Sunday, March 2, 2014

Oscars 2014 Part II: The Nominations

     Here are my "Oscar" nominations. I already posted my Top Ten, so my Oscar Best Picture nominations are just the top half of that list, with the exception of 20 Feet From Stardom which is in the Documentary category and should win. I also think that the director of the Best Picture should win Best Director, although tonight there might be a split. I pick Steve McQueen for Best Director.
     There has been lots of discussion about how Matthew McConaughey has turned his career around by becoming a character actor. He is also one of the hardest working people in Hollywood. He was in Dallas Buyers Club, Mud, and Wolf of Wall Street in 2013, as well as in the HBO series True Detective. His partner in True Detective, Woody Harrelson, is also doing similar things. He appeared in, Now you See Me, Out of the Furnace, and Catching Fire in 2013. Another great character actor is Paul Giamatti who was memorable in 12 Years a Slave and Saving Mr. Banks, and even made an appearance on Downton Abbey. Amy Adams had three nice roles in Man of Steel, Her, and American Hustle. But, Benedict Cumberbatch is the champ, appearing in August: Osage County, Star Trek II, The Hobbit 2, 12 Years a Slave, and The Fifth Estate, as well as Sherlock on TV.
     I give three of the four acting prizes to 12 Years a Slave, with the indomitable Meryl Streep winning the other. She has been nominated 18 times now for Oscars, but has won only three. She is nominated for August: Osage County which was a play and allows lots of eating of the scenery. It had a great cast including Julia Roberts who is nominated for an Oscar also, and the ever present Cumberbatch.
     In Best Supporting Actress, I nominate Carey Mulligan for Llewyn Davis. She always stands out and steals all of her few scenes here. She was also one of the good things in The Great Gatsby which is forgotten in the Oscar nominations, except for Production and Costume Design. I also include Melanie Laurent for Best Supporting Actress. She was very memorable in Inglorious Basterds, and she is a great foil for Mark Ruffalo in Now You See Me. You may have noticed that I am dissing American Hustle, which is one of the most nominated films. I really loved Silver Lining Playbook, and American Hustle has almost the same creative team. But the new movie just doesn't have the characters you care about or the clean storyline of Playbook. I do nominate Jennifer Lawrence because she just blows away everyone on the screen in her few scenes in American Hustle.
     In Best Supporting Actor, I nominate Chris Cooper, who is always a great character actor and stands out in August as the only sane person. I also include Daniel Bruhl for Ron Howard's Formula One film, Rush, which was very good, but didn't go anywhere at the box office. But Bruhl was amazing as as Niki Lauda. It is worth seeing just for his performance. The other new name in the Best Supporting Actor category is Barkhad Abdi as the leader of the pirates in Captain Phillips, another good film left out of the Oscar nominations. He is quite amazing especially since it is his first acting role.
     My nominations, with the winners in Red, are listed below. Enjoy the show tonight...

Best Picture
1. 12 Years a Slave
2. Her
3. Gravity
4. All is Lost
5. Now You See Me

Best Director
1. Steve McQueen (12 Years a Slave)
2. Spike Jonze (Her)
3. Alfonso Cuaron (Gravity)
4. J.C. Chandor (All is Lost)
5. Louis Leterrier (Now You See Me)

Best Actor
1. Chiwetel Ejiofor (12 Years a Slave)
2. Joaquin Phoenix (Her)
3. Robert Redford (All is Lost)
4. Daniel Brühl (Rush)
5. Matthew McConaughey (Dallas Buyers Club + Mud + Wolf of Wall Street)
Honorable Mention: Tom Hanks (Saving Mister Banks + Captain Phillips), Nicholas Hoult (Warm Bodies), Bruce Dern (Nebraska)

Best Actress
1. Meryl Streep (August: Osage County)
2. Judi Dench (Philomena)
3. Sandra Bullock (Gravity)
4. Brie Larson (Short Term 12)
5. Emma Thompson (Saving Mister Banks)
Honorable Mention: Greta Gerwig (Frances Ha), Amy Adams (American Hustle), Shailene Woodley (The Spectacular Now), Cate Blanchett (Blue Jasmine)

Best Supporting Actor
1. Michael Fassbender (12 Years a Slave)
2. George Clooney (Gravity)
3. Chris Cooper (August Osage County)
4. Barkhad Abdi (Captain Phillips)
5. Jared Leto (Dallas Buyers Club)
Honorable Mention: Paul Giamatti (Saving Mr. Banks + 12 Years a Slave), Jason Schwartzman (Saving Mr. Banks), Rob Corddry (Warm Bodies), Alan Rickman (The Butler), Benedict Cumberbatch (August Osage County + Hobbit 2 + 12 Years a Slave + Star Trek II + The Fifth Estate), Mark Ruffalo (Now You See Me), Will Forte (Nebraska)

Best Supporting Actress
1. Lupita Nyong'o (12 Years a Slave)
2. Jennifer Lawrence (American Hustle)
3. Mélanie Laurent (Now You See Me)
4. June Squibb (Nebraska)
5. Carey Mulligan (Inside Llewyn Davis + Great Gatsby)
Honorable Mention: Amy Adams (Her + Man of Steel), Julianne Nicholson (August Osage County), Sally Hawkins (Blue Jasmine)

Oscars 2014 Part I: Geoff's Top Ten Movies of 2013



As usual, hundreds of movies were released in 2013. I've seen about 80 of them. It was quite a good year, so picking just 10 isn't easy. Only four of my Top Ten are also included in the
nine films nominated for the Oscar Best Picture. I did like eight of the nine Oscar Best Picture nominees, including American Hustle, Captain Phillips, Dallas Buyers Club, and Philomena which didn't make my list. However, The Wolf of Wall Street is an abomination. What was Scorsese thinking? But here are my picks for the Top Ten Films of 2013.

1. 12 Years a Slave
     Any of my top three films could, and perhaps should, be number one. 12 Years a Slave is not only great, but is very difficult to watch. It's also one of the most important films in a long time. Everyone should see it, particularly here in Louisiana, where most of the action is set, in New Orleans and on three plantations. The plot follows the true, tragic events in the life of Solomon Northrup (Chiwetel Ejiofor), a free black man living in New York state, who is kidnapped, sold as a slave, and is unable to contact his family and friends for 12 years. This film also has nominations for Best Director for Steve McQueen, and for the actors, Ejiofor, Michael Fassbender as his sociopathic slave owner, and Lupita Nyong'o as a fellow slave, whose suffering is beyond belief. It could have had more nominations for the rest of the amazing cast including Benedict Cumberbatch, Paul Giamatti, Alfre Woodard, Sarah Paulson, Paul Dano, and, of course, Brad Pitt.


2. Her
     This is in many ways the most interesting, and different film of the year. It also may win Best Screenplay for its great writing. Spike Jonze is only 44, but already has an amazing list of director credits for films that are not your typical mainstream films, such as Being John Malkovich, Adaptation, and Where the Wild Things Are. Jonze wrote and directed Her, which follows the life of a schlubby guy (Joaquin Phoenix), who gets a new phone with a Siri-like OS (voiced by Scarlet Johansson) which is also an A.I. That is to say, it is learning and may be sentient. Her is so well done that there is no problem believing that this guy is falling in love with his phone. And beside the fact that his ex-wife is Rooney Mara, his BFF is Amy Adams, and he doesn't want to go out with Olivia Wilde, Her is a very believable film!


3. Gravity
     I was a bit dubious when I saw the trailer for Gravity, with Sandra Bullock wildly spinning around in space. But the movie, directed by Alfonso Cuaron, won me over completely. It helps that I am a Sandra Bullock lover and not one of her many haters. I am also a George Clooney lover. That guy really makes good choices of films to make. Be sure to see his new movie, The Monuments Men. Ignore the reviews. It will make you cry. Ok, where was I? Oh ya, Gravity depicts, very realistically, a disaster where two astronauts are stranded alone in space after the Space Shuttle and the Hubble Space Telescope (sniff) are destroyed. This a two person movie and both actors do very well. Gravity is a film where IMAX 3D really makes sense. It is a joy to watch, at least, for geeks like me.


4. All is Lost
    This amazing film, directed by J.C. Chandor, does Gravity one better. It has only one actor, Robert Redford, as a sailor, alone in the middle of the ocean, fighting for his life after his boat is holed by a shipping container. All is Lost is gripping despite only having one septugenarian actor, who has a total of two lines of dialog in the whole film. It is one man against the sea, and it is really nice to see Robert Redford in a starring role. It is a long time since Barefoot in the Park, The Way We Were, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid etc., but Redford can still bring it. The Oscars has ignored All is Lost except for Best Sound Editing, but Redford was nominated for a Golden Globe. This film sank without a trace, but you should see it now that it is out on DVD.



5. 20 Feet From Stardom
     I saw this documentary at the Nantucket Film Festival, and it blew me away. It is a fantastic history of the female backup singers in pop music, starting in the 1960's. 20 Feet From Stardom follows a group of backup singers, from the days of their enslavement by the infamous Phil Spector, to their emancipation by various British Rock bands who put these great singers up front, to the present day. Many of the singers are featured in interviews and performances, including Lisa Fischer, who has been on every Rolling Stones tour since 1989 singing duets with Mick Jagger. This is a fascinating documentary. An added bonus at the Nantucket Film Festival, was a performance live by Judith Hill, who was supposed to tour with Michael Jackson on his last tour but which never happened due to his sudden death. 


6. Now You See Me
     This film should have had some Oscar nominations just because it may be the most entertaining movie of the year, and definitely, it is the feel-good movie of the year. Now You See Me tells the story of four street magicians (Jesse Eisenberg, Woody Harrelson, Isla Fischer, Dave Franco) who are recruited to take part in a series of high profile magic shows that involve robbing banks. This gets the interest of the FBI (Mark Ruffalo) and Interpol (Melanie Laurent). Now You See Me is a very fun movie, and you don't know what is really going on until the very end. The cast is great, also including Morgan Freeman and Michael Caine. There is a nice chemistry between Ruffalo and Laurent, and I like any movie that has a scene in the men's room at Napoleon House!



7. Short Term 12
     I never would have seen this brilliant Indie movie except that it played at the Nantucket Film Festival. But I wasn't the only one who noticed this nice little film. It was nominated for Best Female Lead (Brie Larson) and Best Supporting male (Keith Stanfield) at the Independent Spirit Awards. Larson runs a group home for at-risk teenagers, and Short Term 12 intertwines her story with the kids that she is caring for. This film is a roller coaster of emotion as Larson's past, present, and future get in the way of doing her job. And, I love the exhilarating, recurring subplot where one of the kids keeps making a break for for freedom and everyone tries to catch him before he can escape out of the front gate to the outside world. Larson is an eye opener. She has suddenly exploded out of nowhere, appearing in three films this year, The Spectacular Now, Don Jon, and Short Term 12.



8. Nebraska
     What can I say? I do love quirky, and one of the best purveyors of quirky along with the Coen Brothers (see Inside Llewyn Davis below), and Wes Anderson (Moonrise Kingdom), is Alexander Payne (The Descendants, Sideways). Nebraska is a about a cranky, old guy (Bruce Dern) in a small midwestern town who gets one of those, "You may have already won..." letters and believes it. So he decides to walk to Nebraska to pick up his winnings. Along the way, he exposes the seams of his whole life so they can be seen by everyone. It's a joy to watch an old pro, and one of my favorite actors, Bruce Dern in action. The supporting cast is also great. June Squibb, playing Dern's long-suffering wife, is also nominated for an Oscar. Not much happens in Nebraska, but it is very fun to watch.



9. Saving Mr. Banks
     I wasn't sure that I was going to like or even buy into Saving Mr. Banks, but it won me over completely by the end of the movie, I loved it. I always have trouble with biopics about people, like Walt Disney, who were real people to me. When I was a kid, the whole family would watch The Wonderful World of Disney every Sunday night. Anyway, it took me a while, but Tom Hanks became Disney, and Emma Thompson gives a wonderful performance as P.L. Travers. This film slowly rises up and takes you over, but you don't really realize how amazing the story is until the ending credits, when they play one of the actual tapes of Travers working with the Disney people. The supporting cast is worth seeing on their own, including Jason Schwartzman, Bradley Whitford, Paul Giamatti, and Colin Farrell. The interweaving of Travers' backstory in the outback ,and how it all plays into the title of the film makes it all a Wonderful World of Disney.


10. Inside Llewyn Davis
     Sometimes I love movies by the Coen brothers and sometimes I don't. But I just want them to keep making more movies. Some of their films, like Raising Arizona or The Big Lebwoski, are set in a weird and bizarre version of the world. Others, like A Serious Man, are played straight and don't have the Coen brother wackiness. Inside Llewyn Davis is one of these. It is played straight, except maybe for the many important roles that cats play in this film. Anyway, Inside Llewyn Davis tells the story of a Bob Dylan-esque character, playing music in Greenwich Village in the 60's. He isn't very successful and he is his own worst enemy.  There are a lot of great small supporting parts including Carey Mulligan, Adam Driver, John Goodman, and Justin Timberlake. But this movie is all about Oscar Isaac in the title role. And the cats, of course.

Sunday, December 15, 2013

The Desolation of Peter Jackson

I have to say that I was slightly hopeful about this film, the second of three planned Hobbit films. The reviews were good on the whole, and it has a 74% Fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes. This obviously set my expectations way too high. It makes me sad that I have to give a thumbs down to The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug because there are some very good bits, almost all of which are bits from the original book. Some day, I hope, there will be a re-edit of these movies, much as was done with Star Wars: Episode I. Just removing all scenes with Radagast the Brown would add a full bottle to my rating. He is the Jar Jar Binks of The Hobbit. I'm happy to say that Radagast's role has been much reduced in the second film. He is only on screen for about 5 minutes. But, where was I? Oh yes, Radagast is not the worst thing about this bloated film, which, at 2 hours and 41 minutes, is actually 8 minutes shorter than the first installment of The Hobbit. The Desolation of Smaug roughly follows the middle third of the book starting with entering Mirkwood and fighting the spiders to a final scene of Smaug flying off in the direction of Laketown.

The action, that is contained in the book, would fill maybe half an hour, so much new material has been added to the film that is nowhere to be found in the book. First, there is the addition of Legolas and the new female elf character, Tauriel (Evangeline Lilly), and the associated "love" triangle involving them and Kili. Second, there is a subplot where Gandalf and Radagast go to Dol Guldur to confront the Necromancer. This will seem very familiar since it is almost identical in every way to Gandalf's visit to Saruman at Isengard. Third, there is a huge expansion of the action in Laketown, where the Master (Stephen Fry) is an evil ruler and the enemy of Bard (Luke Evans).

Fourth, Peter Jackson obviously feels that none of the action is exciting enough, so he adds Orcs to almost every scene including the Barrel escape and in Laketown. Finally, the last half hour of the movie is given over to a ridiculous running battle between Smaug and the dwarves, which like a series of Rube Goldberg devices. This ending is sad because it follows the the best part of the movie, by far, in which Bilbo sneaks down to behold the riches of Smaug. The scene where Smaug is first revealed from underneath a pile of treasure is very well done. It is a strange reunion of Benedict Cumberbatch, who does the voice of Smaug, and Martin Freeman, who is, of course, Bilbo. We will see them together again soon as Sherlock and Watson.

The addition of Legolas and Tauriel is welcome, much as was the expansion of Arwen's role in The Fellowship of the Ring. It just feels good to see Legolas sliding around shooting orcs again. And he is doing it through most of the movie. Evangeline Lilly's Tauriel mostly works well too, although the subplot of Legolas falling in love with her and Tauriel falling in love with Kili is laughable. Thranduil, King of the Wood-elves and father of Legolas appears much as he does in the book. Lee Pace plays the role as woodenly as Hugo Weaving plays Elrond, but with a great love of fetishes.

The dwarves are mostly good. Ken Stott is wonderful as Balin. And the movie begins with a nice flashback of Gandalf and Thorin meeting at the Prancing Pony just to set the scene. The size of the dwarves seems to vary a lot depending on whether any humans are around. It is unintentionally funny when Thorin is suddenly three feet tall. Smaug looks quite good and has a nice touch of menace, at least until he has his fight with the Keystone Cops at the end of the movie, which destroys the mood completely.


Bard is quite a good character, but the Laketown subplot combined with attacking orcs is a fiasco. And I almost walked out during the climactic battle between Smaug and the dwarves. Even Beorn was a bit of a disappointment. The most Peter-Jackson-esque scene is when the dwarves are trying to find the hidden door in the Lonely Mountain. They can't find it, so Thorin throws away the key and the dwarves quit and head home. Jackson loves to make the characters do things that hey would never do, as when Frodo sends Sam home, when Theoden wants to run away at Helm's Deep, and when Faramir becomes Boromir. The good parts of The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug, and there are some, are lost in all the Jackson chaos. All in all, it was very disappointing.



Sunday, October 6, 2013

Gravity

After seeing the trailer for Gravity, I was a bit dubious seeing Sandra Bullock and George Clooney spinning around in space suits. Then, one of my favorite astronauts, none other than Dr. Mike Massimino said, "Somebody did their homework. Everything is exactly like what it was on our mission." And Buzz Aldrin liked it too. Ok, I didn't need too much convincing to go see it. Gravity was a pleasant surprise. It is probably the most realistic portrayal of life in space since 2001: A Space Odyssey. There's even an homage to 2001, when Bullock has to get into the airlock before she runs out of air, except no there's no HAL 9000 trying to keep her out. 

Gravity tells the story of two astronauts, played by Sandra Bullock and George Clooney, who are repairing Hubble Space Telescope when all hell breaks loose. Clooney is an old space hand who loves to tell stories like Robert Duvall in Deep Impact. Bullock is a space rookie and a bio-engineer. The Russians blow up a satellite which creates a huge expanding cloud of debris which places the astronauts and the Space Shuttle in imminent danger.

Not to give too much away, but soon Bullock and Clooney are alone in space with no spacecraft to get them home. They are tethered together and proceed to give the best ever demonstration of Newton's Laws of Motion. Both outside in their space suits and inside various spacecraft, there is an amazing attention to detail much like in Apollo 13, where they actually flip the right switches at the right times. Clooney even pulls the knife switch to detach the Hubble Space Telescope from the Space Shuttle.

Clooney has a new jetpack and they can move around a bit so he gets the bright idea to head towards the International Space Station to save themselves. This would be a bright idea except that the
Hubble Space Telescope is in an orbit at an altitude of about 350 miles and an inclination of 28.5 degrees, and the ISS is in an orbit at an altitude of about 250 miles and an inclination of 51.6 degrees. Why am I telling you this? Well, this means you can't get from the HST to the ISS with only a jetpack. This is the only big error in Gravity, and is done for plot reasons. There is one other violation of Newton's Laws, again done to advance the plot, but on the whole it's very realistic.

My main qualm about seeing Gravity was Sandra Bullock. Don't get me wrong, I have always liked her, but after seeing her in the trailer, I was a bit worried. But she won me over as the movie went on. She is an academic in space for the first time and thinks she is about to die. I think she portrays that pretty well, and despite being terrified, it turns out that her character is very competent. She has to deal with US, Russian, and Chinese spacecraft, and like a real astronaut she pulls out her manual and starts following the checklist. Another nice bit is that all the instructions on the Russian Soyuz are in Russian, and on the Chinese spaceship, they are all in Chinese. 

I wasn't worried about George Clooney. He is perfect for the role of the old astronaut near retirement, who has seen it all. Like him or hate him (I like him), he always makes good, interesting choices for his roles. The director of Gravity is Alfonso Cuarón, who has directed some movies I like a lot, Children of MenY Tu Mamá También, and the best of the Harry Potter films, The Prisoner of Azkaban. He does a great job of keeping this movie simple. Ok, there are lots of scenes of various spacecraft being destroyed (in absolute silence!), but Gravity only runs 90 minutes. There are only two actors and most of the action is between them and in their own heads. This is really an Indie movie in space with a few explosions. The numbers are coming in and Gravity is breaking box office records, as well as getting Oscar buzz already. It's a great movie to see on the big screen and in 3D. 



Sunday, February 24, 2013

Geoff's Oscar Nominations

Read my previous post about my picks for best movies of the year. My list does not include four of the Oscar Best Picture nominations, Argo, Amour, Les Miz, and Django Unchained. These are all good movies and Argo is likely to win for Best Picture. But, they didn't quite make my Top Ten.

In this post, I list what would be the Oscar nominations for the acting categories if it were up to me. My pick for the Oscar is number one in the list for each category. In two of the categories, there is no real competition for number One. For Best Actor, Daniel Day-Lewis blew away the opposition with his portrayal of Lincoln. It was nothing short of amazing. But the other four actors in the category were all fabulous too. In any other year, they could have won the Oscar. Denzel Washington is the only one in a movie that is not in my Top Ten. Flight is very good and Washington, as usual, is excellent as an airline pilot who saves his passengers in a plane crash that leads to the revelation of his many personal problems.

The second category that is already sewn up is Best Supporting Actress. Anne Hathaway didn't have much screen time in Les Miz before she died, but she made the most of it, particularly when she took advantage of the extreme closeups and live singing to deliver a memorable version of "I Dreamed a Dream." I have included three actresses who are not on the Oscar list. Emily Blunt had two nice movies last year, the sweet, quirky, Salmon Fishing in the Yemen, and the classic Indie movie, Your Sister's Sister. Olivia Thirlby had a breakout role in another little seen film, Being Flynn, which starred Robert De Niro and Paul Dano. And Judi Dench is, well, Judi Dench.

The Best Actress category is wide open. In the actual Oscar nominations, I think four of the five actresses have a chance to win, Jessica Chastain (Zero Dark Thirty), Emmanuelle Riva (Amour), Quvenzhané Wallis (Beasts of the Southern Wild), and Jennifer Lawrence (Silver Linings Playbook). This year, they have the youngest (Wallis) and oldest (Riva) Oscar nominees in history. They both, deservedly, have a good chance of winning. The only one I think who is out of the running is Naomi Watts, who gave her usual great performance in The Impossible. In another year, she might have won too. I have included two actresses not on the Oscar list, Marion Cotillard (Rust and Bone), and Helen Mirren (Hitchcock). These performances are both fantastic but almost no one has seen these movies. Put them on your Netflix list. I pick Jessica Chastain as my winner for her portrayal of the very intense, obsessed Maya in Zero Dark Thirty.

The last category, Best Supporting Actor, is also wide open. All five of the Oscar nominees are former winners. I have only included two of them on my list. I nominated John Goodman instead of Alan Arkin for Argo, just because he also had two other memorable roles last year, in Flight as Denzel Washington's friend and drug source, and in Trouble with the Curve as an old baseball man. But I do love Alan Arkin too. It was nice to see Christopher Walken do his thing in A Late Quartet, where any of the other three musicians, Phillip Seymour Hoffman, Catherine Keener, and Mark Ivanir, could have been nominated as well. Tom Hardy had a breakout year in Dark Knight Rising (although we never saw his face), and in Lawless with Jessica Chastain. But, I pick Christolph Waltz for Django Unchained. He was completely unknown to me before he stole every scene in Inglourious Basterds and won Best Supporting Actor in 2010. He is at it again in Django Unchained, where he steals every scene he is in. Waltz is amazing.


Best Picture:
1. Zero Dark Thirty
2. Silver Linings Playbook
3. Lincoln
4. The Avengers
5. Life of Pi








Director:
1. Kathryn Bigelow (Zero Dark Thirty)
2. David O. Russell (Silver Linings Playbook)
3. Steven Spielberg (Lincoln)
4. Joss Whedon (The Avengers)
5. Ang Lee (Life of Pi)







Actor:
1. Daniel Day-Lewis (Lincoln)
2. Denzel Washington (Flight, Safe House)
3. Bradley Cooper (Silver Linings Playbook)
4. John Hawkes (The Sessions)
5. Anthony Hopkins (Hitchcock)

Honorable Mentions: Ewan McGregor (Salmon Fishing in the Yemen, The Impossible), Robert Downey Jr. (The Avengers), Tom Hanks (Cloud Atlas), Bill Murray (Hyde Park on the Hudson), Jean-Louis Trintignant (Amour)



Actress:
1. Jessica Chastain (Zero Dark Thirty, Lawless)
2. Jennifer Lawrence (Silver Linings Playbook, The Hunger Games)
3. Marion Cotillard (Rust and Bone)
4. Helen Mirren (Hitchcock)
5. Quvenzhané Wallis (Beasts of the Southern Wild)

Honorable Mentions: Naomi Watts (The Impossible), Emma Watson (The Perks of Being a Wallflower), Greta Gerwig (To Rome with  Love, Damsels in Distress, Lola Versus), Emmanuelle Riva (Amour)


Supporting Actor:
1. Christolph Waltz (Django Unchained)
2. John Goodman (Argo, Flight, Trouble With the Curve)
3. Robert De Niro (Silver Linings Playbook)
4. Christopher Walken (A Late Quartet)
5. Tom Hardy (Lawless, The Dark Knight Rises)

Honorable Mentions: Matthew McConaughey (Killer Joe, Magic Mike, Bernie, The Paperboy), Edward Norton (Moonrise Kingdom), Jason Clarke (Zero Dark Thirty), Phillip Seymour Hoffman (A Late Quartet, The Master), Mark Duplass (Your Sister's Sister, Safety Not Guaranteed), Alan Arkin (Argo)


Supporting Actress:
1. Anne Hathaway (Les Miz, The Dark Knight Rises)
2. Emily Blunt (Salmon Fishing in the Yemen, Your Sister's Sister)
3. Helen Hunt (The Sessions)
4. Judi Dench (Skyfall, The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel)
5. Olivia Thirlby (Being Flynn)

Honorable Mentions: Scarlet Johansson (The Avengers, Hitchcock), Amy Adams (The Master, The Trouble with the Curve), Frances McDormand (Moonrise Kingdom, Promised Land), Jacki Weaver (Silver Linings Playbook)

Saturday, February 23, 2013

Geoff's Top Ten Movies of 2012


1. Zero Dark Thirty
Forget all the uproar about torture. Zero Dark Thirty is a great film, directed by Kathryn Bigelow (inexplicably not nominated for an Oscar), and written by Mark Boal. They are the same team that produced The Hurt Locker, which won Best Picture, Director, and Screenplay three years ago. This film stars the ubiquitous Jessica Chastain as the relentless CIA operative, who figured out where Osama Bin Laden was hiding. This is an exciting, taut, suspenseful thriller, all the more so for being a true story, which, rather than supporting torture, shows it for what it is. Chastain has a great role to play, and does an amazing job with it. The supporting cast is also wonderful, including James Gandolfini, Jason Clarke, Mark Strong and Jennifer Ehle. 

2. Silver Linings Playbook
Silver Linings Playbook may be the most enjoyable movie of the year. The screenplay is amazing, and the cast is wonderful. Bradley Cooper, playing a guy suffering from bipolar disorder who has just been released from the hospital, and Jennifer Lawrence, who plays a young woman who recently lost her husband, make an improbable couple. Add to that, Robert De Niro, playing Cooper's father, who suffers from obsessive compulsive disorder, and you have a wacky plot that works perfectly. Silver Linings Playbook is definitely the feel-good movie of the year.



3. Lincoln
Daniel Day Lewis gives one of the great performances of all time as Abraham Lincoln, and he will definitely take home the Oscar for Best Actor. This movie, directed by Steven Spielberg, is quite un-Spielbergian. Rather than making an epic movie about Lincoln and the Civil War, Spielberg zooms in on the last four months of Lincoln's life as he tries to pass the 13th Amendment. It shows both what a great President Lincoln was, and how politics has not changed at all in the last 150 years. 




4. The Avengers
This movie was an eye opener. The Avengers is a superhero epic in 3D, with lots of CGI effects, but it is a wonderful movie even without all of that. The director, Joss Whedon, is beloved in geek-dom as the creator of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Firefly. In The Avengers, he showed what real characters and a good script can do even for a comic book. The always lovable Robert Downey Jr leads a great cast, including Samuel L. Jackson, Scarlet Johansson, Jeremy Renner, and Mark Ruffalo. Only Whedon could end Superhero epic with that final scene with the Chicken Schwarma. 



5. Life of Pi
Ang Lee is a great director, responsible for Brokeback Mountain, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, etc, etc. And Life of Pi is a great book by Yann Martel. But this movie is just amazing to watch. It may be the best use of CGI and green-screen ever. It is unbelievable that the Tiger is 100% CGI. This may be one of the few movies to actually benefit from being in 3D. If you didn't see it on the big screen, then I'm sorry. You really missed something. 





6. Hitchcock
Some great movies seem to go by without anyone noticing. Hitchcock was fantastic. I couldn't believe how good it was as I was watching it. But, Hitchcock only grossed $6 million at the box office. This film, about the making of Psycho, is structured like a Hitchcock film, itself, and keeps you in suspense right to the end. Anthony Hopkins, completely unrecognizable in his makeup, and Helen Mirren are fabulous. Mirren, at least, got nominated for a Golden Globe and a BAFTA, but Hitchcock is only nominated for Best Makeup at the Oscars. This is a movie you have to see when it comes on Netflix. 



7. Moonrise Kingdom
I love Wes Anderson, the director of Moonrise Kingdom, because he is different. He doesn't always produce a great film, but like the Coen Brothers and Woody Allen, you just want to give him some money, and then stand back and see what happens. I have loved him ever since he made Rushmore, and saved Bill Murray's, career. Moonrise Kingdom is funny and quirky, as only Wes Anderson can be. The two kids in love who run away together, are so adorable. And the supporting cast speaks for itself, Bill Murray, Frances McDormand, Edward Norton, Bruce Willis, and Tilda Swinton. This is also one of the feel-good movies of the year.

8. The Sessions
In The Sessions, which is based on a true story, a man (John Hawkes) who had polio as a child, must live most of the time in an Iron Lung. He decides that he doesn't want to die a virgin, so he hires a sex therapist (Helen Hunt) to help. This is an unbelievable story, especially since it is true, about how someone, who should just lie down and die, goes to college, becomes a writer, and has a sort of normal life. John Hawkes is one of the most underrated actors in Hollywood and he is great here. And it's wonderful to see Helen Hunt in a good role. You have to love a movie that casts William H. Macy as a Catholic priest, who advises Hawkes' character on his sex life. 



9. Beasts of the Southern Wild
This was the movie that came out of nowhere and blew everyone away. Beasts of the Southern Wild, set in the bayou of Louisiana, has a cast of non-actors, including the then 5 year old, Quvenzhane Wallis, who is a force of nature. The performances, that the director, Benh Zeitlin, got out his non-actors, like Dwight Henry, who plays Wink, and has now gone back to his day job running a bakery, are incredible. And you have to live down here to know how true Beasts of the Southern Wild really is. 


10. Rust and Bone
This is the other movie in French with subtitles this year. Amour is depressing and traumatic, but it has nothing on Rust and Bone. Let's just say that the scene, where the whole audience gives out a collective gasp, is not the one early in the film when Marion Cotillard loses her legs. Cotillard is always great, but she is fantastic here. This is also one of two movies this year, along with The Sessions, which deliver the uplifting message, that serious disabilities do not preclude sex. 

Honorable Mentions: Salmon Fishing in the Yemen, Cloud Atlas, Lawless, Argo, A Late Quartet, The Perks of Being a Wallflower, Django Unchained, Skyfall, Amour


Sunday, December 16, 2012

The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey


Well, it took JRR Tolkien to stir me from my long absence from reviewing movies. In case you were wondering, I am still seeing movies and should reach my usual goal of 50 new movies this year. My 2012 Top Ten will be published as soon as I see the important movies opening at Christmas.

Anyway, The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey is the first of three movies based on JRR Tolkien's first book that he wrote for his young children and published in 1937. The book, The Hobbit, is only 310 pages long, compared to the 1137 pages (including appendices) of the three books of The Lord of the Rings (LOTR). That comes to only about 100 pages per movie. And this first movie of the trilogy is not short, with a running time of almost 3 hours. The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey only covers the recruitment of Bilbo (Martin Freeman) by Gandalf (Ian McKellen) and the dwarves led by Thorin Oakenshield (Richard Armitage), their capture by the Trolls, their capture by the Orcs, the finding and stealing of the ring from Gollum (Andy Serkis), and their rescue by the eagles. Also included is the back story of how the Lonely Mountain was lost to Smaug (voice by Benedict Cumberbatch). This is reasonable but much material has also been added from Appendix E of LOTR which has a nice timeline of events leading up to the action 60 years after The Hobbit, and also from the fevered mind of the director, Peter Jackson.

In particular, we hear that Mirkwood has been invaded by the evil Necromancer (also Benedict Cumberbatch) a.k.a. Sauron, and the White Council, consisting of those heavyweights, Gandalf, Elrond (Hugo Weaving), Galadriel (Cate Blanchett), and Saruman (Christopher Lee) has been formed in response. There is a visit to Rivendell in the book anyway, and so a scene with the White Council is easily added. But the most egregious addition is an interminable sequence involving Radagast the Brown (Sylvester McCoy), until now just an obscure answer in LOTR Pub Quizzes. He is one of the five wizards in Middle Earth along with Saruman and Gandalf. Only briefly mentioned in the books as a friend to animals, Radagast is portrayed in The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey as a drug crazed cross between Uncle Billy in It's a Wonderful Life and the Enchanter (Some people call me Tim) in Monty Python and the Holy Grail. Radagast drives a sled drawn by a team of rabbits which Peter Jackson loves so much that it is shown over and over again. This entire sequence could and should have been left on the cutting-room floor, if there still was such a thing. It is awful and embarrassing.

One more small thing that bothered me is that the scene where Bilbo finds the ring has been changed so that he doesn't just reach out in the dark and find the ring. There is also a scene at the end of The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey when the party is trapped by the orcs, and Bilbo saves Thorin from a Warg. This addition is unlikely and unnecessary since Bilbo and/or Gandalf already have to save the dwarves' bacon during every crisis in the book. On the whole though, this first Hobbit movie hews fairly closely to the plot of the book, except that, as usual, Peter Jackson, can't leave the original characters alone. The worst scene, which harkens back to things that he did in LOTR, is where Bilbo can't take the insults of the dwarves anymore and decides to go home. This is very similar to the LOTR movies when Aragon doesn't want to go on the quest, Theoden wants to run away at Helm's Deep, Faramir becomes Boromir, Frodo wants to send Sam home, etc. etc.

Martin Freeman, most recently seen as Dr. Watson in the new Sherlock series on PBS, is great as Bilbo. I'm not sure that any other actor could be more perfectly suited to the role. And I quite liked the dwarves. The opening scene where they arrive at Bilbo's hole is well done although it goes on for much too long. Having seen the trailers, I was a bit worried that Peter Jackson was going to make the dwarves into the 13 Stooges, but he mostly stays away from this. The one exception is when they are captured by the Orcs and then escape with Gandalf's help. The fight and chase sequence is very reminiscent of Pirates of the Caribbean, and the Orc King strangely looks and sounds like Boss Nass from Star Wars Episode I. Otherwise, it is great to see Ian McKellen reprise his role as Gandalf and Gollum is still the best CGI character ever. He has only one extended scene with Bilbo, mostly right out of the book, where they trade riddles which is a highlight of the movie.

The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey looks to be a huge success at the box office making $84 million on the first weekend and it is getting very good word of mouth. But it's not that great. It would have been a much better movie and would have had much better pacing if about a third of it were cut. But when the director is Peter Jackson, there's no one to tell him this. It's definitely fun to see all these characters come to life, Radagast excepted. But it's a bit disappointing, of course, that after three hours, we find that Bilbo and the dwarves haven't met Beorn or been captured by the elves, let alone reached the Lonely Mountain. For that, we have to wait. The two sequels, The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug and The Hobbit: There and Back Again are scheduled to open December 13, 2013 and July 18, 2014, respectively.