Tuesday, 21 August 2012

Project X : DVD Review

Project X : DVD Review


Rating: R18
Released by Warner Home Video

Three anonymous American high schoolers, three losers and three guys who want to make a name for themselves.

Thomas, Costa, JB (and cameraman Dax) decide that to celebrate Thomas' birthday, they should throw him a party which just happens to coincide with Thomas' parents leaving for the weekend.

Thomas' Dad gives him a warning - sets boundaries for what he believes will just be his three friends hanging around; don't go in my office, don't touch my car, don't drink etc.

However, Costa decides to invite everyone, with Thomas thinking they will be lucky they'll get a few people given their rep.

But, when truckloads of people start to show, the party soon turns from underrated to epic. And chaotic.

Project X is the kind of film teens will love and hardly anyone else.

Its main trio are unlikeable, their behaviour repugnant and the morals on display completely questionable. Drugs, sex, topless teens, drinking, an angry dwarf put in an oven (???) are just the gamut of what's explored here in this found footage film.

Granted the anarchy is impressive and the use of footage from hundreds of extras is well utilised but the overall feel of the film is one that's questionable - so much so, that at the end when Thomas is being berated by his father, his dad has some kind of admiration for him as he'd previously believed his son was "a loser". It's an interesting paradigm that over the years, this kind of behaviour's become more acceptable and even to be aspired to.

Project X is squarely going to hit its target audience, but if you have friends like this, you may want to check whether your parents have insurance. And plenty of it.

Extras: Pasadena Three

Rating:





Ghost Rider Spirit of Vengeance: Blu Ray Review

Ghost Rider Spirit of Vengeance: Blu Ray Review


Rating: M
Released by Warner Home Video

When a package shouts loudly that it's from the producers of Crank, maybe you will have an idea what's ahead.

Nicolas Cage (in OTT loony mood) is back as Johnny Blaze, who's struggling with his curse and trying to lie low in Eastern Europe.

But when he's recruited to try and save a young boy from the devil, it looks like Blaze has no choice but to embrace his fiery side and use the Rider to save the day.

Ghost Rider Spirit of Vengeance is nothing short of bonkers and nothing short of quite disappointing.

The directors should really have dialled back Cage's craziness - sure, it's based on a comic strip, but thanks to a pointless plot and some not particularly eye catching CGI, it ends up being nothing more than a mess to be honest. Sure, it's going for trashy but it never quite hits the mark - and while Idris Elba and Ciaran Hinds add a certain class to the story, they can't do enough to save it.

Extras: Video commentary, deleted scenes and a doco

Rating:




Monday, 20 August 2012

Hope Springs: Movie Review

Hope Springs: Movie Review


Cast: Meryl Streep, Tommy Lee Jones, Steve Carell
Director: David Frankel

Welcome to the world of Twilight sex.

Not Edward and Bella - this is an altogether less supernatural phenomenon, although frankly, no less terrifying.

Meryl Streep's Kay and Tommy Lee Jones' Arnold have been married for over 30 years.

They're in the later years of life, and also their love life. Stuck in an endless routine - the same eggs and bacon for Arnold for breakfast every day, the same Arnold slumped asleep, watching the golf channel at night and the same separate bedrooms without a hint of intimacy - Kay decides enough is enough.

Rather than walking out the door, Kay enrols Arnold and herself in a week long intensive couples therapy clinic run by Steve Carell's Dr Feld.

Unsurprisingly, Arnold's against the whole idea and is cynical about being involved in the first place. As time goes on though, the pair begin to discover intimacies about each other held long locked away and face truths which could prove difficult to overcome.

Hope Springs is a dramedy, with the emphasis more on reality and drama than endless bouts of sex comedy.

Streep and Lee Jones are perfectly matched and deft at breathing life into this somewhat unoriginal story. Sure, we've all been to films where couples are having trouble but this one is adept at putting the story squarely into the latter stages of life. Both the leads bring a light comedic touch to a tale which is essentially downbeat and seriously dramatic in parts. They lift the duo from being stereotypes and give them a warmth and humanity which makes you empathise with them - and Kay and Arnold's situation - immediately and as the film goes on. both handle what's asked of their characters wonderfully. Sure, there are comedic moments which are required of both but the drama lingers long after the humour's worn off and as the therapy (both for the audience and the characters) grinds on.

Equally, Carell who spends most of the time smiling sympathetically is incredibly convincing in his dialled-down turn as the therapist.

That's the thing with Hope Springs - it has a hefty dose of reality which may hit a little too close to home for some in the audience; there's a tenderness and honesty to the script which may cut to the quick but has its roots squarely in something which may face many in years to come.


Hope Springs is quite a serious piece - despite how knockabout the trailer initially appears, with a pace that may actually give you the feeling that it's infinitely longer than it is.

However, you should also be aware that there's plenty of squirm in your seat moments as we have the duo discuss their sex lives, watch Meryl's character Kay literally get in touch with herself and hear sex talk that may frankly put you off any meal you may be about to have...It's to be applauded for getting this kind of thing on the big screen, a rare feat in Hollywood these days, but for some in the audience not over a certain age, it could be a hard ask.

But what you should be impressed with in Hope Springs is an adult dramedy that really does explore what it's like to be older, and dealing with issues of intimacy and attraction - with two very impressive performances by Tommy Lee Jones and Meryl Streep.

Rating:




Tony Scott R.I.P

Tony Scott R.I.P


Sad news this afternoon that acclaimed movie director Tony Scott has committed suicide.

TMZ.com's reporting the director jumped from a bridge in LA - according to the LA County coroner.

The site says:

"According to the Coroner, 68-year-old Scott -- Ridley Scott's brother -- jumped from the Vincent Thomas Bridge spanning San Pedro and Terminal Island around 12:30pm.

U.S. Coast Guard Lt. Jennifer Osburn said a suicide note was found in Scott's Toyota Prius, which was parked on one of the eastbound lanes of the bridge.

Scott directed such films as "Top Gun," "Beverly Hills Cop II," "Enemy of the State," and "The Taking of Pelham 123."

Authorities used sonar equipment to find Scott's body in the port's murky waters. His body was recovered at approximately 4:30pm ... four hours after he jumped.

His body has since been turned over to coroner officials."


Scott is of course famed for a whole stack of movies - including Top Gun, Man On Fire, Unstoppable, Taking of Pelham 1-2-3, Enemy of the State and Crimson Tide.

He'd recently been announced as director of Top Gun 2.

The Raid: Blu Ray Review

The Raid: Blu Ray Review


Rating: M
Released by Madman Home Entertainment

You may have heard of The Raid; you may have heard of it talked about in gushingly reverential terms...you may even know someone who's seen The Raid.

But quite frankly, nothing can prepare you for what you experience in this intense Indonesian martial arts action film.

Directed by Welshman Gareth Evans, The Raid stars Iko Uwais as Rama, a member of a SWAT team called in to help take down the crime lords living in a downtown Indonesian high rise building. Rama's about to become a dad and so has everything to fight for in this raid. Once inside though, the crime lords appear to have the upper hand and set the residents onto the SWAT team - and Rama can't prepare himself fully for what lies ahead - betrayals, shock and plenty of fighting....


And that's it for plot - because, quite simply, that takes second fiddle to some unbelievably violently intense and technically impressive fight sequences which pepper the entire film. Sure, there's a few lulls and quiet moments here and there between the action scenes - but man, oh man, what a stunningly good action film this is.

The Raid is unbelievably violent, utterly adrenaline soaked and will beat you into submission - in a good way.

The body count is incredibly high - people are gored and impaled by a door, shot thousands of times, taken out by machetes and even by fluorescent light tubes. The novelty factor of some of the kills is something audiences will lap up and you can't help but pump your fist in the air as the action escalates.


It's utterly watchable though thanks to spot on direction from Evans and there's something almost balletic about the way the lead up to the action is choreographed; with a slow brooding electronic soundtrack or beating drum, you're taken to the edge of your seat and then smashed in the face with the inevitable beat downs. 

There's a real adrenaline rush to this intensely brutal flick - but the martial arts sequences when the guns are jettisoned and it's just hand-to-hand combat are simply stunning, sensationally choreographed and visually gobsmacking.

The Raid is heading for an American remake - and that's ok with those involved in it because it means there'll be money to make a foreign sequel; my advice though is to see it now while it's in its purest form and at its most thrilling.

Extras: Inside the Raid, TIFF Premiere, Q&A with cast

Rating:

The Women on the 6th Floor - DVD Review

The Women on the 6th Floor - DVD Review


Rating: PG
Released by Madman Home Entertainment

It's off to 1960s Paris we go in this Upstairs, Downstairs social drama about the owner of a house and his relationship with the maids he employs.

A starched Fabrice Luchini is stockbroker Jean-Louis Joubert who lives with his socialite wife amid the perks of wealth. One such perk is the owning of maids; but when the head of the household quits, Joubert ends up hiring Maria (Natalia Verbeke), a Spanish maid new in town, who soon makes his mark in the household.

But not for the wrong reasons - her bright breezy attitude opens up Joubert's eyes to the injustice and suffering of the Spanish help as this cross cultural dramedy unfolds.

The Women on the 6th Floor is a gentle Gallic charmer of a film - it runs foul of a few cliches here and there as it negotiates the day to day life and politics of a stiffly starched yet compassionate relationship and tensions between the French and the Spanish as the Civil war continues. 

Luchini and Verbeke make a pleasant couple - with her youthfullness and joie de vivre bringing out the compassion over time of his repressed socialite. Occasionally, their relationship feels a little forced and lacks perhaps some of the sizzle that you'd expect of the story.

All in all, The Women on the 6th Floor is a light, breezy Gallic treat of a film to wile away a Sunday afternoon.


Extras: Cast interviews, behind the scenes, deleted scenes, theatrical trailer

Rating:

AVATAR gets the 3D Treatment

AVATAR gets the 3D treatment

News reaches Darren's World of Entertainment that Avatar's getting the 3D treatment.

Here's the release, which fans of the phenomenally popular film will want to savour:


PANDORA COMES TO LIFE LIKE NEVER BEFORE WITH THE ULTIMATE HOME VIEWING EXPERIENCE

AVATAR ON BLU-RAY 3D
 
Over 33 Million Facebook Fans Receive Exclusive Global Announcement as the Film That Became a Worldwide Phenomenon Arrives on Blu-ray 3D in October 
 
Auckland, New Zealand – The world of Pandora has never looked better as over 33 millionAVATAR Facebook fans were the first to learn of the upcoming release of the AVATAR Blu-ray 3D Collector’s Edition, available in New Zealand from October 24 from Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment. A home entertainment experience like no other, for the first time ever, fans will be able to welcome James Cameron’s global box office sensation into their homes in stunning 3D high-definition.

“3D television is the future of home entertainment,” said James Cameron, the Oscar® winning Director. “I’m a huge proponent of the technology and very pleased that AVATAR can be viewed in the living room the way it is meant to be seen.”

“As the number of homes with 3D televisions continues to grow, we thought it was important to bring the biggest 3D film ever right into your living room,” continued Jon Landau, Academy Award® winning Producer of Avatar. “This is the only way fans should experience the world of Pandora and this release offers the highest picture quality possible. ”Previously only available to consumers through an exclusive deal with Panasonic, the two-disc AVATAR 3D Blu-ray Collector’s Edition will feature the original theatrical release and be available in all-new collectible packaging. Seen by more than 310 million people worldwide, the Oscar and Golden Globe winning epic is the highest grossing film of all time, taking in more than $2.7 billion in worldwide box office. It is also top-selling Blu-ray disc of all time."

Avatar 3D Blu ray hits October 24th

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