It’s been dubbed the “Three Flavours Cornetto Trilogy” (a cheeky nod to
the appearance of a special ice cream treat), but director Edgar Wright
has done an impressive job keeping these features separate in terms of
style and sense of humor. With “Shaun of the Dead” and “Hot Fuzz,” the
helmer fashioned a special tour of film fandom and genre exercises, but
all good things must come to end, and it does, somewhat abruptly with
“The World’s End.” Amusing and impeccably designed and photographed, the
latest work from Wright, Simon Pegg, and Nick Frost comes across a tad
undercooked, as though the creative team was backed into making a movie
instead of triumphantly mounting one. Although it has plenty of impish
intent, there’s an air of fatigue swirling around the production that
constantly hinders the comedic adventuring.
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Category: Film Review
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Film Review – The World’s End
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Film Review – Drinking Buddies
It’s great to see something like “Drinking Buddies” make its way to
movie theaters. Especially in a day and age when most dramas pull their
punches, here’s a feature that’s decidedly human, trusting in the power
of internalization over the showmanship of melodrama. It’s an effort
that requires attention to tiny behavioral details, articulated by
actors contributing the best work of their careers, while director Joe
Swanberg keeps pace and maintains intimacy. It bruises and stings along
the way, but “Drinking Buddies” skillfully surveys the details of
friendships and longing, delivered in a messy, improvisational manner
that feels completely natural to the habitual hesitation at hand.
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Film Review – Ain’t Them Bodies Saints
There’s beauty to behold in the bizarrely titled “Ain’t Them Bodies
Saints,” which possesses a moviemaking mission to resuscitate a bygone
era of film construction that dwelled in mood and feeling, most
pointedly in the early work of Terrence Malick. It’s a quest shared by
many indie directors, but David Lowery (who also scripts) finds an
organic way of homage while detailing his own story of loss and longing,
employing an atmospheric sense of Texas culture to ease audiences into
this tone poem of a picture. Dramatically static but superbly assembled,
“Ain’t Them Bodies Saints” isn’t just an eye-crossing title, but a
warmly realized portrait of separation as therapy, appreciating all the
minor triumphs of maturation.
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Film Review – The Attack
“The Attack” asks very pointed questions about the nature of marriage
and the preservation of secrets in a romantic, intimate union. It’s a
film concerning the aftereffects of a suicide bombing in Tel Aviv, but
it doesn’t linger on the fury that traditionally follows these
sacrifices, electing to focus on those left behind to process the
mindset required to make such a diabolical personal choice. It’s a
harrowing picture with an interpretive ideological viewpoint that
develops sensational dramatic turns of plot. It’s certainly not easy to
digest, but the internal struggle director/co-writer Ziad Doueiri
isolates here is exceptional at times, giving the divisive topic the
meditative approach it deserves.
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Film Review – Rising from Ashes
It’s a given that “Rising from Ashes” succeeds at selling its
inspirational tale. After all, the story includes genocide survival, an
underdog saga, and a soulful rebirth in the form of unexpected
companionship, making the feature easy to fall for. It’s slight work,
without much in the way of a beginning and ending, but as a documentary
it scores with a heartfelt study of perseverance, watching those who
struggle every single day to contain their lives build confidence and
develop an alien sense of joy, with that purity of spirit contributing
to a sporting odyssey that’s more about human details than physical
achievement.
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Film Review – The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones
We currently live in a “Harry Potter” and “Twilight” free world, with
both franchises closing up shop over the last few years, leaving
Hollywood in a mad dash to find the next big fantasy saga that could
uncover billions in box office returns over the course of numerous
sequels. There have been many failures (don’t expect a “Beautiful
Creatures 2”), but that won’t stop producers from giving the impossible a
go, with “The Mortal Instruments” saga from author Cassandra Clare the
next literary series up to bat. It’s difficult to surmise if the
faithful will fully accept the big screen interpretation, but it’s safe
to write that those who don’t have a clue about “The Mortal Instruments”
before viewing will know even less about the property on the way out of
the theater.
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Film Review – Paranoia
For a decent thriller to work, there should be some sense of
plausibility to help develop a connection with the audience, allowing
them into the scheme of things through recognizable elements of
suspicion, espionage, and accusation. “Paranoia” doesn’t exist on the
Earth that we know and love, but a parallel dimension where handheld
technology is capable of anything, destroying lives with the press of a
smartphone button. Director Robert Luketic’s mistake is that he doesn’t
brand “Paranoia” as sci-fi, instead trying to wow viewers with a
contemporary tech-based suspense film that’s so focused on glowing
screens and the titular anxiety, it abandons any shred of realism, thus
turning a simple story of corporate spying with enticing possibilities
into an extended run of silly make-em-ups that never congeal into
nail-biting astonishment.
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Film Review – Kick-Ass 2
This review contains strong language.
I was no fan of 2010’s “Kick-Ass,” though I was mildly beguiled by the
feature’s comic book vigor, playing directly to the core demographic
with a violent, sarcastic atmosphere that divided the audience into
geeks fully invested in the work and outsiders who couldn’t compute the
mixed messages director Matthew Vaughn was transmitting. Despite the
original film’s inability to attract much attention at the box office, a
small profit has triggered a sequel, once again adapting a comic book
series by Mark Millar and John Romita, Jr. Vaughn’s stepped down, taking
a producing role, and the insider shine has been scraped off, reducing
“Kick-Ass 2” to a glorified DTV sequel that’s determined to outgun,
out-slice, and out-diarrhea its precursor. It’s a vicious, ugly, unfunny
picture, and one that’s lacking the millimeter of polish Vaughn rubbed
into the first movie.
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Film Review – Lee Daniels’ The Butler
“Lee Daniels’ The Butler” is the official title of this picture due to
ridiculous studio tensions that forced distributor The Weinstein Company
to make a slight alteration to the label to prevent additional
retitling banality. Turns out, the Lee Daniels brand on the feature is
more appropriate than previously imagined, as “The Butler” is sopping
wet with his filmmaking DNA, forgoing a clean sense of history and
timing to slosh around numerous eras and interactions, almost forming a
narrative by accident. It could some extra baking time in an editing
suite, but the movie is undeniably passionate work, doing a commendable
job making sense out of the helmer’s scattershot approach to a highly
ordered life.
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Film Review – Jobs
“Jobs” is a baffling motion picture, asking the audience to spent two
hours with a narcissistic creep who stomped on those who helped to build
an empire, flushed his family down the toilet, and treated underlings
cruelly. Of course, it was all in the quest for perfection according to
the screenplay by Matt Whiteley, giving Steve Jobs a free pass to
sainthood, where his tech world innovation, not his dubious character,
preserves his legacy at Apple Inc. Not that “Jobs” has any interest in
behavioral complexity to challenge the exalted subject, instead behaving
like a confused television movie that doesn’t exactly know how to
transform extended examples of unbridled arrogance into a hard-edged
celebration of dogged ambition.
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Film Review – In a World
Although writer/director Lake Bell aims to construct a romantic comedy
with her helming debut, “In a World,” the effort almost registers as a
tribute film to the late voiceover artist, Don LaFontaine. One of the
most famous voices in the history of the vocation, LaFontaine was turned
into a pop culture player when his use of the titular phrase in movie
trailers became the ubiquitous opener for any production needing that
extra introductory punch. Bell aims to celebrate the industry and its
players with the picture, which is always most confident inspecting the
neuroses and power plays of the participants. The ooey-gooey material
just doesn’t share the same personality.
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Film Review – Last Passenger
“Last Passenger” isn’t a particularly innovative movie, but it does have
the sense to at least attempt to break away from the thriller norm. A
runaway train picture spotlighting a collection of desperate commuters,
the film isn’t about pinpointing the root of all evil, instead valuing
the cinematic appeal of sheer panic in the face of possible doom,
working nuances of character over an enormous display of malice. For
some, the lack of explicit evil behavior will register as frustrating,
as the feature does lack a certain edge when it comes to antagonism.
Others might enjoy the change in scenery, as “Last Passenger” is more
interested in the steps of survival, not the mechanics of villainy.
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Film Review – Standing Up
As a film director, D.J. Caruso has primarily pursued more bubblegum
thriller material with “I Am Number Four” and “Eagle Eye,” while
inspecting the dark side of life in pictures such as “The Salton Sea”
and “Taking Lives.” “Standing Up” is a major change of pace for the
helmer, who loses interest in visual effects and suspense set pieces to
make a movie about two kids getting to know each other in the wake of a
terrible incident involving summer camp bullying. It’s a sweet,
sensitive story, guided benevolently by Caruso, who emphasizes the
tale’s kindness and bittersweet qualities, creating one of the more
humane tales of preadolescence to hit screens in some time.
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Film Review – Prince Avalanche
It’s been a long time since director David Gordon Green explored
humanity. After a stretch guiding one inspired comedy (“Pineapple
Express”) and two wretched ones (“The Sitter” and “Your Highness”),
Green returns to his backwoods roots with “Prince Avalanche,” an oddly
hypnotic tale of vulnerability that trusts the power of silence and
imagery, managing to attack central conflicts from unusual angles.
Beautifully shot and refreshingly performed from two actors in need of a
change of pace, the movie settles into a position of isolation and
finds rich character notes to play, spun with that special Green
idiosyncrasy that once defined his career before Hollywood came calling.
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Film Review – Elysium
Four years ago, Neill Blomkamp made a splash with his directorial debut,
the alien immigration saga “District 9.” A sleeper smash that created a
career for the helmer and star Sharlto Copley, the picture was pure
overkill, but offered an enticing glimpse of Blomkamp’s undeniably
fertile creative vision. “Elysium” is his big-budget follow-up, allowing
the moviemaker a chance to romp around an immense sci-fi sandbox, with
major stars to conduct and immaculate CGI machinery to manipulate. Even
though the features are identical in many ways, “Elysium” is more
polished than “District 9,” filling out Blomkamp’s visual potential in
full. However, old, ugly habits remain, keeping his latest work
frustrating to watch as it avoids greatness to monkey around with
numerous noisemakers.
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Film Review – Lovelace
“Lovelace” isn’t a bio-pic about the star of “Deep Throat.” The film is
merely a slice of her story told from two different perspectives,
highlighting the perceived thrill of adult cinema fame and its haunting
reality. It’s not an education on the life and times of Linda Lovelace,
but a glimpse of her years as a victim, with barely any effort put
forward to secure a rounded portrait of a complicated existence.
Although it’s nicely shot and agreeably acted by Amanda Seyfried,
“Lovelace” is a superficial examination of profound pain and dubious
character, keeping the material disappointingly one-note when it aches
to be so much more comprehensive.
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Film Review – Planes
Let’s not kid ourselves here, Disney’s “Planes” has arrived to
facilitate the creation of a new generation of toys. It’s classic
Hollywood marketing disguised as moviemaking, only here the groundwork
has been laid by “Cars” and “Cars 2,” the Pixar pair that didn’t exactly
win critical favor, but ran away with billions in merchandising. Billions.
Of course the Mouse House was going to test the limits of this fandom,
especially when the last “Cars” picture showed signs that audiences were
growing a little tired of the automobile flavor. Now we have airplanes,
but the story, the jokes, and the corporate manipulation remains the
same. However, “Planes” does possess the fluid animation “Cars” lacked,
taking to the sky with a slick presentation of aerial balletics and
cartoon antics.
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Film Review – Computer Chess
“Computer Chess” has a gimmick, and it’s a pretty fantastic one. Set in
the early 1980s, the picture is shot with antique Portapak equipment,
the kind of camera one wouldn’t dare point directly toward the sun. It
lends the feature an endearingly low-fi look that’s played almost
entirely straight, setting the retro mood with an authentic visual
presence that’s amusing to simply study, unearthing vivid memories
concerning the early stages of the video moviemaking revolution.
Unfortunately, the effort’s imagination is limited to its look, as
“Computer Chess” appears to mistake stasis for subversion, leaving the
material’s quest to depict programming authenticity admirable, but
hardly enough to fill out an entire film. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com -
Film Review – Jug Face
Horror films are a dime a dozen, often viewed chasing trends or lazily
slopping the frame with blood to complete the genre task at hand. When a
production comes around that seeks out a different tonal direction,
it’s easy to notice the atmospheric changes. “Jug Face” is such a movie,
with the presence of originality helping to make helmer Chad Crawford
Kinkle’s debut feature stand out from the suffocating pack. It’s short
(80 minutes long), sparingly severe, and mysterious, asking viewers to
follow an unusual premise doesn’t reward with shocks, but a steady pulse
of dread, making the macabre aspects of the work all the more
unsettling. It’s a terrific picture, smartly made and sharply acted, and
it’s one of the best chillers of the year. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com -
Film Review – Blue Jasmine
Writer/director Woody Allen has been in a romantic mood lately. With the
fantasy “Midnight in Paris” and the farce “To Rome with Love,” Allen
was swept away by a golden European glow, scripting tales of life and
love with his special neurotic stamp. “Blue Jasmine” isn’t a
particularly friendly movie, returning the filmmaker to areas of
psychological warfare and social discomfort that have informed his
finest pictures. A satisfying blend of behavioral severity, “A Streetcar
Named Desire” homage, and laughs, “Blue Jasmine” is distinctly
Allen-esque, but dominated by Cate Blanchett’s stunning lead performance
— a masterful tightrope walk of delusion and deliberation that keeps
the effort absorbing and darkly comic.
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