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 Gerard Butler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gerard Butler. Show all posts

Monday, March 18, 2013

Olympus Has Fallen

ACTION/ADVENTURE, SUSPENSE/THRILLER

It's Already Done

8.0 out of 10 | Movie or DVD

Rated: R Language throughout and strong violence.
Release Date: March 22, 2013
Runtime: 2 hours 0 minutes

Director: Antoine Fuqua
Writers: Creighton Rottenberger, Katrin Benedikt
Cast: Gerard Butler, Aaron Eckhart, Finley Jacobsen, Dylan McDermott, Rick Yune, Morgan Freeman, Angela Bassett, Melissa Leo, Cole Hauser, Phil Austin



SYNOPSIS: Disgraced former Presidential guard Mike Banning finds himself trapped inside the White House in the wake of a terrorist attack; using his inside knowledge, Banning works with national security to rescue the President from his kidnappers.

REVIEW: Shooter and Brooklyn Finest director Antoine Fuqua, known for fine drama and action, raises the stakes with a presidential assault of the senses. Taking the fight to the White House are novice writers Katrin Benedikt and Creighton Rothenberger. Can Gerard Butler regain some of his action roots as a disgraced secret service agent?


Mike Banning (Gerard Butler, Playing for Keeps) is attached to United States President Benjamin Asher's (Aaron Ekhart, Battle: Los Angeles) Secret Service detail. While at Camp David with the First Lady Margaret (Ashley Judd, Dolphin Tale) and their young son Conner (Finley Jacobsen, Marmaduke), the First Family travels to a black tie holiday party. Enroute, an accident and a quick decision by Banning makes it impossible for him to continue on the Presidential detail for Asher. 18 months later Banning suffers at a desk job at the Treasury department with the perk of a commanding view of the White House. During a South Korean delegation visit to the White House, a massive airstrike and infantry incursion forces the President, Vice President Charlie Rodriguez (Phil Austin, The Final Destination), and Secretary of Defense Ruth McMillian (Melissa Leo, Flight) into a bunker under the White House. Now trapped as a hostage, Asher and his staff are forced to give up sensitive codes to an insulated system named Cerberus. When the security of the White House is completely breached only Mike Banning is still standing to try and save the day.

Gerard Butler, playing characters in a string of decent to good romantic comedies, returns to more action-packed role as former Secret Service agent Mike Banning. Not since Gamer has Butler been in a film filled with so much fire power. The change of pace suits him. A cross between Steven Seagal's Under Siege hero Casey Ryback and Bruce Willis' Die Hard cop John McClane - and even one of a number of 1980s Chuck Norris flicks like Invasion USA or Delta Force - Gerard Butler seems to have the right stuff.

Director Antoine Fuqua and his writers set up a beautifully bloody first act. With military precision, the entire White House, called Olympus, falls quickly to the foreign aggressors. The body count and bullet count seems more appropriate in the beach landing at Normandy. The massacre is relentless and the tactics precise. Add in Gerard Butler's smoldering determination and some epic hand-to-hand fight choreography, and you have one heckuva ride.

The story is not perfect. Butler's Banning, and the bad guys, hunt down the President's son throughout the middle of the film. The subplot's outcome seems somewhat unnecessary - and trite. Also, some Presidential sparing in a boxing ring at Camp David never fully materializes. Like in 
Battle: Los Angeles, some characters are only developed enough to become sympathetic cannon fodder for the audience. And lastly, the threats concerning Banning's wife Leah (Radha Mitchell, Silent Hill: Revelations 3D) by the villain seems to only result in an unfulfilled afterthought.

Gerard steps up in his return to action, shaking off some of the romanticism of his last few roles. Cole Hauser (A Good Day to Die Hard) and Dylan McDermott (The Campaign) round out the higher profile Secret Service agents on Ashers original detail. Angela Bassett's (This Means War) Secret Service Director Lynn Jacobs keeps her stern exterior for the command center after the White House attack. Morgan Freeman (The Dark Knight Rises), as the Speaker of the House Trumbull, 
is both stunned into silence forced into action as acting President during the hostage crisis. And the villain who masterminds the entire operation brings a more than adequate foil to Gerard's Banning as he and his men and women crush the White House defenses and, possibly, America itself.

Olympus Has Fallen is one of those sleeper action flicks that makes you just want to be a gun toting red-blooded beer-drinking American. And none of that import beer! Lots of action, some snarky remarks, and a little bit of patriotic cheese from this flick may provide the action that you will enjoy.

Olympus Has Fallen is an amalgam of a myriad of patriotic action flicks we've seen in the past. But Gerard Butler, Antoine Fuqua, and the writing team do everything they needed to put an assault on the White House into a great viewable package.

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Playing for Keeps

Yellow Card

★ ★ 1/2 out of 5 buckets | Rental

Rated: PG-13 - Some sexual situations, language and a brief intense image.
Release Date: December 7, 2012
Runtime: 1 hour 35 minutes

Director: Gabriele Muccino
Writers: Robbie Fox
Cast:  Gerard Butler, Jessica Biel, Dennis Quaid, Uma Thurman, Noah Lomax, Catherine Zeta-Jones, James Tupper, Judy Greer






SYNOPSIS: A former soccer star with no prospects tries desperately to reconnect with his son and soon-to-be remarried ex-wife. When he has the chance to spend more time with his son by coaching his soccer team, he finds himself dealing with lustful soccer moms and quirky dads.

REVIEW: Seven Pounds and The Pursuit of Happyness director Gabriele Muccino takes on the romantic comedy genre with dashing Gerard Butler and sexy girl next door Jessica Biel. Robbie Fox, writer of the 1993 So I Married an Axe Murderer, returns as a scribe after an eighteen hiatus, begging the question of whether soccer and family can mix. 
George (Gerard Butler, Chasing Mavericks) was a famous soccer striker in his youth, until an injury sidelined him and stole away his prospects in the sport. Today, he moves into a guest house in Virginia to be closer to his ex-wife Stacie (Jessica Biel, Hitchcock) and son Lewis (Noah Lomax, The Middle). Struggling to make ends meet and to become a quality father to Lewis, George takes in the challenge of coaching his son's wayward soccer team. With the kids in the team engaged with the sport, George finds himself having to deal with lustful divorcees in the form of soccer mom Barb (Judy Greer, Jeff, Who Lives at Home), married women Denise (Cathrine Zeta-Jones, Rock of Ages), and a rich, jealous husband Carl (Dennis Quaid, The Words) who cheats on his wife Patty (Uma Thurman, Percy Jackson and the Olympians: The Lightning Thief) but lives by his own double standards. George may have been able to handles the stresses of World Cup play, but his chance to make good with his son and to make peace with his soon-to-be remarried ex-wife may prove too much to endure.

Chiseled, scruffy, and dashing Gerard Butler made a name for himself with the theatrical Phantom of the Opera and 300, leading to roles in a string of so-so romantic comedies and decent action films. He provides one of the voices to the successful How to Train Your Dragon films and the gritty Machine Gun Preacher. Following up the zen surfer 
Chasing Mavericks drama, Butler continues with a more semi-serious romantic film to finish out the year. Jessica Biel, fresh off her limited released of the Anthony Hopkins and Helen Mirren film Hitchcock, has been successful in mixing up her resume with action, horror, and romance. Both make the most of the film and their characters, with Butler as the immature womanizer and Jessica as the woman who had to give up her love affair with a sports star in order to move on with her life to raise their son by herself.

Butler and Biel are cast with several A-listers including Thurman, Quaid, and Zeta-Jones. But the real show stealer is Judy Greer as soccer mom divorcee Barb. Sure, Thurman and Zeta-Jones are sexy and flirty as heck, but Greer's Barb is brilliant as the seemingly bi-polar emotional wreck that finds solace in Butler's George. Dennis Quaid plays a neurotic jealous husband who walks the line between a good guy and a bad guy. Either way, Butler's George should have probably given Quaid's Carl a wider berth. 


The story is solid enough, but formulaic. Characters are introduced and used, except Greer's superior performance, just as plot devices to throw at George. They serve their purpose well enough, but each piece hangs out to flap in the wind afterward. And the believability factor suffers a little bit when George's appearance at Lewis' practice turns into a soccer clinic and the complete turnaround of a losing bunch of kids to championship material. The story of George, his son Lewis, and ex-wife Stacie works to a greater degree, focusing on George's attempt to reconcile and better his relationship with both of them.

Playing for Keeps is a pleasant semi-dramatic romantic comedy. Anyone who can relate to divorced parents trying to reconcile for the sake of a child will appreciate what this film is trying to achieve. There is sexiness, bare chests, and charisma for most, and the campiness and hijinks of the soccer moms interested in George does take away from the more serious story between George, Stacie, and Lewis.

Playing for Keeps is a cute flick that will entertain moviegoers in the mood for a light dramatic romantic comedy. Butler and Biel have plenty of chemistry to go along with perfect smiles and beautiful features. Is this film nothing but the back of the net? You decide.

Monday, October 15, 2012

Chasing Mavericks

Catching a Curl

★ ★ ★ out of 5 buckets | DVD


Rated: PG Thematic elements and some perilous action
Release Date: October 26, 2012
Runtime: 1 hour 32 minutes

Director: Michael Apted, Curtis Hanson
Writers: Kario Salem, Jim Meenaghan, Brandon Hooper
Cast: Gerard Butler, Elisabeth Shue, Abigail Spencer, Leven Rambin, Scott Eastwood, Devin Crittenden, Jonny Weston





SYNOPSIS: As a boy, Jay Moriarty is saved from the surf by neighbor surfer Frosty Hesson - and falls in love with the water and surfing. Seven years later, teenage Jay discovers that a mythic monster wave called a 'maverick' exists and enlists Frosty's help to conquer it.

REVIEW: Director Michael Apted (The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader) and Curtis Hanson (8 Mile) team up to bring from the depth a film based on the true story of young California surfer Jay Moriarty. With a screenplay by Kario Salem (The Score) from a story by Brandon Cooper and Jim Meenaghan, Apted and Hanson follow a young man with deep rooted issues chasing a wave that doesn't exist.
As a small boy, Jay Moriarty (Cooper Timberline) loved to stare at the pacific waves off the coast of Santa Cruz. He loved to count the swells between waves to understand that it affected the height and power of each break. One day, he fell into the water near some outcroppings and almost drown. But at the last moment, surfer and neighbor Frosty Hesson (Gerard Butler, Law Abiding Citizen) scoops him out from the crashing surf and drives him and his friend Kim (Harley Graham) back home, chastising young Jay of the dangers he put himself into. But Jay was not to be deterred. He cobbles a surf board together with duct tape and borrowed fins, and with the help of a sympathetic surfer Blond, to learn how to master the surf. As a young man with an overworked mother and never there father, Jay (John Wesson, John Dies at the End) looked to the curling waves for comfort, relief, and excitement. One early foggy morning, when Frosty sets out for a surf session, Jay secretly hitches a ride to watch Frosty and three other avid surfers catch twenty to thirty foot waves in a secluded location. Seeing these superior waves as a challenge to be conquered, Jay enlists the reluctant Frosty to teach him how to tackle these 'maverick' waves. Frosty does set out to train the young man, but Jay must contend with more than just Frosty's strict rules and regiment. He also has to deal with a mother finding solice in the bottom of a bottle, a best friend Blond (Devin Crittenden, Disaster Movie) trading solidarity for peer pressured drugs, the girl Kim (Leven Rambin, The Hunger Games) who who he has loved since he was a child, and a troubled teem Sonny (Taylor Handley, Battle: Los Angeles) who aggressively looks down and picks at everything Jay does. Does Jay have what it takes to overcome at all of the obstacles set before him in life and survive one of the most brutal, gnarly curls over to be seen? 

Chasing Mavericks is based on the incredible life and achievements of a young man, Jay Moriarty, whose obsession with water and waves served as a metaphor for how he lived his life. Driven to overcome fear, and put his life in harm's way, the real Jay Moriarty always felt that his life was destined and that he was never long for this earth. Was he chasing an intangible something to fill the hole in his life left by a father who abandoned him with only an unopened sealed letter? Or was he just a young man with a reckless streak? Or was he something in between? 

Similar to the fiction of The Karate Kid and Point BreakChasing Mavericks is an amalgam of the two. Frosty is the zen master who reluctantly takes the troubled, reckless Jay under his wing to train him, not to succeed but to survive. Mr Miyagi taught Daniel to 'Wax On, Wax Off'. Frosty teaches Jay to 'Paddle, Paddle, Paddle'. Both The Karate Kid and Chasing Mavericks have a popular blonde menace set in the protagonist's way, trying to knock him down a peg. But where Daniel needed the karate to stand up to his bully, Jay had all the self-confidence he needed and 'devil may care' attitude to deal with the likes of Sonny. What both lacked was the ability to successfully tackle their climatic events without an experienced hand. And like Point Break, Chasing Mavericks deals with individuals always looking for the next rush or next thrill. Chasing Mavericks focuses on the one big wave, while Point Break dealt with the like of surfing, skydiving, and, yes, bank robberies.

Compared to fictitious works, 
Chasing Mavericks may seem a little tame. There is plenty going on - a mother and son dynamic where Jay has taken on the role of caretaker for his mother Christy (Elizabeth Shue, Hope Springs), a strained relationship between Jay and his childhood friend Blonde, a growing, but elusive romance between Jay and Kim, and a love/hate relationship between father figure Frosty and the young apprentice Jay. Some will miss the heightened angst that they have come to expect for their movie going experience. But what Chasing Mavericks misses in over the top drama, it makes up with heart and a monster wave.

Butler's reluctant father figure Frosty wants Wesson's Jay to be a better man, but he unsure how to go about taking in someone not his own. Not only that, Frosty has to contend with his own streak of recklessness that his own wife Brenda (Abigail Spencer, 
This Means War) compares to how the young Jay acts. Both Frosty and Jay may be kindred spirits and may be chasing waves, but they still look after those they loves. But that does not stop them from training and following a el Nino created wave that would drive away all most the most fool hearty or experienced. The 'maverick' that Jay chases is a monster - and is a character all its own.

The climatic last act includes the elusive wave that Jay has trained for. Watching surfers launch from boats instead of treading out to beyond the underwater plateaus of the coastline serves as testament to the endurance required to tackle this monster. When the series of mavericks come to shore, and literally cause near-hit collisions between boats, it seems like a reflection of Clooney's Perfect Storm
. The Mavericks are massive and are shot with cinematic excellence. The fact that anyone can ride, let alone survive, one of these bucking curls. The intensity and majesty of these forces of nature made manifest are enough to make the whole film worthwhile.


Chasing Mavericks is a subtle tale of man versus man, man versus nature, and man versus himself. Some of the surfers play themselves as homage to Jay Moriarty, proving that this is a tale close to their hearts and a tale worth telling.

Sunday, March 28, 2010

How To Train Your Dragon

This Film Soars
[Jay Baruchel, Gerard Butler, Craig Ferguson, America Ferrera]

Today was a momentous occasion. I went to see "How to Train Your Dragon" accompanied by friends and a 2 year old named Conner. He spent the entire film focused on the movie, quietly asking "what happened to dragon?". It was everything a rabid moviegoer wants in a young moviegoer protege.

SYNOPSIS:  Young viking Hiccup lives in the midst of savage, strong kinsmen bent on killing the dragons that raid their village. Unable to kill an injured dragon he captures, Hiccup helps "toothless" to fly again and learns more about the species in the process.

Vikings, dragons, and misunderstood youth, oh my. Dreamworks dazzles us again with their latest animation. I didn't see it in 3D 'cause of the increase in ticket prices, but it was exceptional anyway. Jay Baruchel from "She's Out Of My League" voices Hiccup, a very non-viking-esque kid. Desperate to impress his clan leader father with his skills of killing the raiding dragons, he manages to down a never before seen Night Fury but is unable to finish the job. Realizing that there is more to dragons than what he has been taught, Hiccup takes all he learns from his new friend "Toothless" and applies it to non-lethal methods during his dragon training.

Majestic vistas, wildly adorned reptiles, breakneck rides through the clouds and rocky canyons, fierce Norse warriors, spindly young intelligent viking offspring, and an enduring Night Fury combine for a wonderful adventure. Funny, sad and action-packed, this movie has all the right stuff! The best part of the film is "Toothless", channelling a little Stitch from "Lilo & Stitch", plus the most comic characteristics of every dog and cat lovers pet. 

"What happened to dragon?" is what the kids asked during the movie. You will have to go see it to find out how to answer. 

Worth: Matinee and a Blu-ray