WaffleMovies.com

Nav Include
Home
 About
 Archives
 Contact
Recent Reviews:
Recent DVDs:
Devil Inside
The Grey
Albert Nobbs
The Vow
Haywire
New Year's Eve
Contraband
Pariah
Mission Impossible
Iron Lady
We Bought A Zoo
War Horse
In The Land
Extremely Loud
Hop
Dragon Tattoo
Muppets
Sitter
Tinker Tailor
Carnage
Young Adult
Descendants
Tin Tin
Week With Marilyn
Melancholia
Jack & Jill
Footloose
Like Crazy
Tower Heist
Mighty Macs
J. Edgar
Martha Marcy May Marlene
Rum Diary
Take Shelter
Twilight Breaking Dawn
Anonymous
Harold & Kumar XMas
In Time
Drive
Thing
Big Year
Real Steel
Paranormal 3
50/50
Ides of March
Moneyball
What's Your #?
Killer Elite
Higher Ground
Contagion
Afraid of the Dark
How She Does It
A Dolphin Tale
Midnight in Paris
Straw Dogs
Warrior
Planet of the Apes
Kung Fu Panda 2
Fright Night
Hangover Part 2
The Help
Cowboys & Aliens
The Debt
Smurfs
One Day
30 Minutes
Our Idiot Brother
Friends w/Benefits
Super 8
Conan
Larry Crowne
Harry Potter DH Part 2
Hot Trailers:
WAFFLE ON DC50-TV
BFCA
Willie Waffle

Create Your Badge



Buy My Book
Back Shelf Beauties










Solitary Man
3 Waffles!

Michael Douglas stars as Ben Kalman - a very famous car dealer who suffered an infamous fall from grace.

Now, he spends his days plotting a major comeback with a can't miss new dealership, and spends his night trying to bed every woman he possibly can (play on playa).

Ben's latest girlfriend, Jordan (Mary-Louise Parker), holds the keys to Ben's future success, so he's willing to do whatever it takes to keep her happy, even if it means he has to chaperone her wild child daughter, Allyson (Imogen "The Ugliest Name For a Beautiful Woman I Have Ever Heard" Poots), to her college entrance interview at Ben's alma matter.

Can Ben make Jordan happy by pulling a few strings to help Allyson?

Can he keep it in his pants to keep Jordan happy?

Solitary Man is all about Douglas, and he delivers like he knows it. Writer/director Brian Koppelman and co-director David Levien tailor the entire movie to Ben's outrageous dialogue and questionable actions, slowly revealing the mystery behind what ruined his career and causes him to act like a dog in heat. However, the big revelation about why Ben has been acting this way lacks logic. It's a big leap for us to believe he changed so much for something so little and unexplored.

Solitary Man gets a bit too sappy towards the end as Koppelman tries to humanize Ben a bit too much, and starts to take the rascal out of him. I think Solitary Man works better when Ben is unapologetic. It's definitely more fun, and Douglas is having the time of his life on screen, which makes the movie more enjoyable for all of us.

Solitary Man is rated R for language and some sexual content.


© 2008 WaffleMovies.com
Movie posters, stills, and DVD covers are © their respective studios and/or production companies.