Thursday, November 26, 2015

"Australia" best movie of the 2008



Set in northern Australia before World War II, an English aristocrat who inherits a sprawling ranch reluctantly pacts with a stock-man in order to protect her new property from a takeover plot. As the pair drive 2,000 head of cattle over unforgiving landscape, they experience the bombing of Darwin, Australia, by Japanese forces firsthand.
Director : Baz Luhrmann
Writters : Stuart Beattie(screenplay), Baz Luhrmann(screenplay), 3 more credits
Stars: Nicole kidman, Hugh Jackman, shea Adams............

Storyline



In northern Australia at the beginning of World War II, an English aristocrat inherits a cattle station the size of Maryland. When English cattle barons plot to take her land, she reluctantly joins forces with a rough-hewn stock-man to drive 2,000 head of cattle across hundreds of miles of the country's most unforgiving land, only to still face the bombing of Darwin, Australia, by the Japanese forces that had attacked Pearl Harbor only months earlier. 

"Phantom" Bollywood Movie(2015)


A disgraced Indian soldier carries out a series of assassinations in the hope of restoring his honour.

Director:

  Kabir Khan

Writers:

  Hussain Zaidi (story), Kabir Khan (screenplay),3 more credits »

Stars:

  Saif Ali Khan, Katrina Kaif, Sabyasachi Chakraborty | See full cast and crew »

Storyline

Phantom is a political thriller that unfolds across various countries around the world. The plot revolves around protagonist Daniyal, whose journey to seek justice takes him from India to Europe, America and the volatile Middle East. However, he finds out that in a mission like this, there is always a price to pay, in this case, a very personal price.

Secret In Their English latest movie(2015)



A tight-knit team of rising investigators, along with their supervisor, is suddenly torn apart when they discover that one of their own teenage daughters has been brutally murdered.
Director:
  Billy Ray
Writers:
  Billy Ray (screenplay), Juan José Campanella(film "El secreto de sus ojos")
Stars:
  Chiwetel Ejiofor, Nicole Kidman, Julia Roberts 
Storyline
A tight-knit team of rising investigators - Ray and Jess, along with their supervisor Claire - is suddenly torn apart when they discover that Jess's teenage daughter has been brutally and inexplicably murdered. Now, thirteen years later, after obsessively searching every day for the elusive killer, Ray finally uncovers a new lead that he's certain can permanently resolve the case, nail the vicious murderer, and bring long-desired closure to his team. No one is prepared, however, for the shocking, unspeakable secret that will reveal the enduring, destructive effects of personal vengeance on the human soul.Written by STX Entertainment
Reviews

Completing the triangle character dynamic are Ray and Claire (Kidman), but the shape fails to show its strength. Ray is said to have been analyzing headshots for 13 years, yet we're shown him doing such for less than 15 seconds, while outside the case his obsessiveness is seen in his constant, though refreshingly unsuccessful, advances on Claire. At proverbial tip of this triangle would be the district attorney, her lawful ideals challenged by Jess and Ray's constant, and illegal, pursuit for revenge. But here in lies the crucial flaw of the dynamic's downfall: Claire, despite embodying righteousness, never has a scene to fully question and dissect the combination of relatable thirst for repentance and the legal restrictions that protect the guilty. To that, where the trailer suggested moments in which Jess addresses this, the film basically cuts them in during a final blatantly explanatory montage—providing the previewed content but not the expected substance.

"PEN" super star latest movies(2015)



12-year-old orphan Peter is spirited away to the magical world of Neverland, where he finds both fun and danger, and ultimately discovers his destiny -- to become the hero who will be forever known as Peter Pan.
Director:
  Joe Wright
Writers:
  Jason Fuchs, J.M. Barrie (characters)
Stars:
  Levi Miller, Hugh Jackman, Garrett Hedlund 
Storyline
12-year-old orphan Peter is spirited away to the magical world of Neverland, where he finds both fun and danger, and ultimately discovers his destiny -- to become the hero who will be forever known as Peter Pan.

Reviews

I have seen this movie 4 times and I can't get enough! i was engaged from beginning to end and I love everything about Peter Pan (huge Disney fanatic) and if you are like me you will love it! Levi Miller plays his part very well and I look forward to seeing him in more great films! Rooney, Hugh and Garrett also play their parts extremely well and were throughly entertaining! I would and do recommend it to all ages if you are looking for an entertaining movie and if you have ever dreamed to be taken to Neverland as I have! I love understanding how Peter came to never want to leave Neverland, and how enemies can start as friends and friends as enemies is such a true statement! Cannot wait to see the movie again :)

The Hunger Games: Mockingjay - Part 2 (2015)



As the war of Panem escalates to the destruction of other districts by the Capitol, Katniss Everdeen, the reluctant leader of the rebellion, must bring together an army against President Snow, while all she holds dear hangs in the balance.
Director:
  Francis Lawrence
Writers:
  Peter Craig (screenplay), Danny Strong(screenplay), 2 more credits »
Stars:
  Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson, Liam Hemsworth | See full cast and crew »
Storyline
As the war of Panem escalates to the destruction of other districts by the Capitol, Katniss Everdeen, the reluctant leader of the rebellion, must bring together an army against President Snow, while all she holds dear hangs in the balance.
 Reviews
Mockingjay II is a bare bones finale — a tedious two hours in which nothing at all happens, with the briefest of breaks for a zombie chase and attack and a half-hearted bit of sci-fi combat.

Yeah, I know they're called "mutts" and not zombies in this world. A lot of gadgets, pills and what-not get their own semi-original names from author Suzanne Collins. But why remember them when these last two films all but ensure this series will be as forgotten as "Twilight" within a year or so?

The film that might have been titled "Kill Snow Part 2" is strictly for the fans. There's no summation of the action, no recap of the last film or earlier installments.

We're just hurled into…exposition. Lots and lots of flat-actors flatly delivering more mountains of exposition, at the very end of a very long YA film series. Not something you pile into the final act of your "epic."

The huntress Katniss, phoned in by Jennifer Lawrence, has to recover from this or that potentially life-threatening injury, get out her bow and hunt down the evil President Snow (Donald Sutherland), who would rather slaughter the various proletarian "districts" that keep Panem running than give up power.

Katniss still has to decide which of two co-stars she has zero chemistry with she should fall for, the brainwashed Peeta (Josh Hutcherson) or the hunkier, more reliable Gale (Liam Hemsworth). What's making out with Katniss like, Gale?

"It's like kissing someone who's drunk — it doesn't count."

Katniss is weary of the slaughter. First the games, then the endless and murderous civil war.

Killing someone? "It's ALWAYS personal."

She's leery of the rebels' "president" (Julianne Moore).

"You're very…useful…to us."

So to end all this, she must go on one last quest, break into the Capital and kill Snow, slip past the Loyalist Stormtroopers and the ingenious killing zones — "pods" — concocted by the ingenious designers of the Hunger Games themselves.

Only they aren't. Ingenious. They're perfunctory minefields, and for a city supposedly wholly embedded with them, there aren't enough to stand in her way.

Characters die, and every so often enemy "propos" (TV propaganda) turn up on handy, omnipresent TVs. Those are the only times we see Stanley Tucci. Alas.

And don't expect any fond farewell to the late Philip Seymour Hoffman, who almost certainly wouldn't want this paycheck job in his obituary or remembered as his "final film."

The best of these movies haven't been all that, and in the hands of low-bidder director Francis Lawrence, three of them have been more forgettable than the rest.

It's a pity this teenage girl empowerment series wasn't better written, deep enough to warrant the casting of Lawrence, who has gone on to an Academy Award and the promise of winning others.

But whatever effort she made in the earlier "Hunger Games" films, she plainly checked out of this one. There isn't a tender moment you believe, a wrenching loss that she makes you feel.

This will make a lot of money, and there's talk of a Hunger Games theme park. But as fans and the rest of us have patiently–ever-so-patiently– waited for these movies to suddenly take flight, grow a heart and have meaning, the words used to describe the lowbrow success of showman P.T. Barnum hang over us all.