Author: BO

  • Film Review – Knife Fight

    KNIFE FIGHT Rob Lowe

    “Knife Fight” often doesn’t know what type of film it wants to be.
    Attempting to braid together political sincerity, political satire, and a
    human element of guilt, the feature advances unevenly, stuck trying to
    make sense of its erratic tone. While an ambitious effort to expose the
    concentrated fraud of the campaigning process and all its collateral
    damage, “Knife Fight” is a decent editor and a rewrite away from being a
    passable statement of disgust. In its current form, the movie is a
    mixed bag, offering a few winning performances and moments of
    revelation, while the rest scatters aimlessly, in search of structure
    director Bill Guttentag doesn’t provide. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Downton Abbey: Season 3

    DOWNTON ABBEY SEASON 3

    Returning American network shows have the benefit of a summer hiatus,
    typically three quick months set aside for producers to get their act
    together and map out a creative battle plan that will carry over 20+
    hours of television. "Downton Abbey" elects the opposite route, securing
    nine-month-long absences between seasons, creating a voracious appetite
    among superfans for all things Crawley. The extended period allowed for
    anticipation is incredibly brave, especially now with the program a
    permanent fixture of message boards, award shows, magazine articles, and
    personal diaries, creating an intimate universe of admiration and
    expectation that's turned the series into a smash where most efforts
    fail miserably. Emerging from the erratic but undeniably attractive
    second season, "Downton Abbey" picks up the baton for another round of
    heartache, frustration, humiliation, and doubt, sprinting ahead with a
    robust third series that corrects many of the minor, heartburn-inducing
    mistakes that ate away at the previous season, while establishing a bold
    new realm of mortality that's sure to keep the faithful at the edge of
    their seats, possibly hurling pillows at the screen in disgust. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Angry Boys

    Angry Boys Chris Lilley

    Having only a fringe comprehension of actor/creator Chris Lilley and his
    fondness for the mockumentary genre (explored in "Summer Heights High"
    and "We Can Be Heroes"), I was surprised by much of his latest effort,
    "Angry Boys." Billed as a comedy, the series is actually anything but at
    times, refusing opportunities for humor to take the entire enterprise
    with the utmost seriousness, as though Lilley was aiming for
    respectability with his well-rehearsed sideshow act, trying to breathe
    life into caricatures that he barely has a handle on. While his
    improvisational breathlessness is something to behold, Lilley doesn't
    have much to say with "Angry Boys" outside of some mild satire directed
    at the fragility of emotionally stunted men. The rest is a blend of
    profanity, touches of blackface and yellowface, anti-gay slurs, urine
    and semen jokes, and wild tonal swings that render the show a real
    patience-tester at times, watching the star feel around in the dark for a
    narrative direction that he's never able to find. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Mama

    MAMA Jessica Chastain

    It’s important to take Guillermo del Toro’s executive producer credit
    seriously, as “Mama” bears all the signs of his previous work. It’s a
    ghost tale with an almost storybook atmosphere, despite its search for
    forbidding areas of confrontation between the unaware and the undead.
    It’s spooky and weird enough to work, with a knockout resolution that
    maintains the story’s integrity — the cinematic equivalent of finding a
    four-leaf clover. Sure, flaws are readily apparent and length is an
    issue, but “Mama” is after a retro atmosphere of spookiness, trusting in
    the art of unease. It’s skillfully made and manages to provide the
    willies with only a few cheap shocks, making the movie something of an
    anomaly in a genre that routinely amplifies its scares and pulls its
    punches. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Last Stand

    LAST STAND Arnold Schwarzenegger

    It might be hard to believe, but Arnold Schwarzenegger hasn’t starred in
    a movie since 2003’s “Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines.” Sure, there
    have been cameos in two “Expendables” screen adventures and a weird part
    in 2004’s “Around the World in 80 Days,” but the once mighty action
    hero has laid low over the last decade, fighting different battles with a
    special group of villains as Governor of California. “The Last Stand”
    treats Schwarzenegger’s return as business as usual, dropping the star
    into the thick of the hunt, with only a few jokes addressing his
    advanced age before he’s back cracking skulls and blasting away goons.
    Sure, the gags could be better, the casting stronger, and the thrills
    continuous, but “The Last Stand” remains immensely enjoyable and
    occasionally freewheeling. At the very least, it’s good to have
    Schwarzenegger back on the screen where he belongs. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Broken City

    BROKEN CITY Russell Crowe

    “Broken City” starts off with tremendous confidence, establishing a
    story that pits corrupt politicians against corrupt cops during an
    election season, with the future of New York City at stake. It’s Mark
    Wahlberg vs. Russell Crowe in a big screen battle of brawn, with
    director Allen Hughes creating an enticing web of lies to examine as the
    film unfolds. There’s promise here, and a satisfying opening act. And
    then the production begins to break down under the weight of its own
    ambition, laboring to make plot points stick and characters significant,
    eventually stumbling to a most unsatisfying close. In trying to
    super-size its suspenseful interests, “Broken City” becomes a broken
    record, hitting formulaic notes of fraud when the script is more
    convincing as a visceral study of men behaving badly. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – A Glimpse Inside the Mind of Charles Swan III

    A GLIMPSE INSIDE THE MIND OF CHARLES SWAN III Bill Murray

    Charlie Sheen hasn’t starred in a motion picture since the 2003 release of “Scary Movie 3,” with years of television and, ahem, other
    pursuits taking up his time in the interim. One would think that Sheen
    would crave an opportunity to play a character unlike himself, venturing
    out in the great creative unknown to embody heroism or villainy, or
    perhaps a little bit of both in a wildly taxing film that stretches the
    actor to his breaking point. Instead, Sheen drops into “A Glimpse Inside
    the Mind of Charles Swan III,” a mildly surreal feature that finds the
    chemically obsessed one playing a chemically obsessed one, with a
    ferocious womanizing appetite and impish inclinations to spare. It’s not
    exactly a bold leap forward for Sheen, but, to his credit, he manages
    to survive a highly disorganized effort from fascinating helmer Roman
    Coppola. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Amour

    AMOUR still 3

    Director Michael Haneke has built a career out of punishing cinema,
    slyly merging doomsday dramatics with a bleak sense of pace and an
    occasional burst of dark humor. Think of “The Piano Teacher,” “Cache,”
    and “Funny Games,” all powerful, sinister snippets of human behavior,
    but not films that demand a revisit outside of cinema education
    purposes. “Amour” is perhaps the least outwardly appealing effort from
    Haneke to date, asking viewers to watch a woman slowly succumb to the
    horrible effects of a stroke, while her husband carries on almost
    helplessly, confronted with the reality of death and separation for the
    first time in his life. It’s upsetting material lined with lead by
    Haneke, who searches for the meaning of love but can’t help but dwell on
    the details of decay. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Factory

    FACTORY Mae Whitman

    “The Factory” finally finds release after an extended period gathering
    dust on a shelf. Filmed in 2008, the production emerges from the wilted
    imagination of Dark Castle Productions, home base to such features as
    the ridiculous “Orphan” and “The Apparition,” one of 2012’s biggest box
    office bombs. “The Factory” is their worst effort to date, which I know
    isn’t much of a statement, but rarely has an exploitation thriller
    repulsed in a manner that seems entirely avoidable. Grotesquely
    misguided and conceived, “The Factory” asks viewers to sit patiently
    while all manner of ugliness is trotted out for the screen, chasing
    horror and procedural trends that are wildly out of date in 2013.
    However, its considerable age doesn’t excuse its carelessness and
    ugliness, which would’ve registered just as numbingly five years ago. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Sapphires

    SAPPHIRES Still 1

    “The Sapphires” is such an earnest film with a distinct soulful beat,
    it’s easy to forgive its occasional heavy-handed screenwriting and
    abysmal third act. For the most part a cheery, pleasingly feisty musical
    comedy set during an era of powerhouse pop songs, the feature is almost
    too good to be true during the opening hour, delivering broad
    audience-pleasing moments while shaping amusing personalities, getting
    the movie up to speed with laughs and heavenly tunes. The party doesn’t
    carry to the end, but there’s enough gaiety and whirlwind plotting to
    sustain an upbeat attitude about the whole endeavor, even when director
    Wayne Blair seems utterly determined to exit the effort on a sour note. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Officer Down

    OFFICER DOWN Stephen Dorff

    I’m not sure what type of film “Officer Down” wants to be, but it
    doesn’t appear particularly successful on any front. Part cop drama,
    part whodunit, with a dusting of action dynamics, the picture marches
    forward without a game plan, creating a confusing, overly fussed-with
    effort that depends on twists to keep the audience invested, only it’s a
    stretch to believe that anyone will be at the edge of their seat by the
    time the resolution arrives. However, “Officer Down” is surprisingly
    settled, eschewing hacky low-budget chaos to attempt a more sensitive
    understanding of a troubled mind. It doesn’t quite achieve its plan for a
    psychological breakdown, but the effort is appreciated, even in a
    feature as messy as this one. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Inventing David Geffen

    Inventing David Geffen

    Many images come to mind when the name David Geffen is mentioned. A
    protector of music, a producer of movies, a billionaire, and a tenacious
    businessman, Geffen has lived quite a life. Filled with the type of
    entertainment world high adventure few will ever be able to equal,
    Geffen has built a brand name of quality and longevity, often from mere
    scraps of ideas, trusting in his instincts and a good hearty yell to
    broker deals and secure interests, with over 50 years of ladders
    climbed, egos endured, and financial risks to show for his work. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Death Ship

    DEATH SHIP 1980

    The haunted ship subgenre is not something that's explored much these
    days, with 2002's "Ghost Ship" perhaps the last major effort to claim
    multiplex attention, and that didn't go well. Back in the 1970s and
    '80s, fascination with all things floating and demonic was more common,
    with "Death Ship" (released in 1980) a prime example of what the premise
    has to offer on an absurdly tiny budget. It's ridiculous and dips a toe
    in tastelessness, but the core terror experience is acceptable for fans
    of the scary stuff, eating up 90 minutes with creepy corridors,
    unexplained antagonism, blood showers, and the most dangerous peppermint
    candy ever committed to film. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – A Haunted House

    HAUNTED HOUSE Marlon Wayans

    The Wayans Family already had their way with horror film parodies,
    having masterminded (or slapped together) 2000’s “Scary Movie” and
    2001’s “Scary Movie 2.” Apparently, the lure of slapstick was too great
    for star Marlon Wayans, who returns to duty with “A Haunted House,”
    which pilfers most of its material from the “Paranormal Activity” series
    and last year’s unexpected exorcism smash, “The Devil Inside.” As to be
    expected with a Wayans endeavor, the picture is crude, desperate, and
    permissive with its actors. What’s surprising here is how lazy “A
    Haunted House” is, doing away with the relative polish of “Scary Movie”
    to merely stitch together fart jokes and abysmal improvisations,
    gradually doing away with any type of connective tissue or, in the final
    act, elementary moviemaking coherence. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Gangster Squad

    GANGSTER SQUAD Josh Brolin Ryan Gosling

    “Gangster Squad” shoots itself in the foot right out of the gate by
    suggesting the movie is somehow rooted in fact. Sure, there was a mafia
    figure known as Mickey Cohen, and yes, he certainly had an interest in
    dominating Los Angeles, but the rest of this picture is more cartoon
    than history. While adapting a true crime book by author Paul Lieberman,
    the production doesn’t know when to stick with the facts or create its
    own narrative, fumbling an engaging take on mob warfare and police
    desperation by trying to turn it all into a stylized, overly emphatic
    actioner, complete with blazing Tommy guns, professional wrestling-style
    performances, and a simplified conflict to extract the most machismo.
    “Gangster Squad” disappoints in a big bad way. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Struck by Lightning

    STRUCK BY LIGHTNING Chris Colfer

    “Struck by Lightning” is Chris Colfer’s attempt to wake up his
    generation while they passively walk into limited futures. Known for his
    work on the television series “Glee,” Colfer is attempting to expand
    his interests and employability as the show declines in popularity,
    scripting himself a chewy leading role in a story that’s built around a
    Big Idea, yet doesn’t have the finesse to leave the crater-sized impact
    it’s seeking to create. Instead, the actor/writer/producer cooks up a
    host of half-realized ideas, flaccid comedy, and strident melodrama,
    looking to serve the goulash as adolescent illumination. It’s not
    exactly ambitious, but “Struck by Lightning” is a noble failure, with
    individual elements more interesting than the strangled, distracted
    whole. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com