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Monthly Archives: March 2014

Divergent (2014, dir. Neil Burger): Derivative!

Divergent_film_posterMore aptly named “DERIVATIVE”, this YA coming-of-age fantasy faintly echoes what comes before – it makes THE HUNGER GAMES (2012) look almost literary by comparison, via an appealing female lead (though Shailene Woodley is no Jennifer Lawrence), a dystopian society (though not as in-depth or satirical) with a conniving but one-dimensional villain (on this, Kate Winslet ties with Donald Sutherland), and a chaste teen romance a la TWILIGHT (2008). The training sequences are a pale imitation of STARSHIP TROOPERS (1997), PACIFIC RIM (2013) or even the the flawed ENDER’S GAME (2013). I even half-expected the film to crack open the tried-and-tested “your world is a nested subroutine” trick from GHOST IN THE SHELL (1995), THE MATRIX (1999) or INCEPTION (2010) – though thankfully, we didn’t have to see a ‘hacked’ version of that … Overall, mildly diverting if you like this sort of thing.

As an aside, I have heard said that the movie is better than the books, in which case I’d like to (1) congratulate the 20-something Ms Roth on being able to rake in so much $$$ with so little effort, and (2) officially warn anyone against reading them ..

 
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Posted by on March 29, 2014 in Film Reviews, Passive Media

 

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Noah (2014, dir. Darren Aronofsky): biblical tale meets Jackson’s Lord of the Rings plus Aronofsky’s trademark psychology

Noah2014PosterPrimeval story-telling meets latest big budget Hollywood CGI extravaganza in Darren Aronofsky’s NOAH, which recasts the Biblical-Babylonian myth in the mould of Peter Jackson’s THE LORD OF THE RINGS – though adding Aronofsky’s trademark exploration of the psychopathic toll that the experience would have had on the protagonist (played by a grizzledly intense Russell Crowe). Ambitiously dives headlong into themes of good vs. evil, human depravity, environmentalism, family ties, and of course, mass catastrophic extinction by drowning. Seriously entertaining.

Next up: Christian Bale as Moses in Ridley Scott’s EXODUS …

 
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Posted by on March 29, 2014 in Film Reviews, Passive Media

 

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The Wind Rises ‘Kaze Tachinu’ (2013, dir. Hayao Miyazaki): bittersweet, semi-autobiographical swansong

Kaze_Tachinu_posterBittersweet semi-autobiographical swansong for Hayao Miyazaki (My Neighbor Totoro, Kiki’s Delivery Service, Princess Mononoke, Spirited Away etc.) Somewhat controversial topic looking at the life of Jiro Horikoshi, who designed fighter planes, but in no way does the film glorify war or justify Japan’s actions. If anything, it celebrates creativity, dreams and the design process, and one can’t help but sense that Miyazaki is reminiscing the days of his youth (just as in the more sugary From Up On Poppy Hill (2011)) and mourning the passing of his own (more than) “ten years in the sun”. This year Frozen was the crowd pleasing, money spinning Academy Award winner, but The Wind Rises was the more deserving

 
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Posted by on March 8, 2014 in Film Reviews, Passive Media

 

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