Around sixty years before the events of The Lord of the
Rings trilogy a young Hobbit called Bilbo Baggins (Martin Freeman) was whisked
off for what became a life changing adventure. An Unexpected Journey is based on the first few chapters of J.R.R.
Tolkien’s The Hobbit but contains
almost all the highlights of the book I read as a teenager. After a tortured
pre production that included a change of writer and director, problems with
studio financing, the temporary loss of it’s central actor and location issues,
An Unexpected Journey is finally here
and even for a year which featured the likes of Prometheus, The Dark Knight Rises and So Undercover, this was the film that I’d been looking forward to
the most all year. I saw the film close to a week ago now and am only just
writing a review. Generally I’ll put pen to paper or rather finger to keyboard
within twenty-four hours of seeing a movie but my experience of An Unexpected Journey made me put off
writing in the hope of a second viewing. With Christmas around the corner and a
trip back to my hometown looming I probably won’t get to see the film again
until 2013 but will probably update my review once I have. The reason for
wanting to see it again before writing a review is because the impossible
happened; I didn’t like it.
Thursday, 20 December 2012
Wednesday, 19 December 2012
Jack Reacher
The popular Jack Reacher series of novels had its film
rights snapped up soon after the release of the initial novel in 1997. Fifteen
years and seventeen books later, the first film has finally made it to the
screen. The ninth book in the series Long
Shot forms the basis of the film Jack
Reacher. A lone sniper sets up shop in a parking garage before training his
sights on people across the river. In quick succession he fires six shots,
killing five random people. A trail of clues left at the scene leads to his
arrest and after failing to confess he asks the police to get him Jack Reacher
(Tom Cruise), an ex Military Policeman and drifter. By the time Reacher gets to
the scene of the crime the accused has been beaten into a coma. Believing the culprit
is guilty based on a previous encounter; Reacher is nonetheless hired by
Defence Lawyer (Rosamund Pike) and begins to uncover a deeper plot.
I’ve read just one
Jack Reacher novel and enjoyed it but not enough to rush out and continue with
the series. Even though I’m not a die hard fan I raised my eyebrow at the
casting of Tom Cruise as what has become a distinctive and well loved
character. Having seen the film, to me the casting now fits perfectly. Cruise
may lack the height and physical presence of Reacher but he more than makes up
for it in screen presence and overall there are very few areas in which I can
fault the film.
Tuesday, 18 December 2012
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre
Often credited as one of the most influential horror movies
of the last forty years, The Texas
Chainsaw Massacre is responsible for creating many elements now frequent in
the slasher genre. The film was produced for a budget of less than $300,000 but
went on to bring in over £30 million at the box office and has since spawned
five sequels or remakes with a sixth scheduled for release in 2013. I saw the
2003 remake when I was about eighteen and remember being nonplussed by its story
and violence. My Dad then asked me if I’d seen the original and when I said I
wasn’t sure he replied “You’d remember if you’d seen the original.” Well nine
years on I’ve now seen the original and despite some good moments and obvious
influence it has had on recent horror I fail to see its appeal. I didn’t find
it scary or threatening, the story bored me and I was very glad that it was
only 84 minutes long.
If you’ve ever seen a slasher film then the premise will
sound very familiar. Five friends are travelling through central Texas on their way to a
run down house owned by the family of Sally (Marylin Burns) and her brother
Franklin (Paul A. Partain). Along the way they pick up a hitchhiker who scares
the group, attacks Franklin
and flees. Once they reach the homestead the group slowly begin to dwindle as
they encounter chainsaw wielding, leather mask wearing neighbour/maniac.
Tuesday, 11 December 2012
Life of Pi
Life of Pi is
based on a 2001 novel of the same name, often thought un-filmable. Taiwanese
Director Ang Lee has somehow managed to bring to life an incredibly visceral
story and create the most beautiful film I’ve seen all year. The astonishing
story makes for a wonderful focus which is given a spectacularly beautiful
backdrop, filmed in 3D. For only the second time since the 3D ‘revolution’,
(see Hugo 2011) the extra dimension
adds to rather than detracts from the story and helps to create a sumptuous
world full of incredible sights, great laughs and awful sadness.
A middle aged Indian man now living in Canada is
recounting a fantastical story to a Canadian man who is trying to write a book.
The Indian, Pi, tells the writer about his childhood in French India where his
father owned a zoo. Pi speaks of his deep and profound religious beliefs and
discloses that he has found solace in several major religions, something that
he was chastised for by his atheist father. When Pi was around sixteen his
family made the decision to emigrate to Canada, sell the zoo’s animals and
start afresh. On the voyage through the Indian Ocean
their ship was struck by a huge storm from which only four survive. Pi is soon
left almost alone with just a Bengal Tiger called Richard Parker for company,
adrift on a vast but beautiful Ocean.
Labels:
2012,
9/10,
Adil Hussain,
Ang Lee,
Drama,
Epic,
Gerard Depardieu,
Hindi,
Life of Pi,
Rafe Spall,
Suraj Sharma,
Tabu,
Thriller
Monday, 10 December 2012
The Muppet Christmas Carol
The first film to be produced following the death of The
Muppets creator Jim Henson, The Muppet
Christmas Carol was well received upon its release in time for Christmas
1992 and has grown in stature ever since. The film is a fairly faithful
retelling of Charles Dickens’ famous novel albeit with Muppets in most of the
roles. The central character of Scrooge though is played incredibly straight by
Michael Caine. I have a vague recollection of seeing certain scenes but don’t
think I ever saw the film as a child. I had been warned that it is impossible
to hate the film but if anyone was going to then it would be me. Around this
time of year every year my girlfriend will inevitably yell the words “You’re
running Christmas for me!” as I moan about decorations, cards, crap TV or
buying presents. I am the archetypal Grinch like character, a man who cares
nothing for Christmas and even less for Christmas movies. (See my Die Hard rant). It was always unlikely
then that The Muppet Christmas Carol
would strike a chord with me and as it turns out I didn’t really enjoy it. It
is not without its positives though.
Sunday, 9 December 2012
The Kid
Undoubtedly Chaplin’s finest film of the period and one of
the highlights of his long career, The
Kid was not only his first feature film but also in my opinion his first
great work. Produced at a difficult time in the star’s life, The Kid is the first of several Chaplin
films which perfectly balanced comedy, drama and pathos. His previous films had
often contained at least one of these elements and earlier films such as A Dog's Life and The Immigrant had provided at least two, but for the first time in
1921, despite personal tragedy and pressure from his studio, Chaplin created
his first true masterpiece.
Production began in 1919 just ten days after the death of
Chaplin’s baby son Norman. Chaplin, who had been struggling creatively, was
instantly hit with an idea that was to become The Kid. As his Tramp character Chaplin finds a baby who has been
abandoned by a poor single mother (Edna Purviance). The Tramp ends up raising
the child alone and when he is around six or seven the child (Jackie Coogan)
helps his adoptive father in his window repair business. The father follows the
boy around town as the boy breaks windows. Soon after being smashed, the man
turns up to repair them. All is well until the boy falls sick and a Doctor
realises the Tramp is not the natural father. Soon after Social Services arrive
to take the boy from the man in what is one of the most gut wrenchingly moving scenes
in cinema history.
Labels:
10/10,
1921,
Carl Miller,
Charlie Chaplin,
Comedy,
Edna Purviance,
Henry Bergman,
Jackie Coogan,
Lita Grey,
Silent,
Silent Comedy,
The Kid,
Tom Wilson
Seven Psychopaths
Director Martin McDonaugh’s difficult second album, Seven Psychopaths is the Irish
Director’s follow up to the 2008 sleeper hit In Bruges. The massively disjointed plot concerns a screenwriter
called Martin (Colin Farrell) and his inability to complete his latest script
which he has titled Seven Psychopaths.
His writing is hampered by a drink problem and his disruptive friend Billy (Sam
Rockwell), a dog kidnapper. One day Billy and his friend Hans (Christopher
Walken) kidnap a dog belonging to gangster Charlie Costello (Woody Harrelson).
Martin’s script begins to take shape as he encounters more and more psychopaths
but the three friends end up on the run while trying to escape the Mob.
I’ve been looking forward to Seven Psychopaths for a long time and when I first saw the trailer
a few months back I instantly watched it again because I loved it so much. It’s
with a heavy heart then that now having seen the film I have to report that
it’s a bit, average. There are some clever ideas in there and some great little
vignettes but on the whole there is far too much going on. Several times I
thought to myself “That would make a good movie” but then it was dropped
instantly. Despite several good performances, some great direction and a few
funny moments I left feeling underwhelmed.
Saturday, 8 December 2012
Die Hard
One of the most iconic action movies from the decade of the
action movie, Die Hard made a movie
star of TV actor Bruce Willis and has thus far led to three sequels with a
forth on the way. A critical hit upon its release and an enduring cult hit, Die Hard has been immortalised in
popular culture thanks to its lone hero central character, gritty action and
signature quote “Yippie-ki-yay motherfucker!” Even a quarter of a century on
I’m able to watch Die Hard with the
same joy and enthusiasm as it was first greeted when I was a mere toddler. The
story is simple. New York City Cop John McLane (Bruce Willis) is on his way
from New York
to L.A to be with his estranged family at Christmas. He is dropped off at his
wife’s Christmas party in the Nakatomi Plaza building but soon finds the office
has been taken hostage by a group of mostly European terrorists lead by the
masterfully camp Hans Gruber (Alan Rickman). With just his wits, a vest and
handgun, McLane must take back the building, save his wife and save Christmas.
Thursday, 6 December 2012
Pan's Labyrinth
Guillermo del Toro’s dark fairy tale Pan’s Labyrinth has been on my list of films to watch for years and
I’ve finally got around to seeing it. I’ve had no excuse as my girlfriend
bought it at least two years ago and it has been sitting on my shelf gathering
dust ever since. I’ve found that Pan’s
Labyrinth is the sort of film that comes up in conversation with people who
generally don’t watch films that aren’t in English and won numerous awards upon
its release. My girlfriend is a big fan and though I enjoyed the effects and
historical side to the story, I wasn’t completely won over by it.
In Fascist Spain a young girl called Ofelia (Ivana Baquero) is forced to leave her home and move to the countryside where he mother’s new husband is beating into submission the remnants of the anti-Fascist rebels. The girl has an affinity for fairytales and soon meets a fairy who takes her into a labyrinth. There she meets a goat like creature called a Fawn who tells her that she is a long lost Princess and must complete three tasks in order to be united with her Royal father. The fairytale is set against the backdrop of a vicious new regime made real by Ofelia’s new stepfather Captain Vidal (Sergi Lopez).
Labels:
2006,
7/10,
Doug Jones,
Drama,
Fantasy,
Guillermo del Toro,
Ivana Baquero,
Maribel Verdu,
Pan's Labyrinth,
Sergi Lopez,
Spanish,
War
Rear Window
Based on Cornell Woolrich’s short story It Must be Murder, Alfred Hitchcock’s 1954 Mystery film is regarded
as one of the Director’s finest. Having broken his leg while away on an
assignment, photographer Jeff Jefferies (James Stewart) whiles away the hours
watching his neighbours from the window of his apartment. One day he wakes up
to discover that a woman across the courtyard is no longer there and her
husband is acting suspiciously. With the help of his girlfriend Lisa Freemont
(Grace Kelly), Jeff investigates his suspected murder case from the confines of
his window side wheelchair.
I’ve only seen around half a dozen of Hitchcock’s films but
I’ve found that my favourites are those which I have heard nothing about. I was
a little bit disappointed by North by Northwest but loved Rope and Shadow of a Doubt. Rear Window falls somewhere in between. I can certainly see why it
is considered so great but there are films in the Director’s extensive cannon
which are just as if not more impressive.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)