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I’m pretty sure that the point of computer-generated animation is not to make the audience feel as though it’s been trapped inside a large plastic box for an hour and a half, but given how often I stumble out of theaters gasping for air lately, it seems that way. The trouble with technology is that it too often gets in the way of artistry or dispenses with it altogether. This is the big problem with “Valiant,” an English-produced CG animated feature about World War II homing pigeons that would have been much better served had it been stylishly drawn cell by cell — a thought that occurred to me as I passed a framed set of gorgeously expressionistic cells from the original “101 Dalmatians” on my way out of the building on the Disney lot. Instead, “Valiant” looks cheap, garish and less than cutting-edge. Talk about revenge of the nerds. ADVERTISEMENT The story of a runt pigeon named Valiant (voice of Ewan McGregor) who dreams of joining the Royal Homing Pigeon Service, an elite squadron of messenger pigeons assigned to relay messages between the British and the French Resistance, “Valiant” is an unconscionably dreary and amateurish-looking thing, and the rote plot and annoyingly predictable script — a compendium of bird puns, mostly — don’t work nearly hard enough to make up for the hammy awfulness of the images. For one thing, the pigeons look not even remotely like pigeons. If I had to guess as to the origin of their species, I’d say they were the product of the unholy union between a handful of British A-listers and a gaggle of turduckens, but I’d rather not speculate. Rendered in hideous, ’80s-era pastels and looking oddly oil-slicked, as though fresh from a cruise on the Exxon Valdez, the pigeons exist in a depressing artificial universe in which it’s nearly impossible to distinguish interiors from exteriors, day from night. The backgrounds are flat and static, and the camera appears to have been nailed down to prevent it from defecting to Pixar. Instead of good character and scene design, we’re given pointless, hyper-realist close-ups of feathers. Instead of panoramic, well-populated shots of Trafalgar Square, pigeon capital, incidentally, of the world, we get a close-up of a granite pedestal and a single grubby pigeon. (Sure is nubby, though.) For a movie that traffics in bird puns as though they were the last word in kinder humor, a bird’s-eye view of the square, the city, is sorely missing. The story begins when Valiant’s town is visited by the heroic Wing Commander Gutsy (Hugh Laurie), who is recruiting badly needed pigeons shortly before the invasion at Normandy in 1944. With the encouragement of the peg-legged publican Felix (John Hurt), Valiant goes off to London, where he meets a repellent con-pigeon named Bugsy (Ricky Gervais, in full David Brent mode) and signs up. After a brief training period, the less-than-elite Squad F — which includes the aristocratic Lofty (Pip Torrens) and the hooligan brothers Toughwood (Brian Lonsdale) and Tailfeather (Dan Roberts) — is shipped off to France, where a downed pigeon named Mercury (John Cleese) has been taken prisoner by the nefarious German Falcon Von Talon (Tim Curry). Inspired by true-ish events (the British military did indeed use messenger pigeons during the war and even had a medal specifically for heroic animals), “Valiant” wants to be the “Saving Private Ryan” of animated war movies. Instead (and the characters are just as hard to tell apart) it’s their “The Great Raid.” Valiant MPAA rating: G Times guidelines: Contains some scary moments for very young children. Released by Buena Vista Pictures Distribution. Directed by Gary Chapman. Produced by John H. Williams. Original story by George Webster. Screenplay by Jordan Katz and George Webster and George Melrod. Music by George Fenton. Editor Jim Stewart. Animation director Richard Purdum. Director of photography John Fenner. Running time: 80 minutes. In general release.
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15 de Julio de 2008 - Posted in General | Sin comentarios »

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The Movie:



Growing up in the 80’s and keeping myself in candy money by selling baseball cards (embarassing fact: I actually had a table at a baseball card show once as a kid), I’ll certainly remember the great lineup of the ‘87 Minnesota Twins, lead by Kent Hirbek and the late Kirby Puckett (who would go on to be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2001) and the pitching of Frank Viola and Bert Blyleven.



The Twins didn’t have one of the strongest seasons, but despite their road record of 29-52 (the team had the lowest winning percentage ever for a World Series champ), the Twins managed to work their way into the playoffs, first beating the Tigers (who had the best record going into the playoffs) and then faced the St. Louis Cardinals (who were favored by many to win) in the World Series, winning the series 4-3 and nabbing the World Series title for Tom Kelly, who managed the win in his first season. Each team won all the games played on their home turf, the first time that that had occured in baseball history.



Backed by crazed fans at the Metrodome (after Dan Gladden’s grand slam in the first game, noise meters clocked the decibel level in the dome at 118 - in comparison, a jet engine is about 120 decibels), these are exciting games; while the Twins easily take the first two games, the tables turn once the series moves to St. Louis.



What does disappoint me again here - and I’ve mentioned it in every review of a Major League Baseball product on DVD - is that the MLB logo is once again seen throughout the entire program. While the logo is fairly small, it’s sizable enough to be distracting. I was hoping that, for a World Series set, it would be gone, as people who are buying this set have spent a lot to have to view the entire series with the logo in the top corner.



A positive note that must be mentioned is the set’s use of the inserts for each of the discs. Instead of just slapping on some basic graphics, the inserts (both inside and out) provide a scorecard, game highlights, trivia, attendance, number of pitches, game running time and trivia. All the information you need to know about each game has been fit onto the cover.




The DVD



VIDEO: A & E presents the series in its original 1.33:1 full-frame aspect ratio. Image quality does have a few issues but, as a notice states on the box, there are some issues with the original master copy that were not able to be fixed. That said, sharpness and detail are a tad inconsistent, but the picture is mostly crisp and the occasional soft moments don’t look too terribly soft.



Some minor wear is noticed on the source elements, but only infrequently and when it is noticed, it’s not much of a distraction at all. Additionally, some slight shimmering is also spotted on occasion. Colors seemed natural and accurate, with nice saturation and no smearing or other concerns. This presentation looked a little improved over the 1986 Mets World Series DVD set. In both cases, it’s amusing to be reminded of how unslick sports broadcasts looked 20 years ago.



SOUND: The stereo soundtrack of the games sound perfectly fine although, as with the video, there are some minor imperfections in the source material. However, the audio is mostly crisp and clear.



EXTRAS: While not extensive, the few extras that are offered here round out the set fairly well. We get the ‘87 World Series Trophy presentation to the Twins, as well as parade footage, a post-game interview with Puckett and the MVP presentation to Frank Viola. There’s also a look at the Twins‘ history and footage of the Twins Clinching the American League West, Twins 4-run rally in the 8th inning of ALCS game 1, the 1987 ALCS clincher and Harmon Killebrew throwing out the World Series game one 1st pitch. Overall, about 45 minutes of extra footage is included.



Final Thoughts: Twins fans should be pleased with this set that captures this classic World Series match-up. While the fact that the MLB logo remains on-screen is irritating, image and audio quality is otherwise very good and the extras round out the set nicely. Highly recommended for fans.

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14 de Julio de 2008 - Posted in General | Sin comentarios »

Timeline full movie downloads

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The most exciting part of “Timeline,” Richard Donner’s dud of a time-warp adventure, is the big, blazing balls of death hurled from the trebuchets, catapults used by medieval armies to hurl flaming orbs and the occasional poor soul at the enemy. No one gets catapulted during the climactic siege in “Timeline,” about travelers who leap from the 21st century back into a 14th century French battle. But not long after the movie opens, the desire to see this collection of clichés and cardboard go hurtling through space becomes an irresistible itch. Based on a book by Michael Crichton, and credited to screenwriters Jeff Maguire and George Nolfi, the story lumbers to a start after archeologist Edward Johnston (Billy Connolly) hitches a ride on a time machine.Built by the professor’s sponsor,Robert Doniger (David Thewlis), the usual Bill Gates clone in glasses and beige sweater running the usual ominous tech firm, the machine has zapped Johnston back into the past.Imprisoned in the very era — nay, in the very same castle — he was excavating some six centuries later, Johnston leaves an SOS for his crack team back in the present. One thing leads to another and soon these modern-day hotties — among them Paul Walker as the archeologist’s son, and Gerard Butler and a miscast Frances O’Connor as a coupleof cheeky dirt diggers — areon a medieval mission impossible. ADVERTISEMENT Directed with a level of technical proficiency that’s to be expected with this kind of studio effort, “Timeline” looks like a real-enough movie and features a handful of credible British actors to class it up. Donner, best known for the “Lethal Weapon” blowouts, doesn’t have a visual signature beyond the big and the glossy, but he keeps things moving. To his credit, the director seems to have realized that the roguishly appealing Butler, a Scot who shares Mel Gibson’s bouncy mischievousness, holds the screen better than Walker, whose wooden sincerity recalls the early Keanu Reeves, albeit without the offbeat charm. Donner gives Butler plenty of screen time and tries to pump up the action, but since he can’t fill a frame with clashing hordes as persuasively as, say “The Lord of the Rings” director Peter Jackson, the battles look simultaneously chaotic and undermanned. Donner’s most calamitous mistake, however, was forgetting to light the screenplay on fire and catapult it from the nearest trebuchet. By turns risibly puerile and purely risible, the screenplay groans under the weight of its multiple platitudes (although Maguire and Nolfi do provide a frisson of exoticism when some characters begin speaking French, provoking the unexpected and rather surreal introduction of subtitles into a Richard Donner movie). When characters are not over-stating the obvious (”You’re alive!”), they spend a great deal of time repeating the same pallid plot points, a tic that reinforces, rather than relieves, the overwhelming fatuity. Something along the lines of, “So, what you’re saying is that if we go back in time, we may die …” “Yes, what I’m saying is that if we go back in time, we may die …” Promises, promises. Timeline MPAA rating: PG-13, for intense battle scenes and brief language Times guidelines: Death by swords and arrows, and some mild adult language Paul Walker … Chris Frances O’Connor … Kate Gerard Butler … Andre Marek Billy Connolly … Professor Johnston Anna Friel … Lady Claire Paramount Pictures, Mutual Film Co. and Cobalt Media Group present a Donners’ Co./Artists Production Group production, released by Paramount Pictures. Director Richard Donner. Writers Jeff Maguire, George Nolfi. Based on the novel by Michael Crichton. Director of photography Caleb Deschanel. Editor Richard Marks. Costume designer Jenny Beavan. Music Brian Tyler. Running time: 1 hour, 56 minutes. In general release.
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13 de Julio de 2008 - Posted in General | Sin comentarios »

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Sometimes it’s more effective for documentaries not to tell you its point of view before, during, or after watching a film to gain the most resonance.  Sometimes it’s best to just throw up the images, warts and all, and let us feel the impact without nudging our thoughts one way or another in a manipulative way.  Such is the case with Kenneth A. Carlson’s Go Tigers!, which gives you the ups and downs of the high school football team called, of course, the Massillon Tigers, in the small town of Massillon, Ohio.  This is a town in which footballs are handed out to every newborn male baby, starting the recruitment early for future players for the town’s biggest source of pride, its football team.

The town is nuts over the team, and in fact, one might call the fervor for which the town’s citizens and officials support the team as rabid.  This documentary showcases the Massillon struggle to redeem itself in the 1999 season, coming off of a humiliating 4-6 record the year before.  The town is also on the verge of a major change, as a levy is being proposed and voted on by its citizens, and one in which would mean a major change to the educational system. 

Carlson employs an even-handed approach to his subject, giving you a glimpse into the personal lives of the players, and it is much to his credit that he befriended them sufficiently to showcase them at their highs and lows.  This isn’t a showcase for Massillon pride, but also an in-depth commentary on what’s wrong with the town’s educational system, where students are habitually held back in 8th-grade in order to make them older, hence bigger and stronger, for their football team as seniors.  There is also a scandal involving the recruitment of students outside of the town, and indeed the state, to relocate to Massillon and play for the team. 

Go Tigers! surprised me with how much anger it was able to inspire in me, almost effortlessly, because it never panders its case, if in fact it has a case to make.  In so doing, it does raise my awareness of small-town sports, and how easily a cult can grow and flourish in a small town.  From the religious undertones, to the ostracizing of anyone who isn’t with the program, one almost would think this was a documentary about religious zealotry, and not the quaint football flick as surmised by looking at the cover. 

By the end of the film, I found myself actually hoping the team would lose, as well as the levy.  I was disgusted at the lopsided interests of the school board, which threw dollars away on babying the football team and coaches, and concentrated very little investment in the education and well-being of the students at large.   A fancy scoreboard, lavish training facilities, and corrupt school policies which revolve around making their football team the best it can be, all served up for our perusal, and potential displeasure.  Go Tigers! may look like an unassuming film about a beloved high school team, but underneath it all, it speaks to what’s wrong with the educational systems of many small communities all over this country. 

The irony is, those who perpetuate this sort of sports-first mentality, especially those in Massillon, probably view this film as another source of pride.

Qwipster’s rating:
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12 de Julio de 2008 - Posted in General | Sin comentarios »

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Fight Club (1999) Reviewed By EricDSnider Posted 07/04/03 13:55:04

"Turns out it’s sorta good women keep men in line." (Awesome)

The trailer for "Fight Club" was a great example of what a trailer should be. It established an interesting, quirky premise — two guys start a club where men get together just to hit each other — and then told us nothing else. We’re left to wonder, "OK, so they start a fight club — but THEN what happens?" Much better than the trailers that spoil the whole movie for you.Having seen the movie, I now understand that this wasn’t just the film’s producers being coy: The film has so much to it, it’s actually ABOUT so much, they couldn’t have done the trailer any other way. Oscar-worthy Edward Norton plays a lonely, insomniac nobody in a cookie-cutter, white-collar job. He truly is a nobody, too: We never learn his name (he’s listed in the credits as "Narrator," which is one of his functions in the film). To find some purpose in life, he starts going to support groups for people with diseases he doesn’t have. There he meets Marla (Helena Bonham Carter, looking absolutely unbathed), who’s doing the same thing. He also meets, on an airplane, a free-wheeling soap salesman named Tyler Durden (Brad Pitt). When Narrator’s condo is blown up by an arsonist, he moves in with Tyler in a condemned old house on the outskirts of town. By coincidence, Marla winds up being Tyler’s creepy girlfriend. Then, just when the movie couldn’t get any weirder, Tyler and Narrator start a fistfight with each other just for fun. Soon it turns into a club, with everyone wanting to get together on Saturday nights to beat the crud out of each other. It’s all in good fun: Any fight participant can end the fight any time he wants to, and no one’s supposed to get permanently damaged. Just a way for men, repressed by society, to let loose with their natural instincts. Which is ultimately what this movie is about. Tyler and Narrator, as inseparable pals, make a perfect pair, a living Id and Superego. Tyler helps Narrator get out of his depression and find friendship and acceptance — two things men in our day supposedly have no need for, even though they really do. But what if men stopped being repressed and actually behaved the way their instincts tell them to? The fight club is the most basic outlet for such feelings; 100 years ago, when men fought all the time, it would have been unnecessary. So what happens now that we’ve been conditioned to think fighting is unacceptable? ("Most people," the Narrator tells us, "will do anything to avoid a fight.&quo ;) Can you unleash just a little bit of primal rage without also unleashing a century’s worth of pent-up emotion and testosterone? "Fight Club" answers that question, darkly, and the answer is no. Once you start, you can’t stop. Tyler builds a frighteningly fascist army of fight club participants who work for him around the clock, engaging in amusing acts of mischief. (Newspaper headlines say things like "Police Seize Excrement Catapult" and "Fountain Befouled.&quo ;) It soon escalates into something far more disturbing — but, again, it seems to be the inevitable result when men’s inner urges are allowed to run free.Director David Fincher ("The Game," "Seven," both of whose influence can be seen here) takes us on a twisted journey through the male psyche, full of flashbacks, freeze-frames, and eye-catching cinematography. Jim Uhls’s screenplay (based on Chuck Palahniuk’s novel) is clever and witty. There is delicious, ironic humor in Norton’s detached narrations, and the movie is undeniably funny — up until the last half-hour or so, when things get REALLY weird. It’s a compelling, entertaining film. Even when it’s nihilistic, pessimistic and macabre, it’s still eminently watchable and profound.
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11 de Julio de 2008 - Posted in General | Sin comentarios »

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Conan The Barbarian Reviewed By Marc Kandel Posted 08/18/07 06:55:30

"Suffer no guilt, ye who watch this in the name of Crom." (Awesome)

Robert E. Howard’s Id brought to glorious, brutal cinematic fruition: Unprecedented, Uncompromised, Unforgettable. “Lord of the Rings” pales, impotent and toothless in comparison. “Conan the Barbarian” is one of the greatest, most monumental films ever created; a primal, uplifting, soul cleaving ode to sex, love, violence, vengeance and death. What more could you possibly want? Pussies need not apply.Conan the Barbarian is an origin tale Howard never penned, a story of ascension detailing Conan’s birth (“on a battlefield” in the books, now a metaphor as young Conan learns horror, pain and loneliness too early in life), providing an impetus for the character’s growth and survival as he endures hard years honing his skills as an instrument of destruction, forging his purpose and place in the universe. Born in the snow-frosted steppes of Cimmeria, taught at his father’s knee to respect the purity and majesty of steel, Conan’s mother, father and their entire village are slaughtered before his eyes by marauders. He is pressed into slavery, raised first as a crude laborer, then as a gladiator whose savage cunning and talent for bloodshed is unmatched in the pit. Freed by his owner, Conan seeks fortune in the world, sates lusts, finds love, comradeship and a trade of sorts in clumsy thievery which sets him upon a path to fulfill his life’s ambition- death to the slayers of his family and thieves of his innocence, pursued to the exclusion of all else.The film utilizes elements from various Howard pulp tales of Conan, but is its own animal in the interests of cinematic compression and linear progression (Howard didn’t much trouble himself with timelines, his stories told from the perspective of a mighty warrior recounting random adventures in a dim tavern, or at his most manic, right over Howard’s shoulder in a darkened room). There is an adherence to the spirit if not word for word prose of the author. Director John Milius, co-writing the screenplay with Oliver Stone, captures the scope of this primal man’s wanderings across the primitive, breathtaking wind-beaten plains, dark hills and teeming, haunted cities of Hyperboria in sole service to his desires, barely discerning between diluted terms of “good” and “evil” in a world not so easily colored between the two. More often than not, Conan lands on the side of the angels, but it’s a near thing, his conflicts and passions merely less depraved than his adversaries. There is a rough sense of justice to the barbarian but he is not above taking what he wants to fulfill his needs, a hero by circumstance.Arnold Schwarzenegger’s performance is unsurpassed to this day by anything in his theatrical repertoire. Easily dismissed by effete snobs as a series of grunts and flexes, underestimated by those concerned with minute divergences from source material, it’s a naturalistic performance playing to Schwarzenegger’s strength as a physical presence. Schwarzenegger successfully portrays a man not given to monologues or overly verbal communication, yet makes every intention, nuance and thought clear to his audience. He could have a place in any Kurosawa film where the actors’ movement, expressions, even the simplest step and stance are every bit as crucial as the spoken word. Case in point: When Conan confronts his tormentors after being captured, beaten, crucified and brought back from the brink of death, words fail before the sight of joyous rage and righteous defiance seething from Conan’s battle-chiseled form. Rexor, Thulsa Doom’s second in command, halts his charge, staring incredulously at the risen warrior, a terrible being of fury come for reckoning. He vomits an infuriated You towards the painted revenant, and Conan opens into his first fighting stance, eyes aflame, presenting himself, challenging, mocking, hating- Crom’s Living Sword on Earth sharpened and drawn in anticipation of awesome mayhem. What words could possibly serve in place of the corded muscles of Conan’s form, throat choked with scalding blood as he silently demands vengeance? The actor provides a fulfilling emotional display of strength, danger, passion and not a little humor, carefully and hilariously sprinkled throughout the grim and gruesome events. Need I mention the camel punch?Milius’ insistence in keeping Conan’s speech to a minimum also emphasizes the weight of the ideas Conan has to verbalize when he is called upon to speak, and in one instance no actor could have done better: Conan’s first and only prayer uttered to unsympathetic, indifferent god Crom, seconds before the Riders of Doom commence their final charge pouring down from the hills to eradicate the brash barbarian who has thwarted Doom’s will. Conan’s prayer is offered brusquely and with unrefined passion by a man unused to asking for anything, and even then Conan cannot compromise- he tells his god what he wants and then snorts and proclaims his intention to do his work unaided, spitting at the very being before which he has reluctantly humbled himself. If there is any one moment of the film where Conan is fully realized as his creator intended him, it is here; a powerful, untamed man striding the earth with impunity, given to rough yet eloquent philosophy on occasion, ultimately preferring action to rhetoric, intellect deferring to the gratifying effectiveness of strength of arms. Schwarzenegger’s eyes fill with the blue sky above him and his words resonate across worlds. Does Crom hear? It matters not- there is killing to be done, for good or ill.The supporting players Gerry Lopez and Sandahl Bergman do well with their respective characters. Lopez is fantastic as Subotai, a Mongol thief rescued and befriended by Conan. One occasionally notices lapses into his surfer persona (Hey old maaaan, where did you get this stuuuff?) but its forgivable, as he grounds Subotai with unquestionable fealty, a loyal compatriot to Conan that will never leave his side. Bergman is vivaciously apt as Valeria, a warrior woman that wins Conan’s heart with unbridled ferocity, eagerly requited by the barbarian who has known his share of female pleasures but never the emotions of a lifelong companion. The character is a composite of two women from Howard’s tales, her name and vocation taken from the Valeria of Red Nails, and her warrior’s spirit and immortal devotion taken from Belit the She-Pirate of Queen of the Black Coast.Valeria’s lithe body and knife-edged passion fills the emotional void in Conan’s world. Failing to halt his destructive need for revenge, she pledges herself body and soul to his cause once she realizes he cannot be dissuaded, forging an insuperable bond between the two. Like Schwarzenegger, Sandahl Bergman’s strengths lie in her dancer’s poise and ability to convey volumes of information without verbal communication, though her dialogue rings honest and true when needed. There are more beautiful, more seductive, voluptuous women to be found throughout the film, but Valeria defies the norm, a wanton ass-kicker believably worthy of Conan’s love and respect. Schwarzenegger and Bergman create a devoted, convincing relationship between two warriors.Even veteran performers give as much attention to the material as they would a work of Shakespeare or Strindberg as the heads roll and grue splashes. James Earl Jones ignites the screen as Thulsa Doom, the sorcerous leader of the murderous snake cult presiding over the destruction of Conan’s village. Doom is a fascinating evil- he is not given to vulgar displays of magic, and in terms of combat it serves him little. Doom’s real power and danger is that of his charismatic personality, his will carried out through the hundreds of eager, bloodthirsty thralls hypnotized by his perverted brand of enlightenment. Jones plays Doom as an immortal weighed down by the centuries, giving him a soft, mournful presence. When Doom beheads Conan’s mother, do we see a hint of regret? There is no pleasure in the killing, at least, none the character reveals to us. He is not given to sneering or gloating, and his rage is a quiet, slithering thing. Witness his cold, withering response to Conan’s devastating trespass deep in the heart of his citadel: Infidel Defilers. They shall all drown in lakes of blood. Now they will know why they are afraid of the dark. Now they will learn why they fear the night. Fuck yo’ mama, David Mamet.Max von Sydow commands attention for the span of a scene as King Osric the Usurper, who gathers Conan’s group, impressed by their audacity at robbing one of Thulsa Doom’s temples, and sets them on a quest to rescue his daughter who has fallen in with Doom’s rutting cultists. Conan’s formidable presence is actually diminished in proximity to this twilight warrior whose truths fall on deaf ears as Osric explains in a chilling, heartfelt monologue the emptiness and disappointment of treasures and power when compared to the love of a father for his daughter. Yet for all his wisdom, what gives the scene heft is his amusing, ironic blindness as a parent, unable to see his daughter as an individual: She seeks… enlightenment. As if I could not give it to her!, angrily, contemptuously, Osric, weighted down by age, wealth and wine hurls one of Thulsa Doom’s cult daggers into an oaken table in disgust where it sticks with an audible thud as Osric’s hand remains still, fingers outstretched, frozen in the act of the throw. Even an old lion has claws. This beautiful, haunting shot will echo in one’s mind long after the credits roll, and Osric’s turmoil and foreboding is marvelously echoed at the end of the film as King Conan sits, master of all he surveys, troubled and uneasy for some reason we will not be privy to… for now.Mako Iwamatsu plays the Wizard of the Mounds (given the name Akiro in the clumsy, ridiculous sequel, Conan the Destroyer), pledged in service to Conan, a doddering wizard fearful of the powers he is called upon to unleash, putting his weathered, sharp voice to excellent use as the film’s narrator and occasional comic relief. A wonderful performance, Akiro’s fumbling yet genuine talents at ritualized necromancy are juxtaposed against the deadly composure and horror of Thulsa Doom’s effortless command of the black arts.So crucial is the lamentably late and honored Basil Poledouris’ grandiose, unrivaled score to this film that years prior to this review I gave it a spotlight in our soundtrack column: http://hollywoodbitchslap.com/feature.php?feature=1270 One can glean further appreciation of areas of the film not covered here within this review as well. Here, I will merely state that it is the greatest orchestral composition ever written for cinema, without peer.Today’s viewer will note the distinct lack of camera tricks during the fight choreography which remains bloodthirsty and extravagant, even without a sword thrust shot from every conceivable angle under the sun at three different speeds or green screens and wires allowing for mid-air pauses and revolving perspectives of the chiseled fighters. The low tech approach showcases true contests of bone and sinew as doughty warriors hack away at each other in a ferocious, satisfying orgy of brutality. The fucking scenes ain’t bad either. Try getting the Governator to do one of those these days.The violence isn’t even the most disturbing aspect of the film. In fact, the most unnerving moment is when Conan sits on the steps of Thulsa Doom’s temple and contemplates his present and future. Having removed from the world what he has come to perceive as the source of his motivations and will, alone and triumphant in the dark, he considers his next move in a world now empty of the things that drive him. Anyone thinking this is not an intellectual character given to great pontification has missed the mark- this chilling, saddening dénouement revealing a character alone and empty, come to the realization that there may be nothing left for him in the world, gives no easy answers, even in a primitive time rife with simple choices. Conan eventually picks himself up, decisively obliterating the last link to his past, and continues onward to an unknown horizon- but the questions are never answered, and even the final information imparted in the film illustrates the constant questing, unsatisfying nature of life, lifting this film beyond a simple adventure tale and making it one for the ages- a magical epic.Damn but fantasy movies had some balls back in the day. Imagine Conan made in the now (or at least the proposed 2009 venture): Neutered to a larger audience-netting PG-13 (Conan was released as an R picture, narrowly dodging an X rating, John Milius making no attempt to age-down a genre never meant for children’s consumption). Dumbed down with stupid catchphrases and self-referencing snark, cartoonish in its delivery so as not to disturb the kiddies or offend the gentry, cast solely to parasitically squeeze dollars from the actor of the moment, nay the second. Meaningless, unfulfilling, utterly nutless. Ah, but wait, we have King Kull to step up and give us a bitter taste of this special flavor of failure, don’t we? No? How ‘bout The Scorpion King? Of course, we do have Gladiator and 300 as exceptions to the rule (one could make an argument for Braveheart, whose combat style most closely mirrors Conan ), but read my plot synopsis again- see anything vaguely familiar? Hell, Gladiator even cast Sven Ole Thorsen (Thulsa Doom’s enforcer Thorgrim) as one of the gladiators and had the unmitigated gall to use the Anvil of Crom theme in the previews of Gladiator. Bah. As for 300, one may note stratagems enacted by Conan during the Battle of the Mounds that mirror tactics used against the Persian army in the more recent film, and Conan’s training and his prayer to Crom echo similar ideology to Leonidas’ rally for his warriors against a much larger force. Conan is the superior film on many levels, but I would be remiss not to point out successful parallels carried out in the kinetically entertaining 300, the history of which was an obvious pool of inspiration for Milius, Stone and probably Howard himself (honestly, I don’t know how much I should credit with Stone, his original concept was throwing Conan into an apocalyptic future, soundly quashed by Milius, thank Crom. Why is Oliver Stone such a dickheaded whackjob sometimes? Honestly).The hour grows late. Some quick points about the copies of the film presently on the market- one is the no-frills Theatrical Cut, the other an Extended Edition (there is also a UK version with some spectacularly annoying edits of the witch sex scene and horse falls during the “Battle of the Mounds”- which didn’t hurt the goddamn horses, but its unlikely anyone reading this review will fall afoul of this copy- ok, maybe MP Bartley in jolly ole England, but for you, I’ll pay postage and get you the fucking goods in that backwater historical curiosity you call a country. Get both versions- the Theatrical Cut, despite picture and sound quality rating lower than the Extended, is a superior cut, the added scenes of the latter failing to enhance the film. The first trips up the momentum of the final battle as Conan reveals regrets to Subotai about his pursuit of vengeance and wistfully pines for the simplicity of the days he would pick blueberries with his family in the hills- not a terrible scene, but throwing off the dramatic timing of the impending danger, and the second scene has Osric’s daughter, first hateful of her rescuers, transferring her loyalty to Conan, the stronger Alpha male. She guides him through a less traveled route of Doom’s Mountain of Power, so he can murder the sorcerer. It’s unnecessary, and worse, the scene tromps over James Earl Jones mesmerizing speech to his thousands of followers exhorting them to go forth killing and burning in the name of Set- the finest “Drink the Kool Aid” scene ever put to film, raising the stakes for Conan to put an end to the cult not only for his personal reasons but to save countless lives. Unacceptable. The extras on the Extended version are great however, other deleted/abandoned scenes, bloopers (one where wild dogs catch up to a Conan that doesn’t get away, where we can hear Arnold cursing “AAAGH! Gahd-Demmit!” as the animals catch him and pull him down on the rocks), fun commentary from Milius and Schwarzenegger, costume designs, so on so forth- a treasure trove of information and visuals.What more needs be said? To paraphrase words spoken by Conan himself: The illusion is real to me. Conan lives, burns with life, he loves, he slays and I am content.
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10 de Julio de 2008 - Posted in General | Sin comentarios »

download Danny the Dog dvd online

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If only movie theaters allowed us to hook up our Xbox controllers and button mash during the fight scenes for a more realistic interactive experience than just sitting and watching this demo.  Jet Li (Cradle to the Grave, Hero) stars in the second English-language film written for him by French action auteur Luc Besson (The Transporter, Wasabi), and while the results are decidedly better than Kiss of the Dragon¸ the artificial storyline and wafer-thin characterizations put this in the category of a great action movie combined with bad drama.   Of course, it’s hard to go wrong in the action department when you have Yuen Woo-ping as the choreographer, and while this is much more subdued than futuristic Matrix films or the high-flying wuxia style of Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon, the grittiness of the situations gives the action an extra visceral jolt when played out in the real world of today.  Jet Li plays Danny the Dog, a lifetime slave who from day one of his "ownership" was taught to be a fighter and killer for his gangster boss, Uncle Bart (Hoskins, Beyond the Sea).  Never receiving a formal education, Danny still has the mind of a child, and the only thing that keeps him from being lethal at all times is the collar he wears to keep him at peace.  Bart has been using him to muscle protection money out of local businesses, but soon he discovers even bigger funds can be had if he enters Danny in lethal underground club fighting, where men fight to the death for a sizeable sum.  Bart’s plans go awry when Danny escapes him, and soon Danny is adopted by a blind musician (Freeman, Million Dollar Baby) and his precocious adopted daughter (Condon), and together they form a strange family bond that soothes the savage beast within Danny. 

Other than the aforementioned action scenes, if there is one other thing that Unleashed has going for it, it is in the very sympathetic portrayal of Danny by Jet Li.  Jet may not be known for his acting, as the way he delivers a kick will always be more amazing than the way he delivers a line of dialogue, but still, he does make Danny a very believable grown man with the mind of a young boy and disposition of an attack dog.  This sympathy does pay off in the later action scenes, where Danny must reluctantly enter the arena in a kill-or-be-killed showdown, as we feel sickened watching him take a pummeling without fighting back and hope that he can escape alive.  It almost works, if only the script weren’t so firmly set in fantasyland.  The whole premise of the “Mortal Kombat” style arenas in underground clubs where gladiators fight to the death is hard enough to swallow, and then you have to add on the story of a boy who grows up as a dog in order to be in the right frame of mind to kill on command.  As if these things weren’t silly enough, the most artificial aspects of the story comes when Danny is out in the “real world” mingling among supposedly real people.  These people happen to be a kindly blind musician and a spunky young girl with a heart of gold, seemingly lifted right out of the pages of some half-baked comic book.  The dialogue between the characters is trite, never really letting you believe that these could actually be people you’d ever think to meet outside of a bad movie, and when the great Morgan Freeman can’t deliver a line in a way that convinces me, you know there must be something wrong with the writing. Unleashed is a kick-ass action flick stuck in the middle of a junk movie, and your mileage will certainly vary as to how much you’re willing to go with the wooden dialogue and heavily overblown plot for the sake of watching Jet Li do his thing.  Based almost strictly on Jet Li’s performance, both in and out of the fighting arena, I wish I could give this one a recommendation, but ultimately, better writing is the necessary ingredient to make this energetic crock fly.  I would say Unleashed would make a better video game than a movie if only it didn’t seem so readily apparent that the shallowest of video games inspired it. 

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9 de Julio de 2008 - Posted in General | Sin comentarios »

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EYE OF THE BEHOLDER

Synopsis:

The “Eye” is an intelligence agent whose current assignment is to track Joanna Eris, a woman suspected of blackmail & murder. However as the eye maintains his surveillance he becomes fascinated with Eris in a way that soon leads to obsession. The closer he gets to her, the more deadly this game of cat & mouse becomes. Quickly dissolving into a twisted crush, Eye of the Beholder has been heralded as “one of the most hypnotic & satisfying thrillers ever made”-Wade Major, Box-office Magazine.

Audio:

The audio for EOTB is pretty darn well done. The 5.1 Digital presentations is very nicely balanced & provides one half of the best aspects of the film. The center is clear & the surrounds & sub do a great job creating the aural textures needed to propel a thriller such as this.

Video:

The video portion of the film presents the second half of the best part of the film. Its anamorphically enhanced images are crystalline & striking. The colors are rich & true. Equally nicely presented are the flesh tones that are beautifully rendered. I did not notice any imperfections in the print or transfer. Really beautifully done.

Extras:

The extras on the disc consist of a director’s commentary, production notes, talent files & a trailer for the feature. The commentary was sufficiently confusing & at times quite aggravating. The Director, Stephan Elliott had a huge hit with Priscilla, Queen of the desert & he’s proving that lightening does not necessarily strike twice in the same place. During his commentary, I found it quite difficult to follow his logic. Actually, I found it impossible to follow. Perhaps, I should have listened to the commentary before I watched the film. Because, after watching the flick, I was so disgusted with all the things it didn’t turn out to be that, I was thoroughly disappointed. But I’ll talk about that later.

Overall:

Overall, I hated this movie. I know that hate is a strong term but I really couldn’t find any other term to describe the total feeling I had at the conclusion of this incredibly stupid film. The ending is so ridiculous, it’s almost laughable. The film really did seem to have a great deal of promise but that went largely unrealized. Ashley Judd was really wasted on this stinker of a thriller. Hypnotic & satisfying are two adjectives used to describe the tone of the film. Sickening, confusing & abysmal are more to the point in describing what started out poorly & ended miserably. EOTB is a poorly written, acted & directed piece of cinematic flotsam that really missed every worthwhile point needed to make a decent viewing experience.
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8 de Julio de 2008 - Posted in General | Sin comentarios »

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Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring, The
The reason why this first part of Jackson’s ‘Lord of the Rings’ is
superior
to his latter two parts is because of restraint. Jackson was restrained
from
over doing it with the CGI and "epic" battle sequences, which in my
opinion
does not make a story epic. Part of the reason was simply because Tolkien
did not have very many battles in the first part of his book, which
thankfully forced Jackson to focus on creating a believable world rather
than a believable hack-n-slash action movie.

I don’t find much entertainment in watching people mutilate each other,
but
I love it when a movie engages me in a world, and ‘The Fellowship of the
Ring’ does just that. Certainly the most breathtaking scenes in the movie
are the moments of patient observation, when the camera pans around and
captures the beautiful settings of Middle Earth. I must give Jackson
credit.
He did hire some very extraordinary artists that have envisioned one of
the
grandest interpretations of Tolkien’s world.

There are about five particular moments that stick out in my mind and gave
me that tingle of goosebumps down my spine when I saw them for the first
time. The first is the introduction to Hobbiton. After the somewhat
awkward
prologue, I was beginning to have my doubts to whether the movie would
live
up to the book. But the movie surprised me. Hobbiton is perfect. The
houses
have flower patches and old fences, the roads look worn and made through
decades of travel, and the Old Mill spins with the laziness of a quiet
town.
Every color is vibrant and every moment looks as through it was taken out
of
a picture book. Although I still don’t agree with the particular look of
the
Hobbits, I believe everything else in Hobbiton is worthy of Tolkien’s
words.

The second moment comes after Frodo’s awakening in Rivendell, and the
third,
during the exploration of the Halls of Moria. In both moments, the camera
pans away from the characters and outward into a static shot of their
surroundings. The moments make us feel like we’re turning our heads and
gazing at the world around us just as the characters do. The golden
waterfalls of the elven city mark an interesting contrast with the dark
halls of the dwarfish mines, but each are inspiring in their own ways and
add to feeling of being engaged in a living world.

My other favorite moments come during the exploration of Lothlorien and
the
passage down the Anduin. And while I won’t go into detail about the
scenes,
since they really should be experienced without any prior expectations,
they
are monuments in imaginative cinema. ‘The Fellowship of the Ring’ is one
of
those rare movies that I always wish I could reexperience for the first
time. Unfortunately, Jackson turned away from exploring Middle Earth in
his
next two movies, and instead, turned to fighting and warfare. He seems to
take a lot of pride in the love story and battle sequences he created in
‘The Two Towers’ and ‘The Return of the King,’ but it is was in his first
movie when he really got it right. In ‘The Fellowship of the Ring,’ it’s
okay if the characters are uninteresting and have silly dialogue. Middle
Earth is the star, and the characters are the ones seeing it for the first
time.

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7 de Julio de 2008 - Posted in General | Sin comentarios »

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Jason Biggs, having cornered the lovelorn loser market with American Pie, Loser, and Boys and Girls, plays that same note again with the critical disaster Saving Silverman. Biggs stars as Darren Silverman, a young man utterly obsessed with Neil Diamond and consistently maintaining a zero batting average with the fairer sex. His string of failures seems to turn around when his lifelong buddies (Steve Zahn and High Fidelity’s Jack Black) steer him towards Judith, an unapproachable ice princess played by Amanda Peet. Judith quickly dominates Darren, bending him to her indomitable will and forbidding him to have even the slightest contact with his two fellow Neil Diamond fanatics. This doesn’t go over particularly well with his old pals, who scheme to kidnap Judith and reunite Darren with Sandy, his old high school crush and fellow cheerleader (Amanda Detmer, who co-starred with Biggs in Boys and Girls, my pick for the worst movie of 2000). Needless to say, wackiness ensues.

I was spared the torment and agony of seeing the Saving Silverman trailer beforehand. If I were that unfortunate, I’m positive I wouldn’t have bothered giving this disc a spin. The end result, as hard as it may be to believe, is not nearly as bad as the trailer would seem to indicate. Saving Silverman didn’t have me to wall-to-wall hysterics, but I found myself laughing more frequently than at any other comedy I’ve seen in the past year. It’s not a particularly witty movie, but it seems dumb by design, still rarely resorting to the banal humor of its mindless, ejaculate-driven competition. Saving Silverman unquestionably has its flaws, particularly numerous terrible jokes that bob around lifeless in the comedy pool, but enough of the gags work to make this movie worth at least a rental.

There’s no indication on the disc or its packaging what the ‘racy never before seen footage’ in this R-rated version of Saving Silverman is, exactly. Dennis Dugan’s commentary points mostly towards “no-no” words and phrases, along with two lengthy and largely non-offensive scenes cut for pacing. Those picking up the R-rated version in the hopes of being treated to the sort of additional nudity the expanded Road Trip offered may find themselves disappointed.

Video: Saving Silverman is presented at 1.85:1 and is, not surprisingly, enhanced for widescreen televisions. The film is bursting with color, and those bold hues seem accurately reproduced on this DVD release. Black levels and shadow delineation are both excellent, and the image is crisp and detailed. Grain, assorted specks, and print flaws never rear their nasty heads to any appreciable extent. This is a typically solid effort from Columbia/Tri-Star, but there’s a slight error with the packaging. The sleeve states that full-screen and widescreen versions of Saving Silverman are available on separate sides of the disc, but this DVD is single-sided. Whoops. I would hope no one reading this review would have even the slightest interest in a presentation that alters the original aspect ratio, so it’s not a big loss.

Audio: Both stereo surround and Dolby Digital 5.1 soundtracks are selectable on Saving Silverman. As is typical with comedies, Saving Silverman is driven by dialogue, with most of the auditory interest located front and center. Surrounds are reserved mostly for Mike Simpson’s rather nice synth-rock score and Neil Diamond-tasticness, though the occasional effect will hop over into the rear portions of the soundscape, such as Jack Black’s head being dunked in a toilet. The Dolby Digital 5.1 audio doesn’t sport the sort of flashiness that DVD message board devotees seem to crave, but this track is pretty much in keeping with the genre and just what a film like this needs.

Supplements: Director Dennis Dugan recorded the commentary track shortly before Saving Silverman opened theatrically. The informal, chatty discussion is heavy on pointing out Happy Gilmore alumni and comments about which gags struck Dugan as funny, each occurring often enough to make for a pretty rowdy drinking game. There’s a decent amount of technical information tossed into the mix, and the inventive Dugan goes into detail about a camera rig he developed himself for photographing motorcycle footage. Regardless of your feelings about Saving Silverman or (shudders) Big Daddy, next time you watch a movie where a character is puttering around on a Harley and doesn’t seem as stiff or lifeless as normal, you may very well have Dennis Dugan to thank. Dugan also answers one of the questions I had from the get-go — how could someone as young as Jason Biggs pal around in the same classes as the considerably older Steve Zahn and Jack Black? No, I’m not familiar with suspension of disbelief. The director’s enthusiasm for the film itself and the talent involved is evident, helping in some small way to overcome the frequent brief gaps of silence and repetition.

Dugan mentions in the commentary that he had pulled out some of Jack Black’s mascot dancing footage specifically for this DVD release, which turns up as part of the three and a half minutes of outtakes. The majority of these bits are just flubbed lines, something I don’t personally find hysterical, but it’s still nice to see a little something extra added to a DVD.

An anamorphic widescreen trailer for Saving Silverman is featured alongside trailers for other CTHV releases featuring the film’s cast and crew, including Dennis Dugan’s Big Daddy, Jason Biggs’ Loser, Amanda Peet’s Whipped, and Jack Black’s The Cable Guy. All of those additional trailers are full-frame with the exception of the 16×9-enhanced Loser. Rounding out the supplements are filmographies for Dennis Dugan, Jason Biggs, Jack Black, Steve Zahn, and Amanda Peet.

Conclusion: Like far too many comedies, Saving Silverman doesn’t really offer much replay value beyond the first couple of viewings, though it has enough laughs to make for a solid rental. Rent it.
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6 de Julio de 2008 - Posted in General | Sin comentarios »