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| Kam's Kapsules by Kam Williams Anchorman (PG-13 for profanity, sexual humor, and slapstick violence). Raucous comedy, set in the seventies, with Will Ferrell as a smug TV news anchor who finds his position threatened by an ambitious female reporter (Christina Applegate). With Vince Vaughn and Chuck D, and cameos by Jack Black, Tim Robbins, and Ben Stiller. Coffee and Cigarettes (R for profanity). This collection of 11 black-and-white short films comes courtesy of director Jim Jarmusch. Each vignette features frank conversations by characters consuming copious quantities of caffeine and nicotine. Cast includes Bill Murray, Cate Blanchett, Roberto Benigni, Steves Buscemi, and Wright, and crooners Iggy Pop and Tom Waits. Dodgeball (PG-13 for profanity and rude, sexual humor). Underdog sports flick about a bunch of average Joes who take on a dodgeball team sponsored by the corporate fitness chain threatening to turn their local gym into its next the franchise. With Ben Stiller and Vince Vaughn. Fahrenheit 9/11 (R for profanity, violence, and disturbing images). Oscar winner Michael Moore's controversial documentary damning the Bush administration's handling of the war on terror. Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (PG for frightening images, creature violence, and mild epithets). Third installment in J.K. Rowling's chldren's series has hero Harry (Daniel Ratcliffe) and his Hogwarts classmates on the run from a renegade wizard (Gary Oldman) who has escaped from prison after being convicted of murder. King Arthur (PG-13 for profanity, some sensuality, and intense battle scenes). Oft-told tale of the Knights of the Round Table gets refreshed as action-oriented costume drama with Clive Owen as Arthur, Stephen Dillane as Merlin, Keira Knightley as Lady Guinevere, Hugh Dancy as Sir Galahad, and Ioan Gruffudd as Sir Lancelot. The Mother (R for graphic sexuality, profanity, and drug use). Erotic drama, set in London, about a 65 year-old grandmother who embarks on a passionate fling with a married man half her age, knowing that he's already having an affair with her own daughter. Napoleon Dynamite (Unrated). Coming-of-age comedy about a weird teen being raised by his uncle and grandmother in rural Idaho where his commitments to dancing and to the path of the ninja have left him socially-isolated. The Notebook (PG-13 for brief nudity and some scenes of sexuality). Adapted from the Nicholas Sparks novel of the same name, the film revolves around a cardiac patient's (James Garner) reminiscences about the World War II era start of his 60-plus year relationship with his high school sweetheart (Gena Rowlands) who is now suffering from Alzheimer's in a nursing home. Shrek 2 (PG for crude and sexually suggestive humor, and a drug reference). Mike Myers, Eddie Murphy, Cameron Diaz, John Lithgow, and Conrad Vernon lend their voices to another animated adventure about the ornery ogre with a donkey (Murphy). The sequel has Princess Fiona (Diaz) taking her new hubby (Myers) home to meet her disappointed parents (Julie Andrews and John Cleese). Sleepover (PG for mature themes involving teens, some sensuality, and mild epithets). This teeny-bopper comedy takes place at a slumber party for 8th grade girls which turns into an all-night scavenger hunt involving stealing cars, sneaking into nightclubs, and kissing boys. Spider Man 2 (PG-13 for stylized action violence). Tobey Maguire reprises his title role as Marvel Comics' Superhero, this time to save the planet from the dastardly designs of a mad scientist known as Dr. Octopus (Alfred Molina). Also returning are Kirsten Dunst, James Franco, Ted Raimi, Elizabeth Banks, and Bruce Campbell. The Stepford Wives (PG-13 for expletives, sex content, and mature themes). Remake of the 1975 film based on the Ira Levin best seller about a suburban town whose eerily-subservient housewives seem a little too plastic and too perfect to be believable. Nicole Kidman, Bette Midler, Glenn Close, and Faith Hill appear as spouses of Matthew Broderick, Jon Lovitz, Christopher Walken, and Matt Malloy, respectively. The Terminal (PG-13 for profanity and drug references). Stephen Spielberg directs Tom Hanks in this romantic comedy about a refugee from Eastern Europe, escaping civil war in his homeland, who is denied entry into the U.S.A. because his country no longer exists. Unable to clear customs, the immigrant makes friends and finds love in a New York City airline terminal. Two Brothers (PG for mild violence). Wildlife epic, set in Cambodia in the 1920s, traces the adolescent ordeals faced by a couple of sibling tigers, separated as cubs, after one is trained as a circus performer while the other is trained to kill. White Chicks (PG-13 for profanity, drug use, crude and sexual humor). Wayans Brothers crime comedy, directed by Keenan, starring Marlon and Shawn as FBI agents, who pose undercover in drag and whiteface as the Wilton sisters, a couple of rich, young hotel heiresses. | |||||||||||||||