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 Forest Whitaker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Forest Whitaker. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Lee Daniels' The Butler

DRAMA

Part of History

8.0 out of 10 | DVD

Rated: PG-13 Thematic elements, sexual material, language, disturbing images, smoking and some violence
Release Date: August 16, 2013
Runtime: 2 hours 12 minutes

Director: Lee Daniels
Writers: Danny Strong, from an article by Wil Haygood
Cast: Forest Whitaker, Mariah Carey, Vanessa Redgrave, Oprah Winfrey, David Oyelowo, Terrence Howard, Cuba Gooding Jr., Lenny Kravitz, Robin Williams, John Cusack, James Marsden, Liev Schreiber, Alan Rickman



SYNOPSIS: An African-American's eyewitness accounts of notable events of the 20th century during his tenure as a White House butler.

REVIEW: Precious director Lee Daniels tackles desegregation, the Civil Rights movement, and the election of the nation's first black president from the point of view of a cotton picker-turned-White House butler, his wife, and children. Written by Danny Strong (Game Change) from the article "A Bulter Served By This Election" written by Wil Haygood.


Cecil Gaines (Forest Whitaker, The Last Stand) finds himself alone after the death of his father and the growing instability of his mother (Mariah Carey, Precious). Taken in by a kindly plantation owner widow (Vanessa Redgrave, Anonymous), Cecil is taken away from the cotton fields and raised to serve in the house. After several years as a butler, Cecil leaves the plantation and finds work as a server in a hotel in the Washington, D.C. area. In 1955, Cecil is invited to work as a butler in the nation's White House under the Eisenhower (Robin Williams, The Big Wedding) administration. As desegregation issues and Civil Rights become more important to the minorities of America, Cecil finds himself a fly on the wall of several presidents' administration, including Kennedy (James Marsden, Straw Dogs), Johnson (Liev Schreiber, The Reluctant Fundamentalist), Nixon (John Cusack, The Raven), and Reagan (Alan Rickman, Harry Potter series). At the same time as Cecil is privy to the inner sanctum and inner dialogues of the nations political machine, he finds he is unable to relate to a wife (Oprah Winfrey, The Princess and the Frog) and his oldest son Louis (David Oyelowo, Jack Reacher) who strives to become a part of the civil rights movement.

In the 1920s in Macon, Georgia young Cecil work's alongside his father and mother in the fields. Tragedy alone allowed Cecil to learn more than he would have and allow him the ability to venture out prepared into a harsh world. Raised and conditioned to be neither seen nor heard other than to serve Whitaker's Cecil slowly ascends to be pristine position in the presidental White House.

Based on a true story of real White House butler Cecil Gaines, the story revolves around his duties and his family who serve as a backdrop to the trials and tribulations of the decades of the 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s, and even the new millennium where African-Americans suffer under segregation as second-class citizens. Cecil shows the audience firsthand what he had to show is his career, his home life, and the politics that he claims he doesn't take part in. Cecil gives the utmost importance to his job, leaving behind his family to struggle through the times for themselves. His wife turns to alcohol-filled infidelity to fill the void that Cecil leaves behind. By trying to make a life better for his family by doing what he was trained to do, Cecil finds that he's unable to relate to his educated and civic-minded son Louis.

The director Lee Daniels puts together all-star cast for this film. Whitaker is no stranger to fine drama. He was riveting in The Last King of Scotland. Oprah Winfrey, Terrence Howard, Lenny Kravitz, and Cuba Gooding Jr.  dig into their roles with passion. Robin Williams, James Marsden, 
Liev Schreiber, John Cusack, and Alan Rickman all add their own personal spin on their individual roles as President.

This film, in a little over two hours, tries to balance political evolution with the personal impact that decisions had on the nation's African-American population. There is a lot to experience with over almost 80 year of American history to follow, and Lee Daniels' The Butler serves it well.

Thursday, January 17, 2013

The Last Stand

ACTION / ADVENTURE, SUSPENSE / THRILLER

Last Legs

★ ★ ★ 1/2 out of 5 | Movie - DVD - Rental

Rated: R Strong bloody violence and language.
Release Date: January 18, 2013
Runtime: 1 hour 46 minutes

Director: Kim Jee-Woon
Writers: Andrew Knauer, Jeffrey Nachmanoff, Goerge Nolfi
Cast: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Forest Whitaker, Peter Stormare, Eduardo Noriega, Luis Guzman, Jamie Alexander, Johnny Knoxville, Zach Gilford, Harry Dean Stanton, Genesis Rodriguez



SYNOPSIS: The leader of a drug cartel busts out of a courthouse and speeds to the Mexican border, where the only thing in his path is a sheriff and his inexperienced staff.

REVIEW: I Saw the Devil and The Good, The Bad, the Weird director Kim Jee-woon director takes on American audiences with the action flick return of Arnold Schwarzenegger. Ghost Team One writer Andrew Knauer and The Day After Tomorrow screenwriter Jeffrey Nachmanoff work under writing supervisor George Nolfi (The Adjustment Bureau) to take a last stand against the cartel.
Chief sheriff ray Owens (Arnold Schwarzenegger, The Expendables 2) enjoys the quiet of his one-light Main Street border town of Summerton. As the local high school football team takes the students and most of the residents of the town hours away, several hundred miles north in Las Vegas FBI agent John Bannister (Forest Whitaker, Repo Men) leads a team of swat, FBI agents and security to transport a federal prisoner by the name of Gabriel Cortez (Eduardo Noriega, Vantage Point) to federal death row. Cortez promptly escapes in a well executed breakout plan and races into the desert with a suped up Chevy Corvette Zero 1 with a FBI agent hostage Ellen Richards (Genesis Rodriguez, Man on a Ledge) in tow. As Cortez races to the Mexico border, the otherwise quiet town of Summerton Junction is facing its own problems when the inexperienced deputies under Ray's command discover a brutal murder that leads to a moonlit firefight between deputy Sarah Torrance (Jaimie Alexander, Thor), deputy Jerry Bailey (Zach Gilford, In Our Nature), and Mike Figuerola (Luis Guzman, Journey 2: The Mysterious Island). As the bullets fly and Cortez speeds closer to town, Ray must barricade the main roads and rely on his novice deputies, an antique weapons museum curator Lewis Dinkum (Johnny Knoxville, Fun Size), and the friend of a fallen officer.

Arnold Schwarzenegger returns to the big screen in a big way, obviously catching the acting bug with his cameo appearances in The Expendables and The Expendables 2. A relative unknown Austrian born actor... just kidding... Schwarzenegger has had a phenomenal career on the silver screen in many genres, including action, comedy, science fiction, and more. When he decided to follow in the footsteps of Ronald Reagan, Schwarzenegger gave up acting for politics. But true to his word, Arnold is back. At sixty-six years of age, Arnold still cuts a muscular silhouette. But his age is starting to peek through the sinews of his biceps.

The Terminator himself makes some smart moves with his return to action. Director Kim Jee-Woon uses his experience in the genre to maximize the gun battles, car chases, and sequences of cat and mouse. Schwarzenegger lets the rest of the cast do more of the heavy lifting, instead of relying on his own brawn to carry the movie. Forest Whitaker, an imposing actor all his own, leads a team of agents in hot pursuit of a dangerous fugitive. Cortez's henchman lieutenant Burell (Peter Stormare, Lockout) is as slick as snake oil as he and the rest of Cortez's small paramilitary force assemble the final piece of Cortez's escape plan. While Cortez and Burell make up the relentless, dangerous criminals with no remorse for the taking of innocent lives, Schwarzenegger's Ray Owens assembles his own army. Unfortunately for Schwarzenegger's Ray, his army consists of a bunch of local misfits, including Johnny Knoxville's Lewis and Luis Guzman's Figgy who provide much of the comic relief to balance the intense action sequences.

Some of the story is filled with Austrian cheese, almost every line uttered from Mr. Universe's lips a possible future classic cliche. Schwarzenegger continues in the tradition he set for himself years ago with Terminator, Conan the Barbarian, and Predator, now a caricature of his former self. At the climax, after Ray and his deputies had stared down a small, heavily-armed army, Ray does have enough in the tank to go mano-y-mano against the third generation cartel-bred Cortez.

The Last Stand will not be the pinnacle of Arnold Schwarzenegger's career, far from it. But what Arnold brings with his latest effort is a fun popcorn bucket thrill ride that should delight action fans during the slower Winter/Spring season film slots. The car chases are slick and adrenalized, the firefights are bloody and filled with lead. There are ooohs, aaahs, and chuckles. The climax could have had a better look to it to match the rest of the film, but Schwarzengger manages to still kick a little ass.

The Last Stand has plenty of action twist and turns, all culminating in a final fist swinging showdown between two physical opponents. If you need a shot of action in your veins, The Last Stand may just do the trick.

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Repo Men

Be Sure To Pay In Full
[Jude Law, Forest Whitaker, Liev Schreiber, Alica Braga]

A rare occasion today. I went to work early, planning a late show with the boys after work. Plans changed, movies were switched, the boys were available, then not. Finally, most of the planets aligned, some boys were able to come, and the original movie selection was on deck at a later time. 

SYNOPSIS:  In a near future, medical advances allow most any part of the body to be replaced... at a price. And if you can't pay the monthly installments and fall behind 90 days, then the repo men come to take back what the company's property. When a repossession job goes bad, one repo man wakes to find he is now a client with an artificial heart, and soon enough, finds himself unable to pay!

I love sci-fi movies, especially those in the near future. From the trailers and commercials, "Repo Men" fit that bill perfectly. I was hesitant about both Jude Law and Forest Whitaker in this type of movie, sci-fi and action together. Even with Whitaker's acting pedigree and Law's work, I was still worried. I should not have given it a second thought. Brutal, bloody and intriguing, this film delivers.

Like other genre films before it, "Repo Men" gives us a glimpse of what is and what could be. With a homage to "Blade Runner" in one of the early panning city shots, the world has failed and come back more capitalistic and self-absorbed... and dominated by the Pacific Rim. When the elementary school has its own dynamic billboard promoting a cola that's "jacked up", you know you are in a effed up society. A mix of "Blade Runner" and "Children of Men", the contrast of neon advertisement and crumbling thrown away decay is always a sign of what we are truly are, but always deny.

Jude Law stars as Remy, a premier repo man working for the "Union", a shady corporation that sells artificial organs on credit. Forest Whitaker joins him in the trade as his childhood friend, Jake. They receive paperwork to collect organs from clients who are 90 days past due on their payments, as well as tracking down extra commissions on their own. Law is buff, burly and all business as he expertly dispatches his clients in collections. Whitaker is just burly, but brings his "The Last King of Scotland" chops to bear. Ironically, the replacement of his real heart with the warranty version only serves to bring more life to the film, as Remy makes the realization of what his life has been about as he stares at it from the other side. 

And if the film is teeming with life, it is tempered with exceptional blood-letting. Each scene of violence and stylized gore is "300" meets "The Matrix". And once the carnage is complete, the viseral aftermath is an affirmation of what is important. The film is balanced with a few laughs, a few 'oh crap' moments, great visuals, good story-telling and believable acting. I figured out the ending before it came, but the ride getting there was worth it.

Movies: Yes
Own: Yes
Rental: sure