Tag Archives: alice eve

Dakota Fanning Filters Star Trek in Please Stand By

Directed by Ben Lewin, Please Stand By introduces the world of Wendy, played by Dakota Fanning, a confusing place.  Wendy is an imaginative and resolutely independent young woman. She is a brilliant young woman with autism.

The autism message is upbeat and supports individualism – accept people for who they are. If you don’t, you take away their freedom.

Wendy yearns to leave the steadfast schedule of her group home. She wants to return to a life she had with her sister’s family. They have a new baby, so she needs to prove she can be responsible first before she can live with her sister again.

Wendy is a staunch fan of anything to do with Star Trek. She even spends a great deal of her free time writing fantasy stories, proving she is a capable person.

The movie starts off tilter but we soon learn that Wendy uses her Star Trek filter to understand people. People are an indecipherable code.

The story takes an interesting turn when Wendy learns about a screenplay competition. She is determined to finish her 500-page Star Trek script, so she can enter the competition.  If anyone knows about screenwriting, you know 500 pages are about 390 pages too long.

Wendy needs to get the script to Hollywood.  The problem is getting it there by the deadline, Wendy must travel hundreds of miles outside her protected boundaries to submit her script in person.  The story becomes a road-trip movie.

Wendy has an adorable little dog named Pete. She carries him in her purse with only a few dollars in her pocket.  In her terms, she is boldly going where she has never gone before.  Her unconventional therapist, played by Toni Collette, is not far behind in hopes of catching up with her. The same for Wendy’s sister, played by Alice Eve.

On her trip, Wendy meets all sorts of people who help her. These are colorful moments in the movie. They all encourage her to follow her dream and find her place in a world she hopes will accept her.  She wants to be accept just like everyone else.

Fanning is great as Wendy, and its refreshing to see her work with Collette and Eve.

Misconduct

misconductDirected by Shintaro Shimosawa, he guides an all-star cast and follows the dangers of power and ambition manifested in Misconduct.  I was fortunate to have a Blu-ray with Digital HD to view the movie. The movie is shot well by Michael Fimognari, who is known for shooting low-grade horror movies.

The intense legal thriller is headlined by Josh Duhamel with Oscar winners Al Pacino and Anthony Hopkins to back him up with their solid acting.  Other strong cast members are Alice Eve, Malin Akerman, Byung-Hun Lee, Julia Stiles, and Glen Powell.

We follow Duhamel’s character, who is an ambitious lawyer. He is seduced by his ex-girlfriend, played by Akerman. At the same time, she presents evidence that incriminates her boss, a corrupt pharmaceutical executive.  He finds himself caught in a power struggle between the pharmaceutical magnate, played briefly by Hopkins, and his firm’s senior partner played convincingly by Pacino. When the case takes a deadly turn, he must race to uncover the truth before he loses not only his wife, played by Eve, but his career, and possibly his own life.

I was entertained by this movie because of the suspense, and the ending was believable. Al Pacino and Anthony Hopkins are true talents and professionals. They were so real and engaging. I watched the movie with two other people, who also enjoyed the movie, so it is worth the rental and time.

If you decide to get the Blu-ray, the look behind-the-scenes of Misconduct includes in-depth special features including “The Making of Misconduct” and deleted scenes.