Sunday, October 19, 2008

On the 8th day God created bees...




If you are looking for a stark realistic picture of the civil rights struggle in the 60’s, you won’t find it in The Secret Life of Bees. I’m sure that won’t matter to fans of the Oprah’s book club best-seller though. The heart of the story is about the universal life lessons of hope and friendship, and it translates here on screen in all of its artificially sweetened sappiness. The film boasts an impressive ensemble of actors led by Queen Latifah, and the young and budding talent Dakota Fanning. The film’s characters often times float just above the story in a kind of parable-like fashion rather than really asking you to believe them (especially Latifah’s), but fairly strong performances with a clear and emotionally heavy-hitting story-line make this film a powerful lesson for the whole family.

Lily Owens is a young girl tormented by her mother’s accidental death. Life on her abusive father’s peach farm doesn’t lessen the pain either, as Lily searches for the truth regarding her mother’s real character. When Lily skips town with her caregiver Rosaleen (Jennifer Hudson) she escapes the world of abuse in search of a town that may give her clues to her mother’s true identity. Lily soon finds herself in the company of the wealthy and intelligent Boatwright sisters, whose family owned honey-making business is a gate-way to a new and unexplored world for Lily. When two starkly different lives collide, Lily will learn more than she bargained for about life, love, and bees.

There is nothing truly remarkable going on here, nor even memorable for that matter. For 2 hrs though, some audiences will scoff at the sugar-coated world that the film portrays, while some will sing its praises by letting it do exactly what its intended to do: Allow us to escape with characters that we care about, and principles that we try to stand for.

3/5

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

The horror....the horror...



It's time for the newest movie minute marathon. What better to celebrate the changing of leaves, the longer nights, the inevitable approach of trick-or-treaters soon to be at our door, than with a batch of gruesome and grisly horror movies.

You may or may not be familiar with the fact that the 70's marks the birth of a new kind of on-screen teenager in american cinema. I'm talking about the kind of teenager that is arguably the best kind of all. A set-up, a plot device, for gore and mayhem. The 70's saw more teenagers slain on screen from telikinetic 'she-devils', masked knife wielding lunatics, and mutant flesh-eating zombies than from all war movies combined.

The 70's however, also brought some interesting horror aueters from around the world that are worth noting as well. This marathon will focus on 70's horror from around the world, some well known, others not so much. The line-up is as follows:

The Bird with the Crystal Plumage - (Italy) - Dario Argento
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre - (US) - Tobe Hooper
The Wicker Man - (GB) - Robin Hardy
Don't Look Now - (G.B./Italy) - Nicolas Roeg
Dawn of the Dead - (US) - George A. Romero

Let the gore begin!

Sunday, October 12, 2008

no it's not late night on cinemax..it's the latest from ridley scott...Body of Lies


With the height of the political season upon us, it is hard to believe that a film dealing primarily with the role of US operatives in the war on terror could hardly function as “escapist” entertainment for millions of Americans. Perhaps that is what makes Body of Lies, from esteemed blockbuster director Ridley Scott so enjoyable. It manages to do what recent Iraq war themed movies left behind in the box-office dust have failed to do so miserably: To say something about the plight of war without being overly preachy. Leonardo DiCaprio and Russell Crowe star in this popcorn action thriller that is very entertaining despite stretching the limits of believability.

Roger Ferris (DiCaprio) is a covert CIA operative who has been sent to seek out and destroy a ring of terrorists responsible for the bombing of civilians. With the help of his boss back in Langley (Crowe), he devises a plan to infiltrate the network of terrorist mastermind Al-Saleem. Crowe, overweight and grey-haired in this movie, is seen back home thousands of miles away with an ear-mounted device almost permanently planted into his head, feeding instructions to his co-worker. He spouts out rhetoric regarding the harsh nature of their work ("which side of the cross are you on kid? I need nailers not hangers.") interjected by directions for his kids to help with the groceries or aim for the toilet, not the floor. Ferris also enlists the help of Chief of Jordanian intelligence, Hani Salaam. Soon the three main players develop operations that create a web of deception that makes stopping the true forces of evil a mix-up of right and wrong.

The film's biggest flaws come from the elements it doesn’t need. Despite Crowe and DiCaprio both being seasoned actors, they seem to be phoning in elements that neither of their respective characters actually demand. Can anyone tell me why Leo has a phony southern accent in this movie? And someone really ought to tell Crowe that they don’t just hand out Oscars for putting on 30 pounds, you actually have to be somewhat memorable on screen as well. Just ask DeNiro. The love interest for DiCaprio’s character brings virtually nothing to the story, and is merely manufactured into the plot to create stakes for a finale that is somewhat predictable. The qualms are relatively few and far between though for a film that doesn’t rely on power of believability. It’s a tight script with sharp action sequences and a plot that is pushed steadily along throughout that make this film worth seeing. Even if it means dealing with subject matter that still rings loud in our ears.

3/5

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

For What it's worth....

So I realized recently that between working a job you hate, eating, sleeping, and trucking through the heavy-hitting political debates (tongue very much in cheek at this point), there are actually hours of entertainment one can sift one's way through (God bless you Netflix. And no this is not a paid advertisement). So if you are idly pacing the floor of your house/apartment/bungalow/communal living type quarters day in and day out feverishly stewing over the impending doom of the economy, why not try a little escapism? If you are looking for something new to rent, this is where I tell you (as if you care) what I have seen lately in hopes that, if nothing else your attention might be turned to possible entertainemnt choices. My hope is that this post will include a little something for everyone. So....here goes..

The Fall - A grownup fantasy movie from the same mysterious writer/director who brought you The Cell back in 2000. For those of you who don't remember that movie, it's the best of Jennifer Lopez' work ever devoted to celluloid. I realize that's not saying much about the movie, but it is saying something about her career. The plot of The Fall goes roughly as follows. A little girl in a hollywood hospital stumbles across a man recently injured in an accident who has become a paraplegic. The suicidal man pursuades the little girl into swiping meds from the cabinents by telling her an elaborate fairy tale that takes place in several continents. A couple reasons to see the movie:
1. Catinca Untaru - Plays the little girl Alexandria, and delivers one of the best child performances I have ever seen.
2. The movie is visually stunning - shot on location in 18 countries, and apparently contains no CGI shots.
3.5/5

La Vie En Rose - Really interesting biopic of singer Edith Piaf. The film is spetacularly lit and shot. It's the kind of tragic epic in which you know that the heroine is absolutely doomed from the moment you meet her. This is the film for which the best actress award was given to Marion Cotilliard last year at the Academy Awards, and what a performance it is. I have the feeling though, that knowing virtually nothing about this character before seeing the film helped me find her much more intriguing. Special thanks to my friend Luc for finally getting me to see this movie.
4/5

Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day - Occasionally I let my wife choose what DVD moves to the top of the netflix queue and thankfully I married someone with good taste. For those guys out there who have to sacrifice a movie watching night of her choosing, you can't really go wrong with this one. Frances McDormand and Amy Adams star, and these are two actresses that I can honestly say I would be willing to watch in almost anything. Frances Mcdormand plays an English nanny who finds herself in the company of an American movie star (Adams) for a day. The exploits and love affairs ensue and the two women soon find themselves trying to (what else?) empower one another.
3/5

Forgetting Sarah Marshall - Just when you thought team Apatow couldn't manage to cram more foul mouthed twenty-somethings, gross-out humor, and plenty of male frontal nudity into one film, Jason Siegel goes and pushes the censors to the limits. Seriously. They really pushed the envelope with this one in about the first 10 minutes of the movie. Peter Bretter goes to Hawaii to try to get over his recent break-up with TV star girlfriend Sarah Marshall only to find (you can pretty much see this one coming) his ex is vacationing at the same resort, on the same island with her new beau. Mila Kunis of that 70's show (and my personal fav. the voice of Meg on Family Guy) is excellent here. For me though, most of the really long laughs came on the DVD bonus features.
3/5

Snow Angels - This film from David Gordon Green is worth seeing for a few reasons:
1. Kate Beckinsale gives a really strong performance
2. Sam Rockwell (who solidified himself as one of my favorite character actors some time ago) gives an absolute knock-out performance.
3. Cinematography and editing are amazing, both elements of the film really push the story-telling aspect a lot.
4. The fact that this film is so gritty and depressing, Makes the fact that David Gordon Green directed The Pineapple Express for his next project really intriguing.

This movie is an interesting case study in the fragility in human relationships. It also underscores the fact that sometimes the difference between the middle-class and the poor may be close in reality, but drastically affect the outcome of different people's social struggles. It's got the mosaic-like aspect we have come to see in dramas in the past few years where there's a lot of different character plots that intersect and collide by the end of the film. Not easy to watch, but fairly well crafted.
4/5

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

A night on the town with Nick and Norah..


"I told em to give me the ellen deGeneres haircut" - Nick (Michael Cera)

I am told that the 1950’s first marked the beginning of a new era. The rise of the “teenager” gave birth to a type of youth empowerment in America the likes of which we had never seen before. The teen has been given prominence all throughout the history of the silver screen as well. Remember James Dean in the 50’s classic Rebel Without a Cause? The brilliant portrayal of a small town high school full of disillusioned dreams in The Last Picture Show? John Hughes’ The Breakfast Club still offers the blueprint for typical high school archetypes in the films that have followed it. Which begs the question: does anyone else feel that Michael Cera would be perfectly casted as Anthony Michael Hall’s character in a Breakfast Club remake? I’ll leave it to the few of you who have never seen the movie even once out of the 10,000 times it has been on cable to do the research yourself. Fast forward to 2008 where recently I had the chance to screen the newest film of teens in their element.

Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist tells the story of a young teen searching for love against the backdrop of the indy music scene in New York City. Nick (Michael Cera) has just broken up with his main squeeze after 6 months, and needless to say is feeling a little down. With the help of his bandmates, and new-found love interest Norah (Kat Dennings), the group sets out to find a local band playing a show at an undisclosed location, and hopefully bring fulfillment to Nick and Norah’s love life.
For the most part this film plays like the bulk of the characters in it: empty, and directionless. Nick loves his girlfriend, but she just doesn’t like him like that. But then, OMG! She keeps “bumping” into him in the city with her new squeeze. Should Nick totally go back to Trish, or hook up with Norah? Yeah, that’s pretty much the whole movie. It’s kind of like Lost in Translation for kids who were only 11 when that movie came out. Except here, there are some surprisingly decent comedic actors given very little to do or say. The all too familiar territory makes it a story about a few kids who are often endearing but rarely interesting.

The film does a masterful job of portraying the times that the American teenager finds itself in. There’s so little going on in the script that the general ambivalence towards anything of social relevance is captured by these real-life twenty-somethings accurately. They are independent, sexually active, and anchored to their cell phones. The kids portrayed in this film pick and choose from a myriad of ideologies and religious beliefs to interest themselves in, while there seems to be no one thing that defines any of them. Norah says “I heard a Jewish saying once that says….” To which the response of her indy geek love interest says something to the effect of “like….totally”. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t think that a movie has to try to be deep to be effective. Some films wear it on their sleeve like Garden State, which this film does not try to be, save from the indy music soundtrack. At the end of the day, I just want a little something to keep me from looking at my watch every 20 minutes.

2.5/5

Saturday, October 4, 2008

Coen Bros. Marathon pt. 4: Blood Simple


What do you get when you combine a jealous hitman, a cheating wife, a crime that spins way out of control, and a few murders along the way? Answer: A film that is not so "simple" to categorize (as the world first learned when the Coen brothers debuted it in 1984), but is tremendously entertaining to watch. Blood Simple is not only fascinating to watch for the formidable talent it would introduce to the world, but for being a well executed take on the thriller/crime genre it and so much of the Coens' extensive body of work owes credit to.

When we first meet Abby (a young fresh-faced Frances McDormand) there is not the slightest inkling of anything wrong with her marriage to her husband Julian Marty (Dan Hedaya). Her love affair with one of her husband's employees is about to change all of that. Her rich, jealous husband hires a private investigator (M. Emmet Walsh) to tail the two, and eventually to murder them. The double crosses ensue however, when the private eye hatches a scheme of his own.

Blood Simple was probably the funnest time I had watching any of the Coen brothers' films this past month. It's fun to see it for what it was at the time (a genuninely clever thriller, albeit a flawed one), and for what it still is. There are so many memorable scenes that are worth the price of admission alone that I am inclined to list a few:

1. M. Emmet Walsh's character sneaks into the home of an unsuspecting Abby and her lover with nail-biting suspense.

2. John Getz' character lugs an assumingly dead Julian Marty down a dark and ominous highway only to find he's not as "dead" as he thought he was.

3. The last 15 minutes of the film: vintage Coens. Masterfully executed suspense with a breath-taking closing few frames. Disclaimer: If you have a healthy fear of knives or generally pointy objects, the last few minutes may make you squirm.

The film is far from perfect, but it is clear that Blood Simple was a forerunner to so many of the Coen bros. masterpieces. Barry Sonnenfeld's cinematography is honestly distracting at times, and I found little that would seperate it from the feel of Raizing Arizona. This seemed to be counter-productive to the mood that most of Blood Simple tries to convey. Pound for pound though, this film is much too fun to be swept aside as merely average. Performances are strong and the suspense is genunine. I suspect though that having been a fan before seeing the film, it might have been just too "simple" to please me. I would like to think not...

3.5/5