Monday, 29 February 2016

Oscars winners 2016 full list

Oscars winners 2016 full list


Here is the Oscars winners 2016 full list

Best picture: Spotlight

Best Actor: Leonardo Di Caprio

Best actress: Brie Larson


Best director: Alejandro G Inarritu

Best original song: The Writing's on the Wall, Sam Smith
Best original score: Ennio Morricone

Best foreign language film: Son of Saul
Best live action short film: Stutterer
Best documentary: Amy

Best documentary short feature film: A Girl In The River
Best supporting actor: Mark Rylance




Best animated feature: Inside Out


Best animated short film: Bear Story
Best visual effects: Ex Machina
Best sound editing: Mad Max Fury Road
Best film editing: Mad Max Fury Road
Best cinematography: The Revenant

Best make up and styling: Mad Max Fury Road
Best production design: Mad Max Fury Road
Best costume design: Jenny Beaven, Mad Max Fury Road
Best supporting actress: Alicia Vikander. The Danish Girl
Best original screenplay: Spotlight
Best adapted screenplay: The Big Short



Sunday, 28 February 2016

Mahana: Film Review

Mahana: Film Review


Cast: Temuera Morrison, Akuhata Keefe
Director: Lee Tamahori

Lee Tamahori returns to the New Zealand screen with a film that reunites him with his Once Were Warriors star Temuera Morrison.

Based on Witi Ihimaera's Bulibasha, and set in provincial Gisborne in the 1960s, it's the story of the Mahana family, who are ruled with an iron fist by grandfather Tamihana, a traditionalist (played by Temuera Morrison).  There's a long-standing rivalry between the Mahanas and their fellow sheep-shearing family, the Poatas and the vendetta runs deep even if no-one talks about it.

But for Akuhata Keefe's 14 year old Simeon Mahana, life is a drudge of continually doing chores and trying to get out from under the yoke of his grandfather and become his own man. However, that brings clashes and things take a turn for the worst when Simeon uncovers more about the deep-held family secret and the anguish that has bound the families inextricably together in resentment....

Mahana is a film of two pieces, wildly meshed together.

At times, it's a dark family drama that plays nicely on the rifts between families and the enmity within as well as hinting at pre-colonial lifestyles and practices. But then other parts of it veer wildly into more traditional lighter elements such as concluding the film with a sheep-shearing contest that's as predictable as the day is long.

And unfortunately, there's a wild mix of acting talents too; at times, Temuera teeters dangerously into over-acting and is not well served by the overly bombastic soundtrack of the film being cranked up at the moments of extreme drama to emphasise that bad things are about to happen. Yet, there are moments when he gives the monster some more human edges that soften his on-screen Tamihana.

If anything, Keefe's the star of the film, giving a turn that has the subtlety that's needed for Simeon, a boy on the cusp of being a man and the awkward teen struggles that come with age and the desire to become your own person.

Tamahori makes good fist of the Gisborne scenery and there are some moodily evocative shots that stand out of mist settling in the valleys and hinting at the discord ahead. But equally, there are puzzling directorial choices that frustrate. One offender is the swirling camera around the exterior of a house as the reason for the conflict is revealed. Granted, it's more about creating a mood and evoking horror, but tonally, it sits at odds with the moment it's revealed - during a shearing contest.

All in all, Mahana is at times, a muddled film which sits at odds with what it intends to do.

By mixing the light with the dark, the film's missed its chance to stamp itself irrevocably on the NZ cinematic landscape; had it been more daring, it could have been a bold and blistering film. As it is, it  sadly feels parochial and limited, when its scope should have been wider.

Oscars 2016 winners

Oscars 2016 winners


With the Oscars just hours away, here's the list of who I believe should /will take the grand prizes:

From the main categories, the winners of the 88th Academy Awards will be:

Best picture: Spotlight / The Revenant
Best director: Alejandro Innaritu, The Revenant
Best actor: Leonardo di Caprio
Best actress: Brie Larson
Best supporting actor: Sylvester Stallone
Best supporting actress: Alicia Vikander
Best original screenplay: Spotlight / Straight Outta Compton
Best adapted screenplay: The Big Short/  Room
Best animated feature: Inside Out
Best doco: Amy / Cartel Land
Best foreign language film: Son of Saul

Newstalk ZB Review - Dad's Army, The Martian and The Walk

Newstalk ZB Review - Dad's Army, The Martian and The Walk



http://www.newstalkzb.co.nz/on-air/saturday-mornings-with-jack-tame/audio/darren-bevan-dads-army-the-martian-and-the-walk/

Saturday, 27 February 2016

13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi: Film Review

13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi: Film Review


Cast: John Krasinski, James Badge Dale, Pablo Schreiber, David Denman
Director: Michael Bay


With a more restrained touch and a degree of maturity, director Michael Bay's more excessive touches appear reined in in this film based on a true story.

When a US ambassador's compound is over-run in Benghazi after several waves of terrorist attacks on September 11th, 2012, it falls to six defence military contractors to try and save the day.

But, as this sat in direct opposition to orders from their CIA chief, the men felt doing the right thing was more important than bureaucracy, and put their lives on the line for 13 hours.

With the likes of American Sniper and Lone Survivor blazing the trail for homegrown hero stories, and coupled with the master of Bayhem at the helm, you'd expect that 13 Hours would be an all guts, all glory, guns blazing type of affair.

But what Michael Bay has done - despite characterisation of the men being more than a little lacking - is craft something tense which transcends its Call Of Duty: Benghazi potential and which delivers taut suspense that's as close to enthralling as any base under siege story can match.

Sure, it hits the tropes and cliches of the genre thanks to scenes of the guys bonding and reaching out to loved ones just prior to fateful events going down as well as its occasionally cliched dialogue, but as it ratchets up to its sickening end, it remains a compelling watch.  It's largely thanks to a controlled level of chaos and a major dose of mistrust that you're never quite sure who's on the right side as the team of six snake their way through the streets - the powderkeg does blow but Bay manages to prolong it to keep you guessing where and when it will go off.

As the leads, The Office star John Krasinki (all buff and beardsy) and James Badge Dale imbue their weary contractor characters with an appeal that will see you empathising with them and hoping they make it, despite their having cursory slight back-story.

But it's Michael Bay who delivers the biggest surprise here with his usual patriotic and jingoistic fare, all wrapped in a hyper-real colour palette and complete with compulsory final shot American flag motif in place - dialled down a bit more than usual. Granted, the men hardly stand apart from each other and when the emotional moments inevitably come, it makes it hard for them to be sympathised with as you're not sure who's been taken down.


13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi may be close to war porn at times, but it never falls short of delivering a tense experience that's heart in its mouth gripping from the moment the action begins.

Rating:


Friday, 26 February 2016

Shayne and Aurox, Whiskey Foxtrot, and Kelvin unveiled

Shayne and Aurox, Whiskey Foxtrot, and Kelvin unveiled


 2K and Gearbox Software introduced Shayne and Aurox, Whiskey Foxtrot, and Kelvin, three new playable heroes for the upcoming hero-shooter Battleborn, which launches with 25 playable heroes on PS4, Xbox One and PC on May 3, 2016.  
Shayne and Aurox, Whiskey Foxtrot, and Kelvin are the weird oddities of the Battleborn heroes, and like all Battleborn, are available to play in both competitive multiplayer matches, as well as the game’s Story Mode – which can be played singleplayer, co-op up to 5 players, or 2-player splitscreen. First in the trenches, Whiskey Foxtrot is an offbeat and imperfect facsimile of a soldier. Using scavenged armor and jerry-rigged weapons, everything about Whiskey Foxtrot just seems “off,” but his homemade UPR-SL3 tactical rifle, sticky bombs, and scrap canon can help turn the tide of any battle. At first glance, Kelvin appears to be a hulking ice golem, but is in fact an entire microorganism civilization that, together, form a single sentient being that smashes, chomps and freezes its enemies for the survival of the species. Another unlikely team-up, Shayne was already a bratty teenage girl at the end of the universe with nothing to lose, but her bond with the space creature known as Aurox has made her nearly unstoppable. Joined at the hip, these symbiotic furies strive to utterly demolish their foes through a mixture of brute force and stealth.

You can read a lot more about both characters, including about how they play in-game in today’s official introduction post on the Battleborn blog: https://battleborn.com/en/news/view/en-battleborn-whiskey-foxtrot-kelvin-shayne-and-aurox-reveal/ 

Tom Clancy's The Division - Survival Guide

Tom Clancy's The Division - Survival Guide




SURVIVAL GUIDE




To view the trailer click the image below



Within the margins of this real survival guide, written before the collapse, lies a mystery— the story of a woman struggling to survive and to discover why New York City fell. Retrace her steps through the city in mid-crisis and solve her clues to reveal the key secrets at the heart of Tom Clancy’s The Division.



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