by Paul Gibbs
For the second year in a row we have a close Oscar race that's difficult to call. Last year, for me there was a very clear choice, and happily the academy actually picked it as Best Picture. This year is harder for me to make my choices on who should win, because circumstances kept me from seeing some of the nominees, and because my personal favorite, The Grand Budapest Hotel, doesn't stand a chance of winning. But I'm still offering my picks for who will win, and who I would choose.
BEST PICTURE:
Winner: Birdman
My Vote: The Grand Budapest Hotel (but I'll be happy with either Birdman or Boyhood).
BEST DIRECTOR:
Winner: Richard Linklater, Boyhood
My Vote: Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, Birdman
its
BEST ACTOR:
Winner: Michael Keaton, Birdman
My Vote: Michael Keaton, Birdman
This one is the toughest choice for me, because potential spoiler Eddie Redmayne was superb in The Theory of Everything. But in the end I was even more impressed by Keaton's raw, honest emotion than by Redmayne's physical transformation.
BEST ACTRESS:
Winner: Julianne Moore, Still Alice
My Vote: Felicity Jones, The Theory of Everything
I missed Still Alice, so I'd pick Jones, who to me gave The Theory of Everthing its heart.
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR:
Winner: JK Simmons, Whiplash
My Vote: Edward Norton, Birdman
Again this is based in part on having missed the front-runner.
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS:
Winner: Patricia Arquette, Boyhood
My Vote: Patricia Arquette, Boyhood
Best Original Screenplay
Winner: Birdman
My Vote: The Grand Budapest Hotel
Best Screenplay Adaption:
Winner: The Imitation Game
My Vote: The Theory of Everything
(Another case of missing the likely winner)
Best Cinematography:
Winner: Birdman
My Vote: Unbroken
Best Film Editing:
Winner: American Sniper
My Vote: American Sniper
Best Animated Feature:
Winner: Big Hero 6
My Vote: I really can't choose between Big Hero 6 and How to Train Your Dragon 2
Sunday, February 22, 2015
Friday, February 20, 2015
MCFARLAND, USA
GRADE: B+
Starring Kevin Costner, Maria Bello, Carlos Pratts, Ramiro Rodriguez
Written by Chris Cleveland & Bettina Gillois and Grant Thompson
Directed by Niki Caro
Rated PG (mild profanity)
Disney's latest feel-good formula sports movie mostly sticks to the tried and true conventions of the genre, but a strong cast lead by sports movie Hall of Famer Kevin Costner makes it a good one, with engaging character and just enough beneath the surface for those of us who don't really care about sports and want to be able to say "it's not really about (insert name of sport I don't care about here)".
Set in 1987 and "Based on a True Story", McFarland, USA stars Costner as Jim White, a high school football coach whose temper has gotten him fired from multiple jobs, forcing him to settle for a job as an assistant football coach and P.E. teacher in the small town of McFarland, California. McFarland is a dirt poor community with an almost exclusively Latino population, and White and his family stick out like . . . the only white family in an almost exclusively Latino community. While Jim isn't an out and out racist, he is the sort of privileged middle class white guy who automatically assumes a group of Hispanic youth in a parking lot belong to a gang, and drives away as fast as he can. He quickly decides this just a place to rehabilitate his reputation, then he and his wife (Maria Bello) and two daughters are out of there. But of course things don't go as planned, and Jim (nicknamed "Blanco" by his students) quickly loses his position on the football team, but keeps teaching. When he notices that the hard-working boys of the community have a talent for running very fast, he comes up with the idea to start a cross-country running team.
The plot plays out in routine sports/teacher movie fashion, with Jim recruiting the kid with the troubled family life, the fat kid, the hoodlum, the kid who smiles all the time, etc, and as they surprise everyone with their talent and tenacity, they learn some lessons about life. All of this could play as too corny to tolerate, but it doesn't, because director Niki Caro (Whale Rider, North Country) puts enough emphasis on character to make us care, which is what makes or breaks a movie like this. Costner couldn't been more in his element here, and he effortlessly carries the film on his shoulders with a natural, assured and mature performance. The mostly unknown supporting cast delivers as well (especially Carlos Pratts as Thomas, the star of the team), and while it's kept very low-key, the racial and class subtext makes the film feel considerably more relevant than it otherwise might, and its portrayal of Mexican-American culture is nicely respectful instead of patronizing. It also manages to mostly avoid feeling like a "white savior" movie, with the kids emerging as strong characters who don't really seem so much "saved" by Jim as working with him.
It's difficult to review a film like McFarland, USA, because on paper it sounds too corny and formulaic to work. But on screen, the emotion engages you and pulls you into having a great time. It's a movie intended for family audiences that want an old-fashioned "clean", feel-good, inspirational film. It's Disney with a capital D. It's not ground-breaking or edgy, but it's solidly entertaining, and even more cynical audience members might find themselves pulled in against their will. It may not be truly great drama, by the final reel most will drop their misgivings about formula and predictability and just get swept up in rooting for the underdog and wiping away some tears.
Starring Kevin Costner, Maria Bello, Carlos Pratts, Ramiro Rodriguez
Written by Chris Cleveland & Bettina Gillois and Grant Thompson
Directed by Niki Caro
Rated PG (mild profanity)
Disney's latest feel-good formula sports movie mostly sticks to the tried and true conventions of the genre, but a strong cast lead by sports movie Hall of Famer Kevin Costner makes it a good one, with engaging character and just enough beneath the surface for those of us who don't really care about sports and want to be able to say "it's not really about (insert name of sport I don't care about here)".
Set in 1987 and "Based on a True Story", McFarland, USA stars Costner as Jim White, a high school football coach whose temper has gotten him fired from multiple jobs, forcing him to settle for a job as an assistant football coach and P.E. teacher in the small town of McFarland, California. McFarland is a dirt poor community with an almost exclusively Latino population, and White and his family stick out like . . . the only white family in an almost exclusively Latino community. While Jim isn't an out and out racist, he is the sort of privileged middle class white guy who automatically assumes a group of Hispanic youth in a parking lot belong to a gang, and drives away as fast as he can. He quickly decides this just a place to rehabilitate his reputation, then he and his wife (Maria Bello) and two daughters are out of there. But of course things don't go as planned, and Jim (nicknamed "Blanco" by his students) quickly loses his position on the football team, but keeps teaching. When he notices that the hard-working boys of the community have a talent for running very fast, he comes up with the idea to start a cross-country running team.
The plot plays out in routine sports/teacher movie fashion, with Jim recruiting the kid with the troubled family life, the fat kid, the hoodlum, the kid who smiles all the time, etc, and as they surprise everyone with their talent and tenacity, they learn some lessons about life. All of this could play as too corny to tolerate, but it doesn't, because director Niki Caro (Whale Rider, North Country) puts enough emphasis on character to make us care, which is what makes or breaks a movie like this. Costner couldn't been more in his element here, and he effortlessly carries the film on his shoulders with a natural, assured and mature performance. The mostly unknown supporting cast delivers as well (especially Carlos Pratts as Thomas, the star of the team), and while it's kept very low-key, the racial and class subtext makes the film feel considerably more relevant than it otherwise might, and its portrayal of Mexican-American culture is nicely respectful instead of patronizing. It also manages to mostly avoid feeling like a "white savior" movie, with the kids emerging as strong characters who don't really seem so much "saved" by Jim as working with him.
It's difficult to review a film like McFarland, USA, because on paper it sounds too corny and formulaic to work. But on screen, the emotion engages you and pulls you into having a great time. It's a movie intended for family audiences that want an old-fashioned "clean", feel-good, inspirational film. It's Disney with a capital D. It's not ground-breaking or edgy, but it's solidly entertaining, and even more cynical audience members might find themselves pulled in against their will. It may not be truly great drama, by the final reel most will drop their misgivings about formula and predictability and just get swept up in rooting for the underdog and wiping away some tears.
Friday, February 13, 2015
KINGSMAN: THE SECRET SERVICE
Reviewed by Patrick Gibbs
GRADE: B+
Colin Firth, Samuel L. Jackson, Taron Egerton, Mark Strong and Michael Caine
Screenplay by Jame Goldman and Matthew Vaughn
Based the comic book by Mark Millar and Dave Gibbons
Directed by Matthew Vaughn
Rated R (graphic, bloody violence, profanity, sex and sexual references, racial slurs)
Someone is finally doing Tarantino better than Tarantino.
Matthew Vaughn, director of Layer Cake, Stardust, Kick Ass, and X-Men: First Class serves up a spy movie that is easily the most skillfully executed R-rated action comedy -thriller since Inglorious Basterds, and features a spectacular and intricately choreographed fight sequence that rivals the "Crazy 88" sequence in Kill Bill. If Vaughn does not get a solid place on the A list after this, there is no justice. In terms of pure skill, this is one of the impressive pieces of filmmaking I've seen in quite a while.
But be warned, it's the most R-rated movie I have seen in a while, and if the movie has a failing, it is
is that it either lacks a sense of when it pushes the boundaries of taste too far, or is simply a bit too smug about reveling in it's ability to do so.
Based upon the comic book by Mark Millar (Wanted), the movie begins in 1997. While on a mission in the Middle East, secret agent Harry Hart (Firth) is unable to prevent the death of one of his fellow agents. Feeling guilt, he personally delivers a bravery medal to the man's widow and young son, saying that if they ever need help they should call the phone number on the back of the medal and deliver a coded message.
17 years later the boy, Eggsy (Taron Egerton), is now jobless and in his early 20's. When he gets into trouble with the police after stealing and joy riding a car, he remembers the medal and calls the number on the back. He is quickly released and met outside the police station by Harry, who introduces him to the world of the secret agency that he and Eggsy's late father work for: the Kingsmen. Meanwhile, Reginald Valentine (Samuel L. Jackson), an eccentric billionaire, is meeting with world leader to discuss a bold new scheme.
Another Kingsman agent, Lancelot, who was inducted during the mission shown in the opening, is killed on a mission to find the missing scientist James Arnold, creating a vacancy for a new agent. Harry proposes Eggsy as a candidate and together with other young hopefuls, including a girl named Roxy, he is enrolled on the training program designed to weed out the unsuitable until only one candidate remains. The training is overseen by Merlin (Mark Strong), a senior Kingsman.
In addition to the top notch direction, Egerton makes a huge impression, showing an abundance of presence and charisma, and this role is a delightful change of pace for Firth, who is surprisingly good in the fight sequences. Jackson is very funny, even if his character seems like Mr. Glass mixed with his villain from The Spirit, mixed with Bill Gates and Steve Urkel.
But the violence level is really unbelievable, and while it is kept very cartoonish most of the time, it occasionally becomes unexpectedly disturbing, particularly in a sequence involve a small child in peril, and there is certain element of taking jokes that have already reached the "very tacky but funny" point and pushing them even further. In that sense the movie is like an amusement park ride: you feel thrilled and sickened at the same time, and you manage to leave feeling like you have had a great fun and been assaulted at the same time.
GRADE: B+
Colin Firth, Samuel L. Jackson, Taron Egerton, Mark Strong and Michael Caine
Screenplay by Jame Goldman and Matthew Vaughn
Based the comic book by Mark Millar and Dave Gibbons
Directed by Matthew Vaughn
Rated R (graphic, bloody violence, profanity, sex and sexual references, racial slurs)
Someone is finally doing Tarantino better than Tarantino.
Matthew Vaughn, director of Layer Cake, Stardust, Kick Ass, and X-Men: First Class serves up a spy movie that is easily the most skillfully executed R-rated action comedy -thriller since Inglorious Basterds, and features a spectacular and intricately choreographed fight sequence that rivals the "Crazy 88" sequence in Kill Bill. If Vaughn does not get a solid place on the A list after this, there is no justice. In terms of pure skill, this is one of the impressive pieces of filmmaking I've seen in quite a while.
But be warned, it's the most R-rated movie I have seen in a while, and if the movie has a failing, it is
is that it either lacks a sense of when it pushes the boundaries of taste too far, or is simply a bit too smug about reveling in it's ability to do so.
Based upon the comic book by Mark Millar (Wanted), the movie begins in 1997. While on a mission in the Middle East, secret agent Harry Hart (Firth) is unable to prevent the death of one of his fellow agents. Feeling guilt, he personally delivers a bravery medal to the man's widow and young son, saying that if they ever need help they should call the phone number on the back of the medal and deliver a coded message.
17 years later the boy, Eggsy (Taron Egerton), is now jobless and in his early 20's. When he gets into trouble with the police after stealing and joy riding a car, he remembers the medal and calls the number on the back. He is quickly released and met outside the police station by Harry, who introduces him to the world of the secret agency that he and Eggsy's late father work for: the Kingsmen. Meanwhile, Reginald Valentine (Samuel L. Jackson), an eccentric billionaire, is meeting with world leader to discuss a bold new scheme.
Another Kingsman agent, Lancelot, who was inducted during the mission shown in the opening, is killed on a mission to find the missing scientist James Arnold, creating a vacancy for a new agent. Harry proposes Eggsy as a candidate and together with other young hopefuls, including a girl named Roxy, he is enrolled on the training program designed to weed out the unsuitable until only one candidate remains. The training is overseen by Merlin (Mark Strong), a senior Kingsman.
In addition to the top notch direction, Egerton makes a huge impression, showing an abundance of presence and charisma, and this role is a delightful change of pace for Firth, who is surprisingly good in the fight sequences. Jackson is very funny, even if his character seems like Mr. Glass mixed with his villain from The Spirit, mixed with Bill Gates and Steve Urkel.
But the violence level is really unbelievable, and while it is kept very cartoonish most of the time, it occasionally becomes unexpectedly disturbing, particularly in a sequence involve a small child in peril, and there is certain element of taking jokes that have already reached the "very tacky but funny" point and pushing them even further. In that sense the movie is like an amusement park ride: you feel thrilled and sickened at the same time, and you manage to leave feeling like you have had a great fun and been assaulted at the same time.
Monday, February 2, 2015
JUPITER ASCENDING
Reviewed by Patrick Gibbs
GRADE: B+
Channing Tatum, Mila Kunis, Sean Bean, Eddie Redmayne, Douglas Booth, Tuppence Middleton, James D'Arcy,
Written and Directed by Wachowskis
Rated PG-13 (some violence, sequences of sci-fi action, some suggestive content and partial nudity)
First thing's first. If you are expecting a mind bending, cerebral experience like the The Matrix that makes you wonder about the nature of reality, you will be disappointed with Jupiter Ascending.
This movie has no pretense about what it is: it's really just Flash Gordon by way of The Wizard of Oz with a healthy dose of Soylent Green thrown in. It's pure B movie, silly, campy space fantasy, not to be confused with science fiction.
It's also a lot of fun.
Unknown to Earth's residents, life on Earth and countless other planets has been seeded by Alien royalty for the purpose of harvesting the evolved living creatures once they reach a state of perfection in evoltuon, in order to produce a type of youth that allows them to live forever. When the matriarch of the House of Abrasax, the most powerful of the alien dynasties, dies her children Balem (Eddie Redmayne), Kalique (Tuppence), and Titus (Douglas Booth) are at war over the inheritance. Eventually a new heir comes to their attention: Jupiter Jones (Mila Kunis), an unsuspecting, Earth-living, unlucky caretaker of other people's homes. Jupiter encounters Caine Wise (Channing Tatum), a genetically engineered interplanetary warrior, who came to Earth to reveal that her genetic signature makes Jones royalty and heir to Earth. Meanwhile, he has to protect her from Balem, who put a bounty on her head and would rather harvest Earth than lose it to Jones.
This is all really just an excuse for action and special effects, but it's really good action and fantastic special effects. Every time I started to get annoyed with the flimsiness and hokey quality of the material, Channing Tatum would use his anti-gravity speed skates and I'd think "Ah, who cares if it makes sense? Pass the popcorn."
I used to be one of Tatum's most vocal detractors, but I have to say, he's really come into his own and makes a strong, charismatic lead in this film (not unlike Keanu Reeves did for the Wachowski's.). I wish the character had been more fully developed, but that can't be blamed on Tatum in the least. The chemistry between him, Mila Kunis and Sean Bean is very strong and they do a great job of driving this movie. The villains are more of a mixed bag: Middleton offers little more than added sex appeal, and Booth (Shem in Darren Aronofsky's Noah) is given a flimsy character. But Eddie Redmayne, fresh off of his Oscar nomination for The Theory of Everything, is all over the place, speaking in a voice that is so soft and raspy that one can't help but think of the "low talker' on Seinfeld, except for when he gets angry, and then he turns into '90's Gary Oldman. I suppose the main goal is to make him seem creepy, and I can't deny that he is, but it's more than a bit overdone.
There is also a bit of a feeling that the film has been trimmed down to be as streamlined as possible, with all of the plot holes and confusion that usually comes with such a choice.
Still, the fact remains that Jupiter Ascending knows exactly what it wants to be a fun, campy space opera that evokes both the old serials of the '30's and the silly space flicks of the '60's and '70's- and it succeeds spectacularly.
GRADE: B+
Channing Tatum, Mila Kunis, Sean Bean, Eddie Redmayne, Douglas Booth, Tuppence Middleton, James D'Arcy,
Written and Directed by Wachowskis
Rated PG-13 (some violence, sequences of sci-fi action, some suggestive content and partial nudity)
First thing's first. If you are expecting a mind bending, cerebral experience like the The Matrix that makes you wonder about the nature of reality, you will be disappointed with Jupiter Ascending.
This movie has no pretense about what it is: it's really just Flash Gordon by way of The Wizard of Oz with a healthy dose of Soylent Green thrown in. It's pure B movie, silly, campy space fantasy, not to be confused with science fiction.
It's also a lot of fun.
Unknown to Earth's residents, life on Earth and countless other planets has been seeded by Alien royalty for the purpose of harvesting the evolved living creatures once they reach a state of perfection in evoltuon, in order to produce a type of youth that allows them to live forever. When the matriarch of the House of Abrasax, the most powerful of the alien dynasties, dies her children Balem (Eddie Redmayne), Kalique (Tuppence), and Titus (Douglas Booth) are at war over the inheritance. Eventually a new heir comes to their attention: Jupiter Jones (Mila Kunis), an unsuspecting, Earth-living, unlucky caretaker of other people's homes. Jupiter encounters Caine Wise (Channing Tatum), a genetically engineered interplanetary warrior, who came to Earth to reveal that her genetic signature makes Jones royalty and heir to Earth. Meanwhile, he has to protect her from Balem, who put a bounty on her head and would rather harvest Earth than lose it to Jones.
This is all really just an excuse for action and special effects, but it's really good action and fantastic special effects. Every time I started to get annoyed with the flimsiness and hokey quality of the material, Channing Tatum would use his anti-gravity speed skates and I'd think "Ah, who cares if it makes sense? Pass the popcorn."
I used to be one of Tatum's most vocal detractors, but I have to say, he's really come into his own and makes a strong, charismatic lead in this film (not unlike Keanu Reeves did for the Wachowski's.). I wish the character had been more fully developed, but that can't be blamed on Tatum in the least. The chemistry between him, Mila Kunis and Sean Bean is very strong and they do a great job of driving this movie. The villains are more of a mixed bag: Middleton offers little more than added sex appeal, and Booth (Shem in Darren Aronofsky's Noah) is given a flimsy character. But Eddie Redmayne, fresh off of his Oscar nomination for The Theory of Everything, is all over the place, speaking in a voice that is so soft and raspy that one can't help but think of the "low talker' on Seinfeld, except for when he gets angry, and then he turns into '90's Gary Oldman. I suppose the main goal is to make him seem creepy, and I can't deny that he is, but it's more than a bit overdone.
There is also a bit of a feeling that the film has been trimmed down to be as streamlined as possible, with all of the plot holes and confusion that usually comes with such a choice.
Still, the fact remains that Jupiter Ascending knows exactly what it wants to be a fun, campy space opera that evokes both the old serials of the '30's and the silly space flicks of the '60's and '70's- and it succeeds spectacularly.
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