Friday, May 26, 2017

'Pirates of the Caribbean' sails into familiar waters - ***

Jerry Bruckheimer producing this series for the 5th time for Walt Disney Pictures came up with a totally different set of people to work on this possibly last episode. New directors, writers and composers try to work together to bring back the old charm of the first episode. Originally intended to be released in 2015, the film was delayed due to conflicts with the script and some budget issues. In other countries like the Philippines it is titled as Salazar's Revenge.

This is really about the search for the Trident of Poseidon, which was believed to be able to break all the curses at sea.  Henry Turner (Brenton Thwaites) wants it to save his father Will Turner (Orlando Bloom) from the curse of being bounded to the sunken ship the Flying Dutchman. Carina Smyth (Kaya Scodelario) wants it to know more about her father who left her as in infant with the book that includes a map that leads to the Trident of Poseidon. Together they partner with Jack Sparrow (Johnny Depp) as captain of the Dying Gull to help with the search.

This movie delivers a steady dose of action sequences and an impressive work on their CGI animation to match. It also tries to go back to the feels that the first episode has generated by adapting to what the original director Gore Verbinski has done.  Though the directors (Joaquim Ronning and Espen Sandberg) claim that they had simply executed what is, according to them on the 'impressive' script they had put their own Norwegian touch by involving more 'heart' and emotions into some scenes.  I am particularly impressed by the new characters in this story,  Javier Bardiem's Salazar is scary and vengeful , Henry Turner provides the heart in this film and Carina Smyth brings in a lot of emotions in this story while being strong at the same time.

After two episodes of this series I got tired already and did not watch the third and fourth.  I am even surprised that there is this 5th installment and there are talks that this film is just the beginning of the final episode.  I think I just simply lost interest in pirates and sea action sequences and it does not help that Jack Sparrow has been reduced to a drunken Mr. Magoo . Though the directors admit that they had made him like what  he was in the first episode which is 'not the main character' his character somehow became a nuisance to the other protagonists in this story. 

Friday, May 19, 2017

a modern take on a loose interpretation - ***

Intended to be a 6 part movie series by Warner Bros, this 2017 fantasy film loosely based on the King Arthur legends spent $175million in production cost and only getting box office returns at $55.2 million.  It started filming in February of 2015 and was intended to be released in July of 2016.  The release has been postponed several times until it finally opened in May this year.

Jealous of his brother's power as king of the Britons , Vortigem (Jude Law) orchestrates a coup and summons a demon knight to kill his brother King Uther Pendragon (Eric Bana) by sacrificing his own wife to the sea witches.  The King senses the plot and tries to flee his family to safety.  His infant son Arthur escapes by boat , his wife is killed by the demon knight and the king plunges in himself the excalibur and turning himself into stone to prevent Vortigem from acquiring the sword.  As destiny would will it,  Arthur comes back a grown man, reluctantly claims the sword and must accept his fate as the new king of the Britons.

Charlie Hunnam made quite an impression on me when I saw him on Pacific Rim. And I really said I will watch out for his next big film and this film was the next one that came along.  His King Arthur started out as someone from the streets trying to earn a living for himself and his foster mother and later would develop into somebody more concerned with the fate of the land and accepting a bigger responsibility.  Charlie is just part of an interesting set of cast members which include some very good uknowns along with popular ones like Jude Law, Djimon Hounsou, Aidan Gillen and Eric Bana.  They have truly done their part as actors and have come together to make it an ensemble act to help further the story.

The director Guy Ritchie has his trademark firmly imprinted in every scene of this film.  If you have seen Sherlock Holmes you will notice how he is fond of some quick cuts to the next scene to demonstrate urgency and push the pace of the story.  Some of his shots and editing style were very expressive and gets the audience to feel what the characters are feeling. It helps generate excitement on a setting that  looks drabby and dark.

I was a little disappointed that the story is not really the classic tale of King Arthur but more of an artists interpretation of how he rose to power.  It is a loose interpretation that acquired too much artistic freedom breaking our own idea of what King Arthur should be like, others would use the word iconoclastic.  I had hope to see the classic story told in a modern way but it went all modern in style and somehow it did not gell very well together. 


Friday, May 12, 2017

as tiring as it is thrilling - **

Wikipedia - Alien Covenant is second to the prequel of the 4 Alien series; Alien (1979), Aliens(1986), Aliens 3(1992) and Alien: Resurrection (1997).  It follows the previous prequel that is Prometheus (2012) and there are two more coming to finally connect the story to the first Alien film.  Of all the Aliens films, Ridley Scott directed 4 of them.

Covenant is a ship in 2104 that carries 2,000 colonists and 1,000 embryos.  It's mission is to reach a remote planet, Origae-6 with the intention of starting a new population of inhabitants.  The ship is manned by a synthetic named Walter (Michael Fassbender) while the crew and the colonists are put to cryosleep.  The ship suffered an accident killing several crew members including the captain Jacob Branson (James Franco).  The crew is awakened  to deal with the situation by fixing the ship.  While doing this they  intercepted a message coming from a planet later discovered to be habitable by human beings.  A contingent went down to investigate and discovered the earlier version of the xenomorph that was cultured by the only survivor of the Prometheus expedition, a synthetic named David who looks exactly like Walter. The investigation proved to be dangerous because of this and escape rendered necessary.

Ridley Scott has mastered this deep-space, close quarter suspense genre that it is almost iconic.  To me who is not really fond of this genre, I had a hard time watching this movie because one I don't like scary movies and two I don't sit well with a lot of gore and blood.  While this movie seemed to get the nod of a lot of critics I did not like it for its story..  The story does not really say much aside from what happened after the Prometheus expedition and maybe an introduction of what might happen in the following installment.  Being a prequel, this movie will just pave the way to the main story that is the Alien series and we will mostly know how this movie will end.   So what prequels can do is mention what is precedent to the main story and help us the audience understand the characters more by giving them more dimension. 

Friday, May 5, 2017

story suffers from a reluctant conflict - **1/2

This movie is based on a 2013 novel of the same title. It is co-written by the author of the book, David Eggers along with the director James Ponsoldt.  Aimed to be a techno-thriller, the movie did not reach its projected income on opening week and ranked 5th at the box office running behind The Fast and the Furious and The Baby Boss.

Mae Holland (Emma Watson)  was hired by a powerful internet company called The Circle upon the recommendation of a college friend Annie Allerton (Karen Gillan) as part of customer relations.  Getting the attention of the co-founders of the company, Eamon Bailey (Tom Hanks) and Tom Stenton (Patton Oswalt) she was asked to be part of a transparency experiment that later proved to be fatal to her and to her loved ones.

This movie boasts of a powerful cast,  a writer who also wrote the source material and the co-writer who also directed the movie.  It is about an issue that is so significant in today's era of the social media where privacy is cheap and almost non-existent.  But the movie fails to present an urgent conflict to make it interesting at best.  At the onset, when Mae got into the Circle, we as viewers were presented with what is obviously wrong with the company but it seems like the people in the story do not seem to recognize this.  And I feel I was pushed back just to allow the story to unravel and when it did I wondered where all the problem is coming from and I realized it should have come from the co-founders of the company but the actors who played these characters seem to be reluctant to be villainous thus making the story almost incomplete. I was a little disappointed watching this.  This is not Tom Hanks' best movie for sure.