Monday, November 10, 2014

Interstellar (2014)



Interstellar generated a great deal of excitement from movie fans prior to release, only to land with a bit of a thud as it gets celebrated by some for its visual treats but picked apart by many for logical lapses and a problematic third act. I'm not here to defend the third act - it is a stinker. The stinky third act is also one that you can see coming if you are paying attention both because it is a fairly conventional and familiar sci-fi "surprise" and because the film is larded with relentless hinting. The third act, however, only wounds and does not fully kill the experience of what was, for the nearly two hours that preceded it, one of the most entertaining movies I have seen this year.

Monday, October 27, 2014

CitizenFour to Kill the Messenger: Some Thoughts On Some Recent Movies (10/27/14)




That Laura Poitras' Edward Snowden documentary CitizenFour feels like it has been gestating for a long time testifies to the hyper-speed at which the news cycle churns. Major media operations long ago lost interest in the story, even though it is barely more than a year old, more revelations have trickled out, and it just happens to be one of the most important stories of the century so far. But, hey, who cares about domestic spying when there is ebola to hyperventilate about? 

Friday, October 10, 2014

Fright Night (1985)


Revisiting films from childhood carries risk - a lot of it. A film that you loved as a child and now remember fondly as an adult can be ruined when you screen it again and realize just how cheesy or dumb the movie really was all along. On the other hand, sometimes you can watch a movie that you have not seen since childhood and now, as an adult, realize there was a level of depth and symbolism that went completely over your head the first time around. The latter is the case of Fright Night - the 1985 original - a movie that still works quite well on the surface as a fun, comedic horror film but that also  explores themes of sexual angst that seem obvious now but did not register with my childhood self.

Thursday, July 3, 2014

Music for the Hiatus


Not done or gone, just have been taking a bit of a hiatus. I've been catching up on other things, but, to be honest, I'm also a little counter-cyclical with the film release slate these days. I find summer movie releasing a bit depressing. There's a massive amount of screen space taken up with lowest common denominator junk. Even my local "arthouse" theater has Transformers - and other major studio releases - playing. I can't blame them too much as they do need to stay in business and they can't help it if people vote with their dollars for more franchise sequels.

Smaller films that might have some appeal for adults tend to get short shrift releases - limited space and out of theaters in a week or two. But it's also pretty amazing just how few R-rated action/thriller films see release these days, particularly in summer. Even Expendables 3 (for which I have zero expectations given the awful last one) will be PG-13. If you're looking for something action-y that isn't pulling punches (no pun intended) to satisfy the censors and the marketing bosses, you're lucky to find one or two movies out there, and if you've seen them, it might be weeks of waiting for another one.

I haven't stopped seeing movies, of course, and I'll have some reviews up soon. I liked Kelly Reichardt's Night Moves. Saw The Rover, which was a bit of a disappointment perhaps because I loved Animal Kingdom so much. It is still worth seeing, and I am a bit sad that it has been such a bomb at the box office (lacks critical cachet and A24's marketing efforts seem lacking on this one). 22 Jump Street is funny enough to merit a watch, even if little to no effort was put into originality or a coherent story (which the filmmakers might chalk up as part of their satire of sequels, even if that might be a cynical appeal for a pass). I saw a solid documentary, Band of Sisters, which you might be able to catch as it continues its marathon roadshow around the country. Mexican film The Amazing Catfish has a few issues, but it works decently and is worth a watch if you're up for a bittersweet family story. That's about all I can recommend from the films I've seen since my last review, although there are a few well-reviewed films kicking around out there (though several of them it looks like I may have missed my 7 day window for seeing in a theater in between rushing them on to VOD). I'll be seeing the much-hyped Snowpiercer soon.

I'll be back posting soon. In the meantime, have a good weekend and above and below is music for this hiatus. But remember when you're celebrating this "Fourth Of July brouhaha, don't forget what you're celebrating, and that's the fact that a bunch of slave-owning, aristocratic, white males didn't want to pay their taxes."



Saturday, June 14, 2014

Friday, June 13, 2014

Capsule Reviews - Girl Most Likely (2012), Clerks II (2006), and Galaxy Quest (1999)


Galaxy Quest (1999) - It is hard to believe that it has been 15 years since this outstanding entertainment was released. It remains remarkably fresh and, given the budget even for the time, looks pretty darn good - of course smartly using the fact that some of it is supposed to look cheap. While the film doesn't exactly spend a lot of extra time fleshing out the character backgrounds, if you're at all savvy about film and TV it won't matter. A fun story with hints of wit dropped throughout, this is an outstanding comedy well worth a refresh for those that haven't seen it in a while.

Girl Most Likely (2012) - If this were intended as an experiment in seeing what happens when filmmakers mash up a Todd Solondz film with a Farrelly Brothers movie, it might be interesting, if only to prove it doesn't work. Wild tonal inconsistency and characters that don't add up in the least are problems, but the cardinal sin is that it isn't funny - either as a dark comedy or as a broad one. I suspect part of the problem is that the filmmakers intended satire but really didn't have a clear sense of what they wanted to satirize. It also has a really mixed message - suggesting that the lead character, played by Kristen Wiig, needs to stop believing she's entitled to her princess fantasy, only to kind of let her have it anyway. Just go watch the superior Muriel's Wedding instead.

Clerks II (2006) - The sequel to Kevin Smith's DIY indie classic keeps the amateurish direction and poor acting but loses the original's chaotic, punk sensibility and sharp sense of humor. Most of the bits fall flat here and the story feels really forced. There's actually a bit too much story here, departing from the original's slice-of-life feel. Even Smith's stand-up tour videos work best as the witty raconteur delivering unstructured, off-the-cuff anecdotes that are more or less Smith going off on tangents about things that have happened in his life. That doesn't come through here. Because this one is packed with more by-the-books plot drama, it needs actors that can sustain it and that can provide depth beyond just reciting the (amply packed) words. Rosario Dawson mostly gets that done, but that is, unfortunately, about it, and she is really a sideline player here. It just doesn't work, although perhaps Kevin Smith die-hards will disagree (and it is really only for them).

All three were screened on Amazon Prime Instant.

LA Film Festival - Supremacy (2014) and Joy of Man's Desiring (2014)

The Los Angeles Film Festival is back in town. The festival has developed a reputation as solid, albeit definitely a big tier below the big boys. There aren't many big buzz premieres or a big market at this festival, and so there isn't a ton of glitz, glamour, or buzz surrounding the festival.

I think the festival is caught in something of a tweener position - it has bigger aspirations than just being a roadshow for favorites from other bigger festivals, or being a niche genre/experimental festival, but it lacks the cachet to score big name competition entries or buzz-heavy premieres. The lack of a robust market also means even up-and-coming filmmakers tend to prioritize other festivals first for their films in need of distribution. That in turn helps sustain the lack of a robust market because the more marketable indie films tend to go to other market-heavy festivals first. It doesn't help that the festival is known to struggle getting people to even drive downtown from the film-industry-heavy westside (disconnected from downtown thanks in part to Westside NIMBYs that stand in the way of subway extension).

At any rate, after working my way through the awful traffic, figuring out where everything was located, and standing in some lines, I actually had the opportunity to watch a couple films.

Cold in July (2014) - Brief Review


There isn't much one can say about the details of Cold in July's plot without giving away a lot of what makes this film so interesting and, despite the darkness, fun. What helps the film to work so well is that, just when you think you've got it all figured out, filmmaker Jim Mickle (along with co-writer Nick Damici) tosses a curve ball or ups the ante to take things in a different direction. The film is adapted from a book by Joe Lansdale.

A Million Ways to Die in the West (2014) - Brief Review


If you've seen the trailer to A Million Ways to Die in the West, run, don't walk, to some other movie, because you have already seen every marginally worthwhile joke in this dreary little film (and if you've seen the inexcusable follow-up trailer, then you've seen the film's big cameo moment).

Edge of Tomorrow (2014) - Review


Edge of Tomorrow is getting a lot of play from critics as a kind of  Groundhog Day for the CGI, all-tentpole-all-the-time era. And in terms of the way Edge is constructed, that fits quite well. Of course, even more than Groundhog Day, Edge of Tomorrow is styled as a Call of Duty type videogame. It is littered with production design that calls to mind past wars (and, more particularly, World War II movies) and built on the premise that has informed video games since the 80s, when home video games gave players the option to continue restarting their games and to start from a particular endpoint.

While Edge doesn't break a ton of new ground, it bogs down a bit late, and the love story gets crowded out, it is also terrifically entertaining and about as good as these big tentpoles tend to get these days. Edge also accomplishes something that is quite rare in a star-driven action movie, and that represents almost the brass ring of tentpole filmmaking: introducing a shred of doubt about the outcome in a jaded audience that knows full well that the good guys are going to win (aren't they?).

Thursday, June 12, 2014

One Of Those Weeks...

...where nothing gets done. I'm behind on finishing my reviews (six of them!), but they will get posted, one way or another.

For now, I will say that there are two movies currently in theaters that I have seen that I think you should go see: Edge of Tomorrow and Cold in July. I'm expecting to see Night Moves and some other well-reviewed films that have been in release soon, and I am highly looking forward to The Rover this weekend (David Michôd's follow-up to Animal Kingdom).

Reviews to come!

Monday, June 9, 2014

Emanuelle Around the World (aka Confessions of Emanuelle) (1977) - Brief Review


In Emanuelle Around the World (wink, wink), our libertine heroine discovers social justice - armed apparently with a bigger budget, although they should have spent a bit more of it on the script and dubbing.

Friday, June 6, 2014

Thursday, June 5, 2014

The Last Dragon (1985) - Brief Review

Julius Carry as Sho'nuff in The Last Dragon
The Last Dragon isn't technically perfect, by any means, but it is a deliriously good time, elevated by the supporting cast, production design, and its refusal to take itself seriously amid an absurd plot-line.

Escape From New York (1981) - Brief Review

Harry Dean Stanton and Donald Pleasence in Escape From New York
Escape from New York is an iconic comedy-action film featuring the second of what would become a five film collaboration between director John Carpenter and star Kurt Russell. The film has well-deserved status as not just one of the top cult action films of all-time, but one of the most enjoyable action movies, period.

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Let The Fire Burn (2013) - Review


On May 13, 1985, the Philadelphia police executed an order to evict the tenants of a townhouse on Osage Avenue. By the end of the day, 11 people (including five children) were dead and more than sixty homes were burnt to the ground. The even-handed but strong documentary Let The Fire Burn, directed by Jason Osder, tells the story of those fateful events and what led up to them.

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

The Lone Ranger (2013) - Review


Gore Verbinski's The Lone Ranger has some moments, and will assuredly achieve some rescue in later years as many box office bombs do. Of course, the rescues later on, rather than being limited to "not as bad as it was made out to be," will likely go overboard with praise. For, in the end, even if you set aside the box office story or the absurd amounts of money spent on an homage to TV westerns, this is still an over-long, over-cooked movie with a dud of a performance in the hero role and wild tonal shifts that suggest two versions of the script fighting with each other for control over the movie's soul. In summary, while it may not be as bad as its reputation, it still isn't good.

Monday, June 2, 2014

Inequality for All (2013) - Brief Review


Charismatic economist and former Labor Secretary Robert Reich brings us a documentary lecture on income inequality in America and the need to fix a brutally unequal and unfair system.

Nice Dreams (1981) - Brief Review


According to legend, when comedy duo Cheech and Chong started filming Nice Dreams, they didn't really have a script - they just had a three and a half page long treatment. It would have been very easy for a film based on such thin material to have turned disastrous. In the comic minds of Cheech Marin and Tommy Chong (who also directed here), however, what we get is an absurdist picaresque that nearly borders on genius.

The LA Times Worries For Week Two Box Office

Steven Zeitchik has an impressively overwrought piece on the very large falls in the second week box offices of Godzilla 33, Spider-Man 5, and X-Men 7. Mr. Zeitchik worries that the big falls in week 2 for these movies might represent a problematic trend in movie-going and may even represent a problem with American culture (really). He says:
But the fact that it’s happening so consistently suggests there’s a larger cultural force at work, a get-them-in-at-any-cost mentality that is coming home to roost not long after. It is a mind-set that acknowledges, and plays off, an attention-deficit-disorder culture.
The very simple response: it is three movies! That isn't "happening so consistently" - it is happening three times. Trying to divine some broader trend from three movies, and, worse, trying to spin it into some cultural critique is ridiculous.

Worse still, Mr. Zeitchik undermines his very own argument by pointing out that this hasn't happened to big tentpole films as far away as...last year. But he need not have gone back even that far.

Friday, May 30, 2014

Music for the Weekend


Have a good weekend and hope you find something good in the theaters.

Weekly Summary (5/30/14)

After the break a list of my reviews for the past week and final verdicts for each of them.

Thursday, May 29, 2014

Brief Reviews (5/29/14)


          

Hugh Jackman Thursday! Check out after the jump for very brief reviews of X-Men: Days of Future Past and Prisoners.