Monthly Archives: June 2014

My Review: The Secret Life of Walter Mitty

walter

The Secret Life of Walter Mitty is what you would call a feel good movie. Walter (Ben Stiller), is a day-dreamer who works for Life magazine in the photography department. When the magazine closes to go online only, it’s the last few weeks on the job for Walter and his remaining co-workers to put together the final issue. Sean O’Connell (Sean Penn) is one of the worlds best photographers and he has a long working history with Walter. He sends him a roll of his latest work for the magazine and thinks #25 is the one for the final cover. But it’s not with the other negatives and Walter has to find it.

Walter is a shy a guy who finds himself day dreaming about how he wants (or wishes) things would go for him. He has a crush on his co-worker Cheryl (Kristen Wigg) but can never work up the courage to ask her out (he even resorts to eHarmony in an effort to get to “talk” to her). These fantasies are often really elaborate and pull him entirely out of reality. When he takes on the task of finding the negative, it turns into a globe trotting adventure that changes his life. He comes out of his shell a more confident and positive person.

Ben Stiller directs and stars in Walter and I gotta say it’s some impressive stuff. The special effects are extensive and well done, the pacing of the movie nearly perfect. He balances both rolls as lead and director really well and the surrounding cast is really good. Sean Penn isn’t in much of the movie, but he does an exceptional job with his small, but important role.

Walter’s story is a good and complete one. We are introduced to who he is, get glimpses of who he was and thus how he became the Walter we first see. Sean inadvertently brings out a side of Walter’s life that he thought he could only imagine. Great movie for a long or rainy weekend, I recommend it.

Summer TV Season

This month starts another transition for the TV season. Fargo finished it’s mini series and it was really good. I think it beat out any “Fargo, the TV series? Really?” that the show was facing at the start. Satisfying and well done from start to finish. Making it a mini series makes it stronger as it’s a self contained story. If they ever come back for more, it’ll be with different characters in a different story. It shares elements from the movie, but it easily stands on its own.

Californication is almost done (for better or worse) and at this time I’m invested in seeing how they finally end the show.

True Blood just started its last season and Bon Temps, LA is up to its ankles in vampire troubles. Picking up right where season 6 ended, it looks like a vampire/human war is still inevitable. The question now is who is going to live to the end (with sexy results).

On the lighter side, Wilfred started it’s 5th and final season. I think the timing is just right to bring Ryan and Wilfred’s story to a close. We can finally get some answers and close the show out on a high note.

Avatar: The Legend of Korra made a surprise return to TV this week! After what can only be called complete silence since last year, Nickelodeon suddenly dropped a season 3 trailer and announed the premiere date about 2 weeks ago. So now we are back to one of the most popular animated worlds on TV and Korra has her hands full. Just two weeks after season 2, the spirit world has started to move in among the mortal world. It’s not an easy move as the spirits are pretty much setting shop right on top of everyone. Gigantic vines are taking over Republic City and Korra can’t figure out how to stop it. With political pressure coming at her, she struggles to keep things calm when people suddenly gain the ability to air bend. This hasn’t happened in generations and Tenzin is over the moon about it. He has the chance to help rebuild the Air Nation and jumps at the chance. Meanwhile, a prisoner named Zahir gets air bending abilities and breaks out of jail. He quickly travels around to his companions and breaks them out one at a time (with marvelous Avatar style action). Zahir (presumably the leader of the pack) was the only one of them who couldn’t bend and with him even more powerful, these guys are an even greater threat. It’s unknown what they did, but it was serious enough for them to be separated by great distances into custom built cells for their transgressions. Zahir breaks out 2 people (water and earth benders) and the episode ends with them off to free the last and the return of series favorite Zuko! It’s a really promising start. New characters, new locations and some serious villains. Action and adventure are on the horizon. *Turns out I missed episode 3, which I will check out ASAP.*

Falling Skies returned too. This one snuck up on me and I was looking to fill my sci-fi category. I liked last season a lot, the show keeps getting better as it goes. The premiere more or less reset things as the Espheni invaders made a swift move on our traveling heroes and put them in some sort of prison camp. Months go by until the story essentially starts back up. It’s an odd jump and a lot has changed so there is a lot of new things to get accustomed to. Tom Mason is in seclusion with Captain Weaver. Tom has managed to find a way to sneak out at night to figure a way out. His son Hal is in the same camp, but free to roam about the enclosed area. Ben is with his half sister who has grown int a young woman and is seemingly in charge of a hippie commune. Lots of questions there. Tom’s wife, Anne is out and about and taken the roll of the crazy merc. The younger kids have been put into what could be called a brain washing camp, which is where Matt is). The MO of the aliens has changed, adults are more or less kept around instead of killed and the kids are no longer being harnessed, but brain washed to the other side. Convincing them that the alien invasion is the best thing for humanity. It almost feels like the series has been reset as the start of this season was a major step back for humanity. The grip has never been tighter and it remains to be seen if Tom can manage to rally the troops again.

On the Netflix front, I finished Orange is the New Black and liked it quite a bit. There’s a lot of history for quite a few of the other inmates which are all well done in addition to Piper’s continued drama. The long plot of the season is rather obvious and really needlessly drawn out. I think the writers came up with an ending for it they liked and had to keep it going into the finale as there was so much build up. I didn’t like the final part of it as it felt way too convienant. She should have “gotten away” with it for a time. I think that would have been much more satisfying and logical when all is said is done. I look forward to season 3!

Season 3 of Sherlock on the other hand was tough to watch. A big format change made the best part of the show all but disappear. Sherlock was like watching a mystery movie every episode. These 3 episodes were more plotting and disjointed than anything else. New character(s) felt way too thin and I didn’t care about the character turn at the end. It still had some elements of what make the show great, but it was really disappointing.

My Review: Dallas Buyers Club

DallasBuyersClub

Matthew McConaughey continues to impress with Dallas Buyers Club. He plays Ron Wooodroof, an electrician and part time hustler. We meet Ron when he looks a bit worse for wear and on the bad side of a betting pool. After an accident on a job site, he’s brought to a hospital where it is discovered that he has HIV. It’s 1985 and HIV/AIDS is a full blown epidemic. The moment his friends and co-workers find out he’s HIV positive, they turn their backs and make him a pariah. It’s a sad display of fear, ignorance and homophobia (Ron is heterosexual, but everyone immediately thinks he’s gay. He contracted the virus from a girl who used IV drugs).

Ron is a real stubborn guy. He fights like a cornered animal when he realizes he’s going to have to figure things out for himself. He does the research for current medical advances for the virus and asks to get on the trial drug program at the hospital. When he’s turned down and the dire circumstances for HIV/AIDS patients become clear to him, he makes it to Mexico as a last ditch effort. There, free of FDA restrictions, he manages to find some help. Ron sees his new goal, fighting the virus and the FDA at the same time.

The Dallas Buyers Club is the program Ron starts to help fellow patients (he lifts the idea from a buyers club set up in another state). Using a loophole to avoid being arrested for selling drugs, he charges $400 a month memberships where the person gets all the meds they need for the month. They are paying for the membership, not the drugs. This catches the eye of health officials as patients are going to him instead of the AZT drug trials.

It’s an incredible story, Ron was an amazing man who fought tooth and nail against a brutal illness and the red tape that claimed to be in the best interest of the people for many years. Incredible acting from McConaughey, a mind blowing, transformative performance from Jared Leto as Rayon (Ron’s transgendered business partner) and one of Jennifer Garner’s best roles as Dr. Eve.

With directing that gives the viewer a “fly on the wall” type perspective on Ron’s fight, I found Dallas Buyers Club to be a completely engrossing, compelling and touching tale of how the worst in life can bring out the best in people. Highly recommended.

LA Kings win The Stanley Cup over the NY Rangers

Another disappointing loss for the NY Rangers last night. The third over time loss in the series meant the end. It was a crazy series that is poorly reflected simply by looking at the 4-1 win in this series for the Kings, it was not a cake walk.

The Rangers fought hard every game and if the puck bounced in their favor once or twice, this series would have (and should have) gone 7 games. The third period was brutal for the Rangers as they couldn’t get passed the blue line to save their lives. A ludicrous tripping penalty against the rangers gave the king exactly what they needed to tie it up.

Both over times were super intense and even with all the lamenting in the world about that tripping call, the Rangers had 2 power play chances to end it and couldn’t pull it off to bring the series back home. Coming back from a 3-0 series deficit has never been done and would have been the sports story of the decade. It was a great season after all and us Ranger fans can now only hope that it won’t be another 20 years before we skate it out in the Finals again. Credit is due for the Rangers for not rolling over and winning game 4.

Time for some clean up

Watched a few things that I can’t rationalize giving full reviews to, so we’ll bang these out real quick.

Don Jon– Joseph Gordon Levitt’s writer/director debut is not a good movie. Boring, trite and cliched, this was a hard one to watch to the end. Jon is a young man who has no problem being with women, but a lot of problems with actually connecting with them. You watch this obvious character transition slowly take place in New Jersey with terrible accents. The MPAA made him heavily edit the content to get a R rating, so maybe he had to take all the jokes out with the “adult content”. Crummy accents all over the place, but I did like seeing Tony Danza dad it up here. Skip it.

DC Universe titles: Young Justice, Justice League: War and Son of Batman– Young Justice is a TV show that lasted 2 seasons and I didn’t hear about it until recently. It’s basically the junior varsity Justice League with Kid Flash, Aqua Lad, Miss Martian, Super Boy and Robin (Dick Greyson) as the founding members who are essentially overseen by Batman. They go on covert missions, leaving the Justice League to take on the ‘world events’ so to speak.  Awesome writing and animation, I really liked the first season getting through it in about a week. I was stoked to see they made a second season, which I will be starting soon, as I wanted more the second it ended.

Justice League: War on the other hand I found disappointing. DCU movies tend to be amazing and I found this one to be under that standard bar of quality. I didn’t like a lot of the voice work and the animation isn’t too swift. Story is good at least, telling the origin of the Justice League who come together to stop an alien invasion led by Darkseid. Highlight for me is the constant verbal sniping between Green Lantern and Batman.

Son of Batman is the first time Batman meets his son Damian. After knocking costume boots with Talia al Ghul years ago, she kept their sons existence secret.Deathstroke kicks up a hornets nest when he attacks The League of Assassins, killing (!?) Ra’s al Ghul (Talia’s father). Knowing Deathstroke is going to be a rather serious threat, she leaves Damian in Batman’s care while she handles things.  Batman takes it surprisingly well! Damian is a colossal maniac of a brat though. Considering who and how he was raised, that’s not surprising. When Mom loses to Deathstroke, it’s up to Bats and son to set things right. And so Batman gets his new protege. One of the better DCU movie releases, but still well behind the crown jewel, The Dark Knight Returns. I’m not too thrilled with Damian’s voice, but it did grow on me. Animation is good, but there are a few weird direction choices (Ra’s does this weird defensive move using a sword against a bullet that looks terrible and makes no sense, for example).

Next release for DCU is Batman: Assault on Arkham which looks really promising.

Ride Along– My second buddy cop movie in about two weeks. Ride Along stars Ice Cube as the hardened vet cop and Kevin Hart as his possibly soon-to-be brother-in-law. Kevin has a  lot to prove to Cube and ends up going on a police ride along to show that he’ll be able handle the police academy (Kevin is a high school security guard). I liked The Heat more, Melissa McCarthy giving the best comedic performance out of the four. I really like Kevin Hart, and if you know his stuff you know the exact guy he plays in Ride Along. They are very similar movies, it really comes down to which cast you like more.