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Friday 19 August 2011

Source Code - Movie Review

BySharjeel Ahmad

Source Code is a fast paced sci-fi thrilling affair. It appears to test brains but it serves better if they are allowed to rest. It brings a big idea and the idea is interesting enough to keep all glued to screens for an hour and a half. It tries in vain at length to explain the idea through calculus and electromagnetics- is it really important? Avatar, Inception....... no one cared to think.

The Idea: Consciousness remains in body even after death and by using it we can access and even live last eight minutes of someone's life.

Colter Stevens (Jake Gyllenhaal) wakes up in train sitting next to a beautiful woman named Christina (Michelle Monaghan). He has no idea what he is doing on the train. Christina knows him as Sean but he does not know her. His last memories are of a soldier fighting in Afghanistan. The big thing: When he looks into a mirror he sees a different face. Eight minutes after he wakes up the trains blows up with a deadly bomb and everyone gets killed. Except, Colter, who finds himself in a strange capsule and a woman is talking to him.

She is an air force officer named Coleen Goodwin (Vera Farmiga). She orders him to go back again in that train and locate the bomb and the person who planted that bomb. That train had already been blown but they fear that more such attacks are ahead. He had to accomplish this through a time program, Source Code, which enables to virtually take over some dead person's body and live last eight minute of that person's life. Colter takes over Sean's body (a school teacher that travelled in the train that had blown up). He goes back to that train through Source Code and comes back unsuccessful. Coleen and her boss (Jeffry Wright) keep sending him back and tell to find the planter of the bomb so that future incidents may be avoided. He also learns that in fact he is also dead: died two months prior to this train incident.

He eventually does the job and saves future bombings. Source Code is a success. So what is next with him? Can he also save the passengers that had already died? Can he survive?

Crazy? A little too much? But still it works and because the proceedings are fast and the direction (Dunken Jones) is smart and crafty. Gyllenhaal plays a role which every decent actor should play well. Christina does what she had to: She looks sweet and innocently charming. Jeffry Wright looks the bossy scientist he needs to look. Vera Farmiga does wonderfully well first as a soldier than as a person with a heart.

Source Code is a smart sci-fi thriller with two spoilers: the odd logics given and the end. Just before the end, there was a frozen shot where everyone was happy and the shot was really moving. It could have been a much better ending. But the makers decided to take a step forward and which isn't truly appealing.

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Review: Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows Part 2

ByBarry F

Like most adults, I came across Harry Potter when book 3 was released, about two years before the first movie. Kids had been aware of the books since day one. They were an immediate hit, selling millions of copies. However, most adults hadn't heard about them. It was only when a TV station in the US was doing a little research for a small article on kid's reading habits that they realised that these books were outselling videogames and movies without any huge publicity or advertising campaigns. It all boiled down to word of mouth. That, of course, changed almost overnight. Suddenly there was a two month waiting period for the books in the US. An American friend of mine was so stunned that he was able to buy all books (four at the time) in a bookshop in Dublin without any problems that he bought four copies of each and sent them home. He was the best uncle in the world that Christmas.
 
Anyway, as I said, I came across the books at book 3 and have read them all as they came out. The books, cleverly, grew up at the same rate as the characters and readers; Starting off as a book for kids with magic sweets and happy, fluffy magic. But there was still real danger and excitement in the book and the author never talked down or patronised the readers. As the books went on the books got larger, the characters grew up, the danger and excitement more extreme, favourite characters changed and even died. And the books grew more and more popular. The hysteria surrounding the release of a book would only be matched by the hysteria surrounding the next book.
 
And then the films came out. Everyone was concerned: How close to the book will they stay? Who will play the teachers? With a big American studio behind them and an American director and market will Harry suddenly become Troy? And who will play the kids? We need not have worried. The movies stuck VERY closely to the books (At times cutting out unnecessary plotlines that actually improves the story). The adult cast was fantastic. The late, great Richard Harris played headmaster Dumbledore (replaced with the equally great Michael Gambon after the death of Harris), Maggie Smith, John Cleese and Ian Hart all played their parts brilliantly. However Robbie Coltrane and Alan Rickman were BORN to play Hagrid and Snape. The kid actors were all pretty good also. Daniel Radcliffe a bit nervous and stilted as Harry (He's to be honest, not the best actor in the world) Rupert Grint as his best friend, Ron was funny and appealing and Emma Watson was perfect as their know-it-all friend Hermione. As the books went on and new characters were introduced the casting was uniformly excellent: Kenneth Brenagh, Ralph Feinnes, Brendan Gleeson, Gary Oldman etc.
 
So, at last, we get to the last movie. Was it worth the wait? Oh yes! As readers will know, Deathly Hallows Part One covered about more than three quarters of the last book. So Part two was going to be mainly the action packed finale. And it lives up to the challenge. Think the battle of Helms Deep in The Two Towers but with more wands. The action is thick and fast when it needs to be but knows when to calm down when it needs to also. After a five minute build up we are thrown into a daring bank heist with a dramatic and destructive escape. Another few minutes of tense calm and we start the battle of hogwarts. Once bumbling characters are suddenly turn into action heroes and we see other characters in a whole new light. Cool characters get even cooler. Well loved characters rise to the challenge or die without any OTT melodrama, they just die. Most of the actors return even if they don't have a single line of dialogue which is a testament to their respect for the films, books and fans.

The end may leave you wanting more but, sorry, that's it... Until Harry Potter And The Midlife Crises I suppose. It yet to be seen if these actors will be able top break out of their roles in Harry Potter and make a career for themselves in the Film and TV industry. Only times will tell on this really but one thing's for sure, they won't have to queue at the dole office for a while anyway!

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Reviewed: Captain America: The First Avenger [2011]

12A - 125mins - Action/Adventure/Sci-Fi - 29th July 2011

With the summer season now in full blast we get our latest and final all action comic book hero for the year in the guise of Captain America- yet another character that I am unfamiliar with. Have I missed out on a childhood filled with comic books? It would seem so.

Set during World War II, Steve Rogers (Chris Evans) a poorly yet determined man has only one goal- to join the army so that he can serve and protect his country. Due to his illnesses and diminished stature though he is rejected and turned away by every recruitment station he visits. A chance encounter with Dr. Erksine (Stanley Tucci) changes his fortunes and leads him to be accepted onto a secret project codename Project Rebirth where his honour and integrity gain him the chance to become a super soldier. He undergoes the transformation and becomes capable of near superhuman acts.

Meanwhile in Germany, Johann Schmidt aka the Red Skull (Hugo Weaving), head of the Nazi exploratory research department HYDRA is building and army and technology that threatens to not only usurp Hitler but destroy the world. Captain America is tasked with stopping Schmitt and bringing the war to a premature end.

I was looking forward to seeing Evans in his role as Captain America as I'd wanted to see if he had what it takes to be the leading star in a film rather than the supporting roles he's more used to. He passed with flying colours making the character his own from a skinny nobody to the patriotic propaganda spinning Captain America. The rest of the cast also performed well with Weaving a convincing bad guy (despite me wanting him to say Mr. Anderson) and Tommy Lee Jones adding his unique charisma to the hard as nails Colonel. I was less convinced with Hayley Atwell playing the love interest Peggy Carter as the chemistry wasn't there and she never really extracted any emotions from me good or bad.

The action taken as a whole was good but I'm not sure that there was enough from Captain America. Sure he swung his shield and sent the opposition flying but I never felt that he was getting down and dirty for his cause. Some of the fighting scenes felt rushed and tended to be over before they had even begun. Also I understand Captain America's improved metabolism/regeneration properties cover up the fact he always looks like he's just walked out from make-up room #1 but I would still have liked to see him a bit beaten up and then recover for the next scene rather than looking as if he's just going for a stroll through the park. He never felt in peril which instantly removes any suspense that I should have been feeling for him.

The story of his origins seemed to take president over the action and to a certain degree that's understandable- there is no movie without a plot, but I would have liked a smidge more action and a tad less talking. Luckily the film didn't give off that all American vibe that I thought it might with the patriotism healthily present rather than all engulfing. Likewise, the comedy flowed at a decent level with many short (as in height) jokes and other such one liners hitting their mark. Although for me, I found Red Skull to be the funniest merely for his appearance- he was not scary and just looked like he'd forgotten to lather himself in suntan lotion before a trip to the beach one day.

The ending certainly adds its clout to The Avengers film due out next year. (You may want to hang around at the end for another post credit scene and a teaser trailer for said film). So where does this go in my list of Summer comic book heroes? I think it slots in nicely behind X-Men, just pipping Thor into second and is comfortably ahead of the Green Lantern.

Rating: B

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Captain America: The First Avenger Movie Review

(Warning: this is a comprehensive review therefore may contain spoilers.)

A lot of pressure was riding on Captain America: The First Avenger. If done well, Marvel could have their best movie yet, whilst generating huge hype for The Avengers. If done wrong, plans for The Avengers would have taken a huge hit. Has director Joe Johnston truly managed to bring the magic to one of Marvel's most iconic characters?

Based on the iconic character from WW2, The First Avenger follows a brave young Steve Rogers from Brooklyn, New York (Chris Evans), as he deemed unfit to serve for the military. With nowhere else to go, Rogers volunteers for an operation that will turn him into a super soldier, led by Dr. Abraham Erskine. The operation is a success but Dr Erskine is quickly killed, along with the secrets of the super soldier formula. Realising their only living super soldier is too much of a risk for combat, the US military decide to parade Rogers out on USO shows to boost morale and gain funding. However when an evil plot reveals itself lead by the evil Johann Schimdt/Red Skull (Hugo Weaving), Rogers must step up to the task and become Captain America.

The movie handles the hardest part well. It is successfully able to avoid turning a flag wearer into a flag weaver. Instead Evans comes across a well likeable character, who hates bullies and isn't afraid to stand up for himself. Steve's character is given proper treatment, before he becomes the Nazi bashing super soldier, as Evans proves he can handle more than just comedy putting any confusion over him being The Human Torch to rest.

Hayley Atwell gives us a convincing performance as the strong, but sensitive Peggy Carter, and Tommy Lee Jones is on scene stealing form as the cocky Colonel Philips who is prone to one-liners. The rest of the cast either struggle to impress or are not given enough time to do so. It's been a tough summer for Bucky Barnes. He suffered a cheap death in the comic books recently, and his treatment in The First Avenger fairs little better. Sebastian Stan tries to make the most of what he is given, as it's evident that Steve and Bucky are long-term friends. Once Barnes is quickly dealt with however, he's soon forgotten. Captain America's support group The Howling Commandos (although they are never actually called that in the film), cry out for their own spin-off as they provide some of the films more fun scenes.

Several disappointments I had with this film were Howard Stark (Dominic Cooper) and The Red Skull (Hugo Weaving). The Howard Stark portrayed in this film had little charisma, and it often felt forced how many times the name Stark was mentioned, as if to keep re-enforcing the fact that he's Iron Man's dad to the audience. Weaving's Skull is so fanatically unhinged, he even disgusts other Nazis, but it's sometimes difficult to see where his intentions lie. Is he simply just obsessed with being a god? The Red Skull certainly isn't the diabolical villain I read in the comics. I also hope we see more explanation behind the Cosmic Cube in The Avengers. Ordinary cinema viewers would have perhaps found it difficult in this film to understand just what is the cube's power.

That's where the film loses a star. The main threat HYDRA, the Nazi deep science division, only really has two main figureheads, therefore never really feels like a world threat. Perhaps if we had seen more classic cap villains such as Baron Zemo and Baron Von Strucker, HYDRA might have looked more of a threat.

Did the film work as a period movie? Easily yes. Whilst maintaining enough historical ground to make it work, but not bogging it down too much until it becomes boring, Johnston mixes the perfect amount of history and fantasy to create a truly unique superhero movie. The special effects were actually a welcome surprise. Despite my initial fears Chris Evans's head would look awkward on a skinny man's body, Marvel pulled it off fantastically well. The battle scenes all look convincing, and they easily rival the effects seen in Thor.

To conclude Marvel can look back at Captain America: The First Avenger as job done. A great performance from it's lead character, good action, good special effects and a great story all round. Captain America isn't a classic by any means, but full credit should be given to Johnston and Marvel for making this happen.

Rating: 8/10

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Cowboys and Aliens Movie Review

ByM Tek

"Cowboys and Aliens": The film based off of the graphic novel of the same name combines classic western with modern Sci-fi. But does this interesting hybrid hold up to the epic merging of two genres into one? Starring Harrison Ford, Daniel Craig, Olivia Wilde as your lead characters; Directed by Jon Favreau and produced by Brain Grazer, Ron Howard, Alex Kurtzman, Damon Lindelof, Roberto Orci, and Scott Mitchell Rosenberg.

The film takes place in 1873 when wanted outlaw Jake Longergan (Craig) awakes in an Arizona desert with an old wound, a mysterious bracelet attached to his arm, a small picture of a beautiful woman, and no memory to any events leading to him being stranded in the desert. After reaching to the town of Absolution, he learns from the run in with the local sheriff John Taggart (Keith Carradine) that he is wanted for arm robbery and is thrown in jail with the plans to be extradited to Santa Fe to face a judge.

Just before extradition, Colonel Dolarhyde, the town's ruler (Ford) comes to retrieve his son Percy (Paul Dano) who is also being sent to a judge in an unrelated shooting and to issue his own revenge on Jake for stealing from him in the past. This is when the aliens strike on the unsuspecting town and kidnaps numerous residents including Percy. Realizing that his memory is somehow connected to the aliens attack, Jake teams up with Dolarhyde and Ella (Wilde) as well as with a small band of towns people in finding the aliens and rescuing their people before it's too late.

What made this film strong was Harrison Ford and Daniel Craig performances. Ford character was played well as the war veteran colonel who rules Absolution with an iron fist, but at the same time was a calculated man with a sense of honor, making a great anti hero in a way. Daniel Craig performance as the desperado gunman who only watches for himself was also well done. However as his full memory slowly returns in the film, the audience may see the full portrayal of his character in the sense of his actions he does in his film and his true reasoning on why he is performing his actions.

The cinematography was excellent, however some will notice that this film had a solid HD look and may nitpick the fact that if it was a true Western, it should be in a more classic film like style, but for the most part, people will probably overlook this. The lighting and filming style was well done and portrayed it as a western ranging from being in a dark saloon to the bright arid deserts galloping on horses.

One thing I did notice as a con to the film was the motivation of the villains in the story. Perhaps the graphic novel explains it better, but the purpose was the aliens actions of the film was to exploit the gold on the planet and perhaps plan for a later invasion (reason for the abundant kidnapping of people).

"Cowboys and Aliens" does pack plenty of action and memorable moments on screen and is good for a starting film to wrap up the 2011 summer run.

Final Verdict 4 out of 5 stars!

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Transformers Dark of the Moon Review

ByM Tek

The Master of Disaster and control chaos has done it again in his final installment of Transformers. Directed by Michael Bay and Produced by Steven Spielberg, the trilogy ends in a big bang that the two can only deliver. Set a few years after the end of the second film, we find the heroes, the Autobots on Earth who have heard little of their enemies, the Decepticons since Megatron and his forces were defeated in Egypt and went into hiding. For the time being, the Autobots continue to assist US forces in covert missions while they wait for their enemy to make their next move.

Meanwhile we learn that the space race of the 1960's was in secret a mission to investigate a crash Autobot ship and the nature of what was left of the vessel. After finding out about this mission through a raid that show the world leaders were withholding information, it's a race to see what secrets lie in wait for both sides as well as if there is more than what meets the eye. As with the previous two films, there is more than enough action to go around for a summer block buster and out of the three, Bay may have went all out for a finale.

As for the script, it is certainly better than the second one and has fewer fillers in the sense of comic relief which was good since this one nearly tops a run time of three hours. The special effects of course is without a doubt well done and may again outdo the second one, but some may wonder if the focus on the special effects may weaken the film in the sense of story presentation. Once again, we have a returning cast including Shia LeBeouf (Sam Witwicky) Josh Duhamel (Lennox) John Turturro (Simmons) Kevin Dunn and Julie White (Ron and Judy Witwicky). Rosie Huntington-Whiteley (Carly Spencer) plays Sam new girlfriend and compare to Megan Fox, there wasn't really anything different between the two characters in the area of supporting the main character to provide drama for the story.

One thing to look forward in this final installment is the search for true honor for the Autobots and the human allies as the war for Earth may lead to its darkest hour as well as treason within their own ranks. Final verdict for this film, Michael Bay may have redeem himself from some of the negative comments about the second film and has put a fitting end for the trilogy.

Final Verdict 3 out of 5 stars.

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Movie Review: The Change-Up (2011)

The Change-Up jumps right into bizarre, foul humor to lure audiences in with pure shock. CG babies are employed for uncomfortable laughs, especially as one unloads his bowels into the mouth of an unsuspecting father or rapidly beats his head against the bars of a crib like something out of The Exorcist. Bathroom jokes are taken to the extreme, hoping that raunchiness will smoothly replace cleverness. So too is comedy involving children, which practically borders on child abuse (such as teaching jailyard justice to a little girl and allowing babies to toss around butcher knives or climb into blenders). The trick is all too apparent. But with a plot resembling Freaky Friday for adults, the R-rated laughs are necessary for uniqueness - clearly, the story barely possesses any.

In Atlanta, Mitch Planko (Ryan Reynolds) is something of a failure, having never grown up, living as a high-school dropout in a teen-oriented bachelor pad, fighting bums for furniture, wielding samurai swords for fun, smoking weed, and spouting vulgarities. He's a man-child, disrespects his father (Alan Arkin), works as an actor in "lornos" (light pornography), and has a penchant for deviant sex. His best friend Dave Lockwood (Jason Bateman) lives on the opposite end of the spectrum. He prioritizes his work at a law firm, hoping to make partner, and never has time for himself. Between his twin babies, young daughter Cara (Sydney Rouviere), and loving wife Jamie (Leslie Mann), he can't find time to just talk with his family.

When Mitch and Dave catch a baseball game, the two chat over their envy of each other's lives, which leads to a drunken urination into a magical fountain. The next morning, the impossible happens - Mitch is in Dave's body and Dave is in Mitch's body. Thinking the solution is to recreate the previous night's inebriated mishaps (like Big), they journey back to the fountain, only to discover that it has been moved and that it may take a week or more to learn of its new whereabouts. At first they panic, but then Mitch convinces Dave that they can assume their new roles while waiting - after all, Mitch is somewhat of an actor. What could possibly go wrong?

The setup is uninspired, but still a decent method for creating hilarious situations with disastrous consequences. Fortunately, it never gets so serious that it can't return to its comedic roots, although the switched identities shtick is carried a bit beyond the logical turning point, making the resolution unrealistic (and tidy) even within the boundaries of pure fantasy. Role reversals aren't new, but Jason Bateman pretending to be sexually uninhibited, preposterously wild and unspeakably crude is a delight to watch, similar to his costar Jennifer Aniston's part in Horrible Bosses. He's cast in his usual role, but then assigned to take it in the opposite direction. This ungentle contrast works well for Bateman, whereas Reynolds simply returns to his Van Wilder days. Coming from Green Lantern, it's obvious he's more cut out for coarse comedy than superhero tights.

Responsibility, family and a career must battle freedom and recklessness in a classic switcheroo scenario with a twist of nudity and crudity. Mitch learns to be a go-getter and to stop quitting (accomplishment issues are at a high), while Dave gets to take a break and date smoking hot associate Sabrina McArdle (Olivia Wilde), which is somehow classified as innocent flirtation. He essentially gets a vacation. Disquieting secrets are revealed and kinky sexuality explored - it's divertingly vulgar but doesn't have enough substance to entertain beyond a single viewing.

- The Massie Twins

The Massie Twins are identical twin film critics who have been professionally reviewing movies full time for over 5 years, appearing on TV, radio, online and in print. They are members of the Phoenix Film Critics Society and the Internet Film Critic Society and their work can be seen at GoneWithTheTwins.com

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Movie Review: Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2011)

After all the theatrical features, multiple TV shows, documentaries, remakes, comics, action figures and more, having all seemingly fizzled out by the early 2000s, it's odd that 20th Century Fox would try and reboot this franchise with a prequel - of sorts. While the film certainly isn't necessary, it attempts to fill in the details (as opposed to bridging a gap) on the uprising of an intelligent ape takeover of Earth. To anyone unfamiliar with the major ideas in the Planet of the Apes series, this new chapter will make little sense and seem largely pointless, especially as it ramps up to the need for another film - one that, if made, would probably be far more exciting.

Dr. Will Rodman (James Franco) is on the verge of a revolutionary medical breakthrough at the Gen-Sys lab. His new gene therapy drug ALZ-112 has the potential to cure Alzheimer's disease, which he desperately wants to produce for the sake of his father (John Lithgow) who suffers from the affliction. Testing on chimpanzees goes awry, and a dozen apes are euthanized to halt research. But Will manages to save a newborn chimp to raise as his own, named Caesar (as in Julius), which matures rapidly thanks to residual experimental chemicals passed on from his mother.

Over time, Caesar continues to advance mentally, doubling his IQ astonishingly rapidly. He even learns basic sign language for communication and wears clothing (vestments he retains through the entire movie that raises plenty of questions that are never addressed). His upbringing still leaves time for romantic proceedings for Will with an oddly well-informed animal doctor, Caroline Aranha (Freida Pinto). As Caesar becomes more aware of the morally corrupt events taking place around him, he lashes out at a neighbor, which lands him in a court-ordered, abusive ape sanctuary. His integration into the new facility is directly equated to human prison, with initiations, gang fights and misuse of power. It's here that he fully realizes the brutal conditions of human supremacy and conjures a plan to overthrow his captors.

Don't mess with Mother Nature or the animal kingdom. Rise of the Planet of the Apes appears to be delivering that message, effectively creating a sympathetic hero in the increasingly bitter Caesar. It's difficult not to pity the monkeys, especially when their leader is bestowed with enough intelligence that reducing him to a pet or property seems inhumane. Ethical questions and responses to animal testing, treatment and housing are all provoked. Toward the conclusion, the film demonstrates how one determined creature can rise above the ranks, organize compatriots, and overcome an enemy with superior intelligence, firepower and technology. But with such a finite number of apes in San Francisco, it still feels unrealistic for the sheer masses of human soldiers to be so nonthreatening. At least the primates possess the surprise factor.

Impressively, the movie ends on a satisfactory note, despite the plot existing solely to build to a known outcome (or another new Apes movie, depending on the box office results). It's unfortunate that the use of nothing but computer-generated monkeys still can't fool the human eye, never appearing entirely believable in movement or appearance. Perhaps Hollywood should realize that something about good old-fashioned ape costumes never loses its B-movie appeal.

- The Massie Twins (GoneWithTheTwins.com)

The Massie Twins are identical twin film critics who have been professionally reviewing movies full time for over 5 years, appearing on TV, radio, online and in print. They are members of the Phoenix Film Critics Society and the Internet Film Critic Society and their work can be seen at GoneWithTheTwins.com

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Rio - Movie Review

BySharjeel Ahmad

Director: Carlos Saldanha
Story: Carlos Saldanha
Stars: Jesse Eisenburg and Anne Hathaway
Music: John Powel

Rio is about good things we have in this world; the love, the beauty, the music and the emotions. It is a light hearted fun filled movie with spectacular visuals.

The film starts with dazzling display of wildlife in a jungle. Many birds are smuggled from that jungle, the captured birds include baby macaw. The box containing the macaw falls down and is found by a girl, Linda (Leslie Mann). She names him Blu and keeps him with her for years. Blu (Jesse Eisenburg) gets deeply attached with Linda and becomes so domesticated that he is unable to fly. Tulio (Rodrigo Santoro), a birds' expert, comes and tell that Blu is the last male of its species. The last female of same species lives in Brazilian city of Rio de Janeiro. Tulio wants the macaws to mate so that their species could be saved. They head off to Brazil where Blu meets with feisty female of her kind, Jewel (Anne Hathaway).

Blu and Jewel have quite the opposite nature. Jewel is a free bird who likes to fly in jungles whereas Blu is a pet who does not fly and likes to live with humans. They, like many other rare birds, are caught by bird smugglers from Tulio' bird sanctuary. Then comes the fun filled thrilling escapade of the two birds. The two are tied together when they escape. They have an obvious problem: Blu cannot fly and the two are chained together. In their journey together through spectacular sites of the city they develop love for each other. They are helped by some fun companion birds and animals. Linda and Tulio are also in search for the two, Linda sees Blu in the carnival. But before she could reach, the two birds are caught by the smugglers. The smugglers take all the birds in a plane and fly. Linda and Tulio are unable to stop them. Blu plans a scientific rescue and all birds get free. Blu cannot fly and Jewel does not want to leave him. In fight with the villain bird, Nigel (smugglers use this bird to plan bird catching), Jewel's wing gets injured. Now both the birds cannot fly.

Jewel is pushed out of plane, Blu jumps after her. They both kiss, Blu starts flying and both are saved. Tulio cures Jewel's wing; Linda and Tulio develop a "Blu bird sanctuary" where both the birds fly fearlessly.

The bold colors, top notch animation, salsa sounds, breath taking visuals, fun characters and sweet voice overs (Jesse Eisenburg and Anne Hathaway) make this film immensely watchable for kids and families. The story is surely predictable and occasionally it loses interest of viewer but still RIO is an absolute audio/ visual delight.

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Movie Review: The Help (2011)

The Help wishes to be an emotional rollercoaster and eye-opening exposé, but succeeds instead as just an uplifting, feel-good movie. Heavy-handed manipulation and expected outcomes mix in for an entertaining history and ethics lesson, but thanks to an overlong runtime, the positive energy isn't permanent. The acting all around is also refreshing (the highlight being Bryce Dallas Howard), along with the novel-within-a-novel screenplay - the generous amounts of humor through dialogue alleviate the weightier subject matter for an enjoyable revisit to a dark chapter on the road to social equality in a land of unwilling participants.

Eugenia "Skeeter" Phelan (Emma Stone) is a southern society girl in the '60s who never really fit in, back from college and interested in becoming a writer. She starts her career by landing a job at the Jackson Journal in Mississippi, picking up a housecleaning column entitled "Miss Myrna." To stay consistent with the tips and tricks previously detailed in the newspaper spot, she speaks with Elizabeth Leefolt's (Ahna O'Reilly) maid, Aibileen (Viola Davis), a poor, third generation black servant for wealthy white families. What Skeeter is really interested in, however, is Aibileen's point of view of taking care of other people's children, working for less than minimum wage, "separate but equal" segregation in buildings and in bathrooms, and the general mistreatment, animosity and feelings of inequality she routinely experiences. Skeeter hopes to collect the stories and compile them into a book.

Aibileen is reluctant at first, especially since her job (and even her life) could be at stake if she speaks ill of her employer, but eventually spills her thoughts on the multitudes of unfairness and racism exhibited by nearly everyone in the town. Joining her in the liberating disclosure is the food-loving, outspoken Minny Jackson (Octavia Spencer), who works for the particularly prejudiced Hilly Holbrook (Bryce Dallas Howard), a mean-spirited socialite who assigns herself the task of upholding segregation and educating others on the inferiority of "the help." Aided by a confident publisher (Mary Steenburgen) and several more maids stepping forward to reveal the ugly truths at the heart of their prominent white employers, Skeeter is set to publish a highly controversial, jolting and remarkable piece.

The young, rich, naïve, annoying whites with their premature babies, constant coddling, general pampering, carefree, work-free lives and lavish homes are no match for the worldly, sensible, abused black maids. Stupid, smiling racists make great antagonists, and therefore nearly every character in The Help is a stereotype, save for Emma Stone, who is the lone forward-thinking woman looking for change in a disinclined community. And yet the focus on her unnecessary love life, which sparks mild comedy, and the awareness of the adverse effects of her actions, stretches out details that slow the progression of the major points. Fortunately, the themes of courage and hard-earned equality make the film a pleasant, moving picture of important thematic material.

- Mike Massie (GoneWithTheTwins.com)

The Massie Twins are identical twin film critics who have been professionally reviewing movies full time for over 5 years, appearing on TV, radio, online and in print. They are members of the Phoenix Film Critics Society and the Internet Film Critic Society and their work can be seen at GoneWithTheTwins.com

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Movie Review: 30 Minutes or Less (2011)

Though it won't win any awards for its plot, 30 Minutes or Less does excel in the department it clearly directs all its efforts to - dialogue. The script provides plenty of hilarious and offbeat situations for its slew of miscreant characters to immerse themselves into and it's here where the laughs emerge. The double duos of protagonists and antagonists trade insults and colorful verbiage in a rapid-fire exchange of vulgarities and insights. While the crudeness oftentimes outweighs the overtly funny, praise does go to the actors who dish out the majority of their lines as if improvising - it's possible most if it actually is ad libbed, but either way these random rants paired with the stars' idiosyncratic characterizations successfully deliver the laughs.

Enraged at his callous, militaristic father, Dwayne (Danny McBride) determines to rid himself of the old man and collect his inheritance early. Scheming with his best friend Travis (Nick Swardson), Dwayne decides to hire an assassin to do the deed. To pay the hitman (Michael Pena) his fee, the duo kidnaps pizza delivery boy Nick (Jesse Eisenberg), straps a bomb to his chest and tells him he has ten hours to rob a bank or else he'll blow up. Fearful for his life, Nick enlists his best friend Chet (Aziz Ansari) to aid in his newfound criminal endeavor and the inept pair set about planning the heist as well as plotting a way to escape their dire situation.

The dialogue is the highlight of the film, making splendid use of five comedians' abilities to ramble, insult and spout profanity in an improvised, on-the-spot manner. It's vulgar, blunt and abrasive, which works effectively with this collaboration. Words never get minced. With such a simplistic, one-note plot, it's essential that these goofs eat up screentime with their hilarious arguing. Danny McBride uses his trademark, bitter, disgruntled attitude to craft a spiteful villain, while Eisenberg plays his typical, expressionless, quick-worded, depressed underdog. Aziz Ansari's major role marks a first for the TV veteran, and he matches wit and sarcasm with the more seasoned movie jokers - so too does Nick Swardson as the particularly dim-witted accomplice. Everyone's chemistry is amusing and the group emotes like good friends gathering together for a night of wild story swapping.

Despite a bungled hold-up, negotiations, renegotiations, spontaneous decisions, altered plans and makeshift money drops, the plot is so basic that it serves only as a setup for verbal humor. Like Pineapple Express, the funny men decide to also throw some serious predicaments into the festivities, which results in a bit of bloodshed that seems out of place. Dwayne is also so despicable and unredeemable that when the violence begins, the audience isn't likely to care whether or not he lives through the ordeals. Mortality doesn't have a place in this world of inept kidnappers, inept bank robbers and inept assassins, even though the occasional dosage of realism dictates its presence.

- The Massie Twins (GoneWithTheTwins.com)

The Massie Twins are identical twin film critics who have been professionally reviewing movies full time for over 5 years, appearing on TV, radio, online and in print. They are members of the Phoenix Film Critics Society and the Internet Film Critic Society and their work can be seen at GoneWithTheTwins.com

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City of God Review

ByJaskee Hickman

In Brazil, there are these neighborhoods called favelas and hundreds of them are in Rio de Janeiro. They're basically a Brazilian variation of slums. Do to the growth of the poor population in Brazil, most favelas really began to pop up around the 1960′s and 70′s. There's was an increase of violence in these neighborhoods and to this day, drug trafficking and shootouts between the police and the drug lords that rule them still happen sometimes. There's one favela based in Rio de Janeiro that has garnered a lot of notoriety over the years. That one favela is called the City of God. It received a ton of attention with the release of the film that carried the same name.

Based on real events and the novel written by Paulo Lins, The film focuses on the rise of organized crime in Rio de Janeiro and one of the drug dealers right in middle of it named Li'l Zé in the late 60′s and all the way into the early 80′s. We see Li'l Zé as a child (Douglas Silva) grow into an adult (Leandro Firmino da Hora). We also get to see Rocket (Luis Otávio/Alexandre Rodrigues) and Zé's childhood friend Bené (Michel de Souza/Phellipe Haagensen) grow up during this same timeframe. "City of God" is shown through the eyes of Rocket, but eventually focuses on the friendship and dealings of Li'l Zé and Bené.

Being best friends, Li'l Zé and Bené are partners in crime with very different approaches. Bené is the more cool and laid-back playboy type and Li'l Zé is about business and he's a man that almost everyone fears. Li'l Zé is the star and primary villain of the film. He goes through his time committing brutal crimes and attempting to completely dominate the drug trade. That creates problems between him and other drug dealers in town and his biggest obstacle is a dealer named Carrot (Matheus Nachtergaele). Carrot is such a big problem, because he is also a friend of Bené and that seems to be the only reason Li'l Zé hasn't disposed of him yet.

As I pointed out earlier, Rocket is basically the narrator of the film and has taken a completely different path in life compared to the other two. He decides he wants to become a photographer and that is illustrated throughout. We get to see some of the choices he has to make as he tries to stay on a straight path to his dream. Through him we also meet more people who inhabit his neighborhood and it's surroundings. The film takes you through the lives of these people and several others as they go through life in the City of God.

With the actors, story, and environment working well together, there isn't anything to complain about when it comes down to this film directed by Fernando Meirelles and his co-director Kátia Lund. Everyone did an amazing job. There was even a T.V. series and follow-up movie (both went by the name of "City of Men") based on it. One of the most interesting parts about this movie, is that most of the actors were actual residents of the "City of God" neighborhood. It must have felt special for these normal people to contribute to something of such great quality and substance.

This film takes a harsh look at a reality that so many will never know. It shows graphic violence and other brutalities that can happen in life. There's still work to be done, but it's good to know that Brazil seems to be improving these days. With improving economic growth and apparently trying to bring about racial equality as far as education and jobs are concerned, Brazil seems to be looking up. This film is a look at a part of their past and it's done in a very honest and unfiltered way. Some people felt it was too harsh, but were more than willing to admit it was a great film. "City of God" is certainly something that you should watch if you have the stomach for it. The four Academy Award nominations it received in 2004 backs that opinion.

Score: 9/10

Rating: R

Directors:
Fernando Meirelles
Kátia Lund (Co-director)

Cast:
Leandro Firmino
Alexandre Rodrigues
Phellipe Haagensen
Alice Braga
Douglas Silva
Jonathan Haagensen
Matheus Nachtergaele
Seu Jorge
Darlan Cunha

Film Length: 130 minutes

Release dates:
August 30, 2002 (Brazil)
January 7, 2003 (U.S.)

Distributors:
Buena Vista International
Miramax (U.S.)

Studios:
O2 Filmes
Globo Filmes
StudioCanal
Wild Bunch

Jaskee Hickman

http://www.themoviepictureshow.com

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The Cars of 007 - James Bond (Part 5 - The 90s)

ByMartyn D Davies

The 1980s had been a strange decade for the James bond franchise. Roger Moore, perhaps the most beloved actor to portray Bond, had seen his reign end with 1985s "A View To A Kill" and was subsequently replaced with new heir apparent Timothy Dalton. The transition from Moore to Dalton happened very smoothly, there was no down time in the release schedule of movies and it seemed as though MGM wanted to keep the franchise running smoothly despite the re-casting of the lead character. Perhaps what no one behind the scenes had anticipated was the lackluster reception Dalton, and his first Bond movie "The Living Daylights", received at the box office and from audiences in general. While the popular argument is that Timothy Dalton wasn't good enough to lead the franchise or open a movie on his own, even having the Bond name behind him, the truth is a bit clearer in hindsight; the franchise and the character of James Bond needed a rest. Audience's tastes were changing, and the once popular "super spy" style espionage/action movies were being supplanted by broad comedy and muscle bound action heroes. So, Bond as a character and a movie franchise was put into hibernation by MGM for the foreseeable future. It would be five years before Bond would resurface, updated for the 90s in every possible way: stories based off of more recently global headlines, a new actor in the title role, and of course - a compliment of the best available cars in the entire world with which to entice new fans while saving the planet.

The series resurfaced too much fanfare with 1995s "Golden Eye". Irish actor Pierce Brosnan, until this point known mostly for his role as TV sleuth "Remington Steele", had taken on the role

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Movie Review: Green Lantern - For Kids Only

ByEthan L Pepper

Movie: Green Lantern

Starring: Ryan Reynolds, Blake Lively

Director: Martin Cambell

Comic book movies like The Dark Knight and Iron Man have proven that super hero stories don't always have to be just for kids. Green Lantern however is a movie that is quite the opposite destined to be remembered only by comic book aficionados and 11 year old boys (until the next super hero movie). Ryan Reynolds stars as Hal Jordan a hot shot test pilot who is brash and irresponsible but also a really good pilot (duh). Blake Lively plays his former co-pilot and obvious and bland love interest. After an evil entity who feeds on fear known as Parallax is unleashed.

A group of intergalactic peace keepers known Greencorps (other alien versions of Green lantern) are threatened. One is wounded and crash lands on earth, knowing he is about to die he sends forth his ring of power to find a successor. The ring ends up in the hands of the aforementioned Hal. It gives him the power to conjure up anything that he can imagine but as soon learns he must rid himself of his fears and be courageous to prevail. The movie goes into much more detail than I just did explaining things like "power streams", "guardians" and the difference between fighting with fear and using the strength of your will. As you can probably guess it all starts to feel pretty silly and in the end doesn't matter much to the actual plot which is pretty simplistic when you take away all the comic book jargon.

The main focus of the film ends up being Ryan Reynolds in campy goofball mode discovering how cool it is to be super hero. This has now pretty much become a cliche of comic book movies and has been done much better in other films like Spider-man. Green Lantern also devotes too much screen time to the laughable and unrealistic love story between Hal and Carol. Blake Lively at times seems to be reading her lines from a cue card just off camera. Their romance is a complete waste of the audiences time.

There is an interesting side story involving Hector, the son of senator who becomes infected by Parallax and begins to have strange abilities like reading people's minds and telepathy. He seems to know both Hal and Carol although their connection is never fully explained. Peter Sarsgaard takes this character and really gives him some life you begin to think that at least the movie will have an interesting villain. The script writers though don't really know how to make that happen and cut off the storyline before it gets going. Opting instead for a nameless emotionless monster to take over the action (boring). Which Hal must defeat through the power of his will not fear. Why? Because fear is bad. For how much they talk about this in the movie it is never really explained at all. Hector's character who is corrupted by fear would have been a great way to illustrate the difference but I don't think the writers wanted to think to deeply so they got rid of him instead.

Now on to the most important part of any film, the special effects. For all the talk the special effects are simply adequate not mind blowing. The alien character designs I felt were kind of boring. A little bit too much like Star Trek from the 1960's or something straight out of Star Wars. For the most part the computerized suit Hal wears looks fine except in a few scenes were it looks a bit too cartoonish. It doesn't really detract from the action that much though. Not as much as the bad scripting and simplistic storyline that doesn't know how to get any real emotional reaction from the audience. So go ahead take your 11 year old brother or nephew to see it he might think it's really cool, at least until the next super hero film.

Blog Anything Movies is the place for anything movies featuring the newest trailers, reviews, previews and opinions. Come by and check it out and of course don't forget to subscribe. Blog Anything Movies

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Movie Review - Captain America: The First Avenger

ByEthan L Pepper

Movie: Captain America: The First Avenger

Director: Joe Johnston.

Staring Chris Evans, Hugo Weaving, Tommy Lee Jones, Sebastian Stan, Stanley Tucci, and Haylee Atwell

I've already seen Captain America twice - something that would imply that I think the movie is great. However, this is a bit more complicated. So complicated that I am going to resort to the old pros and cons list to describe my feelings about this film.

The good:

The acting. Evans, who plays the titular character, and who just so happens to be an actor that I normally think of as mediocre (to put it politely) is actually quite well cast here. He plays Steve Rogers as earnest and determined without bordering on gung-ho patriotism and heroism (most of the time, but more on that later). He plays skinny Steve Rogers as a weakling, true, but also as someone brave and intelligent. We never really find ourselves laughing at pre-serum Steve because Evans plays a 90 pound asthmatic as a normal human being who realizes he is inadequate physically but who still exudes a sort of confidence that makes him likeable and real. As post-serum Rogers, he is humble but proud - a nice little hint of this is when he is watching a bad war propaganda movie featuring himself as Captain America and can't help but smile at it - even as he develops a little cockiness, he still seems so down to earth that it isn't aggravating.

Tommy Lee Jones is great as an old and quick talking sergeant who likes Steve but doesn't really believe in him, even post-serum. He barks out orders and quips nicely and makes a role that might have been cliché and rote seem fresh and entertaining to watch.

Haylee Atwell plays the obligatory love interest, but the story makes a point of highlighting the connection she has with Steve as someone else who has always been overlooked or put down (because she is a woman in the army) and Atwell does very well in giving her some personality so that she does not just simply become the busty, vapid blow up doll that so many other women become in "guy" movies. It doesn't hurt that she is shockingly pretty.

Last but not least is the great Hugo Weaving as the villain. Red Skull is not a three-dimensional villain a la the Joker or even that other little character Weaving portrayed by the name of Agent Smith. No, Johann Schmidt is the classic comic book villain. He has henchmen and evil plans to take over the world. He even has personal one-man air vehicles and a chair that spins. But Weaving plays him both campy and understated in a way that is hard to describe. He never devolves into maniacal laughter or cartoonish evilness, but at the same time he seems to relish having a little secret lab and classic music to listen to while plotting world domination. I honestly don't really see anyone else being able to play this character without being overshadowed by the sillyness. Weaving seems to elevate almost everything he's in by the mere force of his personality and charm. Weaving once said that he only enjoys playing a villain if the character has a sense of humor, and he brings that same sort of smirky bravado here. In some ways, you kinda like the Red Skull just because he is so vibrant. One of the best moments of the film is when he takes a moment to plan out the execution of some Nazi lackeys and actually counts the men he's about to blow into oblivion. As to the voice (something that must be addressed with this actor), while I am certianly no expert at the accuracy of his German accent, the sibilant "s"s he adds on and the vaguely nasal tone makes this another voice that Weaving has created that will probably be talked about for some time.

The action. Johnston knows how to film action and use slow motion to draw out graceful movement. He also knows how to put two people together and have them punch each other in the face in an exciting way. The fight between Red Skull and the Captain at the end is rough and dirty and both men are agile enough to make it feel real.

The look and tone. This is not The Dark Knight. Johnston makes this movie feel retro in it's color scheme as well as it's tone. It may shock some viewers at first at how old-school this movie is. It is very classic looking and harkens back to the old comic books. But the movie is doing this consciously and handles it deftly. It is an extra nice touch to poke a little fun at the America-is-Awesome themes that permeate the Captain America comics and the one thing that could have drug this movie down. Captain America even joins a show to raise war bonds and sings about America and the war with chorus girls - the joke is addressing the propaganda that many could see in the image of Captain America. It is used to its full potential, though, when the Cap tries to take the revue to actual soldiers on the front lines and they are not amused by it at all.

The bad:

The look and tone. While it is one of the movies high points, it could also be a drawback to those who don't get it or who simply do not like it. As I said, this is not The Dark Knight.

The music. At times I felt like I was watching a Disney movie during the fight/battle scenes (oh wait....). This is not a compliment. The music is just bland, or worse, too old-style heroic and seemed to contradict all the effort the director and screenplay writer went through to shatter the idea of this being a "go Hero!" kind of movie. The music actually almost ruined some scenes for me and make them cheesier than they were on their own.

The dialog. While I have already emphasized that Chris Evans exceeded my expectations, there were two or three cringe-worthy moments, mostly due to the script. When the Red Skull preaches to the Captain about a future with no flags, the lame response is "not my future!" - which no one could pull off. The same goes for Weaving, though he fairs better simply on the strength of his acting ability. However, these few moments don't ruin the rest of the acting for me, so I can overlook it.

Suspension of disbelief. Captain America runs through a Nazi camp with an American flag-painted shield strapped to his back. And no one notices him....

The editing of the action. While Johnston seems to know how to film a fight scene, the editing felt abrupt. Instead of actually seeing battle, we see a montage of battle (something I don't think I have ever seen in a movie before) and the idea of it is so weird. Battles are the good stuff, why would you speed through them so fast? Also, the last fight, while executed well by Evans and Weaving and choreographed well, also ends too quickly. I know the last Matrix movie was terrible, but the one thing it had going for it is that it was willing to give the hero and villain an epic fight at the end that lasted more than just a few minutes. It almost seemed like they were rushing the ending to get to the part where they connect Steve to the Avengers. In this case - and I rarely say this - I think this movie, despite its silliness, could have used a little longer runtime to give it everything it needed.

Overall, I found the movie entertaining, especially on the second viewing and I recommend it to hardcore fans and to those who are prepared for something different that what they may be used to.

Blog Anything Movies is the place for anything movies featuring trailers, reviews, previews and of course plenty of opinions as well. Come by and check it out and don't forget to subscribe. Blog Anything Movies

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Movies On DVD: The Adjustment Bureau - Not Meant To Be

ByEthan L Pepper

Movie: The Adjustment Bureau

Starring: Matt Damon, Emily Blunt

Writer & Director: George Nolfi

The marketing for The Adjustment Bureau would have you believe that it is a suspenseful SciFi film with a dash of romance. This is very misleading, the movie is more of an old fashioned romance with the SciFi elements acting as nothing more than window dressing. The movie centers around David Moriss (Matt Damon) a politician who has just lost his senatorial bid. He's a bit down, preparing for his concilation speech in the mens room when he meets Elise (Emily Blunt). They have the kind of cutesy, love at first sight meeting that only happens in movies. Why is she in the men's room? Doesn't really matter the point is that now David is smitten. He is rushed off though to give his speech without getting more than her first name and thinks he'll never see her again. And he wouldn't except three years later one of the members of the adjustment bureau makes a mistake and he ends up meeting her again by chance on a bus. This is where the SciFi/Supernatural element comes into play. As the movie tells it the agents of the adjustment bureau are like the hands of fate changing small events in people's lives to make sure that they stay on their life plan. They wear fedoras and overcoats and carry small notepads that show people's predicted life course. When an important event takes place it shows up as small circle on the life path. After the chance encounter with Elise, David stumbles upon the agents of fate in action changing his bosses life plan. He has seen behind the curtain so to speak and they try to persuade him to tell no one about it and above all to forget about seeing Elise ever again.

From there the movie essentially is a chase film with David desperately trying to reunite with Elise while the agents try to foil his plans. The agents led by Richardson (John Slattery) are seemingly supernatural at times but at other times can't stop David from doing the simplest of things. As written and played by Slattery they are not villains so much as bored middle management drones. Which brings us to the pseudo religious aspect of the film when David asks who Richardson works for he replies that they call him "The Chairman but he goes by many names" implying that a higher power is at work. This raises many questions that the movie isn't prepared to answer which makes the film much less interesting.

Another problem is that part of the fun of movie like this is finding out why David's destiny is so important and unraveling the clues as you go along. Unfortunately this doesn't happen in the movie instead the reason is simply revealed to him later in the film and it really isn't a very strong or interesting reason. It's more like an excuse for why he is being kept away from his true love. This leaves the movie relying pretty much solely on the strength of the love story between David and Elise. Now I will say that Matt Damon and Emily Blunt are good together on screen and the writers at least know how to write natural seeming dialogue. The problem is that this is not enough to convince anyone that they have an epic romance for the ages. With nothing else to fall back on the movie feels empty.

When the conclusion is reached and the questions raised are to be answered the movie falls back on old feel good cliches. True love conquers all even the agents of fate and you can achieve anything if you want it bad enough. The bigger questions are glossed over or not addressed at all. This movie could have been much more than it was with just a little more effort. As it is I would recommend to only the most hopeless of romantics. Blog Anything Movies.

Blog Anything Movies is the place for anything movies featuring the newest trailers, reviews, previews and opinions. Drop by and don't forget to subscribe. http://bloganythingmovies.blogspot.com

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Review: Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2011)

ByWilliam J Ramos

The latest in the series of Planet of the Apes turned out to be entertaining enough and faring better than most of the summer's blockbusters. The beginning was a bit slow, but set a good foundation to build on Caesar's character. With all the newest technology, the CGI captured Caesar's emotions and made him come off human enough.

The movie starts out with scientist Will Rodman (James Franco) looking to create a cure for his ill father who has Alzheimer's disease. He does this by testing on chimps that become intelligent when injected with a serum meant to generate cell growth in the brain. Bright Eyes is one chimp that exhibits extraordinary intelligence and Will believes he can move on to the next phase. However, Bright Eyes goes ape in the lab and is killed. Will later finds out that she was only protecting her baby.

Will takes in the baby and names him Caesar. He raises Caesar as a pet/child over the past eight years who also exhibits high intelligence inherited through his mother. Caesar 's has a not too friendly run in with an angry next door neighbor that leads to Will meeting and falling in love with a beautiful veterinarian, Carolina (Freida Pinto). Will also secretly injects his worsening father with his formula and the man not only gets better, but smarter.

Just when everything seems to be going alright, Caesar starts to question his origins and Will's father starts showing signs of Alzheimer's disease again. Caesar has another run in with the angry neighbor while protecting Will's father and this time is caged in an ape sanctuary. Here is about the time the movie finally starts to pick up the pace.

Caesar learns survival and about human cruelty, and I started rooting for the chimp here. He learns survival because; he is beaten down by the alpha male of his fellow simians in the shelter. He learns about human cruelty when the facilities owner's son, Dodge, starts harassing him. Yet, with his high IQ Caesar formulates a plan of escape. He emerges as the leader of his fellow apes and leads a revolution, climbing trees and buildings and finally leading to the big show down on the Golden Gate Bridge. All the action scenes you see in the trailers scraped up into the last act.

Pretty much, all human involvement was cast aside by the apes and the story really focused on viewers cheering for the future enslavers of humanity. Humans were pretty much there to show all the evils of animal cruelty to greedy pharmaceutical.

I would have liked more action, but the movie kept me entertained and there was enough character development in Caesar to keep the emotional aspect hitting hard. Rise of the Planet of the Apes was not a movie that looked interesting to me, but much to my surprise, I loved it. The story did have your cookie cutter characters and Will fell in love with Carolina rather quickly, but after all, the story wasn't about them.

All in all, it is a good movie to see for a night out on a weekend. A 4 out of 5 rating!

William J. Ramos
http://www.spiffycats.com

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Movie Review: Conan the Barbarian (2011)

Visually, this new Conan feels authentic, with gallons of blood spattering against tempered steel as muscular men wage war with beasts and each other alike. Yet while the action and carnage might sate the most bloodthirsty of viewers, the film feels rather soulless as the endless battles carry on with no pause for dialogue, character development, or plot. The mishmash tale of revenge and an evil tyrant trying to conquer the world is the very definition of generic and the actors don't attempt to move beyond the scope of their stereotypes. Conan states early on, "I live, love, and slay. And I am content". Well, we need a story to be satisfied.
Born of battle and raised to be a fearless Cimmerian warrior, Conan (Jason Momoa) seeks revenge against merciless warlord Khalar Zym (Stephen Lang), the man who razed his village and murdered his father. As Zym attempts to resurrect his dead wife with the aid of his sorceress daughter Marique (Rose McGowan), he discovers the last piece to the puzzle lies in the pure blood of Tamara (Rachel Nichols), a young monk. When Conan rescues the girl from Zym's henchmen, the barbarian sees his chance to draw out the ruthless king and fulfill his lifelong vendetta.
Everything about Conan the Barbarian is unrelenting. While the level of action is commendable, it's sustained with nary a break, leaving no room to catch your breath and no moment to differentiate one villain or action sequence from the next. It's as if the movie is one long battle, starting with a blood-soaked killing field birth and ending with the final thrusts of a warrior dueling his nemesis, interrupted rarely by brief conversations. There's so much butchery, but instead of being creative, it's generally cruel, and although the story is soaked in legends, secrets, witchcraft, sorcery, rituals, necromancers, gravelly voices, victory cries, satanic monks and a demonic Queen Amidala (complete with constantly changing hairpieces and attire), none of it is unique. A B-movie vibe presides over the entire ordeal, with unenthusiastic narration, bland transitions and characters striking poster-ready poses (such as swords being raised to the heavens). There aren't even any original monsters for the barbarian to conquer. The filmmakers have forgotten that adventure can still be exciting even without nonstop predicaments and bloodshed. And are the impossibly white teeth and breast implants an anachronism?
The greatest achievement for this second-rate return to the Conan franchise is the scenery, which makes striking use of locations; battlefields, forests, monasteries, deserts, villages, castles, and caves are all given an appropriate Hyborian treatment (with extensive matte painting) and even a hint of Frazetta influences. The makeup is also exemplary, but wasted on unoriginal character designs (save for McGowan who would have been visually interesting had it not been for her expected, over-the-top approach to the role). Sadly, Conan the Barbarian has employed a broad-brush fashion to every other element - it secured the go-to director for sanguineous remakes (Marcus Nispel previously helmed the Texas Chainsaw Massacre and Friday the 13th remakes), the go-to narrator (Morgan Freeman), the go-to production company for violent extravaganzas (Lionsgate) and even cast Ron Perlman, the go-to elder barbarian (he played similar roles in Season of the Witch and In the Name of the King: A Dungeon Siege Tale, as well as having voiced Conan in the 2007 video game).
- The Massie Twins (GoneWithTheTwins.com)
The Massie Twins are identical twin film critics who have been professionally reviewing movies full time for over 5 years, appearing on TV, radio, online and in print. They are members of the Phoenix Film Critics Society and the Internet Film Critic Society and their work can be seen at GoneWithTheTwins.com


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Friday 5 August 2011

The Guard (2011)

Movie Info

The Guard is a comedic fish-out-of-water tale of murder, blackmail, drug trafficking and rural police corruption. Two policemen must join forces to take on an international drug- smuggling gang - one, an unorthodox Irish policeman and the other, a straitlaced FBI agent. Sergeant Gerry Boyle (Brendan Gleason) is an eccentric small-town cop with a confrontational and crass personality and a subversive sense of humor. A longtime policeman in County Galway, Boyle is a maverick with his own moral code. He has seen enough of the world to know there isn't much to it and has had plenty of time to think about it. When a fellow police officer disappears and Boyle's small town becomes key to a large drug trafficking investigation, he is forced to at least feign interest when dealing with the humorless FBI agent Wendell Everett (Don Cheadle) assigned to the case. -- (C) Sony Pictures
 
R, 1 hr. 36 min.
Mystery & Suspense, Comedy
John Michael McDonagh
John Michael McDonagh
Jul 29, 2011 Limited
$76.8k
Sony Pictures Classics

Thursday 4 August 2011

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Sholem Aleichem: Laughing in the Darkness (2011)

Movie Info

A riveting portrait of the great writer whose stories became the basis of the Broadway musical Fiddler on the Roof. Sholem Aleichem: Laughing in the Darkness tells the tale of the rebellious genius who created an entirely new literature. Plumbing the depths of a Jewish world locked in crisis and on the cusp of profound change, he captured that world with brilliant humor. Sholem Aleichem was not just a witness to the creation of a new modern Jewish identity, but one of the very men who forged it. --(c) International Film Circuit
 
Unrated, 1 hr. 33 min.
Documentary, Special Interest
Joseph Dorman
Jul 8, 2011 Limited
$0.2M
International Film Circuit

Terri (2011)

Movie Info

A hit at the Sundance 2011 Film Festival, Terri is a moving and often funny film about the relationship between Terri, an oversized teen misfit, and the garrulous but well-meaning vice principal (John C. Reilly) who takes an interest in him. Terri is produced by the team behind Blue Valentine and Half Nelson, and directed by Azazel Jacobs (Momma's Man). -- (C) ATO Pictures
 
R, 1 hr. 41 min.
Comedy
Azazel Jacobs
Patrick DeWitt, Azazel Jacobs
Jul 1, 2011 Limited
$0.5M
IDP/ATO

Wednesday 3 August 2011

Point Blank (2011)

Movie Info

Produced by Cyril Colbeau-Justin and Jean-Baptiste Dupont, Point Blank also stars Roschdy Zem, Gerard Lanvin and Elena Anaya. Gilles Lellouche plays Samuel, a nurse working at a hospital when his pregnant wife (Anaya) is kidnapped before his very eyes. Knocked unconscious, he comes to and discovers that a dangerous criminal named Sartet (Zem) is responsible, and if he's ever to see his wife again, he must do Sartet's bidding. Samuel quickly finds himself pitted against rival gangsters and trigger-happy police in a deadly race to save the lives of his wife and unborn child. -- (C) Magnolia
Jul 29, 2011 Limited
$41.0k
Magnolia Pictures

Life in a Day (2011)

Movie Info

The 24th July 2010.... 80,000 Lives.... 4,500 Hours of Footage... 2 Award winning Filmmakers..... Now one incredible motion picture event. What began life as a startling cinematic experiment becomes the must see movie experience of the Summer. Created entirely from footage uploaded by YouTube users, Life in a Day is a film first: exhilarating, moving and very, very funny... it is the story of our world. Told by us. -- (C) National Geographic
 
PG-13, 1 hr. 30 min.
Documentary, Special Interest
Kevin Macdonald
Jul 24, 2011 Limited
$89.2k
National Geographic Entertainment

Page One: Inside the New York Times (2011)

Movie Info

Page One: Inside The New York Times deftly gains unprecedented access to The New York Times newsroom and the inner workings of the Media Desk. With the Internet surpassing print as our main news source and newspapers all over the country going bankrupt, Page One chronicles the transformation of the media industry at its time of greatest turmoil. Writers like Brian Stelter, Tim Arango and the salty but brilliant David Carr track print journalism's metamorphosis even as their own paper struggles to stay vital and solvent. Meanwhile, their editors and publishers grapple with existential challenges from players like WikiLeaks, new platforms ranging from Twitter to tablet computers, and readers' expectations that news online should be free. But rigorous journalism is thriving. Page One gives us an up-close look at the vibrant cross-cubicle debates and collaborations, tenacious jockeying for on-the-record quotes, and skillful page-one pitching that produce the "daily miracle" of a great news organization. -- (C) Official Site
 
R, 1 hr. 36 min.
Documentary, Special Interest
Andrew Rossi
Kate Novack, Andrew Rossi, ate Novack
Jun 17, 2011 Limited
$0.9M
Magnolia Pictures

Singham (2011)

Movie Info

In the backdrop of Shivgad, a small village in the border of Maharashtra and Goa, the film revolves around the story of an honest, diligent and honoured Inspector Bajirao Singham played by Mr. Ajay Devgn who fights against injustice and prejudice using his own ethics and principles. A sudden strike of destiny sets up Singham against the tremendously powerful criminal cum politician Jaykant Shikre (Prakash Raj), challenging his morals and beliefs. Jaykant's powerful planning and force makes Singham land up in the ruling city of Jaykant Shikre, the city of 'Goa', where he leaves no stone unturned to make Singham's life a nightmare to live. Singham's supportive girlfriend Kavya (Kajal Aggarwal) and his tryst with Late Mr. Rakesh Kadam's family makes him realize the importance to bring a change in the system by eradicating the root cause Jaykant Shikre, by not going against the law of force but by being a powerful part of it. -- (C) Reliance
 
Unrated, 2 hr. 23 min.
Drama, Action & Adventure, Romance, Art House & International
Rohit Shetty , Hari
Hari
Jul 22, 2011 Limited
$0.3M
Reliance Big Entertainment

Judy Moody and the NOT Bummer Summer (2011)

Movie Info

The film chronicles Judy Moody's (Jordana Beatty) adventures in which she sets out to have the most thrilling summer of her life with the help of her little brother Stink (Parris Mosteller) and fun-loving Aunt Opal (Heather Graham). The script, penned by Kathy Waugh (Peep and the Big Wide World) and Megan McDonald, is based on the characters in McDonald's popular children's book series, illustrated by Peter H. Reynolds and published by Candlewick Press. -- (C) Relativity
 
PG, 1 hr. 31 min.
Comedy, Kids & Family
John Schultz
Kathy Waugh, Megan McDonald
Jun 10, 2011 Wide
$14.9M
Relativity Media

Tabloid (2010)

Movie Info

Thirty years before the antics of Lindsay Lohan and Britney Spears were regular gossip fodder, Miss Wyoming Joyce McKinney made her mark as a tabloid staple ne plus ultra. Morris follows the salacious adventures of this beauty queen with an IQ of 168 whose single-minded devotion to the man of her dreams leads her across the globe, into jail, and onto the front page. Joyce's labyrinthine crusade for love takes her through a surreal world of kidnapping, manacled Mormons, risqué photography, magic underwear, and celestial sex-until her dream is finally realized in a cloning laboratory in Seoul, South Korea. By turns funny, strange, and disturbing, Tabloid is a vivid portrayal of a phenomenally driven woman whose romantic obsessions and delusions catapult her over the edge into scandal sheet notoriety and an unimaginable life. -- (C) IFC Films
 
R, 1 hr. 27 min.
Documentary, Special Interest
Errol Morris
Jul 15, 2011 Limited
$0.4M
IFC Films

A Better Life (2011)



Movie Info

From the director of About a Boy comes A Better Life - a touching, poignant, multi-generational story about a father's love and the lengths a parent will go to give his child the opportunities he never had. -- (C) Summit
 
PG-13, 1 hr. 38 min.
Drama, Special Interest
Chris Weitz
Eric Eason, Roger L. Simon
Jun 24, 2011 Limited
$1.6M
Summit Entertainment

The Guard (2011)








Movie Info

The Guard is a comedic fish-out-of-water tale of murder, blackmail, drug trafficking and rural police corruption. Two policemen must join forces to take on an international drug- smuggling gang - one, an unorthodox Irish policeman and the other, a straitlaced FBI agent. Sergeant Gerry Boyle (Brendan Gleason) is an eccentric small-town cop with a confrontational and crass personality and a subversive sense of humor. A longtime policeman in County Galway, Boyle is a maverick with his own moral code. He has seen enough of the world to know there isn't much to it and has had plenty of time to think about it. When a fellow police officer disappears and Boyle's small town becomes key to a large drug trafficking investigation, he is forced to at least feign interest when dealing with the humorless FBI agent Wendell Everett (Don Cheadle) assigned to the case. -- (C) Sony Pictures
 
R, 1 hr. 36 min.
Mystery & Suspense, Comedy
John Michael McDonagh
John Michael McDonagh
Jul 29, 2011 Limited
$76.8k
Sony Pictures Classics

Tuesday 2 August 2011

Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides (2011)

Movie Info

Johnny Depp returns to his iconic role of Captain Jack Sparrow in an action-packed adventure. Crossing paths with the enigmatic Angelica (Penélope Cruz), he's not sure if it's love-or if she's a ruthless con artist who's using him to find the fabled Fountain of Youth. When she forces him aboard the "Queen Anne's Revenge," the ship of the legendary pirate Blackbeard (Ian McShane), Jack finds himself on an unexpected adventure in which he doesn't know whom to fear more: Blackbeard or Angelica, with whom he shares a mysterious past. -- (C) Disney
May 20, 2011 Wide
Nov 15, 2011
$238.4M
Walt Disney Pictures