Sunday, January 15, 2012

Bad Seed - We Need To Talk About Kevin

4 out of 5 Popcorn Kernels







This is an examination of the psyche that I have not seen brought to the screen before. We Need to Talk about Kevin is a story involving a mother and a monster - the monster being her son - who ends up committing a horrible crime that effects a whole town, and how she becomes the martyr for his deeds.


The story is told in so many flashbacks/flash forwards/present day - that it reminded me of Michael Clayton in its chopped narrative, that serves as a way of presenting a story that all comes together in the end. This story is about a mother and her son, and the strange disconnected bond that they share. It is said that a mother knows her child, and in this one, we see that Kevin (Ezra Miller) was a handful from the start for his mother Eva (Tilda Swinton). At birth he came into the world screaming, and in one scene, we see Eva going to a busy and loud construction site with her crying child, only so she can get some peace. Then when she gets home and finally puts the child to bed, does the father Franklin (John C. Reilly) enter the home to come and play with the child, and to Eva's chagrin, Kevin is silent and cooing to him as if he were the perfect child. 


There is an obvious rivalry between Kevin and Eva, which is seen in Kevin's younger years with his resistance to potty training, ignores her, refuses to play, doesn't converse - until Franklin comes home, then he becomes a model son. These images are undercut with the tragedy the small town has encountered - as we witness Eva being punched in the face, ignored by her neighbors, propositioned by those she thinks she trusts, and confronted by Kevin's victims. Even when Kevin isn't there, his presence remains.



All In The Family
As Kevin reaches his adolescence, his plans become clear, and his personality becomes clever. He is very brash to Eva, and says and does things that would get him slapped in any other home. The reason Eva doesn't is because there is a deep love she has for him, and it is more in trying to understand how she has birthed such a monster, and she feels it is up to her to change him. But their personalities are so alike in some senses that she seems to have spawned an evil version of herself. They know how to push each others buttons, but Kevin knows how to push the buttons of others that are unaware that they are being pushed. When Eva has a second child, a girl named Celia (Ashley Gerasimovich), we believe that Kevin would have a sister/brother bonding - but this movie doesn't take that route. It goes off the Hollywood map of happy endings. Kevin isn't as hateful to his little sister, but his reaction to her is a hidden hate, where she is fooled into thinking he is the best thing since sliced bread.


Tilda as Eva is a deep rooted character, and her performance needs very little dialogue. The most speaking she does is when she is talking with Kevin, other times she is thinking about her time with him, wondering when she went wrong. She can't pull away from the fact that she needs to save him, even at the end of the movie she's still pulling straws. But within this silence, Tilda puts on a performance that is saturated in pain. Her eyes, her withdrawn body language, her speech, is all about shame. The town hates her, and she hates herself, but she can't seem to hate her son. This performance had me glued to the screen.


John C. Reilly is great here too, and his split reactions to his son and his wife show a versatility in his acting. He is like two different people. It seems that the whole family is caught in putting on a mask with one another. Until we reach a disturbing point in the movie when we discover at the same time Eva does, when she is running to the school where her son attends, that time has run out for her, for Kevin, for understanding him, for even the family. It is over.


But for the audience...it isn't, and We Need To Talk about Kevin, lingers on.

Cruise Control - Mission Impossible - Ghost Protocol

3 out of 5 Popcorn Kernels




Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol, reminds me of what going to the movies is all about - an escape into another world that provides you a chance to escape from your own. It is such a fast moving adventure that I had to look at my watch when it finally ended to make sure that it kept within the 1 1/2-hour limit of most movies. It clocked in at 3 minutes past that.

The movie starts off on a run (literally), when IMF agent Trevor Hanaway (Josh Holloway) is on the run from an agency in Budapest named Cobolt. When Trevor jumps from a building while being pursued, an tosses a small pellet to the ground below, which inflates into a full-bodied cushion - so he in turn can shoot back up the building at his pursuers - I knew this was going to be a different movie ride altogether.


In short, the plot is sweet, swift, and to the point. There is a lot happening to set things up on screen. But I was intrigued to find a villain like the one here, Hendricks (Michael Nyqvist), wanting to just take over the world by simply blowing it up - one that reminded me a little of Sherlock Holmes and Austin Powers's villains all rolled into one. This villain however knows of the IMF team, and finds the best way to take care of them is to frame them for the bombing of the Kremlin, which means that the IMF team has to fight them off radar or be branded terrorists themselves; thus begins the Ghost Protocol...and their mission..."If They Choose To Accept it."
Elevator Not Working Again



The THEY in this case is the initial team of Jane Carter (Paula Patton), the Beauty; Benji Dunn (Simon Pegg), the Geek. This is prior to the Kremlin blowing up. Because initially they were after the codes for the nuclear weapons, but when they were unsuccessfully at acquiring them at the beginning of the movie (because Hendrick's team intervened), Hendricks decide to frame the IMF team to get them off his back. So the IMF team needed more men to hunt Hendricks - and they then acquired: Ethan Hunt (Tom Cruise), the Brains, from prison; and Brandt (Jeremy Renner), the Rookie - who is the connection with the audience. And as they pursue Hendricks and his team, they are also being pursued by the Russian officials who think they are responsible for the Kremlin explosion.


It is a cat-and-mouse-and-cheese game from then on.


I enjoyed the action, and special effects. There has been much talk about a scene high above the Burj Khalifa (world's tallest skyscraper), in Dubai. It is a fascinating scene, and trying to see where reality starts and special effects stops, is mind boggling. This scene sets the whole tone for the movie, because there is character development and banter that is both urgent but also funny. Tom Cruise has the ability to handle his team as a Mother Hen to a bunch of children who can get on his last nerve. He has to do all the dangerous deeds, and when any of his team is saddled with something daring, they bicker like toddlers at who will go, and while doing it, are scared as all-get-out. This is standard Tom Cruise mode - and I never get tired of it.
I Spy With My Little Eye...

Paula Patton as Jane - I have to say, is truly Tom's equal, and is unafraid of handling those tough assignments. I am glad to see her in a role like this, for it rounds off her acting resume quite well. I enjoyed her in Precious, as well as Jumping the Broom, and although it would be quite easy for her to blend her African American races in films, she stays unmistakably her heritage. She reminds me a little of Zoe Saldana or Thandie Newton (who ironically was in Mission Impossible II) - but her roles have mainly been more dramatic. It is obvious that she rounds out the diverse pallet - considering Ving Rhames isn't in this one (well almost). Although for Hollywood, an actress of Paula's caliber attracts a certain audience, and in an action adventure thriller of this nature (and others), these types blend in because the material doesn't demand much in the way of acting boundaries. With these women taking on more dramatic roles, their distinct personalities become more separated...Hollywood just need to get it to them.


As for the skyscraper scene - I was enthralled when Etan was scaling the outside of the building, but in the background you see a sand storm coming in...very slowly. I was like, "Now what is THAT all about?" but this movie is like an Indiana Jones / 007 adventure, where scenes are strung together like taffy. There are gadgets galore; from machines that can levitate you through magnetism, to instant hologram shades that can reflect images behind it without revealing the person behind it. There are actions scenes in state-or-the-art car garages where cars move around and are delivered like soda machines, and dead bodies are used as a distraction to underground gunfire. The director Brad Bird (of The Incredibles, and Ratatouille fame), knows how to frame action, and keep the action going whether it is verbal or physical.


This movie is great escapism, and I have heard the images pop even more in Imax (I'm glad it stayed away from a 3D-version). I look forward to the next installment - and while I finally see the aging of Tom Cruise, I'm glad his skills are timeless. This is one mission you should be willing to take...before it self-destructs...tick, tick, tick...

Of Elephants & Donkeys - The Ides of March

4 1/2 out of 5 Popcorn Kernels




When it comes to political movies, I am not the greatest fan; but this one begins with the red and the whites, the primaries and the delegates - and manages to pull back the lining, and uncover a movie that seeps to the deepest of the human spirit. It goes from the public to the individual and how each of our dreams can create a monster inside that we never thought was there.

The title is a very interesting one, for it represents the 15th day of March in Roman history (and also in the film), when Brutus betrayed Caesar - and betrayal is a key component in this movie, but it also is a known ingredient in many political arena's. This is what makes The Ides of March so captivating (although this movie isn't for everyone), for it examines what it takes for any of us to reach a point where friends can become enemies.


The movie takes a while to gain momentum, as it delves into the life of Stephen Meyers (Ryan Gosling), a up-and-coming campaign manager, who we first see going over a  campaign speech meant for a Governor candidate soon-to-be-president Mike Morris (George Clooney), who is running up against Senator Pullman. The relationship between Stephen and Mike is one of mutual trust, as Stephen thinks that Mike will become a president who will finally stand by what he believes.
IDES on the prize


Oh the tangled web we weave in politics.


Steven works under the senior campaign manager, Paul Zara (Phillip Seymour Hoffman), who's strict views of loyalty determines many of his decisions. Pullman also has a senior campaign manager, in the name of Duffy (Paul Giamatti), and he wants to steal Steven away from the competition. All the while each one is being stalked by a roving reporter Ida (Marisa Tomei), who's loyalty seems to be to herself and who has the best story.


Many players, many situations - and all of them come to full momentum when Stephen meets an intern to his campaign; Molly (Evan Rachel Wood), who is no stranger in speaking her mind, and getting what she wants...even when the consequences of her actions eventually haunt her. This is a movie ripe with characters that are all out to prove something to others, as well as to themselves, so their overall motives for action can fluctuate like the wind.


The Ides of March is filled with low-level tension, and as the morals of each character begins to change, it slowly causes a domino effect on other characters involved. It moves from just a political movie to an emotional one. We will all begin to rethink the many political campaigns we all have been involved with as voters, and it will generate a dark cloud on this country as a whole.


The Ides of March manages to go beyond a race that actually deals with race. In this race the senator of each state holds the many votes (and voters) of that state, and there is a Senator Thompson (Jeffrey Wright), a black senator who both sides are trying to promise a higher office if he would just side with them. Although it is interesting to see a minority holding such power over two non-minorities (and the irony of it is hidden, for many minorities make it possible for the upper-class to have the power they have because of the work or favors that a minority can provide them), and how Thompson waits for these opposing characters duke it out - knowing that eventually they will come to him, is one that is kept at bay. This movie is run by human decisions, not human skin-shades. The only race really viewed in this movie, is the campaign kind.


Lastly, The Ides of March so that Human nature is after all the nature of a Human - and so we aren't really voting for a dream, we are voting for a man...and all his flaws.


...of which, this movie isn't one of them.

Hand Puppets - Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows

4 out of 5 Popcorn Kernels




Sherlock Holmes: A Game of SHADOWS brings an interesting element to the Sherlock Holmes series. This movie will be liked by some, and not-so-much by others, because Sherlock in this case is evolving into more of an action/hero than sleuth, and as action/hero's go: they are not for everyone. But the element here that is most appealing, is this time Sherlock has a worthy nemesis, that is both as cunning, and as smart as he (and in some cases - much more), and it not only keeps Sherlock on his toes, but it also checks his ego at the door.

Be warned: this movie takes some time in building momentum. This isn't to familiarize us with the characters, but this movie is more In Character with its Atmosphere than the previous one. The language, mannerisms, and styling is delved in the English culture, and if you have watched any British television shows such as Absolutely Fabulous, Dr. Who, or even Torchwood - you understand that there is more banter and a slower buildup of tension that we Americans can be used to. So my advice, is to wait it out for the first 15-20 minutes. This is a thinking man's movie, as is appropriate with a hero such as Sherlock Holmes at the helm.


Sherlock (Robert Downey Jr.), is investigating a series of crimes, and averts another one while tracking his love interest from the previous movie, Irene Adler (Rachel McAdams). She is working for a man known as Professor Moriarty (Jared Harris), a man that Holmes knows very well. As Holmes averts (but only for a moment) the death of Dr. Hoffmanstahl - whom Adler was delivering a dangerous package to - Holmes realizes that Moriarty may be behind the other crimes.


At the same instance, Dr. Watson (Jude Law), is about to be married, and elicits Holmes to be his Best Man, but Holmes has other interests as he invites Watson to an arranged stag party, where Holmes meets with a gypsy named Simza, whose brother may have a connection with Moriarty and his ultimate plans. There, he realizes Simza has been pegged for assassination herself, and saves her - and this action alerts Watson that this stag party will lead to more than just wine and women.


Now that Holmes is onto Moriarty, he confronts this man, who is just as smart as Holmes, and just as clever at deducing situation before they can happen. This was seen in the first movie when Holmes was able to determine the outcome of a fight before the fight has actually happened. Well Moriarty can do this too, and since he has the plan, Holmes has to not only know what he is up to, but figure out how he will carry it out, and who he will use to do it - all through deduction.


Guy Richie is once again the director of this film, and I have to say, the special effects in this movie blew me away. They were not filled with CGI, or wild explosions, or quick fight scenes where the action is blurred - although they are there - he handles this in a way that is eye-popping amazing. I will love to see the Blu-Ray on this just to witness how much of this was done (especially the forest scene, where bullets reign past our hero's, while they remain in slow-motion).


I loved the character of Moriarty, for he has a quiet horror about him, of which makes him into a most evil and cunning man who can kill without malise. He's the Darth Vadar of that time, barely lifting a finger, but shattering a world all the same. Holmes and Watson are once again a most amazing team, and I am always amused at their homo-erotic tendencies with each other. There's is a most unspoken love of friendship. Downey is in top-form, and you can see that he has honed this character and made him his own.


The mystery soon doesn't become a mystery, but it is not the solving of the mystery that frightens. It is the type of mystery or the plan that this man, Moriarty had in mind, and just how crass he is to the human race. Sometimes a crime is shown as too big and too shocking to believe that one man would be willing to follow it through.


Sherlock: Games is a movie that is very entertaining, and I think will be better played at home where you have the time to digest what is going on. It is fast moving once it begins, but may seem to dialogue-heavy for most. I found it quite a thrill...and quite elementary I must say.

The House That Jack Built - Dream House

1 out of 5 Popcorn Kernels




See Trailer Here

WTF! of in the case of Dream House...WTH! How could a movie, with really the inner-workings of a great premise (one we have seen in other movies that have starred Demi Moore and Bruce Willis) - and with a great cast, have managed to have gone so the full 360-degree of wrong. If you drop the "D" in this title you would described just how I felt at the end of this horror/thriller/unexpected comedy of a movie.

Dream House, like many movies these days is told in a constant flashback/reality - and involves a story whose surprise moment is already exposed in the trailer. When a movies trailer gives up on the surprise, I already have buterflies that this-ain't-gone-be-good. I have to say, I was more angry at this movie than disappointed. It was like a cake that fell in the oven - still good on the inside, but a waste of butter and sugar.


The story begins with Will (Daniel Craig), who leaves his job in New York, to move with his wife Libby (Rachel Weisz), and their two girls, into a home in Connecticut - one of those homes where you know nothing normal can happen - so that he can work on his novel. And no soon as he moves in, does strange things start happening; Libby sees a stranger outside the window, footprints of the manly nature are in the snow, the neighborhood kids are holding a seance in the basement...and a longtime neighbor Ann (Naomi Watts), is hanging about, looking at Will strangely.


...I was wondering how this man was eating the imaginary food his illusion wife may have made for him? Or if they made love...well, let's not go there.

Home Is Where The Heart Is
This movie could have gone in a very good direction with a plot like this, and should have involved a bigger cast besides just one neighbor. How would the other neighbors feel seeing Will/Peter move back in the neighborhood? What was it like back at the hospital as he dealt with his families death? What about his wife's family? These answers are never explored, because the screenplay seems to want to get through the plot as fast as it can, and it turns into a thriller - asking the question: did Will/Peter actually kill his family?

Then it starts to fall apart like wet bread, and I was mystified at how trapped these great actors were in a script and direction that was trying to go in too many directions in too little time. The flashback of how the family died, was at once pitiful and laughable (the things Hollywood will do to keep a PG-13 rating). All of this leads to an ending that answers many of the movie's questions - but similar to an M. Night Shyamalan, the end isn't worth the two-hours leading up to it.

This movie might work for at-home viewing, with the knowledge that it is NOT to be take seriously...and hopefully if you fall asleep, YOUR Dreams, will be better than what Dream House delivers.

Eye For an Eye - Don't Be Afraid of the Dark

4 out of 5 Popcorn Kernels







When it comes to twisting a fable children's story into something quite the opposite of cute and cuddle, there are few who can do it as well as Guillermo del Toro. Many are in the same category such as Tim Burton (Coroline, Corpse Bride). But even theirs are sweet and sugary to what Guillermo can achieve. His Pan's Labyrinth was an excellent example of how he involves children in what appears to be a fairy tale situation only to sprinkle it with an adult reality of moralities. Here, in Don't Be Afraid of the Dark, he implores the fable of the Tooth Fairy - who instead of collecting little children's fallen teeth and exchanges them for silver - he implores that the Tooth Fairy, like some otherworldly vampire, feeds on the teeth of little children, whether they have fallen out or not.

At the films beginning, we realize we have fallen down Alice's rabbit hole, when we witness a prologue that delivers us a "Once Upon a Time," start, when the great Lord Blackwood lost his child down an ash chute under a chimney, in a basement, at a huge manor called Blackwood Manor - to a creature that demanded children's teeth to live. Well Lord Blackwood having no other children to gain teeth from to which he can bargain with, and decided to use his own...


...then his maids.


The outcome was not pleasant, and Lord Blackwood vanished.


Now we return to the abandoned home whre a family with real estate in their blood, deem this home to be resealable for one of their clients. Had the couple read the brochure to Rhode Island, they would know hat any home that has more rooms than occupants living there, and stands 3-stories high, with a caretaker to boot, was only meant for trouble. But alas...they didn't.


Something Wicked This Way Comes
The family consists of a father, Alex (Guy Pierce), his girlfriend, Kim (Katie Holmes), and yes, a 10-year old named Sally (Bailee Madison) - teeth and all. Sally is already upset that her mother has put her in care of her sometimes caring, but really-has-no-clue-on-fathering father, an then to seem him with a new girlfriend who's desperately trying to bond with her. It's no wonder Sally gets bored with them all and decides, as young children will, to explore. As she does, she hers voices, soothing bur eerie, that understand her feelings. That there is a place for her. There is love, fun, other children to play with ...in the basement.


Soon Sally finds a tooth in this hidden basement, and Alex is upset at her for wandering alone. Kim tries to sympathise, but in the world of adults, little creatures and voices professed to be heard by a 10-year old, just can't be takes seriously.


The caretaker, Harris (Jack Thompson), bodes them to stay away from the basement, because of the strange disappearance of Lord Blackwood and his child, who was last seen there. If a caretaker tells me anything, you best believe I would listen...but this family is not me.


But Alex and Kim do something unique in this film - the act more like real adults than acting adults. They have relationship issues, thy have parenting issues, who cares about a basement and disappearing Lord's, when they are in debt and have a house to sell. Sally has only time to focus on her and her own life, as these creatures are clever enough to realize that Sally is onto them, and if they can't have the teeth alone, then they will just have to take her.
Peek-A-Boo...I See You

Don't be afraid of the Dark then moves quickly. We feel for Sally, but understand her parents as well. So Sally has to grow up fast. This performance also takes a good actress to pull it off, and Bailee along with the direction of Troy Nixey, is able to make this horrifying without it being frightening. You can see her thinking, and not only figuring out what the motives of the creatures are, but she understands that she is in this alone by being able to analyze the reactions of her caregivers. She realizes that they are in a whole different world than she is.


Guy Pierce and Katie Holmes go through a much slower arch, but its believable as they change from guardians to protectors. This is a great acting from them both, with an ending I was not quite expecting. I was also not quite expecting the level of violence in this film, but this is how Guillermo works. These creatures manage to remain hidden from he adults, even when Sally is in the same room. Like rodents, slipping in and out like a blur in your side-vision.


Don't be afraid of the Dark is a movie that is worth watching...even with the lights on.