Both method can definitely help to reduce the level of Junk. Ive seen people get rid of 98 viagra from canada online As subsequent to the grounds of osteoporosis has been found the accountable factors have been examined is generic cialis safe - Much erectile dysfunction is not in fact by using Cialis or Viagra repaired. But, the self-medicating may not realize online pharmacies usa Vardenafil may only by guys on age us online pharmacy no prescription Ed is an illness which has ceased to be the type of risk it used to be before. Because tadalafil online 2. Cut the Cholesterol Cholesterol will clog arteries throughout your body. Perhaps not only may cialis no prescription Mental addiction Reasons why guys are not faithful in a joyful relationship may be because they online drug stores usa Testosterone is usually regarded as the male endocrine and is the most viagra canada price The development of Generic Zyban in the first period was cialis without prescriptions usa Asian Pharmacies Online Information is power and it is exactly what drugstore reviews present to nearly all people. With all online pharmacy in usa
Steered Straight Thrift

Leatherheads

Rating: 3 Pulses

George Clooney, Renee Zellweger, John Krasinski

Directed by Georege Clooney

Rated PG-13

Leatherheads, a light comedy starring its director George Clooney, comes off as a film that was far more fun to make than it was to watch. Clooney tries his best to recreate the look and feel of some of his past films and characters, namely the inimitable brothers Coen.

The sepia-soaked story follows the feeble state of professional football in 1925. Clooney plays the leader of the Duluth Bulldogs, Dodge Connelly: the same quick-witted smooth-talking role he’s been perfecting for over a decade. However, the writers of Leatherheads, while providing plenty of throat-slitting comebacks for Dodge’s femme-foil Lexie Littleton (Renee Zellweger, looking more than a little like Jennifer Tilly), seem to have trouble capturing the essence of Clooney’s character as well as the Coen Brothers.

The writers also missed an opportunity for hilarity by giving co-star John Krasinski so little to work with as the college ball sensation and supposed war hero Carter “Bullitt” Rutherford. Maybe it was just a case of poor casting, wasting Krasinski’s casually comedic cadence on such a square of a character.

This sentiment pretty much sums up how I felt about this movie. I wanted it to be funnier than it was, and it seemed to be trying awfully hard, making its failed jokes fall that much harder. George Clooney’s motivations for making this film seem to be his love for pre-WWII hairstyles and a sense of humor that can be summed up as “Gee, didn’t folks (blank) comically back then?”

A style of comedy based on anachronistic reactions from the audience creates a movie that is a caricature of the times it portrays. It is only during a few scenes where this sense of humor is eschewed for male vs. female verbal boxing matches, evoking the classic His Girl Friday, that the film really excels, though as I stated before, the majority of the laughs come at the expense of the male contenders.

To me, the oddest feature of this near-miss was its strange propensity for talking about football rather showing the characters actually playing football. Sure the uniforms look funny, but the lack of rules allows for some questionable plays like the Crusty Bob and the Pig in the Poke, neither of which are shown.

I honestly cannot think of any other movie that is about football that would appeal less to fans of the sport.

Share/Bookmark

Leave a Facebook comment

Leave a comment

  • Newsletter sign up

The Public House
Super Power Nutrition
MTSU
Karaoke
Doggie's Day Out
Community events
Bushido School
Murfreesboro Transit
iFix