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 Rory Kinnear. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rory Kinnear. Show all posts

Saturday, November 10, 2012

Skyfall

Old Dogs

★ ★ ★ ★ out of 5 buckets | Matinee and DVD

Rated: PG-13  Language, intense violent sequences, smoking and some sexuality
Release Date: November 9, 2012
Runtime: 2 hours 23 minutes

Director: Sam Mendes
Writers: Neal Purvis, Rober Wade, John Logan, from characters created by Ian Fleming
Cast:  Daniel Craig, Judi Dench, Javier Bardem, Ralph Fiennes, Naomie Harris, Albert Finney, Ben Whishaw, Rory Kinnear, Ola Rapace, Bérénice Marlohe




SYNOPSIS:  Bond's loyalty to M is tested as her past comes back to haunt her. As MI6 comes under attack, 007 must track down and destroy the threat, no matter how personal the cost.

REVIEW: Director Sam Mendes, acclaimed creator of American Beauty and Road to Perdition, comes aboard to helm the 24th Bond film and the third of the series starring Daniel Craig. After Casino Royale and Quantum of Solace, Neal Purvis return to scribe Skyfall. Joined by Robert Wade who has written several of the recent installments of the Bond series and Hugo writer John Logan, Purvis brings back the Ian Fleming British super spy back to life. 
James Bond (Daniel Craig, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo) and Eve (Naomie Harris,Ninja Assassin travel to Istanbul, Turkey to hunt down assassin for hire Patrice (Ola Rapace, Beyond) who has stolen a MI6 hard drive containing a NOC list of most of NATOs deep cover operatives. With Patrice battling Bond on top of a train, Eve is ordered by MI6 director M (Judi Dench,The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel) to take the kill shot. Eve does and Bond is flung from the train and into the ravine's cold waters - left for dead. Some time later, when M is saddled with the operation's failure, she is asked by the new head of Intelligence and Security Gareth Mallory (Ralph Fiennes, Wrath of the Titans) to step down from her position and transition into retirement. Unwilling to simply lay down, M pushes on to find the mastermind behind the theft of the NOC list. When she witnesses the bombing of her MI6 office, M moves underground and Bond, who had been quietly living off the grid in a hut on a Mediterranean coast, returns to London to be at his director's and country's service. The pursuit of Patrice leads to beautiful Sévérine (Bérénice Marlohe, L'art de séduire), which leads to Silva (Javier Bardem, Biutiful) a brilliant disgruntled former Double O disciple of M whose true intentions are known only to him.

Skyfall is the 24th James Bond film, celebrating 50 years of 007 films. Daniel Craig, in his third outing as the titular agent on her majesty's secret service, again turns the franchise on its head. Craig, too roguish and raw to replace the suave and smooth operations of Connery, Moore and Bronson, continues to set himself apart as 007. Some may like him, some may hate him, but all should admit that Craig's Bond is unique and earnest in his portrayal of the iconic character. And maybe Craig's raw and sometimes unrefined nature is what Bond should be in this day and age. I like the new Bond as much as the Bonds of my youth. Connery and Moore always exuded capable cool under pressure, never a stitch or cuff out of place. Dalton and Brosnan took up the mantle and the tradition of the character in the manner that those before them had established. Daniel Craig's Bond is more like George Lazenby's portrayal, more vulnerable and real flesh and blood. The campiness and over-the-top villains of my youth are gone, replaced by a more grounded and realistic interpretation of the Bond Universe.

Craig's James Bond has come a long way since Casino Royale. He is more experienced and a slight bit more comfortable in the suits and tuxedos that he wears. His martinis are again shaken, not stirred, but he still enjoys a whiskey or beer when it suits him. Like in Chris Nolan's caped crusader in The Dark Knight Rises, James Bond is now considered an 'old dog'. He and MI6 is part of an espionage world that is deemed by the Prime Minister outdated and antiquated. Yes, the world has changed. But with the clarity and reach of global technology, the understanding of the enemy has lost focus. The enemy is no longer just a dictator or an aggressive nation, but groups of terrorists or zealots who do not announce themselves like the enemies of the Cold War era. As the times and villains change, so must the experienced men and women called to defend crown and country against all manner of new threats.

The blond James Bond seems such a departure from the earlier versions. In Casino Royale, the secret agent was deconstructed and returned to a novice position. In Quantum of Solace, we saw Bond go deeper and darker than expected. Now, in Skyfall, Bond is again deconstructed - not as an inexperienced agent but as a man who has left the game and must struggle to find his way back to his former self. His vulnerability is what I find appealing about the character. It may be cool to seemingly dodge bullets and remain indestructible, but the fear of pain and injury makes what Bond does more heroic and important.

Daniel Craig and Dame Judi Dench are great actors and bring much to their respective roles. But no heroes can be heroic without an important villain. The phenomenal 
Javier Bardem from No Country for Old Men creates another villain just as quirky and original as that of Anton Chigurh, friendo-o. Bardem's Silva replaces the mop top with blond coiffed locks and an effeminate air that thinly veils a brilliant ruthless mastermind that keeps always two steps ahead. Silva could be considered over the top like Bond villains of old, but Bardem keeps Silva laser focused and tightly coiled without a hint of camp. Adding to the roster are Ralph Fiennes, Ben Whishaw (Cloud Atlasas the new MI6 Quartermaster QRory Kinnear (Broken) as M's ever vigilant assistant Tanner. Even acting great Albert Finney (The Bourne Legacy) makes an appearance as Kincade, a gun-toting bearded man from Bond's past.

The action is fierce, the story propelling forward as if the train had no brakes. Even when the story does coast for a while with quiet dialogue, there is still an urgency to the scenes or the words that keep the pace tight and moving forward. The entire chase and confrontation between Bond, Eve, and Patrice in the opening scene will blow you away, from a motorcycle race through the streets of Istanbul to a train-bound dozer scooper that keeps Bond from losing his quarry. As always, the franchise takes us to beautiful exotic locales, with plenty of kinetic energy, blazing guns, explosions, and good old classic espionage. 


Skyfall doesn't have the ring of some many other of the Bond films. Live and Let Die, Die Another Day, and A View to a Kill are so distinctive. But rest assured, this film and this Bond are distinctive all their own - without losing what makes Bond so iconic in the first place.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

We Need To Talk About Kevin

Parental Desperation

Rated: R  Disturbing violence/behavior, some sexuality and language
Release Date: January 13, 2012
Runtime: 1 hr 51 min


Director: Lynne Ramsay
Writers: Lynne Ramsay, Rory Kinnear, novel by Lionel Shriver
Cast: Tilda Swinton, John C. Reilly, Ezra Miller, Rocky Duer, Jasper Newell, Ashley Gerasimovich




SYNOPSIS: Eva Khatchadourian sits in a dilapidated house and a dead end job with her grief and sense of responsibility wondering how her marriage and life were shattered by the actions of her teenage son.



REVIEW:
 In a season of films by writer/directors, another touted film has come to the attention of the award shows in the form of Tilda Swinton's film We Need To Talk About Kevin. Directed by Lynne Ramsay (Morvern Callar) and co-written by the director and Rory Kinear from the novel of the same name by Lionel Shriver.


In Lionel Shriver's novel, Eva Khatchadourian writes in the first-person a series of letters to her husband concerning her coming to grips with what her high-school son has done. If you haven't read the book or found out more from the write-ups, trailers or articles, I will not spoil it here for you. Eva (Tilda Swinton, Burn After Reading) starts the movie as a blissfully young free spirit traveling the world. In her adventures she meets Franklin (John C. Reilly, Cedar Rapids) and settles down to New York to raise their firstborn son. A constant cryer, Eva worries at first that she is a bad mother. As Kevin grows older (played by Rock Duer as toddler, Jasper Newell as 6 to 8 year old, Ezra Miller as teenager), Eva worries then worries that there is something wrong with her son. As Kevin grows older, he is distant and emotionless to her. When he does show some affection for his mother, she laps up all she can get while it lasts. When the unspeakable happens, Eva loses her family, home, job and savings, and is left with a son that still despises her.

Told in flashes while Eva struggles to deal with her new shambled surroundings and menial job at a travel agency, we see her as the free spirit that feels caged as she deals with the pregnancy with Kevin. She seems disconnected from the entire ordeal. And when toddler Kevin doesn't show her the love that any mother should receive, she wistfully longs for the world traveling days that preceded her marriage and motherhood. As Eva scrubs away the paint that someone spattered across the front porch of the rental she is living in or stands at the copier watching the Xerox makes copies, we return to her past with her Franklin, Kevin, and, eventually, a daughter Celia (Ashley Gerasimovich).

The award shows are touting Tilda Swinton's performance. The nomination is well-deserved. She is both haunted and petrified as she notices and fears for what her son is becoming. While Kevin is the perfect smiling son to father Franklin, Kevin glares at his mother with open disdain. At all times Swinton looks like she is barely containing an emotional breakdown, desperately holding back fears or tears from her predatory son or not naive husband.

But every great hero needs a great villain. The role of Kevin, played by three actors, is the perfect evil foil for Swinton to battle with. Starting with young Rock Duer and a glaring defiant toddler Kevin as Eva unsuccessfully gets him to roll the ball back, to Jasper Newell as the six-year-old whose defiance runs so deep he is content to humiliate his mother by continuing to wear diapers and forcing her to change him, to the teenage Ezra Miller as a Kevin much too interested in the archery equipment his father gave him as a present or in bossing his younger sister around to fetch sodas for him. All three share a piercing, emotionless glare that rivals any deadpan looks from The Omen's Damian.

Even being unfamiliar with the Shriver novel, the way the film is paced and shot clues the audience in early on on the atrocities that Kevin is destined to commit. The imagery is vivid and visceral. As Eva tries to clean the angry red paint from her rental and
 becomes soaked in pale red stains, we can see the 'blood' on her face and hands representing the guilt she feels over what has happened.

We Need to Talk About Kevin has been slated as a suspense horror film. Eerie and a little creepy, the emphasis is more psychological than scary. Kevin is the epithome of a budding sociopath, and every scene drips with his deep calculations to torture his mother and please his father. This film is not for everyone, regardless of the superb performances and surreal cinematic style. But for those who can't get enough suspenseful, artistic quiet thrillers, We Need To Talk About Kevin may speak to you.




WORTH: Matinee or Rental