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Showing posts with label business. Show all posts
Showing posts with label business. Show all posts
Friday, February 2, 2018
Sunday, February 5, 2017
The Founder reveals a story you might not know about McDonalds
Movie Title: The Founder
Grade: B+
Rating: PG-13, 115 minutes
In a Nutshell: The Golden Arches! You may actually want to swing
by McDonald’s after you leave the theater to celebrate the American Dream…either
that or ban it because of what Ray Kroc did to the real McDonald brothers in
order to build his fast food empire.
It’s a fascinating look at business, persistence, and the
history of America’s original fast food chain.
According to the movie, every day, McDonald’s feeds 1% of the world’s
population!
Uplifting theme:
- Hard
work, persistence, the American Dream
- “They
all lack the one thing that makes McDonald’s special…” – Ray
“Which is?” – Dick McDonald
“Even YOU don’t know what it is!” –
Ray
“Enlighten me.” – Dick
“It’s not just the system, Dick. It’s
the name, that glorious name. It can be
anything you want it to be. It’s
limitless. It sounds like America….” –
Ray
- If you’re
an older entrepreneur, you’ll be inspired by these older men who made it
big later in life.
Things I liked:
- I love
what director John Lee Hancock did with the movies Saving Mr. Banks
and The Blind Side
. He has become quite the storyteller when it comes to biopic dramas.
- Michael
Keaton gives a great performance, especially shines when Ray Kroc’s behavior
gets worse and worse. His piano duet Linda Cardellini was
charming.
- The tennis
court scene was fascinating to watch.
Brilliant planning, eh?
- Parks and Recreation: The Complete Series
fan favorite Nick Offerman plays Dick McDonald.
- You get to see video of the real Ray Kroc at the end of the film. You also get to see pictures of the real people who played secondary roles in this true story, as well as read what happened to them. Interesting stuff.
Things I didn’t like:
- Some
people will be a bit bored.
- So, the moral of the story seems to be that you can step on people, be unscrupulous and win in the end...? You'll leave the theater in a bit of a downer. It's not a "feel good" story with a happy ending that leaves you morally inspired.
- So, Ray Kroc was basically a thief…he stole a business and he stole someone’s wife. He’s a scoundrel, but because Michael Keaton plays Ray Kroc, you somehow cheer for him during the movie.
- I kind of felt bad for Laura Dern. Both she and Ethel Kroc, whom she played, probably both wished they could have been given a bigger part in the McDonald's story.
Interesting lines:
- “McDonald’s
can become America’s new church: feeding bodies and feeding souls, and it
ain’t just open on Sundays, boys.” – Ray Kroc
- “There
are many things we could do to make a quick buck, but that doesn’t mean we
should.” – Dick McDonald
- “There’s
a wolf in the hen house. We let him
in!” – Dick McDonald
- Good
things come to those who wait.” – Joan Smith (Linda Cardellini)
- “You
think big Joan, don’t you?” – Ray
“Is there any other way to?” – Joan
- “Contracts
are like hearts. They’re made to be
broken.” – Ray
- “Business
is war.” – Ray
- “We
will never beat him. We will never
be rid of him.” – Mac McDonald (John Carroll Lynch)
- “So,
if you can’t beat ‘em, buy ‘em?” - Dick
- “You’re
not in the food business…you’re in the real estate business.” - Harry Sonneborn (played by the all grown up B.J. Novak)
Funny lines:
- “When
is enough going to be enough for you?” – Ethel Kroc (Laura Dern)
“Honestly, probably never.” – Ray Kroc
- “Would
you eat at a place named Kroc’s?” - Ray
Tips for
parents:
- Some
profanity, including 1 F-bomb.
- Those of us who grew up when McDonald's was truly popular (60's & 70's) will enjoy learning more about this American icon. None of my kids ever liked McDonalds, so the younger generations of viewers will probably only be mildly entertained by this movie.
@trinaboice
Thursday, December 24, 2015
Joy might inspire future women entrepreneurs
Grade: B
Rating: PG-13, 2 hours
In a Nutshell:
The movie informs you at the beginning that it was “inspired
by true stories of daring women.” It’s based
loosely on the true rags-to-riches story of Joy Mangano, inventor of the “Miracle
Mop” and “Huggable Hangers”, a business titan on QVC and HSN.
Jennifer Lawrence does it best when she plays an underdog
with natural talent and hope.
Your heart will sink and soar with Joy as she journeys
through the perilous business world.
This movie will make you want to take a leap of faith and invent that
thing that’s been in your head for years…or hide from the world, watching soap
operas all day.
Uplifting theme:
- “Hope
springs eternal.” – Grandma Mimi
- “You
can’t let the practical get you down.
You got to keep moving to what you love.” - Tony (Edgar Ramirez)
- Persistence,
determination, hard work, hope.
- “We
got here from hard work, patience, and humility. Don’t think the world owes you anything,
because the world owes you nothing.” - Joy
Things I liked:
- It’s
always great to see Bradley Cooper, Robert DeNiro, Diane Ladd, Isabella
Rossellini, and Virginia Madsen. It’s
impressive how they were able to deliver some of their ridiculous lines
with straight faces.
- I love
the soap opera that is layered throughout most of the movie. (Director and co-writer David O. Russell
should have brought it back in the end.)
I especially love that it features the queen of all soap operas,
Susan Lucci. It’s cute how it
showcases the decades through their clothing and hairstyles. It made me laugh because my mother used
to “tape her shows” and watch them every day.
- I liked
the comparison of the cicada hiding for 17 years, like Joy did.
- The
music gave the movie a magical story feel.
- I love
that sisters Joy & Peggy looked like sisters. Nice casting.
- Even Joy’s
loved ones put down her ideas, but she never gives up on herself or them. Life keeps pushing her down, but she
never gives up. I admire that
tremendously, because I’m often too quick to quit.
- I admire
how she keeps control of her temper.
- In the
scene in Texas, Joy follows a great rule of negotiation: stop talking and
let the other guy make the first offer.
- It
paints a fairly realistic picture of the business world and how difficult
it can be to begin and maintain a successful business.
- Joan
Rivers was played by her rea life daughter Melissa Rivers. That must have been so much fun for her.
- Drena
De Niro plays Cindy. She is the
adopted daughter of Robert De Niro and has played bit parts in several of
his films.
Things I didn’t like:
- Jennifer Lawrence is the bright star in this movie. You kind of don't care about any of the other people. They're too over-the-top "characters" to feel real.
- I
never like watching families fight.
- Joy’s
mother gets sucked into soap operas and spends her life in front of a TV,
rather than truly living her life.
- I don’t
like it when kids call their parents by their first names.
- The
trailer didn’t explain the movie very well.
- Director
Russell starts with an interesting style in the beginning of the movie and
then drops it completely mid-way.
- While
Russell is great at creating damaged characters, they’re often
one-dimensional.
- Jennifer
Lawrence speaks Spanish a few times, but there aren’t any subtitles. Her accent is pretty good!
Interesting lines:
- “When
someone sees a weakness in me, I turn that weakness into a strength.” – Danica
– (Susan Lucci)
- “The funny thing about hiding…you’re even
hidden from yourself.” – young Joy (Isabella Crovetti-Cramp)
- “We’re
doing an invention.” – Joy’s daughter
“Why?” – Grandma Mimi
“Because we are.” – Joy
“It’s very serious. It’s priorities.” – Joy’s daughter
- “There’s
no shame in hard work.” – Joy
- “Everybody
starts out with some kind of dream about what life will be.” – Grandma
Mimi
Morris’ 4 questions
of financial worthiness:
1. Where
did you go to high school?
2. Who
were you in high school?
3. Are
you prepared, within 6 months of financing this venture, to show adequate
returns?
4. You
are in a room and there is a gun on the table and the only other person in the
room is an adversary in commerce. Only
one of you can prevail, yet you have protected your business and Morris’
money. Do you pick up the gun?
Tips for
parents:
- This isn’t a movie that young children
will enjoy or understand very well.
Teenage girls may be interested and inspired by Joy’s tenacity to
live their dream.
- Some
profanity and fighting.
Labels:
Bradley Cooper,
business,
Diane Ladd,
entrepreneur,
film,
HSN,
Isabella Rossellini,
Jennifer Lawrence,
Joy,
Joy Mangano,
Miracle Mop,
movie review,
QVC,
Robert De Niro,
soap opera,
Susan Lucci,
Virginia Madsen
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