A domain of film news and reviews, covering new releases, film festivals and classics alike, edited by Andy Buckle, a Sydney film enthusiast and reviewer.
Monday, January 31, 2011
The King's Speech dominates DGA and SAG Awards
So The King's Speech looks almost unstoppable now after claiming top honors at both the Directors Guild of America Awards and the Screen Actors Guild Awards. Director of The King's Speech, Tom Hooper took home the DGA Feature Film Award, beating out his distinguished rivals Darren Aronofsky, David Fincher, Christopher Nolan and David O. Russell. The DGA's award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in a Feature Film has traditionally served as a near-perfect barometer for the Academy Award for Best Director. Only six times since the Inception of the award in 1948 has the winner not gone on to take the award at the Oscars. Wow!
At the 17th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards, Colin Firth won the award of Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role for his stirring performance in The King's Speech, while Natalie Portman won the Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role award for Black Swan, all but locking up both winners for Oscar day. In the Supporting Actor/Actress categories, The Fighter duo Christian Bale and Melissa Leo matched their Golden Globe victories with recognition here again. But it was The King's Speech that took out the award for Outstanding Ensemble. While Firth and Rush were excellent, I feel Helena Bonham-Carter is receiving way too much recognition for her underwhelming support. The rest of the cast were all quite solid I guess. But in a year full of great ensembles, notably The Social Network, Black Swan, The Fighter, The Kids are All Right, Winter's Bone and True Grit, it wasn't a prominent stand-out.
The Best Films I Saw in January
I saw a total of 35 films in January. They included:
First Viewing (Cinema) - The King's Speech, Restrepo, Black Swan, Somewhere, Unstoppable, The Fighter, True Grit, Another Year
First Viewing (DVD) - Moulin Rouge (2001), The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975), The Thin Blue Line (1988), A Single Man (2009), 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days (2007), Atonement (2007), The Proposition (2005), I Heart Huckabees (2004), Babel (2006), Monster (2003), Mary and Max (2009), Enter the Void (2010)
Repeat Viewing - Michael Clayton (2007), Blindness (2008), Amelie (2001), In the Year of Our Lord: 1974 (2009), In the Year of Our Lord: 1980 (2009), The Lives of Others (2006), Coraline (2009), A Fish Called Wanda (1988), Kill Bill Vol. 1 (2003), Kill Bill Vol. 2 (2004), WALL-E (2008), In the Year of Our Lord: 1983 (2009), The Big Lebowski (1998), Finding Nemo (2003), A Bugs Life (1997)
First Viewing (Cinema) - The King's Speech, Restrepo, Black Swan, Somewhere, Unstoppable, The Fighter, True Grit, Another Year
First Viewing (DVD) - Moulin Rouge (2001), The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975), The Thin Blue Line (1988), A Single Man (2009), 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days (2007), Atonement (2007), The Proposition (2005), I Heart Huckabees (2004), Babel (2006), Monster (2003), Mary and Max (2009), Enter the Void (2010)
Repeat Viewing - Michael Clayton (2007), Blindness (2008), Amelie (2001), In the Year of Our Lord: 1974 (2009), In the Year of Our Lord: 1980 (2009), The Lives of Others (2006), Coraline (2009), A Fish Called Wanda (1988), Kill Bill Vol. 1 (2003), Kill Bill Vol. 2 (2004), WALL-E (2008), In the Year of Our Lord: 1983 (2009), The Big Lebowski (1998), Finding Nemo (2003), A Bugs Life (1997)
Essential Viewing:
The Thin Blue Line (Errol Morris, 1988)
A Fish Called Wanda (Charles Crichton, 1988)
The Big Lebowski (Joel and Ethan Coen, 1998)
Moulin Rouge (Baz Luhrmann, 2001)
Amelie (Jean-Pierre Jeunet, 2001)
Finding Nemo (Andrew Stanton, 2003)
Kill Bill Vol I and II (Quentin Tarantino, 2003/4)
The Lives of Others (Florian Henckel Von Donnersmarck, 2006)
4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days (Christin Mungiu, 2007)
WALL-E (Andrew Stanton, 2008)
A Single Man (Tom Ford, 2009)
Another Year (Mike Leigh, 2010)
Black Swan (Darren Aronofsky, 2010)
Saturday, January 29, 2011
What is your favourite Pixar film?
Having recently re-watched Toy Story 3 I asked myself what my favourite Pixar film was. I really couldn't decide, but with the exception of Cars (which I haven't seen) I love them all. So I have decided to watch all of the releases by Pixar over the years and come to some sort of conclusion as to what my favourite is. I started today with WALL-E, certainly one of the most visually groundbreaking of the Pixar resume. I have added a poll to my homepage. Thanks for reading and feel free to vote for your favourite film by Pixar.
Toy Story (1995) - *****
A Bugs Life (1997) - ***1/2
Toy Story 2 (1999) - ****
Monsters Inc. (2001) - ****1/2
Finding Nemo (2003) - ****1/2
The Incredibles (2004) - ****
Cars (2005) - ***1/2
Ratatouille (2007) - *****
WALL-E (2008) - *****
Up (2009) - ****1/2
Toy Story 3 (2010) - ****1/2
Toy Story (1995) - *****
A Bugs Life (1997) - ***1/2
Toy Story 2 (1999) - ****
Monsters Inc. (2001) - ****1/2
Finding Nemo (2003) - ****1/2
The Incredibles (2004) - ****
Cars (2005) - ***1/2
Ratatouille (2007) - *****
WALL-E (2008) - *****
Up (2009) - ****1/2
Toy Story 3 (2010) - ****1/2
Friday, January 28, 2011
New Release Review: True Grit (Joel and Ethan Coen, 2010)
Fresh from the news that the Coen Brothers had received another nomination in the directing category at the 83rd Academy Awards, and that their newest film, True Grit, had received ten nominations, I rushed into the city to see the film on its opening day. The Western genre is certainly not one of my favorite genres, but this return to 'true' Western tradition certainly didn't disappoint. While it still doesn't stand amongst my very favorite films of the year, it is a brilliantly dialogued, very well acted and beautifully shot film. The Coen Bros', long two of my most respected filmmakers, have made it their style to be freshly original with each film they make, and they are able to tackle multiple genres with effortless ease. When I heard that they were re-making a John Wayne film I was surprised and puzzled as to why I was hearing such positive reviews. But then I discovered that it is actually a re-adaptation of Charles Portis' 1968 novel, adopting an alternative approach to it's acclaimed, but I believe flawed 1969 predecessor. Jeff Bridges takes on the role that claimed John Wayne a Best Actor Oscar, 'Rooster' Cogburn, and he receives great support from Hailee Steinfeld (in what is extraordinarily her first film role) and Matt Damon and very briefly Josh Brolin and Barry Pepper.
The career of the Coen Brothers has spanned across almost every genre, often adhering to those typical to classical Hollywood; including film noir (Blood Simple and Fargo), gangster (Miller's Crossing), screwball comedy (Raising Arizona, The Big Lebowski) and musical (O Brother Where Art Thou). Having always challenged the boundaries of genre, the Coens' create films that work both as appropriate homage to the typical conventions, but also inclusive to the highly imaginative and subversive flair of their auteur style. I actually found True Grit to be their most conventional and conformative film, which deemed it seem unlike any other Coen film I have seen. True, the Western is a genre you can't really mess with, because it is so grounded in tradition, but very few quality Westerns spring to mind from the last decade. Tommy Lee Jones' The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada (2005) is one, Andrew Dominik's The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford also wasn't bad, along with the Coens very own No Country for Old Men (2007). Paul Thomas Anderson's spectacular American frontier film, There Will be Blood (2007) is also endowed with Western themes. True Grit, despite some unfortunate mumbling from Bridges, which deem a lot of his likely memorable lines unintelligible for the audience, is spectacular entertainment.
My Rating: 4 Stars
Thursday, January 27, 2011
Enter the Void (Gaspar Noe, 2010)
At this point I'm not really sure what to say about Gaspar Noe's Enter the Void. It is certainly still resonating with me. It features absolutely incredible cinematography and bizarre narrative-halting hallucinogenic drug induced light trips that reminded me of Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey. When a young American drug dealer is killed in Tokyo, his spirit remains behind and watches over his younger sister. It's a brilliant concept from the director of the hugely controversial Irreversible (2002), and an ingenious technical feat, but what a struggle at 160 minutes. Am I likely to watch it again? No. ***1/2
Review: Mary and Max (Adam Elliot, 2009)
Mary and Max is Australian filmmaker Adam Elliot's follow up to his 2003 Academy Award winning animated short film, Harvey Krumpet. It is a clay-animated feature film that tells a charming and insightful account of a 20-year pen-pal friendship between Mary, a lonely and ordinary 8-year-old girl living in Mount Waverly, Melbourne, and Max, an obese 44-year-old Jewish man suffering from Asperger Syndrome, who lives an isolated life in New York City. Mary and Max had it's world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival in 2009 and was the first animated film and the first Australian film to be screened on Opening Night in the 25 year history of the Festival. On a budget of 8.3 Million dollars, production of the film required a crew of 120 people, including six animators, to shoot continuously for 57 weeks. It was filmed in writer/director Elliot's home town of Melbourne and took five years to complete. The result is a stirring examination of the quirks and complexities of life and the desire of two strangers to find acceptance in a world where no one else will listen. Fuelled by a rich imagination and dedication to a unique artistic vision, Mary and Max is a triumph of animation that tackles quite effectively some very heavy themes.
Throughout the extent of the films' running time we are continuously learning more about the two characters, with most of it revealed through their correspondence by letters. We are first introduced to Mary (voiced by Bethany Whitmore), an 8-year-old plump and bespectacled girl from Melbourne who has an unfortunate birthmark on her forehead. Her mother is an alcoholic who has all but lost touch with reality, and her father stays busy working his factory job of attaching the string to the tea bag. Her only friend is her pet rooster, who "doesn't lay eggs but will someday" and she dreams of marrying a man named Earl Grey and living in a mansion with her nine children. Mary is compelled to learn about the outside world by posing a question to a complete stranger from America. Equipped with the knowledge that babies come from the bottom of beer glasses, courtesy of her grandmother, she asks Max Jerry Horowitz about the origins of babies in America. Max (voiced by an unrecognizable Phillip Seymour-Hoffman) is an overweight 44-year-old Jewish man from New York City. He lives in isolation in his apartment with an assortment of pets, and is endowed with a series of odd mannerisms that make it difficult for him to relate to others. He frequently encounters severe panic attacks and finds social interaction confusing. His only weekly socialising are his Overeaters Anonymous meetings, and the occasional call from his 'near-blind' neighbour.
Max receives Mary's letter, which also includes a small self-portrait and a chocolate bar, and while confused at first, he decides to write back and answer her question, relishing the opportunity to justify to a complete stranger his many quirks. They remain in correspondence for years, offering creative insights into each others problems, exchanging passions and interests and contemplating the confusion of everyday life. Max suffers from panic attacks, including one serious enough to hospitalize him, and result in the diagnosis of Asperger's Syndrome, which explains why he sees the world in a different way to most people. Mary grows older, and is voiced by Toni Collette, and after finding out about Max's diagnosis, she majors in psychological disorders at University, hoping to find a cure for Max's problem. She also marries her longtime crush (voiced by Eric Bana).
My Rating: 3 1/2 Stars
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
The 83rd Academy Award Nominations
Well here they are! The nominees for the 83rd Academy Awards. Not many surprises to he honest, but when one appears, I'll bring it up.
Best Picture
127 Hours
Black Swan
The Fighter
Inception
The Kids are All Right
The King's Speech
The Social Network
Toy Story 3
True Grit
Winter's Bone
No surprises here. These were my top 10. 127 Hours took the final spot over The Town.
Best Director
Darren Aronofsky, Black Swan
The Coen Brothers, True Grit
David Fincher, The Social Network
Tom Hooper, The King's Speech
David O' Russell, The Fighter
Best Actress
Annette Bening, The Kids Are All Right
Nicole Kidman, Rabbit Hole
Jennifer Lawrence, Winter's Bone
Natalie Portman, Black Swan
Michelle Williams, Blue Valentine
Best Actor
Javier Bardem, Biutiful
Jeff Bridges, True Grit
Jesse Eisenberg, The Social Network
Colin Firth, The King's Speech
James Franco, 127 Hours
Javier Bardem claims the last spot over Ryan Gosling for his work in Biutiful.
Best Supporting Actress
Amy Adams, The Fighter
Helena Bonham-Carter, The King's Speech
Melissa Leo, The Fighter
Hailee Steinfeld, True Grit
Jacki Weaver, Animal Kingdom
Best Supporting Actor
Christian Bale, The Fighter
John Hawkes, Winter's Bone
Geoffrey Rush, The King's Speech
Jeremy Renner, The Town
Mark Ruffalo, The Kids are All Right
No Andrew Garfield for The Social Network! Renner's inclusion doesn't make much sense to me here.
Best Original Screenplay
Another Year
The Fighter
Inception
The Kids are All Right
The King's Speech
Black Swan left out here. I had The Fighter missing out, but it now leads the nominees with six.
Best Adapted Screenplay
127 Hours
The Social Network
Toy Story 3
True Grit
Winter's Bone
Best Animated Feature
How to Train Your Dragon
L'Illusioniste
Toy Story 3
Best Art Direction
Alice in Wonderland
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part I
Inception
The King's Speech
True Grit
Best Cinematography
Black Swan
Inception
The King's Speech
The Social Network
True Grit
Best Costume Design
Alice in Wonderland
I Am Love
The King's Speech
The Tempest
True Grit
Best Documentary Feature
Exit Through the Gift Shop
Gasland
Inside Job
Restrepo
Wasteland
Best Documentary Short
Killing in the Name
Poster Girlstrangers No More
Sun Come Up
The Warriors of Qiugang
Best Editing
Black Swan
The Fighter
The King's Speech
127 Hours
The Social Network
Best Foreign Film
Biutiful
Dogtooth
In a Better World
Incendies
Outside the Law
Best Make-Up
Barney's Version
The Way Back
The Wolfman
Best Original Score
How to Train Your Dragon
Inception
The King's Speech
127 Hours
The Social Network
Best Original Song
"Coming Home", Country Song
"I See The Light", Tangled
"If I Rise", 127 Hours
"We Belong Together", Toy Story 3
Best Animated Short
Night and Day
The Gruffalo
Let's Pollute
The Lost Thing
Madagascar (A Journey Diary)
Best Live Action Short
The Confession
The Crush
God of Love
Na Wewe
Wish 143
Best Sound Editing
Inception
Toy Story 3
Tron: Legacy
True Grit
Unstoppable
No Black Swan here either?
Best Sound Mixing
Inception
The King's Speech
Salt
The Social Network
True Grit
Best Visual Effects
Alice in Wonderland
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part I
Hereafter
Inception
Iron Man 2
Final Tally:
The King's Speech - 12
True Grit - 10
The Social Network - 8
Inception - 8
The Fighter - 7
127 Hours - 6
Black Swan - 5
The Kids are All Right - 5
Toy Story 3 - 5
Winter's Bone - 4
Alice in Wonderland - 3
How to Train Your Dragon - 2
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part I - 2
Biutiful - 2
Rabbit Hole, Blue Valentine, Animal Kingdom, The Town, Another Year, I Am Love, Tron: Legacy, Salt, Unstoppable - 1
Best Picture
127 Hours
Black Swan
The Fighter
Inception
The Kids are All Right
The King's Speech
The Social Network
Toy Story 3
True Grit
Winter's Bone
No surprises here. These were my top 10. 127 Hours took the final spot over The Town.
Best Director
Darren Aronofsky, Black Swan
The Coen Brothers, True Grit
David Fincher, The Social Network
Tom Hooper, The King's Speech
David O' Russell, The Fighter
Best Actress
Annette Bening, The Kids Are All Right
Nicole Kidman, Rabbit Hole
Jennifer Lawrence, Winter's Bone
Natalie Portman, Black Swan
Michelle Williams, Blue Valentine
Best Actor
Javier Bardem, Biutiful
Jeff Bridges, True Grit
Jesse Eisenberg, The Social Network
Colin Firth, The King's Speech
James Franco, 127 Hours
Javier Bardem claims the last spot over Ryan Gosling for his work in Biutiful.
Best Supporting Actress
Amy Adams, The Fighter
Helena Bonham-Carter, The King's Speech
Melissa Leo, The Fighter
Hailee Steinfeld, True Grit
Jacki Weaver, Animal Kingdom
Best Supporting Actor
Christian Bale, The Fighter
John Hawkes, Winter's Bone
Geoffrey Rush, The King's Speech
Jeremy Renner, The Town
Mark Ruffalo, The Kids are All Right
No Andrew Garfield for The Social Network! Renner's inclusion doesn't make much sense to me here.
Best Original Screenplay
Another Year
The Fighter
Inception
The Kids are All Right
The King's Speech
Black Swan left out here. I had The Fighter missing out, but it now leads the nominees with six.
Best Adapted Screenplay
127 Hours
The Social Network
Toy Story 3
True Grit
Winter's Bone
Best Animated Feature
How to Train Your Dragon
L'Illusioniste
Toy Story 3
Best Art Direction
Alice in Wonderland
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part I
Inception
The King's Speech
True Grit
Best Cinematography
Black Swan
Inception
The King's Speech
The Social Network
True Grit
Best Costume Design
Alice in Wonderland
I Am Love
The King's Speech
The Tempest
True Grit
Best Documentary Feature
Exit Through the Gift Shop
Gasland
Inside Job
Restrepo
Wasteland
Best Documentary Short
Killing in the Name
Poster Girlstrangers No More
Sun Come Up
The Warriors of Qiugang
Best Editing
Black Swan
The Fighter
The King's Speech
127 Hours
The Social Network
Best Foreign Film
Biutiful
Dogtooth
In a Better World
Incendies
Outside the Law
Best Make-Up
Barney's Version
The Way Back
The Wolfman
Best Original Score
How to Train Your Dragon
Inception
The King's Speech
127 Hours
The Social Network
Best Original Song
"Coming Home", Country Song
"I See The Light", Tangled
"If I Rise", 127 Hours
"We Belong Together", Toy Story 3
Best Animated Short
Night and Day
The Gruffalo
Let's Pollute
The Lost Thing
Madagascar (A Journey Diary)
Best Live Action Short
The Confession
The Crush
God of Love
Na Wewe
Wish 143
Best Sound Editing
Inception
Toy Story 3
Tron: Legacy
True Grit
Unstoppable
No Black Swan here either?
Best Sound Mixing
Inception
The King's Speech
Salt
The Social Network
True Grit
Best Visual Effects
Alice in Wonderland
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part I
Hereafter
Inception
Iron Man 2
Final Tally:
The King's Speech - 12
True Grit - 10
The Social Network - 8
Inception - 8
The Fighter - 7
127 Hours - 6
Black Swan - 5
The Kids are All Right - 5
Toy Story 3 - 5
Winter's Bone - 4
Alice in Wonderland - 3
How to Train Your Dragon - 2
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part I - 2
Biutiful - 2
Rabbit Hole, Blue Valentine, Animal Kingdom, The Town, Another Year, I Am Love, Tron: Legacy, Salt, Unstoppable - 1
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
Review: Monster (Patty Jenkins, 2003)
Monster, written and directed by Patty Jenkins, is a bleak but engaging recount of the story of convicted serial killer Aileen Wuornos, who was executed in the state of Florida in 2002 for the murder of seven men in the late 1980's and early 1990's. The case received a bunch of media attention, presenting Wuornos as an imposing monstrous presence, and tagged as "America's first female serial killer." At the centre of the drama is a truly startling Oscar winning performance from Charlize Theron as Wuornos, a Florida-residing prostitute who killed men after they picked her up in their cars. Theron's commitment to this role required her to gain about 30 pounds and wear prosthetic teeth. She also underwent an impressive transformation to closely resemble the woman's appearance. Much of her own preparation came from watching clips in between takes of Nick Bloomfield's 1992 documentary, Aileen Wuornos: The Selling of a Serial Killer. While she receives excellent support from Christina Ricci as her lesbian lover, Selby Wall, their somewhat incredible romance is certainly a key detractor from the film.
While the screenplay is essentially a glaring simplification of the life of Aileen Wuornos, Monster takes an unbiased and compelling look at the anatomy of a naturally-born serial killer, from the roots of her motives and her relationship with Selby Wall, to the willingness to commit acts of pure evil out of desperation and ultimately her sincere regret for the course of her actions. At all times though, we are studying the human side of this woman, with brief glimpses of the monstrous. The film actually forces us to side with Aileen, and not merely because she is the centre of the film. If we were to despise her, I'm sure the reception of the film would not be nearly as warm. Patty Jenkins presents her as a near-helpless woman trying desperately to avoid falling any lower than she already is, and desiring to become someone respected by society. An intimidating, cursing, chain-smoking, beer drinking presence, she was an irrational woman all her life. Completely broke, she patrols the barren Florida highways, flagging down cars and offering her experienced services to slimy men. She struggles to survive day to day off her hooking income, forced to wash herself in public restrooms.
After a very swift montage of the early years of Aileen's life, we are thrust straight into her adult life; the period following her move to Florida. This montage is accompanied by a voice-over from Theron, explaining that Aileen had never been able to fit in and just wanted people to recognize and love her for who she truly was. It is one night that she decides to use the remaining five dollars she had in her possession on a beer. In a gay club, she orders a beer and is approached by the sexually curious teenager Selby Wall, who offers to buy her a drink. After initial verbal retaliation from Aileen, she allows her to sit and converse with her. She remains adamant that she has had no lesbian experience, but essentially her sordid profession had left her with no taste for sex at all. After taking to her immediately, Selby invites Aileen to stay the night with her, and the unlikely friendship blossoms. For Selby, however, her new friendship poses a threat to her current household. She is temporarily exiled from her parents place following the accusation from another girl at church that Selby tried to kiss her. Having been attracted to Aileen and finding her presence protective, she decides to remain in Florida and move into an apartment with her.
It is only affordable for the couple because of Aileen's first murder of a client (Lee Tergesen, OZ), who she killed out of self-defense as the man had at first tried to rape and brutalize her. Following a series of failed attempts to find legitimate work, a frustrated Aileen returns to prostitution, where she embarks on her killing rampage. She robs her victims so she can support both herself and Selby, who are now struggling to pay their bills. While the murders are planned at origin, she finds herself becoming more and more desperate to evade capture, even having to kill an sympathetic elderly man who had offered to help her.
Charlize Theron's captivating performance is certainly amongst the decades most impressive. She doesn't just 'play' Wuornos, she totally inhabits her overwhelming pity for herself, her volcanic anger, an occasional sense of euphoria but mostly her impenetrable sadness at her own existence. Through her performance you realize that she empathizes with Eileen Wuornos and is channeling all of her feelings about this woman through her speech and mannerisms. Most of this is revealed in the eyes; and not just how committed Theron is to the role, but also how scarred and broken her character truly is. Technically, it's not so impressive. The grainy cinematography, which actually reminded me a lot of John McNaughton's Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer, lacks some imagination, resorting mostly to alternating close-ups during dialogue. This was an effective way to display, countless times throughout the film, just how impressive Theron's makeover is. All of the dealings with her clients in their cars are shot the same way, and it becomes slightly repetitive, while the relationship with Selby also feels dramatized. Was Selby really so naive as to be seduced into living with Aileen? Where was the appeal? She becomes frustrated with Aileen for not providing for them, while she sits around the apartment all day. While she refuses to look for work, Aileen is out killing people to provide for her. The unnecessary arc that sees Selby meeting some women at a bar and deciding to take Aileen to the fun-fair, also felt out-of-place.
The conclusion, which was the subject of much publicity at the time and has been captured in the aforementioned documentary, is quickly wrapped up. Selby testifies against Wuornos at her trial, and she is convicted and sentenced to death. Monster is a repulsive but gripping portrayal of one woman's tragic life. We find that there are no excuses for her actions, but there were reasons, and the film is a success in making these visible.
While the screenplay is essentially a glaring simplification of the life of Aileen Wuornos, Monster takes an unbiased and compelling look at the anatomy of a naturally-born serial killer, from the roots of her motives and her relationship with Selby Wall, to the willingness to commit acts of pure evil out of desperation and ultimately her sincere regret for the course of her actions. At all times though, we are studying the human side of this woman, with brief glimpses of the monstrous. The film actually forces us to side with Aileen, and not merely because she is the centre of the film. If we were to despise her, I'm sure the reception of the film would not be nearly as warm. Patty Jenkins presents her as a near-helpless woman trying desperately to avoid falling any lower than she already is, and desiring to become someone respected by society. An intimidating, cursing, chain-smoking, beer drinking presence, she was an irrational woman all her life. Completely broke, she patrols the barren Florida highways, flagging down cars and offering her experienced services to slimy men. She struggles to survive day to day off her hooking income, forced to wash herself in public restrooms.
After a very swift montage of the early years of Aileen's life, we are thrust straight into her adult life; the period following her move to Florida. This montage is accompanied by a voice-over from Theron, explaining that Aileen had never been able to fit in and just wanted people to recognize and love her for who she truly was. It is one night that she decides to use the remaining five dollars she had in her possession on a beer. In a gay club, she orders a beer and is approached by the sexually curious teenager Selby Wall, who offers to buy her a drink. After initial verbal retaliation from Aileen, she allows her to sit and converse with her. She remains adamant that she has had no lesbian experience, but essentially her sordid profession had left her with no taste for sex at all. After taking to her immediately, Selby invites Aileen to stay the night with her, and the unlikely friendship blossoms. For Selby, however, her new friendship poses a threat to her current household. She is temporarily exiled from her parents place following the accusation from another girl at church that Selby tried to kiss her. Having been attracted to Aileen and finding her presence protective, she decides to remain in Florida and move into an apartment with her.
Charlize Theron's captivating performance is certainly amongst the decades most impressive. She doesn't just 'play' Wuornos, she totally inhabits her overwhelming pity for herself, her volcanic anger, an occasional sense of euphoria but mostly her impenetrable sadness at her own existence. Through her performance you realize that she empathizes with Eileen Wuornos and is channeling all of her feelings about this woman through her speech and mannerisms. Most of this is revealed in the eyes; and not just how committed Theron is to the role, but also how scarred and broken her character truly is. Technically, it's not so impressive. The grainy cinematography, which actually reminded me a lot of John McNaughton's Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer, lacks some imagination, resorting mostly to alternating close-ups during dialogue. This was an effective way to display, countless times throughout the film, just how impressive Theron's makeover is. All of the dealings with her clients in their cars are shot the same way, and it becomes slightly repetitive, while the relationship with Selby also feels dramatized. Was Selby really so naive as to be seduced into living with Aileen? Where was the appeal? She becomes frustrated with Aileen for not providing for them, while she sits around the apartment all day. While she refuses to look for work, Aileen is out killing people to provide for her. The unnecessary arc that sees Selby meeting some women at a bar and deciding to take Aileen to the fun-fair, also felt out-of-place.
My Rating: 4 Stars
Golden Razzie Nominations
With thanks to Rotten Tomatoes, I was made aware of the Golden Razzie nominees for 2010:
"2010 was a year when those abnoxious "surcharges" for 3-D glasses boosted movie studios' bottom lines, while actual attendance dropped once again. It was a year when most of what Hollywood released was either a remake, a "reboot", a "re-imagining" or an outright rip-off. In other words, it was a banner year for only one of Tinsel Town's best-known award ceremonies..the one that dis-honors the Worst Achievements in Film. Voting members of The Golden Raspberry Award Foundation have sifted through the cinematic rubble of last year and selected nominees for The 31st Annual Razzie Awards, with winners set to be announced in ceremonies at Hollywood's Barnsdall Gallery Theatre on February 26 - the now traditional Night Before the Oscars."
Here are the Nominees:
Worst Picture
The Bounty Hunter
The Last Airbender
Sex and the City 2
Twilight Saga: Eclipse
Vampires Suck
Worst Director
Jason Frieberg and Aaron Seltzer (Vampires Suck)
Michael Patrick King (Sex and the City 2)
M. Night Shyamalan (The Last Airbender)
David Slade (Twilight Saga: Eclipse)
Sylvester Stallone (The Expendables)
Worst Actor
Jack Black (Gulliver's Travels)
Gerard Butler (The Bounty Hunter)
Ashton Kutcher (Killers, Valentines Day)
Robert Pattinson (Twilight Saga: Eclipse, Remember Me)
Tyler Lautner (Twilight Saga: Eclipse, Valentines Day)
Worst Actress
Jennifer Anniston (The Bounty Hunter, The Switch)
Miley Cyrus (The Last Song)
Sarah Jessica Parker, Kim Cattrall, Cynthia Nixon and Kristin Davis (Sex and the City 2)
Megan Fox (Jonah Hex)
Kristen Stewart (Twilight Saga: Eclipse)
Worst Supporting Actor
Billy Ray Cyrus (The Spy Next Door)
George Lopez (Marmaduke, The Spy Next Door, Valentines Day)
Dev Patel (The Last Airbender)
Rob Schneider (Grown Ups)
Jackson Rathbone (Twilight Saga: Eclipse, The Last Airbender)
Worst Supporting Actress
Jessica Alba (The Killer Inside Me, Little Fockers, Valentines Day)
Cher (Burlesque)
Liza Minelli (Sex and the City 2)
Nicola Peltz (The Last Airbender)
Barbara Streisand (Little Fockers)
Worst Screenplay
The Last Airbender
Little Fockers
Sex and the City 2
Twilight Saga: Eclipse
Vampires Suck
Thoughts?
"2010 was a year when those abnoxious "surcharges" for 3-D glasses boosted movie studios' bottom lines, while actual attendance dropped once again. It was a year when most of what Hollywood released was either a remake, a "reboot", a "re-imagining" or an outright rip-off. In other words, it was a banner year for only one of Tinsel Town's best-known award ceremonies..the one that dis-honors the Worst Achievements in Film. Voting members of The Golden Raspberry Award Foundation have sifted through the cinematic rubble of last year and selected nominees for The 31st Annual Razzie Awards, with winners set to be announced in ceremonies at Hollywood's Barnsdall Gallery Theatre on February 26 - the now traditional Night Before the Oscars."
Here are the Nominees:
Worst Picture
The Bounty Hunter
The Last Airbender
Sex and the City 2
Twilight Saga: Eclipse
Vampires Suck
Worst Director
Jason Frieberg and Aaron Seltzer (Vampires Suck)
Michael Patrick King (Sex and the City 2)
M. Night Shyamalan (The Last Airbender)
David Slade (Twilight Saga: Eclipse)
Sylvester Stallone (The Expendables)
Worst Actor
Jack Black (Gulliver's Travels)
Gerard Butler (The Bounty Hunter)
Ashton Kutcher (Killers, Valentines Day)
Robert Pattinson (Twilight Saga: Eclipse, Remember Me)
Tyler Lautner (Twilight Saga: Eclipse, Valentines Day)
Worst Actress
Jennifer Anniston (The Bounty Hunter, The Switch)
Miley Cyrus (The Last Song)
Sarah Jessica Parker, Kim Cattrall, Cynthia Nixon and Kristin Davis (Sex and the City 2)
Megan Fox (Jonah Hex)
Kristen Stewart (Twilight Saga: Eclipse)
Worst Supporting Actor
Billy Ray Cyrus (The Spy Next Door)
George Lopez (Marmaduke, The Spy Next Door, Valentines Day)
Dev Patel (The Last Airbender)
Rob Schneider (Grown Ups)
Jackson Rathbone (Twilight Saga: Eclipse, The Last Airbender)
Worst Supporting Actress
Jessica Alba (The Killer Inside Me, Little Fockers, Valentines Day)
Cher (Burlesque)
Liza Minelli (Sex and the City 2)
Nicola Peltz (The Last Airbender)
Barbara Streisand (Little Fockers)
Worst Screenplay
The Last Airbender
Little Fockers
Sex and the City 2
Twilight Saga: Eclipse
Vampires Suck
Thoughts?
Monday, January 24, 2011
Classic Scene: A Fish Called Wanda (1988)
Otto (Kevin Kline) and Ken (Michael Palin) walk out of the courtroom and discuss the likely death of one of the key witnesses in George's trial in A Fish Called Wanda.
Otto: Hi, hon. How you doin'? Ooh, you look great. I love your hair. Time for a coffee?
Ken: No. I've g-g-g...
Otto: Have you thought about it? (Grabs a piece of paper out of Ken's jacket pocket)
Why did he give you this? (He reads it) Eileen Coady. Basil Street.
What does he want you to do? Send her flowers? Do her shopping? Show her a good time? Rub her out? T... (Ken has stiffened in recoil)
He wants you to rub her out? ... He's going to kill her! (Laughing hysterically)
Ken: Fuck off, or I'll kill you.
Otto: So the old lady's gonna m-m-meet with an accident, eh, K-K-Ken? (mocking Ken's stutter and again, laughing hysterically).
Ken: What's so funny?
Otto: It's just that wasting old ladies isn't nice!
Ken: Well it's better than b-b-b-buggering people.
Otto: I bet you a pound you don't kill her.
Ken: All right (walking away from Otto)
Otto: All right! I love watching your ass when you walk.
Is that beautiful or what?! (yelling after Ken) Don't go near him! He's mine!
A pound says he won't kill her!
Otto: Hi, hon. How you doin'? Ooh, you look great. I love your hair. Time for a coffee?
Ken: No. I've g-g-g...
Otto: Have you thought about it? (Grabs a piece of paper out of Ken's jacket pocket)
Why did he give you this? (He reads it) Eileen Coady. Basil Street.
What does he want you to do? Send her flowers? Do her shopping? Show her a good time? Rub her out? T... (Ken has stiffened in recoil)
He wants you to rub her out? ... He's going to kill her! (Laughing hysterically)
Ken: Fuck off, or I'll kill you.
Otto: So the old lady's gonna m-m-meet with an accident, eh, K-K-Ken? (mocking Ken's stutter and again, laughing hysterically).
Ken: What's so funny?
Otto: It's just that wasting old ladies isn't nice!
Ken: Well it's better than b-b-b-buggering people.
Otto: I bet you a pound you don't kill her.
Ken: All right (walking away from Otto)
Otto: All right! I love watching your ass when you walk.
Is that beautiful or what?! (yelling after Ken) Don't go near him! He's mine!
A pound says he won't kill her!
Review: Coraline and the Secret Door (Henry Selick, 2009)
2009 was really a great year for animated feature films. Joining Henry Selick's Coraline are Pixar's transcendental masterpiece, Up, and Wes Anderson's brilliant adaptation of Roald Dahl's novel, Fantastic Mr Fox. I remember watching Coraline at the cinemas in 3D and really enjoying the experience. Endowed with stunning stop-motion animated visuals it is an imaginative, unique and genuinely creepy fairytale sure to please audiences of all ages. Henry Selick, who directed the beloved children classics The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993) and James and the Giant Peach (1996), expanded the possibilities of animation through the process of stop-motion. He gathered another Academy Award nomination here for his work on Coraline in the category of Best Animated Feature. Receiving popularity and acclaim at the 2009 Sydney Film Festival, Coraline is based on Neil Gaiman's 2002 novel of the same name, and was a massive project. At its peak it involved the work of 450 people, including up to 35 animators and 250 technicians and designers. The budget ballooned into the 60 Million range after the voice-cast of Dakota Fanning, Teri Hatcher, Jennifer Saunders, Dawn French, Keith David and Ian McShane were introduced, but the end result is an exquisitely realized and universally well-received fairy tale adventure.
Technically, this is a spectacular achievement, and grand entertainment. Selick adopts the perfect look to bring Gaiman's story to life, with so many subtle features effortlessly conveyed. The oddities of each the characters are really charming, and Coraline is quite likable as the lead. The voice-cast is also stellar, especially Dakota Fanning and Keith David. The film opens strongly, developing Coraline's curiosity, her aggravation of not being taken seriously and her frustration in being cooped up in a boring old house. This alternative reality, and the adventures it endows upon her, is everything sought by her personality. But once the film becomes darker and becomes a rescue attempt of the missing eyes of the 'lost souls' it delves into cliche a bit and becomes a bit carried away with its own ingenious irrelevancies. One excellent example is the sequence where the world starts disappearing as Coraline and the cat start to walk away from Pink Palace Apartments. The visuals slowly begin to dissolve into white, where it remains for a few seconds before the apartments begin to slowly appear once again. Coraline exclaims: "How can you walk away from something and come right back to it" or something similar. The cat explains: "By walking around the world." This is a brilliant visual feat, but somewhat unnecessary to the plot. It is these few moments that let the film down and make it a tad overlong at 100 minutes. Still, Coraline and the Secret Door is one of the years best films and is an animated feature I highly respect and can certainly recommend.
My Rating: 4 Stars
Review: The Lives of Others (Florian Henckel Von Donnersmarck, 2006)
It is great films like The Lives of Others that really demonstrates and reminds viewers of the possibility and power of filmmaking. A very deserving winner of Best Foreign Language Film at the 2006 Academy Awards, it is one of the most popular and certainly one of the very finest films of the decade. Tackling a context at the very heart of modern European history, director Florian Henckel Von Donnersmarck intricately weaves brilliant characters and profoundly moving human drama into a taut political thriller. Set in 1984, five years before the collapse of the Berlin Wall, the German Democratic Republic has set in place a strict government of the cultural scene in East Berlin. This policing is the responsibility of agents of the Stasi, who make it their business to use an extensive network of spies and surveillance to know everything about their citizens. It is a society that prays on human weakness, choosing to apprehend anyone who dares any dissension within the Communist Government allowing them to destroy the lives of any intellectual they liked.
My Rating: 5 Stars
Friday, January 21, 2011
Recent Viewing (Match Point and The Last King of Scotland)
Match Point (Woody Allen, 2005) *** 1/2
Match Point is a gripping drama about infidelity and the importance of chance in our lives. This is a well constructed screenplay from Allen, as he takes a new direction toward the erotic melodrama. Chris Wilton (Jonathan Rhys Meyers), after starting a risky affair with his friend's ex-fiance (Scarlett Johansson), decides he must cover up the affair to maintain his standard of living amongst the London elite. The final third of the film is genuinely tense, but is let down overall by average unlikable performances from the two leads.
The Last King of Scotland (Kevin McDonald, 2006) ****
A completely absorbing historical drama propelled by a pair of fantastic performances from Academy Award winner Forrest Whitaker (as the barbaric Idi Amin) and James McAvoy (as a young doctor, Nicholas Garrigan). Garrigan volunteers his services in Uganda and eventually is adopted by Amin as his family's personal physician and political colleague. He soon learns that Amin's seemingly outgoing nature towards his people masks a sinister underbelly, and once he is implicated in his horrifying regime, Garrigan realizes he must escape. There are two of the most gut-wrenching sequences I have witnessed towards the conclusion, and while the structure of the film is a bit misguided at times, the history that it reveals is important for all audiences. Definitely recommended.
Match Point is a gripping drama about infidelity and the importance of chance in our lives. This is a well constructed screenplay from Allen, as he takes a new direction toward the erotic melodrama. Chris Wilton (Jonathan Rhys Meyers), after starting a risky affair with his friend's ex-fiance (Scarlett Johansson), decides he must cover up the affair to maintain his standard of living amongst the London elite. The final third of the film is genuinely tense, but is let down overall by average unlikable performances from the two leads.
The Last King of Scotland (Kevin McDonald, 2006) ****
A completely absorbing historical drama propelled by a pair of fantastic performances from Academy Award winner Forrest Whitaker (as the barbaric Idi Amin) and James McAvoy (as a young doctor, Nicholas Garrigan). Garrigan volunteers his services in Uganda and eventually is adopted by Amin as his family's personal physician and political colleague. He soon learns that Amin's seemingly outgoing nature towards his people masks a sinister underbelly, and once he is implicated in his horrifying regime, Garrigan realizes he must escape. There are two of the most gut-wrenching sequences I have witnessed towards the conclusion, and while the structure of the film is a bit misguided at times, the history that it reveals is important for all audiences. Definitely recommended.
Who Will Feature Amongst the Oscar Nominees?
With the Academy set to reveal their nominations in less than a week, I am going to update my predictions: The only films I am yet to see that figure to be prominent are 127 Hours, True Grit, Another Year and Get Low. But these predictions are a mix of both the hype surrounding the ceremony and my own personal selections.
Best Picture
The Social Network
Black Swan
Inception
Toy Story 3
The Kids Are All Right
The King's Speech
The Fighter
True Grit
127 Hours
Winter's Bone
Missing Out: The Town, Another Year, Shutter Island, How to Train Your Dragon
Best Actor
Colin Firth, The King's Speech
James Franco, 127 Hours
Jeff Bridges, True Grit
Ryan Gosling, Blue Valentine
Jesse Eisenberg, The Social Network
Missing Out: Robert Duvall, Get Low and Javier Bardem, Biutiful.
Best Actress
Natalie Portman, Black Swan
Annette Bening, The Kids Are All Right
Jennifer Lawrence, Winter's Bone
Nicole Kidman, Rabbit Hole
Michelle Williams, Blue Valentine
Missing Out: Lesley Manville, Another Year and Julianne Moore, The Kids Are All Right
Best Supporting Actor
Christian Bale, The Fighter
Geoffrey Rush, The King's Speech
Andrew Garfield, The Social Network
Mark Ruffalo, The Kids Are All Right
John Hawkes, Winter's Bone
Missing Out: Bill Murray, Get Low, Jeremy Renner, The Town
Best Supporting Actress
Melissa Leo, The Fighter
Hailee Steinfeld, True Grit
Jacki Weaver, Animal Kingdom
Amy Adams, The Fighter
Mila Kunis, Black Swan
Missing Out: Helena Bonham Carter, The King's Speech and Dianne Wiest, Rabbit Hole
Best Director
David Fincher, The Social Network
Darren Aronofsky, Black Swan
David O. Russell, The Fighter
Christopher Nolan, Inception
Tom Hooper, The King's Speech
Missing Out: Danny Boyle, 127 Hours, Joel and Ethan Coen, True Grit and Mike Leigh, Another Year
Best Adapted Screenplay
The Social Network
Toy Story 3
True Grit
Winter's Bone
The Ghost Writer
Missing Out: Rabbit Hole, How to Train Your Dragon and 127 Hours
Best Original Screenplay
Black Swan
Inception
The King's Speech
The Kids Are All Right
Another Year
Missing Out: The Fighter and Blue Valentine
Best Editing
The Social Network
Inception
Black Swan
True Grit
The Fighter
Best Art Direction
Inception
The King's Speech
True Grit
Shutter Island
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part I
Best Cinematography
True Grit
Inception
Black Swan
The Social Network
Shutter Island
Best Costume Design
Alice in Wonderland
The King's Speech
True Grit
Black Swan
Made in Dagenham
Best Makeup
Alice in Wonderland
True Grit
The Wolfman
Best Original Score
Inception
The Social Network
The King's Speech
127 Hours
How to Train Your Dragon
Best Original Song (I have no idea here)
"I See the Light", Tangled
"You Haven't Heard The Last of Me", Burlesque
"We Belong Together", Toy Story 3
"If I Rise", 127 Hours
"Coming Home", Country Song
Best Sound Editing
Inception
Tron: Legacy
How to Train Your Dragon
Iron Man 2
Black Swan
Best Sound Mixing
Inception
Black Swan
Tron: Legacy
The Social Network
True Grit
Best Visual Effects
Tron: Legacy
Inception
Alice in Wonderland
Scott Pilgrim vs. the World
Iron Man 2
Best Animated Feature
Toy Story 3
How to Train Your Dragon
Tangled
Missing Out: The Illusionist
Best Documentary Feature
Waiting for Superman
The Tillman Story
Inside Job
Restrepo
Exit Through the Gift Shop
Best Foreign Language Film
In a Better World, Denmark
Outside the Law, Algeria
Incendies, Canada
Biutiful, Mexico
Life, Above All, South Africa
Leading Nominees
Black Swan - 10
Inception - 10
True Grit - 10
The Social Network - 9
The King's Speech - 8
The Fighter -6
127 Hours - 4
Toy Story 3 - 4
Winter's Bone - 4
The Kids Are All Right - 4
How to Train Your Dragon - 3
Tron: Legacy - 3
Shutter Island - 2
Blue Valentine - 2
Alice in Wonderland - 2
Tangled - 2
Thoughts?
Best Picture
The Social Network
Black Swan
Inception
Toy Story 3
The Kids Are All Right
The King's Speech
The Fighter
True Grit
127 Hours
Winter's Bone
Missing Out: The Town, Another Year, Shutter Island, How to Train Your Dragon
Best Actor
Colin Firth, The King's Speech
James Franco, 127 Hours
Jeff Bridges, True Grit
Ryan Gosling, Blue Valentine
Jesse Eisenberg, The Social Network
Missing Out: Robert Duvall, Get Low and Javier Bardem, Biutiful.
Best Actress
Natalie Portman, Black Swan
Annette Bening, The Kids Are All Right
Jennifer Lawrence, Winter's Bone
Nicole Kidman, Rabbit Hole
Michelle Williams, Blue Valentine
Missing Out: Lesley Manville, Another Year and Julianne Moore, The Kids Are All Right
Best Supporting Actor
Christian Bale, The Fighter
Geoffrey Rush, The King's Speech
Andrew Garfield, The Social Network
Mark Ruffalo, The Kids Are All Right
John Hawkes, Winter's Bone
Missing Out: Bill Murray, Get Low, Jeremy Renner, The Town
Best Supporting Actress
Melissa Leo, The Fighter
Hailee Steinfeld, True Grit
Jacki Weaver, Animal Kingdom
Amy Adams, The Fighter
Mila Kunis, Black Swan
Missing Out: Helena Bonham Carter, The King's Speech and Dianne Wiest, Rabbit Hole
Best Director
David Fincher, The Social Network
Darren Aronofsky, Black Swan
David O. Russell, The Fighter
Christopher Nolan, Inception
Tom Hooper, The King's Speech
Missing Out: Danny Boyle, 127 Hours, Joel and Ethan Coen, True Grit and Mike Leigh, Another Year
Best Adapted Screenplay
The Social Network
Toy Story 3
True Grit
Winter's Bone
The Ghost Writer
Missing Out: Rabbit Hole, How to Train Your Dragon and 127 Hours
Best Original Screenplay
Black Swan
Inception
The King's Speech
The Kids Are All Right
Another Year
Missing Out: The Fighter and Blue Valentine
Best Editing
The Social Network
Inception
Black Swan
True Grit
The Fighter
Best Art Direction
Inception
The King's Speech
True Grit
Shutter Island
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part I
Best Cinematography
True Grit
Inception
Black Swan
The Social Network
Shutter Island
Best Costume Design
Alice in Wonderland
The King's Speech
True Grit
Black Swan
Made in Dagenham
Best Makeup
Alice in Wonderland
True Grit
The Wolfman
Best Original Score
Inception
The Social Network
The King's Speech
127 Hours
How to Train Your Dragon
Best Original Song (I have no idea here)
"I See the Light", Tangled
"You Haven't Heard The Last of Me", Burlesque
"We Belong Together", Toy Story 3
"If I Rise", 127 Hours
"Coming Home", Country Song
Best Sound Editing
Inception
Tron: Legacy
How to Train Your Dragon
Iron Man 2
Black Swan
Best Sound Mixing
Inception
Black Swan
Tron: Legacy
The Social Network
True Grit
Best Visual Effects
Tron: Legacy
Inception
Alice in Wonderland
Scott Pilgrim vs. the World
Iron Man 2
Best Animated Feature
Toy Story 3
How to Train Your Dragon
Tangled
Missing Out: The Illusionist
Best Documentary Feature
Waiting for Superman
The Tillman Story
Inside Job
Restrepo
Exit Through the Gift Shop
Best Foreign Language Film
In a Better World, Denmark
Outside the Law, Algeria
Incendies, Canada
Biutiful, Mexico
Life, Above All, South Africa
Leading Nominees
Black Swan - 10
Inception - 10
True Grit - 10
The Social Network - 9
The King's Speech - 8
The Fighter -6
127 Hours - 4
Toy Story 3 - 4
Winter's Bone - 4
The Kids Are All Right - 4
How to Train Your Dragon - 3
Tron: Legacy - 3
Shutter Island - 2
Blue Valentine - 2
Alice in Wonderland - 2
Tangled - 2
Thoughts?
Thursday, January 20, 2011
Recent Viewing (Babel and A Single Man)
Babel (Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, 2006) - ***1/2
Babel is another powerful and compelling installment from Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu (Amores Perros and 21 Grams), but is far too long. The screenplay covers four separate international stories that become intertwined through disastrous circumstances, resulting in heartbreaking consequences. Features excellent performances, especially from Rinko Kikuchi (who received an Oscar nomination), and a beautiful score. The only story that kept me completely captivated was the one set in Japan. Really depressing stuff.
A Single Man (Tom Ford, 2009) - ****
Tom Ford's sad but satisfying debut, A Single Man, features some stunning production design, a beautiful score and another superb performance from Colin Firth (more recently, The King's Speech). The film follows a likable middle-aged college professor (Firth), who over the duration of a 24 hour period, which also marks the year anniversary of the sudden death of his lover, experiences a turbulent emotional journey. One of the most visually sensual films I have ever seen.
Babel is another powerful and compelling installment from Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu (Amores Perros and 21 Grams), but is far too long. The screenplay covers four separate international stories that become intertwined through disastrous circumstances, resulting in heartbreaking consequences. Features excellent performances, especially from Rinko Kikuchi (who received an Oscar nomination), and a beautiful score. The only story that kept me completely captivated was the one set in Japan. Really depressing stuff.
A Single Man (Tom Ford, 2009) - ****
Tom Ford's sad but satisfying debut, A Single Man, features some stunning production design, a beautiful score and another superb performance from Colin Firth (more recently, The King's Speech). The film follows a likable middle-aged college professor (Firth), who over the duration of a 24 hour period, which also marks the year anniversary of the sudden death of his lover, experiences a turbulent emotional journey. One of the most visually sensual films I have ever seen.
Releases 20/01
Today marks the release of Darren Aronofsky' s psychological horror/thriller Black Swan, David O. Russell's The Fighter, Michel Gondry's long-awaited The Green Hornet, and an intriguing documentary called Catfish.
Black Swan, which stars Golden Globe winner for Best Actress (Drama), Natalie Portman, is a chilling journey into one ballerinas quest for artistic perfection, as she tries to embody both the white and the black swan for her role as the Swan Queen in Swan Lake. The Fighter is a better than average boxing biopic about Mickey Ward (Mark Wahlberg) an up-and-coming welterweight boxer who has to overcome a working class upbringing and step out of the shadow of his older half-brother Dicky Eklund (Christian Bale). Excellent performances from Wahlberg and Amy Adams, and Golden Globe winners for their supporting performances, Christian Bale and Melissa Leo. Catfish is a very interesting documentary about the horrifying repercussions of social alienation brought about through the misuse of Facebook. All of these films are recommended.
I haven't seen The Green Hornet yet, but with the exception of one glowing review, I haven't heard anything really positive. Still, I like Gondry, so I'll check it out.
Links to Reviews:
- Black Swan (Darren Aronofsky, 2010)
- The Fighter (David O. Russell, 2010)
Black Swan, which stars Golden Globe winner for Best Actress (Drama), Natalie Portman, is a chilling journey into one ballerinas quest for artistic perfection, as she tries to embody both the white and the black swan for her role as the Swan Queen in Swan Lake. The Fighter is a better than average boxing biopic about Mickey Ward (Mark Wahlberg) an up-and-coming welterweight boxer who has to overcome a working class upbringing and step out of the shadow of his older half-brother Dicky Eklund (Christian Bale). Excellent performances from Wahlberg and Amy Adams, and Golden Globe winners for their supporting performances, Christian Bale and Melissa Leo. Catfish is a very interesting documentary about the horrifying repercussions of social alienation brought about through the misuse of Facebook. All of these films are recommended.
I haven't seen The Green Hornet yet, but with the exception of one glowing review, I haven't heard anything really positive. Still, I like Gondry, so I'll check it out.
Links to Reviews:
- Black Swan (Darren Aronofsky, 2010)
- The Fighter (David O. Russell, 2010)
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
New Release Review: The Fighter (David O. Russell, 2010)
The Fighter is an above average autobiographical sports feature film from director David O. Russell (Three Kings, 1999), and starring Mark Wahlberg in the central role of Mickey "Irish" Ward, a promising professional welterweight boxer caught in the shadow of his older half-brother Dicky Eklund (Christian Bale). It also stars Melissa Leo as the brothers' mother Alice, and Amy Adams as Mickey's girlfriend Charlene. Set in Lowell, Massachusetts, the film was nominated for six Golden Globe awards, picking up wins for Bale and Leo in the supporting performance categories. Darren Aronofksy, who remains credited as an Executive Producer, was originally signed on to direct the film, but he opted out to direct The Wrestler (2008), and then Black Swan (2010) instead.
I was very impressed with David O. Russell's work here, transforming The Fighter into an entertaining yet somewhat predictable sporting biopic that pays close attention to the characters and Ward's turbulent relationship with his family that sadly hinders his ascension into the boxing elite. It also remains a compelling commentary on the hardships of the small-town Massachusetts working class, and the scary impacts of drug addiction. Well made films like The Fighter can be pleasing even if they have been made dozens of times before. But this is all based on a true story, so essentially all of the incredible events portrayed here are true to life. The script is great, the performances are all excellent, and the shot-for-shot replication of the fight sequences is thoroughly realistic and brutal. The gritty cinematography during these sequences was also superb. Russell used the exact same cameras from that era and captured the footage in such a way that it appears just like it would have on the television during the 1990's.
Dicky Eklund, a gaunt and mentally affected crack addict, is consistently late to his brothers' scheduled training sessions and often arrives intoxicated. Dicky, once the pride of the Lowell working class, remains popular amongst the locals and adored by his mother and sisters (who seem to ignore his drug problem). Dicky is clinging to a brief moment of fame, having once knocked down Sugar Ray Leonard, despite alternative claims that he slipped. While still physically fit, his moment has passed and he is now trying to experience the success that was denied him, through his equally talented younger brother. He is so disillusioned from his drug habits that not only does he fail to realize the negative impact he has on his brothers' career, but he believes a team of HBO filmmakers are following him around and documenting his comeback to professional boxing. They are actually capturing the effects of crack addiction, which is horrifyingly portrayed on free-to-air television, much to the unexpected embarrassment of Dicky. This is a very prominent arc for the first half of the film, until Dicky is jailed for a series of ever-worsening felonies. Embarrassed by a humiliating loss experienced because of false opponent statistics provided by the promoters and his brother's poor advice, Mickey lays low and all-but quits boxing. After his brother is jailed, and inspired by his new girlfriend, Charline, Mickey finds new management and training, and the second half of the film chronicles Mickey's rise to success, culminating in his title fight in London.
The quartet of inspired performances are all outstanding. While overshadowed by the other flashy Oscar-baiting performances, Wahlberg is very solid in the title role. He plays Mickey Ward as reserved and low-key, and really holds the film together. Christian Bale, thoroughly deserving of his Golden Globe victory, actually starts out very irritating. Bale is over-the-top and chews up the scenery but I really liked him in the latter half when Dicky is released from prison. He is very very good. Having once again lost a lot of weight to portray a role, Bale impressively captures Dicky's mannerisms and Boston accent. Many would claim that Bale is one of the most dedicated 'Method' actors in Hollywood, but Mark Wahlberg's story to be prepared for this role is also astonishing. Wahlberg elected to star in the film due to his personal friendship with Ward, with both men being brought up amongst large working-class families in Massachusetts. In preparation for the role, Wahlberg underwent a strict bodybuilding exercise regimen, dedicating four years of training to obtain the physique to convincingly portray Ward. He apparently even took real punches throughout filming, and refused to use a stunt double, to increase the films' realism. The Ward brothers reportedly even moved into Wahlberg's home during pre-production. That is impressive dedication. Melissa Leo's recognition at the Globes is also warranted, though I really thought it would go to Amy Adams, long one of my favorite actresses. She delivers a tough Oscar-calibre performance as Mickey's bartender girlfriend, who makes him realize the toxic influence his family has on him and supports him through a transition into a more stable management relationship.
The Fighter is certainly much better than I expected, but I still can't shake it's predictable conformity to the genre. The dedication behind the incredible performances and the accurate recapturing of these character's lives makes this much better than average, however. It's a gritty, grueling and tragic struggle that presents some devastating moments in Ward's life, and a heartbreaking loyalty to family. It is because of what you witness throughout, that the final fight is actually rousing, inspiring entertainment.
My Rating: 3 1/2 Stars
Monday, January 17, 2011
New Release Review: Unstoppable (Tony Scott, 2010)
Unstoppable is the fourth film in the last seven years featuring a working collaboration between director Tony Scott and actor Denzel Washington. With the preceding works including Man on Fire (2004), Deja Vu (2006) and The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3 (2009), this is by far the best. Having said that, this is certainly no masterpiece, but a highlight in the recent careers of both Scott and Washington, who have nose-dived in the last decade. Well, it's a stretch to say that Scott's career was ever on a high. I guess he did direct True Romance back in 1993. Denzel, with the exception of Ridley Scott's epic American Gangster in 2007, hasn't been involved in a good film since he won his second Oscar for Training Day in 2001. But here with Unstoppable, Scott has completed an astonishing technical feat for one, and transformed a very thin screenplay based on the actual events of the CSX 8888 incident in Ohio into an a frenetic, edge-of-your seat train pursuit that leaves you clutching the sides of your chair out of suspense, and leaving the cinema beaming. I can't imagine anyone feeling such a way throughout Man on Fire or Pelham.
The drama in Unstoppable ensues after a pair of negligent railway engineers, working for the Allegheny and West Virginia Railroad (AWVR), loses control of a freight train and allow it to enter the main line unmanned. When they are instructed to move the train off it's current track to make room for a train carrying a class of school children on an excursion, one of the engineers (Ethan Suplee) irresponsibly decides not to connect the locomotives air hose to save time, leaving the lone control of the air brakes within the lead locomotive. When he discovers that an approaching switch is not set to the right track, he disembarks the lead locomotive to switch it by hand, but the levers inside the lead car switch from idle on their own accord. The train picks up speed, his attempts to re-board are unsuccessful and the train takes off along the Pennsylvania main line.
This also marks the first day of Will Colson's (Chris Pine) career at AWVR. Newly hired, and only four months out of training, he is partnered with veteran engineer Frank Barnes (Denzel Washington). Colson, on arrival, is met with ridicule from Barnes' veteran colleague, who reveals his despise for rookie conductors, who are brought in on lower salaries to replace the more experienced veterans, who are subsequently laid off. It is revealed later that Barnes is one of the men made redundant. Barnes and Colson take their locomotive out to Southern Pennsylvania city of Stanton, where they pick up their train for the day. Colson, distracted by phone calls that update his ongoing appeal to the restraining order placed against him by his wife, by mistake attaches too many cars. Unable to reverse their load to return the cars, they start out for their destination along the main line in the opposing direction to the unmanned train.
Once news of the unmanned train is made known to Yardmaster Connie Hooper (Rosario Dawson), she notifies Ned (Lew Temple), a welder for the railroad, to set a switch to maneuver the train off the main line, as the two negligent engineers attempt to catch up with the train by car. Once it is discovered the train is running under full power, not 'coasting' as previously thought, and carrying highly toxic chemicals and diesel fuel, Connie calls her superior, Oscar Galvin (Kevin Dunn) and informs him of the potentially disastrous situation if the train reaches the city of Stanton. Travelling at speed through densely populated areas, Connie and Galvin argue about the proper course of action, and after an unsuccessful derailment attempt at an evacuated town, it is left to the heroics of Colson and Barnes to stop the train. Due to Colson's mistake of attaching too many cars, they barely exit the main line in time to avoid the unmanned train, but they decide to release their front locomotive and drive it backwards in desperate pursuit of the runaway.
It is ludicrous, but exciting, heart-pounding entertainment. The opening third of the film is ridiculously lame and reminded me of Training Day all over again. Denzel Washington plays the veteran assigned with the rookie on his first day. He extends his knowledge and instructs him to ask if he doesn't know something, but challenges him to prove his training. They share small talk, and slowly begin to reveal the details of their personal lives throughout the day, which become more intimate and dramatic as their situation becomes even more dangerous. One such exchange is particularly corny when Barnes asks Colson if he is married. He replies: "Yep...sorta...it's a long story", which Barnes' replies: "Well it's a long day." Wow.
There also happens to be a group of school children on a railway excursion on the same day as all this transpires, and at one point their train is running head-on towards the speeding runaway, barely switching off the main line before a collision. They are never seen again. Related to this, there is also a Safety Inspector from the Railway Commission (Kevin Corrigan) waiting at Connie Hooper's office to deliver a presentation to the children. Conveniently he sticks around and assists Barnes throughout their pursuit and attempts to slow the train. Everything is majorly exaggerated here, from the terrifying speed of the train, to the series of implausible incidents that happen en-route of the main line in an attempt to stop the train, to the unnecessary conflict that ensues between Connie Hooper and Galvin. Also amazing is the startling footage that the media captures of their heroics, equipped with swiftly produced diagrams of the possible outcome of the plan to derail, which is being broadcast live around the Nation. Despite all of these ridiculous features, and a screenplay riddled with horrible dialogue, it is hard not to be overwhelmed with excitement and emotion by the end.
Washington and Pine are very well cast, and while their characters are pretty cliche to the genre, they bring a toughness and likability to their roles. Rosario Dawson, who looks at first to be miscast, is also quite good. But the shallow supporting characters are all poorly developed. Tony Scott's hyperactive visual style, which was distracting in many of his previous films, is quite controlled here. The runaway train is captured from all angles as this ominous missile (as Connie Hooper calls it) chugging towards what feels like oblivion for Stanton, while the close synchronised passing of trains, and the final pursuit is technically brilliant. The pace is relentless and the stunts are impressive. Unstoppable is much better than I expected, and one of Tony Scott's best films. Though seemingly implausible, littered with cliches and predictable, the final forty minutes is some of the most heart-pounding action I have seen in a long time, transforming this into just above-average popcorn fare.
This also marks the first day of Will Colson's (Chris Pine) career at AWVR. Newly hired, and only four months out of training, he is partnered with veteran engineer Frank Barnes (Denzel Washington). Colson, on arrival, is met with ridicule from Barnes' veteran colleague, who reveals his despise for rookie conductors, who are brought in on lower salaries to replace the more experienced veterans, who are subsequently laid off. It is revealed later that Barnes is one of the men made redundant. Barnes and Colson take their locomotive out to Southern Pennsylvania city of Stanton, where they pick up their train for the day. Colson, distracted by phone calls that update his ongoing appeal to the restraining order placed against him by his wife, by mistake attaches too many cars. Unable to reverse their load to return the cars, they start out for their destination along the main line in the opposing direction to the unmanned train.
Once news of the unmanned train is made known to Yardmaster Connie Hooper (Rosario Dawson), she notifies Ned (Lew Temple), a welder for the railroad, to set a switch to maneuver the train off the main line, as the two negligent engineers attempt to catch up with the train by car. Once it is discovered the train is running under full power, not 'coasting' as previously thought, and carrying highly toxic chemicals and diesel fuel, Connie calls her superior, Oscar Galvin (Kevin Dunn) and informs him of the potentially disastrous situation if the train reaches the city of Stanton. Travelling at speed through densely populated areas, Connie and Galvin argue about the proper course of action, and after an unsuccessful derailment attempt at an evacuated town, it is left to the heroics of Colson and Barnes to stop the train. Due to Colson's mistake of attaching too many cars, they barely exit the main line in time to avoid the unmanned train, but they decide to release their front locomotive and drive it backwards in desperate pursuit of the runaway.
There also happens to be a group of school children on a railway excursion on the same day as all this transpires, and at one point their train is running head-on towards the speeding runaway, barely switching off the main line before a collision. They are never seen again. Related to this, there is also a Safety Inspector from the Railway Commission (Kevin Corrigan) waiting at Connie Hooper's office to deliver a presentation to the children. Conveniently he sticks around and assists Barnes throughout their pursuit and attempts to slow the train. Everything is majorly exaggerated here, from the terrifying speed of the train, to the series of implausible incidents that happen en-route of the main line in an attempt to stop the train, to the unnecessary conflict that ensues between Connie Hooper and Galvin. Also amazing is the startling footage that the media captures of their heroics, equipped with swiftly produced diagrams of the possible outcome of the plan to derail, which is being broadcast live around the Nation. Despite all of these ridiculous features, and a screenplay riddled with horrible dialogue, it is hard not to be overwhelmed with excitement and emotion by the end.
Washington and Pine are very well cast, and while their characters are pretty cliche to the genre, they bring a toughness and likability to their roles. Rosario Dawson, who looks at first to be miscast, is also quite good. But the shallow supporting characters are all poorly developed. Tony Scott's hyperactive visual style, which was distracting in many of his previous films, is quite controlled here. The runaway train is captured from all angles as this ominous missile (as Connie Hooper calls it) chugging towards what feels like oblivion for Stanton, while the close synchronised passing of trains, and the final pursuit is technically brilliant. The pace is relentless and the stunts are impressive. Unstoppable is much better than I expected, and one of Tony Scott's best films. Though seemingly implausible, littered with cliches and predictable, the final forty minutes is some of the most heart-pounding action I have seen in a long time, transforming this into just above-average popcorn fare.
My Rating: 3 Stars
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