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Eric Melin

Eric met with “Flyboys” star James Franco last week to talk about the dangers of being a World War I pilot and get the scoop on the upcoming “Spider-Man 3” movie! (Warning: “Spider-Man 3” spoilers ahead, beware!) Quicktime users click here.

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One of the funniest parts of “Jackass Number Two” is the warning at the beginning that states that all stunts were “performed by professionals.” In the strictest sense of the word, I guess anybody who gets paid thousands of dollars to chug an entire beer through his butthole is a professional. Using that criterion, that […]

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Watching Howard Hughes’ “Hells Angels” fleet of biplanes speed recklessly across the sky in the 2004 Hughes biopic “The Aviator,” I remembered thinking that there is a great movie waiting to be made about World War I pilots at the dawn of aviation. “Flyboys” is not that movie. It is set in 1917 and features […]

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Eric and J.D. review Brian De Palma’s neo-noir thriller “The Black Dahlia” and discuss its relevance to Bret Michaels and Poison with a straight face. Scary. Click on the photo for the Windows Media version of this on-camera review.

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“It’s like, how much more black could this be? And the answer is none. None more black.” Nigel Tufnel from Spinal Tap may have been talking about the color of his new album, but he may as well have been talking about “The Black Dahlia.” By definition, film noir is black. Pitch black. Some argue […]

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For his first lead role since the 2004 surprise hit “Garden State,” Zach Braff is back with “The Last Kiss,” a melodrama about impending adulthood that is seriously lacking in laughs. Unlike “Garden State,” though, which defined ennui for the post-emo college crowd, this remake of recent Italian film “L’Ultimo Bacio,” was not written or […]

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George Reeves was an Average Joe. A struggling actor whose apparent suicide in 1959 suddenly made his unremarkable tale a whole lot more intriguing, Reeves reluctantly took the role of Superman on TV after a series of false starts at a serious movie career. The actor in a similar career slump these days who portrays […]

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There’s something fascinating about magic again. In an era where computer-generated special effects can portray the most stunning of creatures or stunts, there is something exciting about watching a magician like Criss Angel or David Blaine leave onlookers in a state of shock by performing a trick right in front of their disbelieving eyes. It’s […]

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On the way home from a screening of “Little Miss Sunshine” starring Greg Kinnear, Steve Carell and Toni Collette, Eric and J.D. review the movie and try not to wreck the car, which is not being pulled by a truck.

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Eric and J.D. review the new Mark Wahlberg sports flick “Invincible”, while a hardcore Philadelphia Eagles fan ridicules them and the Dallas Cowboys. Can our dedicated critics keep their focus or will they lose the battle to a big green bald man who takes no prisoners and has eaten no lunch? Click on the photo […]

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The standard sports movie cliché usually involves an underdog team faced with seemingly insurmountable obstacles in their way. They look deep within themselves and, against the odds, pull out an unlikely victory. “Invincible,” the newest Disney sports film, more or less follows that formula with one exception. Vince Papale’s teammates don’t even want him on […]

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If the quirky little indie comedy “Little Miss Sunshine” would have been made inside the Hollywood studio system, some studio executive somewhere would have suggested that the directors insert the Rolling Stones song “You Can’t Always Get What You Want” during the film’s cathartic finale. The title would have been changed to something more easily […]

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After a screening of Oliver Stone’s new 9/11 drama “World Trade Center” starring Nicolas Cage and Michael Pena, Eric and J.D. sit down outside the theater and hug it out. As always, the review also features clips from the movie! Click on the photo for the Windows Media version of this on-camera review.

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Oliver Stone is the last person one would think of to direct a straightforward survival movie about the World Trade Center attack that is free of post-9/11 politics and full of religious empathy. Yet that’s exactly what the rabble-rousing director of “JFK,” the biggest government conspiracy film ever, has done. Whomever you think is responsible […]

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Three cheers for the most unsung hero in comedy—the film editor! In the case of the newest improv-heavy Will Ferrell comedy “Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby,” the MVP of the movie is most definitely editor Brent White. Just as he did with 2004’s “Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgandy,” White had to choose […]

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