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 Dakota Goyo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dakota Goyo. Show all posts

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Dark Skies

SCI-FI/FANTASY, SUSPENSE/THRILLER

Once Chosen, You Belong to Them

7.5 out of 10 | Rental

Rated: PG-13 Violence, language, drug content, all involving teens, sexual material and terror throughout.
Release Date: February 22, 2013
Runtime: 1 hour 35 minutes

Director: Scott Stewart
Writers: Scott Stewart
Cast: Keri Russell, Josh Hamilton, Dakota Goyo, Kadan Rockett, J.K. Simmons, L.J. Benet, Rich Hutchman, Myndy Crist, Annie Thurman, Jake Brennan


SYNOPSIS: As the Barrett family's peaceful suburban life is rocked by an escalating series of disturbing events, they come to learn that a terrifying and deadly force is after them.

REVIEW: Priest director and Legion writer/director Scott Stewart returns with a tale of aliens, abductions, and unseen forces claiming ordinary people for possibly sinister reasons. Will director Stewart bring the same visual style to a tale that seems more ordinary than his previous fantasy-based films?


Lacy Barrett (Keri Russell, The Amerikans) and her husband Daniel (Josh Hamilton, J. Edgar) struggle to keep their financial necks above water as the job market tightens and both do whatever they can to pay the bills and keep their sons Jesse (Dakota Goyo, Rise of the Guardians) and Sam (Kadan Rockett, The Fortune Theory) safe and secure. One day three different flocks of birds inexplicably slam into their house. Then their younger son Sam starts to sleepwalk outside without setting off the home security alarms. Pictures go missing from their frames. Furniture, dishes, and utensils reorganize into geometric designs seemingly all by themselves. The security alarm company can't find a reason for the failures of their system. The police who come to investigate the strange happenings think one of the sons had a hand in the pranks. When Lacy sees a strange humanoid form lurking above Sam's bed, she starts to believe that there is more going on than unrelated events. She goes online to find support from around the world for similar events that have plagued her and her family. The Barretts seek out author, conspiracy theorist, and former alien chaser Edwin Pollard (J.K. Simmons, Contraband) for an unified theory as to what they can do to keep their family safe and stop the events from happening to them. Warning them that moving away, going to the authorities, or ignoring the situation will not help, Pollard tells the Barrett family that their only recourse is to fight the 'greys' with everything they can, hoping that they can make their sons too much trouble to deal with.

Scott Stewart surprised me with the angel and demon roadhouse pre-apocalypse tale Legion. Dark Skies is more mundane source material with an ordinary, nothing special family of four who just happen to be the object of aliens interested in their abduction. The film will never be as epic as Close Encounters of the Third Kind, taking the story to the opposite end of the spectrum by focusing firmly on the plight of the nuclear family. All outsiders in the story - from the neighbors, to the alarm company, to the police - look at the Barrett family as if they are crazy, even if they do not come right out and say it. And from the outside, they family does seem altered. Older Barrett son Jesse is chased by his friend Kevin Ratner (L.J. Benet, Shadow Witness) and ends up having eye-rolling seizure in the woods. Younger son Sam goes to the pool and the neighbor finds disturbing mars on his back and stomach. In a normal world, Child Protective Services would be able to get to the bottom of the situation. In Dark Skies, the normal rules do not apply very well.

As the family dynamic falls apart, Lacy and Daniel are forced to deal with the unraveling strings of their own financial, emotional, and mental deterioration. Add in injury resulting blackouts, lost time, supposed hallucinations, and strange unexplained events, and you have an intriguing and engrossing film. Stewart makes sure to walk the audience through the painted and manicured facade of suburban life during the opening titles, letting us know that alien presences do not just relegate themselves to the Arizona desert; and that the fear of the unknown and mob paranoia is contagious regardless of geography and tax bracket. Like the Twilight Zone episode 'The Monsters on Maple Street', human nature is designed for self preservation and suspicion for anything out of the ordinary.

Stewart has a nice visual style, conveying the right mood with color, framing, and saturation. The nights are filled with striking blue hues, inside the house and out on the streets. Pollard's apartment is filled with newspaper clippings and a hazy and dusty atmosphere, the warm sepia tones denoting an aged worn look that reflects the war weary alien hunter and his eventual submission to the inevitable. The 'grey' aliens are used in perfect proportion, left out until they will provide the most impact.

The cast was well selected. Keri Russell and Josh Hamilton are perfect at everyday parents. They are nothing overly special or out of the ordinary. Just an ordinary family trying to make it. Dakota Goyo's Jesse has just the right amount of vexing adolescent angst against his parents to cause additional tension without ripping the family cleanly in half at the onset. Kadan Rockett's younger Sam is up for the task of being the aliens obsession, but doesn't compare to the little kid in Close Encounters or Danny from Stanley Kubrick's The Shining. The highpoint of the film is J.K. Simmons Edward Pollard. He states the existence of the 'greys' in such a matter-of-fact way, I would believe anything he told me. He also conveys the perfect beaten warrior, accepting of the eventual end of all things. His scene with Russell and Hamilton in his feline-filled apartment is worth the price of admission.

Dark Skies is a quiet suspense thriller centered around possible alien possession and abduction. The story is solid and the ending has some enjoyable twists and turns. Well cast and well directed, extraterrestrial lovers may want to taken to their leader.

Friday, November 23, 2012

Rise of the Guardians

Stay Frosty

★ ★ ★  out of 5 buckets | Matinee and DVD

Rated: PG - Thematic elements and some mild scary action
Release Date: November 21, 2012
Runtime: 1 hour 37 minutes

Director: Peter A. Ramsey
Writers: David Lindsay-Abaire, based on the book by William Joyce
Cast:  Chris Pine, Hugh Jackman, Alec Baldwin, Isla Fisher, Jude Law, Dakota Goyo, Khamani Griffin, Kamil McFadden, Georgie Grieve, Emily Nordwind





SYNOPSIS: When an evil spirit called Pitch becomes bent upon taking over the world by inspiring fear in the hearts of kids everywhere, the legendary spirits of Christmas, Easter, dreams, teeth and frost must unite to take on the threat.

REVIEW: Direct to DVD director of Monsters vs Aliens: Mutant Pumpkins from Outer Space, Peter Ramsey, goes to the big show with his first full animated feature release. David Lindsay-Abaire (Robots, Inkheart, the upcoming Oz: The Great and Powerful) adapts author William Joyce's book 'The Guardians of Childhood' into an animated action adventure featuring some of the most iconic holiday or mythical childhood legends that parents tell their children stories about. 
Hundreds of years ago, an invisible elemental spirit (Chris Pine, Unstoppable) came into being, unsure of who he was or what his purpose was. The only thing he was sure of what what his name was the name given to him by the Man in the Moon - Jack Frost! Now in the present day, as Jack Frost enjoys making blizzard conditions and giving kids snow days from school, an ancient menace named Pitch (Jude Law, Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows) has reemerged to challenge the current Guardians. Consisting of the Russian Santa Claus North (Alec Baldwin, Rock of Ages), a Tooth Fairy named Tooth (Isla Fisher, Rango), the Bunny of Easter (Hugh Jackman, Real Steel), and Sandy the Sandman of Dreams, the Guardians are dedicated to the cause of keeping the children of the world safe and filled with hope and wonder. Now, with Pitch looking to fill the children of the world with grief and fear, the Man in the Moon urges the Guardians to enlist the help of Jack Frost in their defense of the world's youngest. But can the Guardians count on a reckless elemental who just wants to have fun and wants to be recognized?

The animated Rise of the Guardians, based on the book 'The Guardians of Childhood', is a unique perspective on those mythical ideals that our parents have told us stories about. North, the embodiment of the Spirit of Christmas is not just a jolly, big-belled man in a red suit with white fur trim. He is a Russian-esque imposing figure armed with powerful magic and two swash-buckling swords. Like a Russian nesting doll North is jolly, but also fearless and filled with wonder. The Australian accented Bunny, armed with boomerangs and Aborigine markings, takes his task of hiding colored eggs and marking the advent of spring and of hope on Easter Sunday very seriously. Tooth, the director of thousands of hummingbird sized tooth fairies collects thousands of teeth each day in exchange for coins. The pint-sized silent Sandy uses his golden wispy sands to fill childrens' heads with their favorite dreams. Jack Frost, with all of his Final Fantasy white locks and wooden staff, knows how to make sure kids have fun - at the expense of a few adults sliding and sliding around. He seems reckless, but at his core he loves the children just as much as the 'big guys'. The question is... will the belief of the world's children be enough to power the Guardians against the evil of Pitch?

Pitch Black is a formidable adversary to the Guardians. He is the harbinger of fear and was a dominate force in the world in the Dark Ages. When the Guardians emerged as forces for good, Pitch's powers were diminished and he was cast into obscurity. But as Pitch's machinations come to bear against the children, every ounce of power the villain gains takes away from the Guardians energies and their ability to combat Pitch's fear-mongering.

The animation is superb! All of the characters are designed to the utmost details to embody the spirits they portray. Pine, Baldwin, Fisher, Law, and Jackman bring their respective characters to phenomenal life. The worlds created for each of the Guardians takes every mythical character in a direction unseen before, The action sequences are choreographed and rendered beautifully, every camera angle and fluid movement eliciting the proper thrill, dread, or smiles. For every dark moment that Pitch puts into play, director Ramsey balances with intriguing or comic moments.

Rise of the Guardians is the perfect action-packed holiday film in the spirit of the classic move formula where the heroes have to save the holiday. In this film, though, the stakes are higher as our beloved mythical characters are not just saving the holiday, but the hope and happiness of all children and the Guardians' own existence. Maybe a little scary for the smallest of our future generation of dreamers and believers, Guardians will otherwise delight parents and children alike.

Rise of the Guardians takes holiday animation to the next level, giving the audience thrills, spills, and chills along with a fine story of perseverance and redemption
. Jack Frost may be nipping at your nose, but he also has a free spirit and a warm heart.

Friday, October 7, 2011

Real Steel

A Robotic Glass Jaw 

Director: Shawn Levy
Writers: John Gatins, Dan Gilroy, Jeremy Leven
Cast: Hugh Jackman, Dakota Goyo, Evangeline Lilly, Kevin Durand, Anthony Mackie

SYNOPSIS: In the near future where robot boxing has become the predominant sport, a former top contender tries to rise to the top again from behind the joystick as a fighting robot jockey. Out of money and stuck with a son he never knew, he finds himself with a possible shot at the title.

REVIEW: Shawn Levy, director of the Night at the Museum movies and Date Night, ventures into somewhat new territory with a more action-oriented film involving Hugh Jackman and a bunch of slick rock 'em sock 'em robots bent of pulverizing each other in the squared circle. Based on a story by John Gatins (Coach Carter, Hard Ball), Dan Gilroy (Two for the Money), and Jeremy Leven (The Notebook, My Sister's Keeper), Real Steel brings with it the writing talent for sports dramas, conflict, and heart. But can a man looking for redemption behind the controls of a bag of bolts and gears make for a superior film? Let's find out!

In the near future where human boxing matches and mixed martial arts tournaments have been replaced by gigantic remote controlled fighting robots, Charlie Kenton (Hugh Jackman, X-Men Origins: Wolverine) is a former small-time boxer trying to scratch out a living by finding fights wherever he can find them. Whether a Podunk county fair or an local urban venue, Kenton finds himself in the loss column on a downward spiral, without a working robot and with loans out from a multitude of unsavory characters, including former boxer and opponent Ricky (Kevin Durand, 3:10 to Yuma). Bailey Tallet (Evangeline Lilly, Lost), an intimate friend of Charlie's and daughter of the man who sent all of his energies on Charlie's boxing career, is on the verge of closing up her father's boxing gym and desperate to try and get Charlie to settle his debts and give up the non-sanctioned career as a robot jockey. While Charlie tries to drum up more money he finds out an old girlfriend had died, leaving him custody of a 11-year old son Max (Dakota Goyo)who he abandoned years earlier. Strapped for cash, Charlie scammed his girlfriend's sister Debra's (Hope Davis) husband Marvin (James Rebhorn) for $100,000 to keep the kid for the summer and fund another robot. Still unable to catch a break, Max and Charlie come across a sparring robot that Max brings back into working condition. Max then leads Charlie on a quest to get fights for Atom, eventually leading to a possible WRB league match against the massive and undefeated WRB champion Zeus.

Hugh Jackson is buff and charming as always. With a scruffy face and bulging biceps, Jackson is fun to watch, whether he is on the losing end of a small-town robot fight or trying to exude his charms on Bailiey in order to get more money or mechanical advise. Evangeline Lilly's Kate... I mean, Bailey, is tender and sweet, unable to resist what she feels for Jackson's Charlie, in spite of his glaring faults. Young Dakota Goyo plays Max, using his own puppy dog eyes to rope Charlie into pursuing seemingly impossible to win fights with Atom. Kevin Durand adds conflict and back story, his sharp features and perfect teeth like a shark as his character Ricky looks to get even with Charlie. Rounding out the cast is Anthony Mackie as bookmaker and fight promoter FInn, and the Zeus team with Karl Yune as the robotic engineer Tak Mashido and Olga Fonda as Zeus' financial backer. Even family and writers get into the action. Sophie, Tess and Charlie Levy cameo as young sisters at the county fair, interested in seeing a fighting robot up close. Writer John Gatins appears as the funny and unforgettable scene-stealer "Kingpin", the punk organizer and operator of abandoned zoo fighting champ Metro.

The robots, from Twin Cities to Atom to Zeus, have personalities of their own. From massive and burly nature of Zeus to the quiet and reserved underdog Atom, director Levy tries to make every metallic fighter a character in their own right. The director mixes practically built interactive robots with the CGI fighting, making better use of scenes between Jackman, Lilly, Goyo and their robots. All of the robots are slick, big, and realistically placed. Unfortunately, the bond between Max and Atom is cute, but not as strong and enduring as it could have been. The fight scenes are epic and cool, and anyone who does not reference a correlation to Rock 'Em Sock 'Em Robots was probably born later than 1990!

The reference to Rock 'Em Sock 'Em Robots aside, Real Steel is actually very loosely based on the 1956 story by Richard Matheson (What Dreams May Come, I Am Legend) called "Steel", a fiction story first published in Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, and eventually translated into the teleplay "Steel" for The Twilight Zone. Both the story and Real Steel share a former boxer trying to pound out a living in a post-human boxing world with an aging fighting robot, unconsciously striving for redemption in the ring by living vicariously through their metallic counterparts. But where the mechanical failures of Battling Maxo in The Twilight Zone's "Steel" forces trainer played by Lee Marvin to get back in the ring himsef, Hugh Jackman's Charlie is able to stay ringside outside the squared circle for his chance at a comeback.

Entertaining and visually cool, Real Steel is a lesser mechanical version of Rocky with a little less heart. If Sylvester Stallone didn't utter a word or wasn't as endearing as an underdog, this may have been his fight!



WORTH: Matinee or DVD