Posts Tagged 'Nolan'

Top 10 – the Best Ten Films of 2012

Hurray! An end-of-the-year list with good movies! Rejoice!*

10 The Descendants

A lovely portrait of middle-age. The rough edges and the cynicism that characterized director Alexander Payne’s earlier films are smoothed over – to a very satisfying effect. George Clooney delivers a career-high performance. Extra kudos for the gorgeous images of everyday Hawaii.

 

9 The Hunger Games

The big surprise of the year. I, for one, would never have thought that anything that seems knock-off Twilight on the surface could make this good a film. Jennifer Lawrence proves herself to be a true leading lady, one like Hollywood has not seen in years.

 

8 Moonrise Kingdom

A film that much resembles The Descendants, in that it is the softest, cuddliest film in the corpus of its director. Many people are annoyed by Wes Anderson’s blend of depressed Bill Murrays and high concept stylization, but this is a film with a warm and true heart. Excellent performance all around, especially by the kids, and the best soundtrack of the year.

 

7 Cloud Atlas

Arguably the greatest filmmaking achievement of the year. A film project that seemed most likely to be made fun off, or at least provoke some raised eyebrows. But Tykwer and the Wachowski’s adapt an apparently unadaptable book and deliver a movie with a point as well as six climaxes. That it never feels too long is a credit to the excellent editing.

 

6 The Dark Knight Rises

Especially upon repeated viewing it becomes clear that Nolan’s final Batman film is not as good as the two films preceding it. There is some shoddy editing, and the lack of substantial politics disappointed me. But one cannot deny that this is still really good stuff. A mature superhero film on an unprecedented scale.

 

5 End of Watch

An incredibly tense police film with fantastic performances by Jake Gyllenhaal and Michael Pena. The original cinematography – a blend of found footage and first-person shooter games – is its characterizing feature, but there is much substance to all this surface. There is no space for nuance here – the bad guys are very bad indeed – but what the hell? Who cares?

 

4 Anna Karenina

Its first half hour is the best half hour of cinema I’ve seen this year. No film can look like this and still tell a good story about interesting characters, so it is good that after that half hour Anna Karenina slows down to focus on its drama. Joe Wright’s second big achievement with this film is that Tolstoy’s outdated ethics actually do seem quite sensible.

 

3 Martha Marcy May Marlene

Already in 2011 this was the darling of the Sundance festival. We had to wait for a long time to get to see it here in The Netherlands, but boy, was it worth the wait! An outstanding debut for both director Sean Durkin and leading lady Elizabeth Olsen, who has more than twice the talent of her two older siblings combined.

 

2 The Muppets

A surprise choice perhaps. Not the choice made by any esteemed critic with proper taste. But hell, The Muppets made me happier than any other film this year. I laughed, I cried, and back at home I was still singing along with the lyrics.

 

1 Bir Zamanlar Anadolu’da

Aka Once Upon a Time in Anatolia. Completely overwhelming drama about modern-day Turkey and the burdens it carries from its history. The tracking shot of a half-eaten apple rolling down a hill and into a little stream is an example of filmmaking machismo by one of the art’s masters; Nuri Bilge Ceylan. But more crucial is the shot of the doctor, seeing the wife and son of the murder victim walking home. It left me breathless.

 

* Circumstance prevented me from seeing Ang Lee’s The Life of Pi before the close of the year. So it will be a 2013 contender.

Review: The Dark Knight Rises (dir. Christopher Nolan)

Story: Eight years after the events of The Dark Knight billionaire Bruce Wayne (Christian Bale) lives in recluse. Mentally and physically broken by his years as Batman he sees Commissioner Gordon (Gary Oldman) clean up the streets of Gotham. However, the arrivals of the gymnastic burglar Selina Kyle (Anne Hathaway) and of the cruel mercenary Bane (Tom Hardy) force Batman out of retirement. The question is if he is able to rise up again and confront his present foes as well as the demons of his past.

If The Dark Knight Rises is quite a disappointment, then it is so because of the enormous expectations of fans, and the high bar set by its predecessors, Batman Begins (2005) and The Dark Knight (2008). In fact, to call ‘TDKR’ a bad film is unjustified. It is a good summer blockbuster; by far the best of this summer. It grabs such fodder as The Avengers and The Amazing Spider-man in their necks and scoulingly sends them back to kindergarten. And yet it disappoints.

The biggest let down for me was that director Christopher Nolan does not chart new territories and themes in TDKR. Rather, he returns to the issues already covered in quite some extent in Batman Begins. And although Bruce Wayne / Batman does grow as a character, I miss the expansion to Batman’s universe and psychology that made The Dark Knight so very special. From a storytelling point of view it makes sense to make the circle complete, and Nolan does not hesitate to emphasize this, using quite a big number of flashbacks to Batman Begins. But I think he is mistaken to pressume that his audience is not already overly familiar with the previous films.

Valuable time is lost with these flashbacks, and although I do not think that The Dark Knight Rises is too long, I do think it could have spent some of its running time (a whopping 164 minutes) in a more effective manner. On many an occasion, especially in the climactic final hour, Nolan falls back on cheap short-cuts in his staging of the battle over Gotham’s fate. On first viewing these moments may be mistaken for plot holes, but on second viewing they appear to be the result of cramped storytelling and shoddy editing. Unnecessary mistakes that could easily have been solved had Nolan allowed himself more time to stage these scenes properly and less time reinvoking worn down, and this trilogy unworthy, generic stereotypes.

Nolan likes to work with the same people over and over again: Story writer David Goyer, producer Emma Thomas, writer Jonathan Nolan (yes, the brother), composer Hans Zimmer, editor Lee smith and cinematographer Wally Pfister. If I would recommend Nolan to look for another editor if he continues in action films, I must also praise Wally Pfister. Pfister was nominated for an Oscar for The Dark Knight, and he won one for Inception, and in The Dark Knight Rises he delivers again. The vistas of a Gotham under siege are stunning. In cooperation with the special effects team Pfister does something extraordinary: the stunts and effects that in other films seem weightless and immaterial digital constructions have heft and weight and, consequently, realism in TDKR.

Nolan also prefers to work with actors he already knows. Of course he brings back Christian Bale, Gary Oldman, Morgan Freeman (as Lucius Fox) and Michael Caine (Alfred Pennyworth), but he also calls in the services of his Inception veterans Tom Hardy, Marion Cotillard (as business woman and love interest Miranda Tate) and Joseph Gordon-Levitt (as Gotham city cop John Blake). And there are surprising cameos by some old characters as well. The only major new face is Anne Hathaway. And it must be said that, in such an enormous ensemble, it is Hathaway who stands out, next to Bale and Gorden-Levitt. The other actors suffer from the fact that their roles are perhaps slightly too marginal and underwritten. Tom Hardy is imposing, threatening and scary as Bane, but he can not rival Heath Ledger’s Joker. He should not want to either, and we should not expect it from him.

As an action spectacle, this film is stunning. Big set-pieces involve a chase scene with multiple motorcycles, a street battle between cops and thugs and, perhaps most memorable, a mid-air abduction in the opening sequence. We should not underestimate the contribution of composer Hans Zimmer to these scenes. The master of the genre almost overplays his hand with a thunderous score that drowns out bits of the dialogue, but the crucial word in this sentence is ‘almost’. Empire compared Zimmer’s soundtrack with an earthquake, and that is an appropriate metaphor. The music defies further description.

By not offering us something fundamentally new, apart from some interesting characters, Nolan deprives his film from the depth and the political commentary that The Dark Knight had. Complaints that TDKR is politically reactionary or conservative miss the point that there is actually a shocking lack of politics in this film. If there is any, it only serves as a masquerade of or a detraction from the actual plot, which then is too light to justify the epic ambitions of the film.

But Nolan does deliver emotionally. The fans who have made his films the huge successes that they are have invested in this world and in these characters. And although this individual film may not be able to match the quality of its predecessors, it does succeed in satisfyingly finishing this particular story of Bruce Wayne. Actually, it might be its strongest point (and this is the only small spoiler! I put into this review) that it finishes the story of Bruce Wayne, but not necessarily that of Batman. A relief for the studio and for the fans.

Final verdict: The Dark Knight Rises is a fitting and satisfying conclusion to what we can now call the best superheroe franchise to date. However, it is also demonstrably the weakest link in Christopher Nolan’s Batman trilogy, and so it is with appropriate heartache that fans have to say goodbye to their holiday fling of three summers.

The (pre)history of The Dark Knight Rises

The first reviews, from professional outlets, of The Dark Knight Rises have been coming in these last couple of days. Generally positive reviews, although everyone seems to agree that The Dark Knight was the highlight in Christopher Nolan’s Bat-trilogy. I am seeing TDKR tomorrow evening, and will report back on Saturday. In the meantime, here are a few tidbits to wetten your appetite.

Batman was of course, incredibly camp, until he was reinvented, in the 1980s, by Tim Burton on-screen and by Frank Miller in the comics. The 1960s television series was Saturday morning kids fare. But alltogether quite enjoyable:

Tim Burton was not an obvious choice to direct Batman in the late 1980s. He had made a number of small, quirky but succesfull little fantasy movies, and had no experience in action films. But Warner Bros. choice worked out well. Burton built a Gothic Gotham, Danny Elfman delivered a fantastic musical score, Michael Keaton was a reliable Batman and Jack Nicholson stole the show (and a considerable part of the film’s box office take) as The Joker.

But after Burton came Joel Schumacher. And his Batman & Robin, featuring for the first time the villain Bane (seen in the clip below), is the reason why it does not matter if The Dark Knight Rises is a three or four or five star film. Christopher Nolan delivered us from evil. A small reminder of where we came from:

Christopher Nolan, much like Tim Burton, was a left-field choice for rebooting Batman. Nolan was known for small-scale puzzle films, like Memento and Insomnia. You’d think he is way too smart to direct a Batman film, which has to make two hundred million dollar world wide just to break even. But Nolan did. it. He ditched all the bagage of the Burton and Schumacher films and started over again, with Frank Miller’s Batman: Year One as an inspiration. Batman Begins came in under the radar but surprised everyone.

I was appalled when I heard that Heath Ledger would succeed Jack Nicholson as The Joker, in Nolan’s Bat-sequel The Dark Knight. But this was after I had seen Ledger in A Knight’s Tale, and before I saw Brokeback Mountain. Ledger locked himself into a hotel room, read The Killing Joke and came out of the room as the most maniacal movie-villain of the new century. The catalyser in a plot about terror and the costs of justice and freedom, Ledger turned The Dark Knight from a really good film into an unforgettable one.

In Nolan we trust. Bane and Catwoman as villains? That many new characters? A title that does not seem terribly inspired? We do not care. We’ve learned that we can trust Nolan. And if the trailers are anything close to the real deal, then The Dark Knight Rises will be one of the movie highlights of the year.

Five things we’ve learned from the Skyfall teaser…

Hello! Kaboom. The name is Fall, Skyfall. And this is the teaser trailer. Which is now officially considered abso-f*ing-lutely f*ing awesome. Awesome.

Some things we’ve learned. First of all: this one is quite tough and strikes home. London is one of the major settings of this film, and it appears we might see an attack on the Underground. With memories of 2005 relatively fresh and the Olympics with all their security fuss on the agenda, this is more than topical.

Second: It looks gorgeous. But that’s to be expected when you pair director Sam Mendes with cinematographer Roger Deakins and costume designer Tom Ford (that’s his tuxedo that Bond is wearing in the Shanghai bit). A bit too gorgeous for Daniel Craig’s ‘roughed up’ version of Bond? Perhaps; we’ll have to see.

Third: The best villain introduction since ever, as Javier Bardem’s big baddie Silva walks away from an explosion, and we only see him in silhouette…

Fourth: the classic Aston Martin DB5 is back!

And finally: is this going to be a perfect double bill with Christopher Nolan’s Inception? I had strong ‘Nolanesque’ feelings with this teaser. It somehow reminded me quite a bit of The Dark Knight, with the terror striking close to home and a protagonist in psychological shambles… And Inception was, as Nolan proclaimed, his “Bond” film. Which does not mean I would not like to see the man doing a ‘real’ Bond flick.

But that’s fantasizing about the far future, while in the immediate one there is so much to look forward to. Not only Nolan’s The Dark Knight Rises, but also Sam Mendes’ Skyfall. Officially proclaimed awesome. What a year!

PS Probably a coincidence, but Bane, the villain in The Dark Knight Rises, made his first appearance in the comic book series Knightfall. Not only is this an alliteration of Skyfall, in this comic book Bane also broke Batman’s mind and his back. Is Bond awaiting a similar fate? This teaser surely leaves open the possibility….

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

I’m Making Up Good Intentions

First of all I of course want to wish all my readers a happy and healthy 2012. Obviously. Less obvious perhaps; here is a list of good cinematic intentions I have drawn up for myself. Just to start the year on a positive note. Let’s try to be less sour, and more appreciative of the efforts of film makers. Even if things don’t work out as well as you’d hope, we still have to pay them millions for at least trying, don’t you think? So perhaps you want to join me in

1 Seeing more arthouse films.

2 Not seeing bad films twice.

3 Not seeing any film in which anyone was involved who was in any way responsible for The Change Up.

4 Seeing films more often with friends.

5 Being nicer to Peter Jackson.

6 Being nicer to people in general (as I will be in need of a new job come September).

7 Continuing my 11 year long tradition of not seeing the new Woody Allen film in cinema.

8 Discontinuing my 11 year long tradition of not seeing the new Woody Allen film in cinema.

9 Writing reviews the day after I see films.

10 Actually doing some creative work myself instead of just slagging off other peoples’ films.

In return I expect from filmmakers, studios, cinemas and distributors the following:

1 Release big films worldwide at more or less the same time (having to wait four months for The Muppets and Hugo is just horrid).

2 Learn how to use 3D as a storytelling device.

3 No more alien invasion films (pointless request, with Battleship on the way).

4 No more superhero films apart from Nolan’s Batman films (pointless request, with The Avengers, The Amazing Spiderman and Judge Dredd on their way)

5 More smart and extensive (viral) marketing campaigns.

6 No more nachos in cinemas.

7 No more Adam Sandler.

8 Surprise your sneak peek audience with a big title once in a while.

9 Cast more normal-looking people for normal-people roles.

10 Give awards to small, surprising films rather than to sentimental biopic melodramas.

The Top Ten Worst Films of 2011

10 Tree of Life

That a Terrence Malick film comes with mumbling voice-overs and a hard-to-follow plot we all knew. That it could come with added dinosaurs was something we didn’t see coming. And Sean Penn had every right to be pissed off

9 The Three Musketeers

You also don’t expect much from any Paul W. Anderson film. But that it would be so outrageous and stupid even I could not predict. Orlando Bloom’s hair is the only reason that it is slightly better than:

8 Conan the Barbarian

You don’t expect much going into Conan the Barbarian. But that it would be so vile and stupid even I could not predict.

7 Nova Zembla

Everyone who was paid to see it liked it. Everyone who had paid to see it hated it. Overhyped and overmarketed stinker with terrible 3D effects.

6 Paul

Shockingly non-funny for a film with Simon Pegg and Nick Frost. Plus it insults Ellen Ripley rather than that it pays hommage to her. Must have to do with the direction of non-talent Greg Mottola.

5 Pirates of the Carribean: On Stranger Tides

A terrible let down of the fans of the original three films. Lazy writing, directing and acting infuriated me. It says quite a few things about the terrible blockbuster year that was 2011 that this pile of crap is only the fifth worst film of the year.

4 Sucker Punch

Ouch. Proof that Zack Snyder should stick with putting a glamorous veneer over the smarter writings of more talented people. Directing the Nolan-penned Man of Steel will be the Litmus test for the rest of his career. Awesome soundtrack though, thanks to Emily Browning’s “Sweet Dreams…” cover.

3 The Change Up

Morally bankrupt. Together with The Hangover 2 and every single Kevin James film of this year the ultimate proof that American comedy is stone dead. Everyone involved should be banned for ever from any movie set.

2 Transformers: Dark of the Moon

Morally bankrupt. The worst thing about the Transformers movies is that they now spawn a whole new generation of toy based stupid battle movies, like the upcoming Battleship and the GI Joe films.

1 Green Lantern

If films were food than everything else in this list would come from McDonalds, but I described Green Lantern as “a cold hash of unidentifiable meat still dripping with the fat of an unclean frying pan.” Subsequently I suggested that it should be dumped in the deepest depths of the Mariana Trench. We shall never ever mention it again.

Trailer for The Dark Knight Rises online!!!

Quick analysis? This is gonna be dark stuff, with Bruce Wayne leaning on a cane. Michael Caine’s Alfred is in tears and Commissioner Gordon (Gary Oldman) is in a tight spot, politically. A masked Anne Hathaway whispers ominously, and then the shit hits the fan. The Arkham prioners are set loose on the streets of Gotham once more and it turns into a very nasty revolution.  With Batman getting Bane’s “permission to die”… Wow.

Most remarkable is how light the film looks. Batman used to lurk in the shadows: now he is brought into full daylight.

My only worry is about the CG on the collapsing football field and the flying Batwing-kinda-thing. That really needs some more polishing. But there is plenty of time for that in post-production, as The Dark Knight Rises is not set to premiere until July.

Update: The Dark Knight Rises

Christopher Nolan has a legendary reputation for secrecy about his future films. Plot details, characters and themes are often not known to the press and the public until the last few, more extensive, trailers arrive. All the more spectacular than that Nolan and his stars Christian Bale (Batman/Bruce Wayne) and Tom Hardy (bad guy Bane) spoke to Empire about the new Batman flick – The Dark Knight Rises – last month. This is what we’ve learned that we did not know yet…

1)      The Dark Knight Rises will take place eight years after the events of The Dark Knight. That is quite a surprise, given the suspenseful state in which the latter film left Batman: his reputation shattered and hunted by the police.

2)      The new film will find Bruce Wayne in a very bad state. Nolan and Bale have spoken about the way in which grief and guilt are the central elements ofWayne’s existence, and how he can no longer live his life like that.

3)      Bane is a terror and a menace. If the Joker was a psychological adversary for Batman, testing him to his principal and ethical limits, Bane will be an enemy that can actually hurt Batman physically. Tom Hardy spoke of the cracking of skulls and the ripping out of spines. Wow. Nolan goes Conan apparently, but Warner Bros. will insist on PG 13 rating and therefore I expect the violence to be mostly suggested rather than lingered on.

The Dark Knight Rises will conclude Nolan’s Batman trilogy that started with Batman Begins in 2005. The film will hit Dutch screens on July 25th next year. Keep that date free!

 

 

Catching – the Contagion review

Forgive the pun in the title. But coming out of Contagion one can do with some mild-mannered, light-hearted tongue-in-cheeking. For Steven Soderbegh’s latest thriller is gripping to say the least. Contagion mostly calls into recollection Traffic, Soderbergh’s other multiple-plotline ensemble piece about a terrible disease keeping the world in a deadly grasp. And although Traffic’s drugs are referred to as a disease only in a metaphorical sense, Contagion is a about a real disease. A terribly nasty virus carried over from bat to pig to Gwyneth Paltrow and then the rest of the globe. ‘What if’ SARS, the bird-flu or the pig-flu had been as apocalyptic events as sometimes was predicted? Well, for a start the USA would run out of body bags within twelve days.

Soderbergh shows the spread of the disease, its impact on everyday life and the efforts of scientists and doctors trying to find a cure and containing the virus in a documentary-like fashion. He therefore uses the handheld cameras and unusual angles he also used in Full Frontal and Sex, Lies and Videotape. Soderbergh famously switches between such high-brow experiments and more traditional commercial fare (Ocean’s Eleven and its sequels) and Contagion is something in between. It is an enormous flick, in terms of cast, sets and scope, but it is delightfully devoid of cheap thrills and easy emotions. Soderbergh is one of the few directors – the only other one I can directly think of is Christopher Nolan – who get to make serious and intelligent films with huge budgets. Contagion gets to spend time in San Francisco, Minneapolis, Atlanta, London and Hong Kong.

And it stars no less than six big names: Matt Damon is the common citizen caught up in the epidemic pretty early and Gwyneth Paltrow is his cheating CEO wife. Laurence Fishburne is the head of the Centre for Disease Control that tries to find a cure to the disease, and Kate Winslet is his on-the-site organizer. Marion Cotillard is a WHO researcher trying to track the origins of the virus in China and Jude Law is a weasily blogger who makes money out of panic by selling fake medicines online. And if you’d think that wasn’t enough to keep track of: Elliott Gould, John Hawke and Jennifer Ehle also have substantial roles. The last one is even essential.

No surprise then that not everyone gets too shine. While Winslet, Paltrow and Fishburne are impressive, Cotillard and Law feel superfluous. Cotillard even disappears from the film halfway through, only to get a small payback at the end. Ehle on the other hand is only introduced properly, as anything else but a lab-coat, almost near the end of the film. But if there is any star to this film than it is Matt Damon. It is becoming baffling, the last two years, how he lifts up anything he does, how he squeezes real character out of little material, and how he fits in such diverse roles: The Informant! True Grit, Hereafter, now Contagion. Wow.

While the plot may feel fragmentary at moments – perhaps more suitable for a television miniseries – Soderbergh’s style is properly cinematic, combining wide vistas with close inspection of minute details. And to top it off Contagion boasts a stunning and sinister musical score composed by Cliff Martinez. Contagious, gripping, catchy. Forgive the puns that are my sighs of relief after finishing this film uninfected. Go and see, and for God’s sake don’t cough during the film: you’ll make everyone run for the door.



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