Saturday, May 16, 2015

Mad Max - Fury Road

Plot: In post-apocolyptic Australia, Imperator Furiosa (Charlize Theron) takes her battle wagon off raiding duty and into the mountains looking for a utopia called Green Place. Meanwhile, Max (Tom Hardy) is captured by warlord Immortan Joe (Hugh Keays-Byrne), who needs to catch Furiosa. The bad guys tie Max to the front of a jeep to use for replacement blood and as human shield. Because the enemy of my enemy is my friend, Max ends up working with Furiosa, who is secretly smuggling Immortan Joe's young wives to the Green Place. 

In the end, Furiosa and Max risk a final battle, and this wraps up the story. [imdb]    [photos]

Review: Cool. And Epic. The steam-punk cars and puffy tattoos and aerosol makeup look great. I loved the style and art direction. I liked having a film that was so fast moving that the vehicles almost never stopped.  

It is a simple story - understandable without a lot of dialog because fleeing girls chased by bad guys is an archetype, that is, oppressed women are trying to escape to a feminist utopia. It is more feminist than any action movie that I can think of, more in a league with Frozen. As readers of Depth of Processing know, 21st Century women characters rescue themselves without need of male heroes. Is the feminist message sincere or just pandering to get an audience? Answer: This is a Hollywood movie; the best you can expect is both. 

Max is really a side kick for Furiosa, who is the primary hero. It is unusual to have a side kick in the title role.  

Cast: Tom Hardy, who plays Max minimally and tough; Charlize Theron, who is tough and cool at once. 

Directed by: George Miller (This is the George Miller who made the first Mad Max -- not the other one.)

The Music: Cool music. I loved having the drums on the trucks. 

The Visuals: The best. It better win Oscars!

Rating: 3.5 stars: Fun with some good ideas. 

More: The trailers were so guy friendly that my wife wouldn't see the movie. This despite the feminist message and heroine. 

SPOILER -- Even More: I like the idea that the utopian Green Place turned out to be barren. Utopia always is. I liked that they needed to go back home, and try to work out their problems. And I liked that the friends that they made on the journey help Furiosa succeed. 

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Saturday, May 9, 2015

Avengers: Age of Ultron

Plot: Tony Stark (Robert Downy Jr) mistakenly creates a super-intelligent robot, Ultron, who wants to pacify the world by killing all the people. The Avengers are mad at Tony, and gripe at one another. Ultron is allied with two new superheroes Quicksilver (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) and Scarlet Witch (Elizabeth Olsen) who cause more in-fighting on the team. Gradually, the Avengers pull themselves together to battle Ultron at the final battle. [imdb]    [photos]

Review: This installment of the Avengers had a good balance of story telling and action. There were many storylines, andtoo many characters for good group dynamics. Although they talked about teamwork, we don't get as much as in X-Men: Days of Future Past, for example. 

I liked the humanization of the heroes, like Hawkeye's (Jeremy Renners) wife and family, and Black Widow's (Scarlett Johansson) flirting. 

I did not like Thor and Ironman, they seemed disengaged. In previous movies, Ironman has an interesting personal story, but not here. Thor seemed like a likable alien, but was never engaging. I also liked how the bad-guy was created by the good-guys to prevent very problem they created for themselves. It is like the 2nd Iraq war. 

The story is cleverly written to keep so many characters in it. There are jokes and lots of fighting. The plot seems to involve chasing the bad guy and then running away from the bad guy. 

They artfully retired Ironman, Hulk and Hawkeye, and recruited new hero Vision and Scarlet Witch for the next movie. 

Cast: Robert Downey Jr, Chris Evans, Mark Ruffalo, Scarlett Johansson, Jeremy Renner, James Spader, Don Cheadle, Elizabeth Olsen

Directed by: Joss Whedon

The Music: Nothing special; lots of drums. 

The Visuals: Top special effects.

Rating: 3.0 stars: Fun to watch. 


More: The bad guy shown in the middle of the credits is Thanos, a bad guy from Titan the moon of Saturn. He has an Infinity Gauntlet he uses as a weapon, and has godlike powers. 

Even More: The next Avengers movie is May 2018; its called the Infinity War.
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Saturday, May 2, 2015

Ex Machina

Plot: Caleb (Domhnall Gleeson) spends a week with super-billionaire, computer designer Nathan (Oscar Isaac). Nathan has built a female robot Ava (Alicia Vikander), who Caleb is to interview, and determine if it is a real thinking machine, or just a talk-bot. In a moment of privacy, Ava reveals that Nathan is lying about everything. Two sudden plot twists drive the movie to the end.  [imdb]    [photos]

Review: The coolest part is the visual of Ava's half woman, half robot body with its transparent wire mesh. You keep looking at how her face floats on top of the wire -- very weird.

The dialog is wonderful especially between Caleb and Ava. Almost as good is the philosophical dialog between Caleb and Nathan about the morality of artificial intelligence. 

Having said that, Ex Machina, is basically conversation with robots or about robots, and the pace is slow -- in the art movie style of slowing the pace to let us process the big ideas and symbolism. I found it a too slow generally.

I liked the plot twists, and the overall ending -- though I felt sorry for one of the characters.  

Overall, I was disappointed. I liked the highly conceptual sci-fi story with many issues including sex slavery. It is an average movie bumped up by the big ideas, and dropped down by the lack of fun. The most fun is talking about it later. 

Cast: Domhnall Gleeson--convincing and engaging, Oscar Isaac--not eccentric enough, Alicia Vikander--her robot character does not have a lot of range 

Written and directed by: Alex Garland

The Music: Minimal electronica soundtrack

The Visuals: Great special effects

Rating: 2.5 stars: An average movie, I liked the big ideas, but it was not much fun.  


More: Vikander filmed the whole movie in a gray catsuit, a portion of which you saw on her hips and upper torso. The remainder digitally replaced with her transparent robot self. They left her hands, feet, shoulders natural because CGI'ing them is difficult and expensive. Link

Even More: Ex Machina is another version of Frankenstein.

Saturday, April 11, 2015

Danny Collins

Plot: 65 year old rock star Danny Collins (Al Pacino) is still touring to hall-fulls of aging fans, and he still drinks and does cocaine. On his birthday, he catches his young wife with a boyfriend her own age. At the same time, he gets a letter addressed to himself written by John Lennon The letter had been stolen by a magazine writer, and was only delivered after 30 years. He reflects on what he might have done with his life, cancels the rest of his tour and decamps to a Hilton in New Jersey, where he flirts with Mary (Annette Benning) the hotel manager. 

He goes to visit his long estranged son Tom (Bobby Cannevale) who has an enchanting daughter Hope () and a pregnant wife Samantha (Jennifer Garner). There are a few plot twists and soon he is writing songs in his hotel room, and this propels the movie to its not so predictable end.[imdb]    [photos]

Review: Danny Collins is a old man's story about finding meaning in his life. In the beginning, bad things happen to show how empty life is, in the middle we get satire on American life, and in the end we get a message about friendship and relationships. 

Like most art movies, the pace is slow, probably so that you can catch all the symbolism, or perhaps to let the audience feel-deeply. In any event the slow pace is a sleep-inducing. 

There is uniformly good acting from Al Pacino and Annette Benning, who have a nice patter. Jennifer Garner is good too. When Bobby Cannevale is ill, he has a few good moments. Little Giselle is funny and cute -- although her voice may be dubbed in half the time. 

Cast: Al Pacino, Annette Benning, Bobby Cannevale, Jennifer Garner, Giselle Eisenberg

Written and directed by: Daniel Fogelman

The Music: The best part of the music is that we don't have to listen to Al Pacino sing much. 

The Visuals: Nothing special

Rating:  2 stars: Come for the acting, it isn't that entertaining or that thought-provoking.

More: There is a grain of truth to the story. John Lennon did send a letter to an aging rocker which was delivered 30 years late; it went to English singer Steve Tilson.

Even More: Director Fogelman is known for lots of feel-good entertainment, including the musical TV show Galavant. 
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Saturday, April 4, 2015

Furious 7


Plot: Deckard Shaw (Jason Statham), the brother of a comatose guy injured in a previous installment, comes to get revenge on his attackers, namely Dominic (Vin Diesel) and the gang. The government funds his private effort to catch Shaw in return for finding and returning a computer device and hostage Ramsey (Nathalie Emmanuel.) They have road races, fistfights and gun battles in the desert, the Caucasus mountains, the Arab Emirates, and Los Angeles. 

Review:  Furious 7 is highly-produced noisy, crowd-pleasing, feel-good entertainment.

Furious 7 is a fantasy movie -- a magic reality where ordinary folks can have James Bond adventures, where violence is bloodless, drivers drive off cliffs and walk away unhurt including flashy parties and bikini girls. Fantasy violence is bloodless and doesn't break bones. 

The fist fights were stylized to make the movie kid-friendly: I'm not sure I liked it, but realistic action would have been too gruesome for the breezy mood. 

There is dialog about family among the drivers. This helps provide motivation for all the not-particularly sensible action. It isn't so much about loving each other as it is a strong sense of loyalty and belonging. We care about the characters because the characters care about each other. 

Paul Walker died during the filming, so there was a tribute to him in the context of the movie, and it was tastefully done.



Cast: Vin Diesel, Paul Walker, Jason Statham, Michelle Rodriguez, Dwayne Johnson

Directed by: James Wan

The Music: A pretty good selection of pop tracks: mostly hip-hop. I may buy one or two.

The Visuals: I liked the driving best. The fights, not so much.

Rating: 2.0 stars: Just eat your popcorn. I am glad I saw it even though it was so light weight.

More: There is a scene of skydiving in cars. Not sure how they shot that. 

Even More: This is one of the first action movies to feature a killer drone. Many more coming I am sure. 
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Saturday, March 14, 2015

Kingsman: The Secret Service

Plot: A spy for the private spy agency, Kingsman, gets killed, and years later his son Eggsy (Taron Egerton) is given a try-out to become an agent. Colin Firth, Mark Strong, and Michael Caine play other agents. After drowning, fighting, parachute dropping and dog shooting, Eggsy goes out to battle mad billionaire Valentine (Samuel L Jackson) and his blade running assistant Gazelle (Sofia Boutella). [imdb]    [photos]

Review: Kingsman is a spoof of a spy movie, but the ridiculousness starts slowly and then gets sillier and sillier. There is a lot of killing but the deaths are video game style, so it is not gruesome.

Colin Firth is the best character, because he had personality. The other characters were dull, including Eggsy, who did not believably transform from druggy-dropout to ass-kicking aristocrat. Mark Strong's Merlin, who was like Bond's Q, was solid.

Kinsman's English social satire never worked for me. I was hoping for a little depth around the villain Valentine's hatred of global warming, but that never happened. Valentine is a spoof of Richard Branson, who runs Virgin Mobile/Air/Records.

In sum, Kingsman started slow, but the end was entertaining.

Cast: Colin Firth (the main character), Taron Egerton (the hero), Samuel L Jackson (I loved his lisp. Funny), Mark Strong (cool and likable), Michael Caine (really again? I am tired of him.)

Directed by: Matthew Vaughn

Based on: The graphic novel by Millar and Gibbons (who also wrote Kick-Ass)

The Music: The big action scenes have a lively orchestral score, but the quiet scenes are nothing special. Composed by Henry Jackman and Matthew Margetson.

The Visuals: The best special effect is Sofia Boutella's feet, which were electronically replaced by razor sharp, spring blades. The fights are fun, but not cool or spectacular.

Rating: 2.5 stars: Fun to watch. 

More: One fight scene shows the view as a 1st person shooter video game to make the killing not seem sadistic.

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