Monday, November 30, 2009

Movie:The Blind Side


Reviewed by: Joshua Starnes
Rating:
6 out of 10
Movie Details:
View here

Cast:
Sandra Bullock as Leigh Anne Touhy
Tim McGraw as Sean Tuohy
Quinton Aaron as Michael Oher
Jae Head as S.J. Tuohy
Lily Collins as Collins Tuohy
Ray McKinnon as Coach Cotton
Kim Dickens as Mrs. Boswell
Adriane Lenox as Denise Oher
Kathy Bates as Miss Sue
Catherine Dyer as Mrs. Smith
Andy Stahl as Principal Sandstrom
Tom Nowicki as Literature Teacher

Review:
The old saying is there are only seven original plots, repeated over and over again. When it comes to the sports film, there are really only two: the players overcome all obstacles and win, or they lose but discover their own strength in the process. And maybe that's a good thing, as it forces filmmakers to focus more on their characters and what sets them apart from everyone else, rather than the mechanics of the narrative.

Which makes the true story of Michael Oher (Quinton Aaron) such an excellent starting point. A young man from the poor side of Memphis, he had no family or home to speak of--sleeping in empty buildings or the odd acquaintances couch--and seemed destined for a life on the streets. His obvious physical gifts are enough to get him enrolled in a private high school, but the strange new social situation and the psychological damage of his youth may have proved to be insurmountable if he hadn't been stopped on the side of the road one day by maybe the least likely person imaginable, a wealthy white upper class socialite and mother (Sandra Bullock).

It's an inspiring story to say the least, and one in which the sport aspect while important is only tangentially related to the actual drama. Whether or not Michael will ever be good at sports is ultimately besides the point, the real question is whether or not he can get over his own past as well as truly accept and be accepted by the family he has been brought into regardless of their differences.

Stuff that sounds so obviously inspiring is tricky, though, when it comes to bringing it to the screen with film's easy ability to over emote, to blow up every emotion till its 30 feet high. And that is the one great failing of John Lee Hancock's ("The Alamo") adaptation of Michael Lewis' "The Blind Side." It is pat, through and through.

The Tuohy's, to their credit, immediately take to Michael despite some rational reservations, but then they quickly and efficiently steam roll over every problem thrown in their way, usually through matriarch Leigh Anne's perspicacity and straight-talking. A car wreck injuring Michael and her youngest son (Jae Head)? Only a momentary annoyance. His difficulty understanding his role on a football field? Leigh Anne's got the answer for that, too, thanks to a fortunately exacting personality profile that pegged his protective impulse at 95% (how exactly do you quantify that?).

It's got the easy set up and return volley of an after school special, with little in the way of real drama. The closest approximation is Michael's confusion and fear of the world he came from - but he returns to it so seldom it's more of a mood piece that is touched on now and again than it is a conflict.

Which is probably because Michael himself isn’t much of a character. He’s in the film a lot, he reacts to what happens around him, but he tends to keep everything bottled up inside, so much so that there’s no clue as to what he actually thinks and feels about anything. It's fine for him to keep that from the other characters, but not from the audience. And what little we do get from him tends to come entirely through the lens of Leigh Anne.

There's a lot that should be great about "The Blind Side." Leigh Anne is a great idea for a character, just as it's a great idea for a movie. She reacts to the world around her with bravery and humanism, taking people as they are and treating them as human beings regardless of the gulf in class, wealth or relatable experience.

But it's done so lazily; it's a drama without drama, more of a day dream with a happy ending than a story. Real inspiration requires real struggle and while the real Michael Oher certainly did, that's only hinted at in "The Blind Side," and hints aren't enough.

"The Blind Side's" heart is in the right place--how could it not be, it's got so much to go around--but that's about all that is. It's a little too clumsy, a little too 'feel good' for its own good. There's a good story in there, one that's probably worth experiencing, but load up on insulin before you go.

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Movie:Terminator Salvation

Terminator Salvation

Terminator_Salvation movie poster

Release Date: May 21, 2009
Studio: Warner Bros. Pictures
Director: McG
Screenwriter: John Brancato, Michael Ferris
Starring: Christian Bale, Sam Worthington, Anton Yelchin, Moon Bloodgood, Bryce Dallas Howard, Common, Jane Alexander, Helena Bonham Carter
Genre: Action, Sci-Fi
MPAA Rating: PG-13 (for intense sequences of sci-fi violence and action, and language)
Official Website: TerminatorSalvation.com
Review: 7.5/10 rating | 6.5/10 rating | 6/10 rating
DVD Review: 7.5/10 rating
DVD: Blu-ray Disc (Director's Cut) | DVD (Full Screen Edition) | DVD (Widescreen Edition)
Movie Poster: Poster | Banner | Teaser 2 | Teaser 1
Production Stills: View here

Plot Summary: The highly anticipated new installment of "The Terminator" film franchise is set in post-apocalyptic 2018. John Connor is the man fated to lead the human resistance against Skynet and its army of Terminators. But the future that Connor was raised to believe in is altered in part by the appearance of Marcus Wright, a stranger whose last memory is of being on death row. Connor must decide whether Marcus has been sent from the future, or rescued from the past. As Skynet prepares its final onslaught, Connor and Marcus both embark on an odyssey that takes them into the heart of Skynet's operations, where they uncover the terrible secret behind the possible annihilation of mankind.

Teaser (7.17.08):
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Trailer 1 (12.10.08):
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Trailer 2 (3.2.09):
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3 TV Spots (4.6.09):
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4 Minute Internet Trailer (5.7.09):
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Five Minute Footage (Scene + Behind-the-Scenes Clip) (5.11.09):
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Movie:Old Dogs

Old Dogs

Old_Dogs movie poster

Release Date: November 25, 2009
Studio: Walt Disney Pictures
Director: Walt Becker
Screenwriter: David Diamond, David Weissman
Starring: John Travolta, Robin Williams, Kelly Preston, Seth Green, Ella Bleu Travolta, Lori Loughlin, Matt Dillon
Genre: Comedy
MPAA Rating: PG (for some mild rude humor)
Official Website: Disney.com/OldDogs
Review: 4.5/10 rating
DVD Review: Not Available
DVD: Not Available
Movie Poster: View here
Production Stills: View here

Plot Summary: Two best friends -- one unlucky-in-love divorcee (Robin Williams) and the other a fun-loving bachelor (John Travolta) -- have their lives turned upside down when they're unexpectedly charged with the care of six-year-old twins while on the verge of the biggest business deal of their lives. The not-so-kid-savvy bachelors stumble in their efforts to take care of the twins (newcomers Ella Bleu Travolta and Conner Rayburn), leading to one debacle after another, and perhaps to a new-found understanding of what's really important in life.

Teaser (6.11.09):
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Internet Trailer (10.17.09):
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Clip 1 - 'Pill Spill' (10.30.09):
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Clip 2 - 'Baby Proofers' (11.2.09):
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Clip 3 - 'Nut Job' (11.4.09):
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Clip 4 - 'Stink Eye' (11.17.09):
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Clip 5 - 'Penguins Attack' (11.25.09):
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Movie:It's Complicated

It's Complicated

It_s_Complicated movie poster

Release Date: December 25, 2009
Studio: Universal Pictures
Director: Nancy Meyers
Screenwriter: Nancy Meyers
Starring: Meryl Streep, Steve Martin, Alec Baldwin, John Krasinski, Lake Bell
Genre: Comedy
MPAA Rating: R (for some drug content and sexuality. PENDING APPEAL)
Official Website: ItsComplicatedmovie.com
Review: Not Available
DVD Review: Not Available
DVD: Not Available
Movie Poster: One-Sheet | Teaser
Production Stills: View here

Plot Summary: Writer/director Nancy Meyers ("What Women Want," "Something's Gotta Give," "The Holiday") directs Meryl Streep, Steve Martin and Alec Baldwin in "It's Complicated," a comedy about love, divorce and everything in between.

Jane (Streep) is the mother of three grown kids, owns a thriving Santa Barbara bakery/restaurant and has—after a decade of divorce—an amicable relationship with her ex-husband, attorney Jake (Baldwin). But when Jane and Jake find themselves out of town for their son’s college graduation, things start to get complicated. An innocent meal together turns into the unimaginable—an affair. With Jake remarried to the much younger Agness (Lake Bell), Jane is now, of all things, the other woman.

Caught in the middle of their renewed romance is Adam (Martin), an architect hired to remodel Jane's kitchen. Healing from a divorce of his own, Adam starts to fall for Jane, but soon realizes he's become part of a love triangle.

Should Jane and Jake move on with their lives, or is love truly lovelier the second time around? It's... complicated.

Teaser (8.6.09):
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Trailer (11.5.09):
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Movie:Nine

Nine

Nine movie poster

Release Date: December 18, 2009 (NY, LA; wide: Dec. 25)
Studio: The Weinstein Company
Director: Rob Marshall
Screenwriter: Michael Tolkin, Anthony Minghella
Starring: Daniel Day-Lewis, Marion Cotillard, Penelope Cruz, Nicole Kidman, Judi Dench, Kate Hudson, Stacy Ferguson, Sophia Loren
Genre: Drama, Musical
MPAA Rating: PG-13 (for sexual content and smoking)
Official Website: Nine-movie.com
Review: Not Available
DVD Review: Not Available
DVD: Not Available
Movie Poster: Poster 1 | Poster 2 | Poster 3
Production Stills: View here

Plot Summary: "Nine" is a vibrant and provocative musical that follows the life of world famous film director Guido Contini (Daniel Day-Lewis) as he reaches a creative and personal crisis of epic proportion, while balancing the numerous women in his life including his wife (Marion Cotillard), his mistress (Penelope Cruz), his film star muse (Nicole Kidman), his confidant and costume designer (Judi Dench), a young American fashion journalist (Kate Hudson), the whore from his youth (Stacy "Fergie" Ferguson) and his mother (Sophia Loren). The original 1982 Broadway production of "Nine," nominated for twelve Tony Awards and winning five, including Best Musical, was directed by Tommy Tune, choreographed by Thommie Walsh, starred Raúl Juliá with music and lyrics by Maury Yeston and book by Arthur Kopit. The 2003 Broadway revival of "Nine" received eight Tony Award nominations and won two, including Best Revival of a Musical.

Teaser (5.14.09):
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Trailer (11.16.09):
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Rehearsal Montage (10.19.09):
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Movie:The Spy Next Door

The Spy Next Door

The_Spy_Next_Door movie poster

Release Date: January 15, 2010
Studio: Lionsgate
Director: Brian Levant
Screenwriter: Jonathan Bernstein, Jim Greer
Starring: Jackie Chan, Madeline Carroll, Alina Foley, George Lopez, Billy Ray Cyrus, Amber Valletta, Katherine Boecher
Genre: Action, Comedy
MPAA Rating: PG (for sequences of action violence and some mild rude humor)
Official Website: TheSpyNextDoorfilm.com
Review: Not Available
DVD Review: Not Available
DVD: Not Available
Movie Poster: One-Sheet | Teaser
Production Stills: View here

Plot Summary: Lionsgate's family action comedy "The Spy Next Door" stars Jackie Chan as Bob Ho, an undercover CIA superspy who decides to give up his career in espionage to settle down with his next-door neighbor and girlfriend, Gillian (Amber Valletta). But Bob has one more mission to complete before Gillian agrees to marry him: winning over her three opinionated kids.

When Gillian suddenly has to leave town, Bob volunteers to babysit the children so he can earn their approval. But when one of the kids mistakenly downloads a top-secret formula from his computer, Bob's archenemy, a Russian terrorist, moves in for the attack, forcing Bob to juggle the roles of spy and prospective stepfather in the most challenging mission of his career!

Trailer (10.16.09):
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Movie:Sherlock Holmes

Sherlock Holmes

Sherlock_Holmes movie poster

Release Date: December 25, 2009
Studio: Warner Bros. Pictures
Director: Guy Ritchie
Screenwriter: Michael Johnson, Anthony Peckham, Guy Ritchie
Starring: Robert Downey Jr., Jude Law, Rachel McAdams, Mark Strong, Eddie Marsan, Kelly Reilly
Genre: Action, Adventure, Mystery
MPAA Rating: PG-13 (for intense sequences of violence and action, some startling images and a scene of suggestive material)
Official Website: Sherlock-Holmes-movie.com
Review: Not Available
DVD Review: Not Available
DVD: Not Available
Movie Poster: One-Sheet | Holmes poster | Watson poster | Adler poster | Blackwood poster
Production Stills: View here

Plot Summary: In a dynamic new portrayal of Arthur Conan Doyle's most famous characters, "Sherlock Holmes" sends Holmes and his stalwart partner Watson on their latest challenge. Revealing fighting skills as lethal as his legendary intellect, Holmes will battle as never before to bring down a new nemesis and unravel a deadly plot that could destroy the country.

Teaser 1 (5.18.09):
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Movie:Ninja Assassin


Ninja_Assassin movie poster Release Date: November 25, 2009
Studio: Warner Bros. Pictures
Director: James McTeigue
Screenwriter: Matthew Sand, J. Michael Straczynski
Starring: Rain, Naomie Harris, Ben Miles, Sho Kosugi, Rick Yune
Genre: Action
MPAA Rating: R (for strong bloody stylized violence throughout, and language)
Official Website: Ninja-Assassin-movie.com
Review: 6/10 rating | 6/10 rating
DVD Review: Not Available
DVD: Not Available
Movie Poster: View here
Production Stills: View here

Plot Summary: Raizo (Rain) is one of the deadliest assassins in the world. Taken from the streets as a child, he was transformed into a trained killer by the Ozunu Clan, a secret society whose very existence is considered a myth. But haunted by the merciless execution of his friend by the Clan, Raizo breaks free from them...and vanishes. Now he waits, preparing to exact his revenge. In Berlin, Europol agent Mika Coretti (Naomie Harris) has stumbled upon a money trail linking several political murders to an underground network of untraceable assassins from the Far East. Defying the orders of her superior, Ryan Maslow (Ben Miles), Mika digs into top secret agency files to learn the truth behind the murders. Her investigation makes her a target, and the Ozunu Clan sends a team of killers, led by the lethal Takeshi (Rick Yune), to silence her forever. Raizo saves Mika from her attackers, but he knows that the Clan will not rest until they are both eliminated. Now, entangled in a deadly game of cat and mouse through the streets of Europe, Raizo and Mika must trust one another if they hope to survive...and finally bring down the elusive Ozunu Clan.

Trailer (7.23.09):
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Featurette 2 (11.18.09):
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Movie:Avatar


Avatar movie poster

Release Date: December 18, 2009 (conventional 3D theaters and IMAX 3D)
Studio: 20th Century Fox
Director: James Cameron
Screenwriter: James Cameron
Starring: Sam Worthington, Zoe Saldana, Sigourney Weaver, Michelle Rodriguez, Giovanni Ribisi, Joel David Moore, CCH Pounder, Peter Mensah, Laz Alonso, Wes Studi, Stephen Lang, Matt Gerald
Genre: Action, Adventure
MPAA Rating: PG-13 (for intense epic battle sequences and warfare, sensuality, language and some smoking)
Official Website: Avatarmovie.com
Review: Not Available
DVD Review: Not Available
DVD: Not Available
Movie Poster: Poster 2 | Poster 1
Production Stills: View here

Plot Summary: "Avatar," a live action film with a new generation of special effects, takes us to a spectacular world beyond imagination, where a reluctant hero embarks on a journey of redemption and discovery as he leads an epic battle to save a civilization. James Cameron, the Oscar-winning director of "Titanic," first conceived the film years ago, when the means to realize his vision did not yet exist. Now, after four years of actual production work, "Avatar" delivers a fully immersive cinematic experience of a new kind, where the revolutionary technology invented to make the film disappears into the emotion of the characters and the sweep of the story.

The story's hero is Jake Sully, a former Marine confined to a wheelchair. Bitter and disillusioned, he's still a warrior at heart. All Jake ever wanted was something worth fighting for, and he finds it in the place he least expected: on a distant world. Jake has been recruited to join an expedition to the moon Pandora, which corporate interests are strip-mining for a mineral worth $20 million per kilogram on Earth. To facilitate their work, the humans use a link system that projects a person's consciousness into a hybrid of humans and Pandora's indigenous humanoids, the Na'vi. This human-Na'vi hybrid – a fully living, breathing body that resembles the Na'vi but possesses the individual human's thoughts, feelings and personality – is known as an "avatar."

In his new avatar form, Jake can once again walk. His mission is to interact with and infiltrate the Na'vi with the hope of enlisting their help – or at least their acquiescence – in mining the ore. A beautiful Na'vi female, Neytiri, saves Jake's life, albeit reluctantly, because even in his avatar body, Jake represents to her the human encroachment on the Na'vi's unspoiled world.

As Jake's relationship with Neytiri deepens, along with his respect for the Na'vi, he faces the ultimate test as he leads an epic conflict that will decide nothing less than the fate of an entire world.

Teaser (8.20.09):
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Movie:G.I Joe: The Rise Of Cobra


G.I Joe: The Rise Of Cobra

Starring: Channing Tatum, Dennis Quaid, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Marlon Wayans, Rachel Nichols

Director: Stephen Sommers

Genre: Action

Big, loud and recycled, this movie based on the popular toy line would have played better if it hadn't been released in the same year as a Transformers movie. Hardware overload, now.

Release Date: 6-Aug-2009

URL: http://www.gijoemovie.com/

Language: English

Distributor: United International Pictures

Synopsis:

A crooked arms dealer plans to unleash a superweapon upon an unsuspecting world, and only the elite military force known as G.I. Joe stands in his way.

My Comment/Review(s):

Starring: Channing Tatum, Dennis Quaid, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Marlon Wayans, Rachel Nichols

This one might have played better if it hadn't come out at the tail end of a hardware-laden, explosion-torn summer from the likes of Terminator Salvation and, of course, Transformers: ROTF.

Right, that last one means it's all on Hasbro for getting TWO effects-heavy blockbusters into theatres not just in the same year but in the same season.

If you haven't been suffering from hardware overload since Transformers: ROTF, this one will surely drive that railroad spike all the way home into your skull.

NINJA JOES: 'You can get mad all you want, Snake-eyes, but I know the truth ... those pectorals aren't real, they're molded into your body armour!'

Don't blame anyone but yourself; you know what you're letting yourself in for when you go for G.I. Joe: TRoC, a big, loud hodge-podge of recycled action scenes from various CGI-enhanced blockbusters of the past.

There's no room for the real world in this cartoon universe where the good guys wear black and the bad guys have hearts so black, that they were even killers as little kids.

The Joes – based on the Hasbro action figures and resulting cartoon/comic series – are an elite military force made up of top warriors from all over the world. Their nemesis, as yet unnamed in this "origin" movie of sorts, is an evil organisation funded by the world's largest arms manufacturer.

SECRET OF HER SUCCESS: 'And my strut is why I'm No. 2, Zartan, and you're just a jabroni who stands around gawking at stuff.'

The tale is simple enough: there are these four warheads of enormous destructive potential which said arms maker intends to use against an unsuspecting world. They're filled with millions of deadly little nanobots, which are like manmade versions of those nasty world-ending buggers from The Day the Earth Stood Still remake.

And of course, said arms dealer's army of super-soldiers, plain old mercenaries, plus his hired uber-ninja and lovebird femme fatale, clashes with the Joes who are sworn to protect all that's good, bright, noble and freedom-loving in the world.

I went into the first Transformers movie a non-fan who got blown away and had a fantastic time. With G.I. Joe, the experience was not nearly as enjoyable; I went in as a non-fan and left feeling only somewhat entertained.

The good: the butt-kicking gals (Miller and Nichols) and their, er, form-fitting wardrobes; the ninjas (Lee and Park) and their whirlwind duels; and …uh, that's it, really.

The rest of the film is taken up with a lot of posturing, a couple of interesting gun battles, and one totally overblown chase scene through Paris that seems even less necessary than your appendix.

Most of this "epic" conflict is seen through the eyes of two new Joe recruits, Duke (Tatum) and Ripcord (Wayans). Duke is important to the team because he's got past history with the evil Baroness (Miller), while Ripcord … let's just say his skills are needed for the finale.

G.I. Joe: TRoC is not the train wreck that those early Internet rumours made it out to be, but most of the interesting bits – the characters' respective backstories, the sowing of seeds for their respective conflicts, etc – are crowded out to the edges of the frame by all that excess.

TAKE THAT, PISA: 'Now, those Italians aren't the only ones with a leaning tower! Oops! Er, maybe we overdid the leaning bit.'

For example, Snake-eyes and Storm Shadow's first meeting is a somewhat unsettling whirlwind of two little boys trying to kill one another followed by a bizarre moment when a monk, an apparent relic from the TV series Kung Fu, shows up and starts spouting … well, Kung Fu stuff.

And when you talk excess, there's that whole Paris chase sequence that wears out its welcome after they've gone a few blocks. Really, there are more suspenseful ways to film a pursuit; to just pack it with dozens of hurtling and exploding vehicles reeks of … sheer cinematic laziness.

But, why am I griping? It's almost a given that the hordes will just eat this up. Perhaps not on the level of those transforming robots, but well, that's probably just because they're molded in a different scale.

Surfing: http://www.gijoemovie.com/




Making The Grade:


Movie:District 9

District 9

Starring: Sharlto Copley, Louis Minnaar, Mandla Gaduka, David James (not the goalie) and many more fine folk whose names you won't recognise

Director: Neill Blomkamp

Genre: Science Fiction

A thought-provoking, if somewhat icky, sci-fi thriller featuring scenes of relentlessly brutal inhumanity – and yet, hope shines through this grim portrait of our own species.

Release Date: 13-Aug-2009

URL: http://district9movie.com/

Language: English

Distributor: Sony Pictures

Synopsis:

In South Africa, a bureaucrat attempting to relocate a shanty town full of extraterrestrial refugees becomes inextricably involved in the aliens' own struggle for survival. Numerous human bodies explode as a consequence ....

My Comment/Review(s):

Starring: Sharlto Copley, Louis Minnaar, Mandla Gaduka, David James (not the goalie) and many more fine folk whose names you won't recognise

Not a film for the squeamish or easily disoriented, this effort is a multilayered film that works as everything it tries to be: science fiction thriller, allegory, pseudo-documentary, thought-provoking exploration of man's inherent inhumanity … it deserves an A for ambition.

Set in Johannesburg, the film looks at the city's peculiar problem that truly has made it unique in the world. About 20 years ago in the story's timeline, a massive alien vessel appeared, seemingly immobile, over Johannesburg.

HOUSE CALL: 'Do not be alarmed, sir. I'm from Publishers Clearing House ...'

Its occupants were found half-starved and frightened, and a humanitarian mission was mounted immediately to relocate them to a camp on Earth – the titular District 9.

Twenty years later, a clever montage of interviews at the beginning tells us, the aliens –called by the derogatory name "Prawns" owing to their appearance and eating habits – are about to be relocated again, further away from the city because of the human sentiment against them.

A petty executive for the huge corporation MNU is chosen to lead the eviction exercise. Initially gung-ho and somewhat short on respect or regard for the stranded creatures, Wikus Van De Merwe (Copley) performs the job with enthusiasm.

MNU – like other monolithic movie corporations before it – may seem benevolent but it's actually interested only in harvesting alien technology (read: weapons) and DNA.

HANDS OFF: 'Nooo get away! I watched Cloverfield! I know what happens when you @#$%^ in the suits show up in this kind of movie.'

When a strange turn of fate gives Wikus something in common with these forcibly confined, exploited and mistreated ETs, he realises they are his only hope.

That's about half the plot of District 9 right there but it doesn't even scratch the surface of what this movie has to offer.

As mentioned earlier, there are many facets to the film, but don't expect them to run into one another. Blomkamp – who was initially tipped to direct Peter Jackson's proposed Halo movie production – deftly weaves everything together, even the faux documentary bits, into a narrative that is at once jet-propelled and yet laden with drama, pathos and allegory.

There are times when things start to get a bit maudlin (Wikus is such a crybaby for so much of the movie) and also when the madcap situations threaten to turn ludicrous, but it's all reined in nicely for a finale that is memorable for two reasons.

First, it gets you biting your nails, rooting for a pair of sympathetic aliens to succeed in their mission; second, it's simply a wild ride, people, with everything from highly armed professional soldiers to Nigerian gangsters to a way-cool battle-mech suit thrown in.

What really struck me about the effects – courtesy of Weta Digital – is how seamlessly integrated they are into each shot. You know that the aliens, the mech suit, the mothership have to be mostly CGI but they fit into each frame so naturally, that it's almost as if they're really there.

But District 9 is not just about exploding bodies and organic special effects. It's a smart, and smartly made, sci-fi thriller that expects you to do a little work piecing stuff together, and it also gives you pause to search your own conscience.

NOW THAT'S A BFG: 'It also has a can opener, a flashlight, a place to keep my change, and it can drill for oil, too.'

While Blomkamp and Jackson insist the film is not meant to be political, its South African setting will inevitably draw comparisons with apartheid, and how this makes it a bit outdated.

We just need to remember that some things never get old, because mistreatment of those who are different, or weaker, or who come to a place in the mistaken belief it can offer them sanctuary, is prevalent the world over.

Hearteningly, District 9 reminds us in its poignant, bittersweet moments that hope can thrive even amidst crushing inhumanity.

When you look beyond the exploding bodies and fountaining blood, and consider the abject circumstances of these alien visitors, it may strike you that they’re the perfect analogy for the displaced, marginalised and disenfranchised in our world.

They are different, they are exploited, they are forced to live in squalor and you could say they remain alive only at the whim of others. Yet they still yearn for home, cling to the vestiges of their hope, and have a capacity for compassion.

Like the brutality shown by the film's antagonists, these desires and qualities too are not the exclusive domain of any one species … or nationality … or race.

Surfing: http://district9movie.com/




Making The Grade:


Movie:Orphan


Orphan

Starring: Vera Farmiga, Peter Sarsgaard, Isabelle Fuhrman, Jimmy Bennett, Aryana Engineer, CCH Pounder

Director: Jaume Collet-Serra

Genre: Thriller

A dynamite performance by young Isabelle Fuhrman makes this horror-thriller worth watching; you'll believe a kid can freak you out.

Release Date: 20-Aug-2009

URL: http://orphan-movie.warnerbros.com/

Language: English

Distributor: 20th Century Fox/Warner Bros. Pictures

Synopsis:

A family adopts a girl from an orphanage and soon, everyone except the Clueless Dad realises there's something wrong … really, really wrong … with the kid.

My Comment/Review(s):

Starring: Vera Farmiga, Peter Sarsgaard, Isabelle Fuhrman, Jimmy Bennett, Aryana Engineer, CCH Pounder

The more I thought about this movie over the days since I watched it, the more I appreciate what a great job young Isabelle Fuhrman does as the title character – an outwardly charming but sinister, manipulative and of course murderous little girl.

Sure, there is a lot about her performance that is immediately obvious and commendable, but when you think about the way this (then) 11-year-old totally owns the role, then she becomes the overriding reason to watch the film.

If you consider it in the context of the twist that comes near the end, then Fuhrman's achievement here is even more praiseworthy.

Orphan is not too different from previous weirdo-in-our-midst, family-in-distress tales, with the difference being perhaps the short stature of its antagonist. (Okay, there was Leprechaun, but let's get back down to Earth a bit here.)

Just don't let Esther's (Fuhrman) well-mannered-little-girl looks deceive you; in my humble opinion, this villainess is truly one of the most memorable new movie "monsters" to come our way in a long time.

Esther makes her way into the Coleman household shortly after Kate (Farmiga) suffers a miscarriage while pregnant with her third child. Hubby John (Sarsgaard) chances upon Esther at a meet-the-prospective-parents party at a nearby orphanage, and soon the girl is one of the Colemans.

ROOM WITH A VIEW: 'Oooh, I just love my new room. I'll put my shrine to Daddy over here, my Alienate & Torment Mommy message board right there, and the bed's big enough to hide a corpse under.'

While Esther seems so sweet and eager to please, her new kid brother Daniel (Bennett, Star Trek's young young James T. Kirk) isn't too thrilled.

Kid sister Max (Engineer) is thrilled to have a big sister around the house, but it's not long before the poor child gets caught up in Esther's web of deceit and manipulation.

Now, given Fuhrman's excellent job as the creepy kid and director Collet-Sera's knack for wringing suspense out of the most innocuous moment of domestic prying, Orphan would seem to have the makings of a really excellent film.

Indeed it does, except for two things I had a problem with. One, and I'm not up on psychology so I could be wrong, but it seems a bit odd that a family grieving over the loss of an infant would seek to adopt a 12-year-old girl.

DETENTION TIME: 'Sent to the principal again ... I *have* to remember that it's not on to jam pencils into my classmates' ears when they make fun of my ribbons.'

Another, is that John is written as such a, well, write-off that it seems like a lazy way to neutralize the one character who could conceivably counter Esther's nastiness: make him so stupid/clueless that he can't see what's going on even when it – well, you'll see; and make him such a d*ckhead that the audience doesn't give a crap what he does or what happens to him.

Backing up Fuhrman ably are Farmiga (excellent as a semi-hysterical foil to Esther) and adorable little Engineer, who is hearing impaired in real life, as Max.

The Max-Esther dynamic may seem quite disturbing and stir up its share of controversy over the extremes that the younger child gets forced into because of her big "sister", but I'd say this is one of the times when "It's only a movie" applies.

Orphan, let down only by the familiarity of its premise and the seemingly arbitrary blockheaded nature of several key characters, is still for the most part a well-acted and suspenseful thriller.

And it's got the creepiest little girl I can remember since Wednesday Addams – though nowhere near as charming.

Surfing: http://orphan-movie.warnerbros.com/



Making The Grade:


Movie:The Ugly Truth


The Ugly Truth

Starring: Katherine Heigl, Gerald Butler

Director: Robert Luketic

Genre: Comedy

A romantically-challenged morning show producer (Katherine Heigl) is embroiled in a series of outrageous tests by her chauvinistic correspondent to prove his theories on relationships and help her find love. His clever ploys, however, lead to an unexpected result.

Release Date: 10-Sep-2009

Language: English

Distributor: Sony Pictures

Synopsis:

Synopsis – A romantically challenged morning show producer (Heigl) is reluctantly embroiled in a series of outrageous tests by her chauvinistic correspondent (Butler) to prove his theories on relationships and help her find love. His clever ploys, however, lead to an unexpected result.

My Comment/Review(s):

Starring: Katherine Heigl, Gerald Butler, Bree Turner, Eric Turner, Bonnie Somerville

Abby Richter (Heigl) is an award-winning producer whose morning show, although filled with thought-provoking journalistic segments, is not attracting the viewers. To her dismay, her bosses decide to sensationalize her show by teaming her with Mike Chadway (Butler), a crude TV personality who bluntly talks about relationships on his late-night programme, The Ugly Truth.

Abby feels that Mike is over-rated even though she is unlucky in love herself. So to prove that his theories are right, he helps Abby hook up with her sexy neighbour Colin (Winter), following his un-chauvinistic rules. To her surprise, it works but a love triangle evolves. Naturally, as in all romantic comedies, there is no such thing as platonic help.

The Ugly Truth would have been a whole lot better if there was an ounce of chemistry between Abby and Mike. Maybe it's poor editing or choppy storytelling, but the romance hardly seems to be there and there is no indication or suggestion that they even remotely like each other until pretty late in the movie – and then, it seems to have crept in by accident.

The failure to create any chemistry between the characters aside, this romantic comedy is on point with decent acting, eye candy and great supporting characters.

Bree Turner is excellent as Joy, Abby’s cute, bubbly and efficient associate producer who lives vicariously through her boss’ life, and really enhances the show with her perfect comedic timing. Winter perfectly epitomizes the surface aspects of a perfect boyfriend, since Colin is smart, handsome and dresses well.

The Ugly Truth works the romantic comedy formula pretty well and is worth catching if you just want a leisurely watch. And of course, you should watch it to see if Mike’s theories about women ring true for you. Do his stereotyped views have a ring of truth? Is it right for women to think they can change the men in their lives, or are men unchangeable?

Although the movie may feel rushed and a little confusing, that is because it tries to say a lot in such a short time. You should get its point by the end though.




Making The Grade:


Movie:Dance Flick


Dance Flick

Starring: Damon Wayans Jr., Craig Wayans, Shoshana Bush, Essence Atkins and Affion Crockett, Ross Thomas

Director: Damien Dante Wayans

Genre: Comedy

Before you watch a movie that is a parody of other films, you need to watch the films that the spoof makes fun of for it to make sense and actually be funny. Yes, I like stating the obvious.

Release Date: 19-Aug-2009

Language: English

Distributor: Damien Dante Wayans

Synopsis:

Street dancer Thomas Uncles is from the wrong side of the tracks, but his bond with the beautiful Megan White might help the duo realize their dreams as the enter in the mother of all dance battles.

My Comment/Review(s):

Starring: Damon Wayans Jr., Craig Wayans, Shoshana Bush, Essence Atkins and Affion Crockett, Ross Thomas

Before you watch a movie that is a parody of other films, you need to watch the films that the spoof makes fun of for it to make sense and actually be funny. Yes, I like stating the obvious.

Dance Flick pokes fun at many of the song-and-dance movies we've been treated to in recent years and even in the past, from Fame to Step Up to High School Musical. It is almost like you're having constant déjà vu flashes watching Dance Flick because it feels like you have seen it all before. And you probably have, though not with this kind of spin.

It is uncanny how you feel like you are watching a cast-off version of Honey Daniels (Jessica Alba) from Honey when you first set eyes on Megan (Shoshana Bush) who also resembles Sara (Julia Stiles) from Save the Last Dance. Or the uneasy feeling when you watch Ross Thomas’ character Tyler because he walks, talks and broods like Channing Tatum’s Tyler in Step Up.

There are so many of these look-alikes in Dance Flick that it becomes funny how all these characters can co-exist in one movie.

Then you start to notice that Dance Flick even spoofs iconic dance and musical scenes from Singing in the Rain. It is an endless stream of parodies and you cannot help but laugh because you took those scenes so seriously before.

It does not help that the storyline for Dance Flick is also oh-so-familiar: the girl wants to become a professional dancer but takes to the streets to do a dance-off and gains street credibility instead. Romance and gangsters are thrown in for good measure.

Although this film relies very much on its slapstick elements, it is smart comedy at the same time because the Wayans Brothers have included savvy pop culture references that make it even funnier. They have a knack for good comedy not because they try hard to make something stupid but because they obviously took time to fine-tune the gags.

Some of the lyrics for the songs are well-written too, so although you may be apprehensive at first about watching Dance Flick, you will come out with a smile on your face.

Remember White Chicks? That was pure genius and Dance Flick is no exception. The Wayans Brothers know how not to take themselves seriously.

So this review is not half as funny as Dance Flick. It is not even a third as funny. In fact this review is quite serious for such a light-hearted movie. There is not a dull moment in Dance Flick, which is even more enjoyable if you love the movies it spoofs.




Making The Grade:


Movie:UP


UP

Starring: Christopher Plummer, Edward Asner, Jordan Nagai.

Director: Bob Peterson, Pete Docter

Genre: Animation

From the Academy Award®- nominated director Pete Docter (Monsters, Inc.), Disney•Pixar’s "Up" invites you on a hilarious journey into a lost world, with the least likely duo on Earth.

Release Date: 20-Aug-2009

Language: English

Distributor: Walt Disney Pictures

Synopsis:

A comedy adventure about 78- year-old balloon salesman Carl Fredricksen, who finally fulfills his lifelong dream of a great adventure when he ties thousands of balloons to his house and flies away to the wilds of South America. But he discovers all too late that his biggest nightmare has stowed away on the trip: an overly optimistic 8-year-old Wilderness Explorer named Russell.

My Comment/Review(s):

Starring: Christopher Plummer, Edward Asner, Jordan Nagai.

An original and imaginative masterpiece, Up is the movie to catch this summer. A refreshing change from the gore and slapstick screenings saturating the cinemas, Up tells a story of grief, hurt and joy but most of all, love.

Carl Fredricksen (voiced by Asner) takes the journey of his life when he decides to fly to South America with his house and a bunch of balloons as his mode of transport rather than get bundled off to a retirement home.

To his dismay, eight-year-old Wilderness Explorer scout, Russell (Nagai) happens to be on his porch when he takes off on his grand adventure; but Carl's not about to let Russell spoil his escape into the dark and dank depths to a lost world.

You can tell that Up has been crafted with a lot of tender careful thought for detail, and there are no hints of cliché. The storytelling is beautifully and lovingly told. The characters are lovable and emotionally, we can relate to them too; they're almost like people we know.

Disney / Pixar have always achieved this result if you think of movies like Finding Nemo and Wall*E for example, where the relationships and characters are life-like in how they express themselves. It is surprising how yearning is so well expressed in Up: yearning for the loss of a loved one is really the driving force of the film.

Up is a story that you may find yourself wishing you could live through. In fact, it tells you that you are never too old to do what you have always dreamed of doing because if Carl Fredrickson can do it at 78, so can you.

The sky's the limit to what we can achieve, Up tells us, yet ultimately it is the little everyday relationships that matter. How inspiring is that?

This review is very brief compared to the rich storytelling that Up has to offer so the suggestion is to go watch it. Enough said.




Making The Grade:


Friday, November 27, 2009

Movie:Aliens in the Attic

Aliens in the Attic

Starring: Carter Jenkins, Ashley Tisdale, Austin Butler, Ashley Boettcher, Doris Roberts, Robert Hoffman, Andy Richter, with the voices of Thomas Haden Church, JK Simmons and Josh Peck

Director: John Schultz

Genre: Comedy

Yes, it's cheesy and the CGI is just passable and it's got that whole 80s vibe, but this tale of kids vs aliens has some goofy moments that work, somehow.

Release Date: 13-Aug-2009

URL: http://www.aliensintheatticmovie.com/

Language: English

Distributor: 20th Century Fox

Synopsis:

A misunderstood teenager and his vacationing family encounter pint-sized aliens who are out to conquer the world – but not if the kids can help it.

My Comment/Review(s):

Starring: Carter Jenkins, Ashley Tisdale, Austin Butler, Ashley Boettcher, Doris Roberts, Robert Hoffman, Andy Richter, with the voices of Thomas Haden Church, JK Simmons and Josh Peck

Originally entitled They Came From Upstairs, this movie is – like the vastly bigger-budgeted G.I. Joe – a veritable feast of corn. Oddly enough, it has a higher quantity of goofy fun.

It has some cheesy, clichéd moments, dodgy CGI and another retread of that whole "kids are wired differently from grownups" angle so prevalent in movies where the youngsters save the day while the clueless adults stand around gawping.

Think of it as some kind of variant on those 80s movies like Explorers, Critters and the like, only, unfortunately, without the services of Joe Dante or, er, the massive amounts of gore from those other alien invasion tales of that decade.

'They've been just standing there arguing and completely ignoring us. These alien invaders should know better than to send married couples as the advance guard.'

The central character here is brilliant high school student Tom Pearson (Jenkins, of the short-lived TV sea-monster series Surface), a deliberate underachiever in his studies because he longs to be cool instead of being a geek.

Sheesh, has the kid not been riding the wave of TV shows like Chuck, Reaper and to a lesser extent, Heroes and CSI?

It's simple, Tom: geeks rule. Where've you been the last few years?

Anyway, Tom's archaic youthful angst is just one reason why this film has such an 80s vibe.

Another one is the remote setting, with Tom, his sisters and parents, cousins, uncle and grandmother stuck in a lakeside holiday house for a week.

It just so happens that this house harbours a secret that is sought by a quartet of invading aliens.

Never mind that these guys are only knee-high to a pre-growth-spurt teenager; they – at least three out of the four – make up for their vertically challenged nature with extraordinary amounts of meanness.

Toss in some alien mind control device that turns anyone over 18 into a meat puppet for the baddies, and you've got the makings of a silly, goofball effort that won't melt your brain, but it won't exactly charm your socks off either.

'Trust me, it looks like we're some bizarre human-alien hybrid, but we're just two happy individuals.'

The kids needed to be a little edgier and with more personality, the aliens needed to get more screen time, and the adults ... well, they could all get zapped with alien vanishing rays and we wouldn't miss a single one of them.

Some of the funniest bits, God help me, are all about slapstick and involve Robert Hoffman as Tom's sister's boyfriend, after he falls under the mind control thingamajig. These moments are so corny that they become … almost charming somehow, helped along by Hoffman's effectively goofy expression.

This is mostly for the kids, with a few gross moments that might need a bit of explaining, but on the whole, parents ought to be able to get through it with their brains set in neutral.

Surfing: http://www.aliensintheatticmovie.com/



Making The Grade:


Movie:The Final Destination

The Final Destination

The Final Destination

Starring: Bobby Campo, Mykelti Williamson, Shantel VanSanten, Nick Zano, Haley Webb, Krista Allen

Director: David R. Ellis

Genre: Horror

Warning for the squeamish: you may want to get off at an earlier stop. But if you get off on gore, by all means stay on the bus.

Release Date: 3-Sep-2009

URL: http://www.finaldestinationmovie.com/

Language: English

Distributor: 20th Century Fox/Warner Bros

Synopsis:

Death is at it again – going after those "fortunate" enough to cheat it. In this case, it's a group of teens and others who survive a horrible accident at the race-track only to get pulped in various gory, squishy ways.

My Comment/Review(s):

Starring: Bobby Campo, Mykelti Williamson, Shantel VanSanten, Nick Zano, Haley Webb, Krista Allen

And by "sting", we mean "con".

Now, haven't you wondered, through the last three FD flicks, what the heck is it that keeps sending out these premonitions? And leading the nice-looking young people who feature in these tales to get pulped, squished, fried, grilled and shishkebab-ed in such creative ways?

Let's think about it. Death gets cheated of his/her/its rightful harvest by some precognitive chap.

SKEWERED: 'Argh ... next time, when a 3D movie says it's so real you can feel it, I'll believe it.'

Then, Death goes all out to violently retrieve those doomed souls that rightfully belong to him/her/it.

And in the FD universe, Death is so powerful as to affect such manipulation of things and events necessary to claim those scalps.

Now, then … how in the blue blazes did Death allow him/her/itself to get cheated like that in the first place?

Maybe my thought processes were just dulled by all those inventive but disturbing death scenes from the previous movies, or galvanized into action by the much more gruesome and yucky ones in this new outing, but the thought did strike me.

What if this was all just some sadistic con game on Death's part? What if Death wasn't cheated, but if Death … simply cheated?

Something went horribly wrong on the set of 'Girls Gone Wild at the Car Wash IV'

And all for the sake of putting these poor souls through the motions of trying to break some absurd chain, like those "send this e-mail to 24 people in your address book within 24 hours or lose your left testicle to a rabid squirrel" chain-letter things.

Pardon me for belabouring this point, but I've run out of things to say about the Final Destination movies, and I really did have all those thoughts running through my head during the movie.

At least, when I wasn't recoiling from the intense yuckiness of the death scenes. (SPOILER ALERT: At least the movie's ending, colossally stupid though it may be, bears out this theory.)

This time, the "Death cheating" moment occurs when Nick O'Bannon (Campo, who makes it through the film with two expressions – puzzled and not so puzzled) has a premonition of carnage at the race track.

His warning flash saves some lives, and the whole culling-the-survivors process of the earlier movies then starts up again.

It also leads to some hilarious moments. One involves the fate of a drunken redneck. Another one involves the drainage hole of a swimming pool and the butt of a guy who's a total arse. A flying gas cylinder turns a chain-link fence into a French-fry-maker (only with a human torso instead of a potato).

The most nail-biting setup, involving a hot soccer mom (Allen) getting her hair done, is actually quite neatly handled and in keeping with the spirit of the earlier FD movies. The only trouble is, it's been spoiled for anyone who has already watched the trailer.

The Final Destination, directed by Snakes on a Plane helmer David R. Ellis, could have done with a bit more creepiness and less in-your-face gore.

Safety at the mall was never the same after the management fired Paul Blart.

It could also have used the services of a more wickedly humorous script and better actors, though Mykelti "Bubba" Williamson can be singled out for making the best of these slim pickings.

With its cardboard cut-out characters and paper-thin plot, without even the cleverly inventive setups of the previous movies, TFD will have to rely solely on its gore factor to get by.

A good thing, then, that the ride doesn't last too long. The movie clocks in at a lean one and a quarter hours, which kind of signals that the end is nigh for the series.

After all, there's not much more this premise can be milked for – especially now that we're wise to this whole premonition con-game. Then again, dumb and wooden movie characters are always in plentiful supply.

Surfing: http://www.finaldestinationmovie.com/


Making The Grade: