BATMAN V. SUPERMAN: DAWN OF JUSTICE

Showing posts with label Barack Obama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barack Obama. Show all posts

Monday, 31 August 2015

A Bunch Of Blu Rays & DVDs That Have Been Stacking Up









I haven’t posted as much as I would’ve liked this summer because of two big distracting factors: #1. My wife and I moved
from our house in Raleigh to Clayton (roughly 20 minutes outside of Raleigh),
and that was really exhausting. #2. I’ve had a few health issues over the last
few months including an inflammation and a blood clot – and that’s been pretty
painful.





While I’ve been recovering I’ve been making my way
through a bunch of Blu rays and DVDs that have stacked up in my office over the
last few months. Most of them are from the world of VOD (Video On Demand), and
had either limited or no theatrical release, so you may not have heard of them.
Most of them aren’t very good either, but there were a few halfway watchable ones. Let's take a look at a handful of 'em, shall we?






First up, there’s Philip Martin’s THE FORGER,
starring John Travolta as, yes, a master art forger who makes a shady deal to
get an early release from prison, but in return he must pull off “one last
job.” 
So it’s a heist movie, and with Christopher Plummer as Travolta’s father,
and Tye Sheridan as Travolta’s dying son both in on the caper, it highly
resembles FAMILY BUSINESS, a less than stellar ‘80s comic thriller that starred Sean Connery,
Dustin Hoffman, and Matthew Broderick in the grandfather-father-son roles. 




Set
in Boston with bad accents to boot, THE FORGER is a competently dull collection
of clichés that’s a good example of how much Travolta’s been treading water in
his film career since, well, probably HAIRSPRAY (his hair was more realistic in
that too). It also resembles FAMILY BUSINESS in that it deserves to be
forgotten.






Another fail of a thriller follows - this one coming from Canada - Atom Egoyan’s THE CAPTIVE starring Ryan Reynolds, Scott Speedman, Rosario Dawson, and Mireille Enos. Reynolds and Enos play a couple whose daughter is kidnapped by a pedophile trafficking ring. Dawson and Speedman play a pair of detectives that are on the case that lasts over 8 years. The more than capable cast try their darnedest, but the material is crazy convoluted, and the score by Mychael Danna overreaches as it annoyingly builds suspenseful strain on top of suspenseful strain only calling attention to how unsuspenseful the whole thing is. The fractured narrative that skips back and forth in time just makes it confusing too. A murky misfire on every level. Next!





Matt Shakman’s CUT BANK is a more inspired thriller
than THE CAPTIVE, but it’s no great shakes either. The directorial debut of
Shakman, who has directed episodes of scores of notable TV shows including Six
Feet Under
, The Good Wife, Weeds, House M.D., and It’s Always Sunny in
Philadelphia
, it stars Liam Hemsworth as a small town dreamer – dreaming of
getting out of the small town naturally – who accidently captures the murder of
the local mailman (Bruce Dern) on videotape. Hemsworth hopes to use the reward money
offered by the U.S. Postal Service to finally escape with his girlfriend (Teresa
Palmer) from their dead end existence there in Cut Bank, Montana, but, of course,
things aren’t that simple. 





John Malkovich as the town’s sheriff, and Billy Bob
Thornton as Palmer’s father have their suspicions, and a creepy taxidermist who
everybody thought was dead (Michael Stuhlbarg) starts looking into the matter
as well. It twists and turns through a mess of schemes and scams in the
tradition of both the movie and TV show versions of FARGO (Shakman directed two
eps of that too), but it never twists and turns itself into anything but a
watchable throwaway. Shakman should stick to TV.






Henry Hobson’s MAGGIE, another directorial debut, is
one of the few here that got more of a theatrical release (it actually came to
my area), and it’s obviously because of its star, Arnold Schwarzenegger. It’s
another zombie apocalypse scenario, with Schwarzenegger as a farmer in the Midwest
taking care of his daughter (Abigail Breslin) who’s been bitten. 




The father struggles
with how to handle the situation as the country doctor (Jodie Moore) tells him
he has three options: take her to quarantine; give her a drug cocktail that
leads to a slow, painful death; or “make it quick.” It largely feels like a
stand-alone episode of The Walking Dead - one of the uneventful ones on the
season set on the farm maybe - but it has a nicely restrained performance by
Schwarzenegger in his uncharacteristic role, there’s a lot of genuine effort by
Breslin in embodying her infected character, and the eerie grey tone is effective.
I got fairly bored in the last half hour, but fans of the genre and of Ahnold
will probably be more into it.






At the beginning of this just under feature length (68 minuntes) documentary a scroll tells us that HATING OBAMA is an attempt to document the pure hate towards President Barack Obama while asking the central question: “Is Obama hated more for his policies or because he’s black?” It’s a fair question, and there’s some interesting chitchat from a bunch of articulate talking heads here, but Marquis Smalls’ doc doesn’t elaborate on anything we didn’t know already. It mainly plays like a greatest hits of the times Obama has been disrespected, touching on such incidents as when Republican House member Joe Wilson yelled “you lie” during the President’s Healthcare speech, with interspersed commentary mostly from supporters who do indeed think there’s racism at play.



There is significant time given to some anti-Obama voices, such as conservative political activist Derrick Grayson and Reverend Jesse Lee Peterson, but it’s telling that at the end writer/director Smalls shares with us his poll of all his interviewees and 82% of them approve of Obama. A doc like this can’t help but be biased, but the thesis needs more work. HATING OBAMA is a watchable, well constructed conversation of a video essay, but it has no real conclusion - it just throws the question back at us at the end.






Finally, there’s Michael Almereyda’s CYMBELINE, which is another one of those gritty modern adaptations of Shakespeare much like Baz Luhrmann’s ROMEO + JULIET, Ralph Fiennes’ CORIOLANUS, and Almereyda’s own HAMLET, as this re-unites the director with that film’s star, Ethan Hawke. The setting is again New York, but this time in the world of urban gang warfare with the ever crusty Ed Harris in the title role of the king of the Briton Motorcycle Club, who are battling the corrupt cops of the Roman Police Department. Hawke plays the villainous, agitating Iachimo, Milla Jovovich plays Harris’s queen, Anton Yelchin is her son, and, of course, there’s a pair of star-crossed lovers - Dakota Johnson (FIFTY SHADES OF GREY) as Harris’s princess daughter and Penn Badgley (Gossip Girl) as her secret commoner husband. 



All the film's dialogue comes from the original text, albeit trimmed down to the essentials, and it’s fun to see folks like John Leguizamo (as Badgley’s servant) put such effort into their recitations. The old school manner of speaking is an amusing anachronism in this Brooklyn crime-lord context, but you really have to pay attention to follow it or it can get pretty confusing - especially with all the bloody, layered plotting. I appreciated several of CYMBELINE’s set pieces, particularly one in which Jovovich sings Dylan’s “Dark Eyes” (much in the manner of Patti Smith’s version), but it’s far from an easy, entertaining viewing. Like his HAMLET, Almereyda’s take on the Bard here is initially an interesting experiment but one that’s hardly essential.



More later...

Thursday, 18 December 2014

Notes On The Hubbub Surrounding THE INTERVIEW









All day yesterday I was anticipating an email. It concerned an advance screening scheduled for tonight, Thursday, December 18, of a little comedy movie I was looking forward to seeing since I heard about it last summer.

I finally received it sometime last evening, and it said:

“As you may know, a number of theaters have made the decision not to show THE INTERVIEW, and as a result we are cancelling the advanced screening.

A statement from Sony Pictures Entertainment is below:

‘In light of the decision by the majority of our exhibitors not to show the film The Interview, we have decided not to move forward with the planned December 25 theatrical release. We respect and understand our partners’ decision and, of course, completely share their paramount interest in the safety of employees and theater-goers.

Sony Pictures has been the victim of an unprecedented criminal assault against our employees, our customers, and our business. Those who attacked us stole our intellectual property, private emails, and sensitive and proprietary material, and sought to destroy our spirit and our morale – all apparently to thwart the release of a movie they did not like. We are deeply saddened at this brazen effort to suppress the distribution of a movie, and in the process do damage to our company, our employees, and the American public. We stand by our filmmakers and their right to free expression and are extremely disappointed by this outcome.”






I’m disappointed too. I really wanted to see Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg’s THE INTERVIEW since I’m a fan of their work, particularly SUPERBAD, PINEAPPLE EXPRESS, and THIS IS THE END, and though I was skeptical of the killing Kim Jong-un angle, it looked like it had comedy potential.





I really can’t speak about the so called “Sony hacks,” although speculation that North Korea sponsored the attacks is definitely not as far-fetched as it once seemed (just read while writing this that the U.S. is indeed officially blaming them), but when reading this statement from the hackers who call themselves “the Guardians of Peace” it’s hard not to agree with the many folks who are posting to the effect that this means the terrorists have won:





“We will clearly show it to you at the very time and places ‘The Interview’ be shown, including the premiere, how bitter fate those who seek fun in terror should be doomed to… The world will be full of fear. Remember the 11th of September 2001. We recommend you to keep yourself distant from the places at that time. (If your house is nearby, you’d better leave.) Whatever comes in the coming days is called by the greed of Sony Pictures Entertainment.”





However, let’s not jump to conclusions. In a piece published yesterday on motherboard.vice.com, “Reaction to the Sony Hack Is 'Beyond the Realm of Stupid,” Jason Koebler spoke with Peter W. Singer, one of the nation's foremost experts on cybersecurity and cyber war. Singer said that the “Guardians of Peace” group “threatened yesterday 9/11-style incidents at any movie theatre that chose to show the movie.

Here, we need to distinguish between threat and capability—the ability to steal gossipy emails from a not-so-great protected computer network is not the same thing as being able to carry out physical, 9/11-style attacks in 18,000 locations simultaneously. I can't believe I'm saying this. I can't believe I have to say this.

This group has not shown the capability to do that. Sony is rueing any association it has with the movie right now. We are not in the realm of 9/11. Did movie chains look at the reality of the threat? Or did the movie theater chains utterly cave in? This is beyond the wildest dreams of these attackers.”

But, as we all know, the theater chains all pulled out, Sony caved and cancelled the movie’s Christmas day release, and now Rogen and co-star James Franco have armed bodyguards accompanying them everywhere.

So, are we ever going to see THE INTERVIEW? A Sony Pictures spokesperson said yesterday that the studio “has no further release plans for the film,” but a lot can change quickly in this crazy age so I’m still clinging to hope that I can see the film soon.

But I won’t be trying to download it on torrent sites because I hear that many files that are labeled as it are really copies of THE ENGLISH PATIENT with heavy malware embedded - isn’t that adding insult to injury?

So in conclusion all I can say is that this is a sad, ridiculous situation which sets a horrible precedent and I think our President, Barack Obama, should be listened to when he says:

“For now, my recommendation would be people go to the movies.”

Otherwise then, the terrorists really would win – just not the terrorists we’re thinking of.

More later…