It's a dream come true for every well-behaved school girl to find a bad boy who could be her guardian in the world of love, sex, and dance. What better opportunity to do this than to take part in a summer holiday and mingle with the staff? What can come of the clash of two classes and two beautiful bodies entangles in a passionate embrace? Unforgettable dance and music, a teenage hit, parents' worst nightmare loved to the extent of having a remake this time with the Cuban revolution in the background. If you have a craving for young love and a whole lot of dance classes, enjoy. Dirty Dancing and Dirty Dancing 2 Havana Nights.
We all have mothers. It unites us. Distant mothers, mothers who died when we were little, overprotective mothers, mothers toxic, demanding, and neglectful. Some of them shaped us, motivated and instilled values and courage. Others destroyed our relationships, family bonds, and made us give up our friends. Some mothers were for us a difficult example to follow and a role model for whom we weren't good enough. Some mothers were for us a shame due to their failing personal lives, disease, behavior, appearance. But without them, we wouldn't be who we are today. We simply wouldn't be. But to have a mother who is so blindly besotted with her child's success to the extent that it actually comes true happens once in a lifetime. Two acting talents of their epoch, two lives of connected human beings, one goal. And one hilariously good story about one extraordinary mother and how she pushed her son to success. Promise at Dawn, enjoy.
Love. It makes kings abdicate, priests give up their promise of celibacy, people move to another city, and villains change. It's no laughing matter as it proves to be a significant factor in your pursuits, motifs, and targets. It puts your previous aims into perspective and makes the journey worth living. But can two people: one who sells what only love can give you asking nothing in return, and the other: who can buy everything in the world, clash and make something genuine in the world of glitter and false promises? A fairy-tale story of demoralized Cinderella and one modern lonely king. Any chance for true love? Pretty Woman.
Close your eyes for a while. Focus. Breathe. Remember the sweet joy of summer days spent with your friends and toys? Remember times when you were blissfully unaware of the seriousness of adulthood, the necessity to pay for bills, rent, and food? Do you recall the past when your parents' problems were incomprehensible to you and you'd rather eat sweets, chew the chewing gum, and do all those naughty little things that you were usually not allowed?
All of us had different childhood: some were kept in the bubble of financial security and high expectations, others had the money benefits taken away from them, but instead, gained great freedom, imagination, and adventure. Some witnessed things that they shouldn't witness, as parents were only people and we were yet to see how flawed, troubled, and mistaken they all were. A tribute to childhood, summer, and the miracle of us still being alive, taken into account the threats we came across every day and our guardians' issues. The Florida Project.
Finding the right partner is hard. Matching characters and mutual interests are not always the basis for a love-affair. There are a lot of minute differences and variables which make forming a lasting relationship almost an impossibility, even if we pretend that we have something in common. But what if being single was subjected to punishment? What if the ideology of a couple was preferable and the single life doomed to discrimination and eternal seclusion? What if there were places where kiss, sex and falling in love were forbidden? Which camp would be the right place for you? A brilliant film showing us how ridiculous we are in the pursuit of socially accepted happiness. Is the dystopian scenario really that far from reality? The Lobster.
Love, romance, starting a new life, reuniting with the first love seem to be restricted to the young. Stereotypes don't apply to these two films. They offer us an exotic adventure, an insight into a different culture, they make us believe that it is never too late to change something, to move house, to quit a job, to end an unhappy and disrespectful relationship. And the chance of starting a new life is also the right of those who thought that their lives are already over. Soaking up the sun of the Orient, you have a feeling that there's not much you actually need from life: a shelter, some clothing, and simple food is enough to make you get by. For us, spoiled by the western civilization with houses, cars, mortgages, expensive bags, brands, jewelry and luxurious holidays, it's good to remind ourselves that the majority of our world's population doesn't have it that great. And despite the fact, they seem to be a lot happier than all those better-off.
Convoluted plot of fairy-tale Hungarian Hotel takes you to a completely different realm of vocational trust, loyalty, and intrigue. Great choice for setting as Europe can provide dozens of spectacular views, historically burdened characters, and antique mansions. Wes Anderson is a great conductor in the play of people's windy life paths which cross and intercross with every blink of your eye. In those half-empty hotel rooms, there are more stories to be written than in the Great Library of Alexandria.