Wednesday, 27 February 2008

Rambo

Arriving in cinemas with its much publicised 236 body kill-count in a meagre 91 minutes of running time (that's 2.59 kills per minute) Rambo is the 4th entry in the franchise that started with First Blood in 1982 - a movie that featured a kill count of zero and was actually fairly highly respected.

This is of course absolute nonsense. No one's going to watch it for great dialogue, great acting or anything resembling originality. This is murder-porn which may very well be the new form of torture-porn, a sub-genre that became popular with the increasingly absurd, disgusting and atrocious Saw franchise and Eli Roth's two (despicable) Hostel films.

If torture-porn is repugnant (which is is) then why am I going to give murder-porn a (semi) pass (which I am)? The answer is maybe that the violence here has a video game/cartoon like quality that makes it possible to detach yourself slightly from what would otherwise be fairly disturbing. Bodies go flying at a rate of 10 a second, limbs flail, blood spatters. It has such a weak grip on reality that you find yourself amused by proceedings rather than outraged. Rambo even manages to explode a WWII bomb that generates a mushroom cloud (and then impressively outruns the aftermath) which you have to admit is a pretty neat way of dispatching multiple bad guys at once. And these bad guys are set up to be so evil that killing them doesn't really matter anyway.

It's very violent. It's dreadfully scripted. It's appalling acted. It's also very funny. I'm not sure it always intends to be, but it is. And for that reason it's almost worth your time. D+

Tuesday, 26 February 2008

Oscar Predix

8/10 which was probably not bad. Bonus points to me for getting Tilda Swinton and for predicting a Best Actress upset. Minus marks for guessing the wrong upsetter. I went for Ellen Page. It was of course Marion Cotillard. The only other one I missed was Best Cinematography which was a travesty.

Oscar Reaction

Little late with this but...

The Good:

Tilda Switon winning Best Supporting Actress. Good speech too.

Javier Bardem showing a lot of class whilst accepting Best Supporting Actor. I prefered Casey Affleck but I'm not complaining at all about Bardem's win at all since he was outstanding.

Jonah Hill and Seth Rogen 'filling in' for Halle Berry and Judi Dench. That bit was funnier than anything Jon Stewart managed, aside from the pretend snide 'so arrogant' remark about Glen Hansard's Best Song win.

Marion Cotillard showing how much she cared about her Best Actress win but not breaking down in hysterics a la Halle Berry.

The Bad:

Why invite The Rock aka Dwayne Johnson to present an Oscar? Rubbish.

Why invite some girl no-one's ever heard of to present an Oscar? Double rubbish.

Me correctly predicting an upset in Best Actress but picking the wrong upsetter. I went for Ellen Page but Marion Cotillard got it. I actually predicted she'd win just before it was read out but too late to count.

Jon Stewart as host. Not bad per se but just not in the league of Steve Martin who anyone with taste must recognise as easily the best host of recent years.

The Ugly:

The cinematographer Roger Deakins has been nominated 7 times in his career. He's yet to win. He was nominated twice on Sunday and still couldn't win. His The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford work was the best of the year. How on earth was he snubbed yet again? This was a complete travesty. When Robert Elswit's name was read out Deakins just nodded as if to say "thought so". The man's cursed.

Friday, 22 February 2008

My Film Vault's 2007 Movie Years


You've been on the edge of your seat hitting that refresh button every hour of every day since the new year. Well avid reader the wait is over.

We proudly present My Film Vault's very own Movie Years Awards. The hit Australian film "Kenny" gets quote of the year and in all honesty I could have gone with any one of 5 or 6 brilliant one-liners. To find out what the quote was, and for the more prestigious awards of Best Film, Actor and Actress check out this link.

Matt's side will appear very soon although splitting his two A+ viewings of The Assassination of Jesse James and Jindabyne may prove more troublesome than splitting the atom. No ties though Matt!

I also think we may expand these awards (as per Matt's suggestion) to add in, at the very least, Best Cinematography and Best Score. We'll announce this as and when.

One final thought - my list of recommended films for 2007 runs to 18 off the back of just 43 viewings. Incredible year.

The Oscars


Here is what will in time become my legendary annual pre-Oscar predictions. If I get any of these wrong I'll be totally stunned...

Picture

"Atonement"
"Juno"
"Michael Clayton"
"No Country for Old Men"
"There Will Be Blood"

A pretty solid list - I only disliked There Will Be Blood, although even with this I understand its merits. Just didn't do it for me. Some are predicting a Michael Clayton or Juno upset but I think they'll go with the front runner. The Coens are due and splits between the directing and picture categories are rare (although less rare recently), and I can't see it happening here so I'll go with their film.

What will win: "No Country for Old Men"
What should win: "Michael Clayton"
What wasn't (unbelievably) even nominated: "The Lookout"

Director

Julian Schnabel - "The Diving Bell and the Butterfly"
Jason Reitman - "Juno"
Tony Gilroy - "Michael Clayton"
Joel Coen and Ethan Coen - "No Country for Old Men"
Paul Thomas Anderson - "There Will Be Blood"

This has been the Coens to lose for a long time. They wont.

Who will win: The Coens
Who should win: The Coens
Who wasn't (unbelievably) even nominated: Ang Lee - "Lust, Caution"

Actor

George Clooney in "Michael Clayton"
Daniel Day-Lewis in "There Will Be Blood"
Johnny Depp in "Sweeney Todd"
Tommy Lee Jones in "In the Valley of Elah"
Viggo Mortensen in "Eastern Promises"

Happy with everyone nominated except Depp, who's often great but not here. Why give a Best Actor nomination to the lead in a musical when he can't sing? Not that he was bad mind you, it's just that this was an absolutely terrific year for leading men. There could be at least another 5 worthy nominees.

Who will win: Daniel Day-Lewis
Who should win: Viggo Mortensen
Who wasn't (unbelievably) even nominated: Gordon Pinsent - "Away From Her"

Actress

Cate Blanchett in "Elizabeth: The Golden Age"
Julie Christie in "Away from Her"
Marion Cotillard in "La Vie en Rose"
Laura Linney in "The Savages"
Ellen Page in "Juno"

You couldn't pay me enough money to sit through another 2 hours of Elizabeth (well if any readers are actually thinking about offering me vast sums of money to test my resolve, maybe we can talk) so I congratulate those that did, but nominating Cate Blanchett again, for playing the same role seems a waste, even if she was terrific. She's absolutely no chance at all. Linney too will be just happy with the nomination. I really feel any of the other three can win, which flies in the face of most handicappers who have Christie as the prohibitive favourite. I'll stick my neck out and plump for an Ellen Page upset. Two reasons for this: 1. She's likely to be the only homegrown acting winner of the night if she wins, 2. She's young and youth seems to help in this category (Helen Mirren's win last year was the first 'older' winner for years).

Who will win: Ellen Page
Who should win: Julie Christie
Who wasn't (unbelievably) even nominated: Wang Tei - "Lust, Caution"

Supporting Actor

Casey Affleck in "The Assassination of Jesse James"
Javier Bardem in "No Country for Old Men"
Philip Seymour Hoffman in "Charlie Wilson's War"
Hal Holbrook in "Into the Wild"
Tom Wilkinson in "Michael Clayton"

Terrific set of nominees. Any one of them a worthy winner.

Who will win: Javier Bardem
Who should win: Casey Affleck
Who wasn't (unbelievably) even nominated: Christopher Mintz-Plasse - "Superbad"

Supporting Actress

Cate Blanchett in "I'm Not There"
Ruby Dee in "American Gangster"
Saoirse Ronan in "Atonement"
Amy Ryan in "Gone Baby Gone"
Tilda Swinton in "Michael Clayton"

Tilda Swinton seems to have edged ahead of Cate Blanchett in the running, who having won an Oscar a couple of years ago may not be ready for her second.

Who will win: Tilda Swinton
Who should win: Saoirse Ronan
Who wasn't (unbelievably) even nominated: Vanessa Regrave - "Atonement"

Original Screenplay

"Juno" - Diablo Cody
"Lars and the Real Girl" - Nancy Oliver
"Michael Clayton" - Tony Gilroy
"Ratatouille" - Brad Bird
"The Savages" - Tamara Jenkins

Who will win: Diablo Cody
Who should win: Tony Gilroy
Who wasn't (unbelievably) even nominated: Steven Knight - "Eastern Promises"

Adapted Screenplay

"Atonement" - Christopher Hampton
"Away from Her" - Sarah Polley
"The Diving Bell and the Butterfly" - Ronald Harwood
"No Country for Old Men" - The Coens
"There Will Be Blood" - Paul Thomas Anderson

Who will win: The Coens
Who should win: The Coens
Who wasn't (unbelievably) even nominated: James Vanderbuilt - "Zodiac"

Cinematography

"The Assassination of Jesse James": Roger Deakins
"Atonement": Seamus McGarvey
"The Diving Bell and the Butterfly": Janusz Kaminski
"No Country for Old Men": Roger Deakins
"There Will Be Blood": Robert Elswit

The most important category of the night in terms of what a travesty it'll be if they don't win is this one. Roger Deakins is nominated twice. He should win for Jesse James. I'll be fine if he wins for No Country. If however he comes home empty handed I'll be so distraught I may never be able to watch films again.

Who will win: Roger Deakins - "The Assassination of Jesse James"
Who should win: Roger Deakins - "The Assassination of Jesse James"
Who wasn't (unbelievably) even nominated: Rodrigo Prieto - "Lust, Caution"

Score

"Atonement" - Dario Marianelli
"The Kite Runner" - Alberto Iglesias
"Michael Clayton" - James Newton Howard
"Ratatouille" - Michael Giacchino
"3:10 to Yuma" - Marco Beltrami

Who will win: Dario Marianelli
Who should win: Marco Beltrami
Who wasn't (unbelievably) even nominated: James Newton Howard - "The Lookout"

Tuesday, 19 February 2008

Monday, 18 February 2008

Jean de Florette (1986)



Often dubbed (in the usual patronising way) 'the most popular foreign language film of all time', this classic tale, charming and haunting in equal measure, is well worth a watch. There are few people I can see not enjoying this, even if it does not quite measure up to other 'foreign language classics'.

The story focuses on Jean (Gerard Depardieu), a city-dweller, who inherits some property in rural, picturesque, Provence and his attempts to make a life there. Against him stand the elements, in the form of the dry, hot, Provencale weather and the locals, in the form of the cunning and two-faced Ugolin (Daniel Auteuil) and Papet (Yves Montand), Jean regrettably being oblivious to the latter.

This is a genuinely classic tale of human struggle in the ongoing battle for survival. Does Jean win? Well, you'll just have to watch to find out. The drama is compelling and the characters are as deeply and subtly drawn as the lines on the sun worn faces of the Provencale characters who flood the film. Depardieu is undoubtedly the star turn, though, oddly, he is given less to do than Auteuil and Montand who are both utterly watchable as the villains of the piece, especially Auteuil.

There are some stark and shocking scenes which live long in the memory after the curtain falls and a strange tension lurks throughout, brilliantly depicted under the wide, acquamarine, skies of Provence which would (in lesser hands) promise a lighter and more delicate touch. This is hugely to the director's (Claude Berri's) credit. Some things, however, don't quite sit right and you are left questioning the actions of some of the characters (and some of the results) more than you should and these, combined, suggest a higher B grade rather than an A.

There are strong messages here about what corrupts, what endures and what could prevail in humankind's ongoing battle to survive in an ultimately hostile environment. This doesn't at all feel like a political film, but it is. And, in a world where 50,000 people die each day from preventable causes, it offers lessons that ought not to be forgotten.

B+

Oh, it also produced a sequel, which I'm just going to go downstairs and watch!

Tuesday, 12 February 2008

Gone Baby Gone


Yanked from UK cinema screens shortly it was due to be released, this is the Oscar nominated directorial debut from Ben Affleck, who adapted this story of child kidnapping from a novel by Dennis Lehane. The decision to remove it from UK screens was probably sensible given some eerie similarities between the film and the over-publicised Madeleine McCann story, the most startling being the resemblence that the young girl and focus of the film has to McCann. It fared pretty well on its US release without exctly setting the box office alight. Critical reception was positive with Affleck earning numerous citations for most promising newcomer, as well as a whole heap of critics awards for supporting actress Amy Ryan, who will find out next week whether or not she can add an Oscar to the awars she's received for her performance here.

The star of Gone Baby Gone is Ben's brother Casey who will surely always look back on 2007 as a banner year. His immense turn in The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford quite rightly earned him an Oscar nomination and for my money should earn him the win. He dominated the screen at every opportunity, comprehensively out-acting far more seasoned co-stars, and this in a film that doesn't feature a single false note let alone a poor performance. His effort in his brother's film is a little after the Lord Mayor's Show yet he's just as convicing here. Affleck is a private investigator who, along with his girlfriend and partner (Michelle Monaghan), is asked by the girl's uncle to investigate the disappearance. Working alongside a couple of cops (Ed Harris and John Ashton) they start unravelling a mystery that leads them on a trail to the missing girl and, although I don't think all of the plot twists are particular convincing (or indeed surprising), I'll not spoil them here by revealing any more.

The hook of this particular film is that the girl's mother is very obviously unfit to be a mum. Questions are soon raised over whther or not she deserves to have the child back, and such questions lead into the thought provoking moral conundrum that dominates the final act of the film. Gone Baby Gone asks some intelligent questions and offers no answers although Affleck certainly hints at his own feelings in the closing shot. If the ethical questiosn the film raises are its strong suit - the plot itself is perhaps its weakest. Once the mystery is ultimately revealed it doesn't really hold up to much scrutiny, instead playing more like a plot that the author felt needed am additional twist or two rather than one that demanded a sense of realism. A scene atop a quarry makes little sense either at the time or in flash back. The motivation of some of the characters also seems questionable.

So flawed it may be, but there's no denying that Affleck shows promise here as screenwriter and director. This is the first script he's penned since his Oscar winning collaboration with Matt Damon and the first time he's taken the reins behind the camera. He handles it nicely, not falling into the trap of trying to differentiate his work with any flashy quirks or novel camera angels that are sometimes seen by a first-time director. It's a very solid effort, which although hardly sounds inspiring, befits the material well. Whilst Gone Baby Gone wont be in my mind for awards consideration, it has enough good things going for it to recommend as a DVD rental next time you find yourself at a loose end.

B-

Saturday, 9 February 2008

The Golden Compass (2007)



Saw this a few weeks ago and it is represents another one where I find myself in general agreement with the reviewing public. It's all over the place.

The story (sorry for being so far behind here, since this came out before Christmas!) centres around a young girl, Lyra Belacqua, who inherits a magical device, a Golden Compass, which can answer any question it is asked. The magical device helps her on her quest to liberate some friends from experiments being conducted at the hands of the evil authorities in "the North".

It's a traditional, and fairly typical, story of good against evil but it's, frankly, a completely baffling one. I left the cinema understanding very litte. There's a golden compass, some Egyptians, some witches, and a lot of fuss about dust and parallel universes being investigated by Daniel Craig's professor. In short, it's one huge confusing mess and that leaves it well, well, short of par. However, to be fair, par is probably impossibly high, standing somewhere around the Fellowship of the Ring, which stands as a true testament to brilliant narrative film-making. On the positive side, this nowhere near plumbs the insipid depths of the first two Harry Potter films. Still, you should rarely leave a cinema more confused than when you went in, especially not in children's films of this ilk. Messy.

On the positive side, the performances are sound. Dakota Blue Richards is excellent as the cheeky and very watchable Lyra and Nicole Kidman shimmers and dazzles with icy sublimity as Marisa Coulter, the glamourous villainesss of the piece. Daniel Craig, on the other hand, sleepwalks his way through as Lord Asriel.

Interesting characters flit in an out, not least of which is the Ian Mckellan voiced Iorek Byrnison, a huge great armour-clad bear exiled from his rightful place as king of the bears, but others are silly and/or underdeveloped, as, regrettably, is Byrnison's fate. And, most shamefully of all, would-be interesting sidelines are rushed through and not dealt with with the care and attention they deserve and, once again, Byrnison suffers here.

It hasn't turned me off from seeing the next two films in the trilogy, but neither has it got me remotely salivating for the sequel in the way the Fellowship achieved so brilliantly.

C

Monday, 4 February 2008

My Nomination for the Republican Candidate

In honour of the returning Monday Night Political Slot, I thought it only fair to actually comment on a genuine, and of course movie-related, political issue.

The world has been abuzz this past week with Arnold Schwarzenegger's endorsement of a certain candidate for the republican nomination for president come November this year. Well, since MyFilmVault is never one to shy away from political issues, I wish to confirm that I endorse Arnie's endorsement completely and, therefore, with him, endorse John McClane for president:



I don't know which is more surprising, McClane actually running after such a tough, gruelling, year domestically, or Arnie's endorsement of such a long-standing rival. Perhaps Arnie has finally come to terms with the fact that he will never be able to run and therefore has endorsed a like-minded soul.

So, what does McClane have going for him? First of all a first rate record on Terrorism. He's responsible for more terrorist deaths that GW's own 'War on Terror'. McClane also has an astounding record on domestic security. Popular with the ladies, he also scores high on family values, having very publicly shown his protective qualities of family members when they have been in trouble.

Will also score points with the gun lobby.

Of course, I'm not American and hope the facists (sorry, republicans) lose hands down, but I'm sure McClane will make a great candidate. He'll certainly die hard in the poles.

The Monday Evening Political Slot...

Is the astonishing new name for the Sunday Morning Political Slot. The latest installment is just below this pant-wetting (possibly) post from my colleague.

It concerns that age-old debate... Arthouse films or Hollywood blockbusters??

The Best News I've Heard, Like, Ever


Please let this happen!

Cloverfield (2007) vs Silent Light (Stellet Licht) (2007)

This week the Monday Evening Political Slot combines a du(a?)(e?)l review, offering two for the price of one. With political commentary in tow. So, who will win the battle of these two behemoths? And, just as importantly, why?



Cloverfield first...

Much hyped and brilliantly marketed, this J.J. Abrams vehicle, directed by Matt Reeves and starring a bunch of unknowns, centres on an attack on New York. But by who? Or what?

Now, I'm afraid I can't really review this without revealing what or who the mystery attacker is, so if you don't know look away now and you'll just have to come back to find out the punchline of this political slot when you've seen it. Anyway, the movie was released on friday and it is now widely known what this attacker is.

It's a hacking great monster.

Anyway, this is a truly revolutionary film. Not really in the way that it uses handheld cameras and provides a first hand perspective, nor in regards to the subject material, characterisation, editing or direction. What then? It's difficult to pinpoint and describe exactly, but it's essentially the combination of incredible realism and utterly stunning visuals the likes of which have never been joined before to such incredible effect. It's a disaster movie crossed with sci-fi, but it is handled so perfectly I genuinely walked out of the cinema and drove home casting a wary eye towards the horizon in case a hacking great monster there lurked. Now, I would personally say that a fictional film starring a huge CGI creature which has this effect on a viewer deserves a huge amount of kudos. Never before have I witnessed the normal and everyday so dramatically collapsed by something that should absolutely, on the face of it, be absurd. Unbelievable. Could never have imagined a monster movie could ever make anyone feel like this. I expected to enjoy it (on the same kind of level I enjoyed War of The Worlds say) but I never expected this. I cannot wait to see whether it will stand up to a second viewing. I might even go back and watch it again before it finishes its run at the cinema.

It gets extra credit because, as I say, there is nothing spectacular about the basic plot, or narrative (it's a very basic disaster movie set-up) and the performances are no more than okay. They don't need to be anything more than that, however, as the dialogue takes care of that. One further aspect worthy of commendation is the very original way there is absolutely nothing (except one tantalising hint in the last shot) of monster backstory. Perhaps that's why it works so damn well.

A word of warning. This will split audiences straight down the middle. Some will simply hate this and find it laughable and part of me can see why, though I will not be able to accept the reasons for it. For 85 minutes you are living in a city attacked by a mysterious creature and it is completely believable and totally absorbing as a result and nothing will change that for me. Also, the camera work (literally) nearly made me sick, but that was all part of the fun for me. It won't be for others. All reservations aside, this gets a provisional:

A+



Now, Silent Light. This is a slow-burning drama, set amongst the medieval German speaking Mennonite community in Mexico, centred around the philandering Johan's (Cornelio Wall) extra marital affair with Esther (Miriam Toews). The film begins with a 7 minute long shot of the sun coming up and ends with a 7 minute long shot of the sun going down.

Could any two movies be more different?

No, and on two levels.

Silent Light represents everything that is bad about film making. It is an overly-indulgent, pretentious, vacuous, garbled, heartless piece of nonsense. It is a character piece without characters, an artistic piece devoid completely of any artistic beauty. The director, Carlos Reygadas, is the "enfant terrible" of Arthouse Cinema, apparantly. Perhaps it's because he makes such shockingly bad films like this which turn people away from the genuis that can be Arthouse Cinema.

Reygadas is clearly of the opinion that he has a real gift for cinematography. Who else could be so arrogant so as to presume his or her viewers will be completely captivated by 7 minute long shots of the rising and setting sun? But someone needs to tell Reygadas and his cinematographer Alexis Zabe that photography is about more than pointing a camera at something that appears beautiful. You still have to show the audience why it's beautiful, and therein lies the art. Reygadas possesses none of this skill, even though he clearly presumes he has it in abundance. He would do well to look at Roger Deakins' much lauded (by us!) efforts in The Assassination of Jesse James. Here images mean something and represent the larger, bleaker, troubled world they (in totality) capture. There is nothing of that here, even though Reygadas' film aims at a similar darkness.

The performances are okay, but the characters they portray are so utterly lifeless, unengaging and ultimately one dimensional that those performances scarcely matter. This just drags and drags and drags. Appauling. It never for one moment allows you to forget that you're watching a film.

It is not the none thing among arthouse lovers to say that slow, ethereal, (supposedly) thoughtful, 'artistic' films like this can be terrible. So, take it from me, they can be. If you don't believe me, go sit through this. I dare you.

F

So, then, it's pretty obvious which film wins the battle! This has been interesting for me, because I (obviously) did not deliberately go and see these two films with a post like this in mind, they just came to unexpectedly represent something that is constantly on my mind when I see and discuss film.

The typical response of arthouse fans to people like me who post reviews like this of such a 'glorious' film as Silent Light is that I just didn't get it, I'm not on the same plane, as witnessed by my hopelessly high mark for Cloverfield. To that snobbish reposte (which I'm sure most of us have heard at one time or another) my reply is this:

The true 'art' of film comes in collapsing the unreal into the real. The ironic thing about this, I guess, is that it is usually character driven arthouse films which are best credited for doing so, and yet a blockbusting monster flick can manage to do it so much more successfully than an artistic slow burner. And that says as much about the acheivement of Cloverfield as it does the abject failure of Silent Light. It is not a film's provenance that matters, only its result.

Sunday, 3 February 2008

Cloverfield

The much hyped Blair Witch style monster movie opened in America two weekends ago and promptly took the number one slot in the box office charts. It then proceeded to drop by 76% the following weekend which is just about, although not quite, an all-time record. So either all the Coverfield fanboys had scrambled to see it on opening weekend and there were none left who hadn't seen it the week after, or word of mouth was pretty abysmal.

Maybe it was a little of both. I can certainly understand the word of mouth being poor. The first comment I heard upon leaving was "that's an hour and a half of my life I'll never have back". There were groans of disappointment when it finished. No clapping. No murmers of approval. I think you get a sense of how an audience is gauging a film when you're there and I certainly didn't sense an audience on the edge of their seats.

For those who have no idea, Cloverfield is filmed from the perspective of a group of young friends celebrating the imminent departure of one of their buddies, who's off to Japan. The first half hour sees us become acquainted with what'll become a group of 5 through video tributes filmed by Hud, whose been given the job of documenting the entire night. Around 30 minutes in a series of explosions over downtown Manhattan disturbs their celebrations and causes them to leave the apartment. Whilst outide they witness what seems to be a meteor or something similar crashing down the street, but which then appears to be the head of the Statue of Liberty. In the ensuing panic our friends get broken up and we follow a group of 5 of them, one of whom is Rob - the guy who was off to Japan, and the person they all look to for leadership.

Comparisons with Blair Witch are pretty reasonable since, although the set-up is completely different, the style of each film and the marketing of both has trodden a similar path. Not being a fan of The Blair Witch Project I have to say Cloverfield surpasses the only real notable hand-held movie to precede it in every regard. However some of that wouldn't be too difficult. The quality of acting is better here, which is a little like saying it would be better to go blind in one eye rather than two. They both suck, one's just not as bad. Largely though this is very well executed and there is one very notable department in which Cloverfield far outstrips its counterpart and that is the quality of the direction, which here is very well - in places superbly - executed, for example the head of the Statue of Liberty sequence is terrific. The editing too is nicely handled, especially in the cuts between parts of the tape we're watching from Rob and Beth's day out at Coney Island back to the events of the night.

Whilst 90% of this film is good or better, the remaining 10% is so abysmal that it destroys a lot of the good work. That 10% is largely the writing of the dialogue. It may be just one part of a screenplay, but if it doesn't work it sticks out like a 90-foot monster and it really doesn't work here. Most of the ridiculous lines are handed to Hud and it doesn't help that he's the weakest actor in the film. I enter the following into evidence...


Hud: What time is the last chopper?
Rob: 0600 hours
Hud: What time is that?
Rob: 6 o-clock
Hud: Oh yeah, I knew that.


Hud: Thanks for saving me. Otherwise I'd be, like, dead.


(3am, our 'heroes' trapped in the subway, war rages on street level)
Rob: Wait a minute, this track carries the 6 [train].
Hud: Uh, Rob, I don't think the trains are running.


(Rob realises his battery is dead. He's desperately trying to retrieve his voicemail. He runs towards an electronics store that's being looted, quite obviously to get a battery)
Hud: Uh Rob, I think the store is closed man.


(A 90-foot monster rages along the streets of Manhattan ripping up buildings.)
Hud: Rob, something strange is happening outside.


He gets my vote for the "you ruined the movie" which they should consider creating as a new category at the Oscars just to spice things up. A shame really as there is some very good work and a lot of effort gone in to making this film. It just didn't quite do it for me.

C+

Tuesday, 29 January 2008

Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street

Not sure I can muster enough enthusiasm to write a full review for this one. If truth be told I've never been much of a Tim Burton fan. His Gothic sensibilities just don't gel with my own and I've not out and out enjoyed any of his films since Ed Wood.

This is the archetypal Tim Burton film. Dark lighting, tortured main character, a touch of the fantastical, Johnny Depp, Helena Bonham Carter, handsome visuals, etc. Much of that is all well and good but the main problem with Sweeney Todd is that it's a musical. And worse than that it's a musical with lousy music. The songs are dreadful. All of them. I couldn't even sing one now if I tried and I only saw it two days ago. You have to at least have some memorable songs in a musical but there a none here. Zip. There's one amusing line in one song - a line about piss in a scene that features Sacha Baron Cohen - easily the best thing in the film - but it's far too little enjoyment in a film that could have done with a heck of a lot more humour. I'm not the world's greatest fan of musicals granted but I do appreciate them if they're good. I really didn't think this was.

Obviously it is not a bad film. I'm not sure Tim Burton is capable of that. He's too talented: the visuals alone are award-worthy and pretty much always are with Burton. Just as much effort must go into creating the look of a film as in the story-telling so he certainly deserves credit for presentation. But I really was bored by the story and I think I'd have walked out of had I not been stuck in the middle of a row so I can't give this a good grade. However, I suspect if you like Burton you'll love this.

C-

Monday, 28 January 2008

No Country For Old Men

A bit late to the party with this review as it opened a couple of weeks back, but for those that haven't yet seen the Coen brothers' latest, it's well worth the effort. Adapted from the Cormack MacCarthy bestseller, this has been cited as a return to form for the Coens and spoken of with the same regard as Fargo. No Country For Old Men is hot favourite top win the Oscar this year and the Coens have been winning directing awards left right and centre including, most notably, this weekend's Director's Guild of America award, which they were presented with by Martin Scorsese.

If it wins the Oscar (and it seems to be more than a decent bet) it will mark this as the most critically acclaimed Coens film of all time. Forget the comparisons with Fargo - this will stand out there on its own. It'll be the movie that all their others are compared to.

The obvious question is does it deserve such praise? I have to say that it probably does. I have my reservations - and I really really wish I hadn't - but for a good 80% of the running time this is sheer pleasure in celluloid form. My complaints are no doubt the same as many other people's - in fact I know they are because I've heard them. However these criticisms are what turn this A+ film into an A- one - it's not as if they make this an abject failure. It's still a terrific motion and one I'd unhesitatingly recommend.

Josh Brolin stars as Llewelyn Moss, who spots a strange sight one evening whilst hunting pronghorn - a limping pitbull. The injured animal leaves a trail of blood which he follows to reveal several trucks parked out in the middle of the desert. This impeccably directed scene ends with Moss' discovery of a satchel holding $2 million dollars.

$2 million dollars doesn't often go missing without someone trying to find it and amongst the men trying to track it down is Anton Chigurh, a man best described as a complete psychopath with a dodgy haircut. Chigurh is played brilliantly by Javier Bardem who manages to unsettle simply with a softly spoken, guttural voice. He is the physical embodiment of the movie's themes fate vs free-will. One of the greatest scenes in film this year sees him engage in conversation with a gas station employee, who he asks to call the toss of a coin. It quickly becomes clear that Chigurh is asking the employee to stake his life on the coin-toss. The scene is one of many stunning sequences that literally had me on the edge of my seat. I actually leaned forward in admiration, soaking up every brilliant second of a thriller that was as tense, as exciting and as, well thrilling, as any made in recent years.

For 90 minutes this is an A+ film. Stunning. Magical. Unforgettable. But then things go a little wrong. The last 30 minutes don't exactly ruin the film. It's still an A- effort, however it does take the gloss of a perfect creation and that is more frustrating than seeing a good film screw things up really badly. However it's impossibly to discuss what I believe to be flaws without giving away key plot information. Do not keep reading if you've not seen the film!


Spoilers Spoilers Spoilers Spoilers Spoilers Spoilers


Really Really Big Spoilers


Have You Seen The Film?


If Not Why Are You Still Reading?!


Firstly Josh Brolin dies off camera. His death is a complete anti-climax to a story we've been becoming more and more invested in for the film's duration. It helps that Brolin delivers a stunning performance, but Moss is the perfect foil to the madness of Chigurh. He's the good guy that we can all root for - the average Joe who stumbles across $2 million and who tries desperately to hang onto it in the face of a seemingly unstoppable bad guy. Every single person in the theatre is hanging on to his every move, his every decision and to have him killed is bad enough but to have him killed in such an anti-climatic way is much worse. We then have 30 minutes of the Coens driving home the reasons for this, but the film feels like it should end with Moss' death and spiritually I think it does. The Coens, in the way they present Moss' demise and in the 30 minutes that follow, are exploring the themes of free-will and fate. In his death they are essentially showing us how things don't turn out how we want them to. Yet sometimes sermonising is far less enjoyable that a good old fashioned denouement with good guy going up against bad guy and the good guy prevailing against all the odds. Well of course it doesn't have to turn out exactly like that, the good guy can even die, but at least let us see it!

Spoilers End Spoilers End Spoilers End Spoilers End

By all accounts Joel and Etan Coen have been faithful to the source so I guess the fault lies with MacCarthy, but it is not the most satisfying way to end a film that was chew your nails off brilliant. I'd still say it is there best since Fargo. I suspect when I see it again I'll enjoy it even more. I may even see it again whilst it's still in theatres. I'd advise you strongly to do the same.

A-

Thursday, 24 January 2008

The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford (2007)


Oh, how long I waited to see this, in eager anticipation for well over a year. So, the question is...was it worth the wait?

The story focuses on the final year of the life of one of America's most infamous, and most controversial, figures, Jesse James before...well, the title kind of tells you the rest. James, depending on who you speak to, was a cold-blooded murderer, a bandit, a philanthropist, a madman, a Robin Hood type character who took from the rich and gave to the poor and an American hero. All these aspects - and many more besides - are captured by the film and by Brad Pitt's outstanding performance in the titular role.

It is difficult to know where to begin with this. Pitt and Casey Affleck (Robert Ford) are both outstanding and deliver 10/10 list-busting performances. For me, Pitt just edges it and that is not in any way a criticism of Affleck, or of the other cast members, to whom I'll return. What's most impressive about Pitt's performance is the gravitas and the depth he lends to the character. James stalks every scene with his aura and charisma. They say you can tell when a great person enters a room and the atmosphere changes and somehow this effect (which I can genuinely believe the historical James possessed) is captured on film. The tension, and James' presence in every room, is palpable and only increases as James becomes more and more unstable, paranoid, and neurotic as the film drifts on. That's a real testament to Pitt, but also to the ensemble cast who are obviously vital in capturing so difficult an essence to bottle. All are excellent, though a particular mention in dispatches must go to the underrated Paul Schneider (as the philandering Dick Liddil) and, especially, to Sam Shepard who plays Frank James, Jesse's almost equally notorious older brother. Sadly, the elder James disappears to early and Schneider is underused. Parts of this actually feel like the Thin Red Line in the way characters flow in and out of the movie as naturally as the light lays on the tips of the Missouri corn on the prairies depicted in the film's most beautiful moments.

Which brings me on to the cinematography. It has to be seen to be believed. I'm not sure I've ever seen such a beautiful film, with its harrowing depictions of wide open, sun-kissed, beauty entwined with bleak, snowy, landscapes that foreshadow James' darkening mood and his ever-shrinking world. Utterly stunning in the way that it encapsulates everything the film seems to be about. Roger Deakins has deservedly been nominated for best cinematography. Will he win? Well, after Saving Private Ryan won in 1999 ahead of the Thin Red Line, I lost what little remaining faith I had in the Oscars to reward quality film making. It would be a crime if Deakins didn't win. Casey Affleck has also been nominated for Best Supporting Actor and would be a worthy winner.

Another excellent thing about this film is that at least the first hour and a half disappears without any kind of plot whatsoever. It's all about life and the characters who make it up. Only half way in does a recognisable plot (as such) begin to develop and that is a huge positive as you are free, during the first part of the film, to invest in the deep and layered characters being presented to you on screen.

If truth be told, there is much more than this to recommend this film but it must be seen to be truly and fully appreciated. It's brilliant. I could have watched on for much longer in the company of these characters and the performers who depict them so brilliantly. An true example of master craftsmen, director, actors, cinematographer, musicians (and many more), at the top of their game and working in harmony to create a spellbinding and sublime whole. If you haven't already (and if you can find a cinema that's showing it) go and see this.

A+

Wednesday, 23 January 2008

Heath Ledger (1979-2008)


You'll be missed

Monster (2003)


An odd film this. Based on the true story of America's most notorious female serial killer, Aileen Wuornos, it was never going to be an easy watch, particularly as the director takes a first person perspective on the killer in the way that (for example) Zodiac (or Se7en) doesn't. The result is an enjoyable, balanced (in one sense at least) and fair, if unspectacular, film.

The first half of the film is better than the second and the relationship between the two main characters, Aileen, played by the excellent (and duly recognised by the movie-watching public as such) Charlize Theron, and Selby, played by Christina Ricci. Ricci's performance is solid but, in all honesty, there is not much substance to her selfish character and it's not, in my view, a very challenging role. The same can't be said of playing Aileen Wuornos. Theron gets into character perfectly from the off and at no point do you ever feel as though you are watching someone acting, it feels like a very real, flesh and blood, performance. Excellent.

The first half of the film charts the sweet and innocent relationship that develops between the two before things go wrong because of a tragic incident that can easily have the effect on fragile human life as portrayed in the film.

The second half, as Wuornos' killings become more and more senseless, is far less compelling and convincing. The ultimate result is a satisfactory film that I can't, however, see myself ever returning to. I cannot say whether it represents a genuine representation of Wuornos' life but it is a fair and balanced look at how life, and events, can so tragically and dramatically destroy the lives of individuals because of the unequal and often dehumanising conditions in which many human beings are compelled to live. As a film, the characters just aren't engaging enough, especially as the material becomes tougher and tougher and that is partly down to Ricci's miserable and selfish character Selby. It's an interesting ride following the short and tragic journey of the couple, but it's not always a gripping one.

Not great, but not bad either:

B-

Lack Of Posts #2



This picture I'm sure represents the forlorn feelings of all our many fans at the lack of posting.
My apologies as well. I cannot use the excuse of lack of internet sadly, I've just been mega busy. Ironically, this has also been the time when I've made more visits to the cinema than any time in the last six months. This lack of posting will be rectified as of tonight, starting from now...

Tuesday, 22 January 2008

Lust, Caution


Ang Lee specialises in films that explore love and intimacy. His best work explore these intangibles from all angles: the lack of affection between a middle aged, quite unhappily married couple in The Ice Storm; the repressed but deeply held intimacy between two men in Brokeback Mountain; the interwoven, requited and unrequited love in Sense and Sensability. All these films are superb examples of how to bring to life a relationship and convincingly portray it on screen. His latest effort is arguably his most convincing and most satisfying yet. It concerns the intensely intimate relationship between a government official and a resistance fighter and it can be described as nothing short of ground breaking.

This is Ang Lee's first film in his native tongue since 2000’s Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon and it is fascinating to see him work again with great Asian actors. One of these is Tony Leung, an actor who is all over my colleague's movie years ballots, and after seeing this it’s not hard to understand the appeal. I’ve seen Leung before, in Wong Kar Wai’s In the Mood for Love. That’s a highly regarded film and one that features a widely acclaimed performance. But I’ll be damned if he’s not so much better here. Starring opposite him is an actress with none of Leung’s years of experience, but one who betrays such youth with a performance that matches Leung in every way. Tei apparently saw off literally hundreds of other applicants for the role. It was one well worth fighting for and for Lee and his casting crew, such a meticulous auditioning process has paid off.

Wang Tei plays a student in Japanese occupied China, who's recruited by a group of idealistic, patriotic youths determined to resist the oppression thrust upon them. They begin their opposition through theatre but quickly become frustrated with the impotency of their efforts and soon gradate to more brutal methods. They hatch a plan to murder one of the key Japanese collaborators in the region (Leung) and plot for Tei to first befriend then seduce him.

Ang Lee has really taken a chance in this film, filming the most graphic love scenes ever seen in a movie intended for mainstream audiences. However these scenes are not only the most graphic they are also the most convincing. Perhaps there’s a correlation between the two, but it is not just the nudity that makes these scenes so effective. Lee handles the camera with absolute precision. Every movement, every shot so thoughtfully planned and note perfect in execution. The acting is a tour de force and this fascinatingly complex relationship is brought to life, and to a certain extent is told through their love making. It’s a relationship that evolves in unexpected ways throughout the course of the film and it is rare that we see character development as effective as this.

Leung and Tei are perfect. Leung plays a man who shows very little emotion for 90% of the time, and then an explosion of ferocity and passion for the rest. This stark contrast and the intensity of the emotion displayed, nearly all of which is reserved for the love scenes between himself and Tang Wei, is completely riveting. Wei begins the film as a naïve student who can barely overcome her shyness enough to appear on stage, and ends the film as a key figure within the resistance able to deceive one of the most paranoid and cautious men in China. Her transformation is utterly compeelling; she’s superb.

Lust, Caution was disqualified as Taiwan’s entry for foreign language film at the Oscars due to having to large a percentage of cast and crew coming in from outside Taiwain. It’s a real shame as it will almost certainly not find itself shortlisted in any of the other categories* and this is a film that deserves more attention. Rodrigo Prieto’s cinematography deserves notice, although it has to be said there’s an embarrassment of riches in that particular category this year so one cannot complain too much if he is overlooked. The score by Alexandre Desplat is certainly award-worth as well, but the greatest behind the camera achievement is undoubtedly that of Lee’s. This may very well be the best directed film of the year and the greatest directorial achievement in his illustrious career.

A-

*and indeed it wasn't. Nominees were announced earlier today - I wrote this review last weekend.

Lack of Posts

Apologies to our many fans for a lack of recent posts. I've no internet at the moment - that'll be rectified Friday. Have some reviews to go up, including Lust, Caution which you'll probably read before you read this post as I'll put it up shortly.

Shame to see it get completely shut out at the Oscars but overall I liked their list so I won't complain too much.

Oscar Reaction

Nominees announced today - head over to Oscar.com for the complete list. Here's my reaction to the best and worst...

The great:

6 nominations in the major categories for Michael Clayton: film, director, actor, supporting actor and actress, screenplay. That's the best of any film. Totally deserved.

Viggo Mortensen for Eastern Promises

Casey Affleck for The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford

Roger Deakins’ cinematograpy for The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford

Marco Beltrami’s brilliant score in 3:10 to Yuma.

The not:

No love for The Lookout (totally expected though) including no love for the best score in recent history by James Newton Howard.

No love for Lust, Caution – was disqualified for foreign film but still deserved notice especially for Tang Wei who would have slotted in nicely instead of Cate Blanchett who’s been nominated for that character before and the film was, by all accounts, awful. Total non-surprise that Ang Lee’s film was shut out but I’ll moan anyway.

Zero love for the excellent Zodiac. Again, no surprise but that doesn’t make it right!

No Gordon Pinsent in Away from Her, despite him delivering the best performance in the film. Julie Christie’s nomination was deserved though and it was good to see Sarah Polley recognised for an excellent debut (she was nominated for adapted screenplay).

Thursday, 10 January 2008

The Dark Knight Trailer

Haven't been so disappointed by a trailer in a long time...Be interested to know what you guys think. Might even take it off my top 10 for 2008 preview list : (

Kill Bill Vol. 2 (2004)

This reviewer was decidely unimpressed with Kill Bill Vol.1 to the tune of a D. In fact, I had decided not to bother with part two, which I'd anyway heard was the weaker of the two. I think my colleague will protest, but I couldn't disagree more.

Vol. 2 is by far the superior of the two films. The characters are better and, more importantly, better developed, it feels like there's a proper story, with some interesting sidelines, and it isn't just a pointless bloody mess (in both senses of the term). In fact, there is very little in the way of the blood and gore which so defined, and in my view overwhelmed, the first movie.

The Bride feels like a more flesh and blood character than in the first movie, (the excellent) Daryl Hannah's Elle Driver is by far the best of the villainesses, and she gets proper screen time here, and Michael Madsen is as entertaining as he always is. The real star of the show, however, is Bill, played majestically, thoughtfully and deeply by David Carradine. He, like Hannah, is given far more screen time here and the result is a full-bodied, mature, character. The Bride's colourful (to say the least) and sadistic martial arts teacher, Pai Mei (pictured above), played with real verve and chemistry by Chia Hui Liu, is also highly deserving of a mention in dispatches. Apparently the character Pai Mei (which means "White eyebrow") appeared in numerous kung fu films in the 1970's and 1980's, they might well be worth seeing for Pai Mei alone!

It's not a perfect film by any means. The ending is ropey and you can see it coming a mile off and a few aspects and moments invite you to suspend belief just a little too much for my liking (though there are less of them than in vol. 1). That said, there are some excellent scenes (I could watch the Bride and Bill on the porch of the church over and over again - it would win scene of 2004 if we had such a list - and it takes on even more sophistication after you've seen Vol.2's last reel) and it by far surpasses the over-indulgent, shallow and heartless original. This, on the other hand, has flesh, it has heart, and it has soul.

B

Another 2007 release, another great film.

Will try and get round to a full review but for now I'll just say this'll be vying for a top 5 spot without a doubt and both Tony Leung and Wei Tang will be on my shortlist as well. Ang Lee is just immensely talented.

I'd also confidently predict that Matt will love it.

Monday, 7 January 2008

January Preview

With my main 2008 preview to come, here's a little preview of some potential highlights (and lowlights?) in January...

First up, I've gone for the new one from the Coen Brothers' 'No Country For Old Men', featuring a rumoured-to-be-stunning performance from a Matt all-time top 25 performer, Javier Bardem. Also starring Tommy Lee Jones and Josh Brolin, the story focuses on Llewelyn Moss (Brolin) who finds a stash of money and heroin and the bloody events that follow. Bardem seems to have been given huge creative licence and, possibly, the role of a lifetime in the form of a sadistic killer who flips coins for human lives. This could be stunning. Released Friday 18/01/07

Next up comes the Tom Hanks vehicle, Charlie Wilson's War. Hanks plays the titular character who helps to arm Afghan rebels against the Russians, at the heart of the cold-war era, with obvious and deep consequences. This sounds weighty and I'm sure it will be, although I hear that early reviews (unlike No Country For Old Men) have not been favourable, despite it once being an early frontrunner in the Oscar race. Still, an all-star cast of Hanks, the returning Julia Roberts, Amy Adams and the always excellent Philip Seymour Hoffman promises much, not least in dollars, as my colleague's excellent post a month or so back highlighted. Should be worth a watch at least. Released this Friday (11/01/08).

A lowlight for me, but surely a highlight for others, is Tim Burton's Sweeney Todd. I was distinctly unimpressed with the initial trailer and now that I've found out it's a musical, am less impressed still. However, Burton, and his long-time collaborator, the ludicrously handsome Johnny Depp, have massive followings and this is sure to have a wide appeal, even if it is not one I'll be queuing up for. Or even dusting off the Blockbuster shelves in three years for that matter. Still, for those who are going to check it out, expect a colourful interpretation, a solid performance from Depp and plenty of (not Al) gore. I hope you enjoy! Also starring the excellent, and always always watchable, Alan Rickman. And Ali G and Borat creator Sacha Baron Cohen. Released 25/01/08.

On MyFilmVault we always like the personal touch, none of this withdrawn ivory-tower film journalism nonsense on here, so here are two films I'll certainly be checking out in January after belated arrivals to a screen near me in Leicester. The first is Ang Lee's new espionage thriller Lust, Caution, starring one of my favorite actors of all time, Tony Leung. I cannot wait. I can wait even less for a film that I've been salivating over for at least a year, the impressive-looking The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford. It seems I'm destined not to see this film, so the projector will probably break or the cinema burn down or my bike will get a flat on the way, or something, so keep your fingers crossed for me. I hope I finally make it! Will post reviews if I do manage to see them both.

And finally...January sees the reissue of a Hitchcock classic and a film Adam and I both adore, The Lady Vanishes (1938), starring Margaret Lockwood, May Whitty and Michael Redgrave. Despite its age, this remains a true edge-of-your-seat thriller about a woman who mysteriously disappears on a train journey, that stands comparison with anything the directors of today can offer. In fact, it surpasses them. Who touches the master after all? If you've not seen it, you've got to check this out, I can promise you that you won't regret it! In fact, even if you have seen it, what an excuse to catch it again with Hitchcock on the big screen!

And that takes us up to 01/02/2008 and the release of my first 'can't wait to see' film of 2008 - Cloverfield, the stunning trailer for which I've pasted below...



HAPPY NEW YEAR MYFILMVAULT READERS!!! Let's hope 2008 is a great year for moviegoing!

Matewan (1987)



Have seen quite a few films recently, but it seems only appropriate to start with the best of them. Based on real life events, Matewan focuses on Chris Cooper's union man, Joe Kenehan, who visits the town of Matewan to support a group of coal miners in their dispute with the mining company that has long exploited them and their families. Naturally, Kenehan stirs up trouble, whilst managing to unite the various factions of minors (including the 'scabs' who initially take the place of the indigenous striking minors), and all hell breaks loose.

As readers of MyFilmVault will know, this is my kind of stuff. It's tough, taught and hard-edged, with a powerful social conscience in tow. Yet, as I always say, it's the characters, and the actors who portray them, which make this such compelling, impossible-to-look-away, fare.

Perhaps MyFilmVault needs to have another section in movie-years for other notable bits of excellence. For the first time I would genuinely like to nominate the ensemble cast of Matewan for a stunning all-round performance which gives the film all its compelling drama. They surpass all other casts in terms of what they provide as an ensemble. In short, there are no weak links. Cooper is excellent as the film's focal point, James Earl Jones is superb (though sadly underused) as the earthy, best-name-ever-list-topper, 'Few Clothes' Johnson, Mary McDonell is good as the (nicely) understated love interest, Will Oldham is good as the young, idealistic, preacher Danny, and Gordon Clapp and (Lost's) Kevin Tighe are suitably despicable as the bad guys and David Strathairn...well, you get the idea. A stunning cast and huge kudos to John Sayles for directing them so well. This is one of those films where you can just tell the chemistry is right and each scene flows delicately and subtly into the next like the river that meanders softly and naturally through the titular town.

Haskell Wexler was deservedly nominated for the cinematography and the pastel, light, shades hide a darker underbelly and a cutting social commentary on the nature of exploitation and poverty and yet, with that, some of the more positive things that can come out of them, togetherness, struggle and unity. A true testament to an excellent director, a truly stunning ensemble performance, and ideals we, at the beginning of this new millennium, might do well to revisit.

Highly recommended to all!

A

Sunday, 6 January 2008

I Am Legend



Here is the other perspective on the MyFilmVault class trip to see Will Smith's latest. Well, not so much another perspective as we almost agree entirely.

I had heard reviews saying that the first hour or so of I Am Legend are brilliant and the last half hour ropey. And, as my colleague says, that is absolutely spot on. I do not generally find myself in agreement with the film-reviewing community, and I'm not sure my colleague does either, but this time it is hard not to agree.

The first hour is brilliant, A grade, material. Smith is good, the atmosphere is taught and gripping, the post-apocalyptic New York looks visually stunning, and the character of Robert Neville is very well developed indeed. As in Cast Away, a non-human character is used to excellent effect and is a central part of the film's best scene. Unfortunately, this best scene also signals the film's turning point.

The last half hour is ropey, and it is possibly even ropier if I have misunderstood part of the ending (which I won't spoil), but I'll give the film the benefit of the doubt. God comes into it very unnecessarily and the whole chance/fate/free will thing is dealt with pretty poorly. It is handled much better and much more effectively, for example, in the excellent and underrated Signs.

I would go a couple of steps further than my colleague and say that the CGI monsters are pretty damn terrible and unconvincing, which doesn't help when you're on fictitous sci-fi territory anyway. Monsters need to convince if they are to frighten. It felt like all of the budget went on making New York look as good as it does and a few quid went on the mutants. Disappointing.

However, the good bits outweigh the flaws and it is, to be honest, worth watching for the first hour alone, an excellent and, at times, very moving character study on the themes of loneliness, isolation and tragedy. So, therefore, it is fully worthy of a

B

Saturday, 5 January 2008

I am Legend

Well my piece on actors vs actresses left no doubt about who the most bankable star in the world of cinema was and Will Smith has done it again, breaking records for December opening weekends and smashing through the $200 million dollar mark in a little over 3 weeks.

I am Legend is the 3rd adaptation of the Richard Matheson novel about the last man on earth. Ridley Scott was slated to direct Arnold Schwarzanegger in this film (or a variation thereof) back in the 90s but however much I love Ridley Scott, I can’t help thinking it was probably best that this film was made instead.

It’s not perfect – in fact I thought the entire second half was a bit of a let down, however Will Smith is one of the few actors that can be on screen on his own for 2 hours and for that not to become a little stale. He’s not quite at his best here – a couple of scenes don’t convince, particularly when he has a bit of a meltdown. However he shows once again why the public will pay to see him and for the first 60 minutes this is a grade A action film.

New York has never been portrayed quite like this. In fact it probably surpasses Ridley Scott’s own take on New York earlier this year in American Gangster. The latter was a brilliant retro look at 70s New York, and it was totally convincing. This though is a look at an apocalyptic New York and looks even better (if you’ll forgive the slightly pointless comparison!). Grass grows in the pavement cracks, plants have grown to 8 foot tall, deer wander along deserted avenues. It’s brilliant. A big gold star for the CGI guys on that one.

A big black mark for the same guys though (if indeed it was the same guys) for the zombified human mutants. They’re not quite right – not appalling mind you, just not quite up to scratch.

I stated that the entire 2nd half is a bit of a let down. There’s a mention of God at just over the halfway point that totally gives away the ending. I didn’t imagine God would be proved wrong in an American blockbuster and indeed he is not. It’s a pointless and stupid mention and really irritated me. However, for all its flaws I find myself preferring to concentrate on the good points and I guess that’s testament to how well they pulled much of it off. Not the perfect action film but worth seeing on the big screen.

B-