Friday, April 19, 2013

My All Time Favorite Movies: Goodfellas

I have been toying with the idea of doing a series of posts on my all time favorite movies for a little while now. Working at a movie theater again has started all of these conversations about movies and I always love to hear what people have on their lists of favorite movies. I decided I would take my 20 favorite movies of all time and write a blog entry about each of them. There are no set qualifications for a movie to be on this list. These are simply my 20 favorite movies of all time. They will not be numbered. Do not assume that I am going in order from 20-1. I will probably do that starting at 10, but honestly 11-20 are not numbered. They kind of exist right outside of the top 10. A few things you will realize as the list goes on are how recent so many of them are, and how Americanized the list is. I make no apologies for this. I know most people who are deep into film as I am often have many movies from the pre-1970s on their lists, but you will only find 2 or 3 of those here. I do not dislike "classic" movies in any way, but they have never stuck with me as much. I respect the craft, but I am rarely left feeling like they are my favorite movies. I cannot really explain it further than that. I am not xenophobic, but when it comes to cinema, I just prefer the American Aesthetic. I have roughly 10 foreign films that I love, but they do not make it into this list. Again, it is just my personal taste. Each post will be labeled as "favorite ever" so you can easily find them as I go on. As always, I love to hear feedback, if not on my choices, on your choices for some of your favorite movies of all time. Okay, onto this week's post. Oh and there will probably be spoilers about each title on the list.



Martin Scorsese's second and final entry onto my list is my all time favorite film dealing with the mob. There are quite a few great movies about classic gangsters and the mob, and one in my top 10 has some dealings with it, but this is the epitome of films dealing with that era of gangster. The costumes, the score, the props, and the sets are all top notch and Scorsese paces the entire film perfectly. Of course, none of that should come as a shock in any way. Scorsese is a master film maker and Goodfellas is, in my opinion, the peak of his still awesome career. Scorsese co-wrote the script with Nicolas Pileggi and there are times where the film plays like a documentary, which is fitting since this is the true story of Henry Hill's rise, fall and eventually turn away from organized mob crime. Pileggi was the journalist the real Henry Hill told all of his stories to before entering witness protection and the best thing about the film is how real it feels. In fact, the emotions, moods, choices and consequences of all of the characters stay with you for days after the movie is over.

The first time I saw Goodfellas, I was opened to the world of film that was not about plot, because Goodfellas is essentially without plot. There is a driving story here, but there is not really a plot to the story. It is a film about characters, specifically Henry Hill. All his life, all Henry wanted to be was a gangster. They were his heroes growing up. They were the people he saw as influences growing up. From the time he was a young man in New York watching gangters out of his window, to the time he grows up and becomes one himself. However, Hill slowly realizes there are consequences to his actions and believes he might be in too deep, thus the story was born.

If you are watching a Scorsese film there are a few things you can be assured of, first of all amazing music. The score, and the songs in this movie are perfectly married to the visuals. The second thing being, the camera work. There is a POV shot as Henry takes his future wife on her first date past the long line outside of the club, through the security check, down a corridor, through the kitchen and service area, into the main part of the club, where a table is literally lifted into the air and dropped in front of everyone else, so Henry and his date can have first row seats for the show. That is the kind of power he has. His date does not know what he does yet, but when she learns, the film takes to a whole new level because she joins the voice over narration and we start to see things from outside of Henry's perspective. The brilliance of the POV shot is the ease with which the camera flows through the scene. This is a violent movie, a brutal movie, but everything moves so smoothly, it is almost jarring that a movie so nasty and violent could look so smooth and beautiful.

Another great thing about the movie is how it unfolds. It unfolds in easy chapters where characters are never introduced in a forceful way. The entire thing is organic. It gives us an idea that we are in Henry Hill's world because we meet people when he does. We follow him. And since we do follow Hill everywhere, making sure Hill is well played was key and Ray Liotta is definitely up to the task. Liotta's performance lives with you when the movie is over. We understand why the romance of the mafia appealed to him, but we also understand why he slowly, then not so slowly starts to rethink the entire enterprise. Liotta should have been a huge A-list star after this movie, but he became so synonymous with the mafia role that it became tough for him to break out of it. In a movie with big presences like Robert De Niro, Paul Sorvino, and Joe Pesci, Liotta manages to hold his own and make sure the movie never gets away from him. He remains the focus and Scorsese makes sure we understand that.

Of course, Pesci, De Niro and Sorvino are excellent. As is Lorainne Bracco, as Henry's wife, who has her own character arc realizing that mob wives do not do much. They do not see anyone not in the mob and they are quiet, mostly submissive types and that never quite sits well with her. Pesci won an Oscar for his turn as a mob member with a serious temper. His "Clown" speech has been satirized/parodied countless times, but when you watch the movie and see this scene in context, it still works every damn time. Pesci takes a character that could easily just be a cartoon character, but he adds depth, and a real human aspect to him that draws you into his temper, then you watch it explode at the same time Henry does and we are left with the same sense of horrific feeling that Henry is left with.

There are dozens of reasons to love Goodfellas, but there is a scene towards the end of the film that personifies everything I love about it. The scene follows Henry in one day where he has to make a drug deal, cook dinner for his family, make his mistress happy and deal with the possibility of being followed. it does not further the plot of the film, but it serves as a way for us to see how his world is closing in on him. All of these things have to get done, but the guilt is overwhelming him. He is slowly losing his mind, but he has to do all of these things. I think The Sopranos exists because of this movie and because of this scene. We see this member of the mafia have to juggle his criminal world and his personal world. It is a brilliantly paced/shot/edited/scored and acted scene. Scorsese knows when to push in and when to pull out. He understands the rhythm of the scene as it fits in the rhythm of the entire picture.

The entire world of Goodfellas is gripping. Scorsese's best picture will change from person to person, but for me, this is it. It takes a subject with which he has much interest and knowledge and he mines it perfectly. There is not a single frame out of place, not a single touch off center that was not there for a reason. But it is not just technically brilliant, it is full of emotion. It rocks you back and takes you on a journey. You see the highs and lows of one character who never really had a chance to be anything but a gangster, but finds that when he got what he always wanted, it left him cold. yet it shows his guilt in more than one way. He feels guilty as to what he has done, but he also feels guilty that he cannot uphold the code he has lived by for his whole life. It is chaotic for him and confusing for us, but also so perfect.

42

I feel as if I have been waiting my entire life for a Jackie Robinson biopic. As a baseball lover, and as someone who follows civil rights battles closely, Jackie Robinson has long been a hero of mine. It is impossible for me to view this film without any of that swirling around in my head. It would be tough for me not to, at the very least, appreciate this film for what it was trying to do. Until I saw the trailer for this movie only 2 trailers had ever made me tear up: United 93 and The Pursuit of Happyness. I can now add 42 to that very short list. Anytime people say sports do not matter, I want to scream at them to look up Jackie Robinson. Change happens slowly, but someone has to be first and Robinson was first. Robinson broke barriers and allowed for change to begin. Of course, he could not have done it without the gutsy, progressive ideas of Branch Rickey. That was actually the part of the film I was most interested in because what gets lost in much of the Jackie Robinson conversation was the move by Rickey to find the right person to break the color barrier. He knew the player not only had to be talented, but cool under pressure. For anyone who thinks this film is just about the legend of Robinson and that it is old or out of place, allow me to connect it to our contemporary world. Some day soon, I hope, one of the major male team sporting leagues will have the very first openly gay player. One day, perhaps, there will be a film made about him and we will all get to witness history being made. Rumors are swirling that there are 3 or 4 NFL players who might take that leap forward this year. I cannot imagine how difficult it would be to be the first openly gay football player. In that aspect, 42 is incredibly relevant and continues to be.

In 1945 Branch Rickey (Harrison Ford) has the wild idea to integrate a black player into Major League Baseball. He is the owner of the Brooklyn Dodgers, a team that just does not have what it takes to win the pennant. He and his advisers scour the profiles of African American players looking for the right one. Sachel Page is the first name brought up, but Rickey wants someone who has a long career ahead of him. Rickey understands this decision could change the entire landscape of America. Eventually the name Jackie Robinson is brought up. Robinson is a tremendous ball player and military veteran. There is a problem though, he is a bit of a hot head. he has an attitude that scares people. Rickey decides he is the right man for the tremendous task of ushering in a new era of baseball and possibly America. Robinson (Chadwick Boseman) does not fully understand what is being asked of him at first, but when Rickey explain to him that the first black player has to remain calm and not fight back, and that not fighting back would be true strength, Robinson just says, "Give me a glove, and a number on my back and I will show you the guts." The rest of the film centers on his only year in the minor leagues and his first year in the major league. He is booed everywhere, called the most awful names, and even gets baseballs thrown at his head by opposing pitchers who resent him integrating baseball. He has to just take everything thrown at him. Luckily for him, he is an incredible baseball player who lets his bat, his glove and especially his legs do the talking for him. It is so tough for Robinson that one point his teammates all sign a petition saying they refuse to play with a black man. Not only does Robinson have to worry about the hatred from the crowd and the other teams, his own teammates loathe him, even as he is helping them win. All Jackie has is his owner, a black reporter who wants to help Jackie succeed and Jackie has his wife Rachel (Nicole Beharie). Jackie and Rachel have a tender, loving, strong relationship and he often looks to her to ground him and calm him down.

Written, directed, shot, edited, and acted like a classic old Hollywood movie, 42 succeeds on every level, if it does come off a bit formulaic. Brian Helgeland wrote the screenplay and directed the film and clearly holds the story in great reverence. The baseball scenes are expertly executed and paced. Often times in baseball movies, the camera never quite catches the action in a fluid or logical way, but here, the swooping cameras effortlessly catch the pitcher/hitter dynamic and do an even better job of capturing Robinson's speed on the base paths. I loved how well they rendered the old baseball stadiums and how perfect the costumes, sets and props looked. The old style uniforms and especially the gloves all give you a very real feeling of being in the late 1940s. I felt transported back to the era and I think that is important to establish very early on. This is a story that requires care and love because it has to show us an ugly side of our country and it is tough for us to see. By making sure we can feel a part of the 1940s, it opens us up to see our own history. Helgeland has won one Oscar and been nominated for another for his screenplays, so the man knows how to write a successful screenplay and this is no different. Not only does the arc of Jackie's character have the rises and falls you want to see in a character, there are 6 or 7 characters that have these great character moments that fit like a jigsaw puzzle into Jackie's story. It never feels tired or boring, which happens to many biopics, and I think by only focusing on two years of Robinson's life, Helgeland does us all a great service. We get an exceptional idea of who Jackie Robinson was without needing his entire life story.

Of course, a screenplay alone does not make a great movie. Embodying heroes is not easy. Imagine the pressure of playing a national hero, a man who means so much to so many people. Can you imagine how difficult that must be for anyone, let alone an actor with whom not many people are familiar? Well Chadwick Boseman is clearly up to the challenge. Played with blazing intensity, heart breaking vulnerability, and an abundance charisma, Boseman's Robinson soars. The man can say so much with just his face, which is good because Robinson was not able to talk back to all of the people saying nasty, vile things. Boseman has to say what he is thinking with a look, or a twitch. Robinson only loses it one time in the whole movie and that is in the hallway to the locker room and because he has it bottled up the entire movie, that moment is as powerful as possible. Even in that moment though, everything is small, tight, contained. Boseman could easily be nominated for an Oscar for this, but this performance is beyond awards. He manages to give people like me who have only ever seen Robinson footage look like history, a chance to see Robinson like we were really in the 1940s. I was awestruck the first time he was on base and I got to see those famous Robinson legs shuffle and twitch like he had ADD. I loved watching Robinson take that famous swing and jack home runs. Everything Boseman did just felt right. It was a chance for me to see one of my heroes on the big screen and Boseman did not disappoint. He found the humanity in a legend which is not always easy to do. Also, Harrison Ford's Rickey might have been a little cartoonish with his super gruff voice, and cigar chomping, but it worked for me. Ford has never been a great actor, but he completely threw himself into this role. As I said earlier, I was curious about this character and the film gave me exactly what I wanted from him. Ford makes him strong and intelligent and there were many moments I forgot I was watching one of the most recognizable stars in movie history.

I was moved to tears multiple times, for heart warming reasons and out of shame for what our country was like. The biggest scene in the movie is also the best scene and the most vile scene and it reduced me to a mess. Playing against the Phillies, Robinson comes up to the plate for the first time only to be met with the nastiest most vile string of words possible. Phillies manager, Ben Chapman (Alan Tudyk) vocalizes the kind of nastiness that so many have thought and that so many have wanted to say to Robinson, and he gets in Robinson's head. Tudyk does an amazing job portraying the most hardcore racist in the film. Watching him tear into Robinson and watching Robinson have to just take it, turned out to be the hardest thing to watch. It also turned to be a turning point for the movie. It showed humanity in Robinson, and showed vulnerability in him. It gave a direct face to the vile nasty racism. It gave us the fear of white America in the late 1940s. It is one of the hardest scenes of any movie that does not include physical violence. Based solely on the words, I was cringing and wanted to hide. It shows the power of words and they had to find the right actor to play that part, and Tudyk was clearly the right guy. By all accounts Chapman was a funny former player and not a vicious villain. Tudyk plays him as a guy who is trying to get laughs from other people, not as a straight villain. It adds texture to the scene and while the scene goes on and on, it needs to. It does not feel out of place or overly long. It is exactly how it is supposed to be.

42 delivers on everything I had hoped it would. It is a straight forward film with amazing performances that tells an amazing story. I was waiting the entire movie for the moment Pee-Wee Reese put his arm around Robinson on the field and when that moment came, all I could do was weep. Reese was the marquee player on the Dodgers at the time and that is what it took for people to realize that Robinson was a man, just like us. This movie takes us on a journey through a very specific moment of American History and shows us the importance of it without feeling overly preachy. I think that is what I admired most. It knew it was telling us the story of a legend, but never felt the need to beat us over the head with the importance, at least in my opinion. 42 takes us back to a time when baseball really was the National Pastime. It approaches the game with reverence and it treats the subject matter honestly. It gives us the man behind the legend and just how much he had to go through to get to the place where he is as celebrated as he is. I am sure if this film were rated R it could have delved even deeper into the racism, but honestly, I felt it was brutally honest without needing to rely too heavily on the awfulness. We got enough of it to understand. Besides, having a pitcher throw a fastball at your head because you are black does as good of a job of showing racism as any language could do. If you have any passing interest in America or baseball, please get out and see this movie. It will most likely end up in my top 10 for so many reasons, but mostly because it is that great of a movie.

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Admission

Paul Rudd and Tina Fey are possibly the most likable actors out there. Okay, maybe not, but it is difficult to find two actors who are much more likable that these two and just thinking of them in a movie together feels right. They just feel like they would have adorable witty chemistry together. At least that has always been my thought. The trailers for Admission looked to confirm these thoughts. The film did not look laugh out loud funny, but looked witty, intelligent and cute.I did not have high expectations and it took us awhile to finally get around to see it, but when I did, I was not terribly surprise to find that I like it, if my liking it lacked much enthusiasm.

Portia Nathan (Fey) is on the admissions board for Princeton university. She goes to high schools drumming up excitement for students to apply to Princeton and she reads files of potential students and makes a judgement based on what is in the file. She takes her job very seriously and has for the entire 16 years she has worked there. She is a very serious person who lives by her routine. She is not good with kids and very much wants a quiet safe existence. Everything was going according to plan until she gets a call from John Pressman, who works at a new high school and wants her to come visit and talk about Princeton. At first it appears fine, but Pressman eventually drops the bomb that he believes one student, Jeremiah (Nat Wolff) is her son. Pressman and Nathan went to college together, did not know each other, but knew a common person and the specific date and time of her giving birth stuck with Pressman all of these years. He believes that Jeremiah would be perfect for Princeton, but also he thinks Jeremiah wants to know his real mother. This throws Nathan's life into complete disarray. Unrelated to this, her boyfriend leaves her because he got an awful woman pregnant with twins and Nathan is truly on her own and she hates it. Eventually Nathan starts finding reasons to visit Jeremiah and John Pressman and starts to feel like maybe she is a part of something. The problem? Jeremiah, while incredibly bright, had a rough first three years of high school and getting him accepted is going to be a seriously uphill battle.

Admission is witty, warm, predictable, and ultimately very middle of the road. Fey and Rudd are likable and both do a good job with the material, but the film never quite takes off like I wanted it to. There are a few laugh out loud moments, mostly provided by Lilly Tomlin's perfect being, but for the most part, it was just so awkward/uncomfortable that even nervous laughter would not work. Fey and Rudd are working hard to mine the material for laughs, but honestly, I think I would have enjoyed the movie if the awkward moments were played in a more serious tone. I think I would have liked the movie as a whole more if it had picked a tone and stuck with it. I am all for movies that are funny and serious, but there is usually a tone that runs underneath the whole picture, and here it just felt wonky. I could not tell if it was trying to be a super awkward comedy with serious moments, or a more serious drama with a few funny moments. That could be the fault of the screenplay, or through Paul Weitz' uneven direction. I am not sure, but the movie feels confused.

That being said, the relationships work. I loved seeing the Rudd character and his adopted son clash over different desires from life. That little kid was cute and did a great job. Rudd and Fey are great, but Fey and Tomlin need a tv show together. They make a perfect mother/daughter team. Every time Fey's character went home the movie got just a bit better. Also, the kid who plays Jeremiah plays socially awkward well, to the point where I wondered if the character was on the autism scale. It is never mentioned, but it felt like the kid could have had Asperger Syndrome. This is not even remotely important to the film, but I was distracted by it because I just wanted someone to acknowledge the possibility. The scene between the kid and Fey were just too awkward for me. That is where the biggest problem lies. I know they are supposed to be awkward because, well she thinks he is her son that she gave up for adoption and she has no idea how to interact with him, but the laughs are just too ridiculous. The scene where she goes undercover as a college student to try and make sure he is okay is not only cringe worthy, it is just stupid.

Admission is as milquetoast as a movie can possibly be. Everyone deserves better. I almost wish the entire movie had done away with the birth mom aspect, and just focused on the college admission process. I feel like there is a really great movie about the depths high school kids and their parents go to to get admitted to a prestigious college. I would like to see that movie as a biting social drama with curt sarcasm. Or, maybe just see the version of this movie where Tina Fey is the screenwriter, and not just an actress in it.

Final Grade: C-

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Evil Dead (2013)

Over opening weekend of this movie, I watched at least a dozen people leave this movie early because they were too grossed out. I am not sure what they were expecting, but the trailers for this remake/re imagining/sequel/band-new-movie-set-in-the-same-world-as-the-original were brutal, bloody and unrelenting. Why would you watch an Evil Dead movie if that is not what you were expecting? When they first announced the film, I was not nearly as opposed to it as so many others. I know a big part of the charm of the original Evil Dead was the low budget look of the film and how creative Sam Raimi had to be in order to get what he needed from each shot. It was a micro budget movie that turned into this awesome cult classic, that has even spawned a stage musical. However, if there is one place where remakes have been successful, it has been in the genre of horror. I can name a handful of remakes that I prefer to the original in the horror genre. Now, this was not to be a straight remake, as the character of Ash (Bruce Campbell) would be nowhere to be found, so it was more like a whole new story following the path of the original two movies. There are enough callbacks to the original to call this a remake, but a remake with different character. Ah, does it really matter what it is, is it any good?

Starting with your standard 5 young attractive people in a deserted cabin formula, Evil Dead wastes no time getting going. Mia, David, Eric, Olivia and Natalie head up to Mia and David's old family cabin for a few days in order for Mia to detox from the various amounts of drugs to which she is addicted. Mia and David are siblings, but they never got along because David left her to take care of their dying mother. Natalie is David's girlfriend who has no real attachment to the group otherwise and Eric and Olivia are life long friends of the siblings. Olivia and Eric inform David that Mia will say or do anything to get out of the cabin and they all make a pact to not let her leave. In the cabin Mia smells something awful and after the group investigates the basement, they discover a bunch of dead, hanging cats, blood everywhere, and the smell of burning human flesh. They also discover a book that is that completely covered and wrapped in barbed wire, which would seem to be the universal sign for DO NOT OPEN!! Eric opens it, reads a few words that someone wrote in the book not to read, and suddenly Mia is possessed by a demon who needs 5 human souls in order to rise from the ground rule the world.

Once Evil Dead gets going, roughly 10 minutes in, it is a nonstop gory romp with unrelenting blood, noise and cringe inducing moments. There is barely time to breathe between disgusting moments and it does leave you feeling a bit woozy and your limbs might hurt when all is said and done. It is lightening fast until it starts to drag during the climax, but even as it drags, you find yourself cringing and wondering how much more these characters can possibly take. The tone is definitely dark, but there is a hint of very dark comedy that exists throughout. Granted, a good majority of it is nervous laughter at the disgusting things going on, but the on-going gag of Eric surviving everything that hits him is petty funny in a not-really-supposed-to-be-laughing kind of way. In fact, most of the laughter comes from those moments that you know are not funny, but you are not exactly sure how you are supposed to react.

Much has been made on relying on practical effects/make up for the film and it shows that great care went into crafting this continuation of the original film. The make up is flawless. I greatly admired the slow transformation of Mia and what happens to Olivia is not only gnarly and incredibly difficult to watch, it is so well crafted. The make up on her jaw is quite something, but it is hard to admire as she is cutting her jaw off. I loved all of the quick P.O.V shots at the beginning when Eric first reads the book and there is a wonderfully dark scene early on when Mia is trapped by the forest. That sequence might have been my favorite as it is a dark twisted version of The Wizard of Oz or even The Lord of the Rings. It is easy to see why Sam Raimi wanted to work with first time feature director, Fede Alvarez because they are very like minded. They both have a visually pleasing aesthetic and both love to set up shots and stories in similar fashion. I will be curious to see where Alvarez goes from here, because it does appear that Evil Dead is going to be a nice little hit and from what I have read, not too many people are super upset at the movie existing after they watched it. If you look at Evil Dead as a horror movie and not the relaunch of a much beloved series, the movie really works on its own. I know many people who grew up worshiping the original because it shows that you can make a good movie without money, if you have vision and I understand that, but this version of the film has nothing to be ashamed of.

That being said, horror has become kind of stale and no amount of blood, vomit, severed limbs, bloody rain or zombie demons change that. Evil Dead is not terribly scary. It has two good jumps, but it does not set up to scare you. it just wants to gross you out. That kind of gross out horror gets old kind of fast and always has for me. I like the tension of quiet horror movies, and how everything is what you see in the corners of shots, and Evil Dead is not that film. I have worlds of respect for how this film was made and it succeeds in what it wants to do which is gross you out. It is clear from the very beginning that is the mission of this film. There is nothing wrong with that, but I think I was hoping for just a bit more of a difference. I was looking for a Raimi type of camera work, and a cleaner story, but when the movie was over, I definitely felt it and some times, that is enough.

Final Grade: B-

G. I. Joe Retaliation

G.I. Joe was not a great success in terms of entertaining someone who was a giant fan of the cartoon and action figures. Dennis Quaid was awesome because it was clear he was drunk in every scene, but the film was kind of boring. I was pretty damn surprised when I heard they were going ahead with a sequel, and when it came out that most of the cast in the original would not be used in this one, I was even more confused. Enter The Rock. The Rock, who can basically do no wrong in PG-13 or R rated films, seemed like the perfect guy to energize the franchise. Hell, it worked with The Fast and Furious series. Fast 4 was okay, but Fast 5 was spectacular. This sequel to G.I. Joe was to have a new director and a whole new direction, but it got delayed for nearly a year because they wanted to convert the film to 3D. Instead of cashing in on Channing Tatum's monster 2012, they waited. Maybe it was because the movie was not good enough to stand up to the big summer movies, maybe it really was for the 3D conversion, but whatever the reason, it meant we would have to deal with seeing trailers for this film for roughly an entire year. That sort of overkill really sucks out any true desire to see the movie and when it was finally released, I was not nearly as excited as I should have been for a movie starring The Rock and also ninjas.

The G.I.Joes are a secret Government military project. They do the dirty work and their next task is to go into Pakistan to grab their nuclear weapons as that country is in turmoil because their Prime Minister is killed. the President orders the strike, but the President is not who he seems. He is really Zartan (Arnold Vosloo) in disguise, and he has world domination on the brain, but first he needs to find where Cobra Commander is being held captive. The Joes easily get the nukes, and are just awaiting morning to transport them, but before they can leave, they are attacked and completely obliterated. Only 3 Joes survive: Roadblock (The Rock), Lady Jay (Adrianne Palicki)and Flint (D. J. Cotrona). Roadblock gets only a moment to honor his fallen best friend before they must get moving, and try to save the world. Cobra Commander is located, freed and quickly takes his place as the leader of COBRA. Zartan, as the President, tells the world that he wants to meet with all of the leaders of Nuclear countries for a Nuclear summit, but he has nefarious plans in store. The Joes, meanwhile, realize that the President is not the President and try to figure out what they are going to do when they are only 3 people. Enter the return of Snake Eyes Ray Park). Snake Eyes is a bad ass ninja who does not talk. He is rivals with COBRA's Storm Shadow, as they grew up together and Storm Shadow killed their ninja master, or did he? Roadblock also knows a retired Joe, for whom they are named, and they find him (Bruce Willis) and recruit him, who recruits a bunch of retired Joes for the fight.

G.I. Joe Retaliation is definitely not as silly as the first entry into the series, but that does not mean that it is not silly, because it is. There are very cool moments, like the ninja mountain fight, and there are overly stupid moments, like the whole story. John M. Chu, best known for directing such cinematic gems as Step Up 2, Step up 3 and Justin Beiber's Never Say Never, manages to stage action sequences pretty well, but he cannot handle anything else, but he was given a weak story, so it cannot all be his fault. There is an action sequence early on, when the Joes are recovering the nuclear weapon from Pakistan, that is slick, well choreographed and very well executed. The action moves fluidly from character to character, never losing a moment of intensity, and it actually made me think that maybe this would be a better movie than I thought. That all changed during the slower story driven moments. There are lengthy stretches where nothing at all happens and I found myself just waiting for The Rock to punch someone, anyone! I also loved Cobra Commander's jailbreak scene, but mostly because of Walton Goggins awesome performance as the prison warden. That dude has always been a solid actor, and here he pretty much lights up the screen with his fast talking character. if I am being completely honest, he might be the only character I actually cared about in the entire film.

The Rock does a fine job taking over the franchise. As I have mentioned before, I love the Rock because he looks like a live action cartoon character. It is laughable how he towers over everyone. In order to combat the Rock, the film enlists Ray Stevenson (ROME, Punisher 2, Dexter) to play Firefly, the COBRA counterpart to Roadblock. The Rock and Stevenson have one decent hand to hand combat scene and they have a good chase during the climatic action scene. I like how they play off each other and I think it would be fun to see them go against each other in a better film. The Rock is funny enough to provide a nice levity from the death and destruction and the guy oozes charisma from his years performing in the WWE and of course, he is completely kick ass. Roadblock has to be played by someone kick ass because he gets the biggest gun and he gets to blow up tank after tank. If it was someone other than The Rock, it probably would not work. So kudos to the casting department. Adrianne Palicki, who I have loved since Friday Night Lights, does no get nearly enough to do here. She is an actress capable of depth, vulnerability and toughness, and here she is basically just sex appeal. When the Joes get stuck, they put her in revealing clothing and she gets the information she needs. Do not get me wrong, she is gorgeous and her body is stupid sexy, but she can do so much more and I was disappointed to see her reduced to just using sex. I guess I should have expected it in this type of film. Bruce Willis does not really offer anything to his role except a few decent one-liners, but one has to wonder why he agreed to do this film and after seeing him in Looper last year, I have decided that he just chooses not to try in most movies. He sleep walks through his glorified cameo.

The ninja mountain action sequence is definitely the best part of the whole movie and it makes me wish they had not spoiled any of it in the year's worth of trailers we got for it. I am typically over the whole sped-up-then-slowed-down action scenes, but they are effective on the side of a mountain with ninjas leaping to and from mountains to attack each other. My biggest complaint with the ninja sequence and the ninja experience overall in this movie was the lack of sword fights. I was underwhelmed by the hand to hand fighting here. The climatic action sequence starts with the silliest plot point I have seen in a while. Once Zartan has all of the world leaders in a room together, he asks them to deactivate their nuclear weapons and when they refuse, he launches America's Nuclear weapons and then all of the world leaders pull out their nuclear suitcases and launch their weapons! Why would all of the leaders just be carrying around their nuclear weapon suitcases? There had to have been a more logical way for that whole thing to play out. It is ridiculous and pretty much pulled me out of the final 20 minutes of the film.

G.I. Joe: Retaliation has its moments, but I was hoping for so much more. I was expecting worse than I got, so in that aspect, the film succeeds. I still feel there is a way to do a really great live action G.I. Joe movie, but with the studio being 0-2, I doubt we will get a chance to see a third one. The 3D did not do anything to enhance the film, but did not take away from it either. The chemistry between The Rock and Channing Tatum certainly made the first 20 minutes better than the rest of the movie and I just felt there was too much wasted potential with the movie.

Final Grade: C-

Friday, April 12, 2013

My All Time Favorite Movies: The Shawshank Redemption

I have been toying with the idea of doing a series of posts on my all time favorite movies for a little while now. Working at a movie theater again has started all of these conversations about movies and I always love to hear what people have on their lists of favorite movies. I decided I would take my 20 favorite movies of all time and write a blog entry about each of them. There are no set qualifications for a movie to be on this list. These are simply my 20 favorite movies of all time. They will not be numbered. Do not assume that I am going in order from 20-1. I will probably do that starting at 10, but honestly 11-20 are not numbered. They kind of exist right outside of the top 10. A few things you will realize as the list goes on are how recent so many of them are, and how Americanized the list is. I make no apologies for this. I know most people who are deep into film as I am often have many movies from the pre-1970s on their lists, but you will only find 2 or 3 of those here. I do not dislike "classic" movies in any way, but they have never stuck with me as much. I respect the craft, but I am rarely left feeling like they are my favorite movies. I cannot really explain it further than that. I am not xenophobic, but when it comes to cinema, I just prefer the American Aesthetic. I have roughly 10 foreign films that I love, but they do not make it into this list. Again, it is just my personal taste. Each post will be labeled as "favorite ever" so you can easily find them as I go on. As always, I love to hear feedback, if not on my choices, on your choices for some of your favorite movies of all time. Okay, onto this week's post. Oh and there will probably be spoilers about each title on the list.



I know many hardcore film people who would put this film in their top 10, top 5 or even top 3. it really is that good. If you have not seen it, I have no idea what your problem is. In fact, it is currently number 1 on IMDB.com's top 250 movies of all time. Thematically it is resonant and applicable to all. It is gorgeously written, acted, and directed. it is essentially a master class in film and I was kind of surprised to find it on the outside of my own top 10. Bank Merchant Andy Dufresne (Tim Robbins) is convicted of killing his wife and her lover and sent to Shawshank prison. After a while of depression and solitude, Dufresne starts to remember that even in prison there is one thing no one can take from him: hope. He starts to earn the respect of the other inmates and become particularly close to "Red" (Morgan Freeman). Even as the circumstances in the prison get more and more depressing for Andy, he finds a way to hold onto hope.

Robbins, who I have always found to be a solid actor, but not anything special, really nails it here. From the very start, he hooks you into this character of Andy. You wonder how this seemingly mild mannered man will handle life in prison and then as he starts to find that quiet hopeful feeling, it is impossible not to be completely taken in by the performance. It is almost serene what Robbins does with the role. Of course, most people leave the film thinking about Morgan Freeman's pitch perfect performance. Freeman has sort of perfected this type of role as a the confidante of the white man, but he is in top notch form here. He should have won the Oscar for this movie, but instead he got it for a different movie playing the same type of role a decade or so later. Robbins and Freeman create magic together. There is an ease to their scenes that almost transform the surroundings. You forget this is a prison and that there are seriously hardened criminals in the film. Gil Bellows as Tommy, a character vitally important to the story and to the transformation of Dufresne, is quite great. I think he gets overlooked because of how excellent Freeman and Robbins are, but honestly, the Tommy character arc breaks my heart every time I think about rewatching this film.

It does not end with the acting though. Writer/director Frank Darabont adapted Steven King's story and gave it serious life. The screenplay is fantastic. It allows for so many great character moments and gives multiple characters a chance for growth and change. He writes dialog is such a wonderfully rhythmic way and it adds to the ease at which Robbins and Freeman interact. Darabont has become more known for the first season of the Walking Dead at this point, but when you think about The Shawshank Redemption being his first feature length directing job, it is a pretty amazing accomplishment. I did not think there were many camera tricks and that lends itself to the film. It puts you right in the film, I felt. There were moments when you felt like you were in the prison with these people. That is, of course, helped by the gorgeously perfect cinematography of Roger Deakins. When I first saw this movie, I was still in my infancy of loving film, so I did not have an appreciation for cinematography yet, but during my multiple viewings of this film, I have grown to understand how important it is in film in general, but particularly for a film that is set in such a drab place like prison. it takes skill to make a movie look beautiful when so much of what we see is grey. The palette can be so boring, but Deakins and Darabont find the beauty, which is part of the theme of the film. Adding to the beauty of this film is Thomas Newman's wonderful score. Now if Thomas Newman is scoring your picture, there is a great chance that the music will be perfect. The man understands movements in music and how they work within a film. To be fair, movie scores are still something I am learning. It is an aspect of film where my appreciation is still in its infancy. However, even I can recognize how wonderfully uplifting the music here is.

The tagline for this film is "Fear can hold you prisoner. Hope can set you free." The poster features a great shot of Robbins with his arms spread wide with rain pouring down on him. At its core The Shawshank Redemption is about not letting your circumstances hold you down. Yes, the movie literally takes place in a prison, but the idea is that we all have things that trap us and hold us down. It is our job to keep dreaming, to keep hope alive no matter what is happening. The film believes in the uplifting spirit of hope. It is a powerful message in its own rite, but when backed by this film and backed by the tremendous final 30 minutes of this film, the point is perfectly sent and received, at least by me. I did not see this movie in theaters, but saw it early on in its home video life, and I had not studied the film much, and I was just completely taken by how this film made its point. Everything about it was so gorgeous, even though it was birthed out of ugliness. It should be an ugly film and there is certainly ugliness to be found within the characters and the actions of supposedly good characters, but deep down through all the ugliness is this uplifting soaring theme of hope. Everything eventually revolves around this idea of not letting the world bring you down. If you cannot relate to that, you must be living the most charmed of lives.

Friday, April 05, 2013

My All Time Favorite Movies: Ghostbusters

I have been toying with the idea of doing a series of posts on my all time favorite movies for a little while now. Working at a movie theater again has started all of these conversations about movies and I always love to hear what people have on their lists of favorite movies. I decided I would take my 20 favorite movies of all time and write a blog entry about each of them. There are no set qualifications for a movie to be on this list. These are simply my 20 favorite movies of all time. They will not be numbered. Do not assume that I am going in order from 20-1. I will probably do that starting at 10, but honestly 11-20 are not numbered. They kind of exist right outside of the top 10. A few things you will realize as the list goes on are how recent so many of them are, and how Americanized the list is. I make no apologies for this. I know most people who are deep into film as I am often have many movies from the pre-1970s on their lists, but you will only find 2 or 3 of those here. I do not dislike "classic" movies in any way, but they have never stuck with me as much. I respect the craft, but I am rarely left feeling like they are my favorite movies. I cannot really explain it further than that. I am not xenophobic, but when it comes to cinema, I just prefer the American Aesthetic. I have roughly 10 foreign films that I love, but they do not make it into this list. Again, it is just my personal taste. Each post will be labeled as "favorite ever" so you can easily find them as I go on. As always, I love to hear feedback, if not on my choices, on your choices for some of your favorite movies of all time. Okay, onto this week's post. Oh and there will probably be spoilers about each title on the list.



Ghostbusters is on a list of movies that I do not understand someone not liking. There are probably 10 movies on this list that includes The Princess Bride, Ferris Bueller's Day Off and a few others. If you actively do not like Ghostbusters, I am not sure how I could possibly relate to you on a human level. It is so full of pure joy and entertainment. There is nothing to not like about it and if you tell me you do not like it, chances are, I do not like you. Let us begin with the delightful, hilarious cast of Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, Harold Ramis, Rick Moranis, Ernie Hudson, Annie Potts and Sigourney Weaver. it is tough to find a trio as tune with each other as Murray, Ramis and Aykroyd in this film. They create such an awesome chemistry and give us great film characters, and I know people do not like Ernie Hudson's Winston, but I think he adds his own something to the film. Does anyone play a better nerd than Rick Moranis? No, no one does. Aykroyd and Ramis wrote a great script with fun, wacky moments, and a few genuinely scary moments and gave us amazing lines like "Ray, when someone asks you if you're a god, you say "YES"!" Then you add in Ivan Reitman's perfect direction allowing the film to get wacky and kind of hokey, but not too much so that you stop caring about what happens to the guys and new York City. How can you miss? You cannot!

Peter Venkman, Ray Stantz, and Egon Spangler are three scientists at Columbia University, but their grant and run out and they are fired. From there they do what anyone would else would do, they create a ghost extermination business. Soon business is booming and they add Winston Zeddmore and basically become celebrities for taking out the ghosts of New York City. There logo is plastered everywhere, they drive an awesome car and they live it up as rockstars, but of course, someone believes they are frauds and they are jailed. They do not stay long because soon New York City is terrorized by the ancient Sumerian God named Gozer the Gozerian, who has been channeled through the apartment complex occupied by a woman Venkman is seeing.

It is a pretty basic concept, but what they do with it is truly spectacular. The effects are great for the time and they take a concept that could be scary, or could be too goofy and they strike the right balance between them. There are moments that inspire some chills, but mostly the film is played for, and achieves, laughs. Beyond the dialog, you have these great visual gags of our heroes being slimed by the best movie ghost, ever. yes, Slimer is the best one every. He has this vibrant, off-putting personality, and you are actually kind of rooting for him, even though we love our heroes. Bill Murray, who could not be touched in the 1980s for comedy, creates a perfect character in Venkman. He is the playboy of the group, which sounds silly because, well it is Bill Murray, but he makes it work all the way through. Ramis and Aykroyd play the perfect foils for Venkman as the more traditional nerdy types you would expect to be part of a Ghostbusting team. The movie really is all about their chemistry. It is tough to bottle that and give it to any group of people. Whether they were great friends or not, they all appeared to be great friends. it is what gives life to Judd Apatow's movies, as well. There is a sense that you are just watching real people doing their things. It gives the movie something extra.

Of course, you also have the Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man as well. If you put a giant smiling, yet menacing Marshmallow, you probably have one of the best movies ever. That is just the way it works. Plus, the Marshmallow man looks amazing for the time. he is big and cuddly, but truly creepy with that smile. I could talk and talk about this movie, but seriously, very few movies use banter as well as this movie does. It is such a great study in comedic timing and how to play off other actors. I could just post the screenplay at the reason why I love this movie, so let me just leave you with this:

Dr. Egon Spengler: There's something very important I forgot to tell you.
Dr. Peter Venkman: What?
Dr. Egon Spengler: Don't cross the streams.
Dr. Peter Venkman: Why?
Dr. Egon Spengler: It would be bad.
Dr. Peter Venkman: I'm fuzzy on the whole good/bad thing. What do you mean, "bad"?
Dr. Egon Spengler: Try to imagine all life as you know it stopping instantaneously and every molecule in your body exploding at the speed of light.
Dr Ray Stantz: Total protonic reversal.
Dr. Peter Venkman: Right. That's bad. Okay. All right. Important safety tip. Thanks, Egon.

Olympus has Fallen

There is a moment very early on in Olympus has Fallen that made me start to take notice that this film was not going to be the cheesy film I went in thinking it was. It is a gorgeous shot during the initial attack lit by what looks like a gorgeous sunset, but focused on mayhem. There is a nice juxtaposition in it just like moments later when there is a gorgeously framed shot of a bullet riddled American Flag falling in slow motion in front of a decimated White House. These two scenes, both during the first half hour, caught my attention and from there, I was totally hooked. It did not surprise me when the film was over to realize that Antoine Fuqua directed it. Fuqua has directed some pretty awesome gritty movies such as Training Day, Shooter and Brooklyn's Finest. It is pretty rare that a detail like that escapes me going into a movie, but as the movie went on I thought it was probably him. He tends to direct very earnest straight forward action movies without too much humor peppered in. I admire his no irony take on the ridiculous material of some of his films and none of them appear to be as ridiculous as Olympus has Fallen.

Mike Banning (Gerard Butler)was once a Secret Service agent who ran the President's detail, but a Christmas time accident 18 months ago caused the President to request him be transferred. Banning has not recovered. He still longs to be back in the White House. He misses the President whom he called friend and he definitely misses hanging out with the President's son, Connor (Spark plug his is Secret Service handle). Banning and his wife have no real connection anymore and Banning hates his job. America is getting ready to play host to the South Korean Prime Minister, and no one expects what is about to happen. In 13 minutes (not real time) terrorists take complete control of the White House. Unfortunately for America it takes 15 minutes for American forces to get to the White House. Unbeknownst to the South Koreans, a North Korean man had infiltrated its Government and this was the ultimate terrorist act. With the President, Vice President, and a few other important members of American Government and military taken hostage, the Armed Forces must back down. During the mayhem, Banning shot his way into the White House and now he is America's only hope to take out the terrorists and save America.

It is easy to dismiss this film as Die Hard in the White House, because, well, it is Die Hard in the White House. However, I was really drawn into this film because of its earnest approach to the material. Fuqua establishes a sense of American Pride from the first frame (an American Flag and patriotic music) and he never lets that go. This is a film where the President (Aaron Eckhart) is well liked and by all accounts is a great man and leader. The secretary of Defense (A Viciously rambunctious Melissa Leo) is beaten to near death before she gives up her code, and Banning is willing to sacrifice himself to protect America. It is all done without winking at the camera, all done without irony. It believes in American pride and while it might sound ridiculous, it is actually pretty awesome to watch. The initial White House takeover is quite a spectacle as well. Violently paced, and violently played out, bullets fly hard and fast and the body count rises to an insane degree as soon as the action gets going. It is frightening to watch the White House go under siege with such ease. The terrorists are of the incredibly intelligent variety, and that is always scarier. Their plan is ingenious, oh and at some point they deploy a weapon simply called The Hydra. I do not claim to know much in the world, but I do know that a weapon called The Hydra can only be used to create serious harm.

Gerard Butler is the perfect choice for this movie. The man is built to be an action star and the sooner he stops making crappy Romantic Comedies, the better. Do you see Jason Statham making movies wear a female softens to harsh exterior? NO!! Butler is a bad ass and it is time he owns his badassness and this is a great start. A perfect marksman, brutal in hand to hand combat, and with an exceptional knowledge of the White House (displayed in an early exposition scene that seems innocuous at the time), Banning is the perfect soldier to fight an entire organization of North Korean terrorists. The White House makes for the perfect backdrop for the action as well. It is a giant building full of rooms, and secret pathways. It has these cool safes everywhere for Banning to get into and find more guns and information. Butler does it all while spouting out truly epic threats like "I am going to drive my knife into your brain." His every man growl has been perfected and like Bruce Willis' iconic character, Banning takes a beating, but finds a way to dig down and keep fighting.

There are two other sections of this story as well. The President and his people being taken and tortured for codes that act as a kill switch for all of America's Nuclear weapons, and the strategy room where acting President Trumbell (Morgan Freeman) leads a cast including Angela Basset and Robert Forster. The scenes in the strategy are not terribly successful only because they do not always listen to Banning and it costs Americans their lives, but I do admit the scene where the four helicopters get shot out of the air and one literally crashes into the White House is pretty damn cool. Eckhart's President Asher is a very admirable man and Eckhart certainly looks the part of a president. He does not get much to do, save for screaming at the terrorists to stop torturing his people, but he is presidential and that helps. It makes us believe that no matter what he will not give up his codes. We believe he would die for America to survive and I cannot ask for more from a fictional president.

There is a wonderful hashtag joke that I like to believe was intentional, but other than that, there are not many laughs to be found, except in Banning's killer threats. Fuqua keeps a great tempo to the picture. He never slows the action down for long enough, just enough for everyone to catch their collective breath. We do have to sit through a fair amount of fictional politics and exposition during the strategy room scenes, but Freeman, Basset and Forster are exceptionally talented actors and they keep the scene from feeling dragged out. The action is frenetic, but not difficult to follow to keep your eyes on and the bullets are not only loud, but they are so fast, they often give off light as they get ready to pierce an unsuspecting or expecting person. Watching the White House get taken is both awe inspiring in how swift it is and also kind of terrifying, even though I know it is fiction. Mostly though, there are a series of truly arresting shots. I was taken back by how perfectly lit and framed many of the exterior shots were. I found myself completely breath taken by 4 or 5 of the shots and that is not common for a movie like this.

Yes, Olympus has Fallen is a completely ridiculous action movie and improbable and there are probably plot holes and inconsistencies, but I had a hell of a time watching it, and that makes it a success in my book. I had zero expectations going in and about half way thought I turned to my girlfriend and whispered "This is way better than I would have thought." I can only hope this will push Butler back into the world of action movies where he clearly belongs.