Thursday, November 27, 2008

We Now Return to your Regularly Scheduled Reviewer in: Disney's New Dog, and the Return of Theater Magic

I'm back! It’s the Return of the King! And I am Aragorn, wow that's incredibly boastful. Anyway I wanna thank my buddy Dave and my correspondent Pandachi, I believe she will be back in the future, freshmen have more free time, but let’s get on with the show.

This week's (as if I update that often) feature is a non-Pixar animated feature from Disney, Bolt. I must say I had high hopes considering the last non-Pixar Disney animated movie Meet the Robinsons was incredibly good, and while this is not nearly as full of laughs it is freakin' adorable and has some decent action for the childrens.

Let’s get down to business. Bolt is a dog, but not just any dog a super powered dog, with laser vision, hyper speed, and a sonic bark, Thursdays at 8 this fall umm... well its Disney, so its gotta be ABC. Bolt ( John Travolta, Yeah I'm gonna start linking actors to IMDB.) and his sidekick Penny, or is it the other way around, must defeat the evil Dr. Calico, or as Bolt knows him, the green-eyed man. However, all of this is merely the work of writes. Actors and staff on his television show. Bolt is unaware that he is on a TV show and thinks that the forces of evil are really out to get Penny and that all his super powers are factual. When not on the set Penny (Miley Cyrus) wishes she could treat Bolt like a real dog, but is unable too because it will blow the brilliant method acting of the dog. The director explains everything is done for Bolt's sake, no second takes, every episode is a brilliantly orchestrated trick on the dog, seems kinda cruel if you ask me. Bolt is sorta like The Truman Show but with a dog, but only before the plot starts. Soon, Mindy the Network Executive tells the people on the show that adult males between the ages of 18 and 36 are not watching so the decide to do a cliff-hanger, clearly this was the shows first season... yes There's Bolt stuff everywhere, buses, billboards, even the studio's water tower has bolt on it, but plot conveniences aside..

Bolt is convinced that Penny is kidnapped by the Green-Eyed Man, and goes to save her only to get knocked out and shipped to New York, thus setting up the makings of a road movie, so we got that goin '. Bolt know needs to return to California to 'save penny' but he needs some help from the minions of the Green-Eyed Man so a movie about a dog needs a cat, enter Mittens (Susie Essman) a stray cat who ends up being tied to Bolt, both literally and figuratively, and is forced to take him across the country, thanks to a waffle house map. (Waffles, is there anything they can't do?). Along the way they meet Rhino (Mark Walton), a couch potato of a hamster who happens to be a hung Bolt fan boy, think Star Trek. Along the way Bolt finds out that he is not in fact super powered and must come to terms with this. There is a nice montage with just about the dumbest country song I ever heard: "Your home is the best for you because it's yours". Eventually Mittens attempts to convince Bolt to stay in Vegas because of her back story, but Bolt must go back to his beloved Penny. Eventually Bolt gets to do some real Heroics when things go wrong on the set of his TV show. In the end Bolt accepts his average life and becomes grateful for his new friends as well as quitting the show and living in the country with Penny, Mittens, and Rhino.

As far as the movie goes its pretty good as long as you are willing to suspend your disbelief that they have to do constant perfect takes and smoothly transitions everything all for the sake of the dog's acting, kinda redonkulous (first time I ever heard that in a movie). you also have to think that some person somewhere in their travels would think 'hey that's the dog from the TV show' or 'I should help that stray dog, find it's owner and what not' but the questions just needed be applied when the target audience is below teenage level. There's also the sleaziest, slimiest, most jack-hole agent I have ever seen in a movie, and I feel he did not get a proper comeuppance, although he does get one.

This is a movie more targeted towards children, that's to say it isn't as cross generational as say most of the Pixar films, but it’s a good movie for children. It does not pander or dance around injuries in fact its deals directly with Bolt's bleeding and injuries even if they don't make it at all graphic. The climactic scene isn't a quick easy save, in fact the main characters pretty much almost die. The movie is about growing up and accepting that sometimes things aren't what they seem and you just have to deal with it.

All in all I have to give Bolt a
7.7 probably due to my age I might not have enjoyed it as much as a 10 or 12 year old. Bolt is a movie for the whole family it’s enjoyable and fun and just adorable as hell.


Now a word about 3D:


I saw Bolt in "Disney Digital 3-D" which is the same price as a regular ticket but available at certain times and not every theater has it. I was handed the glasses by the podium usher and they where NOT cheap cardboard crap, they where fairly inexpensive plastic and there was a bin where you could drop them off to recycle them, but you could also keep them as I did. This doesn’t mean someone else will sue the same glasses just, recycling as in reusing the materials. I went in thinking that "Disney Digital 3-D" was just a gimmick used to sell tickets, and it kinda is, but it’s a good one. Watching the movie in 3D adds a magic to the movie going experience that it has been losing thanks to home theater and hi-def. You don't get the 3D when you rent the movie and watch it at home so it really makes it fun to go to the movies and get a separate experience than you would at home. There was a few times that it really got me and I jumped. The good thing about a normal movie in the "Disney Digital 3-D" is that you aren't going to get stupid shots where they meaninglessly throw something in your face just to use the 3D effect. I highly recommend trying it with your kids and it will add just a bit of the old movie magic.

Friday, November 21, 2008

Edward Cullen Is This Generation's Mr. Darcy And I Have The Fangirls to Prove It

WHO: Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattinson, and a bunch of people that have been in tons of stuff, but we really don't know who they are. Except for Anna Kendrick: Camp is pretty much one of my favorite movies.

WHAT: If you haven't heard of Twilight by now, you are probably living in on of the underground villages from Gurren Laggan. Actually,no,I'm pretty sure they've all heard of Twilight,too

FULL DISCLOSURE: I am a HUGE Twilight fan. I picked up the first book more than a year before New Moon (that's the second book for the uninitiated) was released; I was instantly hooked and I've never looked back. I've followed this movie through every aspect of it's production: Back when Paramount's MTV Films had it and we were worried they would mess it up, through the lapse of that contract when we were all worried there would never be a movie, to Summit Entertainment's acquisition of the film rights, to casting news and first cast pics, and beyond. Pretty much for the better part of a year. So needless to say, I was expecting a lot from this movie.

OVERALL: I LIKED IT. The cast and crew worked with what they had and made a pretty faithful adaptation. And they didn't have a lot. The budget for this movie was $37-40 million. In comparison, the first Harry Potter movie had a budget of $150 million. Sure, it wasn't perfect, but find me a movie adaptation that is.

That said...

LIKES:

• THE. SOUNDTRACK. WAS. AWESOME. One of the best song-compilation soundtracks I've ever heard.

• The Cullens: I want me some more Cullens. Especially for the fantastic Elizabeth Reaser who shines as Esme and Ashley Greene who is adorable as Alice. And Kellan Lutz was Emmett.

• All the added stuff: I think that the little bits that screenwriter Melissa Rosenberg added depth to the supporting cast and made for some humorous moments.

• The supporting cast: The actors breathed life into characters that are a little too in the background in the book. I knew people like them in my high school. It was nice to see. Also, major kudos to Billy Burke for turning Charlie from "Bella's Dad" to a fully formed person.

DISLIKES:

• My absolute biggest problem with the movie is the end. And it's not the fact that they changed it:


SPOILER WARNING!

My problem with the ending isn't so much the fact that Victoria is there glaming it up, it's the fact that EDWARD COULDN'T HEAR HER THOUGHTS. Cuz Victoria would have to be spewing some pretty nasty thoughts. WHY DOESN'T HE HEAR HER?!?!

END OF SPOILER WARNING


• Edward's "gift": The special abilities that Edward and his "sister" Alice have are major components of their character. I wish they had gotten more attention.

• Jacob's wig. I cannot express in words how much I hate that thing they put on Taylor Lautner's head.

• Various facial expressions. They know who they are.


CAN'T DECIDE:

• The seemingly controversial sparkle: I didn't hate it. It wasn't that bad.

• I missed seeing Edward drive his "special occasion" Aston Martin. But I got my fill of black Aston Martins in Quantum of Solace so it's OK.

CONCLUSION: I saw Twilight at a midnight showing and again the next day (Saturday). I have to say that it actually was better the second time. Without the fangirls screaming and the over-arching worry that the next moment would horribly mess something up, I was able to enjoy a movie based off one of my favorite book series. I realized after the second viewing that it would probably be somewhat confusing for someone that hasn't read the books. But they set out to make a movie for the fans and I think they succeeded.

RATING: 9

Friday, November 14, 2008

Guest review! Quantum of Solace

“Don’t worry,” I said to the young woman who I had just made acquaintances hours before, “Bond movies hardly ever tie in to the previous film.” This was of course said to help coax her to go out to see a midnight showing of Quantum of Solace with a couple people I met a few weeks back. Of course, that usual truth of the Bond series was shattered within the first ten minutes of the film. I won’t give away any details, but yes; Quantum of Solace’s plot is heavily mired in the fact that VESPER IS BLOODY DEAD GET OVER IT BOND *ahem* excuse me. So yes, Bond is back, and this time, he’s back with a vengeance.

So the basics of the film are as follows: Bond needs to figure out who part of the conspirators that lead to Vesper’s death. This shady group apparently has eyes and ears everywhere and is out for the usual things; money, world domination, etc. Except this time, instead of threatening the world with giant lasers or hijacking nukes, they’re taking over the world with their shady group politics, coups, and resource control. Dominic Greene, CEO of Greene Planet, a supposed eco friendly conservationist group that is a front for more insidious dealings, is our main villain. He is apparently a high ranking member of… Bloody hell I’m sick of calling it ‘shady group’. Let’s just call it SPECTRE (because we all know that’s exactly where this is going. Queue Ernst Stavro Blofeld and be done with it already).

So, now for the nitty gritty; Greene’s part of SPECTRE and Bond is trying to catch him and his conspirators in the act. Bond does have a few clever tricks up his sleeve, seeing as how he doesn’t ever seem to be as well equipped as he once was. Our current incarnation of Bond is very quick on his feet when it comes to uncovering these plots. He doesn’t really ever have a plan nowadays. He relies mostly on his quick wits and his enemies idiocies, which works for the tones of these films. Bond’s spying is very fast paced and tense thanks to these measures, since in order to listen in on SPECTRE’s conversation Bond can no longer pull out his handy-dandy Q Labs listening device implanted in his shoe.

Here’s a rundown of the support characters. Felix Leiter returns (as he does in at least half of the bond films), which is a welcome reprieve from that idiotic American stereotype goody goody Jack Wade (who’s portrayer, Joe Don Baker coincidently played the villain Brad Whitaker two Bond films before Golden Eye… way to go casting department). Felix actually gets down and dirty in the field this time, slumming it up in Bolivia with his corrupt senior agent whose name I forgot to bother to care about because in all honesty generic corrupt American agents are a dime a dozen these days. Bond’s lady friend this time around is Camille Montes, a lovely half Russian half Bolivian whose father was killed by one of the minor villains in the rouges gallery that appears in this film. She’s a very feisty young woman who has her own agenda and reasons for helping Bond, unlike most Bond girls who just help Bond out because he’s hot. Judy Dench is back as M, and for some reason or another she tends to visit the field more often than the head of a super secret Government organization should. Rounding out the cast is generic female agent who Bond sleeps with whose cover name happens to be the highly original ‘Strawberry Fields,’ Greene’s balding sidekick who wears a bad toupee, and the surprising return of ex-MI6 agent René Mathis to the field.

If there’s one thing that bothers me about this film, it’s all the great things that it’s missing. Where were the charming one liners? Where was bond’s witty rapport with the main villain of the film? What happened to Bond’s classy demeanor? And where is bloody Q, and his labs with all of their tomfoolery and gadgetry? So much of what made the classic films ‘classic’ is missing in this adaptation. Bond has been turned from gentleman adventurer to a rough-and-tumble savant with a short fuse, mostly for the amusement of our ADD riddled generation. While these new bond films have actually been quite good for action flicks, they are missing the certain je ne sais quoi that truly makes a Bond film the class act staple it’s been for over 40 years.
While Quantum of Solace is visually stunning, fast paced, and has a compelling and quite engaging storyline, it’s missing all of the charming wit and over the top acts of villainy, (not to mention exploding cars. If a car goes over a cliff in a Bond movie, it’s supposed to explode like the doors were made out of nitro glycerin damn it!), that have made Bond films so great over the years. At least we got a few good one liners out of Casino Royale.

That said, I give the movie an 7.5

Don’t get me wrong, it’s a solid film, but it just doesn’t have what it takes in terms of memorable moments and witty dialogue to be as highly esteemed as its predecessors. I guess the only thing left to do now is make that Martini recipe they mentioned in the film… Three measures of gin, one of vodka, half a measure of Kina Lillet. Shake it very well until it's ice-cold, and then add a large thin slice of lemon peel. What was it called again?

DAMN YOU VESPER!!!!
-Lawther