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 Emily Blunt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Emily Blunt. Show all posts

Friday, September 28, 2012

Looper

A Strange Paradox

★ ★ ★ 1/2 out of 5 buckets | Matinee or DVD


Rated: R Some sexuality and nudity, language, drug content and strong violence
Release Date: September 28, 2012
Runtime: 1 hour 59 minutes

Director: Rian Johnson
Writers: Rian Johnson
Cast: Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Bruce Willis, Emily Blunt, Paul Dano, Noah Segan, Piper Perabo, Jeff Daniels, Pierce Gagnon, Garret Dillahunt




SYNOPSIS: In the near future, time travel is both possible and illegal, reserved for only the most influential crime organizations. In the closer future assassins called loopers kill and clean up the victims sent back in time for disposal. When Looper Joe is faced with 'closing the loop' on his own future self, he is forced to face the wrath of his employers and his future self bent on trying to save his own life.

REVIEW: Writer/director Rian Johnson, known for his first feature Brick and his follow-up The Brothers Bloom, reunites with his Brick star Joseph Gordon-Levitt for an attempt at a time traveling epic that turns the linear notion of history on its head
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In the near future, Joe (Joseph Gordon-Levitt, The Dark Knight Rises) works as a killer, a Looper, for a local crime syndicate. A Looper is given instructions to wait at a specific time and place outside of the city to kill people who are sent from the future for elimination and disposal. Time travel has been created thirty years farther in the future, and immediately outlawed - only used by the most influential organized criminals. Loopers are paid by Abe (Jeff Daniels, Good Night, and Good Luck), who is from the future himself and sent back in time to create the Looper program for his bosses in the future. When Joe's fellow Looper Seth (Paul Dano, Cowboys and Aliens) realizes that he is about to 'close the loop' on his own future self, he learns that a mysterious figure in the future named the Rainmaker is dismantling all of the Loopers, and has taken over all of the organized crime rackets. When Joe faces is own experience of 'closing the loop' on his own future self (Bruce Willis, Red), the younger Joe fails to eliminate his older version. By not carrying out the assignment, younger Joe suddenly finds himself the target of Abe and his Gats led by Kid Blue (Noah Segan, The Brothers Bloom), and by the older Joe. Realizing that the older Joe is desperate to regain his life and wife by hunting down and killing the child who may become the Rainmaker, the younger Joe tries to both protect said child Cid (Pierce Gagnon, The Crazies) and his mother Sara (Emily Blunt, The Five-Year Engagement) and eliminate his future self to 'close the loop'.

The genre that spawns stories of time travel has a very fickle audience. Successful entries into its folds includes Gregory Hoblit's Frequency, J.J Abrams' prequel/reboot/sequel Star Trek, and Robert Zemeckis' Back to the Future. But for every perfectly scripted film, there are numerous others that miss the mark completely, either due to poor story or even worse execution. We could debate and go round and round about the dizzying effects of time travel, time-continuum, reality paradoxes, the cause and effect on concurrent versions of self, and more, but at the end of the day, the strength of these types of films hinge of the 'reality' of the physics being used.

When Seth's older self gets away from him and his blunderbuss, Seth faces the the wrath of Abe and his Gats for failing to carry out his assignment. In order to rectify the situation, Seth is slowly amputated a finger at a time, causing his older self to instantly lose the same digit or appendage immediately as an old scarred over wound. Using this fundamental space-time wrinkle of physics, writer/director Johnson sets the scientific stage for everything that comes after. Adding in references to discrepant cars with piping coming out of the tailpipes and dusty solar panels mounted on the hoods and roofs, massive over-population resulting in vagrant wars and destitution, a slick hovering future that still is not in the hands of the everyman, and a rampant development of low-grade telekinetic ability, Johnson paints a future that is not utterly bleak, but still has not solved the world's problems.

Bruce Willis continues with his capable, but dogged tortured man from the future, reminiscent of his performance in 12 Monkeys. Rian Johnson's go-to actor, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, plays the barely blemished mirrored version of Joe, perfecting the tone and manners of his older version. In the diner scene where the older Joe tries to explain what is at stake for the both of them, Gordon-Levitt as the younger Joe responds with a familiar gravelly whisper that could have been spoken by a younger Willis himself. Emily Blunt plays the protective and hurt Sara, her only job to protect and raise the young Cid. Pierce Gagnon, who plays Cid, steals his scenes with an innocence nearly lost. Noah Segan as the bumbling, power-hungry, approval-mongering Kid Blue is a successful source of comic relief and simmering danger, while his time-traveling boss Abe, played by Jeff Daniels, speaks in an authoritative softness that betrays a glimpse of the future that he knows all too well.

Joseph Gordon-Levitt is the driving force in Looper. While he and Willis share the burden of screen-time, Gordon-Levitt's square jaw, piercing eyes, and practiced mannerisms are proof that he is no longer the little kid from 3rd Rock from the Sun. Even through the slow parts of the film, Gordon-Levitt is wonderful to watch. Only Pierce Gagnon's Cid gives Gordon-Levitt a run for his money.

Looper is a slick, intelligent film that should please the genre audience. Only one moment of space-time uncertainty at the end distracts from the continuity of the story (but only the over-thinking theater goer will jump to the wrong conclusion), but the tale-telling is smart and cool. Gordon-Levitt narrates the story like Harrison Ford from Blade Runner, making me wonder what future actually came first. 

Thursday, April 26, 2012

The Five-Year Engagement

Four Funerals and a Wedding

Rated: R Sexual content and language throughout
Release Date: April 27, 2012
Runtime:  2 hrs 4 mins

Director: Nicolas Stoller
Writers: Jason Segel, Nicolas Stoller
Cast: Jason Segel, Emily Blunt, Chris Pratt, Allison Brie, Mimi Kennedy, David Payer, Rhys Ifans, Kevin Hart


SYNOPSIS: A year after they met, Tom Solomon proposes marriage to Violet Barnes. As they try to prepare for their wedding, obstacles keep getting the way of their engagement.

REVIEW: Nicolas Stoller has been busy as of late, directing films like Get Him to the Greek and Forgetting Sarah Marshall, and performing writing duties for films including Yes Man and The Muppets. Partnering again with writer and actor Jason Segel (The Muppets), they both share writing credits for The Five-Year Engagement, while Stoller helms the film behind the monitors. 
In San Francisco in New Year's Eve, one year after they first met, sous chef Tom Solomon (Jason Segel, The Muppets) clumsily proposes to his academic girlfriend Violet Barnes (Emily Blunt, Salmon Fishing in the Yemen). Now engaged, they start to plan their wedding. When Violet gets a 2-year post doc position at the University of Michigan Psychology Department run by Winton Childs (Rhys Ifans, Anonymous), Tom gives up his promising career to be with her near campus in Ann Arbor, as well as agreeing to postpone the wedding date until they get settled. One thing after another gets in the way of their wedding plans, forcing them to reschedule their reservations and reevaluate their relationship.

The Five-Year Engagement is a hilarious film with a sweet story along with it. Jason Segel has proven he can hang with the big boys with his comedy chops and writing skills. With 
The Muppets and Get Him to the Greek under his belt for his writing resume and CBS's How I Met Your Mother to hone his comedy chops, Segel is perched on the edge of romantic comedy stardom if The Five-Year Engagement does well. Emily Blunt, fresh off her romantic turn as Harriet in Salmon Fishing in the Yemen and Matt Damon's muse in The Adjustment Bureau, brings a gorgeous smile, a fine British accent, and her own sense of comedy and romance to her role as Violet. Segel and Blunt are center stage with all of the angst that wedding preparations can cause, but they are helped along the way by a  cadre of supporting cast that fill in the story nicely.Chris Pratt (Moneyball) plays Tom's goofball chef friend Alex who manages to say all the wrong and most inappropriate things in support of his friend. Violet's sister Suzie (Alison Brie, Scream 4) manages to beat Violet to the punch in most respects with funny results, and also manages to prepare a memorable engagement speech. Violet's post doc friends include masturbation obsessed Doug (Kevin Hart, Think Like A Man), gossipy Vaneetha (Mindy Kaling, No Strings Attached), and off-beat Ming (Randall Park, Larry Crowne) round out Violet's psychology ring under the tuteluge of Dr. Childs. Tom also has his own group of U of M friends, including sweater knitting Bill (Chris Parnell, 21 Jump Street) and sandwich shop pickle expert Tarquin (Brian Posehn, Sex Drive). Hart is a little understated compared to his Cedric role in Think Like A Man, Kaling is a clone of The Office's Kelly Kapoor, Parnell is a montage of several roles he has played in skits or other comedies, and Posehn is always a little weird. The real break-outs are Parks and Recreation's Chris Pratt recreating his moron role with great success, and Alison Brie tacking on an accent and adding great timing to her sisterly character. I guess Mad Men and Community have has a positive effect on her. And play special attention to her and Blunt's rendition of a coupe of Sesame Street characters.

In this tale, the comedy is better then the romance. Jason Segel knows how to work his way around the funny bone. Strange settings and props, including many parts of venison and the beast it comes from, make for silly situations. On the romantic side, Segel is indeed a capable actor but Blunt rules the roost with her smiles and skills. Segel and writer/director Stolling balance the dramatics and the funny digs in perfect harmony, with a slight leaning toward the gut-busting versus the eye-gushing.

The Five-Year Engagement is an obvious title for the Segel and Blunt film. It could have been called Four Funerals and a Wedding but I think that parody title was already taken. You will laugh out loud quite a bit, but may not shed the tear you want to for the typical romantic comedy. Overall, the story works, the actors excel at their craft, and the audience will be engaged for the 124 minute film. The time will not feel as long as a five-year engagement, but you wonder how it will ever work out in the end, if at all.

WORTH: Matinee or Rental


Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Salmon Fishing In The Yemen

Faith and Fish

Rated: PG-13   Brief language, some violence and sexual content.
Release Date: March 9, 2012
Runtime: 1 hr 51 mins

Director:  Lasse Hallström
Writers: Simon Beaufoy, novel by Paul Torday
Cast:  Ewan McGregor, Emily Blunt, Amr Waked, Kristen Scott Thomas, Rachael Stirling, Tom Mison


SYNOPSIS:  When a sheik dreams of bringing fly fishing to the wadis of the Highlands of Yemen, a fisheries scientist find himself reluctantly involved in the project. Along the way, dreams, politics and romance go through their own upstream battles in order to make the project a reality.

REVIEW: Based on the 2006 novel by Paul Torday, Salmon Fishing in the Yemen is a political satire that intertwines fly fishing, the Middle East, and the art of political spin management into a romantic comedy drama. Helmed by Lasse Hallstrom, a director of most of the existing ABBA videos and of such acclaimed films as the 1999 The Cider House Rules and the 2000 Chocolat, the 'Salmon Fishing in the Yemen' novel is adapted from Slumdog Millionaire screenwriter Simon Beaufoy.
As the British armed services enter into the fray in Afghanistan, political public relations specialist Patricia Maxwell (Kristin Scott Thomas, The Other Boleyn Girl) looks for a 'feel good' story from the Middle East to strengthen the appearance of Anglo-Middle Eastern relations. Coming across the story of a Sheikh (Amr Waked, Contagion) looking to create a fly fishing salmon running river experience in the Highlands of Yemen, Maxwell tasks fisheries expert Dr. Fred Jones (Ewan McGregor, Haywire) to theorize if it would be possible to create an environment in the Highlands of Yemen for salmon to run and spawn. The Sheikh, based on Jones' wild speculation of 50 million dollars (or more) to Fitzharris and Price Investment House project managing assistant Harriet Chetwode-Talbot (Emily Blunt, The Adjustment Bureau), deposits the necessary money for the project to begin. An avid fly fisherman, Jones still has little confidence that his plan has any chance for success, but the Sheikh asks him to keep an open mind and have faith in a project that the Sheikh sees as a modern benefit for his people.  

Lasse Hallstrom treats the adaptation of Torday's novel by Beaufoy with grace and experience. The story is both fun and serious. McGregor's Jones is a man exacerbated by and quick to point out the absurdity of this project. While Jones is forced to participate in a cause he doesn't believe will succeed, the British government he works for, headed by spin doctor Maxwell, vows to move heaven and earth - or at least 10,000 British water salmon - for the sake of a positive spin photo opportunity for the country's Prime Minister and his cabinet. But as Jones' crazy plans start to show promise, he and Ms. Chetwode-Talbot start to believe in the vision that the Sheikh holds so much faith in.

Throughout the film, faith and fish take center stage. When the Sheikh asks Jones to keep an open mind, Jones' response is that he believes in science. When Jones scoffs at the Sheikh's comparison of religion with fly fishing, the Sheikh asks him why he would spend dozens or hundreds of hours fishing with patience and blind faith that he may land a fish on the end of the hook at the end of the adventure. Where is the scientific benefit in the lost hours angling in a river, the Sheikh asks. At the end of the day, will faith - coupled with science - prevail in success?

While the spin doctors maneuver through the political waters, and the scientists figure out how to maintain cool temperatures and proper oxygenation of water stemming from arid aquifers behind a dam, Jones finds himself in the midst of a failing marriage to a wife Mary (Rachael Stirling, Centurion) and Harriet finds herself agonizing over the MIA status of her new boyfriend deployed to the sandy and volatile Afghanistan region. Working side by side, Fred and Jones develop a friendship greater than their status as colleagues.

Shot on location in England and in Morocco standing in for Yemen, Lasse Hallström captures the essence and grandeur of each locale. Straight-laced Jones conforms to the rigid angles and concrete of the British cityscape, walking in step with all of the other government employee drones, bathed in modernism and cold blues. In contrast, the warmth of the Yemen deserts, the greens of the high grasses and the earthy tones of the highlands make the land's Sheikh a man to be envied to a degree.

Salmon Fishing in the Yemen is a heartwarming and uplifting tale of faith, self-discovery, and perseverance. Political PR reps look for opportunities. Others make their own opportunities, either through forced expertise or through faith and finance. Like the art of fly fishing, the story is elegant and graceful, filled with long-reaching subplots and the light fun whispers of the flick in the casting of the line. Salmon Fishing in the Yemen is a film that, in the end, is very alluring.

WORTH: Matinee or Rental

Sunday, March 6, 2011

The Adjustment Bureau

More Drama Than Sci-Fi
[Matt Damon, Emily Blunt, John Slattery, Terence Stamp, Anthony Mackie, Michael Kelly]


image from freemoviedb.com

RANT: The Adjustment Bureau was on both mine and my housemate's list. After standing in line for popcorn and soda, I met her in the theater. She was a row up from the crosswalk and railing. She stated that she was not happy with the seat selection since all of the seats behind the rail were taken. Sometimes, getting to the theater 30 minutes early is a blessing.

SYNOPSIS: A New York congressman loses his election but finds his soul mate. Afterward, shadowy men in hats continue to keep them apart.

First time director but proven screenwriter of The Bourne Ultimatum and Ocean's Twelve, George Nolfi adapts a short story, Adjustment Team, by Philip K. Dick. Based on their previous work together, Matt Damon seemed to be the obvious choice for Nolfi's freshman directing effort. And like Damon's Clint Eastwood directed Hereafter, The Adjustment Bureau is more drama than science fiction.

Following on themes from Total Recall, television's Fringe and many other of Philip K. Dick's stories, The Adjustment Bureau deals with memories, watchers, and our supposed free will versus unknown forces that continue to push and alter our lives toward an already defined destiny. For some reason, any group of individuals tasked with steering humanity toward specific fates must have fedoras as part of their company uniform. But at least in The Adjustment Bureau, the hats serve a bigger purpose than being retro cool.

Matt Damon as New York congressman David Norris driven for greatness and for positive change. Damon is solid as always, able to switch from comedies like Stuck on You to serious dramas like the aforementioned Hereafter and The Adjustment Bureau. Enter Emily Blunt as Elise Sellas, the woman who captivates Norris on the eve of his defeat for a New York Senate seat and stays in Norris' thoughts long after. They have an easy likable chemistry. Their first meetings seemed forced - until the audience and the case workers of the bureau find out why Norris and Sellas remain so attracted to each other, and why chance seems so counter to "the plan". The case workers, ambitious Richardson (aptly used Mad Men John Slattery), sympathetic James (Eagle Eye and The Hurt Locker's Anthony Mackie), and career heavy Thompson (Terence Stamp) make every move obvious, but shrouded in mystery.

The commercials steer us to believe that the movie is all chases, escapes through doors that lead to venues unlikely to be found, and the conspiracy of the sinister company men trying to tear Norris and Sellas apart. But much slow drama is put in place before the movie switches over the sci-fi suspense thrilling of it all. The Adjustment Bureau is smart, entertaining, well-written and well-acted. I expect nothing less, and receive nothing less, from Matt Damon. But for the suspense and sci-fi fans like myself, the film needs to be adjusted more to what the trailers promised.

Worth: Matinee or DVD

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