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 Liev Schreiber. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Liev Schreiber. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Lee Daniels' The Butler

DRAMA

Part of History

8.0 out of 10 | DVD

Rated: PG-13 Thematic elements, sexual material, language, disturbing images, smoking and some violence
Release Date: August 16, 2013
Runtime: 2 hours 12 minutes

Director: Lee Daniels
Writers: Danny Strong, from an article by Wil Haygood
Cast: Forest Whitaker, Mariah Carey, Vanessa Redgrave, Oprah Winfrey, David Oyelowo, Terrence Howard, Cuba Gooding Jr., Lenny Kravitz, Robin Williams, John Cusack, James Marsden, Liev Schreiber, Alan Rickman



SYNOPSIS: An African-American's eyewitness accounts of notable events of the 20th century during his tenure as a White House butler.

REVIEW: Precious director Lee Daniels tackles desegregation, the Civil Rights movement, and the election of the nation's first black president from the point of view of a cotton picker-turned-White House butler, his wife, and children. Written by Danny Strong (Game Change) from the article "A Bulter Served By This Election" written by Wil Haygood.


Cecil Gaines (Forest Whitaker, The Last Stand) finds himself alone after the death of his father and the growing instability of his mother (Mariah Carey, Precious). Taken in by a kindly plantation owner widow (Vanessa Redgrave, Anonymous), Cecil is taken away from the cotton fields and raised to serve in the house. After several years as a butler, Cecil leaves the plantation and finds work as a server in a hotel in the Washington, D.C. area. In 1955, Cecil is invited to work as a butler in the nation's White House under the Eisenhower (Robin Williams, The Big Wedding) administration. As desegregation issues and Civil Rights become more important to the minorities of America, Cecil finds himself a fly on the wall of several presidents' administration, including Kennedy (James Marsden, Straw Dogs), Johnson (Liev Schreiber, The Reluctant Fundamentalist), Nixon (John Cusack, The Raven), and Reagan (Alan Rickman, Harry Potter series). At the same time as Cecil is privy to the inner sanctum and inner dialogues of the nations political machine, he finds he is unable to relate to a wife (Oprah Winfrey, The Princess and the Frog) and his oldest son Louis (David Oyelowo, Jack Reacher) who strives to become a part of the civil rights movement.

In the 1920s in Macon, Georgia young Cecil work's alongside his father and mother in the fields. Tragedy alone allowed Cecil to learn more than he would have and allow him the ability to venture out prepared into a harsh world. Raised and conditioned to be neither seen nor heard other than to serve Whitaker's Cecil slowly ascends to be pristine position in the presidental White House.

Based on a true story of real White House butler Cecil Gaines, the story revolves around his duties and his family who serve as a backdrop to the trials and tribulations of the decades of the 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s, and even the new millennium where African-Americans suffer under segregation as second-class citizens. Cecil shows the audience firsthand what he had to show is his career, his home life, and the politics that he claims he doesn't take part in. Cecil gives the utmost importance to his job, leaving behind his family to struggle through the times for themselves. His wife turns to alcohol-filled infidelity to fill the void that Cecil leaves behind. By trying to make a life better for his family by doing what he was trained to do, Cecil finds that he's unable to relate to his educated and civic-minded son Louis.

The director Lee Daniels puts together all-star cast for this film. Whitaker is no stranger to fine drama. He was riveting in The Last King of Scotland. Oprah Winfrey, Terrence Howard, Lenny Kravitz, and Cuba Gooding Jr.  dig into their roles with passion. Robin Williams, James Marsden, 
Liev Schreiber, John Cusack, and Alan Rickman all add their own personal spin on their individual roles as President.

This film, in a little over two hours, tries to balance political evolution with the personal impact that decisions had on the nation's African-American population. There is a lot to experience with over almost 80 year of American history to follow, and Lee Daniels' The Butler serves it well.

Saturday, March 31, 2012

Goon

This Isn't Baseball

Rated: R   Brutal violence, non-stop language, some strong sexual content and drug use.
Release Date: March 30, 2012
Runtime: 1 hr 31 mins

Director: Michael Dowse
Writers:  Jay Baruchel, Evan Goldberg, from the novel "Goon: The True Story of an Unlikely Journey into Minor League Hockey" by Adam Fraasio and Doug Smith.
Cast: Seann Willaim Scott, Jay Baruchel, Alison Pill, Liev Schreiber, Marc-Andre Grondin, Kim Coates, Richard Clarkin


SYNOPSIS: Bar bouncer Doug Glatt failed to live up to the high expectation of his brainy doctor family. After knocking out a local hockey player, Dog gets an opportunity to work his way into a minor league team as an enforcer in an effort to get a bunch of under performing players to live up to their potential.

REVIEW: Director Michael Dowse, known for the Topher Grace rocker flick Take Me Home Tonight, stays in the arena with a new underdog sports movie starring Sean William Scott. Based the Adam Frattasio and Doug "The Hammer" Smith novel entitled "Goon: The True Story of an Unlikely Journey into Minor League Hockey", Quebec-born actor and writer Jay Baruchel and Vancouver-bred scribe Evan Goldberg (Superbad, The Green Hornet) create a screenplay for a sport that, for them, is a national pastime. 
Bar bouncer Doug Glatt (Seann William Scott, American Reunion) lives his life in a black T-shirt with SECURITY written in tall letters across it. He is kind to all patrons until someone gets out of line. With a successful doctor brother and father, Doug's trade is considered lowly and not something to be proud of. With his pal Ryan (Jay Baruchel, How to Train Your Dragon), foul-mouthed local Orangetown, Massachusetts hockey 'Hot Ice' wrap-up TV and online host, they take in an Assassins home game to hep cheer Doug up. When an opposing team's hockey player, fresh into the penalty box, climbs the glass to get at Ryan and his rants, Doug steps in and lays the player out cold. Seeing the most lively display of enforcement in a while, coach Rollie Hortense (Nicholas Campbell, SyFy's Haven) asks Doug to try out for the Assassins hockey team. After a few games Doug proves to be a great thug on the ice, even if his skating skills are less than graceful. Impressed, the coach decides to send Doug up to his brother Ronnie (Kim Coates, Resident Evil: Afterlife) minor league Halifax Highlanders team in an attempt to use Doug's fists as a way to get the rest of the team out of their underachieving slump and on the way to a possible play-off berth.

In the spirit of Paul Newman's Slap Shot, Goon uses violence in order for a team to come out its lethargy and finding its strength to win. Where Paul Newman's hockey hooligans all took to the ice with fighting in their hearts and fists, the Halifax Highlanders do not have the backbone in put up much of a fight. Super star Xavier Laflamme (Marc-Andre Grondin, Mike) was a skating and shooting prodigy in the majors until he was checked by career enforcer Ross Rhea (Liev Schreiber, Salt), giving him a triple concussion, a trade to the minors, and a fear of performing. Gord Ogilvey (Richard Clarkin, Land of the Dead) worries more about his divorce and being a bad father than his work on the ice. Goalie Marco Belchier (Jonathan Cherry, Final Destination 2) struggles at the net as much as he gets razzed by his own teammates in the locker room, All in all, the Highlanders are a team of misfits, had-beens, and players that just do not have the heart or want to push themselves to win. Doug, similar to Mark Wahlberg's Vince Papale in Invincible, hopefully has the thuggery to pull the rest of the team off the bench and onto their skates.

Doug Glatt knows how to use his heart and his hands, but fights an uphill battle with get his hockey mates to care about the Highlanders as much as he does. In addition to those woes Doug falls for 'bad girlfriend' Eva (Alison Pill, Scott Pilgrim vs. the World) that is turned on by hockey players and fights but has a nice boyfriend at home. And to top it all, the road to the end of the season and possible playoff slot may lead Doug and the Highlanders against the premier enforcer in the league, the man known at Ross 'The Boss' Rhea that sidelined Laflamme in the majors three years ago.

The film is a semi-serious endeavor laced with the icing of Sean William Scott's kind smiles and innocence. His light side just emphasizes the flip of the switch that occurs when he finds his friends and teammates in trouble and he finds the insatiable need to spring into action for their defense. Jay Baruchel's Ryan spouts out nothing but obscenities, both in his show and in the stands, but its nowhere near as endearing as Scott's performance. The rest of the team pitches in with both good skating and perpetual frat boy antics.

Based on the true story of Mike "The Hammer" Smith, a local hockey goon who somehow found himself in the middle of a minor league hockey club, I think Scott does the story justice, in his unique way. The film is not awe-inspiring or patriotic as Kurt Russell's Miracle, have the nameplate of Newman's Slap Stick, or the kid appeal of The Mighty Ducks franchise, but Goon has something that all good sports films need - an underdog team looking for its heart and using that emotion to find a way to win.

WORTH: DVD or Rental

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Salt

Maybe Change To A Low Sodium Diet
[Angelina Jolie, Liev Schreiber, Daniel Olbrychski, Chiwetel Ejiofor]

Image from online.wsj.com

RANT: Nothing really to rant about today, except the fact that I have neglected my rviewing duties this week. On Saturday, I went to Hershey Park in Pennsylvania for a day trip. It was brutal weather near 100 degrees, but that didn't deter me from riding all of the major coasters. The "Comet" was cool, "Fahrenheit" was hot, "Storm Runner" was electric, and the "Wildcat" should be put down. In recent years, Hershey has added and expanded a water park inside their park, which had movie protege, Conner, running his parents ragged throughout the waterworks. Leaving at 6:30am and returning at 2am, it was a great extended day trip for fun in the sun and hanging with friends. With all of that said, will "Salt" be the roller coaster ride as promised? As you can see, I am dedicated enough to ride real coasters to be sure!

SYNOPSIS: CIA agent, Evelyn Salt, is accused of being a Russian sleeper agent who will kill the Russian President by the end of the day. Soon on the run from both the CIA and FBI, Salt uses her skills as an operative to elude capture. As she attempts to uncover the truth, her actions only cast more doubt as to her true motives.

Phillip Noyce, best known for "Patriot Games", "Clear and Present Danger", "The Saint" and "The Bone Collector", brings a script from Kurt Wimmer to the screen. Both he and Wimmer have enough pedigree to bring a charged political spy thriller to the audiences. One of the critics said that "Salt" is better and "sexier" than the "Bourne" movies, but is it? Angelina may be more sexy than Matt Damon, but the comparison of story is a matter entirely different.

There is no doubt that the sequences of Salt on the run are spectacular. Jolie gives us epic foot chases, starting from the CIA front company headquarters, back to her apartment, onto the highways, and beyond. According to Comic-con reports from Jolie, she was left with scars as a result of her stunt work. I applaud her efforts to the job and can rightfully say that any scars received gave the audience what they asked for. The problem is not the action, it is the story itself.

Jolie's Salt is accused of being a Russian sleeper spy on track to kill the Russian President as he speaks at the funeral of the Amerian vice president. All of this starts when a Russian defector comes in off of the street with a story of children trained from an early age as agents, claiming that Salt is one of them. She fears for her reputation, her career, but mostly for her husband who may be used as a pawn. The audience feels for her predicament as she experts her escape from C.I.A custody. She even finds time to put her dog in good hands while she eludes the government agents and find traces of where her husband may be. But as we twist down the rabbit hole with Salt, we start to question her allegiances and her motives. Because of that, I found that I lost my resolve to support her and empathize with her. And without giving more story away, Salt performs more acts that downright put her in the category of traitor for me.

As intricate as the story may be, if the audience cannot get behind the protagonist throughout the film all may be lost. Whether Salt is villainous or virtuous is not the issue. I have rooted for Gibson's Porter in "Payback" and Gollum in "LOTR: The Two Towers". But to have a character be both villainous or virtuous, both honorable and without remorse, playing both sides of the fence, regardless of the attempts of the storyteller to intrigue us, sometimes does not spice things up.

Worth: Matinee or Netflix

I am also trying out a new rating system shown below based on reader reaction to my somewhat complex monetary rating scale. I will give both ratings and see what kind of reaction I muster. A movie can receive up to 5 popcorn buckets. Why popcorn buckets? Because I am a slave to the thousand + calorie delight! Enjoy!