Showing posts with label movie review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label movie review. Show all posts

Friday, October 2, 2015

Fantastic Fest 2015 Review: THE DEVIL'S CANDY


The Devil's Candy.
Director and Writer: Sean Byrne.
Actors: Ethan Embry, Shiri Appleby, and Kiara Glasco. 

The Loved Ones was one of the most famously hard to find movies out of the festival circuit in the 2009-2010 season. Director Sean Byrne has been away ever since, but thankfully he is back with The Devil's Candy, which is his second movie and his first American production. It's a much more coherent effort with amazing performances by the cast, and one of the heaviest soundtracks in recent memory with cuts by Pantera, Slayer, and a score by the drone metal legends, Sunn 0))).

The story revolves around a struggling metalhead artist, Jesse (Embry), who moves into a new huge house in rural Texas with his wife Astrid and his equally metal-obsesssed daughter, Zooey. As it goes, this also happens to be the site of a couple of murders, and of course, once they move into the house, Jesse's work turns to the more macabre and disturbing. What's worse is that the son of the former residents keeps coming around because the voice in his head is telling him to do some unpleasant things.

But this is not a simple haunted house movie. Byrne manages to employ his knowledge of horror to bring a much more interesting version of a story we've all seen before by mixing aspects of demonic possession, haunted house movies, and even early 00's Japanese movies. And despite the fact that we still follow a nuclear family, the fact that it's a young couple with a tattooed metalhead dad feels fresh because you don't ever see those kinds of characters on screen.

Not only are the characters and their dynamics unique, but the plot itself is surprising. Most genre fans should be able to tell where the story is going but there are still a few left turns along the way that keep the movie compelling. Visually, the way that the Texas farmlands are shot it makes them a lot more scary even during the daylight.  He also manages to get an amazing performance out of Embry, who thankfully has had a genre career revitalization in the last few years shedding his boyish charms and embracing something darker.

The movie's themes about artistic ambition are some of the most interesting ones. As a struggling artist, Jesse tries his hardest to make ends meet and has to accept bland commissions for banks. But when he becomes more possessed and channels the dark energy of this spirit, his works are messed up but full of life, with him losing track of time. Any artist can relate to the freeing sensation, and the je ne sais quoi when you are just compelled to create something, and it flows from you as it if were instinctual.

Once he starts getting attention from a gallery owner, you see how unintentionally neglectful Jesse can get. This is the weakest part of the movie, if only because the gallery and its owner are such obvious "Satan" allegories, causing him to be late to pick up his daughter in order to secure a gallery show. You know that's a huge deal because as you can see, Jesse has a huge bond with his daughter and it ends up being maybe one of the coolest dad-daughter relationships seen in a long time

And while some of the visual symbolism might be a little too on the nose, it's a tiny problem in an otherwise excellent movie with awesome cast and a creative story around it. He's become a much more assertive director and the movie is the better for it. Look for the last shot of the movie and tell me it's not a memorable scene.

With The Devil's Candy, Sean Byrne shows that his time spent in between movies was not wasted. Let's just hope that he comes back sooner than later.



Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Fantastic Fest 2015 Review: ANOMALISA


Anomalisa.
Directors:  Charlie Kaufman and Duke Johnson.
Writer: Charlie Kaufman.
Actors: David Thewlis, Jennifer Jason Leigh, and Tom Noonan. 

Whenever Charlie Kaufman makes a movie, people pay attention. And with good reason. While his
movies maybe a little dense and heavy with metaphors, they are always visually stunning with some heavy themes he tries to deal with. Collaborating with stop-motion animation director, Duke Johnson, Anomalisa is the Kaufman's first entry into animation.

For the majority of the movie, we follow Michael Stone (David Thewlis). He's quite the expert and legend among this weird customer service industry that reveres his words; they buy his book and even has groupy-type of fans. Thing is, Michael is a really unhappy person. To him, the world is the same, everyone looks and sounds the same.  Everyone, even his family, all sound like Tom Noonan.

When he goes to a customer service convention in Cincinnati, he starts going through a breakdown when he meets Lisa (Jason Leigh). She doesn't sound like Tom Noonan for one, and she's this interesting person to Michael despite not knowing why. And isn't falling in love a little like that? Where the person is so special everything else fades to the background and you can't quite put your finger on it, but it works.

This being a puppet-centric movie, it's interesting to note just how well designed and technically accomplished the animation is. Despite their faces having a very obvious split, he puppets all look and feel like real people. They breathe despite not being built for that function, and the way they move leaves the uncanny valley behind. Because of this everything that happens in the movie feels like a true punch to gut. There is one particular sex scene that is one of the most heartfelt and honest scenes seen on a movie screen in a long time.

Visually, the movie is as creative and surreal as a Kaufman movie can be all the while being very mundane. Nothing stands out, everything looks seemingly beige, everyone is the right kind of polite, the hotels all have that very generic hotel look, even the city itself looks boring. But then there's all of these touches that add bits of humor and humanity. Times like when you can't get your key at the hotel to work or the water can't get to the right temperature in the shower. Being at odds with its protagonist, the movie tries to find the human in the mundane.

Anomalisa  is one of those movies where it feels wrong to write a review after only seeing it once. In the broadest of strokes, the movie tries to tackle love, the inexplicably of attraction, and how one views the world. On the other hand, it's a very personal story and heartbreaking story about an unhappy man wandering through the world. But that's kind of the beauty of these movies.

On one side, Michael is a terrible person. He calls up his ex-girlfriend who lives in town and she sounds like Tom Noonan, but you hear her dialogue, and even after not seeing each other after ten years she is still so hurt by their break up but all he can see is a generic individual. But then when he experiences his first meeting with Lisa, you root for him because it truly is an exciting thing to feel.

Anomalisa is truly a beautiful moviegoing experience. The amount of heart that the movie has coupled with the technical complexity of the animation makes this movie the best of two worlds. It's a movie that needs to be seen with a group of people to talk about and then re-watched over and over. And that's what great movies should be like.


Thursday, July 23, 2015

Fantasia International Film Festival Review: TURBO KID


TURBO KID 
Directed and Written by: Francois Simard, Anouk Whissell, and Yoann-Kari Whisse.
Starring: Munro Chambers, Laurence Leboeuf, Michael Ironside, Aaron Jeffrey and Edwin Wright.
Synopsis: A kid tries to survive in a post-apocalyptic earth while avoiding an evil crime lord. 

Friday, July 10, 2015

Friday, June 19, 2015

DOPE Movie Review - Javi's Take


Director and Writer: Rick Famuyiwa.
Actors: Shameik Moore, Tony Revolorio, Kiersey Clemons, Zoe Kravitz, and A$AP Rocky.
Synopsis: A nerdy kid 


Monday, June 15, 2015

OCFF Review: ENTERTAINMENT


ENTERTAINMENT
Director: Rik Alverson.
Writer: Rik Alverson, Tim Heidecker, Greg Turkington.
Actors: Greg Turkington, John C. Reilley, Tye Sheridan, Amy Seimetz, Michael Cera and Tim Heidecker.
Synopsis: A depressed comedian tours the Southwest to apathetic audiences. 


Friday, June 5, 2015

SPY Review - Javi's Take


SPY
Director: Paul Feig.
Writer: Paul Feig.
Actors: Melissa McCarthy, Rose Byrne, Jason Statham, Jude Law.
Synopsis: When an agent goes missing, a bookish CIA analyst must go undercover to stop a nuclear bomb.

Thursday, June 4, 2015

WE ARE STILL HERE Review - Javi's Take


WE ARE STILL HERE
Director: Ted Geoghegan.
Writers: Ted Geoghegan, concept by Richard Griffin.
Actors: Barbara Crampton, Andrew Sensenig, Lisa Marie, Larry Fessenden, and Monte Markham.
Synopsis: A grieving couple moves into a house with a bloody past.


Friday, May 22, 2015

FORBIDDEN EMPIRE Review



FORBIDDEN EMPIRE
Directed by: Oleg Stepchenko.
Written by: Aleksander Karpov, Oleg Stepchenko, story by Nikolai Gogol.
Starring: Jason Flemyng, Andreay Smolyakov, Aleksey Chadov, and Charles Dance. 
Synopsis: When a cartographer goes on an expedition to map the obscure parts of Europe, he comes across a village full of otherworldly creatures. 

Thursday, May 21, 2015

SLOW WEST Review

SLOW WEST
Directed and written by: John Maclean.
Starring: Kodi Smit-McPhee, Michael Fassbender, Caren Pistorius, Ben Mendelsohn.
Synopsis: A 16 year old Scottish boy tries to find his love in America with the help of a jaded bounty hunter.  

Monday, May 4, 2015

MAN FROM RENO Review


Man From Reno.


Director: Dave Boyle.
Writers: Dave Boyle, Joel Clark, Michael Lerman.
Actors: Ayako Fujitani, Pepe Serna, Kazuki Kitamura, Elisha Skorman and Hiroshi Watanabe.


AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON Review


The Avengers: Age of Ultron.

Director: Joss Whedon.
Writers: Joss Whedon (characters by Jack Kirby and Stan Lee).
Actors: Robert Downey Jr., Chris Evans, Scarlett Johansson, James Spader, Jeremy Renner, Mark Ruffalo, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Elizabeth Olsen, Paul Bettany and Samuel L. Jackson.


Monday, April 13, 2015

DIFF 2015 Review: CARTEL LAND


CARTEL LAND
Director: Matthew Heineman
Synopsis: With unprecedented access, this doc follows two vigilante groups on both sides of the US/Mexican border against the drug cartels. 


Saturday, April 11, 2015

DIFF 2015: TURBO KID - Javi's Take


TURBO KID 
Directed and Written by:  Francois Simard, Anouk Whissell, and Yoann-Kari Whisse.
Starring: Munro Chambers, Laurence Leboeuf, Michael Ironside, Aaron Jeffrey and Edwin Wright.
Synopsis: A kid tries to survive in a post-apocalyptic earth while avoiding an evil crime lord. 




There's a small but awesome subgenre of movies that homage the look of older movies. My buddy calls them "Modern Retro", which sums it up really well.  Most notable of these are the works of the Canadian film collective Astron 6, with movies like MANBORG, or with director Jason Eisner's HOBO WITH A SHOTGUN.  Following in the footsteps, we have directors Francois Simard, Anouk Whissell, and Yoann-Kari Whisse's love letter to post-apocalyptic movies, TURBO KID. Set in the distant future of 1997, TURBO KID follows "the Kid," a scavenger trying to survive in this toxic wasteland, and his fight against the local crime boss.

There's a very fine balance that these types of throwback movies need to strike between substance and style. It's very easy to have cheesy dialogue and a pulsing synth score (which this movie does) for the sake of having it, but those elements are no good if they don't help the story. TURBO KID ends up taking cues from the past and using modern sensibilities to tell a fun and comedically violent story.

First, the universe that's been established here is thorough and should be explored further. The sharp script hints at the culture that has developed since the apocalypse happened, but it never hits you in the face with it. It's neat to see the brief scenes of the struggling civilization. There's a whole subculture of bounty hunting, scavenging, and arm wrestling for social status that's developed and everyone has crazy outlandish costumes.

And the best part? Everyone is rocking bikes as their major mode of transportation. Unlike the festival audience that I saw the movie with, the movie doesn't treat this as a joke. As cool as MAD MAX and the ROAD WARRIOR are, it really doesn't make sense that cars would be used in a post-apocalyptic world. And yeah, at first glance it can look goofy, it also gives the world a stronger "survival of the fittest" aspect since you have be strong to pedal quickly to get away from saw-wielding masked maniacs.

The cast is lead by Munro Chambers as "the Kid" who is a resourceful scavengers living out on his own who loses himself in his Walkman and Turbo Man action figures and comics. Aaron Jeffrey plays a cowboy-esque badass who's the arm wrestling champion of the little town, and Michael Ironside plays the main baddie, Zeus. Between Jeffrey and Ironside, they're chewing the HELL out of the scenery, and they look like they're having so much fun. But the true stand out of the movie is gorgeous Laurence Leboeuf as the Apple, who decides to be the Kid's best friend. Her performance is something special and brings a lot of heart and humor to the story.

If there's going to be a critique of the movie is the rather episodic nature of the story. The parts that are between action scenes always feel like mere setups for the next sequence. Given how this was written, it would actually feel TURBO KID could work better as a six episode mini series. Or you know, the sequel could work as that. Also, there's some anachronistic details about the world that CAN make you pause such as some very advance robotics tech and weapons, when all the while this is supposed to be 1997 and the apocalypse has been around for a number of years already.

All of those are really mild critiques because honestly, when you're watching the movie, you are having so much fun and everything is handled in a way that you really don't question it. TURBO KID is a unique throwback movie with so many fun elements, and you can tell that a lot of love went into it and to be honest there's nothing better than a passion project.

TURBO KID screens again at the Texas Theatre on Friday, April 17th at 10:30 pm. 

Monday, April 6, 2015

FURIOUS 7 Review - Javi's Take.


FURIOUS 7 
Directed by: James Wan.
Written by: Chris Morgan, with characters by Gary Scott Thompson.
Starring: Vinn Diesel, Paul Walker, Michelle Rodriguez, Dwayne Johnson, Tyrere Gibson (gasp for breath) Ludacris, Jordana Brewster, Elsa Pataki, Sung Kang, Jason Statham, Kurt Russell, Lucas Black and Bow Wow.


Friday, March 20, 2015

IT FOLLOWS Review - Javi's Take


IT FOLLOWS.
Director: David Robert Mitchell.
Writer: David Robert Mitchell.
Actors: Maika Monroe, Keir Gilchrist, Olivia Luccardi and Jake Weary.
Synopsis: After a young woman is cursed and being followed by a creature, she must figure out how to get rid of it. 


Friday, March 13, 2015

CINDERELLA Review: Javi's Take



CINDERELLA
Director: Kenneth Branagh.
Writer: Chris Weitz.
Actors: Lily James, Richard Madden, Cate Blanchett, Sophia McShera, Holliday Grainger and Helena Bonham Carter.
Synopsis: You seriously don't know this story? Come on now!


This review was originally published at Central Track.

In the wake of Christopher Nolan's Batman reboot, we've faced a nonstop deluge of characters from our youth being thrown into adult, and often violent, situations.
Dark and gritty updates? Yeah, they've been the big trend in Hollywood for a minute. And not even Disney's been immune to it: Its live-action updates of ALICE IN WONDERLAND and MALEFICENT both went this way, with the latter even containing some rape allegories. Fairy tales be damned, shit's been getting pretty real in the theaters lately.
So it's rather refreshing, then, that CINDERELLA  bucks this trend. Much like its protagonist, it's a movie full of hope and humor -- one that kids and adults can appreciate alike.
This is not to say, however, that this incarnation falls right in line with the 65-year-old animated film of the same name. It doesn't. Actually, this new version is better written, especially when it comes to character development and motivation. Of course, it's still fantastical: A lot of scenes -- from Cinderella's mice friends to her stepsisters' garish dresses -- look like they were taken right out of the cartoon. But whereas Cinderella, her stepmother and her prince were all blank slates who served the plot for no real reason before, they're all three more fleshed out and believable this time around.
Cinderella, the character, is ultimately defined by the mantra given to her by her dying birth mother: "Have courage and be kind," our lead is told in this early scene. It's a strong, positive message -- and it's the attitude she develops in kind that, despite her beauty, ends up truly captivating the prince.
Lily James shines in this title role. She steals the movie with her charisma and her facial expressions carry the film. As her Cinderella searches for the best in every situation, her face clearly shows that her stepmother's abuse is getting to her.
There's in fact plenty for James to play with in this take: Richard Madden -- playing a named prince (Kit) this time through -- is basically channeling his GAME OF THRONES character Robb Stark here with his portrayal of a prince whose responsibilities to his father and the kingdom very much clash with those of his heart, but that doesn't mean he's phoning it in. He's solid in the role, and even better when collaborating with James. Cate Blanchett's stepmother too is improved, and finally given a satisfying source for her cruelty was towards Cinderella. There are even times early on in the film when you could sympathize with her character's plight, and Blanchett just brings a real pain to the role.
Overall, though, it's an upbeat film -- almost too much so, in some regards. One of the integral parts of Cinderella's story is all of the suffering and degradation that she must endure at the hands of her stepmother and stepsisters. Here, however, it all feels fairly glossed-over. Most of this tragic part of the story is told via montage, with only a few extended scenes here and there. The same can be said of Prince Kit's slightly more political problems, each of which is resolved in minutes or with relative ease. Combined, these plot leaps are a little problematic; the conflict in this film could certainly be greater.
Another area of restraint can be found through the use of both the fairy godmother character and Cinderella's mice companions. Here, though, it's effective. Helena Bonham Carter's fairy godmother cracks a lot of jokes and is a hilarious presence in the few minutes that she appears on the screen, and the mice add a levity to the film's darker scenes even when relegated to background shenanigans. They don't dominate the story as they do in other tellings. In this version, they just support it -- and quite well, at that.
On the whole, this CINDERELLA fits the bill of a well-known story told in an exciting way. There's depth and dimension in both the plot and the characters here.
Kids in tow or not, it's a worthwhile watch.


Friday, February 27, 2015

WHAT WE DO IN THE SHADOWS Review


WHAT WE DO IN THE SHADOWS

Directed by: Jermaine Clement and Taika Waititi.
Written by: Jermaine Clement, Taika Waititi.
Starring: Jermaine Clement, Taika Waititi, Rhys Darby, Jonathan Brugh, Cori Gonzalez-Macuer, Stu Rutherford, Ben Fransham and Jackie Van Beek.
Synopsis: A documentary crew follows around a quartet of vampires and hilarity ensues.



Friday, January 23, 2015

THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY Review- Javi's Take


THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY 
Directed by: Peter Strickland
Written by: Peter Strickland
Starring: Sidse Babett Knudsen, Chiara D'Anna, and Monica Swinn
Synopsis: An intimate look at the peculiar romantic relationship between two women.