This film made me laugh, a lot, but overall it was messy –
much like the on screen action. I didn’t really get any sense of who any of the
characters were and to be honest apart from inhabiting the house at the centre
of the story, Billy Armstrong and Marta Golden’s characters weren’t really
necessary. They and Leo White were only really used during the films frenetic
ending which is somewhere between a chase and a farce. That being said, there
is still much to like about this Chaplin Essanay effort.
Friday, 29 June 2012
Work
Izzy Wake (Charles Inslee) a paperhanger and his assistant
(Charlie Chaplin) slowly make their way to the house of Billy Armstrong and Marta
Golden where they are due to hang wall paper. After experiencing difficulty
even getting to the house, once they get there things go from bad to worse.
Sunday, 24 June 2012
Beetlejuice
"Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice"
A young couple (Alec Baldwin and Geena Davis) are driving
back from town one day when they crash their car and die. It takes them a while
to realise though as they end up back in their house but with a new family,
father (Jeffrey Jones), Step-mum (Catherine O’Hara) and Goth Daughter (Winona
Ryder) moving in. As they become aware of their death they try to haunt the
family in order to get them to leave but despite turning to the ‘Handbook for
the Recently Deceased’ for help, they are unable to be seen. Instead they turn
to a bio-exorcist called Betelgeuse, a crazed, perverted and unstable dead man
who agrees to help scare the family off.
Unbelievably I’d never seen this film before having confused
it in my head with Candyman, a film I
saw aged about seven which caused nightmares for months. I’m so glad I’ve
finally watched this bizarre comedy/horror. The film contains everything that
the best Tim Burton films do; odd characters and locations, unusual and
distinctive sets and darkly comic plotlines.
Saturday, 23 June 2012
Red Lights
"How did you know that?"
"I'm psychic"
Psychologist and paranormal investigator Dr. Margaret Matheson
(Sigourney Weaver) and her assistant Dr. Tom Buckley (Cillian Murphy) a physicist
travel around debunking supposed paranormal activity from bumps in the night to
stage psychics. Dr. Buckley wants to investigate their most challenging person
to date, Simon Silver (Robert De Niro), a redound psychic who is making a
comeback after a thirty year absence from the stage. Dr. Matheson warns Buckley
against this though after having come up against him in the 1970s and failing to
prove him a fraud. With the help of student Sally Owen (Elisabeth Olsen) Buckley
defies Matheson and begins investigating the illusive Silver.
As a radical atheist and sceptic the film’s ideas appealed
to me. I was delighted to watch the scientists make fun of and debunk people
who claim to see ghosts and be able to read minds. The script treats these people
with distain and isn’t afraid to mention how these people can be responsible for
giving stupid people false hope and can even cost lives. The cast is also
amongst the best of any film this year. With actors such as Signourney Weaver,
Cillian Murphy, Toby Jones, Joely Richardson, the delightful Elizabeth Olsen
and my all time favourite actor Robert De Niro, anything less than a great film
would be a disappointment. Well, this isn’t a great film but it isn’t terrible
either.
Abraham Lincoln Vampire Hunter
"However history remembers me before I was a President, it shall only remember a fraction of the truth..."
In 1818 a young boy by the name of Abraham Lincoln (Benjamin
Walker) witnesses his mother’s murder and vows to get revenge on the man who
took her life. In his late teens he finally plucks up the courage to enact his
revenge but when he fires a pistol at the head of the assassin, the man simply
gets back up and attacks the young Lincoln .
The young man is saved by a strange man called Henry Sturgess (Dominic Cooper) who
tells the future President about the existence of vampires and teaches him the
art of killing them. Lincoln dedicates his life
to the destruction of vampires but finds in later life that words and deeds
outweigh the power of his axe and he eventually becomes a Lawyer and later
President of the Union . During his Presidency
the vampire rich South declares war on the North in the hope of creating a
nation for vampires.
This film is a case of a title that is better than the
movie. The idea behind it sounds great; that one of America’s most beloved
Presidents was also secretly a Vampire Hunter, but the execution doesn’t live
up to the premise. I’ve recently read books about the American Civil War and
Lincoln’s assassination so probably know more than the average Brit about the
President and this period of America’s history and there were nice details,
incidents and characters taken from the period and Lincoln’s life that were
included to give a bit of authenticity to the story. The truth, with the added
inclusion of vampires could have created a really good film but alas it is not.
Rock of Ages
"This place is about to become a sea of sweat, ear-shattering music and puke"
In 1987 Sherrie (Julianne Hough) sets off from her home in Oklahoma towards L.A
with dreams of rock stardom. Almost as soon as she arrives she is mugged and
helped by Drew (Diego Boneta) who works at the Bourbon Room, a Sunset Strip
rock club. Sherrie gets a job at the club and she and Drew begin a relationship
while both dreaming of becoming singers. Meanwhile the club’s owner Dennis
(Alec Baldwin) and his right hand man Lonny (Russell Brand) are struggling to
keep the club open amid protests from the Mayor’s wife Patricia Whitmore
(Catherine Zeta-Jones). Rock legend Stacee Jaxx (Tom Cruise) of the band
Arsenal is due to perform at the club with the hopes of beginning a solo carer,
if he can get his head back in the game long enough to do so.
I’d read mixed reviews before seeing this film but I’m a fan
of a lot of 80s rock music, from Iron Maiden to Metallica to Blue Cheer via
Motley Crue, Motorhead and Pantera. Unfortunately this is not the sort of rock
music you get with Rock of Ages.
Instead you end up with the likes of Bon Jovi and Journey. This is not the type
of music I enjoy, especially when the lyrics are used in place of dialogue in
an annoying coming of age story. This film is about as much rock n’ roll as a
jam sandwich with the crusts removed.
Friday, 22 June 2012
GB Posters Blog - Sam Raimi's Spider-Man
Elaine over at GB Posters asked me to write something about Raimi's Spider-Man trilogy in the build up to the release of The Amazing Spider-Man and below is a link to my piece.
http://www.gbposters.com/blog/spiderman-the-trilogy
You can read what I thought about each film in more detail by clicking on the links below.
Spider-Man
Spider-Man 2
Spider-Man 3
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Thursday, 21 June 2012
Spider-Man 3
"Everybody needs help sometimes Peter, even Spider-Man"
The final part of Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man trilogy finds Peter
Parker finally enjoying life. Things are going well for him; he’s top of his
class, closer than ever to MJ and still has time to fight crime as Spider-Man.
If anything Peter has become over arrogant with his all round success and this
comes back to bite him when an extra terrestrial parasite which amplifies the
characteristics of its host attaches itself to Peter and turns his Spidey suit
black. Now more cocky and arrogant than ever Peter has little time for MJ and
they drift apart. At the same time an escaped criminal accidentally ends up in
a particle accelerator filled with sand. The sand fuses with his body and turns
him into the Sandman – Spider-Man’s latest nemesis.
This is generally regarded to be the worst of the Raimi
Spider-Man films but personally I’d put it second, slightly ahead of Spider-Man While there is an enormous
amount wrong with the film, I actually think that the story is the strongest of
the three. I like how the film looks at Peter Parker’s psychological state and
how the alien parasite is able to effect how and who he is. His relationship
with Mary Jane becomes fractured after ending on a high in Spider-Man 2 and this creates plenty of drama and commotion. Add
this to Harry’s ever growing disdain for Spider-Man and you have the makings of
a decent plot. As a result of focussing more on Parker/Spider-Man’s turmoil,
the villain characters suffer a little and the Sandman’s back-story is only
briefly touched upon. Venom is only really seen in a few scenes as an arrogant
up and comer before becoming a super villain.
Wednesday, 20 June 2012
Battle: Los Angeles
"Now you got three hours to get your ass back before those bombs drop, and make no mistake THEY WILL DROP! with... or without you"
Staff Sergeant Nantz (Aaron Eckhart) is on the verge of
retiring from the US Marines when he gets called back into action one last time
to help repel an alien attack on L.A.
What scientists first suspect to be meteors turn out to be the ships of an
unidentified species of alien who intend to colonise the Earth and drain its
resources. Under the leadership of an untested Lieutenant and with a squad of
Marines who don’t trust him, Nantz must help a band of civilians to escape Santa Monica before it is
blown up by the Air Force.
This is a film with a multitude of problems which start with
the character introductions. For a start there are too many, all introduced
with a minute or two of back story. They are all stock characters which have
been seen a thousand times. We have the guy who’s getting married, the untested
Officer, the guy whose brother was killed, the guy in therapy, the guy from New
Joizey, the guy from Texas and perhaps more unusually the guy from Nigeria who enlisted
for citizenship. I couldn’t tell you any more about the characters than that
and never really cared for any of them. Later they are joined by a female Air
Force (pilot? I think) (Michelle Rodriguez) along with five civilians, three of
which are children.
By the Sea
While on a windy beach The Tramp (Charlie Chaplin) turns his
attention to two married women and ends up getting in trouble with their
husbands. This film feels like a bit of a step back after Chaplin’s previous
films. It feels much closer to His New Job than the likes of The Champion or
The The Tramp in that it is a knockabout
comedy and a farce which lacks character development. Despite this there is
still much to like.
5/10
I especially enjoyed Chaplin’s use of string attached to his
jacket and hat which stops his hat blowing away in the wind. It’s a great idea
and it’s almost a shame it didn’t catch on! The idea is used successfully in a
couple of ways; Firstly in a scene in which Chaplin and Billy Armstrong get
their strings intertwined and end up tangled up and inevitably fighting and in
a second scene while trying to woo Bud Jamison’s wife. In this scene Chaplin
manipulates the string behind his back to make it seem as though the hat is
jumping off his head. It’s a simple, clever and very funny idea.
Apart from those two examples and a brief fight involving
ice creams there isn’t much else of note in this film. There are of course Bud
Jamison’s over the top eyebrows and the background setting of an almost
deserted Los Angeles beach is quite interesting but compared to Chaplin’s later
films this feels a little weak.
5/10
Tuesday, 19 June 2012
Spider-Man 2
"I'm Spider-Man no more, no more"
Two years after his transformation into Spider-Man, Peter
Parker (Tobey Maguire) is struggling to balance the demands of being a super
hero with a job and studying while these all impact on his personal life. His
secret love Mary Jane (Kirsten Dunst) is now a big hit on Broadway but after
the open ended conclusion to their relationship at the end of Spider-Man, the two have since drifted
apart. Peter is writing a paper about the scientist Dr. Octavius (Alfred
Molina) and goes to the unveiling of his latest experiment. Things go wrong
though and Octavius becomes attached to four tentacle like instruments and
becomes Dr. Octopus, a villain hell bent on completing his experiments, even if
they destroy the whole city.
If you read my review of Spider-Man
then you’ll be aware of how bitterly disappointed I was with it. Thankfully
Spider-Man 2 lived up to my memory
and if anything exceeded it. The story is focussed on Peter Parker’s split
lives and how he manages to cope with the responsibility of being Spider-Man.
His relationship with Mary Jane is also at the centre and the will they/wont
they or will they/can they nature of their relationship is played out in full.
Peter’s relationship with other characters including his Aunt and friend Harry
are also featured with the later continuing an obvious thread which leads to a
third film.
Labels:
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