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AARP The
Magazine announces the Top 10 Movies For
Grownups® of 2010
10 Winning Films of 2010 Featured in an
Exclusive Slideshow on AARP.org/movies
WASHINGTON, Dec.
21, 2010 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/
-- Get
Low, The
King's Speech and Secretariat
are among this year's Top 10 Movies for
Grownups, according to AARP
The Magazine —whose
annual Movies For Grownups® Awards spotlight
and celebrate movies with storylines,
performances, and filmmaking that have
distinct relevance to the 50+ audience.
The Top 10 list features films with daring
and riveting performances from some of the
finest actors and actresses to engage
grownup audiences this year. The list of
movies were selected by the editors of AARP
The Magazine ,
the definitive voice for 50+ Americans and
the world's largest-circulation magazine
with nearly 35 million readers.
"The films featured on our Top 10 list
provide a daring group of must-see
performances for the grownup audience," said Meg
Grant,
West Coast Editor of AARP
The Magazine .
"From drama and period-pieces, to family
comedies and romance, 50+ actors and
filmmakers have provided true entertainment
this past year. We are proud to honor and
recognize their achievements."
"Our readers rely on us to cut out the kid
stuff and put dynamic, character-driven
films in their queues," said Bill
Newcott, AARP
The Magazine editor
and host of AARP's weekly "Movies for
Grownups®" radio show.
"We find the movies we know our audience
will love and alert them year-round through
reviews in print and online as well as
through radio and social media commentary."
The Top 10 Movies for Grownups of 2010
previews the annual Movies
for Grownups ® Awards, with
16 categories including unique ones such as
"Best Grownup Love Story," "Best Buddy
Picture" and "Best Movie," among others.
The entire list of awards will be featured
in the March/April issue of AARP
The Magazine ,
available in late January, 2011.
The Top 10 Movies for Grownups® of 2010:
Get Low
It's wrapped up in engaging performances by Robert
Duvall, Bill
Murray and Sissy
Spacek,
but at its heart this folk fable gets to the
deep, dark places of regret, mortality, and
self-imposed isolation.
The King's Speech
Co-starring as King George
VI and
his speech therapist, Colin
Firth and Geoffrey
Rush grate,
grind, and growl at one another until each
emerges more completely human.
Secretariat
Diane Lane shines
as Penny
Chenery,
the middle-aged housewife who nurtured a
horse racing legend;John
Malkovich nearly
steals the show as her
flamboyant-yet-no-nonsense trainer.
The Company Men
The downsizing-fed angst of American workers
at midlife (or approaching it) is chillingly
captured in this story of three men (Tommy
Lee Jones, Chris
Cooper,
and Ben
Affleck)
caught in the corporate vortex. As the
carpenter who watches it all from the
outside, Kevin
Costner seems
like the perfect pal.
RED
Hey, it's got Helen
Mirren wrestling
a machine gun the size of a Buick!
Nine-tenths of this action flick's charm
comes in its vintage stars (Bruce
Willis, Morgan
Freeman, John
Malkovich and
Mirren) playing their ages straight, and
their action over the top.
The Kids are All Right
Annette Bening and Julianne
Moore are
the perfect couple—endearingly affectionate
to each other, properly concerned about
their kids, fiercely determined to endure
life's inevitable betrayals—in this quirky
story about a brother and sister who seek
out their biological dad (a clueless but
well-meaning Mark
Ruffalo).
City Island
In this hidden gem of a family comedy, Andy
Garcia and Julianna
Margulies co-star
as the heads of a working-class family where
everyone seems to have a secret: some big,
some small, some earth-shattering.
Casino Jack
Kevin Spacey gives
his best performance since The
Usual Suspects as
uber-lobbyist Jack Abramoff—a man whose
uncanny knack for rationalization leads him
down some very murky side streets.
Letters to Juliet
The kids went to see the young stars Amanda
Seyfried and Gael
Garcia Bernal,
but Vanessa
Redgrave is
radiant in the film's pivotal role: a woman
setting out across the heart of Italy to
find the love of her youth (a mighty studly-looking Franco
Nero).
Another Year
As the couple who've been married forever
and clearly will remain so, Jim
Broadbent and Ruth
Sheen are
the anchors of this slice-of-life drama—but
it's Lesley
Manville who's
riveting as their aimless friend, who spins
through life with a manic,
wheels-falling-off frenzy.
Visit www.aarp.org/movies to view the slide show
of the Top
10 Movies
for Grownups® of
2010.