Thursday, December 19, 2013

The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug (2013)

Also Known As: -
Year of first release: 2013
Director: Peter Jackson (Bad Taste, The Lord of the Rings 1-3, King Kong)
Actors: Martin Freeman (Hot Fuzz, The Hitchhicker's Guide to the Galaxy), Ian McKellen (X-men 1-3, The Lord of the Rings 1-3), Richard Armitage, Benedict Cumberbatch (Star Trek Into Darkness)
Country: USA, NZ
Genre: Fantasy, Adventure
Conditions of visioning: 16.12.2013, CINEMA theater, 3D, High Frame Rate
Synopsis: The company of thirteen Dwarves led by Thorin (Armitage), one Hobbit (Freeman) and a Magician (McKellen) continue their journey towards the Lonely Mountain where the Dragon Smaug (Cumberbatch) stands guard.
Review: After watching twice An Unexpected Journey on Blu-ray and liking it more and more, I was really eager to see this second part of the trilogy. In the second movie of the Lord of the Rings trilogy (The Two Towers), not much was happening while we were introduced many new characters, which was a difficult exercise to show. On the contrary in The Hobbit trilogy, all the introductions were done in the first movie and quite some action happens in the second, including the first encounter with Smaug the Dragon.
As we are used to with Peter Jackson movies, everything is visually perfect and the scenes at the Lonely Mountain are great, but the way the movie ends makes it really frustrating to have to wait one full year to see the conclusion. The rest of the movie is good as well, but sometimes feels like only a succession of action scenes and encounters with particular characters whom role you don't really understand if you are not a hard-core Tolkien fan. This feeling was reinforced by the HFR 3D which as in the first movie put me ill at ease (I had the feeling to watch TV), especially since the cinema in which I was has a problem of cross-talk between the left and right images of the 3D (the already disturbed me when watching Gravity).
Some characters are also annoying like Legolas (Orlando Bloom is back) and his father Thranduil, although I like his looks, and some scenes are a bit out of place (with Tauriel the female Elf). The Dwarves are very pleasant to watch now that I knew well all of them.
In spite of my reservations, The Desolation of Smaug is still a great show and contains some memorable scenes (in the Lonely Mountain, the escape in the barrels...). I currently like it less than the first movie but I guess I need to wait to see all three before making my final rating of the trilogy.
Rating: 7 /10

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Dialogue avec mon Jardinier (2007)

Also Known As: -
Year of first release: 2007
Director: Jean Becker (L’Été meurtrier, Les Enfants du Marais)
Actors: Daniel Auteuil (36 Quai des Orfèvres, Caché), Jean-Pierre Darroussin (Le Coeur des Hommes 1-3, Un Air de Famille), Fanny Cottençon
Country: F
Genre: Comedy, Drama
Conditions of visioning: 15.12.2013, DVD-rip, 11" laptop screen
Synopsis: A painter who has succeeded in life comes back to his native town where he hires a gardener whom he has known as a child, and who never left the countryside.
Review: Dialogue avec mon Jardinier makes me want to watch more of this kind of French movies, not pompous or pretentious as many can be. The topic is in a sense close to me, although I cannot really fully identify with the painter. It can be disturbing (boring) that the two main characters spend their time talking but the title of the movie should have warned you! And as the roles are played by so talented actors this is not an issue at all. While both are really good, I found that Auteuil caught exactly his character while Daroussin missed it on some occasions.
I was expecting some conflicts between those characters but there are none: their friendship only grows. It is all the more dramatic when some event changes this relationship after about three quarters of the movie.
A nice tale of friendship.
Rating: 8 /10

Monday, December 16, 2013

Robots (2005)

Also Known As: -
Year of first release: 2005
Director: Chris Wedge (Ice Age, Epic), Carlos Saldanha (Ice Age 1-3, Rio 1-2)
Actors (voices): Ewan McGregor (Trainspotting, Star Wars 1-3), Halle Berry (Catwoman, X-men 1-3), Mel Brooks
Country: USA
Genre: Animation, Comedy, Adventure
Conditions of visioning: 11.12.2013, SD VOD, Home cinema
Synopsis: In a robot world, Rodney Copperbottom (McGregor) was born in a rural town and travels to the big city to present his inventions to a prestigious company. But the world has changed and profit is now more valued than innovation.
Review: It is nice to watch an animated movie once in a while, as it is the case for Robots. The story is quite classical (the little guy fighting against the big company), the humor is OK but not really deserving big laughts, the animation of the robots is good-looking (although I couldn't fully appreciate it in Standard Definition).
But the movie doesn't exhibit great ideas that would make it memorable. So it was nice to watch but it will not make a long-lasting impression on the public.
Rating: 5 /10

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

O apóstolo (2012)

Also Known As: Der Apostel
Year of first release: 2012
Director: Fernando Cortizo
Actors: -
Country: E
Genre: Animation, Thriller
Conditions of visioning: 08.12.2013, City46, Original with English subtitles
Synopsis: Escaping from jail, Ramón enters the Camino de Santiago and arrives at a remote village searching for a treasure hidden there by a jail companion years ago. What at first appears to be a deserted town in which only few elderly people live turns out to be a village surviving a curse for over 600 years. 
Review: The storyline is really good and full of surprises increasing the suspense and the mystery at each step. The end is also not only surprising, it is full of humour. The puppets are very expressive and have all some typical expressions that enhance the personality of the character. In particular the nose movement of the pastor is excellent! There are different type of esthetics, a medieval parchment style with illuminations and the main story in a dark and sordide environment. Very well worked, except the special effects for the fog that looked extermely cheap and particularly awful to me.  

Only good points, so why a 6/10 only?! But surprise surprise! The movie was expected to be in Spanish and was actually in Galego (that sounds to be close to Portuguese) with few Spanish dialogues. And the subtitles in English would not help you for the translation, as it was barely English, but it extends the dialogues more than what the characters tell in Galego. Therefore it was quite unpleasant to read and listen to this movie. Next time, I will try to get this movie with English soundtrack. If the English is the correct, this could then become a much better rating...
Rating: 6 /10

Lady and the Tramp (1955)

Also Known As: La Belle et le Clochard (French)
Year of first release: 1955
Director: Clyde Geronimi, Wilfred Jackson and Hamilton Luske (Snow White, Cinderella, Pinocchio, 101 Dalmatians)
Actors (voices): Barbara Luddy, Larry Roberts, Peggy Lee
Country: USA
Genre: Animation, Comedy, Romance
Conditions of visioning: 08.12.2013, Blu-ray, Home cinema
Synopsis: The adventures of the cocker spaniel Lady raised in an idyllic town, when she is replaced by a baby in the heart of her masters.
Review: Who hasn't seen Walt Disney movies as children? With a hint of nostalgia, I started to rediscover those classics two years ago with Bambi and the Lion King. Lady and the Tramp was next on my list and I will probably continue in the future.
The quality of this (diamond) Blu-ray edition is impressive for this first Disney movie shot in cinemascope. Prestine image and music quality as I had never seen before when I was watching this movie on TV. This is a true pleasure to re-discover this classic in such conditions. It allows you to really pay attention to the story, the drawings, the animation, particularly how the dogs move, their hair and their skin, and appreciate the talent of Disney's crew at the time. Iconic scenes like the spaghetti dinner take a new dimension in those conditions.
The story is not too cheesy and although told from a dog point of view, it is a very human one (as explained in the very interesting making-of documentary). The ending comes more quickly than I remembered (I think it has the same effects on all adults).
The only element that displeased me was the fact that almost every character has a different accent, most of them foreign to the USA. I learned in the documentary that Walt Disney found that it gave more believability to the characters, but I found it a bit distracting.
Rating: 9 /10

A Christmas Carol (2009)

Also Known As: -
Year of first release: 2009
Director: Robert Zemeckis (Back to the Future 1-3, The Polar Express)
Actors: Jim Carrey (Mask, Dumb & Dumber), Gary Oldman (The Fifth Element), Colin Firth (The King's Speech), Cary Elwes (Hot Shots!)
Country: USA
Genre: Drama, Animation
Conditions of visioning: 07.12.2013, SD VOD, Home cinema
Synopsis: Old Scrooge (Carrey) is as stingy as can be. On Christmas Eve he will be visited by three spirits that will show him that there is happiness around, even without money.
Review: I thought that would be THE Christmas movie to watch on this month of December. I knew that at the time it was kind of revolutionary because of the motion capture of actors allows them to play many roles (Jim Carrey has eight!). But the main feeling I had when watching the movie was boredom: the movie tries sooo hard to show the bad side of Scrooge, it is hard to believe that he changes in the end.
The most annoying is the length of the scenes, in particular the one with the ghost of Marley, and the one with the first Spirit. Also they all speak so slowly and with a muffled voice very hard to understand in the original English version.
The original story is good (I mean the novel from Charles Dickens) and the special effects quite impressive, but it seems like too much attention was given to the visuals, and not enough to produce a story easy to follow. After all it is Christmas and you want to be entertained! The movie is not even suited for kids because of several scary and morbid scenes.
Rating: 3 /10

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Dragon Wars (2007)

Also Known As: D-War
Year of first release: 2007
Director: Hyung-rae Shim
Actors: Jason Behr, Amanda Brooks, Robert Forster
Country: ROK
Genre: Action, Fantasy, SF
Conditions of visioning: 09.12.2013, Blu-ray, Home cinema
Synopsis: Young reporter Ethan Kendrick (Behr) is destined to protect Sarah (Brooks) in the middle of a war between giant serpents for the right to ascend to Heaven.
Review: What the hell is this movie?!? The first Korean movie to be widely distributed in the USA in 30 years! Directed by a Korean but with a 100% American cast. 38 million dollars of budget. Based on an old Korean legend.
I remember reading some bad things about it, and was expecting something in the style of the Asylum production (Sharknado, Supergator vs. Dinocroc, Snakes on a Train), i.e. bad actors, stupid story, poor dialogs and a minimum amount of cheap special effects. After watching the movie, the closest comparison that comes to my mind is actually ... Pacific Rim! This is not flattering for Guillermo del Toro, but Dragon Wars is the same mix of amazing combat scenes and very bad story and dialogs.
The digital effects are better in Pacific Rim, but they are displayed with such generosity in Dragon Wars! It must be one of the movies with the most digital shots ever. I have seen people on Internet wondering how they could get those visuals for only 38 million dollars. The reactions are quite extreme about this movie: some love it, many find it awful, but hopefully others manage to appreciate it for its generosity and for what it is.
My feeling about it is clear: although the storytelling and editing is extremely poor (so many ellipses...), I was not bored for one second and was truly amazed by the display of ideas when it comes to combat scenes: giant snakes, armies of armored soldiers mounting some bipedal reptiles, huge frog-like beasts equipped with missile-launchers (looking a bit like the amphibian beasts used for a similar purpose in Star Wars Episode I), helicopters chasing some flying reptiles (this is taken from Avatar), and an original dragon design. 
My process for rating is the same as for Pacific Rim: 9/10 for the combats and 3/10 for the storytelling gives an average 6/10, that I push up one more point because of the pleasant surprise it gave me.
Rating: 7 /10

Monday, December 9, 2013

Jingle all the Way (1996)

Also Known As: La Course au Jouet (French)
Year of first release: 1996
Director: Brian Levant (The Flintstones, Beethoven)
Actors: Arnold Schwarzenegger (Terminator, Predator, Twins), Sinbad, Phil Hartman
Country: USA
Genre: Comedy
Conditions of visioning: 07.12.2013, SD VOD, Home cinema
Synopsis: As a last chance to show to his son that he can keep his promises, an absent father (Schwarzenegger) goes out on a race to find a special toy on Christmas Eve. It will take him to the most unlikely places in town, where he will meet special characters.
Review: It is now December, and what better than to watch Christmas movies on a grey hangover Saturday afternoon. Jingle all the Way is dumber than I remembered and Schwarzenegger, then at the top of his comedy period, doesn't act very well. The situations he puts himself in are also exaggerated but that's part of the fun.
It is interesting to see the future Anakin Skywalker Jake Lloyd as Schwarzenegger's kid, especially when his masked father almost tells him: "I am your father" making Schwarzenegger indirectly Luke Skywalker's grandfather (if you follow my drift). By the way, have you ever wondered what this cute little kid has become?
Stupid toy race aside, what I will remember form this movie are the underlying jokes for adults. One of them is the warehouse filled with cheap fake Santa Clauses selling counterfeit toys. The other is the absolutely dumb super-hero Turbo-Man and all the characters from the children's show. The Turbo-Man joke is at its best when during the parade Schwarzenegger is dressed up as the super-hero and has to fight a postman (Sinbad) dressed as Turbo-Man's arch-enemy. It becomes really crazy when they start to use super-powers!
Rating: 5 /10

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Old boy (2003)

Also Known As: -
Year of first release: 2003
Director: Chanwook Park
Actors: Min-sik Choi, Hye-jeong Kang, Ji-tae Yu
Country: ROK
Genre: Action
Conditions of visioning: 03.12.2013, DVD
Synopsis: An average man is kidnapped and imprisoned in a shabby cell for 15 years without explanation. He then is released, equipped with money, a cellphone and expensive clothes. As he strives to explain his imprisonment and get his revenge, Oh Dae-Su soon finds out that his kidnapper has a greater plan for him and is set onto a path of pain and suffering in an attempt to uncover the motive of his mysterious tormentor.
Review: I did well to watch the original just after the remake. The story is really good and revolutionary. It questions "I am a monster, but I have the right to live". And actually we see really two crazy monsters in this movie. The philosophical questions are omnipresent, while they completely disappeared from the Spike Lee remake. The heroe is an average man and behaves all along as such, which makes it closer from the viewer. This way we can more easily take his place, while in the Lee version, the heroe is like a superheroe and therefore not interesting in this movie. The Korean movie has some great scenes for the originality ("I need to eat something alive", the hammer scene) and for the directing (hammer scene) but also several lacking of better technology or time and looking therefore very cheap. The ending of the movie is very Asian, explaining the rationale with an off voice, and very cruel and revolutionary for its content. No movie would depict (SPOILER) and destroy with no mercy the heroe this way! If no scene would look cheap as it does several times, this could have become a master piece.
Rating: 8 /10

Additional bonus point for the Korean movie, the posters are much more esthetic. See some other ones below. 

Old boy (2013)

Also Known As: -
Year of first release: 2013
Director: Spike Lee
Actors: Josh Brolin, Elizabeth Olsen, Sharlto Copley, Samuel L. Jackson
Country: USA
Genre: Action
Conditions of visioning: 02.12.2013, Schauburg, OV sneak preview
Synopsis: A man is kidnapped and locked without human contact for 20 years. When he is released, he is obsessed by vengeance. 
Review: After having seen this movie, I felt like: "ok, it is a remake of the Korean Old boy" and I recognized some cult scenes, but I knew something was missing that was a major point of the original movie, without remembering what it was. So I decided to watch the original. 
The Spike Lee version is a good movie. It shows some scenes with more clarity than the original movie so that it is easy to understand. The acting is nevertheless quite bad from Josh Brolin but maybe he could not save the role given by Spike Lee of superman, that differs from the original movie and turns this version a bit ridiculous. Sharlto Copley is even worse for the flash back scene at the end. 
And the revolutionary part of the original is not remaked at all and this is really a pity! Therefore the Spike Lee movie is good and entertaining, but nothing more.
Rating: 5 /10

La 7ème cible (1984)

Also Known As: Tödliche Angst
Year of first release: 1984
Director: Claude Pinoteau
Actors: Lino Ventura, Jean Poiret, Lea Massari, Elisabeth Bourgine, Jean-Pierre Bacri
Country: F
Genre: Thriller
Conditions of visioning: 30.11.2013, DVD
Synopsis: A former great reporter, Bastien Grimaldi, is subject to death threat. His family worries but he prefers to hide it to the police as he has other worries, family, married mistress. He starts his own inquiry and discovers that he is the target of a known blackmailer, Hagner. 
Review: This movies saves the whole pack of Lino Ventura DVDs! This movie follows at the beginning the same type of suspense as other thriller movies, an innocent guy followed by mysterious bad guys. The traditional secrecy of Bastien's family is also very oppressing. This time Pinoteau avoided his early mistakes and makes a very mature thriller at the level of the best Hitchcock's. And the classic music in the storyline involves the talented Vladimir Cosma as componist of the soundtrack. This is one major advantage! The theme fits perfectly to the thriller and suspense atmospheres. Then Lino Ventura as well as the other roles are very well acted: Jean Poiret, Lea Massari, Elisabeth Bourgine and Jean-Pierre Bacri. This is the kind of Lino Ventura movie, I had in mind from my youth. Excellent!
Rating: 8 /10

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Orgazmo (1997)

Also Known As: -
Year of first release: 1997
Director: Trey Parker (South Park TV-series, Team America: World Police, Cannibal! The Musical, South Park: Bigger Longer & Uncut)
Actors: Trey Parker, Dian Bachar, Michael Dean Jacobs, Matt Stone
Country: USA
Genre: Comedy
Conditions of visioning: 30.09.2013, DVD, Home cinema
Synopsis: While preaching door to door the love of Jesus, Joe Young (Parker) will reluctantly become the hero of a cheap pornographic movie.
Review: I discovered this movie at the end of my period of attraction for parodies (Naked Gun, Airplane, Hot Shot...) and at the time I was liking the dumb humour (Dodgeball, BASEketball, Dumb & Dumber, Dude where is my car?). I have seen it several times in the past but I didn't remember it looked so cheap, and the very poor quality of this DVD edition doesn't help.
In spite of that, the story is crazy as only Parker and Stone (creators of South Park) can deliver it, and the juxtaposition of the Mormon Joe with the world of pornography is prone to laughs. Add to this the sidekick Chodaboy, creator of the real Orgazmo-ray, apparitions by ex-porn stars like Ron Jeremy and Chasey Lane, and the ridiculousness of the porn shooting that will however make it more successfull than E.T. (!!!) and you get a dumb comedy fun to watch with friends accompanied with beer and pizza.
In a similar spirit you can also watch Zack and Miri make a Porn by Kevin Smith (Dogma, Red State) and Flesh Gordon, parody of Flash Gordon that also includes some kind of Orgazmo-ray.
Rating: 6 /10

Pi (1998)

Also Known As: -
Year of first release: 1998
Director: Darren Aronofsky (Requiem for a Dream, The Fountain)
Actors: Sean Gullette, Mark Margolis (Scarface, Black Swan), Ben Shenkman
Country: USA
Genre: Drama, Thriller
Conditions of visioning: 27.11.2013, Blu-ray, Home cinema
Synopsis: A paranoid mathematician searches for a key number that will unlock the universal patterns found in nature.
Review: This movie was an obvious topic of conversation for physics students like I was in 1998. I remember that I liked watching it but found it really strange and experimental. Having now grown, knowing more about movies and watching Pi in optimal conditions, I can appreciate better its qualities. The topic of a scientist looking for the hidden laws behind Nature still appeals to me and I still find the sci-talk in Pi interesting and accurate (probably a mathematician would disagree with me).
Beyond that,  I could see the talent of Darren Aronofski as filmmaker and storyteller. In spite of limited means (the black and white film is very grainy) he manages to convey all the anxiety of the main character through the repetition of sentences ("When I was a kid my mom told me not to look into the Sun, so when I was six I did it") and actions (taking the pills, locking the door, adding milk to coffee). The electro/trip-hop music also fits the general atmosphere. The set is cheap (old computers, the main processor in a plastic container...) but chaotic and thus more believable.
I feared that the movie would be too long and sometimes boring as I remembered, but it was not the case. The main character evolves, meets interesting people like the Rabbi, and the viewer is then compelled to wait for the climax.
Rating: 8 /10

Epic (2013)

Also Known As: -
Year of first release: 2013
Director: Chris Wedge (Ice Age, Robots)
Actors (voices): Amanda Seyfried (Jennifer's Body, In Time), Josh Hutcherson (Voyage to the Center of the Earth, Detention), Beyoncé Knowles (Austin Powers in Goldmember)
Country: USA
Genre: Animation, Adventure
Conditions of visioning: 01.122013, SD VOD, Home cinema
Synopsis: A young girl (Seyfried) is projected into a tiny advanced society living in the forest and fighting for the spirit of Nature against the dark forces of putrefaction and rot.
Review: I only knew about this movie after reading bad critics of it having copied the ideas from Avatar. It may be true to some extend: one character that will risk her life to protect a world which is not hers, the communion of the alien people with Nature,the flying soldiers... But I didn't feel it like a rip-off mainly because the message in the movie is not the same and the target audience is different as well. Avatar is very strong about how humans destroy everything while in Epic evil doesn't have this face.
Epic is more for a young audience but I liked the fact that it doesn't take its viewers for dummies and doesn't overwhelm them with good feelings, cheap drama and key funny faces from annoying comic characters. The comic characters in Epic are a blind three-legged dog running in circles and a duo of snail/slug, and I sincerely laughted each time they appear on screen.
Not a major animated film with double meanings for children and adults like The Incredibles, but refreshingly different from the usual lot.
Rating: 6 /10

Monday, December 2, 2013

A selection of worthy movie soundtracks

I have just realized that over the years, I collected the CDs of a few movie soundtracks, although I did not see the interest of this twenty years ago. I have come to realize that although the vast majority of movie soundtracks are not worth mentioning, a few have a particular quality to them, and in some cases the soundtrack is so good that it is a character in itself in the movie. There are many websites dedicated to soundtracks review like soundtrack.net or filmtracks.com.
Let me guide you through my collection of soundtracks, starting with the one that made me come to this realization: The Wicker Man.

Universal Soldier: Day of Reckoning (2012)

Also Known As: -
Year of first release: 2012
Director: John Hyams (Universal Soldier: Regeneration)
Actors: Scott Adkins (The Bourne Ultimatum, The Expendables 2), Claude Van Damme (Bloodsport, Welcome to the Jungle), Dolph Lundgren (The Expendables 1-2)
Country: USA
Genre: Action
Conditions of visioning: 29.11.2013, Blu-ray, Home cinema
Synopsis: The family of John (Adkins) is murdered in front of his eyes by Devereaux (Van-Damme) and he is left for dead. When he awakes from a coma he will start to investigate, while becoming stronger than ever.
Review: The first Universal Soldier is an excellent SF/Action movie and I like it. I can't remember the sequels except the last one (Regeneration) which was OK but very B-movie and predictable (a lot of fights). Although from the same director John Hyams, son of Peter Hyams (Timecop, Sudden Death, End of Days), Day of Reckoning is very different.
The story evolved more slowly than in the usual action flick and the fist/gunfights are scarce. Instead we get attached to the character of John (intense Sean Atkins) who is the heart of the movie. In spite of the movie posters that show Van-Damme and Lundgren in forefront, we see them only a little, but we feel their influence.
The movie remains modest, there is no huge team of scientists hunting the Universal Soldiers, only one man. The ageing Van-Damme plays a disturbing Luc Devereaux that we know to be good deep inside. I love the black and white make-up he wears during the final fight.
A good movie that takes you by surprise when going against the traditional rules of an aciton movie. But don't take me wrong, there is still a lot of manly action and blood splatter!
Rating: 6 /10

Sin City (2005)

Also Known As: -
Year of first release: 2005
Director: Robert Rodriguez (Planet Terror, From Dusk till Dawn)
Actors: Mickey Rourke (Iron Man 2), Clive Owen (Children of Men), Bruce Willis (Looper), Jessica Alba (The Fantastic Four 1-2, Machete), Rosario Dawson (Death Proof), Benicio del Toro (Traffic), Michael Clarke Duncan (The Green Line), Michal Madsen (Kill Bill), Tommy Flanagan (Sons of Anarchy), Rutger Hauer (Blade Runner), Nick Stahl (Terminator 3), Elijah Wood (Maniac), Josh Hartnett (Pearl Harbor)
Country: USA
Genre: Polar, Thriller
Conditions of visioning: 20.11.2013, Blu-ray, Home cinema
Synopsis: The town of Sin City is filled with crime and corruption. The good guys are not always the ones you would expect.
Review: I had already seen Sin City once or twice, but it made its way back on my pile of "movies to watch again", probably after I read some good about it, or after watching the performance of Elijah Wood in Pawn Shop Chronicles, or because the sequel Sin City, A Dame to Kill for will be out next year. I had forgotten that the cast was so impressive. As too often in adaptation of comic books (like in 300), the best in this movie is what comes from the comic book, in this case the eponymous Sin City series by Frank Miller: the dark stories, anti-heroes, black and white tones with rare flashy colors, the narrator's voice. The movie doesn't add much to this apart from motion, music and some known faces.
Sin City was one of the first movie completely shot in front of blue screens with all backgrounds added later (like Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow). It was praised for that. I don't find it to be extremely well done (looking too artificial) but it is good enough. Also I find that the narrator's voice is too present ; this was OK in a comic book but could have been adapted better for a movie.
The Blu-ray edition I have watched includes a few new scenes, and the editing has this time separated the four segments instead of merging them into one movie. The Customer Is Always Right is the shortest segment that briefly shows Hartnett as a contract killer, a nice short story. That Yellow Bastard is the story featuring Bruce Willis as an old cop rescuing Jessica Alba from a rapist, actually son of the mayor. Corruption is everywhere and the story is very dark. The Hard Goodbye features Mickey Rourke as the excellent Marv, mountain of muscles with a little brain, chasing the killer of a woman he loved for one night, exemplar Sin City story. Finally The Big Fat Kill shows Clive Owen as anti-hero fighting side-by-side with a self-managed gang of prostitutes, against a corrupted cop played by Benicio del Toro and the mob. 
To summarize, the stories (copied from the comic book) and great and dark, but the adaptation work is insufficient.
Rating: 5 /10

Sunday, December 1, 2013

Turistas (2009)

Also Known As: Touristes
Year of first release: 2009
Director: Alicia Scherson
Actors: Aline Kuppenheim, Marcelo Alonso, Diego Noguera
Country: RCH
Genre: Drama
Conditions of visioning: 30.11.2013, City46, OV
Synopsis: Carla is 37 years old, married and leaves Santiago for holidays with her husband. Suddenly they querell and she is left alone on the road. She decides to continue her way with the Norvegian tourist Ulrik to a National parc, where they camp between trees. Both are tourists. 
Review: It is the second movie in a row showing people behaving without feeling nor humanity. But this time, it is what Alicia Scherson wants to show and she leads the story around that. Clara is a tourist in her own life, as she is not motivated by anything, not sure of anything and do not care about the others, all in a quite passive way. 
The directing is great, as nature and Clara's life mirror one another subtly. The nature encounters human on its way making the life harder, as Clara encounters humans and herself making her life harder. The picture is very good, of the nature (plenty of close-up on trees and small animals) as well as of people. The composition of the picture is also very well thought and is almost surrealistic. Some technical defects in the picture when kind of special effects are used do not disturb much. 
Very nice surprise! It looks like as if Clara is looking for answers or help in the nature because she trusts it fully, but (SPOILER) does not find any answer nor help.
Rating: 7 /10