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Boyhood (2014), R, ★★★★

Ellar Coltrane at age 6. Hey, fellas, do you ever recount your memories when you were in the stage of boyhood? Do you remember the first time you went to the movies or go to your first baseball game? Do you remember your first date? One's boyhood chronicles something special in their life that showcases the ups-and-downs of reality in their inner circle and in the outside world. This movie is a testament of risk vs. reward as the filmmakers accentuate the single most important events in their life and undoubtedly the dodgy events in their life. What they have created is one of the most ambitious movies with the greatest reach I have ever seen. The movie starts with Mason Jr. (Ellar Coltrane) at age 6 who is the son of Olivia (Patricia Arquette), a single mother who rents a small house in Texas that works constantly balancing the struggles and her childrens' lives. His sister, Samantha (Lorelei Linklater), is two years older and teases and taunts him and gets away with her...

Lucy (2014), R, ★★

Lucy (Scarlett Johannson) getting kidnapped.  It cannot be possible for 100% of the brain to work, otherwise, we will be powerful, psychotic and insane and then we may throw everybody around or use "Jedi-like" powers. However, if I had those abilities to have 100% brain power, I would basically predict what would happen to the stock market and probably retire early. But, that's just me. Anyway, to have something inflicted into the brain to create powerful abilities to change the world would have that one person struggling to control his or her powers, kind of like a superhero, mostly Spider-Man. This movie has the distinction of showing us what the brain is capable of when it shows a countdown of how much the brain is used. It is informative, but a ridiculous second half derails the movie and my experience with the movie. Lucy (Scarlett Johannson) is a hard-partying woman who lives in Taipei, Taiwan and has a relationship with her boyfriend, Richard (Pilou Abasek). ...

Transcendence (2014), PG-13, ★1/2

Johnny Depp giving a presentation.  Do you trust an artificial intelligent human being? Do you trust a system that is beyond your wildest beliefs and dreams? Do you trust its creator? Well, either you question the person who created the universe or the person who is curious about the nature of the universe gets you perplexed as to why a scientist has the free will to create a computer with technological singularity, another word for artificial intelligence or as he calls it "Transcendence". It is sort of a neat concept when it has to be explained well to get the viewer to go on the journey with the characters, but the storyline and the lack of emotion derails the whole movie and we get left with plot holes and questionable logic. Dr. Will Caster (Johnny Depp) is a shrewd scientist that is curious about what is out there in the center of the universe and while he lectures the fact to an audience that he is building a computer with a team, he predicts that a computer wi...

Begin Again (2014), R, ★★★

Keira Knightley performing a song. The music industry is a tricky business in the movies and maybe in real life. Music producers, executives, and/or talent scouts look around for people who have the "IT" factor, a quality that bring their voice and genre into stardom. But, sometimes being a music producer or being a music executive is even more stressful trying to find a star that can bring out an attractive quality to persuade listeners what he or she is delivering while singing in your own IPod, computer, or a radio. Even though the movie has a predictable and familiar concept, it is, nevertheless, an entertaining film not just about music but redemption. Dan Mulligan (Mark Ruffalo) is a struggling record label executive who is constantly drinking and has not signed anybody for seven years until one night, he encounters Gretta (Keira Knightley), an independent songwriter that has his attention. He wants to sign her on to the company, but given the idea of fame in the ...

The Purge: Anarchy (2014), R, ★★1/2

The small group trying to survive the annual purge. The annual Purge commences again and the hope to survive begins again. Let's think about it again. How would it feel if 364 days of the year is crime-free and one day of the year you can kill anybody you want? Well, the 6th commandment is out the window and it is like a national Hunger Games. Everyone is almost looks like that they are on steroids or have high testosterone when this annual Purge is brought up again. This sequel is a bit crazier and is actually better than the first movie, even though, I would not jump up and down quite yet. MARCH 21, 2033 Less than 2.5 hour before the Annual Purge begins. It is very difficult to review this movie without any spoilers, so bear with me. The movie starts in a diner where one of the waitresses, Eva (Carmen Ejogo), want to seek a raise from her boss to pay for her father's medicine. She goes home and tells her daughter, Cali (Zoe Soul), that "it's not in the cards...

Sex Tape (2014), R, ★1/2

Jason Segel and Cameron Diaz preparing to make some sort of tape. It is daunting and ambitious for someone or a couple to just say, "What the hell?" and go with some broadcasts that showcases the person masturbating or the couple fornicating on a webcam. Any person in their inner circle will question that 1) they are insane and 2) their sex life has spiraled downward. In a way, let's just say that their decision is like therapy but fun and entertaining therapy rather than spending a lot of money going to a sex therapist. But, when you mix up foreplay and comedy, it has to be done well. When this movie was made, those ingredients do not mix well due to a weak script and attempts to be funny. Mommy blogger Annie Hargrove (Cameron Diaz) asks her fans on her latest post to remember the first time their man saw them naked. She remembers when Jay (Jason Segel), her boyfriend at the time, and herself used to have sex constantly regardless of anybody was watching them or no...

Life Itself (2014), R, ★★★★

Roger Ebert and his newly married wife at the time, Chaz. This is a documentary of a portrait of a popular film critic and a man who has worked hard to get where he was in the world of film criticism on newspaper and television. Honestly, anytime he wrote a movie review or commented about something relatable to a film or his thoughts, I read carefully of what he had to say regarding the material, the craftsmanship and the acting. He was not just a film critic but he was a pure essayist who wrote from the heart. In this extraordinary documentary by Steve James, the director of the great Hoop Dreams , we see the renowned critic's life and pain being brought on-screen. This movie is about Roger Ebert's legacy of working at the Daily Illini  at his alma mater at the University of Chicago, working at the Chicago Sun-Times, his relationship with co-worker at At the Movies  and film critic, Gene Siskel, their fights and banter, his fight with alcoholism, and his relationship wi...