Police Stories

Every few weeks a story come out about a police officer getting in  a fight with a photographer. Generally the altercation begins when the photographer tries to capture a shot that the officer deems unfit. The resulting aggression seems to stem from a basic misunderstanding of the law: what a photographer is or is not allowed to photograph and how much authority a police officer has over such actions. As a filmmaker, I’ve encountered my share of police officers while out shooting, but most of my encounters have been humorous ones.

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The Desolation Of The Hobbit

And I thought I had mixed feelings about the first Hobbit film! I’ve seen Peter Jackson’s second installment of his Hobbit Trilogy, The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug, three times now and I still don’t know what to think about it. As in the first film, Jackson and his Weta wizards run amok with Tolkien’s beloved novel, cramming cartoony action scenes, bonkers sub plots and alternative character motivations in every nooks and cranny. The result is a film that’s both immensely enjoyable as cinematic entertainment and extremely insulting as an adaptation. I actually walked out of the theater the first time I saw it. It was late in the film, the characters had all strayed as far away from the plot as they possibly could and Thorin was shouting at Bilbo to “pull the lever!” Visions of a drug-addled Bela Lugosi babbling nonsense in an armchair filled my head and I fled, not after hurling a few childish insults at the screen.

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Mini Reviews: All The Big Summer Films of 2013 (or at least most of them)

It was shaping up to be a fantastic summer for movies, so I decided to see as many as I could. In the end, it was a mixed bag, but still mostly enjoyable.

Iron Man 3 – 2013. Directed by Shane Black

This franchise is all about defying expectations, and after a somewhat weak sequel, Iron Man 3 is back with a vengeance, throwing comedy curve balls and plot-defying twists as fast as its screenwriters can dream them up. One of the complaints about Iron Man 2 was its incredibly CG-y nature—the entire climax was just CG animated suits fighting—and I love how the screenwriters dealt with it this time, inventing a wayward suit that always goes to pieces, placing Robert Downey Junior’s character into countless situations where his precious armor wasn’t an option. It’s good to see Iron Man without his Iron Man armor, and its a testament to the power of the character that it works so well. Robert Downey Junior is Tony Stark, and Tony Stark is Iron Man, regardless of what he’s wearing. The story is crazy and fun, the characters and dialog sparkle, and the action is mostly well choreographed and rendered. A good way to start the summer.

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Mini Reviews 17

I’ve managed to watch a few films this Summer, crazy busy as it is.

Moonrise Kingdom
2012. Directed by Wes Anderson

I love Wes Anderson. He’s one of my favorite film directors. His style is overwhelming and a tad too silly sometimes, but he tells unique stories with such deep emotional resonance that I’m always left applauding and forgiving any and all of his stylistic idiosyncrasies. This is the first of his films that made me pause, though. It’s a sweet tale about two young misfits who run off together in the woods. Set in the nostalgia of the 1960s on a idylic island somewhere in New England, the film just screams Norman Rockwell and classic boys adventure novels. The runaway girl and boy are desperately searched for by their dysfunctional families and the oddball cast of characters that populate the island, all culminating in a bizarre chase scene that involves massive armies of Boy Scouts, what seems like Noah’s flood, and repeated run-ins with lightning. The children and their searchers find grace at the end of it all, and the peace of the island is restored. The art design is lovely, the actors are clearly all having a blast and the film is sweet, but it takes a major misstep about halfway through. Wes Anderson asks the two young actors to play a brief scene that is obviously embarrassing for both of them and feels more like exploitation than realism. Without this scene, Moonrise Kingdom is a lovely film about misfits and the grace they find. With it, it just tastes sour.

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Kaiju Review: Gamera The Brave

gamera 9

Gamera was originally created as a rip-off of Godzilla by Toho’s rival Daiei, but over time the giant space turtle morphed from rampaging monster to benevolent defender of humanity and friend of children. The classic series lasted seven films, and was  rebooted for three more in the 90s. Gamera the Brave is a second reboot, casting Gamera as a tiny baby turtle that hatches from an egg left by its predecessor and quickly becomes very, very big. Toru, a boy whose mother has recently died and who is struggling to connect with his father and friends, discovers this egg and raises Gamera Mark II as “Toto,” a delightful flying pet turtle that has a few surprises up it’s shell.

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The Hobbit: Adaptation and Image

Adaptation

THE HOBBIT: AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY

Filmmaker Peter Jackson wowed me as a teenager with his Lord of The Rings Trilogy in the early aughts. He took massive books that I knew well and loved deeply, majorly condensed them, added a bunch of crazy action scenes and confounding character changes, and still somehow won my heart and made what I felt were good adaptations that captured both the basic plot and the spirit of Tolkien’s three books. Now Jackson is back at it with The Hobbit, the prequel to his trilogy and what I thought would be an easy adaptation for him  to get right. But I was very wrong.

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Mini Reviews 16

Melancholia
2011. Directed by Lars Von Trier

“The world is evil and no one will miss it.” “We’re alone.” “Life is only on earth, and not for long.” These are just a few cheery quotes from the characters of Lars Von Trier’s latest nihilist undertaking, Melancholia.

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Notes on that movie about kids slaughtering each other in various horrible fashions

Much to my chagrin, I went to see The Hunger Games when it came out in March. It was playing a few blocks from where I live and I was really bored. I hadn’t read the book, but I’d heard enough negative comments about this cultural phenomenon to expect the worst. I took a notebook to keep track of my thoughts. I meant to write a review based on these notes, but I just couldn’t waste my time. The whole thing was just too laughable. So here are my random, mostly chronological thoughts, MST3K quip style for your perusal and, hopefully, your enjoyment.

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Mini Reviews 14 (and counting)

These have been piling up. Time to unleash them on the internet public!

Broadcast News
1987. Directed by James L. Brooks

Broadcast News plays out like a modern day Jane Austen novel in its social perceptiveness and its wit. Writer/producer/director James L. Brooks has his finger on the pulse of his times, and he delivers a funny and biting yet dramatic and sympathetic look at the television news business of the late 1980’s. The film focuses on the relationship of three mature yet flawed individuals working together at a Washington news station: the producer, played by Holly Hunter, the writer, played by Albert Brooks, and the announcer, played by William Hurt. These three rely deeply on one other, developing friendships, clashing emotionally, and engaging in a constant debate over the ethics of television: what is and is not news, what can and cannot be manipulated, if and how announcer star power hurts the industry. All three actors are brilliant, but Hunter especially shines as an overachieving, emotionally stressed out miniature dynamo of a woman. Her life is her work and she struggles to differentiate the two. She’s so stressed out that she bawls her eyes out for twenty seconds every morning. She has two men in her life, Brooks, the selfish, self-deprecating best friend and Hurt, the kind and charming yet power hungry new hire. How these two men relate to her and how she reacts to them is the heart of the film, and through all the muddy power politics of television a terribly realistic, bittersweet story of love, hurt and forgiveness unfolds. It’s really quite a breathtaking film to watch and by far the meatiest bit of screenwriting I’ve seen in a long time. It made me re-think the power of the cinematic drama. They rarely make ‘em like this these days.

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Some Dusty Mini Reviews

It’s been a while. I’ve seen plenty of films lately, but I just haven’t had the desire to write about any of them. Until I do, here are some mini reviews that have been sitting on my hard drive collecting dust.

Paper Heart
2009. Directed by Nicholas Jasenovec

Charlyne Yi is a performance artists of sorts. A geeky, gawky Asian twenty-something, she plays extremely loud on her electric guitar and sings passionately about silly things. You wouldn’t expect her to do this, and that, coupled with her awkward persona makes for a Kaufman-esque experience that leaves her audiences both laughing and confused. Enter Michael Cera, a young actor who has capitalized on an equally awkward persona. Together the two embark on a quest across the states to discover the true meaning of love. They interview all manner of couples about love, they hang out, they write and perform some silly songs, and something develops between them. What starts out as a real-life documentary becomes an obviously staged, faux-documudrama about awkward, twenty-something love. Charlyne Yi’s abrupt, incoherent exclamations of her feelings get really annoying really fast, and Cera, though enjoyable to watch, is a bit too cloying here. That said, Paper Heart is an interesting film with an unique approach to storytelling. It doesn’t really say much about love past worn-out truisms, but it delivers these truisms in a novel way, which makes for a fun, if unenlightening viewing.

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Hobo, a 16mm project in the works

These guys have an interesting project in the works, and they want to shoot it on 16mm. I’ve talked to Everett, the director of the project, and as his group’s video attests, he’s a humble, sincere guy. I admire his attempt to preserve the medium of film by actually using the stuff, and I hope he and his team are successful.

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