April 20, 2007
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- Pearson: British miss after a hit
Franky MicklestoneREGARDLESS of whether Amy Pearson's debut album is a hit, the expat Brit will know she's given it her best shot...
- Posts from the Celebrity Checkout Category at TMZ.com
Steven BridgePosted Mar 12th 2007 1:12PM by TMZ Staff Move over Kim Kardashian, Caroline D'Amore and Nicole Richie, because Paris Hilton has a new BFF tutee -- Elisha Cuthbert...
- 2Movie: May 2005
Will SmithThe latest Star Wars movie has broken three Guinness World Records, it was announced today.They were previously held by Keanu Reeves thrillers, The Matrix Revolutions and The Matrix Reloaded...
- Man Alive to The But screenwriters are shuddering at the prospect
John HitchIt's TV for the YouTube generation: get the mission, fight, chase, fall in love, catch the baddie - The End-News-Tech Web-The Web-TimesOnline...
- Morris movie houses compete to fill seats
Sammy KingThe reopening of AMC Theatres in Rockaway Township after a five-year absence has created competition for movie fans in Morris County, with theater chains offering various rewards programs to keep customers coming...
- Posts from the Paramount Vantage Category at Cinematical
Hun LeePosted May 20th 2007 9:31AM by James Rocchi An ordinary man stumbles across a ring of corpses surrounding a fortune in cash and a mountain of heroin. A bad man follows in search of the money; a good man follows in search of the man...
- May. 13, 2007
Sam BoyleHere's what you should do this weekend: Go to the Coolidge and see "Day Night Day Night" without reading a single review. Don't even go to the Coolidge's website; they give the game away, too...
| Sammy King | by www.rockymountainnews.com. All rights reserved. | 17.07 | 0:19 |
Pegg, who played the hapless Shaun, this time portrays Sgt. Nicholas Angel, a London cop banished to the countryside because his stellar arrest record tends to make his fellow officers look bad. They'd rather not expend Angel's kind of energy.
Angel's transfer produces the expected results: It seems you can take the cop out of the city, but you can't take the city out of the cop. Angel brings his no-nonsense ways to the small town of Sandford, where no one seems to take law enforcement seriously, especially the police. Gradually, Nicholas becomes friends with a fellow police officer (Nick Frost, also of Shaun of the Dead) who ultimately tries to persuade him to lighten up.
As it happens, Frost's Danny Butterman is the son of the village's chief cop, Inspector Frank Butterman (Jim Broadbent). When Nicholas begins delving into a series of murders, the plot heads in a whole other direction. At that point, Hot Fuzz becomes an Americanized comedy, something along the lines of a spoof of movies such as Bad Boys II.
Wright pours on the firepower in willful pursuit of preposterous results. A ton of urban- cop violence lands smack in the middle of the placid English countryside. It's as if an army had invaded an old Ealing Studio comedy of the 1950s and attempted to blow it to smithereens.
The Shaun crew receives able support, notably from Broadbent, a fine actor in either the comic or serious mode, and Timothy Dalton, who proves surprisingly funny as a local businessman with an appallingly insincere smile. At two hours, Hot Fuzz probably overstays its welcome, but there are enough laughs to make the movie a worthy successor to Shaun, and this one is no less outlandish: Rarely have we seen a British comedy in which the protagonists are armed to the teeth with both wit and automatic weapons.