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 Ty Simpkins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ty Simpkins. Show all posts

Saturday, May 4, 2013

Iron Man 3

ACTION/ADVENTURE

The Demons We Create

8.5 out of 10 | Movie and DVD

Rated: PG-13 Sequences of intense sci-fi action violence throughout, and brief suggestive content
Release Date: May 3, 2013
Runtime: 2 hours 20 minutes

Director: Shane Black
Writers: Shane Black, Drew Pearce
Cast: Robert Downey, Jr., Gwyneth Paltrow, Don Cheadle, Guy Pearce, Ben Kingley, Rebecca Hall, Jon Favreau, James Badge Dale, Stephanie Szostak, Paul Bettany, William Sadler, Ty Simpkins, Miguel Ferrer



SYNOPSIS:  After the events in New York City fight off the alien attack alongside Captain America, Hulk, Thor, Hawkeye and Black Widow, Tony Stark's world is further torn apart by a formidable terrorist called the Mandarin. After those he holds dear are put into jeopardy, Stark starts an odyssey of rebuilding and retribution.

REVIEW: Shane Black re-invented the action genre with his screenplay for Mel Gibson's Lethal Weapon. After writing The Long Kiss Goodnight, Black slipped into the background for a period of time before he and Robert Downey, Jr. on the 2005 Kiss Kiss Bang Bang. That film may have been the catalyst that reintroduced both into A-list territory again. Now they collaborate again, with writing efforts from Drew Pearce (the upcoming Pacific Rim), with the fourth adventure of the armored avenger named Iron Man.


The alien attack on New York City from a wormhole connected to the other side of the galaxy is over. The Avengers have disbanded for the moment. Tony Stark (Robert Downey, Jr., The Avengers), still suffering from the aftermath of the battle and his near death experience, finds he can not sleep and finds himself spending sleepless nights making new Mark armors. Pepper Potts (Gwyneth Paltrow, Contagion) has moved in with Stark at his Malibu ocean front home, with her and Happy Hogan (Jon Favreau, Identity Thief) working at Stark Industries. Colonel James Rhodes (Don Cheadle, Flight) still pilots the War Machine suit, repainted and renamed the Iron Patriot as it serves the United States' interests.  AIM think tank director Aldrich Killian (Guy Pearce, Prometheus) approaches Pepper with the idea of rewriting the human DNA structure for healing people, but she worries that the technology is too easily concerted to a weaponized version. All the while, United States President Ellis (William Sadler, Man on a Ledge) and Vice President Rodriguez (Miguel Ferrer, The Manchurian Candidate) deal with a new terrorist threat in the form of The Mandarin (Ben Kingsley, The Dictator), a man who hi-jacks the airwaves with announcements of America's corruption and need for cleansing fire. When a bomb blast puts Happy in a coma, Tony declares to the public that The Mandarin is in Iron Man's vengeful cross-hairs. Tony's public announcement sets off a chain reaction of destruction and damage that tests the limits of both the Iron Man suit and Tony's determination and abilities.

Tony Stark has come a long way from his abduction and captivity in the desert under the thumb of the Ten Rings. He has endured threats from within his own company and threats by his own government. Now a hero in the eyes of the nation, he must deal with internal demons revolving around his own insecurities against defending against the unknown, and new international terrorist threats that strike too close to his own home and family. Insomnia and anxiety rule his life, even with the support of Pepper.

Shane Black brings a different dynamic and tone to the third solo Iron Man adventure. Pulling his source from the 'Extremis' storyline, Black and Pearce create a modern villain to put in Tony Stark's path, coupling that hidden threat with the public face of Iron Man's most famous nemesis, The Mandarin. Tony Stark must face overwhelming powerful enemies, face questions about his own mortality against the likes of gods, aliens, and monsters, and face the fact that even with all of his armor he must rely on his own guile and wit. In the first two Iron Man films, Stark's genius created the Mark suits to win the day. In Iron Man 3, the power of the suits in simply not enough - no matter how smart Stark is.

Robert Downey, Jr. shows again why there is no other choice to fill the Mark suits as Tony Stark. Its not just the designer sunglasses and well groomed facial hair. Downey, Jr. has the humor, physicality, snark, and range to put Tony through all of his paces. Jon Favreau acts his namesake as Happy Hogan, happy to be an actor instead of pulling directing duties as well. He even gets to play detective for a bit. Paltrow shows she is not just a pretty face, donning the Iron Man suit on one occasion and kicking serious butt in another. Guy Pearce is at his slick, charismatic best as the rival genius Killian to Stark, taking Iron Man 2's Justin Hammer and adding a more beautiful exterior and a more mad scientist interior. Ben Kingsley, who may never hear the end of it from the devotee fans of the comics about his interpretation of The Mandarin, brings the Iron Man villain to an all-too-real modern era as a terrorist, losing the powers of the alien rings that the comics' Mandarin relied on to face the armored avenger. Rebecca Hall (Everything Must Go) joins the cast as bio-geneticist 
Maya Hansen. 
Joining the bad guys, James Badge Dale (The Grey) plays Killian #2 thug Savin and Stephanie Szostak (We Bought a Zoo) plays soldier Brandt. Paul Bettany (Priest) returns as the trusty A.I. servant Jarvis, and Ty Simpkins (Insidious) plays young 
Harley Keener, a kid that seems to set off Tony's anxieties with a couple simple questions.

Shane Black plays with a 70s motif and sensibility, making Tony Stark deal with a mystery that he may not be able to solve with computer models and simulations - or his powerful armor. Part Bourne Identity, part Mission: Impossible, part I Spy, Stark deals with a threat as fluid as Cold War tension and as real as Modern Era terrorism. Stay through the graphic end credits for the retro style and music to end cap Black's tone. Also stay until the end for an Easter egg scene. It's not as geek-tastic as some of the sequences we have seen in the past, but it is amusing.

Iron Man 3 is a different machine from previous outings. A little more serious than Favreau's films, this sequel has everything we have come to expect, and more. The only thing missing is the AC/DC soundtrack.

Saturday, April 2, 2011

Insidious

A Hodge Podge of Horror

Director: James Wan
Writer: Leigh Whannell
Stars: Patrick Wilson, Rose Byrne, Ty Simpkins, Lin Shaye, Leigh Whannell, Angus Sampson, Barbara Hershey


Watch the Sucker Punch trailer now

RANT: I'm sure that everyone thinks that I would be reviewing Hop today. But I am sure that I will not need to add my two cents in for that sure-fire hit. And since I am always amazed at horror films that come out at any point outside of Autumn, Insidious caught my attention.

SYNOPSIS: A couple and their three children are haunted. When they move into a new home and the hauntings continue, they make the realization that the hauntings are not coming from the house, but from their comatose son.

The writers and directors of Dead Silence and a couple Saw films come back to the screen with another stab at scaring us out of our seats. While Saw spawned a franchise and a small devoted fan base, James Wan and Leigh Whannell flailed with the creepy dummies of Dead Silence. Now, with sharp violin strings and a couple of boys that could double as a Damien stand-in (but in a good way), Wan and Whannell try again at the genre that brought them some success.

Josh Lambert (Patrick Wilson) and his wife Renai (Rose Byrne) move into a new home with their two sons and baby daughter, hoping for a fresh start. Of course, the outside of the house does not reflect the deep wood trim, endless staircases, creaking floorboards or squeaky door that leads to a musty, gray attic space. A couple days in, and the older son finds himself exploring the attic, hearing noises like twigs breaking, falling down, and his parents finding him comatose the next morning. Over the next three months, Renai starts seeing ghosts in their house and begs Josh to move again.

Wan and Whannell bring a couple cool ideas to Insidious. When the hauntings follow the Lamberts to the new house - which breaks the cardinal rule a la Poltergeist - the story takes a sweet turn by making the son haunted instead of the house. And Wan does some nice cinematography to make the new, more modern abode seem as creepy as the older model. Barbara Hershey enters in the second act as Josh's mother with a hidden family secret that most smart horror movie goers had already figured out to some degree with the first family photo that Renai unpacked, twice!

And again tipping the hat to Poltergeist, enter Lin Shaye as Elise Rainier, a medium and reserved ghost hunter. Preceding her are his two ghost hunter cohorts Specs (the writer Leigh Whannell - who is quite watchable) and slovenly Tucker (Angus Sampson). The trio actually steal the show while they are on-camera, even over Patrick Wilson's tortured husband and father and Rose Byrne's tortured and haunted mother and wife. While Lin Shaye is no Zelda Rubenstein, she does look cool in a Cold War-era modified gas mask. James Wan pulls the curtain back from the Insidious beyond, called the Further, allowing us to see what Carol Anne might have endured while in the spirit world.

I was prepared to be scared throughout. Wan and Whannell took the high road by not giving the audience the obvious frights. Sprinklings of The Sixth Sense, Thirteen Ghosts, Poltergeist, The Ring and other films, Insidious eventually disappoints with a weak, almost 1950s B-movie ghoul fest climax. I did jump once, with the fire-branded demon behind Josh. And a series of childhood photographs produced a couple of goose bumps, too.

Now I know why Insidious made an April release date. It was an April's Fools prank on me!

WORTH: Netflix