Hi! So I've kind of neglected This Place after a few of you got butthurt over my reviews of Pacific Rim and My Little Pony: Equestria Girls.
To that, I say: TOO DAMN BAD. MY BLOG, MY OPINIONS.
In my slackiness, however, my list of unwatched-but-downloaded movies has... grown. Mutated, really. Here it is now...
12 Years A Slave
A Good Old-Fashioned Orgy
A Million Ways To Die In The West
A Perfect Getaway
Abraham Lincoln - Vampire Hunter
Act Naturally
After Earth
After Life
Age of Heroes
The Amazing Spider-Man 2
Assault Girls
August - Osage County
Baby Mama
Battleship
Behind the Candelabra
Bride Wars
Burke and Hare
The Cabin in the Woods (2011)
Cemetery Junction
Chef
Chocolate (Hindi, 2005)
The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian
The Chronicles of Narnia: Voyage of the Dawn Treader
Cool Hand Luke
CZ12
Daybreakers
Dead Man Down
Defendor
The Descendants
Don Jon
Drag Me To Hell
Dredd
Edge of Darkness
The Expendables
The Expendables 2
Epic
The Great Gatsby
Grudge Match
Hanna
Hitchcock
The Hurt Locker
I, Frankenstein
The Ides of March
The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus
Indie Game: The Movie
J. Edgar
Knights of Badassdom
The Last Stand
Les Miserables (2012)
Let The Right One In
The Lone Ranger (2013)
The Lovely Bones
Machete Kills
The Monuments Men
The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones
Mystery Team
No Country For Old Men
Pain and Gain
Paranorman
Professor Layton and the Eternal Diva
Savages
The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (2014)
Seeking a Friend for the End of the World
Sharknado
Shutter Island
Snow White and the Huntsman
Son of Batman
The Three Musketeers (2011)
The Wolf of Wall Street
Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy
Titanic 2
Up In The Air
Yakuza - Like a Dragon
Soon I shall start watching! You can be reading my thoughts! Go ahead and disagree with me, but if you feel the need to try and sway my opinion by telling me how wrong I am, I got four letters for ya...
STFU.
So there you has it. Stay tuned!
Kevin Watches Movies
Wednesday, 17 September 2014
Friday, 7 March 2014
COUGH COUGH MOVIE REVIEW
Oh hi! Are you still here? No? I don't blame you. Well, here we go with another review!
STARRING
Sullivan Stapleton as Themistokles
Eva Green as Artemisia
Callan Mulvey as Scyllias
AND RETURNING FROM 300
Lena Headey as Queen Gorgo
Rodrigo Santoro as Xerxes
Andrew Tiernan as Ephialtes
David Wenham as Dilios
Gerard Butler as King Leonidas
Whew, what can be said about this movie that hasn't already been said about the original? Blood, guts, boobs, gore, a stirring speech every five minutes, a proverbial dick-measuring contest between shirtless warriors and more bullet-time and slowdowns than the Matrix trilogy being broadcast on an NES.
When our story opens, it's shortly after the events of 300. David Wenham's Dilios has given way to QueenCersei Gorgo as the person who leads off with the speechifying, and she talks for a good long while. Basically, we're seeing Everything Else that happened while Gerard Butler's Leonidas - whose return is through archival footage and NOT a resurrection, thank goodness - was making modern men feel like particularly weak mice. The movie gets kind of confusing, introducing a younger, shorter, bearded Xerxes and flashing back and forth through time with nary a warning to the viewing audience.
We're introduced to a couple of new characters in this movie, but with the exception of one they're all pretty much disposable action-movie tropes (like the daddy whose son really wants to be a big boy so he sneaks off to join the army, only for them to OH MY GOD MEET UP ON THE BATTLEFIELD). That one non-disposable character would be Artemisia, the Greek orphan who is the real commander of Xerxes' armies. Seems her village was sacked by the national army, and her whole family raped and murdered in front of her (oh, bee tee dubs... one of her family members is raped on-screen, but shadowed. Still heebed my jeebies, though), and after being passed around like a blunt at a Grateful Dead concert for years she's left for dead somewhere in Persia. A big dude finds her and starts training her to be a warrior, and it turns out she's a natural because VENGEANCE.
I will commend the filmmakers for trying to make Artemisia seem like a warrior first and a woman second, as her ladyparts are only emphasized at one part of the movie, but it's clear that she's that way because she wants to be that way. I dunno, I could be wrong... I mean, I didn't see her as a "sex object" even once. She was badass if you ask me. And since this is my blog and commenting isn't allowed, my opinion is the ONLY opinion.
I wonder if this is how Dubya felt.
At any rate, 300: Rise of an Empire is a largely unnecessary sequel. It wasn't horrible, but after watching Gerard Butler almost literally chew up and spit out the Persian army did we really need more?
Go for the violence, the well-choreographed fights, and the.. uhh... more violence. Just don't pay what I did.
VIEWED IN IMAX 3D (ticket price $17.99)
FINAL REVIEW
300: Rise of an Empire
2.75 snowflakes out of 5
TL;DR - A watered-down version of the original. Boobs, though, amirite?
TRIGGER WARNINGS FOR THIS MOVIE: Rape, women being treated as sex toys unless they're Gorgo or Artemisia, blood, gore, violence, crow eating some dude's eyeball
STARRING
Sullivan Stapleton as Themistokles
Eva Green as Artemisia
Callan Mulvey as Scyllias
AND RETURNING FROM 300
Lena Headey as Queen Gorgo
Rodrigo Santoro as Xerxes
Andrew Tiernan as Ephialtes
David Wenham as Dilios
Gerard Butler as King Leonidas
Whew, what can be said about this movie that hasn't already been said about the original? Blood, guts, boobs, gore, a stirring speech every five minutes, a proverbial dick-measuring contest between shirtless warriors and more bullet-time and slowdowns than the Matrix trilogy being broadcast on an NES.
When our story opens, it's shortly after the events of 300. David Wenham's Dilios has given way to Queen
We're introduced to a couple of new characters in this movie, but with the exception of one they're all pretty much disposable action-movie tropes (like the daddy whose son really wants to be a big boy so he sneaks off to join the army, only for them to OH MY GOD MEET UP ON THE BATTLEFIELD). That one non-disposable character would be Artemisia, the Greek orphan who is the real commander of Xerxes' armies. Seems her village was sacked by the national army, and her whole family raped and murdered in front of her (oh, bee tee dubs... one of her family members is raped on-screen, but shadowed. Still heebed my jeebies, though), and after being passed around like a blunt at a Grateful Dead concert for years she's left for dead somewhere in Persia. A big dude finds her and starts training her to be a warrior, and it turns out she's a natural because VENGEANCE.
I will commend the filmmakers for trying to make Artemisia seem like a warrior first and a woman second, as her ladyparts are only emphasized at one part of the movie, but it's clear that she's that way because she wants to be that way. I dunno, I could be wrong... I mean, I didn't see her as a "sex object" even once. She was badass if you ask me. And since this is my blog and commenting isn't allowed, my opinion is the ONLY opinion.
I wonder if this is how Dubya felt.
At any rate, 300: Rise of an Empire is a largely unnecessary sequel. It wasn't horrible, but after watching Gerard Butler almost literally chew up and spit out the Persian army did we really need more?
Go for the violence, the well-choreographed fights, and the.. uhh... more violence. Just don't pay what I did.
VIEWED IN IMAX 3D (ticket price $17.99)
FINAL REVIEW
300: Rise of an Empire
2.75 snowflakes out of 5
TL;DR - A watered-down version of the original. Boobs, though, amirite?
TRIGGER WARNINGS FOR THIS MOVIE: Rape, women being treated as sex toys unless they're Gorgo or Artemisia, blood, gore, violence, crow eating some dude's eyeball
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Sunday, 11 August 2013
Science Fiction/Triple Feature
STARRING
Hugh Jackman as Logan/Wolverine
Tao Okamoto as Mariko
Hiroyuki Sanada as Yashida
Svetlana Khodchenkova as Dr Green
Rila Fukushima as Yukio
Let me start this off by saying "Yes, this movie is better than X-Men Origins: Wolverine".
Of course, a similar effect could be achieved by saying this movie is better than having a monkey throw poo at you. Origins was awful. AWFUL. Anyway!
The Wolverine reintroduces us to Logan, aka
After a Series Of Events, Logan (he makes a point that he's no longer Wolverine) finds himself in Tokyo at the behest of a man named Yashida. Due to his mutant healing factor, Logan is effectively immortal. Any aging or disease is almost immediately eradicated by his immune system (which makes me wonder why he's not filthy rich and Marvel Earth isn't free of disease). During World War II, our hero was a POW in a Japanese camp just outside Nagasaki. When the Fat Man bomb is dropped on that city, Logan saves one of the Japanese guards - Yashida. Seems the old fella is dying and wants to thank his cigar-chompin' Canadian buddy for saving his skin. Oh, and he's also the founder and CEO of one of Japan's most important companies.
Yashida presents Logan with the offer of mortality, stating that his doctor has discovered a way to transfer mutant powers between people. Yashida wants the healing factor for himself, but Logan won't agree. The old man dies that night, causing Stuff To Happen (saving you from spoilers, Dear Reader). Logan ends up saving Yashida's daughter, Mariko, during a kidnapping attempt at the old man's funeral, which is where More Stuff Is Revealed.
Not my best writing, this review, but I hate spoilers. Really, I do.
I was very impressed by this movie, which is to say that my expectations weren't terribly high. The aforementioned X-Men Origins really was That Bad. The movie is rather predictable at times - I mean seriously, once you see one scene with Yashida's doctor you're gonna notice she's kinda evil - and Logan is constantly hallucinating the late Jean Grey (whom he killed to save the world at the end of another forgettable movie, X-Men: The Last Stand). I could do without the hallucinations, really. I didn't think they added much of anything other than Famke Janssen's cleavage to the story.
... wait, that was probably the point.
FINAL REVIEW
The Wolverine
3 snowflakes out of 5
TL;DR - Worth seeing, but don't pay extra for 3D. More of a character movie like Batman Begins was than a superhero movie, really. Also, cute Japanese girls and DUTCH CLEAVAGE. :P
STARRING
Denzel Washington as Bobby
Mark Wahlberg as Stig
Edward James Olmos as Papi Greco
Bill Paxton as Earl
GUNS! BANG! FUNNY ONE-LINERS! EVIL ADMIRAL ADAMA! RANDOM BOOBIES! EVIL BILL PAXTON! IT'S GAME OVER, MAN!
FINAL REVIEW
2 Guns
2.5 snowflakes out of 5
TL;DR - Wait, that review was too long? I did like the movie, despite my VERY simplistic review. See it, but wait for DVD/Netflix. Perfectly Acceptable Buddy Cop Action Movie. PABCAM.
STARRING
Tara Strong as Twilight Sparkle
Andrea Libman as Pinkie Pie & Fluttershy
Cathy Weseluck as Spike
Ashleigh Ball as Rainbow Dash & Applejack
Tabitha St Germain as Rarity & Princess Luna
Rebecca Shoichet as Sunset Shimmer
Oi.
Okay, so I watched this movie after downloading it (YAR HAR FIDDLE DEE DEE) for the wife, who is a Brony. Bronies are fans of the RIDICULOUSLY popular TV show My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic, and despite the first syllable, aren't always dudes.
I KNOW. IT CONFUSED THE FUCK OUT OF ME, TOO.
This would be the first time I have ever sat down to watch anything to do with MLP:FIM (as it's called by the cool kids), so please forgive me if I mangle names, plot points, and any semblance of macho man-ness you may have thought I possessed.
And if you thought I possessed any macho man-ness, ask me about Sailor Moon.
So the plot of Equestria Girls is this: shortly after having been crowned a princess, the newly-mutated Twilight Sparkle is having a slumber party or some shit at the castle with Princess Serenity Cadence (really? CADENCE? AH DON'T KNOW BUT AH BEEN TOLD/IF I MOCK THIS MOVIE I SLEEP IN THE COLD) and all of her friends, who are apparently called the "Mane Six".
Yup. This show has more puns in it than your average conversation between Gary, Phil, and myself. To wit:
They live in Canterlot. There's show where they go to Mane-hattan. There's a time-travelling stallion named Doctor Whooves.
Still here? You're made of sterner stuff than I.
Still here? You're made of sterner stuff than I.
After the pillow fights (I assume that girl ponies have the same kind of slumber parties girl humans do) the ponies go to bed. Yes, BED. PONIES. IN A BED. Twilight Sparkle bitches to her dragon friend Spike (voiced by Shampoo! Aiya!) that she can't sleep with her new mutation, a pair of wings. Wings with their own mind. My wife used the phrase "wing boner" in my presence.
Somebody shoot me.
After finally falling asleep, some other pony sneaks into TS' room, fucks off with her magic crown (which contains an Essence of the Thunder King or something) and almost makes a clean getaway except she trips over the goddamn dragon whelp WHICH IS ABOUT AS BIG AS A GOLF BALL IN A ROOM THE SIZE OF YOUR HOUSE. Seriously, who does this broad think she is, Kevin Nash?
HI PAUL!
The chase is on! All the ponies wake up SIMULTANEOUSLY (I wonder what else about them is synchronized OH GOD THE MENTAL IMAGES) and chase this Evil Pony - Sunshit Simmer, or something - throughout the POORLY GUARDED CASTLE THAT CONTAINS TWO RULING PRINCESSES AND A SMALL CADRE OF PRINCESSLINGS to a room full of portals.
No, no GLaDOS. I'm not that lucky.
Sleepy Shitter escapes through a portal, taking the Crown of Eternal Stench with her. Through the Power Of Exposition, it is explained that only
So it's off through the portal all by herself, whee let's go on a solo adventure OH SHIT THE DRAGON POOP FOLLOWED HER. When they awaken in the Other World, Spike has transformed into a puppy (as you do) and Twilight Sparkle is now a purple teenager.
Yup.
TS ends up finding herself at Canterlot High (which accurately describes the writers, I think) and soon on the wrong side of the school's Most Popular Student (three guesses as to who THAT is, and the first person who says Quinn Fabray gets slapped). She meets up with a girl who looks and sounds suspiciously like her friend Fluttershy, and discovers that THAT IS ACTUALLY HER NAME. Yes, the denizens of Canterlot High ARE NAMED LIKE THEY'RE ALL PONIES.
So as not to confuse the kids, I get it. Also, it's hard to come up with different names when you're on the good shit like this show's directors.
Twilight Sparkle and Shutterfly team up with the rest of the Inner Senshi to take down the Evil Pony bitch in an all-singing, all-dancing cafeteria Broadway show that justifies my earlier Glee reference. Evil Pony pulls out all the stops, including siccing her own versions of Crabbe and Goyle on our intrepid heroines. Tara Strong ends up getting her crown (more of a tiara, really) back by winning a popularity contest after showing up about a day and a half before the vote, and then they put the final kibosh on Sunset Drive-In with THE POWER OF FRIENDSHIP.
This is a recurring theme in the show, I'm told.
Now, I'm pretty sure you think I hated this movie from the verbal beating I just laid on it. Far from it. These are a good portion of the riffs that came to mind as I watched this movie with my wife last night and kept to myself in the interest of brownie points and other things you probably don't want to know about. I do know the source material, and from the bits I've heard over my headset as the wife giggles her way through the three seasons of the show, it's pretty faithful to the source material.
RUN-ON SENTENCES ARE FUN, DAMMIT
It's full of plot contrivances, Super-Powered Coincidences and authority figures who never show any authority, as well as my biggest question: if putting the crown/tiara/whatever on her head gave Shimmerpants EVIYL DEVIL POWERS, why didn't it do anything AT ALL to Twilight Sparkle? She should have just magicked her way out of it, went "LOL GG" and went home. No POWER OF FRIENDSHIP ending, that's why she didn't do it. It's like she read the script.
FINAL REVIEW
My Little Pony: Equestria Girls
I Don't Want To Sleep On The Couch Tonight snowflakes out of 5
TL; DR - For fans only.
After many attempts to fix the line breaks in this post, I have given up. Stupid Blogger. YES SOME OF MY PARAGRAPHS ARE A SENTENCE OR A SINGLE WORD LONG STOP TRYING TO BE MY EDITOR
Labels:
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Friday, 19 July 2013
Tower Heist
STARRING
Ben Stiller as Josh Kovacs
Eddie Murphy as Slide
Casey Affleck as Charlie
Alan Alda as Arthur Shaw
Matthew Broderick as Mr Fitzhugh
Téa Leoni as Agent Denham
Gabourey Sidibe as Odessa
As the opening credits rolled on this movie, my eyes kept getting wider. This is a pretty big talent pool, and as we know large casts like this always do well!
... well, not if you're Movie 43. Or New Year's Eve. Still!
Tower Heist is the tale of a guy named Josh Kovacs. Ol' Josh is the building manager of The Tower, an upper-crust condominium in downtown New York. Josh's job is to know everything about everyone who lives in the tower and take care of them, because they're all absurdly rich. In Josh's employ is the hapless Charlie, the concierge, whose wife is eight months pregnant and is also Josh's sister. We're also introduced to Enrique Deveraux (Michael Peña), whose dream it is to move up from the BK (aka Burger King) to the Big Time in customer service. Josh's favourite tenant is the billionaire Arthur Shaw, and it seems his lips are permanently attached to Shaw's butt. Josh and Shaw play online chess, Josh picks up Shaw's dry cleaning, gets his mail... and Alan Alda uses his old Hawkeye Pierce charm to win Josh over.
... well, not if you're Movie 43. Or New Year's Eve. Still!
Tower Heist is the tale of a guy named Josh Kovacs. Ol' Josh is the building manager of The Tower, an upper-crust condominium in downtown New York. Josh's job is to know everything about everyone who lives in the tower and take care of them, because they're all absurdly rich. In Josh's employ is the hapless Charlie, the concierge, whose wife is eight months pregnant and is also Josh's sister. We're also introduced to Enrique Deveraux (Michael Peña), whose dream it is to move up from the BK (aka Burger King) to the Big Time in customer service. Josh's favourite tenant is the billionaire Arthur Shaw, and it seems his lips are permanently attached to Shaw's butt. Josh and Shaw play online chess, Josh picks up Shaw's dry cleaning, gets his mail... and Alan Alda uses his old Hawkeye Pierce charm to win Josh over.
Then Shaw is arrested for securities fraud. He's apparently penniless, living off the money he stole from The Tower's pension fund after Josh entrusted him with the portfolio. When the doorman tries to commit suicide over the loss of his pension, Josh loses his shit. He takes Charlie and Deveraux up to Shaw's apartment where he's under house arrest, yells at the man, and then proceeds to go all Jack Nicholson on an old Ferrari that used to belong to Steve McQueen. The building ownership (represented by Judd Hirsch) doesn't take too kindly to this and fires all three men.
Desperate, Josh tries to sell Shaw out to the FBI. He ends up having drinks with Agent Denham, who drunkenly tells him that there's twenty million dollars unaccounted for. It's simply gone. With his intimate knowledge of the building, Josh figures the money is being held in a wall that Shaw didn't remove during a major renovation project several years ago. He recruits Deveraux, Charlie, the recently-evicted Mr Fitzhugh, and his criminal neighbour Slide to try and rob Shaw.
I couldn't help but notice how Same-y this movie was. Ben Stiller plays a Ben Stiller character, all intense one minute and completely bungling the next. He's also very obviously wearing mascara in several scenes. Matthew Broderick plays a slightly more confident Leo Bloom, his character from The Producers. Casey Affleck plays an idiot, something he seems to play in every role (with the exception of Gone Baby Gone). Eddie Murphy is Token Black Criminal. Yawn.
Desperate, Josh tries to sell Shaw out to the FBI. He ends up having drinks with Agent Denham, who drunkenly tells him that there's twenty million dollars unaccounted for. It's simply gone. With his intimate knowledge of the building, Josh figures the money is being held in a wall that Shaw didn't remove during a major renovation project several years ago. He recruits Deveraux, Charlie, the recently-evicted Mr Fitzhugh, and his criminal neighbour Slide to try and rob Shaw.
I couldn't help but notice how Same-y this movie was. Ben Stiller plays a Ben Stiller character, all intense one minute and completely bungling the next. He's also very obviously wearing mascara in several scenes. Matthew Broderick plays a slightly more confident Leo Bloom, his character from The Producers. Casey Affleck plays an idiot, something he seems to play in every role (with the exception of Gone Baby Gone). Eddie Murphy is Token Black Criminal. Yawn.
Some of the more surprising laughs came from Gabourey Sidibe's character, Odessa. I haven't seen Precious, so I wasn't familiar with her acting chops before this one. It felt like she was holding back for most of the movie. Alan Alda plays Shaw as a smarmy asshole, which is refreshing for me as I know him best as the aforementioned Hawkeye. I will say this for Stiller, though: despite being a Ben Stiller character, I didn't spend the entire movie wanting to punch him like I usually do. I tell you, if you want to make sure I don't see a movie, put Stiller with Nicolas Cage. *shudder*
Despite some interesting twists (and a few shudder moments during the climax... if you have vertigo, prepare to cover your face when you see Deveraux on the roof), this movie is, as I said earlier, Same-y. It's reasonably predictable, and the laughs aren't as frequent as I'd like. Eddie Murphy is completely wasted here, but since he hasn't had a quality movie where he isn't a donkey in about 15 years, it's not like he's got top-drawer scripts being sent his way. Again, much like Pacific Rim, I felt they could have done so much more with the material they had here. There are plot points that feel like they were thrown in because it was convenient for the scriptwriters. I would have liked a bit more time exploring Slide and Odessa's relationship, because it's one of the few times Murphy's character isn't channeling Chris Tucker in Rush Hour. A few loose ends, like the sparks between Josh and Denham, go nowhere and are unresolved by the movie's end. Hasty editing? Possibly. Of course, the answer to my gripes is probably summed up in two words: Brett Ratner. The director. Hey, there's Rush Hour again!
FINAL REVIEW
Tower Heist
2.5 snowflakes out of 5
TL;DR - An unoffensive movie. You could do worse than watch it, but it'll leave you wanting more.
Despite some interesting twists (and a few shudder moments during the climax... if you have vertigo, prepare to cover your face when you see Deveraux on the roof), this movie is, as I said earlier, Same-y. It's reasonably predictable, and the laughs aren't as frequent as I'd like. Eddie Murphy is completely wasted here, but since he hasn't had a quality movie where he isn't a donkey in about 15 years, it's not like he's got top-drawer scripts being sent his way. Again, much like Pacific Rim, I felt they could have done so much more with the material they had here. There are plot points that feel like they were thrown in because it was convenient for the scriptwriters. I would have liked a bit more time exploring Slide and Odessa's relationship, because it's one of the few times Murphy's character isn't channeling Chris Tucker in Rush Hour. A few loose ends, like the sparks between Josh and Denham, go nowhere and are unresolved by the movie's end. Hasty editing? Possibly. Of course, the answer to my gripes is probably summed up in two words: Brett Ratner. The director. Hey, there's Rush Hour again!
FINAL REVIEW
Tower Heist
2.5 snowflakes out of 5
TL;DR - An unoffensive movie. You could do worse than watch it, but it'll leave you wanting more.
edit: Apparently, I forgot Eddie Murphy's role in Dream Girls when I was slagging him in this post. My bad.
Monday, 15 July 2013
Pacific Rim
Starring
Idris Elba as Stacker Pentecost
Charlie Hunnam as Raleigh Becket
Rinko Kikuchi as Mako Mori
Charlie Day as Dr Newton Geizler
Ron Perlman as Hannibal Chau
Movie viewed in IMAX 3D on 13 July, 2013
I went into this movie after stellar reviews from friends and critics. I was ready to be absolutely blown away by the sheer power of awesome.
Well, the special effects were above top-drawer. Everything else? Less so.
A bit of "plot" summary: In a refreshing new take on alien invasion, the 250 foot tall invaders - called "Kaiju", a Japanese word meaning "strange creature" - come from a dimensional rift in the bottom of the Pacific Ocean. These kaiju run roughshod over Earth as only giant monsters can, until we decided to fight back by building giant robots calledEvangelion Jaegers (German for "hunters") to kill them. And kill them we did! Sure, cities like San Francisco get the everlovin' shit knocked out of them, but WE KILT THEM ALIENS GOOD *hock ptoo*. The robots are piloted by humans who use a neural interface to control the machine's movements, but the sheer size of the machines is too much for a single human brain. Instead, they use teenagers a two-pilot system to share the neural load in a process called "drifting" that links the minds of the pilots. Their thoughts are your thoughts, your memories are their memories... it's all very Vulcan.
A bit of "plot" summary: In a refreshing new take on alien invasion, the 250 foot tall invaders - called "Kaiju", a Japanese word meaning "strange creature" - come from a dimensional rift in the bottom of the Pacific Ocean. These kaiju run roughshod over Earth as only giant monsters can, until we decided to fight back by building giant robots called
In the movie's opening, we are introduced to the pilots of a Jaeger called Gipsy Danger. The pilots, the improbably named Raleigh Becket and his older brother Yancy, are sent out into the ocean off the coast of Alaska to fight a giant monster. Their commanding officer (played by the awesome Idris Elba) orders them to ignore the fate of a 10-man fishing boat in favour of saving the millions of lives this Kaiju will end should it make landfall.
So guess what the Becket boys do?
In the ensuing chaos, the Kaiju rips half of Gipsy Danger's head off and kills Yancy. As Raleigh will repeat almost as often as Spider-Man blathered on about great power and great responsibility, he was still in Yancy's head when he died. He felt all the pain, fear, blah blah blah. Raleigh manages to control Gipsy Danger on his own long enough to get back to land where he's found by a boy and his grandfather. Then TIME PASSES.
It's seven years later. Half-Life 3 still isn't out. Becket is still in Alaska, helping to build "the Wall of Life", a waste of fictional taxpayers' fictional money that is supposed to stop a Kaiju dead in its tracks. Stacker shows up and uses his Powers of Motivational Speech to convince the PTSD poster boy Becket to rejoin the fight, which was about as difficult as convincing me to eat bacon.
After some more inspiring orchestral music, Our Heroes arrive at The Hall of Justice, or something. The UN (with a Canadian representative! He even gets a line! WOO WE'VE BEEN VALIDATED) has decided that the effective way to kill the Kaiju is bad because sometimes stuff gets wrecked, so they're gonna go with the wall thing (SPOILER: The walls don't work). Stacker ain't got time for that, so The Hall of Justice is now "the resistance" and they've got a few Jaeger allies from around the world who, aside from Grizzled Australian Veteran and His Asshole Son, barely get any lines.
As we're being introduced to the mush-mouthed Aussies (seriously, could ANYONE figure out what they were saying?), we're also introduced to a cute little Japanese character named Mako Mori. She's our token Neon Genesis Evangelion tribute. Take a look at her and tell me she doesn't look familiar...
Google "Rei Ayanami" if you don't get it. Just make sure Safe Search is on.
Turns out "Miss Mori's" family got offed by a Kaiju and she Wants Revenge. Stacker ain't got time for that either, and is Dead Set Against letting Mako co-pilot the rebuilt Gipsy Danger with Becket until Becket says "dude, seriously". Then it's on like Donkey Kong until both Becket and Mako drift and have flashbacks to their traumatic backstories. This is when we find out that Stacker had time to adopt the young Mako, and... Jesus, is this REALLY the plot?
I'm really struggling to figure out what was good about this movie other than the special effects. LucasFilm's Industrial Light & Magic outdid themselves, that's for certain. The only effects complaint I have is that it's obvious the 3D was tacked on at the end, because there's no obvious scenes that utilized it. The 3D phenomenon that was started by Avatar has turned into a way for studios to make an extra $3 on tickets and stymie people with video cameras in the audience.
This film also suffers from "here's a guy who's integral to the plot but we can't be arsed to tell you his name" with the two scientists tasked to Find Out What The Kaiju Want. There's the weird British George McFly/Sheldon Cooper fusion (turns out his name's Herman) and Screams Almost As Much As Shia LeBeouf Guy (or "Newton", as IMDB.com tells me). Then there's "supporting cast we introduced to be either ethnic stereotypes or cannon fodder", aka the Russian and Chinese Jaeger pilots. The Russians frown a lot and act aloof! The Chinese guys are REALLY good at ping-pong!
As you may have guessed, this movie disappointed me. Perhaps it was my friends on Facebook losing their shit over how much they loved what they saw. Maybe I just expect too much from director Guillermo del Toro. Maybe I like a little steak with my sizzle. Don't get me wrong, it's a Perfectly Serviceable Popcorn Flick. Reviews, both critical and from your friends, might make you think this is the Second Coming of Star Wars (the original, not the prequels) or Indiana Jones. It's not. It's fun, but Pacific Rim left me with a kind of empty feeling and wishing it could have been more.
FINAL REVIEW
Pacific Rim
3 snowflakes out of 5
TL;DR - Come for the special effects. Just don't expect too much more.
Sunday, 30 June 2013
42
"I do not care if the guy is yellow or black, or if he has stripes like a fuckin' zebra. I'm the manager of this team, and I say he plays. What's more, I say he can make us all rich. And if any of you cannot use the money, I will see that you are all traded." - Leo Durocher, Manger of the Brooklyn Dodgers, Spring Training 1947
Starring
Chadwick Boseman as Jackie Robinson
Nicole Beharie as Rachel Robinson
Harrison Ford as Branch Rickey
Christopher Meloni as Leo Durocher
Alan Tudyk as Ben Chapman
John C. McGinley as Dr Perry Cox Red Barber
Everyone knows who Jackie Robinson is. He's the black baseball player from the Negro League who broke the sport's colour barrier in 1947. This movie is the story of that event.
Well, not really. It glosses over a lot of stuff in favour of having us watch Alan Tudyk hurl some of the most vile racial epithets I've ever heard.
We first meet up with Jackie as his Negro League team, the Kansas City Monarchs, is travelling through Alabama on their way to another game. A representative from the Brooklyn Dodgers sends Jackie to that city in hopes that General Manager Branch Rickey (played with enthusiasm by a sometimes unrecognizable Harrison Ford) can sign him to a contract. This attempt is, of course, successful... we'd have no movie otherwise.
This is where a lot of the glossing-over begins. After Spring Training, Jackie is assigned to the minor-league Montreal Royals. We only ever see Jackie in a Royals uniform during Spring Training and NEVER in Montreal, possibly because of this quote...
"I remember Montreal and that house very well and have always had warm feeling for that great city. Before Jack and I moved to Montreal, we had just been through some very rough treatment in the racially biased South during spring training in Florida. In the end, Montreal was the perfect place for him to get his start. We never had a threatening or unpleasant experience there. The people were so welcoming and saw Jack as a player and as a man." - Rachel Robinson
It's obvious that this movie was more concerned with getting the abuse Jackie was subjected to on film rather than showing that at least one place he played didn't care about his skin colour.
I am well aware that Jackie's presence on the Dodgers' roster was not welcomed with open arms by everyone. Members of the Dodgers sign a petition saying they won't play with him when he makes the Opening Day roster in 1947 (something that has only been rumoured, and never verified), he's ejected from a Spring Training game by on-field security in Philadelphia because "niggers don't play with whites" in that town... it had to have been mind-bogglingly awful for the guy. The screenwriters insert a fully-fictional scene where Jackie breaks his bat in the tunnel from the Dodgers' dugout to the clubhouse to show that even a man like Jackie Robinson had a breaking point.
I had a few issues with other, seemingly innocent aspects of the movie. It seemed that every time Jackie tied his shoes, or looked at a baseball diamond, the background music felt the need to mimic a John Williams orchestral score. Yes, Robinson was heroic for putting up with the shit baseball made him put up with. The score lays it on a little thick, really. Then there's the aforementioned glossing-over of historical facts (like how Robinson disliked the Negro Leagues because of its disorganization and acceptance of gambling), the sloppy way some characters are introduced (some giant corn-fed lookin' fella is traded part-way through the 1947 season, and even after researching that season I still don't know what the hell his name was), and - again, this is MY problem - the use of John C. McGinley as Dodgers' radio play-by-play man Red Barber. I kept waiting for him to refer to Jackie as "Newbie" or call Ben Chapman a girl's name.
MAN do I miss Scrubs.
The above bashing and Scrubs-worshipping paragraph-and-sentence doesn't mean I didn't find good in the movie. Chadwick Boseman's Robinson is very easy to like, and he plays the man with the humility that Robinson was known for. Harrison Ford nails it as Branch Rickey, and it was easy for me to disassociate the man from Han Solo and Indiana Jones, two previous roles that Ford has become synonymous with. I am a fan of both Christopher Meloni and Alan Tudyk, but I wish they were both used more and less at the same time (Durocher was suspended during the 1947 season for "unbecoming conduct", depicted as adultery in the movie but in reality was trumped-up charges of associating with gamblers ). Tudyk dives into his role as Ben Chapman with relish, but the character is really just satisfying the movie's need for a "bad guy" as the only scenes with him depict Chapman's crazy levels of racism, him being more polite about it and justifying the racism to reporters, and then finally having his picture taken with Robinson at the behest of Phillies management. I really wish they had utilized these two actors more, but I'll take watching them for even five seconds over two hours of Kristen Stewart.
FINAL REVIEW
42
2 snowflakes out of 5
TL;DR - Jackie Robinson was a polarizing figure, and a true hero for being brave enough to be the one black man in professional baseball until 1948. This movie does not do him justice.
Friday, 14 June 2013
This Is The End
STARRING
Seth Rogen as Seth Rogen
Jay Baruchel as Jay Baruchel
Craig Robinson as Craig Robinson
James Franco as James Franco
Danny McBride as Danny McBride
Jonah Hill as Jonah Hill
Emma Watson as Emma Watson
Michael Cera as Michael Cera
... yes, I had fun typing all that out.
What can I say about this movie? I just got back from seeing it, and every so often a scene or a line will pop into my head and I'll start laughing uncontrollably. Does that work for you?
The movie starts out with Seth waiting for his buddy Jay at the airport. The two actors are looking forward to a weekend of pot, booze, and video games. Seth suggests they attend a party at James Franco's house, and the cameos start flying by the screen: Mindy Kaling! Jason Segel! Rihanna! Christopher Mintz-Plasse! It's almost overload. When the loner Jay decides he needs to go for a walk to get more smokes, that's when the shit hits the fan. There's a huge explosion, followed by blue lights sucking people up into the sky. Huge sinkholes appear everywhere, and everything goes crazygonuts.
The movie doesn't let up on the laughs from the word go, and when they get to Franco's house it gets even crazier. I will warn you, gentle reader, that this movie features the disgusting toilet humour you've come to expect from Seth Rogen movies. There's a yelling match between Franco and McBride that is particularly disgusting, yet completely hilarious all at once.
Watching these actors play caricatures of themselves is particularly funny, and I really hope none of them really act the way they do in the movie. The Jonah Hill in this movie, for instance, is a sycophantic asshole with somewhat disturbing feelings for Jay Baruchel. Baruchel himself is a conceited hipster jackass who thinks he's above everyone else. Danny McBride is only looking out for number one: himself, while everyone else goes at Number Fuck You. It goes on and on, but the best parody performance - and some of the biggest laughs in the theatre - had to go to Michael Cera. For once, he's not playing a "Michael Cera type" and it's shocking to see... assuming your eyes aren't shut, squeezing out tears of laughter.
I recommend this movie to everyone who wants something different from the movies this year, while feeling a little samey and familiar. If that makes sense.
FINAL REVIEW
This Is The End
3.5 snowflakes out of 5
TL;DR - Funny in a juvenile way, but unless you're feeling superior you'll still laugh. A few gross-out scenes. More cameos than a trilogy of Muppet movies. Check your brain at the door and enjoy yourself.
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