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Common Sense Movie Reviews: Music and Lyrics (2007)
Original at Common Sense Movie Reviews
• Tue, Apr 14
By TheAnswerMVP2001 When it comes to romantic comedies I'm a big fan of Hugh Grant. Over the past couple decades he's been the king of the genre, but after the horrible film American Dreamz I had my doubts about how good Music & Lyrics could possibly be, maybe Grant was finally getting too old for these types o...
Common Sense Movie Reviews: The Lair of the White Worm (1988)
Original at Common Sense Movie Reviews
• Tue, Apr 14
By TheAnswerMVP2001 I believe I have officially discovered a film that could be comparably worse than most American horror films... a British one! In browsing through the Netflix assortment of Hugh Grant films I stumbled upon The Lair of the White Worm. A horror film starring a young Hugh Grant that almost appear...
Review - Cutaways - Start Stop! Start Stop!
Original at dieshellsuitdie (Blogspot)
• Sun, Oct 26
By dieshellsuitdie Richard Curtis and Hugh Grant would probably dig them too. Closer 'I Don't Understand What You Don't Say' isn't quite as good as the three songs before it, due to the too sugary synths and sounding like 'In The Morning' by Razorlight. ...
Opinion: Action: Mike and Melody discuss Music and Lyrics
Original at The Reporter
• Thu, May 24
Melody: Another fluffy romantic comedy written by Marc Lawrence who has also penned Forces of Nature, the two Miss Congenialities and Two Weeks Notice, all of which starred Sandra Bullock. Sandra must not have been available to play opposite Hugh Grant this time round (they were both in T...
Movie Review: Music and Lyrics - Grant and Barrymore Romance
Original at Blogcritics
• Fri, Feb 23
By Tall Writer The basic premise of the new romantic comedy Music and Lyrics joins two talented people together through music and circumstance. Hugh Grant plays Alex Fletcher, previous co-lead singer of the music group Pop. Drew Barrymore completes the romantic couple as Sophie, an eccentric, endear...
Opinion: music & lyrics
Original at MOG
• Wed, Feb 21
By emscee It starts off with a deliberately cheesy, ersatz-'80s video of a song called "Pop! Goes My Heart," by a Wham!ish duo (of which Hugh Grant is the Ridgeleyish half), and then we see Grant in the present, exploiting his past glories with an air of cynical acceptance. So far, not bad, and since yo...