Bounty Hunter

Bounty Hunter Image It's been a classic arcade game, a guilty-pleasure TV series, and a gritty reality show, but now bounty hunting crosses the line into comedic territory this Friday when Jennifer Aniston and Gerard Butler star in The Bounty Hunter. A cross between decades-old "on the run" comedies like Bird on a Wire and the action packed husband vs. wife thriller Mr. and Mrs. Smith, The Bounty Hunter finds Butler assigned to track down and bring to justice the woman who happens to be his ex-wife. Aniston plays a bail-jumping investigative reporter tracking a murder case, but when the bickering couple reconnects they find themselves not only constantly one-upping each other but on the run for their lives. Christine Baranski and Jason Sudeikis co-star. Rated PG-13.

My little 'Runaways'

Quick quiz: Who can claim as mid-1970s opening acts Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, Van Halen, Cheap Trick, and the Ramones. Answer: Five teenage girls who really rocked. Founded by guitarist Joan Jett, The Runaways were a quintet of young musicians who shot out of Los Angeles and took the music world by storm with a loud, brash rock style that fans had never seen from women before. In the new band biopic The Runaways, Kristen Stewart portrays the talented rebel, Jett, and her New Moon co-star Dakota Fanning plays lead singer Cherie Currie, who was once called the long lost daughter of Iggy Pop and Brigitte Bardot. The film chronicles the creation of the band and its fast tracked path to stardom and excess. Oscar-nominee Michael Shannon stars as band manager Kim Fowley, and Alia Shawkat and Tatum O'Neal co-star. The Runaways is out in limited release this Friday, so check local listings before heading to the theater. Rated PG-13.
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'Frog' hopping

Disney's latest animated musical, out now on DVD and Blu-ray, is one of firsts. The Princess and the Frog is the first traditional, hand-drawn film the studio has produced since 2004, when computer-generated animation took over in popularity and the company closed its 2-D department. The release also marks the first Disney feature to star an African-American protagonist, and the first to be set in a real-life city—that city being New Orleans. Set in the French Quarter during the Jazz Age, the film follows Tiana, a young woman who is convinced by a talking frog that he is indeed a prince trapped in an amphibian's body. But instead of her kiss turning him back into his royal state, the peck has unintended consequences for Tiana herself. John Goodman, Terence Howard and Oprah Winfrey lend their voices, and Randy Newman provides the original score to this family-friendly Louisiana adventure. Rated G.

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