And parents not only let their kids watch it, but ENCOURAGED it, because Jesus.
Adam from YMS put it best when he said that the only way to get US Christian conservatives to watch not only a gore movie, but also a subtitled movie, was The Passion of the Christ.
Also I watched
The Notebook, 5/10
This is based on a Nicholas Sparks book, and if that name says anything to you then you know what to expect. It's a story about Allie and Noah in 1940s South USA, who have a whirlwind summer romance as teenagers, and then end up reuniting 7 years later under more complicated circumistances. I went into this expecting a gigantic schmaltzfest, but the 7.6 on IMDB suggested otherwise, so I kept my mind open. And I was pleasantly surprised in several respects. It's not something I'd deliberately seek out or watch, but it was pleasant enough.
First off: Rachel McAdams must have dealt with some serious back issues from how hard she carried this movie. Among a cast of not very remarkable characters and fairly good acting across the board, McAdams is putting every inch of her soul into her performance, and elevates the movie all by herself. At first I was dreading this movie turning out to be a combination of Titanic and Twilight, but those fears were allayed after the first act, and McAdams is a big part of that. The acting and tone overall are a lot more grounded and nuanced than what you might initially expect. Despite this being a straight up melodrama, it has an honesty and a groundedness to it that kept me from rolling my eyes all the way through. It's also got some nice period piece production value to it, and it's shot pretty well, so it's also a good looking movie. The score is also nice, if rather overly insistent at several points.
In a way I'm kind of conflicted about how to view this movie: is it a bog-standard romance drama that's elevated by its great aspects, or is it a romance drama that could be great, but is dragged down by being so bog-standard? A movie like this lives and dies on its characters, and they're about as basic as you get: Noah is a poor, rough country boy, Allie is a wealthy city slicker, and they just don't get along, but oh they do love each other so much! Allie is at least elevated by McAdams' acting, but Ryan Gosling's best work this is not. Plus he looks so much like Bo Burnham in
Inside that it's hilariously distracting. The rest of the cast have so little effect on the plot that they barely warrant a mention: I liked that James Marsden's character wasn't a romantic foil or antagonist, but instead an actual good guy. Joan Allen is also great as the mom, even if the character is also very basic.
Whoops, I guess I forgot something: the movie's presented from a framing device where a man is reading the titular Notebook to a now old and dementia-ridden Allie at an old folks home. It's nice enough, but the two narratives are completely separate from one another. It feels like two movies smashed into one: one about a young romance, one about an old couple in their fading years. It ends up dragging out the movie's runtime and ending, making both of its constituent parts feel partly incomplete. I get what it's going for, but as executed it doesn't really make good use of the combination.