AppsScraps Movie Reviews

Dec 31, 2008

No Regrets (aka Huhwihaji anha)

Release date: 16 November 2006 (South Korea)

Korean director Hee-il Leesong shows us the payoff when a nation supports its young filmmakers. South Korea, I still maintain, is producing some of the finest directors out there. In this sorrid tale a young orphan Su Min (played by Nam-gil Kim)'s factory job is saved by the intervention of the boss' closeted gay son, Han Lee (played by Young-hoon Lee). But Su Min ends up quitting anyway to take up a job dancing naked at a gay karaoke club where the staff provide any level of sexual service you'd like. Han Lee soon follows smitten with his love for Su Min. The film is well done, though could have benefited from fewer corny bits (some perhaps lost in translation true) and the - seemingly - odd plunge into noirish revenge at its end. With a few more films under his belt, Hee-il Leesong will refine his skill and provide us a movie filled with scenes as moving in their emotional and visual statement as the couple he captured in No Regrets. I will remember Su Min, his outstretched hand tossing his friend's ashes from the car as it speeds down the highway, and the lovers whispering their secrets to each other, for some time.

My rating 7 out of 10.

The Day the Earth Stood Still (2008)

Release date: 12 December 2008 (USA)

While the special effects were top notch, and director Scott Derrickson kept true to Edmund North's classic 1951 screenplay, including the uber-fabulous alien robot-guard Gort, this is an awful movie. The main problem is (and it simply wrecks me to admit it) Keanu Reeves as Klaatu, the majordomo boss alien, can't act. I adore Keanu for purely sexual reason yes, but not even watching his wonderful body move through an hour and a half of wooden acting was enough to save the film. Things are no where helped by Jennifer Connolly as the bright geneticist Klaatu takes a liking to, and worse by Kathy Bates in one her most desperately horrible roles ever. Dreadful stuff. Robert Wise's 1951 version (yes, that same Robert Wise who directed The Sound of Music) remains the definitive one to rent. If you opt to watch this for the special effects, by all means go for it, but find a copy of the band Klaatu's great first album from 1976 and put on "Calling Occupants of Interplanetary Craft" to avoid the talky bits.

For the special effects solely, my rating 3 out of 10.

Dec 29, 2008

Sweeney Tood: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street

Release date: 21 December 2007 (USA)

Johnny Depp singing. Yes, hard to believe but he does in this macabre, over-the-top, gory remounting of one of the theatre's classic shows, the story of Sweeney Todd. Directed by Tim Roth in full Rothenesque-style, I thought the film was fantastic. Granted, the tragic (very) bloody tale of Sweeney's return to Fleet Street to avenge his exile by Judge Turpin (played with relish by Alan Rickman) and rescue his daughter, Johanna, is not for everyone. The film is dark and, well, violently gruesome but the addition of Stephen Sondheim's (very difficult to sing) music, including the classic piece "A Little Priest" is perfectly done. Helena Bodham Carter plays Mrs. Lovett and is a perfect foil alongside Depp. The gore aside, Sweeny Todd delivers a wonderfully musical two hours with a truly tragic ending that speaks volumes about what we wrought when we seek to avenge wrongdoings.

My rating, noting I have a macabre streak in me, 9 out of 10.

Cloverfield

Release date: 16 January 2008 (USA)

Matt Reeves directs this monster|alien version of Blair Witch Project complete with aggravating shaky camera action. The film focuses on a group of New York friends - none memorable - who end up in the midst of a battle royal in Manhattan the night a creepy monster|alien thingee, that sheds wee monster|aliens thingees like itself, arrives in New York City. Despite all logic, one of the ragtag bunch opts to film everything with his shaky cam as they flee the destruction. Probable? Hardly. The acting is miserable but the monster is neat - especially since the special effects had to be translated across the hand-held camera (no small feat) - and it was fun watching just to see how each principal would meet their inevitable end. The promotional title for this flash in the pan film was 'Monstrous' ... and that about sums things up.

My rating of 5 out of 10.

A Zed and Two Noughts

Release date: 9 September 1986 (Toronto International Film Festival)

This thoroughly modern film starts with a swan crashing headlong into a car and killing two pregnant women and severely injuring the woman driving the vehicle. The husbands of these two women, Oswald and Oliver, are twins and, in an obsession with death and symmetry, start a bizarre journey with the car accident survivor, now disabled by the amputation of her leg. Amid this journey as with all Greenaway films, you meet some pretentious and strange folks, including a mad doctor who's advice to the amputee is to amputate the surviving leg so it doesn't feel lonely. You'll meet a women obsessed with zebras and a zoologist obsessed with time-lapse photographing larger and larger animals as they decay ... including, eventually, himself and his brother.

A Zed and Two Noughts is a feast for the eyes and senses and while you see how the film will end from miles away, the sheer audacity of it all warrants my rating of 7 out of 10.

Deathnote 2

Release date: 17 June 2006 (Japan)

DeathNote 2 gives us another four episodes of this fascinating Japanese anime series and continues to follow young high school student, Light Yagami, as he descends further and further into murder and mayhem after finding the Death Note, a book which when a name is written in it, results in that person's death. This set of four episodes focuses on the continuing cat and mouse game played between Light and the mysterious L, the detective who is working to bring the child killer to justice. The story is infectious and I can hardly wait to see the next set.

Continuing with the tradition of fabulous, luscious anime married to an an utterly intriguing story, my rating 9 out of 10.

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

Release date: 25 December 2008 (USA)

Based on a small handful of pages written by F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button tells the story of a boy born an old man who inexplicably grows younger as he ages. It is a fascinating premise for sure and the tragic love story woven in its 2 hours and 40 minutes is exceptionally well done. Benjamin Button is played by the ever sad puppy-eyed Brad Pitt, and his love interest of 70 some odd years is Daisy, played by Cate Blanchett. This reviewer entered the theatre wary of both Pitt and, of all people, Zodiac and Fight Club director David Fincher tackling a fantasy love story. But both succeed - Fincher more than Pitt - thanks to screenwriter (Forest Gump) Eric Roth. The lessons we learn of love and life as Daisy's daughter, Caroline (played by Julia Ormand), reads Benjamin's diary to her dying mother as Hurricane Katrina roars down on New Orleans, resonate with a truth so real it is sure to overwhelm all who see it. Bring someone you love to see it; and bring tissues.

My rating 9 out of 10.

Frost/Nixon

Release date: 15 October 2008 (London Film Festival)

Post Watergate and President Ford's pardon of Richard Nixon, all everyone wanted was an apology; an admission that Tricky Dicky did cross the line. It took British television host, David Frost, four interviews but he did succeed in getting the former President close to saying sorry. This movie dramatises that journey. In the hands of director Ron Howard, Frost/Nixon rolls on quite banally for the first two-quarters of the film before finally getting down to business and delivering some great movie making in the last third. This movie is made watchable solely on the astounding performance of Frank Langella as Nixon. His work is, simply, breathtaking. Bravo Mr. Langella.

My rating 7 out of 10.

Doubt

Release date: 30 October 2008 (USA)

John Patrick Shanley directs the movie version of his own play that centers on the place where faith, doubt and certainty intersect. The story takes place in a Catholic school in the Bronx in 1964 and concerns the battle between an old school nun, Sister Aloysius (played by the always great Meryl Streep) and her Vatican II supporting boss, Father Brendan Flynn (Philip Seymour Hoffman). When a junior nun, Sister James (Amy Adams) mentions a concern she has about Father Flynn and the school's only black student, Donald, to Sister Aloysius, the witchhunt is on. Doubt is a fantastic movie with fine, fine performances - Viola Davis as Donald's mother in particular. The sermon Father Flynn gives (us all) midway through the movie is worth the price of admission itself. In the end, Doubt delivers a storyline that is current with enough smarts to have you leave the theatre thinking about how certain your own beliefs may be.

One of the best movies this year gives it my rating of rating 9 out of 10.

Dec 8, 2008

In the Shadow of the Moon

Release date: 19 January 2007 (Sundance Film Festival)

This excellent documentary, directed by David Sington and released at Sundance Film Festival in 2007, recounts a story we all know: the Apollo moon landings between 1968 and 1972. What makes this documentary special is its simplicity. Twelve men have walked on the moon; only twelve. And while we know their story, and while those of us old enough know exactly where they were when Neil Armstrong became the first human to walk on the moon on July 21, 1969, hearing their story in their own words provides a new context to the achievement. These test pilots cum-astronauts have been forever changed by the experience for they have seen our world from a perspective we never will. In recounting their flights, you'll be mesmerized by their journey and perhaps, just perhaps, see the earth and our responsibility for and to it in a different light.

My rating 9 out of 10.

Romeo & Juliet

Release date: 1 November 1996 (Canada)

Baz Luhrmann directed this 1996 version of the near 500 year-old classic by William Shakespeare. What first struck me about watching this very stylistic version of the story set in Verona Beach is just how timely it still is today. There remains, I am sure, star crossed lovers in many countries separated by their cultural upbringings and parental obligations and certainly urban gangs are as real today as in 1582. I loved this version of the classic, though I know not everyone will. Baz Luhrmann tends to be a director you hate or love passionately. I side firmly on with the later. Leonardo DiCaprio stars as Romeo and does a super job (DiCaprio seems to be losing his ability to act the older he gets). Clare Danes stars as Juliet and is a little shell-shocked taking on such a classic role to say nothing of mastering Elizabethan English. All is saved however by Luhrmann’s amazing vision for this film – I loved the scene where Romeo and Juliet first meet between the aquarium - and Pete Postlethwaite as Father Laurence.

My rating 8 out of 10.