MOVIE THEME
(week 18)-Harold & Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay: A fitfully funny yet less excellent sequel, Kumar lights up a bong on an airplane, but the device gets mistaken for a bomb, which results in the two getting tossed into Guantanamo. The movie milks the absurdity of prejudice in so many ways that it threatens, at times, to wilt into a liberal fable. It's a mesh of the funny and the draggy, yet goosed by little volts of comic shock. Cho gives Harold's exasperation vigor and snap, and Penn plays Kumar as a fully fleshed character
(week 19)-Nim's island: Anything can happen on Nim's island, a magical place ruled by a young girl's imagination. It's an existence that mirrors that of her fav. literary character, Alex Rover- the world's greatest adventurer. When Nim's dad goes missing from their island, a twist of fate brings her together with Alexander, the author of the rover books. Now they must draw courage from their fictional hero, Alex Rover, and find strength in one another. Watch this movie if u are looking for the Hollywood's hottest child star or a more flapping and neurotic Jodie Foster.
(week 20)-What happens in Vegas: Ashton Kutcher and Cameron Diaz play a mismatched pair of gamblers who meet, party hard and wake up in Las Vegas only to learn that they got hitched during what should have been a sloshed one-night stand. To lay claim to a $3 million slot-machine payoff, the two are forced to live together for six months as husband and wife. Kutcher, who gives his most energized performance to date, and Diaz, darting between the caustic and shrill, look as if they're warming up to groovy hate sex, not love, which may be why the film goes flat the moment it turns friendly.
(week 21)-Made of Honor: When Tom met Hannah, the two were at college, and they ended up as buddies. After 10 years of palling around, he realised that Hannah is the one for him. But she's gotten herself engaged-to a towering hunk of a Scotsman. She wants Tom to be her maid of honor. To win her over, he seizes upon the emasculating role, a process that starts out routinely but grows steadily funnier as the movie arrives in Scotland. Made of Honor is a nice cookie-cutter comedy, no more or less, but Dempsey, with his relaxed charm, and Monaghan, with her soft and peachy sensual spark, rise to the challenge of making friendship look like the wellspring of true love.

