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| 27 Dresses |

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| 2008 Romantic Comedy of The Year |
The makers of Knocked Up bring you another romantic comedy.
Katherine Heigl stars alongside James Marsden as a morbid exploited personal assistant. The story focuses on Jane (Katherine
Heigl) who has been a bridesmaid at 27 different weddings without ever being the bride. The one person she does actually love
is her charming boss. When she finally plucks up the courage to show her feelings, her sister Tess, swoops in and before she
knows it is getting married to the man of her dreams. Meanwhile, Malcolm Doyle played by James Marsden is a columnist who
keeps following Jane around desperately trying to get a date while writing stories on her and Tess' marriage. It all gets
very complicated and I will say no more because otherwise I will spoil 27 Dresses for you.
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| 21 (2008) |

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| The Inside Story of Six MIT Students Who Took Vegas for Millions |
With the ongoing popularity of high stakes poker, greenlighting a film
like 21 would appear to be a Tinseltown no-brainer. After all, you've got the true story of how a group of MIT students broke
the bank in Vegas by applying their highly trained analytical minds toward counting cards, beating Sin City's blackjack tables
in the process. It's a mega-dose of Mensa wish fulfillment. But leave it to Hollywood to fiddle with the facts. Ben Mezrich's
non-fiction book entitled Bringing Down the House centered on a group of mostly Asian geniuses grifting casinos for all the
cash they could. Somehow, that translated into a cast consisting of Kevin Spacey, Jim Sturgess, and Kate Bosworth.
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| Superhero Movie (2008) |

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After being bitten by a genetically altered dragonfly, high school loser Rick Riker develop superhuman
abilities like incredible strength and armored skin. Rick decides to use his new powers for good and becomes a costumed crime
fighter known as "The Dragonfly." However, standing in the way of his destiny is the villainous Lou Landers. After an experiment
gone wrong, Lou develops the power to steal a person's life force and in a dastardly quest for immortality becomes the supervillain,
"The Hourglass." With unimaginable strength, unbelievable speed and deeply uncomfortable tights, will the Dragonfly be able
to stop the sands of The Hourglass and save the world? More importantly, will we stop laughing long enough to notice?
Read full review
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