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Garden State (2004)
10/10
Zach Attack
7 September 2004
Garden State was written and directed by the affable Zach Braff from the television show Scrubs. He now enters the feature film arena with an offering that is surprisingly confident and entertaining.

In the dramedy, Braff plays Andrew Largeman, a man who has returned to his hometown to attend the funeral of his mother. He hasn't been to his old stomping ground in quite some time, but finds that not much has changed. Sure, one of his old buddies has become a millionaire thanks to a clever invention, but this hasn't changed who he is in the slightest. Yes, everything is all too familiar, including some unresolved tension between he and his father (played by Ian Holm). Upon reconnecting with his old friends, Largeman makes a new acquaintance in the form of a young, tale-telling woman (played by Natalie Portman). Slowly, the two begin to fall for each other.

Braff plays Largeman with a good deal more restraint than his TV personae, and his dry sense of humor and deadpan delivery is on target much of the time. He isn't, however, always equal to the dramatic scenes, he has fashioned for himself. The big confrontational moments between him and Ian Holm aren't quite as affecting as they aspire to be. Still, Braff does have a natural screen presence and this is a side of him we haven't seen on Scrubs.

Natalie Portman is absolutely radiant as the young woman of Largeman's affection. She positively glows here in a turn that is energetic and sincere. Her character is a bit taxing in the early goings, but I completely warmed up to her, and by the end of the picture, it was clear that Portman had taken the concept of the love-interest and re-invented it.
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Sonny (2002)
9/10
R WE ALL SEEING THE SAME MOVIE?
7 September 2004
Am baffled at the low ratings and poor reviews this film has gotten. Would this still have been the case if Nick Cage were not an A-List actor? I thought this film to be a phenomenal character piece that kept me gripped until the very end. James Franco once again shows his chops as one of the best actors of his generation. Perhaps the film was a little too real for many to take and showed a life of prositution that was not through Hollywood goggles (ie Pretty Woman). With the exception of Scott Caan, all the performances were stellar and the movie was a phenomenal debut for any first time director. I hope that you haters out there do not sway Mr. Cage away from his position behind the lens.
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