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 Bill Burr. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bill Burr. Show all posts

Saturday, June 8, 2013

The Heat

The Heat poster with Sandra Bullock and Melissa McCarthy
COMEDY

Bring the Heat, Bring the Noise

8.25 out of 10 | Matinee or DVD

Rated: R  Pervasive language, strong crude content and some violence
Release Date: June 28, 2013
Runtime: 1 hour 57 minutes

Director: Paul Feig
Writers: Katie Dippold
Cast: Sandra Bullock, Melissa McCarthy, Demián Bichir, Marlon Wayans, Michael Rapaport, Bill Burr, Nathan Corddry



SYNOPSIS: Uptight FBI special agent Sarah Ashburn is paired with testy Boston cop Shannon Mullins in order to take down a ruthless drug lord. The hitch: neither woman has ever had a partner -- or a friend for that matter.

REVIEW: Bridesmaids director Paul Feig crafted a film that allowed Melissa McCarthy to a Supporting Actress Oscar nomination. McCarthy and Feig with another Oscar alum, Sandra Bullock, for a buddy cop movie - with women. Katie Dippold, with writing creds for MADtv and Parks and Recreation, takes her first crack at the big screen with this action/adventure comedy.


Sarah Ashburn (Sandra Bullock, The Blind Side) is a special agent with the FBI. Clearing more cases than her colleagues, Ashburn is pursuing the position for senior supervisor special agent of the office. But before she can be considered, her boss assigns her to track down a drug kingpin name Larkin in the Boston area. Looking through all the street-level dealers, Ashburn finds that a street thug named Terrell Rojas (Spoken Reasons) has been apprehended by the local Boston Police Department, collars by a detective name Shannon Mullins (Melissa McCarthy, Identity Thief). At odds from the start, Ashburn and Mullins try to gain intelligence by working their way up from Rojas to the bigger suppliers and distributors in an attempt to get at the mysterious Larkin. As they get deeper and deeper into the criminal organization's network, they have to overcome obstacles with each other, their respective law enforcement agencies, and a DEA operation already in progress on the organization. They either have to work together to get the collar or tear each other apart trying.

Bullock goes back into her fish-out-of-water, woman-in-the-wrong-profession, underdog FBI agent role that she was so effective at in Miss Congeniality. Disliked by her colleagues in spite of her impressive track record, Bullock's Ashburn is an outsider looking in. Melissa McCarthy is also an outsider, but she is feared rather than resented. Her Mullins' rough exterior is a result of growing up in an Irish Boston household filled with brothers, sarcasm, and general familial abuse. Unlike Ashburn's by the book practices, Mullins relies on her gut instinct to make the right choices. Both will be necessary to get the job done in this flick.

Unfortunately, Bullock's character is a little too similar to her Gracie Hart role, minus the meek, mousy exterior. The similarities are so apparent, I found myself a little bored at how familiar the character acted. Once McCarthy's Mullins appeared onscreen with Bullock's Ashburn, though, the chemistry and hilarious hi-jinks was evident and palpable. Together, they are comedy gold. McCarthy brings a wit, physicality and improv skill set that takes this flick to the next level. Some of the supporting cast adds to the fun, too. All of Mullin's Boston-born brothers, gathering around the family table for dinner, set a tone of discomfort and unwarranted Southie pride at the expense of both Sarah and Shannon. What is a narc, anyway?

I was a huge fan of the first Miss Congeniality, but here there is no pageant or support staff of law enforcement officers. Ashburn and Mullins are on their own. Bullock plays the same straight-as-an-arrow, play-by-the-rule-book special agent, but it's McCarthy's Mullims who steals the show with her vulgarity, sarcasm, and rude behavior. As much as I love Bullock, her reprisal of a too similar character to Gracie Hart seems a little dated and tired. But her chemistry with McCarthy turns up the heat on both the action and the laughs.

Fans of either of these too accomplished actresses will enjoy the slap-stick, vulgarity, and uproarious antics that these two get their characters into. The story is nothing new - criminal enterprises and the good guys (or girls) who try to bring them to justice - but the funny chemistry between this dynamic duo is brand new!

Monday, January 28, 2013

Stand Up Guys


COMEDY

Bad Boy Bucket List

★ ★ ★  out of 5 | DVD or Rental

Rated: R Sexual content, language, brief drug use and violence.
Release Date: February 1, 2013
Runtime: 1 hour 35 minutes

Director: Fisher Stevens
Writer: Noah Haidle
Cast: Al Pacino, Christopher Walken, Alan Arkin, Juliana Marguiles, Mark Margolis, Lucy Punch, Addison Timlin, Vanessa Ferlito, Katheryn Winnick, Bill Burr



SYNOPSIS: A pair of aging con men try to get the old gang back together for one last hurrah before one of the guys takes on his last assignment -- to kill his friend.

REVIEW: Writer/Actor/Director Fisher Stevens, moves back to the director's chair for a piece of fiction that is a little different than the documentaries and documentary shorts he is more known for. Stevens is joined by another member of the team who is moving from shorts to a full feature. Noah Haidle writes his first full-length feature, both attracting A-list talent with the likes of Christopher Walken (Seven Psychopaths), Al Pacino (Righteous Kill), and Alan Arkin (Argo).



Doc (Christopher Walken) loves to spend his time painting sunrises, then spending time at a diner talking to the waitress Alex (Addison Timlin, Californication). Today he changes his routine in order to pick up newly released convict Valentine (Al Pacino) - known as Val to hi friends - who he ran with doing mob jobs when they were younger. Now twenty-eight years later, Val and Doc are together again. The only problem is that Doc was given the contract to kill Val for killing the mob boss Claphands' (Mark Margolis, Immortals) son during a botched robbery which landed Val in prison in the first place. Knowing that his friend has been given a contract, Val decides to make it one hell of a night before Doc needs to "deliver the package" at 10am the next morning. Along the way they visits whorehouse, do lines of prescription drugs, have a few beers, and break out their old friend Hirsch (Alan Arkin) out from a adult living facility. As a night burns away the trio reminisce about old times and how this might be the end of the line.

Touted as an ex-con bucket list, Stand Up Guys is a sentimental look at regrets, aging, and things left undone and unsaid. Can Val cram all his last wishes into one night? Doc and Hirsch try their best to try to make it happen. Not only is Stand Up Guys about getting old and thinking about the younger years, but it's also about how the world is changed - And not necessarily for the better.

Director Fisher Stevens does a great job with the symbology in this film. A brand-new sports car represents how everything has changed around the old retired mobsters. Keyless ignition, horsepower, and all the gauges on the dashboard represents a new modern technological era that the retired mobsters just don't fit into anymore. Walken, Pacino, and Arkin prove to the younger thugs that sometimes the old ways are the best ways - even if the older generation may have lost a step or two.

Walken, Pacino, and Arkin give performances that you've come to expect and love from these actors. Walken, with his distinctive voice, cadence and mannerisms, shows that Doc is a happier man now that he's retired. Pacino brings back his typical devil-may-care attitude, just looking to fulfill his last night with food, booze, drugs, and women before the clock strikes 10 AM. Arkin is his typical gruff and quiet self who also wanted to fulfill one last wish since he was broken out of the nursing home. The trio is supported by Timlin's Alex, and victim Sylvia (Vanessa Ferlito, Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps) whose found in a compromising position. Add in Hirsch's daughter Nina, played by Julianna Margulies (The Good Wife) who slips comfortably into the familiar role of an ER nurse, and a Madam named Wendy (Lucy Punch, Bad Teacher) and her employee Oxana (Katheryn Winnick, Love and Other Drugs) and you have several avenues that the old timers can explore to serious or comic effect.

Stand Up Guys is a tight dramatic comedy about old-timer mobsters who make realizations about their mortality, regrets, and how the old ways are still the best ways. Walken, Pacino, and Arkin make the film their own, letting us indulge in their practiced arts of being wise guys. It's time to either kick ass or chew bubble gum... and I'm all out of bubble gum!