Sunday, March 29, 2009

Watchmen

The acclaimed graphic novel makes its way to the big screen.  It's 1985 in the United States and superheroes, which were in decades past common place and accepted in society, are now outlawed and now being taken out one by one by unknown persons.  A few of these superheroes rejoin to figure out who's behind it and why, while the Cold War gets closer and closer to nuclear war.

This is a new take on the superhero genre, and one not for kids.  It is rated R for everything in the book.  It's an interesting movie and keeps your interest throughout.  It is however too long at 3 hours, but the length is somewhat necessary with all the different story lines that tie together, still some probably could've been cut out.  For being a superhero movie there really isn't a lot of action, it's more of a mystery and you're watching it all unravel.   It is pretty cool how they show a different version of the 50's-80's, where superheroes where the norm.  Some of the acting is a little questionable but overall it's well done.  I probably would've been fine not seeing this movie, but it's entertaining.  It's overly graphic in pretty much every way.

** 1/2 out of 4 - Rentable

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Sunshine Cleaning

A single mom (Amy Adams) desperately wants to change her circumstances in hopes of providing a better life for her son. While working as a maid she stumbles upon the idea of working as a crime scene clean-up crew. Enlisting the help of her slacker sister(Emily Blunt), they take on a tad more than they bargained for.

Total indy film. If you are a fan of Sundance, which is where this premiered last year, you will love it. It is a total character piece. Slow, methodical, but clever. The story is simple, predictable, and does lag at times, but the characters really pull you through it. Both actresses do a fabulous job and Alan Arkin, who plays their father, is great as well.

Again this is much more of an independent film, but for you traditionalist, I think you will still be OK with it as it doesn't stray too far from the formulaic. Just remember that it is more of a character development deal and does get a tad slow at times, but very entertaining.

*** Must See

Rated R (for language and thematic elements)

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Race to Witch Mountain

A Las Vegas taxi driver unknowingly picks up two teen aged aliens and then finds he must help them get to their spaceship so they have time to save the world.

Yep, that's what this movie is about. I went to see it because I remember the originals when I was little. They actually kind of scared me. So I thought that the remakes might be kind of fun. Oh dear. Can we say campy? Yes boys and girls this was one of the worst. The four unsuspecting friends that accompanied me to the theatre all fell asleep leaving me to make sarcastic remarks to myself.

The story is actually not bad, just poorly underdeveloped as are all of the characters--and again the dialogue! How is it that these movies get made?

* 1/2 Not-A-Chance

Rated PG (for violence)

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Taken

Liam Neeson plays a retired and divorced special agent or "preventer" whose daughter is kidnapped while vacationing in Europe.  He takes matters into his own hands in order to get her back and punish those that took her.  

This is a very intense and exciting movie.  Kind of "Ransom meets The Bourne Identity", and Liam Neeson's character is very Jason Bourne-esque, dropping multiple attackers with a few moves and always one step ahead of his enemies, but in a believable way.  The things his daughter go through are scary and troubling to think they really exist.  I don't quite buy Liam Neeson with an American accent.  I don't know if it's just because I know he's not and I've seen many movies with his normal accent, or if it's because he does a bad American accent.  I don't have that problem with say, Christian Bale or Hugh Jackman.  But it's a solid movie, although the ending, although a nice wrap-up, is a tad cheesy and doesn't quite match the mood of the rest of the movie.  

*** out of 4 - theater or rentable (PG-13 for violence and language) 

Paul Blart: Mall Cop

Paul Blart is a mall cop with aspirations of becoming a real cop, for which his low blood sugar and high weight prevent him from becoming so.  But he's given the chance to be the hero when his mall is overtaken by crooks.  

This is a really stupid movie with few funny parts.  It seems like it had a very low budget, but it received lots and lots of advertising.  The lead character seems way too old for his love interest, a gal working a wig/hair stand in the mall, although our hero is a likable character.  I can't recommend spending money on this movie, which I unfortunately did. 

*1/2 out of 4 - Not a chance (PG-13 for violence and language)