undollaroatestablog

28 Şubat 2010

Annapolis (2006)

Kategori: Kategorilenmemiş — undollaroatestablog @ 13:13

Blending the hoary conventions of boxing movies into the equably-worn primary-training die, “Annapolis” is a slippery if not primarily novel military recruiting film whose plot is considerably less developed than its leading men’s abs. James Franco and Tyrese Gibson scowl and strut and should pushy the hearts of teenage girls all atwitter, and that’s about the no greater than audience that won’t see most of the punches telegraphed well in move up. Perhaps every generation needs its own “An Officer and a Gentleman,” but Franco’s second starring vehicle of early 2006 should be more of a middleweight, package trap position-wise.

Jake Huard (Franco) has grown up across the water from the prestigious U.S. Naval Academy, driving rivets into the hulls of ships by day and boxing at night. And while his dad (Brian Goodman) doesn’t expect much more from him, Jake gets the opportunity to fulfill his late mother’s dreams when he’s offered late admission into the academy’s grueling officer program.

Jake is fine in the brawn department, but he’s a little short on brains — the exact opposite of his pudgy roommate, derisively nicknamed Twins (Vicellous Shannon), who’s a whiz at the books but can’t clear the wall on that damn obstacle course. Both are thus subjected to their share of dehumanizing abuse, with the toughest instructor, Midshipman Lt. Cole (Gibson), training his sights on Jake, who receives support from another superior among his overseers, Ali (Jordana Brewster).

Drifting along like a traditional basic-training film with at best a half-metal jacket, “Annapolis” takes a turn in the second half as Jake begins training for the Brigades, a boxing competition that will potentially afford him a shot at the merciless Cole. This is previewed fairly early on, as the trainees are thrown into the ring to prove their mettle. Although the Brigades are a longstanding tradition at the academy, all this plays more like a plot contrivance than a test of character.

Franco, also featured in Fox’s period release “Tristan & Isolde,” is certainly in great shape, and he’s convincing enough as a hard-knocks, blue-collar youth learning to rely on others while being toughened and molded by a starched African-American drill instructor. At one point, he even protests, “I’m not quitting!” It’s just that somehow, it feels as if someone has made this movie before.

The strongest element in Dave Collard’s script, in fact, sparks to life thanks largely to the performance of Shannon, who is both funny and occasionally touching as Twins. Shipped off to Annapolis from a small town that feted him with a parade, he dreads the prospect of not making the cut.

Brewster, by contrast, simply looks as if she parachuted in from a shampoo commercial — a degree of license tolerable in most movies that’s conspicuous and incongruous in this spartan environment. Then again, the Jake-Ali relationship is all tease, since fraternization between plebes and their superiors is strictly prohibited. Otherwise, the pic is notable for its diversity in casting, with Roger Fan and Wilmer Calderon rounding out Jake’s roommates.

Director Justin Lin (who made his solo debut with “Better Luck Tomorrow,” starring Fan) exhibits considerable proficiency in shooting the boxing sequences, where the work by the sound technicians is especially impressive, making every blow crackle as if it had landed on the skull of the person sitting next to you.

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Still, the instructors consistently stress to their charges that the class is only as strong as its weakest plebe. Judging “Annapolis” by its most appealing attributes (among all the cliches): It’s not bad superficially, but neither is it all that it could be.

27 Şubat 2010

Robert Frank – The Complete Film Works: Vol. 2 review

Kategori: Kategorilenmemiş — undollaroatestablog @ 07:28
“All three shorts are at best
only mildly interesting. They offer a look at the 1960s through the eyes
of a counter-culture filmmaker.”

Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz

 

OK END HERE (director:
Robert Frank; screenwriter: Marion Magrid; cinematographer: Gert Berliner;
music: Ornette Coleman;  Runtime: 32; MPAA Rating: NR; producer: Edward
Gregson; Contemporary Films/Steidl; 1963-Germany-in English)

Steidl presents Robert Frank: The Complete Film Works-Vol. 2 the
PAL format. The three-disc set includes Conversations in Vermont and Liferaft
Earth. Beat generation Swiss-born director Robert Frank (”Candy Mountain”/
“Run”/ “Summer Cannibals”), perhaps the most influential of mid 20th-century
American photographers, has turned filmmaker and directs this personal
movie, a documentary shot in grainy black and white. 

A contrived status-quo melodrama that has Frank and his bored live-in
girlfriend in his luxury Manhattan apartment facing the East River, getting
up late on Sunday, watching worthless TV programs and visited by Frank’s
ex-flame and her new husband. The conversation drags and the artist makes
excuses to get rid of his boring guests, while making arrangement with
the business exec to meet in his corporation office to discuss a business
deal. Frank then takes his attractive girlfriend to a local bistro, where
they run into another boring couple. The girlfriend from Wisconsin tells
Frank she “loves what’s familiar and he seems strange, but she wants to
be with him.” It ends when they return to his pad, indicating sex is the
main part of the relationship.


 

LIFERAFT EARTH
(director: Robert Frank; Runtime: 32; MPAA Rating: NR; Steidl; 1969-Germany-in
English)

Frank has made over 20 personal films since 1959 like the ones in
this box-set, but is best known for the Beat family portrait Pull My Daisy
that he co-directed with painter Alfred Leslie and was narrated by Jack
Kerouac. Liferaft is about 118 hippies in Hayward, California, going on
a fast in a ‘War against Death.” Death is said to be ignorance and starvation.
Those fasting lived in an air-filled plastic loop. during the course of
several days they moved to another location in the woods outside of San
Francisco. As far as I could tell the fast had no impact on the world,
but the participants seemed to feel good that they made it through six
days. The fast was organized by organized by Wavy Gravy and Stewart Brand.


 

CONVERSATIONS IN VERMONT
(director: Robert Frank; cinematographer: Ralph Gibson; Runtime: 27; MPAA
Rating: NR; New Yorker Films/Steidl; 1969-Germany-in English)

It’s about the wealthy born artist engaged in conversation with his
troubled oldest teenage son Pablo and his 15-year-old daughter Andrea.
The artist’s wife, fellow artist Mary Lockspeiser, remains in the background,
as he chats with the teens in their rural Vermont retreat. The kids attend
a commune school and are glad to be removed from the fast paced hipster
NYC scene, as they talk about their counter-culture lifestyle. Lots of
dad talk to the kiddies about the past and present, that was too personal
and trivial to hold my interest.

All three shorts are at best only mildly interesting. They offer
a look at the 1960s through the eyes of a counter-culture filmmaker. 

25 Şubat 2010

Picture is adult entertainmen…

Kategori: Kategorilenmemiş — undollaroatestablog @ 20:43

Picture is adult diversion – liberally spotted with episodes and lines of explosive and penetrating attributes – that veers from the general run of pictures of its type sufficiently to get audience attention. From day one, Carole Lombard was set someone is concerned the starring spot, but her untimely extermination projected Joan Crawford in as replacement.

Crawford is in command of the vast business interests left by her father, and shaken by the writings of Melvyn Douglas, a happy-go-lucky scribbler of sorts who takes a crack at the family personal and business skeletons.

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In addition to a spotlight performance by Crawford, Douglas clicks solidly as the writer and principal romanticist. Script is studded with amusing dialog of most intimate and double entendre content.

Alexander Hall’s direction is snappy and speedy all along the line, and he contrives laugh toppers to every episode.

23 Şubat 2010

Drifting Clouds (1998)

Kategori: Kategorilenmemiş — undollaroatestablog @ 13:13

Nuvole in viaggio (1996)
Aki Kaurismaki

Finlandia
Recensioni trovate:

2


Marcello Testi

05-11-1997

l.a.

18-03-1998

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21 Şubat 2010

National Treasure: Adventure….

Kategori: Kategorilenmemiş — undollaroatestablog @ 09:33


ALERT VIEWER

National Treasure: Adventure. Starring Nicolas Cage, Diane Kruger and Sean
Bean. Directed by Jon Turteltaub. (PG. 125 minutes. At Bay Area theaters.)



Critics will slam “National Treasure” for not being good, but audiences
will probably like it for not being bad. It has no ambition, little sense and
false sentiment, but it does have velocity, high spirits and scale. It also
has Nicolas Cage, either in a toupee or I want to know what he’s been rubbing
on his head. And it has Diane Kruger, looking a lot more like Helen of Troy
here than in “Troy.”

In short, it’s a Jerry Bruckheimer movie, and the fact that just saying
that means something … well, that means something. Like the moguls of old,
Bruckheimer (”Con Air,” “The Rock”) is a producer with a signature style, one
characterized mainly by the assumption that the audience is very, very
impatient. So things keep happening, even if they shouldn’t happen, each
moment topping the next. Call him lowbrow, but nobody falls asleep during a
Bruckheimer movie, and that includes critics.

In addition to being lively, “National Treasure” wins points for
geniality. There’s a relaxed air about it, despite the piling on of story, and
a family-friendly feeling about it, despite the frequent threat of violence.
Cage floats through the proceedings as Gates, the last of a long line of
treasure hunters. We first meet him midadventure, with a crew on the North
Pole, finding a wrecked ship and a last, crucial clue: The treasure map he
seeks is on the back of the Declaration of Independence. That is, the one in
Washington that’s covered in bulletproof glass and heavily guarded.

In these early minutes, “National Treasure” introduces a shrewd narrative
strategy that buoys the film nicely all the way to the finish. The story could
simply have been about one man’s effort to steal the Declaration. Instead it’s
about two men’s competing efforts. A member of Gates’ crew, Howe (Sean Bean),
turns rogue and decides to steal the Declaration, despite Gates’ objections.
And so Gates has no choice but to try to steal the Declaration himself in
order to protect it. He has to get there before Howe gets there. The result of
this nifty turn is double the fun, double the suspense and double the tension
– with Gates getting to do bad-guy things while maintaining his good-guy
identity.

Kruger is in the movie because there needs to be a girl in it. She plays
the conservator of the National Archives even though she looks barely old
enough to be an intern and, for reasons that really don’t add up, ends up with
Gates on his adventure. Also for no discernible reason, she soon starts
looking at him with warmth and admiration. Don’t try to make sense of this. It
only makes movie sense.

The action follows the characters over the course of their various
adventures, none of which will be described here, since a movie like this is
all about surprise. Clues lead to other clues, each more improbable, but if
the characters are willing to put up with this hectic pace, the least we can
do is watch. About midway, it crosses the mind that what “National Treasure”
really needs is for Harvey Keitel to show up, and so he does, on cue, as a
sardonic FBI agent who has a sly way of saying, “Somebody’s got to go to jail.

Director Jon Turteltaub succeeds in suppressing the humanity he
demonstrated in “Phenomenon” and “While You Were Sleeping” long enough to turn
in a well-oiled Bruckheimer machine. He spoils an action scene that takes
place many feet under the sidewalks of Manhattan, with staircases collapsing
and characters falling hundreds of feet to their doom, with too many close-ups
and edits. But that’s par for the course in action movies these days.

To Turteltaub’s credit, there are other touches, nice ones, that also
seem directorial. In particular, Bean, as the villain, is portrayed as a
friendly fellow — not as a classic smiling villain, but rather as someone
of spontaneously warm temperament. If somebody bangs into him on the street,
for example, his first unguarded impulse is to smile and excuse himself. This
characteristic is not often seen in villains, which makes it interesting.
Equally interesting is that this quality in no way diminishes his overall air
of menace or limits his options in our eyes. He’s still evil enough for
anything.

As for Cage, this is his fourth film with Bruckheimer, and he’s beginning
to look comfortable in this sort of movie. A little too comfortable.

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– Advisory: There is gunfire and, throughout, the threat of violence.

E-mail Mick LaSalle at mlasalle@sfchronicle.com.

19 Şubat 2010

DRAGONFLY: Drama. Starring Ke…

Kategori: Kategorilenmemiş — undollaroatestablog @ 11:48

ALERT VIEWER
DRAGONFLY: Drama. Starring Kevin Costner, Kathy Bates and Susanna Thompson.
Directed by Tom Shadyac. (PG-13. 103 minutes. At Bay Area theaters.)

"Dragonfly" is about a widower with a gobs c many to keen about. His late wife
was not however beautiful and sexy but also brilliant and angelic, a pediatric
oncologist who wore bunny ears at medical centre Christmas parties and did charity
work in Venezuela. He has photos of her all down the house, and apparently she
never took a mouldy dead ringer — standing next to a waterfall, posing with a
tropical bird.

The husband can't get over her, and the movie does everything to make sure
we don't, either. After the wife is killed in the first scene — in a freak
bus accident — it becomes impossible to imagine how this fellow is supposed
to recover, even if he is played by Kevin Costner.

That's the significance of "Dragonfly." This otherwise routine effort puts
us right there on the ground floor of a man's grief. It's as if suddenly he
has 100-pound weights on his legs and he has to climb the stairs. Every day.
Why bother? The movie doesn't take the usual romantic approach to depicting
grief. When he goes into the house, the soundtrack stops. It's quiet in there.

Costner has a good role. He's not mired in his usual type — a stammering
neo-Gary Cooper after sensitivity training — but plays a man with a hard edge,

an emergency room doctor used to making life-and-death decisions. To see him
in an early scene, barking orders as injured patients come pouring through the
hospital doors, is like seeing Costner unbound. Someone brings in an attempted
suicide, and he passes her off on another doctor. "Today we're only interested
in treating people who want to live," he says.

It's a hint of what could be a promising direction for this actor. He
doesn't have to be a sweet guy. On two occasions in "Dragonfly," well-meaning
people tell him that he needs to take time to grieve, and a dangerous look
crosses his face, as if he might start breaking things.

Costner was always good at thinking on camera, and here his thoughts are
often in conflict, making for complex and true moments. His character takes
some comfort in being around friends and yet can't stand them — they can't
possibly be as busted up as he is. The only person he can really talk to is
his next-door neighbor (Kathy Bates), a lesbian whose lover has died.

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"Dragonfly" has elements of either a supernatural or psychological thriller,

depending on the source of the messages the dead wife seems to be sending her
husband. Kids who have had near-death experiences tell him that they've seen
her, but the kids could be playing with him. He also believes that objects,
including a dragonfly paperweight, are moving themselves around his house.

The first hint that the movie is about to go sour comes about a third of
the way in, when on four occasions someone comments on the doctor's bald spot.
Costner may not be the most hirsute movie star around — he's thinning
slightly in front — but he doesn't have even an intimation of a bald spot.
They should have cut his hair or cut the jokes.

The movie's more serious problem is that its marriage of two genres —
romantic drama and eerie thriller — doesn't quite come off. At times it tries
to be scary, in the manner of "The Sixth Sense," but the thrills fall flat.
Our hero is not seeing "dead people." At worst, he's seeing his dead wife, and
how scary could that be? If anything, that's good news.

The thriller is only thrilling enough to kill the movie's romantic mood,
while the romance just makes "Dragonfly" seem meandering and inert. Yet as an
etching of an emotion and a vehicle for Costner, the movie makes a case for
itself.

Advisory: The subject matter may alarm children.

This article appeared on page

D – 3

of the San Francisco Chronicle

15 Şubat 2010

Though Hou has said that he wa…

Kategori: Kategorilenmemiş — undollaroatestablog @ 01:39

Though Hou has said that he wanted this to have a different rhythm from the out of it, measured constant pace of his before-mentioned work, it remains in two shakes of a lamb’s tail recognisable as a Hou movie, not sole because of the unquestionably lengthy takes (here, admittedly, often of moving trains, cars, motorbikes, etc), but because of his determinedly inclining approach to record and the way it provides information. This time round, the ’story’ of a gathering of small-dated punks on the fringes of the underworld is designed to offer insights into the scrupulous, political and economic climate of ’90s Taiwan; it does, and the movie looks as marvellous as ever. But over the extent of all the expertness on view, joined can’t servants belief a sense of déjà vu. The film echoes much of Hou’s own previous work, and the plot’s inner strand – an ambitious guy and his younger, more inconstant buddy once get their comeuppance in a car crash – is oddly reminiscent of In no way Streets.

13 Şubat 2010

“An unappealing fright film.”…

Kategori: Kategorilenmemiş — undollaroatestablog @ 08:18
“An unappealing fright film.”

Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz

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The fourth collaboration between writer Jimmy Sangster and cinematographer-turned-director
Freddie Francis (”Nightmare”/”Paranoiac”/”Torture Garden”) is a car wreck.
Francis as a cinematographer won Oscars for Sons and Lovers (1960) and
for Glory (1989), but as a director only made second-rate horror films
of no distinction. This low-level Hammer cheapie is an unappealing fright
film. It couldn’t be more ridiculous than if it were written by someone
with a memory disorder, who cooked up a story where not all the ingredients
were added that would make it edible. American character actor Robert Webber
gets a rare chance to star and is victimized by Sangster’s terrible script,
as he looks shell-shocked at the lines he’s asked to deliver. This film
is so bad, that hysteria might be the best side effect the viewer experiences.
The fright film suffers from serious plot holes, an unlikable protagonist,
unconvincing performances across the board (except for the private detective),
and a punchless and unbelievable story.

A mysterious American drifter gets into a car accident in England
and loses his memory. The patient, who had no ID on him, is named Chris
Smith (Robert Webber) by his London hospital physician, Dr. Keller (Anthony
Newlands). After four months he’s treated for a fractured skull, but remains
with amnesia. His bills are surprisingly being paid by an anonymous benefactor,
and upon his release he’s given a free luxury apartment by the same anonymous
benefactor. Chris hires private detective Hemmings (Maurice Denham) to
clear up the mystery of his identity, locate the benefactor and learn more
about the only clue to his identity–a torn photo of a beautiful woman
that was found on him after the accident. The photo is traced to a model,
Denise James (Lelia Goldoni), for a gruff gay fashion photographer (Peter
Woodthorpe), who says she was slain in a shower Psycho style six months
ago. The trouble is Chris keeps hearing voices and seeing the model around
his flat and riding in a convertible around London dressed in a mink coat,
and he believes he’s hallucinating. Soon the model introduces herself to
him as the wealthy wife of the driver in the auto accident and Chris becomes
involved in a complex murder plot, as he’s being framed. But luckily Chris
continues his romance with the nurse (Jennifer Jayne) he met while in the
hospital, and unfortunately for us this story goes off the track in such
a muddled, sluggish and dumb way it’s not worth analyzing. It’s the kind
of film where one feels any story in a storm will due, and this is any
story. Worth seeing only to realize how someone who is so brilliant as
a cinematographer could be so inadequate as a director. 

12 Şubat 2010

Shaun of the Dead (2004)

Kategori: Kategorilenmemiş — undollaroatestablog @ 02:59

09 Şubat 2010

The Barbarian Invasions is, I…

Kategori: Kategorilenmemiş — undollaroatestablog @ 09:24


The Barbarian Invasions is, I think, one of those films that
you either like a whole lot, or you find rather flat. It’s not a
“love it or hate it” film, as there’s really nothing here
that would really drive someone crazy (unless this putative viewer
just can’t stand movies that revolve around people talking to each
other), but it does depend to a considerable degree on what the
viewer makes of the film. If you don’t click with the characters and
situation right away, the film doesn’t make much of an effort to draw
you in.

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The
story revolves around a dying man, Rémy,
and his family and friends who come to reminisce about their times
together, celebrate his life, and say goodbye. In particular, the
film focuses on the character of Sebastién,
Rémy’s
semi-estranged son, who starts out taking care of his father simply
because it’s the right thing to do, and ends up deeply emotionally
involved.



The ensemble cast certainly does an excellent job of bringing the
characters to life; while they’re not, in my view, sufficiently
developed in terms of the story, even in what we see of them, they
all seem like real people who are doing their best to get through a
difficult time in their lives. The Barbarian Invasions is to a
great extent a slice of life from a family and community of friends
united in grief, and as such it provides only as much closure as the
characters themselves get from their experiences. But natural and
believable characters and story aside, the problem with The
Barbarian Invasions
is that it’s too much just a slice of life.
Watching the film is like looking through the window at someone’s
family gathering: we see the people interacting with each other,
notice their relationships, become aware of their emotional states,
and… move on. The glass wall between us and them is a reminder that
we’re observers, not participants, and we know that once we continue
onward, we’ll never see these people again or know anything more
about them.


I mentioned a moment ago that your reaction to the film depends on
what you bring to it. If you manage to make an emotional connection
to any of these characters early on, so that you feel for them, and
want to know more about their relationships with others, then The
Barbarian Invasion
s will likely impress you with its subtle
handling of the emotional content of the film, and you’ll probably
find the conclusion deeply touching. That’s a fairly big “if,”
though, since the film gives little context to the situation or
characters. While the introductory scenes seem promising, the initial
feeling of involvement in the film gradually fades. It doesn’t help
matters much that there’s a generous helping of secondary characters
whose relationships are never well explained, and whose characters
are never fleshed out. It’s realistic, sure: all these people know
who each other are, so they don’t need any hints or on-screen
character development. But for the viewers who are on the other side
of that glass wall, it’s yet another way in which The Barbarian
Invasions
makes it hard to feel connected to the story.

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