Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Film Review - The Adopted

 The Adopted
Production year: 2011
Country: France
Cert (UK): 15
Runtime: 99 mins
Directors: Melanie Laurent
Cast: Clementine Celarie, Denis Menochet, Marie Denarnaud, Melanie Laurent, Theodore Maquet-Foucher

The first feature to be directed by Mélanie Laurent, best known in the English-speaking world for her playing the French heroine of Tarantino's Inglourious Basterds, is a soft-centred, romantic movie of love and family life in provincial France. In its whimsical, bittersweet way it's very like Les parapluies de Cherbourg and Les demoiselles de Rochefort without the music.

In this case the pretty young women are two sisters living in Lyon, one adopted, the other a single mother with a delightful little son, both close to their tough handsome mother. The adopted girl, Marine, manages a bookshop specialising in Anglo-Saxon literature. The first time she appears, she and her boyfriend, Alex, a restaurant critic, re-enact a French version of the bookshop encounter between Bogart and Dorothy Malone from the film version of The Big Sleep, which rather sets the general tone. The single mother, Lisa (played by Laurent herself), writes sad folk songs and works in a music shop. All three characters obsessively watch Cary Grant and Audrey Hepburn in Charade. It's a wispy, tasteful, mildly touching, very French affair.




Film Review - The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel

 The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel
Production year: 2011
Country: UK
Cert (UK): 12A
Runtime: 118 mins
Directors: John Madden
Cast: Bill Nighy, Billy Nighy, Celia Imrie, Dame Judi Dench, Dame Maggie Smith, Dev Patel, Judi Dench, Lillete Dubey, Liza Tarbuck, Maggie Smith, Penelope Wilton, Ramona Marquez, Ronald Pickup, Tena Desae, Tom Wilkinson

The cast are spry, but this bittersweet comedy about English retirees in India needs a Stannah chairlift to get it up to any level of watchability, and it is not exactly concerned to do away with condescending stereotypes about old people, or Indian people of any age. It's a film which looks as if it has been conceived to be shown on a continuous loop in a Post Office queue.

The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel is based on a novel by Deborah Moggach, directed with a sure hand by John Madden. The premise is interesting: older people find themselves swept to South Asia by globalised market forces. A chaotic and dilapidated hotel in Jaipur run by a fast-talking but hopeless young entrepreneur called Sonny (Dev Patel) offers itself to UK customers looking to "outsource" their retirement-care needs. Maggie Smith plays against Downton type as Muriel, a grumpy old cockney bigot; Judi Dench is Evelyn, a melancholy widow; Bill Nighy and Penelope Wilton are a quarrelsome couple; Celia Imrie and Ronald Pickup are roguish older singletons with a twinkle in the eye and some lead in the pencil, and Tom Wilkinson is Graham, the former High Court judge nursing a secret.

Some of these people are nice, and some are nasty, and this naturally affects the speed at which the teeming wonders of India will open them up to real, life-affirming values. The realities of commerce are notionally present in the form of a call centre, where Evelyn gets a very unlikely job, advising the employees, including Sonny's girlfriend, on the cultural niceties of talking to Brits and phone manners in general. Her workload appears pretty civilised and gentle and supervisory, which makes this a very laidback call centre.

There's no doubt that this is a very impressive cast doing their best with genteel characters, though I would have liked to see Catherine Tate's famously plain-speaking gran get in there and perk things up. Nothing in this insipid story does anything like justice to the cast's combined potential. Theoretically we are in Rajasthan, but really we are off on a Saga holiday to Tea-with-Mussolini country, a world in which picturesque oldsters, out of their comfort zone, demonstrate vulnerability, vitality and pluck.

This is not to say that there isn't a scattering of nice moments. Nighy capering with joy and attempting to do a high five after fixing a tap is an entertaining spectacle, and Wilkinson brings a certain gravitas to the proceedings. But it is oddly like an Agatha Christie thriller with all the pasteboard characters, 2D backstories and foreign locale, but no murder.





Film Synopsis - Red Dog

 Red Dog
Production year: 2011
Countries: Australia, Rest of the world
Cert (UK): PG
Runtime: 88 mins
Directors: Kriv Stenders
Cast: Bill Hunter, Josh Lucas, Keisha Castle-Hughes, Noah Taylor, Rachael Taylor

Is it a children's story for adults? Or an adult's story for children? Well, it's a doggy story for humans, anyway: an avowedly true-life tale that comes across like a well-meaning PG-certification of the real world. Red Dog is a Greyfriars-Bobby-type story from a remote mining community in Western Australia: the dog in question went on a legendary, heartrending quest to find his master who had died in an accident – the dog was said to have journeyed thousands of miles before coming home, and was the subject of a 2001 novel by Louis de Bernières on which this film is based. Josh Lucas plays John Grant, an American who adopts Red Dog; Noah Taylor plays Jack Collins, the local barkeep, and there is a gallery of tough mine-workers who turn out to have hearts of gold. The actual journey of Red Dog takes up disconcertingly little of the film: the rest is concerned with his legendary and unreal-sounding adventures in this remote community.




Film Review - Rampart

     Rampart
    Production year: 2011
    Country: USA
    Cert (UK): 15
    Runtime: 102 mins
    Directors: Oren Moverman
    Cast: Anne Heche, Ben Foster, Cynthia Nixon, Ice Cube, Ned Beatty, Robin Wright, Sigourney Weaver, Woody Harrelson
   

The dirty LAPD cop is a much love-hated figure in American cinema, in movies like Internal Affairs, LA Confidential and Training Day. (Abel Ferrara's Bad Lieutenant works in New York, but has a kind of honorary LAPD status in this murky context, along possibly with Jack Nicholson's Colonel Nathan Jessup, handling the truth in A Few Good Men.) The corrupt officer is traditionally cynical, unrepentant, menacingly affable, perhaps brooding over retirement. His glowering sense of survival in the Los Angeles street wars is flavoured with gruff self-satisfaction and self-pity, and he could well feel the need for one last brutal gesture of self-worth in mentoring or ethically deflowering some naive young rookie.

James Ellroy's script for Rampart, brought to the screen by director and co-writer Oren Moverman, shows an irredeemably filthy LAPD officer, Detective David Brown, played by Woody Harrelson. He is a lawman who is a law unto himself. We see him in 1999, the end of the century and the bitter end of a tarnished golden age of being a corrupt cop in that city. The title, as well as connoting our hero's paranoid defensiveness, refers to the Rampart police division of downtown Los Angeles, which in the late 1990s was the centre of a sensational scandal. Officers were found to be deeply involved in drug crime and robberies. Perhaps the nearest British equivalent is the Obscene Publications Squad, or "Dirty Squad" in London's Soho in the 1970s, a group of police so corrupt that they effectively co-owned and co-managed the porn business with the pornographers themselves.

Harrelson's crooked cop is first seen in a classic pose: that open, almost country-boy face is closed off, hidden behind aviator shades as he cruises the streets in his squad car. In this opening scene, we are treated to an excruciating moment as Brown indulges in the pure, pointless bullying of a young female officer. He has bought her a burger and fries for lunch; she has accepted, clearly out of cowed politeness, and then he demands she eat up all the fries she didn't want. Ellroy shows that in precisely the same spirit of cruelty, resentment and boredom, Brown demonstrates to this younger colleague how to intimidate groups of Latino guys huddled on street corners by driving straight at them, siren blaring – and then notice where they are running.

Brown is plying his trade in the era of Rodney King and OJ Simpson, when police tactics and the race war became a painful national issue: he himself beats the hell out of someone evading arrest and an amateur video finds its way on to the nightly news. This of course was an era before videocameras were commonplace on mobile phones and before YouTube. The video's appearance is sensational; Brown figures it is too convenient and suspects he is being set up by his department and the city establishment to draw heat away from the "Rampart" scandal. Sigourney Weaver and Steve Buscemi have cameos as harassed authority figures intensely embarrassed by Brown's behaviour. He refuses to apologise or take early retirement; instead, Brown stays sharp by mixing pills and booze, and retains a lawyer whom he intends to pay with a captivatingly horrible plan of pure evil that puts him further into the mire. Meanwhile, his domestic imbroglio – living with two sisters, played by Anne Heche and Cynthia Nixon, with whom he has had a daughter each – becomes a nightmare as he realises that this is a household made up of women who hate him. Just to nettle Brown, his daughter calls him by his station-house nickname, "Date-Rape", a handle he allegedly earned by killing a violent date-rapist (a classic Ellroy trope).

Rampart is an involving and tense study of a long, slow, agonising endgame; scenes from a life in denial and descent. Brown sometimes defiantly threatens to take his bar exams, so the city can hire him as their "token fascist", and also fantasises about a court case in which he would defend himself, tell the truth, lose, but get a job on Fox News – and some of the fascination and poignancy of the film is that this is almost plausible. He has in any case become used to the idea of police work as cold war, an armed neutrality with repeated skirmishes, in which the LAPD and gangs claim Los Angeles in the way Pakistan and India claim Kashmir. Collaboration and accommodation with the enemy must occasionally be made: payoffs and contacts and off-the-record hits are acceptable in order to prevent a larger catastrophe, and this is all part of the martyred "dirtiness" of the job. In a resentful, mutinous spirit very like Brown's, Clint Eastwood's Inspector Harry Callahan once explained how he got his nickname: he gets "every dirty job that comes along".

There is an acrid, pessimistic, despairing wit in Rampart sometimes, especially when Brown reveals his specious fluency in legal casework, easily coming up with a legal precedent that justifies the latest brutality – which he may or may not have made up. Perhaps this nightmare can still end in some kind of deal for Brown. But it is when he has to face the incomprehension and contempt of his children that the blank despair shows on Harrelson's face. Rampart is a gripping movie, and a great addition to the Ellroy canon.





Saturday, February 25, 2012

Film Review - The Blind Side

 Film: The Blind Side
Star Cast: Sandra Bullock, Tim McGraw, Quinton Aaron
Direction: Lee Hancock
Duration: 2 hours 8 minutes
Genre: Drama
Rating: 2.5/5

This is the one for the biopic movie lovers. A movie on the life of Michael Jerome Oher, The Blind Side is the story of the American Footballer who had played for Baltimore Ravens of the National Football League. Featuring the myth of the white men being the redeemer of the impecunious, poor and crime ridden black community, the movie has a smooth flow.

Oher’s story is no doubt an inspiring story of racist harmony wherein a Memphis high society white woman, Mrs Tuohy (Sandra Bullock) decides to legally adopt Big Mikey (Quinton Aaron), an abandoned black boy who is lonely, hungry and homeless.  She not only brings him home, but also gives him a family, education and whatever he wanted. Later on he is recruited by a major college football program and groomed into athletically and academically successful NFL outlook.

The best part of the movie is the depiction of the way in which Oher’s presence in Touhy’s leads the family into some thoughtful discoveries of their own. Also, the teen has to work hard to tackle out the All-American challenges coming by in each and every step of his life.

Overall, the movie is well directed. Sandra Bullock as Leigh Tuohy was completely riveting with her firm determination in giving a better life to the 18 year old boy who was left on the roads ever since his father casted off the family of eight siblings and his mother became a jumble.





Film Review - Daybreakers – Trailer

 Directed by: Peter and Michael Spierig
Produced by: Chris Brown, Sean Furst, Bryan Furst
Cast: Ethan Hawke, Sam Neill, Willem Dafoe, Claudia Karvan, Vince Colosimo, Isabel Lucas

Starring two times Oscar nominee Ethan Hawke and Sam Neil, Peter and Michael Spierig have come up with their new production ‘Daybreakers‘. Slated to release on January 8, 2010, the frame of the film is set in 2019 when a plague transforms almost every existing human on this earth into a vampire. With very few humans left, the blood supply for the vampires starts diminishing culminating into circumstances where their existence is getting threatened. The vampires need to trap and farm every human on this earth or else find a substitute for blood. However, an undercover group of vampires make a discovery that has the potency to save the human race from extinction.





Film Review - My Girlfriend is an Agent

My Girlfriend is an Agent continues to slam the box office in Korea coming in third now, behind Terminator and Angels & Demons.

The story follows Su-Ji who is a government spy but cannot reveal herself to her boyfriend Jae-joon. The couple break up after Jae-joon cannot take more lying, he grows increasingly suspicious and leaves her.

Three years later Su-Ji is disguised as a cleaning lady while in persuit of an industrial spy, she happens to run into Jae-joon who has become an international top level accountant, seeing him again brings back feelings, but is Jae-joon being honest to her? The couple end up chasing the same criminal as they both have taken up the career of undercover agents.

A typical romcom, light hearted and good entertainment.




Film Review - Red Cliff II

 Genre: Action / Adventure
Cast: Tony Leung Chiu-Wai, Takeshi
Action: Corey Yuen Kwai, Dion Lam Dik-On
Writer: John Woo, Chen Han, Sheng Heyu
Screenwriter: John Woo, Khan Chan, Kuo Zheng, Sheng Heyu
Director: John Woo
Producer: John Woo, Terence Chang
Rating: 3/5

After directing the stylish The Killers and Face Off, John Woo puts his hand on Chinese history which indeed is one of his best directions. The movie features full entertainment accompanied with a lot of action, emotions and of course acting. Hosting some remarkably striking and excellent battlefield action in a rich historic epic, the Red Cliff II is the most expensive Asian film financed till today.

The movie revolves around the final days of the Han Dynasty wherein the astute Prime Minister, Cao Cao persuaded the capricious Emperor Han to proclaim a war on the Wu (South) and Xu (East and West) kingdoms in order to unite China. Several battles of wit and strength results both on water and land eventually lead to the battle of the Red Cliff. Much better than Red Cliff I, Red Cliff II does not let the audiences leave their chair for a minute, unless you are not an action lover and wish to go in for romantic movies as a choice!

Red Cliff II, when compared with its first part, moves a bit faster, first providing its backside and then moving in straight towards plan and action. Sun Xiang-Shang (Vicki Zhao) makes an unaware friend while spying after the enemy lines on Cao Cao’s forces whilst Zhou Yu and Zhuge Liang work out some brainy ways to attain their unfeasible tasks. As the eve of the battle arrives, everything seems to go under Cao Cao’s favor along with the wind that puts up a fire attack indicating a bad sign for the partnership. Zhuge Liang, who can read the weather, infers that there will be a change in the wind. The ploy apparently becomes excellently interesting until the right time for attack.

Lin Chi-Ling’s Xiao Qiao does a bit more as compared to her role in Red Cliff I by making herself appear to be in danger of fitting herself for the Red Cliff’s Helen of Troy with the clue that Cao Cao was heading on towards a war for her. This indication does not get confirmed throughout the movie but does tenders Xiao Qiao a chance to get herself involved in her amazingly tense key role during the final war.

The side effects of the honor, homoeroticism and brotherhood themes can make you giggle a bit, but overall, the movie takes you in an enjoyable journey to 208 A.D China. Something difficult to categorize, the movie is neither a minute classic nor a classical commercial.





Film Review - Pina (2011)

Running Time: 106 mins.

This is a magical film by WIM WENDERS, lovingly conceived and shot as an open love letter to the late choreographer PINA BAUSCH. The Wuppertal Tanztheatre group whose median age appears to be around 39, execute the most sublime dance pieces, women in beautiful silk gowns, barefoot falling, falling, a grey room full of black chairs with dancers having their limbs moved to conform, everyone with eyes closed sometimes walking into walls… it sounds surreal and it is, and yet, it is so familiar you connect to the energy of the unspoken; and through the movement of the dancers, combined with the music, you are transported into the past, it feels as though Pina has glimpsed the contents of your dreams and held onto the emotions they contain; the dream is gone, but, somehow, Pina captures the essence.

Dance pieces are performed in countryside and city settings, the rarefied juxtaposition of the dancers within the different landscapes only serving to make the visuals more enthralling. The use natural elements is fundamental to the exquisite depth that is created by the dancers, choreography and photography, water, dirt and sand remind us that we are a part of nature, not apart.

I was so moved at times that I cried, (at least twice) the scene where there is a New Orleans style funeral procession, where the dancers walk along a dune, the women are dressed in colourful gowns and the men in suits with ties, all are without instruments but they use their hands to simulate not only the missing instruments but also a sense of joy and deep loss. This elegiac tribute to Pina Bausch, her vision and her artistry, twinned with those of Wim Wenders combine to create possibly the best film I have seen in many years.

The film is shot in 3D and is the first time 3D has ever worked for me. Suggesting that there is going to be a revolution for the serious filmmaker with this technology finally becoming an art form. Wenders, is always brilliant but I think he has surpassed himself this time. I cannot recommend this film highly enough sit back and be amazed.




Film Review - The Adjustment Bureau (2011)

Running Time: 106 min.

The Adjustment Bureau directed by George Nolfi, is another short story made into film taken from the rich vein of Phillip K. Dick’s back catalogue. After Blade Runner, Total Recall and Minority Report, one might have expected something equally exciting. In fact, this film almost appears plot-less, struggling to fill the 106 minutes (padded out in fine style by Emily Blunt as a gifted modern dancer). The premise is the classic debate of ‘do we really have free-will?’ Nolfi’s film has used more ideas from the Matrix, Sliding Doors and the most excellent Monsters Inc than the original short story ‘The Adjustment Team’. David Norris (MATT DAMON) is a congressman running for the Senate, whilst practicing his speech in the men’s room he encounters Elise (EMILY BLUNT) after some verbal flirting and a kiss they fall in love, instantly. Meeting her changes the course of his career, because of something she says to him. The next day he bumps into Blunt, and takes her number, upon arriving at the office, he fails to notice that everyone appears to have been put on pause. He enters the boardroom to find a group of men dressed in black combats, natty suits and fedoras who are electronically scanning his colleagues and friend. He attempts to run but the men of the ‘Adjustment Bureau’ detain him. He is told he was never supposed to meet Blunt the second time and that if he wants his career to flourish, he must give her up. They dispose of the telephone number Blunt has given him, and because he doesn’t even know her name, he is unable to find her.

Track forward three years, he’s still carrying a torch for Blunt and is attempting to trace her, during the previous three years he has taken the bus everyday at the same time, in the hope that he might bump into her again, but the Bureau have already told him, that they will always interfere and ‘adjust’ situations, so that they will never meet. That’s the whole plot. This film isn’t a thriller, nor really an action movie it just falls between the two stools, and the romance between Damon and Blunt, is questionably believable. I love Damon, but he’d better get himself into an action comedy and soon. Although the film asks interesting philosophical questions, there’s no depth to any of the answers. TERENCE STAMP does another of his veteran turns, nothing new there, ANTHONY MACKIE is a great actor and has been in some great movies, recently The Hurt Locker, he’s good in this but the writing is not muscular enough. However, he does carry the suit wearing, fedora toting, 1940′s agent look very well though. But on the whole the film doesn’t get out of 2nd gear. New York City dazzles in it’s rôle. Now that I have lowered your expectations you will be better able to enjoy the film!




Film Review - BRIDESMAIDS (2011)

Running time: 125 mins

Bridesmaids by PAUL FEIG director of Knocked Up, is a fine example of the romantic comedy genre. Produced by Judd Apatow, who, once again, doesn’t fail to recognise good box office (also produced 40 Year Old Virgin, Forgetting Sarah Marshall and Anchorman, to name but a few). The film is a delightfully light-hearted, look at the life of Annie, played by KRISTEN WILG, who also co-wrote the screenplay. Annie is best friend of the bride to be, Lillian, MAYA RUDOLPH (Daughter of the singer Minnie Ripperton), she has a failed business and is in denial about her current relationship.

Just as her life is falling apart, Lillian, asks her to be her Maid of Honour, no problem there, it should be easy as they’ve known each other their entire lives, but Lillian has a new best friend Helen (ROSE BYRNE), who is glamorous, super rich, and not content to be just one of the bridesmaids. Annie, in contrast has a job she hates in a jewellery store, 350 dollars in the bank and rent due. The two women, vie not only for the affections of the bride-to-be, but for the kudos of being Maid of Honour; some of the most tragi-comic moments of the film are played out through their warring.

The film begins with Annie in bed with her ‘f*** buddy’ being manhandled literally and pretending to enjoy it. Oddly, when Annie does eventually get into bed with someone with whom she is in tune with, we don’t see the sex scenes and are left to imagine that they are a great step up from what she was accustomed to, the decision not to show the scene between Annie and the cop is perhaps because there is no on-screen chemistry between them The on-screen sexual chemistry is left to the larger than life character of the groom’s sister, Megan, MELISSA McCARTY, whose hilarious antics are a real highlight in the film, especially the scene with the meeting between her and her real life husband BEN FALCONE, who plays an Air Marshall meeting on a plane bound for Las Vegas, it is so funny and the development of her character is a lesson in how not to ‘judge a book by its cover’. Man that woman is limber!

Before the trip to Vegas Annie has to contrive a hen party on a budget and takes the motley group of bridesmaids to a Brazilian restaurant, where everyone gets food poisoning, giving rise to an absolutely gross scene in an exclusive bridal shop entirely carpeted in white with only one toilet, oh and a sink!

The film has flashes of the Farrelly brother humour aka There’s Something About Mary’ and also the toilet humour of Dumb and Dumber, but this comedy is of a higher calibre, more akin to the Nora Ephron perspective, well it was written by two women. There’s a wasted cameo by British comedian Matt Lucas as Annie’s flat-mate which fails to ignite, however, the actress who plays his sister is spookily believable as a genetic sibling.

This is a very funny film (except for the policeman’s fake Irish accent-not funny at all) and a great chick-flick that your boyfriend will love too.




Film Review - The Time Traveler’s Wife

Based on the hit 2003 novel by Audrey Niffenegger , The Time Traveler’s Wife tells the tale fairly well. Director Robert Schwentke (Flightplan), brings Niffenegger’s book to the screen without any splash and hoopla. There are no great revelations and the film takes a surprisingly low-keyed emotional track given the time travel-entangled romantic aspect of The Time Traveler’s Wife. You won’t need the hankies or tissues for this one.

Henry (Eric Bana) is a Chicago research librarian with the ability to travel through time through some genetic anomaly. The episodes happen without warning and he has no control over them. Henry is a young boy about to witness his mother’s imminent death  when the ability to time travel first presents itself. He suddenly finds himself two weeks in the past, still in her loving embrace. And so it goes. Sometimes at moments of stress and other times for no apparent reason, he simply travels.

Bana is convincing and earnest. Henry struggles with the ability, both a gift and a curse. We learn he has gone back hundreds of times to the day of his mother’s death with the hope of somehow preventing it and failing to stop it each time. Many years have passed and perhaps by now he has accepted it but watching your mother die hundreds of times should leave more of a scar then the portrayal brought.

A nice benefit for the female viewers of Henry’s time travel is that he leaves without clothing and arrives at his destination nude. There is a good deal of almost-naked-Eric Bana shots throughout the film.

Rachael McAdams, of The Notebook fame, also plays her character, Claire, ably. When she first meets Henry as an adult, the love beaming in her eyes radiates like high beams on a dark country road. There is no doubt she loves Henry. Through their trials of separation, brought on by his inadvertent time travels, she is seldom troubled. She is merely annoyed when once he disappears for two straight weeks. The romantic scenes play well and the chemistry between the stars feels authentic.

The problem I have with the movie is that a situation such as this should create a lot more stress no matter how much you love someone. Most wives get more than just a little cranky with a husband who is chronically late for dinner. Claire is so accepting most of the time with the time travel and Henry’s disappearances, it just doesn’t feel right.

Time has separated many couples in tales told on the silver screen:  The Butterfly Effect with Ashton Kutcher, The Lake House with Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock and Somewhere in Time with Christopher Reeves and Jane Seymour. Each film found a way to change the effects of time so two people can be together, not always with the desired outcomes.

All of these films caused viewers to feel something, to relate to the characters. The Time Traveler’s Wife failed to achieve that result. Without revealing the ending, it can only be said that the sizzling drama the previews promised merely simmered.