Posts Tagged 'Scott'

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

Been There, Done That – the American Pie: Reunion review

The first American Pie film holds a special place in my heart. Yes, it was gross and infantile, but it reached me at an age where I sympathized with the characters and their obsessions. The second film appealed less to me, but it still had some really funny jokes (if the combination of masturbation and superglue seems funny to you at least). I never saw the third film, about Jim and Michelle’s wedding, and the direct-to-dvd films that followed it. But now all the characters from the first film are back, in a reunion, about a reunion, called American Pie: Reunion (dir. Jon Hurwitz & Jayden Schlossberg).

And they may have grown older, they’ve hardly grown up. Jim and Michelle may be parents now, but they are still an awkwardly bumbling around couple of average-Joes. Oz is still the jock, Kevin is still boring (watching Desperate Housewives with his domineering wife is a weekly highlight) and Finch is still ‘mysterious’. Oh, and Stifler is still Stifler.

In a similar vein, actors such as Sean William Scott (Stiffler), Jason Biggs (Jim), Alyson Hannigan (Michelle) and Mena Suvari (Heather) once were prodigies of American comedy, and possibly indie cinema. Yet they have failed to develop in any new direction with their choice of roles.

All those things do not necessarily mean that American Pie: Reunion could not be funny. On the contrary, there are still some really good jokes. The pre-credits romantic ‘domestic accident’ involving Jim and Michelle is excruciatingly funny. As is a prolonged joke involving an undressed, drunk teenage girl-next-door. And there is even a character arch for Stifler, although without true character development.

The real problem for American Pie: Reunion is twofold. First of all there is the need to cram too much stuff in. Every character from the first two movies has to come back, even if it is only to get a cheer from the crowd. Personally, I like Jim’s Dad (who doesn’t?), but I could have done without Vicki, Nadia, Sherman and the MILF guys. The second problem is more severe. This is a film without urgency. We meet all these characters that we used to know again, and we see them get in and out of trouble, but there is nothing that needs to happen. In the first film, the boys set themselves a deadline: to get laid before high school graduation. That’s hardly casting the one ring into the mountain of doom, but there is something at stake. In this film, there’s nothing. Do you really think that Jim and Michelle’s problems might prove unsolvable? Of course not.

When the actual reunion takes place at the end of the film, you had almost forgotten that it was supposed to take place at all. And that tells you enough about the film: surely it is not a complete waste of time; there is some fun to be had here, but the general sense is: been there, done that, saw the wet t-shirt competition.

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

Trailer Tuesday: The Reunion of Brave Damsels of Earth

American Reunion

Dir. John Hurwitz & Hayden Schlossberg. Starring: Eugene Levy, Jason Biggs, Mena Suvari & Sean William Scott

Release date NL: April 5 2012

 

Brave

Dir. Mark Andrews & Brenda Chapman. Starring: Kelly MacDonald, Kevin McKidd, Emma Thompson & Robbie Coltrane

Release date NL: August 2 (2012)

 

Damsels in Distress

Dir. Whit Stilman. Starring: Greta Gerwig, Adam Brody, Analeigh Tipton & Megalyn Echikunwoke

Release date NL: TBA

 

4:44 Last Day on Earth

Dir. Abel Ferrara. Starring: Willem Dafoe, Paz de la Huerta, Natasha Lyonne & Shanyn Leigh

Release date NL: TBA

Thursday Movie News Flash Update Blog-message (NEW FEATURE!)

From today onwards, Thursdays will be devoted to bringing you the latest news about films to come, castings, festivals, awards and all the really, curiously strange news about film I can get my hands on. All presented in 2.0-era-appropriate short soundbites.

Things we learned this week:

-Harrison Ford not in Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner remake/sequel/spin-off

-Natalie Portman in TWO new Terence Malick films

-Finnish Nazis-from-the-moon-invade-earth movie Iron Sky is the most popular thing on the Berlin festival

-Daniel Radcliffe is angry at the Academy for snubbing Deathly Hallows

-Oscar front runner Jean Dujardin ‘misogynist’  poster scandal might hurt his award chances

And

-Multiplex chain Pathe won’t let me see The Muppets in its original English-spoken version  in my home town

Romeo and ms Monroe – the My Week With Marilyn review

First of all: what a wonderful joy is this film. What a pleasure to watch it. You’d be inclined to say that this is a wonderful film the likes of which they don’t make anymore. Except that this film actually just has been made. A film that breathes old-fashioned Hollywood cinema, much like other recent and forthcoming films like The Artist and The Woman in Black. Films crucially and ironically, that are not American.

This is a lovely, formulaic love story that echoes Romeo and Juliet and The Prince and the Pauper, and the film of which it shows the making-of, The Prince and the Showgirl (1957). With the little twist that this film is about the romance between a princess and a third assistant director. Marilyn Monroe (Michelle Williams), at the height of her fame, comes to England to make a film with Sir Laurence Olivier (Kenneth Branagh). He, the famous Thespian, wants to become a movie star. She, the movie star, wants to be a serious actress. But the two clash hard, due to Monroe’s eccentricity and drug addiction and Olivier’s discipline and ambition. Caught in the crossfire between them is the young British third assistant director, Colin Clark (Eddie Redmayne), on whose memoirs this film is based. Colin thanks his job to Olivier’s wife Vivien Leigh, but falls for the charms of Monroe.

My Week With Marilyn is a serious film, but with a light touch. It is filled with British star actors in small supporting roles: Judi Dench, Emma Watson, Derek Jacobi, Toby Jones, Dominic Cooper and Dougray Scott all turn up. But this is without a doubt Wililams’ and Branagh’s film. Both were, logically, nominated for Oscars for their roles. Williams, like Meryl Streep as the older Lady Thatcher in The Iron Lady, manages to go beyond impression or impersonation, and really inhabits Monroe and channels the tragedy of her short life. The casting of Branagh is brilliantly conceived. He is the only actor who comes close to Olivier in evoking Shakespearianism. And to have Olivier, as played by Branagh, quote the doomed Prospero from The Tempest, during the making of a film in which Olivier tries to reinvigorate and reinvent himself, is of a stunning intertextual complexity. Or it is just a little joke. The academic in me prays for the former.

Meanwhile England looks gorgeously green. The soundtrack leads and follows the action on-screen closely and the 99 minutes of movie-goodness flash by. The direction, by experienced television director Simon Curtis, is efficient and appropriately glamour less: there is plenty of glamour already on-screen with the presence of all these famous actors playing famous actors in beautiful period costumes.

This is a film that deserves all the praise showered upon it, and probably more. A film worth seeing in the cinema. Go quickly, before it disappears from the big screen.

Trailer Tuesday: Djinns and Friends with Kids are Detached from the Moonrise Kingdom

A heterogeneous bunch, this week. Horror from the UAE, Apparently smart comedy, Adrien Brody and the new Wes Anderson.

 

Djinn

Dir. Tobe Hooper. Starring: Khalid Laith, Aiysha Hart, Razane Jamal & Paul Luebke

Release date NL: TBA

 

Friends with Kids

Dir. Jennifer Westfeldt. Starring: Adam Scott, Jennifer Westfeldt, Maya Rudolph, John Hamm, Chris O’Dowd, Kristen Wiig, Megan Fox & Edward Burns.

Release date NL: TBA

 

Detachment

Dir. Tony Kaye. Starring: Adrien Brody, Christina Hendricks, Lucy Liu, Bryan Cranston & James Caan

Release date NL: TBA

 

Moonrise Kingdom

Dir. Wes Anderson. Starring: Bruce Willis, Edward Norton, Tilda Swinton, Bill Murray, Frances McDormand, Jason Schwartzman & Harvey Keitel

Release date NL: August 23, 2012

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)



Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.