
.MOVIE
LISTINGS
| MOVIE REVIEW ARCHIVE
| THEATER INFO
OPENING
OR RETURNING:
Films open the Friday following
date of EW publication unless otherwise noted. See
archived movie reviews.
Awake:
Pretty young things Hayden Christensen (Star Wars Episodes
I-III) and Jessica Alba (Sin City) star in this thriller
about a young man who experiences creepy, crazy things while under
the knife (but completely aware) for a surgery. R. Movies 12.
Business of Being Born, The: Ricki Lake executive
produced Abby Epstein's documentary about the maternity care system.
"No one, male or female, pregnant or childless, who sees The
Business of Being Born will ever see the hospital maternity
ward as a normal environment again," said Salon. Screens
as a benefit for the Eugene chapter of the Oregon Midwifery Council.
6:30 pm Feb. 7 and 13, Cozmic Pizza. $5-$25 ss.
Crossroads Film Festival: Second annual international
festival shows films from around the world and uses the proceeds
to support programs helping visiting students at OSU. Feb. 10 screenings:
Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter and Spring (Korea) and Son
of the Bride (Argentina), 1 pm; Window to Paris (Russia/France)
and In This World (Afghanistan), 4 pm; Chaos (France),
6:30 pm. Festival continues through Feb. Darkside Cinema, Corvallis.
$8 per screening.
Ethnic Fim Studies Series: Series focuses
on "Faces of Global Migrant Labor" with My Migrant Soul and
Fun@Sun: Making of a Global Workforce. 6 pm Feb. 14, 240A
McKenzie, UO. Free.
Films of Cuba's Special Period, 1994-2003:
Film series presents La vida es silbar (Life is To Whistle),
directed by Fernando Pérez, in which three characters in Havana
wrestle with their pasts, faith and futures. 7 pm Feb. 13, 129 McKenzie,
UO. Free.
Fool's Gold: Fools' choices? Kate Hudson
and Matthew McConaughey play a divorced couple who reteam to bicker
endlessly — and search for a sunken treasure. Totally sure
they stay divorced in the end, too. PG13. Cinemark. VRC Stadium
15.
I Love Choice: Planned Parenthood hosts this
festival of documentaries that examine the struggle for reproductive
rights. Films include Motherhood By Choice, Abortion Denied
and Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness. 7 pm Feb.
12, DIVA. $5 adv. (at Novella Café and Sundance), $7 door.
In the Name of the King: Let us not forget
that in 2006, director Uwe Boll (Bloodrayne) challenged his
harshest critics to boxing matches. Boll's new film involves a good
man (Jason Statham, oh, dear) who takes on a nasty sorcerer (Ray
Liotta!) after the sorcerer captures his wife (Claire Forlani).
PG13. 150 min. Movies 12.
Kurt Cobain: About a Son: Images of people
and scenes of the places the iconic Cobain grew up, and places significant
to him, are set to audiotaped interviews conducted with Cobain (by
journalist Michael Azerrad), adding up to a personal, ambient and
intimate portrait. Not rated. 97 min. Bijou. See review this
issue.
Margaret Mead Traveling Film Festival: New
York's American Museum of Natural History organizes this festival,
which is locally presented by the UO's Museum of Natural and Cultural
History. Films show for three Fridays in February; the first is
China Blue, a look at young women working in impossible conditions
in a jeans factory in China. 5:30 pm Feb. 8, 175 Knight Law, UO.
$3, students free.
P.S. I Love You: Holly (Hilary Swank) must
go on without the love of her life, Gerry (Gerard Butler) when illness
strikes. But for her 30th birthday, she gets a letter and a tape
from Gerry, telling her how to make the most of her life. Sorry,
have to end this there; I feel a bit queasy from all the sweetness.
PG13. 126 min. Movies 12.
Star Trek: The Next Generation: Writer Eric
A. Stillwell presents "Yesterday's Gold," an episode he co-wrote
in which the Enterprise discovers a strange rift in space.
(Stillwell, Lolita Fatjo and Mary Conley lead a workshop on writing
for sci-fi TV at 9 am Feb. 9.) Shows at 7 pm Feb. 8, DIVA, with
Q&A to follow. $5, $3 stu.
Swedish Film Series: Ingmar Bergman's Autumn
Sonata follows a famous pianist as she visits her daughter,
who lives in the country, and is surprised to find that her other,
disabled daughter is living there as well. 7 pm Feb. 8, 177 Lawrence,
UO. Free.
Videomaker's Forum and Slam: A newly expanded
forum for video creators to discuss and share their work. Forum,
4 pm; Slam, 5:30 pm Feb. 10, DIVA.
Vince Vaughn's Wild West Comedy Show: Subtitled
30 Days and 30 Nights — Hollywood to the Heartland,
this film follows Vaughn and four stand-up comedians across the
country as they perform 30 shows in 30 days. R. 100 min. Cinemark.
Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins: Martin Lawrence
plays R.J. Stevens, a famous self-help guru who finds he can't escape
the guy he used to be when, at the request of his parents, he returns
to his Georgia hometown for their 50th wedding anniversary. PG13.
Cinemark. VRC Stadium 15.
Wild & Scenic Environmental Film Festival:
This collection of conservation-oriented short films covers topics
from bicycling to coffee, dogs to salmon, kayaking to lawn tending.
Guest speakers will also appear. 7 pm Feb. 7, 180 PLC, UO. $7.
Films open the Friday following EW publication
date unless otherwise noted. See archived reviews at www.eugeneweekly.com
CONTINUING:
Across the Universe: Julie Taymor (Titus,
Broadway's The Lion King) puts her ambitious but unsatisfying
spin on a love story built around Beatles songs, following a young
man (Jim Sturgess) and the girl he falls for (Evan Rachel Wood)
amid the tumult of the 1960s. PG13. 131 min. Movies 12. 44211 (10/18)
Alvin and the Chipmunks: What's next? A live-action
Care Bears movie starring Jason Lee? (He's in this and Underdog,
for those not keeping track.) Those wacky little creatures with
the high-pitched voices will surely cause him some trouble in this
newest bit of family fare. With, um, David Cross. Now I'm confused.
PG. Cinemark.
Atonement: Finally, Joe Wright's adaptation
of Ian McEwan's exceptional — and exceptionally difficult
to summarize — novel comes to town. Atonement takes
place across years, as the actions of young Briony (Saoirse Ronan)
have lengthy, unimagined consequences to the futures of her sister
Cecilia (Keira Knightley) and their housekeeper's son, Robbie (James
McAvoy). OSCAR NOMINATIONS: BEST PICTURE, BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY,
BEST SCORE, BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS (SAOIRSE RONAN). R. 123 min.
VRC Stadium 15.
(1/10)
August Rush: Keri Russell and Jonathan Rhys
Meyers star as a musical young couple whose lovelorn encounter produces
a child. Orphaned "by circumstance" (says the description), the
boy (Freddie Highmore) grows up to become a musical prodigy. OSCAR
NOMINATION: BEST SONG. PG. 113 min. Movies 12.
Bee Movie: Not much looks all that sweet
about this animated comedy, in which Jerry Seinfeld voices a recent
bee college graduate who learns, to his shock, that humans have
been stealing bees' honey for ages and ages. With the voices of
Renee Zellweger and Matthew Broderick. PG. 90 min. Movies 12.
Bucket List, The: Jack Nicholson, I expect
this kind of thing from. But Morgan Freeman? In this schmalty-sounding
flick about two new friends trying to cram all the adventures of
a lifetime into a considerably shorter amount of time? Oh, Rob Reiner.
Once upon a time, you made a good movie or two. PG13. 97 min. Cinemark.
VRC Stadium 15.
Charlie Wilson's War: Mike Nichols directs
from an Aaron Sorkin script this political … drama? comedy?
… about a congressman (Tom Hanks) who combined forces with
a CIA agent (Philip Seymour Hoffman) and a rich socialite (Julia
Roberts) to direct a massive covert operation during the Cold War
era. OSCAR NOMINATION: BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR (PHILIP SEYMOUR HOFFMAN).
R. 97 min. Movies 12.
(1/3)
Cloverfield: It'll be no surprise to fans
of J.J. Abrams' Lost that the characters in Cloverfield,
an Abrams-produced film about a group of friends trying to survive
a monstrous attack on Manhattan, have their own MySpace pages —
among lord knows how many other sites adding to the movie's mythos.
Though it's gripping while you're in the theater, the movie's flaws
start to come to mind once you step back into daylight. PG13. 90
min. Cinemark. VRC Stadium 15.
Dan in Real Life: Poor Dan (Steve Carrell)
is an advice columnist with a passel of daughters whose life is
further complicated when he falls for his brother's girlfriend (Juliette
Binoche). Also, the brother is played by Dane Cook. PG13. 99 min.
Movies 12.
Diving Bell and the Butterfly, The: Julian
Schnabel's affecting film puts viewers inside the mind of Jean-Dominique
Bauby (Mathieu Almaric), the French Elle editor whose entire
body was paralyzed — except for one eye, via which he blinks
to communicate. Gracefully told and beautifully acted, Schabel's
film is one of the best-received of the year. OSCAR NOMINATIONS:
BEST DIRECTOR, BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY. PG13. 112 min. Bijou.
(1/24)
Eye, The: Jessica Alba plays an accomplished
violinist, blind since birth, who discovers after cornea transplant
surgery that she can see death … before it happens!
With Alessandro Nivola and Parker Posey. PG13. Cinemark. VRC Stadium
15.
Game Plan, The: The Rock stretches his dramatic
skills as a football player faced with a strange challenge: a little
girl who claims to be his daughter. PG. Movies 12.
Golden Compass, The: An only slightly above
average film based on Philip Pullman's utterly brilliant novel.
In a world much like our own, everyone has an animal companion who's
part of themselves, and one little girl (Dakota Blue Richards) is
the key to saving not just her own world, but countless others as
well. With Daniel Craig, Nicole Kidman and Sam Elliott. PG13. 113
min. Movies 12.
(12/13)
Hannah Montana & Miley Cyrus: Best of Both
Worlds: Just what it sounds like: a concert film on tour with
the tween sensation. Cinemark. VRC Stadium 15.
I Am Legend: Will Smith does the all-by-his-lonesome
thing in a New York City left not exactly empty after a manmade
virus devastates the globe. During the day, he tries to find other
survivors; at night, he tries to survive the creatures that are
what's left of humanity. PG13. 100 min. Cinemark.
(12/20)
I'm Not There: Portland filmmaker Todd Haynes'
(Far From Heaven) unconventional Bob Dylan movie is one of
the year's most anticipated — and, for the most part, highly
praised. Different actors, including Cate Blanchett, Heath Ledger
and Christian Bale, play incarnations of Dylan over the decades.
"One of the most inventive and joyous movies of the year," said
Salon. OSCAR NOMINATION: BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS (CATE BLANCHETT).
R. 135 min. Bijou LateNite.
(12/6)
Juno: Director Jason Reitman's turned out
another buzzworthy movie, this time with a screenplay by newcomer
Diablo Cody. Ellen Page (who was outstanding in Hard Candy)
plays a pregnant teenager dealing with herself, her future, her
parents, the best friend who fathered the kid and the couple who
wants to adopt it. "Hilarious and sweet-tempered, perceptive and
surprisingly grounded," said the Los Angeles Times. OSCAR
NOMINATIONS: BEST ACTRESS (ELLEN PAGE), BEST DIRECTOR, BEST ORIGINAL
SCREENPLAY, BEST PICTURE. PG13. 96 min. Cinemark. VRC Stadium 15.
(1/10)
Meet the Spartans: Didn't I just joke, a
few weeks ago, that apparently everything must get its own send-up
movie now? The latest addition to the bloated category spoofs 300,
Britney Spears and, um, You Got Served. PG13. 84 min. Cinemark.
VRC Stadium 15.
Michael Clayton: George Clooney plays the
title character, a "fixer" at a law firm. When one of his colleagues
seems to snap, sabotaging a major case, Clayton is forced to take
a good look at what he's doing. "A terrifically engrossing, tethered-to-the-real-world
drama," said Entertainment Weekly. OSCAR NOMINATIONS:
BEST ACTOR (GEORGE CLOONEY), BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR (TOM WILKINSON),
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS (TILDA SWINTON), BEST DIRECTOR, BEST SCORE,
BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY, BEST PICTURE. R. 119 min. Cinemark.
(10/25)
Mr. Magorium's Wonder Emporium: This story
about a magical toy store, its owner (Dustin Hoffman) and the young
shop employee who might inherit it (Natalie Portman) is written
and directed by Zach Helm, who also wrote last year's Stranger Than
Fiction. G. 94 min. Movies 12.
National Treasure: Book of Secrets: Nicolas
Cage returns for more adventure and hijinks — something to
do with the president's secret book (hey, this sounds like Crooked
Little Vein!) and clearing his family's name; did great-great
grandpa have something to do with Lincoln's assassination? With
Helen Mirren. PG. Cinemark. VRC Stadium 15.
No Country for Old Men: The latest from the
Coen brothers is a near-masterpiece, an adaptation of Cormac McCarthy's
acclaimed novel, and it's earning plenty of acclaim itself. The
story involves a small-town sherriff, a deadly drug deal and a psychopathic
killer (Javier Bardem). The reviewers say "intense," "searing,"
"an evil delight." OSCAR NOMINATIONS: BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR (JAVIER
BARDEM), BEST DIRECTOR, BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY, BEST PICTURE. R.
122 min. VRC Stadium 15.
(11/29)
Over Her Dead Body: Eva Longoria (or is that
Longoria Parker?) stars as a bitchy ghost who doesn't approve of
her former fiancé's (Paul Rudd) new love — who can see
her. PG13. Cinemark. VRC Stadium 15.
Persepolis: Marjane Satrapi's fantastic graphic
novel memoir makes its way to the screen directed by Satrapi and
Vincent Paronnaud — and seems to leap straight from the page.
Moving, smart, funny and compelling, the story follows young Marjane
as she grows up in troubled, tumultuous Iran, then goes to Vienna
as a teen to escape the fundamentalist rule. OSCAR NOMINATION: BEST
ANIMATED FEATURE. PG13. 95 min. Bijou.
(1/31)
Pirates Who Don't Do Anything, The: Those
talking side dishes return in the latest Veggie Tales movie, in
which three veggie pals set sail into the 17th century and learn
what it means to be heroes. G. Movies 12.
Poultrygeist: Lloyd Kaufman's chicken-zombie
horror-comedy (with musical numbers). Bijou LateNite.
Rambo: Jon Rambo (oh, you know who plays
him) sees his solitary life in Thailand come to a crashing close
when two American human rights missionaries (Julie Benz and Paul
Schulze) track him down and ask for his help getting into Burma.
When they don't return, Rambo knows what must be done. And it involves
cheesy one-liners! R. 93 min. Cinemark. VRC Stadium 15.
Strange Wilderness: Steve Zahn and Allen
Covert star as the hosts of a failing nature program whose only
hope for saving their series is to find something truly different
to feature: Bigfoot! R. Cinemark. VRC Stadium 15.
There Will Be Blood: Oscar-nominated Daniel
Day-Lewis stars in Paul Thomas Anderson's (Magnolia) dark
film about an evil oilman who heads to a California town, where
a preacher (Paul Dano) accepts his presence on the condition that
the oilman will help fund a church. "A force beyond categories,"
said Roger Ebert. OSCAR NOMINATIONS: BEST ACTOR (DANIEL DAY-LEWIS),
BEST DIRECTOR, BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY, BEST PICTURE. R. 158 min.
Cinemark. VRC Stadium 15.
Twenty-seven Dresses: Current It Girl Katherine
Heigl (Knocked Up) stars in this always a bridesmaid, never
a bride story of Jane, whose sister gets the guy Jane's in love
with. But with James Marsden (Enchanted) around, you've got
to assume Jane's not going to have a totally unhappy ending. PG.
107 min. Cinemark. VRC Stadium 15.
Untraceable: Another movie about the horrors
of technology! Goodness! This time, a nasty, tech-savvy internet
criminal is killing people at a speed determined by the number of
hits his ghoulish website gets. Diane Lane and Colin Hanks are gonna
get the bad guy, though. An awful lot seems to go on in the preview
for this one. R. 110 min. Cinemark. VRC Stadium 15.
MOVIE
THEATERS
Use the links provided below for specific show times.
Bijou
Art Cinemas
Bijou Theater 686-2458
| 492 E. 13th
Regal
Cinemas
VRC Stadium 15 342-6536
| Valley River Center
Cinemark
Theaters
Movies 12 741-1231
| Gateway Mall
Cinemark 17 741-1231
| Gateway Mall
|