Monday, January 29, 2007

Very Brief note on the SAG's.

Okay, after having watched the SAG's, there are several things thatmight affect the outcome slightly. Eddie Murphy and Helen Mirren are basically guaranteed Oscars come Oscar time. Some other stuff happened involving television. Jennifer Hudson for best supporting actress. Honestly, most of the awards this year are uninteresting. There simply has been a lack of mystery as to who will win. Of course, then again maybe I am too laid back when considering the Oscars. Maybe the Academy will opt for some interesting buzz after it decides to give several "gimme" awards to different people. Wouldn't it be great to see Abigail Breslin win for best supporting actress? Kate Winslet for best actress again? Or even to see some unknown lay the smack down on some professionals? Anything besides the shoe-ins? With that being said, I think the SAG's cemented Eddie Murphy and Helen Mirren in their respective categories, neither of which were in much jeopardy anyway. The only real question left for the Oscars is best director and best film. Which was the only category made more interesting by the SAG award for best ensemble (their version of best film, in a way) going to Little Miss Sunshine, the indie dark comedy flick that took over a nation. It really is the movie that could so it seems. Although I have to say that I don't see why. It had an okay ensemble but really shouldn't have won just as Alan Arkin shouldn't be nominated for the minimal screen time he has. In my upcoming review you will be able to see why I was less than interested in Little Miss Sunshine and why I feel it is a ridiculous movie to have received the bump that it did by winning the SAG award. Now, it looks like it has an actual chance at being a contender in the Oscar race for best film. One in which I really hope it does not win.

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Comments and picks on the Oscar Noms

well, well. Today was an interesting day. Most critics are of course refering to the shocking upset of no oscar nominations for Dreamgirls for best picture nor best director, a nice slap in the face to the Oscars. However, there are several other interesting picks that leave me to believe this is the year of the dark oscars. Now, the Oscars aren't exactly known to overly love comedies and romance films, but from looking at the picture of this years nominees, it seems that hollywood went out of its way to stick to more dramatic and artistic pieces.

For best actor the Oscar's removed DiCaprio's nomination for The Departed and added Ryan Gosling's depiction in the critically acclaimed indie film, Half Nelson. Whereas for best supporting actor, only Eddie Murphy and Mark Wahlberg's nominations carried over from the Golden Globes. New nominations include Alan Arkin in Little Miss Sunshine, Jackie Earle Haley from Little Children and Djimon Hounsou for Blood Diamond. For best actor, it looks like the same game from the Golden Globes and the expectation is on Forest Whitaker to win again with Ryan Gosling as the dark horse. However, Half Nelson and Gosling's performance were very well praised when released to theaters, so maybe he could pull a Crash-Brokeback scenario for the win. Even though Eddie won in the globes, with the emphasis on darker characters, except alan arkin, I get the feeling that his run might be up in the air. Although Murphy is still in the lead for this, expect Jackie Earle Haley to have a strong possibility too. The underdog being Alan Arkin.

Next come the actresses. For best actress, four of the nominees are culled from the best actress in a drama globes and one is from the comedy section. In other words, even though Merryl Streep is in the running, I highly doubt that by adding her it would stop the train that The Queen is on. Expect Helen Mirren for best actress since Streep has plenty of flashy gold statues. Penelope Cruz is the underdog in this race. For best supporting actress, 4 of the same girls from the golden globes are included, the only exception is Abigail Breslin getting a nod for Little Miss Sunshine instead of Emily Blunt for The Devil Wears Prada. Maybe this was done because the Academy honestly felt that Abigail deserved it more, or maybe it was because they already knew that Merryl Streep would win for best actress...either way, it doesn't add or change much about the supporting actress category for which Jennifer Hudson will surely win. Even though I have yet to see Dreamgirls, I hold out hope that Rinko Kikuchi wins this for Babel, but I think that may be a lost cause. The underdogs for this category are Abigail Breslin and Adriana Barraza.

Next comes the Director category in which it is a really heated and tight race. Many critics choose either Martin Scorcese or Clint Eastwood to gain the win. Although I think Stephen Frears has a nice shot at winning and Inarritu could just as easily come out with it, since Martin and Clint are both well established and loved directors. Plus, in the past, Flags of our Fathers was less than inspiring and there is a history of little love for Scorcese at the Oscars. So why not take that into consideration and announce the coming of a new brilliant director such as Inarritu or Frears? Greenblass for United 93 is the underdog and has little to no chance since he replaced Bobby at the Globes and it might be nominated more as a nod to the great film it was and it's well done recreation of said events. A patriotic move by the Oscars but hardly statue worthy.

Best Picture nominations will prove very interesting and Babel's win at the Globes might actually hurt it here. Then again, Letters From Iwo Jima's small release might hurt it as well. I don't think whoever wins the picture this year will win the director spot and I have a feeling Clint or Martin will win in at least one of these two categories so let us say that this year, Clint is getting old and he is a beloved man. Oscar goes to him for Letters from Iwo Jima if Frears wins the best director. This makes sense, or the other way around, but The Queen will more than likely win in one of the two categories. Either way, Little Miss Sunshine is the darkhorse with no chance and the rest of the category is a guessing game, but a fun one!

Miscellaneous categories include Pan's Labryinth to wipe the foreign film category clean. Also, Cars for animated film. For costume design its a close call between Curse of the Golden Flower, Dreamgirls, and Marie Antoinette with my bet being on Marie Antoinette. Cinematography is a close close call with the strong forerunners being Pan's Labryinth, Children of Men, and The Prestige. The only one i wouldn't bet on would be Black Dahlia. Dreamgirls for art direction. Original song from Dreamgirls, probably 'Listen.' Best original screenplay will probably be The Queen again. Best adapted screenplay will probably go to either the Departed, Children of Men, or interestingly, Borat.

Some other little tidbits include that the globe winners for best original score and best song, were snubbed come oscar time. The Painted Veil is mentioned nowhere and Happy Feet is only included in the animated area. Hell, a song from the documentary An Inconvenient Truth replaced them! Click got nominated for best makeup...wtf? Also, the Pursuit of Happyness song listed in the Globes has been removed from the song category by the academy. See what I mean when I say no Happy? The giant flop Poseidon got nominated for best visual effects. Also, the short film awards are given to some really great films. I have watched a couple of past award winners and nominees and I was very impressed with the quality. More people should see quality short films. And with that, I'm out.

Wannabe

Monday, January 22, 2007

Pan's Labryinth

'Get Lost in the Labryinth'

One of the films recently gaining much acclaim and is now being included as a strong contender for best foreign film if nominated is Guillermo Del Toro's latest film, Pan's Labryinth. At one point, Del Toro described his film as a philosophical horror and at other times an adult fairy tale. Although the film does include fantastical elements, I think the film belongs more to the philosophical horror. This film is the second part of what will be Del Toro's Spanish Civil War trilogy and it takes place on a farm that has been turned into an outpost for the fascists in the Civil War. Since I have never seen the first film of the trilogy, The Devil's Backbone, I will not be able to speak on the thematic elements carried over nor be able to compare them. Instead, I will focus on trying to explain the magic of the film.

The main actors of the film are Ivana Baquero as Ofelia, Sergi Lopez as Captain Vidal, Maribel Verdu as Mercedes, and Doug Jones as the intimidating Pan. The only familiar actors from the cast seem to be Sergi Lopez and Doug Jones. I have seen Jones before in Del Toro's other well-known work, Hellboy, but I can't recall where I have seen Sergi Lopez before. With that said, these two men will turn your undies brown. Sergi Lopez plays the most crazed and conflicted leader short of the main character of Clockwork Orange. As for Doug Jones, well, he has proven once again that he has perfect acting chops to go head to head with Andy Serkis for best costumed actor. I'm also of the impression that he is ridiculously tall. No matter what, both of their characters seem very...sympathetic. Captain Vidal is a torturer and easy to hate, but his passion for his unborn son and for his wife are certainly commendable. His desire to die honorably and to have his legend spread is contemptuous at times and just pathetic at others. But they are never disappointing. In fact, none of the cast disappoints. The chemistry between Ivana Baquero and Maribel Verdu is palpable and the feeling of oppression and constantly being watched is nervewracking throughout mostly due to the actors. It's rare that a film comes when no character is a disappointment, automatically making this film a treasure.

As for direction, the film is about choice and might just be the best argument ever made for joining a psychiatric ward. Ivana has a choice to stay alive in the real world or to join the netherworld from which her essence came. Should she stay with her step-father and the constant danger of the war just to keep her brother and mother alive? Or should she forsake all she has known for a fantasy world? The contrast between the two dimensions is made evident by the amount of horror, magic, and sadness present in both worlds. In the end, the film is about making well informed moral choices and not following blindly as all of the captain's soldiers did when they let the captain brutally torture people. Shot on a budget around 5$ million, the film looks like it was made for 16$ million. The scenery is beautifully caught in various filters and brought to life. At night, the shadows touch every surface and add a bluish cold blue to the world. The pacing and storytelling are all top notch, although now I am curious about the other three key holes in the den of the Pale Man. All in all, for a low budget film, Del Toro proves why he is allowed to direct Hollywood features. Simply put, he is a man who understands characters, story, and the intertwining of all these with cinematography. The only part that revealed it's lack of budget are some of the special effects in the film.

Conclusion:
Del Toro's film is gorgeous, stirring, and brilliantly acted and made. It enslaves the audience to its hypnotic tale and does not disappoint. The only real questionable area is the violence and cruelty. Some of the violence is so abrupt and graphic that the film can be really hard to watch. I know that it is meant to emphasize the point of Ofelia choosing a side, but it can also make the audience decide to either leave early or be disgusted with the rest of the film. For a foreign film in Spanish, it is a shoe-in for an Oscar nomination, where hopefully it will be able to beat the next Letters From Iwo Jima (seriously, how the hell is that a foreign film?). But if you are faint of heart, stay away unless you decide for more adventurous fare.

4.7 out of 5

Wannabe

Children of Men

'The Bleakest Celebration of Life Ever'

Why Alfonso Cuaron's newest film, Children of Men, wasn't nominated for a Golden Globe is almost beyond my comprehension. I say almost because I quickly found out why from my uncle who has a less artistic palate. His response was that it was perhaps the most horrific future he'd ever seen and that it went so fast sometimes that he had no idea what was going on. Well, he's partially right. I would have to say that if you compare the three films by the Triumvirate (Guillermo Del Toro, Alejandro Inarritu, Alfonso Cuaron) from this year you will see the most horrifying films of the past, present, and future respectively. Although Cuaron's film is creepier than the bubonic plague, it's also strangely fascinating and beautiful. As for the hard to follow part, well...older people tend to have trouble following action scenes more so than the younger people.

The story is set in the year 2027 with the premise that mankind has become sterile. No babies have been born for many years, leaving no hope for a future legacy. It begins in England which is one of the last countries not to have fallen completely into ruins. Instead, it has enacted strict immigrant laws and a totalitarian government system to keep everyone and thing in check and functioning smoothly. In fact, the lead character works for the Ministry of Energy, a direct reference to 1984. Then comes along Clive Owen's character who is a burned out political activist and former father who agrees to help his ex in smuggling a young black girl out of the country. However, things go very wrong as his ex-wife dies and her own organization turns on him and he has to make sure the girl flees to a safe place called the Human Project since she is the only pregnant woman left. GRanted that was a really dumbed down version of the script, but the script is amazing. Although based on a book, Cuaron's direction is evident throughout and displays his ability to create beautiful images even in the darkest of times. He also does an excellent job of crafting the film to highlight the troubles of the new coming of the first baby born in so long since everyone wants to manipulate her. He also exhibits the inability of man to stop fighting, especially when Clive Owen's and the girl are walking out and every soldier stops and stares, surprised to see a baby while mood music plays slowly in the background...until somone shoots a rocket into the soldiers from above and destroys the peaceful possibility of hope. The only problem with the story is the idea that if man could have children things would be better, but it seems that even if man became fertile again, mankind has descended too far into darkness to turn back into a civilized society. I don't know if this is Cuaron's fault or not because the movie is based on a book, but if the Prisoner of Azkaban was any indication, Cuaron will cut and edit lots out of an adaptation to make the best visually imaginative movie he can.

But what about the actors? Surely they had some role to play in this film? The answer is yes. All of them. Even the crazy Scottish guy with dreadlocks. They are all significant and important to the story. Even their deaths, which it seems everyone does. Clive Owen's character is played very well and slightly different but on the whole he's a bit too laconic to empathize with, even after he undergoes a transformation and tries to help the girl. Julianne Moore has a short role, but an important one and then she's gone. The real star is Michael Caine. Seeing Michael Caine as the ultimate old hippie is really satisfying. Yes, he grows strawberry hash and such, but he's everyone's best old friend. Him and his lovely disabled wife Jan whom he poisons before he dies, which might just be the most heartbreaking scene in the movie. Michael Caine might be the best damn actor on earth and after watching him in this role, it makes you want to see him again or go and find another film with a similar character. Hats to you Caine for taking a small role and doing so much with it. Unfortunately, the only other major character was the previoously mentioned pregnant girl. Not impressed. She popped that baby right out and was able to get up and run away. A lot of her emotional characteristics fit the bill for the character but at no point in time does it seem realistic for her to be pregnant. Plus, she's kind of aggravating for constantly demanding things and then wandering off to be watched by Owen and her assistant. She doesn't seem to have enough life experiences and I think she needs some before attempting her next role. Although she shows promise, it needs polish first. But overall a great job by the cast.

Conclusion:
Cuaron uses this film and crafts a haunting nightmare of a world. And if you need proof that Cuaron is the real deal, just watch the ridiculously long one-take traveling shot toward the end. Through his storytelling craft, the message of the film comes through quite clear. Without children men revert to their sinful chaotic nature because they have lost their hope and it becomes everyone for themself. In this warring state, man has the capacity to destroy his own values and any hope of a brighter future. By making entire squads of toughmen go quiet when a baby enters the room, Cuaron is able to paint a picture of hope for the men. It also helps to accent the symbolic journey and birthing of Jesus. In the end, it is a sci-fi film stuffed to the gills with visual metaphors, themes, symbolism, and imagery.

4.0 out of 5


Wannabe

Sunday, January 21, 2007

Little Children

'It’s like the good guy kicked you in the pants'

When I sat down to watch Todd Field’s Little Children (based on the popular novel by Tom Perrotta), I noticed a good deal of older couples and a spattering of enticed faces waiting to see their favorite book and the Golden Globe nominee unveiled. I, however, was there for one reason, the director’s use of a train whistle. The trailer keyed me onto Field’s ability to create amazing amounts of tension through the prolonged use of this sound effect and these unexpected crowds made me wonder if I was in the wrong theatre (even though only one theatre would dare show something this independent). Within the first ten minutes of the film I understood that this movie would please both crowds. Not only did the beautiful photography stick out but also there was a group of gossipy mothers being mocked by a wonderfully smarmy Kate Winslett. The couples in the audience seemed comfortable, intrigued and ready for an all out tragic satire on the nice suburban neighborhood.

Truth be told, the performances really brought all the hard work of the design crew into fruition. The acting was so fitting and believable from Kate Winslet, Patrick Wilson and Jennifer Connelly that everything became that much more satirical and shocking. Wilson played the whipped, stay at home dad, Brad who is married to the protective career woman, Kathy Adamson (played by Connelly). Wilson’s natural good charm and good looks made his gradual fall into infidelity with Winslet’s Sarah Pierce seem like a frighteningly normal process. Each character goes through a phase of restlessness and desperation, curiosity and overwhelming passion that drives the movie from satire to poignant action. Jackie Earle Haley plays the released sex offender Ronnie J. McGorvey and offers a wonderful sense of ambiguity to his character’s rehabilitation. The only one who is left behind is Richard Pierce (played by Gregg Edelman) but the cut of his screen time was forgivable. Winslet takes hold of a very complicated and passionate character with awe-inspiring ease and beauty. I watched as her character gained ounce after ounce of maddening, conflicting emotions and then saw them drained from at a moments notice.

The society of a “perfect” middle class neighborhood is unraveled better through Little Children’s concepts in a way that touched me more than American Beauty. There are narrations and satire that start out as distracting but give the needed pacing and break from watching the intensity of the childlike adults. The cinematography and lighting ROCKED: enticing warm glows and intriguing angles were used in the pool scenes that were rife with impure thoughts. The close up of the porcelain children add a very eerie meaning to the story. Even the glory moment for Brad at a night football game is hilarious thanks to the lighting and inspirational background music. And towering over all the sound effects, the screams of the train envelope the movie in a sense of tension, passion and painful silence that said “here comes the train wreck” and when it came the crowd only sat, shocked and awed at what they were feeling.

Conclusion:
Todd Fields made an amazing blend of artistic imagery and juicy satire of the typical parents. In the end Little Children gives the audience a ride through middle class suburbia that has laughter, sexual tension and though provoking dialogue but ends in a crash of meaning. The young adults who create such gossip and remorse for their less than perfect life are acting worse than innocent children in their care. Grow up and live for the actual children. 4.75 out of 5

Castlemyking

An Update

Hmm, I can't review everything and I am getting back into that nasty habit of writing fiction that I hope someday will either be published or that I can use to create my next directorial piece, for whatever good thats worth. Because of these problems, I have asked any and all friends to send me pieces or reviews that they like. I will edit them as I see fit, but for the most part, I'm interested in seeing other people's opinions. So don't be surprised to see more reviews, just check the signature for my name if you like my reviews. They will be labeled my friends and can be given a title if they like, but for the sake of protection and anonymity from the evil Hollywood system of knowing everyone, they will always have an alias, even if its just Wannabe's Friend.

Also, I recently discovered a fascinating site called fantasymoguls.com. It's a fantasy game akin to fantasy football except free, fun, and about movies. You are your own studio and must choose six movies for your studio that are being released in the next 4 months. The scoring is based on things like money brought in and such. It is a fun guessing game and I highly recommend it. As for everything else, well, my last update was a bit faulty. Too much time has passed for me to give a good review of the Painted Veil or The World is Not Enough. The recent essay on film criticism spun out of ideas for a Truman Show review, which I didn't do. However, I can say that the future looks bright since I am currently writing a review of two other films that should complete the Mexican Triumvirate as I call it. They should be up soon, but until then, here's something a friend has to say.

Thursday, January 18, 2007

Hyper-Realism vs. Cartoons

I would like to take a second to discuss artistic aesthetics. I realize that at the end it discusses "good film vs bad film" which is of course pointless since it is an endless debate. However, I am trying to make a point of the critic's tool of realism and its ramifications in a film. If you think this will be a discussion about animation versus live-action, I'm afraid you may want to come back later. Instead, think of this as reality television versus comic book movies. Still a bad analogy, but oh well.

In the world, each medium has its own distinctive artistic flavor. The flavor of each medium is usually a direct reflection of its capabilities. A cartoon tends to use a lot of schtick because it allows for very interesting physical movements and literally stretched characters. Whereas films tend to have rules based on logic and be expansive in sets and locations. Theater on the other hand should be more abstract and very surreal. Some of these tendencies are spurred by monetary considerations, others simply by the nature of the medium. In all cases though, the rules of that medium can be changed and made to imitate or mock other mediums. They can also be manipulated and misused to suit the purposes of the artist. With that being said, certain stories and ideas seem to fit better on certain mediums. Lord of the Rings the 9 hour long play might be cool, but it is also ridiculously expensive. a pain in the ass for the performers and audience members who might have places to be. In other words, a show that would never last long and would be produced rarely. The first and best piece of advice in writing I ever received was, when you write a screenplay, make sure that it is a screenplay and not a play, not a novel, and not a short-story dressed as a screenplay. Many people can't recognize the medium they write in which is why translators and adaptors have good creative jobs.

Film is traditionally known for being realistic. It is a medium in which a great amount of detail is captured and has potential for holding the perfect performance forever and can be distributed far and wide in a short amount of time. A opening performance of a play in 200 theaters in America simultaneously is next to impossible and making sure that all of those productions are of high quality is impossible. Since film was developed as a medium long after theater, there was a natural competition between the mediums for storytelling in which the performance capturing effect of the film was pitted against the live performance with the audiences to decide. History shows that the rise of film and decline of theater audiences over time would show that film won in that regard. While plays tried to recreate Haiti, Cuba, Yonkers, and other locations, film took audiences there. You want to see a real drug deal? Watch some documentaries about drug dealing. Critics have, in the past, lauded the "realistic" assets of a production. Only recently has that concept been critically challenged.

I believe each film can be categorized somewhere along the spectrum between hyper-realism and cartoon. In the past, a "serious" film that might be categorized as a "masterpiece" was always more "realistic" than other films of that year. Whereas comic-booky and cartoonish films were either for children and therefore below the notice of adults or just bad films. While Who Framed Roger Rabbit? was a great movie according to most critics and involved a message of tolerance and cooperation over hatred and bigotry, it was a film categorized as being meant mostly for children. Thankfully, a new generation of critics and filmmakers have entered the arena. A generation that understands the implications and importance of film that is not constantly and boringly realistic. Now, many comic books are getting well-made films, several of which are critically acclaimed. Whereas there are also films that are too "realistic" for the common palate such as Jackass or the movie based on the partyers in Cancun. While many old-fashioned critics may decry these recent changes, here's the truth that they don't want to realize and the secret behind brilliant film work. NO FILM IS TRULY REALISTIC.

What I mean by that is a film is usually based on a story with dramatic elements, or its edited to emphasize pacing, tempo, a certain movement, etc. Perhaps the only realistic film I can think of is the one by Andy Warhol about a man sleeping for six hours. Even films that are accredited with tons of historical accuracy such as Pearl Harbor and Gone With the Wind tend to manipulate dramatic devices and cinematography to their own advantage. How many people can say they have seen a man who was playing with a snow globe right before he passed away during the middle of a rainstorm? Exactly. Film is not about realism, it's about capturing the essence of realism and manipulating that essence to reveal a story that is above the norm. It is meant to delight in the realistic absurd. If I rambled to you for an hour and lied every 3 seconds, you would probably ignore me after 30 seconds. However, a film could take that story and make it seem plausible to a massive audience. Every film creates its own laws which will then govern the movie. If the film is set in space, then no one has gravity and they can float. Ahh, but wait! Maybe they land on a planet that naturally has gravity and aliens that can pick up languages at light speed! Well, that last bit might be a bit harder to swallow, it can still be logically explained away in some other scene or flashback. The recent film Babel is a good example of the absurd of the everyday. The film gives the feeling that everyone is connected and it holds messages that can relate to our reality and political situations. Babel is a great film because it really is a film showing the connections and links of humanity and mankind to others. How those connections are established, damaged, destroyed, and fixed. The story and the "reality", which is supposed to be the world of the audience, are merely vehicles for the director and writer to explore this complex issue of humanity. Children of Men, however, is set in the future and creates its own rules about that future which will let the director and writer explore the meaning of life and the wonder of birth. Now the film feels logical, because the laws on which the film works stem from and are built upon the current reality of the audience of today, making it "our world" in the future. M. Night Shyamalan has a made a living off of creating these absurd ideas into logical ones. The ending of Signs and the reason why the aliens were killed made complete sense, but only in the context of the movie. In reality there are no aliens (yet!) and I highly doubt that preacher's wives often have premonitions of the future of their families right before they die. It is all "willing suspension of disbelief" as they say.

So what makes a good film? A good film is made when not only are the rules and laws of a film understood and made clear to an audience and followed throughout a movie, but when through these laws and world, the film is able to explore something outside of itself, something that might be more immediate or of more importance to the general public than tying your shoes. When a film fails to follow its own rules, then it is called "unrealistic" because it is. It is unable to follow the reality it has given itself. Also, when films are considered bizarre it is usually because those films do not do a good enough job of explaining their reality and the rules in it, so the audience tends to substitute their own rules for the film's laws of reality. Good films walk the line between cartoon and hyper-realism so that they can create their own insulated and perfect world or vision. I give this example because I feel that Alfonso Cuaron is especially good at this type of dramatic device. Cuaron in his new movie has a scene where the only pregnant girl in the world reveals herself to a man in the back of a barn while standing amidst a bunch of cows. This is an inevitable and requisite part of the plot, but the positioning and framing of this shot is perfect. The barn atmosphere with animals brings out the symbol of the coming of Jesus in the child while the use of that particular animal, the cow is brilliant since throughout the movie there have been several shots already of fields of burnt and dead cows, maimed and mutilated. It creates a striking image of hope that without help could be killed like cattle. A hope in danger. All of that, from a pregnant woman showing a man her pregnant belly. It is from visionaries that understand the significance of story and vision that great movies are made. Not whether the film is "realistic" or not and I look forward to the first fully animated adult film that is critically praised as I know it one day will be. Cheers to those who can find the correct placement of realism or cartoon to accurately emphasize and create films worth watching.

(Oh, and one more thing, please don't confuse realism with gritty violence. It hurts me inside)

Wannabe

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Quick comment on Golden Globes

I'm at work, so here's a quick rundown of how it all played out.
Dreamgirls(haven't seen it yet) and Babel(have) run away with the prizes.
Painted Veil won best Original Score which is slightly amusing. Helen Mirren gets way too much loving for The Queen and her made for TV movie. Martin Scorcese wins a Golden Globe for best director and is now assured a kiss of death come Oscar time. Sacha Cohen won best comedic actor for Borat, thus confirming the belief among thousands of conservative Republicans that Hollywood is too liberal and that censor chips should be planted in everyone's brains to ascertain good taste. Heroes is overshadowed and wins nothing, but it gets a better showing than Lost. Hugh Laurie proves himself to be a genius at being a jerk doctor. Jennifer Hudson lets the world know that thye can soon be expecting her to show up and possibly win the Oscars and a real career in Hollywood. Eddie Murphy wins a Globe and finds out how easy it is to be overshadowed. Also, apparently Hollywood can now create and make Foreign Films(From America people!!!) like Letter From Iwo Jima and Apocalypto and win in that category. And a bunch of other people and shows win awards, but no one really remembers or cares. My predictions, we will see more of Babel and Dreamgirls and The Queen come Oscar time.

Sunday, January 14, 2007

Munich

'Munich is something to munch on'

Munich is one of those movies that was widely acknowledged last year as being nominated for best picture as a honor to its director Steven Spielberg without any real expectation of winning. It was lauded before it came out as being a great work since it was the melding of Steven Spielberg and Tony Kushner, the mastermind behind the play Angels in America. The movie was released, considered okay, but not amazing as everyone had hoped for it to be. What happened? The cast included several well known actors including Geoffrey Rush and Eric Bana plays the main character. In fact, the current Bond, Daniel Craig, had a big part in the film. Many articles and critics focused on the historical accuracy of the story itself as being flawed and therefore producing a flawed movie. Some decided to focus more on the fact that the movie feels too heavily prejudiced in favor of Israel. Since I have little knowledge of the actual events upon which the film is based, hopefully my review will be different in explaining the reasons for its failure to capture audiences and critics, although I am of the belief that America supports Israel a little too often in the Middle East.

Most of the history upon which the film is based comes from the events surrounding the hijacking and execution of the Israeli Olympics sports team by an Islamic group of radicals in the film known as Black September. After the deaths of the athletes, the Israeli government gathers several groups of Israeli nationalist Jews together to form their own terrorist cells and to supposedly attack back and kill the terrorists responsible for the deaths of the Israeli athletes. The film follows one of these cells lead by Eric Bana’s character. Speaking of poor Eric Bana, the man shows such promise in films and then his films get panned. His character in Troy was great, but the rest of the movie was badly handled. Hulk failed as a consequence of the struggle between the director Ang Lee and the studio execs creating an opaque and cloudy vision of mish-mashed ideas. So what was wrong with the film this time for Eric Bana? Well…he is. Yes, he finally doesn’t seem to live up to the part he was chosen for. He shows a lot of range but why can he not pan out? This could be because of the way in which the film was created. Tony Kushner is primarily a playwright and this was his first screenplay. He treated the screenplay as he would treat a play by being there for the creation and editing his script as he came up with new ideas and tried to sculpt the vision to how things were going. Tried to make the characters belong more to the actors and help them. However, with the constant editing and rewriting on the set, this causes possible confusion for the director Spielberg who has never directed a play, and for the actors in terms of not knowing the arc of the overall story or characters necessarily. However, a leading man should be used to this and it doesn’t seem to affect most of the other actors. In fact Daniel Craig comes off better than Eric Bana. Geoffrey Rush does an excellent job as well. In the end, I guess Eric Bana simply wasn’t ready for this role. Most of the movie he comes across as too silent and moody and he doesn’t let the audience in far enough to see his personal conflict as much as he ought.

Other problems...well, Spielberg? If you want to see the growth of a director, just look at Spielberg’s career and be awed. He went from doing light entertainment and kids films to adult war films such as Saving Private Ryan and Schindler’s List. The problem is that he has never really tried to make a message film. Well, that is arguable, but for the most part he claims to only want to tell great stories, which may or may not have a message. In this case he has said that he wanted to make a comment about a very real and debilitating conflict which is causing so much pain. Where he succeeds is he doesn’t focus explicitly on the Israel versus Islam hatred. He makes it a story about a man and his group of revenge killers for the national tragedy. He also doesn’t let Israel get off the hook. It would be easy to claim that Spielberg is pro-Israel however, the Israeli government comes off looking bad as do most of the radicals. By the end, the conflict appears to be useless and all for the sake of revenge on both sides. The real problem is that the film spreads itself too thin and the pacing needs work. The film tries to cover too much from recreating the assassination of the Israeli sports team, to portraying and building the struggle and empathy for the main character, to the building of the friendship between Eric Bana and his friends. The pacing goes too slowly in some spots where I think Spielberg is trying to develop the silent conflict of Bana’s character and it feels forced and slow. It is easy to be distracted while watching the film and find yourself doing something else when you shouldn’t be. Another interesting thing is that Spielberg noted that this movie is as close to directing a play as he will ever get. Well, for a first attempt its not bad, but he needed to devote more time to developing the relationships through dialogue.
Conclusion:
Munich is a good film but it suffers from being too spread out. The relationships between characters and their motivations are murky at best. Also, Eric Bana does not seem to put in too much of a performance. However, Spielberg puts in a good first attempt with good cinematography, great action scenes, and the re-enactment of the kidnapping of the Israeli sports team is exquisite. Spielberg has shown that he is more interested these days in making adult entertainment masterpieces and I feel that this film is an excellent attempt at this ideal. Hopefully this won’t be the last time Kushner and Spielberg collaborate because I feel that next time a lot of the problems that plagued this movie will not exist and they will learn to emphasize each other’s assets better to create a true great masterpiece that will rival the likes of Citizen Kane, Casablanca, and even Schindler’s List.

3.75 out 5

Wannabe

Thursday, January 11, 2007

Déjà vu

'Deja Vu has been seen before'

Well, Tony Scott’s time traveling drama has come and gone from theaters. To claim mixed feelings seems a fair judgement. The film succeeded on several levels. The actors were pretty good, after all it is hard to ever argue with Denzel Washington in the role of a police investigator. I seem to have a hard time pointing out where the film fails and why I left wholely unsatisfied whereas several middle schoolers out on a date in front of me left raving about how the film blew their minds. Yes, I’m older which plays a small part. Really where the film fails I think is in its mediocrity. My expectations were a bit high for this film considering the hype and the fact that the director is Ridley Scott’s brother. I guess I expected an eye-opening fresh experience when instead I had a decent one. First, the actors.

In this film Denzel Washington plays a police investigator who is brought on board after a huge explosion killing many navy men on temporary leave in New Orleans. He then tries to find a way to stop the death of Halle Berry and the many navy men aboard the ship. Denzel is Denzel and he will always be a great cop. I kind of wish that directors would stop typecasting him so much, or maybe he just really likes playing strong authoritative black men. He works fine and differentiates the role slightly from his previous cop type roles. Then there is Halle Berry, who manages to pull off one of her best performances believably, I feel, and manage to finally look attractive all at once. I admit that I am not a Halle Berry fan and I have never understood the fascination with her beauty. I prefer Tyra Banks or Gabrielle Union honestly for looks and I think Vivica A. Fox is more like what Halle should be. In this film though, I have finally seen the acting potential and the beauty I have heard so much about. Kudos to her, but with that being said the performance is still nothing outstanding or amazing. The villain is done by none other than Jesus himself, Jim Caviezel. I’m glad I saw him again because after The Passion it seemed like he fell off the face of the earth and I get the impression now that he’s trying to reinvent himself as a versatile actor and not be known as Jesus like Christopher Reeves was known as Superman. With that being said, he pulls it off well. His character is cold and demeaning and one of the scariest villains I have seen on a screen. He felt like Hannibal Lecter from Silence of the Lambs because at any moments when he was captured you got the feeling that he might leap up and decapitate Denzel Washington while smiling, except you could never see his muscles tensed. Very creepy. The supporting cast do a decent job as well with people like Val Kilmer and Adam Goldberg turning in okay jobs. The fact of the matter is that the film rests on Denzel’s shoulders where he carries things effortlessly as always. So, in the end, a decent job by the cast with a well deserved nod to Caviezel and an improvement in Berry’s work.

Well, now to the problems. The plot does a good job of creating an invisible co-star out of the element of time itself as Denzel works against it and time travels. It even does a decent job of keeping a continuity where weird little things in the beginning of the movie make sense after Denzel travels in time and tries to change things. The problem comes in how the time changes. The movie briefly explains a couple of simple theories as to how time works. The one it sticks to is the branch theory, which I personally do not ascribe to, in which when something is changed in the past the possibility of changing the future forever occurs. Now, my biggest complaint is that when Denzel does change the future to get the desired outcome, it is only a small thing that has changed. There were plenty of bigger events earlier that should have changed everything but didn’t. Also, why did Caviezel’s character come back to the boat? The end is way too tidy and everything feels like it was explained away in bad scientific theories. Denzel dies in the new time line by drowning (I think) so that the director doesn’t have to mess with the crazy idea of having Denzel meet himself. The villain comes back on board for a final confrontation and dies. Halle Berry lives anyway and meets the new Denzel Washington. I also dislike the Hollywood thing where actors seem like something the other one says is vaguely familiar, as if from a previous life. In this film that doesn’t make a lick of sense because when Denzel at the end, that Denzel never went back in time, will never go back in time, and should therefore have no recollection or even sense of vague familiarity with Halle's words which his old self had told her. The fact that the film has a science fiction component that is different from most sci-fi crime actioners is interesting but I feel it is badly implemented.

The last problem I have is with Tony Scott in the film. The cinematography is great and I feel like the continuity editor was amazing. However, the film is simply ok. It is not great unless you are being exposed to these ideas for the first time. I feel that Time Cop did a better job in this genre than this film and that I’ve seen a lot of these same gimmicks better realized in other films. They aren’t done badly, I’ve just seen them done better. I’m glad to see Tony Scott branching slightly into sci-fi, but he is primarily an action director as can be seen from his list of past films and it shows in this film. He has directed Top Gun, Days of Thunder, Man on Fire, Domino, and is working on a modernized version of The Warriors. Looking at this past work, I feel he was trying to copy the success he had with Man on Fire by having Denzel and setting in New Orleans. In fact, he does a really good job getting the feel of New Orleans without focusing on it heavily. Of course the action is intense and well done. But the relationships and dialogue need work and I feel like he could have really stepped it up on this one. Every director has bad films, which this one isn’t. It’s just not his best quality.

2.75 out of 5

Wannabe

Tuesday, January 9, 2007

More Coming

Whew,
Okay look. I realize you might not care considering there seems to be only two people signed onto the email feed, but here's the deal. I will have at least three more movie reviews shortly. Sorry for the delay but I had things like Christmas, a wedding, honeymoon, and it can be hard to remember to write or see movies through all of that. Since that is all over now, I should have a review of The World Is Not Enough, Deja Vu, and The Painted Veil shortly. More will follow probably including some self-critical essays on where I stand in the whole review-criticism spectrum. Anyhow, just letting you know that the site isn't dead. Also, I hear good things about Children of Men...see if I can get that critiqued as well. Peace!

Wannabe