Showing posts with label 2005. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2005. Show all posts

Friday, December 29, 2006

Munich


Film Title: Munich
Year: 2005
MPAA Rating: R
Length: 164 minutes
Film Genre: Action / Drama / History
Director: Steven Spielberg
Producer: Kathleen Kennedy, Barry Mendel, Steven Spielberg, Colin Wilson
Writers: Tony Kushner and Eric Roth (screenplay) / George Jonas (book)
Players:
Eric Bana as Avner
Daniel Craig as Steve
Ciaran Hinds as Carl
Plot: 11 Israeli Olympians died in a hostage crisis at the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich. A team of mercenaries was assembled by the Israeli government to "take care" of those responsible. Flashbacks of the hostage situation are interspersed with the assasinations of the Palestinian conspirators.
Acting: Munich stars several up and coming actors plus a few seasoned veterans. The great character alchemist Spielberg creates another incredible ensemble. Bana is a great lead man - belonging with the likes of the also young Christian Bale (Equilibrium, American Psycho, Batman Begins). Daniel Craig, the new and improved 007 (Casino Royale), shows his blooming potential in his protrayal of the ever-abrasive and sometimes comedic David. Hinds' Carl reminds one of a past nearly forgotten in his classic style and demeanor.
Cinematography: You average Spielberg shots - some of the best. A vintage feel with its slightly desaturated color palette.
Visual: Some disturbing usage of explosives (a charge planted in a man's bed, for example), but some of the best witnessed in a film. They are believable and powerful at the same time - a feat hard to come by in a movie.
Audio: Great! Great! Great!
When I watched it last: An hour ago
What to watch for: Performance by Bana, the oh-so-real feel of the film (due in part to clips from actual 1972 news programs and spot-on creations of other broadcasts), a story of Avner's family so many miles away in Brooklyn and finally the madness of a man driven to guilt and paranoia.
What to watch out for: Language, Violence, Mild Sexual Content, Nudity (a woman is shot and left naked)
IMDB Rating: 7.9 out of 10
Roger Ebert Rating: 4 out of 4 stars; "Munich is an act of courage and conscience...As a thriller, Munich is efficient, absorbing, effective. As an ethical argument, it is haunting."
The Cinema Standard Overall Score: 8.2 out of 10; The content of the movie may split some opinions of the movie, but it is a striking success of a film. Watch this one.
--Reviewed by Brady

Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Joyeux Noel (Merry Christmas)


Film Title: Joyeux Noel (French) / Merry Christmas (USA)
Year: 2005
MPAA Rating: PG-13 (originally R, but was changed on appeal)
Length: 116 minutes
Film Genre: Drama / War / History / Foreign
Director: Christian Carion
Producer: Christophe Rossignon
Writer: Christian Carion
Players:
Benno Furmann as Nikolaus Sprink
Diane Kruger as Anna Sorensen
Guillaume Canet as Lieutenant Audebert
Alex Ferns as Gordon
Daniel Bruhl as Horstmayer
Gary Lewis as Father Palmer
Plot: The recounting of a Christmas truce on the front lines of World War I. Scottish, French and German soldiers share the joy of Christmas, much to the chagrin of their commanding officers.
Acting: The three unit commanders - Scottish Gordon, French Audebert and German Horstmayer - are a superb onscreen trio, but one character stands out from the rest. Gary Lewis' Father Palmer is the true hero of a story filled with heroes.
Cinematography: Not much to brag about, but there is nothing to complain about either.
Visual: There are not a lot of special effects, but probably because the movie is set in World War I.
Audio: Sweeping war-movie music with ebbing symphonies are interpersed throughout the film. The singing in the film steals the show though. Sorensen and Sprink make up a performing duo on and off the stage. The couple are a soprano and a tenor in German opera and share a love interest. They entertain the amassment of troops and bring an emotion to the front line that has been suppressed by the hate which surfaces in war.
When I watched it last: Last Night
What to watch for: Lewis' sermon.
What to watch out for:
A bedroom scene with very brief nudity; some blood (it is a war movie, or at least a movie that occurs during a war).
IMDB Rating: 7.7 out of 10
Roger Ebert Rating: 3 out of 4 stars; "[T]his moment of peace actually did take place, among men who were punished for it, and who mostly died soon enough afterward. But on one Christmas, they were able to express what has been called...the brotherhood of man."
The Cinema Standard Overall Score: 8.3 out of 10; Though I didn't write much on this film, it is definitely a must see, especially near Christmas time.
--Reviewed by Brady

Monday, December 18, 2006

Brick


Film Title: Brick
Year: 2005
MPAA Rating: R
Length: 110 minutes
Film Genre: Crime / Drama / Mystery / Neo-Noir
Director: Rian Johnson
Producer: Norman Dreyfuss, Ram Bergman, Mark G. Mathis
Writers: Rian Johnson
Players:
Joseph Gordon-Levitt as Brendan
Nora Zehetner as Laura
Lukas Haas as The Pin
Noah Fleiss as Tugger
Naoh Segen as Dode
Matt O'Leary as The Brain
Emilie de Ravin as Emily
Plot: A girl mixed up in the drug world of an average high school dies mysteriously. Her ex-beau decides to find out who is responsible. Welcome to the neo-noir detective movie.
Acting: The acting in the movie is strange to say the least. Every character is played one step beyond normal - an oversaturation of reality, or absurdity at times. I like it for the most part. Gordon-Levitt was a perfect cast for this role and Zehetner's Laura is the epitome of the beautiful femme fatale (it's even mentioned by Brendan in the movie).
Cinematography: The cinematography is nice, but not ground-breaking. Scenes at a tunnel were shot well with some of the action shot outside looking in and some of the action shot from the inside looking out, creating silhouettes.
Visual: When Brendan is punched in the face, a fast white flash (almost comic book starburst style) fills the screen. I'm not sure how I feel about it, but it's a cheap effect to accomplish and at least adds something to the action. Another cheap, but very effective, visual is the way that Johnson transitions from Brendan's dream sequence back to reality. A piece of black plastic moves up a waterway, slides up and covers the camera. Then it is quickly pulled off Brendan's head like the covers of his bed. The plastic coming up the water was actually filmed backwards with Emilie walking backwards as well, so that when played forward the plastic would flow up the water beside the awkwardly walking Emily.
Audio: Slow moving songs with odd sounds - interjected during periods of the film that are devoid of dialogue - match the movie's odd plot and action.
When I watched it last: Last Night
What to watch for: Gordon-Levitt's Brendan, the incredibly beautiful Zehetner, Tugger's Mustang, the Pin's cane, the Pin's mom and any scene involving a fight.
What to watch out for:
A shot to the head with much blood, reference to drug use, language.
IMDB Rating: 7.8 out of 10
Roger Ebert Rating: 3 out of 4 stars; "The story is never clear while it unfolds, but it provides a rich source of dialogue, behavior and incidents."
The Cinema Standard Overall Score: 8.0 out of 10; I liked the movie but was confused for the most part and still had many questions at the end, but what mystery movie doesn't and shouldn't leave you questioning things?
--Reviewed by Brady

Wednesday, September 06, 2006

Cinderella Man


Film Title: Cinderella Man
Year: 2005

For production credits see Jason's post on this movie:
Cinema Standard - Cinderella Man by Jason

Acting: Incredible. Amazing. Awe-inspiring. Need I say more? Well, I'm going to anyway. You can send me to the gallows for saying this, but this is Russell Crowe's best performance. Renee Zellweger is great as the stand-by-her-man wife.
Cinematography: The camera is perfectly placed at all times. The movie is not filmed with some artful eye for "setup scenes" which look "cool". It's a joy to watch.
Visual: The visual team on this movie hit an absolute gold mine with the special effects during the boxing scenes. Watch carefully and notice that the big hits are actually snapshots taken by the reporters in the audience. There's a bright flash and a slight pause in the action...just as if it were someone taking a picture.
Audio: Watch this movie to feel what it must be like to take a hundred punches in a boxing ring. And it's mostly due to the sound. By the end of the fifteenth round, you may be lying on the floor writhing in pain. The punishing blows are gut-wrenching at times.
What to watch for: All around, a great movie. Thank you Ron Howard for letting family be the central core of the movie, when a boxing career could have - - and according to Hollywood - - should have been center stage. "Cinderella Man is as powerful as its hero’s punches" (pluggedinonline.com).
What to watch out for: Ron Howard's demonic protrayal of Max Baer; some language
When I watched it last: A couple of weeks ago
IMDB User Rating: 8.1 out of 10; #170 on the top 250 movies of all time as voted by users
Roger Ebert Rating: 3.5 out of 4 stars; "Cinderella Man is a terrific boxing picture, but there's no great need for another one. The need it fills is for a full-length portrait of a good man."
The Cinema Standard Overall Score: 8.9 out of 10; This is arguably the best movie about...correction - that includes boxing. This is a film to own.
- - Reveiwed by JB

Cinderella Man


Film Title: Cinderella Man
Year: 2005
MPAA Rating: PG-13
Length: 144 min
Film Genre: Biography / Drama / Sport
Director: Ron Howard
Producer: Brian Grazer
Writers: Cliff Hollingsworth
Players:
Russell Crowe as James J Braddock
Renee Zellweger as Mae Braddock
Paul Giamatti as Joe Gould
Craig Bierko as Max Baer
Plot:
Based on the life and boxing career of Jim Braddock. The movie chronicles his life during the Depression and his second chance as a boxer.
Acting:
Russell Crowe and Renee Zellweger give stunning performances as the Braddocks. Both play well against each other and give amazing performances as people from the Depression era. Paul Giamatti also brings alot to the film as Braddock's trainer and manager.
Cinematography Ron Howard does a superb job directing this film. His use of the camera is recognizable. If you look at his work from Apollo 13 and A Beautiful Mind you can see the similarities in camera movement and framing.
Visual: The use of lighting and special camera capture moments really give a life to the fighting in the ring.
Audio: Once again superb.
When I watched it last: a week ago
What to watch for: Everything, this one is the Best boxing movie I've ever seen.
What to watch out for: some historical inaccuracies
IMDB Rating: 8.1 out of 10
Roger Ebert Rating: 3 1/2 stars
The Cinema Standard Overall Score: 8.8 out of 10. This movie will stir your heart as you watch the struggle of Jim and his family unfold, but oh is the payoff great.
--Reviewed by Jason

Click here to see Brady's post on this movie.