Tuesday, August 2, 2022
Vengeance
Saturday, July 23, 2022
Nope
Monday, July 18, 2022
Cabaret Fathom Events 50th Anniversary
Saturday, July 16, 2022
The Gray Man
Friday, July 8, 2022
Thor: Love and Thunder
Saturday, June 25, 2022
Elvis
Thursday, June 23, 2022
John Carpenter's The Thing Fathom Events
Monday, June 20, 2022
Lightyear
I don't know what audience this film is ultimately directed at. The plot is a little convoluted and complex for kids to relate to, and the adults in the audience will not find it as engaging as it should be as a straight drama. There is humor but it is not of the nature that we are used to in animated fare, and the movie just seems to sit there wanting to be loved but only managing to be respected. Somewhere in the story conferences, the Pixar team missed the heart that they usually find in a film, and instead they settled for the spectacle.
Chris Evans is fine as the voice of Buzz in this Movie about the movie that inspired the kid in another movie to idolize. I do think Tim Allen would have been able to bring the funny a little more often, but the problem is the script rather than just being the actor. The plot here is almost a reimaging of Christopher Nolan's "Interstellar" which was a complex, time based space travel film which also has a hard time explaining the time sequence elements that are at it's heart, but at least that was not simply rushed over. At the end of this film, an antagonist character shows up and it will be very confusing to the kids and he is not well explained to the adults.
The movie looks good, it is a nicely realized attempt to imagine a film that could stir Andy's imagination and make Buzz the competitor for his affection against Woody. Some of the images cross-over, like the space suit and the laser pointer weapon. The spaceship is a bigger stretch of imagination, but a kid can do that with the right toy. On the other hand, the Turnup ship, the new home base, and the defense shield all feel a little derivative. The robots of Zurg needed to be a bigger part of the story, there is just one element of that which makes much of an impact, the rest of the time they are barely in the background.
The heart that Pixar usually finds in the story is focused on a couple of characters that we needed to have more stakes in. Alisha Hawthorne as Buzz's best friend and commanding officer, is given an emotional story arc, but it takes place almost entirely out of Bizz's presence. The time elapse nature of the story keeps her and Buzz from being as connected as they need to be for us to really feel the loss. What Pixar was able to do in a few minutes at the start of "Up", they can't replicate in the 105 minutes that this film runs. When Sox, the mechanical cat is the hero of the story, and the key relationship Buzz has on screen, then he should be the heart tugger, and while there is a moment or two, they don't reach us the way they could.
I saw this in 3D and it made the backgrounds deeper and the foreground more interesting, but there was nothing special about it other than the 3D effect. Nothing pulls you in or startles you by coming off the screen. So the film is serviceable but not special, and that feels like a failure when we are talking about the source. For anyone else, it would be a solid hit.
Saturday, June 11, 2022
Jurassic World: Dominion
Tuesday, May 31, 2022
Top Gun Maverick
Tuesday, May 24, 2022
Star Trek The Motion Picture (4K Director's Cut)
effects shots and additional scenes to tantalize us. I owned that edition on VHS and on Laser Disc, as well as a Laser Disc version of the original theatrical cut. I suppose it was my purchase of a collection of Star Trek films from the first to the fifth in a Laserdisc Box set that made me complacent about updating the films when they had subsequent releases.
I have never seen the Director's Cut by Robert Wise from the 2001 DVD offering. I bypassed it, figuring ist was simply a remaster of the Special Edition. It was not until I saw the film last night that I saw what substantial improvements in the story had been made by the inclusion of two previously cut scenes and the trimming of other moments here and there. This 4K version is a remastering of the Director's Cut from 2001 and of course it is digitally enhanced to improve the video and the audio.
"The human adventure is just beginning."
Friday, May 20, 2022
Men
Thursday, May 5, 2022
Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness
Tuesday, May 3, 2022
The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent
TCM Film Festival Day Four
It's always a bit sad when you reach the last day of the festival. Even though you might have a full slate of events to attend, the knowledge that it is all coming to an end sometimes hangs over you. That's one reason to start the day off with something that you know is going to get you going on the right foot. I'd watched "Paper Moon" just a couple of months ago, when Director Peter Bogdanovich had passed away. My film salute that weekend also included "The Last Picture Show". It was just five years ago that he attended the festival to talk about "What's Up Doc?", the second of a trio of films that had made him the hottest director in Hollywood. "Paper Moon" was the third film in this string of hits and it won nine year old Tatum O'Neal the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress.
"Paper Moon" is a terrific film that is hugely entertaining, and it had the bonus of being a film my daughter had yet to see. It is my pleasure to have introduced it to her and to say that it was her favorite film of the festival, what a great surprise and joy. TCM Host Ben Mankiewicz interviewed Louise Stratten about Bogdanovich and his career. She was his former wife, longtime collaborator and friend to the end of his life. She is also the sister of the late Dorothy Stratten, who Bogdanovich fell in love with before she was murdered by her husband.
She spoke very highly of Bogdanovich and is trying to carry on his legacy with some film projects. Ben had recently spent a great deal of time talking with the director for the TCM Podcast
"The Plot Thickens". It is worth your time to listen, especially if you are a lover of older films.
After our first film of the day, we zipped upstairs to get inline for "Fly by Night", a comic thriller that I had never heard of before. Alas, we had a high queue number and it did not look promising for us to get in. We went over to the adjacent line to get a queue number for "High Noon" as a backup. Sure enough, with about seven people in front of us, we were informed that "Fly by Night" was full, so we zipped over and got seats in the back for the Gary Cooper Classic Western.
So maybe it wasn't our first choice, after all we have both seen it numerous times before, but it certainly deserves a showcase at the festival. We were Ok with the substitute and then we got something we did not expect and which was one of the highlights of the festival for us. Country Music star Marty Stuart was doing the introduction and he was fantastic. He expressed all the themes that the film was about and talked about how engaging the music was. He got so wrapped up in the energy of the tune that is the theme, he practically played it out by slapping his chest, like Matthew McConaughey in the "The Wolf of Wall Street".Of all the introductions of films at the festival, his was the most moving and generous and I felt really lucky to have been locked out of the other film. In addition to Mr. Stuart, we were introduced to Gary Cooper's daughter Maria Cooper Janis who had some stories of her own to tell about the film and her father.
Tony Bill, David Ward, Michael Phillips along with Ben Mankiewicz |
They talked about the casting issues and adapting the book to a workable screenplay. One story that they mentioned was that Robert Shaw's limp in the film was a result of an accident he had and instead of recasting the part, it simply became part of the character. Shaw got the part because the originally cast Richard Boone, mercurially vanished after being offered the part and no one knew how to get a hold of him.