Saturday, December 31, 2011
Incendies
IMDB
First time viewed: Yes
Current Release: Yes
Watched With: Myself
WOW. Knocked me off my feet, wasn't expecting that at all.
A story that feels epic and intimate. I can see why this has made so many top 10 lists and I'm glad I got to slip it in before the end of the year after missing it at the cinema.
Definitely a must see.
Tokyo Sonata
IMDB
First time viewed: Yes
Current Release: Yes
Watched With: Myself
I've already said a few times this year how much I like Kiyoshi Kurosawa's work. This is his latest and it's just beautiful. Like his other films it's quite and subtle, but this time there are no horror or dark genre elements, it's a straight forward drama about a japanese family and what happens when the father loses his job.
It's a little unpredictable and, again, I probably don't know enough about the social climate of Japan to understand all the statements it makes subtextually but I still enjoyed this sweet and melancholy little drama.
The Last Circus
IMDB
First time viewed: Yes
Current Release: Yes
Watched With: Myself
Ooo crazy stuff. I won't pretend to understand the socio-political undertones prevalent throughout this film but I can say that it was a great deal more entertaining than Water for Elephants...
Sad clowns with machine guns. That's really all you need to know.
Blame
IMDB
First time viewed: Yes
Current Release: Yes
Watched With: Tyler, Jordan, Amberly
So what can we blame? My natural aversion to Australian accents? My knowledge of locations that ruin suspension of disbelief? Or just the boring characters, writing, action and direction.
I don't believe for one second that these characters would group together to kill someone. I do believe that they would screw it up as bad as they did but even then, the drama, the stakes, the tension wasn't there.
It just feels like no choice was made in directing or editing to make any stylistic effort to manipulate the audience into caring about anything. It's perfectly watchable and the footage is exposed correctly but other than that there's not much going for this. It finishes as arbitrarily as it began. Eh.
Friday, December 30, 2011
Babe: Pig in the City
IMDB
First time viewed: No
Current Release: No
Watched With: Tyler, Jordan, Amberly
Just needing to prove a point I made in Happy Feet 2. It's unfair to say that the movie advertised int hat trailer is not what you get. But it's certainly not HOW you get it.
George Miller has made a fascinating film and the darkest, most traumatising g-rated film I've ever come across.
Mickey Rooney dressed as a clown. Horrifying enough I know but then Babe kills him via a series of accidents, in front of an audience of cancer kids, in slow motion to the soundtrack of Édith Piaf's Non, je ne regrette rien. That's just really messed up. There are other ways you could have directed that sequence. And again, it's these unusual directorial choices from Miller that makes watching Happy Feet so fascinating to me as well.
And while maybe not as traumatising as watching a dog strung up upside-down by a chain slowly lowered into a canal and drown while other animals slowly turn away and ignore his desperate plight to the soundtrack of Puccini's Humming Chorus, (already traumatising in itself thanks to Peter Jackson's Heavenly Creatures) I find there is a far more particular psychological cruelty to watching a cute little cripple dog get killed trying to save his friend's firstly, secondly showing him finally at peace and happily running around in heaven and finally having Babe rip him out of his one state of bliss back into the grimy depressing real world where his is a cripple again. It's hard to describe exactly how well this sequence works at tearing your insides up but it leaves me shellshocked every time.
Yes, Babe 2 is a very dark little number, especially compared to the bright sunshine of the first film. I really do love the way the portray the city. They've made it THE city, with bits of every famous city landmarks all rolled into one giant idea of what a city is, filtered through a children's storybook world. Production design is amazing. And FX work by Rhythm and Hues is great as well.
Look, don't get me wrong, I think the film is utterly amazing and I like how dark it goes but it still does leave me in shock at some of the stuff they got away with depicting without getting the bump up to PG.
Sympathy for Lady Vengeance
IMDB
First time viewed: No
Current Release: No
Watched With: Tyler, Jordan, Amberly
Chan-wook Park's last in his thematic trilogy of revenge films. Just arrived on bluray from the U.K. and the first thing that struck me about it watching again was the ending. I don't remember ever seeing this version where in the films final act everything slowly fades to black and white. I distinctly remember all those scenes in colour. A quick jump on IMDB revealed that two edits exist and the fade was an idea he was toying with. It's an interesting effect, I do so miss the colour from all the blood in the last half but it does serve to emphasises character over actions and a few other things as well.
Chan-wook Park's created another uniquely stylised world (a friend remarked how much it reminded her of Amelie, except this is a littler darker...) and this time he plays around with time a much more and manages to get a great deal of exposition done with snappy flashbacks and fast pace so it never feels too clawing for the audience. I love the way he cuts right to the reactions and aftermath of events for just a few seconds before moving on, and lets the audience fill in the details of what happened.
While there is not big twist revelation like in Oldboy there is a realisations that changes the course of the last act of the film to something that is easily the most emotional part of the film and a rather unusual situation to think about.
In all 3 films we are never told explicitly what to think about the revenge taking place. It's very much left up to the audience to debate after. This film also come with a heavy dose of atonement that cripples our main character, making it very different from the other films in the series. And in the end, as expected, there is not real happy resolution but there is a cathartic release.
It's certainly less extreme than Oldboy but keeps it's pace and style. It's been a very long time since I've watched Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance, the first of these films and I think I'll have to dig it up and give it another look now. Check this one out if you have the chance. I believe the Australian DVD that I own has the full colour ending, I don't know which I prefer, I'm still getting over the confusion of thinking there was something wrong with the television.
Thursday, December 29, 2011
Arena
IMDB
First time viewed: Yes
Current Release: Yes
Watched With: Myself
Well that happened.
It's pretty much exactly what you would expect from DTV low budget filmmaking. Cheap thrills, a story we've seen before, some fighting, Samuel L. Jackson? VFX are ok, directed by a VFX guy so you'd hope so. The movie is not that bad compared to most DTV stuff, but then again, I don't watch most DTV films, so yeah, it's pretty bad.
The Skin I Live In
IMDB
First time viewed: Yes
Current Release: Yes
Watched With: Tyler
Pedro Almodóvar's films are a huge gaping hole in my film knowledge. I think I've seen maybe one or two before and it was only with a very vague idea of what this was about that I went into the cinema. Always a refreshing treat.
Maybe it's because I've been watching so many lately but there was something very 90's thriller about this, well, at least the start, which also reminded me a great deal of Eyes Without A Face that I also watched for the first time this year. Of course this then delves into places you couldn't have dreamed of in the 1960.
After the comparatively straight forward set up there is an extended flashback that take us through the rest of the film where not only character backstory is established but there are some slow revelations that become apparent.
Hard to talk about without spoiling but it does seem to be a subject that he's dealt with in the past. Probably not like this. Makes for a fun ride though, very enjoyable.
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
P2
IMDB
First time viewed: No
Current Release: No
Watched With: Tyler, Jordan, Amberly
Festive horror! Alexandre Aja's horror films are always enjoyable and this Christmas number, while quite different from his others, is a nice little treat.
I love it mainly for Wes Bentley, who I find just adorable, even as a psycho stalker murderer man. He's just a guy that wants a date for christmas, I can relate.
While the film is basically 2 people in a car park for 80 minutes it keeps the tension and action going with some inventive sequences.
A great addition to my list of Christmas horror films and definitely one of the better ones, easily the best in the last few years.
Tuesday, December 27, 2011
The Cottage
IMDB
First time viewed: No
Current Release: No
Watched With: Tyler, Jordan, Amberly
Write Up. Do like this one.
Lovewrecked
IMDB
First time viewed: No
Current Release: No
Watched With: Jordan, Amberly, Tyler
From the Director of Grease, Honey I blew Up the Kid and Flight of the Navigator!!! Another Amanda Bynes gem. It's even more trashy than most of her output.
The transitions. MY GOD THE TRANSITIONS! There is actually a STAR WIPE. They are accompanied by SOUNDS! I scoured the credits and looked through IMDB crew list and couldn't find anyone willing to claim responsibility for editing this film. Just some people that were assistants. Does make you wonder.
It's really very bad. This is coming from someone who genuinely likes She's the Man and Sydney White. It does have a gloriously convoluted set up, that's really the main reason I like these films. But really... It's pretty atrocious.
Meet The Feebles
IMDB
First time viewed: No
Current Release: No
Watched With: Jordan, Amberly, Tyler
Write Up! Tee hee hee
Zathura
IMDB
First time viewed: No
Current Release: No
Watched With: Jordan, Amberly, Tyler
Write up! Love it!
We Bought A Zoo
IMDB
First time viewed: Yes
Current Release: Yes
Watched With: Myself
They Bought a Zoo.
Cameron Crowe is just as shamelessly sentimental as Spielberg. Although most of this manages never to tip too far over the edge. It was pretty enjoyable.
Oh, and they bought a ZOO.
The Iron Lady
IMDB
First time viewed: Yes
Current Release: Yes
Watched With: Jordan, Amberly, Tyler
The latest in Marvel's superhero canon in the lead up to The Avengers movie next year. Meryl Streep takes over the role from Robert Downey Jr, who was busy with the Sherlock Holmes franchise. Stay for the end credits for a Samuel Jackson cameo!
Streep gives a lot of speeches. A LOT.
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