Drama
Friday, September 14, 2012
ROBOT AND FRANK
Drama
PRINCIPAL
CAST MEMBERS
Frank Langella: Frank, a crusty septuagenarian
James Marsden: Frank’s son Hunter, an attorney
Liv Tyler: Frank’s daughter Madison
Susan Sarandon: local librarian Jennifer
Jeremy Strong: library trustee Jake
REVIEW
“Set in the not too distant future”, this simple tale of an
aging Frank is a bit sad as we see the effect his failing memory has on his
family. However spurred on by the assistance of a robot, Frank shows some of
his former spunk. Langella does a great job, nicely balancing the different
personality traits the role calls for.
However this charming little film is ruined by the
ending: the transition to the bucolic setting is too abrupt, totally out of sync
with the rest of the film that unfolds at an unhurried pace. And then the final
scene, well it needs to be rewritten big time: as one moviegoer was heard to say
“it’s a real cop out leaving things that way”. I agree.
CLASSIFICATION
TO THE ARCTIC 3D
Documentary
REVIEW
This latest IMAX documentary covers some very familiar
ground: global warming and the daily struggle just to survive in this harsh
environment. By focusing on a mother polar bear and her twin seven-month-old
cubs their plight becomes evident but the solutions are not.
Meryl Streep narrates with feeling and Sir Paul McCartney
has written some new songs that almost overwhelm the viewer. But not quite, as
the majestic landscape rivets our attention as the background to a serious
problem.
Although the producers have avoided including anything of a
gory nature, that does not mean to say the film is without some sense of
pending doom. By contrast, the cubs provide more than a few moments of levity
so it’s a nice balance.
CLASSIFICATION
Saturday, September 1, 2012
PREMIUM RUSH
Action thriller
PRINCIPAL
CAST MEMBERS
Joseph Gordon-Levitt: NYC bicycle messenger Wilee (as in Wile
E. Coyote)
Dania Ramirez: Wilee’s ex-girlfriend Vanessa
Jamie Chung: Vanessa’s roomie Nima
Assif Mandvi: Raj, company dispatcher
Michael Shannon: NYPD Detective Robert Monday
Wolé Parks: Manny, another bicycle messenger
Christopher Place: NYPD bicycle cop
REVIEW
Clearly not an Academy Award candidate, it is nevertheless
interesting enough watching a group of “kamikaze” bike riders do their thing
along the streets of Manhattan. To crank up the action (as if there is not
enough) a rogue cop wants to get his hands on the premium rush package before
it gets delivered. Let the fun begin.
The crisp editing keeps things moving along and the unusual
routes these delivery people take result in some comic moments to lighten
things up, just in case you’re taking things too seriously.
CLASSIFICATION
LAWLESS
Crime drama
PRINCIPAL
CAST MEMBERS
Tom Hardy: Forrest Bondurant
Jason Clark: his older brother Howard
Shia LaBeouf: their younger brother Jack
Dane DeHaan: Jack’s friend Cricket
Bill Camp: Sheriff Hodges
Jessica Chastain: Maggie Beauford, an exotic dancer
Guy Pearce: Special Deputy Charlie Rakes
Mia Wasikowska: Preacher Minnix’s teen aged daughter Bertha
Gary Oldman: Chicago gangster Floyd Banner
REVIEW
This telling of how things were in Franklin County,
Virginia, the bootlegging capital of the USA during the Depression era has a
lot going for it: high production values with particular attention to detail
(except for a few items noted below) coupled with some fine acting and a strong
story line.
But all that is mired in blood: this has to be the goriest
movie I’ve seen in years as I purposely go out of my way to avoid that kind of
thing. I get no pleasure in watching people being beaten to a pulpy mush, of
seeing in close-up the blood spurting out while the victim struggles to
survive, gasping and thrashing about. But the retribution enacted upon the
instigator of the slashing is even worse. And we get to see it in detail.
The point being, this grisly depiction of violence is not
just an incidental aspect of the film you could ignore. No, it starts with the
very first scene when we see the older brother dispatch a corralled pig with a
shotgun. I need not describe the result as cruelty offends most people’s
sensibilities. And so it should.
CLASSIFICATION
FOR
NITPICKERS ONLY
Jack shows Bertha his new camera, a Brownie Target Six-20.
Trouble is, Kodak only began selling that model in 1946, some 15 years after
these events took place.
When Maggie is talking with Forrest her pink bathrobe is on
or off her right shoulder depending upon the camera’s point of view, from
behind or in front of her.
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