Author: BO

  • Film Review – Mental

    MENTAL Toni Collette

    “Mental” is mental, living up to the potential of its title with a wild,
    uninhibited display of psychological fractures and grotesque comedy.
    The picture marks the return of writer/director P.J. Hogan to the
    screen, who long ago helmed the cult hit “Muriel’s Wedding” before
    embarking on a deflating Hollywood career that included “My Best
    Friend’s Wedding,” 2003’s “Peter Pan,” and “Confessions of a
    Shopaholic.” Revisiting his Australian roots, Hogan summons a tidal wave
    of mischief and manic activity with “Mental,” straddling a thin line
    between insanity and compassion. Hilarious but a tonal bucking bronco,
    the effort is perhaps best reserved for viewers in the mood for a
    runaway mine cart viewing experience, willing to absorb all the chaos
    Hogan happily provides. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Temptation: Confessions of a Marriage Counselor

    Tyler Perry's Temptation Still 3

    Tyler Perry makes two types of films: comedies and melodramas. He'll
    usually blend the genres to give his audience the most bang for their
    buck, but he's resolute in his directorial range, with "Temptation:
    Confessions of a Marriage Counselor" his most combustible picture to
    date, even out-heaving "For Colored Girls." A biblical parable dressed
    up as an unruly Perry extravaganza, the feature does a commendable job
    with fiery tempers and silky acts of seduction, showing signs of life as
    a cheap thrill for an audience more than happy to interact with the
    screen. Expectedly, Perry can't maintain the insanity for long,
    eventually drowning the effort in severity to make a chilling
    impression. Still, "Temptation," when it's just overheated and not
    apocalyptic, is engaging enough to pass, generating sufficient
    hullabaloo without taxing Perry's pedestrian moviemaking skills. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Phil Spector

    PHIL SPECTOR Al Pacino Helen Mirren

    "Phil Spector" opens with a bizarre disclaimer the places the events in
    the film in a state of limbo, unable to comment on the murder trial of
    the titular musical titan and unwilling to give the man an exhaustive
    exploration of his life and times. It's an ephemeral picture, taking a
    thin slice from the chaos of Spector's legal woes and savoring each
    bite. It's also the latest work from powerhouse writer David Mamet,
    lending the feature a pair of lungs to ease its odd quest to remain a
    satellite in Spector's orbit for 90 minutes, making no judgments and no
    pleas about a divisive individual flailing as he fights for his freedom. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – G.I. Joe: Retaliation

    GI JOE RETAILIATION Channing Tatum Dwayne Johnson

    In 2009, director Stephen Sommers brought “G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra”
    to multiplexes, tasked with turning the popular cartoon series and toy
    line from the 1980s into a viable franchise for a new generation. He
    failed miserably, masterminding a leaden, nitwit film that actively
    ignored what made the original creation such a delight to a generation
    of kids. Rewarded with lackluster but passable box office returns, a
    sequel was ordered up. Now we have “G.I. Joe: Retaliation” from helmer
    John M. Chu, and while there was an enormous opportunity to
    course-correct the series, the follow-up is essentially more of the same
    nondescript action and unappealing characterizations as before.
    Although some baby steps are made to please the hardcore fan base,
    “Retaliation” doesn’t show the level of production bravery required to
    make this brand name mean something on the big screen. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Host

    HOST Saoirse Ronan

    Purists will likely scoff at the suggestion, but it’s hard to discount
    the “Twilight” DNA in the foundation of “The Host.” Both projects
    originate from author Stephenie Meyer, who made a killing with her
    sparkly vampires saga and has now moved over to sci-fi for her latest
    effort, once again cooking up a love triangle template to hang prolonged
    moments of swoon and physical contemplation on. It’s undeniably
    derivative and about as thrilling as “Twilight” was, returning to a
    droning ambiance of indecision to fashion a first step forward in a
    burgeoning franchise for a young audience aching for a new fixation now
    that Meyer’s original moneymaker has concluded. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Wrong

    WRONG Still 3

    “Wrong” is an offering of absurdity from writer/director Quentin
    Dupieux. The picture exists in a dreamscape of uninhibited conversations
    and ridiculous occurrences, yet it’s par for the course for the helmer,
    who made his international introduction with 2010’s “Rubber,” a movie
    about the adventures of a tire that rolled around the southwest killing
    people with telekinetic powers while a group of onlookers slowly
    succumbed to the effects of poisoned turkey. “Rubber” was an acquired
    taste but showed great imagination and a reverence for the bizarre.
    “Wrong” returns Dupieux to a position of oddity, although his latest
    enjoys a slightly more human touch. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Starbuck

    STARBUCK Still 1

    The premise of “Starbuck” (A French-Canadian production) promises a
    wacky time at the movies, dealing with accidental fatherhood, delayed
    adolescence, and persistent loserdom. Perhaps other filmmakers would’ve
    leaned into the potential of the tale, but co-writer/director Ken Scott
    is hunting for something more meaningful with this tender blend of
    mischief and maturation. A few laughs are offered during the feature,
    yet “Starbuck” aims for more thoughtful storytelling, doing whatever he
    can to separate expectations of slapstick from the effort’s gradual
    influx of concern, eventually forming a warm, sugary feel of humanity
    that’s a more inviting viewing experience than the exterior of the
    picture promises. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Family Weekend

    FAMILY WEEKEND Still 3

    “Family Weekend” doesn’t travel very far as a comedy, and it isn’t
    nearly as touching as the screenwriter would like to believe. It’s a
    picture stuck in mediocrity, attempting to form something heartwarming
    with a premise that demands a consistent blast of acid. A forceful lead
    performance from Olesya Rulin manages to take command of the movie, but
    her concentration is supported by a production that’s overwritten and
    tonally unsteady, in need of a more judicious editor and a game plan to
    approach the steady erosion of marriage with a profound hit of honesty,
    not just a sitcom-style presentation of forced therapy. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Life on Fire: Wildlife on the Volcano’s Edge

    Life on Fire Wildlife on the Volcano's Edge

    Volcanoes are mysterious, terrifying, and quite beautiful from a safe
    distance. Their secrets are nearly impossible to discover, buried deep
    in the Earth under layers of lava and furious gases, requiring a fine
    touch of science to extract samples for study, and even those efforts
    aren't nearly enough to understand the fury that powers these
    fire-belching titans. Endeavoring to paint a larger portrait of volcanic
    activity, director Bertrand Loyer has assembled "Life on Fire: Wildlife
    on the Volcano's Edge," a six-part series that inspects the balance of
    nature that sprouts up around these danger zones, heading around the
    world on a mission to understand instinct, survival, and risk with an
    epic cinematic sweep that provides atypical access to creatures
    conducting daily business in the shadow of certain doom. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Natural Selection

    NATURAL SELECTION Rachael Harris John Diehl

    "Natural Selection" has all the hallmarks of an average independent
    production, with its HD cinematography, mild razzing of religious
    conviction, and unshowered performers embodying the middle-class and the
    borderline insane. Writer/director Robbie Pickering isn't shy about
    following trends, but he's also smart about storytelling, endeavoring to
    disrupt the norm with a strange tale of devotion and love buttered on a
    road trip saga where things often go horribly wrong for the lead
    characters. "Natural Selection" is a comedy, with excitable
    personalities and broad confrontations, but Pickering clearly loves
    these screwed-up souls, bending the material away from mockery,
    gradually revealing his sincerity in a manner that's contagious.
    Supported by marvelous performances and a prominent soundtrack, the
    feature satisfies and even surprises on occasion, introducing Pickering
    as a filmmaker with an interest in emotional content instead of serving
    up pedestrian acts of humiliation. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – A Resurrection

    A RESSURRECTION Misha Barton

    “A Resurrection” will most likely be remembered as one of the last
    screen appearances for Michael Clarke Duncan, the behemoth actor who
    tragically passed away last autumn. It’s especially important to
    celebrate his role as Duncan is the best thing about “A Resurrection,”
    brightening up the picture with the ten minutes of screen time he has,
    showing more comfort and range than anyone else in this dreary, cheapy
    effort. With intentions to build a ghostly whodunit, the movie falls
    asleep instead, as writer/director Matt Orlando doesn’t show the kind of
    invention necessary to snap scares into position, working to shatter
    the suffocating monotony that pins the feature down. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – InAPPropriate Comedy

    INAPPROPRIATE COMEDY Lindsey Lohan

    When there’s no creativity to be found, shock value always rears its
    ugly head. “InAPPropriate Comedy” is the latest picture to mistake
    crudeness for cunning, trying to nab attention through bad behavior and
    wretched use of comedy’s current crutch: interminable improvisation.
    It’s racist, gross, and vulgar, and for all the time the production put
    into constructing this movie (though that could be debated), there’s not
    a single laugh to be found. “InAPPropriate Comedy” strains to be
    outrageous, but it’s a corpse from the get-go, making the ensuing 75
    minutes of screen time an extreme chore to sit through. The feature
    doesn’t offend, it just bores. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Croods

    CROODS Still 1

    After their stab at epic storytelling with last holiday's "Rise of the
    Guardians," Dreamworks Animation reduces the heat on the big movie
    sweepstakes with "The Croods," a production that's willing to be silly
    and sincere, employing a cartoon ambiance of pinballing people and
    exaggerated body language to produce a considerable amount of laughs,
    while also tending to the demands of heart that squeezes every family
    film offering released these days. Toppling cliche to make a deep
    impression as a fulfilling offering of entertainment, "The Croods" is
    superbly constructed, dazzlingly animated, and genuinely hilarious, with
    a spirited mood of adventure and a pleasing read of maturation. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Olympus Has Fallen

    OLYMPUS HAS FALLEN Gerard Butler

    "Olympus Has Fallen" is one of the dumbest films I have ever seen. And I've watched all of Tyler Perry's movies. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Spring Breakers

    SPRING BREAKERS James Franco

    I'm willing to give writer/director Harmony Korine the special
    consideration he requires when he makes a movie. He's an impish artist,
    prone to deep free dives into excess while treating stupidity as sport.
    He's created interesting pictures during his career, including "Gummo"
    and "Julien Donkey-Boy," though even his best work has a way of feeling
    like an endless night spent inside an art-school drunk tank, surround by
    oddities as nausea sets in early. His latest is "Spring Breakers,"
    currently sucking up blog buzz for the provocative way it parades around
    former Disney Channel stars in various stages of undress and
    intoxication. I wish there was more to the viewing experience than
    gyrating flesh and deep inhales, but Korine is trapped in a shtick coma,
    attempting to collect random images, poorly-defined fears, and swinging
    bare breasts and form it all into cinematic poetry. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Admission

    ADMISSION Tina Fey Paul Rudd

    Perhaps we were spoiled with “30 Rock,” Tina Fey’s whip-smart,
    heroically silly network comedy show that recently ended its run on NBC.
    Graced with ace timing, a remarkably pliable cast, and a commitment to
    playfulness, the show was a free spirit that never grew old. “Admission”
    is Fey’s introduction to the world of Serious! acting, and while she’s
    capable of expanding her craft, this movie doesn’t challenge the actress
    in a manner that’s expected. Contrived and eventually gutless,
    “Admission” is boosted by a few meaningful moments and a sharp ensemble
    who always seem to be aware they’re being handcuffed by a disappointing
    screenplay. It’s certainly a pleasant picture, but far from the
    knuckleball wit and goofball wonder Fey is typically associated with. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Waiting Room

    WAITING ROOM Still 1

    “The Waiting Room” is a documentary about health care. While a touchy
    subject these days in America, it’s also a topic worth every moment of
    exploration, allowing for a deeper education and a wider appreciation
    for patient and medical staff. Mercifully, it’s not a politicized effort
    eager to turn heads with opinions, instead treating the topic with the
    directness it deserves, highlighting the frustrations and complications
    that take place during an average day at a public hospital. “The Waiting
    Room” is grim but enlightening, perhaps required viewing for those who
    care to debate themselves blue about a crisis they’ll never fully
    understand. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Barbara

    BARBARA Nina Hass

    Christian Petzold has proven himself to be a nuanced filmmaker with a
    specific interest in the heartbeat of his characters. With “Yella” and
    “Jerichow,” he’s displayed tight command of mood and visual
    communication, using body language to express what long passages of
    dialog cannot possibly convey. Even when the material doesn’t quite
    stimulate the senses, Petzold shows an investment in the life of his
    screenplay, refusing to hand his audience easy answers. “Barbara” isn’t a
    tightly wound story of sacrifice, yet its distance is alluring,
    retaining secrets and motivations, building to a satisfying conclusion.
    Petzold may not summon a gripping pace, but his concentration on the
    minutiae of behavior remains riveting. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Eden

    EDEN Jamie Chung

    I don’t discount the importance of the message contained within “Eden.”
    Taking a look at the elaborate system involved in human trafficking, the
    feature is noble in its efforts to depict the horrors of prostitution
    and the psychological void of its victims. However, it’s not a very
    comprehensive picture, brushing by salient points of submission to
    achieve a conventional arc of consciousness punctuated with violence.
    There should be more to chew on with a story as horrific as this, yet
    writer/director Megan Griffiths isn’t interested in the crucial details
    of decay, robbing the film of necessary motivations and a lasting welt
    of reality. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com