Movies, Phantasy

Twilight

No Comments 27 December 2008

Most people I know woke up to the full powers of the flesh sometimes in their second decade. Some experience this discovery as ‘no big deal;’ others are thrown off balance.  Trying to explore this new territory with some success often proves dauntingly difficult. Many films have been made about teenage romance.  A few of them are delightful to the adult mind. Twilight is one of them.  It takes you to a different place: A truly dangerous love affair that every parent, for once, would have a right to oppose:  Do you want your teenage daughter fall in love with a classmate who happens to be Vampire?  Visually, the film takes you to stunning views and mood of the Pacific Northwest.  You don’t want to miss these vistas.

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Movies, Drama

Good Night, and Good Luck

No Comments 1 November 2008

At the Oscars award show not long after Good Night, and Good Luck came out in 2005, the host made a joke about the long-term bachelor George Clooney who directed and starred in the film.  It went something like this:

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Movies, Phantasy

Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull

No Comments 1 October 2008

As far as action films go, the previous episodes of the Indiana Jones franchise left me pretty unmoved.  Archeological treasure hunts were never my cup of tea. For this reason, I could have easily done without Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. But here I am on the airplane. What the heck, let

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Movies, Phantasy

Wall E

No Comments 28 September 2008

If you are like me and wonder how Pixar can pull off one creative blockbuster after another, here is an interesting peek behind the scenes of the studio.  In an interview the writer and director of Finding Nemo and Wall E, Andrew Stanton, intimates that Finding Nemo did not work as a film until very late in the production process when creative team figured late in the production process that they needed to change the personality of Memo of give the film its captivating dramatic force.  Pixar movies, we learn, are not the superb product from day one, but gradually improve. Wall E took over a decade from the initial conception to the completed film. The finished product is yet again a masterpiece. Unlike previous Pixar films, Wall E has a dead serious subject. Planet earth is a post-apocalyptic rubble field, inhabitable by humans.  The only creatures left behind is the little robot Wall-E and a cockroach that roam what appears to be the greater New York area.

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Movies, Drama

300

No Comments 12 September 2008

image300 is different from any movie I had seen before.  The closest would be Chinese films such as Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon with the magical fighting scenes. Yet these Chinese films still are far from where 300 takes you. For my eyes, the film pushes boundaries of cinema as an art form. 300 tells the story of a historical battle in which 300 Spartan battled hundreds of thousand Persians intent on subjugating all Greek city states. (I cannot tell more without giving it away). ). I typically don’t like brutal, bloody films. But the makers of the film based on graphic novel (never new they existed) prove that even slaughter can be made artful. Anyone who wants to see a cinematic innovation and is able to stomach some really terrifying carnage, rent 300.

 

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Movies, Drama

Mama Mia!

No Comments 31 August 2008

Mamia Mia!, this was worse than I had feared.  I did not even get a great tour of the Greek islands. I was the first to leave the cinema. Now I was watching people coming out.  Women smiled, men looked pained, albeit a bit proud they took their lady to the movies.  Cinema, in my view, has rendered opera unnecessary.  What makes a great movie is that, unlike opera or its modern incarnation—the musical—, it makes you forget that you are watching a staged reality. The best movies become lifelike. You think you are watching reality. In Mamia Mia! you never forget that you are watching a show. A good playwright like Tom Stoppard (Shakespeare in Love) could have managed to write a decent script around the songs of Abba.  But Catherine Johnson lacked the skills and produced childish superficial love story. Pierce Brosnan (the former James Bond) is not able to act out his inane role. Meryl Streep does better with hers,

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Movies, Comedy

Tropic Thunder

No Comments 30 August 2008

There is a reason why in most films different people take on the roles of the writer, director,  and the lead actor: Rarely is one and the same person equally good at all these jobs.  Tropic Thunder stars Ben Stiller, and is written and directed by Ben Stiller. That was a mistake. When I saw the trailer a few weeks ago, my hopes soared. Perhaps Tropic Thunder was going to be as funny as There is something about Mary. Far from it, the new Ben Stiller vehicle only provokes a few laughs. The story (a film crew making war movie in Vietnam comes under real attack) is rather weak, a mumble jumble of ideas that Stiller had over the years. The best part of the movie was Tom Cruise, who plays a slimy, foul-mouthed, overly hairy Hollywood producer. Cruise steals the show from Stiller, even though he only played a minor character, in a sideline of film. I am not going to see another film written and directed by Stiller any time soon. 

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