Our internet was a real pain in the butt in July, so instead of streaming a bunch of new stuff, we picked through some DVDs to find oldies to watch again. Here's what we found:
S actually had not seen Apollo 13 before, which I couldn't believe. A few days prior to picking this, we watched the new Apollo 11 documentary that popped upon one of the streaming services. This seemed like an appropriate follow-up. This is a good movie. I have read Jim Lovell's book and of course had seen the movie before (mom and I even saw it in the theater, as I recall), but it was tense viewing nevertheless. I expressed that to S, and his response was, "you can't kill Tom Hanks!" I'll spare you the plot details since everybody already knows them. Lots of people, including Hanks (or Hanx, as he calls himself) were well cast; this might be Ed Harris's greatest role. Gary Sinise as Ken Mattingly is the movie's tragic hero. The whole thing is a truly incredible story.
Sometimes I forget that John Corbett has played anyone other than Aidan Shaw on Sex and the City, but he surely was. One of his most adorable roles was as Ian Miller in My Big Fat Greek Wedding (which, incidentally, came out concurrent with his run on SATC). The story, in case you it isn't obvious from the movie cover or title, is the love story between Ian and the very Greek Toula Portokalos ... and her very large Greek family who disapproves of the decided non-Greek Ian. The totally adorable Ian eventually wins them over. (Most of the fame for My Big Fat Greek Wedding was directed at Nia Vardalos, who had done some acting prior to that, but MBFGW was her first writing credit, and of course she played Toula as well. I think, in addition to the writing props, she deserved credit for her excellent facial expressions!)
When it came to light that S had never seen Father of the Bride (the Steve Martin version), especially since we happened to be together with mom, K, and J at the time, there was simply no choice but to watch it. What a spectacular movie this is! The three of us sisters routinely quote from it, but those little vignettes don't do justice to the whole shebang. Totally, fully, one hundred percent, worth a re-watch. (Side note: S slept through some of it so still hasn't seen it in all its glory!) (Fun fact: Kimberly Williams, who played Annie, is married to Brad Paisley.)
I didn't say it above, but Tom Hanks is am American treasure. If you disagree with me, you're simply wrong. Another recent re-watch was Cast Away. As with so many of his movies where he just plays a guy who makes the best out of whatever situation he finds himself in, Hanks' marooned, lonely (other than Wilson), mostly silent character just seems like some version of himself. And he's awesome. Truly, I had a hard time looking away from the screen, despite having seen this one before. Some of that may be because there's so little speaking that you really do have to watch to know what's going on, but that's also a testament to what he can do as an actor without speaking.
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