Erickson Tribune

Cedar Crest

UPDATED: Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Cedar Crest at the movies

Posted on Wednesday, August 27, 2008
 

Four nights a week at Cedar Crest, residents gather to watch current and vintage movies. Each movie night has a slightly different personality, but they all have one thing in common: Both the people who pick out the films to show and those who watch them love the movies. They know what they like, and they’re not afraid to mention what they dislike.

Here are some reviews by Cedar Crest residents of recent DVD releases:

The Bucket List
Warner Home Video

The Bucket List is promoted as a comedy. While it has some comic moments, it is, instead, a wonderful movie aimed at adults and full of sentiment delivered flawlessly by two of the best actors of our time—Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman.

It was truly uplifting for most of the Cedar Crest residents, who applauded at the end. For this to happen is a considerable achievement for a film about two men given less than a year to live who decide to go out by fulfilling their wishes instead of brooding. The subject would normally be a depressing one. In this film, it is not.

—Monty Kuttner

The Great Debaters
Genius Products (TVN)

The film The Great Debaters with Denzel Washington, Forest Whitaker, Denzel Whitaker, and other notable actors played to an appreciative audience at the Thursday Night Movie. This film is based on true events from the 1930s and recreates the stories of a remarkable debate team at Wiley College, in  Marshall, Tex., and its coach, who leads them through a series of victorious debates against more notable college teams. One member of the team is a precocious 14 year old, James Farmer Jr, played by Denzel Whitaker, who grows up to be a founder of C.O.R.E., the Congress of Racial Equality— a very influential organization in the civil rights movement.

The film is an exciting and inspiring one showing how one group of black students reached the heights of success under the leadership of a brilliant English teacher, who himself was one of America’s leading poets and activists, Melvin Tolson.

—Anita Berkowitz


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Across the Universe
Sony Pictures

Across the Universe is a very unusual film, written and directed by Julie Taymore, best known for her work on the stage version of The Lion King. Like that play, this film is filled with imaginative images—in this case embodying the drug culture of the 1960s. The plot is a love story set against the anti-war movement and the Vietnam War. It very cleverly uses the music of the Beatles to help tell the story.

Unfortunately, for the people here at Cedar Crest a story set in the 60s does not bring back pleasant memories, and the music of the Beatles was never our favorite music. While I enjoyed the artfulness and skill that went into the production of the film and tolerated the plot and music, most of the audience at the Sunday Night Movie left before the movie ended.

—Monty Kuttner



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