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 Mackenzie Foy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mackenzie Foy. Show all posts

Monday, July 15, 2013

The Conjuring

HORROR

Built on Remains

8.5 out of 10 | Movie and DVD

Rated: R Sequences of disturbing violence and terror
Release Date: July 19, 2013
Runtime: 1 hour 51 minutes

Director: James Wan
Writers: Chad Hayes, Carey Hayes
Cast: Vera Farmiga, Patrick Wilson, Lili Taylor, Ron Livingston, Shanley Caswell, Hayley McFarland, Joey King, Mackenzie Foy



SYNOPSIS:  Paranormal investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren work to help a family terrorized by a dark presence in their farmhouse. Forced to confront a powerful entity, the Warrens find themselves caught in the most terrifying case of their lives.

REVIEW: Director James Wan, helmer of Saw and Insidious, takes a step back in time with a horror film right out of the 1970s. A period flick centering around Harrisville, Rhode Island in 1971, The Conjuring is based on the real-life paranormal investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren. Written by twins Chad and Carey Hayes (Whiteout, House of Wax), The Conjuring targets a tightly-knit family facing strange occurrences in an old house.


Ed (Patrick Wilson, Young Adult) and Lorraine Warren (Vera Farmiga, Safe House) are a married couple with an interesting occupation. He is demonologies and she is a clairvoyant. Together they are paranormal investigators operating in the northeast. In 1971, Ed and Lorraine take on a case where a family with five daughters have moved into a Rhode Island home and are experiencing supernatural events. The mother Caroline Perron (Lili Taylor, The Cold Lands) has bruises appearing on her body, the youngest daughter finds a jack-in-the-box and an invisible friend named Rory. Another daughter sleep walks, bumping into the same wardrobe night after night. One smells rotten meat, while another gets her leg pulled during her sleep. The Warren's and their team investigate to collect enough evidence to send to the Catholic Church to approve an exorcism. But the exorcism may be too late as the family is taken to the edge of their sanity and willpower.

Director Wan takes the 40-year-old motif in the horror genre and gives it a modern take. Not relying on special effects, Wan relies on practical scares more in tune with films like the original The Haunting and The Amityville Horror. He does use a heavy dose of warbling noise in the soundtrack and music to set the tone for chills and thrills. In the setting of 1971 Rhode Island, the setting of an old rickety house is perfect for opportunities to make you scream out loud. From a game of hide and clap, to a lone mother down into the basement stairs with nearly extinguished matches, this film does justice and pays homage to a genre most currently saturated with visual spectacles.

What happens when a family of seven buy a Harrisville, Rhode Island property from a bank auction? In this case, the result is a family slowly terrorized by an ancient dark force which has been sucking souls for over 100 years. No different than today, the family has sunk all of their savings into the house and the resulting repairs, only to realize that if they wanted to leave their demon infested home they really have no practical place to go. Even the upcoming Poltergeist remake settles their story around a family who moves into an outdated suburban property that will end up being as haunted as it was in the original film.

Wan makes great use of the house's architecture, using perfectly aligned doors to draw in unwitting victims to a demonic oppressed basement. Even the opening scene of the film with a doll named Annabelle sets the tone for a very creepy experience. The film flattens out a little bit as characters come in and establish themselves while they move into the house, but the creeks, screeches and knocking quickly serve to ramp up a perfect haunting. We do see the demonic presence, eventually, but the film does a great job of building up tension with only wisps of what the family is encountering.

The cast is realistic and down to earth, Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga perfect in the roles as Ed and Lorraine Warren. They add credibility to the Warren's occupation of paranormal investigation that usually draws skeptics in droves. Ron Livingston and Lili Taylor, as well as all of the phenomenal young actresses that play the Perron daughters, also lend an air of believability to the tale.

A true throwback to 70s horror, The Conjuring is a well-made version to earlier works such as The Exorcist, The Haunting or The Amityville Horror. Today's audience will never appreciate those earlier films as much as audiences who watch them when they originally presented on the big screen in that era. But Wan does a good job in re-creating a film type using tried-and-true techniques of inferred scariness. Even the titles cards at the beginning of the film seem like something right out of a William Blatty novel cover. Some moviegoers may think the concept is out of date with the director's use of practical effects for the most part. But it does well enough to illicit a couple screams in the darkened theater.

The Conjuring is a director's passion project put on film in a way that is true to the time
 the true story took place. If you're looking for a downright suspenseful time that will leave you gripping the edge of your seats, The Conjuring may be just what the paranormal Investigators ordered.

Friday, November 16, 2012

The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 2

The End of An Era

★ ★ ★ out of 5 buckets | Matinee or DVD

Rated: PG-13 - Sequences of violence including disturbing images, some sensuality, and partial nudity
Release Date: November 16, 2012
Runtime: 1 hour 56 minutes

Director: Bill Condon
Writers: David O. Russell, based on the novel by Matthew Quick
Cast:  Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattinson, Taylor Lautner, Peter Facinelli, Elizabeth Reaser, Ashley Greene, Jackson Rathbone, Kellan Lutz, Nikki Reed, Billy Burke, Mackenzie Foy, Maggie Grace, Jamie Campbell Bower, Christopher Heyerdahl



SYNOPSIS:  After the birth of Renesmee, the Cullens gather other vampire clans in order to protect the child from a false allegation that puts the family in front of the Volturi.

REVIEW: Dream Girls and The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 1 director Bill Condon returns to put the final stake in the coffin for the franchise with the final installment to the Stephanie Meyer series of supernatural young adult books. Melissa Rosenberg, writer of all but the original film, returns to scribe the film that will have to say goodbye to Bella, Edward, and Jacob. 
Bella Swan (Kristen Stewart, Snow White and the Huntsman) and Edward Cullen (Robert Pattinson, Cosmopolis) come back from the brink as Bella gives birth to their half-vampire/half-human daughter Renesmee (Mackenzie Foy, The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 1). Bella is then turned into a newborn vampire by Edward in order to save her life. Jacob Black (Taylor Lautner, Abduction), as part of his werewolf nature, becomes imprinted to Renesmee and pledges to protect her at all costs.  While Bella becomes more familiar with her new powers and needs, Renesmee grows at an astonishing rate. When Cullen cousin Irina (Maggie Grace, Taken 2) witnesses the child exhibiting vampire powers, she flees to Europe to report to the Volturi leaders Caius (Jamie Campbell Bower, Anonymous), Marcus (Chistopher Heyerdahl, Hell on Wheels), and Aro (Michael Sheen, Midnight in Paris) that the Cullen coven has broken the laws by creating a child vampire - an immortal - who must be destroyed. In order to avert a bloody battle, Dr. Carlisle Cullen (Peter Facinelli, Loosies), Esme Cullen (Elizabeth Reasers, Young Adult) and the rest of the clan decides to persuade their friends to become witnesses to the miracle that Renesmee is - and to prove that she is not something to be feared or killed.

The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 2 brings the saga of Edward, Jacob, and Bella to a spectacular close. For fans of the film series, this final installment will delight and not disappoint. For the fans of the Stephanie Meyers book series, I am sure that the classic words will still be spoke ... "The book is better.". For the uninitiated, this is not the movie to jump on board with. If you were not a 'twi-hard', Breaking Dawn will not turn you into a sudden blood thirsty or rabid fan. But the film has its moments of coolness, levity, and fierceness.

The cast of characters is vast. Like the Harry Potter series, Breaking Dawn builds each story on the back of its predecessor. You care for the characters because you have become quite attached to them over the course of several films. Now, as the eve of the final battle against the Volturi approaches, familiar and new vampires come to the aid of both sides. Soothsayer 
Alice Cullen (Ashley Greene, The Apparition) and Jasper Hale (Jackson Rathbone, The Last Airbender) disappear through the middle of the story, even though Alice is a prize that Aro covets. Strongman Emmett Cullen (Kellan Lutz, Immortals) and others from the clan, including Rosalie Hale (Nikki Reed, Catch .44), look to defend their family, and the newest hybrid addition. Carlisle recruits powerful vampires from around the globe, ranging from elemental master Benjamin (Rami Malek, Larry Crowne) to war veteran Garrett (Lee Pace, Lincoln) to sideliner Alistar (Joe Anderson, The Grey).

As Bella settles into her new cold, undead skin, she and Edward are faced with married life together, a child like no other, and the rising threat from the Volturi, the story plods along until the final stand-off. Fans get their share of bare abs and intimate moments during the quiet first act. When Alice foresees that the Volturi are heading to the wet West Coast to claim the child and purge the Cullen clan, the story becomes somewhat more interesting as the Cullen family head to different parts of the planet to recruit others to their aide. Bringing together such a varied and eclectic group of blood suckers changes the family dynamic and offers cool visuals, but the story finally reaches its destination as the Cullens and their witnesses face off against the Volturi and their guards on a field of freshly fallen snow. The vampires and the werewolves show their powers and fighting skills in the final battle against the ancient power-hungry self-appointed monarchs. The white backdrop remains uncharacteristically pristine as opposing sides rend limb from limb, ripping heads from the sinewy connections to necks and shoulders. For the characters you have grown to love, be prepared to lose some of the them to the wings of war.

I was never a huge fan of The Twilight Saga, neither in book nor film format. Put off in the earlier films by the adolescent love triangle and Stewart's lip-biting, brooding, wishy-washy Bella, I had started coming around to liking Bella's character at the end of Breaking Dawn - Part 1 when she delivered Renesmee and started her blood-letting journey as a glistening vampire. But although more strong-willed and ready for battle, Bella still doesn't command the respect that she needs in order to carry this final chapter to a close. The gathering of the Cullen witnesses is interesting in both locale and variety of  vampires, their powers, and their personalities.

The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 2 closes the book on vampire/werewolf/human girl love triangles. While the concept of vampires versus werewolves is not new - see Underworld or the Universal Monsters - Stephanie Meyer's version of glamoured skinned blood suckers and tribe packs of wolves enthralled a generation of young adult movie goers. Whether you're on Team Jacob, team Edward, or a general Twi-Hard fan, you will like this last installment. For the rest of us, The Twilight Saga may have been just a huge suck of time.