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Always Packed for Adventure!

It's the destination and the journey.

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Movie Review- Get Hard

On Friday, we headed to the Arclight Hollywood for a twenty-one plus screening of Get Hard. This was our first time at one of their twenty-one plus screenings and it was not likely something that we would repeat. They have a bar right outside of the theatre and you can bring drinks into the movie, so a majority of the audience was hammered before the movie began. Neither of us drank and being sober in a room full of drunks was definitely not the way to go. We are so used to a quiet, respectful movie going crowd that the Arclight usually attracts, but at this showing, all bets were off. People were talking, cell phones were in constant use and there was even a loud verbal argument with a group sitting towards the front of the auditorium. 

The twenty-one plus screening was a mess. On the upside, we had our first Arclight celebrity sighting as were were paying for parking. Nolan Gould, who plays Luke on Modern Family, was also paying for parking. 

On to the movie...

PLOT - James King ( Will Ferrell) is living a charmed life. He's insanely wealthy, engaged to be married to a beautiful fiancé and he has just been made partner at his hedge fund firm. His life comes crashing down, when he is wrongly convicted of fraud and embezzlement. Rather than send him to a white collar prison, the judge wants to make an example out of James and he is sentenced to ten years in San Quentin. James is given thirty days to get his affairs in order.

Darnell Lewis (Kevin Hart) is struggling to get ahead. He lives in South Central with his wife and young daughter, but he desperately needs thirty thousand dollars to put a downpayment on a house in a safer neighborhood. He owns a carwash company in the building where James works. 

James is a desperate man as the days to his prison sentence come closer and he has a conversation with Darnell, where James reveals that he assumes that since Darnell is African-American, that he has served time in prison. Although this assumption is incorrect, Darnell goes along with it and strikes a deal with James, for thirty thousand dollars, Darnell will prep James for prison life.

LIKE - Will Farrell and Kevin Hart are both hilarious and they are a great team in Get Hard. Like most Farrell movies, the story is utterly ridiculous, but if you just go with it, it's a fun ride. The actors are better than the actual story and the funniest moments in the film are when they are clearly going off of the script and riffing the lines. Although the general story arc was highly predictable ( they will develop a friendship and the bad guy will be caught in the end), the story did have some elements that were less obvious, especially within the realm of how Darnell instructs James. I thought that it was a strong choice to have James be a character that is just so completely out of touch with any reality, rather than him being someone who is simply racist or stereotyping. He's naive. It made me root for him, even as he was making some pretty awful statements. 

DISLIKE - The comedy was uneven. There were moments where I was laughing so hard that I teared up, but mostly, it wasn't funny enough to make me laugh-out-loud. Occasionally, I thought that they tried too hard to be edgy or to straddle the line between offensive and funny. Sometimes it was just plain offensive. It didn't need to try quite so hard. 

RECOMMEND -  Sure. Clearly this isn't a brilliant film or something that's going to win any awards, but as far as low-rate comedies go, Get Hard was fun. It's not going to be a classic or maybe even one that I will rewatch, but it was an enjoyable Friday night out at the movies. If anything, watch it for the pairing of Hart and Farrell. 

tags: Get Hard, Get Hard Movie Review, Get Hard Movie Offensive, Get Hard Movie Sterotypes, Will Ferrell as James King in Get Hard, Kevin Hart as Darnell Lewis in Get Hard, Kevin Hart and Will Ferrell, Arc light Cinema Hollywood, Arc light Cinema twenty-One Screenings, Arc light Cinema Film and Bar, Nolan Gould Modern Family at Arclight Hollywood, Arc light Hollywood Celebrity Sighting, Rude People at the Theatre
categories: Watch
Monday 03.30.15
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

Theatre Review- Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat

When I was a kid, the first big Broadway production that my mom took me to was Cats. I don't think that I moved a muscle or took a breath during the entire show. It was downright magical. Cats was the show that turned me into a musical theatre junkie. It was the one and only production that I've ever seen of Cats. I'm certain that if I saw the show now, it wouldn't be nearly as magical. Sadly, it probably would be quite as good as I remembered it.

Dan's first show was Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, which he saw as a child in England. It was magical for him. I've seen most of Andrew Lloyd Webber's shows ( with and without Tim Rice), but I had never seen a production of Joseph. Many months ago, we saw that it was coming to the Pantages Theatre and we bought tickets.

I watch a lot of reality TV, but I don't watch American Idol. I'd heard of former contestants, Diana DeGarmo and Ace Young, only because you have to be living under a rock to not at least hear the names of the most popular contestants. DeGarmo and Young, a real-life married couple, star as the Narrator and Joseph respectively. This production really feels like it's a vehicle to promote the two stars and that the whole production is riding on their name. However, as I walked around the lobby, I didn't see anyone who was talking about American Idol or the two leads, so this may have been lost on the crowd.

I can't compare it to other productions, although Dan did and declared it to be rubbish. Just going off of this, I'm inclined to agree. The choreography and vibe from the performers is that of a Disneyland Parade. It's overdone and phoned in. Dan observed that it was like watching a stage show at the El Capitan, which is awesome there, but you expect much more out of a major show. There is little in the way of genuine emotions. DeGarmo and Young have lovely voices, but little stage presence and they struggle to carry the show. The rest of the cast was overdoing it for laughs and pandering to the audience. I felt like I was constantly being goaded to clap for the show, even though it wasn't very good. Most of the people sitting near us, were equally unenthused. 

The costumes and set were low budget. This isn't to say minimalistic. I'm a fan of minimalistic. No, everything just looked like it was purchased from a local costume shop and thrown up there. They did attempt some visual effects with the use of projections. Sometimes this worked and sometimes it didn't. The worst was when they were projecting images on performers in white costumes and the images didn't hit their mark. They didn't pull it off. They also were totally off beat when using colored lighting to punctuate the lyrics when singing about Joseph's coat of many colors. Maybe they were having an off night? In any case, the missteps really showed and made it look amateur. 

I think the primary fault lies with the director, as the overall vision for this production missed the mark. I cannot recommend it and we nearly walked out at the intermission. It was that bad.

Now, I'm going to climb on my soapbox for a minute to complain about one of the rudest groups of people that I've ever had the "pleasure" to be seated next to at a show. We were next to and in front of a family of five. I loved going to the theatre as a kid and I love seeing children at shows, knowing how excited I was at their age, makes me get excited for them, hoping that they will love it as much as I did. It's a special thing.

This was my first time seeing a child act out at the theatre and the blame lies squarely with her parents for encouraging her. They were just as loud and obnoxious as she was, encouraging their entire family to sing their hearts out along with the show. Naturally, the two older kids were too embarrassed to do so, but I was seated next to the youngest daughter and the mom, who sang off key for the entire performance. I should have said something, but I kept with a passive-aggressive move of giving them the evil eye and complaining to Dan during the intermission. 

It's okay to get excited and sing before the show/during intermission/after the show, but unless the show has an audience participation section, it's NEVER okay to sing along during the production. It's also not okay to talk about the show during the show, which they also did. If you're going to dare talk, don't loudly shush the people in front of you when they make one measly comment. It also isn't okay to constantly kick the seat in front of you, which the kid did the entire evening. And, it's not okay to repeatedly kick and bump the person next to you, especially if you don't apologize. My beautiful cream colored dress has a shoe print on it. Thanks.

Yep, I was pretty darn annoyed with this family. The only thing missing was they didn't sneak in food in a loud crinkly wrapper or have a cellphone ring.

A nice moment happened with a mother in front of us went to get a booster seat for her daughter and asked if we minded, since her child was now a lot taller. My view wasn't blocked, but even if it had been, I would have been okay with it, since they were kind enough to ask if I was okay. They were quiet throughout the performance, but when the well-behaved child leaned over to ask her mom a question (quietly), this was when the monster sitting next to me made the loud shushing sound. Yep.

Theatre etiquette = learn it, live it, pass it on. 

Climbing off my soap-box now.

 

 

tags: Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat Review, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat Pantages Theatre, Pantages Theatre 2014, American Idol Diana DeGarmo, Diana DeGarmo Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat Review, Ace Young American Idol, Ace Young Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat Review, El Capitan Stage Show, Diana DeGarmo as The Narrator, Ace Young as Joseph, On my Soapbox, Theatre Etiquette, Taking Children to the Theatre, Kids Behavior in Theatre, Singing Along During a Broadway Show, Rules for Broadway Theatre Audience Members, How to be a Good Audience Member, Don't Sing Along, Passive Aggressive Theatre Beahvior, Handling Rude People, Rude People at the Theatre, Rude people in a Play, Pet peeves Theatre Behavior, Booster Seats at Pantages Theatre, Talking During a Show, Talking During a Broadway Play, First Broadway Play Cats, Cats was Magical as a Child, Theatre Magic, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat Redding England, Theatre Fail, Production Fail, Bad choreography, Bad Direction, Andrew lloyd Webber, Tim Rice
categories: Watch
Sunday 06.08.14
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

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