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4) Across the Universe

Julie Taymor, the creative force behind Frida and bringing Disney’s The Lion King to Broadway, used the music of The Beatles to create psychedelic odyssey in Across the Universe. In it, Jude (Jim Sturgess) plays a young man from England who travels to America in order to find his estranged father. Stateside, he begins a far flung adventure where Jude joins a vivid ensemble of young misfits as they strive to navigate life in the counterculture of the sixties – confronting, love, war, and death.
Although Across the Universe received mixed reviews when it premiered and bombed at the box office, its ambition taking on The Beatles‘ massive, diverse catalogue is to be commended. Taymor cleverly incorporates 34 compositions from the prolific band that spans their various albums and eras, then pairs them with her signature, but incredibly moving and inventive imagery for a true musical magical mystery tour.
3) Stardust

Adapted from a Neil Gaiman novel by a beloved filmmaker and featuring a star-studded cast, we were shocked that Stardust didn’t make a bigger splash when it hit theaters in 2007. A pre-Daredevil Charlie Cox plays Tristan, a young man who vows to leave his boring countryside town for the magical world of Stormhold in order to retrieve a fallen star for his sweetheart.
Tristan soon learns that the star is actually a woman Yvaine (Claire Danes) and there are several sinister forces after her apart from Tristan. The pair embark on a wildly entertaining journey back to Tristan’s hometown of wall during which they encounter cunning witches, flying pirate ships and Tristan’s own estranged mother, who turns out to be a captive princess of Stormhold. Stardust‘s co-writer/director Matthew Vaughn expertly delivers on the scale and spectacle of Stormhold while also packing the film full of heart, laughs, and swashbuckling danger. We also think the film contains one of Robert De Niro’s best comedic performances ever.










