Thursday, December 22, 2016
Hell or High Water - Love Letter to a Throwback
Tuesday, December 20, 2016
Blast from the Past: Rogue One: A Star Wars Story
Sunday, November 13, 2016
Arrival is Top Shelf Sci-Fi with Brains
Fear of the unknown. The impulse responsible for more of our behaviors - both good and bad - than nearly any other aspect of the human condition. It practically defines us. So when a dozen colossal spaceships appear at various points across the globe with no explanation, how do we react?
Arrival is the anti-Independence Day. It spoils nothing to say that there are no colossal battles or CGI annihilated cities in Arrival. It joins the short list of science fiction films like Close Encounters and Interstellar aimed squarely at adults, that stays smart and uses the tropes of the genre to say more about the nature of mankind, than about the nature of alien life. This will be a pretty short review, as the less you read about Arrival before you see it, the better. Amy Adams is Dr. Louise Banks, a university linguist recruited by the government to try and find a way of communicating with our mysterious visitors, in hopes of cracking the big question - why are they here?
Written by Eric Heisserer (from a story by Ted Chiang) and directed by the great Denis Villeneuve (Prisoners, Sicario), Arrival is a breath of fresh air on so many levels. Example: there's a lot of tech on display in the military command center beneath the ship, but for once we're not inundated with electronic product placement - there's no jarring close-up screaming "CISCO" or "NOKIA." Arrival also steers away from the trend of CNN-branded faux newscasts with real-life anchor cameos, which always seem to lessen the feeling of realism, rather than increase it. Villeneuve has become such an accomplished filmmaker, I'm frankly giddy knowing he's the guy directing next year's Blade Runner 2049. Are we ever in good hands.
Jeremy Renner and Forest Whitaker are both terrific here, but this is all Amy Adams, who's in nearly every scene and delivers a nuanced, at times heartbreaking performance. It's so refreshing to see a realistic adult female character who's not dependent on men or approval or who's a prisoner of her emotions. I suspect audiences are going to welcome her character and the rich emotional storytelling of Arrival with open arms. Very highly recommended.
Friday, November 11, 2016
In Through the Out Door: Doctor Strange Will See You Now
Wednesday, October 5, 2016
Sagnificent Seven
Over the last year, we’ve had something of a Western resurgence, easily one of my favorite genres. So I was pretty excited for Antoine Fuqua’s take on the John Sturges classic The Magnificent Seven (1960). A wild west rendering of Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai, the story of powerless villagers hiring gunslingers to defend their town from evil men works well across many environments, even deep space, as in 1980’s Battle Beyond the Stars. As we saw with last years’ The Hateful Eight, The Revenant and Bone Tomahawk, Westerns can still connect with audiences and deliver primal, pulp storytelling, with antagonists facing off against the backdrop of the wild frontier. Sadly, Fuqua’s well-intentioned remake isn’t nearly in the same class as those other films.
Denzel Washington takes on the Yul Brynner role (and black garb), while Chris Pratt riffs off of Steve McQueen’s cantankerous ne’er-do-well. Ethen Hawke and Vincent D’Onofrio, round out the mercenary mob, with Martin Sensmeier, Manuel Garcia-Rulfo and Byung-hun Lee providing backup diversity – and that’s really part of the problem with Seven. Fuqua is to be commended for bringing a diverse ethnic sensibility to the film – but the script never does their varied makeup any justice as characters. The character work in Seven is one of its weakest elements. Sensmeier and Lee exude tremendous charisma as Native American and Asian recruits, but other than “The elders say I’m on a different path,” and being good with knives, these two are brooding cyphers. Garcia-Rulfo has the thankless designation of Mexican Outlaw. This is a likable cast, but they’re woefully underserved by the script (Richard Wenk and Nic Pizzolatto).
Haley Bennett is the town’s voice who recruits the Seven as protectors, who seems cast mainly due to a resemblance to Jennifer Lawrence. If The Magnificent Seven was more fun, much of the sketchiness here could be forgiven, but unfortunately the film plays out in dreary, overbearing, and all too perfunctory fashion. The death blow is Peter Sarsgaard’s land-grabbing villain, played as a man seemingly driven by heavy-lidded boredom. He drags himself through scenes with lethargic flippancy, letting all the air of menace escape from the balloon. His character is a yawning misfire.
If you want to see a film where the director has boundless enthusiasm for the genre, go back and check out Sam Raimi’s The Quick and the Dead (1995). It’s brisk, faithful to a legion of tropes, and makes even the most hastily glimpsed characters memorably vivid, while always maintaining a sense of fun. It’s one of the countless, more engaging westerns that kept popping up for me while The Magnificent Seven mechanically unspooled. Pale Rider, Django Unchained, Tombstone – and Lawrence Kasdan’s Silverado. I’m betting Antoine Fuqua’s watched Silverado a lot, and you can sense him gamely trying to evoke a similar dynamic contrast between scenic grandeur and bullet-firing mayhem.
But for whatever reasons, this iteration of The Magnificent Seven just doesn’t stay with you. When the considerable gunsmoke finally clears, you’re likely to find that disappointment is what’s left standing.
Monday, September 12, 2016
Blind Panic: Don't Breathe
Nearly every summer, a sleeper emerges that you've never heard of that seemingly comes out of nowhere and captures audience's attention - usually a horror thriller. As summer gasped out its swan song, this year that distinction went to Don't Breathe.
You probably know the premise - a trio of young thieves plan a home invasion where the victim is blind. An easy score. Except the man in the dark is a Gulf War veteran, for whom blindness has become a superpower. He knows every inch of his hermit-imposed environment, his ears attuned to even the slightest noise. Played by the great Stephen Lang (Avatar), his blind man is a powerful, dangerous presence - a coiled spring. His quiet patience reminds you of Charles Bronson.
Directed by Fede Alvarez, (Evil Dead), Don't Breathe is a really hard movie to talk about without veering off the highway into spoiler territory, which I don't want to do. It's an extremely visceral and effective film, and the premise is stupendous. That first half of the movie is pure gasp-inducing adrenaline. The blind man's house is deep in the abandoned wasteland of derelict Detroit neighborhoods, and the absence of neighbors or passersby creates a foreboding, apocalyptic mood.
The trio of thieves are solid, especially Jane Levy. Dylan Minnette is a little too earnest, his character feeling more like he belongs in a John Hughes movie. But the movie calls for extremely personal, physical work from these two, as well as Daniel Zovatto, the most unrepentant of the three. The house is practically a character unto itself, feeling decrepit and real. Alvarez has a keen sense for what rattles an audience, and this is a great picture to see in the theater. It's claustrophobic and in your face.
The film owes a real debt to Panic Room, as well as the 1967 Audrey Hepburn thriller, Wait Until Dark, directed by the great Terence Young (if you've never seen it, find it). I'll just say that Alvarez makes the audience's sympathies a moving target. When the tables turn, as much as you want the blind man to triumph over his invaders, they're not stock bad guys, especially Levy. In the second half, you'll find there's more than one kitchen sink in play, and I found my allegiances in a fair amount of flux. Maybe I had some issues, but let's keep it spoiler-free.
When they bring the check, you've really got to hand it to Alvarez for delivering a super taut, economical premise with pretty tight lug nuts. Made for about $10 million, its dog-days box office is at $67 million so far. That's why you gotta love a good thriller.
Monday, August 8, 2016
So Long, Summer: 2016 Fall & Winter Movie Preview
So what’s next? Looking ahead to the fall and winter months, I have to say, it doesn’t exactly look like the most awe-inspiring autumn, let alone Christmas. Unquestionably, films are going to surface we didn’t see coming, but as it stands now, there’s less than ten films that look cool enough to lure me into the theater. It’s a surprisingly short list this year.
Wednesday, August 3, 2016
Suicide Squad Review Wreckage
Monday, August 1, 2016
The Needful Nostalgia of Stranger Things
Tuesday, July 26, 2016
Cameron's Abyss on Blu-ray Next Year!
Saturday, July 23, 2016
Review: Star Trek Beyond Warps to Success
Of the "Nu-Trek" films, this is the first one to take place entirely in deep space, far from Earth, as the Enterprise is more than halfway through its five-year mission. Captain Kirk (the superb Chris Pine) is feeling a little weary, finding life a little "episodic." His early heart-to-heart with Bones (Karl Urban) is reminiscent of a similar confessional vulnerability from Christopher Pike to his doc, way back in The Menagerie (aka The Cage), back where this amazing universe began.
After a visit to an Elysium-esque Starbase, the Enterprise crew must journey into a nebula to answer a distress call (guys, never seen Alien, or taken the Kobayashi Maru test? Come on!), the ship is ruthlessly attacked by Krall (Idris Elba), an aggressive alien out for blood, who nurses a real chip on his shoulder for the Federation.
The setup is really just a means to have the crew abandon ship and be split-up on a hostile alien world. And this is where Justin Lin and Simon Pegg get major props - because while Star Trek Beyond is full of outlandish action sequences, most of it's devoted to character, and to spending time with that core trio we have such affection for. A wounded Spock (Zachary Quinto) and McCoy are marooned together, and these scenes just shine, making the most of that Bickersons relationship between the two that was a hallmark of the original series.
Scotty encounters an alien exile, Jaylah (Kingsman's Sofia Boutella), an independent and fierce outcast who soon becomes a tremendous ally. She's a terrific character and it speaks volumes that she's able to hold her own with Pine, Urban and Quinto on the charisma meter. She's a tremendously engaging and fun addition to the group.
Another breakout star is the Starship Franklin, a castoff from the Enterprise/Captain Archer era. It's a supremely cool ship and its return to service says a lot about there still being plenty of juice left in old relics, if you know what I'm saying.
That's really the operative word here - fun. While it really is a souped-up blockbuster, Star Trek Beyond has tremendous affection for what makes Star Trek Star Trek, and is replete with little asides and deft callbacks that will bring plenty of smiles to fans' faces. It's a tremendously entertaining film and moves at a nice clip, not suffering at all from any 3rd act largesse.
If there's a weak spot in Beyond, it's the villain, Krall. The makeup design of Krall and his minions is pretty awful, and a little too reminiscent of the bumpy-faced alien syndrome that befell Deep Space Nine. He's very difficult to understand, and his motives are too much of a muddle, even by the third act. Also, if you're the kind of fan who bristles at anachronisms, you'd better know that you'll be getting Beastie Boys and Public Enemy writ large here, because demographic equals box office, even in the far reaches of deep space. So brace yourselves and just go with it. As enjoyable as the film is, it's a shame that the plot (and villain) don't connect to some kind of larger metaphoric ideal, as the original series did so well. There's really no Big Idea at play here, which is too bad, as it could have fit in very easily. There's nothing grand being said about the human condition or mankind's place in the cosmos, other than our tenacity.
But audiences are loving this picture, and at the end of the day, this is one of the most joyous depictions of the Kirk/Spock/McCoy dynamic we've seen in ages. Its place as one of the highlights of the summer box office is a good thing, and fans should embrace it, because it's going to go a long way towards keeping Trek alive and well for future iterations. It may be propelled by high octane flash, but it's so great to see a modern audience wildly enjoying what's essentially just a souped-up episode of one the most enjoyable cast of characters of all time. Boldly go.
#SDCC - Dark Tower Choo-Choo and Planet Hulk
Simon & Schuster had fictional author "Beryl Evans" there to autograph copies, despite the fact that she was murdered decades ago in another dimension. This is cross-platform marketing at its very best.