Homefront movie
7.25 out of 10
The Hunger Games: Catching Fire movie
8.75 out of 10
Disney's Frozen movie
10.0 out of 10
Delivery Man movie
6.75 out of 10
Thor
8.25 out of 10
Showing posts with label Elizabeth Olsen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elizabeth Olsen. Show all posts

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Liberal Arts

Knowledge is Sorrow

Rated: NR
Release Date: September 14, 2012
Runtime:  1 hour 37 minutes

Director: Josh Radnor
Writers: Josh Radnor
Cast:  Josh Radnor, Elizabeth Olsen, Richard Jenkins, Allison Janney, John Magaro, Zac Efron, Elizabeth Reaser


SYNOPSIS:  When 30-something Jesse returns to his alma mater for a professor's retirement party, he falls for Zibby, a college student, and is faced with a powerful attraction that springs up between them.

REVIEW: Josh Radnor, star of the CBS hit comedy How I Met Your Mother, is becoming a renaissance man with forays into writing and director feature films. In 2010, Radnor surprised at the Sundance Film Festival with HappyThankyouMorePlease where he won the Audience Award and was nominated for the Grand Jury Prize. When he finished Liberal Arts and presented it at the festival, the film was snatched up for distribution. Does triple threat writer/director/actor John Radnor serve up another hit? Let's take a look.
Thirty-something college graduate Jesse (Josh Radnor, HappyThankYouMorePlease) works at the admissions office of a New York college, an avid reader of literature and graduate of an Ohio college with a liberal arts degree. When Professor Peter Hoberg (Richard Jenkins,The Cabins in the Woods) looks to retire at Jesse's alma mater, Jesse returns to his own campus and finds himself transcending to an earlier, more knowledge-hungry, care-free time of his life. While on campus, Jesse meets 19-year-old old soul Zibby (Elizabeth Olsen, Silent House) who captures his imagination. When Jesse returns to New York, he and Zibby stay connected through hand-written letters and a burned CD of classical music that Zibby found awakened a new awareness in her during her Music Survey course. Jesse and Lizzy realize that there was a strong attraction to each other and try to figure out what to do about it.


Because in much wisdom there is much grief, and increasing knowledge ... For in much wisdom is much grief; and he who increases knowledge increases sorrow.
Ecclesiastes 1:18

Josh Radnor would be the first to tell you that he was working through something when he wrote the script for Liberal Arts. Looking to learn a lesson about the prospects of aging and of one's mortality, Radnor creates a story that is fueled from personal experience and personal growth. An alum of Kenyan College in real life, Radnor did take a real trip to his alma mater and realized that he had matured to a point where interactions with the younger generation still attending college would seem suspect.

Liberal Arts is a romantic dramedy in the best sense of the genre, the script following the trials and tribulations of Jesse by using several perspectives and opinions to light the way. Jesse interacts with the 'end of the road' 
Professor Peter Hoberg who wants to escape the prison that a few decades of working at the college has made it for him. During his wanderings through the campus, Jesse also encounters a young student Dean (John Magaro, The Box) who is both emotionally distant and a kindred spirit who enjoys the same book that shaped his own younger mind. Jesse can relate to both his own youth in the form of Dean, as well as his mounting fears that his second favorite college professor confides to him concerning his impending retirement.

Smartly written with poignant prose and dialogue, Radnor has mastered translating the written words into compelling dialogue. A perfect example of Radnor's craft coming to life can be encapsulated in a cafe bench debate between Jesse and Zibby over the pros and cons of 'Solar Sun, Lunar Moon', a campy vampire romance novel, and its place in literature. Is literature relegated to prose that compels and enriches, or is it something that you can enjoy just as fun? The conundrum that Jesse poses about literature in its totality is that 'literature is created to combat loneliness', but the more you read the less you exist in the real world.

Centered around the struggle of the yearnings of the idealized past, the drifting wayward existence of the the present, and the fears of an unknown future, Josh Radnor's story is made all the better with stellar performances by Radnor, the stunning and enthralling Elizabeth Olsen, and Richard Jenkins. Add in characters like a Romantic Literature Professor Judith Fairfield played with grace and diction by Allison Janney (The Help), a young spiritual guru Nat played without irony by Zac Efron (The Lucky One), 
young troubled student Dean played by John Magaro, and a wistful book store employee Ana played by Elizabeth Reaser (The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 1) - plus the Ohio college campus as an Autumn oasis of enlightenment and higher learning - and you have a refreshing, intelligent film worth viewing.

Liberal Arts may be an independent film, but ranks high on the list of films with something to say and a beautiful way to say it. From the new perspectives found through a pair of headphones and a burned CD, to the lost art of hand-written letters, to the influences of the written word on the expectations of real life, Liberal Arts is measured by more than degrees. 

WORTH:  Matinee or DVD

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Silent House

Continuous Tension and Terror

Rated: R Disturbing violent content and terror.
Release Date: March 9, 2012
Runtime: 1 hr 26 mins

Director:  Chris Kentis, Laura Lau
Writers: Laura Lau, based on the film by Gustavo Hernández
Cast:  Elizabeth Olsen, Adam trese, Eric Sheffer Stevens, Julia Taylor Ross, Adam Barnett, Haley Murphy


SYNOPSIS: While clearing out their belongings and making repairs at their lakeside retreat cottage, a father, his daughter, and her uncle encounter strange noises inside the boarded up house. Unable to make contact with anyone outside the house, things good from bad to worse as the noises become something more sinister.

REVIEW: Chris Kentis, writer and directer of Open Water, reteams with Open Water cinematographer and producer Laura Lau. Taking a screenplay from Lau based on the original film La casa muda (The Silent House) by Gustavo Hernández which, in turn, is based on a true event from 1940's Uruguay. Filmed as a single take camera shot for the entirety of the film, Silent House is a technical achievement worthy of discussion. The real question is whether the film holds up as a horror suspense thriller. 
Sarah (Elizabeth Olsen, Martha Marcy May Marlene) tries to help her father John (Adam Trese, 40 Days and 40 Nights) and uncle Peter (Eric Sheffer Stevens, Julie & Julia) by packing up boxes and filling garbage bags with their belongings from a lakeside retreat house that had fallen into disrepair  and endured acts of vandalism. With all of the windows boarded up with plywood and all but one entrance padlocked, the inside of the house is dim, dusty and victim to water damage and mold. When Peter leaves to go to town, Sarah is visited by a strange girl her own age, Sophia (Julia Taylor Ross, Rookie Blue) that she doesn't remember knowing. Later, she starts hearing creaks and banging from the second floor of the house, prompting her to persuade her father to reluctantly check out the upstairs rooms. When the noises quickly move from harmless house settling to a possible shadowy intruder with a perchance for a dangerous and violent game of cat and mouse, Sarah struggles against her fears and panic to protect her father and keep herself alive.

Starting as a shaky down-panning shot of Sarah sitting on a outcropping of rock in the lake, the cinematography follows Sarah as she walks back to the house and meets up with her father at the house's driveway. They move inside the house with the camera following close behind. After a couple brief stints of establishing dialogue between John, Sarah and Peter, the film quickly moves on to disturbing noises that set off a chain reaction of events that test Sarah's limits of inner strength and sense of survival. The difference between the camera work in Silent House and some of the other more recent popular horror suspense films like Paranormal Activity 3 and The Devil Inside is that the camera is not part of the story. Shot in the third person instead of the first person where the cameras and cameraman are actual characters in the film, Silent House uses the camera as a floating historian of the event as it follows Sarah through her eighty-five minute ordeal in high psychological terror. Expertly shot as a single take that has not a single edit (although there are two moments where edits could have occurred, including a harrowing attempt at escape through a padlocked cellar door and during a scary blackout with only a Polaroid camera flash for illumination), Silent House raises the tension levels quickly and keeps them elevated throughout the rest of the film.

Elizabeth Olsen, younger sister to Mary-Kate and Ashley, stepped out from behind her famous and wealthy silbings' shadows with a notable performance as Martha in Martha Marcy May Marlene in 2011 and continues with a gripping performance as Sarah in Silent House that establishes her as a young actress to keep an eye on. As the story unfolds, Olsen, in real time, embodies the terror and paranoia that accompanies a locked house with one or more menacing interlopers bent of mayhem and violence. The movie is essentially a one-woman show, with the camera following Sarah faithfully while losing sight of both Peter and John throughout the tale. The physical and emotional toll of the performance surely added to the grueling and edgy final result on screen.

For the true fans of the genre, Silent House is a cross between Liv Tyler and Scott Speedman's The Strangers and Cécile De France's French import High Tension. I certainly appreciated the technical efforts displayed in the film, as well as the finished product brought to full realization. Several well placed surprising moments made many in the audience scream outright, while others were mildly amused by the film and the outspoken fellow moviegoers. Silent House is worth a look if you are truly a completist for horror suspense movies.

Silent House is a claustrophobic, edge of your seat, cat and mouse, thrill ride full of good scary surprising scares, twists and creeps, corner stoned by a superior performance by Olsen. As Olsen's Sarah falls down the rabbit hole, we are swept along to watch her descent into possible madness and doom. Just be sure to remember your own way out of the house. 

WORTH: Matinee or DVD (for the fans)