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 Harold Perrineau. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harold Perrineau. Show all posts

Saturday, February 23, 2013

Snitch

ACTION/ADVENTURE, SUSPENSE/THRILLER

Sins of the Father

7.5 out of 10 | Rental

Rated: PG-13 Sequences of violence and drug content.
Release Date: February 22, 2013
Runtime: 1 hour 35 minutes

Director: Ric Roman Waugh
Writers: Ric Roman Waugh, Justin Haythe
Cast: Dwayne Johnson, Barry Pepper, Jom Bernthal, Susan Sarandon, Michael Kenneth Williams, Rafi Gavron, Melina Kanakaredes, Benjamin Bratt, Lela Loren, JD Pardo, Harold Perrineau



SYNOPSIS: A father goes undercover for the DEA in order to free his son who was imprisoned after being set up in drug deal.

REVIEW: Felon writer/director and established sixteen year stunt veteran Ric Roman Waugh returns with a story co-written with Revolutionary Road and the upcoming Johnny Depp version of The Lone Ranger writer Justin Hayte. Based, or inspired, by true events - as most films seem to be these days - Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson will stop at nothing to protect his family.


John Matthews (Dwayne Johnson, Fast Five) works hard to keep his construction business afloat. He supports his second wife and little girl as well as worries about his ex-wife Sylvie Collins (Melina Kanakaredes, Percy Jackson and the Olympians:The Lightning Thief) and his son Jason Collins (Rafi Gavron, Celeste and Jesse Forever). When Jason is set up for receiving the illegal drug ecstasy in the mail during a sting operation, he is put into federal custody and faces the "mandatory minimum" sentence of 10 years in prison unless he is willing to roll over on somebody else. Jason can't and won't roll over on any other friends because he doesn't know any actual drug users or dealers. His father John looks for any way to reduce his son sentence by trying to find a way to find drug pushers on his own. Forced to turn to his one of his workers Daniel James (Jon Bernthal, The Walking Dead), an ex-con with narcotic ties John Matthews is introduced to a local drug dealer named Malik (Michael Kenneth Williams, Boardwalk Empire). Offering his trucks to transport drugs for Mailk, John Matthews is assured by federal prosecutor Joanne Keeghan (Susan Sarandon, Cloud Atlas) and Agent Cooper (Barry Pepper, True Grit) that the final meet will reduce Jason's sentence down to one year. But the plug is pulled on the operation by Cooper when the promise of the larger cartel kingpin Juan Carlos 'El Topo' Pintera (Benjamin Bratt, The Lesser Blessed) could be captured. With John facing an uncertain future for himself against the drug dealers and cartel and facing uncertain terms certain the federal prosecutor, he puts his own plan in motion, regardless of the risk to his own life

Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson takes another roll that separates him from that of a brute character stemming from his World Wrestling Federation (now WWE) days and even some of the more recent comedy work he had done for Disney. Maybe one of his better performances, Johnson excels as a desperate man willing to do anything to protect his son. Even with his muscles and height Johnson's character isn't infallible or indestructible, making him a much more realistic character. John Bernthal's Daniel "Cruiser: James looks like he stepped from the small screen as his character Shane from the AMC series The Walking Dead. Barry Pepper and Susan Sarandon make up the supposed good guys as a undercover agent and federal prosecutor respectively, ultimately looking to make as big as score against the drug cartels as possible. William, playing the local drug peddler, and Bratt, playing the elusive former para military drug lord, give Johnson's character enough drama to deal with.

The story is quickly set as the competent businessman John Matthews deal with the day-to-day operations of this construction company. When his son Jason is busted receiving the Ecstasy in the mail, the story quickly speeds up as the lives of Jason's family lives spin out of control. As Dwayne's character looks to seal the deal against other drug dealers to save his son he faces a hail of bullets and double crosses at each turn.

This film has plenty of mild intrigue and action throughout, although the ending was a touch week. From bullet ridden drug exchanges to a climactic semi tractor-trailer truck chase on the highway, Dwayne Johnson has a solid action film on his hands. There's drama around the family and dealing with the government and the drug dealers..

A strong dramatic effort by all involved from Dwayne Johnson to Barry Pepper to Susan Sarandon to Williams and Bernthal, these actors and actresses have enough talent to get the job done. The suspense and intrigue are evidence enough with a young man's life and the balance, the dangerous world of drug trafficking, and the threats of Injury or even death as a end to an innocent life.

Snitch, based on true events, pits the father against the government machine and the drug cartel. Well-made dramatic and suspenseful film, Snitch makes for a decent fit for February movie going.


Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Zero Dark Thirty

Manhunt

★ ★ ★ ★ out of 5 buckets | Matinee or DVD

Rated: R Brutal disturbing images, strong violence and language.
Release Date: December 19, 2012 (expands January 11, 2013)
Runtime: 2 hours 37 minutes

Director: Kathryn Bigelow
Writers: Mark Boal
Cast: Jason Clarke, Jessica Chastain, Kyle Chandler, Harold Perrineau, Fredric Lehre, Edgar Ramirez, James Gandolfini, Joel Edgerton, Chris Prat, Frank Grillo, Mark Strong





SYNOPSIS: A chronicle of the decade-long hunt for al-Qaeda terrorist leader Osama bin Laden after the September 2001 attacks, and his death at the hands of the Navy S.E.A.L. Team 6 in May, 2011.

REVIEW: Kathryn Bigelow won the Oscar for Best Picture for her film The Hurt Locker.  Before that she had big with successes with Point Break, Near Dark, and Strange Days. Returning to the deserts of the Middle East, she reteams with The Hurt Locker scribe Mark Boal to tell the tale of the biggest manhunt of the 20th century.
Maya (Jessica Chastain, Lawless), a CIA field analyst, is sent to Pakistan two years after the attacks on the World Trade Center towers on September 11th, 2001. Taking part in the brutal interrogations of middle eastern detainees with ties to Alcaida and other terrorists groups, Maya uncovers a network of couriers who may lead to Osama bin Laden. After several years and several other successful bombings around the globe, Maya has to fight the war to capture Osama bin Laden on several fronts, including against a change complexion of terrorism, a United States government with a changing policy concerning interrogations and detainees, and a ticking clock against more pain and death.

Zero Dark Thirty is Kathryn Bigelow's second film to take place in the conflicts of the Middle East. From Jeremy Renner's turn as a bomb disposal expert in the hateful sands of the region to the long pursuit of the terrorist Osama bin Laden, Bigelow's captures the tireless persistence of American patriots who fight for the freedoms of their homeland at a cost that may be too lofty to truly commiserate.

Bigelow opens the film with complete darkness and the iconic date of "September 11th, 2001". All that is heard is various recordings from officials, air traffic controllers, 911 operators, and workers in the World Trade towers. As American society was plunged into a pessimistic darkness, Bigelow hurls us two years later where a young CIA agent recruited straight out of high school and into a CIA Black Site where seasoned agent Dan (Jason Clarke, 
Lawless) interrogates a money man with ties to the 9/11 attacks. We do not stay anywhere too long, as the hunt for Osama bin Laden and twenty of the top leaders of the Alcaida terror network. Maya is the fulcrum - with agents, detainees, soldiers, technicians, analysts, and terrorists changing around her over the years she struggled and sacrificed in her pursuit for bringing bin Laden to justice.

Jessica Chastain starts off her career as Maya as a tough, but new recruit assigned to overseeing CIA Black Site interrogations. As the years go on, Chastain hardens her character into a woman with a singular diamond point focus against the man who is a ghost in the Middle Eastern sands. As the pressure to find bin Laden grows, Maya butts heads and egos against her station chief Joseph Bradley (Kyle Chandler, Argo) for more resources, mourns for the loss of interrogative freedom along with Dan, and constantly struggles against the slow grind of political red tape against supervisor George (Mark Strong, Green Lantern) and the CIA Director (James Gandolfini, Killing Them Softly). Will the government move on intel that in less than 100%? Even the Seal Team 6 members, although well trained, are skeptical of the mission parameters. Squadron Team Leader Patrick (Joel Edgerton, The Odd Life of Timothy Green) and DEVGRU Justin (Chris Pratt, Moneyball) follow orders on the instincts of a woman who may be the singularly most knowledgeable person on who and where Osama bin Laden is.

Coming in at 157 minutes, you can feel the emotional toll that the ten years have on main character Maya in the story. The pace is slow and even, plodding along with the teams and analysts as they miss opportunities to capture key personal with knowledge of bin Laden's network. They unravel around the edges as terrorist cells continue to plot and carry out their destructive missions. As the end nears, the tension rises in the CIA bunkers in Langley, Virginia and in the Pakistan darkness. But the actual incursion by Seal Team 6 on the bin Laden compound seems too real world slow and methodical to work as the climatic ending on the big screen.

Bigelow and Boal use Chastain's Maya as an amalgam of a public suffering immense loss of its innocence, as well as the sometimes quiet, sometimes volatile outrage and frustration of American agencies trying to achieve a measure of closure against a single man whose orders and decisions changed the cultural outlook of a nation. The film pulls back the curtain of what America had to become in order to get this dirty job done, showing the raw methods necessary and rawer nerves that result.

Zero Dark Thirty is a hard and objective look at a decade-long hunt for one man. The men in the employ of the terrorists are not made monsters unnecessarily. In the same light, America is not left with virtuous clean hands either. We know how it ends, but we may know what it took to get there.

Saturday, March 17, 2012

Seeking Justice

Working Class Hero?

Rated: R  Brief sexuality, violence and language
Release Date: March 16, 2012
Runtime: 1 hr 45 mins

Director:  Roger Donaldson
Writers: Todd Hickey, Robert Tannen
Cast:  Nicolas Cage, January Jones, Guy Pearce, Jennifer Carpenter, IronE Singleton, Harold Perrineau, Xander Berkeley


SYNOPSIS: When his wife is sexually assaulted, school teacher Will Gerard accepts the offer from a vigilante group to avenge her. What he doesn't realize is that the 'favor' they ask him to carry out afterward is more than what he bargained for.

REVIEW: Roger Donaldson, directors of such intrigue films as The Recruit and The Bank Job, takes a story and script from first time writer and longtime cinematographer Todd Hickey and relative new screenwriter Robert Tannen. Starring Nicolas Cage, one of the hardest working actors in show business, will Seeking Justice find the justice it seeks?
High school teacher and chess enthusiast Will Gerard (Nicolas Cage, Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance)   enjoys the New Orleans scene with his musician wife Laura (January Jones, X-Men: First Class) and his friends and co-workers. One night, when Laura is sexually assaulted and put into the hospital, Will is approached by a mysterious man named Simon (Guy Pearce, The King's Speech) who ensures Will that his organization can and will silence the assailant for good if Will agrees to help the organization in the near future when they ask for his assistance. Unable to watch his wife suffer in pain, Will agrees and the deed is carried out. A few months later, when Will is asked by Simon to carry a letter to a mail box in front of the zoo, the favor is upped to following a mother and two daughters, then ramped up to the request to carry out an assassination of an accused pedophile. When Will refuses, he and his wife are put into danger by the same organization that aided them in the first place. Running out of time, Will must try to expose the organization before it destroys him. 

Nicolas Cage has recently tarnished his acting star with a string of less than stellar films including Season of the Witch and The Sorcerer's Apprentice. Even with genre anticipated films like the Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance sequel and a comic book favorite film of mine, Kick-Ass, some look at Cage's current career path as on the decline. He has certainly come a long way down from Adaptation and Leaving Las Vegas, or even the National Treasure franchise. With Seeking Justice, Cage does pump the brakes a little by putting out a decent product.

Nicolas Cage tempers the caricature of himself that even SNL's Andy Samberg has perfected on the segment 'Inside the Cage, with Nicolas Cage'. When Cage is not mugging or staring wide-eyed, his character actually comes down to earth enough to be believable and distraught. January Jones channels sympathy instead of her signature distain from Mad Men as she recovers from her physical and psychological trauma. Guy Pearce beefs up a little, probably in preparation of the upcoming space prison sci-fi flick Lockout, and cuts an imposing and dangerous figure as the vigilante group figure head  Simon. Harold Perrineau (Lost) as Will's principal boss and friend, and Jennifer Carpenter (Gone) as Laura's musician friend Trudy keep to the background until the story plots require them to step forward. Some of the 'organization's' henchmen like Scar (IronE Singleton, The Walking Dead) have larger roles than some of the bigger name actors and actresses. 


Seeking Justice is the type of film that is reminiscent of 1990s films like Johnny Depp's Nick of Time where a seemingly unprepared and unlikely middle-class man is forced to go beyond his comfort zone against an established organization that has unlimited resources, a powerful reach into law enforcement, and expertise in misdirection, mayhem and violence. In this case, the protagonist dies not take retribution into his own hands to avenge his wife's assailant, but is forced to take action nonetheless when his decisions to have someone else kill for him comes back to haunt him. 

By no means is Seeking Justice Cage's best work, but it is a solid action drama thriller whose script has been brought to full life by the expert hands of its director Roger Donaldson, and by the work of the film's protagonists in Cage and January Jones, and its antagonist Guy Pearce. If you can't get into Jonah Hill's 21 Jump Street, you can always fall back onto Seeking Justice as a second choice if you really need a couple chases or guns pointed in your face.

WORTH: Matinee or Rental