Monthly Archives: April 2014

La Televisione

It’s hard to come up with new TV update posts. I’m going to have to just number them soon. Anyway, here’s what’s been filling up my DVR.

Orphan Black- Season 2 on BBC America is off to a strong start. One of the surprise shows of last season remains mysterious, original and tense. Two episodes in and we already have a double cross and a few bodies as a result. Sarah’s little girl has been found, Alison is heading for a full on panic freakout and Cosima is trying her best to be sneaky with Dr. Leekie. There’s a lot of balls in the air now, I like the angle of bringing Art Bell into the conspiracy as you can only fend off cops in the know for so wrong. They won’t drag that bit out any more and be able to use the character well. The addition of a religious third party in the clone dance is this seasons biggest wrinkle. They’ve made some serious moves already so this season should be packed with reveals.

Parks and Recreation/Community- Both have finished their seasons and Community is back in great form. Short season, but that’s better than a long and boring one (season 4). Parks and Rec was good, but the finale was more of series finale. I thought I was watching the end of everything until the announcer said it would be back in the fall. They jump 3 years into the future which I guess they’ll continue with. The wrote themselves into a corner so it looks like a major shift was the only way forward.

Archer: Vice- Easily the worst season so far, but that’s still a complement. Since Archer has been so damn good, they went for a big thematic shift that I think worked pretty well. It wasn’t laugh out loud funny like last season, but I still liked it. There’s still plenty of great laughs and moments and I really liked the finale. I’d call it a successful experiment that has set up some great new material for next year.

Face/Off- I was right on the final 3 and Rashaad won which I’m super stoked about. He was a front runner right from the start, had only one misstep all season (same as Tyler who I would have been happy with winning too). Not much to say as Face Off is a tried and true winner for me. Comes back in July!

Mad Men- The final season has begun and it’s as Mad Men as ever. Opens with a “here’s where everyone is right now” episode and this weeks episode really dug down into Don’s current madness. He’s on a tight rope that will not stop shaking.

The Walking Dead- Finished strong. Great season from beginning to end. Low on stupidity which keeps the show on point. Rick is back in classic Rick shape and the gang is back together but in trouble. Odds are their captors will come to release they shouldn’t keep them all together in one spot.

Fargo- Really like it! It shares the same tone of the movie, but it’s a significantly different murder “mystery”. There are some similar characters but I think they’ll be able to differentiate themselves as they continue. Great cast and good writing so far. The reach of the crime(s) look to be much greater than the movie, there’s more moving parts in this one. The accents are much lighter on the TV show which seems a little weird.

The Amerians- Still great. Major turmoil at the homestead which is unearthing the KGB’s agents most rooted beliefs. They’ve kept a lot of themselves buried and it’s starting to come out. Massive personal conflicts are pushing Liz and Philip to the edge, it’s a major struggle for them to keep them fighting for their homeland. Fascinating stuff, I hope more and more people catch on now that the first season is easily available.

My Review: Rush

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When Rush came out in theatres back in September, I made a mark to see it as it’s something up my alley, but never made it out to do so. I regret that now as I think the only way I could have liked Rush more would have been to have seen it up on the big screen.

First things first, no Canadian bands are involved in this film. Rush is about the 1970’s Formula 1 rivalry between James Hunt from Great Britain and Niki Lauda from Austria. The story spans about 6 years, starting in 1970 when the two meet in the F3 driving league as young talent looking to make a name for themselves. Almost from the second they see each other, they butt heads, making one of the biggest rivalries in the sports’ history. James Hunt represented the more playboy lifestyle. Boisterous, a hard partier and a ladies man, it isn’t hard for Hunt to steal a spotlight. Niki Lauda is the other side of the coin. Much more serious with a much more logical and clinical thinking mind. He was also brutally honest, he could never make friends like Hunt could. Where Hunt is the wild child, Niki is the straight laced, rule oriented man. The things they did share was the love of the race track, a natural talent behind the wheel and the unrelenting drive to be in first place.

I can’t think of another race movie like this that I’ve seen other than Days of Thunder and that was a generation ago and a fictitious story. If you see racing cars in todays cinema, it’s going to be on the Fast & Furious angle, not professional racing. Rush is a surprisingly compelling tale and the race scenes are truly thrilling. Great direction by Ron Howard, bolstered by a fantastic sound mix and soundtrack by Hans Zimmer.

Chris Hemsworth plays the ever charming James Hunt with Daniel Brühl as the intense Niki Lauda. They have brilliant chemistry, really selling how different but oddly alike these two men were. They goaded each other on season after season, pushing each other as far as they could go professionally. They both annoyed the hell out of each other, but there was a also a clear line of respect (which the movie really tries to show in it’s storytelling). From the outside it could easily seem like they were enemies, but the right word is rivals. They were each shooting to be better than the other, where being better also meant becoming the champion of the F1 circuit. These two were constantly battling each other for first place finishes.

If you are a fan of the Top Gear show, you have to see this. It’ll feed right into that part of the brain that makes you smile. Intense on the track with great moments of humanity and life off of it. I’ll leave it with one of my favorite scenes that gives the best insight on Niki’s mentality. Shortly after Niki first meets Marlene (who he will later marry), he asks her for a ride to the train station from someone’s house. They’re bouncing along a country road in Italy when Niki turns off the car radio after hearing a noise whenever she accelerates.

Niki: Your fan belt is loose.

Marlene: My what?

Niki: And when you brake your foot goes all the way down, which means there’s air in the system.

Marlene: Anything else?

Niki: No… Apart from the rear brakes are worn out, the front right tire’s a bit soft, which explains why you’re weaving so much.

Marlene: How can you tell?

Niki: My ass.

Marlene: Sorry?

Niki: God gave me an okay mind, but a really good ass, which can feel everything in a car.

Marlene then calls Niki crazy, saying her “very expensive” mechanic just looked at the car and it’s in like new condition. The car breaks down a short while later.

My Review: Ender’s Game

 

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Ender’s Game, written by Orson Scott Card and published as a book in 1985, is a military science fiction story featuring a young man named Ender Wiggins. Prior to hearing about this movie being in production, I had never heard of the author or this series and went into watching the movie blind about the story.

Set in the not to distant future, Earth is invaded by an alien race named the “Formics”. They closely resemble bugs in appearance and nearly succeeded in taking over the world. Every military resources on Earth was put to use and in the end it was a man named Mazer Rockham who was able to take down the main ship, ending the war. Tens of millions of people died in the attack and for the next 50 years, Earth has prepared itself for the return of the Formics.

The invasion scared the remaining populace to death. Caught completely off guard, many felt that it was luck that the human race survived. Such an attack could never happen again (hmm, that sounds familiar). With the fear of a seemingly guaranteed second invasion attack to come, the International Military is formed and tasked with making a defense plan. Seeing the youth of the world as it’s best chance, they comb every nation to find the best and brightest, training them to be the military and tactical force that will shut down the Formics for good. Ender Wiggin is the youngest of his siblings and the last to go through training. His sister is let out of the program because she is seen as too compassionate and his brother was let go because he resorted to violence too quickly. Ender is quickly noticed by Colonel Graff as the perfect mix of the two personalities, but he must be groomed and tested to be Earth’s best chance for victory.

I really enjoyed Ender’s Game. A terrific and interesting look into the future of our society, of military life and methodology. Asa Butterfield plays Ender beautifully and Harrison Ford gets a great role as Colonel Graff. Ender’s journey is a fascinating one, as we see a very smart young kid change as he learns from the experiences in this extreme space boot camp. Ender and the other cadets go through rigorous classroom and physical training, learning large scale war tactics and battlefield skills. Seeing Ender testing his superiors and subtlety maneuvering himself into a position of leadership consciously and sub-consciously is a lot of fun. There’s always a layer of mystery surrounding this operation and Ender slowly picks away at it as he feels himself being squeezed by the hand of his superiors. There are cracks in what he is told and the constant stress of being a completely dominating force exhausts his senses and humanity. He doesn’t like what he’s becoming and it scares him that he’s so good at it.

Ender’s Game was released at just about the same time as Gravity, which completely overshadowed it. It’s a very compelling story, much like Gravity and it also has special effects that rival the work in Gravity as well. The zero-G training room is brilliantly executed, the whole aesthetic of the world is really well visualized. It all looks very well thought out and real, making this future scenario seem that much more plausible.

I don’t know what was omitted or change from the book, but I really liked the movie I saw. It kept me engaged the whole time, it’s a smart story and the acting is great from newcomers and veterans alike. I was pleasantly surprised with this one.

My Review: Thor: The Dark World

 

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I thought the first Thor movie was average at best. Never read his books, never cared for the character. He’s in a similar boat as Superman; having god like powers makes it hard to be concerned about his or her well being. The Dark World is a significant improvement over the first, but still has its faults.

The best part for me is that a small part of the movie takes place on Earth. There’s much more of Asgard and a few of the other realms that Thor watches over. This makes for a much more visually interesting (and often beautiful) and unique movie with the wild colors, landscapes and technology. There’s a much better sense of where Thor comes from and how his culture operates. Also, since this happens after the events of The Avengers, there’s a solid jumping off point of change in Thor and Loki. Loki is locked up for his tyrannical run for Earth and Thor is busy settling things down from Loki’s actions.

The hook of the movie arrives when a great ancient power awakens that threatens all nine realms. After barely fending off the first attack by the Dark Elf Malekith, Thor and Loki must team up in order to stop him from destroying everything. It’s Loki’s chance for some kind of redemption, but can he really be trusted? This is easily the best and most thought out part of the movie. The story arc with the brothers and their parents works really well and gives great motivation and reason for the rest of the movie (and the cool ending).

They lucked out finding Tom Hiddleston to play Loki as he’s the perfect fit for such a role. He’s been great from the start, but now he really owns the character, it’ll be hard to imagine anyone else playing Loki (he pulls off that silly helmet somehow too). He’s got depth, his reasons for being the way he is and that all combines into being a great foil to his brother Thor. Chris Hemsworth continues to fill Thor’s boots well, I can’t think of anything negative to say about him.

I’m very take it or leave it on Natalie Portman as Jane Foster though. She’s just kind of there with her stupid red boots and it’s hard to believe she’s a scientist. Using a couple of big words in rapid succession and spinning a few dials on a machine doesn’t make you a scientist. This folds into my main problem with the movie: there’s a lot of convenient solutions at just the right time. There’s way too many moments of “just go with us on this one” from the writers. Characters get marooned in another realm only to walk into a cave and find the other end of a worm hole that they were playing with at the beginning of the movie. It brings them right where they need to be. Science is used as the solution for The Big Problem of the movie, but it’s theoretical science written on paper at best. Jane and Erik are doing some Einstein level mathamatics and engineering in a matter of minutes and it all works right out of the gate. Did I mention they are sticks? Sure we see them first used in The Avengers, but they quickly reverse engineer them for this new problem and then toss them around like outlet sale bocce balls. You can really just fling those things around in energy storms and god only knows what else and they work perfectly? Sure the results look cool and Thor gets some serious punching done, but come on. Even if it’s easy to sweep aside being in the Summer Blockbuster genre, it’s still dumb. Speaking of dumb, the jokes! They really tried making this movie funny with quick quips, but gad zooks are they bad. Most of them hit the dirt like a big mouth bass.

As far as comic book movies go, The Dark World is one of the better ones. They do a lot with a rather average character and that’s commendable (almost forgot to mention, the soundtrack is terrific). It moves the Marvel Universe in the right direction and they are making these movies better with each one so I can’t complain much.

My Review: The Wolf Of Wall Street

 

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The Wolf Of Wall Street is the fifth Leonardo DiCaprio and Martin Scorsese team up. This time they bring us the true story of Jordan Belfort, a stock broker who was gladly swallowed up by the sins of greed and excessive living.

The Wolf is a story of unbridled debauchery, a ride that sucked in hundreds of people and came to an end only because of obnoxiously stepping over the lines of the law.

Jordan Belfort (played by Leonardo DiCaprio) was (or is, really) a self made man who kept his eye on the prize: making money. Once shown the way of selling nonsense at the first Wall Street firm he was hired at in his early twenties, it became a race of how much money he could make and spend for the next decade or so.

It’s almost cartoonish in nature the way it’s shown. In the beginning, Jordan is shown as a nice average guy. Young, innocent (naïve), polite and ambitious. But once he gets a taste of the high life, it’s a quick decent into madness. He starts his own company, pulling in some friends with questionable morals into the fold. Jordan was only 26 when he left reality behind. Taking advantage of people left and right, more sex and drugs than a person should be able to imagine let alone experience. The addiction, lies and deceit stack up until the tower can’t get any higher and collapses on everyone.

DiCaprio really loved this role, you can see him revel in the chance to play such a character. Jonah Hill as Jordan’s main partner in crime, Donnie Azoff is absolutely perfect. The way they play off of each other is on screen chemistry that can’t be made up, they just frolic hand in hand in every scene they do.

While money can’t buy happiness, it sure does by fun. The movie shows this rollercoaster ride at it’s core, giving you a seat at what it was like to live a life like this. The build up of the lift hill (entering the industry) and then the exhilaration of gravity taking over for the rest (the success and everything it let them do). These guys had a blast doing what they did. Are drugs bad? Sure, but the bad comes at the end of the awesome parts. Is the sex with everyone in sight bad? Yes! Just ignore the relationships it ruins. Is money bad? Only if you don’t have enough to buy your way out of a pickle! Besides, if I don’t pull it in by the truckload some other jerk will!

Jordan could talk to his sales force like an emperor, his subjects hanging on his every word. You sell these stocks, this IPO, we will live on top of the hill forever! Their work day basically became a party with no rules or restrictions. They ran wild like college kids until they made so much noise that it drew attention from the Feds. The drug addiction just moved in along with the money, using one to start the day and the others to regulate that feeling until sleep eventually won out. Buying the drugs was as normal as buying food. Once entrenched, none of them even thought about getting out.

Jordan even had a chance to get out under reasonable circumstances after he draws too much heat to shake. No jail time and some fines that were more or less be a slap on the wrist. He throws the deal out of the window for his astronomical pride and obsession with money. The draw of his lifestyle was too much for him to turn his back on. Turns out when the Feds have proof of you breaking a laundry list of laws and you tell them to jump off the highest cliff they can find, they really come after you.

At just under 3 hours long, the movie shows a lifestyle of hilarious excess that matches the likes of drug king pins. It really uses that R rating to the fullest. The good times lasted for years but were cyclical in nature, much like coming on and off a drug high. Actually, it’s exactly like that as you constantly see these guys running around gacked out of their gourds at one instance and then crashing hard only to rally and do it again. When a problem came up, find a loophole to bring it back to “normal”. A life where a problem was more or less a pot hole in the street paved with gold until the hubris of the seemingly invincible could protect them no longer. The punishment comes at the end, but it’s questionable how punishment it really was (Jordan did very little time when he ultimately cooperates).

The Wolf Of Wall Street is a hell of a time that rides fast on the shoulders of it’s fantastic cast. While it shows an attitude and system born of the 1980’s and played into the 1990’s, it still fits today. Financial inequality has never been higher and the corruption of Wall Street has only strengthened its bond with the banking industry. You don’t need to look at a Hollywood movie to reflect on the troubled times we live in. You just need to see what’s in the news everyday.

Shameless

The wait for season 5 begins

The wait for season 5 begins

With Breaking Bad done, Shameless has moved up into my #1 spot for best show on TV. It was a close second while Bad was on, but now it’s the easy front runner. Season 4 concluded 2 days ago and it is arguably the best season yet.

The cast of Shameless is really big, I think Game of Thrones is the only other show with more main characters. But the writers really make it work, especially this season. They found fantastic arcs for everyone to take. Frank and Fiona have been the anchors of the show from the start but this season there was a change of guard. Lip and Ian have been close to the top of the hierarchy with Carl and Debbie trailing behind. Frank and Fiona had major events go down that actually took them out of the spotlight, opening up the door for the other kids to really show what they got. Lip really took on Fiona’s roll while managing his taxing new life and while Ian was AWOL for nearly half the season, his return brought one of the best plot lines and best acting with Mickey.

Carl and Debbie are the youngest on the show (ignoring Liam here) and have more or less been in the background. They’ve been like orbiting moons around the bigger planets. This season was their breakout year with their biggest plots and far and away their best acting. They’re getting better and better, major props to Ethan Cutkosky and Emma Kenney for stepping all the way into their roles and delivering some of the more memorable scenes of the season.

It’s such a well rounded show with fantastic actors pulling off some really intense and personal acting. There was a lot going on for everyone and it was all amazing stuff. Lip’s college culture shock/forced maturation and his relationship with Mandy and Amanda. Fiona’s heartbreaking collapse, Franks’ health battle (loved the introduction of Sammi and Chucky this year, glad they will be back), Ian and Mickey’s relationship and Carl and Debbie’s adolescent growing pains in a environment that is tough enough as it is. I like how they have Kevin and Veronica Ball orbiting the Gallagher family with their own thing. It keeps their real only friends involved, but wisely out of the way so they don’t take over (a problem with the UK original).

And the ending! The hooks are set for season 5 and I’m already stuck on the line. Can’t wait for my favorite show to come back for more.

My Review: Captain America: The Winter Soldier

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The greatest compliment and easiest assessment is that Winter Soldier is a much better movie than the first Captain America. A much more interesting plot and the feeling that everything isn’t going to be Okay just because Cap is around. There are serious, world changing events going on (for regular citizens and those sworn to protect them).

First and foremost, Chris Evans is much more comfortable wearing Captain America’s boots. Much like how Robert Downey Jr. is synonymous with Tony Stark, Evens is Steve Rogers. Well written dialog between characters (if rather blunt and in your face at times) develops a tangible bond between the good guys and makes their struggle seem more believable. I really like the idea of HYDRA having it’s tentacles wrapped around seemingly everything come to light and what it takes to really stop them. It parallels todays corruption and unease going on today, but frames it in comic book trappings.

HYDRA is evil and devious, going to crazy over the top feats to mold the world in a way they see fit. There’s some great action scenes from start to finish which range from infiltration missions, cat and mouse chases on foot and in vehicles, some surprisingly great hand to hand fighting (even if some of it is way too shaky and disorienting) topped off with screen filling explosions and destruction. Captain America’s super abilities let him do some really interesting and creative stuff action wise. With great speed and strength he’s got that cool superhuman “crash through stuff” navigation, he can take a serious beating and still get up which let’s him get away with more fantastic stuff (huge falls, general punishment) and his shield work is something no one else really does. There’s some really cool offensive and defensive weapon work in each fight he uses it in. Since he can’t shoot energy around and really doesn’t rely on guns much, they exploit his hand to hand strength to great affect (tip of the hat to the sound guys for really selling the hits). Plus, the characters supporting CA are really great too. Everyone else is just a human, but really good at what they do so they are able to smartly back him up. Captain America may be running point, but he wouldn’t be nearly as effective without the team he trusts.

I think I like The Winter Soldier so much because it’s a great division of Good vs Evil. The good guys are fun to be around and easy to root for. The bad guys are really bad and offer a real challenge to over come. The Winter Soldier is a great foil from Steve Roger’s past and an equal match in terms of strength and ability. The string pullers of HYDRA are real dirty suits and give a different level of challenge to over come (Black Widow really gets to shine and Nick Fury gets to be much more than a guy barking orders). I really appreciated seeing the regular people, the ones who are just cogs in the wheel of the machine stand up for themselves when evil shows it’s face. They didn’t need to be convinced or otherwise cajoled to put their foot down and try and stop awful things from happening right in front of them.

This is probably my favorite Marvel movie so far, even if it runs a bit long. They drop seeds to continue the universe all over the place and the entire cast gets to shine. This production team manage to successfully balance a lot of spinning plates, it’s some impressive stuff. There’s a few more comic book movies this year, let’s hope the quality is the same!

My Review: Captain Phillips

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Awesome movie. The story of Captain Richard Phillips and his crew of the MV Maersk Alabama, a huge cargo ship that got hijacked by Somali pirates in 2009.

Tom Hanks plays Captain Phillips, so you know what kind of performance you can expect (the end is truly breathtaking stuff). He plays against Muse (new comer Barkhad Abdi who plays his part just as well as Hanks) who is the leader of the hijacking. The event plays through an intense few days and knowing too much will dull the sense of emergency and suspense on your first watch. It’s a well paced 2 hour experience that’ll leave you tingling.

With Paul Greengrass directing a movie on the ocean I was concerned Captain Phillips would be a free-for-all camera pitch and roll fest. He reeled it in though and comes through with what I think might be his best work to date.

My Review: The Conjuring

Who you gonna call? Ghostbusters! Not the Perron family, they have a demon infestation (ghosts are apparently a different kind of annoyance). The Conjuring is the latest haunting (with a dash of possession) film that has scared the pants off of a whole lot of people (huge opening weekend, almost 140 million domestic total).

It seems like most of these movies are based on “true events” which is always a good hook to have in promotion. This one is from the files of Ed and Lorraine Warren who are authorities on contact from the other side. Through the late 60’s and into the 70’s they made dozens of trips to investigate paranormal activity (even a full blown possession before this case apparently). The Warren’s are contacted by the Perron family who have just moved into a farm house and there is some really shady stuff going on. As soon as the Warren’s enter the home, they know that this isn’t a hoax or the family hearing things that can be explained away. There is a evil presence that has attached itself to the Perron’s and won’t let go of them easily.

It’s an effective horror movie. The easiest comparison is to the Paranormal Activity franchise, but this isn’t a found footage movie. This follows the more tried and true cinema take and evens mimics the 70’s style film aesthetic to match the time period of the movie. The Conjuring relies on a lot of jump scares/orchestra hits, but there is a heavy sense of foreboding and dread as soon as the boarded up basement is found in the house. The cast is great, the story of the house is a neat one and the haunting set pieces work up well. Misdirection, stuff in the shadows, physical manifestations, right up to ‘drag em around by the hair’ and demonic possession.

Director James Wan has made his bones in the horror genre (Saw, Insidious) and I like his work here. Interesting shots and production design with solid FX work. He knows how to set a scene and follow through. But there’s so much competition in this genre now that they all step on each others toes. The ‘hair dragging’ bit has been done to death, it’s hard to show something new. While I did like the movie, you can’t ignore how it checks every box down the haunted house list which makes it feel redundant. Speaking of showing, The Conjuring avoids almost any gore. Some scratches, bruises, a bit of ‘evil vomit’ and a bite wound are the extent of it.

The end was a real cop out too. It seemed too easy and simple. The movie is a huge build up until the last 10 minutes and then it’s suddenly over. For a demonic entity with a real mission, it sure gave up without much of a fight. It was almost like it knew it was on 100th page of the script and it was time to wrap it up quick. An otherwise strong horror movie left me disappointed at the end. You don’t want that to be your audiences’ last feeling.