Father time is undefeated. And like a professional athlete who’s showing signs that they can’t quite keep up with a younger generation of competitors, Hollywood icon Clint Eastwood’s latest offering leaves me questioning how much quality filmmaking the 89-year-old has left in him. In typical Eastwood fashion, he places his sights on the true story of title character, Richard Jewell, the security guard and cop-wannabe who became a controversial figure following the bombing of the 1996 Olympics at Centennial Park in Atlanta. Eastwood uses Jewell’s heartbreaking experiences as an exposé on the careless and destructive behaviors of the mainstream media, the film’s clear antagonist. Yet, what transpires feels more like the incoherent grumblings of a miserable old man than an enlightening and eye-opening examination of what’s actually a legitimate issue.

Richard (I, Tonya’s Paul Walter Hauser) is a poor, overweight security guard with such a deep-rooted desire to protect people that it leads to some questionable behaviors that cost him a couple jobs along the way. But when Richard jumps on the opportunity to help protect his country at the security-needy 1996 Olympics, he can’t possibly prepare himself for the horrors that he’ll encounter after he stumbles across a bag of explosives. Richard Jewell may have saved countless lives by diligently doing his job on that fateful evening, but his sketchy past and a lack of other leads make him a prime suspect and anti-hero that a local journalist, Kathy Scruggs (Olivia Wilde), completely exploits with her reckless reporting.

Clint Eastwood’s film is a revolving conundrum. His intentions are deliberate, but meandering. His interpretation is clear, but clouded in hypocrisy. All of which make Richard Jewell a muddled mixed-bag of ideas and emotions. Eastwood waves a shameful finger at the news media and its desire for higher ratings and career-advancements built on the back of inconsiderate reporting. The film even goes as far as to accuse the now-deceased journalist Kathy Scruggs of obtaining private information from the F.B.I. by sleeping with an agent (played by Jon Hamm), none of which has ever been corroborated publicly, and this blatant disregard for truth and authenticity feels awfully hypocritical when you take into account the root of Eastwood’s story. It’s a back-handed low-blow by the director and his screenwriter, Billy Ray, who attempt to tackle the media’s obsession with releasing a story quickly rather than accurately, and the personal ramifications of those actions. Richard Jewell lived a grueling 88-day nightmare in the aftermath of the Olympic bombing, one in which he morphed from an instant hero to a devilish mastermind in the blink of an eye. In fact, this is the film’s most accomplished feat, hammering this burden and personal anguish into the viewer. However, Eastwood’s characterization of nearly every other facet of the story is shallow, superficial and deceptively inaccurate. Richard Jewell has the hopes of making an awards season splash but I’m not buying into this likelihood, even after Kathy Bates’ recent Golden Globe Nomination for her supporting turn as the security guard’s mother. Instead, Richard Jewell is another ho-hum effort from a once legendary filmmaker struggling to deliver a cohesive story in the twilight of his career.

GRADE: 2.5/5

Briefly: I don’t know how this one slipped under my radar for so long, but Sully looks fantastic.

A new IMAX trailer for the film, which was apparently shot almost entirely on IMAX cameras, has just hit the web, and is a tense as hell look at the anticipated film, which also features an interview segment with cast and crew.

Seriously though, this trailer is intense, and I can’t wait to see the insane-looking Hudson River scene on the big big screen.

On January 15, 2009, the world witnessed the “Miracle on the Hudson” when Captain “Sully” Sullenberger (Hanks) glided his disabled plane onto the frigid waters of the Hudson River, saving the lives of all 155 aboard. However, even as Sully was being heralded by the public and the media for his unprecedented feat of aviation skill, an investigation was unfolding that threatened to destroy his reputation and his career.

Take a look at the trailer below, and let us know what you think! Sully hits theatres on September 9th!

 

Momentum, releasing this weekend and starring Olga Kurylenko (Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol), James Purefoy (Rome), and Morgan Freeman (Like Everything Ever), is Campanelli’s directorial debut, but I wouldn’t call him a rookie. The Montreal native worked with Clint Eastwood for twenty years, starting with The Bridges of Madison County until American Sniper. You don’t work with someone like Eastwood for twenty years without picking up a thing or two.

“I mean learned everything from him, pretty much,” Campanelli explained. “He’s such an amazing director and he’s such a powerful story teller and that’s what I learned.”

Momentum entered production halfway through Eastwood’s American Sniper. “When I was leaving, he gave me words of advice. He said, ‘Just make sure you have a great script and you’ve got a great cast and you’ve got a great crew. That’s 90% of your job this time. Once you’ve got that…’ Then he paused. ‘Oh yeah, don’t forget you have to get a great caterer, because the crew needs to eat.’ Yeah.” I hear Campanelli laugh.

“People gotta eat!” I tell him.

“People have to eat and if it’s crap they’ll complain and if it’s good they’ll be on your side. So that was part of it. He’s got a great sense of humor, but what I learned the gentle nature of working with the cast. He empowers them, which a lot of directors don’t do. A lot of directors I find intimidate their cast and then the cast get a little on edge. He likes to create a very natural for the cast.”

Momentum, shot in South Africa for a modest $20 million, stars Olga Kurylenko as Alexis Farraday, a hotshot heist specialist caught in a game of cat and mouse with a ruthless assassin (James Purefoy) and his team of guns working for one of the most powerful men in the United States. Seeking revenge against the assassin for the death of her friends, Alexis sets out to uncover the truth and make it out alive.

I interviewed Momentum‘s director about his first time sitting behind the camera as a director armed with his visual instinct to create what I think is one of the most arresting indie action movies of the year.

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Geekscape: What made you choose an action movie for your directorial debut? Because actions movies are very complicated to craft. So what made you take it on, on your first go?

Campanelli: Yeah, in hindsight, it maybe wasn’t the wisest decision but I always jump in feet first. I never shy away from the battle or a challenge. So when I read the script, obviously I went, “Wow, there’s a lot of action. There’s a lot of stuff that happens here.” I am a big fan of the genre, so I was like, “Wow, I’ve watched so many of these over the years, now I get to do one.”

So I am very, very blessed and I thought, “Well I might as well jump in and I got to work with one of my best friends.” He’s a photographer, Glenn McPherson. He’s done a bunch of big budget action movies and I thought, ” Wow, this guy will help me a lot too.”

Being on set for 25 years and doing a mixture of all these Clint Eastwood movies, action movies and all sorts of genres, I was kind of prepared for it, because I kind of knew where to put the camera and I think a lot of directors don’t come from a camera back ground or a very visual background. So I would rehearse with the stunt coordinators. I would say, “So what’s going to happen here?” Then they would tell me and I would say,”Okay great.”

I just instantly knew where to put the camera, so it wasn’t like… I’ve been on sets with newer directors, that have no clue where to put the camera and either I would suggest or the director’s photographer will. I was kind of doing it on my own, “Lets put one here, another here, here.” We used go-pros and stuff, because it was action. The more coverage you got the better and the more dynamic it will be. I got very lucky with an incredible editor, Dubbie White, really made this film another dimension. He was so incredible. I just thought, “I’m going to jump in and do it.” I did.

You said your camera background allowed you to know, way ahead of time, where to put the camera. How else did your cinematography background influence you?

Campanelli: So as I read scripts in general, I’m always picturing the theme itself and I kind of picture where the camera is going. So I was very well prepared in production and all the texts counts and meetings with the crew. I told them exactly where I was going to put the camera. Even though, it was invisible space, so there was nothing there. I was like,” So I’m going to put this here. This is going to here. The guy is going to stand here.” So I was very good at that and I would say as a camera operator, but more so as a director, because no one is going to ever read the script, that I read and the cast read and all of that.

So my job as a director, especially, is to take those words off the page and put them on the screen. So the audience, that’s never going to read the script understands what we all went thought reading it, like the emotions and the visual nature of it. So as a camera operator, that kind of prepared me, because I do that all the time, is I take a camera and point it in the direction of a story and let it come to provision.

But obviously as a camera operator, I don’t get a lot the decisions of the performance and things like that. That’s the director’s job. I definitely enjoyed the extra aspect of working with the cast, getting the nuance of performances and just being able to tell the story in a more direct way, from being a camera operator, but that definitely helped me out. Also coming from the crew, I know what the crew goes through in making a movie. It’s not easy, it’s hard. So I definitely wanted to empower my crew and to really say, “Hey, were all part of this movie. Let’s make this together.” And we did. I was very fortunate of a great crew.

You mentioned Clint Eastwood likes to craft a particular atmosphere on set in order to achieve the best performances out of his actors. Do you do that as well?

Campanelli: I’ve done that as a camera operator too. I create like a nice cocoon for the actors of protection, of giving them judgement on their performance sometimes or just that I got the shot, so I know what I’m doing technically. So don’t feel afraid of screwing up a take, because I’ll get it, but if you give me a good performance I’ll make sure we have it and it’s not ruined. I think some camera people sometimes, “Oh I didn’t get that one.” And it was their performance of a lifetime. I’ve learned that from set too, because we shoot all the rehearsals, mostly on the first takes. So we have to be really prepared, so does the cast. So we all rise to the occasion and the challenge. So far it has been working out great. I’m trying to follow in his footsteps.

Speaking of performances, you have a very interesting cast. Olga really stood out to me, as there are not enough action heroines in Hollywood. What can you tell about the creation of her character and what can you tell me about Olga’s performance?

Campanelli: Yeah, she did. It was amazing. Like you said earlier, I am a big fan of female heroine movies. I just love them. I think there needs to be more of them. I think they are so entertaining to watch and it’s like putting an ordinary person, into an extraordinary circumstance. I just love that kind of situation, because the audience puts themselves in that situation too. They’re like, “What would I do if that happened to me?” I just really, really love that.

Olga, I worked with her on a movie called Phantom Psychopath, a few years back. I was very charmed by her, obviously by her beauty, but also because she’s just a nice, gentle, warm person. I thought I’d really like to work with her someday, so I put her in my mental bank and thought, “Well if I get a movie…”

Olga Kurylenko stars as "Alex" in Stephen Campanelli's 'Momentum.'
Olga Kurylenko stars as “Alex” in Stephen Campanelli’s ‘Momentum.’ Courtesy of Starz Digital.

When I read the script it was funny, because she just came to life in it and I thought, “Oh my God, this would be perfect for her.” So luckily we got it to her and she liked it. She’s done a lot of diverse roles, but this was her first lead action-thriller and she couldn’t of been better. She was so I banged her up and bruised her and cut her and she was amazing. She was like, ” Look Steve what you did, I got a big bruise because of you.” And I’m like, “Well it was worth it, because you did a great job.” She did a lot of her own stunts. Obviously the super dangerous ones, she didn’t do, but she did do like 80 percent or 90 percent of her own stuff, because she wanted to and I wanted her to also. She was such a trooper. It was cold sometimes and she never complained. She was such a treat to work with and I would work with her on anything again.

I’d say with James Purefoy, too. He played such a great evil guy, but yet he’s just so charming. I saw him in The Following and said, ” That’s it, he’s my bad guy. We got to have him.” Luckily he agreed and we got him.

What can you tell me about working with Morgan Freeman?

Campanelli: I’ve done three movies with him as a camera operator and we’ve gotten along very well. We’ve became like friends and he said to me, “When you get a movie and you get to direct it. If you have a role for me, I’d love to do it.” I said, ” Okay great.” Then this came out and I read the part of the senator’s role and I went, “Oh my god, Morgan would be perfect for this.” Luckily he agreed to do it, so I was very blessed. I was like, “Wow, my first movie and I got three of these top notch actors. I’m really, really lucky.”

Was he intimidating at all, to coach on set or was he very approachable?

Campanelli: Morgan is very funny. He is very intimidating on set, but he is a practical joker. He loves to joke with you, so he will intimidate you, but in a funny way. In the first movie, I was so intimidated by him and I thought he didn’t like me, but he was doing the opposite. He was really liking me, because he was intimidating me so much. He enjoyed doing it. So knowing him all these years, I felt very comfortable around him around him. You could tell the crew was like, “Oh my God, that’s Morgan Freeman.”

He commands so much respect and he’s such a very talented actor. We were great. We were very comfortable around each other. I had some notes for him, he had a couple for me and we just collaborate great on everything. He was so incredible at his lines, he remembered everything instantly. He very rarely needs another take, unless we have a technical problem or he cracks a joke in the middle of something. It was a real treat to work with all three on this cast. Like I said earlier I am really lucky to have such a great cast for my first movie.

James Purefoy, in 'Momentum.'
James Purefoy, in ‘Momentum.’ Courtesy of Starz Digital.

James Purefoy as the villain, I agree he’s so charming, but he’s also, like, I just want to destroy him. He is so awful. He beats up a kid! What influenced that character? Was there anything from other books or movies that went into that character? Or was that just a perfect storm of you and James Purefoy putting your heads together?

Campanelli: Right, right. That’s a good question. It probably is an amalgamation of a lot of other bad guys. James put a lot into the character, in terms of being so prepared and have some really nice notes about his character. I trusted the simplicity in that. When I first met him, we talked about his character and I said, “You know you are very evil, but I still want to make you charming. That the audience can kind of secretly, in their subconscious, cheering for you.”

We hate him, but kind of want to be him sometimes too.

Campanelli: In real life he’s like that too. He’s so charming and he’s such a great guy personally, that it transfers to his characters. He was so great in Rome as Marc Anthony and everything he’s done is brilliant. So we collaborated the whole scene, like that interrogation scene, till the end. He and I collaborated for weeks on that, just trying to get the dialogue just right, just perfect for that scene. When we finished, we were both exhausted from working, but we’d get together and talk about it, try to make it great. I’m very, very proud of that scene. So it was just a really good mutual effort on our part.

One of the things that really sold me about Momentum, it happens right from that start when you have the robbers in the black suits and LED lights. They look like really evil Power Rangers.  How did those costumes come about? Who came up with that idea and why did you go there as opposed to just your traditional ski masks and what not?

Campanelli: You almost answered it. I didn’t want to do anything traditional. I didn’t want to ski masks. Of course you’ve seen the Point Break robbers, you’ve seen all these things. I just wanted something different.

I’m not a very good artist, but I was sketching what I wanted and I described to the costume designer and props people, what I wanted. With weeks of just sketches, things kind of came to that final costume. I said, “I want a little bit of steampunk, with the glasses kind of thing.” I wanted texture, so we found this neoprene, not a normal neoprene, we found something with texture. We found this other neoprene that had all these microscopic holes in it. The light will catch that hole. So I’m a very visual person, being from the camera department, so everything in that costume was for a visual reason. That’s why, I wanted to signify the different colors so we know who is who. We had the red, the green, the blue and the purple. So I wanted to make sure the audience to kind of knew who was seeing what, because all of their voices were very similar, with the voice box. That was the whole reason to hide Olga’s character, obviously.

That was in the script originally, with the voice boxes. I thought, “Let’s take it to the next level and make these guys creepy and scary. Let’s open the movie with a bang.” That was my whole thing. I really wanted the first five minutes to grab peoples attention and go for the ride for the whole 90 minutes.

You did. Like I said, I’m a total nerd and I thought, “These guys are like evil Power Rangers. This is awesome!”

Campanelli: That’s great, I’m glad you got that.

I understand that you want to turn Momentum this into a franchise. Hell, the word Momentum means to keep going.

Campanelli: To keep on going exactly.

Olga Kurylenko, in 'Momentum.'
Olga Kurylenko, in ‘Momentum.’ Courtesy of Starz Digital.

Where do you see the story going from here? [Warning: Spoilers!]

Campanelli: I don’t want to give away to much, but I definitely have some ideas for these people and Olga is so excited. She’s really hoping this movie does well, because she really wants to do a sequel too. She loved the character. It was a very sad day when we called a final wrap. It was a very tough movie physically. It was really hard to make, because we had a really short time to do all this action I wanted to do. I didn’t want to do anything cheaply. I really wanted to make things big. It was a small South African movie that I wanted to turn into a big Hollywood movie.

I think I achieved it, but the last thing we see is obviously is going off on the plane. Then I had an idea that she’s so great with getting away with things, that in the sequel, obviously it’s really easy to track a plane. Morgan Freeman’s character, the senator, can easy track the plane wherever it lands. They arrest her.

So I have an idea, where they would be flying, obviously, and she has that computer hacker guy sitting next to her. He hacks the plane, when another plane is crossing their airspace and basically now they are following the wrong plane. Then now they don’t know where Olga landed. That’s how the story would start. She’s in a different country right now. They raid the wrong plane. They go on board, they try and find her. She’s not there and that’s how that would start. Then after that I have some other ideas, but I don’t want to give to much away.

I’m hoping it does well. People should go see the movie to see where it goes next. Then we could increase Morgan’s character a lot more and really bring him into the fold. So I think it would be an exciting ride for all of us.

Momentum is out now in theaters, On Demand, and iTunes.

Every year a few prestigious titles hold off their general release until the last possible moment. Although most viewers won’t be seeing Clint Eastwood’s American Sniper until 2015 (me included), a late-December limited release in the Los Angeles and New York City markets only qualified the film for the upcoming Academy Awards in February. The reason for this is simple, many people believe there’s a strategic advantage to being the freshest movie in a voting member’s mind. And while no one will really know the impact until Oscar Nominations are handed out on Thursday, January 15th, the fact remains that American Sniper is a well-earned return to form for Eastwood.

Bradley Cooper stars as the war hero and patriot, Chris Kyle. After a stagnant life in the Texas rodeo prompted the 30 year old to join the Navy Seals and defend his country, Chris Kyle was deployed to Iraq where he collected more than 150 recorded sniper kills. But rather than the enormous number of Iraqi insurgents he murdered with pinpoint accuracy in order to protect his fellow officers, Chris was most haunted by all the American casualties he failed to save.

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It’s an undeniable truth, war desensitizes you. But what can prepare someone for pinning the Navy Seal emblem on their chest and becoming a trained assassin in an endless war? Bradley Cooper gives his most valiant attempt at understanding such a person as he lives, breathes and transforms himself into Chris Kyle, the deadliest sniper in American history. Cooper’s immensely dedicated performance is both cold and selfless all at the same time. I watched an interesting interview where Chris Kyle described the barrier between the typical American lifestyle and the battlefield. Much like Jack Nicholson in A Few Good Men, Chris spoke about the every-day civilian’s inability to process what goes on in a war zone. We could never really understand unless we experienced it, and perhaps that’s what makes Cooper’s performance so golden. He peels the layers of a character devoted to his country and guilt ridden while state-side in between tours, but aware of the war’s crippling impact on his family life. This multi-dimensional story is brilliantly captured by Clint Eastwood, a director I’ve openly criticized after a lengthy decline in his quality of work. But much like a tough-love superior officer, I only offered my negative remarks towards Eastwood because of his illustrious history as a filmmaker. After the disappointing adapted musical, Jersey Boys, it was fair to say that Eastwood was capable of better. And with the upcoming general release of American Sniper, we’re given a refreshing taste of his prior greatness.

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Although American Sniper is a successful and tense action-drama, the feature suffers from a few detractors. Like many other recently adapted films, the source material is so expansive that it becomes impossible to transfer every aspect of the book to the big screen. Eastwood places the main focus on Chris Kyle’s time in Iraq and, as a result, cuts a great deal of the Navy Seal’s home life out of the script. Personally, I’m a fan of substance and story, so I would have gladly traded a majority of the constant gun fire and battlefield footage for a deeper insight into his personal life. Furthermore, some of the war-time scenes feel slightly unrealistic. Although a service member friend of mine assured me of more accuracy than I’d expect, witnessing Chris Kyle’s personal phone calls to home while out on important assignments seemed both irresponsible and highly fabricated. However, an Oscar-worthy performance from Bradley Cooper and detailed direction from Clint Eastwood clearly overshadow the film’s weaknesses.

With American Sniper you should expect a long-winded and slow-burning affair, regular staples in any Eastwood film. The repetitious cat-and-mouse struggle between Chris Kyle and a lethal Syrian sniper definitely over-extends itself as well. Yet, long after the credits roll,  Bradley Cooper’s towering portrayal of a complex national hero will not be forgotten. The same goes for Chris Kyle’s unselfish service to our country.

GRADE: 4/5

You can find other work from MCDAVE at his Host Site

Warner Japan is plotting a remake of  the Clint Eastwood western Unforgiven, and they’ve got Ken Watanabe (Inception) set to star in it. Variety  is reporting that in this remake director Lee Sang-Il will keep the 1880’s setting and the same general plot of the original but with Watanabe playing a samurai with a violent past. The location has been changed to the northern Japanese island of Hokkaido at a time when Japanese settlers were displacing the native Ainu people.

This is one of the few times we see a Japanese remake of an American film. It’s usually the other way around as seen in the past with such as films as The Ring (Ringu), Dark Water (Ju-On) and many others. Yurusarezaru mono which if it isn’t apparent means “unforgiven” in Japanese is scheduled for release next fall in Japan. Koichi Sato has been cast in the Gene Hackman role and Akira Emoto is set to play the Morgan Freeman part. You most likely can expect to see this hit the States sooner or later given what a high-profile remake this one is.

The Expendables 2 isn’t even in theaters yet and we are already hearing details about a third film in the franchise! Total Film sat down with producer Avi Lerner who revealed four stars that they’re trying to get in the sequel.

“We’ve approached Clint Eastwood to be one of the guys, we’ve got a character in mind for him. We’re talking to Harrison Ford. [And we want] Wesley Snipes when he comes back from prison. I’ll give you one more name, we’ve got Nicolas Cage to play [one of the characters].

And we’re going to bring Mickey Rourke back, if he won’t be too crazy. I like Mickey. And of course, all the existing stars [will return]”

Somewhere out there Geekscape writer Molly Mahan’s head just exploded. If they can pull this one off it’d be an incredible feat. Nic Cage has apparently already signed on and from the sounds of it Eastwood hasn’t said no yet to it. So, uh when do pre-sale tickets for The Expendables 3 go on sale?

Sometimes, the world kicks you in the ass and you can’t deal with putting on real clothes or moving from your couch for a few days.

Depression hits everyone sooner or later, and most geeks have a movie or three that substitute for medication. And until we all plug into an Avengers IV at the end of this week, here are Geekscape’s 24 FPS surefire depression treatments!

Jae Renfrow: Pristiq River

When I get depressed I usually don’t want to feel better, so I watch movies that’ll wallow with me. Like Million Dollar Baby. Oh, it’s all well and good early on. You’re sitting pretty learning gaelic and reveling in the witty banter between Morgan Freeman and grump Clint Eastwood. You get to see a trailer trash girl kick some butt and rise above her fried twinkie family. Next thing you know you’re biting your own tongue off hoping you drown in the blood. That’s life folks.

And Clint Eastwood has another sad bastard movie sitting on my shelf for those moody Mondays: Mystic River. You ever wonder what happened to all your friends? I do. And when it starts getting me down, I just pop in Mystic River so I can watch one child hood friend make another confess to the murder of his daughter so he can sleep at night. I remember doing this to my brother two years ago when I visited him in Kentucky. I kept saying. “Did you kill her? Just tell me you killed her. C’mon, you killed her didn’t you? Just tell me, it’s cool. You killed her. Say it.” And you know what? It works. He was a blubbering mess after five hours of it and I disposed of him in the woods out behind our house. Rest in peace, bro.

But on the rare occasion that I do want to feel better I just curl up with plate of brownies and watch Bring It On. Hot chicks having PG-13 fun, while trying to protect their cheerocracy from cheererrorism. I’m smiling just writing about it.

Time to get the sad spirit fingered right out of you!

Joe Starr: The Last Adapinbender

My primary depression movie is Transformers: The Movie, but sometimes I’ve got more sadness than Hot Rod’s got photon charges.

When that’s the case, I let Tom Cruise in The Last Samurai ease the pain. Cruise’s character Nathan Algren and I have a lot in common: he can’t find peace in his life and neither can I. One time he was ordered to slaughter a village of Native American women and children and sometimes I have tough sets on stage where people don’t laugh as much as I want them to. And Ken Watanabe has a way of delivering lines that make you mourn for the loss of Japan that Was like it’s something you experienced in person and not via Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3 when you were in fifth grade.

If I need a little more pick me up, I’ll burn through Book 3: Fire of Avatar: The Last Airbender like it was a bottle full of happy pills. “I don’t think boomerang is coming back, Toph.” Damn it, Sokka, it’s like you know me.

When that isn’t enough, I watch old Royal Rumbles on YouTube. And that’s when you need to start worrying me.

Steven Kunz: Cymbalted Away

Spirited Away has a real heart behind it and to see the amazing animation and the fantastic settings and characters makes it my ‘go to’ if I want to be inspired or become motivated to change things. It’s really enjoyable to see Chihiro initially learning how to be a servant in the bathhouse and watch her grow stronger throughout the film. This movie is also something I go to when I’m depressed because of, once again, childhood memories. I received a Japanese copy of this movie from an art teacher back in high school for the entire summer, a year before the movie came out. It was just a really nice gesture and I showed Spirited Away to friends and family for the entire summer.

Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back is so ridiculous and over the top in that it is impossible not to feel good about it. It’s a movie you can enjoy simply because of that absurdity. Great example of this would have to be Jay and Silent Bob fighting Cock-Knocker, played by Mark Hamill. How can anyone not laugh at Hamill playing a wacky character parodying the lightsaber fights from Star Wars?

Aliens is not only a classic and entertaining movie, but it also brings back childhood memories for me. This was a movie I first watched when I was in the 4th grade, and ever since I can pop in at any time and easily recall great childhood moments. The whole movie itself brings back a younger, happier time.

No matter how bad things are, you’re not Newt.

Matt Blackwood: Arthouse Abilify

This may sound odd, but my go-to movie when I’m feeling awful is a new one. I love getting lost in a story, and it’s tougher to do that when I already know what happens. I especially like to see a new movie in the theatre. I go all by myself and sit in the front and disappear into cinema for two hours. Being overwhelmed by someone else’s imagination takes my mind off my own problems.

Tim Powers: Thomas the Triavil Engine

My ‘go to’ depression TV show is Trains and Locomotives.

This hour-long show explores the trains and locomotives that aided the growth of travel, further settlement and the development of certain American industries and agricultural ventures.

Archival film footage shows many famous trains that operated dome cars, impressive private rail cars and illustrious sightseeing cars through the years.  You’ll see one-of-a-kind, world class trains that were once the very top for speed, style and service. Trains and Locomotives also features interviews with the people who rode, operated and managed the great trains of America’s vast railroads.

Climb aboard the Super Chief, the showcase train of the world famous Santa Fe Railway, which set the standard for all western passenger trains, or visit The California Zephyr, known as the “Silver Thread Through the West.”   Witness the documentation of a travel mode that provided scenery, comfort and high-class service across the United States – from President Lincoln’s private car to the latest most modern cars that are plying the world’s rails today. The unique and timeless footage captures the excitement of streamlined, steam locomotive hauled trains that will go down in history as a monument to the rail industry, as well as the growth of a the American nation.

Visit the machines of iron and rails that stretched from the first Eastern states along the Atlantic, across the expanse of North America to the new states along the Pacific.  If you like to view the world at eye level, or at the speed of steam and coal, then we welcome all aboard Trains and Locomotives on RFD-TV.

Mark Wensel: River Phoenix Remeron

Not only is Stand By Me my favorite movie, but I have a weird connection to coming of age stories that take place in the 60s. What? I like to watch movies about memories that I’ll never have. Is that so weird?

Anyway, there’s something about the story of four kids in their last summer of innocence. Happiness, leeches, guns and taking care of bullies! Then the end happens and you just kind of become a blubbering mess. Not only that, but the fact that the most talented of the four actors overdosed in the street at the top of his game. A more depressing movie that’s not about mass death there is not.

Matt Kelly: Harold and Marplan

There’s few films that are more hopeful, uplifting and well shot as Harold & Maude. Hal Ashby’s direction and Ruth Gordon’s delivery of Colin Higgins is enough to make you chuckle, smile and L-I-V-E LIVE LIVE LIVE.

The film is filled with beautiful motivational speeches that give you a desire to get up and make a change in the world. It’s been my favorite movie since I saw it over 9 years ago and will probably always be my favorite movie.

How can you still be sad after a wonderfully uplifting speech like this?

‘Mayhem’ Molly Mahan: Lexapro of the Fall

I used to say Legends of the Fall was my favorite movie (after all it is a pretty awesome flick), but then I realized I watch it so much because it was the only thing that made me feel better when I was down. When I broke up with my first serious boyfriend, I seriously watched it every day at least once for two weeks. I was a mess, but the awesome trio of Aidan, Anthony, and Brad made life bearable. It was a reason to get up in the morning (if only to find the remote to turn on the TV and crawl back into bed).

I think the reason it helps so much is because there is no way my life will ever be as bad as theirs. My wife isn’t going to be shot by Irish bootleggers, nor is she going to shear her head before blowing her brains out…possibly because I’m a heterosexual female and therefore will never have a wife, but I digress!

Though I don’t watch it as much anymore (perhaps I am more emotionally stable? Hah, yeah right!), whenever I am down on myself I still recall poignant scenes from the film and imagine myself as the characters. For example, today I was down on myself for whatever reason, so I thought of Samuel in his final scene: Blinded by mustard gas, hearing the voice of my savior and I smile, only to be shot down by the Kaiser’s men. Bastards.

That’s right. Brad’s gonna make everything better.