Showing posts with label filmed moves. Show all posts
Showing posts with label filmed moves. Show all posts

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Movie reviews -hollyhood news

movie reviews


# #1 - Get Smart
The closing credits of “Get Smart” mention Mel Brooks and Buck Henry, creators of the original TV series, as “consultants.” Their advice must have been: “If it works, don’t fix it.” There have been countless comic spoofs of the genre founded by James Bond, but “Get Smart” (both on TV and now in a movie) is one of the best.

# #2 - Kung Fu Panda
In Kung Fu Panda, Jack Black is the voice of Po, a clown-eyed, sheepishly neurotic, roly-poly panda of no visible athletic ability who trains to become a lightning-limbed martial-arts master.

# #3 - The Incredible Hulk

Rebooting a blockbuster franchise that never got off the ground in the first place may not seem like the smartest move, but there is a certain brute logic to it: Scrutinizing the bomb in question can offer up 100 mistakes from which to learn.

# #4 - The Love Guru
What is it with Mike Myers and penis jokes? Having created a classic, funny scene with his not-quite-visible penis sketch in the first “Austin Powers” movie, he now assembles, in “The Love Guru,” as many more penis jokes as he can think of, none of them funny, except for one based on an off-screen “thump.”

# #5 - The Happening

Something in the air is turning normal people into self-destructive crazies prone to flinging themselves off buildings and blowing their brains out.

# #6 - Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull

What are you, like, 80?'' the brash young James Dean wannabe asks the familiar-looking professor of archaeology in Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. The cocky kid (who demonstrates an awful lot of Indiana Jones' spirit in his swagger) calls himself Mutt, and is played with a kick by Shia LaBeouf.

# #7 - You Don't Mess with the Zohan

If "You Don't Mess With the Zohan" isn't the bravest movie ever made about current Arab-Israeli relations, it's at least the bravest movie ever made about current Arab-Israeli relations featuring a former Mossad agent who shags Lainie Kazan.

# #8 - Sex and the City

As a Darren Star series on HBO, Sex and the City may have come in tidy half hours, but what those sparkling and fizzy episodes added up to, in spirit, was the great chick flick of our time. The show was that rare thing, a fairy tale you could believe in.

# #9 - Iron Man

After Tobey Maguire's gawky boyishness and Christian Bale's glower, the ''offbeat'' casting of comic-book films is now the new normal. (The trend really started back in 1989, when Tim Burton turned a saucer-eyed noodge like Michael Keaton into Batman.) Yet it's still bracing to see Robert Downey Jr. redefine what it takes to be a superhero in Iron Man.

# #10 - The Strangers
The strangest, most intriguing thing about The Strangers is that the two main characters are already dead -- before the masked psychopaths even show up outside their door. (Don't worry, that's not a spoiler.

Movie Review: Lebanon news

Movie Review: Lebanon (2009)
Movie Review:  Lebanon (2009)

MPAA Rating: R

Starring: Oshri Cohen, Itay Tiran, Michael Moshonov, Yoav Donat

IMDB Link: Lebanon

Movie Trailer: Trailer

“Man is steel. The tank is only iron.” On July 12, 2006, conflict began between Israel and Lebanon. It began when Hezbollah soldiers fired rockets into Israel and blew up two armored Humvees patrolling the Israeli side of the border. Three soldiers died. Two other soldiers were taken by Hezbollah into Lebanon. Israel responded and for 34 days they carried out air strikes and rolled into Lebanon with tanks and foot soldiers. The writer/director of Lebanon, Samuel Maoz, was himself a gunner in one of those tanks, so this is a sort-of autobiography of his experiences. You can feel that placing this story on paper and on celluloid was a form therapy for Samuel. He places us, as the audience, in the dark, dank, cold, putrid, unwelcoming pit of a monster that he knows all too well. And because the camera never leaves the inside of that tank, save for two small book-ending scenes, he shows us what it felt like to be sequestered in those claustrophobic spaces only understanding the outside world what we see through the gunner’s scope.

A single tank is sent into a small town that has already been bombed by the Israeli Air Force. Inside the tank are four young men: Herzel (Oshri Cohen), the loader; Assi (Itay Tiran), the commander; Yigal (Michael Moshonov), the driver; and Shmuel (Yoav Donat), the gunner. For all of them, this is their first taste of war. The first day of fighting pushes all four of these men past anything they were trained for. For who can be trained to fire on unarmed civilians, to plow their way through streets that just hours before teemed with life, to see the blood and havoc that war creates and not let it change and effect their humanity?

The other film that is constantly being brought up when one speaks of Lebanon is Waltz with Bashir, the foreign picture Oscar contender of 2008. Both of them deal with the same war and the same psychological trauma it inflicted on its soldiers, but in wholly different ways. This film showed me an entirely new angle to war, one I had not seen in any war film. The closest comparison that comes to mind is the German film Das Boot but even in that film the sense of confinement doesn’t feel this suffocating. It is impressive that I felt the same heart-pounding, dizzying feeling I got from the first twenty minutes of Saving Private Ryan from sections of this film and, as I’ve said, the camera never leaves the inside of the tank.

When the gunner is looking out his scope, we get to see some sunshine. We get to see a family torn apart. We get to see a soldier bleed out. We get to see inside a travel agency and have a weird feeling in the pits of our stomachs as the cross-hairs of the cannon rests upon a picture of the Twin Towers. Most times with any slight movement the turret moans and creaks in protest, but as with any gimmick there are other times when this is cheated, when empathy is being attempted and the whirrs and clanks would get in the way, so they are left out all together. Apart from this story necessary hitch, the rest of the sound design makes it feel like the world is about to come crushing down around us. The only real gripe I have is that the score is sometimes misaligned and did not add to what I was watching. However, that is a small quibble for a film I honestly and wholeheartedly respect.

The first thing that struck me as I was watching Lebanon was how confident the film making felt. For only being the second film that Samuel Maoz has ever directed and first one written, you can feel how much he knew this story and exactly how best to portray it. He was able to take what could have been a gimmick and made it impressive. If I venture to read more into it than may be there, it showed how myopic the “war machine” is. The young men, specifically the gunner, can’t really see most of the destruction that their shells are creating. One of God’s little blessings. Just as the people who sit in plush chairs and push pens across paper to declare war cannot see the destruction they cause. Like I said, that may not be what Samuel was going for, but it feels apropos.

Movie Review:Public Enemy news

Movie Review: Mesrine: Public Enemy (2008)


Movie Review:  Mesrine: Public Enemy #1  (2008)


MPAA Rating: R

Starring: Vincent Cassel, Ludivine Sagnier, Mathieu Amalric, Samuel Le Bihan

IMDB Link: Mesrine: Public Enemy #1

Movie Trailer: Trailer
So I assume that you’ve all seen Mesrine: Killer Instinct and are now anxious to see the conclusion to the series. Luckily, you are not to be disappointed as Mesrine: Public Enemy #1 delivers the same captivating storytelling, magnetic performances, and ace dialog that its predecessor sported. It does, however, lose a bit of focus with its sometimes all-too-frantic pacing which comes from Jean-François Richet’s and Abdel Raouf Dafri (who both return to direct and write, respectively) attempt to up the ante, which is understandable, considering that in the second installment of the “Mesrine” series, Jacques is hunted down seemingly everywhere. But although Mesrine: Public Enemy #1 does lose some sense of direction, it makes up for it in much more in-depth, entertaining, and frequent action sequences, which make the film all the more fun — in a mindless aspect.

Interestingly enough, Mesrine: Public Enemy #1 begins in a manner similar to that of the first movie. Once again, the film introduces the same caption: “No film can recreate the complexity of human life. But each with its point of view.”, and once again, the first scene of the film projects Mesrine’s death. This time, we see how his body is quickly whisked away by police officials, who struggle in fighting off photo-happy journalists. Of course, the entire shooting is explained in detail during the film’s last scenes, however, the introductory scenes are interesting for one reason: They show just how much media attention was given to Mesrine, who is often referred to as “the honest bandit.”

Very early in the film, we flash-back to Mesrine, who is once again played by the same excellent Vincent Cassel (who seems to be packing a few extra pounds and a new haircut) as he rests in court. As Mesrine, Cassel once again captures the man in such impeccable perfection that even through the most outrageous moments, the character seems organic — which is always a plus in cinema. But as Mesrine sits in court, Cassel hides the faces of rage and the threatening physical approach of it for a bit of comedy. In the courtroom he first smart-mouths the judges with his cases against the judicial system (which he believes to be imperfect) and quickly changes course when he slyly pulls out a gun and flails it around, suddenly becoming an orchestrator of terror and panic. He holds up a judge and makes his daring escape, while pledging that no court-room or prison can ever hold him down and, as we come to learn, he certainly kept his promise, escaping several maximum security prisons, with each one having a new and daring plan of escape.

But Mesrine doesn’t feel pleased with just being another bank robber anymore, no, he wants to become a revolutionary and this is where the problem starts for Mesrine: Public Enemy #1. Mesrine, who plans to use his media coverage for change, starts writing daring letters to newspapers but once he receives negative feedback from a radical by the name of Jacques Dallier (Alain Fromager), he takes matters much more personally. He kidnaps Dallier and traps him in a darkened cave, which is only illuminated by very ritual-esque candles. He then begins to torture Dallier, who debunks Mesrine’s stance as a revolutionary. In addition, Dallier also calls Mesrine a fraud and a liar and claims that he isn’t as honest as other media sources make him out to be. Sadly, this is in essence, where the entire pseudo-revolutionary portion of Mesrine’s life is dedicated to. Beyond this and one other pivotal scene in which Mesrine claims that politics are corrupt and that he robs banks not to run the country dry, but just for money for his own personal uses, the film never really explains in much detail this vital portion of the Mesrine mythology. In addition, the second act moves at a marginally slower pace.

Mesrine: Public Enemy #1 has its unexpected moments. In example, Dafri chooses to explore what Mesrine lost when entering the life of crime. In one scene, he is seen at his father’s side, who is dying in a hospital bed. Besides putting away the hatred that he harbored in the first installment of the film, Mesrine, who is disguised, cries and proclaims to his father that he was a bad son and a bad father and that it was all his fault. This is a very emotional scene and remains surprising because Mesrine has continuously shown himself to be absolutely emotionless throughout his long career, but during his father’s final moments, he tries to make amends. This entire sequence is possibly one of the most memorable in either installment.

New additions to the cast include François Besse (Matthieu Amalric — he played the villain in Quantum of Solace), Mesrine’s new sidekick and fellow prison escapist, who remains an interesting contrast to the main man. Unlike Mesrine, Besse is reserved and doesn’t care for his theatrics involving the mass media. However, Besse does respect Mesrine for his sharp-thinking, his undeniable courage, and his audacity — all of which are put to play in a scene in which the duo rob a casino while disguised as inspectors. Another fine new performer is the beautiful Ludivine Sagnier who plays Sylvie, who is not only Mesrine’s last lover, but also his most romantic.

However, I would have liked more of Olivier Gourmet who plays Commissioner Broussard. When he is first introduced in the film’s first scenes, I was expecting a parallel to Christian Bale’s Melvin Purvis in Public Enemies, the uncompromising upholder of the law who proves to be a challenge for Mesrine, who is the film’s anti-hero. However, Broussard is only interspersed within the film and his longest screen-time is in the film’s final moments, during which he masterminds the end of Mesrine’s reign of terror.

Mesrine: Public Enemy #1 marks an unforgettable conclusion to the “Mesrine” series, however, unlike Mesrine: Killer Instinct it does have its share of problems which may or may not detract audience members from the film’s true potential. That being said, this second installment is a rare second trip that not only packs more rushes of adrenaline it also adds moments of suspense and even sadness. And for this it is to be commended.

Friday, September 10, 2010

Movies news-Katherine Heigl and Ashton Kutcher dodge


This week: Katherine Heigl and Ashton Kutcher dodge bullets on-screen while Will Forte t ries to sidestep the SNL curse.





Killers: Do you remember the chemistry that Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt had on-screen in Mr. and Mrs. Smith that lit fires offscreen as well? Katherine Heigl and Ashton Kutcher don't even have a spark of that in this rote rom-com as a young married couple with a serious stumbling block—Heigl is unaware that Kutcher is a contract killer until bullets start to fly. You’ll wish they wouldn’t duck. Best extras: Both the DVD and Blu-ray have the ironically titled "Killer Chemistry: Behind the Scenes With the Killers' Cast," deleted/alternate/extended scenes and a gag reel. Blu-ray Bob's Verdict: Forget Me

MacGruber: The problem with films based on Saturday Night Live skits like Coneheads, It's Pat, A Night at the Roxbury, Superstar, The Ladies Man and pretty much every other SNL flick except The Blues Brothers and Wayne's World is obvious: a funny short sketch doesn't usually translate into a funny feature-length film. In MacGruber, Will Forte plays the MacGyver-ish leading man who, with the help of Ryan Phillippe and Kristen Wiig, tries to stop Val Kilmer from nuking Washington D.C. The crude, juvenile humor on this unrated disc (highlight: MacGruber makes really strange sex sounds) works much better when lubricated with a generous serving of your favorite liquor. Best extras: Both the DVD and Blu-ray contain a feature commentary, deleted scenes and a gag reel. Blu-ray Bob's Verdict: Rent Me (if you just
left happy hour).


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Solitary Man: Michael Douglas leads an all-star cast (Danny DeVito, Susan Sarandon, Mary-Louise Parker, Aaron Eisenberg) in this sophisticated adult comedy about a man (Douglas) who has it all: a successful career, beautiful family and luxury Manhattan pad. The problem is that the same irresistible charm that got him where he is could also cause his life to unravel. Best extras: Both the DVD and Blu-ray contain an audio commentary, a behind-the-scenes featurette with the cast and the theatrical trailer. Blu-ray Bob's Verdict: Rent Me

Tommy (Blu-ray): The Who's surreal rock opera directed by Ken Russell stars Roger Daltry in the titular role of the character who, at the age of six, saw his father murdered by his mother and her lover. The traumatized boy retreats into the darkness of his mind and becomes deaf, dumb and blind in this Oscar-nominated musical that features Ann-Margret, Oliver Reed, Tina Turner, Elton John, Eric Clapton, Keith Moon, Jack Nicholson and many more stars circa 1975. Best extras: Despite Tommy looking and sounding better than it ever has for its Blu-ray debut, Sony skimped on any extras whereas some international DVD versions have hours of bonus features. Blu-ray Bob's Verdict: Rent Me

Also New This Week: Forbidden Planet (read the full review in Disc-y Business tomorrow), Supernatural: The Complete Fifth Season, The Office: Season Six, Smallville: The Complete Ninth Season, The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas, That Evening Sun, The Phantom (2010) and Wonders of the Solar System