Cameron Crowe's ELIZABETHTOWN
Orlando Bloom, Kirsten Dunst, Susan Serandon

i won't summarize too much, since this film has been out for a while, but it's about Drew (Bloom) who hits rock bottom, career-wise, in a spectacular way, only to have to fly to Kentucky and retrieve his estranged father's body after a heart attack. Sounds depressing as all get-up, but Cameron Crowe never neglects those funny/bizarro moments in life that keep your head above water if you glance their way. The supporting cast is fantastic: Judy Greer and Paul Schneider, especially. Susan Serandon plays wife/mom, like she seems to do alot these days, but she brings her Susan Serandon panache to it, and her tap dancing scene had me bawling. Orlando Bloom did a good job being a steady center around which the rest of the story and cast could swirl and tumble. Kirsten Dunst wasn't as annoying or dsitracting as she usually is, but was still her snaggle-tooth lazy-eyed self. Really, she was the only flaw in an otherwise impeccable film. And with Cameron Crowe, with the story or acting starts to drag, there's ALWAYS a killer soundtrack to compensate. 4.5 out of 5 Free Birds.
AN UNFINISHED LIFE
Robert Redford, Morgan Freeman, Jennifer Lopez, Bart the Bear
J.Lo opposite Big Red? i was intrigued. And i loves me some good Robert Redford, who actually flexes his mean bone in this film by Lasse Hallstrom (What's Eating Gilbert Grape, Cider House Rules). Redford plays Einer, a Wyoming rancher who lost his adult son Griffin in an accident 10 years ago and still carries the wound. It made him drink and made him mean, but he still cares for his friend Mitch (Freeman), who used to help him on the ranch until he was mauled by a bear (Bart) and now just kinda hangs out. La Lopez is Jean, Einer's estranged daughter-in-law, who unbeknownst to Einer, was pregnant when Griffin died and said baby is now Einer's granddaughter Grif.

The strange and lovely relationship between Mitch and 'his bear' continues throughout and underneath everything going on with the humans and is an obvious metaphor for the stuff going on with Einer and Jean, but Freeman's one scene with his nemesis/friend makes it worth it.
This movie got panned by critics, and i understand why, but i still liked it. i liked how the story made no apologies for being simple and not controversial. Nothing new from Redford or Freeman, and Lopez doesn't seem to want to get out of the 'pretty' box. In this film, it's 'hurt and pretty,' which is boring. Yell! Grunt! Do something unpretty! Even when she gets mad at Einer, it's in a low, pretty whisper. Oh well. At least she got out of the romantic-comedy spiral of death. Becca Gardner, who plays Grif, was very good and was refreshingly unlike typical kid-actors. The scene where she asks Redford and Freeman if they're a gay couple was a fantastic surprise. Great shots of 'Wyoming' (probably Canada) and anything with a bear is good stuff. 3 out of 5 steadycam shots.