Tuesday 25 October 2016

2004 Page Added + Now Showing Page Added

Movie-Viewing Experiences  15/10/16 - 25/10/16      
A+ = Masterwork   A = Excellent   A- = Very Good   B+ = Good   B = Nice Try   B- = Tolerable   
C = Pretty Crappy   D = Intolerable   E = Looking Into the Void   F = The Void



THE VILLAGE (2004)
A-   RE-EVALUATION   ORIGINAL GRADE: B
d: M. Night Shyamalan
CAST: Bryce Dallas Howard; Joaquin Phoenix; William Hurt; Adrien Brody; Sigourney Weaver
> unfairly maligned, this film is another victim of the "Let's Stick It To M. Night Because His Later Films Aren't As Good As The Sixth Sense" Club; I must admit, I got sucked into that too, but on second viewing this film has attributes which I originally missed: GREAT performance by Bryce and a solid one by William & I love how the true hero is not immediately obvious & there are some genuine scares sprinkled through what is really a tender love story & the reveals are both creative and logical to the tale being told & the optimistic ending is a relief; still not as good as The Sixth Sense though, of course...
Award-Worthy Performance
Bryce Dallas Howard



LADIES IN RETIREMENT (1941)
A-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Charles Vidor
CAST: Ida Lupino; Louis Hayward; Evelyn Keyes; Elsa Lanchester
> the misleading title (I thought I was about to watch a light comedy) camouflages a striking gothic/film noirish murder movie; we're in Bronte-land...rich spinster & poor spinster & two mad sisters & moors & mist & Fate; obviously based on a play, the film is beautifully shot and never feels stagebound or stodgy; while the story would have benefited from a stronger lead actress (Bette Davis is the immediate choice), Ida is okay as the means-well but does-bad "companion"; nobody in the supporting cast tries to grandstand even though the opportunities are there; despite a weakish and hurried ending (a bleaker alternative...which is vaguely hinted at...would have had more impact), it remains an effective suspenser



MRS BROWN aka HER MAJESTY, MRS BROWN (1997)
A-   SECOND VIEWING
d: John Madden
CAST: Judi Dench; Billy Connolly; Geoffrey Palmer; Antony Sher
> completely captivating story of Queen Victoria's love for a Scottish servant after the death of her beloved Prince Albert; the film sticks to presenting it as a platonic relationship, despite recent revisionaries who suggest it was far more (who cares?); Judi was born to play these kind of roles and it's fun to see her ordering about her old co-star (Geoffrey) from the As Time Goes By TV series; Billy is a taller and funnier version of a longlost mate of mine and I always love hearing him speak; director John just allows the story to unfurl without any major grabs for attention...there's no need; charming from beginning to end
Award-Worthy Performance
Judi Dench



GUILTY HANDS (1931)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: W.S. Van Dyke
CAST: Lionel Barrymore; Kay Francis; Madge Evans: Alan Mowbray; C. Aubrey Smith
> entirely preposterous but still-entertaining murder movie of the old-fashioned kind (scene of the deed is in a drawing-room & the victim entirely deserves to be dispatched & the motive is based on love & the scenario is cunning & there's a trick "cosmic justice" ending); unusually, the identity of the murderer is immediately revealed and the mystery instead comes from wondering if s/he can possibly get away with it; the acting is competent enough but the real star of the show is the clever plotting; love the obviously-fake thunderstorm sound effects; the opening aboard a darkened train is equally nifty and quickly kickstarts the story; good fun without a drop of plausibility anywhere to be seen



RIDE WITH THE DEVIL (1999)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Ang Lee
CAST: Tobey Maguire; Jeffrey Wright; Skeet Ulrich; Jewel; Jonathan Rhys Meyers
> American Civil War epic (you know it's an epic because of the ceaseless grandiose soundtrack & the gorgeous landscape vistas & the long running time) which suits me just fine (I am an American History buff, of sorts); nice young Southern guy (well-played by Tobey) gets himself involved in the rebel cause via joining up with the Bushwhackers; becomes an increasingly reluctant fighter, meeting up with fanatical leader Quantrill and taking part in the infamous Lawrence Massacre; the usual side-tales of friendship, romance, family and freedom are slotted in between some appropriately-brutal battlefield scenes; dawdles a bit - at least 20 minutes could have been sliced off - but remains fairly engrossing throughout



MILLIONS (2004)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Danny Boyle
CAST: Alex Etel; James Nesbitt; Lewis McGibbon; Daisy Donovan; Christopher Fulford
> not entirely sure what to make of this...fantasy / comedy / drama / family film / lesson in geopolitical ethics / Christian parable; grieving dad & two sons (mum died) move house and youngest kid finds a bag of big money along the nearby railway tracks...a spending spree ensues with the youngest taking moral advice from imagined Christian Saints (Saint Peter, Saint Francis...all the biggies); a rush is on to spend it all before the UK Pound/Euro exchange deadline kicks in; heartstrings are tugged without ever becoming schmaltzy; Danny utilises flashy camera & editing tricks which ramp up the fantasy aspect, but sometimes it's at the expense of the story; might be a grower



TAWNY PIPIT (1944)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Bernard Miles & Charles Saunders
CAST: Bernard Miles; Rosamund John; Niall MacGinnis
> (very) eccentric British light comedy +  wartime propaganda piece about (I kid you not) a pair of rare ground-dwelling birds and the little village which rallies to protect the eggs...yep, that's pretty much it; if you don't have the patience or affection for this kind of quintessential English fare, don't bother reading any further; me, I was fortunately in the right mood for it; usual British 1940's/1950's film trademarks: quirky townsfolk & bumbling bureaucrats & happy soldiers & rambunctious kids & nasty but cartoonish villains (Fifth Columnists); amusing quote from a visiting Russian female sniper (who brags about killing over 100 Germans): "The Soviet Union knows what Freedom is!" Since when?  



FIVE CARD STUD (1968)
B   SECOND VIEWING
d: Henry Hathaway
CAST: Dean Martin; Robert Mitchum; Roddy McDowall; Yaphet Kotto; Inger Stevens
> interesting hybrid: an Agatha Christie style "who-keeps-doin'-it" crossed with an out-for-revenge Western; pretty lame mystery (it's obvious who the killer is right from the get-go) and there is no attempt at suspense; the romantic interludes (the only reason why it features any women) are boring with stupid dialogue; Roddy is hardly the ideal casting for a nasty cowboy; having said all that, there are some saving graces...both Dino & Bob are right at home in this kind of thing & the murders are appropriately explicit rather than the usual fall-down-shot & Yaphet takes no crap from no white guy & it makes a nice change from the standard Western plotting & I love the creative use of the Bible  



DEEPWATER HORIZON (2016)
B   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: Peter Berg
CAST: Mark Wahlberg; Kurt Russell; John Malkovich; Gina Rodriguez; Kate Hudson
The Towering Inferno on an oilrig; pretty much a run-of-the-mill disaster flick, despite attempts at a semi-documentary feel...The Checklist: first 30 minutes spent learning to care about the main characters & the villains are the number-crunchers in business shirts & there is a crusty veteran who knew this was going to happen & small acts of heroism are rewarded with unjust deaths while the big-name heroes live & spectacular explosions before a last minute rescue; Kurt is impressive as the obligatory I-Told-You-So guy; much of the dialogue is unintelligible due to background noise and a couple of weird accents (esp. John's)
Award-Worthy Performance
Kurt Russell 



THE LAST ANGRY MAN (1959)
B   FIRST VIEWING
d: Daniel Mann
CAST: Paul Muni; David Wayne; Betsy Palmer; Luther Adler; Billy Dee Williams
> in the tradition of gritty 50's urban dramas such as MartyThe Catered Affair and Edge of the City comes this...the American version of British "kitchen-sinkers"...just not as hard-edged or depressing, of course; Paul's final film performance, and he seems to have finally succeeded with doing a broad middle-European accent; story is all about a noble inner-city doctor who treats his "slum" (the movie's term...not mine) patients for little personal reward or recognition; cynical network producer wants to turn him into a sponsored Reality TV star...and so it goes; engaging enough, but the smell of burning martyr is a bit strong
Award-Worthy Performance
Paul Muni 



THE CHOCOLATE WAR (1988)
B-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Keith Gordon
CAST: Ilan Mitchell-Smith; John Glover; Wally Ward
> I read the novel as part of my Children's Literature 1A course and after two semesters of Pollyanna & The Wouldbegoods & Swallows and Amazons, it was a refreshing breath of pessimism; set in a private all-boys school, the acting principal (Brother Leon...uh oh...) wants all students to sell 50 boxes of chocolates each as a fundraiser, but one boy says no; all about bullying and bastardisation, the book is tough and scary but the film softens the blow (and the point) somewhat; the soundtrack songs don't fit (80's Synth-Rock) and neither do the arty dream sequences; and, as for the altered ending...ever heard of a "feelgood" finish to a film where a child gets his teeth punched out by a slow-mo wallop?; I mean, really...



ALONG CAME POLLY (2004)
C   FIRST VIEWING
d: John Hamburg
CAST: Ben Stiller; Jennifer Aniston; Philip Seymour Hoffman; Bryan Brown; Debra Messing; Alec Baldwin; Hank Azaria
> just another Ben-the-Geeky-Loser flick that wants to be a feelgood rom-com but dishes out tedious fart / diarrhea / kinky sex jokes instead of comedy; Prejudice Time: the only film I've ever been able to appreciate Ben in is 2010's Greenberg; Jennifer plays Rachel again and Philip does a Jack Black impersonation (it's a draw) and Alec hits one of his rare comedic fails; Bryan & Hank are pretty good, although the star of the movie is the blind ferret; many scenes flop (Phil's basketball game & Ben's salsa dance & Phil's risk-insurance presentation); I really don't expect much from a Hollywood rom-com but I do expect more than this blandfest





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Friday 14 October 2016

1960's Pages Updated

Movie-Viewing Experiences  7/10/16 - 14/10/16      
A+ = Masterwork   A = Excellent   A- = Very Good   B+ = Pretty Good   B = Nice Try    B- = Tolerable  
C = Barely Tolerable   D = Intolerable   E = Looking Into the Void   F = The Void


THE MAN IN THE BACK SEAT (1962)
A-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Vernon Sewell
CAST: Derren Nesbitt; Keith Faulkner; Carol White
> one of the British "Quota Quickies" which manages to jump up a class or two in quality; based on an Edgar Wallace story (one of the world's most prolific, wide-ranging writers ever...he even wrote the original script for King Kong), the film is virtually a How-To guide in making an exciting, meaningful movie on the slimmest of budgets (small cast & minimal number of sets & keep it dark); a couple of newbie thieves attempt to rob a bookie of his takings...but the bag is handcuffed to his wrist...and there's no key...; clearly born to lose, the two petty villains stumble from one misfortune to another, trying to out-maneuver the inevitable; the direction is taut, wasting no time in conversational character analysis...you get to know everyone through their actions; the ending is perfection



THE GIRL ON THE TRAIN (2016)
A-   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: Tate Taylor
CAST: Emily Blunt; Rebecca Ferguson; Haley Bennett; Justin Theroux; Allison Janney
> no, I haven't read the book; pretty good murder-mystery story which unfolds its details gradually, flashing back and forth without ever becoming confusing; masterful performance by Emily as the alcoholic protagonist (to be fair, it's a great part which any reasonable actress would've looked good in); once the culprit and the motive are revealed, the film dawdles in its winding up, thus robbing us of a powerhouse, tense finish; it had my attention right through its two hours, but according to the three women sitting behind me, it's not as good as the book...who would've guessed? BTW...Emily is hardly a girl. Woman. She's a woman.
Award-Worthy Performances
Emily Blunt; Allison Janney



MULHOLLAND FALLS (1996)
A-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Lee Tamahori
CAST: Nick Nolte; Chazz Palminteri; Jennifer Connelly; Melanie Griffith; Treat Williams; John Malkovich; Michael Madsen; Andrew McCarthy; Chris Penn; Bruce Dern; Louise Fletcher
> mysteriously over-looked and under-valued modern film noir in the style of Chinatown; set in early 1950's L.A. and centred on a squad of detectives with the rapport between them being a highlight of the film; Chazz stands-out as an aggressive cop trying to improve himself through therapy; gruesome murder of a woman, intimately known to Nick, leads them to the Atomic Energy Commission; well-told story with little injections of humour here and there; while the soundtrack music is a bad fit, the vast cast all fit fine; film deserves rediscovery
Award-Worthy Performance
Chazz Palminteri



THE GIFT (2000)
B+   SECOND VIEWING
d: Sam Raimi
CAST: Cate Blanchett; Giovanni Ribisi; Keanu Reeves; Katie Holmes; Hilary Swank; Gary Cole; Greg Kinnear; J.K. Simmons; Rosemary Harris
> a Southern Gothic (so therefore contains the obligatory rednecks, sudden violence, religion + the supernatural and creepy swamp trees draped with vines) which has been underrated by most critics...not sure why; the murder-mystery aspect is well-handled (even if the true culprit is pretty obvious) and Sam knows how to crank up the scares; all-star cast is engaging with Cate the stand-out and Keanu a surprisingly-effective husband-from-hell; can't make up my mind if Giovanni is excellent or OTT but he can sure get angry; a serviceable thriller
Award-Worthy Performance
Cate Blanchett



CHARLIE CHAN AT THE OPERA (1936)
B+  FIRST VIEWING
d: H. Bruce Humberstone
CAST: Warner Oland; Boris Karloff; William Demarest
> often referred to as the best Charlie Chan movie in the Warner Oland run...while I'm not able to go that far (haven't seen them all yet), it is obvious that it's a notch above many of the others; certainly lifted by the presence of Boris (in creepy / obsessed mode) and William (exasperated and loud as ever...and nobody can take a pratfall like Bill...great fun); when the murderer is revealed, it is a genuine surprise; film has quite a number of amusing one-liners sprinkled throughout (mainly delivered via Warner & William's parle); plot moves along at the usual cracking pace and there are blessed few operatic warblings to have to endure; a good parlour-game mystery movie of the old type, before smartypants forensics took over



THE QUARE FELLOW (1962)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Arthur Dreifuss
CAST: Patrick McGoohan; Sylvis Syms; Walter Macken
> a small but powerful anti-capital punishment story; life in a Dublin prison circa late 50's where most of the crims have that Irish twinkle & blarney goin' on; Patrick is the newbie guard who starts out as a by-the-book type but soon changes his outlook as he begins to view the prisoners as men; biggest weakness is the ridiculous sub-plot of this new guard dallying with the wife of the condemned-to-death man (and it's the shortest love affair in celluloid history...blink and you'll miss it); great pub scenes with two terrific brawls; you never meet or even see the face of the victim ("the quare fellow" is apparently an Irish term for condemned man) and the actual hanging itself is suitably cold and efficient; annoying & frustrating mystery...what does the note on the door say??



WOMAN ON THE RUN (1950)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Norman Foster
CAST: Ann Sheridan; Dennis O'Keefe; Robert Keith; Ross Elliott
> nifty B-Movie which manages to mine a unique plot point: witness to a murder runs away and is sought by 1) the police 2) the murderer 3) his wife; the wife tries to track him down and is followed by everybody else; Ann is my absolute favourite wisecrackin' dame from the Old School and this was her last good role of that ilk...and she is terrific; monetary concerns dictate plot locales and sets, but none of that matters with a good script and a skilled director and this film has both; snappy dialogue camouflages some of the necessary repetition of action; wonderful big finish in an amusement park complete with thundering rollercoaster
Award-Worthy Performance
Ann Sheridan



THE TWO FACES OF DR JEKYLL aka HOUSE OF FRIGHT aka JEKYLL's INFERNO (1960)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Terence Fisher
CAST: Paul Massie; Dawn Addams; Christopher Lee
> one of the under-regarded and certainly overlooked Hammer Horror movies from the studio's great 1957-1976 run; as usual, budgetary concerns dictate the production values, but costumes and sets still somehow manage to appear top quality; focus in this retelling of the Jekyll & Hyde classic is that Mr Hyde is the handsome, suave, charismatic brute (Jerry Lewis must have taken notes for his 1963 The Nutty Professor) and that his aim is power-through-sex; the usual body transformations occur offscreen (shame...how does Jekyll's beard grow inwards?) but they aren't overly missed; psychological horror wins out (it's cheaper) and makes the premise more interesting as a result; a little dull in patches with a weak finish, but still rewarding viewing



OYSTER FARMER (2004)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Anna Reeves
CAST: Alex O'Loughlin; Jack Norton; David Field; Kerry Armstrong; Jack Thompson
> just like there are quintessential American films (westerns & musicals & gangster flicks) and British (comedies & kitchen-sinkers), there are archetypal Aussie movies...and this is one of them; a blend of rough characters with good hearts & an emotional attachment to the land & struggling to make ends meet but she'll be right, mate & a joking distrust of strangers until they prove themselves; slight tale of a small river community eking out a living by farming oysters...romance, crime, broad humour and hard physical work all happening in gorgeous surroundings; good, natural acting by all with an assortment of fascinating faces sliding in and out of shot; low-key and human 



ROBINSON CRUSOE ON MARS (1964)
B   FIRST VIEWING
d: Byron Haskin
CAST: Paul Mantee; Victor Lundin; Adam West
> very much a kids' film of its day because today's kids would call it stupid; thus, ex-kids who were 8 at the time would probably be its biggest fans; me, I missed seeing it as a kid (I was never much of a space guy anyway), so I can be objective...meh...it's okay, but I prefer 1959's Have Rocket, Will Travel featuring the Three Stooges; I was most absorbed by the first half, right up until he found company and immediately took a fascistic-approach to friendship..."I am the boss man around here and don't you forget it"...and that's even after he found out that Friday was an abused slave; must have been the inspiration for Ridley Scott's superior (but not by much) The Martian; I have a question: why didn't the guy eat the monkey once he had someone else to talk to?



MISS PEREGRINE'S HOME FOR PECULIAR CHILDREN (2016)
B-   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: Tim Burton
CAST: Asa Butterfield; Eva Green; Samuel L. Jackson; Chris O'Dowd; Terence Stamp
> disappointing; based on the trailer, I was expecting a cross between the cartoon series Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends and The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen graphic novels but no such luck; applause for the sheer cleverness of the ideas and the depth of the imagination on show, but so little has been done with it; it dazzles visually (it's a Tim Burton film after all) but sags in the storytelling; slow build-up after intial shock-scene (very Harry Potter) but the characters aren't established...they are defined by their quirks, and that's all; Stan Lee's & Jack Kirby's X-Men and The Inhumans tramped similar ground but with more gravitas; the big showdown looks spectacular but really is just another superhero slugfest



LIMELIGHT (1952)
D   FIRST VIEWING
d: Charles Chaplin
CAST: Charlie Chaplin; Claire Bloom; Nigel Bruce; Buster Keaton
> a hefty wallow in self-pity, sentimentality and, most off-putting of all, martyrdom; hard to know where to begin, so substantial is my dislike of this movie; it seemed to just go on and on and on, slopping over from one serve of melancholy to another; Charlie plays a washed-up music hall great who rescues a ballerina from suicide; an unlikely romance based on gratitude develops; Charlie's on-stage acts are tedious and not even vaguely amusing, so no wonder the old guy was down & out; even the much-vaunted appearance of Buster only really stands out because it's a break from the monotony of it all; I have no doubt that this was Charlie's most personal film...but, mate, for the rest of us...boring is just boring




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