New York, New York - (Martin Scorsese;1977;USA)
After WW2, a saxophone player and a singer fall in love in New York City but soon struggle in their relationship.
A very good film that could've been great, suffering from overlength and at times losing track of it's characters in the musical numbers. Them music is great however, and the acting is very good. What impressed me the most was how this was a tribute to the Golden Age of cinema. I loved the various set pieces and backgrounds used from old films.

Red Eye - (Wes Craven;2005;USA)
A woman is forced by a middle man to help assassinate a politician while she's on an airplane.
The first have is actually pretty good, depending on genuine suspense and dialogue. The second half off the plane however turns towards cliche, and gets ridiculously predictable. The acting in the first half was also good, but sloped in the second half, because that half didn't demand much from them.


Proud Member of the Gangster BB Bratpack - Fighting Elitism and Ignorance Since 2006