Showing posts with label film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label film. Show all posts

Saturday, February 2, 2013

Warm Bodies



Warm Bodies is a zombie movie with heart, and guts, and pieces of brain.  I say pieces of brain because this is a movie where the more you think about the plot, the less you’ll enjoy it.  Instead, turn off your brain at the door (or better yet, give it to a zombie to snack on) and enjoy the romantic comedy zombie adventure.

If you haven’t heard, this is the movie where Nicholas Hoult (from the the UK tv show Skins, a favorite of mine) plays a Zombie named ARGHHH aka “R” who befriends a human girl named Julia in a post-apocalyptic zombie destroyed world.  (“R” and Julia, get it? ;D)  It’s an interesting take on the zombie genre (again, zombie falls in love with girl o_O), and had more laughs in it than I thought it would.  It’s silly, but is aware of its own silliness and doesn’t take itself too seriously.  Check it out if you like zombie movies and/or romantic comedies.

7/10

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Silver Linings Playbook



David O’ Russell’s Silver Linings Playbook is an average film with great performances.   The story is something you’ve probably seen before.  Bradley Cooper plays a newly released psych ward patient who moves back home with his parents to attempt to restart his life.  Along the way, he meets a young widow (played by Jennifer Lawrence) with issues of her own.  Together they help navigate each other through their dysfunctional lives and yada yada yada.  

Anyways, the movie is worth seeing for Bradley Cooper and Jennifer Lawrence.  Cooper is great at playing a manic depressive who is always on the verge of a violent outburst.  It’s an extreme version of his character in movies like The Hangover or Wedding Crashers, except that there’s stress, anger and instability lurking beneath his smug smile.  Lawrence has great chemistry with him because, like him, she also lacks a social filter and is able to match his level of craziness. 

Together, they elevate an otherwise forgettable movie.

7/10                                           

Sunday, January 13, 2013

Zero Dark Thirty




I’m a sucker for year end top ten lists.  Specifically, year end top ten lists that relate to film.  The website metacritic.com has been keeping track of film critics’ Top Ten lists with a point system.  Their point breakdown goes like this:

2012 Film Critic Top Ten Lists

3 points for each 1st place ranking
2 points for each 2nd place ranking
1 point for being ranked 3rd - 10th, or for being included on an unranked list


According to the metacritic poll, “132 individual top ten lists published by the film critics regularly included in Metacritic's score calculations” and Zero Dark Thirty has been number 1 since it screened for critics back in early December.  Academy Award nominations were also announced on Thursday (http://oscar.go.com/nominees) where Zero Dark Thirty was nominated for 5 awards including Best Picture and Best Actress for Jessica Chastain.

So when Zero Dark Thirty finally had its wide release this past Friday, my expectations were pretty high.  I went into the movie expecting to see something amazing, with a little reminder to myself to not hype myself up too much for the movie.  Overhyped movies naturally and inevitably lead to disappointment.  I am also usually wary of critics, who I tend to disagree with pretty often.  However, after watching the movie, I see what all the fuss is about.  Zero Dark Thirty is a damn good movie, but not in the way that you might expect. 

The movie, which is about the 10 year hunt to find Osama Bin Laden, is not an action movie but a procedural.  A majority of the movie is interrogations and people in offices talking and analyzing character profiles, videotapes and phone calls.  Most of the action is in the last act of the movie, and even then it feels downplayed.  The movie is about details.  Details that lead to other details that lead to details.  I love this and find it exciting as hell.  Apart of why the movie works is due to Jessica’s Chastain’s performance as Maya, who plays the obsessive CIA agent.  We don’t learn anything about her personal life, but get wrapped up in every new piece of information she uncovers. 

I also like the way the Zero Dark Thirty handles its subject matter.  The movie doesn’t try to glorify or condemn certain actions, it just presents them.  In another director’s hands, this movie could have been turned into your typical Hollywood blockbuster.  Instead, the movie’s focus is 10 years of frustration and waiting. It is interesting that the movie was originally going to be about the hunt for Osama Bin Laden and how impossible it was to find him.  Then he was found and they had to rewrite the script and take the movie in another direction. 

So yes, Zero Dark Thirty is one the best movies I’ve seen this year.  Is it the best movie I’ve seen this year?  I’m not sure, I’m too indecisive.  It is definitely top four, hanging out up there with The Perks of Being a Wallflower, Django Unchained and Looper.