Saturday, April 28, 2018

Avengers: Infinity War (2018)

Director(s): Anthony Russo, Joe Russo. Cast: Robert Downey Jr., Chris Hemsworth, Mark Ruffalo, Josh Brolin, Chris Evans, Scarlett Johansson, Don Cheadle, Benedict Cumberbatch, Tom Holland, Chadwick Boseman, Zoe Saldana, Karen Gillan, Tom Hiddleston, Paul Bettany, Elizabeth Olsen, Anthony Mackie, Sebastian Stan, Idris Elba, Danai Gurira, Peter Dinklage, Benedict Wong, Pom Klementieff, Dave Bautista, Vin Diesel, Bradley Cooper, Gwyneth Paltrow, Benicio Del Toro, Chris Pratt, William Hurt, Letitia Wright, Carrie Coon. 149 min. Rated PG-13. Action/Sci-fi. 

They slowly and painstakingly developed 18 movies, brick by brick, over 10-15 years, to prepare for this movie; then entertained our collective consciousness for 2-1/2 hours of battle after battle in this movie, to finally hurl us into ... that ending. What. An. Ending. Doesn’t matter whether upcoming films leading up to Avengers 4 next year reverse that ending or not. It’s about how they've professionally built a most complex structure with an impossible number of characters, to deliver one of the greatest cliffhangers of all time. This is the Hollywood machine at its best: unbeatable, mainstream commercial film-making.

Mo says:
MoMagic!

Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Winchester (2018)

Director(s): Michael and Peter Spierig. Cast: Helen Mirren, Jason Clarke, Sarah Snook. 99 min. Rated PG-13. Horror.

'Inspired by actual events' (yeah, sure), about a hundred-year-old house located some minutes from my home. So there was a certain obligation - a 14% Tomatometer score notwithstanding. But the jump-scares kept coming at such rapidity and hilarity (there's a moving roller skate jump-scare, I kid you not), I started experiencing abdominal pains. The Spierig Brothers have proven they're not idiots, so the laughs and narrative push toward a Sixth Sense-like outcome made me suspicious: is this a horror spoof in disguise? If The Room has taught us anything, it's that laughing during a horror movie is still considered having fun.

Mo says:

Faces Places (Visages villages) (2017)

Director(s): JR, Agnès Varda. 89 min. Rated PG. France. Documentary.

Old French New Wave director (Varda) and young photographer/muralist (JR) roam the country in search of obscure people in France's countryside, take pictures of them, and create huge murals. That simple. But then you start thinking: these people, with their own stories to tell, are not just ... people. If only the film-makers could've held onto that profound effect; because at the end they suddenly go on a self-congratulatory journey to meet up with Jean-Luc Godard, another iconic New Wave director - the self-aware atmosphere significantly impacting the documentary feeling, making the final heartfelt moment look like a setup.

PS: Last week, JR made it to Time Magazine's 100 Most Influential People of 2018.

Mo says:

Possession (1981)

Director: Andrzej Zulawski. Cast: Isabelle Adjani, Sam Neill, Margit Carstensen. 124 min. Rated R. France/West Germany. Horror.

A horror movie, paradoxically exploring severe marital problems during the first half. But then you've already seen the name Carlo Rambaldi (E.T.'s creature designer) in the opening titles. And it's famous for being 'the one where Isabelle Adjani copulates with an octopus'. And it's the artistic equivalent of The Exorcist, where someone gets possessed, but you're really not sure they're possessed ... until things really go bonkers. It's one of Sam Neill's earliest roles, and a film for which Adjani won Best Actress at Cannes. Need I say more? Not for mainstream movie lovers; not for the faint of heart.

PS: Some IMDb trivia:

- Reportedly, writer-director Andrzej Zulawski has said that he penned the film's screenplay during a divorce he was going through at the time.

- The film was initially banned in the UK. The BBFC approved it in 1999.

- According to Halliwell's, "it was released in the US in a 97 minute version". As such, the film was cut by about half an hour from its full running time of about 127 minutes. According to Yuri German at Allmovie, "the version originally released in the U.S. had 45 minutes chopped out".

- Isabelle Adjani told a French magazine that it took her several years to get over playing Anna. She also said that she'd never take on a similar role.

Mo says:

Saturday, April 21, 2018

You Were Never Really Here (2017)

Director: Lynne Ramsay. Cast: Joaquin Phoenix, Judith Roberts, Ekaterina Samsonov. 90 min. Rated R. UK/France/USA. Mystery/Thriller.

One of the most "morbid" hitman stories ever. As opposed to ... a "delightful" hitman story? Yes, because assassination of the evil carries a certain catharsis. But not this one. Joaquin Phoenix plays one of the most disturbed good guys you've seen on-screen; a man so haunted by past demons, even achievements at saving the innocent give him suicidal ideations. He's a robot with a death wish, either to take out or be taken out. Chilling cinematography and soundtrack elevate this to perfection, and since Ramsay also directed We Need to Talk About Kevin, I must seek out her other films.

Mo says:


Chappaquiddick (2017)

Director: John Curran. Cast: Jason Clarke, Ed Helms, Kate Mara, Bruce Dern. 106 min. Rated PG-13. Sweden/USA. History.

The Kennedy family's 1969 scandal, when a drunk Ted drove his car off a bridge and flipped it into a lake. With a girl inside. And he didn't report it until 9 hours later. So the entire film is about the incident, and the cover-up (or the lack thereof). There are some gripping father-son moments between a hemiplegic Kennedy Sr. (astonishingly embodied by Dern) and Ted (Australian Clarke struggling a Bostonian accent), but that's as far as character development goes. You never get to know how the man really felt about the incident. You mainly see the facade he maintained.

PS: After House of Cards, this is the second time Kate Mara is getting killed at the hands of a politician. She has potential to become the Sean Bean of actresses.

Mo says:


Les diaboliques (The Devils) (1955)

Director: Henri-Georges Clouzot. Cast: Simone Signoret, Véra Clouzot, Paul Meurisse. 117 min. France. Crime/Horror.

Two quotes on this sixty-something year old movie:

1. After it's done, we see this:

"DON'T BE DEVILS! Don't ruin the interest your friends could take in this film. Don't tell them what you saw. Thank you, for them."

So when Hitchcock said on his 1960 movie Psycho (made 5 years later): "Do not expect to be admitted into the theatre after the start of each performance of the picture ...", this is where he got that idea.

2. From Roger Ebert:

A man wrote to Alfred Hitchcock: "Sir, After seeing Diabolique, my daughter was afraid to take a bath. Now she has seen your 'Psycho' and is afraid to take a shower. What should I do with her?" Hitchcock replied: "Send her to the dry cleaners."

This ancient movie had an ending 5-minute sequence that truly frightened me. And that horror was about a dead body in a bathtub. So the French Hitchcockian film predated Hitchcock's most commemorated shower murder scene, and had repercussions that affected both Stephen King and Stanley Kubrick in writing and directing The Shining's scariest moment.

I'm scoring this on a matter of principle.

Mo says:
MoMagic!

Wonderstruck (2017)

Director: Todd Haynes. Cast: Oakes Fegley, Millicent Simmonds, Julianne Moore, Michelle Williams. 116 min. Rated PG. Drama/Mystery.

The stories of two deaf teenagers, 50 years apart, told in parallel. So it's obvious from a mile away  there will be a 'big reveal' at the end, where we discover how these two people are related. After a few impossible coincidences pushing these two characters closer and closer, the 'big reveal' happens, and we say: "Okay ... so what?" Would've loved for the recreated 1977 New York City segments to go on forever, but that wasn't the purpose of the movie. The purpose, was the dumb 'big reveal'.

Mo says:

Monday, April 16, 2018

Beirut (2018)

Director: Brad Anderson. Cast: Jon Hamm, Rosamund Pike, Dean Norris. 109 min. Rated R. Thriller.

In 1982, an ex-CIA operative, notified that an old colleague has been taken hostage in Lebanon, is coerced into negotiating his friend’s release. Again, Jon Hamm proves he can single-handedly command a major Hollywood production even through the twists and turns of a Tony Gilroy-written spy thriller, although dark grainy cinematography makes keeping up with those twists a challenge. The notion of groups banning the movie for stereotyping the Lebanese as terrorists is much ado about nothing, especially since the movie is much more critical of Israeli mentality and behavior - showing how terrorism is a by-product of their politics.

Mo says:

Wednesday, April 11, 2018

78/52: Hitchcock's Shower Scene (2017)

Director: Alexandre O. Philippe. Cast: Peter Bogdanovich, Jamie Lee Curtis, Guillermo del Toro, Illeana Douglas, Danny Elfman, Walter Murch, Elijah Wood, Eli Roth, Gary Rydstrom. 91 min. Not Rated. Documentary.

IMO, Psycho is Hitchcock's best film, and together with The Exorcist and The Shining, rounds up the best three horror movies ever made. Case-in-point: an entire documentary, solely to analyze one scene in Hitch's masterpiece (on par with Hitchcock/Trufautt, an entire documentary about one Hitchcock interview). Some moments like Elijah Wood sitting on a couch with others watching it saying: "Wow ... ooooh ..." are quite dumb, but editing grand-master Walter Murch analyzing the 52 shots of the 78 second sequence, is movie-lover gold. See why Psycho's shower scene is taught in film school as one of the greatest ever created.

Mo says:

Pacific Rim: Uprising (2018)

Director: Steven S. DeKnight. Cast: John Boyega, Scott Eastwood, Cailee Spaeny. 111 min. PG-13. USA/China/UK. Action/Fantasy.

Nothing in the story, no interesting characters, not a single slightly smart line of dialogue, and not even a city decimation by crashing robots and monsters we haven't already seen in the 436th Transformers movie. This isn't even worth 100 words of a review, so I'll stop right here. Good candidate for a worst-movie-of-the-year MoCrap score. We'll see.

Mo says:

Sunday, April 8, 2018

Isle of Dogs (2018)

Director: Wes Anderson. Voices: Bryan Cranston, Koyu Rankin, Edward Norton, Bob Balaban, Bill Murray, Jeff Goldblum, Greta Gerwig, Frances McDormand, Scarlett Johansson, Harvey Keitel, F. Murray Abraham, Yoko Ono, Tilda Swinton, Ken Watanabe, Liev Schreiber, Courtney B. Vance, Roman Coppola, Anjelica Huston. 101 min. Rated PG-13. USA/Germany. Animation.

Incredible investment is again placed into an exquisitely detailed production (another stop-motion animation), where characters are positioned symmetrically or move in straight lines across the screen in typical Wes Anderson style, making this an immaculate celebration of form, but again ... somewhat falling short in content. The idea of a brutal (but feeble-minded and possibly kind-hearted) despot manufacturing a divisive factor as grounds to slaughter dogs may have Trumpian correlates, but that wasn't enough for me to feel: yes, such a grand effort was totally worth getting that message across. The film-maker's vocabulary just doesn't work for me.

Mo says:

Saturday, April 7, 2018

A Quiet Place (2018)

Director: John Krasinski. Cast: Emily Blunt, John Krasinski, Millicent Simmonds, Noah Jupe. 90 min. Rated PG-13. Horror.

Krasinski? The comedian from 'The Office'? Making the perfect horror movie? A Quiet Place works two-fold: metaphorically, since an atmosphere where any squeak in the midst of the imposed utter silence is a death sentence, is an excellent analogy for totalitarian regimes; and socially, where the silence-induced horror forces the audience to respect its realm, become silent, and become one with the movie - through avoidance of talking, coughing, and yes ... even texting. That's how a horror movie should function. Suspension of disbelief prevails, and plot inconsistencies become negligible. I could hear a pin drop in the theater.

Mo says:

The Lovers (2017)

Director: Azazel Jacobs. Cast: Debra Winger, Tracy Letts, Aidan Gillen, Melora Walters. 97 min. Rated R. Drama/Romance.

Long-married couple at the brink of dissolving their marriage from extramarital affairs each plan to announce this during their son's weekend visit, but suddenly ... something happens. Marriage is considered "the great mystery", so the plot is as unpredictable as they come. Unfortunately, the mysteriousness and unpredictability of the very personal story (probably autobiographical to the writer) works against the chances of it having a more universal message that can be applied to the viewer. And while thrilling action is not expected, a slightly faster pace would've helped. Alas, nice to see Debra Winger back in movies.

Mo says:

Thursday, April 5, 2018

Downsizing (2017)

Director: Alexander Payne. Cast: Matt Damon, Christoph Waltz, Hong Chau, Kristen Wiig, Udo Kier, Jason Sudeikis, James Van Der Beek. 135 min. Rated R. Comedy/Sci-fi.

Sci-fi concept of a community of miniaturized people opens as another interesting Trump era movie on racism and xenophobia (because 'American-born' still doesn't save someone from being considered an outsider ... right?), but then expands into a commentary on human societies, as even the most Utopian of utopias branched out from human civilizations will eventually corrupt into the usual social strata, with the rich exploiting the poor, reminiscent of Snowpiercer. And you know the further movie-end branching out won't cure the inherent decadence. So beware: if you’re expecting futuristic sci-fi ideas here (rather than a sociopolitical study), you’ll be disappointed.

PS: Thanks for the recommendation, JZ. I too was surprised newcomer Hong Chau wasn't nominated for an Oscar. Look how she has zero accent in real life.

Mo says:


Tuesday, April 3, 2018

Ready Player One (2018)

Director: Steven Spielberg. Cast: Tye Sheridan, Olivia Cooke, Ben Mendelsohn, Lena Waithe, T.J. Miller, Simon Pegg, Mark Rylance. 140 min. Rated PG-13. Adventure/Sci-fi.

I frowned at this being made by Spielberg. The man is an architect of 80's fandom - so why direct a movie to pay homage to ... himself? Even Tye Sheridan in the main role is too obvious as a young Spielberg lookalike. And while the movie is a dazzling spectacle, the innumerable 80's references are questionable: why the Back to the Future DeLorean, as opposed to any other car? One exception: a short sequence referencing iconic scenes of an iconic 80s horror movie, became one of my most fulfilling 2-minutes of the last decade. Wish the entire narrative was that relevant.

Mo says: