Saturday, December 26, 2009
The Wisdom of our Great Directors
"A movie like Fight Club is always going to come under attack from fucking pussies... violence between consenting adults is a healthy thing." - David Fincher
"I'm not from the Mike Leigh school. I want to reach the widest audience possible." - Christopher Nolan
"I want every one of my movies, even 20 years down the line, to have the same piss and vinegar, the same hard fucking dick as Reservoir Dogs. There can be no fuck-up, no weak link, no blank in the chamber for the kid to discover." - QT
"There's a point editing a film when you get really tired of it. I never got tired of Goodfellas" - who do you think?
"I don't like the name 'the Movie Brats' that much. I wish they'd called us 'the Movie Nerds'" - Steven Spielberg
and Paul Greengrass names Ken Loach as his favorite director which is awesome.
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
MSN's Top 10 of 2009
The MSN critics have near impeccable taste. Their list of the top 10 of 2009 will probably be the closest to mine. Much kudos to them putting Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans on their as well as them putting Inglourious Basterds so high. To make it even more legit, they also added the individual lists of their panel of critics. Big props to them putting some of the seriously underrated movies of the year Public Enemies and Observe and Report. Check out both here
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Three Tomatoes are Walking Down a Street...
I post in this shit freely. No rules. Never were, never will be. This is my sweet declaration of freedom, like good ol' TJ, breaking more ground than an earthquake or a really fat person walking in a cartoon. I don't know why I get discouraged by the fact that my blog isn't read by multitudes of people. It's not like I gave a shit when the only one reading my diary back in 'nam was my charlie overseer in the prison camp. I still wrote my things down, so I guess I'll continue. Fuck it, whatever.
Anyways, can't believe I haven't posted a response upon my seeing Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans. I have seen it four times in theaters as I write this if that's any indicator of the supreme level enjoyment this film gives me. Seriously, if you're in OC you have no excuse not to see this... it's playing at the Campus theater in Irvine and the Regency theater in Laguna Niguel. Herzog and Cage throw a most incendiary molotov cocktail into the stale police-procedural drama genre and it is endlessly gratifying. Herzog subverts the genre conventions by completely obliterating them. What maybe begins like your typical crime show or cop movie increasingly becomes a delightfully evil and hallucinatory story. This maybe the first time I've ever seen a POV shot from tripping iguanas or break dancing souls. Or lucky crack pipes.
Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans is easily one of the best films this year. Cage is quite possibly the most fearless actor with the most on-screen presence working in film today. It's a testament to his work that anyone could make that statement after all the shit movies/roles he's done. But when he's on, like he is here, he's fucking on and I'd like to see anyone else try and touch him. This is a film where the plot gradually becomes irrelevant and instead we sit back and bask in the wonderfully rich and crazy world, characters, and perspective of Louisianna, cops and criminals that Herzog and Cage have provided for us.
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
My New Favorite Actor/Person
"According to published reports, over the years Cage bought two Bahamian islands, more than dozen houses around the world, scores of exotic sports cars as well as dinosaur skulls, meteorites and yachts (he's suing former money manager Samuel J. Levin and his firm for $20 million in Los Angeles Superior Court, claiming Levin fattened his own bank account while "sending Cage down a path toward financial ruin")"
Sunday, September 13, 2009
I'm a Fan of Big Fan
In many ways Big Fan is a look at an alienated, poor, isolated individual with an obsession and the dangerous consequences those circumstances and personality traits produce. However, I believe that the film is largely more redemptive and sympathetic to Paul and his friend Sal (played by the equally great Kevin Corrigan). Paul and Sal's fandom is their only sense of purpose and connection in a pretty cold and alienating world. Paul in particular, writes pretty clever and insightful sports analysis and delivers this well on sports talk radio almost every night. Maybe if he had had the opportunities of a jounalism major at a nice college he could easily be a sports writer or TV/radio pundit. Either way, he still has something that he puts his heart, mind, and soul into and gets heard and respect on the radio for it.
Which leads into some of the other aspects of the film. The realism of this film is tremendous. Characters are complicated and criticized, the urban decay and poor working-class world of the Rugged Shaolin that Paul inhabits is depicted wonderfully. This world is also often juxtaposed, during scenes and moments of conflict, in contrast with the world of the wealthy. Whether it be the rich/party/night-club manhattan lifestyle of Paul and Sal's favorite Giants player or the lavish, suburban family life of his rich, sleazy, trial lawyer brother. It is also portrayed at Paul's work in a parking garage, where his rich customers in their nice cars constantly look down on him and treat him like dirt.
Paul has nothing but contempt for this world in a way, but he is still mostly concerned about Giants football. However, it obviously affects him. He is bored with his lame brother-in-law who is in management for price club and that's all he talks about. He has no illusions about his rich brother's greed and the hollow life he fashioned for himself with his stupid, mistress, overly tanned, boob and nose-jobbed, trophy wife. Yet, since he can not afford a nice house or fancy things, and chooses to not want to meet and marry gold-digging ladies, he gets criticized and condescended upon by everyone in his life. At least he has something to look forward to every day. He works, goes out and eats with his friend. It's not like he's some unemployed mooch of the family. His only flaw is that he's poor and different.
Anyways, that's where I believe Big Fan is a complicated character study that paints a dark and dangerous picture of the potential consequences of the effects Paul's surroundings, as well as his fandom, but is also sympathetic to Paul (and Sal) and critical of the values and world they inhabit. That's the brilliance of this movie, Siegel's writing/directing, and Oswalt's performance. It's sweet, sad, smart, funny, realistic and dark. I can't say enough good things about this movie, go see it if you have the chance.
Selling Out
What finally popped this luddite's cherry? I always loved the experience of going to video rental stores (and libraries). When you have no life like me you do not want to take one of the few things you like to actually go out into the world and do away. However, I was getting fed up with the lack of selection at all rental stores (indie ones included). Nothing can beat Netflix selection so I just had to go for it and now I'm having fun with it. My queue is obscenely large. The first movie I've gotten from Netflix is McCabe and Mrs. Miller, a classic, supposed hallmark of film, that I have a hard time finding at the stores.
Feeding the Addiction
Amoeba Hollywood:
Godfather Trilogy
George Washington (Criterion Collection)
Chungking Express
Dawn of the Dead (78) - Finally I own this! I've been relying on Katie's copy for too long!
Scanners
The Thing
Cabin Fever
Hostel 2
Target:
The Office Season 5 (I got the Target exclusive edition with the Michael Scott Paper Company cover!)
Adventureland
I Heart Huckabees (underappreciated)
Superman Returns (also underappreciated)
The Hills Have Eyes Remake (Unrated)
Blockbuster:
A Simple Plan
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
Monday, August 31, 2009
Saturday, August 15, 2009
Friday, August 14, 2009
Empty Promises to an Imaginary Audience
District 9
Degrassi Goes Hollywood
Thirst
Ponyo
The Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard
Belated RIP John Hughes
Thursday, July 2, 2009
Flashback showings in the OC!
This is super late to consider it promoting but oh well, i want to make more of an effort to write in this blog and I'll start with this. I'm pumped to be seeing Trainspotting for the first time at the Rancho Niguel theatre. If anyone sees this within the hour you should definitely go! Katie and I went last week to watch Pulp Fiction and it was a ton of fun and on a gorgeous print. However, there were not a lot of people there and they are taking a loss with this classic film series... I want it to keep going so if you can make it out please do! Anyways, I'll write about this and all the other amazing films I haven't written about either soon.
Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Monday, April 20, 2009
What I'm Anxious to See This Year
Inglourious Basterds
Public Enemies
Funny People
Drag Me To Hell
Shutter Island
Sherlock Holmes
Up
Where the Wild Things Are
Away We Go
Extract
Moon
The Girlfriend Experience
Limits of Control
X-Men Origins: Wolverine
Star Trek
Terminator Salvation
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Recent Rentals
Saturday, April 11, 2009
Adventureland
Alright, now I'm more up to date and almost caught up with everything I've seen in the theater recently. Now I get to write about Adventureland, which I saw last week and is another great addition to a great year so far in movies. First and foremost, the trailers totally misrepresented the movie as some kind of teen comedy, just like Superbad. Instead, Jesse Eisenberg's character, James, is in a very similar position i will be in a couple of months - a college graduate with a not-so-lucrative liberal arts degree. When he has to get a summer job, his degree does not even help for entry-level positions. While my nervousness ambiguous position about graduate school and my future is more of a self-inflicted problem than Jesse's, which is more a product of circumstance, I definitely related to this movie in that sense. How often do you see a movie about the exact same brief moment in life that you are experiencing. It definitely feels like my Graduate. Maybe that's a bit hyperbolic, but that's how I feel. Mottola, based this mostly on his own experiences, and shot and captured it well.
Ride the High Country/Wild Bunch at the New Beverly
One of Katie and my favorite things to do in southern California is to see double features of great movies, for super cheap, in an old exploitation theater in LA - the New Beverly. During Spring Break, the New Beverly continued to show the greatness that is Sam Peckinpah, whose films I had not seen until we caught Straw Dogs there a couple months ago. Anyways, Straw Dogs blew me away and when a Peckinpah double bill fell in line with the time while I was in southern California, we had to go.
Sunshine Cleaning
Once again I apologize (if anyone's reading) for being so late on this one too. Not that Sunshine Cleaning deserves such lag! In fact, it's quite the opposite. I really enjoyed this movie for many reasons. First would have to be the character development, particularly of the two leads, sisters Rose and Norah, brought to life by probably two of the best female actors working today, Amy Adams and Emily Blunt. Throughout the film you become very attached to both characters and they are just a great screen pair. Not to mention a movie with a fully developed, complex, and interesting treatment of women, which we don't see a lot. Rose and Norah are very real, and are not simply spending the whole movie pining for a man to save themselves emotionally financially - in fact its the exact opposite in this movie. As you all probably saw already in the trailer, they obviously take it into their own hands by starting the crime-scene clean-up business (which was a new and interesting industry and concept to explore).
Saturday, April 4, 2009
I loved I Love You, Man
It's unfortunate that a far less worthwhile movie gets more writing than I Love You, Man, but I had to let the world know how much "Merde" sucked. Anyways, this was an amazingly hilarious comedy that we are coming to expect from the likes of Paul Rudd and Jason Segel. It's not just funny, but also sweet and does not insult our intelligence. I am very down for the "bromance" and continue to thoroughly enjoy these more interesting, smarter, and more complicated portrayals of manliness. We don't have to be completely stoic, unfunny, retards and can go on man-dates in search of friends! And while I think great comedies and comedians have done this throughout cinematic and television history, it really seems like this new renaissance of comedy has mastered it and continues to produce gold like I Love You, Man. Rudd and Segel are an amazing comedic duo, and while this term has probably been played out, really do pull off a bromantic comedy. I was rooting for them to be friends more than I wanted Pete to get with his wife. The surrounding cast are all great, particularly Jon Favreau and Jamie Priestly, two people I love. On top of other great familiar faces like Andy Samberg, J.K. Simmons, and Rashida Jones. If you want to feel really really good after watching a movie, rush to the theaters and catch this. I suggest it, tots mcgoats.
"Now I'm Useful": Tokyo! Review
Tokyo! is three short films by three different directors (Michel Gondry, Leos Carax, and Bong Joon Ho) doing each of their visions of the city. While the trailer was wonderful, the movie as a whole is not worth seeing in theaters. Gondry's "Interior Design" and Bong Joon-Ho's "Shaking Tokyo" are both interesting, look good visually, and are pretty engaging overall, but "Merde" by Leos Carax is the most painful 25 or so minutes I've spent watching a movie since I can't remember when.
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
I Agree with Peter Travers
Watch the Watchmen
This is very late, I know, but I had to write something about the Watchmen. I saw it 3 weeks ago on opening night and saw it two more times the same weekend (one being in imax). That should be an indicator of not only how much I enjoyed the film, but how it's something I could not get out of my head and had to watch it multiple times. It stays very true to the graphic novel and where it strays it delivers. Most notably is the amazing title sequence, that brilliantly and stylistically throws you into the alternate universe that the Watchmen inhabit in about 2 minutes, perfectly reflected in and enhanced by Bob Dylan's "They Times are Changing". Also, the ending (which should no longer be a spoiler), works better cinematically than Alan Moore's original.
Monday, March 30, 2009
Changing the Focus of this Blog
Thursday, January 29, 2009
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
I'm Addicted to Lists: Best Movies of 2008
This is long overdue, but I have finally made my top movie list of 2008. In my opinion, 2008 has been the best year in film in my conscious movie-going life. It gave me my favorite movie of all time and a diverse and large group of great films that are sure to become all-time favorites of mine. Since this year was so great I could not limit my list to 10, so I’m doing 15. Ebert and Roeper did more than 10 as well, so suck it – this is elite. I have a couple disclaimers before I go into this though. First is that I will not count Che and Gomorrah as having been released this year. If I could not find them in LA by January that is too obscure to be considered 2008. These would have surely been on my list but I have to wait to see them now, so they can wait till 2009’s list. However, there were a few films I missed that are fair game for 2008, most notably Happy Go Lucky and Wend and Lucy, which I’m sure would be contenders if I had seen them but now I must wait until they come out on dvd. Either way I am happy with my list. If you disagree post it on my comments and I will argue to the death with you because I am very attached to this list. Here we go.
The Dark Knight: Words can not describe my love for this movie. It’s not only my favorite film of the year, but my favorite of all time. Christopher Nolan said he wanted to do what Empire Strikes Back did for Star Wars and he succeeded. Heath Ledger’s performance was one of the best I’ve seen in my lifetime and his Joker will go down as one of the great characters on screen. The rest of the acting is superb – anyone who bitches one more time about Christian Bale’s Batman voice should have their tongues cut off. His Bruce Wayne and Batman were perfect, and the voice was necessary and intimidating. Gary Oldman and Aaron Eckhart made me fans as well. This is everything and more I could have ever wanted with a Batman film. Few things have been as consistent in my life as my love for this hero and his story. Nolan told it brilliantly and beautifully, making it as much a noir-ish crime film as a comic book (as Batman should be). I’ve never been in a theater where people cheered after action sequences and special effects. Finally, as many people have gone into depth about, it makes you think and is a definite product of the times we are living in. Whatever, it’s all been said. Believe the hype. The Dark Knight is amazing.
The Wrestler: Another amazing flick. Mickey Rourke is awesome as an aging 80’s star wrestler still going off at Vet Halls and Community centers in wrestling’s senior circuit. It is one of the best performances of a year filled with bests for other favorite actors. As dominant a force as Rourke is in this he is complemented with outstanding supporting actors (Marisa Tomei and Evan Rachel Wood) and Arronofsky’s directing chops and storytelling ability. Not only a great, classic, American underdog story where I’m not sure I’ve rooted for someone in a film as much as I did for Rourke’s character, Randy “The Ram” Robinson; but also a deep character study of a man dealing with his past demons, his current ones, and the hard reality of a down-and-out veteran wrestler working at a grocery store just to make it. It’s gritty and real and at points the shots feel as disoriented and beaten-up as Randy must feel after brutally staged performances with much younger foes. Bruce Springsteen’s title track fits the film/trailer so perfectly as well. All this and an awesome hair metal soundtrack and funny, blasphemous, commentary about Kurt Cobain. Just go see it.
Milk: A truly inspiring life and story, captured and told perfectly by Gus Van Sant and the best all-around cast next to the Dark Knight. Sean Penn is unbelievable as Harvey Milk in this, he lost himself in this role and became it. James Franco, Emile Hirsch, and Josh Brolin are already favorite actors of mine and they shine as well. I wish this was released before we voted this year, because this film is beautifully told, acted and inspiring; its an argument, not only against right-wing bigots but also how to successfully fight them – with a movement. Milk recognized this in his time and became one of its great speakers, organizers, fighters, leaders, and martyrs. I believe, as Milk did, in the power of the people to make social change, but after the passage of Prop 8 I wish Milk was still alive. At least this brilliant film cuts no corners and is unabashedly pro-gay rights, pro-movement politics, anti-right, and progressive. Not only good enough to change minds, but more importantly, inspiring enough to get people off their asses and into the fight.
Slumdog Millionaire: How did Danny Boyle get to be so amazing? I mean this guy gave us Sunshine last year and now this masterpiece. I went into it expecting great storytelling and insight and commentary into the changing social terrain in India in the last couple decades as it is ever penetrated by global capitalism (and these were delivered brilliantly to be sure), but I did not expect it to look amazing as well. Beautifully stylistic from the beginning through the end credits. And this is not to minimize the story and content of the film. Slumdog brilliantly interweaves portraying the brutal reality of India’s poor with the joy, love, struggle, and triumph of the personal lives of the characters dealing with these realities. Great directing, great story, great characters, deft criticism and challenges on questions of class (eloquently defending the hustle in such an unequal society with fantastic montages and a perfectly complementing soundtrack), and simple and beautiful, Dickens’ style love story. This movie is the whole package and will go down as a classic.
Let the Right One In: I was so glad to be able to see, not just a good, but a great horror film this year. Let the Right One In is one of the most beautiful, interesting, and frightening takes on the vampire story that I’ve ever seen. Perfectly set (and made) in Sweden where it’s almost always dark and with plenty of white snow canvasses to be splattered with red blood. Eli’s Caretaker’s blood-extracting kit is one of the most inventive and coolest things I saw on screen this year. And to top it all off, a perfectly sweet and violently vengeful ending. Fuck Twilight, go see this.
Synecdoche, New York: Charlie Kauffman delivered another genius, mind-bending, ambitious script, but this time he directed it – and did as good a job, if not better, than Spike Jonze and Michel Gondry. A look at life and aging, filled with plenty of weird and paranoid insecurities that we all have. I’ll probably sound like everyone else, but there’s so much to think about in this movie you can’t see it just once. I haven’t seen Doubt, but Philip Seymour Hoffman was so amazing in this I don’t know how it could be overlooked.
Pineapple Express: While already familiar and expecting a lot from Seth Rogen/James Franco/Apatow etc. this was my first introduction to David Gordon Green. He did not fail to impress and Pineapple Express is probably the coolest, most violent, and most ambitious (until Funny People) project produced by the Apatow Crew. I was expecting it to be hilarious, and it was, but I was not expecting the amount of violence, reminding me of duo comedies. James Franco as Saul has to be one of my all-time favorite characters. My favorite comedy in a year of great comedies. This deserves a cult following.
Revolutionary Road: I was skeptical of this movie at first because looking at the underside of American suburban life is such a boring cliché in film and would seem to be even more petty amidst this recession. However, I love Leo and Kate Winslett together and I thought the trailer was done well so I saw it. I was very surprised. The themes of Revolutionary Road deal more with “Death of a Salesmen” work alienation and the effect of sexism in our relationships. You wouldn’t know it, but the film becomes a powerful argument for a women’s right to choose. Leo and Kate do an amazing job of becoming these characters and you become so attached to them that it’s heartbreaking as a member of the audience to witness what becomes of their lives/relationship. And the crazy guy was brilliant, and unexpected, comic relief. Definitely one of the best movies of the year.
Wall E: What can I say that hasn’t been said. The beginning of the film is almost lyrical with no dialogue. Basically, robots make me love being human. Also serves as a great post-apocalyptic/sci-fi film. Pixar did it again.
Hellboy 2: The Golden Army: Guillermo Del Toro upstages his first Awesome Hellboy movie with The Golden Army. The directing and special effects create a fantasy meets Universal Monsters type of world, perfect for Hellboy and the BPRD to explore and fight against evil in. Krauss was super funny and I applaud any superhero/comic-book movie that breaks into a drunken sing-along between love-struck Abe Sapien and Hellboy. The second best comic book movie in a year that gave us the Dark Knight, Incredible Hulk and Iron Man. Enough said.
Forgetting Sarah Marshall: Funny and sweet as hell. Apatow and his crew at their best with Jason Segel’s screenwriting debut. Add another comedy classic to their ever-growing stack. Few movies made me feel as good after I saw it as this.
Miracle at St. Anna: I still stand by this. It basically got dumped on by most critics and did horribly at the box office, but I thought it was great. The war scenes were great and it’s an important story that needed to be told and I thought Spike Lee did a great job. For a full review just go to my October section on this blog and read what I wrote after I saw it.
Incredible Hulk: Wholly underrated, and yes, I think it was better than Iron Man. I loved Iron Man as much as the next guy, but I’m not so sure why it completely overshadowed Incredible Hulk. Maybe its my fanboyness and attachment to Hulk as a character and its comics (and the great 90’s cartoon), but I really think this was an awesome comic-book movie, worthy of all the praise of Iron Man. Ed Norton was the perfect Bruce Banner and did such a great acting job. William Hurt and Tim Roth were spot-on as Thunderbolt Ross and Emil Blonsky. Liv Tyler was a fantastic Betty and her and Norton’s on-screen chemistry rivals any within the Marvel movie universe. The film – Leterier’s directing style, the action, and the CG and special effects looked amazing. I mean, Hulk looked like he was a part of our world. You could tell everyone involved with this got the Hulk story, characters and universe down perfectly. Also, great themes that dealt with worker’s alienation and frustration in the Developing world and subversive views of American militarism. Plus the final fight scene was as great a comic-book action scene anyone could ask for. And the Hulk Smash got me so pumped.
Iron Man: Don’t let the above blurb fool you, I loved Iron Man. Robert Downey Jr. was absolutely amazing as Tony Stark and Jon Favreau did such a stand-up job directing this. Making an Iron Man story as liberal as it could possibly be without being cheesy is quite a feat. Iron Man looked great and the special effects were awesome.
Harold and Kumar 2: Escape from Guantanamo Bay: Hell yes this belongs in a top movies of the year list. Harold and Kumar are the Cheech and Chong of our generation. I don’t think I laughed as hard as I did in a movie this year. Plenty of great honkie-bashing and a great chill session with George W. Bush. Nothing could be funnier than when we get a look at Roldy in college in 2000. Count NPH’s cameo as another awesome comeback performances and cameos in a year that saw a lot of those. Both Harold and Kumar films need to become cult classics.
Noteworthy Mentions: Burn After Reading, W., Zack and Miri Make a Porno, In Bruges, Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Indiana Jones 4: The Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, Be Kind Rewind, Tropic Thunder, Valkyrie, Cloverfield, Step Brothers
What I’m most looking forward to next year:
Inglorious Basterds
Funny People
Watchmen
Scott Pilgrim vs. the World
Shutter Island
Public Enemies
X-Men Origins: Wolverine
The Wolfman