I may see one or two more before the year ends, but thus far here's my listing of the 10 films I saw this year. When I've already written a blog entry for it, a link will be provided in the title of the movie:
10. Terminator: Genisys
A big let-down, and the only film I saw in the theatre this year that had me checking my watch. Couldn't wait for it to end. And making John Connor the antagonist was the biggest bonehead decision of 2015. Well, before Slater elected to kick away in overtime in yesterday's Patriots game.
9. The Hunger Games: Mockingjay, Part I: I 90% liked it; 10% didn't. Read about that here.
8. Bridge of Spies
Not a bad film, exactly, as my blog entry said. But I couldn't recommend it with excitement, either. A professionally made, professionally acted, professionally delivered movie, and all over the year end's Top-10 lists in many places (and #8 for me, though I only saw 10 total movies as of 12.28.15.), but still not a film that will generate awe or excitement. Spielberg's genius works against him here. My expectations for his films are sky-high, and this isn't. Even more low-key than Lincoln was, but without Day-Lewis's awe-inspiring performance. A good film for a Sunday afternoon on cable.
7. The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies
The Middle East is a land mass unlike any other in the world. Without
traveling it, if you want to get to Africa, you'd have to take a ship or
plane. Those who control the Middle East control all trade (today,
much or most of the trade) coming and going from all of Africa. Control
that, and you will have riches and power, then and now. Combine that
with the extreme religious significance of those lands (three of the
world's major religions spring from it) and combine that with the concentration of oil there, and you've got land that everyone wants. And they'll all fight for it. Forever.
Now think of this movie, and that mountain. It's got gold and not oil, but it's all otherwise the same. A better movie than it's being given credit for, especially when compared to Jackson's LOTR films. And a very political movie, too. It's got something very relevant to say.
6. Spectre
A very good Bond film, Daniel Craig's 3rd-best, IMO, after Skyfall and Casino Royale. Expecting it to be as good as Skyfall was indeed too much to ask, and that's okay. The planets aligned for Skyfall, which was a better movie than it had a right to be, and perhaps was the best in all of Bond. And a great movie in of itself, by itself, that transcended the genre. Spectre doesn't do that, but it's a great ride nonetheless, and Christoph Waltz's performance is as good as you figured it would be. Though it's not as good as Javier Bardem's in Skyfall, Waltz doesn't have as much to work with, either. There are a couple of head-scratches here, in terms of what Blofeld does, and you wonder why he's treated as well as he is at the end (to better set him up in the sequel?), but overall this was a good ride.
Honorable Mention: Jaws (re-release). This would have been rated if it had been released this year.
Top Five Next Blog Entry--to be continued
Showing posts with label LOTR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LOTR. Show all posts
Monday, December 28, 2015
My Top-10 Films of 2015 (So Far)
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Sunday, December 15, 2013
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug--short movie review
Photo: Movie poster, from its Wikipedia page.
Very good "hallway" movie that connects the first to the yet-to-be-released third film, and apparently only meant as such. I say that because when the one moment comes that you've been waiting for, the movie ends. The fact that that's disappointing speaks well for how good and gripping the movie is.
Mostly it's a special effects action flick, which isn't bad, but I got the feeling that the three LOTR movies were about something a little bit more. The first Hobbit movie was, as well. A great deal about friendship, honesty, greed, and stamina are mentioned in those films, and for good reason. The Ring is destroyed, after all, more because of friendship than because of any lava at Mt. Doom. The first Hobbit movie takes a good twenty minutes right up front in the movie to show everyone's camaraderie (which seems unnecessary at the time, but isn't) and friendship, and that theme played itself out as the movie went on.
Here, there's no time for that. We get nonstop action from the first moment until the last, with the occasional moments for budding romance thrown in. We see swordfights galore, and lots and lots of running, and many instances of hiding, and...well, you get the idea, and I make it seem much worse than it is. It's actually a lot of eye-popping fun (even with a very verbose dragon, and some very silly barrel / riverbanks scenes, where the Dwarfs and Hobbits run and jump like Olympians, and dozens of Orcs are nice enough to stand in a straight line so they can get knocked over by the same one barrel) and you won't realize that the two hours and forty minutes have passed until the abrupt ending. It's a movie well worth the money. In fact, as with all special effects flicks, if you plan to watch it at all, you have to see it on the big screen.
I'm just going to trust that the third film wraps up the themes of friendship and of reclaiming your home (I've sort of done that in real life, as you know if you follow this blog) and that the last film won't just be amazing visuals and riveting action like this one was. Not that there's anything wrong with that.
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Friday, December 28, 2012
The Hobbit (Movie)
Photo: Movie poster, from its Wikipedia page
I'd heard (and read) a lot of negative reviews about this movie, so I approached it with great trepidation. After all, who wants to pay $11.50 per ticket and sit through an almost-three-hour film if it's terrible?
I needn't have worried. This one is, in some ways, superior to the first three LOTR films, though those did have a better flow and vibe. The opening scenes with The Hobbit, and the scenes involving the riddles with Gollum, are very long, and noticeably so while you're watching them. Yet, they are also very necessary, as the first sets up the characterization and spirit, while the latter shows how Gollum lost the Ring, which is hinted at in the LOTR films, but never fleshed out. It is here. I'm guessing Peter Jackson--who does know great editing and pace, so you have to assume his long scenes had a purpose in his own mind--let these riddle scenes go on a little because they explain Bilbo's entire purpose (in a very Star Wars-like, Zen kind of way) on this trip: He needs to come so that he can find the Ring and keep it away from Sauron, so that, of course, Frodo can drop it into Mount Doom later, thereby keeping evil out of the hands of Evil. This is the whole point behind all six of the LOTR and Hobbit films, and so is therefore deservedly fleshed out, even if it is a tad overlong. But that's an epic, right? You appreciate it because it is so important, so...well, epic. Epics are told on a grand scale, and some scenes are epic in of themselves if they're important enough.
But I digress. Do not be swayed by the many bad reviews. It is a story on a grand scale, complete in of itself, and not just a set-up for the other two films. Does it set them up? Of course. But it's a set-up movie the way that Star Wars: A New Hope was a set-up movie. Both are complete.
I told a few people that I liked The Hobbit more than the LOTR films. I cannot completely substantiate this, but the feeling I get of trust, of kinship, of fighting evil, is much stronger here than in the LOTR films. This is for a few reasons. In the first three films, there were an expert sword-fighter/killer, an expert bowsman, an expert axe-man, an expert wizard--you get the idea. These guys were Middle-Earth renowned for their already-superior abilities. The whole point of the LOTR movies, which wasn't shown enough, is that it's the everyday little people--the Hobbits--who are the real fighters of true evil. (Roger Ebert gave the LOTR films 3 1/2 stars, rather than 4, because of this point, that they got carried away with the epic battle scenes and lost track of this theme.) The Hobbit exemplifies that point much more. The film busies itself with Bilbo proving his worth to these otherwise taller fighters; by doing so, he exemplifies this ideal.
The Hobbit also has characters that are all less-established than the LOTR fellowship. No actual kings here (though one should have been). No famous fighters. These guys are all losers in the sense that they got kicked out of their homeland--literally, they lost their home. And not just in the sense of a country, or a house, but an actual feeling of belonging, of home, of being where you were meant to be. We're told by good hosts to be "at home" in the sense that the word "home" is a descriptive, not just a place. We're supposed to feel, after all, that "there's no place like home."
Lastly, there is more of an emphasis (though the viewer is never assaulted with it) on The Way, on Zen--on The Force, if you want to think of it that way. Gandalf is constantly asked why he picked a hobbit to join this group. Later, he says that he's frightened and that Bilbo (and, one assumes, Hobbits in general) give him courage. But his first response was perhaps a much more honest "I don't know." He's simply drawn to pick him; it's nothing more than being guided, than trusting your gut. What creates gut decisions? I mentioned before that it is necessary, in a Fate kind of way, that Bilbo be in the group because he needs to steal the Ring. It shouldn't go unnoticed that Gandalf calls Bilbo "the burglar" throughout the film, much to everyone's wonder, including Gandalf's own. Having Bilbo in the group really makes no sense; if Fate hadn't chosen him, nobody else would have. But the battle of Good vs. Evil had already begun, unbeknownst to everyone but Gandalf: Sauron has already started to fool everyone (though the Elven Queen is catching on, I think); he's already looking for the Ring, already conquering lands and dispersing and killing the natives and the trees. (There's an obvious comparison with Star Wars's Emperor Palpatine here, a plot device that Lucas must have stolen from Tolkein.)
These forces of Good and Evil are constantly at war, as if they were their own separate entities. It's a common theme and belief--dating back to Zen's and The Way's origins, and certainly believed by the Ancient Greeks and by the Elizabethans, never mind Tolkein and Lucas--that we are often just pawns used and manipulated by these forces. Who knows how this will show itself? Here, it's when a dragon, who probably knows nothing of Zen, or Good and Evil, decides to attack a city for its gold. If this doesn't happen, the native people don't get driven out, and they don't have to go on a quest to win it back, and Bilbo doesn't burglarize Gollum, and Frodo doesn't defeat Evil by dropping the Ring into Mt. Doom.
And so on.
The Hobbit brings this out more than the other three LOTR films. And the visuals are better, too.
Go see it. Go appreciate it's grand nature, it's epic storytelling of Good vs. Evil.
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Movie Lovers
Photo: The Tree of Life movie poster, from it's Wikipedia site. (See this film. Roger Ebert, in this year's Sight & Sound poll, said it's one of the ten best ever made, world-wide.)
I must be a movie lover (technically called a cinephile) because:
1. I sit through the credits. I love to know who the cinematographer, director, and supporting actors are, and sometimes it's necessary to just let the whole movie sink in after it ends. I was like this after the movie Lincoln recently.
2. I do sometimes compare people to movie characters. Actually, I do that all the time. The real people hardly ever compare, even if the movie character was "bad." I realize this is antisocial of me.
3. I get giddy about upcoming movies by directors I like, such as a new Spielberg film. I'm enough of a cinephile to get excited by the new Ed Zwick, Peter Weir, David Fincher, Terrence Malick, or Ridley Scott film, amongst the names of great directors that most non-fans don't know.
4. I do relish intelligent film discussions, but not intelligent film competition, because when proving a point about a film, I definitely become obnoxious--and so does the person I'm talking with. For example, when discussing a film, I actually use the word "film," not "movie." Sounds elitist, I know, but the fact is that Schindler's List was a film, and Hangover was a movie. Just because the point is obnoxious, that doesn't make it untrue.
5. I understand the demographics, too--which is why I won't go see films geared towards demos I don't want to see movies with. I mean that in the kindest of all possible ways.
6. I definitely judge people by their favorite movies. If your favorite film is one of the Hangovers, or one of the Saws (as good as the first one of each series was), and if you've never even seen (or heard of) 2001 or Schindler's List, then I'm out.
7. I really appreciate movie memorabilia, but such things will just clutter up the house. Or maybe I just don't decorate well. Of course, should the actual real prop come my way, I'm all over it. Who wouldn't want to have one of the rings actually used in the LOTR films?!?
8. I complain about continuity issues and product placements all the time. (But only after the movie, of course. Belanger's rule #1 of seeing films at a theatre: You will not talk during the film.) Drives people nuts.
9. I don't remember dates or important things by films. I'm a guy; I remember such things based on who I'm dating at the time.
10. I haven't made out in theaters since I was a teenager. Call me unromantic or lacking in spontaneity, but I'm not spending $11.50 per ticket just to miss most of the movie. Hell, if I want to make out with a woman in the dark, I'll just invite her over after I've stopped paying the electric bill for a few months.
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Sunday, September 18, 2011
The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers by J.R.R. Tolkein
I suspect that I wouldn't have anything more to say about the plot and themes, for you, because if you're reading this, you've read the books or seen the movies already. I could go into a few changes from one to the other, but I won't put such disclaimers here. Instead, I was interested in Tolkien's writing choices, as I was in the review for the FOTR. Here, Tolkien basically splits the book in half: the first half to Aragorn and Gandalf; the second half to Frodo and Sam and Gollum. I know that Tolkien wrote the "trilogy" all at once, not intending for breaks, and that his publishers took that volume of about 1,000 pages and split it into threes. This leads to what sometimes look to be odd writing choices, but considering the big 1,000 book, really isn't. In other words, it looks like Tolkien wasn't going back and forth with his narration between the two groups of heroes--most other authors would have. It looks like he split the second book between the two groups and did not go back and forth between them. But it only looks that way, since it's 398 pages. But if you think of the three books all as one, he does, in fact, go back and forth--just for several hundred pages at a time between the groups. So, as in Elf-land and Middle Earth in general, that which seems to be is not.
Also of note was a comment from Sam on page 325. Boromir's brother has been chastising Frodo and questioning him hard; Sam gets slowly angry at this and finally responds--but mentions they have the ring. He realizes his verbal goof and says to Faramir that he has spoken and behaved handsomely so far, and he should continue to do so after Sam's gaffe. Part of that retort was, "But handsome is as handsome does, we say." Substitute "handsome" for "stupid," and you've got Forrest Gump. Tolkien's work stretches far.
The last thing I'll note is the very obvious bearing Beowulf had on Tolkein. The swords and such, the fighting, the horns on everything, the righteous in battle stuff, the putting of the dead on water, and so much more there isn't room to mention. But if anyone knows LOTR: TTT and Beowulf, you can't miss the fact that Shelob is a direct descendent of the She-hag in Beowulf (and maybe a tiny bit of Grendel, too).
One work, one deed, leads to another. Such as it is in Middle-Earth; such as it is here.
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