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4/10
A stepping stone for Ringwald
25 March 2020
If you grew up in the 80s you probably saw your fair share of John Hughes films and thought of Molly Ringwald as a big star. When this film was about to come out the big deal about it was: Ringwald was treated as a woman, not a girl. It even said "woman" in any studio media leading up to the release. People weren't so much interested in this movie because of the story, but because everybody knew Ringwald was moving on from her John Hughes treatment into adulthood - like much of Ringwald's audience.

The year after this movie (1988) Ringwald went on to "Fresh Horses" in an even more adult role, but it was also not a big hit. By then the "Brat Pack" magic was effectively over and all those young celebs were moving in their own directions. Ringwald didn't experience much success until "Townies" in 1996, and by then the movies that painted her fans' image of her were well in the rearview. People might feel nostalgia for those John Hughes roles, but they weren't trying to relate to them anymore. Unfortunately Ringwald either didn't have a sense for what people wanted, or, more likely, she just had her own ideas about what she wanted to do. But despite working more or less continuously since the 1980s she never attained the kind of fanbase she had in those days.

So "The Pick-up Artist", while not a great film, still had a position of some importance for people who grew up watching Ringwald's earlier films. It was more of a event than a movie, an event which ultimately was disappointing but served a purpose in that people who wanted a glimpse of the future learned that not everything goes the way you might like, even for our idols. There's really no way anyone who didn't grow up during the era can understand how this movie drew a line dividing childhood and young adulthood. That was really the appeal of this film.
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Operation Ganymed (1977 TV Movie)
1/10
Even the title is bad
11 May 2019
They couldn't even get the name Ganymede right in the title. Pretty much tells you all you need to know about this movie.
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Bargain Mansions (2017– )
1/10
For people who love the generic
3 May 2019
This show is all about buying a perfectly good period home, ripping out everything period about it, and making it look like a current tract home. I'd recommend this show if you want a house that is anonymous looking and doesn't stand out at all, maybe good if you're in witness protection or something like that.
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Mrs. Brown's Boys (2011– )
2/10
An insult to viewers
10 February 2019
Going in I'd hoped this would be like a sillier version of "All In The Family", and while this does have similarities it has none of the delivery or genius. Let me just sum it up here - this show shares a lot with sitcoms of the mid-1970s. Jokes, production values, a live audience, a laugh track. Think of a very mediocre mid-70s sitcom and you've got this show. That's really all there is to it.

About the laugh track: this alone is enough to break a show. Basically a laugh track says: this is not funny but you should laugh anyway because we told you to. Now, I acknowledge that this show is performed before a live audience, but it's clear this laugh track is dubbed in for the "benefit" of television viewers. Very sad not to mention irritating.

The jokes, as others have mentioned in their reviews, do not surprise or creep up on you. Practically all of them you've heard before and they were laid to rest decades ago. If you find comfort in the predictable, the tired and well-worn, then you'll probably like this show.

This is a live stage production, which is sort of interesting and it seems like the actors do play up to the audience. Unlike some of the reviewers here I felt the performances were adequate for this type of production. However, this show is no "Mary Hartman". The fourth wall is frequently broken, almost like an appeal for forgiveness from the audience, and there is no brilliance on this stage.

The story is drab and goes nowhere. Other shows have successfully taken a nothing story and done wonderful things with it to keep the viewer engaged, but apparently the producers of "Mrs. Brown's Boys" never watched "Seinfeld."

That being said, there is obviously an audience this show appeals to. I can't determine if this is a generational gap or something else, but apparently people either really love this show or can't stand it. I also give credit for trying this type of live 70s-style comedic production but what this show brings to the screen honestly isn't worth watching.
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