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 Vera Farmiga. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vera Farmiga. 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, February 10, 2012

Safe House

Safety in Numbers?

Rated: R  Some language and strong violence throughout.
Release Date: February 10, 2012
Runtime: 1 hr 55 mins

Director: Daniel Espinosa
Writers: David Guggenheim
Cast: Denzel Washington, Ryan Reynolds, Vera Farmiga, Brendan Gleeson, Sam Shepard, Robert Patrick


SYNOPSIS: Young inexperienced CIA agent Matt in charge of a safe house in Cape Town suddenly plays host to ex-CIA fugitive Tobin Frost. When the safe house is breached in attempt to assassinated Frost, Matt finds himself on the run protecting the man he is supposed to keep under guard.

REVIEW: Easy Money (2010) director Daniel Espinosa and Exit Strategy writer David Guggenheim team up with A-listers Denzel Washington and Ryan Reynolds for a fast-paced cat-and-mouse, spy versus spy, keep-you-guessing, tale of survival
Cape Town, South Africa CIA safe house keeper Matt Weston (Ryan Reynolds, Green Lantern) spends his shifts in a bored state, wondering when he will be reassigned to a real case officer position elsewhere on the globe. Even his CIA Langley contact David Barlow (Brendan Gleeson, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1) can't guarantee Matt any change in his current post. Soon, though, the U.S. Consulate receives a visitor, Tobin Frost (Denzel Washington, Unstoppable) as he turns himself in. Transferred to Matt's safe house, the CIA sends an interrogation team to extract whatever information Frost has gained since turning traitor nine years ago. When a heavily armed team led by a man named Vargus (Fares Fares, Easy Money) breaches the safe house after Frost, Matt makes the decision to move off-site with Frost in an attempt to protect him as an intel asset for the Agency. In Langley, senior analyst Catherine Linklater (Vera Farmiga, Source Code) and Barlow square off against each other to bring Frost in, while deputy director Harlon Whitford (Sam Shepard, The Notebook) orders them to work together to flush out both Weston and Frost before either or both are killed in the field.

Part Man on Fire and The Bourne Identity, Safe House is a white knuckle ride that doesn't let up until the very end. The story begins slowly and innocently enough as we watch Matt mindlessly throws a ball against an empty safe house wall listening to language lessons on his headphones and wishing for more adventure in his CIA career. Across town Tobin Frost meets with an ex-MI6 spook with possible incendiary information on a microchip to be sold to the highest bidder. Once Frost arrives at the safe house a 'walk-in guest', Matt unwittingly gets his wish as all hell breaks loose with automatic weapons fire, flash bangs, double-taps, and a high body count. But while the safe house ends up being anything but safe, the streets and bergs in and around Cape Town are no more safe as Weston and Frost take part in brutal high-speed chases on the run from relentless armed thugs desperate to reacquire Frost. But while Vargus and his men are on the hunt for the mysterious microchip, we soon realize that something more shadowy and covert is afoot.

The action is fast-paced and relentless. But even when the story slows down, Reynolds' Weston and Washington's Frost pace each other like coiled cobras. Every move Frost makes or statement he utters is a calculation he uses to further his own ends. The young Weston, anxious to prove his worth to the Agency he has dedicated his adulthood to, learns quickly that he has to up his own physical and mental game to go toe-to-toe with Frost, as well as unravel the tightening noose created by their pursuers and, possibly, his own Agency. Can Weston be a superior agent to the dangerous Frost? Can he trust the Agency as he continues to try to bring Frost in? Will he start questioning the directives of the Agency as Frosty burrows deeper into his psyche? Guns, chases, fights, conspiracies, and unavoidable and more difficult obstacles - all have a place in Safe House. Simmering and boiling over, the entire film is a lesson in kinetic and forward momentum.

Somewhat safe in their Langley, Virginia bunkered command center, Catherine Linklater, Davis Barlow and Harlan Whitford also master their dance of half-truths, office politics, and real or imagined conspiracies against the Agency and each other. Is there a information leak in the bureaucracy of the business, or are the men pursuing Weston and Frost just that lucky each time they catch up to the pair?

Shot in a grainy, washed-out, contrasted style, Espinosa makes the most out of the Cape Town, South Africa locales. From the center of downtown and a crowded soccer stadium, to a dirt road and isolated villa in the shadow of picturesque mountain ranges, Safe Town is a rock solid story cast against a exotic diverse landscape. The mix of rigged and handheld camera styles finish off a feast for the eyes, jostling around the cityscape during downtown high-speed automotive escapes and settling in close and steady between Frost and Weston as they glare at each other in distaste, adrenaline and testosterone.

Safe House is a high-octane thrill ride, covering all of the bases of the typical actioner. Some parts of the story work on all cylinders, some other could have been done better. As a conspiracy, some points are obvious to the genre initiated. But all in all Safe House will entertain and please, resting on the talents and on-screen presence of Washington and Reynolds, as well as as some great ass-kicking!

WORTH: Primetime and DVD

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Source Code

Eight Minutes To Save Millions

Director: Duncan Jones
Writer: Ben Ripley
Stars: Jake Gyllenhaal, Michelle Monaghan, Vera Farmiga, Jeffrey Wright. Michael Arden


Watch the Sucker Punch trailer now

RANT: While all of the kids and their mothers (or fathers) are cranking up the opening weekend grosses, taking in over double the nearest competitor, I decided to take in another underdog film, Source Code. I found the non kid demographics there!

SYNOPSIS: A captain in the Air Force finds himself in the body of another man as part of a mission to find a bomber on a Chicago commuter train.

Relative newcomer director Duncan Jones finds himself in front of a script from another relative newcomer writer Ben Ripley with his departure material for Source Code. Known for straight-to-video films Species III and Species: The Awakening, Ripley surprises with Source Code. Duncan Jones, director and writer of 2009's Moon with Sam Rockwell and Kevin Spacey, brings a freshness and thoughtfulness to a story that could have been a 12 Monkeys reject.

Jake Gyllenhaal stars as Captain Colter Stevens, a man who finds himself in the body of a man on a Chicago commuter train. Sitting across from him is Michelle Monaghan as Christina Warren, apparently a friend of the man who Capt. Stevens finds himself trapped in. Eight minutes later, the train explodes from a bombing... and Capt. Stevens finds himself trapped in a capsule with only a video monitor with Capt. Colleen Goodwin (Vera Farmiga) instructing him to remember his current mission to identify a bomber. Stevens mission is to find the bomber before the bomber detonates a second dirty bomb in the heart of Chicago later in the day.

The film is an interesting concept with the hearts of 12 Monkeys and Groundhog's Day, combining the action thriller of Capt. Stevens trying to solve the mystery of the bomber's identity and prevent the deaths of millions of Chicago residents, and the recurring attempts to do so eight minutes at a time before dying in the bomb blast.

Jake Gyllenhaal, Michelle Monaghan and Vera Farmiga are perfectly cast, bringing heart into the tale. Gyllenhaal conveys the confusion of a man out of time and body and the valor of a dedicated unsung military hero doing anything to save lives. Monaghan, although more of a foil to begin with as Stevens relives the same eight minutes, quickly expands into a true tangible interest that Stevens and the audience cares about. Finally, Farmiga's Goodwin is both mission driven and human compassionate. Rounding out the main cast is Jeffrey Wright as Dr. Rutledge, the inventor of the Source Code that Stevens finds himself in.

Source Code is a well-paced, duel-point thriller. The film focuses on the mission and Stevens ability to complete the mission parameters to save millions; all the while trying to find a way to go beyond the mission to save the commuter train passengers and, more importantly, Christina.

I enjoyed the ride, the characters and the code.

WORTH: Matinee or DVD