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Tag Archives: Jennifer Lawrence

X-Men: Days of Future Past (2014): Dir. Bryan Singer gets his groove back

X-Men_Days_of_Future_Past_poster (1)Back to welcome form for Bryan Singer and the X-men franchise in this ‘reboot’ (though is it a reboot if it has the same director and actors? …) Intelligent action thriller, though if it doesn’t quite hit the mark, it is because:

(1) It has so many characters (and 2x the actors per character due to the dual timelines, 1970s and 2020s) so several of them get short-shrift. E.g. Jennifer Lawrence is wasted by only needing to pout in blue body paint, Peter ‘Tyrion’ Dinklage only has scope to be the token obsessed scientist, and Ian McKellen as the elder Magneto only has time to show us a scowlier Gandalf in futuristic body armor and short hair

(2) There is a little too much fan-service to previous films that confuse the casual viewer and flatten any attempted emotional high notes (e.g. who is that red head again, and why should she matter? etc.)

That being said, the best (and signature X-men) bits are the new super powers that are smartly blended into the action, specifically Blink’s Portal throwing ability (art imitating video games?) and Quicksilver’s lightning reflexes.

For X-men afficiandos, a sequel is already planned, X-Men Apocalypse, which is set in the 1980s of the reset timeline. It hasn’t taken that long, and now comic book movies are just as convoluted as the comic book series inspirations. Don’t know if that’s a good thing … 

 
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Posted by on June 6, 2014 in Film Reviews, Passive Media

 

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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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American Hustle (2013, dir. David O. Russell): a lot of fun!

American_Hustle_2013_posterDavid O Russell is in top form, rejoined by his Silver Linings Playbook principals (Bradley Cooper, Jennifer Lawrence), plus further “it” actors of the moment Christian Bale, Amy Adams and Jeremy Renner (plus more uncredited cameos). The film dramatizes the ABSCAM FBI sting operation of the late 70s/early 80s which nabbed several corrupt politicians including Congressmen, told from the viewpoint of the small-time conman (a nearly unrecognizable Bale) who was hired to be its brains. Though not as crowd-pleasing as Silver Linings (the characters are not as likeable and more one-dimensional, dialog not quite as sharp, and plot not as simple as a rom com), the movie will surely be a contender for top gongs, and thoroughly deserves its 7 Golden Globe noms so far. A lot of fun!

 
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Posted by on January 3, 2014 in Film Reviews, Passive Media

 

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The Hunger Games: Catching Fire (2013, dir. Francis Lawrence): a quality follow-up for fans of the first film

220px-Catching-Fire_posterFor fans of the first film, a quality follow-up, but doesn’t quite reach the hallowed circle of sequels that were better than episode 1 (Empire Strikes Back, Wrath of Khan, etc.) Somehow, the stakes felt a bit lower and less dramatic, and the plot is entirely predictable to anyone who’s read a lot of sci fi/ dystopian future lit – though Jennifer Lawrence does a creditable acting job (as ever). Entertaining, well-crafted, slightly-deeper-than-typical action fare, though still not good enough to make me want to read the books 🙂

 
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Posted by on December 2, 2013 in Film Reviews, Passive Media

 

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Oscars 2013: a disappointing showering of love for Affleck’s Argo

220px-85th_Academy_Awards_PosterOf the acting awards I can support all 4 (Jennifer Lawrence for SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK, Daniel Day Lewis for LINCOLN, Anne Hathaway for LES MISERABLES and Christoph Waltz for DJANGO UNCHAINED), plus Ang Lee for directing LIFE OF PI – but I was very disappointed with the Academy for showering Ben Affleck with love for ARGO (best picture).

It was a good movie, but simply not as a great as any of the others that were nominated – how about any of those 5 above + ZERO DARK THIRTY, for a start? We’ve seen the Academy dole out gongs ‘retroactively’ for snubs of prior superior work (e.g. Martin Scorcese finally winning for THE DEPARTED), but Ben Affleck’s previous movies don’t qualify there. Or maybe the insular delusion of “Hollywood saves the day” was just too tempting not to vote for (more cynically, maybe they thought that every extra viewer who sees the film because it won, and can be brainwashed as to Hollywood’s social value, is worth compromising the integrity of the award). Either way, badly played Academy voters, badly played.

 
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Posted by on February 24, 2013 in Film Reviews, Passive Media

 

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Silver Linings Playbook (2012, dir. David O. Russell): an exceptionally good rom-com

Silver_Linings_Playbook_PosterContrary to popular opinion, I will willingly watch and enjoy a rom-com if it’s exceptionally good; such a film only comes along once every 2-3 years, and happily this one’s fits the bill 🙂 … A fresh take on the rom-com formula, with sassy Juno or Little Miss Sunshine-like script and dialog, two very appealing leads, and great acting from the whole cast (including Robert De Niro in his best recent role, and Bradley Cooper going from strength to strength), but the standout has to be Jennifer Lawrence’s Oscar-worthy performance. Even included a meta reference to her Hunger Games alter ego via a speech about The Lord of the Flies. Though I have to say we particularly enjoyed Cooper’s diatribe about Ernest Hemingway which invited parallels to the recent disappointments of Julian Fellowes’ Downton Abbey.

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Posted by on February 15, 2013 in Film Reviews, Passive Media

 

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The Hunger Games (2012, dir. Gary Ross): smart, well-made thriller

220px-HungerGamesPosterSmart, well-made thriller which appeals both to the Twilight/Harry Potter set and adult auds who enjoy intelligent action movies. BO should be sky high. For the unitiated, take the central premise of Battle Royale (1999 Japanese novel of teenagers fighting to the death for sport under a totalitarian regime), set it in near future America, then throw in elements from The Truman Show (1998 Peter Weir flick) and the overall story arc from Gladiator (2000 Ridley Scott film). Though it plays more like The Running Man (1982 Stephen King novel, 1987 Schwarzenegger vehicle) than Lord of the Flies (1954 William Golding novel). Jennifer Lawrence shows how Kristen Stewart how to act, though it’s clear the weak link is Josh Hutcherson (who plays Peeta Mellark), especialy if Peeta has a big role in the sequels.

 
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Posted by on March 25, 2012 in Film Reviews, Passive Media

 

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