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The Other Guys
Action & Adventure Mark Wahlberg, Will Ferrell Adam McKay
Although the comedy team of Will Ferrell and Mark Wahlberg does not sound like a threat to Laurel and Hardy or Abbott and Costello, they conjure up consistent laughs in "The Other Guys", yet another comedy from "Talladega Nights" director Adam McKay. Ferrell plays a mild-mannered police accountant partnered with Wahlberg's hothead (recently demoted to desk-jockey duty after shooting a very famous Yankee player during the World Series), and both men must endure the showboating fame of a pair of supercops (Samuel L. Jackson and Dwayne Johnson) in their New York City precinct house. Along with sending up cop-movie clichés, the movie basically exists to give Ferrell and Wahlberg room to work amusing variations on their characters (with grace notes for Michael Keaton's stereotypical tough captain, too). The loosey-goosey structure works especially well when Wahlberg is needling his partner's squareness or marveling, in wonderfully awestruck tones, at the unbelievable hot-i-tude of Ferrell's wife (Eva Mendes)--a discrepancy made all the more maddening because Ferrell seems indifferent to her charms. Throw in a plot about a billionaire Wall Street crook (Steve Coogan) and the revelation of Ferrell's hilariously dark past, and the movie finds a nice zone of silliness. Of course, any Will Ferrell vehicle must be judged by the opportunities for the star to launch into some borderline-surreal riff--and happily, this film comes through. From the moment Ferrell begins deconstructing Wahlberg's lion versus tuna metaphor, "The Other Guys" manages to find time for such nonsense, and the film--the world in general, for that matter--is the better for it. "--Robert Horton"

The Social Network
Biography, Drama, History Jesse Eisenberg, Rooney Mara, Bryan Barter, David Fincher
A story about the founders of the social-networking website, Facebook.

The Sorcerer's Apprentice
Action, Adventure, Comedy, Drama, Fantasy Nicolas Cage, Jay Baruchel, Alfred Molina, Teresa Palmer, Toby Kebbell Jon Turteltaub
Balthazar Blake (Nicolas Cage) is a master sorcerer in modern-day Manhattan trying to defend the city from his arch-nemesis, Maxim Horvath (Alfred Molina). Balthazar can't do it alone, so he recruits Dave Stutler (Jay Baruchel), a seemingly average guy who demonstrates hidden potential, as his reluctant protégé. The sorcerer gives his unwilling accomplice a crash course in the art and science of magic, and together, these unlikely partners work to stop the forces of darkness. It'll take all the courage Dave can muster to survive his training, save the city and get the girl as he becomes The Sorcerer's Apprentice.

Thirteen Conversations About One Thing
Drama Matthew McConaughey, David Connolly, Joseph Siravo, A.D. Miles, Sig Libowitz Jill Sprecher
A man approaching middle age decides to change his life. A rising young attorney's plans are thrown into disarray as the result of a single act. A woman faces her husband's infidelity. An envious businessman seeks revenge on a cheerful coworker. And an optimistic young cleaning woman awaits a miracle. These ordinary people all find themselves asking the fundamental question philosophers have pondered throughout history: What is happiness, and how does one achieve it?

A Crime
Thriller Harvey Keitel, Emmanuelle Béart, Norman Reedus, Joe Grifasi, Lily Rabe Manuel Pradal
While returning home after fixing the lights of a billboard, the worker Vincent Harris passes by a taxi with a damage door panel. When Vincent arrives home, he finds his wife murdered on the floor of the living room. He claims that the driver was wearing a red jacket and a ring with a large stone. Three years later, he lives in Brooklyn but is still chasing the killer of his wife. His dysfunctional neighbor Alice Parker has a crush on him, but Vincent is haunted by the ghosts of his past. When Alice meets the cab driver Roger Culkin out of the blue, she seduces him, damages his taxi and gives a red jacked and a ring to him. Then she forces him to meet Vincent, inventing a culprit to release Vincent from his past and stay with her.

Santa Baby 2
Comedy, Fantasy Jenny McCarthy, Kelly Stables, Kris Holden-Ried, Paul Sorvino, Dean McDermott Ron Underwood
Teri (Kelly Stables) should have been the heroine. Mary Class (Jenny
McCarthy) is just a headache.She's back. Still a corporate suit; nothing in her demeanor has changed
as a result from the previous episode. Still obnoxious to elves, her
dad Santa, etc. Oh, she has some gratingly stereotyped people working
for her in "The City," too. The City scenes are too over stated and
over done to be cute. But now Santa's going through some mid-life
crisis (a few centuries late), and wants Mary to take over again. Mary
doesn't want to, again.Enter Teri, a go-getter who does all the work. She's depicted as an
evil interloper who wants to seize control, but if you see the movie,
and actually want some toys under the tree Dec. 25th, you'd root for
her instead of the other two. The actress playing the role is very
likable, and plays the role expertly. The other elves are pretty funny,
too. The Union trade negotiations were pretty funny, but Mary comes off
as stone hearted; it's annoying after a while to listen to her belittle
everyone constantly. And that guy playing Mary's boyfriend? He plays
the role like Beavis.OK in places, but could have been better, though.

The Search for Santa Paws
Adventure, Family Reese Alexander, Diedrich Bader, Sahar Biniaz, Jan Bos, Ameko Eks Mass Carroll Robert Vince
Magic dogs and an elf team up with two children to rescue Santa who has lost his memory.

Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps
Action & Adventure Shia LaBeouf, Michael Douglas Oliver Stone
"Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps" has the compelling backdrop of the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, features Michael Douglas returning to one of the defining roles of his career, stars two charismatic young actors (Shia LaBeouf, "Transformers", and Carey Mulligan, "An Education") and some wily old hands (Susan Sarandon, Frank Langella, and Eli Wallach)--so why is the movie such a dud? For one thing, director Oliver Stone doesn't bother to genuinely explore what caused the stock-market crash of 2008; instead, the movie's plot revolves around melodramatic backroom machinations and financial revenge, none of which has any real emotional heft. For another, Stone is possibly the most obvious director of all time. When the characters are talking about financial bubbles, the movie has shots of children in the park blowing bubbles; when the market crashes, the movie cuts to cascading dominoes--Stone beats every metaphor into submission, and if the audience feels bludgeoned at the same time, well, that's just too bad. Add to that portentous dialogue like "He's a monkey dancing on a razorblade," incoherent references to sub-prime mortgages and other financial technobabble, and a woefully mismatched soundtrack by David Byrne and Brian Eno, and the result is muddled, sluggish, and confusing. It's too bad; Douglas is as charmingly reptilian as ever. Also featuring a pointless cameo by Charlie Sheen, star of the original "Wall Street". "--Bret Fetzer"

2 Minutes Later
Adventure, Comedy, Thriller Michael Molina, Jessica Graham, Peter Stickles, J. Matthew Miller, Jennifer Layne Park Robert Gaston
When lesbian detective Abigail Marks teams up with gay guy Michael Dalmar to solve the disappearance of his twin, Kyle Dalmar, a famed portrait photographer, their investigation leads them into the Kyle's risqué world. With Michael posing as Kyle, the pair uncover assistants who have designs on their bosses, clients who have an interest in detectives, and killers who want them stopped. Navigating between identity and duplicity, Abigail and Michael discover that photos never lie, and two minutes can mean the difference between life and death.

3 Needles
Drama Mabel Adams, Asckt, Shawn Ashmore, Caroline Aspirot, Nontombi Bovana Thom Fitzgerald
A three-paneled look at the worldwide AIDS crisis: in Montreal, a porn actor (Ashmore) schemes to pass his mandatory blood test; a young nun (Sevigny) makes a personal sacrifice for the benefit of a South African village; in rural China, a black market operative (Liu) posing as a goverment-sanctioned blood drawer jeopardizes an entire village's safety.



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