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 Ruben Fleischer director. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ruben Fleischer director. Show all posts

Monday, January 7, 2013

Gangster Squad

DRAMA

New Territories

★ ★ ★ ★ out of 5 | Movie - DVD - Rental

Rated: R Strong violence and language.
Release Date: January 11, 2013
Runtime: 1 hour 53 minutes

Director: Ruben Fleischer
Writers: Will Beall, Paul Liberman
Cast: Sean Penn, Josh Brolin, Ryan Gosling, Emma Stone, Nick Nolte, Robert Patrick, Michael Peña, Giovanno Ribisi



SYNOPSIS: In 1949, the chief of the LAPD enlists a group of police hard cases to form a gangster squad to go against Los Angeles crime boss Mickey Cohen.

REVIEW: 30 Minutes or Less and Zombieland director Ruben Fleischer goes 
dramatic Los Angeles mobster noir with a screenplay by Will Beall (Castle, the announced Justice League) from the book of the same name by Paul Lieberman. What happens when the law is not enough to keep organized crime in check? You create a task force with members more ruthless than the criminals ever were.
Ex-boxer Mickey Cohen (Sean Penn, Milk) only knows violence and power. He led with his fists in order to gain an upper hand in 1949 Los Angeles. As he controlled more and more of the city's organized crime, the cops and politicians not under Cohen's thumb are near powerless to combat the power hungry thug turned crime boss. Chief Parker (Nick Nolte, Warrior) enlists the service of homicide squad Sgt. John O'Mara (Josh Brolin, Men In Black III) to put together a squad of men who would work beyond the boundaries of the law in order to dish out justice against Cohen and his syndicate.

Gangster Squad is inspired by a true story as the men and women of post-war Los Angeles suffer under the rule of the mob. Part L.A. Confidential and part The Untouchables, Brolin's O'Mara puts together a squad of hard cases to work without the protective shield of the L.A.P.D. badge. 
Sgt. Jerry Wooters (Ryan Gosling, The Ides of March) is the young capable cop who has as many vices as he does virtues. African American Officer Coleman Harris (Anthony Mackie, Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter) on the beat is the only thing that stands in the way of heroin hitting his local streets. And Sgt. O'Mara's wife's urging, O'Mara ends up picking up old-style western six-shooter Officer Max Kennard (Robert Patrick, Trouble with the Curve) to give some accuracy to the boys' shooting. Tagging along with Kennard is a companion Officer Navidad Ramirez (Michael Peña, End of Watchwho doesn't seem to be right for the job but stands behind his guns when necessary. Rounding out the squad is Officer Conway Keeler (Giovanni Ribisi, Tedwho counterbalances to team's brawn with some brains as a former Army intelligence officer with skills and wiretapping to try to get at the bottom of Cohen's criminal mechanisms. 

There may be several members to the righteous Gangsters Squad but Mickey Cohen has his own men surrounding him loaded to bear. Most serve as cannon fodder and human shields to protect, but Cohen does surround himself with a trusted bodyguard and his number one lieutenant who serve him above all else. But none of the men who carry Tommy guns and carry out Cohen's orders are no match for the power-hungry man himself. Brolin's O'Mara has his hands full with the weathered, progressive-thinker brute with a plan grander than the city itself. The Chicago mobs may have clung to the old ways just a little to long, allowing themselves to be lulled into thinking their empires couldn't be toppled.

Tommy guns roar and bullets riddle both personal property and torsos. The film pulls no punches as hot lead and closed fists lead to sprays of blood. Embroiled with men on both sides of the law, Grace Faraday (Emma Stone, The Amazing Spider-Man) serves as the softer side of a story filled with hardened and driven men. A girl just trying to make it in Hollywood Land, Faraday ends up being an evening gown swishing, crimson-lipped dame on the air of both the domineering Mickey Cohen and the charismatic Jerry Wooter. Stone smokes up each scene she walks her gams into, but sometimes does not have enough to do to warrant part of the story.

Gangster Squad is the perfect post-noir period piece for your hard-boiled enjoyment. Of course, there are moments of Hollywood Land cinematic bravado. Such things are inevitable when there is such a vast library of storytelling already projected on the silver screen, plus guns and gristled men of action. Quentin Tarantino would be proud of the mob/gangster squad standoffs. And Kevin Costner, remember that scene at the train station with Elliot Ness in The Untouchables? Brolin, Gosling, and Penn ellipse that with more bullets and blood on the carpeted steps of a posh hotel. Director Fleischer and writer Beall ramp up the violence, the intrigue and the humor.
Michael Peña and Giovanni Ribisi add their own sense of style to the keep the mood as light as it can handle.

Gangster Squad is the perfect blend of bullets, blood, and classy babes. Brolin's square jaw, Penn's piercing stares, Gosling's charisma, and Stone's sultry eyes make for fine entertainment taking place on the streets of the City of Angels.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

30 Minutes or Less

Waiting For The Delivery

Director: Ruben Fleischer
Writers: Mihael Diliberti, Matthew Sullivan
Cast: Jesse Eisenberg, Danny McBride, Nick Swardson, Aziz Ansari, Michael Peña

30 Minutes or Less movie image

SYNOPSIS: Two wannabe criminal masterminds kidnap a pizza delivery guy, strap a bomb to his chest and order him to rob a bank for $100,000.

REVIEW: Ruben Fleischer, director or Zombieland, takes a script from relative scribe newcomers Michael Diliberti and Matthew Sullivan to bring us a day in the life of an average pizza delivery guy Nick. Reteaming with his Zombieland star Jesse Eisenberg, Fleischer tries his hand at a more obvious, less subtle comedy.

Jesse Eisenberg stars as Nick, a snarky pizza delivery guy who endangers life, limb and a beat-up mustang to try and get the hot pepperoni pies to their final locations in, you guessed it, thirty minutes or less. Cut to a couple of wannabe criminal masterminds Dwayne (Danny McBride from Pineapple Express) and Travis (Nick Swardson from Comedy Central's Reno 911!) who realize that they want to get their hands on Dwayne's father's remaining lottery money. In order to get the money, lap dancer Juicy (Biana Kajlich from CBS's Rules of Engagement) plants the seed that Dwayne should have a professional assassin kill his father so he, and her, can get the money. Of course, a professional hitman costs $100,000 that Dwayne doesn't have in his wallet. Dwayne and Travis concoct a plan to build a bomb vest, lure a pizza delivery guy to a scrap yard location, knock him out, strap on the bomb, and set him out to rob a bank for the $100,000 within 10 hours before the bomb explodes on its own. Once the money exchanges hands then Dwayne and Travis would give Nick the code to disarm and disrobe the bomb vest. Enter Nick's friend Chet (Aziz Ansari from NBC's Parks & Recreation) who Nick seeks out to help him get out of the vest to no avail and then participate in the actual robbery.

Similar in feel to Zombieland without the heart that Emma Stone, Woody Harrelson and Abigail Breslin brought to that film, 30 Minutes or Less is just a manic, 5-hour energy boost of a movie compressed into a hour and a half. Eisenberg is becoming the stoic straight-man caricature that he portrayed in The Social Network, Adventureland and Zombieland. Even Nicks's heartfelt 'final' goodbye to Chet's sister Kate (Dilshad Vadsaria) lacks any visual cues hinting at emotion. Maybe Eisenberg is getting the same roles, or maybe he needs to expand his facial expressions. Ansari brings his small screen mugging and outbursts perfected on Parks and Recreation to the role of Chet although the best scenes were already run through the movie's preview trailers. Danny McBride's Dwayne is classic McBride, full of venom, furrowed brows and bad judgements. Nick Swardson seems to be the most versatile as Dwayne's sidekick Travis, showing a little ingenuity and remorse. The breakout character is Michael Pena as Juicy's hitman boyfriend Chango. His off-beat gangster speech and mannerism provide the most laughs, along with Ansari's Chet.

Running at under one and a half hours, 30 Minutes or Less is a quick ride with a few potholes, a few blown lights and a few misses. We never find out what happens to Dwayne's father, The Major (Fred Ward) once Chango happens upon him. We have to suspend our disbelief much longer than usual to believe that Travis has the internet reading and general mechanical skills to create a stable bomb vest with a remote detonator, a countdown mechanism and loads of C4.

This film seems like a quick hit, but lacks the substance that will attract mass audiences greater than 18 to 25 year old males. Fleischer's Zombieland had laughs, action, and a solid cast and story. 30 Minutes or Less, with its great list of comedic actors, somehow just doesn't capitalize on itself, opting instead to deliver the goods after the time has expired.

WORTH: Matinee or Rental