Dell's Good, Bad & Ugly Movie Reviews

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  • dell71
    Enter Sandman
    • Mar 2009
    • 23919


    Iron Man 3
    Directed by Shane Black.
    2013. Rated PG-13, 130 minutes.
    Cast:
    Robert Downey Jr.
    Gwyneth Paltrow
    Don Cheadle
    Guy Pearce
    Ben Kingsley
    Rebecca Hall
    Jon Favreau
    William Sadler
    Paul Bettany
    James Badge Dale
    Stephanie Szostak
    Ty Simpkins
    Dale Dickey
    Miguel Ferrer

    Dealing with the events of The Avengers is taking a heavy toll on Tony Stark (Downey Jr.). He suffers from anxiety attacks, can’t sleep and spends most of his time designing and assembling various Iron Man suits with differing properties and capabilities. Meanwhile, the rest of the world is at the mercy of a ruthless terrorist known as The Mandarin (Kingsley). To deal with this menace, President Ellis (Sadler) dispatches Tony’s bestest buddy Col. Rhodes (Cheadle). He wears one of Tony’s suits that’s been painted red, white and blue and dubbed “The Iron Patriot.” After a Mandarin bomb goes off that puts Happy (Favreau), another of Tony’s buds, into a coma our hero decides to get involved.

    To me, the reason this franchise is so successful is not that Iron Man and his world saving exploits are so great. It’s that Tony Stark, as portrayed by Robert Downey Jr. is endlessly compelling. It’s a perfect match of actor and character coming together to form an individual you can’t take your eyes off. This, his fourth outing as the billionaire media-darling turned superhero, is no different. With Stark’s wealth and vigilantism fueled not only by the crime committed against him, but other deep-seated issues, the obvious comparison is with Bruce Wayne, particularly as played by Christian Bale in the recently concluded Dark Knight Trilogy. The difference being that Bruce broods and sulks as if two seconds from slitting his own wrists and downing a bottle of sleeping pills while Tony is an outgoing and likeable extrovert even though his air of superiority is readily apparent. When the anxiety attacks begin, he’s truly taken aback. They’re chipping away at his real armor, his supreme confidence, not to mention what it’s doing to his relationship with Pepper (Paltrow). For a man such as he, this is a devastating development. The scenes of Tony trying to come to grips with these most recent traumatic events and a future possibly more uncertain than when he made his first Iron Man suit are the best in the movie. He connects with us and somehow, through all the tragedy and difficulties of his present, he still makes us laugh.


    Don’t worry, even though there are plenty of opportunities for us to practice armchair psychology, this is no artsy character study. There is lots of action. It’s all pretty well done, but the most spectacular sequence, for my money, is the “barrel of monkeys” scene. All I have to say is 13 civilians falling from a plane and just one Iron Man. Later, the scene I suspect most of you will point to as the most exciting is the finale involving more Iron Man suits than you can count. This works OK, but is a bit too cluttered and repetitive for my taste. Don’t get me wrong, it provides some great visuals and thrills. It’s just a little too much.

    Where Iron Man 3 threatens to lose us is with a bunch of small but easily noticeable problems that snowball into an issue that hangs over the movie in a bad way. They stretch our suspension of belief beyond even what's expected of a superhero flick by either dispensing too much information, or none at all. In the too much department, we know how far something has to travel to save Tony’s butt. To say it gets there fast is an understatement of epic proportions. It could only have gotten there sooner if Superman reversed the Earth’s rotation. On the other hand, we get no information, other than relying on our own knowledge of Tony’s genius, on how this rescue is even remotely possible considering a trip to Home Depot features prominently in this occurrence. Most troublesome is how his computer Jarvis (Bettany) is still able to help remains a mystery. And just where does the Audi come from? I’ll stop there. Suffice it to say these annoyances take me out of the movie a little at a time.

    In the end, it’s a testament to a character we’ve become vested in through several movies that it’s problems don’t overwhelm IM3. I hate to keep bringing up Batman, but it’s similar to The Dark Knight Rises in that things people would normally destroy a movie for will be dismissed as non-issues due to their love of the hero and his franchise. I’ve no issue with this other than to say it’s a pretty good movie but hardly a great one.

    MY SCORE: 7/10

    Comment

    • j.hen
      Self Care
      • Oct 2008
      • 10058

      I think Iron Man 3 really showed that these Iron Man films would be more on par with the first Captain America and Thor movies (as far as box-office performance) than being compared to what Avengers was able to do there without Robert Downey Jr. in the titular role. Hopefully Disney/Marvel realizes this as well.

      As you pointed out, the movie itself isn't that great on it's own, but we get more Tony Stark and less Iron Man. Which saves the film imo.

      Comment

      • dell71
        Enter Sandman
        • Mar 2009
        • 23919

        RDJ has been a key cog in the marvel movie machine since the first iron man probably wouldn't have been as successful as it was without him. It was also his personality (combined with hulk) that propelled the avengers imho.
        Last edited by dell71; 05-15-2013, 04:37 PM.

        Comment

        • dell71
          Enter Sandman
          • Mar 2009
          • 23919


          My Week with Marilyn
          Directed by Simon Curtis.
          2011. Rated R, 99 minutes.
          Cast:
          Michelle Williams
          Kenneth Branagh
          Eddie Redmayne
          Dominic Cooper
          Judi Dench
          Zoe Wannamaker
          Emma Watson
          Julia Ormond
          Toby Jones
          Dougray Scott

          The first time Marilyn Monroe (Williams) went to London it was on a business trip. Accompanied by her husband of three weeks, famed playwright Arthur Miller (Scott), and a number of handlers, she went to film what would become The Prince and the Showgirl. Her co-star and director is the legendary Sir Laurence Olivier (Branagh). During what was a very trying shoot, Marilyn befriends Third Assistant Director Colin Clark (Redmayne). As the title suggests, this is the story of their tumultuous week together.

          Predictably, the notoriously troubled Marilyn is the center of attention. She frustrates Olivier to no end. She suffers wild mood swings, is ridiculously insecure and often hopped up on various pills. Williams’ performance is a near-perfect impersonation of the icon. More than that, she captures Marilyn’s fragility and the manner in which she wields her sexuality as the only weapon she feels comfortable using. It’s remarkable work that threatens to reduce Monroe to a caricature but manages enough humanity to make her a sympathetic figure.

          No less brilliant is Kenneth Branagh as Olivier. He, no doubt has the showier role with many loud-voiced tirades and even an angry Shakespearean soliloquy. He balances this with heartfelt admissions as the movie wears on. He hits every note perfectly as does Judi Dench as Dame Sybil Thorndike, popping in on occasion to provide encouraging words to Marilyn.


          Through the two leads, MWwM gives us wonderfully contentious moments between legends. We learn very early that Marilyn’s lack of training, acting ability and, perhaps most of all, professional etiquette offends his very soul. However, her raw sex appeal and presence are simply too much to be denied. Marilyn suffers the brunt of his verbal attacks making her even more unsure of herself than she already is.

          While the fireworks between Marilyn and Olivier drive the movie, it’s the relationship of she and Colin that gives us its most touching moments. In him, we see a young man getting in way over his head but we can’t help admiring the tenderness with which he treats her. We truly feel his longing to save her. What we wish he’d understand is that she doesn’t really want to be saved. Her manipulations are transparent to us, but not to him. How could they be? Imagine yourself a 23 year old straight male and the most beautiful woman in the world coming on to you.

          The end result is a delightful movie filled with wonderful performances. It’s fairly light on offering any new insight into Ms. Monroe, but it does humanize her enough for us to grab hold of. It helps that, despite her forwardness, her relationship with Colin maintains a sense of innocence. It gives the impression of a story of puppy love while treading in some rather adult waters. That said, don’t come into MWwM thinking all the mysteries of Marilyn’s demise will be solved. It’s an entertaining, but small, chapter in the ill-fated star’s turbulent life.

          MY SCORE: 8/10

          Comment

          • dell71
            Enter Sandman
            • Mar 2009
            • 23919


            Bernie
            Directed by Richard Linklater.
            2011. Rated PG-13, 99 minutes.
            Cast:
            Jack Black
            Shirley MacLaine
            Matthew McConaughey
            Brady Coleman
            Richard Robichaux
            Rick Dial
            Brandon Smith
            Larry Jack Dotson
            Merrilee McCommas
            Mathew Greer

            Locals say assistant funeral director Bernie Tiede was the most popular man in Carthage, Texas. This was at least in part due to how great a mortician he was. They say he made the remains of their loved ones look wonderful. Another reason was that he was the most genuinely nice person in town. He was so beloved that no one in town blamed him or wanted to convict him even after he confessed to a murder. This is a retelling of just how this came to be. Amazingly, this is based on a true story.

            The movie mixes and matches genres in a way that could be confusing, at first. It’s part documentary as some of the people who knew the real Bernie play themselves and speak candidly about what occurred. This is interspersed with scenes using actors. Aside from Jack Black in the lead, there’s Shirley MacLaine as Marjorie, one of the many widows Bernie befriends, and Matthew McConaughey as Danny “Bucks”, the District Attorney trying to make sure Bernie does the time for his crime. Eventually, it turns into courtroom drama. Through it all runs a current of dark comedy making it even more unbelievable that this really happened. Stylistically, it’s very reminiscent of Waiting for Guffman. Thankfully, all the different strands mesh easily, helping us settle into a groove and roll with the punches.


            For a film such as Bernie success hinges on the believability of its cast. Not surprisingly, MacLaine and McConaughey nail their roles. McConaughey in particular feels completely natural as the normally self-serving DA who is not given enough credit for wanting to do the right thing even though the people with power to re-elect him appear to be completely against him. They tell him so every chance they get. Thankfully Jack Black reels himself in enough to keep Bernie from becoming a complete joke of a person. That’s not necessarily an easy thing to do considering Bernie is quirky and effeminate, two qualities that could easily be overblown along the lines of Robin Williams in The Birdcage. Black plays him as an odd bird, to be sure, but one we can still identify with and even understand why people like him.

            Once our main characters are established as real people, the movie has one more task. It has to make us in the audience like Bernie at least half as much as the people of Carthage. Granted, we don’t get all smitten with him like they do, but it succeeds. Actually, showing the killing goes a long way in this. It’s filmed in a way that we don’t see him as some heartless monster, at least up to that point. Combined with the generally ill disposition of his victim and the situation he’s found himself in, it plants the idea in our heads that we might have done the same thing. It also makes us skeptical of what the actual charges are against him. We’re sympathetic toward him, at first, but as time moves on and his actions become more and more egregious we’re not so sure about things. And that’s precisely where the movie wants you to be.

            MY SCORE: 7.5/10

            Comment

            • Houston
              Back home
              • Oct 2008
              • 21231

              Originally posted by dell71
              Dell's Classics Presents:



              The 400 Blows
              AKA Les quatre cents coup
              1959. Not Rated, 99 minutes.
              Director: Francois Truffaut.
              Starring Jean-Pierre Leaud, Claire Maurier, Albert Remy, Guy Decomble.

              Young Antoine Doinel (Leaud) navigates his tough childhood without much guidance from his largely apathetic parents. Part of appreciating this movie is understanding why it was made. This is the directorial debut of Truffaut. Prior to getting behing the camera, he was one of France's top movie critics and had become increasingly disappointed with the way movies were being made. Instead of continuing to complain about the matter, he simply made a movie himself, setting out to do something different than what he'd been seeing. On top of that, its largely autobiographical as well. In the process, he helped kick off what became known as the French New Wave. Read more about it, here. It is a real slice of life, feeling like you're simply spending time with our young hero, not necessarily watching a movie with a traditional plot and conflict, though both eventually become apparent. Nor is it manipulative melodrama, intent on getting you to cry as it so easily could've been. That its unobtrusively shot without a ton of fancy editing tricks helps foster the illusion. The natural feel of the writing and acting work heavily in its favor, also. Though each performance is effortlessly realistic, including that of our child star Leaud, the actors never seem to preen for the camera. Finally, in true slice of life fashion we get a stopping point moreso than an ending. The possibilities of what could happen next are endless, both good and bad. This gives the movie more resonance than your typical happy ending does. If you're an artsy-fartsy film buff, you must see this movie. If the sight of a black-and-white movie instantly puts you to sleep and the thought of reading subtitles turns your stomach stop reading this review now and forget I ever mentioned this flick. Yup subtitleophobes, we're speaking French.
              MY SCORE: 10/10

              Personally think 400 Blows is a little overrated but I loved Truffaut's lesser known follow up called "Shoot the Piano Player", watched it last night. I read that one thing he didn't like about The 400 Blows is that it didn't show his appreciation or influence of American films. So with Shoot the Piano Player he made a more darker film noir-esque movie. It's more like Breathless(but actually serious) than The 400 Blows.


              That link you posted mentioned his 3rd film called "Jules and Jim", planning to watch it tonight
              Last edited by Houston; 05-18-2013, 01:42 PM.

              Comment

              • dell71
                Enter Sandman
                • Mar 2009
                • 23919

                Thanks. I haven't seen "Shoot the Piano Player" or "Jules and Jim." Have to do that soon. I have seen "Breathless" and that's one I think is way overrated, but as you can tell I love "The 400 Blows."

                Comment

                • dell71
                  Enter Sandman
                  • Mar 2009
                  • 23919


                  The Watch
                  Directed by Akiva Schaffer.
                  2012. Rated R, 102 minutes.
                  Cast:
                  Ben Stiller
                  Vince Vaughn
                  Jonah Hill
                  Richard Ayoade
                  Rosemarie DeWitt
                  Will Forte
                  Mel Rodriguez
                  Doug Jones
                  Erin Moriarty
                  Nicholas Braun
                  R. Lee Ermey
                  Joe Nunez

                  Evan (Stiller) is the manager of the local Costco and the organizer guy in the town of Glenview, Ohio. He creates clubs and committees for everything. Naturally, after his buddy Antonio Guzman (Nunez), the after-hours security guard at said Costco, is murdered in the store, Evan organizes a neighborhood watch to find the killer. Only three people answer his call to duty: Bob (Vaughn), Franklin (Hill) and Jamarcus (Ayoade). They aren’t the most dedicated soldiers. However, as long as there plenty of cold Budweisers around they’re happy. In any event, they get more than they bargained for when it becomes evident that hostile aliens are responsible for the killing. You’ll notice I’ve already mentioned two brand names. You will become well acquainted with them as well as Ray-O-Vac batteries and Magnum condoms. In other words, product placement and penis jokes ensue.

                  Strangely, between all the commercials flying at us exists a fun movie with a wacky premise. Ben Stiller plays himself, as always, so you already know if you think he’ll make you laugh. Vince Vaughn also does his normal schtick. However, he seems much more into it than he has in quite some time and is really pretty amusing. Less known Richard Ayoade also provides us with a few chuckles and the cameo by the great R. Lee Ermey is downright hilarious. Still, our heartiest laughs go to Jonah Hill. His character is not quite off type, but he approaches it from a different angle than normal. It works wonders. The four share a nice chemistry making the banter between them enjoyable.


                  Most surprising is there are a pair of well-executed human stories mixed in to all the advertisements and raunchy jokes. One involves the state of the relationship between Evan and his wife Abby played by Rosemarie DeWitt, here looking very Tina Fey-ish. The other is about Bob and his daughter, the rebellious Chelsea (Moriarty). Both work better than expected as if organic to the tale and not shoe-horned in just because. In fact, I enjoy these parts of movie more than the main plot.

                  That main plot, of course, heavily involves aliens. It’s rather lazy in almost all regards and seems ill-fitting of the movie they’re in. Though set up to play as a spoof of alien invasion flicks, the effort is only half-hearted. This includes creature design awfully similar to some rather famous cinematic extra-terrestrials. By the end, we realize their entire storyline is just one long dick joke. No pun intended. Sorta. Okay, I’m lying. Either way, the punchline to this particular dick joke is rendered ineffective by all the ones that came before it. Sorry. Sorta.

                  Despite the rampant commercialism, lazy sci-fi and endless succession of genital humor I found The Watch fun to sit through. I realize these aspects are a complete turn-off for many, hence the abysmal reviews this has generally garnered. They are for me, normally. They even keep me from grading this as a great movie. However, maybe I was just in the right frame of mind. Maybe, I’m more susceptible to such humor than I’d like to believe. In any event, the guys kept my interest and made me laugh. At the end of the day that’s all I ask out of my comedies.

                  MY SCORE: 7/10

                  Comment

                  • dell71
                    Enter Sandman
                    • Mar 2009
                    • 23919


                    Premium Rush
                    Directed by David Koepp.
                    2012. Rated PG-13, 91 minutes.
                    Cast:
                    Joseph Gordon-Levitt
                    Michael Shannon
                    Dania Ramirez
                    Jamie Chung
                    Wolé Parks
                    Aasif Mandvi
                    Lauren Ashley Carter
                    Christopher Place
                    Anthony Chisolm
                    Kym Perfetto

                    Wilee (Gordon-Levitt) is a Manhattan bike messenger. For those of you who’ve never been to New York he’s a same day courier of small packages that rides a bicycle instead of driving a truck. Rest assured, this is a real job in the Big Apple. As you might imagine, with your knowledge of Manhattan traffic, real or just what you see in movies, this isn’t the safest occupation in the world. Wilee seems to make it even more dangerous. He usually rides at breakneck speed, refuses to even have a break on his bike and commits as many moving violations as humanly possible. He has an unbridled passion for riding and is completely dedicated to being on time. Therefore, he’s the perfect person for Nima (Chung), the soon-to-be ex-roommate of his soon-to-be ex-girlfriend Vanessa (Ramirez), to call when she has a highly valuable, time-sensitive envelope to be delivered across town. He picks it up at about 5:30. It had better be there by 7:00, or else. Of course, we wouldn’t have a movie if there weren’t a few obstacles. Namely there’s Bobby (Shannon), a desperate cop with a serious gambling problem. He’s intent on getting that envelope for himself. Lots and lots of bike riding ensues.

                    There are a couple of cat-and-mouse games going on. This is where Premium Rush excels. First and foremost is the aforementioned one between Wilee and Bobby. Next, but no less fun, is between Wilee and a legit bicycle cop. Watching our hero try to elude both is highly entertaining. These, along with our dirty cop mishandling his debtors, provides us with the film’s action and does an excellent job of it. The contents of the envelope and the story behind it gives us its heart. It works enough for us to root for its safe delivery.


                    Where PR sputters is when its attentions turn to the love story stuck in its spokes. It is an awkwardly handled triangle with fellow bike messenger Manny (Parks) vying with Wylie for Vanessa’s attention. Oh, I forgot to mention she’s also a messenger. It mostly involves each guy yelling their case at her then trying to force their lips on her. Who says romance is dead? Truthfully, this could sorta work if performed properly. Unfortunately, the line deliveries of both Ramirez and Parks leave a lot to be desired. Assuming it is actually them we see riding through the streets, they’re better cyclists than actors. At least they are in this movie.

                    The only other issue is time. We effectively jump back and forth within it on the day in question. Each leap backwards reveals enough of the story to keep us engaged. The problem comes when we start getting close to our deadline. You know how in some movies the hero has thirty seconds to diffuse a bomb and takes ten minutes before he gets it done with one second left on the clock? Yeah, sort of like that.

                    In the grand scheme of things, the problems I’ve mentioned are really small. They don’t subtract from our enjoyment of PR. Watching all the bike stunts is fairly exhilarating and the whole thing moves at a brisk pace. Down time is kept to a minimum and surprisingly so is stupidity, aside from the finale I mentioned above. This should quench the thirst of all you action junkies.

                    MY SCORE: 7.5/10

                    Comment

                    • dell71
                      Enter Sandman
                      • Mar 2009
                      • 23919


                      Ice Age: Continental Drift
                      Directed by Steve Martino and Mike Thurmeier.
                      2012. Rated PG, 88 minutes.
                      Cast:
                      Ray Romano
                      Queen Latifah
                      Denis Leary
                      Keke Palmer
                      Peter Dinklage
                      John Leguizamo
                      Jennifer Lopez
                      Wanda Sykes
                      Nick Frost
                      Josh Pegg
                      Simon Pegg
                      Seann William Scott

                      Our most beloved prehistoric squirrel, Skrat, has finally gone and done it. His magnificent chase of that ever elusive nut has improbably led him to the Earth’s core. This sets off a chain reaction causing the surface above to split into what we now know as the seven continents. This parting of the land separates woolly mammoth Manny (Romano) from his wife Ellie (Latifah) and their now teenage daughter Peaches (Palmer). He finds himself out to sea on a block of ice with his trusty and familiar cohorts, Diego (Leary), the saber-toothed tiger, and Sid (Leguizamo) the sloth. Also along for the ride is Sid’s grandmother, Granny (Sykes). Manny trying to get back to his family as they try to reach safety ensues. And the squirrel chasing that nut.

                      To ensure getting the family back together is no easy task, there must be a villain. This one is Captain Gutt (Dinklage), an ape/pirate who runs a scurvy crew. The most important of the bunch is his first-mate Shira (Lopez). She’s a saber-toothed tiger and love interest to Diego. J-Lo handles the character capably. Still, Gutt stands out as a fun bad guy. Dinklage voices him excellently with a mean streak just enough to be a little scary to the youngest viewers. Gutt also provides us some of the movie’s best visuals just by swinging around as apes are wont to do. He also has a bit of magnetism about him. Helping in this regard is the fact that he’d be perfectly at home as the villain in the next Pirates of the Caribbean flick.


                      Speaking of PotC it is but one of the movies CD pays homage to. Most notable of these is Braveheart as the movie has lots of fun with that. It even makes fun of itself from time to time. Thankfully, it does so in a manner allowing it to avoid becoming self-parody. Just a wink and a nod letting us know it understands that much of what’s happened over the course of the series isn’t historically or chronologically accurate.

                      Liberties with history aside, the main point of these films is to have fun. Of course, the not-so-subtle message in all of them is that we can all get along despite our differences. Even the bad guys are a collection of numerous species cooperating on a task. Once again, the lesson comes through loud and clear. The added layer is our concentration on inter-generational relationships withing the family. It’s nothing groundbreaking but still nicely done.

                      The Ice Age franchise has found a nice niche for itself. They aren’t truly great movies like the Toy Story films, but they’re certainly a cut above most of the dreck passing for children’s entertainment. Each installment, Continental Drift included, is a fun adventure that manages to inject new colorful characters into our cast of familiar faces without upsetting the dynamics. This fits nicely into the canon.

                      MY SCORE: 6.5/10

                      Comment

                      • dell71
                        Enter Sandman
                        • Mar 2009
                        • 23919


                        Wrath of the Titans
                        Directed by Jonathan Liebesman.
                        2012. Rated PG-13, 99 minutes.
                        Cast:
                        Sam Worthington
                        Liam Neeson
                        Rosamund Pike
                        Ralph Fiennes
                        Bill Nighy
                        Toby Kebbell
                        Édgar Ramirez
                        Danny Huston
                        Lily James
                        John Bell
                        Kathryn Carpenter

                        Even though he’s half-god, Perseus (Worthington) has made it clear to his father Zeus (Neeson) he wants nothing to do with those snobs on Mount Olympus. Still, the old man comes sniveling back, begging Perseus to save their hides. Zeus’ dad Kronos is a little ornery over being defeated by his boys eons earlier and wants a return match. After Kronos starts killing off gods and threatens both the gods and man alike, you know who reluctantly joins the fray. He enlists the help of Queen Andromeda (Pike), her army and his cousin, fellow half-god Agenor (Kebbell). In case you’re somehow not sure, this is the sequel to the 2010 remake of Clash of the Titans.

                        That last sentence sums up a lot of what people think is wrong with Hollywood. It’s what they point to as evidence of the movie industry’s lack of original though. This is particularly true of the blockbusters flooding the multiplexes every summer; an endless procession of sequels, prequels, remakes, reboots and re-imaginings heavy on techno wizardry and light on substance. These generalizations might seem unfair in a review on any one film in particular. However, Wrath of the Titans must wear the shoe it fits.

                        Sam Worthington adds another to his repertoire of bland protagonists. Liam Neeson does what Liam Neeson does: use his booming voice to give his character an air of authority. However, he spends most of the movie on the sidelines. Pike just looks pretty as Queen Andromeda. Most bizarrely, Kebbell as Agenor seems to be impersonating Russell Brand. As simple as the plot seems, its execution is jumbled. It doesn’t always make sense and a general mess is made of Greek mythology. In short, stuff just keeps happening whether it’s logical or not.


                        On the plus side, that stuff keeps the movie somewhat interesting. There is tons of action as our heroes try to save both the Earth and the heavens. Creature designs are generally fantastic and they tear up things pretty well. The one exception being our main baddy. He’s a little too out of whack with everything else and getting anywhere near him should cause death. Sadly, it doesn’t because then our hero wouldn’t be able to be heroic. There is some heavy-handedness about father-son and sibling relationships. Honestly, this doesn’t bother me since it at least makes sense. More troublesome is the weirdly atheist undertones. As I’ve said in reviews of other films there are good, even excellent movies from that point of view. The problem here is it feels needlessly subversive to its own subject matter. Combined with all the poetic license taken with the characters we get the feeling the people who made Wrath of the Titans don’t exactly appreciate Greek mythology.

                        Much like its predecessor, Wrath isn’t the worst movie in the world. It’s just not a good one, either. The visuals work very well. Full disclosure: I did not watch either of the franchise’s movies in 3D which I’ve heard complaints about, especially in regards to the first film. The action keeps things moving along nicely and it’s thankfully short at ninety-nine minutes. Unfortunately, the characters are dull and/or given nothing to do and what’s happening around them doesn’t always add up.

                        MY SCORE: 5/10

                        Comment

                        • dell71
                          Enter Sandman
                          • Mar 2009
                          • 23919


                          Trouble with the Curve
                          Robert Lorenz.
                          2012. Rated PG-13, 111 minutes.
                          Cast:
                          Clint Eastwood
                          Amy Adams
                          Justin Tumberlake
                          John Goodman
                          Chelcie Ross
                          George Wyner
                          Matthew Lillard
                          Robert Patrick
                          Joe Massingill
                          Ed Lauter
                          Tom Nowicki

                          Gus Lobel (Eastwood) has been a baseball scout for the Atlanta Braves for forever and a day. He loves the game so much he even named his daughter Mickey (Adams) after Mickey Mantle, his all-time favorite player. As it eventually happens to most of us, Gus’ eyes are going on him. That’s an even bigger deal than normal given his job. It doesn’t help that Philip (Lillard), the young hotshot in the front-office wants to phase him out and rely much more heavily on his new fangled computers.

                          Luckily for Gus, he’s still got one friend who thinks like him and is willing to go to bat for him. That’s Pete (Goodman), who also works in the front-office. He figures out what’s wrong with his buddy and, in hopes of saving Gus’ job, convinces Mickey to tag along with her dad on a scouting trip to watch highly-touted prospect Bo Gentry (Massingill). Bo literally gets a hit on the first pitch of every at-bat until the plot requires otherwise. Since he’s so good, he is also an insufferable jackass. Scouting Bo aside, the real question is whether Gus and Mickey can survive each other. They don’t have much of a relationship mostly because Gus is a crotchety old dude who isn’t happy unless he’s ripping someone a new one. Think Clint’s character from Gran Torino sans racism and cool car.


                          Watching Eastwood and Adams play off one another is somewhat intriguing. They combine to create a genuine portrayal of two people who care for each other but can’t communicate without it getting testy. A little less effective is the telegraphed-from-a-mile-away romance between Adams’ character and Johnny “Flame” Flanagan played by Justin Timberlake. He’s a former pitcher once scouted by Gus who is now a rival scout for the Boston Red Sox. Some of their scenes together are fun, especially if you enjoy baseball trivia. Unfortunately, her overly pushy boyfriend treating their relationship like a business transaction plus the fact that Flanagan is the only other scout that doesn’t qualify for AARP makes it feel too preordained for us to get worked up about.

                          Things go along well enough for a good deal of the run time, but dammit, we’ve got problems to solve. Best handled of these is Gus and Mickey’s relationship. It feels like a logical resolution. On the other end of the spectrum is Gus’ work issue and Mickey’s love affair. That love thing is handled exactly like you suspect it will be but were praying the filmmakers aren’t that lazy. Sorry, they are.

                          That work issue is even more ridiculous. Being a baseball fan with friends who shun the hordes of new statistics out there, I am acutely aware that this movie plays as the exact counter-argument to the Brad Pitt flick Moneyball. Even so, what this movie comes up with is just way too contrived for its own good. Basically, it’s “look what fell out of the sky!” What we’re left with is a film that plucks along in an occasionally interesting manner, thanks to the performances of its leads, but never quite gets us emotionally involved enough to buy the ending.

                          MY SCORE: 5.5/10

                          Comment

                          • dell71
                            Enter Sandman
                            • Mar 2009
                            • 23919


                            Red Dawn
                            Directed by Dan Bradley.
                            2012. Rated PG-13, 93 minutes.
                            Cast:
                            Chris Hemsworth
                            Josh Peck
                            Josh Hutcherson
                            Adrianne Palicki
                            Isabel Lucas
                            Connor Cruise
                            Edwin Hodge
                            Alyssa Diaz
                            Julian Alcaraz
                            Will Yun Lee
                            Jeffrey Dean Morgan
                            Brett Cullen
                            Fernando Chien
                            Kenneth Choi


                            The first person we meet is Matt Eckert (Peck). He’s a hotshot high-school quarterback who selfishly puts himself before his team, the Wolverines. Hint: this will be a recurring theme. Wee next his father Tom (Cullen), the local tough guy cop and his tough guy brother Jed (Hemsworth), home on leave from the military. Blanks are filled in by an assortment of locals. You know the locals: the girlfriend, the geek, the other girl(s), the black guy, etc. In a shocking nod to diversity, we actually get two black guys. Of course, neither one…well, I’m getting way ahead of myself. Most of the locals are teenagers and friends of the boys, but there are a few strangers who find themselves in this ragtag bunch due to the circumstances. What circumstances? North Korea has invaded the United States and are hitting the town of Spokane, Washington pretty hard. A daring escape forms the aforementioned bunch, without dad, by the way. One thing leads to another and before you know it, they’ve become a resistance known as…wait for it…wait for it…the Wolverines! Yayyy! If, like me, you’re old enough to actually remember the last decade of The Cold War then you probably know this is a remake of the 1984 original which stars Patrick Swayze, Charlie Sheen, and a number of the day’s hottest young stars.

                            Like its predecessor, Red Dawn is a relentless barrage of blood-soaked patriotism. Not that there’s anything inherently wrong with national pride, but that’s pretty much all there is. Some effort is made to develop the relationship between the brothers, but I’ve already told you everything there is to know. Everyone else is a cardboard cutout either part of and/or helping the resistance, or they’re traitors, saving their own hides by helping the enemy. Speaking of the North Koreans, that’s just it – they’re North Koreans. The idea, drilled home by all the news blurbs that open the film, is that their current real-life leadership is not only crazy enough to invade they actually make that move. From there, we get a depiction of how we Americans like to think we’d react to such a situation.


                            Of course, such a depiction requires lots of action. Red Dawn does lots of things well in this department. For starters, there’s lots of it. The next supposedly covert operation is never far away. It should go without saying that each one erupts in gunfire. These scenes do a surprisingly decent job of creating tension. If nothing else, we know that a number of North Koreans (and their supporters) will die along with one of our heroes. Guessing which “good” guy gets it is where the tension is. The problem here, like with the rest of the movie, is we might be emotionally invested in the cause (provided we’re American or anti-North Korean), but not in any character not named Matt or Jed. Therefore, ancillary characters dying is of little concern to us. Even worse, when the movie tries to manipulate us one last time with a major decision made by one of these people, we’re just thankful he made the choice on his own because we wouldn’t hesitate to shoot him, otherwise. Our lack of compassion for this character further proves that our roster of freedom fighters is made up of types rather than actual people. Magical Negro, anyone?

                            Okay, so depth is not found here. It’s a shoot ‘em up, popcorn flick designed by Americans for Americans and uses no uncertain terms. At being precisely this it succeeds. Note for note, it’s practically identical to the clunker Battleship. This one swaps out space aliens for North Koreans. Otherwise, they’re virtually the same. Somehow, this is still better. Perhaps because we can more readily identify with menaces from another country than another planet. More likely, this one removes just enough cheese and other Michael Bay-isms (I know he didn’t direct Balttleship) to be a more believable, if still implausible tale. The action looks better and the run time is a good deal shorter, avoiding most of the long, boring stretches where nothing is really happening. Things are happening here all the time. This makes it a fun watch that uses our fears to create an action-filled adventure. There is no cinematic genius on display, so I wouldn’t call it good. It’s just a better movie than Battleship constructed from the same parts.

                            MY SCORE: 5/10

                            Comment

                            • JimLeavy59
                              War Hero
                              • May 2012
                              • 7199

                              Still waiting for that Last Ounce of Courage review.

                              Comment

                              • dell71
                                Enter Sandman
                                • Mar 2009
                                • 23919

                                Oops. Forgot about that one. Thanks.

                                Comment

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