Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Batman: Year One review

Batman: Year One - To spare confusion, this is a review of the recently released animated DVD. Yes, after being an inspiration (of varying degrees) to both Tim Burton and Christopher Nolan's first films involving the Dark Knight, someone finally got around to doing a rendition, albeit animated, of this classic graphic novel. Does it hold up? Let's find out.

Batman: Year One begins with Bruce Wayne/Batman (Ben McKenzie) returning to Gotham. Jim Gordon (the wonderful Bryan Cranston) is also arriving in Gotham after a transfer from Chicago. The two men face adversary from Gotham's corrupt police force, Mafiosos and rotten political underbelly.

The animated style of the film is, for the most part, not bad. The violence is well animated, and the whole thing essentially reads as a blow by blow reaccount of the original comic book. Which is not bad, depending on your taste. I would've liked some small deviation from the original, in that novelty is sometimes it's own reward. Most of the voice actors were well chosen and perform adequately to excellently, with one glaring omission. Bryan Cranston is excellent as Jim Gordon. Bret McKenzie is terrible as Batman, with the exception of a couple of excerpts that were so well written any one could have knocked out of the park. He reminds me of Altair from Assassin's Creed, saying everything in some horrible haunted monotone that evokes Hayden Christiansen's Anakin Skywalker. Okay, it's not that bad. Nothing is that bad. But Bret comes close. He's no Kevin Conroy (Batman: TAS), that's for damn sure. I think they wanted to evoke this scary serial killer thing with him, and that's all wrong for Batman.

Another problem that magnifies Bret's awful voice-acting is that the filmmakers have eliminated most of Batman's narration. As a result, he seems like almost a supporting character in his own film, which is odd considering the name of the film is Batman: Year One, not Jim Gordon: Year One. It's funny because Tim Burton practically made the Joker the protagonist in his Batman and Christopher Nolan pretty much made Harvey Dent the protagonist of The Dark Knight. Guys, if you don't find Batman interesting, don't make a Batman movie (Chris I'm kidding, continue to do what you do).

What it adds up to is an okay rendition of a classic graphic novel. Was it possible to live up to the original, given the amount of influence it had? Not really, but they could have done better had they offered a better Batman and not given essentially a retread. Good for some thrills but strangely forgettable, Batman: Year One gets a
C+

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Paranormal Activity 3 review

Happy almost Halloween everybody! It's time for a review of the weekend's big box-office hit. The Paranormal Activity series or as I like to call it the "obsessive camera guy with absurd amounts of spare time and incredibly spacious haunted luxury home" series (maybe their name for it is better) has done quite well over the last few years, and I rather like the tonal shift away from the torture porn movies that reigned as king in the aughts. To paraphrase another review, I like the type of horror this series does, and I like the audiences that go to see it. That said, is this film any good? Let's find out.

Paranormal Activity 3 - This film is a prequel to the previous films. We have a short clip of Katie (of films one and two) and her sister Kristi pregnant with Hunter in 2005 (prior to either 2 movies) and then we jump back further in time to September 1988, a month after I was born. I'm wondering if Paranormal Activity 4 will feature Katie in utero development with haunted ultrasound photos. Her family seems to go through this debacle regularly. The movie reveals that she was not always plagued by a demon but perhaps inherited him from her sister...which PA2 already implied. There's not much else this movie sheds light on that doesn't verge into the kind of awkward, reminding me almost of The Last Exorcism.

In terms of plot, the film is rather light. So there's not much to do but sit back and play I Spy. If that's your thing (and if, like me you saw the past two movies, it is) great. If not, or you dislike horror movies altogether, than by all means stay away. The movie does not verge from the now well established formula of the prior movies, and that's rather disappointing. Worse yet, the movie forgets what was, for me, the scariest part of the first (and still reigning scare champ) film: the minimalist but still frightening sounds. You can explode all the kitchen chairs or move the furniture up to the ceiling, but an almost inaudible growl or roar leaves me cringing.

Familiarity builds contempt, and the filmmakers have all but exhausted their bag of tricks it seems. Two or three or six cameras does not a better film make. And while I love the subtle slow build over the jump scare any day of the week, I confess I'm rather tired of the found footage device. When a child is crying in a corner, would you not put the camera down to comfort them? When a menace is apparent, would you not grab say - a knife or blunt implement - rather than slowly advance with a camera? It's the "He's right behind you! Don't split up! Don't open that door! For gods sakes, get a clue from that creepy music!" of our generation.

I had some chills and there are some suspenseful moments, albeit nothing compared to the first movie which left me too scared to sleep for hours. The ending is kind of a letdown, and I guessed early what at least part of the source of the trouble is, and you will too. I just hope the filmmakers don't pull a "Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning" to try and further undermine the spookfactor of "Toby".

More of the same, Paranormal Activity 3 gets a
B-

Friday, October 14, 2011

Drive review

Drive - Meant to do this one last week. In any case, Drive is a much heralded movie with a 93% on RottenTomatoes.com, and my notoriously hard to please friend enjoyed it. That said, did I like it? Well, yes and no. But more on that later.

A driver who will take any (five-minute long) job gets into trouble when a job goes wrong and he must fight mobsters and thugs to protect himself, a young mother and her son.

Drive stars Ryan Gosling stars as "The Driver". This lack of a name, or any major characterization beyond the man's mechanical purpose in the film, is telling as to just what sort of movie this film really is. It's a B-movie, with all the positives and negative attributed to that sort of movie. Drive relishes in the simple definitions and sense of morality that would make Stallone proud (Cobra and Rambo were B-movies after all). The Driver and a young boy are watching a cartoon and a Shark with legs appears onscreen. "He's the Bad Guy" one of them says. "How can you tell?" the other replies. We know, and we don't need explanations or motivations. Who says the 50s are dead? We still consider ourselves to be our jobs, and we judge overly on appearances.

I enjoyed the way the first half of this movie plays out. Actually, I really enjoyed the way the first five minutes of the movie play out. It's tight, nail-bitingly suspenseful, and without a drop of blood. The first half of the film is almost a different beast altogether from the rest of the film. It's serene, interesting, and not much is said. But then how much of what we say in the real world is that important? Small talk prevails, as meaningful subjects are avoided. We all die wishing we'd said more and meant more. The first half of the movie was like a poetic mirror. I actually lost myself in some of the vast pauses in conversation. Maybe I read too much into it.

Drive has a fantastic supporting cast and, in my opinion, wastes a few of my favorite TV actors. Anything is proportionally better the more Christina Hendricks is used. Unfortunately, by Hollywood standards, she's far too beautiful (in a lioness way) to be cast as anything other than the woman who is not to be trusted. It's weird to see Bryan Cranston with hair (Jessie!) and I would have liked to have seen more of him as well.

I thought the soundtrack to be another of Drive's stronger points. The cinematography is also excellent. Unfortunately, someone got splattergore in my cool suspense film. Yes, the second half of the film is an over-the-top Tarantino level of violence. It's unnecessary, and the film can do nothing but take it completely seriously or risk an even weirder tonal shift from the first half of the movie. It offers a mildly interesting contrariness to the serene/suspenseful first half of the movie, but then, so would putting a severed head next to a Mona Lisa. That doesn't mean I would enjoy seeing that either. Oh Drive, I had high hopes for you. Maybe someday there can be a mainstream art picture without a bodycount. Alas, we do not live in that civilized a day. Our hands too, are dirty. Drive, which is at the end of the day a B-movie, gets a
B.

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Our Idiot Brother review

Our Idiot Brother - Ned (Paul Rudd) is a stoner idealist. Due to a predictable albeit funny mistake on his part, Ned goes to jail. When he gets out, his girlfriend kicks him out of their house. Ned then relies on the charity of his mother and three sisters (Elizabeth Banks, Zooey Deschanel, and Emily Mortimer) and Ned accidentally exposes hidden truths about their lives.

This movie was a hidden gem! Didn't think much of the trailer for it, didn't intend to see it, but this movie is delightful. Ned is easily the best role Paul Rudd has played since his Anchorman role Brian Fantana, and Our Idiot Brother is his best film since Role Models. Too often Paul Rudd is cast as the snide straight man, while others like Steve Carrell play the goofball, but it's not my favorite role Paul gets to play. His handsomeness is what I think is to blame concerning Hollywood's typically unimaginative casting. Here, as Ned, Paul gets to (literally) let his hair down and approaches his role without cliche or self-awareness. It's genuine and sweet without being cloying. He's the perfect idealist, aware of himself and steadfast in his views regardless of the trouble they might lead to. What could be more annoying to a family of harpies and people caught in self denial?

Elizabeth Banks gets to play a bitch, and Zooey Deschanel plays someone who isn't ridiculously kooky. Steve Coogan, alas, still plays a snide bastard, but he does so with restraint.

I'm not crazy about the title as Ned isn't an idiot, and I feel it was a bad choice and may end up attracting the wrong people to the film and disappointing them. It's not a goofy slapstick film or a stoner comedy (though there are moments) and there aren't any lowest common denominator jokes. The title is the main misstep the movie makes. The laughs come often and the hippies "fighting" is hysterical. There is not a situation that feels cartoonish or unrealistic. Ned is someone I'd genuinely like to know. The world would probably be better off if more people followed in his....crocks. Okay, he's not perfect, and neither is the film. But the cracks are so small I would need a microscope to find them. I would gladly see this film again (probably on DVD) and it was a nice way to end the summer.

Our Idiot Brother gets a A-

Friday, August 26, 2011

Fright Night 3D

Fright Night 3D - All Charley (Anton Yelchin) every wanted was a normal life with his single mom (Toni Collette) and girlfriend (Imogen Poots) he suspects is too good for him. But Jerry (Colin Farrell), the next door neighbor has some strange mannerisms and habits. Kids are disappearing from class at school and Charley's former best friend Ed (Christopher Mintz-Plasse) suspects that Jerry is a vampire.

Okay, this movie is a lot of fun. It has some tightly coiled suspense, well crafted characters, and a good mix of horror and comedy. There's rather more of the former than the latter. What's more, the film isn't so meta (aside from a few jokes about vampire lore and Twilight) that you would get taken out of the story. The screenplay was done by Marti Noxon of the Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel writing staffs, and it's a well crafted piece of work. Although the film never gets much better tension-wise than the first scene with Jerry and Charley, it's still has plenty of thrills along the way. And it makes vampires into a dangerous difficult to kill menace again! A small but note-worthy achievement in a day where True Blood asks us to get along with them and Twilight desires for us to snuggle in a meadow with them.

Colin Farrell is excellent as Jerry the vampire. It's kind of a shame that as his box office returns get lower, Farrell delivers better and better. I also love David Tennant (of Doctor Who fame) in general, but he's great as vampire hunter/stage magician/drunk foul-mouthed hasbeen Peter Vincent.

Bottom line, Fright Night is a very fun, occasionally scary, well scripted movie. It's not amazing, and doesn't say anything new about the subject of vampires, but if you're going to do a re-make, it might as well be fun enough to make me forget that fact. In a month typically bereft of good movies, Fright Night is the best you're going to do for entertainment this August. Fright Night gets a B+

Friday, August 12, 2011

Glee: The 3D Concert Movie

Glee The 3D Concert Movie: This concert edition of the worldwide hit TV show, Glee, features performances from the concert by the cast and interviews with the cast and the fans.

Songs performed from the show include standard fare like "Somebody to Love" "Don't Rain on My Parade" and "Don't Stop Believing", but it also has more recent Season 2 material. I was pleased to see "River Deep, Mountain High" and "Ain't No Way". Gwenyth Paltrow also shows up to sing "Forget You". Really, none of the numbers hit a bum note. "Valerie" and "Slave 4 U" have some kickass dance numbers, and Finn, Puck and Artie all bring it with "Jessie's Girl" "Fat Bottomed Girls" and "P.Y.T". My favorites though have to be the Warblers. Darren Criss and his group of blazer boys are the perfect combo of charm, dance and harmony. Really, you either love Glee or you don't, and this is not likely to convert the non-fans.

However, despite my praise and love of the show, musical numbers and cast, I have some major criticisms. The movie is about an hour and a half long, with an extra half hour of ads (Thanks Fox!) on top of that. But once the concert gets going, there's always a break for an interview with a fan with a story. There's a girl with red hair and Aspergers who loves the show. There's a gay kid who looks up to Kurt. And there's a dwarf cheerleader who goes to prom. None of them are interesting, and they actively detract from the experience. I'm sorry guys, but I JUST DON'T CARE. The show has touched you. You see yourself as one of the cast. So does everyone else.

It's a concert movie, guys. It shouldn't be possible to screw this up, but they did. The sole exception in the distractions was this 4 year old Asian child in a Warbler blazer who has memorized the song and dance routines and performs them in his living room. He actually made the show for me by being freaking adorable and hilarious. But the rest of the non-concert activity was the equivalent of an exciting action movie interrupted every 5 minutes with a screen-filling ad for life insurance. It's irritating filler, and fans deserve better.

The filler feels like a concealed middle finger to fans who didn't pay to see the concert live. The extra cash required to see the film in 3D (we saw the early bird special, so money saved there) adds insult to injury. 3D adds nothing except cash to studio pockets.

Bottom line, the musical numbers were great (refreshing to not hear as much audio enhancement), but they're nothing you could not see by re-watching the show, and there weren't enough of them. The non-concert related material sinks the show. And where is Matthew Morrison? Oh yeah, doing his solo concert. Disappointment. I can't really recommend forking out the extra cash for this one. For hardcore Gleeks only. Love Glee but I hate you Ryan Murphy.
C-

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Captain America: The First Avenger.

Sidenote: getting to see this film was a chore and a half. the damn projector burned the film up 20 minutes in and we had to go see the 3D showing (ugh). In short, it took almost 4 hours to see a 2 hour film. Still, I received 3 movie passes for later use. yay! But I digress...

Captain America: The First Avenger - At long last, Cap gets an honest to goodness origin film, with a budget and everything (The less said about the three awful movies made in the 70s and 90s, the better). Of course, we all know it's a tie-in for The Avengers movie next year, same as every Marvel film for the last three years. But that doesn't matter. At the end of the day, is it a good movie? Well yes and no.

First off, Chris Evans is great as Steve Rogers aka Captain America. He elevates the material and is the film's beating heart. He's so genuine in his desire to support his country that it almost makes you wipe away 70 years of cynicism and buy war bonds. I also liked his friendship with Buckey (Sebastian Stan). Hayley Atwell gives an enjoyable performance as a not dead weight female soldier by the name of Peggy Carter. It's a shame there aren't more scenes between her and Steve Rogers. Stanley Tucci lends gravitas to the film, and every other thing out of Tommy Lee Jones's mouth makes me chuckle. Hugo Weaving and Toby Jones are both decently played as villains, although I wish they had better material to work with.

When the movie starts in 1940s America it's wonderful. It sucks you in and holds you. A time where America was, indisputably the good guy. There's a warm bronze glow about things, and Howard Stark (Dominic Cooper) bears a vague resemblance to Clark Gable. It feels period and well put together. We sympathize with Steve and his big hearted desire to join the Army. And is he small! It's a credit to CGI that this effect came off so well.

Then later on in the movie, the villains create laser guns. It's kind of baffling to me that the filmmakers would bail on that 1940s nostalgia so early on in the film. Nazi's with vaporization lasers! oh no! And it doesn't quite work for me. Couldn't the Cosmic Cube's benefits to the Nazis have been a little more subtle? Like creating a hydrogen bomb subtle? Or rocket fuel (these are just off of the top of my head)? Because we soon have a case of bloodless bodiless combat ladies and gentlemen. And that's neat and easy from a gravedigger's perspective, but from a dramatic prospective it rings rather hollow. It's a movie about WWII, and we have one bloody and shocking moment in the entire movie. I feel like they saved all the blood for that moment. Bottomline: WWII + over the top Flash Gordon tech = no no. Still, everyone stays fairly serious about it, and that helps the audience swallow the conceit.

Random unorganized thoughts

America turning down willing volunteers for the army? My, 1940s were a different time.

My opinions on the Red Skull makeup (meh) haven't changed since I first saw it. And no one in the film seems concerned in the slightest when they see it! "Eh, must be Wednesday."

Whilst I do care for Steve and his journey, his journey is fairly simple. A few twists and turns would have been nice.

The fights scenes were riveting and quite enjoyable. A lot of nice metal clanging noises and good demonstrations of "peak athletic abilities".

I kinda wish Cap had taken the time and broken up the whole Holocaust thing. I guess SuperNazis with lasers, jets and superbombs is a higher calling. but only just.

As expected, 3D adds absolutely nothing. See it only if your 2D projector burns up all the film.

All in all, a mixed bag, but an enjoyable, if forgettable film. Captain America gets a
B- Now hurry up with the goddamn Avengers movie!