Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Film Synopsis - Prometheus

   Directed by   
Ridley Scott

    Produced by   
Ridley Scott
David Giler
Walter Hill

  Starring   
Noomi Rapace
Michael Fassbender
Guy Pearce
Idris Elba
Logan Marshall-Green
Charlize Theron

Prometheus is an upcoming science fiction film directed by Ridley Scott and written by Jon Spaihts and Damon Lindelof. The film stars Noomi Rapace, Michael Fassbender, Guy Pearce, Idris Elba, Logan Marshall-Green and Charlize Theron. The plot follows the crew of the spaceship Prometheus in the late 21st century, as they explore an advanced alien civilization in search of the origins of humanity.

Conceived as a prequel to Scott's 1979 science fiction horror film Alien, rewrites of Spaihts's script by Lindelof developed a separate story that precedes the events of Alien, but which is not directly connected to the films in the Alien franchise. According to Scott, though the film shares "strands of Alien's DNA, so to speak", and takes place in the same universe, Prometheus will explore its own mythology and ideas.

Principal photography began in March 2011, with filming taking place in Canada, England, Iceland, Spain, and Scotland, mostly on practical sets. The film was shot entirely using 3D cameras and required no conversion in post-production.

Prometheus is scheduled for release on June 8, 2012, in the United States and Canada. Scott has suggested that if the film is a success, he would be interested in pursuing sequels.





Film Synopsis - Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter

Directed by   
Timur Bekmambetov

Produced by   
Timur Bekmambetov
Tim Burton
Jim Lemley

Starring   
Benjamin Walker
Dominic Cooper
Anthony Mackie
Mary Elizabeth Winstead
Rufus Sewell
Marton Csokas

Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter is an upcoming 2012 American 3D action horror film based on the 2010 mashup novel of the same name. The film is directed by Timur Bekmambetov and is produced by him and Tim Burton. The novel's author, Seth Grahame-Smith, wrote the adapted screenplay. The real-life figure Abraham Lincoln, the 16th President of the United States (1861–1865), is fictionally portrayed in the novel and the film as having a secret identity as a vampire hunter. Benjamin Walker, who beat out Nicolas Cage for the role, stars as Lincoln.[1] Filming began in Louisiana in March 2011, and the film is being produced in 3D. It is scheduled to be released on June 22, 2012.





Thursday, April 12, 2012

Film Review - Mirror Mirror (2012)

Genre:     Comedy, Sci-Fi
Director:     Tarsem Singh
Writer:     Melisa Wallack, Jason Keller
Cast:     Lily Collins, Julia Roberts, Armie Hammer, Nathan Lane, Robert Emms, Mare Winningham, Michael Lerner, Mark Povinelli, Jordan Prentice, Danny Woodburn, Sebastian Saraceno, Ronald Lee Clark, Martin Klebba, Joey Gnoffo
AKA:     Snow White
Studio:     Relativity Media

Hooray!  Finally the Snow White adaptation that we've all been excited for has arrived. Slick visuals, Chris Hemsworth and Kristen Stewart look great….oh wait - that's Snow White and the Huntsman, which comes out this summer.  Instead, this is the Relativity version that had been jockeying for release schedule supremacy with its counterpart to ensure it reached audiences first.  There's a reason for that.

Mirror Mirror is sadly about as bad as its trailers made it look.  Despite very low expectations, I found myself struggling to keep my focus and even stay awake throughout this tiring revisionist take of the classic tale.

The film suffers from many drawbacks, chief of which being its script.  Mirror Mirror does venture away or put twists on many of the story's best known elements (including the queen's mirror, the poisoned apple, the dwarfs).  However, the story remains incredibly predictable - not only do you know exactly where the main story is heading, but the individual scenes offer no surprises either.  Even the film's climatic fight sequence, which yields the story's biggest "twist", feels bland and familiar.

What is perhaps most upsetting about Mirror Mirror is the cast.  Not that it's bad, but rather that it's an excellent Snow White cast… who are given so very little to work with.  Lily Collins and Armie Hammer are perfectly charming, the seven dwarfs (played here by actual midgets) are endearing and even Julia Roberts is a successfully wicked queen.  Each scene, though, felt like a real struggle for these actors - their attempts to infuse life into and find genuine moments for their characters thwarted at every step.

This holds true, too, for director Tarsem Singh (the incredibly talented filmmaker behind The Cell, The Fall and Immortals).  While the bright, colorful and grandiose production design and costumes clearly had the Tarsem stamp, the script again seemed to nullify much of his directing style.  To compensate, sequences were added, such as when the dwarves' home gets rampaged by marionette dolls remotely controlled by the Queen, that certainly are unique to this version, but do little to progress the story.  Tarsem's better judgment also got the best of him when he added insult to injury by having the cast sing a Bollywood-type song over the end credits.  It just did not work.  Sean Bean's look of shock during the sequence says it all.

Two main ways you can tell Mirror Mirror did not turn out as intended: the children in the audience barely laughed and even more telling, all of the production company credits arrived in the middle of the end credits.  You know it's bad when the producers hope everyone leaves before their names appear on screen.  With a much stronger script, Tarsem could have made this version something, but as is, we must now rely on Snow White and the Huntsman to make us forget this one quickly.





Film Review - The Cold Light Of Day

Genre
Action/adventure, Thriller

Starring
Henry Cavill, Bruce Willis, Sigourney Weaver

Henry Cavill (Immortals) is in a race against time in this Madrid-set thriller, which sees his mild-mannered business consultant up to his pecs in duplicitous spies and corrupt officials after his family is kidnapped while vacationing in Spain.

Yet the real race for the 28-year-old Briton is to establish his leading man credentials ahead of Man Of Steel – something this workmanlike slice of sub-Bourne hijinks isn’t likely to achieve in what will probably be a fairly short stay in UK cinemas.

Arriving in Alicante with financial woes as well as luggage, Cavill - and his Blackberry - soon get the goat of his hard-ass, yacht-sailing dad (Bruce Willis), a cultural attaché who gives his oldest son as tough a time as Kevin Smith reportedly got on Cop Out.

Swimming ashore in a huff – the better to show off those honed Kal-El muscles – Cavill returns to find the clan’s gone AWOL, largely due to Bruce’s secret sideline in international espionage.

With only hours to recover a mysterious briefcase – the precise contents of which remain comically vague – Cavill’s Will is soon required to acquire a raft of new skills (gun toting, car chasing, DIY abseiling off terracotta rooftops), not to mention an attractive half-sister (Veronica Echegui) who is no less ignorant of Bruce’s extracurricular activities.

Sigourney Weaver, meanwhile, fetches up as a shades-sporting, power-suited authority figure who at one point berates Will for being a “fucking amateur”.

The same, alas, applies to a dreary slice of hokum that, similar to the otherwise superior Safe House, vainly hopes the deployment of unfamiliar locations will mask its leaden predictability.

Yet it is Cavill who proves the bigger liability, the Tudors star being far too ripped and toned to convince as a sweatily desperate everyman. Watchable enough if hard to root for, he’s a curiously blank presence in a movie that wants us to invest in his survival.

Here’s hoping he brings a tad more personality to Superman in 12 months’ time.




Film Review - Battleship

Genre
Action/adventure, Science Fiction

Starring
Taylor Kitsch, Alexander Skarsgård, Liam Neeson

Director
Peter Berg

Hollywood has already laid siege to most of our childhood memories – even the ones it created itself.

After churning out enough remakes, updates and reimaginings to turn nostalgia to nausea, it’s decided to go one step further, adapting a board game so facile it can be easily replicated with a pen and paper. What’s next, Noughts And Crosses: The Movie?

Leaving aside the mercenary aspect – pretty tricky with Hasbro Toys on production duties – such an enterprise requires some serious padding, and Peter Berg’s swollen blockbuster more than delivers.

When aliens attack a fleet of naval destroyers (apparently actual battleships are now obsolete), Lieutenant Hopper (Taylor Kitsch) leads the rag-tag crew of the HMS John Paul Jones into the breach with just his cock-sure attitude and a cock-rock soundtrack.

What follows is nigh-on two hours of gale-force military fetishism, a script set to soundbite (“Boom!” says the underused, but surprisingly un-terrible, Rihanna, firing a cannon), and stratospheric levels of product placement.

At one point Hopper actually plays Battleships with real battleships (well, destroyers). Meanwhile, Michael Bay’s hectic editing provides the blueprint for the seasick action sequences, and the alien ships look exactly like Transformers – another Hasbro property.

So why isn’t such a frivolous concept any fun to watch? Probably because there’s nothing at stake but toy sales.

The aliens’ supposedly awesome weaponry only manages to destroy a few ships, a freeway and a baseball pitch. No shots last for more than three seconds – even the slow-motion ones – and no idea sticks around much longer.

Except for a brief scene of Hong Kong’s Bank of China Tower toppling to the ground and a vertiginous “Abandon ship!” moment, the CGI-heavy SFX feel rushed and contextless, like the console adaptation of an ancient blockbuster, rather than the reverse.

“It’s time for a game change,” barks Hopper’s brother (Alexander Skarsgård) with some justification. Fair enough. Anyone for Hangman?




Thursday, April 5, 2012

Film Review - Headhunters

Production year: 2011
Country: Rest of the world
Cert (UK): 15
Runtime: 101 mins
Directors: Morten Tyldum
Cast: Aksel Hennie, Julie Olgaard, Max Manus, Nikolaj Coster Waldau, Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Synnove Macody, Synnove Macody Lund

If the producers of this movie have their way, Norwegian noir will be the new Stockholm suspense. Following in Stieg Larsson's footsteps, this is the first adaptation of king of the airport thriller, Jo Nesbø. The plot pits cocky recruitment consultant Roger Brown (Aksel Hennie) against espionage executive Clas Greve (Game of Thrones's Nikolaj Coster-Waldau). It's a duel to the death, ostensibly over a stolen painting, while there's also a moral somewhere about modern capitalism. But the film doesn't merit chinstroking: it's stuffed with Troma-style riffs around schlock, gore and human effluvia, bookended by Shallow Grave-like sections full of cynical machinations. The parts barely relate, never mind work together.




Film Review - Titanic 3D

Production year: 2012
Country: USA
Cert (UK): 12A
Runtime: 194 mins
Directors: James Cameron
Cast: Bernard Hill, Bill Paxton, Billy Zane, David Warner, Frances Fisher, Gloria Stuart, Jonathan Hyde, Kate Winslet, Kathy Bates, Leonardo DiCaprio

The colossal melodrama that made James Cameron king of the world 15 years ago is back in 2D and 3D – and only the snobbish or the obtuse could deny its ambition, verve and entertainment firepower. Where Julian Fellowes is currently emphasising the class mosaic on television, Cameron made Titanic the backdrop for a wildly over-the-top weepie romance. Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio now look foetally young as the poor little rich girl and the ordinary guy who sees her inner yearning. Meanwhile, on the soundtrack, keening Irish music gives way to Céline Dion's thumping power ballad. 3D gives a new perspective to the voyagers plunging away from us down the deck, turned up 90 degrees into a sheer wooden cliff-face. Cameron's macho excitement at the techno-engineering catastrophe is palpable.





Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Film Review - Mission: Impossible 4, Ghost Protocol

Genre: Action | Adventure | Thriller
Directed by: Brad Bird
Movie Cast: Tom Cruise, Jeremy Renner, Simon Pegg, Paula Patton, Michael Nyqvist, Vladimir Mashkov, Josh Holloway, Anil Kapoor, Lea Seydoux, Tom Wilkinson

Mission: Impossible — Ghost Protocol is a terrific thriller with action sequences that function as a kind of action poetry. The best one has Tom Cruise hanging more than 100 storeys up on the glass windows of the Burj Khalifa in Dubai, the world’s tallest building. He has been equipped with gloves that cling when slammed against a surface and release when they are curled back.

Tricky enough in concept alone. But it has been claimed that Cruise “insisted on doing his stunts himself”. Say what? The character Ethan Hunt is seen like a human fly clinging to glass, thousands of feet in the air, and you’re telling me we aren’t looking at computer-generated imagery? If that’s really Tom Cruise, he seems like a suitable case for treatment.

If it is or isn’t, the sequence is one of the most spellbinding stretches of film I’ve seen. In the way it’s set up, photographed and edited, it provided me and my vertigo with scary fascination. The movie has other accomplished set pieces as well. It opens with Ethan Hunt’s breakout from a Russian prison.

There is a staggering fight scene inside a space-age parking garage where moving steel platforms raise and lower cars, and the fighters jump from one level to another. There’s a clever scene in the vaults of the Kremlin Archives in which a virtual reality illusion is used to fool a guard. And a scene at a fancy Mumbai party in which Anil Kapoor thinks he’s seducing MI team member Jane (Paula Patton) in an elaborately choreographed diversionary technique.

Ethan and Jane are joined by Mission mates Brandt (Jeremy Renner) and Benji (Simon Pegg) in an attempt to foil a madman named Hendricks (Michael Nyqvist), who has gained control of a satellite and possession of Russian nuclear codes, and wants to start a nuclear war. His reason, as much as I understand it, is that life on Earth needs to be annihilated once in a while so it can get a fresh start, and Hendricks is impatient waiting for a big asteroid to come along in his lifetime.

The movie benefits greatly from the well-defined performances of the Mission team. Cruise, hurting from the death of his wife (remember her in the third MI picture?), plays a likeable man of, shall we say, infinite courage. Simon Pegg, with his owl face and petulance, is funny as Benji the computer genius, one of those guys who can walk into the Burj Khalifa with a laptop and instantly grab control of its elevators and security cameras.

Paula Patton is an appealing Jane, combining sweet sexiness with vicious hand-to-hand fighting techniques. And Jeremy Renner’s Brandt, entering the plot late as an “analyst” for the IMF secretary (Tom Wilkinson), is revealed to have a great many extra-analytical skills.

Brandt and Benji have a scene that reaches a new level of action goofiness even for a Mission: Impossible movie. Brandt’s mission, and Ethan makes it clear he has to accept it, is to wear steel mesh underwear and jump into a ventilating shaft with wicked spinning fan blades at the bottom. Benji will halt his fall with a little mobile magnet at the bottom of the shaft, so Brandt can break into massive computers. Renner does an especially nice job of seeming very scared when he does this.

The movie has an unexpected director: Brad Bird, the maker of such great animated films as The Iron Giant, The Incredibles and Ratatouille. Well, why not? Animation specialises in action, and his films are known for strong characterisation. You’d think he’d been doing thrillers for years.

Now I want to get back to Tom Cruise, who we left clinging to the side of the Burj Khalifa, allegedly doing his own stunts. I’m not saying he didn’t. No doubt various unseen nets and wires were also used, and at least some CGI. Whatever.

I remember a story Clint Eastwood told me years ago, after he made The Eiger Sanction (1975). There’s a scene in the movie where Clint’s character dangles in mid-air at the end of a cable hanging from a mountain. He’s thousands of feet up. Clint, who also directed, did the scene himself.

“I didn’t want to use a stunt man,” he said, “because I wanted to use a telephoto lens and zoom in slowly all the way to my face — so you could see it was really me. I put on a little disguise and slipped into a sneak preview of the film to see how people liked it. When I was hanging up there in the air, the woman in front of me said to her friend, ‘Gee, I wonder how they did that?’ and her friend said, ‘Special effects.’”