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Showing posts with label Thrillers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thrillers. Show all posts

Monday, June 3, 2013

A Tempest Brings Stranger Shocks

     And the Rewind Series (2010 edition) kicks off with a lesser entry in a modern master's filmography, a drama about a girl's life after her mother decides to kill her & a highly original adaptation of THE classic playwright.  Time wanes, wherefore thou shouldst commence posthaste.

  The Tempest - I doubt any serious film maker sets out to create a body of work that could best be described as divisive and (for lack of a more apt description) artsy-fartsy, but these traits seem to be the benchmarks of writer/director Julie Taymor's productions.  Just four movies into her cinematic career and she's given us a biopic of a world class artist, a hippy dippy excuse to use the Lennon-McCarthy songbook as a soundtrack & two Shakespearean adaptations.  Even Kenneth Branagh throws a thriller into the mix occasionally.  The Tempest split the critics almost right down the middle.  I am happy to say that I fall securely on the happily impressed side of that fence.
     The film is a little rough hewn in places, particularly some of the editing, which doesn't allow the picture to flow from scene to scene as well as it might, but otherwise I found it to be an excellent adaptation of The Bard's final play.  Ms. Taymor did an excellent job of trimming the Five Act play into a two hour picture.  The script seemed neither piecemeal, nor overly stuffed,  which is impressive considering the sheer volume of source material.  The special effects are primitive, to be sure, but fantastically whimsical in a manner that seems conducive to Elizabethan stagecraft.  The scene where Ariel turns into a monstrous bird is particularly delightful, reminiscent of The Dark Crystal or Pan's Labyrinth.
     Ben Whishaw (who is impressing me more and more every time I see him) is fantastic in the role of the captive spirit, bringing both humanity and an inhuman alienating quality to a role made all the more haunting by the marriage of its disparate elements.  Chris Cooper, Felicity Huffman, Alfred Molina, David Straithairn... great performances across the board.  I found the inclusion of Russell Brand shockingly well conceived, but Djimon Honsou nearly stole the show as the subhuman Caliban.  For someone with such a thick Beninian...Bening...Benininese...damn...African (okay?!) accent, he produces some really crisp and carefully inflected Middle English.  He went just far enough over the top without cheapening the production.
     Of course, I say he ALMOST stole it because nothing could take your eyes off of the great Dame Helen Mirren.  It was a bold choice casting the stageplay's lead Prospero as a woman named Prospera, but I think it was also a wise one.  I cannot imagine any male actor crafting a sorcerer with quite the same blend of the scary and the sympathetic.  Of course, this is a vast oversimplification of a performance that takes a well rounded classic character and fleshes him/her out further than I've ever seen it done before.  As a final note, it is sort of wonderful that an actress who began her career as a blatant sex symbol pulls off this material with the ease and grace of a feminine Olivier.  You would think she'd been training for nothing but classical theater all her long and storied career...4 1/2 of 5 stars.

  Aftershock - On the surface, one would expect this tale of the Tangshan Earthquake of 1976 to be a pretty cut and dried disaster flick, but that is only the beginning.  In the aftermath a mother finds her children trapped under the rubble in such a way that the rescue workers conclude she must choose which child to save.  Certainly a dramatic way to find out which of you is Mom's favorite.  The girl is left for dead but survives, spending her life burdened by bitterness and abandonment issues, refusing to seek out her surviving family.
     You really have to consider director Xiaogang Feng's film in two parts. It opens with the actual earthquake.  The movie does an excellent job of painting a picture of a relentlessly hot but peaceful evening in a small village, then ripping it to shreds as chaos ensues.  Aftershock assembles a fantastic ensemble of extras for this scene, and the sense of panic evoked is palpable.  Unfortunately, the effect is muted by the "virtual strings" that show a bit on the outdated CGI technology.  Still, if you can ignore the occasional impression that some peripheral villager just got crushed by a slab of pixels, there is a lot of hopelessness and danger to be experienced in the quake scene.
     The rest of the film tells the story of the separated family in the years that follow.  It DOES wax a little melodramatic, but it also presents the viewer with situations that contain enough inherent pathos to be moving.  The dramatic thrust of the story is firmly centered on the mother and daughter, with the son existing as something of a peripheral character.  The two central actresses give performances which form each other's inverse, in a way.  The mother is played by actress Fan Xu, who is mostly unknown to American audiences.  Her character is easily the best written in the entire script with a multitude of nuances and conflicts to explore and expand upon.  Unfortunately, the actress mostly yells and cries her way through the film, completely ignoring the delicious subtleties she was served up on a silver platter. 
     The daughter (Fang Deng) is played by Jingchu Zhang whom highly attentive viewers (and likely bitter if they payed for a ticket) may recall from English language feature Rush Hour 3.   Miss Zhang is given very little true dramatic meat to gnaw upon by comparison.  The script gives her little in the way of three dimensional emotional complexity.  For most of the film she is merely detached and bitter.  In the final scenes of the film she is given little to work with besides an instant transition from troubled to remorseful.  However, the actress digs deep and pulls far more emotional resonance out of her scenes than they inherently possess. She does much of this internally, while still remaining completely emotionally accessible to the audience, yet without ever devolving into the histrionics that the improbably emotional context of the film so readily invite.
     Each point of the film that I've focused on presents many great strengths, but they are also flawed in some way.  Aftershock is, in this sense, exactly equal to the sum of its parts.  It is deserving of praise but falls well short of greatness.  Still, it is a GOOD movie, just not much more...4 of 5 stars.


  You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger - Of all the working directors who are often awarded/burdened by the weight of the title of Modern Master, Woody Allen's body of work is perhaps the MOST uneven.  Pictures like Manhattan, Annie Hall and Husbands and Wives (a personal favorite of mine, Juliette Lewis is particularly AMAZING) practically invented the dramedy genre and set the bar higher than most films of the type even approach. On the other hand, Celebrity was the only film I've ever walked out of during a theatrical showing.  Hell, To Rome With Love showed almost that much variation in quality within the bounds of a single flick, featuring vignettes that ranged from the nearly expired to the merely tired.  I love Woody at his best, but I'm always scared when he comes out with a new feature because it hurts a little to watch him fail.
     Fortunately, while certainly not a masterpiece, You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger is a good site better than merely watchable and actually delves into some of the Woodman's less well trodden thematic topics.  While the disintegration of relationships over time is certainly present (as always) in Allen's script, the film actually develops into a commentary on faith and spirituality in the modern world.  I don't exactly agree with the writer's tidy and flip answers, but his opinion is always one worth hearing and his trademark wit does its usual task of keeping uber-serious topics from ever turning the picture into a downer.
     Unfortunately, the acting is something of a mixed bag in ways that I never expected it would be.  Gemma Jones definitely steals the show as the recent divorcee seeking enlightenment and Pauline Collins make a very engaging psychic counselor.  Josh Brolin is at his hulking, awkward best and actually seems to pull more substance out of frequent scene partner Freida Pinto than I've seen her exhibit before when she wasn't standing silently framed in sunlight.  The greatest disappointments here are definitely the least expected.  Master thespians Anthony Hopkins and Naomi Watts actually pale in comparison to their less celebrated cast mates.  Watts in particular is quite surprisingly terrible and Hopkins merely seems lost to the flow of Allen's unique style of dialogue.  Antonio Banderas didn't do a bad job, but he's mostly acting opposite Watts so he faced an uphill battle.
     Stranger is not the picture that Woody Allen will be remembered for in a hundred years, but it is entertaining and a good sight better than the film maker's most glaring failures.  I enjoyed the film, but will not likely revisit it in the future...3 1/2 of 5 stars.

  Related articles:  To Rome, Sugarweenie (To Rome, With Love)

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

The Great Gay Film Festival of 2011

     There were also several films with gay themes of note that I failed to catch back in 2011, so I put three of them together to make this post.  Why the hell not?
     Today's "colors in the homo rainbow" include a teen transsexual, a man so far in the closet he's in Narnia, and a sci-fi thriller about sexual coming of age.  I am happy to report that this batch of movies was MUCH better than the 2012 version of the festival.  Less snark, more recommended viewing!

    Gun Hill Road - Believe it or not, this one was already on my viewing list and it JUST released on DVD earlier this month.  I believe it first came within range of my radar due to young star Harmony Santana's Gotham Award nomination for the Breakthrough Award which the young transsexual actress deserved in spades.  As Michael/Vanessa she gives a performance that is nuanced and pained, yet demonstrates a confidence and understanding of exactly who the character is.  No doubt many points in the film mirror experiences and feelings in her own life, but she creates a character that is far more than a stock personality.
     I also have to take a moment to compliment actress Judy Reyes, who plays Michael/Vanessa's mother.  Rarely has a performance captured such unconditional love of a parent for a child, or such yearning for a closeness to one's husband that seems just beyond the character's grasp.  The actress certainly proves that she has dramatic chops that go far beyond the comedic stylings of SCRUBS.
     Unfortunately, actor Esai Morales's performance seems slightly forced by comparison as the conflicted father.  We definitely get his frustration and confusion, and they ring true for the most part.  However, some of his scenes seem to degenerate into a stereotypical, macho "But he's my boy" litany that could have been played with a little more variety.
     This is the first feature for writer/director Rashaad Ernesto Green, and I hope that the limited commercial success of Gun Hill Road does not hinder his ability to make another.  The script is written with intelligence and sensitivity to ALL of the parties involved and his direction indicates an ability to draw truth from the performances of his actors.  I definitely recommend this film, especially for the parents and families of children whose sexual identity may fall outside of the norm...4 of 5 stars.

  Beauty - Winner of the 2011 Queer Palme at Cannes, Beauty is a South African film that tells the story of Francois van Heerden, a man in his mid-40's who enjoys sex with men (unknown to his wife and family), but hates "faggots" (which should be clear to anyone around him).  Francois is played brilliantly by actor Deon Lotz, who manages to make the character both horrifying and oddly sympathetic.  Excellent supporting turns are provided by actors Charlie Keegan (as the young man he develops feelings for) and Michelle Scott (as the unsuspecting wife), but make no mistake, this is largely a one-man show.
     Writers Oliver Hermanus and Didier Costet were previously unknown to me, but they have crafted a tale that lends real irony to the film's title.  Francois's inability to accept his own attraction to "beauty" leads him to live a life full of bitterness and ugliness.  It is a marvelous example of how living in the closet (or in any other form of denial) can turn a man into a monster.  Hermanus also directs, and he pulls together a tightly knit and expertly handled production.  Beauty is not an easy film to watch, but it is well worth the effort and discomfort...4 1/2 of 5 stars.

  Kaboom - In my experience, the work of writer/director Gregg Araki (The Doom Generation) is always trippy and surreal, but I don't think I've ever seen him have so much fun with a film.  Kaboom is one part sexual awakening tale, one part sci-fi thriller, and one part farce.  Somehow all of these disparate parts stew together into a wholly unique movie that is improbably cohesive in tone.
     The ensemble cast as a whole is great, but the film belongs (acting wise) to Thomas Dekker, who plays Smith.  It took me most of the film to remember where I had seen the young actor before I remembered that he played John Conner in TV's Terminator: The Sarah Conner Chronicles.  This is a very different role, one that enables Mr. Dekker to show an acting range that lies well outside the previous one.  He does so marvelously, aided by one of the most hypnotic [pairs of eyes ever put on the big screen.
     Mr. Araki wisely understands the confusion and alienation experienced by college age kids who are just beginning to understand themselves and their bodies.  Smith's feeling that he is "alien" in some way and caught up in forces beyond his control is something of a metaphor for how everyone feels as a young adult.  This is the "serious" thematic core of the piece.  The fact that, in his case, there are external forces to justify said feelings only adds to the general hilarity and mystery. The ending is a LITTLE disappointing, but I can largely forgive the film maker because I had so much fun getting there...4 of 5 stars.

     Related Articles: The Great Gay Film Festival of 2012

Monday, April 8, 2013

2013 Awards Preview - Part One: Pulpy Players

     Below is my first list of films for the 2013-2014 Awards season, titled Pulpy Players.  Each article in this series will present a group of upcoming releases that are currently on my watch list.  I divided them up to each represent the strengths found in cinema in each of the last four years (with 2013 as an unknown wild card for the fifth post). This post is in honor of the year 2009, which was one of the best years in science-fiction ever.  In its honor, I present films in the genres that Oscar flirts with occasionally, but hardly ever follows home: Horror, Science Fiction, Action flicks, Thrillers, Mysteries & Westerns.
     On a side note, this might be the year that unseats 2009 as the best year for sci-fi in the twenty-first century.  There are no less than nine pictures in that genre on my watch list.  If even half of them live up to their hype, it would be a banner year indeed.
      The movies that already have release dates are presented in chronological order.  The films that have not received such dates are listed alphabetically afterward.  The fifteen films (that have not already been released) that I am most excited about seeing appear in bold with short descriptions of why.  Do not be surprised if we see some of these get pushed back until 2014.  I will be surprised if we don't.  Still, for now, the Pulpy Players of 2013 are...

  01/18 - Mama (stars Jessica Chastain)

  03/01 - Stoker (Kidman and Wasikowska)

  03/08 - Dead Man Down

  03/15 - The Call
              Upside Down (mixed reviews, but Kirsten Dunst!)

  04/05 - 6 Souls (stars Julianne Moore)

  04/19 - Oblivion (Cruise and Freeman, maybe cheese, maybe more)

  05/03 - The Iceman:  This picture may have gotten mixed reviews on the festival circuit, but Michael Shannon's performance was universally lauded.  Films like Take Shelter have proven what kind of tour-de-force work the man is capable of delivering.  The movie is directed by Ariel Vromen, and stars Shannon as a family man who must become a hired killer to provide for his loved ones. Along the way, he discovers he has a real talent for his vocation.  James Franco, Winona Ryder, Chris Evans, Ray Liotta, David Schwimmer & Stephan Dorff round out the cast.

  05/15 - Star Trek: Into Darkness (would have been highlighted, if I thought you needed a preview)

  05/31 - The East:  This will be the third film written by and starring Brit Marling.  She had a great start with Another Earth, took it to a whole other level with Sound of My Voice, and it looks like (going on the trailer, early critical response and my own hopes) she may surpass herself again with The East. The films stars writer Marling as an agent trying to track down a terrorist group called The East who have set out to punish the corporate giants who are sucking America dry.  Ellen Page and Alexander Skarsgard also star. Sound of My Voice director/co-writer Zal Batmanglij returns. I can't wait.

  06/07 - After Earth (surely Shyamalan will get it right again one day???)

  06/28 - Byzantium: This little quasi-horror flick is directed by Neil Jordan (The Crying Game) and adapted by Moira Buffini from her own stage play.  It tells of two mysterious women (Saoirse Ronan and Gemma Arterton) who settle in a small town that quickly becomes curious about what the pair are hiding.  Sam Riley and Jonny Lee Miller round out the cast, but they had me at Saoirse.

  08/09 - Elysium: Back in 2009, South African writer/director Neil Blomkamp's District 9 raised the bar on low-budget science fiction forevermore.  Now it's 2013, he's got a much bigger budget, and he's returning with Elysium, a futuristic tale in which the 1% live in a lavish space station while the 99% inhabit a ruined planet Earth.  Class conflict with a sci-fi twist seems to be the man's forte.  Let's see if he can do it again.  Matt Damon, Jodie Foster and District 9 star Sharlto Copley lead the cast.

  09/13 - I, Frankenstein (I'm dubious, but it stars Aaron Eckhart & Bill Nighy)

  09/20 - Prisoners: French Canadian director Denis Villeneuve blew me away a couple of years ago with Foreign Language film nominee Incendies.  Now he's been recruited by Hollywood for English language films beginning with Prisoners: the story of a man trying to locate his missing daughter by any means necessary.  The AMAZING cast includes Hugh Jackman, Viola Davis, Melissa Leo, Jake Gyllenhaal, Maria Bello, Paul Dano and Terrence Howard.

  10/04 - Paranoia (Hemsworth, Oldman, and Ford)

  10/11 - Oldboy: Intrigue, mystery and suspense are the keywords in this remake of the Korean classic.  Director Spike Lee may have failed to "wow" with last year's Red Hook Summer, but I know he still has genius within him.  Perhaps something way outside of his normal wheelhouse is just the sort of palate cleanser needed to let it shine through again.  Josh Brolin, Samuel L. Jackson, Elizabeth Olsen, Michael Imperioli, Richard Portnow, Sharlto Copley, and Lance Reddick star.
               Captain Phillips: Director Paul Greengrass has already managed to pull one unlikely Best Director nod out of the action thriller genre with United 93.  Can he snag another one for this biopic about the captain who faced the hijacking of the first U.S. cargo ship by Somali pirates?  Having Tom Hanks in the title role with Catherine Keener as his wife can't hurt.

  10/18 - Carrie (I'm not sure we need another either, but it stars Moretz with Julianne Moore as Mom)
               Malavita: Leon, The Professional (one of the best action flicks EVER, for this Movie Frog's money) certainly proved that Luc Besson can direct a taut thriller and having a cast led by two of last year's Best Supporting Actor nominees (DeNiro and Jones) is certainly a step in the right direction.  Michelle Pfeiffer also stars, and if anyone needs/deserves a career relaunch, it's her.

  11/01 - Ender's Game (another one I almost highlighted, starring Hugo's Asa Butterfield)

  11/15 - The Counselor: A thriller about a lawyer who end up on the wrong side of the law doesn't sound THAT exciting.  If it's directed by Ridley Scott, I'll give it a chance.  If it stars Pitt, Fassbender, Bardem, Dormer, Diaz, Cruz, and Leguizamo, I'm stoked.  This one does.  Just saying.

  12/25 - Jack Ryan (If Pine can fill Shatner's shoes, why not Ford's?)

  TBA - Blood Ties: This crime family story set in 1970's New York is from talented French director Guillaume Canet (Little White Lies) and has a fantastic cast.  After Rust and Bone, I'd watch Cotillard and Schoenaerts team up in a Smurfs sequel.  Also stars Mila Kunis, Zoe Saldana, Clive Owen, Billy Crudup, James Caan, Noah Emmerich and nineties indie queen Lili Taylor.
             Blue Caprice
             The Congress (more sci-fi with Wright, Giamatti & Keitel)
             Dead Man's Burden (might be the only 2013 Western of note)
             Devil's Knot (dramatization of West Memphis 3 from Atom Egoyan with Firth and Witherspoon)
             Empire State (fairly standard sounding actioner, but Hemsworth & Johnson might make good team)
             Ends of the Earth
             Europa Report (sci-fi with Sharlto Copley of District 9 & Michael Nyqvist of Millennium Trilogy)
             Horns (considered highlighting this one: Daniel Radcliffe in a bizarre horror tale)
             Kissing Darkness (in a twist on traditional horror set-up group of gay college pals go camping)
             Last Days On Mars
             The Loft
             Lowlife: Director James Gray has a highly unique mystery premise to work with and a STELLAR cast involved: Jeremy Renner, Marion Cotillard, and Joaquin Phoenix.  Believe me, this is one to WATCH!
             Non-Stop (stars Liam Neeson and Julianne Moore)
             Only God Fogives: Drive (directed by Nicholas Winding Refn and starring Ryan Gosling) made #2 on my Best Picture list for 2011.  Only God Forgives is Refn's follow-up...also starring Gosling...hmmm. I had to watch the recently dropped trailer three times before I stopped drooling.
             Only Lovers Left Alive: Quirky director Jim Jarmusch tries his hand at a vampire flick.  Good news.  Better news?  It stars Tom Hiddleston, Tilda Swinton, Mia Wasikowska and John Hurt.  Sometimes my inner fan-boy gets a little gift from the universe and the kind of movies I loved as a pre-teen actually get made well.  I'm keeping my fingers crossed.
             Simple Moves
             A Single Shot (crime thriller with William H Macy and Sam Rockwell)
             Snowpiercer: The director of 5 star Korean thriller Madeo (Joon-ho Bong) tries his hand at English language science fiction in this piece about a train that carries the last living humans across the planet.  Starring...wait for it...Tilda Swinton, Chris Evans, John Hurt, Jamie Bell, Ed Harris and Octavia Spencer.
             Spiritismes
             Still of Night (starring Susan Sarandan)
             Therese (between Jessica Lange and Elizabeth Olsen the scenery should be chewed to bits)
             Two Faces of January: Hossein Amini, scribe of such diverse fare as Drive, Wings of the Dove, and Snow White and the Huntsman brings this thriller of escape to the table for his first directing gig.  With Amini also handling the adaptation and stars Kirsten Dunst, Viggo Mortensen and Oscar Isaac on board, my anticipation is running high.
             Under the Skin
             Violet & Daisy (Precious penner Geoffrey Fletcher debuts as a director, starring Sasirse Ronan)
             White Bird in a Blizzard (Doom Generation director Gregg Araki is sure to make an odd thriller)

     And that, my friends, is your list of Pulpy pics for 2013.  We covered a lot of ground today, but we have four more sets of films still to come.  Look for Part 2: Specialties That Might Spellbound later this week.  In it, we'll be covering Documentaries, Animated Features, and non English language movies that MIGHT (and it's more iffy in this category than most) make it to U.S. theaters in the coming year.  We'll be watching for you (and flies, always watching for flies).
                                                                Froggy


     Related Articles: Senna, Take 13 (Take Shelter review), Another Young Project (Another Earth review),
The Sound Hope Sparks (Sound of My Voice review), Sister's Summer Sleepwalk (Red Hook Summer review), Down With Sinister Lies (Little White Lies review), Rent and Honed (Rust and Bone review), Best of 2011 - Best Picture (concluded)