Last week
Sandra Bullock
celebrated her 40th birthday. (Do you really "celebrate" turning 40?
I mean, there are still fingernail marks in the floor from my being
dragged into 30. -- Yeah, I know, I have to get in front of the wave
with my blogs; I'm always playing catch-up.) Here are my thoughts on
the best, worst, and most watchable Sandra Bullock movies.
Sandra Bullock's Best Movie
Okay, no
pussy-footing, right out of the gate let's give the people what they
want. If you are talking about quality of filmmaking, Sandra's best
movie hands down has to be "In
Love and War," the stirring romantic and tragic tale of young
Ernest Hemingway's love for an older-woman nurse during World War I.
Directed by the immortal Richard Attenborough this film is sumptuous
class all the way. A fantastic, touching, lush, beautiful film.
(That's right, I used "the f-word" -- FILM!) Watch the
widescreen version. Trying to watch the fullscreen version is like
watching television with your nose pressed against the screen:
everything is really huge and 75% of the picture is out of your field
of vision. $5.50 at your local Wal-Mart. Why are you still sitting
there? Oh yeah, I promised you more....
Sandra Bullock's Most Overlooked Movie
I'll give this one
to "Gun Shy"
even though she's only a supporting character. This film has a bumpy
"What the hell is happening?" start and is definitely on the quirky,
artsy-fartsy side, but Sandra is delightful and the film works just
well enough to deserve at least a single viewing.
Sandra Bullock's Worst Movie
At first I thought
of "Love Potion No.
9." Then the atrocity that was "Two
if by Sea" came to mind. (Dennis Leary, how could you?
Actually, Dennis Leary in just about anything should be a
warning sign.) But, and I thought I had totally purged it, the
absolute worst Sandra Bullock movie of all time presented itself to
my reluctant memory. This isn't just the all time worst Sandra
Bullock movie it may be one of the all time worst movies ever made.
The winner, um, loser? "Fire
on the Amazon." I'm not going to describe it because my
description would only make it sound interesting and you might be
suckered into losing a good hour+ of your life. Trust me: RUN!
Run for you lifes! Grab the children and get out of here while you
can!!!! My duty here is done.
(Don't you hate it
when you squish a bug and it melds to your finger so no amount
of rubbing or scraping will remove it? You just permanently have this
little bug face on your thumb, staring up at you like, "Dude, that
was so uncool." Damn, gnat on the monitor. -- Sorry, I was
distracted. Shiny objects and all that. Uh-oh, people are staring...
tie it all in quick... Well that's exactly what this movie will be
like, stuck like a squished bug in the middle of your horrified
brain, if you don't take my advice and you stupidly dare to watch it!
Yeah, good recovery, no-one even noticed.)
"Fire on the
Amazon" is most famous for Sandra Bullock's "nude" scene. She
even tried to have the film killed. Listen -- she is not nude.
She might have been naked when they filmed it but you don't see a
bloody thing. I know. I paused, zoomed, squinted, and used the
highest powered microscopes known to man. Zero, zip, zilch, noda. You
get far more nudity during the average NYPD Blue episode, This
film was nonsensically hit with an NC-17. I bet it could be played on
basic cable with hardly an edit. YAWN. Assuming it isn't a
body double, which it may well be, it's my opinion you see more of
Sandra Bullock naked watching "In Love and War." At least you
can make out her butt.
(Great, now I am
going to get all those Google hits for "Sandra Bullock naked" and
"Sandra Bullock's butt.")
Sandra Bullock's Most Underrated Movie
"Speed
2: Cruise Control." It's pretty good, actually. "Two thumbs
up," even. The major flaw in it is that Jason Patric should have been
playing Keanu
Reeves' character. The idea that she's involved with
another hazardous duty cop and doesn't know it after her
supposed breakup with Keanu's character from the first film does
not work. Ignore that stuff. Pretend it's the same male
character being played by a different actor and it's a much better
movie.
Sandra Bullock's Most Re-Watchable Movie (and probably my
favorite)
I think the most
re-watchable of all Sandra's movies may well be "Hope
Floats." I couldn't count the number of times I have seen
this film. I've even been known to watch it 2 or 3 times in a row. It
is the perfect "depression" movie. Feeling low? Get yourself a crate
of cheesecake, put "Hope Floats" on loop and sit there in your
pajamas staring at the TV for a week. It's great fun. Try it.
The first time I
tried to watch "Hope Floats" disaster struck. I had just
bought the movie (Wal-Mart again), brought it home, and put it
straight into the VCR. Less than 30 minutes from the end, my VCR ate
the tape. (No, DVDs don't solve that problem. My DVD has
played magically disappearing and reappearing DVD with me.) Every
time I would tell someone this they would start laughing
hysterically. But no-one would tell me how the movie ended, darn it!
They would just laugh like it was some kind of punchline. Hey, some
"audience participation" here! How does the film end!?!?! Anyway, I
finally got out a screwdriver, took the offending machinery apart,
rescued my tape, put it in my newly purchased VCR and got to
see the end.
(Do not
watch "Hope Floats" on television! They chop the thing to
pieces. They even cut the ending! They actually cut the part that
contains the line about hope floating!!! Arrrrgh!!!
Seriously, there's important stuff during that ending. ABC and their
ABC Family channel, which cut a nearly 2 hour movie down to 2 hours
with commercials, ought to be ashamed of themselves.)
I'll put "Practical
Magic" as a runner-up in this category. A mixed-bag of a
film, but fairly re-watchable. I saw them play this at a senior home
once. About the time the exorcism began all the little old ladies got
up and fled the room. (The DVD for "Practical Magic" gets my
nomination for worst commentary track ever. They took three different
commentary tracks -- one by director Griffin
Dunne, one by Sandra Bullock and, I think, the producer, and one
by the composer -- and instead of having them separate they just
spliced them all together. The worst is Dunne's. I've never in my
life heard someone drone on so monotonously anywhere outside of a
Mensa convention.)
Okay, there you
have it, my picks for some Sandra Bullock movies worth seeing and
avoiding. (Throw "28 Days" into that last category while you're at
it.) Happy Birthday, Sandy! Here's to 40 more! (kissy kissy)