Posts Tagged 'Fassbender'

Review: Prometheus (Ridley Scott)

For a film of which the director proclaims that it is not the prequel to Alien, Prometheus sure has a strange ending. And that is the only spoiler I am going to give you. However, the web has been teeming with Prometheus teasers, trailers and virals, which have given away so much of the plot already, that I can hardly be accused of spoiling anything.

Quick set-up: a good hundred years before the events of Alien (Ridley Scott’s breakthrough film of 1979) two scientists (Noomi Rapace and Logan Marshall-Green) find a star map that can lead mankind to its creators. They get industrial tycoon Peter Weyland (Guy Pearce) to fund an expedition to planetLV 223. Having arrived with a team (including corporate honcho Charlize Theron and captain Idris Elba) on the planet surface, everything goes kinda different from what they expected.

All in all I think that Prometheus disappointed me. But perhaps that is only because I expected so much of it. I really, really did not want it to be ‘just an Alien prequel’. And in too many ways it was just that. Prometheus is a film with its own story, its own agenda and its own ideas. And although it exists in the same universe as Alien, it clearly has different themes. But Ridley Scott filled this film with direct visual and narrative similarities to Alien, without this being necessary.

On itself the film has more good than bad qualities. The casting is excellent for example. Noomi Rapace as Elizabeth Shaw is as convincing as a leading lady as Sigourney Weaver was as Ellen Ripley. Supporting roles are equally well-filled. A fantastic performance by Michael Fassbender as the android David stands out.

The film also does not back down with regard to the horror and violence. It is pretty gruesome and visceral, as a proper Alien film should be. I am happy that the studio has had the guts to stick with a 16 (R inAmerica) rating. They could have easily demanded a PG13 from Scott, considering the reported budget of 120 to 130 million dollars.

The film has its own ideas and stands by them. I do not know whether I agree with all of  them, and there are certainly still plot strands left open for possible sequels, but any film with ideas, that makes its viewers think and ponder and discuss the movie afterwards gets a plus in my book.

On the downside there is, obviously, the pointless 3D. I watched parts of the film without the 3D glasses and that was fine. And there is a strange thunderous/ethereal score by Marc Streitenfeld that reminded me of the music in Scott’s earlier films 1492 and Kingdom of Heaven (although these score were composed by different people). The music was not so much inappropriate as it was just too much and too omnipresent. Here the contrast with the minimalism of Alien is actually too big.

Prometheus is hardly flawless, and it does not live up to its hype. But apart from the hype, it is a perfectly acceptable, smart and sophisticated horror scif-fi flick.

 

Trailer Tuesday: Lawless Prometheus Rises

Lawless

Dir. John Hillcoat. Starring: Shia LeBoeuf, Tom Hardy, Guy Pearce, Jessica Chastain, Mia Wasikowska & Gary Oldman

Release date NL: November 2012

 

Prometheus

Dir. Ridley Scott. Starring: Noomi Rapace, Michael Fassbender, Charlize Theron, Guy Pearce & Idris Elba

Release date NL: 31 May 2012

 

The Dark Knight Rises

Dir. Christopher Nolan. Starring: Christian Bale, Tom Hardy, Anne Hathaway, Gary Oldman, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Michael Caine, Morgan Freeman, Marion Cotillard, Aidan Gillen & Liam Neeson

Release date NL: 20 July 2012

Horror For Those Who Do Not Like Horror – the A Dangerous Method review

David Cronenberg is usually associated with disturbing and bizarre body horror. His most famous films include Videodrome (1983), in which a man merges with a video recorder, The Fly (1986), in which a man turns, well, into a fly, and Existenz (1999), that shows people being physically plugged into a video game. The last couple of years Cronenberg has started to move away from his signature style, with films that focus more on the horrors of more everyday violence: A History of Violence (2005) and Eastern Promises (2007).

A Dangerous Method may very well be the culmination and the end point of this trend, as well as a u-turn Cronenberg had to make to return to his old style (see the trailer for Cosmopolis in the post below). For there is little to no violence in A Dangerous Method, and most of what there is, is suffered with delight by the psychologically ill Sabina Spielrein (Keira Knightsley). At the same time the theme of this film, psychoanalysis, the explicitly shown physical contortions of Knightley and the preoccupation with sexuality, transformation and patricide are usually the implicit second layers of truly interesting horror films. A Dangerous Method could be called horror film for people who do not usually delight in seeing American teenagers being cut in half by redneck idiots then.

Knightley’s character, first a patient in a mental hospital but later a doctor herself, is the spill in the relationship between her doctor and lover Carl Jung (the ubiquitous Michael Fassbender) and his mentor Sigmund Freud (Cronenberg stalwart Viggo Mortensen). The two men circle around each other, first in mutual respect and later in competition, when the younger Jung rejects the narrow focus on sexuality in Freud’s work.

This truly is a film for people who already are somewhat familiar with the basic ingredients of Freud’s and Jung’s work. Cronenberg has no intention of turning his film into a Psycho-Analysis 101 course. It is also a film for patient people, because Cronenberg takes quite some time to get to the point where dramatic tensions start to build. His plot is fragmented, but chronological. Voice-overs reading out the correspondence between the two doctors are quite common, and when they are not corresponding, Jung and Freud are sitting in dark rooms, smoking and talking.

As a result this is a very wordy film, much like the play on which it is based (Christopher Hampton’s The Talking Cure). Even though many of the locations and backdrops are gorgeous, they do not serve or mirror the dramatic developments in the film. If they were meant as a counterpoint to the turmoil of the times (early decades of the 1900s) and of the characters’ psyches, then they fail to effectively serve this purpose.

On the plus side there is some really excellent acting going on. Fassbender and Mortensen are reliable, and always a pleasure to watch, but this is Keira Knightley’s film. With complete determination, and apparently inspired by descriptions of real cases, she contorts her face and her body in the most painful and unnatural compositions. And when Spielrein is cured, Knightley still shows the great physical effort it takes her character to maintain her diginity.

A Dangerous Method is all in all not a bad film, but it is not a highlight in Cronenberg’s oeuvre. I am really putting my hopes up higher for Cosmopolis.

Star Wars’ Worker Bees Fight Back! Live! – the The Hunger Games review

There is an interesting discussion in the movie Clerks (Kevin Smith, 1994). The characters in the scene discuss Star Wars, and in particular the question “who built the Death Star?” Because (SPOILER!) when it is destroyed at the end of Return of the Jedi, it is still under construction. There must have been thousands of innocent workers on board when Han Solo makes the bloody thing explode. Yet we hardly see any ‘working people’ in the Star wars movies. We only see soldiers, and politicians, and the incidental barman. Yet how could an Empire function without its worker bees?

That was something I thought back of when I saw The Hunger Games. This sci-fi-adventure-romance story is set in a future America in which the ridiculously fancy and rich Capital (think Coruscant in the SW prequels) rules over and exploits twelve poorer districts. Each year each district must send two tributes to the Capital who are then to fight each other to death in a huge arena, broadcasted live for the entertainment of the masses. Of course, now that Jennifer Lawrence is one of the tributes, things go a little bit different…

I liked The Hunger Games, but it is by no means perfect. So let’s get the smaller objections out of the way before we move on. First of all the film is a bit too long, and it suffers from the original novel: a number of characters could have been discarded but are now left in to please the fans of the book. This is partcularly true for the girl Rue. Second I can understand that the design of the film, and especially of the Capital and its inhabitants, can bother people. It is a bit over the top. Yet I also think that it is important that The Capital is not just rich, it must be opulent. Unnecessarily rich, so that its exploitation of the districts is all the more shocking. When the representatives of the Capital come to district 12 to select the tributes, it must really feel as if the storm troopers from Star Wars land on one of the less fortunate planets in the galaxy. More problematic than the design are the Roman names of Capital characters: Caesar, Seneca, Cato… I mean, we get the parallel with the Colloseum games… Really, we do.

So what is good then? Well, The Hunger Games abunds in ideas. Not each one is worked out equally well, but especially as a critique of reality television and talent shows such as X Factor the film works really well. Furthermore, it is brutal. This is a film that has been rated approximately 12 around the globe, and there is not much explicit violence. But the terrible violence that is implied by its set-up, its ideas and its soundtrack is brutal. One Dutch reviewer really did not get the film. He thought it was disgusting because the violence was not explicitly shown. That comment really told me more about the guy himself: how numbed down must you already be if you think that the violence should be more explicit in a film like this, that critiques the idea of entertainment in suffering.

And then there is Jennifer Lawrence. Just, wow. What a talent. She already blew me away in Winter’s Bone in 2010, and last year she stood her ground against Michael Fassbender in X-Men: First Class. No mean feat. What an actress, and what a screen presence. In The Hunger Games she is in almost every shot, yet you’re never tired of looking at her. She combines grace and loveliness with toughness and rough edges. Lawrence’s Katniss Everdeen is a character you really want to survive the film.

Trailer Tuesday: The Shadow of Prometheus’ Huntsman Diaries

Dark Shadows

Dir. Tim Burton. Starring: Johnny Depp, Eva Green, Chloe Moretz, Michelle Pfeiffer, Jackie Earle Haley, Helena Bonham Carter & Christopher Lee.

Dutch release date: May 10, 2012

 

Prometheus

Dir. Ridley Scott. Starring: Noomi Rapace, Charlize Theron, Idris Elba, Michael Fassbender & Guy Pearce

Dutch release date: May 31, 2012

 

Snow White and the Huntsman

Dir. Rupert Sanders. Starring:  Charlize Theron (again), Kristen Stewart, Chris Hemsworth, Sam Claflin and a bunch of British guys as the seven dwarves.

Dutch release date: June 7, 2012

 

Chernobyl Diaries

Dir. Bradley Parker. Starring: Jesse McCartney, Jonathan Sadowski & Olivia Dudley

Dutch release date: TBA

Trailer Tuesday: TED’s Bernie Watch 3DD

Prometheus

Dir. Ridley Scott. Starring Noomi Rapace, Michael Fassbender, Idris Elba & Charlize Theron

Release date NL: May 31, 2012


Bernie

Dir. Richard Linklater. Starring: Jack Black, Matthew McConaughey & Shirley MacLaine

Release date NL: TBA

Neighborhood Watch

Dir. Akiva Schaffer. Starring: Ben Stiller, Jonah Hill, Vince Vaughn & Richard Ayoade

Release date NL: August 30, 2012

Piranha 3DD

Dir. John Gulager. Starring: Danielle Panabaker, Ving Rhames, Christopher Lloyd, Gary Busey  David Hasselhof

Release date NL: May 10, 2012

Thursday Movie News Flash Update Blog-message

Things we have learned this week:

 

Coolest actor alive wants to bring Irish mythology to the screen

There is a new Zorro in town

And that town is in the future!

Naomie Harris is no match for Bond

and

Bill Murray did not shred the script for Ghostbusters 3

And the winner might be… [best actor]

The nominations for the 2012 Oscars will be announced on January 24, but on this site we have still three predictions to make. Best Film, Best Director and, today, Best Actor. A tricky category. Last year the little golden fellow went to Colin Firth for The King’s Speech, while he should have received it in 2010 for A Serious Man. In that year, ironically, Jeff Bridges won for Crazy Heart although his 2011 performance in True Grit. The point I’m trying to make is that the Best Actor award, even more so than the Best Actress one, is a career prize. It is not about the specific movie you happen to be in, it is about it being yuor turn. That is why there is only one big favourite this year, although there are many Oscar-worthy performances.

 

The big favourite:

George Clooney for The Descendants.

 

The other ones:

Jean Dujardin for The Artist

Brad Pitt for Moneyball

Leonardo diCaprio for J. Edgar

Michael Fassbender for Shame

and

Gary Oldman for Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (my favourite, could easily work as a career prize)

 

The career thingy is also the reason that, while they might score a nomination, it is just still too early for Ryan Gosling (Drive), Michael Shannon (Take Shelter) and Joseph Gordon-Levitt (50/50)

Trailer Tuesday: Prometheus, Salmon, and Halflings in my father’s house

Prometheus

Dir. Ridley Scott. Starring Michael Fassbender, Noomi Rapace, Idris Elba, Charlize Theron & Guy Pearce.

Release date NL: May 30, 2012

Salmon Fishing in the Yemen

Dir. Lasse Halstrom. Starring: Ewan McGregor, Emily Blunt & Kristin Scott Thomas

Release date NL: March 8, 2012

The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey

Dir. Peter Jackson. Starring: Martin Freeman, Ian McKellen, Elijah Wood, Cate Blanchett, Andy Serkis, Benedict Cumberbatch & Richard Armitage.

Release date NL: December 13, 2012

Casa de mi Padre

Dir. Matt Piedmont. Starring: Will Ferrell, Gael Garcia Bernal & Diego Luna

Release date NL: TBA (USA: March 16, 2012)

Watch the Trailer – Skip the Film?

Because no-one has ever, at all, since the beginning of cinema, thought of adapting Jane Eyre for the big screen… From first time feature director Cary Fukunaga is yet another take about the girl with the history and the crush on the older gentleman with a terrible secret:

Dir. Cary Fukunaga. Starring: Mia Wasikowska, Michael Fassbender & Judi Dench.

Dutch release date: September 22

Because it’s been quite a while since we’ve seen a vampire movie, so it doesn’t matter that this one is not even an original flick.

Dir. Craig Gillespie. Starring: Anton Yelchin, Colin Farrell & David Tennant

Dutch release date: September 29

Because it has been ages since Woody Allen made a film, and we’re all looking forward to a bunch of clichés about “The City of Light”

Dir. Woody Allen. Starring: Owen Wilson, Rachel McAdams, Michael Sheen & Carla Bruni

Dutch release date: September 15



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