After November managed to pass without a single movie viewed (owing
to both an extended sickness and the fact that I was continuing to
binge-watch old episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents), I hoped to make up for it in December. (Side note: as of this writing, I am rocketing toward the end of Season 6 of Hitchcock.)
I think I did a respectable job catching up with first-run movies,
especially since I took a two-week vacation, cruising the Caribbean and
spending time in South Florida with friends and family. Interestingly,
of the 12 films I screened in December, fully half of them were inspired
by real-life individuals. Must be Oscar season! Here's what I saw:
THOR: THE DARK WORLD (2013)—I enjoyed the first Thor
very much, and subsequently had high hopes for the sequel. As it turns
out, some of it is enjoyable...but as a whole, I felt it fell far short
of the original. Watchable but not memorable. (7)
FROZEN (2013)—Here's a very pretty, very tuneful Disney animated adventure featuring the great Josh Gad (Broadway's The Book of Mormon) as a hilarious snowman. Extremely slick and polished, aided by the music of Robert Lopez (another alumnus from Mormon). Disney makes the most of its stellar cast, which includes Idina Menzel (Broadway's Wicked) and Kristen Bell. (9)
NEBRASKA (2013)—Director Alexander Payne's first four major-release pictures (Citizen Ruth, Election, About Schmidt and Sideways) were superior comedy-dramas—satirical, searingly funny and full of oddball characters and pathos. 2011's The Descendants,
while enjoyable, didn't quite reach the heights of those earlier films,
and that's also true of this latest effort. Filmed in beautiful, stark
black-and-white, it follows older-than-dirt Bruce Dern and his son, Will
Forte of Saturday Night Live, on a road-trip from Montana to
Nebraska to collect the $1 million Dern erroneously believes he's won in
an advertising sweepstakes. Along the way, we meet various friends and
family members who do and say some interesting and/or amusing things,
but it seems a bit like watered-down Schmidt to me. Still, any Payne film is automatically better than most movies. (8)
AMERICAN HUSTLE (2013)—Christian
Bale, unrecognizable under a weird wig and with 40 extra pounds on his
gut, plays a forged-art dealer in the 1970s who, after running afoul of
the Feds, works out a deal with them to catch various other lowlifes
(i.e., mayors and Congressmen) via bribe-acceptance flim-flammery,
reminiscent of the famous ABSCAM sting operation. Bradley Cooper, with
hideous curly hair, is a hot-tempered FBI guy who manages to let himself
get pulled a little too closely into these con games; Amy Adams is
Bale's partner in crime; and Jennifer Lawrence, in her best role so far,
is Bale's greedy, chain-smoking wife. At 138 minutes, the movie goes on
way too long; despite strong critical reviews (and a few nicely played
scenes), it's often very draggy and feels bloated. However, when
Lawrence is onscreen, the movie springs to life. (6)
HER
(2013)—Spike Jonez's latest is a sci-fi romance that casts Joaquin
Phoenix as a fellow who, in the not-too-distant future, explores his
computer's new operating system—an "artificially intelligent" being
(think HAL from 2001, only voiced by sexy, smoky-voiced Scarlett
Johannson). This OS is so real that the two engage in the equivalent of
phone sex and gradually develop a "real" relationship. But, as with the
very best science fiction, new technology often yields unexpected and
horrifying ramifications. The cast does a terrific job in this
futuristic story, which seems entirely too plausible. (9)
SAVING MR. BANKS (2013)—Who doesn't love Walt Disney's version of Mary Poppins? P.L. Travers, that's who. The cantankerous creator of the Mary Poppins
books was evidently dead set against the "Disneyfication" of her
creation, and this movie brings to the screen (by Disney, no less) the
clash between Travers and the studio as they try to secure the rights to
the character. As Travers, the always dependable Emma Thompson
accurately portrays the ornery, constantly displeased author…but despite
a halfhearted attempt to soften her toward the end, she's entirely too
much of a Negative Nelly to win my heart. The infusion of numerous
flashbacks to explain her current mood are all rather awkward and don't
do much to serve the narrative—I still wanted to kick Travers in the
face. Featuring Tom Hanks as Walt Disney. (6)
INSIDE LLEWYN DAVIS (2013)—The Coen Brothers are totally unpredictable. Their films waver in quality between the classic 1996 Fargo and the unwatchable A Serious Man from last year, which bored me silly. Inside Llewyn Davis doesn't offer the savage action of Fargo or the inspired nuttiness of The Big Lebowski,
but much of it is amusing in a way that is uniquely Coen—such as when
Llewyn, a folk singer, sits down with an iconic record producer (F.
Murray Abraham), who patiently listens to the guitarist perform a
wonderful tune and then deadpans, "I don't see a lot of money here."
That may be the funniest line I've heard in a movie this year, yet it's
also sad and brutal. The plot of the movie might be stated as: "Homeless
Chicago-based folk singer meets weirdos and struggles to stay warm and
earn money." As a result, the film contains a great deal of awkward
humor, which definitely appeals to me. Nothing about Llewyn except for
his music is appealing—like Saving Mr. Banks, it's a movie
saddled with a central character who is almost completely unlikable—but
the constant misery the Coens put him through is something verging on
magical. (9)
PHILOMENA
(2013)—The true story of Philomena Lee, a woman whose child was
forcibly removed from her and sold off by the Catholic church. Now, some
50 years earlier, she joins forces with a journalist to track down her
son. Alternately funny, sad, ironic and shattering, Philomena is a
touching film that challenges and surprises the viewer. As Philomena,
Judi Dench is her usual magnificent self, and Steve Coogan turns in
another excellent performance, close on the heels of What Maisie Knew. (9)
THE WOLF OF WALL STREET (2013)—You
don't expect Martin Scorsese movies to be particularly funny, but
although Wolf could most accurately be described as a comedy-drama, I
laughed during this movie more than most straight-out comedies. Although
it has a length of three hours, it moves fairly briskly. It has a lot
of fun satirizing its drug-abusing, sex-addicted, corruption-obsessed
stockbrokers. Led by Leonardo DiCaprio and Jonah Hill, this cautionary
tale (inspired by the true story of Jordan Belfort wallows in their
wretched excesses, which turns out to be good news for viewers of this
movie. Featuring knockout Aussie actress Margot Robbie as Leo's love
interest…can't wait to see her on screen again. (9)
DALLAS BUYERS CLUB (2013)—Like American Hustle and The Wolf of Wall Street,
this is yet another drama based on the story of a real-life hustler who
ran afoul of the law. Matthew McConaughey (who does a cameo in Wolf)
stars here as Ron Woodroof, a Texas lowlife who's diagnosed with HIV
and who eventually starts distributing illegal medicines to other
sufferers of the virus. We see a very repellent, homophobic side of
Woodroof at first, but as time goes on, we gradually begin to see how
his plight humanizes him—most strongly epitomized by how his
relationship with a transgender character (Jared Leto) evolves. It's a
sad picture—not entirely to my taste, but it's gotten universally good
notices. (6)
THE PAST
(2013)—My main reason for wanting to see this—other than the fact that
reviews have been phenomenal—was because it stars dreamy French actress
Bérénice Bejo of 2011's The Artist. (Coincidentally, Jean Dujardin, the male star of The Artist, cropped up in The Wolf of Wall Street, which I had seen only the day before.) In The Artist, Bejo played a sweet, adorable, nurturing, goody-two-shoes sort of character; with her role in The Past, nobody is going to accuse her of being typecast. Indeed, I am not sure I would have even recognized her in The Past,
in which she plays a troubled, spiteful, chain-smoking, double
divorcee. Moreover, she is made up to look significantly less beautiful
than she appeared in The Artist. The Past (Le Passé)
tells about how Bejo and her Iranian husband (Ali Mosaffa) reunite to
finalize their divorce, while her new flame (Tahar Rahim) must deal with
his own spouse, who is in a coma following an attempted suicide. During
the course of the film, numerous family secrets are unearthed and hurt
feelings come to the surface, so there's no end of drama as these three
characters intervene (along with children from various marriages). It's a
searing and emotional drama populated by characters we care about and
want to see healed. I already want to see it again. It's something just
short of a masterpiece. (9)
YOU'RE NEXT
(2013)—A large family gets together when some killers wearing animal
masks start to pick them off, one by one. This is a standard slasher
movie with one genuinely surprising twist in the middle, but not much
else. I feel like I've seen this movie before. It has a few good
moments, but I'm stunned that it has a 75% (!) positive rating on the
Tomatometer. (7)
Wednesday, January 01, 2014
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