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PAIN AND GAIN Red Band Trailer Plays Up the Comedy

 

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After releasing a so-so trailer last month for general audiences, the new red band trailer for Pain and Gain hits hard and really plays up the comedic and gruesome elements of the film. Director Michael Bay of Transformers fame has been trying to make this ‘true story’ come to life for a while and only agreed to direct Transformer 4 if he was allowed the time to tackle this “small, passion project” first.

 

At the turn of the year, this film made my number forty slot on my most anticipated films of 2013 because it looked like a wholesome, man’s night at the theater and this newest trailer all but affirms my suspicion that this might actually be enjoyable even though it has The Rock.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i72tN2lU4fU
Featuring Mark Walhberg and Dwayne Johnson as a pair of body builders turned high rolling thieves, Pain and Gain hits theaters April 26.

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$3 Theater: THE IMPOSSIBLE

 

I don’t think I stand alone when I say that nothing beats cinema on the cheap so you can imagine my delight at discovering one of the last standing relics of a bygone time: the three dollar theater. Owned and operated by parent company Landmark Cinemas, the Crest Cinema offers films caught in the vestibules of time, after their theatrical run but prior to their DVD release, also known as the opportune markdown moment. Join me as I review films as they make the jump from the theater to the shelf.

The Impossible

Following the account of a British family vacationing in Thailand during the devastating 2006 tsunami, The Impossible is a true story that’s simply captivating even when flirting with over-dramatization.

 
We meet Maria (Naomi Watts), Henry (Ewan McGregor) and their three children, who have been expatriates over in Japan for a bit, during a moment of foreshadow-laden turbulence as they fly over the Indian Ocean to spent Christmas in the tropics of lush Khao Lak. We get to know them in fits and starts but no real meaty character development comes spilling off the screen until the inevitable wall of water blasts through their sleepy vacation spot and send the family members sprawling every which way.

There is a perfect little moment of quiet right before the tsunami storms the beach which unfolds into a massive shot of the sea rocketing through palm trees and houses like sticks and cards that is both beautiful and devastating. From here, the practical effects take over and I was left wowed to what was unfolding before me. Not only did director Juan Antonio Bayona (The Orphanage) manage to give the sequence immense emotional weight but he did it within a massively effective visual manner.

This simply does not look like something shot in a studio or developed with effects. This looks like a woman and her son caught in a tsunami battling for their lives. It looks and feels real without being over-the-top or showy and for that the measured hand of Bayona and the entirety of the effects department deserve some much recognition.

In the calm of the storm, the real terror begins and the characters start to shine. As Maria and son Lucas begin to make their way to rescue, their wounds slip into view, invoking a true sense of gut-wrenching horror. As Maria’s mangled mess of a calf emerges from the nasty brown water for the first time my mind immediately raced to infection and death and I admittedly got a little nauseous once again a testament to the level of reality and restraint taking place. The makeup effects used here are executed precisely as they should be; simple but captivating, nasty but reined in. It’s the realism that Bayona has honed in on and managed to simulate here that makes everything seem so important and at the same time thrilling.

Watts may have been nominated for an Academy Award for her turn as Maria, but it is young newcomer Tom Holland who really anchors the film. For an inaugural performance, Holland rises above the shtick of child acting and really embodies this strong-willed character for his duration of time onscreen. There is not a moment where I felt that his acting slipped or the weighty dramatic turbulence of the film overcame him and for that I applaud him.

While this is hardly a cautionary tale, you can’t miss the powerful message sewed into the film, as it truly embodies the power of unity under duress. In chaos, there is hope and in pain, there is camaraderie and this story underlines the might of a collective effort working together, regardless of race or creed. As a member of the human race, it’s hard to not find this message stirring and the true acts onscreen inspiring. Ironically enough, this is a multinational film in all senses of the word. It’s made by a Spanish director, co-financed by American studios and centering on a British family who live in Japan all taking place in Thailand. It runs the gambit on class and race representation and all of these perspectives add an element of the universal “us” to the central message of human fraternity.

While some critiques of the film could point out the over-dramatizations taking place, I found myself willing to overlook it without holding it against it too much. The series of coincidences which lead to the conclusion may be a blatant draw for the dramatic but the unabashed emotional manipulation works for the most part.

Ultimately, whatever I say at this point about this film will seem reactionary but I nonetheless feel poised to defend it for what it is; a riveting narrative anchored by strong performances with a masterful flair of visual realism and a slightly unfortunate tendency to sway towards the over-dramatic.

 
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Will Smith Talks DJANGO and Makes Himself Look Like a Douche

 

Making the internet rounds today is news that box-office superstar Will Smith has finally opened up about why exactly he turned down the titular role for Quentin Tarantino‘s smash hit Django Unchained. His comments are strange and mostly ungrounded and when taken out of context, he comes off a bit like a selfish child only interested in hogging the spotlight:

“Django wasn’t the lead, so it was like, ‘I need to be the lead,'” the star said. “The other character was the lead! I was like, ‘No, Quentin, please, I need to kill the bad guy!’”

I understand what Smith is saying but come on, Django is clearly the lead of the film and the fact that you can suitably mimic that quote in a baby’s voice doesn’t speak wonders to the charismatic star’s ego. Yes, Christoph Waltz‘s award-winning character Dr. King Schultz may have occupied a lot of screen time as well but rest assured Django is still top billing. I guess it just goes to show that Smith really has no interest in working in a ensemble film, just one where he gets your undivided attention and gets to do all the hero-y stuff always. Ultimately, it just seems like such a strange comment that would really do nothing but invite the internet mob to grab their torches and rabble at Smith.
 
 
What is most perplexing is Smith’s choice of the film After Earth as a substitute for Django. Sure, maybe he’s not interested in the heavy lifting dramatics of a Tarantino film but any A-lister should know that working with Tarantino looks better on your resume than a post-Avatar: The Last Airbender M. Night Shyamalan. I guess Django didn’t have a place for Jayden Smith so Will wasn’t interested.
 
After seeing the finished version of Django Unchained, Smith commented:
 
        “I thought it was brilliant. Just not for me.”

 
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HEMLOCK GROVE Trailer From NETLFLIX ORIGINAL SERIES

 

In the midst of next month, Netflix Original Series is primed to release their third series, Hemlock Grove, all in one go.Horror auteur Eli Roth is sitting in the executive producer’s chair on this project that is based on the novel of the same name by Brian McGreevy, who also helped develop the series.

Hemlock Grove begins with the mysterious investigation of 17-year-old Brooke Bluebell’s murder. As rumors mount, two of the suspects in her killing, Peter Rumancek, a 17-year-old Gypsy trailer trash kid rumored to be a werewolf, and Roman, the heir to the Godfrey estate, decide to find the killer themselves.

 

Thus far, I’ve loved the innovative strategy of simultaneous release that Netflix’s unique platform has afforded them. It makes addiction that much sweeter and has the potential to quickly throttle interest in the ever expanding streaming medium. With House of Cards now a measured success and an eagerly anticipated continuation of Arrested Development sure to blow the roof off of ratings, it looks like Netflix may truly be on to something here.

Starring Famke Janssen (X-Men Trilogy), Bill Skarsgård, Landon Liboiron, Penelope Mitchell, Freya Tingley and Dougray Scott, all 13 episodes of Hemlock Grove launch on Netflix April 19th.

Check out the trailer here:

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Weekly Review 19: UNITED 93, DOGTOOTH, THE THING, LILYHAMMER

It’s been a long time since I did my last issue of Weekly Review and seeing that I haven’t been to the theater in a while, I’ve decided to reinstate this weekly installment to get those film reviewing a’flowing.

 

United 93 (2006)

 


I recently revisited Paul Greengrass‘ critically acclaimed, controversial United 93. United 93 is a bold and inspired account of 9/11 told primarily from the perspective of the passengers aboard the ill-fated commercial jetliner. It’s an intimate true story that doesn’t descend to sentimentality or weepy objectivization.

The ending is a sobering, fore-drawn conclusion but that fact can’t negate the pulsing sense of suspense that Greengrass has managed to weave here. Where he could have easily turned these people into cheap caricatures, Greengrass instead humanizes his subjects, even unraveling to a degree the pathos the leader of this Al Qaeda suicide brigade. Using close quarter tactics, a talented fresh-faced ensemble and a tightly edited degree of propulsion, United 93 reaches an oft inimitable level of reality and intimacy.

A

 

Dogtooth (2009)

 

 

A bold, experimental Greek film, Dogtooth plays with the idea of obedience in seclusion to an often uncomfortable degree. We’ve all heard the horror stories of children exposed to harrowing, breathtaking amounts of domestic abuse but this film subverts that expectation in a discomforting way. There are no beatings. There is no physical abuse. Sure, there may be a little bit of forced incest going on but it’s all about the journey that counts.

What happens onscreen, in purposefully awkwardly framed shots, is a patient psychological degradation. This social experiment is a systematic dehumanization based solely on information manipulation and isolation. It’s a film that revels in the subtext and offers little to no solid conclusions. Instead, it offers you a scenario and allows you to create the outcome yourself.

While this sophomore effort from Greek filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos is surely controversial, it doesn’t quite reach the level of social commentary that he seems to have intended. Nonetheless, it is an intriguing attempt to illuminate and bastardize the supreme power of parenting.

 

C+

 

The Thing (1982)

 

Gooey and gripping, The Thing represents all things great about horror. From the suspense-laden moments of still to the sudden and explosive acts of violence, The Thing is all about mood. Set in the snowy confines of nowhere Antartica, a team of scientists are attacked by seemingly possessed neighbors and become infected one by one.

The atmosphere here is spot on with it’s blistering winds and towering snowbanks and the special effects are top notch. The comparisons to Alien are certainly there and as that film is an immense accomplishment in my mind, I’m somehow more inclined to enjoy this film.

 Finally, effects like these really illuminates how much more realistic and downright grotesque puppets look compared to CGI. Why was the switch ever made?

C-

 

Lilyhammer (2012)

 

Outside of the movie realm, I plunged through the overlooked debut from Netflix Original Series, Lilyhammer. An episodic fish-out-of-water story that features Sopranos alumni Steve Zandt Vanh as a mobster-turned-informer who is relocated to Lillehammer, Norway.

As an international, genre-blending dramedy, the series succeed tremendously and while it doesn’t have the weighty darkness that permeated and defined The Sopranos, the levity of the series is what sets it aside and makes it special.

Vanh is essentially Silvio from The Sopranos with his perma-scowl, his affected diction and his iconic slicked back hair-do (which is actually a toupee) but sitting front and center of the series, we get to see a more personal side to Vanh that we never saw in The Sopranos.

 

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HBO Really Wants You to Watch GAME OF THRONES

 

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Less than a week after the last preview, HBO has released yet another trailer for Game of Thrones’ third season. Luckily, they have a host of awaiting fans willing to not only watch them but re-post these things regardless of how many there are. This trailer takes a closer look at some character relations and features more actual dialogue than sweeping statements about war or grandeur. Game of Thrones returns March 31 to HBO.

 

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New GAME OF THRONES Trailer- War and Duty and Daft Punk

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“I am the king! Everyone is mine to torment.” – Joffrey

Check out the houses from all over the Seven Kingdom’s preparing for the next stage in battle as the Starks, the Lannisters, the Baratheons and the Targaryens all show their military might in HBO‘s new full length Game of Thrones trailer that surges to the tunes of Daft Punk.
Game of Thrones returns to HBO on March 31.

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G_z_vYu2ZzI

In addition to the prior cast returning, season three will see a host of new characters in the ever expanding world of Westeros. Per Wikipedia, new casting additions to this season include:

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Out in Theaters: THE INCREDIBLE BURT WONDERSTONE

 

I don’t think that it’s any big secret that I’m not the biggest fan of comedy movies (which is ironic considering that I’m a pretty damn funny guy) and the same is the case with The Incredible Burt Wonderstone. For me, comedies thrive on one element alone: laughs — and like many other comedies, Wonderstone departs too much from the actual laughs to pursue a sense of uplifting drama that doesn’t add much. It’s a serviceable film that mines some absurdist laughs but I hoped for more from the pairing of Carrel and Carrey. It’s just another comedy in over its head that didn’t bother to find quite enough jokes but still manages to slide by on its earnest, if saccharine, sweetness.



Steve Carrell
plays the eponymous character whose act with partner and childhood friend Anton (Steve Bushemi) reached its commercial success in the nineties and they’ve been running on fumes ever since. When new-age street magician Steve Grey (Jim Carrey) upstages their act, Burt and Anton find their star plummeting fast. In the aftermath, Wonderstone struggles with lost celebrity as he tries to rediscover the magic of being a magician.


Much like the characters within, the filmrelies heavily on physical comedy to mixed results. Jim Carrey seems to inhabit the space that made him such a riotous physical performer twenty years ago but my nostalgia for the “golden age” of Carrey comedy seems at odds with my current comedic sensibilities. Funny faces and guttural screams of pain aren’t what they once were. Perhaps I’ve grown up or maybe the world is moving into an age where comedy has to be rife with darkness in order to truly resonate but, one way or another, I couldn’t really summon the belly laughs that many other people in the theater seemed to.

Sure, Carey scores some laughs with his outrageous street “magic,”

 particularly a scene involving an egged-on spectator, but he does little more than these flashy, infrequent bits. My personal favorite character in the film is probably Buschemi’s Anton because he’s so meek and peculiar. He doesn’t do anything particularly funny but he’s undeniably the heart of the story.  

Olivia Wilde‘s Jane, on the other hand, I had trouble buying. When she confessed that she was picked on at school for doing magic, my suspension of disbelief went out the window. We’re talking about Olivia Wilde. This Olivia Wilde. Once again, the uninspired casting of the youngest, most beautiful girl possible just discredits the narrative they’re trying to sell us.

I think my biggest issues with comedies in general is that they almost always try and shoehorn in a clunky emotional arc about the protagonist finding love, rediscovering himself or reconnecting with a lost friend. All three are the case in The Incredible Burt Wonderstone, and even though it works a little better here than usual, it’s just yesterday’s white bread repackaged. I know that flavor and I’m not particularly fond of it. For the bit of warmth we feel for the film and the characters, we can point to Carrell who infuses an inimitable quirky earnestness in all of the characters he plays, even though he starts off as a total douche-bag here.

As the dramedies of a post-Judd Apatow culture seem to be steadily increasing and consequently wearing themselves thin, it’s good to see a traditional comedy –  however safe and traditional it may be. Its conventionality though is no excuse for the obvious lack of comedic gold prepared for this one. If only the writers had locked themselves in a dark room for a little longer, this might have been more memorable but ultimately it’s a serviceable one-and-done that, no matter how inoffensive, is hardly worth recommending.

 

C-

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KICK-ASS 2 Gets Red-Band Trailer

 

Fans of comic fiction ultra violence will be sure to get a kick out of this red band trailer for Kick-Ass 2. Following up on 2010’s surprise hit, Kick-Ass, this sequel reunited us with eponymous superhero Kick-Ass (Aaron Taylor-Johnson), his potty-mouthed, tough-as-nails little sidekick Hit-Girl (Chloe Moretz) and newcomer Colonel Stars (Jim Carrey) as they take on a gang of super-villains led by the Motherfucker (Christopher Mintz-Plasse). Those unfamiliar with the series or the comics on which they are based will be sure to be rolling their eyes but the franchise manages to be wink-wink  about the inherently silly nature of comic-based superheros, handling these heroes with sardonic wit and hyper sadism.

Check out the Red Band Trailer but don’t do so at work as this is classic NSFW territory.

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New Christopher Nolan Film INTERSTELLAR Gets Dated

A dream within a wormhole within time travel within a dream within a wormholm within….

Blockbuster mastermind Christopher Nolan has wowed audiences over the last decade with his innovative original features Inception, The Prestige and Memento but is more closely associated with much loved Dark Knight trilogy. Nolan managed to turn a faltering franchise, whose last film iteration featured George Clooney‘s nipples, into a grounded and complex saga that reignited the spark of superhero potential. Now that Nolan has wrapped up his take on the Dark Knight, he is free to set his sights on more original fare in line with Inception and his next feature film, Interstellar, seems like it will be just as grand and macroscopic as that film.

Under the collective banners of Warner Bros. and Paramount, Interstellar will be hitting theaters on November 7, 2014 and will be sure to make a mighty box office blow. According to the studio:

“The film will depict a heroic interstellar voyage to the furthest reaches of our scientific understanding.”

 Nolan, and the title of the film alone, has made it clear that this filmic journey will take place in the galactic realm and will involve worm holes and likely alternate realities. Although no cast has yet been assembled, I’m going to go ahead and assume that he’ll at least be pulling a fair share for his regular corral of actors. I’d be willing to bet that at least two of the following are cast: Christian Bale, Michael Caine, Cillian Murphy, Ken Watanbe.

I personally am glad to hear that Nolan is still willing to challenge himself and his audiences and I’ll be sure to be waiting in line for this one. As for whether we’ll see him returning to superhero fare as a exec. producer for Justice League, we’ll have to wait and see.

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