What If directed by Michael Dowse, starring Daniel Radcliffe, Zoe Kazan, Megan Park, Adam Driver, Mackenzie Davie, and Rafe Spall.
With any romantic genre movie the two leads must have good chemistry. No good chemistry equals no good romantic movie. Randcliffe and Kazan nail the chemistry out of the park in this movie. Every scene they are in together is oozing and saturated with it. They are the main reason to see this movie and completely make this movie watching. Along with a good screenplay that doesn't misrepresent the two main characters but treats them as real characters. The same goes with their friends in their lives, making every situation they get into not seem artificial but well thought out with some dialogue that doesn't feel contrived but flows with the characters. Again this isn't a movie trying to break new ground but if you're in the mood for a good romantic movie, you can't really do any worse than this movie and you won't feel like you've wasted time watching it.
Saturday, March 28, 2015
A Walk Among the Tombstones
A Walk Among the Tombstones written and directed by Scott Frank, starring Liam Neeson, Maurice Compte, Dan Stevens, and David Harbour.
Finally Liam Neeson has found a movie that doesn't try to retread his movie Taken. Don't get me wrong though it still is Neeson kicking ass and taking a few names but it's done in a completely different way than Taken. That's a good thing.
This is basically a cops and robbers type of story where Liam Neeson is trying to find a serial killer. This movie doesn't break any new ground but it's told in a good manner as the story line lets Neeson's characters take forefront in the narrative as he guides the viewer through the twists and turns of the detective story. It's told well enough, with enough character touches, and back story that I wouldn't mind another couple of movies with this character as long as Neeson is playing him.
Finally Liam Neeson has found a movie that doesn't try to retread his movie Taken. Don't get me wrong though it still is Neeson kicking ass and taking a few names but it's done in a completely different way than Taken. That's a good thing.
This is basically a cops and robbers type of story where Liam Neeson is trying to find a serial killer. This movie doesn't break any new ground but it's told in a good manner as the story line lets Neeson's characters take forefront in the narrative as he guides the viewer through the twists and turns of the detective story. It's told well enough, with enough character touches, and back story that I wouldn't mind another couple of movies with this character as long as Neeson is playing him.
Sunday, March 8, 2015
The Drop
The Drop directed by Michael R. Roskam, starring Tom Hardy, James Gandolfini, Noomi Rapace, John Ortiz, and Matthias Schoenaerts.
This is a little gem of a movie I stumbled upon with little information about it except the name Dennis Lehane. I can tell you that alone makes this movie worth checking out.
I have come to an understanding over the years that if a movie is either written by Dennis Lehane or based on a book by him - I had better check out that movie. It is bound to be good. This movie has a double whammy of Lehane - it's based on a short story by him and adapted to screen by him. It's 90 minutes of good story telling, great characters, very good direction, and some great acting by Tom Hardy. This is an underrated movie not talked about by a lot people. It doesn't try to reinvent the wheel but what it does best is just use simple storytelling to tell a simple story. It's not hard to get caught up with the action and storytelling going on nor to get fully involved in the characters.
Lehane has become a master at the gritty, crime scene that slowly boils under a city. He writes some really good characters and uses them as a guide through the underbelly. This story is no different as Tom Hardy plays the main character masterfully and continues to add to his filmography of different roles played. This characters is soft spoken and for the most part gentle. There is nothing loud or abrasive about him but Hardy manages to fully bring him to life in quietness and subtle eye movements that speak volumes without saying a word. Lehane is really good at bringing characters to life without using much dialogue but what dialogue there is has to be paid attention to because its not just there for the sake of being there. There's a purpose to it and every scene in this small, tightly paced movie is necessary. Every move of a character has purpose as it helps to explain them and flesh them out.
This is a little gem of a movie I stumbled upon with little information about it except the name Dennis Lehane. I can tell you that alone makes this movie worth checking out.
I have come to an understanding over the years that if a movie is either written by Dennis Lehane or based on a book by him - I had better check out that movie. It is bound to be good. This movie has a double whammy of Lehane - it's based on a short story by him and adapted to screen by him. It's 90 minutes of good story telling, great characters, very good direction, and some great acting by Tom Hardy. This is an underrated movie not talked about by a lot people. It doesn't try to reinvent the wheel but what it does best is just use simple storytelling to tell a simple story. It's not hard to get caught up with the action and storytelling going on nor to get fully involved in the characters.
Lehane has become a master at the gritty, crime scene that slowly boils under a city. He writes some really good characters and uses them as a guide through the underbelly. This story is no different as Tom Hardy plays the main character masterfully and continues to add to his filmography of different roles played. This characters is soft spoken and for the most part gentle. There is nothing loud or abrasive about him but Hardy manages to fully bring him to life in quietness and subtle eye movements that speak volumes without saying a word. Lehane is really good at bringing characters to life without using much dialogue but what dialogue there is has to be paid attention to because its not just there for the sake of being there. There's a purpose to it and every scene in this small, tightly paced movie is necessary. Every move of a character has purpose as it helps to explain them and flesh them out.
Hercules
Hercules directed Brett Ratner, starring Dwayne Johnson, Ian Mcshane, John Hurt, Rufus Sewell, Aksel Hennie, Ingrid Bolso Berdal, and Joseph Fiennes.
I came into this movie with low expectations, then this movie went lower than those expectations, that is how bad this movie was. Ever cliche that is associated with a fantasy movie was here, not one hair of cliche was out of place. There is no logic or even any semblance of structure to anything in this movie which would be all right if this movie just decided it was going to be over the top and then acted accordingly. But this movie takes itself way to seriously as its inner logic betrays everything about it.
The only saving grave about this movie was the side characters around Hercules. They were way more interesting than any aspect of this movie. I just wish the writers could have figured that out. It reminded me of the movie Kingdom of Heaven with Liam Neeson and his band of merry knights that died about 20 minutes into the movie despite the fact they were all way more interesting than Orlando Bloom's character who then had to support the whole movie. At least in this movie they didn't kill off the more interesting characters, they just didn't have the common sense to give them more scenes.
I came into this movie with low expectations, then this movie went lower than those expectations, that is how bad this movie was. Ever cliche that is associated with a fantasy movie was here, not one hair of cliche was out of place. There is no logic or even any semblance of structure to anything in this movie which would be all right if this movie just decided it was going to be over the top and then acted accordingly. But this movie takes itself way to seriously as its inner logic betrays everything about it.
The only saving grave about this movie was the side characters around Hercules. They were way more interesting than any aspect of this movie. I just wish the writers could have figured that out. It reminded me of the movie Kingdom of Heaven with Liam Neeson and his band of merry knights that died about 20 minutes into the movie despite the fact they were all way more interesting than Orlando Bloom's character who then had to support the whole movie. At least in this movie they didn't kill off the more interesting characters, they just didn't have the common sense to give them more scenes.
Kingsman: The Secret Service
Kingsman: The Secret Service directed by Matthew Vaughan, starring Colin Firth, Samuel Jackson, Mark Strong, Michael Cain.
This is basically just a movie to kick back and have good time watching. It doesn't take itself too seriously and knows what kind of movie it is. It is completely over the top but it knows this and just rolls with it, like a movie that is going to be that. This movie isn't trying to reinvent the wheel as it harkens back the fun times of the Sean Connery and Roger Moore James Bond movies.
It was also fun to watch Colin Firth in an action film. I never thought I'd see him one and does a great job. It was much like it was watching Helen Mirren in Red. He helped to sale this movie as he played around with the suave British spy.
Make no mistake though this movie is extremely violent. One scene in particular was insanely violent but I will point out that scene did have a purpose storyline-wise and wasn't just there for the violent aspect of it. It did serve a purpose.
So when this movie comes out on DVD, just sit back, put it in the player, and have a good time watching it.
This is basically just a movie to kick back and have good time watching. It doesn't take itself too seriously and knows what kind of movie it is. It is completely over the top but it knows this and just rolls with it, like a movie that is going to be that. This movie isn't trying to reinvent the wheel as it harkens back the fun times of the Sean Connery and Roger Moore James Bond movies.
It was also fun to watch Colin Firth in an action film. I never thought I'd see him one and does a great job. It was much like it was watching Helen Mirren in Red. He helped to sale this movie as he played around with the suave British spy.
Make no mistake though this movie is extremely violent. One scene in particular was insanely violent but I will point out that scene did have a purpose storyline-wise and wasn't just there for the violent aspect of it. It did serve a purpose.
So when this movie comes out on DVD, just sit back, put it in the player, and have a good time watching it.
Blood Ties
Blood Ties directed by Guillaume Canet, starring Clive Own, Billy Crudup, Marion Cotillard, Mila Kunis, James Cann, Noah Emmerich, and Lili Taylor.
The trailer for this movie was a hundred times better than this bore of movie turned out. Even with all the actors in it, it still was way to slow and took to long to get where it was going. The story line was all over the place and never seemed to fully settle down on anyone to guide the viewer through the movie. There weren't enough acting scenes to fully flesh out the characters leaving the viewer to fill in the pieces of what was going on and for having this many characters, that's not a good thing. There is a good story lurking underneath this movie but it needed a better screenplay to pull it off. The direction and production design were the only good things this about this movie everything else was a let down.
The trailer for this movie was a hundred times better than this bore of movie turned out. Even with all the actors in it, it still was way to slow and took to long to get where it was going. The story line was all over the place and never seemed to fully settle down on anyone to guide the viewer through the movie. There weren't enough acting scenes to fully flesh out the characters leaving the viewer to fill in the pieces of what was going on and for having this many characters, that's not a good thing. There is a good story lurking underneath this movie but it needed a better screenplay to pull it off. The direction and production design were the only good things this about this movie everything else was a let down.
Aliens
Aliens written and directed by James Cameron, starring Sigourny Weaver, Michael Biehn, Carrie Henn, Paul Reiser, Bill Paxton, and Lance Henriksen.
It has been about 10 years since I've seen this movie and I've got say this movie has held up extremely well over the time since it came out in the late 80's. This movie is easily one of the best 100 movie ever made and would make my list of the top 20 movies of all time. I don't know what more I can say about it. This movie defines categorization as it mixes in all kinds of genres: sci-fi, horror, thriller, and action, to create a movie experience unlike any other made. It's one of the best sequels of all time and personally I think it's better than Alien even though it is differently made beast than the straight up horror aspect of Alien. It's a beautifully executed marriage of idea, concept, production, direction, casting, acting, and everything else that goes into making a movie.
Perfect casting along with perfect acting. Sigourny Weaver out does herself from the first film and embodies one of the first and best action women ever. She brings her character into a completely different world of motherhood as he battles the alien Queen doing the same thing. This idea of motherhood shouldn't have worked but it's believably pulled off. This movie also great at creating the characters of the marines in ways movies have been trying (and failing mind you) to recreate since this movie came out. These characters really come alive not just by the actors playing them but by a screenplay that treats them as characters despite not a lot of them having more than a handful of lines. But what lines they have breathe life into them and then the actors playing them just help to make them real. Their dialogue is immediately quotable and funny without seeming to be forced. And it flows with a familiar banter and intimacy among people who have spent a lot of time together - it feels genuine and real.
Pitch perfect pacing with never an out of place scene in it's over 2 hour run time, which is very unheard of with movies today, especially from thriller hybrid. Cameron pulled all stops on direction as he fully created a believable world with the help of a production team that completely complimented his vision. He actually directed the movie using camera moves that show cased the detailed job the production team did on creating the sets. They are sets but they never feel like sets and his camera movies around them in ways that make those sets come alive. Even today Cameron is not a person obsessed with the MTV style of editing or jumps cuts. He doesn't do this but I still felt like was extremely close to what was going on in this movie.
Lastly the Alien creature itself is my personal favorite of all Hollywood monsters as it has imbedded itself into my mind since I first saw these movie back-to-back when I was 15. That experience has never left me as I've come to love the design and culture of these "monsters". I hate the three sequels after this movie but I own them and will watch them from time to time just because they are part of the Alien series - that is the only reason.
It has been about 10 years since I've seen this movie and I've got say this movie has held up extremely well over the time since it came out in the late 80's. This movie is easily one of the best 100 movie ever made and would make my list of the top 20 movies of all time. I don't know what more I can say about it. This movie defines categorization as it mixes in all kinds of genres: sci-fi, horror, thriller, and action, to create a movie experience unlike any other made. It's one of the best sequels of all time and personally I think it's better than Alien even though it is differently made beast than the straight up horror aspect of Alien. It's a beautifully executed marriage of idea, concept, production, direction, casting, acting, and everything else that goes into making a movie.
Perfect casting along with perfect acting. Sigourny Weaver out does herself from the first film and embodies one of the first and best action women ever. She brings her character into a completely different world of motherhood as he battles the alien Queen doing the same thing. This idea of motherhood shouldn't have worked but it's believably pulled off. This movie also great at creating the characters of the marines in ways movies have been trying (and failing mind you) to recreate since this movie came out. These characters really come alive not just by the actors playing them but by a screenplay that treats them as characters despite not a lot of them having more than a handful of lines. But what lines they have breathe life into them and then the actors playing them just help to make them real. Their dialogue is immediately quotable and funny without seeming to be forced. And it flows with a familiar banter and intimacy among people who have spent a lot of time together - it feels genuine and real.
Pitch perfect pacing with never an out of place scene in it's over 2 hour run time, which is very unheard of with movies today, especially from thriller hybrid. Cameron pulled all stops on direction as he fully created a believable world with the help of a production team that completely complimented his vision. He actually directed the movie using camera moves that show cased the detailed job the production team did on creating the sets. They are sets but they never feel like sets and his camera movies around them in ways that make those sets come alive. Even today Cameron is not a person obsessed with the MTV style of editing or jumps cuts. He doesn't do this but I still felt like was extremely close to what was going on in this movie.
Lastly the Alien creature itself is my personal favorite of all Hollywood monsters as it has imbedded itself into my mind since I first saw these movie back-to-back when I was 15. That experience has never left me as I've come to love the design and culture of these "monsters". I hate the three sequels after this movie but I own them and will watch them from time to time just because they are part of the Alien series - that is the only reason.
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