Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Last five films

This week brought some very interesting titles. First off was the 1957 Best Picture which proved to be a very solid movie that has aged fairly well. It is tough to rate older movies because we are so used to seeing the best effects possible and very unique acting performances, but the cinematography for this time in this film is tremendous. The acting is very strong and this is one of my favorite war movies ever.

Capote featured 2005 Best Actor winner Phillip Seymour Hoffman and it was very easy to understand why he took home the hardware that year in seeing his tremendous portrayal of Truman Capote. I think the film wanted you to believe it was a little more involved or deeper than it actually turned out, but it was engaging.

The other three films were all unique in their own way. The Magdalene Sisters was a surprisingly good movie and the life story of Bob Crane (star of TVs Hogan's Heroes) was also interesting. An American Rhapsody was another movie that wanted to be bigger than it was. The plot was interesting, but it fell a little short across the board.





Capote (2005)
Directed By: Bennett Miller
Starring: Philip Seymour Hoffman, Catherine Keener



Acting: (9)
Effects / Cinematography: (8)
Plot: (8.5)
Entertainment: (8.5)

Cumulative: (8.5)





The Bridge on the River Kwaii (1957)
Directed By: David Lean
Starring: William Holden, Alec Guinness




Acting: (9)
Effects / Cinematography: (9.5)
Plot: (8.5)
Entertainment: (9)

Cumulative: (9)





The Magdalene Sisters (2003)
Directed By: Peter Mullan
Starring: Nora-Jane Noone, Anne-Marie Duff


Acting: (8.5)
Effects / Cinematography: (8.5)
Plot: (8)
Entertainment: (7.5)

Cumulative: (8.125)




Auto Focus (2002)
Directed By: Paul Schrader
Starring: Greg Kinnear, Willem Dafoe



Acting: (8)
Effects / Cinematography: (7.5)
Plot: (7.5)
Entertainment: (8)

Cumulative: (7.75)





An American Rhapsody (2001)
Directed By: Éva Gárdos

Starring: Scarlett Johansson, Nastassja Kinski




Acting: (7)
Effects / Cinematography: (6.5)
Plot: (7)
Entertainment: (7)

Cumulative: (6.875)

Sunday, April 27, 2008

Week in Reviews 4/21 - 4/27

The 7 seven films I watched this week were all very highly regarded. I enjoyed all of them except Monster. I guess I just didn't like seeing two of the hottest actresses in Hollywood looking ugly.

Braveheart was by far my favorite movie of the week. Until last night, I may have been the only male in my age demographic in the United States not to have seen the 1995 Best Picture winner. Despite the 3 Hour run time, I was entertained throughout.

Braveheart (1995) Best Picture Winner*

Directed by Mel Gibson
Starring Mel Gibson

Acting: (9)
Effects / Cinematography: (9.5)
Plot: (9)
Entertainment: (9)

Cumulative: (9)




In the Bedroom (2002)

Directed by Todd Field
Starring Marisa Tomei, Tom Wilkinson, and Sissy Spacek

Acting: (8.5)
Effects / Cinematography (8)
Plot: (8)
Entertainment: (7)

Cumulative: (7.5)






Lars and the Real Girl (2007)

Directed by Craig Gillespie
Starring Ryan Gosling and Patricia Clarkson

Acting: (8)
Effects / Cinematography: (7)
Plot: (7.5)
Entertainment: (7)

Cumulative: (7)







Monster (2003)

Directed by Patty Jenkins
Starring Charlize Theron & Christina Ricci

Acting: (8)
Effects / Cinematography: (7)
Plot: (7)
Entertainment: (5)

Cumulative: (6.5)





The English Patient (1996) Best Picture Winner*

Directed by Anthony Minghella
Starring Ralph Fiennes and Juliette Binoche

Acting: (8.5)
Effects / Cinematography: (8.5)
Plot: (8)
Entertainment: (7.5)

Cumulative: (8)




The Savages (2007)

Directed by Tamara Jenkins
Starring Phillip Seymour Hoffman and Laura Linney

Acting: (8.5)
Effects / Cinematography: (7)
Plot: (7.5)
Entertainment: (7)

Cumulative: (7.5)





Donnie Brasco (1997)

Directed by Mike Newell
Starring Al Pacino & Johnny Depp

Acting: (8.5)
Effects / Cinematography: (8)
Plot: (8)
Entertainment: (8)

Cumulative: (8)




Monday, April 21, 2008

Three more oldies from this weekend...



A Cry In The Dark (1988)
Directed By: Fred Schepisi
Starring: Meryl Streep, Sam Neill



For any Seinfeld fan who ever wondered why Elaine busted out with "Maybe the Dingo ate your baby" remark during that one episode....here you go.

Acting (7.5)
Effects / Cinematography (7.5)
Plot (7.5)
Entertainment (7)

Cumulative (7.375)




The Wanderers (1979)
Directed By: Philip Kaufman
Starring: Karen Allen



Acting (4.5)
Effects / Cinematography (6)
Plot (5)
Entertainment (4)

Cumulative (4.875)




The Wild Bunch (1969)
Directed By: Sam Peckinpah
Starring: William Holden, Ernest Borgnine


Acting (6.5)
Effects / Cinematography (7.5)
Plot (7)
Entertainment (6.5)

Cumulative (6.875)

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Week in Reviews 4/14 - 4/20

Featured Review

Before the Devil Knows You're Dead (2007)

Directed by Sidney Lumet
Starring Ethan Hawke, Phillip Seymour Hoffman & Marisa Tomei

Acting: (9)
A great ensamble cast delivers gritty and difficult performances across the board. While I would not nominate any one actor ahead of the other, I would certainly consider this as one of the best overall performances of the year by a collective cast.

Effects / Cinematography: (8.5) Dark and Menacing: That is how I would describe the entire atmosphere created for this film. The visual effects really set the stage for an incredible story.

Plot: (9.5) The writing and editing are nearly flawless. The plot is incredibly absurd and desperate in the best ways possible. The cutting and multiple perspectives of each scene magnify the tension. In a year of good crime dramas ( Zodiac, No Country, Gone Baby Gone), this is simply the best.

Entertainment: (9) I'm more than a little surprised that this film wasn't nominated for Best Picture at either the Oscars or Golden Globes. The movie was completely captivating. I felt like it provided equal performances and superior drama to nominees like No Country for Old Men and Michael Clayton.

Cumulative Score: (9)

Other Films This Week

The Sting (1973)

Directed By George Roy Hill
Starring Paul Newman & Robert Redford

Acting (8.5)
Effects / Cinematography (8)
Plot (9)
Entertainment (7.5)

Cumulative (8)



The French Connection (1971)

Directed by William Friedkin
Starring Gene Hackman & Roy Schieder

Acting (8)
Effects / Cinematography (7)
Plot (7)
Entertainment (6.5)

Cumulative (7)




The Hunting Party (2007)

Directed by Richard Shepard
Starring Richard Gere & Terrance Howard

Acting (6.5)
Effects / Cinematography (6)
Plot (6)
Entertainment (5.5)


Cumulative (6)









Reservation Road (2007)

Directed by Terry George
Starring Joaquin Phoenix, Mark Ruffalo, and Jennifer Connelly

Acting: (7.5)
Effects / Cinematography: (6)

Plot: (6.5)
Entertainment: (6.5)


Cumulative: (6.5)




Resurrecting the Champ (2007)

Directed by Rod Lurie
Starring Josh Hartnett & Samuel L. Jackson

Acting: (6)
Effects / Cinematography (6.5)

Plot (6)

Entertainment (5.5)

Cumulative (6)









Lions for Lambs (2007)

Directed by Robert Redford
Starring Meryl Streep, Tom Cruise, and Robert Redford

Acting: (6.5)
Effects: (3.5)
Plot: (4)
Entertainment: (3.5)

Cumulative Score (4
)










Friday, April 18, 2008

Some re-watched favorites and another foreign film

So far this week I have gotten through two of my favorite movies and watched a second foreign film dealing with death.




Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004)
Directed by: Michel Gondry
Starring: Jim Carrey, Kate Winslet


Acting / Dialogue (8): Watching this again I realized that Carrey and Winslet's performances are somewhat mitigated by the performances of the rest of the cast. They are awesome, Kirsten Dunst, Elijah Wood and others leave something to be desired.

Cinematography / Effects / Music (10): The music and camera effects are great, from the visuals of Joel's memory being erased, to the dark hall spotlight scenes.

Plot Originality / Effectiveness (10): A tremendous story line and a very unique plot concept, if only the technology were real.

Viewing Experience (10): This movie is currently in my top 5 of all time and it didn't disappoint on the second viewing.

Cumulative: 9.5




Garden State (2004)
Directed By: Zach Braff
Starring: Zach Braff, Natalie Portman



Acting / Dialogue (8.5): On the second time through I was getting worried that I had somehow overrated this the first time. Then I realized that its not until Portman shows up that this movie takes off. Braff and Portman are believe able and the rest of the cast supports them well.

Cinematography / Effects / Music (8.5): The music through the whole movie is awesome and the camera is above average.

Plot Originality / Effectiveness (8.5): Coming of age movies are many but this is my favorite. It doesn't focus on sex and instead deals with the demons of growing up.

Viewing Experience (9): This once again rates highly on my list and it may be that I overrate it because my age allows me to relate to the characters so well, in any case it is a must see.

Cumulative: 8.625





The Sea Inside (2004)
Directed By: Alejandro Amenábar
Starring: Javier Bardem


Acting / Dialogue (8)

Cinematography / Effects / Music (8)

Plot Originality / Effectiveness (7.5)

Viewing Experience (7.5)

Cumulative: 7.75






Play Misty For Me (1971)
Directed By: Clint Eastwood
Starring: Clint Eastwood



This film started the whole stalker/crazy person genre.

Acting / Dialogue (5)

Cinematography / Effects / Music (5)

Plot Originality / Effectiveness (8)

Viewing Experience (4)

Cumulative: 5.5

Sunday, April 13, 2008

Week in Reviews 4/7/08 - 4/13/08

This past week can only be described as historic. 14 Movies in 5 days.....9 on Friday and Saturday alone. With the wife out of town for the weekend, I pulled out several classics that I had been meaning to watch for quite some time. I had high expectations for most of them and wasn't disappointed at all. The movies were so good that 5 of them made there way into my top 100 of all time.

*I had previously seen Temple of Doom and Stand by Me when I was a child, but didn't remember much about them. It was like seeing all 14 films for the first time.

Featured Review

Carlito's Way (1993)

Directed by Brian De Palma
Starring Al Pacino and Sean Penn

Acting: (9) As much as I love Pacino in The Godfather series, he's even more dynamic as Carlito. Unlike Michael Corleone, Carlito is portrayed as a man who sincerely wants to bury his demons and start a new life in paradise. Pacino is tough and dangerous, but really comes off as being a good guy. Sean Penn, while looking ridiculous, delivers an impressive performance as Pacino's pal and lawyer.

Effects / Cinematography: (9) De Palma is a genius behind the camera and Carlito's Way is his ultimate masterpiece. The film transitions from gritty to elegant and back again without missing a beat. Everything from the music to action sequences is enthralling. Its only rival in this category that I've seen is another De Palma Classic, The Untouchables.

Plot: (9) The film starts at the ending. Even though De Palma shows us Carlito's fate in the first few minutes, I found myself still hoping against hope, that he'd find a way to get out.

Entertainment: (9) This was one of the best movie watching experiences I've had in quite some time. Carlito's Way is a worthy challenger to any organized crime movie you want to match it up with. It's more entertaining than The Godfather and every bit as intense as Scorsesse's, Goodfellas or The Departed.

Cumulative Score: 9


Other Films from this Monumental Week

Broadcast News (1987)

Directed by James L. Brooks
Starring William Hurt, Holly Hunter, & Albert Brooks

Acting: (10)
Cinematography: (8)
Plot: (9)
Entertainment: (9)

Cumulative: (9)





Walk Hard (2007)

Directed by Jake Kasdan
Starring John C. Reilly and Jenna Fischer

Acting: (7.5)
Cinematography (8)
Plot: (5.5)
Entertainment: (7)

Cumulative: (7)






The Untouchables (1987)

Directed by Brian De Palma
Starring Kevin Costner, Robert De Niro, and Sean Connery

Acting: (8)
Cinematography: (9)
Plot: (8)
Entertainment: (8)

Cumulative Score: (8)






Me, You, and Everyone We Know (2005)
Directed by Miranda July
Starring Miranda July and John Hawkes

Acting: (6.5)
Cinematography (7)
Plot (5.5)
Entertainment (6)

Cumulative Score: (6)







This is Spinal Tap (1984)

Directed by Rob Reiner
Starring Christopher Guest and Michael McKean

Acting: (7.5)
Cinematography (7.5)
Plot: (8)
Entertainment: (7)

Cumulative Score: (7.5)





I am Legend (2007)

Directed By Francis Lawrence
Starring Will Smith

Acting: (6)
Cinematography: (5)
Plot: (7.5)
Entertainment: (5)

Cumulative Score: (5.5)






Deliverance (1972)

Directed by John Boorman
Starring Burt Reynolds and Jon Voight

Acting: (8.5)
Cinematography: (8.5)
Plot: (8.5)
Entertainment: (8)

Cumulative Score: (8)





Life of Brian (1979)

Directed by Terry Jones
Starring the Monty Python Cast

Acting: (6.5)
Cinematography: (6)
Plot: (5)
Entertainment: (5)

Cumulative Score: (5.5)





The Godfather 2 (1974)

Directed by Francis Ford Coppola
Starring Al Pacino & Robert Deniro

Acting: (9)
Cinematography: (9)
Plot: (9)
Entertainment: (9)

Cumulative Score: (9)






Stand By Me (1986)

Directed by Rob Reiner
Starring Will Wheaton and River Phoenix

Acting: (7)
Cinematography (7)
Plot: (7.5)
Entertainment: (7)

Cumulative Score: (7)





Indiana Jones: The Temple of Doom (1984)

Directed by Steven Spielberg
Starring Harrison Ford and Kate Capshaw

Acting: (6)
Cinematography: (9)
Plot: (7.5)
Entertainment: (7)

Cumulative Score: (7)






Misery (1990)
Directed by Rob Reiner
Starring Kathy Bates and James Caan

Acting: (8.5)
Cinematography: (7)
Plot: (8)
Entertainment: (7)

Cumulative: (7.5)






Pieces of April (2003)

Directed by Peter Hedges
Starring Katie Holmes, Derek Luke, Patricia Clarkson & Oliver Platt

Acting: (8.5)
Cinematography: (7)
Plot: (8.5)
Entertainment: (7.5)

Cumulative Score: (7.5)

Friday, April 11, 2008

Friday night at the movies...


The Diving Bell and the Butterfly (2007)
Directed by: Julian Schnabel
Starring: Mathieu Amalric, Emmanuelle Seigner, Anne Consigny

The second movie was my choice and after looking through the movies playing at the local $2 theatre this one caught my eye. The main reason was the rave reviews that had been garnered from some of the top movie critics in the industry. I went in knowing the background. This is probably the most unique movie I have ever seen, I would specify that it is without a doubt but it is midnight and my mind isn't working great right now.

The story is about the following:
Jean-Dominique Bauby (April 23, 1952 – March 9, 1997) was a well-known French journalist and author and editor of the French fashion magazine ELLE.

On December 8, 1995 at the age of 43, Bauby suffered a massive stroke. When he woke up twenty days later, he found he was entirely speechless; he could only blink his left eyelid. This rare condition is called Locked-in Syndrome, a condition wherein the mental faculties are intact but the entire body is paralyzed.

Despite his condition, he wrote the book The Diving Bell and the Butterfly by blinking when the correct letter was reached by a person slowly reciting the alphabet over and over again. Bauby had to compose and edit the book entirely in his head, and convey it one letter at a time. To make dictation more efficient, Bauby had his interlocutor read from a special alphabet which consisted of the letters ordered in accordance with their frequency in the French language. The book was published in France in 1997. Bauby died just two days later of pneumonia.

The whole premise of the movie would seem to make a film nearly impossible, but it is pulled off perfectly.

Acting / Dialogue (9): Superb acting by the entire cast. There wasn't a single misstep by any of the characters.

Cinematography / Effects / Music (10): If I could rate this category higher I would. There was no doubt in my mind what it would feel like to be in Bauby's shoes during the latter half of his life. The first person camera work was flawless and I found myself shifting in my seat wishing that he could just say his thoughts. The unbelievable patience it must have took both for him and the staff he worked with to be able to complete his work is unbelievable. I felt tormented myself every time someone would start to recite the alphabet.

Plot Originality / Effectiveness (10): Again this movie was unlike any other I have ever seen. It is a disservice to even try to grade it according to our traditional standards. It is 100% original to me.

Viewing Experience (7.5): This movie is absolutely not for everyone and a lot of people, will not like it, will get bored with it, or will be upset by it, but I felt a sense of accomplishment from the movie. We get a true sense of the trials Bauby goes through and from the early times shortly after the incident when he desires death to the point where he reaches freedom and moves beyond self-pity. The movie is daring and perfectly accomplishes its goal. There are points that seem drawn out or repetitive, but I feel that this was mainly done to allow the viewer the deepest possible glimpse into his life.

Cumulative: 9.125
This movie gets classified in its own category, it definitely does not fit in any box I can possibly think of to put it in.



27 Dresses (2008)
Directed by: Anne Fletcher
Starring: Katherine Heigl, James Marsden


The first movie of the night was ladies choice and of course the only way I would have ever gotten to see my movie was to sit through this. This movie provided all the excitement of watching paint dry, but I made it through and there were a couple redeeming qualities.

Acting / Dialogue (5): Absolutely average and I definitely feel like Heigl mailed this one in. The script was cliche ridden and I'm not sure there was an original thought in the entire film.

Cinematography / Effects / Music (5.5): The soundtrack is slightly above average, but again nothing new is brought to the table unless of course you want to count the 27 dresses detailed by the title.

Plot Originality / Effectiveness (5): Absolutely predictable from start to finish. With a nice little bow tie placed on the end of the film to make all the girls swoon.

Viewing Experience (4): Outside of a 30 second bar scene where Heigl puts her own spin on the lyrics to Elton John's Benny and the Jets it was really bad.

Cumulative: 4.875

Thursday, April 10, 2008

25 You (My Fellow Americans) Haven't Seen......But Should




People flock to multiplexes around the world by the millions to view the latest blockbusters. Every year, however, many great movies go unseen. Some lack the marketing dollars provided by Hollywood's mega-studios, while others feature unknown actors yet to garner mainstream appeal. It's important to note that some outstanding movies are being made every year that somehow fail to reach a mainstream audience that would love them if given the chance. The 25 films below are prime examples of the masterpieces that routinely fall through the cracks and out of the average movie-goer's consciousness. According to the numbers, not many Americans have seen these great films. The next time you're at Family Video and you're just not convinced that the latest Will Ferrell sports comedy is what you're in the mood for, try one of these. In most cases, I think you'll be pleasantly surprised and in some cases, you'll be mesmerized.

1. Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004)
2. Once (2007)
3. The Fountain (2006)
4. Everything is Illuminated (2005)
5. Brick (2006)
6. Waitress (2007)
7. Away from Her (2007)
8. The Believer (2002)
9. Kiss Kiss Bang Bang (2005)
10. The Machinist (2005)
11. Starter for 10 (2007)
12. Thank you for Smoking (2006)
13. Primer (2004)
14. The Proposition (2006)
15. Sunshine (2007)
16. 3 Burials of Melquades Estrada (2005)
17. The New World (2005)
18. Hard Candy (2006)
19. Green Street Hooligans (2005)
20. Shattered Glass (2003)
21. The Ice Storm (1997)
22. Ghost World (2001)
23. Mean Creak (2004)
24. Serenity (2005)
25. Shop Girl (2005)

Fargo (1996)



I remember watching this the first time and the company I watched this with ruined the experience for me. At the time I thought it was average and recently I had the chance to watch it on cable, and my view changed dramatically. This ranks up there with Dumb and Dumber and Moulin Rouge as my most dramatic opinion swings regarding a movie. In Dumb and Dumber it took me until the 4th or 5th time before I truly appreciated it. For Moulin Rouge, I had to finally sit down and watch beyond the "green fairy" portion of the film. Anyways on with the rating.

Acting / Dialogue (9): I think it took me moving into the south to truly appreciate the acting performances and the dialogue. Being from Michigan and knowing many "U-pers" the performance just seemed normal. Escaping from the north I realize that each of these characters nailed their parts. Frances McDormand and William H. Macy have never been better.

Cinematography / Effects / Music (8.5): Another appreciation I gained from the second viewing is how well they nailed the winters of the north. It's painfully cold.

Plot Originality / Effectiveness (9.5): The ransom concept is nothing new, but the way everything is portrayed and the relationship between Macy's character and his father-in-law is classic. Along with the relationship between Buscemi and Stomare.

Viewing Experience (9): The second time around I really enjoyed this film. It has a little bit of everything and the acting is top notch. The dialogue gets funnier with each viewing.

Cumulative: 9

Monday, April 7, 2008

Brief Reviews from 3-29-08 - 4-6-08



The Grifters (1990)
Directed By: Stephen Frears
Starring: Annette Bening, John Cusack, Anjelica Huston




Acting: (8)
Cinematography (7)
Plot: (7.5)
Entertainment (7.5)
Cumulative: (7.5)


The Last Picture Show (1971)
Directed By: Peter Bogdanovich
Starring: Timothy Bottoms, Jeff Bridges, Cybill Shepherd




Acting: (6)
Cinematography (7)
Plot: (5.5)
Entertainment (5.5)
Cumulative: (6)



Frantic (1988)
Directed By: Roman Polanski
Starring: Harrison Ford



Acting: (6)
Cinematography (5)
Plot: (3.5)
Entertainment (4)
Cumulative: (4.625)




Midnight Cowboy (1969)
Directed By: John Schlesinger
Starring: Jon Voight, Dustin Hoffman




Acting: (9.5)
Cinematography (8)
Plot: (8.5)
Entertainment (8)
Cumulative: (8.5)



Ghostbusters (1984)
Directed By: Ivan Reitman
Starring: Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, Sigourney Weaver



Acting: (7)
Cinematography (7.5)
Plot: (7.5)
Entertainment (8)
Cumulative: (7.5)


Raging Bull (1980)
Directed By: Martin Scorsese
Starring: Robert De Niro, Joe Pesci







Acting: (9.5)
Cinematography (9)
Plot: (8.5)
Entertainment (8)
Cumulative: (8.75)



Hitch (2005)
Directed By: Andrew Tennant
Starring: Will Smith, Eva Mendes, Kevin James




Acting: (6)
Cinematography (6)
Plot: (6)
Entertainment (6)
Cumulative: (6)




Badlands (1973)
Directed By: Terrence Malick
Starring: Martin Sheen, Sissy Spacek




Acting: (6)
Cinematography (6)
Plot: (6)
Entertainment (5.5)
Cumulative: (5.875)





Moulin Rouge (2001)
Directed By: Baz Luhrmann
Starring: Ewan McGregor, Nicole Kidman

Acting: (8.5)
Cinematography (9)
Plot: (8.5)
Entertainment (9)
Cumulative: (8.75)