Monthly Archives: February 2013

Side by Side the Review

Great documentary recently hit Netflix Instant. Side by Side did its rounds on the film fest circuit, got a great response and is now easy to see for everyone.

It’s a discussion on the warp speed that digital film making is over taking traditional celluloid film and techniques (many Cinematographers feel threatened). Film stock has been in use for more than 100 years and it’s only been about 13 years since digital has hit the professional scene to slowly claw it’s way into favor. In fact. traditional film cameras stopped being manufactured in 2011.

This is really a story of the inevitable. Digital was vastly inferior to film, but that is quickly changing. Equipment and workflow is changing to almost all digital, with many cost, speed and versatility for production benefits. There’s a few steadfast film makers who are holding on to film and Side by Side gets their side as well as the more forward thinkers. It’s an even movie where the pros and cons of each side are given equal time and consideration. While the conclusion seems pretty clear to anyone right at the start, this docu is a great history lesson with some fantastic interviews from some of the biggest names in cinema. A must watch for movie buffs.

End of Watch the Review

It’s been awhile since I’ve seen a cop movie, so it was nice to visit the genre again. End of Watch is the story of two young Los Angles cops on the beat. Following them for about a year, Brian and Mike are not only partners on the force, but really good friends. Through their everyday job the stumble upon a very deep rooted and dangerous criminal organization that does not want anyone disturbing their business.

End of Watch is shot documentary style and that’s my biggest problem with it. There’s no need for it as the filmmakers didn’t stick with the idea. It’s set up so that Brian is going to school on the side and one of his electives is a film class, so he has a hand held camera and two cameras that he has pinned to the chest of himself and Mike. So that’s where most of the footage you see “comes” from. Sometimes other people have cameras too, like a gang banger sitting in the back of a car on their way to a drive by. But throughout the movie, you see camera angles that don’t fit this set up. Cameras disappear and come back, traditional steady cam shots are used in chases…it doesn’t make much sense to me. A few lines of dialog are said to explain the video camera footage, but what for? It wasn’t used and there was no benefit to it. I might be over reacting, but it stuck out to me for the entire film.

Aside from that, I thought it was a great movie. I’ve heard a lot of grandiose praise for this flick which I think is a bit much, but it’s defiantly worth a watch. I like Jake Gyllenhaal a lot and he’s got great chemistry with Michael Pena. It’s well made all around, the banter between the two leads is fun even if there are a few dips into douchey bro cop territory.

Good times, I recommend it.

Savages the Review

Savages Poster
Savages is the latest motion picture directed by Oliver Stone. It’s a simple tale of two friends and one shared (yes, shared) girlfriend. Chon and Ben are a team of pot growers, Chon the muscle, Ben the brains. The quality of their product is said to be legendary, head and shoulders above any other strain. The have built out a network that brings them and their people a lot of money. Great lives to everyone involved. A Mexican cartel rolls in and wants to partner up, spread the seeds into Mexico and beyond. This cartel is run by Elena (Salma Hayek) and she does not take no for an answer.

Ben in an altruistic guy, he wants to keep it simple and not go down a terrible path. When the boys say no, the Mexican cartel kidnap Ophelia (Blake Lively) to force Chon and Ben into the partnership.

So that’s the set up to this paint by numbers picture. Cue the blue and yellow filters all over the place, the sexy girls in bikini’s, the gun violence and the cursing. It’s an okay idea that is killed by…Ophelia. She sucks. Just a terrible character to hinge an entire movie on. There’s no reason why Chon and Ben are so head over heels for this girl. She’s stupid and spoiled to the point where you feel no concern over if she lives or dies. This girl is kidnapped, treated pretty well all things considered (until there is a cheap reveal at the end, which I really think was put in because the writers realized how lame of a scenario they were working with late in the game). She’s lucky she’s not in the bottom of a well and she complains about being given pizza to eat and no pot to smoke. Really?

The movie is cheaply narrated by her as her boyfriends go through all sorts of stuff to get her back and the climax of the movie is made completely stupid by a fantasy ending she comes up with. More of my time was wasted by this stupid character who wanted to show us a “tragic romantic” ending that just left me wondering why the time and money was wasted on filming it. The actual ending is decent, but that really doesn’t amount to much on this middle of the road Hollywood snoozer.

Skip it, you aren’t missing anything.

The Dark Knight Returns the Review

Part 2 was just released and looking back, I don’t think I talked about the first one!

Put simply, TDKR is one of the cornerstones of Batman lore. Written by Mark Miller and released in 1985 , Returns takes place 10 years after Bruce Wayne has hung up the cowl. Gotham is over run by gangs, the worst of humanity is eating the city from the inside. A weathered Bruce Wayne decides he can’t sit by any longer. Old foes re-emerge along with The Bat and the authorities are none to happy about any of it.

Returns has everything that makes Batman a fan favorite. Intensity, brains, brawn and honor. Even long past his physical prime, Bruce Wayne is a force of nature than no one can match. Having just watched Part 2, it’s the freshest in my mind. It is the strongest of the two with the stakes at the highest. Joker comes out of retirement and the carnage is legendary. The fight he and Batman have is the stuff of legend, and the dialog! Just dripping with brilliance (fantastic voice acting from everyone). The set up and follow through for every piece of this tale are just some of the best story telling around. The battle with Superman? Get outta here! Just tantalizing and euphoric action. Batman is the definition of bad ass.

Warner Brothers takes a lot of pride in their properties and they let this production team go to make the best Batman they could. The animation is fantastic (I can think of only one quick action that was really awful) and the soundtrack is simply epic in scope and scale.

The Chris Nolan pulled a lot of things from this source (and Year One for Batman Begins) and while there is a lot of questionable decisions in those movies for fans, Returns can be called the uncut Batman. The power and awe of one of America’s favorite heroes. Let me be clear; this is a story that is for adults. There’s a lot of grown up stuff in here in theme and violence. I’ve glossed over a lot of the details, if you’ve never read the book it’ll be a whole new world and fans can be assured that it does the source material justice.

Arguably perfect.

Ted the Review

Seth MacFarlane successfully parlays his TV career to film with Ted, a fun story about two long time friends. One being Mark Walberg, the other a teddy bear come to life.

Ted holds a lot of ties to Family Guy, with a lot of the same cast and a similar sense of humor. There’s not as much “cut away to random act” for laughs and there are zero show tunes which probably explain how this movie did so well (half a billion world wide). It’s a good story that’s held together with great and funny characters. The idea is goofy but the filmmakers know this, acknowledge it and make it work. The CG effects that bring Ted alive onscreen is also a huge factor. He looks like a real character interacting with real people in the real world which can’t be understated at how important that is. If he looked fake it would have been distacting and taken a lot away from the movie since he’s in almost every shot. There’s a handful of weird looking parts where he doesn’t match the lighting in the room, but on the whole he’s really impressive.

I’m a fan of Seth MacFarlane for the most part, some of his shtick is dumb, but there is some hilarious stuff in this movie. It’s not gross out humor, but there is plenty of cursing, insults, sex and drug humor. Some of it is played out, some of it hits the mark. It’s one of the better comedies I’ve seen and even outside of that, it’s a great movie. It won’t appeal to everyone, but those people probably aren’t much fun to be around anyway.