Born on the Fourth of July, 8/10
This is an Oliver Stone biopic about Ron Kovic, a Vietnam vet turned anti-war activist in the 60s and 70s. Considering it's from 1989 this film feels decades ahead of its time. It's a really raw, unflinching and uncompromising portrayal of Vietnam fervor, PTSD, abandonment of veterans and all the baggage these broken men brought home with them. Cruise is genuinely great in the central role, and I'm frankly astonished that I never see this performance mentioned anywhere. Young Cruise is perfect for the role, since he manages to embody both the bright-eyed, upbeat naivete and the harsh, broken nihilism the character requires. The film also avoids cheesy Hollywood-isms, choosing to just show things in a matter of fact, everyday way, which makes Ron's state really sink in the further it goes on. You really get a sense of how Ron tries to return to his former life, but no matter how hard he tries, something has been broken inside of him. There are no major issues with it, besides maybe the pacing. Since the movie's meat lies in Ron's life after Vietnam the first act can feel kind of rushed as we see him go through high school. A fantastic positive surprise and highly recommended.
I also watched about 20 minutes of Pitch Perfect on TV,
and based on what I saw I don't think this film has aged well at all, despite being less than a decade old. I don't know if it struck a chord with the Glee crowd because that show was big at the time, but man, there just is no way to make acapella singing cool. I legit had trouble parsing what the movie was going for. It wasn't absurd enough to be a parody, not funny enough to be a straight-faced comedy, and definitely not compelling enough for me to be engaged. For the most part it felt like a completely typical american college comedy with all the tropes, except this time it's acapella singing and an almost all-female cast. I previously mentioned how Mean Girls managed to be relatable to me despite being squarely aimed at american audiences, and this film fails at that. I turned it off at the part where it seemed the movie was genuinely expecting me to feel tension about an acapella singing competition. For me to care it would have either needed to be way more ridiculous and absurd, or to feel more relatable to someone outside of the american college experience. Anna Kendrick is super hot though, so points for that I guess.