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The following are capsule reviews of movies recently reviewed by the Office for Film & Broadcasting of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.
Akeelah and the Bee
(Lionsgate)
Irresistible story about a South Los Angeles 11-year-old loner
(Keke Palmer) who reluctantly agrees to compete in a national
spelling bee --- under the tutelage of an emotionally fragile
English professor (Laurence Fishburne) against the initial
wishes of her hard-working mother (Angela Bassett), who worries
the endeavor will interfere with the girl's flagging grades
in other subjects. Writer-director Doug Atchison handles Akeelah's
journey of self-discovery and growing empowerment deftly and
builds suspense on the way to a satisfying if unabashedly
formulaic conclusion, helped by his first-rate leads, and
inspiring messages about conquering fears, winning by honest
means, the strength of community, and, above all, the beauty
and potency of words. A few crass expressions and a single
use of a four-letter word can't detract from an overall warm
endorsement for all audiences. (Ratings: A-I, PG)
RV (Columbia)
Intermittently
funny road comedy about an overworked executive (Robin Williams)
who, for job-related reasons, cancels a long-planned family
holiday in Hawaii and instead loads his wife (Cheryl Hines)
and kids (Joanna "JoJo" Levesque and Josh Hutcherson) into
a malfunctioning motor home and drives from Los Angeles to
Colorado, with much comic mayhem along the way. Directed by
Barry Sonnenfeld and with a subdued Williams in top jester
form, this knockoff of "National Lampoon's Vacation" is full
of silly slapstick and broad, if harmless, humor and imparts
a warm message about family bonding. Some mildly crude humor,
including a gross-out scatological sight gag, sexual innuendo,
and scattered crass language and light profanity. (A-II, PG)
Stick It (Touchstone)
High-energy but formulaic teen sports movie about a 17-year-old
former world-class gymnast (Missy Peregrym) who, after a run-in
with the law, is sent by the court, as an alternative to juvenile
detention, to a hard-core gymnastics academy, where a tough-love
coach (Jeff Bridges) helps her get a second chance at the
sport from which she had walked away. Stylishly directed by
Jessica Bendinger, the film's cliched plot is thinner than
the sport's balance beam and capped with an implausible ending,
but Peregrym radiates perky charm and its girl-power message
of second chances, fellowship and self-validation offsets
its contrarian strains of thumbing your nose at the rules.
Some crude language. (A-II, PG-13)
United 93 (Universal)
Tense,
well-acted documentary-style drama about the hijacking of
an aircraft on Sept. 11, 2001, when passengers fought back,
downing the plane in the ensuing melee and preventing destruction
of a probable Washington target, while air traffic controllers
on the ground struggled to make sense of what was happening.
Director Paul Greengrass has avoided exploitation with his
dispassionate approach and the use of a no-name cast, but
many will obviously find this extremely distressing. Yet as
a testament to heroism and a vivid cautionary tale, the film
was, on balance, a worthwhile endeavor. Harrowing suspense,
violence and bloodshed (though discreetly shot with quick
editing), other disturbing Sept. 11 imagery, a smattering
of profanity and four-letter words uttered under extreme distress.
(A-III, R)
-- CNS
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