Posted by Craig Kessler on February 15, 2010 at 7:30 am
Crazy Heart is a tale about a broken man at the end of his career trying to live- it-out and roll-with-the-punches. Bad Blake (Jeff Bridges) keeps his music career alive by playing in dumpy venues, but just barely getting by as he feeds off his former glory from his country star days. He is older, has been divorced multiple times and is an alcoholic. On his travels he gets interviewed by a local reporter named Jean (Maggie Gyllenhaal), and the two form this relationship despite their troubled pasts.
Bad Blake is dealing with the crossroads of his dying career while watching his protege Tommy Sweet (Colin Farrell) become a rising country star. With no money, and alcohol controlling his life, he looks towards his new relationship and his predecessor for a second chance at a new life.
This movie is a slow paced character driven movie revolving around the singers troubles and his hopes for a new chance. Jeff Bridges puts on a performance that may win him the Oscar, at least I think he will win it. The movie touches a cord and the fact that Bridges sings and plays the guitar gives it an extra dynamic. Don’t expect any real action, but if you like top notch acting and character pieces, this movie is for you.
Snap Review of Crazy Heart

What did you think of Crazy Heart?
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Posted by Nick Ondras on February 7, 2010 at 10:29 pm
Oscar season is among us, and like I previously mentioned people are finally giving the nominations a chance. However, if you didn’t see any of them odds are you saw Dear John, the latest adaptation of a Nicholas Sparks novel. It knocked Avatar off its seven-weekend #1 spot to debut in primary with $32.4 million. The romantic drama starring Channing Tatum and Amanda Seyfried as a couple who communicate with each other through letters trumped Nights in Rodanthe’s opening weekend of $13.4 million, the last book-turned-movie of Sparks. It also topped The Notebook’s bow of $13.5 million in 2004.
Not so far away from Dear John, James Cameron’s Avatar took a 24.6% dive to second place with $23.6 million. Its domestic total last week finally beat Titanic’s lifetime of $600.8 million with a massive $630.1 million cumulative. The next film from Taken director Pierre Morel From Paris With Love opened with $8.1 million. The action/thriller starring John Travolta may have suffered from the fact that its targeted audience of men was too busy preparing for Sunday’s Super Bowl game, with no time to go to the movies.
In fourth place, Martin Campbell’s Edge of Darkness fell a steep 59.3% from first place with $7 million. The revenge thriller’s total is up to $29.1 million in ten days, trying to make back an $80 million budget. Tooth Fairy finishes us up at #5 with $6.5 million, falling 35% from last weekend. The Dwayne Johnson-starrer has a grand sum of $34.3 million in three weeks.
Out of the top five-
- Like I said, the Oscar baits are finally getting the cash they rightfully deserve. Scott Cooper’s Crazy Heart, starring a likely win Jeff Bridges, increased 58.1% over football weekend and entered the top ten, expanding onto 580 more screens. The country-western weeper has a total of $11.2 million.
- It was funny seeing Lone Scherfig’s An Education came back to the marquees in Connecticut this weekend. The coming-of-age flick, with best actress nominee Carey Mulligan (deserving a win), found its weekend total go up 668% as it amplified an extra 686 screens. The two-day expedition total: a healthy $915,000. Its complete epitome: $9.8 million.
- Tom Ford’s A Single Man was playing on another 137 more screens, resulting in a weekend total of $631,000, a 14.1% increase from last weekend.
- Michael Hoffman’s Leo Tolstoy biopic The Last Station came onto 42 more screens and inherited $371,000, 337.8% more than its last check-in.
- Michael Haneke’s The White Ribbon entered four more theaters and came out with $132,000, a 12.9% increase.
- IFC’s Red Riding Trilogy, three films from author David Peace following an English serial killer in the ‘70s and ‘80s, debuted with $15,500 on one screen.
- Henrik Ruben Genz’s drama Terribly Happy, about a relocated cop after a mental disruption, managed $13,000 on one screen.
- Meanwhile, The Hurt Locker was sent to DVD by Summitt, which removed it from theaters. Summit, revenue wise, messed up.
Here are the box office results according to studio estimates Sunday-
- 1. Dear John…$32.4 million
- 2. Avatar…$23.6 million
- 3. From Paris With Love…$8.1 million
- 4. Edge of Darkness…$7 million
- 5. Tooth Fairy…$6.5 million
- 6. When in Rome…$5.5 million
- 7. The Book of Eli…$4.8 million
- 8. Crazy Heart…$3.7 million
- 9. Legion (2010)…$3.4 million
- 10. Sherlock Holmes…$2.6 million
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