November, 10th 2010

What’s Up With Edward Norton?

 

Last year, I wrote a small piece about Mo’Nique’s big Oscar win for Precious and I marveled over the fact that she had won an Oscar before Edward Norton. As great as Mo’Nique was in that film (and I’ve gushed repeatedly), no one could’ve seen that coming.

“Don’t worry, Edward,” I wrote. “I’m sure you’ll be getting one of the gold guys soon enough.”

On second thought, maybe I’m not so sure.

When Norton first stormed onto the scene with Primal Fear, it was more than just a great performance, it was a calling card, a young actor showing off his incredible bag of tricks. He played a con-man (it wouldn’t be the last time)—a teenage sociopath who deceived a gullible attorney into thinking he was a stuttering innocent, when,  in fact, he was a calculating killer. There’s a great moment—the big reveal—when Norton’s sweet slack face curls into a malevolent grin. It’s chilling.

Norton was nominated for Best Supporting Actor for that film, and although he didn’t win, a major actor had...

12:42 pm Comment Count Tags: general film
November, 5th 2010

For Colored Girls

 

Some labors of love should be told to get lost. For Colored Girls, director Tyler Perry’s cinematic adaptation of the seminal 1970s play For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow Wasn’t Enuf, is that kind of well-intentioned, but doomed-from-the-start effort.

I have no doubt that the original work was very meaningful to Perry and his talented cast. But the play’s “choreopoem” structure—7 different actresses reciting poetic monologues that depict 20 unnamed characters—is nearly impossible to adapt. Perry chose to use 20 actors and give all the characters names and flesh out their stories. He also chose to occasionally have the actresses break the fourth wall and recite the plaintive, rhythmic dialogue from the play. It’s a risk that might’ve paid off in the hands of a more talented director, but here it just feels jarring and awkward.

Another problem: The film’s melodrama is piled on so thick, it borders on laughable. And the play’s themes of female empowerment are a bit...

4:31 pm Comment Count Tags: film reviews
November, 4th 2010

Due Date

 

Last year, director Todd Phillips was able to make one of the funniest films of the decade, The Hangover, by constantly ratcheting up the insanity. Just when you thought things couldn’t get more out of control, someone lost a tooth, or Mike Tyson showed up, or a gangster ended up in the trunk of a stolen police car.

Phillips’s newest film, Due Date, a clear homage to the John Hughes classic, Planes, Trains and Automobiles, attempts to do the same thing—with somewhat less inspired results.

Robert Downey Jr. plays Peter Highman, a tightly wound architect who is traveling across country to witness the birth of his first child. Zach Galifianakis is Ethan Tremblay, a dope smoking, perm-sporting man-child who, as is often the case with Galifianakis characters, is just a few loose screws away from being completely unhinged.

In Planes, Trains and Automobiles it was bad weather that forced the two mismatched companions to set out on their cross country journey. In Due Date, updated as it is for the new...

11:38 am Comment Count Tags: film reviews
October, 22nd 2010

Conviction

 

Conviction fits neatly in the great tradition of tough-cookie-fighting the system films, from Norma Rae to Silkwood to Erin Brockovich.

It tells the true story of Betty Anne Waters (Hilary Swank), whose loveable loser brother Kenny (Sam Rockwell) is given life without parole for a grisly murder she’s certain he didn’t commit. (We’re not as sure.) She decides to get her law degree to defend him.

But first she has to get her GED.

Of course, Betty Anne's commitment to her brother’s release will consume her life, ruining her marriage, and almost costing her her kids. There will be setbacks, many of them. But she will gain a feisty best friend (Minnie Driver), a fellow adult law student, who rallies her spirits and helps her persevere.

Eventually, Betty Anne learns a new word: DNA. Conviction takes place in the 80s, before DNA evidence was widespread. She realizes that this is the only way she can save Kenny. Except Kenny has been in jail for 15 years and...

3:22 pm Comment Count Tags: film reviews
October, 21st 2010

Stone

 

Talk about the entrée not living up to the promise of the appetizer. Stone starts out with an absolutely nifty film noir premise: An uptight case worker with a few skeletons in his closet is seduced by the femme fatale wife of a manipulative inmate who’s hoping for early parole. Juicy, right? And when you consider that the sap is played by Robert De Niro, the wife is played by the sexy Milla Jovovich, and the con is played by the ever-compelling (if hammy) Edward Norton, you should be in movie heaven, right?

Well, I should’ve known that Stone had deeper, less pulpy things on its mind when director John Curran started doing artsy close-ups of buzzing bees and De Niro’s Jack and his put-upon wife (Frances Conroy) were always listening to a fire-and-brimstone-preaching radio station.

Nope, Stone isn’t really about the con—who’s double-crossing whom—but sin, God, and the possibility of redemption. So when Norton’s Stone starts buying into a Buddhism-type religion that advocates man’s perfect tonal harmony with the universe, he’s not faking it for Jack’s benefit. Or...

12:34 pm Comment Count Tags: film reviews
October, 14th 2010

RED

 

If the promise of Dame Helen Mirren wielding an automatic weapon is enough to lure you into the theater—hey, works for me!—then RED is probably right up your alley.

It’s an old-guys kicking ass confection (RED stands for Retired Extremely Dangerous) that has a hipster sensibility and a wily sense of humor.

Frank (Bruce Willis) is a retired CIA operative, just minding his own business, when a gang of assassins comes into his home and tries to take him out. Of course, they’re no match for Frank, who was an elite black-ops guy in his day. Figuring that the retirement benefits officer (Mary Louise Parker) he was flirting with over the phone might be a target, he kidnaps her and reassembles his old team, played by John Malkovich, Morgan Freeman, and, yes, the grand Dame herself.

Everyone has a schtick: Parker’s adorable Sarah is terrified at first, but ultimately kind of game—hey, it beats her desk job, and besides, all this cloak and dagger stuff reminds her of her favorite romance novels. Freeman’s Joe was happy enough in a retirement...

3:03 pm Comment Count Tags: film reviews
October, 7th 2010

Never Let Me Go

Never Let Me Go

 

Red Alert! Red Alert!: The following review is chock full o spoilers. Proceed at your own risk…

 

The opening scenes of Never Let Me Go, based on Kazuo Ishiguro chilling novel, seem familiar—and yet ever so slightly off.

We’re at Havisham’s, a boarding school of some sort in England—and the children are well-behaved, as British school children tend to be, and dressed in tweedy gray uniforms, as British school children tend to wear. They eat in a cafeteria, play football (or soccer if you like), and the girls whisper about the boys.

But why is Mrs. Havisham (Charlotte Rampling) insistent that these children, in particular, can never smoke and must take excellent care of their bodies? Why is the school nurse’s office more like an ultra-sterile hospital ward, with several doctors and nurses milling about importantly in white coats? And why is there a rumor that leaving the school’s grounds will result in immediate death?

Because these children are different from other...

12:05 pm Comment Count Tags: film reviews
September, 30th 2010

Buried

 

The next time your filmmaker buddy complains to you that he doesn’t have enough money to finish his project, I suggest you refer him to Buried. Turns out, all you need is a box, Ryan Reynolds, and a cell phone to make a pretty darn compelling movie.

Yup, all of Buried takes place in a grave, where trucker Paul Conroy has been buried alive. The film starts in pitch black silence (no need to wave at the projectionist, it’s on purpose), then watches as Paul wakes up, panics, writhes around in agony, and tries (in vain) to break out.

He has a lighter and a cell phone, and that’s pretty much it.

We find out that he was doing a contract job in Iraq and the convoy he was driving in got ambushed by insurgents. Most of his fellow truckers are believed to be dead. The cell phone is there so the kidnappers can talk to him and demand ransom. (It starts at $5 million). It’s also his only link to the outside world.

“You can’t be buried too far underground if you’re still getting cell service...

12:37 pm Comment Count Tags: film reviews
September, 29th 2010

The Social Network

Over the years, we’ve seen many movies about sweet-tempered simpletons (Forrest Gump being a prime example) but very few about brilliant jerks. The Social Network is such a movie.

We learn almost everything we need to know about Harvard sophomore Mark Zuckerberg (Jesse Eisenberg, in a fearless performance) in the first scene. He’s at a bar with the girl he’s dating, and he’s rambling on about the elite social clubs he wants to pledge. In the course of their (mostly one-sided) conversation, he manages to be testy, rude, elitist, defensive, cruel, and just a wee bit desperate. The girl promptly breaks up with him.

Of course, Zuckerman isn’t the film’s hero, he’s more like its jangly nerve center. He’s, famously, the young billionaire who founded Facebook, and The Social Network tells the story of how he built up that site from a campus-only social phenomenon—a way to get girls and maybe be seen as cool—to the biggest thing to happen to global communication since the telephone.

The film is directed by David Fincher (The Fight...

2:04 pm Comment Count Tags: film reviews
September, 27th 2010

Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps

 

The great joke of Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps? That the insider trading and corporate raiding that Gordon Gekko was guilty of in the original film was petty thievery compared to grand larceny committed by the latest round of Wall Street thugs.

As the film starts, Gekko (Michael Douglas) is just getting out jail. He’s given his cufflinks (diamond-studded), his money clip (empty), and his cell phone (microwave-oven sized). But that’s about all he has. No one comes to pick him up—certainly not his estranged daughter Winnie (Carey Mulligan), a left-wing blogger who blames her father for the overdose death of her brother.

But since all daughters are doomed to date their fathers (or so they say), Winnie is engaged to marry Jake (Shia LaBeouf), himself a young Wall Street stud (albeit one with principles).  Jake was mentored by an aging Wall Street titan (Frank Langella), whose boutique brokerage firm was pushed out of business by the bigger, greedier Churchill Schwarz (think Goldman Sachs), led by soulless fund manager Bretton James (Josh Brolin). Jake vows to avenge his...

3:48 pm Comment Count Tags: film reviews