Friday, December 13, 2013

Review: Atonement


Atonement opens in 1935, at a stately manor in the English countryside.

A thirteen-year-old girl, Briony is finishing a play on her typewriter, the typebars banging a martial beat on the white paper. The rat-a-tat-tatting continues, integrating itself into the soundtrack, even as she gets up with her completed draft and marches away.It's a device that recurs throughout the film, effectively linking writing and soldiering, love and war--the two subjects and, to a considerable degree, two halves of the film. The girl is Briony and she has a sister, Cecilia. 

Robbie is the son of the family housekeeper, who works for the family too.

Robbie wants to express his longing for Cecilia and writes a letter for her.

He entrusts it to Briony. Because Briony has a schoolgirl crush on Robbie, she reads the note. And that four-letter word, barely understood by a prepubescent girl, hits her like a sledgehammer. 

Briony, whose active imagination takes the form of writing plays, had already become feverish when she peeked through an upstairs window at Robbie and her sister by the fountain. That's when her emerging sexuality morphs into toxic revenge.

Briony's false witness, for which she will seek atonement for the rest of her life as a nurse and author, forever alienates Cecilia from her family and puts Robbie in jail for three years, until he is released and joins the war effort.

Thanks to Briony, Robbie stands accused – and the movie spends its remainder unravelling that fateful turn of events, from the war-ravaged wastes of northern France to Blitzed-out London, through to a modern-day coda featuring Vanessa Redgrave as the elderly Briony explaining her contrition to a television interviewer.







Without giving too much away, I will say that the power of the story depends on its believability, on the audience’s ability to perceive Robbie and Cecilia in wartime as suffering, flesh-and-blood creatures. McAvoy and Knightley sigh and swoon credibly enough, but they are stymied by the inertia of the filmmaking, and by the film’s failure to find a strong connection between the fates of the characters and the ideas and historical events that swirl around them.

Newly released: The Book Theif


Director: Brian Percival

Writers: Markus Zusak (novel), Michael Petroni(adaptation)

Stars:Sophie Nélisse, Geoffrey Rush, Emily Watson




Movie Info

Based on the beloved international bestselling book, The Book Thief tells the story of an extraordinary, spirited young girl sent to live with a foster family in WWII Germany. Intrigued by the only book she brought with her, she begins collecting books as she finds them. With the help of her new parents and a secret guest under the stairs, she learns to read and creates a magical world that inspires them all.

Review: Django Unchained




It can be argued that Quentin Tarantino has already taken on the Spaghetti Western (by his own admission his favorite genre) in "Inglourious Basterds" albeit by a circuitous route as just one part of his strange concoction of war film and revenge. In "Django Unchained," he approaches the Spaghetti Western in a more head on manner and a Quentin Tarantino Spaghetti Western is about exactly what you'd expect one to be. As with most of his films since "Kill Bill" revenge is on the menu, it's served up in a high pressure spray of blood and laughter.


Django, it turns out, is a natural at the bounty hunter game, sharp with the eye and quick with the lead and able to subsume himself into a role as needed to sidle up to his prey, be it a ridiculously dressed valet or a cold hearted black slaver. He and Schultz quickly take to each other as Schultz teaches him the ropes, so much so that when Django tells him the story of his long lost wife the beautiful Broomhilda Von Shaft, Schultz feels honor bound to help him rescue her.
Unfortunately rescuing her means traveling into the belly of Candyland, the Mississippi plantation of one Calvin J. Candie (Leonardo DiCaprio), the king of the mandingo fight rang.


The performances across the board are high, with Foxx and Waltz enjoying great on screen chemistry. One of the few downsides is Schultz's built-in showmanship often pushing Django to the sidelines, leaving him to shine only when he has the screen to himself.
That said, in a nearly three-hour film there's plenty of opportunity for him to get time to himself, particularly in the last act as he faces off against Candie's various henchman, from gunman Billy Crash (Walton Goggins) to head house slave Stephen (Samuel L. Jackson) who truly epitomizes the film and eras' villainy as a black man who accepts slavery as the way things are meant to be and enjoys his place in that hierarchy.




Which is about as preachy as "Django Unchained" gets. Tarantino definitely has a point to make about slavery, and it is there, but it is well hidden behind a stout curtain of fun, which is ultimately what you'll get from "Django." 



Reference


http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1853728/criticreviews


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/film/filmreviews/9812057/Django-Unchained-review.html

http://www.metacritic.com/movie/django-unchained

Newly released: About Time


Director: Richard Curtis

Writer: Richard Curtis

Stars: Domhnall Gleeson, Rachel McAdams, Bill Nighy

Movie Info

At the age of 21, Tim Lake (Domhnall Gleeson) discovers he can travel in time... The night after another unsatisfactory New Year party, Tim's father (Bill Nighy) tells his son that the men in his family have always had the ability to travel through time. Tim can't change history, but he can change what happens and has happened in his own life-so he decides to make his world a better place...by getting a girlfriend. Sadly, that turns out not to be as easy as you might think. Moving from the Cornwall coast to London to train as a lawyer, Tim finally meets the beautiful but insecure Mary (Rachel McAdams). They fall in love, then an unfortunate time-travel incident means he's never met her at all. So they meet for the first time again-and again-but finally, after a lot of cunning time-traveling, he wins her heart. Tim then uses his power to create the perfect romantic proposal, to save his wedding from the worst best-man speeches, to save his best friend from professional disaster and to get his pregnant wife to the hospital in time for the birth of their daughter, despite a nasty traffic jam outside Abbey Road. But as his unusual life progresses, Tim finds out that his unique gift can't save him from the sorrows and ups and downs that affect all families, everywhere. There are great limits to what time travel can achieve, and it can be dangerous too. About Time is a comedy about love and time travel, which discovers that, in the end, making the most of life may not need time travel at all.

Reference

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2194499/?ref_=nv_sr_1

Actor: Christoph Waltz

Christoph Waltz is an Austrian-German actor best known for his parts in 'Inglourious Basterds' and 'Django Unchained'.

He was born into a theater family. His grandmother was the Viennese Burgtheater actress Maria Mayen, and his step-grandfather was fellow Burgtheater actor Emmerich Reimers.
Christoph Waltz made his acting debut on stage and subsequently performed on various stages including at the Salzburg Festival.










During the 80s, Christoph worked primarily in theater, commuting from his home in London to Germany. Slowly he began to work in TV, taking one-off roles on series, and TV movies. 

In 1990, he was in the British TV series 'Gravy Train'. Film roles soon followed, however, attempts to break into English-speaking film and TV were unsuccessful. 


Christoph has stated he is grateful to have made a living and supported his family through acting. For thirty years he worked steadily, tirelessly, in this manner.



In 2009, he had his breakthrough role in Quentin Tarantino's 'Inglourious Basterds' as SS-Standartenfuhrer Hans Landa alongside Brad Pitt, Michael Fassbender and Eli Roth. The role won him an Academy Award, a BAFTA and a Golden Globe among many others for Best Supporting Actor making him the only actor ever to win an Oscar in a Tarantino movie. He won 27 awards for his performance as Hans Landa, including the Cannes prix d'interpretation Masculin for 2009, the Golden Globe for Best Supporting Actor and the BAFTA Best Supporting Actor award.

 
In 2011, he appeared in 'The Green Hornet' opposite Seth Rogen, Jay Chou and Cameron Diaz; 'Water for Elephants' alongside Robert Pattinson and Reese Witherspoon; and 'Carnage' with Jodie Foster and Kate Winslet.


2012 saw him win another Academy Award for his appearance in Quentin Tarantino's 'Django Unchained' opposite Jamie Fox and Leonardo DiCaprio.
 

Reference


Director: Joel Coen

Working with his brother Ethan, screenwriter/director Joel Coen has built a reputation as one of the most visionary and idiosyncratic filmmakers of the late 20th century. Combining thoughtful eccentricity, wry humor, arch irony, and often brutal violence, the films of the Coen brothers have become synonymous with a style of filmmaking that pays tribute to classic American movie genres -- especially film noir -- while sustaining a firmly postmodern feel. Beginning with Blood Simple, their brutal, stylish 1984 debut, the brothers have amassed a body of work that has established them as two of the most compelling figures in American and world cinemas.





Born in St. Louis Park, MN, in 1954, Joel Coen studied at New York University before moving into filmmaking in the early '80s. He and his younger brother began writing screenplays while Joel worked as an assistant editor on good friend Sam Raimi's 1983 film The Evil Dead. In 1984, they made their debut with Blood Simple. Both of them wrote and edited the film (using the name Roderick Jaynes for the latter duty), while Joel took the directing credit and Ethan billed himself as the producer. It earned considerable critical acclaim and established the brothers as fresh, original talent. 


Their 1994 follow-up to Barton Fink, The Hudsucker Proxy, was a relative critical and commercial disappointment, though it did boast the sort of heavily stylized, postmodern irony that had so endeared the brothers to their audience. Whatever failings The Hudsucker Proxy exhibited, however, were more than atoned for by the unquestionable success of the Coens' next film, Fargo (1996). A black, violent crime comedy with a surprisingly warm heart, it recalled Blood Simple in its themes of greed, corruption, and murder, but provided more redemptive sentiment than was afforded to the characters of the previous film. The brothers shared a Best Original Screenplay Oscar for their work, and another Oscar, for Best Actress, went to Frances McDormand, to whom Joel had been married since 1984.
 
The year 2000 brought the Coens into the depression-era with O Brother, Where art Thou? An admittedly loose adaptation of Homer's The Odyssey, O Brother starred George Clooney,John Turturro, and Tim Blake Nelson as escaped convicts on a surreal journey through 1930s Mississippi. Wasting no time in production of their next feature, the following year found Joel the recipient of his third Best Director award at Cannes for the darkly comic, monochromatic post-noir The Man Who Wasn't There.


Two years later, Joel and Ethan re-teamed with Clooney for Intolerable Cruelty, a film that represented their version of a '30s screwball comedy. The film was noteworthy in that it was the first movie made by the brothers that did not originate with them; they rewrote a script that was already in existence.
 



After a three year layoff from movies, the brothers returned with an adaptation of Cormac McCarthy's No Country for Old Men. The taut but philosophically minded thriller opened to nearly universal praise and became one of the two films to dominate year end critics and industry awards. Joel and Ethan won the best Director award from the Director's Guild of America, and found themselves taking home awards for Directing, Writing, and Best Picture from that year's Oscar telecast.


Reference



Actor: Brad Pitt

Brad Pitt(William Bradley Pitt) is one of Hollywood's best-known film stars. He has received two Academy Award nominations and four Golden Globe nominations and is frequently voted as one of the world's most attractive and desirable men.
Brad Pitt's screen debut came in 1987, when he had uncredited parts in No Way Out, No Man's Land and Less Than Zero. He also made a guest appearance in the TV sitcom 'Growing Pains'. Between 1987 and 1988, Brad Pitt appeared as the character Randy in 'Dallas'.
Brad Pitt's first leading film role came in 1988 when he starred in the Yugoslavian / US produced The Dark Side of the Sun. The release, however, coincided with the Croatian war so it was shelved until 1997.

He went on to star in Legends of the Fall the following year, alongside Anthony Hopkins and earned himself his first Golden Globe nomination for his portrayal of Tristan Ludlow. Pitt then went on to star in Seven, playing the role of a detective, alongside Kevin Spacey, Gwyneth Paltrow and Morgan Freeman. The film was another huge success and saw him diversifying a little in his acting style.

Brad Pitt's next significant role was in Meet Joe Black; again sharing screen time with Anthony Hopkins. Another key role for Pitt came in 1999 when he starred in Fight Club, playing the role of Tyler Durden in the adaptation of Chuck Palahniuk's novel.

Brad Pittappeared in Ocean's Eleven with Matt Damon, George Clooney and Andy Garcia.

2004 saw Brad Pitt star in Troy, as well as making an appearance in Ocean's Twelve, the sequel to Ocean's Eleven. The following year, Brad Pitt was cast alongside Angelina Jolie in Mr & Mrs. Smith. The career decision would ultimately be a life-changer for Pitt, as he eventually left his wife in order to start a relationship with Jolie.

Pitt's performance in Babel was well-received by the critics and the film received no fewer than seven Academy Award nominations.

After appearing in Ocean's Thirteen, Brad Pitt starred in The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford. His acting skill this time landed him the Volpi cup at the 64th Venice International Film Festival.
In 2008, Brad Pitt featured in the Coen brothers' comedy Burn After Reading, which also starred Tilda Swinton, John Malkovich, Frances McDormand and George Clooney. Later, he was cast as the title role in the unusual film The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, about a man who ages in reverse. The film also starred Cate Blanchett.
Pitt then went on to feature in the Quentin Tarantino film Inglourious Basterds and the Terrence Malik movie Tree of Life.
















Reference

http://www.movieactors.com/acting-reviews/brad-pitt-review.htm

http://www.theguardian.com/film/bradpitt

http://www.rogerebert.com/cast-and-crew/brad-pitt

Review: No Country For Old Men

This is a terrific return to form on a par with "Fargo" and other Coen classics, and it's the type of movie that can only get better over time with repeat viewings. When I first see this movie, the first impression I got was that "it is too difficult." Then I watched it several times more, I understood some points the Coens meant.



Llewelyn Moss (Josh Brolin) is a Texan who comes across a drug deal gone wrong in the middle of the desert, but when he takes a suitcase filled with $2 million cash, he goes on the run to stay ahead from a ruthless killer named Anton Chigurh (Javier Bardem) and a bunch of Mexicans, while a local sherriff (Tommy Lee Jones) follows the trail of dead bodies left by Chigurh and tries to figure out who is responsible. 




 Most of the film's 2-hour running time is comprised of Moss being chased by Chigurh, every once in a while cutting back to Tommy Lee Jones as the local sheriff, who is mystified by the expanding body count all seemingly done by the same man who killed his officer. 



 All three men are extremely resourceful, making the film that much more fascinating to watch them deal with various situations as they come up. One might try to argue which of the three key players is the focal point of the story, but Bardem's clinically ruthless yet always smiling killer will leave the biggest impact. It takes almost an hour before we even learn his name or his reasons for acting the way he does, but much is revealed by a late player in the game played by Woody Harrelson, whose relationship with Anton is never quite clear.


The script is impeccable, easily some of the Coen brothers' best writing, presumably taking McCarthy's best bits and injecting their own flair for character dialogue. The best lines and monologues are given to Bardem and Tommy Lee Jones, the latter who proves to be a natural as a Coen Brothers character. 

Fans of McCarthy's novel might be surprised and delighted by how closely the Coens stick to the tone and plot of McCarthy's novel.

Every bit of my attention is kept rapt to this visually stunning film by the perfectly-constructed shots of the Coens' regular direction. I was literally absorbed in the movie.


Reference


http://www.slantmagazine.com/film/review/no-country-for-old-men


http://www.empireonline.com/reviews/reviewcomplete.asp?FID=134048


http://www.ericdsnider.com/movies/no-country-for-old-men

Newly released: The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug



Director: Peter Jackson

  • Prequel: The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey  

  • Sequel: The Hobbit: There and Back Again 

  • Running time: 161 minutes

  • Initial release: December 2, 2013 (Los Angeles) 







  • Movie Info

    The second in a trilogy of films adapting the enduringly popular masterpiece The Hobbit, by 

    J.R.R. Tolkien, The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug continues the adventure of the title 

    character Bilbo Baggins (Martin Freeman) as he journeys with the Wizard Gandalf (Ian 

    McKellan) and thirteen Dwarves, led by Thorin Oakenshield (Richard Armitage) on an epic 

    quest to reclaim the lost Dwarf Kingdom of Erebor.



    Reference

    http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1170358/?ref_=hm_3p_vi1#lb-vi2165155865

    Newly released: The Attorney

    ▶Genre : Drama


    ▶Director: Yang Woo-seok


    ▶Cast : Song Kang-ho, Oh Dal-soo, Kim Yeong-ae, Kwak Do-won and Si Wan 


    ▶Synopsis : A movie about a civil rights lawyer in the 1980s and is an original by web-toon 

    artist Yang Woo-seok who is also the debuting director.


    ▶Release Date : 2013/12/18



    This movie is sensational in Korea because it is the story of the former president Roh Moo-Hyun.


    Director Park Chan-wook and Bong Jun-ho higly praised this movie and the actor Song Kang-

    ho for his heart-touching acting, saying "there are laugh, warm humanity mixed with sincerity."

    I'm looking forward to watching this movie soon. 



    Reference

    Thursday, December 12, 2013

    Review: Pulp Fiction


    Quentin Tarantino's second feature, Pulp Fiction, is at once ridiculously entertaining and remarkably weightless.There are several trivial episodes in this movie which are forming a horizontal structure and they are oddly connected anyway.


    Pulp Fiction's success made Travolta reputable again.

    Travolta and Uma Thurman have a sequence that's funny and bizarre. She's the wife of the mob boss (Ving Rhames), who orders Travolta to take her out for the night. They go to Jack Rabbit Slim's, a 1950s theme restaurant and they end up in a twist contest. 
    This is one of the most famous scenes in 1990's.


    He's attached to a watch from grandfather's ass.

    Bruce Willis and Maria de Medeiros play another couple. He's a boxer named Butch Coolidge who cherishes a wristwatch. The history of this watch is described in a flashback, Vietnam veteran Christopher Walken tells young Butch about how the watch was purchased by his great-grandfather and has come down through the generations - and through a lot more than generations, for that matter. Walken's monologue builds to the movie's biggest laugh.




    In this manner, the movie enumerates separate episodes and let audiences know they are linked to each other after all. The method of the movie is to involve its characters in sticky situations, and then let them escape into stickier ones. Characters are messed up in that process finally we cannot help laughing at what seemed serious yet.


    Reference


    http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0110912/


    http://www.slantmagazine.com/film/review/pulp-fiction

    Review: Old Boy




    Park Chan-Wook’s revenge-feuled thriller, Oldboy is re-released this year after a decade.

    This film has achieved international success even though being in the Korean language.
    It explores the depths of insanity and captivity before digressing into incestuous relationships and vengeance.




    The film follows Oh Dae-su (Min-sik Choi),family man who is grabbed off the street and imprisoned in a room by unseen captors. 15 years passed and without explanation Dae-su is released from the confinement of his room.


    Dae-su then meets Mi-do (Hye-jeong Kang) who takes pity on him and falls in love with Mi-do. He intends to find his captors and seek the ultimate revenge.
    But their love turns out to be incestuous and that is planned by the very captor, Woo-jin Lee (Ji-tae Yu).


    He blames Dae-su for her sister's suicide and confined him for revenge. Woo-jin believes he has avenged her sister's death and enforced the worse type of vengeance on Dae-su, causing much more torment than a simple killing. 


    But Dae-su's sincere love for Mi-do awakens Woo-jin his love for his sister and he commits suicide instead of killing Dae-su. Then the horrible revenge play ends.

    What makes "Oldboy" different from other usual "revenge" films is that it persistently pursues and asks viewers a single question of "why he has been confined for 15 years," as opposed to "who has imprisoned him."

    Throughout the film, director Chan-Wook's attention to detail is quite incredible, and almost every frame of the film is beautifully composed and rich with reflections of the characters’ twisted psyches. Even the set design, too, is complex and fascinating.



    Recently this movie is remaked in Hollywood, by Spike Lee. But the film is criticized severely by the critics. 
    I think Chan-Wook's sensible image of the original work is hard enough to realize in Hollywood.


    Reference


    http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0364569/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1

    http://sar914.blog.me/20200829585

    http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/oldboy-2005

    http://badassdigest.com/2013/11/26/oldboy-movie-review-get-locked-up-in-this-glum-lifeless-remake/