July, 21st 2011

Friends With Benefits

Justin Mila

 

I think I would’ve liked Friends With Benefits a bit more if it weren’t quite so smug. It makes fun of, among other things, John Mayer, chick flicks, Third Eye Blind, and Katherine Heigl. But at its heart, it really is just a chick flick  itself—a pretty than decent one, but hardly a game changer. I wanted to say to the film, “Dude, get over yourself.”

The title of the film says it all (and how this film managed to snag that title while the similary-themed Natalie Portman/Ashton Kutcher header got saddled with the forgettable No Strings Attached is one of the great rom-com mysteries): Mila Kunis is a headhunter who recruits art director Justin Timberlake to New York (from L.A.) for a job at GQ. They become friends, then both craving a little uncomplicated sex, decide to become friends with benefits. Exactly what you expect to happen happens (game changer!).

So the question on everyone’s lips: Can Justin Timberlake carry a movie? The answer. Sure. He’s good. Not great. He’s the Topher Grace of movie stars but the Justin Timberlake of pop stars—if you get my drift.

The real revelation is Mila Kunis, who just keeps getting better and better. Beautiful, funny, oozing...

5:44 pm Comment Count Tags: film reviews
July, 21st 2011

Captain America: The First Avenger

 

Take away the (frankly lame) 3-D and a few CGI bells and whistles, and Captain America: The First Avenger feels like the  kind of movie a little tyke might’ve sprung 10 cents for in 1945 and caught as part of a double-feature matinee.

And that’s exactly what director Joe Johnston is going for.

This is an old-fashioned movie, set during WWII and based on the popular Marvel comic book, with a 98 pound weakling named Steve (even the name Steve feels so charmingly square, doesn’t it?) who just wants to fight bullies (read: Nazis) overseas. He keeps trying to enlist, but gets rejected because he’s too frail.

But a German scientist (Stanley Tucci), with loyalties to the Allies, recognizes Steve’s true strength (of character, that is) and recruits him for a secret project: He’s going to turn into a Steve a super soldier.

So Steve goes into this sci-fi-ish looking metal chamber, surrounded by men in white lab coats, and emerges looking like, well, Chris Evans. The CGI here is great—for the film’s first half hour, they managed to plausibly shrink the buff Evans into a cute wimp (using a body double whose face is replaced by Evans’—Winklevoss-twin-style). Steve’s newly rippled...

12:39 pm Comment Count Tags: film reviews
July, 15th 2011

He'll Ink to That!

So my friend, the uber-talented filmmaker (and recent Sondheim Award winner!) Matt Porterfield is launching his Kickstarter fundraising campaign for his newest project, I Used to Be Darker (co-written with his partner, Amy Belk) and has chosen to do it in a particularly, well, badass way. As I wrote on Matt's Facebook wall, "If Chuck Norris were launching a Kickstarter campaign, this is how he'd do it."

See for yourself. (And if you're inclined to invest in Matt's project, all the better.)

By the way, Matt has promised to get a new tattoo for every $100 invested. . . (Just kidding).

 

 

10:22 am Comment Count Tags: general film
July, 14th 2011

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2

Dealthy Hallows Part 2

 

As I watched the juicy and satisfying Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2, it occurred to me how patient the series has been.

Here we were at the eighth and final film of the series (based on seven books) and we still didn’t know Harry’s exact link to the evil Lord Voldemort, still didn’t know if the brooding Severus Snape (the indispensable Alan Rickman) was good or bad (or both), still hadn’t seen Harry’s loyal sidekicks Hermione and Ron consummate their unspoken love with a kiss, and, most stunningly, still hadn’t witnessed Harry and Voldemort in any kind of epic showdown.

And yet, none of the previous films seemed like filler—each had its own internal rhythm and narrative, its own demons to slay (real and metaphorical), its own talismans to collect, its own pieces of the Harry Potter/Voldemort puzzle to be revealed. We’ve grown to love and care about these characters and we’ve been too happily ensconced in JK Rowling’s lavishly orchestrated world of muggles and wizards and enchantments to be restless.

Our patience has been rewarded: Unlike some finales that don’t quite satisfy (*cough* Lost), Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 gives us...

11:56 am Comment Count Tags: film reviews
July, 8th 2011

Horrible Bosses

Horrible Bosses

The premise of Horrible Bosses—three mild-mannered dudes are driven to potential homicide by their titular tormenters—is nimble enough, so its success depends largely on the, uh, execution.

It helps that the entire cast in on top of their game.

There’s Jason Bateman, the soul of put-upon decency, as Nick, whose boss (Kevin Spacey) is an unrepetant jerk who makes him jump through hoops for a promotion before gleefully giving it to himself.

There’s Jason Sudeikis as good-guy horndog Kurt, who, after the death of his mentor, must deal with the boss’s coked-up womanizing son (Colin Farrell).

And there’s Charlie Day, in a starmaking performance, as cutie-pie neurotic Dale, whose own boss (Jennifer Aniston playing way against type), is a sociopath sex fiend who really puts “her ass” into sexual harassment.

I loved when our heroes met with their first would-be hit-man—they found him on Craig’s List, probably not a good idea—and Dale, who has watched far too many Law and Order episodes, solemnly introduced himself by saying, “I am the one they call Dale.”

Later, I laughed out loud when they brought a briefcase filled with 5 grand to yet another potential gun for hire...

4:06 pm Comment Count Tags: film reviews
June, 26th 2011

Bad Teacher

Bad Teacher, not to be confused with Horrible Bosses, which opens in two weeks (is this the Snakes on a Plane effect at work?), is a one-joke film that inevitably wears out its welcome. But hey, at least the joke is pretty good.

The extremely game Cameron Diaz is Elizabeth Halsey, who teaches middle school to pay for a boob job (all the better to land a rich husband). She has nothing but contempt for her students—indeed, she’s usually too bored, hungover, or high to even notice them.

There’s one great sequence where Diaz—who performs the whole film wearing high heels, tight skirts, and a “screw you” snarl—marks up papers with comments like: “Could you BE any more stupid?” She also shows her kids inspirational teacher movies—Stand and Deliver, Lean on Me, Dangerous Minds— in lieu of doing any actual teaching. This is funny, liberating even, in our PC world, where every child is a precious snowflake and every movie teacher just cares so darn much!

But Bad Teacher has no place to go. There’s Justin Timberlake—cute, but still not making a case for abandoning music— as a dorky and rich substitute teacher who Elizabeth pursues. He, however, only has eyes for...

1:03 pm Comment Count Tags: film reviews
June, 10th 2011

Super 8

Super 8

 

When does theft become homage? When the person you’re ripping off is a collaborator. J.J. Abrams apparently knows this and, with Steven Spielberg on board as executive producer, his Super 8 has gone from Spielberg-theft to Spielbergesque.

Actually, of the all the films that have tried to do Spielberg—Goonies and Gremlins come to mind—Super 8 may do it best. It captures a lot of the uniquely clear-eyed suburban nostalgia that made Spielberg films like E.T. and Close Encounters of the Third Kind so magical.

It’s the summer of 1979 and, in a working class Ohio town, Joel (Joe Lamb) has just lost his mother to a horrible accident at the plant. His cop father (Kyle Chandler) is ill-equipped to deal with a grieving son (or his own grief for that matter) but luckily Joel has an enterprising friend (Riley Griffiths) who wants to make a zombie film on his Super 8 camera. That’s just the distraction that Joel, who is handy with makeup and props, needs—all the more so when the cool and pretty Alice (Elle Fanning) is cast as the leading lady....

5:33 pm Comment Count Tags: film reviews
June, 9th 2011

Midnight in Paris

 

After a lifetime of making films that were explicit homages to his beloved Manhattan, Woody Allen seems to have reached the “European vacation” phase of his career. He obviously doesn’t know England (Match Point) or Spain (Vicky Cristina Barcelona) as well as he knows the Upper West Side, but these new locales have inspired him and even loosened him up. When describing his latest, Midnight in Paris, one feels compelled to use French pastry analogies: It’s a bonbon, a macaroon, a petit four.

The role of Woody Allen will this time be played by the droll Owen Wilson—who, with his WASPy looks marred by that fabulously crooked nose, has always struck me as Robert Redford’s comedy doppelganger. Turns out, he’s an excellent, if unlikely, stand-in. Wilson has a child-like sense of awe about him, so he represents the romantic side of Woody’s nature well.

Here, he plays Gil, a Hollywood screenwriter vacationing in Paris with his fiancée Inez (Rachel McAdams). Gil is disenchanted with life in L.A.—he’s working on a novel and fantasizes about living the bohemian life in...

12:57 pm Comment Count Tags: film reviews
June, 9th 2011

The Tree of Life

The Tree of Life

 

Sometimes you have to risk ridiculousness to find the sublime and director Terrence Malick has never shied away from that paradox. With its hushed dialogue, poetic incantations, and lengthy digressions about the cosmos, it would be very easy to mock Malick’s latest, The Tree of Life, as self-indulgent nonsense. But be careful what you mock. For all its art house pretensions, it is also one of the most resonant examinations of childhood that I have ever seen.

There are two things you need to know before you go see The Tree of Life: One is that very early in the film, Malick takes a break from the O’Briens, the traditional 1950s family he has introduced us to—Brad Pitt is the father, along with his forest-sprite-like wife (Jessica Chastain) and their three sons—and turns his attention to swirling images of fire, water, clouds, and solar systems (there’s even a little parable involving dinosaurs). We are watching nothing less than the dawn of the earth.

Now, some people will be enthralled by the beauty of these images. Others, like myself, will be glancing at their watches...

12:10 pm Comment Count Tags: film reviews
May, 27th 2011

The Hangover Part II

Hangover Part II

 

Much like a wild night of partying that you enjoyed a whole lot but probably shouldn’t attempt to repeat, The Hangover Part II was possibly ill-conceived from the start.

I loved the first one, for its audacity and gleeful debauchery, but also the cleverness of its Agatha Christie-goes-to-a-bachelor-party-in-Vegas-style plot.

This latest installment—which finds the boys in Bangkok—follows the original’s structure to a tee. I get that choice—in some ways, fans would feel cheated if they didn’t get to see a glassy eyed Phil (Bradley Cooper) moaning into the phone: “It happened again.”

But the film can hardly be bothered to even slightly deviate from the original formula.

So instead of a missing groom, they have lost the precocious 16-year-old brother of Stu's (Ed Helms) fiancée.

Instead of a pulled tooth, there’s a chopped off finger, and an ill-advised Mike Tyson tattoo. (Ill-advised for both the character and the film—the...

12:22 pm Comment Count Tags: film reviews