Surveillance

Frustratingly Average, 12 March 2009

Author: gary-444 from United Kingdom

This is far better than Director Jennifer Lynch’s debut “Boxing Helena” Yet it still fails to excel in any of the genre’s it explores. A good cast acquit themselves well with cinematography which is both easy on the eye when it needs to be, and visceral when required. Exactly what role father and executive Producer played is a mystery but the trade mark off-beat quirky David Lynch style ingredients do not fire on all cylinders.

As a straightforward murder/mystery with a twist it is fine. As a thriller it lacks pace, and as a torture/horror piece it fails despite some graphic, gory moments. The Coen brothers in “No Country For Old Men” understand that it is the threat of violence which can be so unsettling. Here, it is neither under stated enough for aesthetes, nor consistently gory enough for “carnage” fans.

At just over 90 minutes the story stays within its welcome. Told in flashback to “surveillance ” cameras, the device works and is well constructed. The plot twist works insofar as it delivers a dramatic “gear change” to the story, but it also raises numerous loose ends which tend to irritate , rather than delight. Ultimately routine fare, but with enough promise to secure another film offer for Jennifer, I suspect

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Gran Torino

Eastwood, actor and director, on superb form, 6 March 2009

Author: gary-444 from United Kingdom

A superb piece of cinema which sees Eastwood scale new heights as both Director, and Actor. I have never given a film a maximum rating before, as the very essence of art is striving for that little bit more. But not to do so for a work that so conspicuously accomplishes its lofty objectives would be churlish indeed.

The story is simple enough, just widowed Walter Kowalski, a Korean War veteran is becoming increasingly isolated. His wife has died, the world is changing all around him, and his neighbourhood is dominated by South East Asians, some of whom have moved in next door. Yet mistrust gives way to acceptance which turns to friendship as Walter fights one last battle with those that threaten his sense of values.

It is hard to watch Walter Kowalski without seeing virtually every character that Eastwood has ever played, and in part, he is a distillation of them all. Sometimes he doesn’t talk at all, just emitting a Bear like growl, of anger? Of pain? Or maybe both. In part this is an elegiac, valedictory paean to the American Dream, embodied by his eponymous “Gran Torino”. The American motor car holds an iconic place in U.S. popular culture as lauded by the Beach Boys, Bruce Springsteen and Jack Kerouac, so when next door neighbour Tao is forced to try to steal it as part of a Gang Initiation, this is more than an attempted car theft. This is an assault on the very essence of what ex-Ford car worker Walter holds dear.

Yet it draws him into a culture which whilst ostensibly alien, he comes to realise holds dear values which he has considered lost. Family duty and service are paramount. Whilst his own son sells Japanese cars, his grand daughter has her own eyes on the Gran Torino, and the family are circling the Estate like vultures. The irony that the Polish immigrant antecedents of a name like Kowalski are testament to a previous generation’s assimilation and adaptation of the American dream resonates throughout.

Pushing 80 years old now, actor Eastwood wisely eschews an overtly “hard man” role, yet in that icy stare lies not only the fictional quintessentially American blue collar views of veteran and production line worker, but also the ghosts of Dirty Harry and a plethora of Western vengeance seekers, and wreakers. The violence, such as it is, is understated. The depiction of the Mong gangs, restrained. Ever since the stylised teenage gang violence of West Side Story morphed into the gratuitous excesses of “Death Wish”, American cinema has glamorised and celebrated this phenomena in shameless supplication to a teenage audience. Not here it isn’t.

Director Eastwood has produced his finest hour here. Not a single frame is wasted. The American flag flutters behind him as he sits on his porch, dog by his side, early in the film viewing the wholly alien customs and language of his next door neighbours. The dialogue is similarly efficient. Elegaic, without being sentimental, Eastwood’s trademark wry humour is also evident as he tries to introduce “man talk” to Tao, in his Italian hairdressers, and in his ongoing duels with a Priest a third of his age, keen to speak to him about matters ” life and death”.

There is an excellent supporting cast, lead by Ahney Her, as Sue who provides a linguistic and dramatic bridge between Kowalski and the surrounding community. If this is Eastwood’s swansong as a leading role actor it is a fitting one. However I do hope that his Directorial ambitions remain. As an actor popular acclaim superseded critical acclaim resulting in his fairly late entry into the Directors chair. On this form he still has much more to give 

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New In Town

Light Pleasant Fare, 6 March 2009

Author: gary-444 from United Kingdom

*** This review may contain spoilers ***

How you rate this film depends upon the benchmark you are using. On the one hand there is nothing exceptional about it, it excels at nothing. This is Director Jonas Elmer’s first major feature – and he and the studio take no chances. On the other, as a light romantic comedy, clinging for dear life to a tried and tested formula, it is enjoyable and executes its task perfectly well.

The plot synopsis is very straight forwards. City high flyer Lucy Hill ,played by Renee Zellweger is sent to backwater Minesota to “downsize” and ultimately close a food production plant. Upon arrival the locals amuse themselves with her unfamiliarity with local ways. She falls in love with her nemesis , Harry Connick Jnr as Ted Williams the Union representative, is won over by the town’s quirky charm, saves the Plant from closure and everyone lives happily ever after.

A number of scenes, notably the hunting one, are genuinely funny, and the various town characters are affectionately and warmly played. The merits of the simple family life are a cornerstone of the films values, as much as the, “cold weather but warm people symbolism.” But Zellweger is fine ,though Harry Connick Jnr struggles to convince as her love interest in an under written role. Her high heels will have women green with envy, and set men’s pulses racing. The slight story at 97 minutes is probably 10 minutes too long. But the feel good schmaltzy ending will send devotees, and the casuals,home perfectly content

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The International

Bank Thriller Holds Interest, 3 March 2009

Author: gary-444 from United Kingdom

*** This review may contain spoilers ***

A contemporary thriller featuring a corrupt bank, and the execution of banking officials, certainly scores on topicality. Overall, this attempt to deal with international terrorism, money laundering, fraud and geo-political power plays is quite enjoyable. One of the problems with financial misdeeds is that on screen, it is boring, and lacks dramatic impact. Director Tom Tykwer overcomes this by having people executed at regular intervals, and mixing it with the odd shoot out to pump up the action quotient.

Lead actor Clive Owen as international agent Louis Salinger is a serviceable enough action hero, Naomi Watts as his boss Eleanor Whitman though is totally miscast and lightweight. To his credit , Tykwer keeps the two hour running time ticking along, the drawback is that it is by a series of clichés and formulaic plot devices. You are never kept guessing as the plot unfolds.

Bank raids are exciting. Corporate plots to indebt third world country’s are not. However a big budget allows the action to shuttle between Berlin, Luxembourg, Italy, New York and Istanbul, pretty much evenly divided enabling a scenic shift alone to create some new interest. But for every bit of cerebral intrigue, we are “rewarded” with routine action fare. Watts is run over, which hurts, but seems none the worse for her ordeal. A “Jackal style” execution scene is handled with the sophistication that Frederick Forsyth could muster on the back of a business card, and a shoot -out in the Guggenheim Gallery in New York is so over-blown it could have been Rambo taking on all-comers in a firestorm of automatic weapon fire.

The climax is pure James Bond. And like Bond, so long as you don’t pay too much attention to the detail, it does it’s job pretty well without excelling either as an action movie, or densely plotted thriller

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Rescue Dawn

A Disappointing Derivative Effort, 1 March 2009

Author: gary-444 from United Kingdom

I am a fan of war movies in general,Vietnam War Movies in particular, and Herzog as a Director, with “Fitzcarraldo” still one of the most astonishing pieces of film making I have ever seen.So this film should have been an obvious one for me to enjoy, but it wasn’t.The production values, unsurprisingly, are excellent, and Christian Bale takes the lead role well, but as an entity it failed for me.

Despite the efforts of Bale,as pilot Dietar Dengler, the running time of 126 minutes feels long.The pre-capture scenes on the aircrtaft carrier, and the post rescue scenes have the Patriotic,jingoistic feel of “Bat21” or “Mising in Action”, which is fine, but the tone sits ill at ease with the more reflective mood of the time in the jungle.

The UK 12 certification gives Herzog little room for manoeuvre in showing the interrogation, torture and captivity of Dengler and others in a realistic light.Unsurprisingly the film lifts in scenes which contain only the beautiful jungle, and an escaping Dengler, where survival and rescue are paramount.But the long sequences wear thin and without the bravado of the “Bat21/MIA” ideology to sustain the momentum it starts to run a little flat.

Wholly overlooked is the sheer bravery and fortitude of the Laotian people, thrown into a secret war that was not of their choice.The Laotian/NVA characters are largely cyphers with no substance, which is a shame.A noble hunter AND quarry always increases the dramatic possibilities.

In summary this story tries to pander to too many tastes, and ends up short in all genres.it is not gung ho enough for the “USA Defender of Right” brigade,it is too sanitised for the “Vietnam sceptic” lobby.the beginning and end will irritate the hell out of the “Herzog purist” fans

and genre specific afficianados will struggle to get satisfaction form the incomplete elements of the several genres contained.

A good looking, but unsatisfying effort 

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St Trinians

Fun, Frothy Entertainment., 28 February 2009

Author: gary-444 from United Kingdom

The original St Trinians series was a classic of it’s era, well acted, well written and very funny.Whilst probably falling short of the standards of it’s inspiration, it is nonetheless amusing, entertaining and modern.And perhaps that is also it’s strength, it borrows from the original without copying it, and the modern incarnation provides sufficient distance for it to be considered on its own merits.

Rupert Everett is superb as the School Headmistress, although the likeness to television personality Esther Rantzen is unnerving.Russell Brand demonstrates that his comic talents flourish even better under direction and a script than with the free form of stand-up comedy, as the “spiv”.Stephen Fry is perfect as a quiz show host, and Colin Firth plays the straight man fall guy with some aplomb. All in all a very good cast.

The 100 minute running time is just right. the editing and script is quick with plenty of one liners and visual jokes to watch out for.Though not a work of comic genius this will appeal both to schoolchildren unfamiliar with the original, and parents who are and remember the original with fondness.I would certainly happily see a sequel.

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The Other Boleyn Girl

Powerful Costume Drama, 9 February 2009

Author: gary-444 from United Kingdom

The story of the six wives of Henry the Eigth is a staple of British history. Director Justin Chaswick , who cut his teeth on period drama with a TV production of “Bleak House”, makes an excellent job of converting Phillipa Gregory’s novel, in which she picks out the Boleyn girls contribution, onto the Big screen. Much of the credit for this goes to Peter Morgan whose fine screenplay confirms his status of one of the best writers of screen dialogue around at the moment.Whilst historically inaccurate in some key respects, the context is enough to provide a convincing and rewarding “faction”.

Two hours of intrigue, treachery, plotting and heartbreak focus on the efforts of the Boleyn family to do a spot of social climbing courtesy of their daughters Anne and Mary. Natalie Portman as the former, leaves Scarlett Johansson as the latter somewhat in her wake in a towering performance of froideur and ambition. Eric Bana as King Henry is absolutely convincing is his arrogant amorality, yet still allows the side of him which can be manipulated by women to shine through.

Lavish, whilst falling short of being a full blown costume drama, the story depends upon plot , rather than action, and succeeds triumphantly. The below par CGI recreations of Medieval Cityscapes are more than compensated for by a rip roaring pace to a cleverly paced tale. My only criticism is that the cerebral battle between Henry and his wife Catherine, and the visceral passion of his relationships with Anne and Mary are somewhat under drawn, presumably to give it as wide an audience as possible with a 12A rating.

However the ingredients of a King, mistresses, a scheming Court and razor sharp dialogue deliver an impressive result, which I can recommend to all.

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Frost/Nixon

A Moment in Time Captured, 29 January 2009

Author: gary-444 from United Kingdom

*** This review may contain spoilers ***

There is a paradox central to this film. The Frost/Nixon interviews were recorded over several hours, yet they are only remembered for a few minutes. Yet the running time of the film is around two hours, so what do you do with the rest of the film? There are two audiences to play to. The first, of whom I am one, are old enough to recall “the real thing”, and will see it as Drama AND history. Those too young will see it primarily as Drama.It is too fleeting in its treatment of Nixon to be called a Biography. As a snapshot of “those moments” it is very good. But in order to understand the significance of those moments requires a remit way beyond what the film could hope to achieve. Indeed Oliver Stone’s “Nixon” needed 3 and a quarter hours, and “All The presidents Men” needed two hours twenty minutes on Watergate alone! Inevitably it fails in this regard, and as a result much of the true drama of the occasion is lost.

The credentials of Screenplay writer, Peter Morgan, are peerless. “Last King Of Scotland”, “The Queen” and “The Other Boleyn Girl” all demonstrate an ability to write about those at the seat of power. Michael Sheen plays an impish Frost, Frank Langella is a compelling, truculent , imposing Nixon, Kevin Bacon gives an impressively restrained performance as aide Jack Brennan, and Rebecca Hall as Frost’s girlfriend Caroline Cushing has great legs.

Frost was closely involved in this project and comes out of it as clean as a whistle, portrayed as a raffish ,intelligent , go getting bon viveur, whose career defining gamble pays off. Nixon is not shown unsympathetically, but the caricature of him as a clever bully who thinks he can outwit a lightweight English Talk Show Host, and fails is too simplistic.

There are some wonderful vignettes, presumably true. Nixon asks Frost whether he had done any “Fornicating” the night before – just before they start recording, and makes a soul – baring late night call to Frost, which he subsequently fails to recall. Frost makes a gift of a pair of stylish Italian slip on shoes to Nixon as a parting gift – a style which Nixon had queried Brennan on as to whether they were “too effeminate?”.

A stylish, entertaining, erudite script, is head and shoulders above the lamentably banal fare trotted out by much of Hollywood these days. Unsurprisingly, a single writer provides a cohesion and consistency of vision which multiple screenwriters so rarely deliver. Yet ultimately it is not quite enough. As a tale about a drama, it is fine, as a drama itself it does not quite find the angle to carry it off

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The Wrestler

Bloody Brilliant, 20 January 2009

Author: gary-444 from United Kingdom

*** This review may contain spoilers ***

I am no fan of American style wrestling, yet this superb tale of an ageing, fading wrestler is a triumph. Lead, Mickey Rourke as Randy “The Ram” Robinson delivers a career defining performance of pathos and power. The wrestling scenes are visceral and blood soaked, and the supporting cast consistently excel, however brief “their moment”. Reputedly shot for under $7m, it does not have a low budget feel to it, proving once again that fine acting and a good script beat dollars and CGI. The dressing room and “backstage” shots feature working wrestlers adding to the authenticity of the film.

The lead story of “The Ram’s” demise is mirrored by the supporting sub plot of lap dancer Cassidy, who also “sells” her flesh with time running out on her. Well played by the marvellous Marisa Tomei, who at 44, still has a body to be proud of, the part is underwritten and neatly contrasts with the hell-bound “Ram”.Evan Rachel Wood plays a thoughtful cameo as Stephanie,Randy’s estranged daughter, providing the film’s most poignant scene as her father takes her to visit a childhood seaside haunt to reminisce and build bridges.

“Raw” most accurately defines the films ambiance, whether it is the bruised and broken flesh of the ring, Randy’s explicit “tail-gunning” of a good time girl when he should have his mind on taking his daughter out for dinner, or his plaintiff desperation at pursuing the only thing he knows, wrestling, against the odds. It is rumoured that Nicholas Cage was screen tested for this role, which is odd, because it reprises some of the themes of Cage’s role in “Leaving Las Vegas”. The headlong crash to destruction, the “tart with a heart” and a worthy script feature in both. A carefully chosen soundtrack ably underpins the proceedings, although Bruce Springsteen’s custom written “The Wrestler” is absurdly tossed away with the credits rather than interwoven into the story.

My only real concern is where the audience is for this. The young and pre- teenage audience, the bedrock fans of wrestling are excluded by its certification. And the casual adult audience may not be attracted by the ostensibly “uncool” subject matter. That would be a shame, as a sophisticated audience will appreciate the Shakespearian Tragedy of the plot, and Rourke’s finest two hours 

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Slumdog Millionaire

A Colourful, Visceral Triumph, 18 January 2009

Author: gary-444 from United Kingdom

Very occasionally a film comes along which has the potential to change the face of Commercial Cinema, Slumdog Millionaire is one of them. Hollywood represents the bulk of cinematic history and is still the driving force behind it. But we live in a changing world. Politically we are seeing a resurgent Russia, and the emergence of China and India as economic super powers. Cinema is only now starting to pick up those shifts.

The American Film Industry, like its Motor Car Industry, has grown fat and lazy. Tired plots, formulaic scripts, predictable locations and a wearisome reliance on big budgets, CGI and big explosions to “deliver” have made it increasingly less interesting, and relevant, to World audiences, and I suspect to home ones too.

So here we have a film shot totally in India, mainly in Mumbai, with no Western actors, no “names”, and a substantial amount of dialogue in Hindi, sub titled into English. (You can almost hear the LA Exec writing the reject slip for the pitch, can’t you?). At first glance English Director, Danny Boyle, is not the obvious choice. But on closer inspection you consider the visual big budget feasts which were “Sunshine” and “The Beach”, the pacey drama of “A Life Less Ordinary”, the visceral grittiness of “28 Days Later” and “Trainspotting”, and the low budget/ gallows humour of “Shallow Grave” and you have the ingredients which make “Slumdog’s ” success.

Cinematically it is a joy, rich colours, beautifully shot, blaze across the screen. The locations enthral. OK the Taj Mahal is predictable, but nonetheless breathtaking, the slums a vibrant cesspit. The acting is convincing and compelling, wonderfully led by Dev Patel as Jamal Malik the eponymous hero. Heaving with brilliant cameos, watch out for the Police Inspector, his fat side kick, and the evil Orphanage “Fagin”.

It is true that Hollywood cliché may have been swapped for Bollywood cliché . But as a “cross-over trailblazer for a largely unsuspecting audience, that is forgivable ,it works. Beware that although the story does have the advertised feel-good ending, the content has the trademark Danny Boyle rawness which is frequently uncomfortable, and in one case unwatchable. But that rawness also delivers the funniest, ” shittyest” scene of the picture!

A classic “rages to riches” premise, told with style and innovation, a landmark film.

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