The Girl Who Leapt Through Time

Apparently an updated retelling of a popular Japanese young adult novel, TGWLTT takes that certain melodramatic romance that the Japanese do so well and adds a time-travelling twist. Young Mokoto gains the ability to literally leap backwards in time (from what appears to be walnut). Once she refines her ability in the pursuit of pudding and infinite karaoke, she is caught up in an ever-widening spiral of interlocking cause and effect as romance intrudes on her one-of-the-guys friendship with Kosuke and Chiaki.
This languidly paced comedy has some clever gags and appropriately tear-filled moments in all the right places. Worth checking out if you are looking for something a bit different from the standard anime fare.
Alone

You’ve seen J-horror films, time for some T-horror. Thai Horror, that is. Pim and her husband Wee return to Thailand when Pim’s mother is hospitalized by a stroke. As they watch Pim’s family home, she begins to see the apparition of her dead sister, Ploy. They were conjoined twins until their teens when they were separated. Wee watches in horror as Pim’s apparent schizophrenia grows until, he too encounters the enraged spirit. Once the secrets of Pim and Ploy start popping up, they can’t be buried again.
Alone doesn’t really break any new ground, but does a solid by-the-numbers job at piling on the tension until the ending pops like watch spring. If most J-horror frustrates you, check out Alone. This haunting has a purpose and plays by some rules.
AICN Secret Screening #1: Southland Tales

I wanted to like this one, I really really did. I absolutely loved Richard Kelly’s Donnie Darko, so my expectations were high. Sadly, Southland Tales turned out to be a bit of an unfocused mess.
Any attempt to summarize the sheer number of sprawling storylines in this parallel universe story would take fill paragraph after paragraph. Here’s as short as I can go: missing person and action movie star Boxer Santaros (Dwayne Johnson aka the Rock) resurfaces with amnesia in LA with a scifi screen play about a fourth dimensional apocalypse. Meanwhile, drug-addled officer Jason Taverner (Seann William Scott) gets pressed into a neo-Marxist plot against the security theater the Republican’s created after the nuking of Abilene. Drug dealers, Republicans, neo-marxists, HSA agents, messiahs and pop-porn stars all scheme and betray one another on the eve of a very real apocalypse.
Sounds like a lot? Sure is. Tales has four times the story threads and four times the casting needed for any one movie. I felt like I was watching several Cohen brothers films stewed with Repo Man and Strange Days. As fun as it is to watch everyone from Sarah Michelle Gellar to Wallace Shawn run about trying to come out on top, nothing quite coalesces into a satisfying ending. Kelly divides the film into chapters four, five, and six, relying on the audience to be familiar with chapters one through three as captured in the Southland Tales graphic novels. Seems like a poor plan for a movie’s success. This film might satisfy fans of the books, but I doubt it will make many new converts.
Oh, and my head still hurts from seeing Justin Timberlake lipsync The Killers’ "All These Things That I’ve Done" in a very Dude like moment.
Sex and Death 101

After giving us the very wicked Heathers, he stumbled a bit on his some of his other outings, with Sex and Death 101, writer/director Daniel Waters returns to form. Here Roderick Blank (Simon Baker) receives and email detailing every woman he has and will ever sleep will. As he comes to terms with the fact that his fiance is only number thirty-one on a list of a hundred or so names, a mysterious female serial killer is drugging men into permanent comas. Roderick stumbles down a debauched trail destined to collide with so-called Death Nell.
In the hands of other directors, Sex and Death 101 could have been a bland paint-by-numbers mainstream comedy. But remember, this guy did Heathers. The loads of laughs here are tempered with some cutting, bittersweet insights into the world of sex and dating for those in their thirties. Baker does a great job in this balancing act. He’s smug enough to be the ladies man but has the chops to make you believe the hard revelations he comes to.
And props to Patton Oswalt for the best introduction at FF 07 so far: "I’m the kale. We’ll bring down that Australian creme brulee, Simon Baker, after the movie. You gotta choke this shit down right now."
Postal
Uwe Bolls latest video game movie. Yes, the guy that did House of the Dead, BloodRayne, Alone in the Dark, etc. There’s a whole internet full of trash talk about Boll and his career, so I won’t waste the pixels here. You should google it some time, it’s actually funny, unlike Postal. This movie is the worst film I have ever seen. Really. And trust me, I’m counting all the arty, ineffective student films I’ve ever seen too. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Dr. Boll, I know you wanted to shock and out Southpark Trey Parker and Matt Stone but sorry, I was only shocked how devoid of humor the film was.
The QnA was worth staying for, however. Postal star Zack Ward (aka Scut Farkus from The Christmas Story) upstaged the always angry and dour Boll (sporting a Boll Power t-shirt, no less). Zack displayed all the charm, wit, and current events awareness of a really boring beer-shotgunning rawker who would have been in Heavy Metal Parking Lot if they hadn’t left his scenes on the cutting room floor. The very drunk Ward spouted off for about forty-five minutes leaving very little time for Boll to do his thing. At the end of the QnA, Boll sat there massaging the bridge of his nose and wondering if perhaps the whole "any publicity is good publicity" idea was really working out.