Thursday, September 3, 2009

Major Secrets Surround Sorority Row

When five sorority girls inadvertently cause the murder of one of their sisters in a prank gone wrong, they agree to keep the matter to themselves and never speak of it again, so they can get on with their lives. This proves easier said than done, when after graduation a mysterious killer goes after the five of them and anyone who knows their secret in Sorority Row.

Don't think too hard, or at all, and Sorority Row works. The opening scene, in which an unsuspecting, cheating boyfriend gets set up by the Theta Pi sisters for the ultimate fake-out, which quickly escalates into a very real dead body, is pretty convincing. Sure, you can think, Why is there an abandoned mine shaft nearby? But don't bother. Of course, good gal Cassidy (Evigan) wants to do the right thing, whereas ringleader Jessica (Leah Pipes) is all about covering it up. Eventually, the rest of the group falls in line with J's way of thinking and the stage is set to see how far the well-off will go to stay well-off. Once the body count starts piling up, the "sisters forever" mantra starts to fall apart.

The trick with this kind of pic is keeping the audience's attention with more than just clever kills (which the film does have—hello flare gun!). Screenwriters Josh Stolberg and Peter Goldfinger focus their attention on the dynamic hate-you, hate-you-more relationship between Cassidy and Jessica. Both actresses play their parts to the hilt, and it's great fun to watch. Evigan has grown up and has that It factor, which any would-be scream queen requires. But it's Pipes as Jessica who breaks out as the queen bee. In fact, she may have more hilarious one-liners than Rachel McAdams did in Mean Girls. Willis plays weak link Ellie with just the right amount of OMG-we're-all-gonna-die attitude that you don't want to see her get offed (yet). And Margo Harshman plays slutty gal Chugs, whose so-over-it mentality made us smile. With way-hip casting—Briana Evigan, Rumer Willis and Audrina Patridge—this splatfest is exactly the type of movie it should be. Cringe, laugh, and wonder if this is what happened to that hot sorority girl that you dated back in college. Did she really just stop calling you? This gets a 3 on my "Go See" scale.

This Final Destination Was A Scary One

In The Final Destination, on what should have been a fun-filled day at the races, Nick O’Bannon (Bobby Campo) has a horrific premonition in which a bizarre sequence of events causes multiple race cars to crash, sending flaming debris into the stands, brutally killing his friends and causing the upper deck of the stands to collapse on him. When he comes out of this grisly nightmare Nick panics, persuading his girlfriend, Lori (Shantel VanSanten), and their friends, Janet and Hunt (Haley Wenn & Nick Zano), to leave… escaping seconds before Nick’s frightening vision becomes a terrible reality. Thinking they’ve cheated death, the group has a new lease on life, but unfortunately for Nick and Lori, it is only the beginning. As his premonitions continue and the crash survivors begin to die one-by-one -- in increasingly gruesome ways -- Nick must figure out how to cheat death once and for all before he, too, reaches his final destination. 

The Final Destination is definitely in the race to be the best horror movie so far this year— thanks in large part to two key scenes, one of which takes place at a NASCAR racetrack. It's the opening sequence, which is always absolutely essential in these Final Destination films. In case you do not know the franchise scheme, it always begins with a large-scale accident of some kind during which a few people (typically impossibly good-looking 20-somethings) escape the Grim Reaper… but of course, death doesn't like to be cheated. So, one by one, each survivor gets the kibosh put on his or her newfound lease on life. The enduring conceit is elaborate set piece deaths done as if conceived by all-night think tank sessions with James Henry Atkinson, Rube Goldberg and David Copperfield. In the first movie it was an elaborate airplane crash; in the second (also directed by David R. Ellis) it was a hellish highway smashup; in the third a wrecked rollercoaster; and now it's the track. Ellis, a master of motorized manipulation, does some pretty awesome things with four wheels and 3D here. Then there is another death trap set inside a beauty parlor (a bitchy customer, scissors, razors, nail clippers, and flammable hairspray don't mix!) which is a great, er, tease.

Aside from that, the movie is pretty stock. The actors (main cast consists of Bobby Campo, Shantel VanSanten, Nick Zano and Haley Wenn) do the best they can with flimsy material (presumably some character-building moments were excised to make for a faster-paced 80 minute popcorn movie) and they are likable enough. They have some funny dialogue and they deliver it well. They are in some pretty humorous scenes involving suicide (yeah, what a knee-slapper!) and unorthodox use of tampons (at least they weren't maxi-pads). At the top of the laundry-list of must-do's is fun. The killings may be shocking and bloody (we are talking rated-R here), but there's always a sense of escapist unreality. Wafer-thin, The Final Destination is definitely the weakest entry to date —  but worth a peep anyway if you enjoy rides like these. This gets a 3 on my "Go See" scale. It may not be the best one, but it satisfies. 

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

It Would Be Better To Forget This Halloween

Rob Zombie's Halloween II Picks up at the exact moment the first movie stopped and follow the aftermath of Michael Myers murderous rampage through the eyes of heroine Laurie Strode.

That vaunted style that Zombie has more or less brought to all of his preceding work - also including House of 1000 Corpses and The Devil's Rejects, the latter being his one truly great film - has largely evaporated for the director's fourth feature; I'd really be hard pressed to honestly claim that Halloween II really possesses much in the way of a style whatsoever. Or better to say: it possesses no coherent style. Moments here and there are extremely well-made, but on the whole the movie seems to consist of nothing but a whole lot of disjointed, underlit scenes of a big dude stabbing the fuck out of people. This much is true, though: Zombie didn't just toss it off as a make-work effort. He clearly devoted some effort to making this film a fair continuation of his version of the story that pays tribute to the first Halloween II without copying it, and far more than at the end of his Halloween, one gets the feeling like he's made the material his own. The 2009 edition of HII opens with a short return to little Michael Myers (now played by Chase Vanek) and his mother (Sheri Moon Zombie) in the insane asylum, reiterating Zombie's interest in the warped goings-on of Michael's brains - no incomprehensible killing machine, this - before re-stating the 1981 film in a fairly snug little mini-movie. Mere moments after the end of Halloween the police intervene in the remnants of the blood-bath, picking up the blood-covered and quite hysterical Laurie Strode (Scout Taylor-Compton) on the street, and rushing the not-quite-dead-after-all Dr. Sam Loomis (Malcolm McDowell) and Annie Brackett (Danielle Harris, who played Jamie Lloyd in Halloween 4 and Halloween 5) to the emergency room. Laurie herself is set right in a nauseatingly specific surgery scene that pays far closer attention the the physical cost of violence than most slasher movies would dare: her bones are set, chunks of glass removed from her body, stitches everywhere. In what will become one of the few successful motifs developed throughout the film, Laurie's surgery is intercut with scenes of Michael (Tyler Mane, only the second man to play the role twice) improbably coming to life in a coroner's van, killing the drivers, and stomping back to Haddonfield to finish the job he started, killing Laurie in the hospital. He gets their fairly quickly, but Laurie manages to escape, albeit very slowly, and she ends up cowering in the small outbuilding where the parking lot guard spends his nights, when Michael - having massacred nearly the whole hospital staff - closes in on her. Then Laurie wakes up, one year later, on October 29. Credit where it's due, this whole sequence of about 15 minutes is pretty hard to complain about. It even manages the "only a dream" reveal with some panache: when Laurie was awoken by an old TV show of The Moody Blues playing "Night in White Satin", I was fairly convinced it was a dream sequence, but the longer it went, the less likely that seemed, so that when the reveal finally came, it was an honest surprise. The whole thing is a very knowing homage to the 1981 film, in which Michael stalked Laurie in the hospital the night after the first killings, but by shortening the action so much, Zombie alleviates most of the rampant stupidities of that movie. And most importantly, the whole thing is honestly thrilling and suspenseful: and that is a rare and uniquely valuable commodity in any slasher movie from any time period.

Once Laurie wakes up, though, Halloween II takes a monumental step down in quality and in interest. The rest of the film divides itself between three storylines that only come together near the end: Laurie, now living with Annie and her sheriff dad (Brad Dourif), is trying to put her life together, with the aid of a couple new friends, Mya (Brea Grant) and Harley (Angela Trimbur); Dr. Loomis has turned his post-traumatic stress into a trashy true-crime novel about Michael's life and killings that has every other survivor of the Halloween murders screaming for his head; and Michael, he's still out there, keeping alive somehow, and suffering visions of his mother and his younger self directing him to find and kill Laurie, as this is the only way that he can reunite the Myers clan. At the same time, Laurie is suffering from extremely vivid dreams that are unnaturally close to Michael's hallucinations. I should mention that these dream sequences/visions are the most interesting moments in the film, once that kick-ass opener has wrapped up: honestly creepy without being OMG so terrifying, and much more like real nightmares for it. I certainly get what Zombie is trying to do here: explore the traumatic fall-out from a slasher event in a way that customarily is never done. But it's not very effective, for a number of reasons: Loomis's storyline is absolutely pointless, and Laurie's is burdened by Taylor-Compton, who has not matured much as an actress since the 2007 Halloween. She's not quite as annoying, but the actress still doesn't have much range to do anything but talk shrilly and scream even shriller still. The Michael plotline is perhaps the best-executed, bearing out the notion that Zombie is primarily interested in exploring the mind of a serial killer, something he's done in all four of his features, more or less. Here, the fatal flaw is that a slasher movie simply isn't well-suited, formally, to that kind of study; it's ridiculously tricky to make a "mind of a killer" film if the killer isn't your protagonist, and even if Laurie functions as a kind of extension of Michael's psyche, the film is constantly working against itself. Anyway, the Michael sequence often descends into nothing more than "Deborah Myers drives Michael to kill", and while the killing scenes are quite unusual - they are mostly bloodless, but perilously brutal, with Michael stabbing at his victims with great force - they are not especially well-motivated. One scene in particular, in which Michael interrupts a Halloween party, not only doesn't fit neatly into the plot, it creates a small galaxy of plot holes. Mostly, the film is just a waiting game: plot happens, it's dull, we sit around expecting something to come of it, it never does. Brief flickers of interest aren't enough to keep anyone but the most giving of horror fans patient for that much nothingness, and ultimately Halloween II exhausts itself on a single great, unanswered question: what's the point? The corker of an ending - predictable, but hardly the ending that one would have expected, and Zombie certainly seems to make it clear that there will be no Halloween III - isn't enough to justify more than hour of holding pattern that precedes it, and so Halloween II shuffles along as one of the more boring horror films of late: competent in all respects, but there's no urgency pushing it forward.  Only Zombie's fascination with Michael gives it any hint of merit whatsoever, and a hint in this case isn't that much. After a great remake of the first movie this one was a huge letdown. Rob should've stopped with the first movie. A disappointing 2 on my "Go See" scale.

What The Hell Rob? This Halloween Sucks

Hollywood has given second chances to many movies that were minor successes. They also take a franchise that had a huge following a huge fan base and they utterly destroy it. Take Rob Zombie's first version of a film classic. He expanded on the story and made it interesting, but in "Halloween II" he just gives us violence for the sake of filling screen time.

Picking up right where the first film left off, Laurie has survived the infamous Halloween massacre, but Michael disappears. Laurie Strode (Scout Taylor-Compton) struggles to come to terms with her dark past, or at least to try to forget it. But the missing and thought dead Michael Myers (Tyler Mane) has other plans, and as the anniversary approaches, he returns once again, with plans for another family reunion that Laurie and Haddonfield, Illinois will never forget. Laurie is taken to a hospital after she supposedly kills the man who was responsible for the deaths of several people and a night of terror.

Where the original took place solely in the hospital, Rob Zombie has totally taken this movie beyond any thing even a novice director could think of. He gives us the standard nudity that is in almost every B horror movie, he gives us the violence of a B horror movie he gives us casting of a B type horror movie, what he doesn't give us is a reason to care about anyone in this B horror movie. Laurie survives a second attempt on her live by Michael and then its a year later. What happens in that year, where does Michael hide, out in plain site?, in barns? that is never revealed.

Michael is troubled by visions of his mother, Deborah Myers (Sheri Moon Zombie) and a younger version of himself (Chase Wright Vanek) these visions drive him to walk back to Haddonfield to find Laurie and bring her home. Along the way Michael encounters three people who take action against him using violence to beat him only because they think he is on their property. Sherman Benny (Duane Whitaker) and Jazlean Benny (Betsy Rue) along with Floyd (Mark Boone Junior) become the first victims of a now enraged Michael Myers. Next to meet their maker by the hands of Michael in a scene that is in the movie to just add to the violence, are night club owner Big Lou (Daniel Roebuck) and Howard (Jeffrey Daniel Phillips) along with the of course needed stripper Wendy Snow (Nicky Whelan) making a complete nuisance of himself is Dr. Samuel Loomis, (Malcolm McDowell) he has written a book on the first nights events, he has become almost as big a whore as many of the films characters are.

There is really nothing in this movie, the violence is graphic and noisy, the kills are onscreen but lack a total regard for what it is we want to see, they are shown from a distance and behind closed doors, we see the aftermath and hear the knife enter the body. If we pay to see the horror on screen then lets SEE the horror on screen. The whole original story is GONE, the first five minutes of the movie takes place in the hospital, only so we can have the onscreen deaths of two characters, Nurse Daniels (Octavia Spencer) and a Night Watchmen, Buddy (Richard Riehle) then its flash forward time. Sheriff Leigh Brackett (Brad Dourif) is back only so we can have the murder of his daughter Annie (Danielle Harris) which true horror fans know happened in the first Halloween, the one by the master John Carpenter.

I give this version of Halloween II a 0 and on my avoidance scale a 4 I can only say this, Rob when you sit down and want to remake another classic, please put the director chair back in the closet. There is nothing in this movie that I could say is worth watching, even the original stuff is not exciting enough, and the idea that everything we sat through may be a figment of a madman's dreams or thoughts, well that is just stupid and I hope that wasn't what you tried to get across.

Halloween II is rated R for Strong Brutal Bloody Violence Throughout, Terror, Disturbing Graphic Images, Language, and Some Crude Sexual Content and Nudity
Running time is 1 hr. 41 mins.

Bateman & Co. Make Extract Worthwhile

Joel (Jason Bateman) is one step away from selling his flavor extract factory and retiring to easy street when a freak workplace accident sets in motion a series of disasters that put his business and personal life in jeopardy.

I believe Mike Judge’s Office Space failed to initially strike a chord with mass theater audiences because its brand of satirical humor was largely missed on those it poked with its ridicule stick. Judge goes down that same road with Extract, but rather than telling the story from the point of view of employees looking up at evil management, he shoots from the view of a company owner looking down on incompetent workers who are a big pain in the butt to him. Joel (Bateman) owns an extract factory on the verge of selling out to General Mills. All he has to do to cash in is keep things running smoothly long enough for the big proposal to finally come in. Problem is, a workplace accident that violently separates an employee (Clifton Collins Jr.) from his testicles threatens to squelch the lucrative deal. Joel can either scuttle the entire agreement or reach a financial settlement with a bus-bench attorney (Gene Simmons) that would bankrupt the company. To make matters worse, Joel’s workplace demands have sapped the sexuality from his marriage to Suzie (Kristen Wiig), who hasn’t slept with him in weeks. This lack of carnal delight plays itself out in a humorous scene depicting his wife’s sweatpants being cinched up nightly at 8:00 pm sharp… just before Dancing with the Stars comes on TV. The sound of Suzie’s drawstrings pulling tight is not unlike that of a rusty dungeon door slowly creaking itself shut with a heavy metallic slam. The sexually frustrated Joel spends his evenings at a sports bar run by sleazy friend Dean (a shaggy-haired Ben Affleck) who dispenses horrible but well-meaning advice like a drug dealer pushes pills. In fact, one night, following an accidental dose of horse tranquilizer, Dean convinces Joel to hire a male gigolo (Dustin Milligan) to seduce his wife. According to the drug-tainted logic, if she gives in to the temptation, Joel will have no moral compunction from making his own moves on workplace tart Cindy (Mila Kunis) who first brought attention to herself by showing interest in his food additive and flavor extract prowess. No one has ever gone for his heart in quite this way before. Some of the film’s more hilarious moments follow, including one featuring a hysterical pot-smoking scenario featuring an explosively violent drug dealer and a water bong the size of an aboriginal didgeridoo. Think of the first time you saw Cheech and Chong smoke the giant joint in Up in Smoke. It’s that effective.

Extract probably won’t have the longevity of Office Space, nor will it likely attract the same loyal cult following. Its tone is a bit too sweet for that, and since it reaches for a more widely accepting audience, it doesn’t carry the same sharpness of satirical wit as its older brother. But its extremely likable cast -- led by a sympathetic Jason Bateman -- elevates the material above the drone of typical cinematic drivel slated for mass consumption. It takes a clever satirist to make a victim laugh at his own imperfections, and time (as well as an eventual cult following) has shown that Judge knew what he was doing with Office Space and Idiocracy, another understated jewel, after all. Perhaps Judge fans who’ve been clamoring for another Office Space won’t be completely satisfied with Extract, but if they stop and give it a moment, they’ll notice this film is vintage Mike Judge. ... letting the idiocy of real people drive the comedy.  This one is a must see. I give it a 3 on my "Go See" scale. 

Extract Makes This Company What It Is.... Silly Fun

Every once in awhile a comedy comes along that makes you sit up and take notice, you usually will find yourself laughing out loud, maybe even crying from all the laughing that you experience. Mike Judge is responsible for making us laugh, his King Of The Hill is corny and a little bit old fashioned but we still laugh, his Beavis and Butthead, well lets just leave it at we still laugh. Now Mike Judge brings us the story of a small business owner trying to pave his way in the American workplace, "Extract" is what comedy should be, simple.

Joel Reynold (Jason Bateman) seems to have everything. A small business he has brought from the ground up to be one of the bigger companies in the community, a nice home and he believes he is happily married, if he makes it home before eight PM that is. At eight PM his wife Suzie (Kristen Wiig) puts on her sweatpants and becomes as interested in him as he is in her designs of supermarket coupons. Sexually frustrated, Joel confides in his best pal, Dean (Ben Affleck), a barkeep who has his head in the clouds, usually it's a cloud of marijuana smoke. Joel soon finds himself wrapped up in a convoluted scheme to make Suzie cheat on him first, this is the extent of deans master plan that would allow Joel to pursue a beautiful new employee at his plant, Cindy (Mila Kunis) with a clear conscience. Dean gets Brad (Dustin Milligan) a dim-witted gigolo to pretend to be a pool boy and hit on Suzie.

The plan works so well that it becomes a daily exercise in futility for Joel, Cindy has gotten a job in the plant to try to convince Step (Clifton Collins Jr.) to sue the plant after he loses a vital body part in a freak accident. When Joel finds her in a motel room, he also happens to find several missing items that went missing at the extract plant. Chaos ensues of course, Step decides he wants to sue the plant after all and hires a lawyer, Joe Adler (Gene Simmons) is the kind of sleazy lawyer that everyone thinks is working hard for them but is only working for themselves. This movie is a comedy of errors and when Joel finally gets a shot at redemption he takes it, he deals with the gigolo issue and also the issue of Cindy and the missing items. He talks to Step and they both decide that suing the company isn't what he wants, Joel also decides not to sell the company he has worked so hard for.

I give Extract a 3 and on my avoidance scale a 0. The laughs come fast and hard in this movie, the jokes are more for the older teen and adult, they are both dirty and raunchy but here they work. Mike Judge has given comedy a much needed shot in the arm. Extract isn't the next great comedy, but it will make you laugh, it has many little inside jokes that you will laugh at, many of the jokes come across dead pan and they will make you laugh out loud. Extract is the type of movie we need right now, when the comedy film has landed in the gutter and refuses to leave, Extract pushed that idea around and we get to enjoy the ride.

Extract is rated R for Language, Sexual References and some Drug Use
Running time is 1 hr. 30 mins.

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

The Temp Is Dropping But Hollywood Is Gearing Up For Year End

September is usually a time of year where Hollywood is preparing for its next wave of movies, these movies are aimed at the older more mature audience member and are more likely to garner Academy Award nominations. This is the time of year where as an adult you will find something of interest at your local movie house. Just how many of these will become blockbusters is yet to be seen, though these are the movies that we will be looking at and saying that one is the best picture of the year. As of today Hollywood has released close to two hundred movies and sadly you can count on one finger the truly great films. Hopefully one of these movies listed below will induce you into making such a statement.

September brings horror and comedy, bio's and cartoons, Gerard Butler in an action movie where he belongs and Tyler Perry once again in a dress. Will any of these releases make the top ten list, probable not but they may just entertain the heck out of you.

September 04th
All About Steve
Extract
Gamer
My One And Only
World's Greatest Dad
September 09th
9
September 11th
The September Issue (Limited)
Sorority Row
Tyler Perry's I Can Do Bad All By Myself
Whiteout
September 18th
Cloudy With A Chance Of Meatballs
The Informant (Limited)
Jennifer's Body
Love Happens
September 25th
Disgrace
Fame
I Hope They Serve Beer In Hell
Pandorum
Surrogates

October brings laughter and lunacy, history and the end of the world, also lots and lots of horror movies, it is of course the month for them. Looking at the list there doesn't seem to be many that may capture the Academies attention, that's not to say that none of these will be good, I can see at least half a dozen must see movies on the list.

October 02th
A Serious Man (Limited)
Capitalism: A Love Story (Limited)
The Invention Of Lying
More Than A Game (Limited)
Toy Story & Toy Story 2 3D
Whip It
Zombieland
October 09th
An Education (Limited)
Bronson (Limited)
Couple's Retreat
The Damned United (Limited)
Free Style (Limited)
Good Hair (Limited)
October 16th
Black Dynamite (Limited)
Law Abiding Citizen
The Maid (Limited)
New York I Love You
The Stepfather (Remake)
Where The Wild Things Are
October 23rd
Amelia
Antichrist (Limited)
Cirque du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant
Motherhood (Limited)
Ong Bak 2: The Beginning
The Private Lives Of Pippa Lee
Saw VI
October 28th
This Is It (Michael Jackson)
October 30th
Gentlemen Broncos

Very few of these will be blockbusters but a few will be showing for awhile, Martin Scorsese is sure to entertain the viewers while other directors will be hoping to just get their shot at entertaining you. If you are a fan of horror movies this is the time to rejoice, several horror movies are about to hit the big screen and several remakes are on the way. Of course this list, like any other is tentative. Hollywood can and will make several changes before the release dates. Several of the limited movies may not open in every city. Do you think Hollywood has forgotten the concept of originality?

The next few months of the year will be aimed at the adult movie goer so go out and enjoy these movies, as an adult we only get a few months out of each year where we can actually look forward to going to the movies again. Gerard Butler will draw the action fans and Megan Fox will draw her own kind of fans, October also brings the LONG awaited release of The Road, I for one can't wait to see this movie. Maybe I will see you there, until then, sit back enjoy the movies and oh yeah read our blog for these movie reviews and much more.

UPDATE: Martin Scorsese has pushed the release of Shutter Island back to 2010. This was one of the most anticipated movies of 2009. A sure Academy Award contender and is a loss to movie goers. At a time that movies just plain suck, we could have used a thriller of this caliber. The Road has been moved to November 25th, this makes no sense that a movie of this type will now be released at Thanksgiving?


The Cynic