June Lineup: ‘Edge of Tomorrow’

Producers: Jason Hoffs, Gregory Jacobs (‘Side Effects’, ‘Haywire’, ‘Magic Mike’, ‘The Informant’), Tom Lassally (‘The To Do List’), Jeffrey Silver (‘The To Do List’), Erwin Stoff (‘Constantine’, ‘Water for Elephants’, ‘Beautiful Creatures’, ‘Street Kings’)

Director: Doug Liman (‘Swingers’, ‘The Bourne Identity’, ‘Mr. and Mrs. Smith’, ‘Fair Game’)

Screenwriter(s): Christopher McQuarrie (‘The Usual Suspects’, ‘Valkyrie’, ‘Jack Reacher’), Jez Butterworth (‘Fair Game’), John-Henry Butterworth (‘Fair Game’)

Based on: “All You Need is Kill”, a novel by Hiroshi Sakurazaka

Cinematographer: Dion Beebe (‘Gangster Squad’, ‘Chicago’, ‘Memoirs of Geisha’, ‘Collateral’)

Composer: Christophe Beck (‘We Are Marshall’, ‘Frozen’, ‘The Muppets’, ‘The Hangover’)

Cast: Emily Blunt, Tom Cruise, Brendan Gleeson, Bill Paxton, Jonas Armstrong, Tony Way, Kick Gurry, Franz Drameh, Dragomir Mrsic, Charlotte, Riley, Masayoshi Haneda, Terence Maynard, Lara Pulver

Clips:

Cage (Tom Cruise) must make a decision as to whether or not he’ll let his fear keep him from dropping from a plane that is rapidly breaking.

Interviews:

Director Doug Liman discusses how the time loop is used in this particular story, changes in perception throughout the film, the characters, and Tom Cruise’s insane work ethic.

Review: Rise. Fight. Fall. Repeat.

May Prelude: ‘X-Men: Days of Future Past’

Producers: Simon Kinberg (“Jumper”, “Elysium”, “X-Men: First Class”), Hutch Parker (“The Wolverine”), Lauren Shuler Donner (“You’ve Got Mail”, “Any Given Sunday”, “Constantine”), Bryan Singer (“The Usual Suspects”, “Valkyrie”, “X-Men: First Class”)

Director: Bryan Singer (“The Usual Suspects”, “X-Men”, “X-Men 2”, “Valkyrie”)

Screenwriter(s): Simon Kinberg (“Mr. & Mrs. Smith”, “Sherlock Holmes”, “This Means War”), Jane Goldman (“Stardust”, “The Debt”, “X-Men: First Class”), Matthew Vaughn (“Stardust”, “Kick-Ass”, “The Debt”)

Cinematographer: Newton Thomas Sigel (“Drive”, “Valkyrie”, “The Brothers Grimm”, “X-Men 2”)

Composer: John Ottman (“Valkyrie”, “The Losers”, “Superman Returns”, “X-Men 2”)

Cast: James McAvoy, Patrick Stewart, Michael Fassbender, Ian McKellan, Hugh Jackman, Peter Dinklage, Evan Peters, Ellen Page, Nicholas Hoult, Halle Berry, Shawn Ashmore, Anna Paquin, Lucas Til, Daniel Cudmore, Kelsey Grammer

Clips:

Mystique intercedes a meeting with the world’s leaders.

A little insight into the abilities of Bishop, Blink, and Colossus.

Interviews:

Peter Dinklage (“Dr. Boliver Trask”) and Hugh Jackman (“Wolverine”) answer questions from co-stars (Patrick Stewart, Shawn Dinklage, Ellen Page, Nicholas Hoult), Screenwriter Simon Kinberg ,and fans.

Michael Fassbender (“Magneto”) and James McAvoy (“Professor X”) talk to JoBo.com about how their characters have evolved from the previous film, about working with the original X-Men cast, and about the fans at Comic-Con.

The cast talks about the story and the roles that their characters play in its reveal. (***SPOILERS beyond 3:05***)

Review: Bryan Singer makes X-Men cool again in ‘X-Men: Days of Future Past’

‘The Amazing Spider-Man 2’: With a great budget comes an even greater responsibility

the amazing spider man 2Even with some cool visual effects, an impressive score, and a great cast, ‘The Amazing Spider-Man 2’ suffers from some script structure issues.

Peter Parker (Andrew Garfield) faces his toughest decisions yet shortly after his high school graduation while battling a fanatic-turned-villain, Electro (Jamie Foxx), and his childhood friend, Harry Osborn (Dane DeHaan) as the Green Goblin.

Heroes are only as good as their villains. While Garfield continues to grow as a Spider-Man that we can fully understand and, therefore support, his antagonists don’t seem as formidable. A villain with whom we can empathize makes for a more balanced showdown when our hero and the villain inevitably fight (i.e., “Loki” in ‘Thor’ and in ‘The Avengers’ and “Bane” in ‘The Dark Knight Rises’). Conceptually, Max Dillon’s rise (or fall) to villainy as Electro may have worked, but cinematically it failed to genuinely play out. Max’s reason for being against Spider-Man is too rushed and, as a result, not strong enough to explain why he’d want to seek revenge on Spider-Man; his descent into crime doesn’t make sense logically. Additionally, Foxx, while he has proven his acting skills in other films (i.e., ‘Ray’, ‘Collateral’, ‘The Soloist’), doesn’t portray Max as an individual that audiences would necessarily pity, but someone who’s more of an annoyance.

Paul Giamatti has a minor role in this film as a villain we meet at the beginning of the film. Although ‘The Amazing Spider-Man 2’, due to the placement of each villain in the story, doesn’t fall into the same issues that ‘Spider-Man 3’ suffered with having too many villains, Giamatti’s character, Aleksei Sytsevich, is merely a temporary distraction and, had his character not been included in the film, screenwriters Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman, may have had more room to develop Electro’s character and expand on his gradual steps towards villainy as he is the main villain.

With superhero films growing in both size and in stakes with what the protagonist (or protagonists) must face, the dialogue should also equal the severity of the threat to give audiences that feeling of satisfaction when their heroes defeat the enemy (or hopelessness should the villain succeed). Having dialogue that’s very cliché takes filmgoers out of the experience; lines that they’ve heard numerous times before no longer hold any seriousness or authenticity. Our characters—both good-natured and ruthless—are given lines that not even comic book movies can get away with anymore with how much they’re overused. ‘The Amazing Spider-Man 2’ has a great task in its hands in being the second installment in a rebooted franchise. The first forty-five minutes are a rehash of what the first film introduced at the end. Audiences are being retaken into a scenario that, again, distracts from what could have been a deeper analysis into Electro’s downfall or revealing Sytsevich’s much larger role in the Marvel Universe as it relates to Spider-Man.

‘The Amazing Spider-Man 2’ is not without its great moments and attributes. It features a score by Hans Zimmer that, while keeping melodies that resonate with the Spider-Man theme from ‘The Amazing Spider-Man’, is reminiscent of John William’s style with strong hints of Alan Silvestri’s score for ‘Captain America: The First Avenger’. It’s a very heroic and majestic score that makes you root for our zany, yet distracted hero. For any dubstep fans, ‘The Amazing Spider-Man 2’ introduces this recent addition to the popular music industry. Instead of, however, taking away from the experience, it emphasizes the type of mind that Spider-Man is dealing with here in Electro and the grave danger in trying to defeat someone as erratic as his powers. At one point during a fight scene, we’re attuned to Electro’s inner thoughts via the score which makes for a cooler (if not, a bit chilling) experience.

For a comic book film, there are several dramatic scenes. Despite the poor dialogue that our cast must work with, the emotion behind their words are felt. As Peter Parker wrestles with having to keep a promise made previously with Gwen’s (Emma Stone) father, keeping his identity hidden from his Aunt Mae (Sally Field), and trying to figure out who his father really was, Garfield shows us a side of Parker that hadn’t yet been explored before. There’s a specific scene between Garfield and Field that shows Garfield’s range and Parker’s depth as a character.

Although his role as the villain comes much later in the film and is smaller relative to Electro’s role, Dane DeHaan’s approach to Harry Osborn/Green Goblin is the most memorable and the role that feels the most grounded. Having to constantly be told that there’s no helping his situation including his old friend, Parker, is a bit more believable in script logic as well as in DeHaan’s slow and careful delivery.

In ‘The Amazing Spider-Man 2’, there’s a lot to showcase and the screenwriters made things a bit more difficult for themselves in backtracking to an idea from the first film and not providing enough of a foundation for the villains in the film to stand on. For a summer blockbuster, it’s an entertaining film at times with how it presents itself visually and with the confidence in their characters that Garfield, Stone, and DeHaan depict naturally. Nevertheless, ‘The Amazing Spider-Man 2’ struggles to stick to one main idea and falls short of its promise.

Jim’s Rating: 6.5/10

 

May Prelude: ‘The Amazing Spider-Man 2’

Producers: Avi Arad (“The Amazing Spider-Man”, “X-Men Origins: Wolverine”, “The Incredible Hulk”, “Iron Man”) , Matthew Tolmach (“The Amazing Spider-Man”)

Director: Marc Webb (“(500) Days of Summer”, “The Amazing Spider-Man”)

Screenwriter(s): Alex Kurtzman (“Star Trek”, “Star Trek Into Darkness”, Mission: Impossible III”), Roberto Orci (“Star Trek”, “Star Trek Into Darkness”, Mission: Impossible III”), Jeff Pinkner , James Vanderbilt (“Zodiac”, “The Losers”, The Amazing Spider-Man”)

Cinematographer: Daniel Mindel (“Enemy of the State”, “Spy Game”, “Star Trek”, “Star Trek Into Darkness”)

Composer: Johnny Marr, Pharrell Williams (“Despicable Me”), Hans Zimmer (“Rush”, “Inception”, “The Dark Knight”, “Gladiator”)

Cast: Andrew Garfield, Emma Stone, Jamie Foxx, Dane DeHaan, Colm Feore, Paul Giamatti, Sally Field, Felicity Jones, B.J. Novak

Clips:

Peter Parker (Andrew Garfield) and Harry Osborne both (Dane DeHaan) reflect on, in a way, losing their parents.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8D2jAunii50

Peter Parker, in this amusing clip, helps pursue a criminal (a.k.a. the Rhino, portrayed by Paul Giamatti) and tries to steal some items back from him.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gAeryCqZikk

Interviews:

Andrew Garfield, Emma Stone, and Jamie Foxx in an ‘Unscripted’ Interview answering fan questions (basically, them being silly)

Questions:

  • To Jamie: If Electro had a theme song, what would that theme song be?
  • To Andrew: If you could have Spider-Man form an alliance with any other superhero, who would you pick and why?
  • To Jamie: What is the weirdest rumor you’ve ever heard of yourself?
  • To Emma: Does your professional connection (between Emma and Andrew) help you?
  • To Emma: What radioactive insect should Gwen Stacy get bitten by to make her a perfect match for Spider-Man?
  • To Andrew: Have you ever killed anybody? If you knew for sure that you would never ever be found out, would you?

For a more serious interview…sort of:

Andrew Garfield, Emma Stone, Jamie Foxx, Dane DeHaan, and Director Marc Webb talk about the film.

Review: ‘The Amazing Spider-Man 2’: With a Great Budget Comes An Even Greater Responsibility

Gareth Evans shows his impeccable talents as a filmmaker in ‘The Raid 2: Berandal’

A546_C016_06060BDirector Gareth Evans not only brings us a better film in the sequel, but schools us all on how to shoot a proper martial arts film. ‘The Raid 2: Berandal’ is a film worth seeing based on the fight choreography alone. At the risk of sounding cliché, it is unlike anything you’ve ever experienced on screen (and more so than its predecessor).

Rama (Iko Uwais) goes undercover to develop a case against the gangs, crime families, and corrupt police officers alike connected to the tenants that occupied the very apartment he was instructed to bring down in ‘The Raid: Redemption’.

When people state that visual or special effects in a film are “out of this world”, it is usually met with apathy and sarcasm as the phrase is overused. Describing the fight choreography in this film with that phrasing, however, is completely justified.

Firstly, many of the actors and stunt people performing these bouts use choreography different from each other. Typically, we see fighters using the same choreography as their opponents. However, with ‘The Raid 2: Berandal’, this is not the case. It’s a refreshing thing to notice onscreen that not all techniques are created equal. Each person has a unique way of using their whole bodies or things surrounding them in a room. There is a scene in which one man gives his opponent his own version of “batting practice”. (Basically, this man puts “The Bear Jew” from ‘Inglorious Basterds’ to shame.) His partner-in-crime is a woman whose use of two hammers is viciously extraordinary.

Secondly, the camera in each of these fight sequences, moves in an untraditional manner. Not only are these scenes shot in many different angles, but the viewers are given enough time to process what’s going on in each move and counterattack before moving on to the next shot as opposed to relying on shaky cam and quick cuts. Another small, but considerate thing that ‘The Raid 2: Berandal’ does is that once an opponent is knocked down, there’s time allotted for them to recover before they get back up to help their fellow attackers fight their opponents. Although this small detail will most likely be overlooked, it’s a bit of a shift away from the typical fight sequences in Hollywood, featuring a more realistic take on how fighting scenes might play out naturally.

While ‘The Raid 2: Berandal’ features gratuitous violence (more than the first film), most of it has a purpose. Our hero, Rama, has a 10-min kitchen brawl with someone that could be his equal physically that also takes a slight turn for the psychological. The fighting here starts out with Rama’s opponent playing little mind games with Rama in his short counterattacks. The two men aren’t quick to start, but more divisive in how they approach each other. It’s a nod back to intelligent fighting in classic action films (i.e., Luke Skywalker and Lord Vader’s fight in ‘Empire Strikes Back’).

Besides the excellent fighting, ‘The Raid 2: Berandal’ has a very interesting story with a subplot that plays out very much like a Greek tragedy. It is a film that resonates much with ‘The Godfather’: a son wanting a higher position within his family, threats of mob wars, and back dealings among crime families and law enforcement. It’s a familiar story, but with a martial arts edge.

The acting is also very well done, especially from Iko Uwais and Arifin Putra (Rama and Uco, respectably). Uwais, specifically in scenes regarding his family, approaches the role in a very dedicated manner. Although most of his scenes call for some form of anguish, it’s a scene about his son where the audience can truly appreciate the actor’s range.

Although Uco’s character development is a little rushed (despite the film being almost 2 and a half hours), Putra, in showing the transformation in his character, gives a great performance as the foolishly ambitious, young man desperately trying to prove his worth as a leader to his father.

‘The Raid 2: Berandal’ stands firmly on its own with a strong, well-structured story and combat action sequences that films cannot yet match.

Jim’s Rating: 8.7/10

May Prelude: ‘Belle’

Producer: Damian Jones (“The Iron Lady”, “The History Boys”)

Director: Amma Asante

Screenwriter(s): Misan Sagay

Cinematographer: Ben Smithard (“My Week with Marilyn”, “Alan Partridge”)

Composer: Rachel Portman (“The Duchess”, “One Day”, “The Manchurian Candidate”, “Mona Lisa Smile”)

Cast: Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Matthew Goode, Alan McKenna, Penelope Wilton, Emily Watson, Tom Wilkinson, Sara Gadon, Miranda Richardson, James Norton, Tom Felton

Clips:

Lord Mansfield (Tom Wilkinson) and his wife (Emily Watson) discuss Dido’s future and they’ll say once society finds out.

Dido’s uncle (Tom Wilkinson) and aunt (Emily Watson) must give her and her cousin some startling news.

Interviews:

Gugu Mbatha-Raw talks about her role and the story of Belle.

Director Amma Asante talks about how she came across the real story and how got ‘Belle’ off the ground.

Review: Belle: ‘Pride and Prejudice’ with a bit more attitude

May Prelude: ‘Million Dollar Arm’

Producers: Mark Ciardi (“The Rookie”, “Miracle”, “Secretariat”, “Invincible”), Gordon Gray (“The Rookie”, “Miracle”, “Secretariat”, “Invincible”), Joe Roth (“Alice in Wonderland”, “Snow White and the Huntsman”, “Oz the Great and Powerful”)

Director: Craig Gillespie (“Lars and the Real Girl”, “Fright Night”)

Screenwriter(s): Thomas McCarthy (“Up”)

Cinematographer: Gyula Pados (“The Duchess”, “Evening”, “Predators”, “Metallica Through the Never”)

Composer: A.R. Rahman (“Elizabeth: The Golden Age”, “Slumdog Millionaire”, “127 Hours”)

Cast: Jon Hamm, Lake Bell, Bill Paxton, Alan Arkin, Aasif Mandvi, Suraj Sharma, Madhur Mittal, Tzi ma

Clips:

Brenda (Lake Bell) tries to convince JB (Jon Hamm) to invest more in learning about the kids that he’s trying to bring into the big leagues.

JB (Jon Hamm) witnesses a player using a very unique way to pitch a baseball at high speeds.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4ZdlqLFQtvw

Interviews:

Rinku Singh, the baseball player on whom ‘Million Dollar Arm’ is based, talks about the reality television show that led him to pitch for the Pittsburgh Pirates.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hGPGhvAGtXU

ESPN talks about the reality show in India, “The Million Dollar Arm”, more in depth and interviews Rinku Singh and Dinesh Patel about their experience in the contest, their inexperience with baseball, and how far they’ve come to learning the game and American customs.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OC3gczLJLuE

Suraj Sharma talks about his role as Rinku Singh and about the difficulties that come with the process of selecting pitchers.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7j_105F0RmM

Jon Hamm discusses what interested him in the script, playing JB, his young co-stars, and shooting in India.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5icrBe_nb00

Review: COMING SOON!

May Prelude: ‘Godzilla’

Producers: Jon Jashni (“Pacific Rim”), Mary Parent (“Role Models”, “Pacific Rim”, “Noah”), Brian Rogers, Thomas Tull (“42”, “Pacific Rim”, “300: Rise of an Empire”)

Director: Gareth Edwards (“Monsters”)

Screenwriter(s): Max Borenstein, Dave Callaham (story)

Cinematographer: Seamus McGarvey (“Atonement”, “The Soloist”, “We Need to Talk About Kevin”, Anna Karenina”, “The Avengers”)

Composer: Alexandre Desplat (“Moonrise Kingdom”, “Argo”, “Zero Dark Thirty”, “Philomena”, “The Grand Budapest Hotel”)

Cast: Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Elizabeth Olsen, Bryan Cranston, Juliette Binoche, Sally Hawkins, Ken Watanabe, David Strathairn

Clips:

Ford Brody (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) tries to convince a master sergeant that he can be an asset to their team in order to board a train to help his family trapped in the city.

A great monster attacks the California coast and military personnel scramble to try to contain the beast.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CKiOw-iABpk

Interviews:

Gareth Edwards explains to The Verge why monster movies matter, designing the monster, and making ‘Godzilla’ relevant.

Bryan Cranston Interview with “What Would Walter White Do?” and adding a few details to his character.

Review: ‘Godzilla’: Where the Monsters are more interesting than the Humans fighting them

May Prelude: ‘God’s Pocket’

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V1WaXhUhjnM

Producers: Lance Acord, Jackie Kelman Bisbee, Sam Bisbee, Philip Seymour Hoffman , John Slattery, Emily Ziff (“Jack Goes Boating”)

Director: John Slattery

Screenwriter(s): Alex Metcalf, John Slattery

Based on: ‘God’s Pocket’, a novel by Peter Dexter

Cinematographer: Lance Acord (“Where the Wild Things Are”, “Marie Antoinette”, “Lost in Translation”, “Being John Malkovich”)

Composer: Nathan Larson (“Margin Call”, “Boys Don’t Cry”, “The Woodsman”)

Cast: Philip Seymour Hoffman, Christina Hendricks, John Turturro, Calev Landry Jones, Glenn Fleshler, Richard Jenkins, Eddie Marsan

Interviews:

Director John Slattery (“Mad Men”) talks about the challenges of being a new director and advice given to him by his peers about the filmmaking process.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BZtp0HrANb4

Christina Hendricks, John Slattery, and the late Phillip Seymour Hoffman talk about the script, shooting ‘God’s Pocket’, and being scared of each other on set.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jwFtJ9s5X5E

In this interview, they talk more in-depth about the story, small towns, their characters, and about John Slattery as a director.

ReviewAll is not what it seems in ‘God’s Pocket’

May Prelude: ‘Chef’

Producers: Sergei Bespalov (“Machete Kills”), Jon Favreau, Karen Gilchrist

Director: Jon Favreau (“Elf”, “Iron Man”, “Iron Man 2”, “Cowboys & Aliens”)

Screenwriter(s): Jon Favreau (“Swingers”, “Couples Retreat”)

Cinematographer: Kramer Morgenthau (“Fracture”, “Thor: The Dark World”, “The Express”)

Cast: Jon Favreau, John Leguizamo, Bobby Cannavale, Emjay Anthony, Scarlett Johansson, Dustin Hoffman, Sofia Vergara, Amy Sedaris, Robert Downey Jr., Russell Peters

Clips:

Carl’s (Jon Favreau) friends urge him not to send a harsh critic a response to his review on Twitter.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NHfX4ckJB14

Interviews:

Roy Choi, a chef in LA who owns a gourmet Korean taco truck, “Kogi”, talks about being introduced to the film industry and how he felt about Jon Favreau making a film about his specific craft.

Jon Favreau talks about filming, food, and friendships developed on the set of “Chef”.

Review: COMING SOON!