{
    "success": true,
    "data": {
        "id": 1413581,
        "msgid": "lineup-of-movies-worth-seeing-this-week-1447893297",
        "date": "1999-09-11 00:00:00",
        "title": "Lineup of movies worth seeing this week",
        "author": null,
        "source": "JP",
        "tags": null,
        "topic": null,
        "summary": "Lineup of movies worth seeing this week JAKARTA (JP): A man-eating crocodile and a man-jilting bride join the movie lineup at the local theaters. Can't make up your mind? See if the following brief reviews, along with the grades, can be of any help. They are provided by screenwriter Rayya Makarim (RM) and film reviewer Tam Notosusanto (TN). This week's films, in alphabetical order, are: Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me.",
        "content": "<p>Lineup of movies worth seeing this week<\/p>\n<p>JAKARTA (JP): A man-eating crocodile and a man-jilting bride<br>\njoin the movie lineup at the local theaters. Can&apos;t make up your<br>\nmind? See if the following brief reviews, along with the grades,<br>\ncan be of any help. They are provided by screenwriter Rayya<br>\nMakarim (RM) and film reviewer Tam Notosusanto (TN). This week&apos;s<br>\nfilms, in alphabetical order, are:<\/p>\n<p>Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me. Comedy; starring Mike<br>\nMyers, Heather Graham, Elizabeth Hurley, Rob Lowe and Robert<br>\nWagner. Directed by Jay Roach.<\/p>\n<p>Sexually impotent in 1999, Austin Powers discovers that Dr.<br>\nEvil has traveled back in time to 1969 to steal his &quot;mojo&quot;<br>\n(Austin&apos;s source of power). With the help of his own time machine<br>\nAustin pairs with CIA agent Felicity Shagwell to reclaim his lost<br>\nlibido and destroy his arch-nemesis once and for all. Hilarious<br>\nin some parts, this film, however, is two notches below the<br>\noriginal. A lot of the humor is recycled and as a result<br>\nthe film lacks the spontaneity and originality of its<br>\npredecessor. (Graded B by RM)<\/p>\n<p>Entrapment. Action; starring Sean Connery, Catherine Zeta-<br>\nJones, Ving Rhames and Will Patton. Directed by Jon Amiel.<\/p>\n<p>Aging master thief Connery goes on a series of heists<br>\naccompanied by beautiful insurance investigator Zeta-Jones, who<br>\ngoes undercover to entrap him. From New York to London to Kuala<br>\nLumpur, this movie is a spectacle of breathtaking stunts, exotic<br>\nlocations and the May-December romance between the two leads.<br>\nIt&apos;s glamorous and sometimes thrilling, but not much else.<br>\n(Graded B- by TN)<\/p>\n<p>Lake Placid. Comedy-thriller; starring Bill Pullman, Bridget<br>\nFonda, Oliver Platt, Brendan Gleeson and Betty White. Directed by<br>\nSteve Miner.<\/p>\n<p>See review above. (Graded B by TN)<\/p>\n<p>The Mummy. Adventure; starring Brendan Fraser, Rachel Weisz,<br>\nJohn Hannah and Arnold Vosloo. Written and directed by Stephen<br>\nSommers.<\/p>\n<p>Don&apos;t expect to be frightened by the state-of-the-art<br>\ncomputer-generated mummy, because this glossier, noisier redoing<br>\nof the 1932 horror classic never has the intention to go  there.<br>\nThis movie is more a Raiders of the Lost Ark wannabe, but without<br>\nthe wit, the thrill and the classy style that have engaged<br>\nIndiana Jones fans around the world. (Graded C by TN)<\/p>\n<p>Runaway Bride. Romantic comedy; starring Julia Roberts,<br>\nRichard Gere and Hector Elizondo. Directed by Garry Marshall.<\/p>\n<p>USA Today columnist Ike Graham (Gere) does a last minute story<br>\non Maggie Carpenter (Roberts), a small-town babe who has the<br>\nhabit of dumping men at the altar. Ike gets fired and seeks<br>\nvindication by getting up-close-and-personal with the &quot;man<br>\ndevourer&quot; herself. It&apos;s always great to see beautiful and well-<br>\nliked people on the screen. A fun film with &quot;quirky, weird and<br>\nmysterious&quot; characters. (Graded B+ by RM)<\/p>\n<p>The Thirteenth Floor. Sci-fi thriller; starring Craig Bierko,<br>\nGretchen Mol, Vincent D&apos;Onofrio, Dennis Haysbert and Armin<br>\nMueller-Stahl. Directed by Joseph Rusnak.<\/p>\n<p>No, it&apos;s not about claustrophobics stuck in an elevator. It&apos;s<br>\nan intriguing yarn about a group of scientists who invent a<br>\nparallel universe set in 1937 Los Angeles which they can leap<br>\ninto and out of. Then one of them is brutally murdered and the<br>\nfilm becomes a noir-ish mix of time-travel fantasy and a<br>\ndetective story. Independence Day creator Roland<br>\nEmmerich co-produced this subtler, quieter Matrix lookalike.<br>\n(Graded B by TN)<\/p>\n<p>Warlock: The End of Innocence. Horror; starring Bruce Payne,<br>\nAshley Laurence, Boti Ann Bliss and Angel Boris. Directed by Eric<br>\nFreiser.<\/p>\n<p>When did we ever get Warlock I and II anyway? In this third<br>\ninstallment of the bewitched franchise, a 17th century sorcerer<br>\n(Payne) comes to the present and terrorizes a group of college<br>\nstudents camping out in an old New England mansion.  It takes<br>\nforever to get to the fun stuff, and it&apos;s not even coherent and<br>\nsatisfying. The Blair Witch Project this isn&apos;t. Rent the funnier,<br>\nscarier original instead. (Graded D by TN)<\/p>\n<p>William Shakespeare&apos;s A Midsummer Night&apos;s Dream. Comedy;<br>\nstarring Rupert Everett, Calista Flockhart, Kevin Kline, Michelle<br>\nPfeiffer, Stanley Tucci, Christian Bale and Sophie Marceau.<br>\nWritten and directed by Michael Hoffman.<\/p>\n<p>The worlds of fairies and human beings meet in a comical<br>\ncircumstance of confusion and romantic attraction. Shakespeare&apos;s<br>\nwords and plot are well-preserved in this engaging adaptation<br>\nthat despite some miscasting and misinterpretation in the part of<br>\nthe actors, still comes out as an entertaining, enjoyable motion<br>\npicture. (Graded B by TN)<\/p>",
        "url": "https:\/\/jawawa.id\/newsitem\/lineup-of-movies-worth-seeing-this-week-1447893297",
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    "sponsor": "Okusi Associates",
    "sponsor_url": "https:\/\/okusiassociates.com"
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