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 Scott Eastwood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scott Eastwood. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Texas Chainsaw 3D

HORROR

Massacred

★ ★ out of 5 | Movie - DVD - Rental

Rated: R Strong grisly violence and language throughout.
Release Date: January 4, 2013
Runtime: 1 hour 32 minutes

Director: John Luessenhop
Writers: Adam Marcus, Debra Sulivan, Kristen Elms, Stephen Susco, characters by Kim Henkel and Tobe Hopper
Cast: Alexandra Daddario, Dan Yeager, Tremaine 'Trey Songz' Neverson, Scott Eastwood, Tania Raymonde, Shaun Sipos, Keram Malicki-Sanchez, James MacDonald, Thom Barry




SYNOPSIS: A young woman travels to Texas to collect an inheritance; unknowingly finding herself pitted against a chainsaw wielding maniacal killer who is rumored to have killed several people years before.

REVIEW: Takers writer and director John Luessenhop takes a trip down a dark road to continue the myth that dwells behind the mask of the chainsaw wielding Leatherface. Written by a cadre of scribes, including Adam Marcus (Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday), Debra Sullivan (Conspiracy), Kristen Elms (TV movie Banshee), and Stephen Susco (The Grudge), Luessenhop tries to start a buzz around startling and horrifying characters created in 1974 by Kim Henkel and Tobe Hooper. 
In 1974, Jeb Sawyer, aka Leatherface (Dan Yeager, Metal Heads) brutalizes and kills several young people traveling through Texas. When a lone girl escapes and goes to the authorities, Sheriff Hooper (Thom Barry, 2 Fast 2 Furious) returns to take Jeb into custody. Before he can do so, Burt Hartman ( Paul Rae, True Grit) and a posse of avenging neighbors that it upon themselves to take matters into their own hands, shooting up the property and burning down the house. None of the Sawyer family survives save an infant Heather (Alexandra Daddario, Hall Pass) who is scooped up by the Miller family to raise. Years later, Heather receives a communication that she has inherited property and assets from a grandmother she never knew, spurring her to travel to Texas with her boyfriend Ryan (Tremaine 'Trey Songz' Neverson, Preacher's Kid), best girlfriend Nikki (Tania Raymonde, Blue Like Jazz), and Ryan's band mate friend Kenny (Keram Malicki-Sanchez, Punisher: War Zone). Along the way they bump into hitchhiker Darryl (Shaun Sipos, Rampage), and travel to the Carlton estate to see what lies in store for them. But no more than a couple hours after their arrival to the house the behemoth known as Leatherface, along with his favorite buzzing tool of dismemberment, is released on the unsuspecting group of teenagers to restart his buzz saw killing ways.

In 1974, writer/director Tobe Hooper took his impressionable memories of Ed Gein and crafted a horrifying tale of a deranged nuclear family with fierce protective familial loyalties and a perchance of being the cut-ups at any party. Dennis Hopper tried to avenge his own family years later in the 1986 Massacre followup. The franchise descended into its own sticky strange mire for a while with A Family Portrait and The Next Generation. But in 2003, Michael Bay produced a terrifying and satisfying reboot of the franchise with the Marcus Nispel directed effort written by Scott Kosar and starring Jessica Biel and R. Lee Ermey, following up that success with a even more twisted sequel/prequel from Jonathan Liebesman and writers Sheldon Turner and David J. Schow. Things were looking up for Leatherface. The 2003 and 2006 reboots did what they had set out to do and breathed new life into a family that was hell-bent on dishing out death for its own survival and twisted sense of love.

Now in 2013, the year must be a bad omen. Leatherface returns with his signature chainsaws, floppy ties, and limping posture. At the first title scenes, TCM fans must have been optimistic. The audience is treated to the 'archive' footage from the original 1974 Tope Hooper film. Its plot highlights, from teenagers stepping onto the Sawyer property and receiving ghoulish ends, to a strange family dinner party where a hapless blond is the guest of honor, to a screaming escape in a pick-up truck accented by a man in a human mask shaking and whipping around a smoking feller of trees, all preparing us for a film of the same cool tone and quality. What we get is a quick cut to the responding police officer Hooper in the aftermath at the end of the first film, along with several shotgun-toting Sawyer clan members that we have never seen before. After justice is served, Luessenhop propels forward eighteen years to a grown up Heather Miller/Sawyer who takes a VW Minibus trip to Texas similar to most of the Massacre films we have already watched. The question is, do you get enough quality scares for the money?

Luessenhop does surprise with a few good startles, especially when Leatherface slides out of the shadows or appears behind his victims. The 3D does nothing for the film beyond the typical schlock 3D shot of a chainsaw blade emerging from the screen, but even that said I will admit there were a couple 3D moments that made me want to duck. It was a certainty that the queasy fear and disgust that Tobe Hooper conjured up in 1974 with his early slasher fair would not be duplicated. The 2003 reboot surprised and pleased hardcore TCM fans and newbies alike. This season's Texas Chainsaw 3D must have left the Massacre off the title because the studio was going to prove that it was going to massacre and smear the good horror genre name of Leatherface. Mission accomplished, I'd say.

The story had promise and attempts a few times to follow through. Besides the couple of jumps from Leatherface that I have to attempt surprised and shocked me off my seat a little, the idea of the Sawyer Clan and a next generation of family roots that Leussonhop conveys is a consistent theme through any of the TCM films. But as the killings get under way, the plot becomes more and more obvious. Sure, there are a few turns along the way, but nothing that is so gripping, revealing, or revolting to carry the film. One standout scene involves Officer Marvin (James MacDonald, >The Kids Are All Right) as he is prodded by the mayor against the sheriff's orders to follow a blood trail in pursuit of Jeb Sawyer. Another scene, with Heather in the back of a police cruiser, foreshadows the ending all too well - her wide-eyed terror giving way to purpose.

TCM is all about family. In 1974, it was an oddity in modern horror to see the devil from their perspective. In this outing, Leatherface is cast as a protector who is just shielding what's his and his family's. The real villains end up being Mayor Hartman and a handful of redneck ruffians including Carl (Scott Eastwood, Trouble with the Curve) bent on the Sawyer family's ultimate destruction.

Texas Chainsaw 3D leaves off the Massacre in both tone and scope. Pale in comparison to the brilliant classic that Hooper created almost 40 years ago and the excellent reboot 10 years ago, this attempt seems to be a chainsaw with no teeth.

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.