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Monday, December 30, 2013

Director Retrospectives- David Fincher PT 1


This is part one of a three part retrospective of David Fincher. Future instalments with discuss Fight Club, Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, Panic Room, The Game, Zodiac, Benjamin Button, Alien 3, and the first two episodes of House of Cards.

Part One- Polar Opposites- Se7en and The Social Network

Seven (1995)If Fincher didn’t invent the convention of the brilliant serial killer always being just one step ahead of the police, he unquestionably perfected it here. This is the twisted psychopath unleashing his vengeance upon the deserving, avaricious world at its absolute best. And this remains Fincher’s best film.

Two cops in New York are hunting a serial killer. The presence of the killer is momentous even before the detectives track him down, once caught, the killer is channeled through Kevin Spacey with a disturbingly authentic evil calm.
Written by Andrew Kevin Walker, this amazing original script that was almost never made. Walker wrote it as an original screenplay around 1991. Apparently he was quite depressed at the time. New Line Cinema bought it, but it took years before it went into production Walker went to work on other projects thinking the script would never be made, but it was. It was released Sept 22, 1995.
By using the seven deadly sins as the basis for justifying the killer’s prerogative, the film’s plot is definitely one of the best around, added to this amped up, excellent performances by Brad Pitt and Morgan Freeman, the production comes off flawlessly, but Seven is so haunting and goes down as one of the best Thrillers of all time because of Fincher’s vision of a hellish New York. This world is poison and Fincher makes it seep. 

The grit and grime of the crimes scenes combined with filth of the city streets, alleyways, rooftops, constantly being pounded with rain, darkness engulf even the few happy moments of the film. So much of this film’s beauty is in the compilation. The sets and lighting are so complex that making Seven must have been the result of a finely tuned crew, each member bulked up on their own creative genius. It is how everything, every element aligns perfectly that makes Se7en such a phenomenal filmmaking achievement.
10/10

The Social Network (2010)- Maybe not understanding all the programming and math involved in the technical side of the project makes me feel like an idiot? I have no idea what any of equations or algorithms mean, or how to write script.
Maybe I’m a little jealous because I never got to go to college parties as glamorous as the ones in this film?
Or maybe the problem is that the subject matter it just so banal that despite the quality of the production, this film is lost on me?
I have a problem with this film that is so full of maybes. And yet for all its weaknesses, it won three Oscars, albeit one of them was for Baxter and Wall's editing, which is superb. Both editors have worked on numerous Fincher productions. 

None of the actors are convincing at portraying the real people they are supposed represent. Maybe that’s the point? They are attempting to play versions of Zuckerberg and Co. that seem more interesting than the real, live versions.
I guess I see the reasoning behind this. As activities, creating companies, programming computers, or writing software, no matter how profound, aren’t exactly as riveting as invading Bin Laden’s compound, or smuggling blood diamonds out of Liberia.
Still, I am no fan of Jesse Eisenberg. His success is baffling to me. He was for a while a Michael Cera impersonation gone wrong, now, whatever he is, he does it well. He sells tons of tickets…but none of them are to me.
The best part about this film is that it has Rooney Mara, briefly. Later she becomes Lisbeth in Dragon Tattoo.

The most interesting thing about this film is simply that it exists and was so successful. Rather, that a production company actually paid David Fincher to try and create a full-on thriller packed with betraying, greedy, snarky little boys either getting their way, or losing millions of dollars. Poor babies.
Even if in the end Zuckerberg did create something monumental, so what. It's just a monument to a monument. What does any of this represent? How does any of this change the world?
It’s not like Facebook has cured any sick people or stopped any wars. It’s arguably even created a recent few (of both).
5/10

My Year- 2013 in Film

This is a ranking of everything I watched in 2013. If you're looking for something new to watch, hopefully my list can provide some inspiration, or at least steer you away from what not to watch.


1.SideEffects- (2013)- Steven Soderbergh- 10/10

2.Se7en- (1995)- David Fincher- 10/10



3.The Edge of Heaven (2007)- An unforgettable film from Turkish director Fatih Akim- 9.5/10

4.Elysium- (2013)- Niel Blomkampt- 9.5/10

5.The World's End- (2013)- Simon Pegg and Nick Frost of Shaun of the Dead are working again here with Edgar Wright in perhaps the funniest movie I've ever seen!- 9.5/10


6.A Hijacking- (2013)-Tobias Lindholm-
9.5/ 10





7.The Attack- (2013)- Ziad Doureri- Women make the best suicide bombers. They receive more media attention and generate greater mass hysteria. If they can kill innocent children, this creates the best publicity possible-
9/10


8.The Way Back- (2010)- Peter Weir's tale of escapees from a Siberian camp that walk to India- 9/10

9.Distant- (2002)- From Turkish Director Nuri Bilge Ceylon, a man tries to cope with his life in the dismal conditions of an Istanbul winter- 9/10

10.Prisoners- (2013)- Denis Villeneuve- 9/10



11.Fruitvale Station- (2013) Breakout hit from first time filmmaker Ryan Coogler uses the truth of a story to make this excellent, yet simple film- 9/10 

12.Bicycle Thieves- (1948)- Vittorio De Sica- 9/10

13.Days of Heaven- (1978)- One of Terrence Malick's first features. Amazing portrait of the United States agricultural machine in 1918. Visually stunning- 9/10


14.Captain Phillips- (2013)- Paul Greengrass- 9/10

15.Citizen Kane- (1941)- Orson Wells- 9/10

16.All Is Lost- (2013)- JC Chandor- 9/10


17.The Hunt- (2013)- Thomas Vinterberg- This film dredges up the "other side" of sexual abuse accusations, a much needed discourse that we all choose to ignore- 8.5/10

18.I Heart Huckabees- (2004)- David O. Russels' all-star cast investigate the existential- 8.5/10

19.Fill the Void- (2013)- Rama Burshtein- Glimpse into the world of ultra-orthodox Judaism. Excellent performance by Hadas Yaron in the lead- 8.5/10





20.Twelve Years a Slave- (2013)- Steve McQueen tells the story of a free man sold into slavery- 8.5/10

21.Wadjda- (2013)- Haiffa Al- Mansour- 8/10

22.Trance- (2013)- A super exciting thriller from Danny Boyle. It aims for the complexity of Inception, but doesn't quite achieve it- 8/10

23.This Is England- (2006)- A young kid gets involved with a group of skinheads while he's just trying to get by- 8/10

24.Europa Report-(2013)

Sebastian Cordero- 8/10



25.Margin Call- (2011) JC Chandor's look at the taciturn climate just before the Wall Street meltdown- 8/10 

26.Lore- (2013)- Cate Shortland's portrait of the children of an SS officer trying to survive after Germany's loss in WWII - 8/10


27.The Conjuring- (2013)- James Wan- 8/10

28.The Tree of Life- (2011)- Terence Malik's sensual mix of perspective- 8/10 

29.Following- Christopher Nolan's first simple, and very good feature film- 8/10


30.Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues- (2013)- The long awaited follow-up to the first instalment. Great script and very Funny- 8/10



31.127 Hours- (2010)- James Franco stars in Danny Boyle ultra-suspenseful survival flick- 8/10

32.World War Z- (2013)- Marc Forster- 7.5/10

33.The Hunger Games: CatchingFire- (2013)- Francis Lawrence- 7.5/10

34.Casablanca- (1941)- Michael Curtiz's lengdary tale about life's most difficult choice- 7.5/10



35.Drug War- (2013)- Johnnie To- 7.5/10

36.Flight- (2012)- Robert Zemeckis- 7.5/10


37.Harold and Kumar 3D Christmas- (2011)- Todd Strauss-Schulson- 7.5/10


38.Zodiac- (2007)- David Fincher- 7/10

39.Three Monkeys- (2008) Internal trauma tears a family apart. Nuri Bilge Ceylan- 7/10




 

40.Looper- (2012)- Rian Johnson's time-traveling, action-filled picture of a bleak world- 7/10


41.The Wolverine- (2013)- James Mangold- 7/10

42.Mr. Nobody- (2009) Jaco Van Dormael- 7/10


43.Downhill Racer- (1969)- Michael Ritchie directs Richard Gear and Gene Hackman in their younger days- 7/10

44.Primer- (2004)- Shane Caruth- 7/10

45.Somewhere- (2010)- In Sofia Coppola's feature a listless movie star re-examines his life, and his Ferrari-7/10

46.Blue Caprice- (2013)- Alexandre Moors- 7/10



47.Love- (2011)- William Eubanks- 7/10



48.Grandma's Boy- (2006)- Nicholaus Gossen's comedy about a video
game guru who still lives with Grandma- 7/10



49.The Campaign- (2012)- Jay Roach directs Will Ferrell and Zack Galifianakis in this political spoof- 7/10


50.Drive- (2011)- Nicolas Winding Renf's breakthrough film staring Ryan Gosling- 7/10 



51.Attenberg- (2010)- Greece's submission for the 2010 Academy Awards- 7/10

52.Gravity- (2013)- Alfonso Cuaron- 6.5/10


53.The Loneliest Planet- (2011)- Julia Loktev's minimalist travel film- 6.5/10 


54.Senna- Asif Kapadia's doc about racing legend Aryton Senna- 6.5/10




55.Once Upon a Time in Anatolia-(2011) Ceylan depicts the search for a dead body in the Turkish outback- 6.5/10



56.Green Lantern- (2011)- Despite 

Ryan Reynold's terribleness, Martin Campbell's superhero flick is decent -6.5/10


57.Hunger- (2008)- Steve McQueen's visual but painfully slow film about 1981 IRA events- 6/10


58.The Rules of the Game- (1939) Jean Renoir's jumble of conflicting relationships-6/10


59.Meet the Fockers- (2004)- Jay Roach- 6/10

60.Erasing David- (2010)- David Bond tries attempts to erase his footprint- 6/10

61.Argo- (2012)- Ben Affeck- 6/10


62.The Canterbury Tales- (1972) Italian Pasolini's fun take on the Chaucer classic- 6/10



63.Enough Said- (2013)- Nicole Holofcener- 5/10



64.The Avengers- (2012)- Josh Whedon directs this massive waste of time- 5/10



65.Ender's Game- (2013) Gavin Hood- **most dissapointing film of the year award**- 5/10


66.The Grandmaster- (2013) Kar Wai- 3/10

67.Killing Them Softly- (2012)- Andrew Dominik- 3/10


68. Only God Forgives- (2013)- Refn- A disgrace to the magnificence of Bangkok, this is an unwatchable attempt of a film- 2/10








Thursday, December 19, 2013

Equilibrium

DuPont: And you, Preston, the supposed savior of the resistance, are now its destroyer, and, along with them, you've given me yourself... calmly... coolly... entirely without incident.

John Preston: [Polygraph machine scribbling rapidly] No.
[Polygraph suddenly registers Preston completely in control]

Polygraph Technician: Oh... Shit.

John Preston: Not without incident.


This is one of my all time favorite movies, yet I have a hard time defending it now as a serious piece of cinema, and I’m not sure why. It gets low ratings on all the major film sites despite tons of great actions scenes, a huge overarching story line, great attention to detail, and a terrific performance by Christian Bale.

The Story: The dictator ruled state of Libria force-feeds its citizens drugs to suppress their emotions, and in fact, feeling emotion is entirely illegal. Punishment is death.

Overactive emotions have been known to cause many of humanity’s previous atrocities and wars, so to vanquish emotion is to therefore benefit humankind. There is a method to the madness; this film is set right after world war III, and emotion suppression is modern humanity’s solution for preventing world war IV.

Of course there are those that do not see this repression as a benefit and so an underground resistance forms. Although the plot is excellently executed, the dystopian theme comes across as just a little bit too close (for some, not for me) to an exact replica of an Orwellian model. Equilibrium has been accused of being unoriginal, a mere mishmash of well-known various Sci-Fi stories.

I was never bothered by this mishmash. Examining the film shows there are more than enough original features, features that people must be overlooking when judging, because the originality more than counter balances the borrowed material.

The top ranking law enforcement officials are (I think very cleverly) called Clerics. They employ the use a fictitious fighting style called the Gun Kata. The Gun Kata a major part of the film and makes for some amazing scenes. The details about the world are so specific that it really is an amazing accomplishment on writer/director Kurt Whimmer’s part. Whimmer makes a living mainly as a writer, Equilibrium being one of only two major features he’s directed.


As I said earlier, Christian Bale gives a great performance, handling almost all the fight scenes himself, and due to budget constraints, only being allowed a handful of takes to get each set of complex choreography right. Director Whimmer makes excellent use of light and space, pleading his case for humanity's right to “feel” as light peeks through the drab gray tones of the photography, rarely, but just enough.

Equilibrium is the biggest box office flop of a film I can think of. For how epic it is, the 20 million dollar budget seems miniscule, but  its total to-date gross is $1.2 million, a totally pathetic ratio. Equilibrium appeared around the same time as the Matrix was doing its thing and so Equilibrium got very little press. The two films share a similar vibe and since Equilibrium came out second, it loses points for originality, and even though The Matrix is undoubtedly a great achievement, Christina Bale is hands-down the better lead (I'm not too fond of Keanu Reeves). Just based on that fact alone Equilibrium is worth checking out.  

9/10