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Juno 2007 123movies

Juno 2007 123movies

A comedy about growing up… and the bumps along the way.Dec. 05, 200796 Min.
Your rating: 0
6 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Juno 2007 123movies, Full Movie Online – A tale told over four seasons, starting in autumn when Juno, a 16-year-old high-school junior in Minnesota, discovers she’s pregnant after one event in a chair with her best friend, Bleeker. In the waiting room of an abortion clinic, the quirky and whip-sharp Juno decides to give birth and to place the child with an adoptive couple. She finds one in the PennySaver personals, contacts them, tells her dad and step-mother, and carries on with school. The chosen parents, upscale yuppies (one of whom is cool and laid back, the other meticulous and uptight), meet Juno, sign papers, and the year unfolds. Will Juno’s plan work, can she improvise, and what about Bleeker?.
Plot: Faced with an unplanned pregnancy, an offbeat young woman makes an unusual decision regarding her unborn child.
Smart Tags: #pregnancy #teenage_mother #pregnant_teenager #adoption #f_rated #strong_female_character #woman_holding_a_baby #positive_pregnancy_test #female_protagonist #abortion_clinic #unwed_mother #marital_problem #cheerleader_uniform #teenage_sex #cult_film #loss_of_virginity #discovering_one_is_pregnant #pregnant_schoolgirl #prom #husband_wife_relationship #high_school_prom


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Ratings:

7.5/10 Votes: 523,890
94% | RottenTomatoes
81/100 | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 6336 Popularity: 17.156 | TMDB

Reviews:


This features a strong and characterful performance from Elliot Page in the title role. She is a young girl who somehow manages to convince her rather naive and drippy boyfriend “Bleeker” (Michael Cara) to have sex. When she becomes pregnant, she decides against an abortion and so offers the baby up for adoption to “Mark” (Jason Bateman) and his rather obsessive wife “Vanessa” (Jennifer Garner). The remainder of the gently entertaining film follows this young woman as she gradually deals with her pregnancy, her relationship with her parents and starts to bond with “Mark”. It’s this latter storyline that begins to illustrate to her not just the cracks in that marriage, but also her own feelings about herself, her unborn child and it’s father. The film offers a witty and sometimes quite emotionally effective observation of how she evolves as a person and though the denouement itself is rather flat, it’s still quite a fun outing for all concerned. Allison Janney and JK Simmons work well together as her parents who inject a certain amusing realism to the fact that their daughter is expecting a baby, not doing heroine! The dialogue is well written with an enjoying degree of sarcasm and plausibility to it that quite frequently raises a smile.
Review By: CinemaSerf

Juno is a girl, a totally cool girl who don’t take shit from anyone and do whatever she likes. She is not like disrepectful or anything, she just knows who she is and what she likes, even though she thinks that she haven’t figured it out yet. She totally has.

Juno gets pregnant with Bleeker. She thinks about getting an abortion, as it will be the responsible thing to do, but can’t get herself to do it (I mean, the kid already has fingernails!), instead she finds a cool couple to adopt the child (Jennifer Garner and Jason Bateman).

Juno is a movie about being a kid and growing up, about taking responsibility for your life and doing the right thing, even though it’s damn hard. I mean, imagine being a pregnant teen on your school… you think people would talk about you? Well, they do… a lot. Also, imagine how your parents would react and how you would react to giving it up, whether its abortion or adoption.

Anyways, Juno is cool and takes everything as it comes. She’ll figure it out eventually, we know this the minute we see her. Nothing will break Juno.

Ellen Page is amazing as Juno, and the rest of the cast is so carefully casted that it’s not even funny. Everyone understands their part and while the dialogue is a little movie-ish all the way through, it is also terrible believeable. These people speak this way because they… know themselves and don’t give a damn what anyone else thinks.

_Last words… if you haven’t yet, go watch this movie. You don’t even need to be a teenager to get it… this is a movie for everyone, boy or girl, man or woman, age 12 or 68. Don’t miss out on Juno, she is worth every minute._

Review By: Kenneth Axel Carlsson
Despite the massive popular success that Juno has deservedly received, it is still a small film with a big message at heart.
While the teen comedy genre has been littered with the fine works of directors like John Hughes and Paul Weitz, most entries are poorly written and acted affairs that fail to capture the world of teenagers. With Juno, director Jason Reitman and screenwriter Diablo Cody have managed to create a realistic portrayal of teenage life without being dreary or overly artsy. The intent of Juno is to tell the story of a sixteen-year-old girl who deals with a responsibility “way beyond her maturity level” and the people around her who care. The filmmakers succeed in not only creating the most realistic teenage comedy ever produced, but also in bringing characters who the audience trusts and knows. Juno is down-to-earth and grounded in reality, never over-the-top and intelligent enough to not rely on cheap gags to gain laughs. The naturalist feel of the actor’s performances also gives the film a sense of being there with the characters as they charm the audience with their whimsy. Juno is bold and smart and is always entertaining and comfortable.

Juno McGuff (Ellen Page) has found out she is pregnant with the child of her on-again, off-again boyfriend Paulie Bleeker (Michael Cera). After choosing against aborting the infant, she chooses to give it to a young couple, Mark and Vanessa Loring (Jason Bateman and Jennifer Garner). That’s a gist of it, but what makes the simple plot so winning is the material provided to the ensemble cast, who works with some of the freshest dialogue ever afforded to a teenage film since Alexander Payne’s Election. Diablo Cody does not rely on the quirky to make her screenplay succeed, because the characters feel so real and while the dialogue to some may seem odd, it is able to realistically show the vocabulary that teenagers speak every day to their peers. The subtlety of Jason Reitman’s direction adds to the scope of reality by not over-doing it and allowing the characters to speak for themselves. Reitman is intelligent to not let the environment take over and he commands control of the production. Even the clothes worn by Juno and her friends reflect themselves. Juno’s baggy trousers and loose clothings represent her independent and free mind as well as the gap between child and adult-hood. Paulie’s running uniform signifies his attempts at running free like Juno, while Leah (Olivia Thirlby), Juno’s best friend, tends more towards Uggs and other commercial clothes, showing how she attempts to blend in with the crowd rather than be herself. Even Mark Loring starts to evolve into more juvenile clothes as he gets closer to Juno. It is this attention to detail that makes Reitman’s direction succeed with ease.

The performances from the ensemble all serve as excellent portraits of Diablo Cody’s characters, managing to bring the right amount of warmth to each part. Ellen Page is the stand-out, shining in every scene and showing that there is a little bit of Juno in all of us. She has spunk, heart and plenty of humour making her one of the best written and acted young female roles to ever grace the screen. The chemistry with Michael Cera adds even more to the power of the character. Michael Cera is known mostly for playing meek, awkward characters, but in Juno, he goes even beyond his role as George Michael Bluth on the comedic masterwork Arrested Development. Cera plays Paulie with both strength and courage, making him a great companion for Juno and a scene where he confronts her is pure genius on the part of both Cera and Cody. Jennifer Garner and Jason Bateman are equally as good, helping in making their character’s conflicts and differences un-forced. As Mark evolved throughout the film, so does Bateman who develops the character in key with Cody’s writing.

The only aspect of the film where Reitman and Cody depart from reality is actually a smart choice. Nowhere in the film is a character shown talking on a cellular telephone, the opposite of today’s world where every single teenager appears to be talking into their hand. The absence of such a device expands on the theme of innocence that Juno displays. In an age where teenagers are trying to grow up too quickly, Juno is given the ultimate test of female adulthood by carrying an un-born child in her pouch. In yielding this responsibility and promising to give it to a loving couple, she grows as a character into realising that she is still a child herself and decides to wait a while before she grows up. The touching and poignant final scene, a guitar duet between Juno and Paulie, shows that she needs to hold onto her youth just a little longer before it disappears like track runners rushing to the finish line. Despite the massive popular success that Juno has deservedly received, it is still a small film with a big message at heart.

Review By: stefanbe

Other Information:

Original Title Juno
Release Date 2007-12-05
Release Year 2007

Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 36 min (96 min)
Budget 7500000
Revenue 232372681
Status Released
Rated PG-13
Genre Comedy, Drama
Director Jason Reitman
Writer Diablo Cody
Actors Elliot Page, Michael Cera, Jennifer Garner
Country United States
Awards Won 1 Oscar. 89 wins & 100 nominations total
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix DTS, Dolby Digital, SDDS
Aspect Ratio 1.85 : 1
Camera Panavision Panaflex Millennium XL, Panavision Primo, Super Speed MKII, Super Speed Z-Series MKII and Ultra Speed Z-Series MKII Lenses, Panavision Panaflex Platinum, Panavision Primo, Super Speed MKII, Super Speed Z-Series MKII and Ultra Speed Z-Series MKII Lenses, Panavision Panastar, Panavision Primo, Super Speed MKII, Super Speed Z-Series MKII and Ultra Speed Z-Series MKII Lenses
Laboratory DeLuxe, Hollywood (CA), USA, Technicolor, Vancouver, Canada (processing)
Film Length 2,626 m (Sweden), 2,627 m (Portugal, 35 mm)
Negative Format 35 mm (Kodak Vision2 200T 5217, Vision2 Expression 500T 5229)
Cinematographic Process Digital Intermediate (2K) (master format), Spherical (source format)
Printed Film Format 35 mm (Kodak Vision 2383), D-Cinema

Juno 2007 123movies
Juno 2007 123movies
Juno 2007 123movies
Juno 2007 123movies
Juno 2007 123movies
Juno 2007 123movies
Juno 2007 123movies
Juno 2007 123movies
Juno 2007 123movies
Original title Juno
TMDb Rating 7.039 6,336 votes

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