Showing posts with label Dreamworks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dreamworks. Show all posts

#SanDiego Grab Passes to #LightBetweenOceans @ AMC La Jolla 8/11


The Light Between Oceans
Director: Derek Cianfrance
Writers: Derek Cianfrance (screenplay), M.L. Stedman (novel)
Starring: Mark Rylance, Ruby Barnhill, Penelope Wilton, Jemaine Clement, Rebecca Hall, Rafe Spall, Bill Hader 
MPAA Rating: Rated PG-13 for thematic material and some sexual content
Official Socials: FacebookTwitter | InstagramIMDb
U.S. Release date: July 1st, 2016
Hashtag: #LightBetweenOceans
A lighthouse keeper and his wife living off the coast of Western Australia raise a baby they rescue from an adrift rowboat.



Click Movie Poster To Grab Your Passes




LOCATION:
San Diego, CA

TIME AND DATE:
August 11, 2016
Thursday 7:00pm
(Have your passes ready to show at the door)

These tickets are on a first-come, first-served not guaranteed basis. Arrive early to secure your seats.

Watch DreamWorks Pictures' #LightBetweenOceans Trailer!


The Light Between Oceans
Director: Derek Cianfrance
Writers: Derek Cianfrance (screenplay), M.L. Stedman (novel)
Starring: Mark Rylance, Ruby Barnhill, Penelope Wilton, Jemaine Clement, Rebecca Hall, Rafe Spall, Bill Hader 
MPAA Rating: Rated PG-13 for thematic material and some sexual content
Official Socials: FacebookTwitter | InstagramIMDb
U.S. Release date: July 1st, 2016
Hashtag: #LightBetweenOceans
A lighthouse keeper and his wife living off the coast of Western Australia raise a baby they rescue from an adrift rowboat.

Have you watched the trailer for DreamWorks Pictures’ THE LIGHT BETWEEN OCEANS, a heart-breaking drama about fate, love, moral dilemmas and the lengths to which one couple will go to see their dreams realized. The film, which is based on the best-selling novel by M.L. Stedman and stars Michael Fassbender, Alicia Vikander, Rachel Weisz, Bryan Brown and Jack Thompson and is written for the screen and directed by Derek Cianfrance, opens in theatres everywhere on September 2nd!

Book Review: The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins




The Girl on the Train
Author: Paula Hawkins
Reading Level: Adult
Genres: Mystery | Thriller | Crime
Released: January 13th 2015
Review Source: Purchased

A debut psychological thriller that will forever change the way you look at other people's lives.

Rachel takes the same commuter train every morning. Every day she rattles down the track, flashes past a stretch of cozy suburban homes, and stops at the signal that allows her to daily watch the same couple breakfasting on their deck. She’s even started to feel like she knows them. “Jess and Jason,” she calls them. Their life—as she sees it—is perfect. Not unlike the life she recently lost.

And then she sees something shocking. It’s only a minute until the train moves on, but it’s enough. Now everything’s changed. Unable to keep it to herself, Rachel offers what she knows to the police, and becomes inextricably entwined in what happens next, as well as in the lives of everyone involved. Has she done more harm than good?

Compulsively readable, The Girl on the Train is an emotionally immersive, Hitchcockian thriller and an electrifying debut.


The Girl on The Train by British author Paula Hawkins, is a novel that debuted number one on the New York Times Fiction Best Sellers 2015. It has been compared many times to the book, and subsequent movie, Gone Girl by American author Gillian Flynn. Although I can see some similarities in theme of a darker, more twisted plot and context, I genuinely feel the similarities are like comparing apples and oranges. Yes, they are both fruit, but they both have very different tastes, textures and looks.

The Girl on The Train is about a thirty something year old woman named Rachel who rides the commuter train daily to London. During her ride, as she watches out the window, she always notices the back of a particular set of row houses at one of the stops along her way. One of the homes belongs to her ex-husband, where she used to live with him before he left her for his current wife, Anna. Another house a few doors down belong to a couple she doesn’t know, but whom she always sees outside on their back porch, and she takes an almost obsessive interest in them. She creates names for them (she refers to them as Jess and Steve) and a complete back story of what she believes their lives together must be like.

You definitely get a sense right away that Rachel is very lonely and deeply affected by the affair her ex-husband had on her with his current wife (who now lives in her old home with him and their new baby), but where things get even more intricate to the plot is that we learn early on that Rachel is an alcoholic and was actually fired from her job months prior to the opening of the story for being drunk at work. She rides the train daily as a way to hide her job loss from her roommate. One day Rachel sees something significant in regards to “Jess” as her train passes the row houses, and later when news reports reveal that “Jess”, who is really named Megan (her husband’s name is really Scott) has gone missing, Rachel emerges herself into the situation to try and help find her because she feels a real, rather inexplicable, connection with this woman.

The real interesting twists and turns in this story relate back to Rachel’s alcoholism. A lot of things she sees or remembers, or doesn’t remember for that matter, have to be taken with a grain of salt because we don’t know what is real and what is actually inaccurate do to her being intoxicated the majority of the time. There are a lot of holes in her memory due to black outs and that makes the whole unfolding of this plot, the twists and turns, and the mystery so intriguing. At times, even aside from her intoxication, I found myself wondering if she was actually mentally ill. You really want to pull for her because she is for all proses the story’s heroine, and is the main character, but you just don’t know what is real and what isn’t.

There is also a lot of side plot in regards to her ex-husband, his new wife, and how that whole situation affected Rachel and ties into her current situation, and the situation with the missing woman, Megan. The way Paula Hawkins tied all this together was pure brilliance. Every other chapter of this “What happened?” and “Who may have done it?” kept me changing my mind constantly. I never had a direct “I figured it out!” moment until the very end.

The only thing I can say that was a negative was in the beginning, until you really figure out who is who amongst the characters, it gets a little confusing because the author switches points of view each chapter (and the fact that Rachel makes up names for two of the characters in the beginning doesn’t help with the confusion of keeping things straight). Also each chapter takes place on different dates. So the dates jump from past to present and then back again throughout the book. That was a little hard to keep straight for me at first, but once I got into the story, and all of the characters were sorted out in my mind, I was completely sucked in and couldn’t put it down. I highly recommend this book and I give it 5 Stars! It’s an easy read length wise, too, so it’s a perfect book to read on vacation or on lunch breaks.

The movie rights were already purchased by Dreamworks in 2014 and actress Emily Blunt is in talks to play the leading role of Rachel. If people want to compare this book to Gone Girl then I can only say that with the success of that movie, I think this movie will do the same. So definitely jump on it now before the movie comes out!


Movie Review: Penguins of Madagascar


Penguins of Madagascar

Release Date: November 26th 2014
Director: Eric Darnell, Simon J. Smith
Writers: John Aboud, Michael Colton, Eric Darnell, Tom McGrath, Brandon Sawyer
Main Cast: Tom McGrath, Chris Miller, Chris Knights, John Malkovich, Benedict Cumberbatch, Ken Jeong, Annett Mahendru, Peter Stormare
Genres: Animation | Adventure | Comedy | Family
MPAA Rating: Rated PG for mild action and some rude humor
Studio: Dreamworks Animation

Official Sites: Web | Facebook | Twitter | IMDb

Discover the secrets of the most entertaining and mysterious birds in the global espionage game: Skipper, Kowalski, Rico and Private now must join forces with the chic spy organization, the North Wind, led by Agent Classified (we could tell you his name, but then … you know), voiced by Benedict Cumberbatch to stop the villainous Dr. Octavius Brine, voiced by John Malkovich, from taking over the world.



It was no surprise that the whole theater would be laughing out loud as we watched the Penguins doing what the Penguins do best. Get stuck in a bind and work themselves out of it. From the youngest movie goer to the oldest, not one single person was quiet, myself included.

I really loved what they did with the humor. They weaved in adult humor, that only adults would get throughout the whole film in certain sayings or names called out. Everything about the movie was great. The storyline from start to finish kept as busy following along and cracking up. The animation is so vibrant and well done. The 3D effects were comfortable, nothing that was to much to handle on the eyes. The sound effects and music paired very well to the movie itself. The voice-overs were chosen well for each character. All in all, the movie as great. A must-see with the whole family.

In this Dreamworks Animation movie we watch how the 4 penguins came to be a group. And we see how they ended up away from were they were born. Skipper, Kowalski, Rico and Private end up surviving the impossible and becoming the spy Penguins that they are. Then after years and there stint in Madagascar, they are come across another spy organization, and they must team up to save all the Penguins from Zoos around the world from the evil Dr. Octavius Brine. Of course teaming up with The North Wind, isn't as easy as it sounds. But slowly and surely they finally end up making it all came together and saving the day. And of course I love that the egg that was almost abandoned before he was born, saved the day in the end. Good job Private.

Highly recommend to go out and see this film this holiday season. Your kiddos and yourself will be happy that you do. Be careful where you place the popcorn, because you might end of spilling it from all the uncontrollable laughter.





From Left to Right: Alex, Armani and Casen

Alex: The movie was super funny the whole time. 

Armani & Casen: It was funny and our favorite part was when the Penguins did the dance and were slapping each other butts. (uncontrollable laughter)


Movie Review: Turbo


Turbo

Release Date: July 17th 2013
Studio: Dreamworks
Director: David Soren
Main Cast: Ryan Reynolds (Turbo), Paul Giamatti (Chet), Samuel L. Jackson (Whiplash), Michael Peña (Tito), Luis Guzmán (Angelo), See full cast HERE
Screenwriter: Darren Lemke, Robert D. Siegel, David Soren
Genre: Animation | Family
MPAA Rating: Rated PG for some mild action and thematic elements
Official Website: Turbo Official Dreamworks Movie Site

Storyline: A freak accident might just help an everyday garden snail achieve his biggest dream: winning the Indy 500.

Vroom, Vroom! That’s Turbo coming in fast and hard to all theaters today! Turbo (Ryan Reynolds) will win you over with his strong spirit and never giving up determination. What I adored about Turbo the movie in whole is that it will show all those who watch it that you never give up on your dreams. That might not happen over night or fall in your lap, but if you keep trying, you will eventually get there. Then with that message, add the vivid movie that Turbo is and it will take the gold medal. A movie that can be seen by the whole family, so take the kids and grandparents plus anyone in between. Everyone will be glued to their seats laughing and gasping throughout the whole film.

When I went to screen Turbo, I took along my boys and their friends. So 4 boys ages 6-11 years old thoroughly enjoyed watching Turbo and we saw it in 3-D. I asked each one of them individually what they thought of the movie and they said it was awesome, funny, hilarious, colorful and great music. Some of their favorites scenes were when the snails did a music video type scene, the race at the end with Turbo and just the taco truck in general. As a group they said the whole movie was just awesome from start to finish and they wanted to watch it again. As a parent and movie lover, I would watch Turbo again in theaters. When the DVD comes out for sale I will be buying a copy as well. Where does Turbo rank amongst past animation films such as The Lion King, Cars, Epic and Toy Story? It might not become a classic like The Lion King, but I’m sure it will become a household name for a while.

So for all those kids on summer break and the parents pulling their hair out, ready for them to go back to school already, I recommend that you catch Turbo in theaters before it speeds away. You will enjoy the action, humor and storyline.

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