Thursday, December 19, 2013

Movie Recommendation - Brick



Brick is the first film by writer/director Rian Johnson, a man whose unique perspective came to light in last year's Sci-Fi hit Looper and his work directing some of the best episodes of Breaking Bad.

Brick has been one of my favorite movies for years, ever since a podcast I listened to when I was about 15 told me about the then new movie. I couldn't find it anywhere for a good couple years, until one day I found one used copy in a now-defunct local video game store on their dvd rack. It's combination of high school drama mixed with Hardboiled Film Noir became an instant classic for me, and I try to expose as many people to this film as possible. Now that Looper has come out I think it's a much easier task these days, but I still try and get as many people as I can to see this movie.

It's hard for me to not spoil things when talking about Brick because my enthusiasm for it is only ever being barely kept in check, but I'll try my best to keep it succinct.

The premise of Brick is this; our main character Brendan (played by Joseph Gordon-Levitt) is a high school outcast that had a falling out with his now-estranged girlfriend Emily (played by Emilie de Ravin.) We start the film with a phone call to Brendan from Emily asking for help, and Brendan is on the case. He conducts an investigation into the events that led up to Emily asking for help, and her eventual disappearance.

The conceit of the film is that it's a Thriller film set in high school told through a Film Noir lens. All the characters talk as if they were straight out of a 1940's gangster movie, and Brendan is our down-on-his-luck Private Investigator, though in reality he's just a high school student.

The film is full of twists and turns that you won't see coming. Though fair warning, the 40's gangster speak can take some getting used to. I had to watch it with the subtitles on the first couple times to understand what was being said. I find it interesting to see how Johnson was able to so able to completely strip a 1940's Noir movie to it's essentials and replicate what those scenes in a movie made in 2005 set in a high school with teenagers. There are Femme Fetale's, Police Chiefs, interrogations of witnesses and all sorts of other Noir essentials that are somehow re-purposed into the film in some way or another. The cinematography is beautiful, the music is inventive and fits the movie to a tee and the story is engaging on multiple levels.

The film is on Netflix Streaming and even to my surprise, available to rent on Youtube. Check this film out.

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

The X-Men Movie Franchise - An In-Depth Look and Review (Part 2)

So part 1 of this post was about the first three movies, so I figured I'd talk about the prequel/sequels in this one.

First, let's get it out of the way

X-Men Origins: Wolverine.

Almost entirely bad. I didn't re-watch it prior to this post, but I remember it like someone remembers a bad smell. X-Men Origins was originally supposed to be the start of a new franchise of prequels, I believe the next one rumored would have been Magneto. They filmed Origins:Wolverine at the same time of The Last Stand and this is where our first problems arise. The studio was trying to make decisions about the X-Men universe for two movies, one in present day and one set in the 1970's. This led to them deciding some characters couldn't appear in The Last Stand because they might appear in Origins:Wolverine instead.

Here's what I thought worked for the film. First and foremost, Hugh Jackman. I never thought he'd be the guy, but he has Wolverine down, the man can and will play Wolverine for as long as he's still able to make the character work with his real life aging. With the release of Days of Future Past, which I'm sure he'll make an appearance in, it will be his 7th time playing Wolverine, he's the one constant to all these films. He's the only character in Origins:Wolverine that doesn't get dicked around with too much. I really enjoyed the bone claws they use in the film. When they switched to Adamantium I thought the CGI looked terrible, especially considering they had it down in the first X-Men movie.

The other thing I think works really well is Ryan Reynolds as Wade Wilson. Perfectly cast and Reynolds has expressly stated he wanted to be Deadpool many times before and after this film. The only bad part is that the movie screws him over, giving us a Deadpool that is silent and doesn't make sense with the comics version of Deadpool that everyone loves.

For the bad, pretty much the rest of it. Will.I.Am should not have been in the movie, he was just a famous person who wanted in and they gave him a power that makes him identical to Nightcrawler, but without all the things that makes Nightcrawler cool. The re-writing of Sabretooth also really bugs me. He's in the first X-Men film and Wolverine clearly doesn't know who he is. In this one they've taken a different approach and made him Wolverine's half brother and made him a big villain of this film. So they broke continuity with their own series there. The introduction of Scott Summers doesn't work for me either. If he's a teenager just developing his powers now in the film's 1975, how old is he supposed to be in the X-Men films? I'd put it close to 40, and the Scott Summers of the X-Men films was somewhere in his late 20's. The CGI'd Patrick Stewart at the end of the film was also unnerving. I think they handled the character of Gambit alright, but much like Deadpool they took away a lot of what was cool about him. The whole film feels like a big understanding of how and why the X-Men universe works and what fans want to see from it.

X-Men: First Class

After seeing X-Men 1-3 I was pretty excited for First Class, as I had heard it did an excellent job as an entry in the X-Men franchise and also to help bury Origins:Wolverine and pretend it doesn't exist and ruin a bunch of X-Men canon.

At the beginning of First Class we open once again with child Eric Lensherr (Magneto) in the Nazi concentration camps moving the iron bars, the same as the firs X-Men film. Only this time we see what happened next, with our Nazi bad guy Kevin Bacon.

First Class is a return to form, with director Matthew Vaughn and produced by Bryan Singer, who directed the first two films. I think everyone turned in a fantastic performance, with a lot of credit due to James McAvoy and Michael Fassbender, having to portray characters played by two of the finest actors of our time, Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellan, respectively. You get to see their history and connection that is so evident in the first three X-Men films and how they're two sides of the same coin, where Xavier is the light side and Magneto is the dark.

The way the film explains or references things in the previous X-Men movies is a relief because you can tell they want it to make sense within the universe. I liked that they added that Mystique's cells aged at half speed, explaining why she should look no older than 30 in the X-Men films while according to this film have been born somewhere in the 1940's. I also liked her relationship with Magneto, as the things he says to her are things Mystique says to Nightcrawler in X2. I enjoyed seeing college flirt Xavier, the line "A very groovy mutation" got me every time. His relationship with Mystique was also interesting, and explains why she joins Magneto, mostly because he wants her to be exactly as she is while Xavier pushes her to hide herself. The cameo of Wolverine is absolutely perfect. It also makes sense that Wolverine doesn't recognize Xavier or Magneto in the first X-Men film, as it would have been a very brief meeting nearly 40 years prior. The special effects are well done, the story is fun and youthful with more than a handful of nods to the first 3 films. It was exactly the reboot the franchise needed.

I have yet to see The Wolverine, but when I do I'll make a post about it and how it relates to the other films in the series. I'm super excited for Days of Future Past, as it is going to simultaneously tie in to The Last Stand and First Class, which would bring this closed Marvel universe a synchronicity only seen elsewhere in Marvel's cinematic universe.

I hope everyone out there enjoyed my little synopsis'/reviews here. How do you feel about the X-Men movies? What are your thoughts on Days of Future Past? Leave a comment below.

The X-Men Movie Franchise - An In-Depth Look and Review (Part 1)


After the release of the X-Men: Days of Future Past trailer I had two big thoughts; One, that it looks fantastic and I can't wait to see it, Two, I hadn't seen X-Men:First Class and couldn't remember most of what happened in X-Men 1-3. So I decided to go back and revisit X-Men 1-3 in preparation for watching First Class and reacquaint myself with the universe and talk about what I thought of them.

First up - X-Men


Full disclosure, I've never read an X-Men comic, though I do love the characters and franchise. My main exposure to the X-Men were through the 90's animated series...and this film. I loved the animated series, but I couldn't tell you anything that ever happened, just generalizations about the characters themselves. This movie came out when I was 10, so between the animated series and this movie these are the versions of the characters I grew up with and I know.

I can't speak about how the characters relate to their comic book versions, but boy do I love this first film. It does a pretty good job of setting up the expansive X-Men universe, covering Magneto, Professor X, Wolverine and Rogue. The problem that these large scale team movies run into is that you can't possibly have time to explore each character and give them a great deal of things to do, but this movie seems to find a good balance. While Storm, Cyclops, Jean Grey and Mystique don't get much in the way of character development, they each get to show why they're useful for their own specific skills and how they fit in in their environments.

We essentially have four main characters, who each provide a different view of the world through their mutant eyes. Professor Xavier shows us the positive and encouraging side of the mutant debate, while Magneto shows us the dark destructive side. Wolverine shows us someone who's new to the world of being out in the open and around other mutants, but has dealt with being a mutant for a long time. Rogue shows us the young, inexperienced side that is experiencing everything for the first time. This gives the movie a well-rounded feel, like afterwards you know pretty much how this world works. The other thing I think it does exceptionally well is making the bad guy sympathetic.

In the film, the catalyst for events is a Senator being highly supportive of a Mutant Registration Act, which would strip mutants of a lot of rights and treat them as lesser people. Through Professor Xavier and Magneto trying to sway his opinion on the matter we get to see both sides of the coin and understand where Magneto is coming from. While he is this film's bad guy, you understand how he came to the conclusions he did. After all these years X-Men still holds up for me as a very solid film.

X2: X-Men United


This film has been my second place contender for best comic book movie sequel for a long time, right behind Spider-Man 2, and with good reason. X-Men United feels like a near-perfect expansion of the first film and fits extremely well as a second installment in a series. Instead of finding new directions for the story to go, X2 feels like a direct progression of events, a solid and cohesive venture that takes the ideas, themes and concepts from the first film and expands on them in logical ways. In the first film we open the movie with a flashback to Magneto's childhood of being in the Nazi concentration camps and he brings up throughout the film that he will not be put on a list and targeted as a demographic ever again. In this film he still rallies on this point, but throughout most of the film he is either under mind-control or stuck in a prison. Nevertheless, his predictions about how mutants will be treated are shown to be coming true thanks to the films main antagonist, William Stryker, who is collecting and experimenting with mutants. I loved the portrayal of Nightcrawler, and thought he often steals the show. He brings humor through his repeated stated introduction of himself, but he also brings a much darker storyline about what it's like to truly be an outcast. He's a mutant just like the others, but he looks much too different for normal society to accept him, a point he bonds with Mystique about, who tells him that they shouldn't have to hide who they really are to please society.

While I do have some problems with the story, they are overshadowed by the amount of good things I think about it. My biggest complaint is that the Wolverine/Jean Grey love triangle seems so rushed. It's clear that she feels something for him, but she never acts upon it. Wolverine has a handful of interactions with her in the first film and by the time of this film he's full on in love with her, despite us having not seen any development towards that. Other than that though, I think the love story angles in this film were executed well, especially Rogue's adoration of Wolverine and her inability to be intimate with her boyfriend as well as his inability to understand her situation. There's a nice summary of the situation towards the end of the film where Mystique appears as Jean Grey in Wolverine's tent and tries to seduce him. When he figures it out he throws her off, but she shifts into both Storm and Rogue, asking him if he would prefer either. When she shifts into Rogue Wolverine hesitates for a moment before giving her a final "Get out."

Another story point I thought was handled very well was the comparison between being gay to being a mutant. The highest point of this not-so-subtle but nicely done arc comes when the gang travels to Iceman's parents house and he "comes out" to them about being a mutant and his mother asks if he'd ever tried not being a mutant. Again, not the most subtle, but a nice little analogy, as it helps audiences relate to what being a mutant must be like, being ostracized based on the way you were born and had no control over.

The action and effects in this movie are fantastic, from Iceman's ice and Wolverine's regeneration to Magneto's metal controlling abilities (that prison escape sequence is one of the coolest scenes in the whole series) to Nightcrawler's teleportation. The only thing I get hung up on is some of the wire-work for characters. In a lot of scenes it seems really unnatural, like in Wolverine's battle with Lady Deathstrike, they both use a large amount of wire-work and wire-fu and I swear I can almost see the wires with how clear and unnatural it looks to me.

The film climaxing at Jean Grey's death is still super effective for me. Though like I mentioned earlier it does feel a little odd how effected Wolverine is, you just have to accept in these movies he is head over heels in love with her. The death feels impactful and the movie built it up to make sense. She had been having erratic spurts of power since using Cerebro in the last film so she both knows she has the power to save everyone and that she is the only one who could do it. There is some beautiful symmetry at the end of the film with Jean Grey reciting the same monologue about the arise of mutants in the human gene pool that Xavier opens the first film with while we get a visual of a Phoenix shape rushing beneath the water, setting up what comic book fans already knew was coming, the story of Phoenix in the end of the trilogy. Overall this film is still one of my favorite superhero films of all time, and is an excellent sequel to a first installment, doing pretty much everything right.

X-Men: The Last Stand

This is where things got tough for me. I hadn't seen The Last Stand since it came out on dvd. I remember originally liking the film but after all the negative criticism and some bad feelings over the contents of the deleted scenes, I was left with the impression that I hated the film and it was awful. A friend of mine told me before I had seen the trailer of Days of Future Past that it was going to make The Last Stand a relevant movie, and though I haven't seen it yet, heard the same thing about The Wolverine. So I thought I should try and keep an open mind when re-watching, and you know what, it's not that bad.

With The Last Stand came the switch of directors from Bryan Singer to Brett Ratner, which was my first warning sign. Though I don't think he's a bad director, it doesn't bode well for the continuing look and feel of the film from the last two. For as much shit as this movie gets, I think it handles a lot of continued plot points well, and I think that is owed largely to Simon Kinberg and Zak Penn, the main writers for all three films.

First, for the good. I think the overall Phoenix story is handled very well, with the intro showing how powerful Jean Grey was, following her re-appearance as Phoenix and her ultimate demise at the hands of the one man who can kill her, Wolverine. We had been building up to this storyline since the last movie and the final sequence with Wolverine and Phoenix is a true visual masterpiece that conveys the utter hopelessness and finality of the situation, how she's virtually unstoppable but the one person who can stop her also is madly in love with her. To me, the mutant cure main story arc is just a catalyst to set up this story and the other arc I thought was done well, Magneto's.

In the first film we were shown Magneto loudly stating that he would never be under the rule of a dictator again, and that no one would be able to put him on a list or judge him based on his birth again. In the second film we see him amassing other mutants who think the same way as he does about being controlled. In this film we see Magneto becoming exactly the thing he vowed to never be under rule of, a tyrannical dictator. We do get a taste of this in the first film, as his main plan is to force everyone to be like him, a mutant. In this film Magneto wants to use Phoenix to kill the humans and have him bend to his will. When Mystique gets hit with the cure and becomes normal, he disowns her, saying she's "not one of us anymore." In the final battle sequence when Magneto gets hit with the cure, he drops to the ground and just starts muttering to himself that he's the thing he hates, normal. Throughout the trilogy you get a good understanding and sympathy for Magneto, as you can see the path he had to go and why he would think that way. Why his past at the hands of Nazi's effect his ideas in the present day. You don't agree with him, but you understand him, and I think that was well done over the three films.

Now, for the bad. The intro sequence's cgi de-aging of Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellan is unnerving. They look like they're wearing rubber masks of slightly younger selves. They're supposed to be 20 years in the past but they just look like they're really shiny versions of themselves 10 years younger. It makes me feel uncomfortable watching, much like young Jeff Bridges in Tron:Legacy. Most of the other problems have to do with secondary characters, like Angel. Angel shows up in the beginning of the movie as a kid to provide the motivation for the cure storyline. He then proceeds to only show up to progress the plot and has no real character development. He shows up once to escape being given the cure and he flies off to the Mansion. He shows up at the mansion to give Storm a reason to keep the school open, then he shows up in the final battle to save his dad. Finally we see him flying in the air in the end sequence. For a character who is so connected to the plot of the film he barely does a damn thing. Then there is Bobby Frost and Kitty Pryde. I get that the idea of their relationship is that she's a "normal" girl that likes Bobby that allows him to feel needed and important, unlike Rogue who can't be intimate with him for fear of injuring or killing him. However, he's a real dick to Rogue, which makes her decision to get the cure to be with him really frustrating to me. On the subject of Kitty Pryde, I really like Ellen Page and her characterization of Kitty, but it was frustrating that they switched actors for Kitty once she actually had something to do with the plot. I know she was someone different in the first film too, but in X2 she actually was the star of a sequence of events and some continuity there would have been nice. The disappearance of Nightcrawler was also a big deal to me. I think he's one of the stars of the second film and plays an integral part of the plot and to have him not even be name checked in the next installment really gets to me. My last big gripe here is that Magneto recruits an army of mutants, but Toad and Sabretooth are nowhere to be found. It didn't really make sense for them to be in the second one because Mystique was his only henchman who had contact with him. But in a film where Magneto is trying to recruit everyone he can find and the two henchman from the first film are nowhere to be found is annoying.

The Last Stand feels rushed, in a hurry to get to the next action sequence, whereas the first two maintain a nice balance of emotional/plot arcs and action sequences. This one is all about the effects. Not a terrible film, just not great. Unlike it's successor, X-Men Origins. But I'll save that for part two, when I talk about prequels!