Sunday, 8 April 2012
Friday, 30 March 2012
The Ides of March
The
politics is a dirty business. This assertion goes without proof, it is an axiom.
And this assertion also means that politics is a perfect topic to explore in a
movie: it is only natural to recall Shakespeare and the tensions and emotions
of his plays. The topic, I believe, remains underexplored despite the lack of
good and fresh ideas obvious in the cinematography now.
The Ides of
March is based on the play “Farragut North” by Beau Willimon, and the influence
of theatre can be sensed throughout the movie. Relatively short at
approximately 100 minutes, it sets fantastic example to numerous recent movies
in terms of how to keep attention of the audience. Just like in a theatre, the
movie throws you right in the middle of the action, gives you a couple of
minutes to familiarize yourself and then quickly throw a few problems in, and
before you even decide for yourself what would be the best course of action,
the movie proceeds to catharsis, leaving you pondering about the nature of
human beings.
Saturday, 24 March 2012
John Carter
Transplanted
to Mars, a Civil War vet discovers a lush planet inhabited by 12-foot tall
barbarians. Finding himself a prisoner of these creatures, he escapes, only to
encounter a princess who is in desperate need of a savior.
The success
of Avatar keeps the heads of the world movie corporations awake at night.
Cameron managed to create another world, populate it with unusual yet
charismatic creatures, create a conflict with humans, drop the main character
in and let us watch the development of the story. What sounds simple in theory
found a great response in peoples’ hearts, allowing Avatar to take in a lot of
profit and leaving fans waiting for the sequel. John Carter is so obviously
trying to be the second Avatar, it is impossible to escape from comparisons.
And comparisons are, unfortunately for John Carter, not in its favor.
Friday, 23 March 2012
The Hunger Games
After the
rebellion in Empire somewhere in a future, the punishment is set for 12
rebelled districts. The Capitol selects a boy and a girl from each district who
fight to death on live television. Katniss Everdeen volunteers to take her
younger sister's place for the latest match.
The movie
is based on the first novel in the Hunger Games trilogy by Suzanne Collins,
published in 2008. It was probably the most advertised film of the spring, and,
given the bestseller nature of the books, the film to wait for. And the fans
will not be put down.
Art always
follows the mood of the crowd, reflects it and tries to satisfy the desires of
the majority. This is why the occurrence of the anti-utopian and
post-apocalyptic movie was actually predictable given the world-wide movements like
“Occupy Wall-Street”. The society filed a demand for another “V for Vendetta”,
and the movie industry (as well as book-publishing) rushed to satisfy it.
Wednesday, 21 March 2012
Super 8
It is the
summer of 1979 and a group of friends are filming an amateur movie for the
contest. During one of the scenes they witness a train crash which put the
start to the chain of events that are going to change the lives of all people
in their small town.
I was not
intending to watch this movie based on what I saw in the trailer. I am not a
great fan of horrors or anything like that, and given the fact that 2011 was
rich in good movies, my conscience did not object much. Anyway, as the flow of
movies came to a stall, I got back to the Super 8.
Well, J.J.
Abrams, writer and director of the movie, fooled me. It is beyond the
understanding come the trailer to the movie is so detached and different from
the movie itself, as if the trailer was a completely independent unit of
cinematography. In a way this is good as it does not give away all the catches
of the movie, but the fact remains that based on the trailer you would expect
something completely different.
Thursday, 8 March 2012
Limitless
Eddie Morra
is an unsuccessful writer who suffers from never-ending misfortunes. One day,
he meets a drug dealer who sells him a top-secret drug which bestows him with
super human abilities. And he is soon to find out that “with the power comes
great responsibility”…
This movie
made a buzz in 2011 when it launched provocative and smart advertising
campaign, which featured a guy hacking into the screens on the Time Square in
New York. That was brilliant move, fresh and interesting, and it is probably
the only thing which is good about this movie.
It should
have been called Brainless. Yes, to hope that this movie would be smart and
brainpower-demanding would have been completely unreasonable. After all, from
the first frames of the trailer you could guess that this is yet another pop-corn
action about difficult life of people with superpowers. However, even these low
expectations did not save me from brutal truth: you have to turn your brains
off to watch this movie.
Thursday, 1 March 2012
A Dangerous Method
Sabina
Spielrein, Russian with extreme psychological disorder, arrives at the clinic
where young Carl Yung is working. This is the start of a difficult and intense
relationship between Sabina, Yung and Sigmund Freud, which will enrich all of
them and will give birth to psychoanalysis.
I am a
great fan of Keira Knightly, and I have been waiting for this movie since its
release in September 2011 on the Venice Film Festival. Eventually, it arrived
in Britain almost half a year later, and it was almost impossible to find it in
the cinemas.
The movie
is an adaptation of the book "A Most Dangerous Method" by John Kerr,
and it is a very poor adaptation. There are some movies adapted from the books
that run smoothly, without considerable losses of cohesion or plot details. Just
recall the last Harry Potter movie: despite pretty poor source, the movie
itself is easy to watch and still interesting even for those who read the book
several times.
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