About Last Night bland, sexist

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Really, he just isn’t funny.

There are people in this world who think Kevin Hart is funny. But do those sad souls think he’s funnier than Jim Belushi?

Hart invites the comparison by taking one of Belushi’s classic roles in the remake of About Last Night. The story drifts further than the 1986 movie from the 1974 play on which it is based, Sexual Perversity in Chicago. It retains the core story, the rise and fall of a sex-based relationship between Danny Martin (Michael Ealy) and Debbie Sullivan (Joy Bryant). Martin and Sullivan are pressured by their best friends, sex-crazed pig Bernie Jackson (Hart) and viciously man-hating Joan Derrickson (Regina Hall).

There’s a dog and an “urban” ized cast in this one, but the biggest change is Jackson and Derrickson are also screwing. That’s just for an extra dose of bizarre humor, though. For the most part, this movie retains the soul of the 1986 film.

Not that that’s a good thing, mind you.

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Robocop is the reason I want to watch movies for a living

The 1987 classic Robocop opened with a news brief informing viewers that OmniCorp literally owned the police force in Old Detroit, and the film continued into an incisive examination of deep fears about corporate control and consumerism gone wild.

The 2014 remake opens with a shock jockey talk show host (Samuel L. Jackson) gushing about how OmniCorp’s unmanned drones should be used for American law enforcement — citing, primarily, their success in Operation Freedom Tehran.

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Also, he looks better in black. Everything looks better in black. Photos courtesy Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Columbia Pictures

The central conflict of this new Robocop is political. Though their drones have pacified the entire world, OmniCorp CEO Raymond Sellers (Michael Keaton) can’t stand the $600 billion he’s leaving on the table every year because U.S. law won’t allow him to remake law enforcement. To get around the law and hopefully get it repealed, OmniCorp puts their technology on recently crippled Detroit cop Alex Murphy (Joel Kinnaman) as a way to prove their technology can work in the U.S. Murphy is stripped down to his lungs, his right hand and his brain, which OmniCorp and lead physician Dennett Norton (Gary Oldman) have extreme control over. Instead of putting a man inside a drone, they remake a man into a drone.

Robocop is the best, ballsy-est and truest remake in this newfangled remake era Hollywood finds itself in. The plot is almost completely new — the core elements of a remade police officer hunting down the people who killed him are still in place, but the surrounding material is very different.

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Monuments are more interesting than these men

Monuments Men. Good God what a waste of time!

This dreary film, based on a true story that couldn’t have been anywhere near this boring, follows seven allied art scholars through basic training and into World War II. Their job is to find and restore major works of art that the Nazis have stolen. This gets tricky — not really interesting, just tricky — when they learn Hitler has given the order to destroy everything his army has plundered if the Reich falls, meaning Lt. Stokes (George Clooney, who also directs, co-writes and co-produces) and his squad are in a race against the allies as well as the Germans, at times needing to go behind enemy lines to stay ahead of the war.

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Man I don’t even know what’s going on in this scene my eyes are so glazed over at this point

SnnnooOOOORE!!!

Good God what a waste of time!

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Shirley Temple dies at 85

ImageImageBeloved 1930s child star Shirley Temple died today of natural causes. She was 85.

Despite retiring as an actor at 21, Temple has an extensive, award-winning filmography that includes Heidi, The Little Princess and The Littlest Rebel. She became the first performer to receive a juvenile Academy Award in 1934 at just 6 years old. She is one of only 12 recipients of this honor.

After retiring from film, Temple moved on to a political career with the Republican party, but lost her first election to represent California’s 11th district. She was appointed by Richard Nixon to the United Nations General Assembly two years later, and would go on to serve as U.S. ambassador to Ghana under Gerald Ford and to Czechoslovakia under George H. W. Bush. Also during the Ford administration, she became the first woman Chief of Protocol of the United States.

Temple beat cancer in 1972, undergoing a mastectomy. She was one of the first celebrities to publicly announce the diagnosis.

Temple had three children, the youngest of whom is 59. BBC reports she died in her home surrounded by family and caregivers.

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Legos. Who would have thought

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Emmet Brickowski (Chris Pratt) makes a joke about Starbucks. Photo courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures.

The Lego Movie is the best movie yet of 2014 and could be in the conversation for best kids movie ever made.

Set in a vast, patchwork land of various environments reproduced in Lego, the movie follows Emmet Brickowski (Chris Pratt), a standard construction worker piece who stumbles upon the Piece of Resistance, becoming the prophesized Special. An underground network of Lego people who are able to build anything out of spare pieces around them, called master builders, spirit Brickowski away so he can save the world from Lord Business (Will Ferrell). But they soon realize Brickowski is completely incapable of original thought processes, let alone saving the world.

Through overwhelming creativity, exciting action sequences and a barrage of well fleshed out themes, The Lego Movie rises to the level of genuine art. The commercialism that could have easily strangled this film is actually one of the primary things it rallies against.

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