REVIEW: Red Dawn

Red Dawn
Directed by: Dan Bradley
Written by: Carl Ellsworth and Jeremy Passmore (screenplay), Kevin Reynolds (story)
Starring: Chris Hemsworth, Josh Peck, Josh Hutcherson and Adrianne Palicki

Categorizing the remake of Red Dawn as a mindless action movie is a mistake.  Typically, those modern American action films embed a sense of macho honor and patriotism as a backdrop, not as a front-and-center subject.  Red Dawn avoids this, instead opting to adopt a philosophy of mindlessness, creating a space where the call of duty is all that matters and the foreign and domestic political spheres are nonexistent.

The original version of this story rose to prominence in 1984, at the height of Reagan and in the final decade of the Cold War.  Its premise, Soviet forces invading America and a small group of Colorado high schoolers engaging in guerrilla warfare against them in their town, fed off of paranoia.  In this updated version it’s the North Koreans invading the state of Washington, but the adolescent insurgents fighting for freedom and democracy are still very much in tact.

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REVIEW: Life of Pi

Life of Pi
Directed by: Ang Lee
Written by: David Magee (screenplay), Yann Martel (book)
Starring: Suraj Sharma, Irrfan Khan, Rafe Spall and Gérard Depardieu

Because of the horrendously vague marketing campaign, the only draw to Life of Pi for me was the Ang Lee directing credit.  Though Lee’s directing career includes some misses (Taking Woodstock, Hulk) he is a master storyteller and when he’s on (Brokeback Mountain, The Ice Storm) few contemporary filmmakers can touch him.

Life of Pi is neither masterwork nor miss.  It is, however, a stunningly gorgeous movie about survival at sea, and all the problems and symbolism that entails.  An inquisitive young boy named Pi (Suraj Sharman) is moving away from his home in India with his family to escape mounting political tensions.  The ship is caught in a storm and sinks.  Pi and four animals from his family’s zoo stowaway on a life boat and drift across the Pacific.

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REVIEW: Lincoln

Lincoln
Directed by: Steven Spielberg
Written by: Tony Kushner (screenplay), Doris Kearns Goodwin (book) (in part)
Starring: Daniel Day-Lewis, Sally Field, David Strathairn and Tommy Lee Jones

Seeing movies after they have been stampeded over and analyzed by the critical mainstream can be both a blessing and a curse, as it is with Steven Spielberg’s latest historical filmmaking venture, Lincoln.  I often make it a point not to read reviews of movies I plan on writing about until after I’ve seen the movie and collected my thoughts, and this one is no exception.

That being said, there was an op-ed in the New York Times released by Northwestern history professor Kate Masur days before Lincoln was released nationally.  It was titled “In Spielberg’s Lincoln, Passive Black Characters,” and it addresses just what its title proclaims in a succinct, powerful fashion.  Masur is not a professional film critic, and her piece is not an evaluation of the whole production but merely a response to the specific part of it that her title describes.

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REVIEW: Take This Waltz

Take This Waltz
Directed by: Sarah Polley
Written by: Sarah Polley (screenplay)
Starring: Michelle Williams, Seth Rogen, Luke Kirby and Sarah Silverman

One of the first things we see Margot (Michelle Williams) do in Sarah Polley’s Take This Waltz is gently flog an adulterer while visiting an old fashioned theme park.  Waves of anxiety and embarrassment wash over her face as the other people in the crowd laugh at both her and the obnoxiously over-the-top characters performing the ritual.

This scene sets up a convenient Meet Cute for Margot and Daniel (Luke Kirby), but it also brings to light the stigma attached to adulterers, though in modern times the flogging is more verbal.  The dual purposes of this scene are important because Margot is married, and even loves Lou (Seth Rogen), her husband of five years.

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REVIEW: Skyfall

Skyfall
Directed by: Sam Mendes
Written by: Neal Purvis, Robert Wade and John Logan (screenplay), Ian Fleming (characters)
Starring: Daniel Craig, Judi Dench, Javier Bardem and Ralph Fiennes

Like Christopher Nolan’s reboot of the Batman mythology, the Daniel Craig-led entries in the 007 franchise are darker, more meditative studies of their respective heroes.  Not only do they redefine the universes of these characters, but they plunge them into less cartoonish environments with consequences.  They also take themselves somewhat seriously.

With Craig as the infamous super spy, the franchise lifted itself to an extraordinary high point in 2006’s Casino Royale.  This was an origin story laced with intense action sequences, elegant vistas and shocking amounts of pathos.  He became the infamous, emotionally hallow womanizer of the earlier films because his heart was broken.

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REVIEW: Flight

Flight
Directed by: Robert Zemeckis
Written by: John Gatins (screenplay)
Starring: Denzel Washington, Kelly Reilly, Don Cheadle and John Goodman

Denzel Washington has an uncanny knack for throwing away his lines while still allowing them to register emotionally on his face.  This tactic serves him quite well in Robert Zemeckis’ Flight because the character he portrays, the alcoholic airplane pilot Whip Whitaker, would be much too volcanic and ineffective if he was played in a straightforward way.  In Washington’s hands, he transforms into a wounded maverick lying his way out of a situation he had no control over.

Unlike many of Zemeckis’ other movies, Flight avoids many opportunities for standard character development and perseverance.  When a standard Orlando-Atlanta flight turns into a nosedive at 30,000 feet because of mechanical malfunctions, Whitaker remarkably flies the plane upside down and stabilizes it for a safe landing.  Of the 102 passengers on board, only six died when all of them should have.

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REVIEW: Bachelorette

Bachelorette
Directed by: Leslye Headland
Written by: Leslye Headland (screenplay)
Starring: Kirsten Dunst, Lizzy Caplan, Isla Fisher and Rebel Wilson

Writing Bachelorette off as a Bridesmaids cash-in would be to oversimplify it and also a great disservice to the movie’s writer and director.  Leslye Headland originally conceived Bachelorette as an Off Broadway play in 2007.  Now, is it possible that the movie adaptation got released largely because of the success of Bridesmaids?  Certainly.

Really, though, the only thing these two movies have in common are their comic misfires of the bridal party.  Bachelorette is a decidedly nastier and much more bitter type of comedy.  The three women at its center, Regan (Kirsten Dunst), Gena (Lizzy Caplan) and Katie (Isla Fisher) are so disgustingly self-absorbed and cruel that they treat the wedding of their “friend” Becky (Rebel Wilson) as an excuse to do cocaine, hook up with groomsmen and open up old high school wounds.

Becky was the friend in high school that the other three kept around to feel better about themselves.  She’s plump and somewhat naive, but she’s also the first of the group to get engaged.  The movie’s first scene involves the conversation of her telling Regan about her future husband intercut with the furiously funny cell phone conference of Regan telling the other two.

After that, the rest of Bachelorette takes place on the night before the wedding, with the three women destroying Becky’s dress in a drug-induced Facebook photo session seeing how many of them can fit inside it and then running around New York City trying to get it fixed before the morning.  Not many of the plot points really seem to make sense from there on out, especially an obvious, overly long detour at a strip club to meet Gena’s ex-boyfriend (Adam Scott), who of course is a groomsmen.

Heyland puts her story at the whims of three very troubled, dysfunctional women.  They are on drugs, so of course most of what they’re doing doesn’t make sense.  Buried beneath the movie’s bitingly funny zings are their high school woes, which include abortion and bulimia.  These issues cause some tonal inconsistencies, but for the most part Heyland doesn’t dwell on them.

Gena is by far the most troubled.  She has a serious drug habit, and her high school days are now the least of her problems.  Caplan is a stand-out in this role in a movie that is already exceptionally well-acted.  Her jittery, darting performance meshes very well with Dunt’s authoritative rampaging and Fisher’s rampant partier.

The men play a much larger role in Bachelorette than they did in Bridesmaids, mostly because the women are much more sexualized.  After that aforementioned strip club scene, the trio of misfits splits up with a corresponding member of the bachelor party (Scott, James Marsden and Kyle Bornheimer).  The brisk, well-timed cuts between these conversations and many of the other ones complement the biting delivery well.

Heyland has created women who don’t want redemption and whose only third act salvation comes in the form of only kind of ruining the wedding instead of completely doing it.  The farcical comedy works well most of the time, especially with three villainess, conniving and unsympathetic stooges at the center.  Sure it is a little candy coated (the movie should’ve ended with the three women’s wicked stare at the alter) and contradictory in the final scene, but from what we’ve just witnessed them do the night before, it isn’t going to last past the reception.

Grade: B-

REVIEW: Cloud Atlas

Cloud Atlas
Directed by: Tom Tykwer, Lana Wachowski and Andy Wachowski
Written by: Lana Wachowski, Tom Tykwer and Andy Wachowski (screenplay), David Mitchell (novel)
Starring: Tom Hanks, Halle Berry, Jim Broadbent and Hugo Weaving

Tom Hanks and Halle Berry have come unstuck in time.  Over the course of Cloud Atlas’ wildly ambitious 172 minutes, the two mainstream Hollywood actors and a plethora of others- Susan Sarandon, Jim Broadbent, Hugh Grant- appear as wildly different characters in just as wildly different time periods, from California in 1973 to post-apocalyptic Hawaii hundreds of years from now.

The six varying and intersecting narrative threads in Cloud Atlas are stunningly shot and at times narratively captivating.  As adapted by Andy and Lana Wachowki and Tom Tykwer (who all co-wrote and directed), it amounts to a beautiful mess.  There are too many narrative threads and characters to begin with, and adding poor execution and editing to that just makes it worse.

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10 Movies I Changed My Mind About

I hated Pulp Fiction the first time I saw it.  The first Tarantino movie I’d ever seen was Kill Bill: Vol. 1, which is a decidedly gorier and altogether more accessible movie for an eighth grader (technically I wasn’t legally “mature enough” for either by the MPAA’s standards), although I was the only one in my grade who seemed to enjoy it.  When I watched Pulp Fiction for a second (and a third and a fourth ad infinitum) viewing, it gripped me like few other movies had before or since.  To this day it is still one of my all-time favorites.

Movies, especially great ones, often change from viewing to viewing, not because they are different but because we are.  Though we now live in an age of Rotten Tomato blurbs and aggregated consensus, a critic’s most valued possession is still their written voice.  With every review now posted quickly and then archived online, conversation on most movies usually peaks quickly when they are first released, and then dissipates just as fast.  The only time afforded to looking back is the annual “Best of the Year” cluster fuck.

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REVIEW: Magic Mike

Magic Mike
Directed by: Steven Soderbergh
Written by: Reid Carolin (screenplay)
Starring: Channing Tatum, Alex Pettyfer, Cody Horn and Matthew McConaughey

Magic Mike is not a radical film.  Its form is decidedly modern, with director Steven Soderbergh creating a lived-in yet color-saturated urban Florida summer.  Its content, a fairly standard “Getting my life together” narrative, has been made radical because of Hollywood’s endless dedication to the male gaze.

As you are probably aware at this point, Magic Mike is the Channing Tatum stripper movie.  It is a summer success story that is somehow a surprise because averting the endless movie camera gawk at the female form and aiming it at men is seen as a risk.  Studio executives remain in a state of shock when the non-heterosexual male half of the population turns out to support a movie made for them.

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