The Map Reader: Movie Review
Rating 6/10
Cast: Rebecca Gibney, Bonnie Soper, Jordan Selwyn, Mikaila
Hutchison
Director: Harold Brodie
New Zealand is a long way from the rest of the world.
A fairly obvious statement but one which forms a major part of Harold
Brodie's film The Map Reader, shot on Auckland's North Shore.
16-year-old Michael (Jordan Selwyn) has spent his life immersed in and
surrounded by maps - they're his only way to escape from the mundanities of
small town New Zealand life as he grows up without a father.
His single mum Amelia (Rebecca Gibney) is desperate to get him out into the
world and see him socialize more - while at the same time, she's terrified of
the day coming when he will leave.
Michael's an introverted character who's happy in his isolation - but that is
shattered with the arrival of two women in his life; both from completely
different walks of life.
The first is Mary (Shortland Street's Bonnie Soper), a blind and flirtatious
woman who's on the verge of finding her own way in the world.
The second is his class mate, Alison (Mikaila Hutchison) whose happy outlook
on life masks the reality of mocking from her peers and a more tragically
dark domestic life.
However, both these different woman bring out another side to Michael - as he
begins to work out what he wants from life.
The Map Reader is a pleasantly plotted film and a slightly
different take on the traditional coming of age, rites of passage flick.
The main actors (Jordan Selwyn and Mikaila Hutchison) are both impressive in
their respective roles and clearly have a bright future in film - Hutchison in
particular manages to convey the awkwardness of growing up in New Zealand while
trying to be accepted by her peers - and all the time, hiding the horrors of a
violent father.
The Map Reader's director Harold Brodie says he wanted to make a film about
people coming into lives and going out of them - and enjoying them while they're
around.
He's certainly managed to do that as Michael is only really animated when
he's surrounded by characters other than his maps.
Granted, The Map Reader does show a side of New Zealand
which is a shameful one (the domestic violence); however, it's also responsible
for showing how small time life can nurture people and bring out the best of
them.
At Darren's World of Entertainment - a movie, DVD and game review blog. The latest movie and DVD reviews - plus game reviews as well. And cool stuff thrown in when I see it.
Wednesday, 11 February 2009
Saturday, 7 February 2009
Sex Drive: Movie Review
Sex Drive: Movie Review
Rating 6/10
Cast: Josh Zuckerman, Amanda Crew, Clark Duke, Seth Green, James Marsden
Director: Sean Anders
When a film opens with what feels like a cast off scene from the first American Pie film, you're always left with a feeling something predictable and formulaic is coming.
Sex Drive is the latest addition to the sex crazed teen phenomenon so successfully mined by American Pie, Road Trip et al.
Josh Zuckerman is 18-year-old Ian Lafferty who's pursuing an online relationship with the implausibly named Ms Tasty.
Desperate to seal the deal and leave the virgin territory behind, Lafferty decides to steal his brother Rex's 69 GTO and drive 9 hours across America to get his leg over.
So grabbing his best friends Lance (Clark Duke) and Felicia (an Avril Lavigne looking Amanda Crew) he sets off on the journey, having (slightly genre predictable) adventures on the way.
Sex Drive is nothing new - it's at times a blatant rip off of all of the various teen sex comedies; as mentioned its opening sees a naked Zuckerman humiliated in front of his father and family (a la American Pie) and from thereon, it continues to plunder the typical situations so familiar to the genre.
James Marsden's character Rex is essentially the new version of the Stifler character from American Pie - he shows little depth to the bullying brother and yet, somehow he's quite likeable (even if the final scene revelation involving his character could be seen coming a mile off)
Clark Duke's Lance is the new pudgy entry to the lothario genre - he's essentially an inflated Austin Powers and wannabe Hugh Hefner - but unsurprisingly, his sexually confident swagger is just a façade.
Granted you can see the ending of this film coming a mile off - Lafferty heads off with a female friend to lose his virginity to some "babe he met on the internet" (please don't make me solve the jigsaw for you).
But where Sex Drive manages to succeed (and is likely to spawn further sequels) is the journey is pleasantly enjoyable, even if it is derivative.
The road trip, rites of passage, sexual awakening and crass laughs are all played well - as is the constant use of Lafferty's embarrassment ending up on the internet (via Youtube) seconds after it's played out on the screen.
All three of the leads acquit themselves likeably - with all of them suffering from ritual humiliation as the journey goes on.
However, it's Seth Green's cameo as a sarcastic Amish villager which steals the show - his deadpan delivery and improvised schtick are a real highlight (and difference) in Sex Drive - and kudos to the script writers who only use him to hilarious effect sparingly - it could so easily have been overmilked and ruined.
Ultimately, some will feel Sex Drive has seen screenplays from American Pie, Road Trip, Eurotrip (and all the rest of them) thrown into a blender, pulped and formulaically poured back into the script; whereas the younger audience (whom this is squarely aimed at) will lap up its crudity, nudity (both male and female) and gutter humour.
Rating 6/10
Cast: Josh Zuckerman, Amanda Crew, Clark Duke, Seth Green, James Marsden
Director: Sean Anders
When a film opens with what feels like a cast off scene from the first American Pie film, you're always left with a feeling something predictable and formulaic is coming.
Sex Drive is the latest addition to the sex crazed teen phenomenon so successfully mined by American Pie, Road Trip et al.
Josh Zuckerman is 18-year-old Ian Lafferty who's pursuing an online relationship with the implausibly named Ms Tasty.
Desperate to seal the deal and leave the virgin territory behind, Lafferty decides to steal his brother Rex's 69 GTO and drive 9 hours across America to get his leg over.
So grabbing his best friends Lance (Clark Duke) and Felicia (an Avril Lavigne looking Amanda Crew) he sets off on the journey, having (slightly genre predictable) adventures on the way.
Sex Drive is nothing new - it's at times a blatant rip off of all of the various teen sex comedies; as mentioned its opening sees a naked Zuckerman humiliated in front of his father and family (a la American Pie) and from thereon, it continues to plunder the typical situations so familiar to the genre.
James Marsden's character Rex is essentially the new version of the Stifler character from American Pie - he shows little depth to the bullying brother and yet, somehow he's quite likeable (even if the final scene revelation involving his character could be seen coming a mile off)
Clark Duke's Lance is the new pudgy entry to the lothario genre - he's essentially an inflated Austin Powers and wannabe Hugh Hefner - but unsurprisingly, his sexually confident swagger is just a façade.
Granted you can see the ending of this film coming a mile off - Lafferty heads off with a female friend to lose his virginity to some "babe he met on the internet" (please don't make me solve the jigsaw for you).
But where Sex Drive manages to succeed (and is likely to spawn further sequels) is the journey is pleasantly enjoyable, even if it is derivative.
The road trip, rites of passage, sexual awakening and crass laughs are all played well - as is the constant use of Lafferty's embarrassment ending up on the internet (via Youtube) seconds after it's played out on the screen.
All three of the leads acquit themselves likeably - with all of them suffering from ritual humiliation as the journey goes on.
However, it's Seth Green's cameo as a sarcastic Amish villager which steals the show - his deadpan delivery and improvised schtick are a real highlight (and difference) in Sex Drive - and kudos to the script writers who only use him to hilarious effect sparingly - it could so easily have been overmilked and ruined.
Ultimately, some will feel Sex Drive has seen screenplays from American Pie, Road Trip, Eurotrip (and all the rest of them) thrown into a blender, pulped and formulaically poured back into the script; whereas the younger audience (whom this is squarely aimed at) will lap up its crudity, nudity (both male and female) and gutter humour.
Friday, 6 February 2009
Milk: Movie Review
Milk: Movie Review
Rating 8/10
Cast: Sean Penn, James Franco, Emile Hirsch, Josh Brolin
Director: Gus Van Sant
"My Name is Harvey Milk - and I want to recruit you."
Based on the life of American gay politician Harvey Milk, Gus Van Sant's latest is a compelling look into American political life during the 1970s, with a brilliant central performance by Sean Penn.
Harvey Milk was the first openly gay man to be elected to public office in California - but unsurprisingly, his rise to power was not an easy one.
As it opens, Milk is about to turn 40 and is picking up his much younger lover Scott Smith in a subway station.
But unsatisfied with his way of life, both Milk and Smith relocate to San Francisco hoping to find happiness as well as a greater tolerance for their relationship.
On their arrival there, they promptly open the Castro Camera a shop which becomes a regular hang out for a community which feels persecuted by bigotry and intolerance.
And that's the springboard which sees Milk catapulted into the idea of a political life.
However, Harvey soon learns the road to political acceptance is a rocky one - and comes at an extremely high personal cost.
Milk is an inspiring piece of film-making; some may find it bittersweet given what's happened in California with the anti-gay marriage Proposition 8 - which parallels the anti gay rights Proposition 6 which is explored in the film.
Sean Penn is mesmerizing as Harvey Milk - and it's a performance which has rightly been recognized by an Oscar nomination - but it's James Franco's performance as Scott Smith which is the best of the film.
He's clearly Milk's soul mate, his grounding presence during the election campaigns show Milk where his priorities should lie.
Van Sant's done a commendable job of recreating 70s era San Francisco as well as pushing Milk's central message that you have to give people hope.
Josh Brolin is also quite brooding as Supervisor Dan White; his role as Milk's supporter on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors is a relationship fraught with tension.
White's clearly slightly uncomfortable with Milk's open character - and there's plenty of insinuation during the film that White himself was a closeted gay man - and his feelings of betrayal towards the end of the film spark the explosion which brought Milk's career to a premature end.
It's a timely release for Milk - last year saw the 30th anniversary of his assassination - but the fact it's getting accolades may leave a sour taste in some people's mouths.
Ultimately, Milk rises on the performances of Sean Penn and James Franco - you'll be hard pressed to leave the cinema feeling anything less than emotional after the end shot of thousands supporting the candlelit vigil for Milk.
However, what they're clearly commemorating is the opening of acceptance that Milk's position in power gave them - and that hope springs eternal.
Rating 8/10
Cast: Sean Penn, James Franco, Emile Hirsch, Josh Brolin
Director: Gus Van Sant
"My Name is Harvey Milk - and I want to recruit you."
Based on the life of American gay politician Harvey Milk, Gus Van Sant's latest is a compelling look into American political life during the 1970s, with a brilliant central performance by Sean Penn.
Harvey Milk was the first openly gay man to be elected to public office in California - but unsurprisingly, his rise to power was not an easy one.
As it opens, Milk is about to turn 40 and is picking up his much younger lover Scott Smith in a subway station.
But unsatisfied with his way of life, both Milk and Smith relocate to San Francisco hoping to find happiness as well as a greater tolerance for their relationship.
On their arrival there, they promptly open the Castro Camera a shop which becomes a regular hang out for a community which feels persecuted by bigotry and intolerance.
And that's the springboard which sees Milk catapulted into the idea of a political life.
However, Harvey soon learns the road to political acceptance is a rocky one - and comes at an extremely high personal cost.
Milk is an inspiring piece of film-making; some may find it bittersweet given what's happened in California with the anti-gay marriage Proposition 8 - which parallels the anti gay rights Proposition 6 which is explored in the film.
Sean Penn is mesmerizing as Harvey Milk - and it's a performance which has rightly been recognized by an Oscar nomination - but it's James Franco's performance as Scott Smith which is the best of the film.
He's clearly Milk's soul mate, his grounding presence during the election campaigns show Milk where his priorities should lie.
Van Sant's done a commendable job of recreating 70s era San Francisco as well as pushing Milk's central message that you have to give people hope.
Josh Brolin is also quite brooding as Supervisor Dan White; his role as Milk's supporter on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors is a relationship fraught with tension.
White's clearly slightly uncomfortable with Milk's open character - and there's plenty of insinuation during the film that White himself was a closeted gay man - and his feelings of betrayal towards the end of the film spark the explosion which brought Milk's career to a premature end.
It's a timely release for Milk - last year saw the 30th anniversary of his assassination - but the fact it's getting accolades may leave a sour taste in some people's mouths.
Ultimately, Milk rises on the performances of Sean Penn and James Franco - you'll be hard pressed to leave the cinema feeling anything less than emotional after the end shot of thousands supporting the candlelit vigil for Milk.
However, what they're clearly commemorating is the opening of acceptance that Milk's position in power gave them - and that hope springs eternal.
Thursday, 5 February 2009
Valkyrie: Movie Review
Valkyrie: Movie Review
Rating 6/10
Cast: Tom Cruise, Tom Wilkinson, Bill Nighy, Eddie Izzard, Terence Stamp, Kenneth Branagh
Director: Bryan Singer
Historical thrillers are a difficult beast.
Inevitably when concerned with real events, you almost always know the outcome.
So, when it was announced Tom Cruise would be involved in a film about the assassination of Adolf Hitler, attention switched to what Cruise would bring to the role (given history tells us Hitler ended his own life)
When we first meet Cruise as Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg during World War II, he is voicing concerns about how Hitler's actions are damaging the view of Germany abroad.
Within minutes, he's ambushed in the Tunisian desert, and shipped back home - albeit without an eye, his right arm and several fingers.
Elsewhere, Kenneth Branagh's character General Henning von Tresckow (acting as part of a cabal who want the downfall of Hitler) is planting a bomb in some liquor which is taken onboard Hitler's private plane.
When that assassination attempt fails, it soon becomes clear the shadowy movement who want shot of Hitler will have to try something different.
Enter von Stauffenberg - who becomes pivotal in the plotting after being brought into the group by Bill Nighy's General Olbricht.
It soon becomes clear the group's only thought as far ahead as how to assassinate Hitler - not what will happen to Germany after it - so von Stauffenberg starts to mastermind the post assassination operation and plays a major part in the attempt to end Hitler's reign on July 20, 1944.
Valkyrie is an interesting conspiracy film - there will be some purists who'll be irritated by the mix of accents (all of the key players are American or English and don't attempt the German accent - despite them being seen to write in German) but to get hung up on that would be a major mistake.
Bryan Singer's film portrays a Germany which was in part radically in conflict with itself as it tried to separate duty for the country from moral responsibility.
Hitler's image is omni-present throughout the film - be it in paintings on walls or in radio broadcasts - he has limited screen time which makes every scene he's in particularly tense.
And thanks to Singer's subtle eye for detail, tension is a major part of Valkyrie.
It's interesting how some of the main players and instigators of the coup d'etat suffer from such indecision after the plan's set in motion - although with their lives at stake, it's easy to see why.
Cruise himself brings a steely determination to the von Stauffenberg role - but it's never anything less than human. While he teeters on becoming like Hitler as the coup unfolds and during the bomb attempt's aftermath, it's clear this man's passion is what is driving him - not a ruthless streak.
The tension in Valkyrie leads to some edge of the seat moments - one scene sees an order for Goebbel's arrest issued as the same arrest order for von Stauffenberg comes in - and a lot of that stems from the decisions made by some when faced with horrendous pressure and moral decisions.
Overall, Valkyrie is another step up for Cruise whose image has radically suffered during the past few years - and a sign that underneath all the couch jumping and Scientology debate, there really is a good character actor lurking in there.
Rating 6/10
Cast: Tom Cruise, Tom Wilkinson, Bill Nighy, Eddie Izzard, Terence Stamp, Kenneth Branagh
Director: Bryan Singer
Historical thrillers are a difficult beast.
Inevitably when concerned with real events, you almost always know the outcome.
So, when it was announced Tom Cruise would be involved in a film about the assassination of Adolf Hitler, attention switched to what Cruise would bring to the role (given history tells us Hitler ended his own life)
When we first meet Cruise as Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg during World War II, he is voicing concerns about how Hitler's actions are damaging the view of Germany abroad.
Within minutes, he's ambushed in the Tunisian desert, and shipped back home - albeit without an eye, his right arm and several fingers.
Elsewhere, Kenneth Branagh's character General Henning von Tresckow (acting as part of a cabal who want the downfall of Hitler) is planting a bomb in some liquor which is taken onboard Hitler's private plane.
When that assassination attempt fails, it soon becomes clear the shadowy movement who want shot of Hitler will have to try something different.
Enter von Stauffenberg - who becomes pivotal in the plotting after being brought into the group by Bill Nighy's General Olbricht.
It soon becomes clear the group's only thought as far ahead as how to assassinate Hitler - not what will happen to Germany after it - so von Stauffenberg starts to mastermind the post assassination operation and plays a major part in the attempt to end Hitler's reign on July 20, 1944.
Valkyrie is an interesting conspiracy film - there will be some purists who'll be irritated by the mix of accents (all of the key players are American or English and don't attempt the German accent - despite them being seen to write in German) but to get hung up on that would be a major mistake.
Bryan Singer's film portrays a Germany which was in part radically in conflict with itself as it tried to separate duty for the country from moral responsibility.
Hitler's image is omni-present throughout the film - be it in paintings on walls or in radio broadcasts - he has limited screen time which makes every scene he's in particularly tense.
And thanks to Singer's subtle eye for detail, tension is a major part of Valkyrie.
It's interesting how some of the main players and instigators of the coup d'etat suffer from such indecision after the plan's set in motion - although with their lives at stake, it's easy to see why.
Cruise himself brings a steely determination to the von Stauffenberg role - but it's never anything less than human. While he teeters on becoming like Hitler as the coup unfolds and during the bomb attempt's aftermath, it's clear this man's passion is what is driving him - not a ruthless streak.
The tension in Valkyrie leads to some edge of the seat moments - one scene sees an order for Goebbel's arrest issued as the same arrest order for von Stauffenberg comes in - and a lot of that stems from the decisions made by some when faced with horrendous pressure and moral decisions.
Overall, Valkyrie is another step up for Cruise whose image has radically suffered during the past few years - and a sign that underneath all the couch jumping and Scientology debate, there really is a good character actor lurking in there.
Wednesday, 4 February 2009
Slumdog Millionaire: Movie Review
Slumdog Millionaire: Movie Review
Rating8/10
Cast:Dev Patel, Freida Pinto, Anil Kapoor, Ankur Vikal
Director:Danny Boyle
So it's finally here.
The film which
To be honest, it's highly unlikely you won't have already heard ofSlumdog Millionaire- based on thenovel Q And A by Indian author Vikas Swarup, it is as close to a feel good film as you'll get at the moment.
It's the tale of Jamal Malik, a former street child (The Slumdog of the title)
At the start of the film, he's just one question away from taking the top prize on the Indian version of Who Wants To Be A Millionaire? (hosted by Bollywood actor Anil Kapoor)
But Jamal's in a bit of a pickle - one which a phone a friend option won't get him out of.
Accused of cheating, he's being brutally tortured by the police who are desperate to know how one slumdog can know all the answers to such a wide ranging set of questions.
But Jamal starts to proffer up the reasons why he knows what he does - and in flashbacks, we see how life and destiny have taken their toll on him; as well as shaping his present day life.
From his relationship with his brother Salim to the love of his life Latika, this film winds together coincidence with reality so convincingly that you can't help but feel that Jamal's life is strongly controlled by destiny.
It's hard not to praiseSlumdog Millionaire- on close inspection, you can see why this film is doing so well with the critics.
It's about the triumph of life; and in these deeply uncertain economic times when life can be changed by the dropping of the exchange rates and the ongoing recession, Slumdog gives the viewer a feeling of the victory of humanity.
However, that being said - it's not an easy journey to get there.
Director Danny Boyle's latest is at times a love affair to a country and city (Mumbai) which has recently hid the headlines for the most hideous of reasons; terrorism.
But the squalor in which the film begins and the abject poverty will open many people's eyes to the reality of life in Mumbai.
It's difficult not to get swept away with the film - but it does require you to slightly suspend any reality because of how the questions on WWTBAM directly connect to Jamal's experiences.
Dev Patel (who you may know from TV dramaSkins) throws in a world weary turn as Jamal in the latter parts of the film.
However, it's the child actors (Ayush Mahesh Khedekar and Azharuddin Mohammed Ismail) who portray him and his brother in their early days who shine - and blow Patel out of the water.
Even when they face capture from a local crime lord who captures street kids to ultimately blind them to make money from begging, the two young boy actors are great at conveying a degree of innocence as well as a nagging desperation to break free from their life of squalor.
Ironically this film itself was nearly shut down and sent directly to DVD - so in some ways, its continuing acceptance at award ceremonies is a direct parallel to the journey made by Jamal himself.
Slumdog Millionaireis probably likely to sweep the Oscars later this month - it won't have you leaving the cinema with a giant grin on your face (although the montage over the closing credits is worth staying for) but I can guarantee you will enjoy the journey and you'll probably go home feeling grateful for whatever lot you have in life.
Rating8/10
Cast:Dev Patel, Freida Pinto, Anil Kapoor, Ankur Vikal
Director:Danny Boyle
So it's finally here.
The film which
- a) Is The most awarded of the season
- b) Is The one which is picking up plenty of Oscar buzz
- c) Is the most likely to sweep the board
- d) Was destined to be released straight to DVD
To be honest, it's highly unlikely you won't have already heard ofSlumdog Millionaire- based on thenovel Q And A by Indian author Vikas Swarup, it is as close to a feel good film as you'll get at the moment.
It's the tale of Jamal Malik, a former street child (The Slumdog of the title)
At the start of the film, he's just one question away from taking the top prize on the Indian version of Who Wants To Be A Millionaire? (hosted by Bollywood actor Anil Kapoor)
But Jamal's in a bit of a pickle - one which a phone a friend option won't get him out of.
Accused of cheating, he's being brutally tortured by the police who are desperate to know how one slumdog can know all the answers to such a wide ranging set of questions.
But Jamal starts to proffer up the reasons why he knows what he does - and in flashbacks, we see how life and destiny have taken their toll on him; as well as shaping his present day life.
From his relationship with his brother Salim to the love of his life Latika, this film winds together coincidence with reality so convincingly that you can't help but feel that Jamal's life is strongly controlled by destiny.
It's hard not to praiseSlumdog Millionaire- on close inspection, you can see why this film is doing so well with the critics.
It's about the triumph of life; and in these deeply uncertain economic times when life can be changed by the dropping of the exchange rates and the ongoing recession, Slumdog gives the viewer a feeling of the victory of humanity.
However, that being said - it's not an easy journey to get there.
Director Danny Boyle's latest is at times a love affair to a country and city (Mumbai) which has recently hid the headlines for the most hideous of reasons; terrorism.
But the squalor in which the film begins and the abject poverty will open many people's eyes to the reality of life in Mumbai.
It's difficult not to get swept away with the film - but it does require you to slightly suspend any reality because of how the questions on WWTBAM directly connect to Jamal's experiences.
Dev Patel (who you may know from TV dramaSkins) throws in a world weary turn as Jamal in the latter parts of the film.
However, it's the child actors (Ayush Mahesh Khedekar and Azharuddin Mohammed Ismail) who portray him and his brother in their early days who shine - and blow Patel out of the water.
Even when they face capture from a local crime lord who captures street kids to ultimately blind them to make money from begging, the two young boy actors are great at conveying a degree of innocence as well as a nagging desperation to break free from their life of squalor.
Ironically this film itself was nearly shut down and sent directly to DVD - so in some ways, its continuing acceptance at award ceremonies is a direct parallel to the journey made by Jamal himself.
Slumdog Millionaireis probably likely to sweep the Oscars later this month - it won't have you leaving the cinema with a giant grin on your face (although the montage over the closing credits is worth staying for) but I can guarantee you will enjoy the journey and you'll probably go home feeling grateful for whatever lot you have in life.
Tuesday, 3 February 2009
Role Models: Movie Review
Role Models: Movie Review
Rating 7/10
Cast: Paul Rudd, Seann William Scott, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Elizabeth Banks, Robbie J Thompson
Director: David Wain
Danny (Paul Rudd) and Wheeler (Seann William Scott) are two energy drink salesmen on a tour of Los Angeles schools.
The pair sell (and drink) Minotaur energy drink - but despite that, they're diametrically opposed when it comes to towing the company line.
Wheeler loves the job; whereas Danny detests where his life has gone for the last 10 years - and things get worse for Danny when his relationship with Beth (Elizabeth Banks) falls apart.
So one day, on an energy drink and bitterness high, the pair end up trashing a school statue as well as assaulting a policeman and land themselves on the ultimate downer - a day in court.
However, Danny's ex Beth comes to the rescue and manages to get the pair 150 hours of community service as opposed to jail time.
The only problem is they end enrolled in a programme called Sturdy Wings (a kind of older brother scheme) - and matters get even worse when they meet their charges.
Danny's paired off with Augie (a post McLovin Mintz-Plasse) who's obsessed with live role playing re-enactments - and Wheeler's given a fifth grader named Ronnie (Thompson) who's blessed with a predilection for breasts and an extremely foul mouth.
Trouble is, after just one day with their charges, both Danny and Wheeler feel it'd be easier to spend time in jail rather than deal with the pair again&.
Role Models shouldn't work - it shouldn't be funny given you know what kind of character Seann William Scott plays (think variations of Stifler from American Pie)
And yet it does - sure, it's foul (you'll be shocked at how often you laugh at Ronnie spouting such obscenities as he does - including one very funny outburst involving a swear word and Miss Daisy) and yeah it's not the most sophisticated plot and you can see how the character arcs will end a mile off; but I just found myself laughing out loud at this.
That's mainly due to Paul Rudd, who wrote the script.
His turn as Danny is spot on for delivery as he fights exasperatedly against community service - his comic timing is a lot more subtle than the continual adolescent that Seann William Scott always plays.
Mintz Plasse is amusing as Augie, the nerd who lives in a fantasy world to escape the realities of home - but as Augie bonds with Danny, it's Augie who teaches Danny about respect and morals.
Also, it has to be said this film belongs to fifth grader Ronnie - whether it's because of his foul mouthed ways or the assured way he delivers his lines, he's a star in the rising (as long as he doesn't get typecast as a potty mouthed kid)
Role Models won't win awards for subtlety; it won't win awards for its obvious characterization - but it may win you over a whole lot more than you were willing to admit when you're in the queue buying the ticket.
Rating 7/10
Cast: Paul Rudd, Seann William Scott, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Elizabeth Banks, Robbie J Thompson
Director: David Wain
Danny (Paul Rudd) and Wheeler (Seann William Scott) are two energy drink salesmen on a tour of Los Angeles schools.
The pair sell (and drink) Minotaur energy drink - but despite that, they're diametrically opposed when it comes to towing the company line.
Wheeler loves the job; whereas Danny detests where his life has gone for the last 10 years - and things get worse for Danny when his relationship with Beth (Elizabeth Banks) falls apart.
So one day, on an energy drink and bitterness high, the pair end up trashing a school statue as well as assaulting a policeman and land themselves on the ultimate downer - a day in court.
However, Danny's ex Beth comes to the rescue and manages to get the pair 150 hours of community service as opposed to jail time.
The only problem is they end enrolled in a programme called Sturdy Wings (a kind of older brother scheme) - and matters get even worse when they meet their charges.
Danny's paired off with Augie (a post McLovin Mintz-Plasse) who's obsessed with live role playing re-enactments - and Wheeler's given a fifth grader named Ronnie (Thompson) who's blessed with a predilection for breasts and an extremely foul mouth.
Trouble is, after just one day with their charges, both Danny and Wheeler feel it'd be easier to spend time in jail rather than deal with the pair again&.
Role Models shouldn't work - it shouldn't be funny given you know what kind of character Seann William Scott plays (think variations of Stifler from American Pie)
And yet it does - sure, it's foul (you'll be shocked at how often you laugh at Ronnie spouting such obscenities as he does - including one very funny outburst involving a swear word and Miss Daisy) and yeah it's not the most sophisticated plot and you can see how the character arcs will end a mile off; but I just found myself laughing out loud at this.
That's mainly due to Paul Rudd, who wrote the script.
His turn as Danny is spot on for delivery as he fights exasperatedly against community service - his comic timing is a lot more subtle than the continual adolescent that Seann William Scott always plays.
Mintz Plasse is amusing as Augie, the nerd who lives in a fantasy world to escape the realities of home - but as Augie bonds with Danny, it's Augie who teaches Danny about respect and morals.
Also, it has to be said this film belongs to fifth grader Ronnie - whether it's because of his foul mouthed ways or the assured way he delivers his lines, he's a star in the rising (as long as he doesn't get typecast as a potty mouthed kid)
Role Models won't win awards for subtlety; it won't win awards for its obvious characterization - but it may win you over a whole lot more than you were willing to admit when you're in the queue buying the ticket.
Saturday, 31 January 2009
Frozen River: Movie Review
Frozen River: Movie Review
Rating 8/10
Cast: Melissa Leo, Misty Upham
Director: Courtney Hunt
2009 is shaping up as a good year for smaller independent films.
After the highs of Let The Right One In I thought I'd have to wait a while for another good "arthouse" film.
However, I was wrong.
Frozen River (which has seen a Best Actress nomination for Melissa Leo) is the story of Ray Eddy, a New York trailer mum whose struggle to meet the bread line sees her lured into the world of illegal immigrant smuggling.
When her husband leaves her, taking the down payment for a new trailer home to live in, Eddy (a stunning Leo) finds herself with no choice but to trade in illegal immigrants by teaming up with a Mohawk girl (Misty Upham) who lives on a reservation on the US Canadian border.
The pair begin making runs across the frozen St Lawrence river in Ray's car - with each journey bringing them closer to their goals - but in more danger from being caught.
Frozen River is an extremely compelling, and ultimately horrifying piece of film from first timer Courtney Hunt (who also wrote the screenplay).
Leo's Eddy is struggling left right and centre - as Christmas approaches and after her son inadvertently sets light to their trailer by trying to defrost the water pipes, she's got little choice but to team up with Lila, the Mohawk girl, despite her distrust.
Both women bring a quiet desperation to the roles - Lila has a family she never sees and Eddy has a family she's struggling to keep; Eddy's son resorts to stealing credit card numbers to try and help her make ends meet.
However, they also exude an inner strength and a determination to do right via their respective families - which makes each journey a more pain staking emotional one than they initially realize.
There's tension all round - each journey brings the pair a new peril - and in one particular case, they dump a package from an illegal family out in the snow; only to find out later that the package contained an alive baby.
From there, it's a desperate scrabble to find the infant and see if it survives.
Despite the glum nature of the film, it never wallows in mawkishness; each is doing what they have to to survive - and as time goes on, the two form a bond and friendship after an initial distrust and resentment.
While Upham does well in her role as Lila, it's Leo who shines - her world weariness shows on her face and in her resignation; yet she's never a quitter, she continues to fight on - she may be familiar to some from her turn in the 90s as a hard bitten detective on the stunning TV cop series Homicide: Life on The Street, but here she easily demonstrates why the Academy has rewarded her in 2009.
Frozen River is a triumph - it's a compelling and engrossing film which will lure you in when you least expect it and will leave you emotionally devastated at its conclusion.
Rating 8/10
Cast: Melissa Leo, Misty Upham
Director: Courtney Hunt
2009 is shaping up as a good year for smaller independent films.
After the highs of Let The Right One In I thought I'd have to wait a while for another good "arthouse" film.
However, I was wrong.
Frozen River (which has seen a Best Actress nomination for Melissa Leo) is the story of Ray Eddy, a New York trailer mum whose struggle to meet the bread line sees her lured into the world of illegal immigrant smuggling.
When her husband leaves her, taking the down payment for a new trailer home to live in, Eddy (a stunning Leo) finds herself with no choice but to trade in illegal immigrants by teaming up with a Mohawk girl (Misty Upham) who lives on a reservation on the US Canadian border.
The pair begin making runs across the frozen St Lawrence river in Ray's car - with each journey bringing them closer to their goals - but in more danger from being caught.
Frozen River is an extremely compelling, and ultimately horrifying piece of film from first timer Courtney Hunt (who also wrote the screenplay).
Leo's Eddy is struggling left right and centre - as Christmas approaches and after her son inadvertently sets light to their trailer by trying to defrost the water pipes, she's got little choice but to team up with Lila, the Mohawk girl, despite her distrust.
Both women bring a quiet desperation to the roles - Lila has a family she never sees and Eddy has a family she's struggling to keep; Eddy's son resorts to stealing credit card numbers to try and help her make ends meet.
However, they also exude an inner strength and a determination to do right via their respective families - which makes each journey a more pain staking emotional one than they initially realize.
There's tension all round - each journey brings the pair a new peril - and in one particular case, they dump a package from an illegal family out in the snow; only to find out later that the package contained an alive baby.
From there, it's a desperate scrabble to find the infant and see if it survives.
Despite the glum nature of the film, it never wallows in mawkishness; each is doing what they have to to survive - and as time goes on, the two form a bond and friendship after an initial distrust and resentment.
While Upham does well in her role as Lila, it's Leo who shines - her world weariness shows on her face and in her resignation; yet she's never a quitter, she continues to fight on - she may be familiar to some from her turn in the 90s as a hard bitten detective on the stunning TV cop series Homicide: Life on The Street, but here she easily demonstrates why the Academy has rewarded her in 2009.
Frozen River is a triumph - it's a compelling and engrossing film which will lure you in when you least expect it and will leave you emotionally devastated at its conclusion.
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