Archive for the 'Action Movies' category

DVD Review – Derailed & King Kong

May 21 2006 Published by under Action Movies, Drama, Movie Reviews, Movies

DVD ReviewOnce the kid was born, movies in theaters became a thing of the past. Now, the wife and I are big fans of NetFlix. A while back I started to create a recurring post called the DVD Review. The thought was, I’d offer thoughts on movies after the luster of their release marketing wore off.

This week’s delivery brought King Kong, Derailed, and Pride & Prejudice. We haven’t made it through Pride & Prejudice yet, so I’ll hit the others.

Derailed – This movie didn’t have a lot to offer. At all. At any point. The plot was thin. The characters were uninteresting. The pace was slow and the story predictable. Aniston didn’t bring much to the flick, and Owen himself didn’t seem to care what happened to his character.

The movie tells the tale of a married man who meets a woman on a train, gets involved in a tryst, and ends up being mugged and watching her get raped. Shortly thereafter, the mugger begins blackmailing him. That has the potential to set up a suspenseful movie, but it never gets there. Aniston refuses to talk to the police about the brutal rape because her husband would learn of the affair – ignoring the possibility that her husband wouldn’t notice the physical trauma from the rape.

The movie spends the next 102 minutes dragging the viewer through one hackneyed premise after another. If you haven’t figured out the plot from that brief recap of the first 10 minutes of film, you might enjoy this. If, like most people, you’ve already put the whole story together, save your time and money.

Before the movie serves up the ending you have known was coming for 85 minutes, you’re trying to do your taxes in your head and wondering how you can get the last 90 minutes of your life back.

King King – Before I moved this blog to Word Press (and in doing so lost all my previous posts) I spent a lot of time railing on this picture. Only one note made it into the post-transition blog.

I’m still amazed that Paramount spent nearly $300 million to make and market this film. It’s much better than I expected, but not $200 million better. I had seen most of it in the Jurassic Park franchise. The cast spends two hours and 45 minutes of the 3:10 run time stuck on Isla Nublar Skull Island being chased by dinosaurs and giant insects. The remaining 25 minutes is spent watching Kong slide on ice in New York.

They did manage to make King Kong much more disturbing and sinister than I ever thought possible. The natives on Skull Island, for instance, were like something from under the staircase in a Wes Craven flick. Seriously, what’s with the mutants and what about a giant monkey causes their eyeballs to roll up inside their heads?

The one thing I found really interesting was the model work. I’m trying to figure out whether Peter Jackson meant for all of the models to look cheesy or if that was an accident. If you’ve seen any comments by the director on that topic, send them along.

In all, I’d be hard pressed to recommend Derailed to anyone other than insomniacs that don’t respond to medication. Kong is a good rent for the visuals. In the alternative, though, you could pull Jurassic Park or Jurassic Park III out of the cabinet and watch them. Just remember to imagine a giant gorilla thrown in with the raptors and T-Rex and you’re all set.

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Getting Off Of Politics For A Moment…

May 08 2006 Published by under Action Movies, Celebrities, Movies

MoviesCelebritiesI’ve been beating the political horse pretty hard for a while now and the Net Neutrality thing is done to death. I guess it’s time to pay attention to the third leg of my blog tripod – the lunacy that is the entertainment industry.

Speaking of lunacy, Tom Cruise opened a new movie this weekend. It fell well short of projections. They must have known that was going to happen. Given all the ads that featured “soft, romantic Tom” and played up the romance angle, it was apparent they were losing female movie-goers. It’s also apparent, given the ads all featured the same five or six action sequences, that the third installment was going to be much like the first two, and all the good stuff is in the trailers.

Several reviews of “Mission: Impossible 3″ pointed out that Mr. Cruise’s public persona had become a distraction when watching him on the big screen. “It’s impossible to watch ‘M:I-3′ without asking: Do we still, you know, like Tom Cruise?” the critic Owen Gleiberman wrote in Entertainment Weekly, while Manohla Dargis wrote in The New York Times: “It would be a stretch to say that Tom Cruise needs a hit. What this guy needs is an intervention.”

Hollywood spends so much time trying to promote the actors and make America identify with them, that it becomes dangerous for the movies they are affiliated with when their public image is a cultural joke.

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Oscar Nods

MoviesCelebritiesSo the nominations are out… The big winner was Fatback Mountain, with 8 nominations. A number of movies scored a handful, but the story of gay cowboys is Oscar’s favorite, so far.

Honestly I think Oscar nominations must be doled out by the same people that handle US Figure Skating’s Olympic athletes. To exclude Walk The Line in the best picture category, but then include the crap-fest Crash is a crime against movies. Yes, I’m pleased that Joaquin Phoenix and Reese Witherspoon got best actor/actress nods, but leaving the movie out of play for the big score is a travesty.

The media coverage will beat to death the story line about the Witherspoon/Huffman duel over best actress. On the men’s side, I’ve got to go with Phoenix despite the buzz about Hoffman.

On a final note, don’t start screwing with the color controls on your television come March 5. This years Oscars look to be a rather monochromatic event with Terrence Howard and Ang Lee providing the only diversity. Honestly, if William Hurt can get a nod for a walk-on, the Howard should have picked up a supporting actor nomination for his role in Crash (he was the bright spot in a very drab movie). He was excellent in Hustle and Flow. Unfortunately, the only chance he may have this year is if the Academy hands him an Oscar just so they can avoid the complaints about their all-white affair.)

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The DVD Review

Jan 09 2006 Published by under Action Movies, Awful Movies, Comedy, Drama, Movie Reviews, Movies

The DVD ReviewMy wife and I have an 8 month old son. He’s just at that age where he’ll remain content for about an hour to 90 minutes, then start complaining in general terms. As a result, a first-run movie, unfortunately, is a rare occasion. So I’ve become NetFlix‘ biggest fan. I’m getting my money’s worth on that $18 per month. I figure my average rental fee on any one movie is less than a dollar.

Anyway, all of this inspired me to kick off a new section – the DVD Review. It should be subtitled “I Watch The Crap So You Don’t Have To.”

With the long weekend last week and the uneventful week this week, I had time to chew through a number of flicks. There were a couple of gems, and a bunch of crap. So here we go.

The 40 Year Old Virgin – Greatness. The humor is raw and course (which my wife hates) and there is a lot of profanity that seemed unnecessary (the chest waxing scene could have been funnier with fewer f-bombs and more of the “Kelly Clarkson” shtick. I think him screaming random oddities would have been better than the names he kept calling the woman. The story is cute and moves along well. The only major issue I had with the story line was the Paul Rudd “girlfriend” thing. It added nothing.

The Brothers Grimm – The movie grim. It’s 30 minutes of my life I’ll never get back. It would have been 118 minutes, but at about 30, I couldn’t take the pain any longer and hit eject. The Bush Administration should use this movie to interrogate al-Qaeda suspects.

Four Brothers – I don’t know where to start with this golden turd. I think a friend summed it up best… “Where do these guys live that you can have a shoot out with full automatic weapons in the middle of the street, in broad daylight, for 20 minutes, and not a single cop shows up?” That was just one of two elements of suspended disbelief that I had trouble with. The rest of the movie was the other.

Must Love Dogs – This was a good date movie. The wife and I both enjoyed it. It’s sugary and sappy as all date movies are supposed to be, but it was fun. Pop it in when your wife/girlfriend wants to curl up on the couch. It’s one that she’ll enjoy and you can accept.

Saving Grace – I have a fondness for absurd British comedy. Still Crazy, Waking Ned Devine, and The Full Monty are great flicks even if you have to watch them twice to understand what the characters are saying. Saving Grace fits nicely into this category.

Into The Blue – If you liked 2 Fast 2 Furious (not the original, but the sequel) than you might like this. Just don’t expect it to move along as quickly. It’s not the most exciting movie, but if you’re into Scuba diving, some of the underwater shots are really nice.

Alexander - My thoughts? Watch Troy instead. I expected a movie about Alexander the Great. Instead, I got a movie that felt like I was sitting in on a therapy session for ATG. This movie was less Braveheart and more Analyze This. I really don’t care if Alexander the Great was neurotic because his father didn’t love him. And what the hell is the deal with Oliver Stone movies? This guy seems to spend a lot of time trying to tell us why nobody is responsible for their own actions.

So there you have it. The first round of the DVD Review. Visit us next week when we’ll try to get around to Danny Deckchair, The Constant Gardener, and Hustle & Flow

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So Stoked About This

Dec 19 2005 Published by under Action Movies, Movies

MoviesUnderworld: Evolution comes out in just a few weeks (January 20 release date). Underworld is probably one of the better vampire/werewolf movies and I loved the idea of the two species fighting it out to see who gets to sit at the top of the food chain.

Honestly, when I heard about the sequel, I was scared. I couldn’t see Kate Beckinsale signing up for another go at the franchise simply because of the typecast possibility. Having the original cast back should make this as much fun as the first – though I have an issue and a favor to ask.

First, the issue is the role of Lucian. I hope his role is limited to depictions of past events only. He pretty much defined “dead” in the first film, so a typical he-wasn’t-really-dead story would piss me off.

As for the favor, I just ask that they please kill Kraven. He should have been killed in the first flick. That’s the point to having a spectacular asshole as the villain – you rejoice when they meet their end. But he didn’t. He’s going to snivel along into the second film. He really needs to die in a horrible way in this movie. Please let it be so.

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