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Tag Archives: Bruce

June 18, 2012

Movie Review ~ Moonrise Kingdom

4
by Joe Movie Review • Tags: Alexandre, Anderson, Bruce, Coppola, Desplat, Edward, Features, Focus, Frances, GIlman, Hayward, Kasia, Kingdom, logo, McDormand, Moonrise, Mothersbaugh, Norton, roman, Studio, Swinton, Tilda, Walicka-Maimone, Wes, Willis

The Facts:

Synopsis: A pair of young lovers flee their New England town, which causes a local search party to fan out and find them.

Stars: Jared Gilman, Kara Hayward, Tilda Swinton, Edward Norton, Frances McDormand, Bill Murray, Bruce Willis

Director: Wes Anderson

Rated: PG-13

Running Length: 94 minutes

Random Crew Highlight:  Physical Effects and Miniatures ~ Gene Warren III

TMMM Score: (9/10)

Review:  As children, fairy tales come fast and furious.  There are an endless stream of books, television shows, movies, cartoons, etc that create fantasy worlds for our imaginations to run wild with.  As adults, we all too often are deprived of actual fairy tales.  Sure, the adult version of fairy tales could be the latest action/adventure/special effects bonanza and that’s OK too.  We also get the occasional cartoon that is aimed at children but has humor that adults can really appreciate.  Still, when was the last time an original fairy tale was created for the post-teenager crowd?  Our fairy tale wishes have been granted with Moonrise Kingdom, the best example of committed and creative filmmaking to be released in 2012.

Director Anderson is no stranger to fantastical worlds of his own making.  Every movie he’s helmed involves people, places, and situations from an Earth that looks a lot like ours but is seen through a kaleidoscope of color and music our eyes and ears aren’t always privy to.  That’s created a bit of a problem for me in some of his films.  While I appreciated Rushmore and enjoyed The Royal Tenenbaums, I found The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou and The Darjeeling Limited to be exercises in frustration.  He bounced back nicely with the wondrous Fantastic Mr. Fox and returns to full-bodied form with Moonrise Kingdom.

As with all Anderson films, you need to decide if you’re going to go with it or not.  If you can’t give yourself over to the narrative structure or slight oddity of his style then you may want to select a different title for your movie night.  I think it’s a worthwhile choice no matter what mood you are in and what experience you want to have.  While Moonrise Kingdom may start off seemingly incoherent, it tightens its grip steadily and brings you along on its gentle ride. 

Set in the 60’s, our story begins its once upon a time with several mysterious scenes that appear to be unrelated but in time all come together.  What is young Suzy (Hayward) looking at through binoculars outside her window?  Where has Khaki Scout Sam (Gilman) disappeared to?  What of Suzy’s parents (McDormand and Murray) who seem to inhabit the same house but never the same room?  And how does Scout Master Ward (Norton) and Captain Sharp (Willis) fit into the whole mix?  All of these questions and more are covered nicely – interspersed with musical interludes and back-story asides that complement the present action.

Hayward and Gilman are young, inexperienced actors and it shows.  Their matter-of-fact line readings do come off as a bit amateur but it somehow works well when paired with the bravura dialogue cooked up Anderson and Roman Coppola.  These are youngsters that have issues…be it personality quirks or psychological setbacks and the Anderson/Coppola script cares for them nicely.  Their determination to be together is part Romeo and Juliet, part Bonnie and Clyde and were they played by actors that were too knowing it wouldn’t have worked the same way.

Casting the young leads with such novices, Anderson was smart enough to surround them with valued character actors that were willing to go the extra mile and commit to playing cartoon characters that never act cartoony.  I think Willis is often not given enough credit as a fairly decent actor.  True, this lack of credit is only fueled by his acceptance of umpteen roles that require him to show up and shoot a gun.  When he takes on these kind of comically strange roles he shows why he’s the go-to-guy for exactly these types of characters.

Murray, Norton, and McDormand all amicably glide through the movie with full faith that their performances will be captured correctly in Anderson’s lens.  Murray is Anderson’s frequent star and you can tell that a certain sense of unspoken gravitas was afforded him as he really stretches into the absurd territory.  Murray can come off as quite aloof in movies but here that aloofness is written into the part from the get-go.

Swinton pops up in a glorified cameo doing her best Meryl Streep impression.  That’s not a dig at either actress and it made me wonder if the role was written with Streep in mind (she did contribute her voice to Fantastic Mr. Fox)…still, Swinton cuts a great figure in Kasia Walicka-Maimone’s deliriously perfect costumes.

The production design of the film is a wonder in and of itself.  Vibrant colors and mod touches abound in every single frame of the film, giving the film a look and feel of a movie that truly was made in the 60’s without being kitschy.  Nothing feels artificial or overly designed…a trait common in Anderson’s entire repertoire.  Composer Alexandre Desplat’s contributions cannot be measured as his arrangements elevate each scene that much higher with his perfect underscoring.  Mark Mothersbaugh, too, adds a percussive musical mood with several booming drum sequences.

If the film were to be faulted anything, it would be its relentless attack of creativity.  That’s hardly a bad thing but it can be a bit overwhelming to capture on one viewing…meaning that a second look is nearly required to take in all that is presented in 94 minutes.  That viewing the movie is such a total pleasure I can’t imagine that anyone would be unhappy to visit this Anderson’s brilliant kingdom again (and again).  You’ll live happily ever after if you do.

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May 11, 2012

Down From the Shelf ~ Color of Night

by Joe Down from the Shelf, Movie Review • Tags: Blades, Bruce, Color, Film, Hollywood, jane, Lesley, logo, March, Night, Of, Pictures, RichardR, Rush, Studio, Willis

The Facts:

Synopsis: A color-blind psychiatrist Bill Capa is stalked by an unknown killer after taking over his murdered friend’s therapy group, all of whom have a connection to a mysterious young woman that Capa begins having intense sexual encounters with.

Stars: Bruce Willis, Jane March, Lesley Ann Warren, Rubén Blades, Lance Henriksen, Scott Bakula

Director: Richard Rush

Rated: R (or Unrated)

Running Length: 139 minutes

TMMM Score: (2/10)

Review:  A stunningly awful film, Color of Night is the much ballyhooed 1994 erotic thriller that ended several careers and put the kibosh on the psycho-sexual thrillers that Basic Instinct spawned.  It’s a film I’ve seen maybe a half dozen times and it only gets worse with each viewing.  Now with that being said, any true film aficionado should try this one on for size…while it hasn’t achieved cult/camp status it really does deserve it because there are some howling amazing performances and even funnier bits of dialogue. 

Willis was on the A-list when this came about and while he walked away relatively unscathed Color of Night was an important turning point for the actor: he never dropped his trou for an erotic thriller after.  I don’t think Willis is a bad actor, just a specific one.  As bad as this material is, he takes the completely wrong angle to come at it from and winds up looking fairly idiotic in the process. 

I have to admit I don’t know quite how to summarize the movie for you…it’s so convoluted I can’t even get at the true inadequacy of the proceedings.  However, I’ll give it a go. 

After a patient of his commits suicide during one of their sessions, Willis’ Bill Cappa suddenly becomes color blind to red and quits his practice.  To get away from things he goes and visits his friend (Bakula) in California only to be tossed into a murder-mystery before the end of day 2.  Bakula pretty much picks up Cappa from the airport and brings him to the therapy group he leads…and the group is filled with every cliché in the book.  The nympho, the gruff ex police officer, the OCD yuppie, the immature artist, and the one with the gender problem.  Oh yeah…one of them also is a killer as Bakula soon finds out.

The movie is awkward up until Bakula meets the end of a blade and after that it just becomes bizarre.  Somehow information about the death doesn’t reach the patients so Willis (encouraged by the police to continue as the leader of the group) has to break it to them in one painfully bad/funny scene.  Also…while the film continues on for several weeks there is no mention of a funeral or how Willis can legally continue to live in Bakula’s expansive mansion or drive his car!  The filmmakers just assume that we will accept all these conveniences but we know better.

Now on top of all this enters the femme fatale in the form of March as a kitten-ish beauty that spells bad news for Cappa.  March was hailed by director Rush as the “eighth wonder of the world” and unless he was referring to the fact that she never wears underwear or has eight extra teeth in her head, I can’t see why.  Her acting is horrible and she seems only to exist to wear clothes that come off easily.  She’s even more ridiculous as the film reveals more about her and expands her role in a few twists I shan’t give away.

The sex scenes between Willis and March were cause for much buzz because they earned the film an NC-17 at first…then trimmed to receive its eventual R.  None of these scenes is erotic in the least though one gives credit to both actors for baring all in such a laugh riot as this.  The film is available on DVD only in a director’s cut that clocks in at an astounding 139 minutes.  The film could have and should have been 90 minutes including credits. 

Supporting players should be as embarrassed as Willis and March.  Warren probably fares the best as the nympho of the group…though it almost seems like an extension of her character from Clue.  She’s the only one that seems to be trying to give the proceedings their due but eventually she’s forgotten as are the rest of the group members.  Worst performance is a close call between March and Blades as an un-PC and nearly unwatchable cop.  I can’t imagine Blades looking back fondly on what he did on this film – it’s a pretty embarrassing role.

Director Rush directed the cult favorite The Stunt Man and his attempts to make this film with style falls flat because he’s missing the essential element for most films – taste.  The taste factor of this one is incredibly low and he never seems to understand that.  Camera angles that make no sense are used and filming techniques that maybe looked good in dailies look patently absurd here.  Add to that the dreadful score that sounds like a church mouse on a circus organ and there’s just no way to escape this movie without hitting the eject button.

So yes…this is bad but yes…if you have the time and fortitude to check this one out it’s nearly worth it because it is so uniquely awful.  A year later Showgirls would arrive on the scene and demonstrate how to make a bad movie that’s totally watchable.  Scaling Color of Night is a feat…but there are much worse mountains to climb.

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May 3, 2012

The Silver Bullet ~ “Peace, Love, and Misunderstanding” Trailer

by Joe Silver Bullet - Trailer Park • Tags: Beresford, Bruce, Fonda, IFC, jane, Keener, logo, Love, Misunderstanding, Morgan, Peace, Studio

Synopsis:  An uptight NYC lawyer takes her two teenagers to her hippie mother’s farmhouse upstate for a family vacation.

Release Date:  June 8, 2012

Thoughts:  Jane Fonda has been largely absent from the screen in the last two decades as she focuses on being an advocate for women’s health and works for various charities.   I’m sure there is a good reason for her signing on to director Bruce Beresford’s been-there-done-that style family dramedy but I’m having a hard time buying her in that bad wig and hippy-dippy vibe.  Also…didn’t she make this movie already and wasn’t it called Georgia Rule?  Beresford has directed some decent films in his day but his work of late has a dull pallor that doesn’t speak to his talents.  Catherine Keener too could do a role like this in her sleep.  Why are all these talented people in such an ordinary looking movie?  The fact it has sat on the shelf for almost a year doesn’t bode well.

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