Sunday, 11 November 2012

Seeking Justice: Blu Ray Review

Seeking Justice: Blu Ray Review


Rating : M
Released by Roadshow Home Entertainment

Following recent OTT screen antics, Nicolas Cage returns to a more demure performance in this thriller.

Cage plays Will, an English teacher, whose wife (January Jones) is attacked and raped one night while he's playing chess. At the hospital, Will meets Simon (Guy Pearce) , who tells him that an organisation which he works for can take care of the man who did this to his wife, in return for a favour down the line.

Will reluctantly agrees and all is well until 6 months later, when Will is contacted and asked to return his part of the bargain.

Playing out as an action version of Dr Faustus, Seeking Justice is a perfectly serviceable thriller with nothing out of the ordinary to redeem it from the other straight to video fare. Cage is relatively on form in Roger Donaldson's hands and as a conspiracy deepens, the film plays its hand fairly straight. The action sequences are tautly directed and again, nothing out of the ordinary.

All in all, Seeking Justice is a film you will put on and leave playing in the background; it has a good cast including the likes of January Jones, Jennifer Carpenter and Guy Pearce - it's just lacking a little of the action and material to help it stand out.

Extras: None

Rating:


Saturday, 10 November 2012

Brand new Hobbit images

Brand new Hobbit images


Another week closer to the Wellington world premiere of The Hobbit and another week of new images being launched onto the internet.

This time, thanks to TheOnering.net, we've got more looks at Radagast The Brown, new looks at the Wargs, and Misty Mountain Goblins.

The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey has its world premiere on Wednesday November 28th.

Feast your eyes below:











Robot and Frank: Movie Review

Robot and Frank: Movie Review


Cast: Frank Langella, Susan Sarandon, James Marsden, Liv Tyler, Jeremy Sisto, Voice of Peter Sarsgaard
Director: Jake Schreier

Sometime in the very near future, robots live among us as carers for the elderly.

Ageing ex-convict and thief, Frank (Frank Langella) lives alone away from his family and is starting to show severe signs of mental deterioration and dementia.

When his son Hunter (Marsden) visits, he's so shocked by how quickly his father is sliding into dementia, that he gives him a robot to help him with the daily life.

Initially reticent to bond with the robot butler or allow it to help at all, Frank begins to warm to it, when it helps him shoplift. That plants a seed within Frank's mind, and soon, he's back to planning heists with his electronic pal, who believes that the work Frank's doing is aiding his memory.

Frank turns his attention to stealing a book from the local library, Don Quixote run by Susan Sarandon's head librarian, Jennifer. Mainly because the library's being closed down, the books phased out and stored electronically, something which Frank doesn't agree with.

However, Frank's soon looking to carry off an even bigger heist with his robot chum....

Robot and Frank is a saccharine movie with a simple story and thankfully, a masterclass of acting as its central performance.

Frank Langella is mightily impressive as the ex-con whose life is falling apart around him but who refuses to acknowledge that it's happening. He gives a great turn in this character piece, as a man who's fighting against the tides of time and winds of change - as well as with the loss of his memory and life as he knows it. Combined with a twinkle in his eye when planning the heists with the Peter Sarsgaard voiced caretaker robot, Langella is compelling, humbling and touching from beginning to end - in fact, you can't help but empathise with him right away.

Sarsgaard channels HAL from 2001: A Space Odyssey in terms of vocal performance from the white lego  legged style robot - a sort of space-helmeted white-washed Twiki from Buck Rogers; a sympathetic Sarandon works well in her all too brief scenes (the reasons for which become clear at the end) and Marsden and a principled and lecturey Tyler do wonders with their estranged siblings, who share different views on the place of robots within society.

There's also a humorous script at play too - with some laughs coming from the most unexpected of places; a pair of robots, when forced to interact, intone that they "are functioning normally" when asked how they are; Sarandon's library robot is named Mr Darcy; the script is deft at throwing in great one liners as well as oddities to show how Frank's starting to disconnect from the present and becoming confused with the new technology.

At the end of the day, Robot and Frank is a charmingly slight heart-warming affair, a buddy film which is original and novel despite its cutesy rose tinted view and occasional narrative flimsiness here and there. On a thematic par with Martin Landau's turn in Lovely, Still from 2008, Robot and Frank has a masterclass of acting from an impeccable Langella which keeps you engaged from beginning to end as well as offering a tantalising "what if" look into a potential future.

Rating:


Episodes S2: DVD Review

Episodes S2: DVD Review


Rating: M
Released by BBC and Roadshow Home Entertainment

Matt LeBlanc, Stephen Mangan and Tamsin Greig return in Season 2 of the British/ American sitcom, Episodes.

Picking up where season 1 ended, Sean and Beverly's long standing marriage is in tatters after Beverly slept with Matt LeBlanc during the planning of their American sitcom, Pucks.

When the premiere of their show does well, it looks like the rocky patch could prove a difficult working environment for Sean and Beverly but by the second episode, the ratings are sliding and networks are hovering around the show to make changes.

Season 2 of Episodes is not as smart as the first which really delved into the politics of the industry and making a show as well as poking fun at Matt LeBlanc's public persona. While there was more of a sly and smart sense to the writing in season one, a lot of that seems to have been jettisoned for broader comedy and as a result, while Episodes S2 is good, it's nowhere near as good as the first season was.

The main trio are still watchable - though it's Greig who gives more of a deeper performance than the other two leads. But the satire runs dry towards the end and to be honest, you'd have to hope that a third season brings a little more of the smart writing that was so prevalent in the first.

Rating:


Friday, 9 November 2012

Setting up the Wolverine

Behind the scenes - setting up the Wolverine


Our international spies have been out and about trying to see what's going on behind the scenes of The Wolverine.

Filming's currently underway in Sydney and one of Darren's World of Entertainment's spies has been taking a look at what's been going on behind the scenes of The Wolverine.

No sign of Hugh Jackman as Wolverine yet though...

The Wolverine is due in cinemas in 2013.







World War Z trailer is here

World War Z trailer is here


It's here - your first full look at World War Z! 

The film starring Brad Pitt is due for release next year.

A U.N. employee is racing against time and fate, as he travels the world trying to stop the outbreak of a deadly Zombie pandemic.

From Babylon 5 writer J Michael Straczynski and Max Brooks, World War Z stars Brad Pitt, Mireille Enos and David Morse, it looks like Zombie War is coming....

First up, there's the World War Z teaser trailer and poster - as well as the full World War Z Trailer...







Mark Wahlberg for Transformers 4

Mark Wahlberg for Transformers 4


News just in....


MICHAEL BAY RE-TEAMS WITH HIS "PAIN AND GAIN" STAR MARK WAHLBERG FOR TRANSFORMERS 4

HOLLYWOOD, CA (November 8, 2012) – After an exceptionally successful collaboration on the upcoming "Pain and Gain," Michael Bay has cast Academy Award®-nominee Mark Wahlberg in the highly anticipated “TRANSFORMERS 4.”  The film will hit theaters June 27th, 2014. 

"Mark is awesome.  We had a blast working on “Pain and Gain” and I’m so fired up to be back working with him.  An actor of his caliber is the perfect guy to re-invigorate the franchise and carry on the Transformers’ legacy,” said Bay.

Bay will direct the next installment in the “TRANSFORMERS” series, which begins shooting next spring.  From Paramount Pictures, a division of Viacom, Inc., in association with Hasbro, the film will be produced by Don Murphy & Tom DeSanto, Lorenzo di Bonaventura and Ian Bryce, and executive produced by Steven Spielberg, Bay, Brian Goldner and Mark Vahradian.

Bay’s first “TRANSFORMERS” film was a box office sensation in 2007, opening at #1 and earning more than $700 million worldwide.  His second installment “TRANSFORMERS: REVENGE OF THE FALLEN” in 2009 grossed more than $830 million worldwide.  In 2011, “TRANSFORMERS: DARK OF THE MOON” was an even bigger hit worldwide, grossing more than a billion dollars to become the 5th highest grossing film of all time.  To date, the franchise has earned more than $2.6 billion worldwide.

From acclaimed director Michael Bay comes "Pain and Gain," a new action comedy starring Mark Wahlberg, Dwayne Johnson and Anthony Mackie.  Based on the unbelievable true story of three personal trainers in 1990s Miami who, in pursuit of the American Dream, get caught up in a criminal enterprise that goes horribly wrong.  Ed Harris, Tony Shalhoub, Rob Corddry, Rebel Wilson and Bar Paly also star.  The film is based on magazine articles by Pete Collins, with a screenplay by Christopher Markus & Stephen McFeely and produced by Donald DeLine, Michael Bay and Ian Bryce.

“PAIN AND GAIN” is currently undated in New Zealand.

Very latest post

Honest Thief: DVD Review

Honest Thief: DVD Review In Honest Thief, a fairly competent story is given plenty of heart and soul before falling into old action genre tr...