Mona Lisa frown
February 6, 2004 | 12:00am
Bohemian California-native art history professor Katherine Watson gets a job at a prestigious and conservative 1953 womens college, her liberal West Coast values clashing with the schools conservative East Coast principles. The moment I saw Mona Lisa Smiles trailer, this premise presented to me, I knew Id love the film. Plus, it starred a beret-donning Julia Roberts and an all-female cast of Kirsten Dunst, Julia Stiles, Maggie Gyllenhaal, and Marcia Gay Harden. A few months and two hours later, the harsh, sad truth extinguished all of the little enthusiasm I had left: This is one horrible film.
As Ive said, the films plot has a freethinking art history professor named Katherine Watson (Roberts) trying to introduce the traditionalist all-female Wellesley College to her feminist beliefs. However, that would seem to be a difficult task, considering that its students main priority is to nab a husband. "I thought I was headed to a place that would turn out tomorrows leaders, not their wives," Katherine exclaims upon hearing this. With her own syllabus, she uses paintings to open her students minds to new, more open-minded ideas, causing her to ruffle some feathers among the administration, especially when she compares Picasso and Pollocks modern art to the classic Michelangelo the school adores, again proving their acute traditionalism.
Mona Lisa Smile had so much potential, and blew it all. It even contradicts its own feminist message. The film supposedly encourages individualism and non-conformation, when the script itself is just another mundane, humdrum stencil that follows the typical chick flick formula. The film opposes stereotyping, when the characters themselves are stereotypes: Dunst plays the bitch everyone loves to hate; Stiles is the timid teachers pet; Gyllenhaal plays the sex-crazed slut. Even Julia Roberts doesnt give as great a performance that she usually gives, making Marcia Gay Harden Mona Lisas only saving grace; though her role is small, Gay Harden is fantastic as the prim and proper Nancy. In Mona Lisa Smile, nothing much happens, and with an idiotically inane script and lackluster performances, it doesnt even seem to be aware of the same feminist values that it is preaching. In a word: boring.
Bottom Line: We now know the reason behind the Mona Lisas mysterious smile it didnt have to watch Mona Lisa Smile.
Grade: C-
Bottom Line: Proof that Meg Ryan should stick to her forte romantic comedies.
Grade: D
Bottom Line: Next to the original Massacre, this is a horror movie buffs ultimate nostalgia guilty pleasure.
Grade: B
Again, just as in most of his films, Tom Cruise gives another less than superior performance in The Last Samurai; you just cant cease imagining him as Tom Cruise, more so Nathan Algren. This role is the same part Cruise has been playing his whole career, with a couple of exceptions: his roles in Minority Report and Jerry Maguire, his two best films. Samurai is shot brilliantly; the battle scenes filmed with epic majesty and genuine emotion. However, the best part of The Last Samurai isnt its acting, nor its writing or directing: the film is just so damn gorgeous. The lush, beautiful Japanese landscape, the intricately carved verdant mountains, the handsome, linear Japanese architecture; theyre all part of what makes the film so elegant, so lovely. The Last Samurai may not be a bad film, but it isnt a very good one either. At its best, it is a triumphant, moving, inspiring tale of unflinching passion; at its worst, it is a dull, dreary exercise of temporary monotone.
Bottom Line: A stylistic, elegant, gorgeous filmmaking exercise with all the best intentions.
Grade: B
Dont watch In The Cut.
Watch The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.
Watch The Last Samurai.
Watch The 46th Annual Grammy Awards. Personally, I watch the Grammys simply for its performances, though the awards are neat, too. Im hoping Grammy voters will "shake it like a Polaroid picture" and give the impossibly catchy Hey Ya! by OutKast the Record Of The Year award. It will be shown on Monday, 8 p.m. on Star World.
2 days till the 46 th Annual Grammy Awards
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