Thursday, April 30, 2015

2015 @ The Movies Archives - April

Monthly Movie reviews originally published on Facebook - YEAR 2:

April 7 2015 through April 28 2015:

2015 @ the Movies take 40 : “Furious 7” (IMAX) A high-octane meditation on family, loss and memory. The film explores a bold redefinition of the family unit positing that 15 years of turbo-charged glances across tainted windows creates bonds that no power-wrench can break apart. This only rivals with the gripping revelation that amnesia can truly be conquered through the utter obliteration of a four-level parking garage in central L.A. However, nothing will prepare the audience for the arresting metaphorical portrayal of grief as a picnic in formal wear on a sandy beach. Car-enthusiasts with a penchant for the objectified female form quivering in a roar of improbable engines might be surprised! Experienced at Springfield 11 on April 7 with Susie Rodriguez and Kurtis Van Diesel. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Yab0sXGEjg


2015 @ the Movies take 41 : “Seymour: An Introduction” A thought-provoking documentary that plays like a zen version of "Whiplash."A soul-searching Ethan Hawke shares the teachings of Seymour Bernstein, a piano genius who gave up on a promising music career to devote his life to teaching his craft, having tea, and precisely folding a hide-a-bed in a one-room apartment. The revenge of art over commerce, what’s not to like? Of course, the first thing that Ethan Hawke has Seymour do is perform in public for actor friends, so we have a reason to buy a ticket to see his documentary. Drat! Karl was right, commerce always wins in the end… Experienced at Moxie Cinema in theater 1 on April 10 with Susie Steinway and Kurtis Key bed. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oCOM3wMqoHg


2015 @ the Movies take 42 : “The Wrecking Crew” We love legendary artists who conjure wonders. Whether it is a song or a film, the name in big letters on the marquee is the one we want to look up to. This documentary reminds us that, in a lot of cases, the best ideas are the fruit of a collaboration, not a solitary vision. Unfortunately, there is not enough room on the marquee, and polytheism is hard to market. Time to set the story straight and meet the musicians who were really playing the instruments. Experienced at Moxie Cinema on April 11 in theater 1. 


2015 @ the Movies take 43 : “The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel” The first installment felt like a waste of talent: the crème de la crème of British acting dipped in comedic gulab jamun syrup. When I saw the trailer for the “second Best", I thought “not again and now with added Richard Gere!” I still took a chance based a French critique who was only half appalled… Well, this second best sequel sports an unexpected bitter sweet ending that is quite refreshing - thank you Maggie Smith. Use only as a last resort if you are out of Nutella on a rainy Sunday afternoon. Experienced at Regal College Station Stadium 14 in auditorium 9 on April 11.


2015 @ the Movies take 44 : “Danny Collins” A young singer song writer does not receive a 1971 letter from John Lennon and misses the fork in the road that could have saved his musical career from crass commercialism. This catchy pitch is based on actual events and had plenty of a potential for a smart film. However, savvy producers and screenwriters came along and drowned the premise in a thick drama stew that the most seasoned cast cannot navigate: estranged son - check, adult rom-com angle - check, twenty-smothing rom-com angle - check, red car - check, estranged cute grand-daughter with medical condition - check, pregnant doe-eyed daughter in law - check… what next? Leukemia, of courses!! By the end of the film, you’ll be asking yourself why the soundtrack is exclusively made up of Lennon songs… remember? 1971, the letter? Experienced at Wehrenberg Campbell 16 Cine in auditorium14 April 12 with Terry Cannavale.


2015 @ the Movies take 45 : “The Gunman” A perfect $5 bad movie Tuesday contender. This Sean Penn vehicle is based on a French crime novel by acclaimed Jean-Patrick Manchette. On paper that looks intriguing. However, it is helmed by Gallic director Pierre Morel who brought us the original "Taken." As expected, it is downhill from here. The post-colonial political thriller suffers from a total absence of character development. The adaption team must have gone “let’s cut out the boring parts where people talk.” In the end, the most interesting compositions are probably a drunk Javier Bardem and the angry bull during the final corrida scene… Experienced at Regal College Station Stadium 14 in Auditorium 13 on April 14 with Bedroom-gunfight Susie. 


2015 @ the Movies take 46 : "Unfriended" Since “The Blair Witch Project”, the found footage concept has been a staple of the horror genre. Sometimes used as a bad excuse for poor directing, it generates boredom and motion sickness more than anything else. This film offers a new approach that we could call “found screen.” During 1hour 22 minutes one fixed camera captures the screen activity of a laptop (a Macbook) in real time. Through a mix a social media platforms, characters interact and the story comes to life. The piece hold true to its form until the very end and requires a multitasking viewer/reader/listener. A lot of the subplots unfold through a competing instant messages and private chats. The frantic typing is very realistic with its broken spelling, and most interestingly, its hesitations and deletions that confronts the character’s real feelings to what they actually post. When the film is an intriguing experiment form-wise, it is plagued by a very stereotypical view of digital natives who are all unredeemable gun-waving bullying sex maniacs. Too bad, the same "found screen" principle helmed by David Robert Mitchell (It Follows )would have great potential. Side note: this film might become a cult classic in 2025 when Spotify, Facebook, Youtube or Skype feel as quaint as Myspace andGoogle Wave. Experienced at Regal College Station Stadium 14 in Auditorium 14 on April 18. 


2015 @ the Movies take 47 : “The Return of the Living Dead” (1985) The same year zombie-master George A. Romero released “Day of the Dead.” A good reminder that undead-explotation was already rampant 30 years ago, nothing new. With this fake-quel Dan O’Bannon doesn’t quite reach the Romero level of social commentary, but provides a good reminder of the 1985 wackiness. The guy also wrote the original screenplay for “Alien" so respect. A Mondo Moxie experience in theater 2 on April 18 after dark. 

2015 @ the Movies take 48 : "True Story (film)Machiavellian manipulation? Unexplained coincidence? Supernatural connection? The film never truly answers these questions and cultivates a deep ambiguity about its characters’ motivations and endgame. That is a brave approach in a movie culture enslaved by the over-explanatory biopic syndrome. By the same token, the film shows the words “True Story” are oxymoronic and should not be used together. The last scene resonates as a twisted echo of the quintessential American line from the 1962 classic The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance : "When the legend becomes fact, print the legend.” Jonah Hill and James Franco navigate the parts with a refreshing sobriety andShelley's American accent is spot on. Catch it while you can! Experienced at Moxie Cinema in Theater 1 on April 24 with Susie Finkel & Kurtis Short-stop.


2015 @ the Movies take 49 : "Ex Machina" This claustrophobic sci-fi metaphysical thriller plays like a high-tech Twilight Zone episode. Like Her it explores the emergence of the post-human thinking machine. Here the AI, named Ava, is embodied - albeit hollow - but restrained to a prison-like lab. It is a bit metaphorically heavy at times, but Oscar Isaac as a creepily laid back Dionysus is oddly fascinating. Some might find the extreme objectification of the female form disturbing; however, it makes Ava’s resistance to her creator all the more powerful. Experienced at Brenden Theatres and IMAX at the Palms in Auditorium 14 on April 25. 


2015 @ the Movies take 50 : "While We're Young" Yes, it is as pleasant and fun as the trailer for a while, and then it takes on a bit more themes than it can chew. Is it about cross-generational friendships, childless middle-age couples, the ethics of documentary filmmaking, or mentoring and creativity? Kind of all that, most of the time… The cast is great and fun to watch, but the lack of focus undercuts the punch of their performances. The problem culminates with the very last scene. It sort of tricks the viewer into believing a super-disappointing normative ending is at play to quickly backtrack, but not really and to top it with a very ambiguous last shot. Don’t get me wrong, I am all for an ambiguous ending. However, sometimes the film needs to have the last laugh and not let the audience hanging… Experienced at Moxie Cinema in theater 2 on April 28 with Susie Darby. 





Saturday, April 4, 2015

2015 @ The Movies Archives - March

Monthly Movie reviews originally published on Facebook - YEAR 2:

March 1 2015 through March 31 2015:



2015 @ the Movies take 27 : “Mr. Turner” With this biopic, Mike Leigh seems to have put all his creative energy in translating Turner’s palette to the screen. However, in spite of a great performance by Timothy Spall, the film fails to resonate in terms of characters and plot. We are very far from the humanity and depth of Leigh’s previous effort “Another Year.” Watching this piece from a pure visual standpoint feels then redundant when one can go back to the paintings themselves. Experienced Moxie Cinema in Theater 2 on March 1st with TerryKurtis & Susie.

2015 @ the Movies take 28 : “Focus” (IMAX) A totally new twist: A Will Smith movie where he is going to be super-smooth and wear sun glasses! Nothing revolutionary in this super-slick con man tale that is enjoyable for what it is, but fails to con its viewer and peters out into a very a nondescript melodrama. Experienced Springfield 11 with Susie & Kurtis
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MxCRgtdAuBo


2015 @ the Movies take 29 : “Song of the Sea” A well-deserved Oscar nomination from a pure visual and animation stand point. The film delivers a beautiful vision where characters and decor mesh perfectly. The most magical scenes are Saoirse' silent ones that are unfortunately too few as the piece gets ruined by chatty over-explanation: “In case you did not get it kids, here is the story so far…” And here lies the major flaw of this charming visual feast: the story. Yes, it is based on a celtic myth, but it is also a hodgepodge of motifs found in Hayao Miyazaki’s work: Ponyo + Spirited Away with a dash of Mononoke… Tomm Moore walks a very thin line between homage and cloning that is very distracting. Experienced at Moxie Cinema in Theater 2 with Susie Kiki and Kurtis Ashitaka. 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZcXjPLmWZzc


2015 @ the Movies take 30 : “A Most Violent Year” (2nd viewing) A second viewing is well worth it. When I was struck by the rich character study the first time around, I can now appreciate how well-crafted the story is. In spite of long takes and a circular structure, the film packs an unexpected punch that stays with you. Catch at Moxie the while you can! Experienced at Moxie Cinema in theater 1. 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ySWXwXlXlQU


2015 @ the Movies take 31 : “Chappie” (IMAX) At least Transformers doesn’t pretend to be something else than a hollow SFX feast. This pseudo-philosophical tale has a paper-thin script led astray by a very improbable cast: a colorful South African rap couple teamed up with a token Indian nerd to defy a mullet-sporting Hugh Jackman (two cubicles away)… All this for Chappie: a banged-up Patlabor ersatz with a budding AI that is as charismatic as Wall-E with a dead battery. Stay home and re-watch Mamoru Oshii’s Ghost in the Shell (1995) instead. Experienced at Springfield 11 with Susie Yo-Landi & Kurtis Ninja! 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l6bmTNadhJE


2015 @ the Movies take 32 : "Divergent Series: Insurgent” (IMAX 3D) Memo to producers: when starting (and continuing) a female-empowered YA action franchise, cast a talented, charismatic young actress. This memo was unfortunately lost in the mail and continues to plague this Hunger Games wannabe. In order to save the mayonnaise, this installment introduces a new character portrayed by Naomi Watts. The latter demonstrates more acting range while eating a slice of bread than the lead - Shailene Woodley - in both movies combined. Maybe when you are born “abnegation, “ you become so selfless that you can’t act, but I diverge. Experienced at Springfield 11 on March 20 with Susie Candor & Kurtis Dauntless.

2015 @ Ciné 33ème prise : "Two Days, One Night" (Deux Jours, une Nuit) Toujours un plaisir après un deuxième visionnage - Marion Cotillard sans les paillettes Hollywoodiennes brille de son jeu subtil qui aurait mérité son pesant d'or aux Oscars.... Vu au Moxie Cinema dans la salle 1 le 21 Mars avec AngelKristenThomas et Mary.

2015 @ the Movies take 34 : "What we do in the shadows” Vampire mockumentary? To be honest, when I first saw the trailer I was dubious at best. This kind of gimmick-based movies tends to disseminate their best in the trailer and fall flat like an exhausted soufflé after 10 minutes. I am happy to report this soufflé soars and sustains great hilarity throughout. It is also a “biting" take on discrimination - too bad the makers of True Blood missed that memo. Experienced at Moxie Cinema in Theater 1 on March 21 with KurtisVon Dielaughing-on-the-floor.

2015 @ the Movies take 35 : “Holy Mountain” (1973) A creative tour de force that takes us on a mystical acid trip without resorting to the often boring and dated Pink-Floyd-light-show-rip-off sequence. Each scene is a marvel of set design, cinematography and prop invention. It is also fascinating to think that Jodorowsky’s vision was brought to life practically without digital magic, but just real magic. “It is a film. Zoom back camera!” Experienced at Moxie Cinema in theater 1 on March 21 with Kurtis who can run through solid matter. A Mondo Moxie presentation!

2015 @ the Movies take 36 : “Two Days, One Night" (Deux Jours, une Nuit) Still fresh after a third viewing - in spite of the repetitive nature of the plot and the very mundane environment, I love how the Dardenne brothers carefully place small details to inform the larger story. For instance, they feature multiple eating scenes throughout the film. What the characters eat mirrors their struggle. When Sandra gets the ill-fated call about her job, she is baking a homemade strawberry tart after that it’s only pre-packaged or hospital food… Culturally relevant? Check out this IFC featurette (at 0m06s you will see the homemade strawberry tart and at 2m38s the store-bought pizza). Experience at Moxie Cinema in theater 2 on March 24 with Anne, Josh & Susie.

2015 @ the Movies take 37 : “Timbuktu” A stunningly beautiful cry against obscurantism shot in the historical heart of Mali. It is also a tale of female resistance sung in colliding languages rarely bought to the screen. Let’s not forget that this linguistic mosaic includes a couple of french-based dialects - the remnants of a previous invader. Highest recommendation. Experienced at TIFF Bell Lightbox in cinema 3 on March 25 with Susie Wallet & KurtisRockwell.

2015 @ the Movies take 38 : “Wild Tales” This Argentinian short film collection finds its unifying theme in bitter revenge. Always outrageous and often funny, most stories hit their target. My stand-out is "La Propuesta” (The proposal) a study in greed that shows more restraint and packs a more powerful punch (or should I say blow) in the end.
Experienced at TIFF Bell Lightbox in cinema 4 on March 27 with Susie Wallet & Kurtis Rockwell.

2015 @ the Movies take 39 : “It Follows” Good genre films - especially of the horror kind - are the ones who translate a social commentary through a nightmarish vision that forces our eye open (sometimes with the help of a razor blade). With his second feature, David Robert Mitchell achieves exactly that. Through a basic horror trope, he captures the torment of the teenage years - torment that remains unnamed and barely visible but so devastating. He even goes as far as removing the parents from the story altogether to reinforce the generational disconnect and the teenage need to find a new identity. A treat for the entire family! Experienced at Moxie Cinema in theater 2 on March 31. I went alone, but saw Shelley & Mike in the lobby. 

2015 @ The Movies Archives - February


Monthly Movie reviews originally published on Facebook - YEAR 2:

February 3 2015 through February 28 2015:


2015 @ the Movies take 17 : “The Loft" ($5 Tuesday!) This remake of a Belgian thriller is a casting disaster. It is sometimes hard to believe in a character portrayed by an actor that is strongly associated with a previous role. It becomes unbearable when 4 out of the 5 leads are in that situation. This movie brings together McCoy from the Star Trek reboot, Cyclops from X-Men, Cameron from Modern Family and the lead from Prison Break. We are supposed to believe they are now a gang of macho yuppies because they stopped shaving a week ago and one wears glasses. Even the talented Matthias Shoenaerts (who reprises his role from the Flemish version) seems at a loss in the midst of this unlikely crew. Soon coming to a grocery store near you in the $2.99 DVD impulse-buy bin conveniently located by check out line #9. Experienced at Regal College Station Stadium 14 In Auditorium 5.


2015 @ the Movies take 18 : “A Most Violent Year” After “Margin Call” & “All is Lost”, J. C. Chandor brings us his most accomplished film to date. He continues to explore the devastating power of pride, but this time in the context of a gangster film. However, this slow pace character study quickly deviates from usual tropes of the genre. The moral corruption of the lead character, Abel, is a slow journey of decay paved with good intentions. All served by great performances by Oscar Isaac and Jessica Chastain. This smart crime drama is to be put on the same shelf as the overlooked “The Drop” from last year. It is really a shame both movies garnered no Academy recognition. Experienced at Wehrenberg Campbell 16 Cine in Auditorium 11(which is pretty nice) with Susie & Kurtis and nobody else.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o87gG7ZlEAg



2015 @ the Movies take 19 : “Jupiter Ascending" (3D) is a grandiose spectacle about capitalism gone awry far beyond puny Wall Street on an intergalactic scale. This visually stunning tale is, however, plagued by very incoherent casting (pitting Mila Kunis against Eddie Redmayne is downright cruel…) and a corny love story. That was my first take on the film.
Then I came across a thought-provoking review by French film critic Simon Riaux. He sees the film as a hybrid of traditional children stories: Cinderella + The Three Little Pigs, hence explaining some of the apparent corniness. For a movie obsessed with genetics, it seems fitting that its narrative structure would be a hybrid. Mila Kunis portrays a toilet-scrubbing Russian immigrant who is really the lost queen of the universe. According to Riaux, she functions like a Cinderella archetype unaware of her royal genes, and in the end she even gets magic flying shoes. Channing Tatum, as a human/wolf hybrid genetically engineered for war, is both Big Bad Wolf and Prince charming. In order to rescue the lost queen from her 3 evil siblings, he will, by three times, destroy each of their space palace. Of course, the 3 siblings echo Cinderella’s evil cousins, but they are above all three capitalist pigs from space! Nicely thought through Monsieur Riaux! Like “Cloud Atlas”, “Jupiter Ascending” is flawed, but still a fascinating object to pick apart. Experienced Regal College Station Stadium 14 in tiny Auditorium 11 (Good thing we sat close to the screen) with Susie (wishing it was on IMAX) and Kurtishttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zEunxzlC5Yg


2015 @ the Movies take 20 : “Oscar Documentary Shorts” (Program A) Overall, this year offers a very dark selection in terms of subject matter that pushes the boundaries of traditional documentary filmmaking in terms of form.
Crisis Hotline: Veterans Press 1 (USA) the most conventional piece in the selection that ends up feeling like a long informercial about crisis center management.
Joanna (Poland): A young mother dying of cancer prepares her young son for life after her passing. This piece is beautifully shot and edited without straying from its vérité and never falling into pure pathos or sappiness. 
Experienced at Moxie Cinema in theater 1 with Susie & Kurtis.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-F92LJDtSmM


2015 @ the Movies take 21 : “Oscar Documentary Shorts” (Program B)
White Earth (US): Think about it as “The Overnighters” the short children version. Kids of migrant oil workers in North Dakota share their experiences. Unfortunately, this short lacks focus and, despite stunning visuals, doesn’t accomplish much.
The Reaper (La Parka) (Mexico): Imagine David Lynch filming the mind of a man killing 250 bulls a day in a Mexican slaughterhouse. The blood splatter on a dirty wall and the grease dripping from a row of meat hooks take on the guise of a twisted modern art piece while the empty gaze of the slaughterer at the dinner table of a derelict house surrounded by nine children punches us back to reality. Wait, this is the upbeat part of program B...
Our Curse (Poland): I am not sure why this one is the last piece shown in the program, but it feels almost too much at this point: a young couple welcome their infant son home for the first time. The baby boy suffers from a very rare incurable condition that causes him to stop breathing once he falls asleep. Should I say more? Let’s point out a strange line that might be due to a translation error. When describing the condition, a doctor calls it a “cool challenge”… I really hope this is not Polish dark humor.
Experienced Moxie Cinema in theater 1 with Susie & Kurtis.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bG3jRxKBu38



2015 @ the Movies take 22 : “Still Alice” A film exploring the plight of the Alzheimer disease once more should come with something new to offer whether in story or form. The central motivation for this film seems to be giving Julianne Moore a shot at the golden statue - as if we needed confirmation of her talent as an actress. Plus, making Julianne Moore shine by surrounding her with a boring cast delivering very flat performances feels cheap. The unique perspective of the patient as a linguist is also barely explored. More so, her plan to to orchestrate her suicide via a system of messages to here debilitated future self is left hanging with no comment. As I mentioned in a earlier post, Bille August’s “A Song for Martin” (2001) accomplishes much more on the same topic. Experienced at Moxie Cinema in theater 2.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZrXrZ5iiR0o

2015 @ the Movies take 23 : “Kingsman: The Secret Service” As it was aptly put by Eddie Izzard, when one buys a ticket to see a British film, one expects a dose of Edwardian sophisticated ennui and dexterously moved matches in a dimly lit room overlooking the Arno. However, what is somewhat true of UK cinema, does not apply at all to British comic books. They have more in common with Sid Vicious than James Ivory (Who is American, but knows how to arrange matches like a true Anglo). Kingsman is adapted from one of these cheeky Brit funny books. In an effort to demonstrate that comics book are not a kiddy-only fare, UK comic writers have been notorious for pushing the envelope so far up “there" that the most stoic Royal mailbox would turn a shade redder. Attempting to adapt these comics to the screen is nearly impossible, remember “Kick-Ass” - same problem. The subversive comment they offer on the medium of comics is lost. It is also downright misguiding to repackage them as the latest quirky dog-loving James Bond off-shoot. Experienced at Regal College Station Stadium 14 auditorium 3 with Kurtis &Susie. Let's stay away from the trailers... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TjC3R6jOtUo


2015 @ the Movies take 24 : "Fifty Shades of Grey" (IMAX) I demand immediate reparation for this travesty (lower lip bitten once). We are nowhere near 50 shades. We barely got two: Mr. Grey fully dressed holding a red rope (lower lip bitten twice) and Mr. Grey shirt less holding another red rope of a slightly shorter length (lower lip bitten thrice). This spectacle was as titillating as a sardine caught in a net gasping for air (lower lip bitten twain times more). I was definitely hoping to channel my 14 year-old self seeing the French dub of "9 1/2 Weeks” for the first time (lower lip now bleeding) as part of a family movie outing, but it fell flat. Quel Dommage! Experienced at Springfield 11with Susie & Kurtis. Check out Mickey Rourke’s French voice at 0:25, it is the same guy who dubs Bruce Willis, hilarious. Also, revisiting this 1986 vintage soft-porn might be perilous. It ain’t like French wine in terms of ageing.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fi1SxXQ39d4


2015 @ the Movies take 25 : "The Warriors" (1979) Mondo Moxie! a beautifully absurd tale where gangs of paramilitary clowns wedge a war for an imaginary domination of a territory they cannot control. Kudos to the Moxie crew for showing a beautiful restored version of this cult classic. Experienced in  Moxie Cinema in Theater 2 with Kurtis "The Orphan" Foster. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qAUMri0mv8M


2015 @ the Movies take 26 : "The Lazarus Effect” A ridiculous pseudo scary movie that makes incoherent attempts at startling the viewers, so they will not fall asleep. I do not understand why Mark Duplass, Olivia Wilde & Donad Glover ended up in this DOA stinker. Experienced Regal College Station Stadium 14 in Auditorium 8. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wDwTT37YBcE