Technically, 2003's "A Man Apart" doesn't fall into the Vin Diesel
career feeding frenzy that developed after the release of 2001's "The
Fast and the Furious." Although issued after the monstrous "XXX," "A Man
Apart" was actually shot in late 2000/early 2001, when the star was
merely a curiosity with a minor hit ("Pitch Black") on his resume.
However, post-production troubles kept the feature out of sight for the
next two years, finally released when Diesel's brand name was red-hot
and audiences were starting to question the Hollywood hype machine
surrounding the growly brute. Intended to play into the actor's more
dramatic interests, "A Man Apart" was marketed as a tough guy
experience, emphasizing the lead's position as a thunderous force of big
screen revenge, peppered with explosions and cowering villains. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
Author: BO
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Blu-ray Review – A Man Apart
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Blu-ray Review – FernGully: The Last Rainforest
In the early 1990s, environmental education was beginning to take hold
in both schools and pop culture, with a particular emphasis on the
plight of the rainforest, largely viewed as a core problem for Mother
Earth's woes. "FernGully: The Last Rainforest" emerged as a sensitive
call to arms from a major movie studio (debuting two months after
Disney's deeply flawed but interesting rainforest adventure, "Medicine
Man"), hoping to entertain family audiences while emphasizing a harsh
message of deforestation and pollution threatening to destroy the magic
of the world. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com -
Film Review – Taken 2
While Louis Leterrier’s “The Transporter” and “Transporter 2” were no
diamonds of cinema, they were wonderfully amusing offerings of junk
food, big on action and entertainment value, sold with a special Jason
Statham growl. And then co-writer/producer Luc Besson handed
“Transporter 3” to helmer Olivier Megaton, who cooked up a dreadful,
comatose third installment, effectively killing interest in the series.
Pierre Morel’s “Taken” was blissfully simplistic, focused, and served
raw, using star Liam Neeson’s natural way with blunt force to fashion an
absolute gem of an actioner. And now Besson has returned to his bad
luck charm, calling up Megaton to guide “Taken 2,” a disappointingly
flat, atrociously edited, and somewhat nasty sequel that doesn’t come
close to the rapid-fire original.
Read the rest at Blu-ray.com -
Film Review – Frankenweenie
There’s no doubt that “Frankenweenie” is a Tim Burton film. That it’s a
largely lifeless Tim Burton film is the real surprise, considering it's
the man’s second shot at mastering this story. Originally brought to
life by the helmer as a short in 1984 (where it was basically brushed
aside by nervous Disney executives), “Frankenweenie” returns to screens
nearly two decades later, this time as a stop-motion animated
production, hoping to mirror the success of Burton’s similar efforts,
“The Nightmare Before Christmas” and “Corpse Bride.” While it’s crafted
with gloriously ghoulish details and teeming with classic movie
references, “Frankenweenie” shows great difficulty proving its worth as a
feature-length effort, working through elements of monster rampage and
scientific debate that feel more like padding than a naturally dramatic
extension of the original creation. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com -
Film Review – Wuthering Heights
Emily Bronte’s celebrated 1847 novel has been adapted time and again by
world cinema, with each production embracing the squeeze of unrequited
love and the abundant atmospheric trimmings of the original work. It’s a
timeless tale of obsession, yet this latest take on the material takes
matters into a harsher direction of internalized agony and violent
communication. It’s a lengthy picture with ambiance to spare, but it’s
something to be seen, offering a rejuvenated approach to the story that
dazzles with grit and grief, captured with an authentically terrifying
atmospheric approach that beautifully supports the discomfort and
anguish flowing through the veins of the performances. This “Wuthering
Heights” is not something to be passively accepted, but deeply felt,
down to the bone. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com -
Film Review – Butter
There was tremendous potential for “Butter” to throw a spotlight on the
rigors of butter sculpting competitions, drinking in the varied
characters that populate this odd hobby while taking note of the
exceptional skill required to turn slabs of dairy into art. Instead,
“Butter” goes for a swipe of irreverence, poking fun with Midwestern
caricatures while bending over backwards to earn a gratuitous R-rating.
It’s a needlessly vulgar, decidedly laugh-free picture that works up a
sweat trying to come off provocative when all it needed to be was
present with a sculptural medium that doesn’t require much of a satiric
boost to provide 80 minutes of solid entertainment and the occasional
giggle. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com -
Film Review – Someday This Pain Will Be Useful to You
Here’s a film that assumes a great deal of its characters and situations
are interesting and, in some cases, deeply sympathetic. How wrong
“Someday This Pain Will Be Useful to You” is. A conventional exploration
of a young, troubled soul living an affluent life in New York City, the
feature is disorganized and unpleasant, aching to reach some form of
emotional vulnerability, only to spotlight a story without severity,
lacking an abyssal sense of violation and soulful agony that typically
informs such angsty endeavors. It’s not exactly a trainwreck of a movie,
but “Someday This Pain” is so void of depth and meaning, it often
resembles a parody of the bruised teen subgenre. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com -
Film Review – The Barrens
I applaud writer/director Darren Lynn Bousman’s attempts to keep the
spirit of low-budget horror alive, scripting stories that prey on fears
of the apocalyptic unknown and the mentally unstable. However, with
efforts such as “11-11-11” and a remake of “Mother’s Day,” the helmer’s
ambitions are far more interesting to dissect than his movies. Add “The
Barrens” to the pile of promising failures, with the creator isolating
the drive to seek and destroy the legendary Jersey Devil, which promises
to be an enticing feature of creepy woodsy remoteness, populated with
characters touched by madness. Bousman doesn’t have the vision to hoist
the horror up high, settling on a mundane camping thriller only
sporadically enlivened by mysterious violence. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com -
Blu-ray Review – Hocus Pocus
It's been surprising to watch "Hocus Pocus" develop a cult following
since its release in 1993, amassing a passionate group of fans raised on
VHS rentals and routine basic cable showings. It's a declaration of
love that certainly wasn't there during its initial theatrical run,
where the sharp minds at Disney released an exhaustively
Halloween-centric story in mid-July, and then seemed surprised when the
picture bombed. Any film that displays the ability to rise from the box
office ashes and sustain popularity for nearly two decades is a minor
cinematic miracle in my book, but I have to wonder, why has "Hocus
Pocus" bewitched a vocal minority? A bland, unfunny oddity with overly
manic execution and a few strange tonal detours, the feature desires to
be a colorful, politely spooky creation, only to elicit blank stares.
Perhaps I underestimate the power of its generational hold, yet
considering the potential of a broad Disney witch romp, "Hocus Pocus" is
an incredibly mediocre movie. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com -
Film Review – Won’t Back Down
“Won’t Back Down” is such an exaggerated attempt to shed light on the
failures of the public school system, it might have you rooting for
illiteracy to win in the end. Nuance and some type of dramatic balance
is punted away right at the top of the feature, making the next two
hours a preachy, hokey bore boosted by a few sublimely devoted
performances. Education is a critical topic worth a cinematic
inspection, but thespian passion and good intentions do not carry a
movie alone. A production like this demands a brain as big as its heart,
helping viewers to understand complexity when dealing with the youth of
the nation. “Won’t Back Down” merely uncorks a box of Crayons and
broadly colors over the issues at hand, doing a disservice to the
parents, students, and teachers who struggle with this impasse on a
daily basis. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com -
Film Review – Looper
Writer/director Rian Johnson has developed a reputation for
uncompromising, inventive work (with “Brick” and “The Brothers Bloom”),
and his latest, the sci-fi brainteaser “Looper,” is no different. While
his features are intricately designed and heavily considered, Johnson’s
not one to keep an eye on pace, often so enamored with screen
particulars that a simple sense of forward momentum is missing, losing a
primal cinematic drive to step back and admire his handiwork. “Looper”
is the closest the filmmaker has come to a dazzling motion picture,
toying with the conventions of the time travel subgenre to fashion his
own thriller, a movie with real teeth and a working brain. Although
intermittently ferocious, “Looper” doesn’t hold the viewer by the throat
for two hours, showing a troubling lack of stamina the longer it
develops the central conflict. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com -
Film Review – Pitch Perfect
It’s difficult to believe “Pitch Perfect” was scripted by Kay Cannon, a
vastly talented writer who made a name for herself working on “30 Rock,”
a job that requires ingenuity, a samurai-sword-sharp sense of humor,
and a mathematical understanding of screen timing. Cruelly, “Pitch
Perfect” is a glorified episode of “Glee” with a “Family Guy” funny
bone, bellyflop displays of improvisation, and a running joke concerning
projectile vomiting. At one point, a character even slides around in
the soupy stomach contents. Yeesh. Perhaps the target demographic of
teenagers and music competition nuts will enjoy themselves
wholeheartedly with this bothersome feature, losing themselves in the
songs and fatigued silliness, yet “Pitch Perfect” is an unexpectedly
lazy effort from a genuinely inspired writer, steamrolling through the
world of a cappella in an uncivil manner that doesn’t inspire laughs or
induce the chills that typically accompany true vocal power. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com -
Film Review – The Hole
The particulars of film distribution have kept “The Hole” from American
eyes for quite some time now. Originally shot in 2008 and released in
Europe in 2009, the feature finally makes its way west for reasons that
aren’t immediately clear, but I’m grateful regardless. The latest from
director Joe Dante, “The Hole” is a modest production with a hearty
sense of scare, tunneling into the psyche to find a human source of
terror to compliment the monsters that occasionally pop into view during
the picture. Entertaining, with a welcome sense of mischief, “The Hole”
plays to Dante’s strengths, returning him to a suburban battleground
where young characters face off against an unstoppable, often knee-high
malevolent force. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com -
Film Review – Hotel Transylvania
There’s a polar opposite difference between the gloriously elastic
animation of “Hotel Transylvania” and its wretched screenplay, and it’s a
heartbreaker to see such a wonderful premise torpedoed by a lack of
storytelling consideration. A rare foray into spooky business for family
audiences, the feature contains such promise that it seems almost
impossible to screw up in a major way. Enter Adam Sandler, who brings
his low-brow sense of humor to this monster mash, endeavoring to appease
adults with a moldy tale of father-daughter strife, while he looks to
tickle kids with bodily function humor. Although it’s a shame that
“Hotel Transylvania” is so persistently crude, true disappointment
emerges from the exceptional cartoon craftsmanship of the movie, which
is wasted on ghastly writing. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com -
Film Review – The Perks of Being a Wallflower
It’s a rare event to find an author not only writing the screenplay
adaptation of his own work, but directing it as well. It’s a heavy
workload for Stephen Chbosky, who attempts to make the nuances of his
book, “The Perks of Being a Wallflower,” compute on the big screen.
Although gifted a trio of inspired performances from the lead actors,
“Wallflower” is a muddled creation blessed with unique emotional
sincerity, yet cursed with loose ends and poorly defined characters,
huddled into a precious creation that might test the patience of those
with a sensitivity to effusive teen melodrama. There’s enormous insight
into the adolescent mind, yet Chbosky is hopelessly disorganized,
creating a film of sporadic significance. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com -
Film Review – Bringing Up Bobby
“Bringing Up Bobby” has all the good intentions in the world to tell an
honest story about separation and the lasting sting of mistakes.
Writer/director Famke Janssen (the “X-Men” star making her filmmaking
debut) portrays her story earnestly, massaging an arc of personal
responsibility that’s kindly enough, but rarely is it ever felt down
deep in this underwhelming picture. A mismanaged drama with overheated
performances and a general disinterest in following through on
characterizations, “Bringing Up Bobby” doesn’t provide the soulfulness
it aims to share. Instead, it stumbles through scenes without a
consistent tone, hoping to shape something meaningful out of its display
of misguided parenting. Janssen just doesn’t have the vision to achieve
it. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com



















