Wednesday, December 31, 2008
The Optimist's Best of the Rest
Best Comeback - Mickey Rourke in The Wrestler "I'm an old broken down piece of meat and I deserve to be all alone, I just don't want you to hate me."
Best Line - Heath Ledger as The Joker in The Dark Knight "Do I really look like a guy with a plan?"
Biggest Tearjerker - Marley being put to sleep in Marley & Me
Best City Used As A Backdrop This Year - Chicago (The Dark Knight, Nothing Like The Holidays, Cadillac Records)
Biggest Load of Crap - The Happening
Biggest Letdown - Quantum Of Solace
Biggest Surprise - Slumdog Millionaire
Best Movie To Make You Smile - Happy-Go-Lucky
Best Use Of An Actor - Samuel L. Jackson appearing in Iron Man AND The Incredible Hulk as Col. Nick Fury
Best Director - Clint Eastwood (Changeling, Gran Torino)
Most Surprising Role - Anne Hathaway in Rachel Getting Married
Funniest Scene - The "Never go full retard" scene in Tropic Thunder
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
The Best of the Best in 2008
- The Dark Knight - Heath Ledger WAS The Joker. Each of his scenes made you believe that there could actually be a psycho like this out there in the world.
- Slumdog Millionaire - And Indian version of "Who Wants To Be A Millionaire" tells a tale of growing up and doing all you can to find your long lost love. Beautifully done.
- Milk - Sean Penn does it again in this film about Harvey Milk who was the first openly gay man to be elected to a U.S. Public Office.
- Tropic Thunder - THE comedy of the year that also had the most controversy with Robert Downey Jr. playing an Australian actor who jumps so deeply into character that he has a pigment augmentation procedure to play a black man. Controversial? Maybe. Racist? Not in the least. Funny? Hell yeah!
- The Wrestler - Mickey Rourke wins hands down for the best comeback award in my book here as he plays a wrestler that loves what he does too much to give it up. Emotional and entertaining.
- Iron Man - Robert Downey Jr. comes in second place for best comeback with this movie based on the Marvel comic book of the same name. An origin story done right. Samuel L. Jackson making an appearance as Col. Nick Fury didn't hurt either.
- Bolt - While the movie is called Bolt it's the hamster Rhino that steals every scene that he is in. He needs his own spin off.
- Let The Right One In - A vampire movie with a hint of romance. Not too graphic and no scene goes overboard with the dramatics and you get a movie with heart that was well told.
- Rachel Getting Married - Anne Hathaway in her best role to date. She returns home after leaving rehab to attend her sisters wedding. You actually feel for her character as she tries to make amends at the worst time possible. Dramatic and sad and worth seeing.
- In Bruges - Who knew that Colin Farrell as a hitman would be this funny? His one liners alone make this one of the surprise hits that most people skipped.
The Worst Movies of 2008
- The Happening - M. Night Shyamalan should just take a break and reevaluate his whole existence after this crap.
- Beverly Hills Chihuahua - A movie about talking Chihuahuas? How desperate is Hollywood to make a movie like this?
- Quantum Of Solace - The hype was built up for months before its release and it turned out to be a colossal flop. Nowhere near as good as Casino Royale.
- Jumper - Great premise. Had the potential to be SO much better than it was. Samuel L. Jackson in another awful role.
- The Love Guru - I like Mike Myers. Hated this poor excuse of a movie.
- 88 Minutes - Al Pacino means great movie, right? Not in this bullshit. Highly predictable and bad acting meant a load of crap at the box office.
- The Hottie And The Nottie - A movie starring Paris Hilton? 'Nuff Said.
- Meet Dave - Eddie Murphy still trying to be funny? Sorry, stopped laughing a long time ago.
- Valkyrie - Tom Cruise in a movie about trying to kill Hitler. I say Yay to that, No to this boring ass movie.
- The House - Michael Madsen's so-called return? He should've stayed in bed.
Friday, December 26, 2008
Worlds worst dog holds family together
The Reader does well on the big screen
When he falls ill on his way home from school, 15 year-old Michael Berg (David Kross/Ralph Fiennes) is rescued by Hanna (Kate Winslet), a woman twice his age. The two begin an unexpected and passionate affair only for Hanna to suddenly and inexplicably disappear. Eight years later, Michael , now a young law student observing Nazi war trials, meets his former lover again, under very different circumstances. Hanna is on trial for a hideous crime, and as she refuses to defend herself, Michael gradually realizes his boyhood love may be guarding a secret she considers to be more shameful than murder.
Is there a point past forgiveness? Are some crimes so beyond comprehension that there are no mitigating circumstances? Those questions are at the heart of The Reader; their existence its biggest problem. The acting, particularly by an outstanding Kate Winslet, is at times inspired. But the relentlessly downbeat nature of the film, along with the prospect of feeling sorry for a woman who worked as a Nazi guard and was at least partly responsible for the deaths of hundreds, is a bit much to ask. Winslet plays Hanna Schmitz, a streetcar ticket-taker who happens upon a boy retching in an alley during a rainstorm. That boy is Michael Berg, whom we will come to know at various stages of his life. The young Berg is played by David Kross; Ralph Fiennes plays him as an adult. This chance meeting will lead to a passionate affair between Hanna and Michael, one that includes not just copious amounts of sex but intellectual stimulation. Hanna likes to be read to and requires it of Michael almost as a ticket of admission to her bed. They grow close, but Hanna is moody, flying into rages. Michael is being kept from friends his age, and when Hanna is offered a promotion, she suddenly disappears. We next see Michael in law school, where his professor (Bruno Ganz) takes his students to the trial of women charged with war crimes - Hanna is among them. She was a guard at Auschwitz and is being tried for murder in the deaths of hundreds of prisoners. Michael is, of course, flooded with memories and struggles with his emotions. Hanna has a secret, one that Michael realizes over the course of the trial. It doesn't absolve her of guilt but it would affect her punishment if she would reveal it. The adult Michael remains morally confused, distant, still grappling with his feelings about Hanna. Fiennes is, as always, quite good, but this part of the film is sterile, cold. Only a late scene, in which Michael meets with the daughter of a survivor (Lena Olin), feels truly alive and is all the more welcome because of it. Kross is good in a tricky role. Winslet is outstanding, particularly given that Hanna is such an unsympathetic character. We never quite feel sympathy toward her, and it's testament to Winslet's skill and confidence that she never really asks us to. For though The Reader costars the gifted Ralph Fiennes and gives a lot of screen time to a young actor named David Kross, it is Winslet's haunting performance that gives the film its success. It is hard to overstate the impact Winslet makes in the trial scenes, even though she says very little. Alternately despairing, distraught and defeated, she allows conflicted emotions to play across her face as she struggles with the life and death decision of which secrets to reveal and which to hide away. From here on in, The Reader is at its strongest, as the film's series of twists that play out over years add to the dramatic and philosophical content. It's also here that The Reader's concerns with the guilt-ridden interplay between generations, with whether it is even possible to come to terms with what people we love have done, gain a sharper focus. Though Fiennes' increased screen time helps the film, he never seems to have enough to do. He and young Kross are also hampered by their involvement with the film's most pat and conventional aspects, including the larger role given both to Berg's future wife and their aforementioned daughter. Fortunately, The Reader is able to recover its focus. Though this remains a reserved film in which the underlying material is stronger than what's been done with it, enough of it has been retained to keep the enterprise on point. Especially when Winslet is on the screen. A strong 3 on my "Go See" scale.
The Rodriguez family shows us what the holiday is about even if we've seen it before
Tuesday, December 23, 2008
What a comeback!
Darren Aronofsky's The Wrestler is not a film about sports but, appropriately, one about the shabbier precincts of show business, where performers sell not only an illusion, but to varying degrees their bodies and souls. Randy "The Ram" Robinson (Mickey Rourke) was a star during the 1980s wrestling boom, but unlike his old sparring partners--his "nemesis," the Ayatollah, now has a car dealership in Arizona--Randy is still at it, a nostalgia act relegated to the margins. Madison Square Garden-sized arenas have been replaced by high-school gyms, pay-per-view purses by a few folded bills passed along apologetically. Though still powerful, his physique is visibly worn. His long, peroxided locks look like a poorly rinsed mop; off-duty, he sports glasses and a hearing aid he touchingly tries to conceal. Randy is not, however, a bitter guy--not when he's locked out of his trailer in Jersey for unpaid rent, not when neighborhood kids wake him from a night spent asleep in his van. He's an avuncular figure to the up-and-coming twentysomethings with whom he wrestles, and they respect him in kind. Some of the film's best scenes convey the backstage tenderness of growth-hormoned giants preparing to pulverize one another for a crowd's amusement, the friendly negotiations between "faces" and "heels" over the crippling good-vs-evil pantomime about to ensue. After a hardcore bout against a pasty sadist, featuring barbed wire, broken glass, staple guns, and other implements of bloody defilement, Randy receives a wakeup call in the form of a beneficent heart attack, a firm signal that it's time for him to do something else with his life. And for a while he does, reconnecting with his estranged daughter (Evan Rachel Wood); taking a day job at a grocery-store meat counter; making fitful romantic progress with Cassidy (Marisa Tomei), a local stripper with a soft spot for martyrs of the flesh. (She describes The Passion of the Christ in awe: "They beat the living fuck out of him for two whole hours and he just takes it." Randy agrees: "Tough fucking guy.") But The Wrestler is no simple redemption tale. Randy may be a fundamentally decent guy, but he is, as his daughter points out, a lifelong fuckup, and sometimes such nebulous flaws are the ones least amenable to repair. The real reason to see the film, though, is Rourke, who gives the kind of performance many of us imagined he would have offered with regularity over the past two decades. Instead, he wandered: into Cinemax bait, into boxing, into a body, at once hulking and defeated, that no fan of his early '80s work could ever have foreseen. Most remarkable, though, is the degree to which Rourke, in a role that could have invited outsized characterization, instead offers modesty and understatement. This small performance, in a small film, is by far the biggest of his career. The film's heart and soul are in Rourke's three-dimensional portrayal of Randy not as a big dumb goon but as a real guy trying to find his purpose in the world. Numerous small touches in his performance (his walk, his voice, his mannerisms) bring the character to life in a way that's incredibly moving, and I don't think there's not a single false or contrived moment of "acting" anywhere in the film. Even his attempt to reconnect with his estranged college-age daughter, Stephanie (Wood), whom he abandoned years ago, doesn't feel like the cliché it could have been. Randy's desire for reconciliation stems from his inner goodness. He's sincere, and he means well. He has a good heart, metaphorically if not physically. One of the film's simplest, most memorable scenes has Randy good-naturedly working the deli counter at the grocery store, jesting with customers and generally enjoying himself. You start to think the same thing he's thinking, which is that he really could leave wrestling behind and live happily as a wage-earner. But once you've been a celebrity, the public will always view you that way. If you have the audacity to leave showbiz, you're a failure. We want you in the limelight, or we don't want you at all. Randy "The Ram" Robinson is struggling with that harsh truth, and The Wrestler brings us along for the heartbreaking journey. A Definite 5 on my "Go See" scale.
Monday, December 22, 2008
Changing 7 lives has never been done this way before
My trip to Australia was a blast
Luhrmann has combined the elements of the Western and the war movie by dividing the movie into two parts (it really needed an intermission). There are echoes of Gone with the Wind, Howard Hawks’ Red River and even The Wizard of Oz—this last makes splendid sense in context, especially given the film’s open-faced acceptance of Aboriginal magic and mysticism, as well as the fact that for Kidman’s initially uptight Englishwoman, Australia truly is “somewhere over the rainbow.” All of it is used as a background to romance and the framework for at least four magnificent set pieces: a cattle stampede, the delivery of the cattle, a fancy ball and the bombing of Darwin. Kidman is amazing in her role of Sarah, and there is no one else acting today who could have done as perfectly as she does. It seems Luhrmann, who also directed her in “Moulin Rouge,” created the role with her in mind for it fits her that totally. She brings a freshness to the part as well as a strength that Sarah has to have. And her chemistry with Jackman is pitch perfect. Jackman is rugged and handsome as the Drover and matches Kidman in the chemistry department. His acting is not as strong as hers but strong enough. Recently named “the sexiest man alive” by People Magazine, this role proves the title wasn’t some fluke. Waters is the surprise of the film. His portrayal of Nullah is staggering. He narrates the film and is the character who ties it all together. He is the right person for this role and makes an indelible impression. When awards are given out for “best supporting actor” his name should be front and center. Australia is a sprawling, engrossing look at the continent about which we know very little. This movie should make the Australian Tourist Board very happy as it would seem millions will now want to visit there. In the meantime it is hoped million of filmgoers will find out just how entertaining this film is. It deserves to be seen and savored maybe more than once. Who cares if it is almost three hours long – they are three of the most entertaining hours you will exposed to this year. A strong 4 on my "Go See" scale.
Saturday, December 20, 2008
Tell me a bedtime story
Hotel handyman Skeeter Bronson (Adam Sandler) gets an unexpected surprise when he discovers that the tall tales he's been telling his niece and nephew are somehow coming true. Hoping to take advantage of the mysterious phenomenon, Skeeter spins one outlandish yarn after another, but the children's unexpected contributions to the stories turn Skeeter's life upside down in the Disney film, Bedtime Stories.
Skeeter Bronson (Sandler) works as a handyman at a hotel once owned by his father (Jonathan Pryce), but now run by Barry Nottingham (Richard Griffiths). When his uptight, divorced sister Wendy (Courteney Cox) goes out of town for four days, she asks Skeeter to help her schoolteacher friend Jill (Keri Russell) look after her two young children Bobbi (Laura Ann Kesling) and Patrick (Jonathan Morgan Heit). But when the bedtime stories he tells the children begin to come true, Skeeter starts to believe he has a chance to change his destiny and replace Kendall (Guy Pearce) as hotel General Manager and future husband to Barry's spoilt daughter Violet (Teresa Palmer). If you like Adam Sandler's loud and bawdy style (or lack of it), you will warm to this lively and undemanding fable that reminds us we are limited only by our imagination. Raining gumballs, galloping on a cherry-red steed, a kiss from a fair maiden and driving in an ancient Greek chariot race are some of the ingredients incorporated into the bedtime stories Sandler's Skeeter tells his young niece and nephew at night, which magically eventuate into his real life. The premise is fine as all the central characters find their way into the stories and the bizarre becomes unexpectedly plausible. It's funny and fresh, and Sandler is nicely contrasted by the lovely and feminine Keri Russell (notable in Waitress) who brings warmth and heart to the proceedings. Director Adam Shankman's biggest questionable decision is to portray Richard Griffiths' hotel owner Barry Nottingham and his heir apparent Kendall as caricatures. It works well enough in the case of Griffiths, but this is not a role that suits the talented Pearce, as he hams it up like a vaudeville boo-hiss villain and unfortunately comes out second best. The two eight year old youngsters are as delightful as they are natural, and it is their impulsive and instinctive re-writing of elements from the nightly storytelling that becomes integral to the plot and story outcome. Russell Brand (who made his acting debut in Forgetting Sarah Marshall), injects his own brand of humor and charisma as Mickey, the room-service waiter with sleep panic disorder and Australian actress Teresa Palmer is impressive as the spoiled-little-rich-girl daughter, engaged to the ambitious Kendall. Youngsters will enjoy the laughs generated by the saucer-eyed guinea pig Bugsy, who tags along with Skeeter and his niece and nephew everywhere. Anything can happen in a story, Heit's Patrick tells Skeeter when he starts to recount a fantasy involving a medieval castle, a king, his daughter and a mermaid. But each story involves elements that connect to Skeeter's own life. And as Skeeter tries to steer the stories to include endings of his choosing, Bobbi and Patrick insist on their own input, with clear thoughts of their own as to whether or not stories can have a happy ending. Don't look for too much realism, but the scene in which Sandler's tongue swells up (after being bitten by a bee) and he gets Brand (wearing a hula skirt and coconut halves) to translate his nonsensical attempts at speech at a formal presentation, is wonderfully ridiculous. There is never any doubt that all will end well - after all, this is a bedtime story, and Sandler, who recently became a father for the first time, reportedly was keen to make a comedy that was family friendly. Good enough for the kids, silly enough for the adults. A 4 on my "Go See" scale, with a happily ever after on top.
Thursday, December 18, 2008
This crime was a treat to watch
To describe the plot is to give away the trick to a certain extent. It begins with a middle class Spanish schlub named Héctor (Elejalda) at the end of a not particularly good day. His wife (Candela Fernández) goes out to rustle up some dinner while he sits in the backyard with a pair of binoculars trained on the nearby woods. Suddenly, he spots a nude girl (Bárbara Goenaga) sauntering through the underbrush. Moving closer to investigate, he is set upon by a terrifying man whose face is wrapped in bandages and who has apparently killed the girl. He chases Héctor through the woods to the odd scientific laboratory on the other side, where -- wouldn't you know it -- groundbreaking experiments against the laws of God and man are taking place. Héctor soon finds himself sent one hour back in time, giving him a chance to save the girl if he can act quickly enough. The middle third suffers from a strange sort of lethargy, as the chronologically displaced Héctor moves through the same sequences from a different perspective and we see the answers to various mysterious hooks set up during his initial journey into the woods. As an intellectual exercise, it's vaguely interesting, but it lacks the urgency required to really grab us. Vigalondo, however, is far too smart to simply leave things at that. What at first seems to be just narrative acrobatics is actually prep work for the last 20 minutes: a brilliant series of reversals which sets the whole film on its ear. I daren't reveal the specifics here, but its corkscrew structure elevates the premise to another level: providing not only the right sense of closure but also an intellectual dilemma that maintains its fascination long after the house lights have gone up. Timecrimes will mostly likely reward multiple viewings immeasurably, making it a shoo-in for the midnight cult circuit and/or feverish home viewing. Beyond the structure itself, Vigalondo maintains a pair of secret weapons to help keep his scenario sharp. One is the notion that Héctor understands his position completely and that -- if he doesn't behave in certain ways at certain times -- he could literally destroy the universe. It brings a dose of bizarre levity to the proceedings as he engages in a number of false starts and tries to remember the way things should have gone when he wasn't paying especially close attention the first time around. The other is the surprisingly ordinary quality of the time machine itself. It looks like an industrial storage vat: a bit technical, but nothing a 30-minute training seminar won't clear up. The process of time travel is instantaneous and fireworks-free; Vigalondo's shooting style conveys a sense of normality belied by the surreal sight of Héctor stalking himself. The lack of special effects ironically heightens that plausibility, rendering the storyline reasonably airtight. All that comes in addition to the smart pacing, dark humor, and a sense of humanistic tragedy which Timecrimes deploys in expert fashion. In the end, it really has nothing more than a clever idea, but by spinning that oyster into such a rich and varied stew, Vigalondo signals his ability to handle topics considerably more complex. On the other hand, that would mean not making fun little gems like this one... and what a terrible shame that would be. The result is something truly unusual -- a time travel film that doesn't feel forced or overly illogical. There are still times during Hector's trio of trips where we scratch our heads over perceived fallacies, but the movie appears to anticipate them, and then offers up rational and realistic answers. While many might balk at the notion of science subverted for what ends up being one man's personal problems, there's no denying Vigalondo's skill as a storyteller. Here's hoping that the inevitable American remake (rumored to be helmed by Canadian master David Cronenberg himself) can live up to the devilish delights manufactured here. A smart well crafted mystery. A solid 4 on my "Go See" scale.
WTF? Moment : After being stabbed in the arm with a pair of scissors (by himself) he finds a first aid kit where he proceeds to bandage up his arm. Later on after having a accident (where again it's himself that hits um...him), he has a huge gash on his forehead. He decides to use the bandage from his arm where he then wraps his whole head (creating the bandaged guy that he saw earlier) and it appears that the bandage has increased in length. We see that he has enough to wrap his head, create eye holes a little nose and still have a bit of bandage hanging. If he had that much wrapped on his arm wouldn't his arm look like he was Popeye on one side? LOL
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Yes, Man!
Monday, December 15, 2008
Frost gets the best of Tricky Dick
In 1977, three years after the Watergate scandal that ended his presidency, Richard Nixon (Frank Langella) selects British TV personality David Frost (Michael Sheen) to conduct a one-on-one, exclusive interview. Though Nixon believes it will be easy to snowball Frost, and Frost's own team doubts their boss can stand up to the former president, what actually unfolds is an unexpectedly candid and revealing interview before the court of public opinion.
Sunday, December 14, 2008
A beautifully tragic cadillac
The story of how the blues became popular and gave birth to rock and roll begins at a dingy bar on the rough South Side of Chicago in 1947, where an ambitious young Polish emigre, bar owner Leonard Chess (Adrien Brody), hires a talented but undisciplined blues combo that includes quiet and thoughtful guitar prodigy Muddy Waters (Jeffrey Wright) and impulsive and colorful harmonica player Little Walter (Columbus Short). Fascinated by the sound of the music - and eager to cash in on the record burgeoning record business - Chess arranges a recording session for Waters. Waters' early recordings start moving up the R+B charts and receiving heavy play. Chess treats his musicians like family -- he buys them a Cadillac when they record their first hit record -- although the line between business and personal sometimes causes conflict with his increasingly talented and successful stable of artists. After backing up Muddy on his early recordings, Little Walter becomes a star in his own right, but his quick temper and loud manner often run him afoul of friends and the law. He also finds that the only woman he can talk to is Muddy's girl, Geneva (Gabrielle Union), who struggles to remain loyal despite Muddy's poorly concealed affairs. Big Willie Dixon (CEDRIC THE ENTERTAINER), a songwriter and bandleader, also is a key member of the Chess Records family, as is Howlin' Wolf (Eamonn Walker), an intense and proud blues singer who develops a musical rivalry with Muddy. But it's not until 1955 when a Chess artist finally "crosses over" into the realm of mainstream ("white") America - a skinny guy from St. Louis named Chuck Berry (MOS DEF), whose dynamic "duck walk" and catchy, country-tinged tunes mark the birth of rock-and-roll. When Berry is arrested and jailed at the height of his career, Chess finds another talented performer to cross over singer Etta James (Beyonce Knowles), an emotionally scarred young woman whose vulnerability tempts Chess' loyalty and concern in unexpected ways. As rock-and-roll grows more popular, the Chess artists find themselves revered by a new generation of musicians, but they have also each earned and lost a small fortune on booze, women and the high life, and their addictions begin to take their toll. Even as tragedy befalls, their music and their spirit remain strong: as the sixties wind down and Leonard Chess gets out of the record business, the blues live on. Martin's movie chronicles a transformational moment in popular music and culture. Before being eclipsed by the other performers, Jeffrey Wright registers powerfully as bluesman Muddy Waters, Mos' Def duckwalks as country-to-rock crossover dream Chuck Berry, and Beyoncé wails her heart out as soul singer Etta James. But among these scene-stealing headliners (who include Adrien Brody as the label's "ears," Leonard Chess), the knockout is Eamonn Walker, positively feral as blues sensation Howlin' Wolf. Musician-songwriter Willie Dixon (Cedric the Entertainer) provides the narration quilting together the story that spans 1941 to 1969, from Muddy Waters migrating to Chicago from Mississippi to Leonard Chess' sale of the label to his artists. (In the interest of narrative pruning, Martin entirely eliminated Philip Chess, Leonard's brother and partner, from the story.) The real-life Chess was a contradictory and complicated figure, not unlike Jamie Foxx's Curtis Taylor of Dreamgirls, suggested by Motown's Berry Gordy. Dreamgirls was critical of Curtis' shady deals and artistic backstabbing. But Cadillac Records (which takes its name from Chess' habit of buying his artists fancy cars with their royalties instead of giving them the money outright) is mystifyingly neutral about Chess, who bribed disc jockeys and cooked the books. Brody plays Chess as a slightly crooked but well-meaning musical cheerleader without fully emerging as a character. Cadillac Records is a toe-tapping experience where the music rather than the actors dominate. This undermines Wright's performance and advantages that of Beyoncé. The film boasts a soundtrack that includes the actors performing Muddy Water's "Mannish Boy," Howling Wolf's "Smoke Stack Lightning," Chuck Berry's "Sweet Little Sixteen," and Etta James' "At Last."As the legendary James, beset by drama and drug addiction, Beyoncé delivers - if more powerfully as actress than as a soul thrush. Etta James was a complex woman in the '60s and '70s — incredibly talented and haunted at the same time. There are many demons behind those famous recordings, and Knowles gets it. Etta's story would be better told in another film, surely. A good film that may've been better in individual stories, but still quite enjoyable. A rockin' good 4 on my "Go See" scale.
I Doubt you will hate this film
The marvelous Meryl Streep is frighteningly good as Sister Aloysius, the fire-breathing principal of a 1964 Bronx parochial school in John Patrick Shanley's powerful but stagy Doubt Streep will no doubt score her record 13th Oscar nomination as Best Actress for Sister Aloysius, who declares war on the parish priest, Father Brendan. Played by Philip Seymour Hoffman, Brendan appears more than ready for the battle.Already suspicious of the priest's embrace of the Vatican II reforms in his liberal sermons, the archly conservative sister - who finds ballpoint pens a newfangled abomination - senses ammunition when the naive Sister James (Adams) tells her that the school's first black student, an altar boy, returned from the rectory with the smell of alcohol on his breath.Sister Aloysius quickly concludes that her nemesis behaved improperly with Donald Miller (Joseph Foster II). And so might a contemporary audience that has heard countless stories of sexual abuse by priests over the past decade.But Shanley's Pulitzer-winning play - which he has adapted for the screen and also directed - is called Doubt for a reason. The movie's crux is Sister Aloysius trying to pin down the charming priest - and it's impossible to figure out from the text or Hoffman's skillful performance whether he's guilty as charged or merely the victim of the sister's witch hunt. Father Brendan admits taking a special interest in the boy, who is in a difficult situation because of his race. But he's admitting nothing, even as the sister's efforts to compel a confession escalate.While Hoffman is warmer here than in any previous screen role, Streep (stepping in for Cherry Jones, who created the role onstage) dominates the proceedings except for a single amazing scene.It involves not the priest, but a conversation between the sister and the boy's mother (Viola Davis) as they walk outside on a winter day.The mother announces a revelation that stuns the seemingly unflappable sister into momentary silence - and, in her single scene, Davis acts Streep right off the screen. Shanley works overtime to convince us of the story’s cinematic possibilities. The wind violently blows as Sister Aloysius’ suspicions grow. The camera is held at skewed angles when Father Flynn faces accusation. During one extended scene in Sister Aloysius’ office, there is a lot of fussy business over the window shades, which flood the room with interrogating light. Such intrusions are distracting, which may be why Streep goes big – she’s competing, in a sense, with the director. Sister Aloysius is a showy role - the quintessential tyrannical nun – and Streep goes with it. She makes her entrance viciously hushing the children during one of Father Flynn’s sermons, and soon she’s treating Father Flynn like one of those students, taking him into her office and turning the screws until he confesses. But does he have anything to confess? Doubt leaves us in doubt, thanks to Hoffman’s remarkable performance (by far the best in the film). Even as incriminating details mount, Hoffman gives Father Flynn so many layers we begin to wonder if he may be innocent – if his “spirit of compassion,” as he calls it, has been misunderstood. Doubt is less a story of sexual abuse within the church, then, than one of lesser, more insinuating sins: intolerance, impropriety, gossip. This is hands down one of the year’s best – as some awards groups are claiming – yet its central conundrum is still a riveting one: At what point might vigilance cloud our moral vision? A Chilling 4 on my "Go See" scale.
Believe in Despereaux
Once upon a time, in the faraway kingdom of Dor, there was magic in the air, raucous laughter aplenty and gallons of mouth-watering soup. But a terrible accident left the king broken-hearted, the princess filled with longing and the townsfolk despondent. All hope was lost in a land where sunlight disappeared and the world became dreary gray. Until Despereaux Tilling was born... A brave and virtuous mouse, Despereaux is simply too big for his small world. Though tiny, wheezy and saddled with comically oversized ears, Despereaux refuses to live a life of weakness and fear...believing he was destined to be celebrated in the tales of chivalry he so adores. When he's banished from his home for not following the rules that society expects of a mouse, Despereaux befriends fellow outcast Roscuro, a good-hearted rat who can't bear to look in the mirror and hopes to live far from the grim underground of his kind. While Despereaux begins his noble quest to rescue Pea--a princess who can't see beyond her distorted view of the world--his pal Roscuro receives a painful rejection from her highness that sets him on a course of self-destruction. Along their parallel adventures, the two encounter colorful characters from a serving girl who wishes to be a princess to the evil leader of the sewer rats, who plots revenge on humans from his fiefdom in the subterranean shadows he relishes but Roscuro can't abide. From the highest turrets of the glittering castle to the dankest dark of Dor's sewers, friendships will be tested as Despereaux and Roscuro embark upon a journey that will change the way they look at their world--and themselves--forever. In this tale of bravery, forgiveness and redemption, one tiny creature will teach a kingdom that it takes only a little light to show that what you look like doesn't equal what you are. This is The Tale of Despereaux.
If nothing else, The Tale of Despereaux will be an achievement in at least one regard. It demonstrates a way to do computer animation without relying solely on the shiny, plasticized versions of the world popularized early on by Pixar and now adopted completely in the Dreamworks camp. Based on an illustrated children's book, Despereaux feels hand-drawn but better, cartoony in all the right ways and lushly, perfectly stylized. Whether the convoluted story matches the gorgeous animation is another question. A small fable told on the large stage of a fantasyland castle, Despereaux is much more than just the story of its titular mouse. Like an interspecies game of telephone, the story follows a series of misunderstandings and prejudices among many residents of the kingdom, including the narrator herself (Sigourney Weaver). The film is adapted from four different books by Newberry Award winner Kate DiCamillo, and the choppy narrative structure is probably a result of all that condensing. Still, as an all-ages holiday diversion Despereaux will be hard to beat. Dor is the kind of fantasy kingdom in which princesses talk to mice, rats have an organized community, and soup is a cause for annual celebration. Roscuro (Dustin Hoffman) is a shipbound rat with a culinary nose who arrives in Dor on the day of the great soup unveiling, when the king's chef serves the entire kingdom his latest concoction. A series of mistakes later, Roscuro lands in the queen's soup bowl and scares her to death; the king goes into a deep depression, the chef is rendered obsolete, and all rats are banned from the kingdom forever. After all that exposition, we finally meet Despereaux (Matthew Broderick), a tiny mouse with outsized ears and dreams to match them. His parents (Wililam H. Macy and Frances Conroy), along with the school principal (Richard Jenkins), encourage him to be timid and meek like other mice, but Desperaux dreams of chivalry and swordfights and courtly love. His dreams all come true when he meets and befriends Princess Pea (Emma Watson), left lonely by her father's depression and desperate to be rescued. But a lonely servant girl named Miggory Sow (Tracey Ullman) is so jealous of the princess that she aims to kidnap the princess and take her place, and she eventually finds an ally in Roscuro, who wants to escape exile in the rat kingdom and be welcomed by the princess the same way Despereaux is. It's way too much plot for such a brief children's movie, especially including the back stories for characters like Miggory and a castle guard and whole scenes between the chef and a man made of vegetables. They're the kind of subplots that become comfortable detours in a book, especially when told with such imagination, but in the film they take away from the story's central drive. Despereaux and Roscuro run up and down in the castle, go through exile and salvation and wind up at the center of a rat-style gladiator event, and it's enough to try and keep up with those two. It's a shame that the elegance of the animation and the storytelling don't match up, since Despereaux makes for such a nice throwback to "once upon a time" and "far, far away." I'd nearly forgotten, after Enchanted and the Shrek movies, that there's a genuine delight in settling into a story with jokes that don't derive from pop culture references, and themes that aren't a reflection on anything particularly real. So while the elegant escapism that apparently made the book such a treasure doesn't quite translate to the screen, Despereaux remains its own quiet kind of achievement, an entertaining throwback absent irony or pretension. An enchanted 3 on my "Go See" scale
TDTESS is worth the IMAX treat
Helping him along is a Princeton astrobiologist named Helen Benson (Connelly), whose young stepson, Jacob (Jaden Smith), thinks Klaatu is the enemy and keeps trying to get him busted. Meanwhile, the real star of both versions of the movie, a gigantic robot named Gort, has been confiscated by the authorities after trying to save Klaatu's life. In 1951, the intergalactic golem was a silvery, rather clunky attempt to reflect a time defined by the sleek lines of industrial designer Raymond Loewy. Here, the leviathan is matte black, with one single, penetrating red eye, wreaking havoc on all who cross its path like a piece of public sculpture run amok. There are very few surprises in "The Day the Earth Stood Still," whether viewers have seen the original or not. In fact, the most genuinely shocking thing about the remake is that director Scott Dickerson resists the more-bloated-the-better fad and doesn't overreach. While a big deal is being made that the film is being shown in IMAX theaters, little of the movie lends itself to that technology's bigger-and-louder aesthetic.
Still, "The Day the Earth Stood Still" earns points for efficient storytelling, and Derrickson has cast some terrific actors in those supporting roles, including Kathy Bates as the secretary of defense, John Cleese as a Nobel Prize-winning theorist, and TV dreamboats Kyle Chandler and Jon Hamm as Pentagon apparatchiks. Those Imax-friendly bells and whistles finally make their presence felt in the last half-hour of "The Day the Earth Stood Still," when Gort unleashes its fury and a swarm of malignant, metallic locusts descends upon the Earth like a swiftly metastasizing scourge. Reeves, echoing his role as Neo in the "Matrix" movies, again hits his marks with impassive blankness as a transcendent, Christlike figure of sacrifice and redemption. Through it all, the filmmakers adamantly withhold any and all potential for unintentional campiness. Even the original's best-loved piece of dialogue, "Klaatu barada nikto," has been quietly excised. Solemn, sober and efficient, "The Day the Earth Stood Still" -- much like Klaatu himself -- gets the job done and moves on. And Robert Wise, far from spinning in his grave, has no doubt simply shifted position for an untroubled eternal rest. An outworldly 3 on my "Go See" sacle.
Thursday, December 11, 2008
Grumpy Old Dirty Harry
Everyone has at least one friend with a racist grandparent. They’ll scream and shout about how the Mexicans are moving into the neighborhood or bitch about the white devils down the street. They’re not out there actively wearing clan hoods or marching in hate demonstrations, but they’re not above dropping the occasional racial slur. Many people tend to excuse racism among the elderly as a product of the way they were raised. “My granny’s from a different time,” your friend will tell you after spending twenty minutes trapped in her kitchen while she blames the Jews for 9/11. “She’s not a hate-monger, she just doesn’t know any better,” your friend will say. Until now, that’s an excuse I’ve never really bought into. But Eastwood makes a rather compelling case for it in his new grandpa gets revenge flick Gran Torino. At 78, perhaps the only actor in the history of American cinema to convincingly kick the butt of a guy 60 years his junior, the hard-headed, snarly mouthed Clint Eastwood of the 1970s comes growling back to life in Gran Torino. Centered on a cantankerous man who can fairly be described as Archie Bunker fully loaded (with beer and guns), the actor-director's second release of the season is his most stripped-down, unadorned picture in many a year, even as it continues his long preoccupation with race in American society. Highlighted by the star's vastly entertaining performance, this funny, broad but ultimately serious-minded drama about an old-timer driven to put things right in his deteriorating neighborhood looks to be a big audience-pleaser with mainstream viewers of all ages. Stewing in the poison of a half-century of post-traumatic stress disorder, Clint Eastwood's ornery bigot Walt Kowalski, the antihero of this western-like tragicomedy set in a contemporary Michigan suburb, sits on his front porch pounding cans of PBR and bemoaning the influx of "zipperheads and gooks" in his formerly white neighborhood. He is everybody’s angry, racist grandpa crossed-bred with gun-toting Mr. Strickland from Back to the Future. His wife has recently died and he’s the last white person left in an old neighborhood which has long since been repopulated with immigrants. We never see Walt’s life with his wife, but he speaks of her with reverence. Presumably she was a stabilizing influence. Without her he’s anger, bitterness and loneliness personified; a sour-faced ogre who seems to hate everyone and everything around him. He sits day after day on his porch guzzling beer, scowling at his neighbors and calling them the most vicious ethnic slurs imaginable. His relationship with his greedy, selfish family is little better. After a long life Walt has no tolerance left for laziness or fools. “Pussy!” he snarls whenever someone fails to live up to his expectations. He wouldn’t be out of place running into the street, firing off a shotgun and screaming “slackers!” at passing children, and at first it seems that a bitter, fed-up, racist husk is all that’s left of craggy-faced old Walt. Walt may have a low opinion of the world, but he’s a man of principal and character. When gangbangers rough up the quiet Hmong (people from Southeast Asia) family next door, he drives them off with a rifle in a classic, Eastwood, badass standoff. His grateful neighbors don’t buy it when he growls that he simply didn’t want them on his lawn, and Walt wakes up the next morning to discover his porch littered with gifts. Walt isn’t interested in their friendship at first, but eventually he starts to see some value in Thao and Sue (Bee Vang & Ahney Her), the Lor family’s well-behaved kids, a marked contrast to his own self-absorbed grandchildren. Soon even he gets sick of all the constant loneliness and Walt accepts an invite to dinner where he develops an affinity for Hmong food. In another film, this is the spot where hard-bitten racist Walt would be magically transformed into old softie. The movie would end with him weeping and perhaps reconnecting with his son. Well forget it. That never happens in Gran Torino and maybe that’s why it’s so damn good. There’s obvious affection between Walt and his neighbors but he stays the same unforgiving, bitter, aged badass he is at the beginning of the film. Rather than them changing him, he sets out to change them by taking Thao under his wing and working with him to build character, to turn him into a proper man. Soon it’s clear that Walt loves Thao and his family, his loneliness is satiated, but he goes right on calling them “chinks” and “spoonheads”. It’s not out of malice, for Walt that’s just the way it’s always been. Thao and Sue look past it, recognizing they’re only words. They’ve seen the good in him and it outweighs whatever it is that makes him such a cynical old man. If there’s any change in Walt it’s that his tolerance for the thugs and gangbangers who accost his friends has become even lower. He sets out to protect Thao and Sue. His way of protecting them is by packing a pistol and refusing to put up with crap. Imagine every butt-kicking, unflinching character Clint Eastwood has ever played. Now imagine seeing them in their twilight years, wrinkled, haggard, on death’s door, and spitting in the face of death one last time to help a friend. As Walt lets Thao and Sue in, he starts to care. The more he starts to care the less he can stand to let the scum continue to rule his neighborhood. He loads his weapon and stands up. Clint Eastwood’s performance as Walt is his best work as an actor in years, a return to all of the things that made him great as a younger man. He’s brilliant and imposing, shocking and so over the top he’s often funny. Unfortunately the rest of the movie’s cast isn’t quite up to the task of going toe to toe with them. They range in acting ability from bearable to plumb awful. Christopher Carley is the film’s worst offender as a concerned neighborhood priest and the gangbangers Walt takes on never manage anything better than thug stereotypes. Bee Vang and Ahney Her fair better as Thao and Sue also there is John Carroll Lynch who will have you laughing out loud in the back and forth scenes in the barbershop, it’s Eastwood that makes Gran Torino so compelling. Gran Torino is a movie you must see. The PC police will almost certainly lambaste it, attempt to dismiss it as clumsy and cry out in shock at Eastwood’s willingness to portray a man so filled with hate and intolerance. I will say that I thought that the racial slurs were a little too much at times, but Gran Torino is smarter than it seems and it’s broader, funnier, and more straightforward than you’d expect. This is the Clint Eastwood we all remember in a perfect final performance. He’s riding off into the sunset scowling, snarling, and spitting blood. Go and see this movie. It's the last time you'll see Clint on the big screen.
Friday, December 5, 2008
Valkyrie almost made me cry...it was that boring
A proud military man, Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg (Cruise)is a loyal officer who serves his country all the while hoping that someone will find a way to stop Hitler (David Bamber) before Europe and Germany are destroyed. Realizing that time is running out, he decides that he must take action himself and joins the German resistance. Armed with a cunning strategy to use Hitler's own emergency plan - known as Operation Valkyrie - these men plot to assassinate the dictator and overthrow his Nazi government from the inside. After a long takeoff, "Valkyrie" finally takes flight as a thriller in its second half but never soars very high. Bryan Singer's long-awaited account of the near-miss assassination of Adolf Hitler by a ring of rebel German army officers on July 20, 1944, has visual splendor galore, but is a cold work lacking in the requisite tension and suspense. Cruise himself is a bit stiff but still adequate as Col. Claus von Stauffenberg, the handsome, aristocratic officer whose disenchantment with Nazism, the Fuehrer and the war finds sympathetic ears among a sizable number of military bigwigs at a time when the tide has turned against Germany in the East and an Allied invasion is expected imminently in the West. As if the filmmakers felt the need to show modern viewers who might wonder why they should emotionally indulge Nazi authority figures, the opening is swathed in Stauffenberg's feelings about how Hitler and the SS are a "stain" on the German army and his coincidentally contemporary desire for a "change" in the country's leadership. Shortly after entering these sentiments into his diary while serving in Tunisia in 1943, Stauffenberg is badly injured and loses his right arm, the last two fingers of his left hand and his left eye; with a black eyepatch, he still looks quite dashing, even if executing a Nazi salute with a prosthetic arm might appear rather irreverent. Slowly letting his sympathies show, Stauffenberg is introduced to a circle of powerful men, many of them old-school army officers whose conservative notions are closer to those of the Kaiser of their youth than to the rabid ideology of Hitler and the SS. Script unfortunately erases many of the interesting personal and political nuances pertaining to these men, notably the urgent belief of some that, with Hitler gone, they could join with the United States and Britain to beat back the Soviet Union and prevent the Bolshevization of Germany. What is perhaps most amazing about the plot is that so many people were involved and yet it was never detected with any certainty. Among the central figures: Major-Gen. Henning von Tresckow (Kenneth Branagh), first seen trying to kill Hitler by sneaking a bomb onto the Fuehrer's plane; retired Gen. Ludwig Beck (Terence Stamp), a longtime Hitler opponent at the center of the military-civilian conspiracy; Gen. Friedrich Olbricht (Bill Nighy), another veteran resistance figure still in a position of authority; Gen. Erich Fellgiebel (Eddie Izzard), whose role in charge of communications at Hitler's Wolf's Lair compound in East Prussia would be crucial to the plot's chances; and the most equivocal figure, Gen. Friedrich Fromm (Tom Wilkinson), commander in chief of the reserve army in Berlin, and a cagey operator who artfully turns a blind eye to the conspirators' activities while remaining cautiously loyal to the Reich. As it finally takes shape, the plan hinges not just on eliminating the Fuehrer but on implementing a coup in Berlin. To this end, Stauffenberg has the brilliant idea of turning Operation Valkyrie, the code name for a measure enabling the reserve army to take control of Berlin in a national emergency, to their own purposes. Stauffenberg, thanks to his access, will place a bomb in a briefcase underneath the large conference table during a briefing at Wolf's Lair, while his associates in the capital will implement the government takeover as Stauffenberg flies back to Berlin. An ambitious plan, to be certain, one in which details large and small go wrong. Putting it on the screen in a clean, classically derived style, Singer is careful to make sure everything is clear to the viewer and emphasizes the sometimes daunting physical reality of things, such as the difficulty Stauffenberg, with only three fingers, has in cutting the thick metal wire necessary to set the bomb's fuse. Once Stauffenberg has set off the explosion and cleverly slips away, convinced Hitler couldn't possibly have survived, the picture's grip strengthens somewhat as the coup, initially delayed, ultimately stumbles forward. Due to interrupted lines, no one in Berlin knows if Hitler is alive or dead, and the film's single haunting scene shows a room full of female communications operators slowly raising their hands, one by one, to indicate to their supervisor that they have received some news -- the Fuehrer is dead. It isn't long before evidence to the contrary comes through. The reserve army, which has rounded up the SS and gone to arrest Goebbels (whose name Cruise for some reason makes rhyme with "nobles"), is told to stand down, and the tables are turned on the conspirators after a few heady hours. And Germany has nine months of devastation to look forward to. Story's fascination, ironies, missed opportunities, implications and what-if aspects invest Valkyrie with automatic appeal for anyone interested in history in general and World War II in particular. But a nagging feeling persists throughout that the film should be more gripping than it is, and that the men involved could have been revealed with more complexity and dimension. Cruise makes Stauffenberg a stalwart, flawed and honorable man, but reveals little sense of his stellar intellectual, artistic and family background. The star's neutral Yank accent contrasts with the British voices that surround him but, truth be told, it is more the Anglo intonations coming out of the German characters that sound oddly disconcerting. Of the character actors, Wilkinson most impresses with his robust presentation of an intriguingly Janus-like figure. David Bamber carries off a pretty plausible portrait of the declining Hitler in a handful of scenes. Although it would have looked like inappropriate stunt casting in this context, the suspicion nonetheless persists that the contemporary English-speaking actor who would make the most interesting screen Hitler is former Singer cohort Kevin Spacey. By the end credits, I was bored and wishing that I had walked out 10 mins into the movie. I just didn't have any compassion for any of the characters even after they were all caught and executed. I just wanted the movie to be over. It felt like a total waste of my time, but the trailer looked good and we all know that sometimes all the best parts are in the trailer. A saddend 2 on my "Go See" scale.