April, 21st 2011

Water for Elephants

Anytime a beloved book is adapted for the screen, there are going to be some grumblings about the casting (enraged The Hunger Games fans, I’m talkin’ to you).

And so it was when I first heard about the cast of Water for Elephants, everyone’s favorite book of 2006.

Pretty-boy bloodsucker Robert Pattinson as Jacob, the ardent young veterinary student who hops a train and accidentally joins a traveling circus? No way! Ryan Gosling would be perfect in that role.

Snub-nosed all-American cutie Reese Witherspoon as Marlena, the graceful horse trainer and acrobat who enchants him? But Marion Cotillard was clearly Marlena.

The only cast member I sort of got behind was Inglorious Basterd’s Christoph Waltz as August, the circus’s sadistic ringmaster (I’d envisioned Daniel Day Lewis when I read the book, but as second choices go, Waltz is not too shabby).

Oh, how I’d love to report that my reservations were unfounded. . .

...

5:45 pm Comment Count Tags: film reviews
April, 14th 2011

Maryland Film Festival Lineup: Like Christmas in April!

 

Here's a link to the preliminary lineup for this year's Maryland Film Festival, which runs from May 5-8.

I, for one, can't wait.

Look for lots of reviews and previews in this blog in the coming weeks. In the meantime, take a moment to revel in the fact that Fishburne (Laurence) is narrating a documentary on Fishbone (the band).

 

http://www.md-filmfest.com/film-guide-2011.cfm

 

 

3:36 pm Comment Count Tags: general film
April, 8th 2011

Hanna

 

With Hanna, director Joe Wright (Atonement) is trying to create something that is part art film, part international action film, and part fairy tale (Terence Malick meets Run Lola Run meets The Brothers Grimm, you might say). And, at least for its first hour or so, his strange hybrid casts an undeniable spell.

When we first meet 16-year-old Hanna (mesmerizing Saoirse Ronan) she is hunting a buck in the forest with a bow and arrow. She has wild, nearly-white hair and placid blue eyes, and she moves swiftly and stealthily after her prey. She shoots the buck, it staggers forward a few yards, and collapses, not yet dead.

“I missed your heart,” she says matter-of-factly. She then pulls out a gun and shoots the deer in the head.

Hanna is being raised in the forest by her father Erik (Eric Bana)—and he’s teaching her more than just survival skills. He’s training her to be an elite assassin and a world scholar. But he knows that their little idyll is temporary. Soon, she’ll want to leave the nest and explore the world on...

3:15 pm Comment Count Tags: film reviews
April, 7th 2011

Win Win

WIn Win

Thomas McCarthy is the Anne Tyler of directors. He makes movies about surrogate families, unlikely bonds, and sad people finding solace—if not outright happiness—in each other’s company. Sure, maybe there is something a little contrived in his formula—he combines the low-key, naturalistic sensibilities of an indie director with the satisfying catharsis of mainstream film (Win Win could almost be described as a downbeat version of The Blind Side). But I’m buying what he’s selling. (And for the record, I like Anne Tyler, too.)

In Win Win, Paul Giamatti plays Mike, a lawyer with a seedy little practice that has an ominously banging heater in the basement, a toilet bowl that is constantly overflowing, and a jaded secretary who gripes about how little money they’re bringing in. He is married to the decent and pragmatic Jackie (Amy Ryan) and they have two little girls. Mike is also the coach of the dismally bad local high school wrestling team.

Mike is so stressed out about the lack of money coming in that he is getting panic attacks. So when he finds out that Leo (Burt Young), a...

12:50 pm Comment Count Tags: film reviews
April, 1st 2011

Source Code

Source Code

 

Inception is the gift that keeps on giving. Hollywood, of course, is nothing if not self-cannibalizing.  It takes any kind of success and witlessly tries to duplicate it. But how do you duplicate a film as original, twisty, and downright weird as Inception? You don’t, of course. But maybe you greenlight intelligent, complex sci-fi thrillers that you might otherwise have ignored. Hence, we had The Adjustment Bureau, which wasn't particularly good but was at least a break from the standard Hollywood fare. And now we have the excellent Source Code.

Thank you, Christopher Nolan.

Source Code is directed by Duncan Jones, and if that name doesn’t sound familiar, how bout this one: Zowie Bowie? Yup, he’s David Bowie’s son, all growed up, and he’s turned into a darn good filmmaker. (His little seen Moon got critical raves.)

His leading man is Jake Gyllenhaal—Jakie-pie, in my household (ahem)—who is one actor I could see seamlessly taking over the Bourne franchise. He’s sensitive, yet...

3:22 pm Comment Count Tags: film reviews
April, 1st 2011

Insidious

 

Unless you’re talking about a visionary horror genius like, say, Guillermo Del Toro, I generally think it’s better to imply but not show the BBST (big bad scary thing). Frankly, our imagination of the horror is generally much more terrifying than whatever the director and CGI wizards can come up with. In fact, more often than not, the demon/ghost/witch/alien is kind of a joke.

Which brings us to Insidious. The first half of the film, about a beautiful young family that moves into a house that seems to be haunted (the whole thing is a rather explicit homage to Poltergeist, which I endorse), is filled with the genuine dread of the half-seen and hinted at.

The second half, where the family hires a medium and tackles the BBST head on, shows us the evil creatures that are afoot in a big way. And while I  have to admit that the evil freak show does provide some nice chills, it replaces the slow burn of dread with something overcooked  and cheesy.

Still, no one can accuse director James Wan of holding back....

12:29 pm Comment Count Tags: film reviews
March, 15th 2011

Catching Up With . . . Ex B-mag Intern Michael Cuomo

 

About 12 years ago, Michael Cuomo was a bright-eyed young intern here at Baltimore magazine. After graduating from Loyola University, he moved to New York to study journalism at NYU. Somehow, he got bitten by the acting bug. So he dropped out of school and started taking acting classes with famed acting coach Joseph Chaikin.

Off-Broadway work and commercials—like the current one for an AT&T netbook where he’s trying to explain the nature of his device to TSA workers (“It’s a computer AND a phone”)—followed.

Now he’s at the SXSW Film Festival with his newest film, Happy New Year, where he plays a badly wounded (emotionally and physically) Marine staff sergeant being treated in the PTSD ward of a small VA hospital.

I caught up with Mike over the phone. Here’s a little taste of our conversation.

 

...
2:53 pm Comment Count Tags: general film
March, 4th 2011

The Adjustment Bureau

 

When I saw The Adjustment Bureau trailer, with its smartly dressed men in fedoras going through portals and freezing time, I turned to my companion and said, “If you liked Inception. . .”

For sure, Universal Pictures wants us to think that The Adjustment Bureau is Inception-esque, but if anything, it’s actually more Capra-esque. It’s a story about a little guy going up against powerful cosmic forces to be with his one true love, and it’s downright quaint by today’s sci-fi standards (not totally surprising since it’s based on a Philip K. Dick story that was written in 1954).

Matt Damon plays David Norris, a maverick politician from Brooklyn who’s considered to be a rising star. But when a photo of him mooning some old college buddies is leaked to the press, his senatorial run is derailed. In the bathroom, just before he goes on stage to make his concession speech, he meets a free-spirited young woman named Elise (Emily Blunt) and they share a connection and a kiss. He fears he will never see her again, but several months later, he’s on a bus and there...

4:58 pm Comment Count Tags: film reviews
February, 28th 2011

Who Am I? Why Am I Here? Thoughts on the 83rd Academy Awards

 

The Google box is abuzz today with the following question:

Was James Franco really trying to do a good job last night? Or was he ironically commenting on the experience, even as he was having it? (The same question, by the way, could’ve been asked of his weird stint on General Hospital).

If he saw himself as some sort of Keyser Soze-style imposter—“The greatest trick James Franco ever pulled was convincing the world to let him host the Oscars”—shouldn’t he have been, well, funnier? Or at least, more clear in his intentions?

And if he was some sort of rebel party crasher (because that had to be it, right?), wasn’t that a bit disingenuous? After all,  127 Hrs. was nominated for best picture and he, for best actor. His director, Danny Boyle, won for Slumdog Millionaire two years ago. His Milk co-star Sean Penn won best actor that year,...

5:09 pm Comment Count Tags: general film
February, 18th 2011

Unknown

 

With his hulking frame and leonine face, I guess it was inevitable that Liam Neeson would morph into a bona fide action star. Maybe the better question was, “What took him so long?” (He’s almost 60.)

In the last two years alone, Neeson has starred in Taken, Clash of the Titans (it was he who uttered the immortal phrase: “Release the Kraken!”), and The A-Team. And now he’s in the Bourne-like Unknown,  aka Taken 2: This Time Nobody Knows What the Hell’s Going On.

I prefer the sensitive, gentle giant Neeson of  Schindler’s List, Husbands and Wives, and Kinsey. But I won’t go so far as to agree with the critic who compared Neeson’s career trajectory to Nicolas Cage’s. Frankly, Neeson was never that good—and his latest movies aren’t nearly that bad.

In fact, on its own terms, Unknown—about a biochemist (Neeson) who travels to Berlin with his wife (January Jones), konks his head in a car accident, and awakens to find out that his identity has been...

3:27 pm Comment Count Tags: film reviews
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