Saturday, November 10, 2012

WRECK-IT RALPH

Pictures courtesy of Walt Disney Pictures

Ralph voiced by John C. Reilly in "Wreck-It Ralph."

A video game bad guy tries to remake his image in the Disney animated feature, WRECK-IT RALPH.  

Ralph is the bad guy in the 1980’s video game Fix-It Felix Jr., a big, hulking figure with fists that serve as sledge hammers.  His job is to destroy a high-rise residential building, while Felix utilizes a magical hammer to fix the mess.  

Tired of playing the bad guy role, and following a run-in with other Fix-It Felix Jr. characters, Ralph leaves his video game in search of a medal to prove his worth.  What Ralph finds is a world of trouble, adventure and excitement far beyond his imagination, whether it’s in the video game world of modern combat or the adrenaline of the kids game Sugar Rush.  
 
Ralph voiced by John C. Reilly in "Wreck-It Ralph."

Mixing nostalgia for yesteryear’s world of gaming and the technological awe of today’s action, WRECK-IT RALPH enjoys the best of both worlds creating a children’s film that is funny, entertaining, creative and distinctly original, no small task considering the immense amount of children fare in today’s saturated cinema market.  

Although the tale of being oneself is nothing new, WRECK-IT RALPH’s universe is.  Video game movies have been made before, but they have always been made from the inside out, viewing the game as a participant or character as opposed to examining it from the gamer's perspective.  This unique point of view is further expanded through a series rules and standards established by writers Jennifer Lee and Phil Johnston and director Rich Moore.  

The grasp and humor is derived from seeing familiar faces like Pac-Man, his ghost monster friends, Q-bert and Frogger, but most of the fun comes from newly created characters, including Ralph, his video game nemesis Felix, Jr., Vanellope, a glitch from the video game Sugar Rush and Calhoun, a no-nonsense combatant from a warfare game full of violence and splattered aliens.  Each character brings a certain sensibility from their distinctly different game into the tale, and it works for the betterment of the story, with each sub-plot adding to the film as a whole.  

WRECK-IT RALPH is a unique children’s picture, one as equally focused on entertaining children and their parents as it is effective in delivering a humor-filled adventure where the bad guys aren’t always bad, and everything isn’t always as sweet as it appears.  

Grade: B

THE PAPERBOY

Photos courtesy of Millennium Entertainment

Nicole Kidman as Charlotte Bless in "The Paperboy."

The dirty south is an understatement in writer-director Lee Daniels latest, THE PAPERBOY.  

The PRECIOUS writer-director is back with a slice of film noir centered around the murder of a racist sheriff in the hot and steamy southern dregs of Florida in the 1960’s.  John Cusak’s slimy Hillary Van Wetter stands trial for the murder, while the writing tandem of Matthew McConaughey and David Oyelowe as Ward and Yardley attempt to find out if Hillary is really the culprit or an otherwise hot-headed and scummy heathen.  

Assisting the journalistic duo are Charlotte Bliss, played by Nicole Kidman, a sexual pen pal of Hillary’s, and a means to an end for Ward and Yardley.  Also along for the ride is Ward’s younger brother Jack, played by Zac Efron, a naïve young man who pines for Charlotte without understanding the complications that are involved.  
Matthew McConaughey as Ward Jansen and Zac Efron as Jack Jansen in "The Paperboy."

As he did with PRECIOUS, writer-director Lee Daniels magnifies with THE PAPERBOY.  Daniels is a man of excess, gratuity and a heavy hand, seemingly incapable of delivering a message or fable without a barrage of sex, violence and other unworldly human events.  

If like me, watching one character try to crush another with a tube TV-set in PRECIOUS wasn’t enough, you won’t find any consolation in watching the antics of Kidman’s sex-pot Charlotte rip off her clothes in jail or urinate on another character.  

These actions are off-putting on their own, but the effectiveness of the actors in these morally bankrupt and incendiary roles makes THE PAPERBOY void of anything artistic and certainly humanistic.  Kidman, Efron and MacConaughey are each on top of their games, but its gone to waste on characters who are caricatures, individuals who resemble humans in form only.  Even worse are Oyelowe and Cusack, from opposite ends of the spectrum in terms of social, economic and cerebral status.  Both men come off as reprehensible, but Cusak’s Hillary is so manipulative, disheveled and disgusting that he’s more like a clown than a monster.

Lee Daniels paints his characters with broad strokes, so broad that even the blind can see.  In many ways, Daniels is becoming a more independent, hard “R” rated version of Tyler Perry.  The only thing THE PAPERBOY delivers is a lot of pain and suffering, on all five senses.  

Grade: D

Friday, November 09, 2012

ARGO

Photos courtesy of Warner Bros.

Scoot Mcnairy as Joe Stafford, Ben Affleck as Tony Mendez, Rory Cochrane as Lee Schatz, Chris Denham as Mark Lijek and Tate Donovan as Bob Anders in "Argo."

Ben Affleck doubles as a CIA operative and movie producer in order to save American lives in the dramatic thriller ARGO.  

The thriller, based on the actual events in 1980 Iran, follows a group of American embassy workers who flee the Iranian consulate following a riotous attack on the building.  The group finds refuge at the Canadian embassy, but this sanctuary is temporary.  

After hearing this news, and understanding the immediacy of the workers predicament, CIA operative Tony Mendez, portrayed by Affleck, devises a plan to extricate the Americans from Iran by having them, and he, pose as a Canadian film crew.  Mendez won't be able to pull off the guise with only CIA assistance, so he calls on the Hollywood community to assist in the mission.

Scoot McNairy as Joe Stafford, Rory Cochrane as Lee Schatz, Kerry Bishe as Kathy Stafford, Ben Affleck as Tony Mendez, Tate Donovan as Bob Anders, Christopher Denham as Mark Lijek and Clea DuVall as Cora Lijek in "Argo."
Following in the footsteps of his previous two directorial works, GONE BABY GONE and THE TOWN, ARGO has a rich atmosphere establishing the time, place and most importantly the intensity of the characters’ predicament.  

Whether it’s the embassy workers walking the dangerous streets of Iran or Mendez’s encounters with high-ranking administration officials or Hollywood creative types, Affleck captures the immediacy and importance with each scene.  By creating this distinct and crucial mood, ARGO’s events have a naturally heightened drama.  Where other films rest their outcome on high speed chases, gun play or hand-to-hand combat, ARGO finds more tension and suspense through less combative moments.  

The authenticity of the material also soaks through, as ARGO frames its story well with specific, timely and detailed events and aspects.  

The film also benefits from a collectively strong cast, delivering colorful performances, but not so much as to overshadow the material  Goodman, Alan Arkin, Brian Cranston, and each of the embassy worker actors deliver defined and convincing portrayals of their real life counterparts.  At the forefront is Affleck as Mendez, a man burdened as much by personal events as international ones.  The task at hand is one of life or death for six Americans, and you can see the despair weighing heavily on Mendez through Affleck’s burdensome demeanor and the intensity behind his eyes.  

ARGO is an accomplished and entertaining factually-based dramatic thriller that Hollywood rarely delivers.

Grade: B+

PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 4

Photos courtesy of Paramount Pictures

Kathryn Newton in "Paranormal Activity 4."

Unsettling sounds are moving through another Southern California residence in the third follow-up to the original PARANORMAL ACTIVITY.  

PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 4 picks up where the third one left off.  Katie and her nephew Hunter have fled from the confines of their old home, and have moved to a new place.  Another family begins experiencing the same sounds, sights and horrors that troubled Katie and Hunter.  

This time, most of the creeps haunt a pair of high school students, Alex and Ben, who much like the participants in the first three PARANORMAL films, begin to document their experiences through a series of computer cameras.

 A scene from "Paranormal Activity 4."
The beauty of the first PARANORMAL ACTIVITY, and I’d argue to a lesser extent, PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 3 was its simplicity.  In these two films, the effort and execution was focused on the things that go bump in the night, an object of two that would move and eventually the climax would reveal something a bit more.  

PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 4 again uses this same framework, but often times gets distracted with the built in mythology established in the last two films.  The mythology is present, but the mystery is gone, as we now know what is going bump in the night and also what it is leading up to.  

All may have been forgiven had the creepy night time scenes been paramount, and less time had been devoted to foolish teenagers and their preoccupied parents.  The acting and writing have never been these films drawing cards, but PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 4 exposes these aspects as a liability.  Teens are left to carry the dramatic weight, and screenwriter Christopher Landon felt that a series of f-bombs were the best way to convey their despair.  

Kathryn Newton as Alex fares much better than her male counterpart, the sexually-charged Ben, played by Matt Shively, who’s range is limited, but the older and younger actors are even worse.  Creepy kids are now more a cliché than they are genuinely terrifying, and PARANORMAL ACTIVITY  4’s kids are more likely to illicit laughs than shrieks.  

In many ways, the same can be said for the film as a whole.  PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 4 is a tired exercise that attempts to expand the scope of the series, but ends up diminishing it.  

Grade: D

FRANKENWEENIE

Pictures courtesy of Walt Disney Pictures

Victor and Sparky in "Frankenweenie."

A boy resurrects his canine companion in Tim Burton’s FRANKENWEENIE.  

The animated feature is centered around Victor and his dog Sparky, the inseparable duo who could one be pulled apart by death itself.  Unfortunately that’s exactly what happens.  Sparky’s passing leaves Victor, an aspiring scientist, with a lot of free time and an interesting idea from his scientist teacher.  

After science class, and grieving the loss of his best friend, Victor decides he’ll try to revive Sparky with a jolt from mother nature.  One stormy night, some jumper cables and a bolt of lightening does just that for Victor and Sparky.
                                                                Victor Voiced by Charlie Tahan in "Frankenweenie."
Tim Burton’s touch with live-action material has been sketchy at best recently, but when the creative and imaginative director puts his talents to work in the world of animation, he’s as solid as they come.

FRANKENWEENIE, the full-length version of the director’s first short film, is a heartfelt, humorous and clever tale about the bond that exists between a boy and his dog, albeit through the slightly twisted mind of Burton.  

Clocking in exactly three times as long as the short, FRANKENWEENIE never wears out its welcome.  Burton and screenwriter John August milk the film for both standard and odd situations, riffing on classic horror films and the 1950’s, but also find a nice groove with the kids-oriented story line.  

Burton, filming the stop-motion animated tale in black and white, utilizes both techniques to maximum effect.  The choice to go black and white gives the film a unique feel, while also creating an odder and more detailed atmosphere.  The stop motion animation also gives the period piece a more authentic feel, and the movements and actions of the characters a more humanistic draw.  

FRANKENWEENIE hits home on a couple of occasions, but more or less plays it safe with the story, settling for laughs and amusement, when something greater lies beneath the surface of this kiddy spooker//  FRANKWEENIE still delivers a solid slice of Halloween entertainment.

Grade: B

Wednesday, November 07, 2012

ARBITRAGE

Photos courtesy of Lionsgate

Susan Sarandon and Richard Gere in "Arbitrage."

Richard Gere feels the heat while trying to unload his flailing enterprise in the dramatic thriller, ARBITRAGE.

Gere is Robert Miller, a highly successful businessman who has inflated his company’s worth in order to sell the franchise for great value.  From the outside, Robert is a content capitalist with a family and a fortune.  On the inside, he’s a stressed high stakes roller, both professionally and personally.  Not only is Robert under pressure for the sale of his business, but he’s also feeling it from his artist lover who he’s trying to keep secret from his wife, played by Susan Sarandon.
                                                           Brit Marling and Richard Gere in "Arbitrage."

 The time doesn’t feel right for a film like ARBITRAGE.  A seedy philander attempts to pawn off his company for more money than its worth, would be ripe for the picking, presuming that audiences we were hoping to see Robert get what he deserves, but writer-director Nicholas Jarecki tackles Robert’s predicament from the opposite end of the spectrum.  

Although not entirely empathetic, Jarecki still tilts ARBITRAGE in Robert’s rooting interests, despite the fact that his actions are morally reprehensible.  Not only are Robert’s business dealings underhanded, but his extra-marital affair now has him caught in the middle of a crime, with Tim Roth’s tenacious detective on his heels. 

Although Jarecki’s screenwriting skills are easily seen through ARBITRAGE, they’d be for naught if it were not for the stellar cast, beginning with Gere.  Gere, who’s career has spanned over three decades, has not been any better than he is in ARBITRAGE.  Gere enables us to see Robert through several prisms, each as compelling as the next, and as viewed  through each light, Robert becomes more complex, rich and oddly sympathetic.  

The rest of the cast is also strong, with Sarandon as his strong, but compromising wife, Roth as an unrelenting officer and Brit Marling, as his daughter who gets caught in the crossfire.

ARBITRAGE is a unique and engaging thriller, not because its something new, but rather because of the angle we’re viewing it.

Grade: B+

TROUBLE WITH THE CURVE

Photos courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

Amy Adams as Mickey and Clint Eastwood as Gus in "Trouble With the Curve."

Clint Eastwood heads south to scout baseball’s number one prospect in the family drama TROUBLE WITH THE CURVE.  Eastwood is Gus, a veteran scout for the Atlanta Braves, one who has provided the organization with some of its best players for the past 30 years.  Yet as the sport has progressed, Gus hasn’t, relying on the same techniques for scouting as he always has.  He’s sent to North Carolina to check out hot-hitting high school prospect Bo Gentry, but has currently been struggling with his eyesight.  

His daughter Mickey, played by Amy Adams, a successful lawyer seeking partnership, meets up with Mickey in Carolina, despite the demands of her position.  Risking her professional future, Mickey decides her father's predicament is more crucial than her personal success.

                                                          Justin Timberlake as Johnny, Clint Eastwood as Gus and Amy Adams as Mickey in "Trouble With the Curve."
Some may think that TROUBLE WITH THE CURVE is the antidote for those that believe MONEYBALL and its sabermetrics are baseball blasphemy.  Although TROUBLE WITH THE CURVE has its heart in the right place, it could have used a little more baseball insight from the creative minds behind MONEYBALL.

First and foremost, the film is a family drama, set against the backdrop of baseball.  Oh there’s talk of baseball, particularly the banter between Mickey and her love interest Johnny, played by Justin Timberlake, but the extent of baseball knowledge seems relegated to trivia and analogies, rather than the intricacies between the foul lines.  

Eastwood and Adams are terrific, with Clint at home as the grizzled old veteran who can’t leave yesteryear behind, and Adams as the concerned, head-strong and caring daughter who feels overwhelmed with her responsibility as a lawyer and daughter.  When the film is focused on these two, it works, even if the talented actors are often pressed to make the sappy dialogue ring true, and they usually do.  

In the end, TROUBLE WITH THE CURVE tries to mix too many pitches into its dramatic arsenal, when a fastball and a change-up would have delivered just what the film needed.  I don’t recommend this well-meaning, well-acted, but poorly written baseball drama.

Grade: C+