Wednesday, December 16, 2009

WoS Reviews: The EW3 2000 Film Festival

Wos Reviews presents: The EW3 2000 Film Festival

Here they are year by year to which I thought were the best of each year. Movies marked with an “+” are movies that are in my own personal collections. Hopefully, in January I want to have a screening of those movies for my friends to enjoy. Without further ado:

2000:

Unbreakable +

Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon +

Memento (runner up)


2001:

Spirited Away

Hannibal

Y Tu Mamá También

Ocean’s Eleven +

Ghost World


2002:

Hero +

Equilibrium+

Infernal Affairs (runner up)

Bubba Ho-Tep (runner up) +

X2


2003:

The Lord of the Rings: Return of the King +

The Station Agent

Once Upon a Time in Mexico (Runner up) +

Whale Rider (runner up- US Release)

American Splendor (runner up)


2004:

The Incredibles +

Collateral +

Ghost in the Shell 2

Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkeban +

House of Flying Daggers (runner up) +

Hotel Rwanda

The Machinist

Million Dollar Baby

Napoleon Dynamite +

Dodgeball +

Passion of the Christ (I said it.)

Spiderman 2


2005:

Batman Begins +

Wallace and Gromit: Curse of the Were-Rabbit +

March of the Penguins

Mr. & Mrs. Smith

Walk the Line

Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith +

A History of Violence

Brokeback Mountain (Yeah, I said that too.)


2006:

The Prestige +

Children of Men +

Rocky Balboa (runner up) +

Pan’s Labyrinth

Casino Royale

Lady in the Water (Yeah, that too.) +

Pirates of the Caribbean 2: Dead Man’s Chest


2007: Great Year

There Will Be Blood +

No Country for Old Men +

American Gangster

Eastern Promises


2008: Spectacular Year!

The Dark Knight +

Red Cliff +

Iron Man

Wall*E

Forgetting Sarah Marshall

Hellboy II

Appaloosa

Quantum of Solace

Rambo (Yep, that too…) +


The EW3 2000 Film Fest:

So here is what the line-up for my film fest would look like:

Unbreakable, Crouching Tiger (2000)

Spirited Away, Y Tu Mamá También (2001)

Hero, Equilibrium (2002)

Return if the King, Once Upon a Time in Mexico (2003)

The Incredibles, Collateral (House of Flying Daggers) (2004)

Batman Begins, Revenge of the Sith (2005)

The Prestige, Children of Men (Rocky Blaboa) (2006)

There Will Be Blood, No Country for Old Men (2007)

The Dark Knight, Red Cliff (2008)

So, if I find the time, means and venue I will put out the invitation. I hope you can all make it out to see movies with me. The 2009 list will be posted soon and two films will be added to the above itinerary. Until 2019!

PS: If you got a beef with my line up, post yours in the comments below! Thanks!

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

My Masterpiece

An Inglorious Mess

A review of “Inglorious Basterds” dir. Quentin Tarantino

By Ernest M. Whiteman III

Prologue:

Okay, I was wrong. About “Inglorious Basterds”, I was wrong. I admit it.







So, Tarantino did NOT ape Samuel Fueller’s better WWII movies. I was wrong about that.

Still, it was as though if he was jiggling shiny keys at our big, fat baby faces, with each key representing one of his tried and true tricks of movie making.

PART One:

When I step out from the theater, the movies that I really love and which get my highest recommendation will have me smiling and thinking about making my own movies, going over what I can do, what I want to do and how the movie I just seen influences that.

I had that feeling walking out of “The Hurt Locker” earlier this year. (Easily one of the great war movies in the last decade.) I had it walking out of “The Dark Knight” last year. Hell, I had that feeling after watching “Red Cliff” on my DVD player at home; I was so joyous and happy about that movie that I grinned the rest of the day thinking about it. I had that feeling twice over after viewing “Red Cliff 2” on my DVD player. I want to share these movies. I want to make these movies. And I still smile now like a loon thinking about them.

Unfortunately, I did not get that feeling walking out of “Inglorious Basterds”. It did not make me smile or joyous about movies. I did not go in looking for blemishes so I could dismiss the movie. I went in expecting to be surprised and enthralled of his vision. I was not. Sure, I was entertained, I even laughed at the funny stuff, but I was never enthralled. I went in with the expectation that Tarantino’s talent grew, that it went far beyond aping other movies, better movies.

I was wrong about that.

PART Two:

Aldo “The Apache” Raines is the first problem. People will gravitate to this character, laughing at his ways, his accent (Which wavers between “bored doing it” and cartoon dog throughout the movie.) and will be quoting his lines ad nausea. In the end though, Lieutenant Aldo “The (pause) Apache” Raines was a pretty shallow part. All twang and no substance. Actually, the character gives you that escape hatch that all similar goofy characters do, that you do not have to take the movie so seriously.

Another big problem is that all these characters are introduced without any real introduction, or worse, a really cool introduction and we do not stay with them for very long. I felt no empathy for any of the characters. Even for Shosana, whom we are curve-balled into thinking the whole movie was about her. I felt no empathy for her despite her shocking, if drawn-out and glaringly Leone-esque introduction.

Here is another failing of Tarantino’s talent; I should not be able to recognize whom he is aping. The reference should be there but the scene should be all Taratino. So, from there I simply knew that she would run into Colonel Landa again in some tension-filled scene later on. This hook was so obvious. The reason their scene together never worked for me is because I know, even upon second viewing that Landa NEVER laid eyes on Shosana.

Glaring in its misuse is the character Stiglitz, whom is representative of this general problem of the film. He simply should have been in it more, as he was the most interesting character I found from his awesome, titled introduction. But the only purpose for him I could tell was so that audience members could invest something in his character, because he is such a cool character, that when he is killed (so uselessly I might add), that we are tricked into thinking that we have to take this movie so seriously for doing so.

Characters appear and vanish without leaving any impression and the only ones who do are the ones doing the “Cool Things” like bashing Nazis with a bat, or killing Nazi officers for no reason, or running a “cinema” in Nazi-occupied France, or knowing about the film industry of the times. But none leave resonance. None made me care about them. Therefore the scenes in which everyone praised the tension, I found tedious and wanting to just get to the point. For a lesson in film tension, I highly recommend “The Hurt Locker” and that tension was mounted without words!

As an annoyed footnote, I felt as if Tarantino was pressing the whole African experience in America a bit much as if trying to win the African American audience back, even going as far as having Samuel L. Jackson serve as the narrator for no other purpose than to have Samuel L. Jackson serve as the narrator because we all remember Samuel L. Jackson from Pulp Fiction, Jackie Brown, and his tiny part in Kill Bill. Simply, it is cool to hear Samuel L. Jackson saying cool shit. Just another jangly key.

PART Three:

Here’s the plot-twist: I enjoyed it. I did. I laughed at the funny bits and enjoyed what action there was. In essence, Tarantino simply made a WWII Caper Film. Which is fine. I rather enjoyed his caper films. He is great at making caper films, i.e. Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction, Jackie Brown are all caper films. Plus, I did like the revisionist twist he put on WWII, such as the Basterds getting a chance to end the war early, and the death of the Nazi leadership.

And there are the small moments that I enjoyed. Such as when Danowitz wants to leave after finding Hilter’s box, but his companion doesn’t want to leave the movie. Their exchange made me chuckle.

But he stuffed this one with so many grand characterizations, not characters mind you, but archetypes, really, that having not spent any time with them I felt no suspense in any of the suspense scenes because I did not invest anything in the characters to begin with. Just jangly keys.

Yes, I knew Shosana was out for revenge.

And yes, I knew the Basterds “keel nat-zees”.

But the two plots just lie side-by-side with no integration. A better, experienced director would have found a way to intertwine them. In fact, upon watching it again, (To give it another chance) I realized that Shosana never meets the Basterds nor does she get to have her moment of revenge, actually getting killed even before her plot unfolds.

I guess Tarantino had two different WWII movies in his head that he simply could not flesh out into longer movies, so he jammed them together. His writing feels lazy in this one. He uses tricks, the jangly keys, to trick us into empathy for the characters when solid writing and characterization should do that.

The conceit of jamming Shosana and Landa in a scene together only tricks us into to make us feel something for Shosana because of her violent intro. Would it have been more tense if Landa did recognize her and asked more pointed questions while under the table Shosana was drawing a weapon, a knife perhaps, to kill the eye of her vengeance but is worried she is not fast enough to outmatch him drawing his pistol? Instead, they eat truffle and she cries.

I thought that he wrote the whole basement scene simply to lead up to that three-fingered giveaway and to give Aldo more cool lines to speak like, “…you’re fighting in a basement”. And, in the end, it all seemed that Tarantino was writing the movie for cool lines for his fans to quote, for that final line in the film in particular and simply placed a whole WWII scenario around it.

EPILOGUE:

So I was walking out of the theater after seeing this movie when I overheard, “I really didn’t like it but I’ll recommend simply because, hey, it’s Tarantino.” Herein lies my problem, with this movie. Too many people excuse it because it is simply a Tarantino movie. The excuse of “It is what it is” does not work for me. Not this time, because if he had a vast catalogue of films, it might, but after the years of hype he put into it himself. Andrew Horton, a friend of mine made the point of, if Tarantino were making a movie a year, it might be acceptable. I agree. But he is not, so it is not.

But most people do not want Tarantino to fail, because he represents their own tastes, or perceived tastes in film. A taste on the outside of the Hollywood mainstream, which is where we all want to be, as smart and as knowledgeable in movies as QT, yet, we still line up to pay money to see the Revenge of the Fallens and the New Moons and the Old Dogs and the Antichrists. Hell, we still line up to pay money to see ANY movie.

We all have our tastes in film, and taste is the enemy of art.

I know what you’re thinking. You expected one thing from my review, you either got what you expected, overly-critical cynicism that maybe was bit entertaining, maybe you chuckled but in the end was nothing new or surprising, or, maybe you got something even more disappointing than all that after all my promising that it was more than that.

Well then, you got exactly what I got from “Inglorious Basterds”

Recommended, but only if you like funny un-war movies like M*A*S*H or Kelly’s Heroes, and are satisfied without seeing the Be-All-End-All of the Tarantino Catalogue.

Highly recommended if you like something akin to a cover band aping the work of their betters while making a huge show with their own laser light flourishes.

Or bright shiny keys jangled in your big fat baby face.

PS: A Quick Review of “A Nation’s Pride”, the film-within-the-film included on the DVD: Why would hard-bitten, Texas actors, play American Army Colonels in a Nazi Propaganda Movie?



© 2010 Ernest M. Whiteman III

It Might Get Loud

It Might Get Loud

Reviewed by Ernest M. Whiteman III










I want it to be a struggle. It has to be a struggle.

Highest Recommendation

Sunday, August 16, 2009

Best Picture of 2009


The Hurt Locker

You find that as you get older that you love maybe two things.

For me, though, I guess it’s just one thing…


I have seen the Best Picture of 2009.

Highest Recommendation.


2009 Ernest M. Whiteman III


Movies with my Boo



Wisdom of the Sages

Movie Reviews

:[ Harry Potter and the Half-blood Prince: Sixth and penultimate chapter of the Harry Potter film series finds Potter battling Death Eaters and raging hormones, and- wait, wasn’t that the last film, and the film before that? Wow. I guess what makes this different for the other is the death of a character, oh, wait….

Hmm, funny, I rather enjoyed the movie. It is the darkest and filled with some of the best acting from the three leads. Emma Watson is growing into quite a good actress; her scene with Radcliffe after Hermione sees Ron and Lavender kiss is one of the best in the series. Alan Rickman’s Snape character finally gets some payoff and the journey of Dumbledore and Harry is a true adventure.

I am not ashamed to say I am a grown-up watching Harry Potter movies.

High recommendation.

:[ G.I. Joe: I dislike how they changed back stories to fit in with today’s audiences. Snake-eyes and Storm Shadow had a great back story in the comics. Watch the better version of this here. I hate how they have to make everything soap-opera-y as if that takes the place of mythology. Sure, this movie makes about as much noise as the Transformers movies, and the acting is all one note. Dennis Quaid, a fine actor, is reduced here to doing a John Wayne impersonation.

What struck me while watching it: none of the actors cast act. The producers have to churn this out quickly. Yet, the craft of acting takes time. But the producers are savvy enough to hire archetypes, meaning, they do not have to act but react to the situations. That way, they get the movie out faster than having to wait on the actor to discover a moment to portray.

But then again, it struck me while watching this, the cartoon was just as cheesy and I should really just relax.

Not Recommended, but if you can't help yourself, I understand.

:[ District 9: Charlotte had a keen interest in seeing this. Man, she astounds and amazes me with her sophisticated taste in movies. Sure, she digs the kiddie stuff like “Aliens in the Attic” and “G-Force”, (Which I have also seen, but will not review.) but she goes for the mythological stories as well. She digs the series “Heroes” because it has that, as well as both the “Twilight” and “Harry Potter” series. But for some reason she really wanted to see this.

“District 9” is probably one of the smartest, sci-fi actioners to come around in a long time. The premise is quite simple. The citizens of South Africa have been living with a stalled spacecraft and its denizens for over 10 years, so much so the South African government has had to segregate them from society. Sound like a familiar plans also associated with South Africa?

It begins with documentary coverage of the aliens and then turns into one of the best sci-fi action, buddy chase flicks ever put to film. What really amazed me beyond the story and subtext was how alive and real the aliens were portrayed. They almost seemed real and the special effects did an amazing job in integrating them into real environments. Charlotte has led me to another great film of 2009. She felt so much for the aliens, which is a testament to the craft that brought them to life.

Be a pity if this did not at least get a nomination for Best Picture.

Highest recommendation.


2009 Ernest M. Whiteman III

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Should Call It "Public Enemy"


More like: “Public Enemy”

A review of “Public Enemies”

Directed by Michael Mann

Reviewed by Ernest M. Whiteman III

The best digital video movie ever made. About on par for what Mann has done. He is one of those consistent directors that while makes a false move once in a while (Miami Heat), always redeems himself with solid work like this biographic portrait of the last years of John Dillinger’s reign.

Johnny Depp cuts a human Dillinger, while the underutilized Christian Bale once again does a solid acting turn. Who makes a star turn is Stephen Lang playing a gruff, no-nonsense FBI Agent, whom gets the final words of the film, that just break your heart. Why it is called “Public Enemies” when it is just about One Public Enemy I have no idea, I just know I’ve seen another solid work from a consistent master.

High Recommendation.

© 2009 Ernest M. Whiteman III




Another Pixar Great



UP and Away

Produced by Pixar

Reviewed by Enrest M. Whiteman III

I don’t think I need to re-iterate how good a movie this is. Another Best Animated for Pixar. My Charlotte did not want to see this again as she’d see it before. Watching it I knew why, it is too emotional, the characters are too rich. Char hates movies that make her sad. Well, she does not hate them. She simply will not see them again.

Which is a better testament to how good it is than any award. Many take the kids for the goofiness of the characters or the comedy, or to smatter their child with the artistry. But, my Char got the heart of it. “Up” is that good.

High Recommendation.

© 2009 Ernest M. Whiteman III


Big Robot-y Things Bashing


(See? Even the poster is loud.)


Big, Morphing Robots Part Two

Directed by Michael Bay

Reviewed by Ernest M. Whiteman III

If there is one crime against the Internet and YouTube, it is that they reduced the attention span of young, susceptible audiences to 10 minutes or less. Therefore most big summer movies are required to have huge, spectacle every 10 minutes or the audience will get bored with the movie. Michael Bay excels at this. So does Transformers 2: Revenge of the Fallen.

Never mind the stupidity of some of the situations, never mind the racism of the Twin Robots (Went over my 10-year-old’s head, she loved them, but I was cringing. Doesn’t mean Char is racist, just that she thinks better of people.), and forget the silly loops in plot (Why is Megatron back and suddenly an acolyte of a robot that neither the Autobots nor the Decepticons EVER stop to mention before now?), it was whiz-bang every 10 minutes, either with silly comedy, overblown melodrama, or big fucking robots bashing each other.

My 10-year-old Charlotte summed this up the best; after the movie ended and the lights came up, after laughing at the jokes and cheering the fights and covering her ears in the explosions, she turns to me and asks, summing up everything that every reviewer could ever put into words about this movie:

“Okay, now, what was all that about?”

Do not recommend.

© 2009 Ernest M. Whiteman III


Read This If You Want To Live



Read This If You Want To Live

Terminator: Salvation

Directed by McG

Reviewed by Ernest M. Whiteman III

I used to love The Terminator when I was a child. Yep, I was able to see R Rated films in my hometown. As long as you had an adult with you, you could see most anything. I always thought that is what made Riverton cool. They knew it was up to the parents to decide, not committee. They also knew a kid knows the difference between a violent sci-fi actioner and real life. I mean, how many robots from the future do you run into in real life. Me? Maybe two. So far.

I played Terminator as a boy, making up sequels with my little sister so she could play too. It was fun. But before you rag on me about dragging nostalgia into a movie review, thus rendering me a hypocrite, believe me when I tell you that I, unlike many others, know the difference between the nostalgia of watching a sci-fi actioner and real life.

You see? I have grown the fuck up. People do. People should.

Terminator Salvation is the fourth of the Terminator series, the second to go without creator James Cameron and the first to go without Arnold Schwarzenegger as the lead. Directed by McG, the story picks up in the year 2018. John Connor, the supposed savior of humanity is not yet the leader we need him to be. Which is what many had a problem with. It was a good story for the Connor character to rise through the ranks to become the man who shows humanity how to smash those metal motherfuckers to bits.

But since it didn’t have purple lasers, and shiny space tanks rolling over mountains of human skulls, JUST LIKE TERMINATOR 2 DID (!!!), than it, all together now: “raped” childhoods everywhere. For some reason, what becomes popular seems to appeal to our wanting-to-stay-young mentality. The popularity of “Twilight”, “Tweeting”, even “Transformers 2” and now “G.I. Joe”, movies based on childhood toys are making it big. Shit, there was a time when grown men, GROWN men, where chewing on pacifiers, if I remember that dreaded trend correctly.

Attaching nostalgia to something as ridiculous as a movie prevents us from living in the now. Now, some may say, an exciting popcorn flick is needed to distract us from the rigors of our current reality even for a little while. I say, fucking boo-hoo, man up and face reality like the grown ups we are. Geez.

Now, what I disliked about the movie was the weakness of the forced storyline of Marcus Wright. But the theme of a machine learning to appreciate human life is a theme that the beloved T2 espoused. Also, Kyle Reese’s machinations were a little too Rube Goldbergian for me. He must have waited months, after he and that other little kid moved around ten-ton equipment and to get them set just right, all just for a single terminator robot to come traipsing by, so they could spring their trap. Six months of staring at that street FINALLY pay off.

Overall, it was an okay movie, heck, a good movie. Still, I am so tired of the twist ending, like it was all a plot by some unforeseen adversary all along.

Recommend only if you like sci-fi action-ers.

But not if your childhood is based on faint memories that grow dimmer with each passing decade, which only convinces you, more and more, that your childhood memory was so fucking fantastic that if this one movie causes you to remember it wrong, that that childhood movie will be erased forever, from existence.


© 2009 Ernest M. Whiteman III

Saturday, May 16, 2009

Boldly Going There Again


Boldly Going There, Again
A Review of "Star Trek"
Directed by J.J. Abrams
Reviewed by Ernest M. Whiteman III

RED ALERT! RED ALERT! SPOILERS! SPOILERS!

Sci Fi Geeks have the toughest time facing reality.

They cannot accept that the world continues to move on without ever acknowledging that they are the Chosen Ones or the Pinnacle of Human Society or the Keepers of Useless Nostalgia. So, when something a silly as a movie remake or reboot of a beloved TV series or movie occurs, they freak the fuck out because if Twikkie isn’t in it or it does not have some has-been from the TV series in the movie in some sort of useless way, than the movie will have raped their childhoods. God, GROW UP!

Star Trek opens with a bang. With the USS Kelvin coming under attack from a mysterious ship that blows it out of space. Here we have James Tiberius Kirk’s birth being remolded as that of Conan the Barbarian; born on the battlefield as Kirk is literally pulled from his mother as the battle rages.

From there we have a look at a young Spock dealing with bullies as he is half human and how the ENTIRE Vulcan race sees that as a disability. Star Trek then goes on to show how people of different backgrounds come together to form the nucleus of our favorite, low-budget TV series of the 60's. It continues the canon universe while at the same time starting its own. The movie suddenly felt like Star Trek to me when they began talking of alternate time lines.

But here, Kirk and Spock must overcome their animosity towards each other to stop a Romulan called Nero from destroying the planets of the Federation. Nero comes from the future a bit beyond Jean-Luc Picard and after seeing the destruction of his home world Romulus, he holds Spock responsible, but a time rift accidently pulls them into the past and thus sets Nero on his dastardly plan of revenge altering time as he goes.

The Romulans got a lot of flak for being boring villains but Nero, as played by Eric Bana, does something NO OTHER Trek villain has done, at least in my memory; he destroys a planet! He destroys a MAJOR, STAR TREK Universe planet! Give the guy his props, the dude destroyed Vulcan! No other villain has ever done that in Star Trek lore.

Aside Alert: Cuba and I were talking about this. Even the Beloved Borg, never destroyed a planet. In fact, they assimilated whole races. They practically gave you shelter, sustenance, and a purpose. Shit, I know tons of guys that would only benefit from Borg assimilation. It’s rather cushy beyond the whole losing control of self and of personality. But really, who needs those? It's only ego and pride to see these things as worth saving, right? Hell, even our beloved Death Star only destroyed one planet! Nero is tied with the Death Star, so cut him some slack. Just because he did not wear a wig and chest pad and quoted Melville.

When Kirk is marooned for mutiny on an ice planet he conveniently happens upon the time displace Spock of the future (Nimoy), who steers him to one Montgomery Scott, future chief engineer of the Enterprise and they puzzle out how to get back aboard the ship. From there they race to prevent Nero from destroying Earth.

I was one of the doubters of Chris Pine as Kirk. But a tiny single moment in one of the international trailers changed my mind. When Uhura tells him "I hope you know what you’re doing." and Kirk replied, "Yeah, me too." To me, for the first time since I heard of this movie, he sounded like Kirk, from the movies and series. No, he did not sound like Shatner. But Kirk. (Check the line here at the 1:27 mark.) That one line changed my view of the movie and made me see the choices that Pine made for the role. (See? Nostalgia can play a part.) It was smart for Pine NOT to ape Shatner. It imbued Kirk with a sense of swagger and a sense of needing Starfleet.

Zachary Quinto was good as the young Spack. But what bugs me was not his channeling Nimoy, which I did not mind, he made Spock his own. I loved that everyone BUT Spock saw his mother’s lineage as a disability. His rejecting the Vulcan Science Council is one of the best scenes in the movie, possibly in all Trek movies. It has heart and soul, something unexpected coming from a Vulcan. I loved his relationship with Uhura. Now what bugged me was the fake bowl cut. Should have left him with his natural hair. If anyone seen The Cage, the first pilot for the old seires, realize that Quinto is playing this Spock. But sans the famous bowl cut. Yeah, I’m getting geeky and nit-picky, like I just denounced.

Because, what interested me most is how many "die-hard" fans disliked this reboot crying around about how it erases all those year of Star Trek. Geez, get over it folks. Here yet another case of way too many people attaching nostalgia to a brand new movie. Why can’t people just let it go. Enjoy the movie or not. Don’t make it a matter of memory. Nothing will ever live up to how you will remember a thing. I liked it very much. I enjoyed the action, the effects, the acting. I am very familiar with the mythology of Star Trek, I love, love LOVE they added Captain Christopher Pike. And that he lives!

I really loved how it rewrote the rules of Trek while at the same time paying homage to Star Trek history and safekeeping the original series. Karl Urban, of Lord of the Rings fame, is the highlight of the film, actually pulling a performance of Doctor "Bones" McCoy and, for me, he showed the younger actors a thing or two about channeling the character while still making it his own.

Still, as good as this movie is and perceived, it still does not explain how Kirk and McCoy exchanged eye color! (For the die-hard Trekkies!)

High recommendation.


WOS Reviews © 2009 Ernest M. Whiteman III

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

We Will Fight the Good Fight


"We will fight the good fight"
Red Cliff II – directed by John Woo
Reviewed by Ernest M. Whiteman III
WARNING: SPOILERS!

Everyone reading this right now knows my love for the historical romance called "Three Kingdoms" by Luo Guanzhong. But it had been my interest piqued by John Woo’s making a film based on the decisive battle of the book that got me to read the book, or books, to begin with.

Opening with a judicious and quick summary of part one the movie quickly jumps into the action with a game of Cuju (kickball or soccer) and we find that Sun Quan's sister Sun Shang Xiang (The adorable Wei Zhao) has been in Cao’s camp spying for the undermanned Han-Wu Alliance. She gets a great storyline when she befriends a northern Wei soldier. Meanwhile, disease and sickness has taken a toll on the Northern Wei and Cao Cao comes across a nefarious tactic that leads to the breaking of the Alliance.

While Liu Bei and his compatriots leave, Kongming stays behind to assist Zhou Yu in coming up with a strategy to oppose the vastly larger Wei fleet amassed at Red Cliff. But it is the bond of friendship and brotherhood in war, a common Woo theme that helps the smaller army overcome. People who know Chinese history already know the outcome of this pivotal battle. Filled with a spectacular final battle that occupies nearly the last hour of the film, great characterizations of the famous historical figures, and a surprising touch with the role of the women in the film.

Woo had come under fire for the characterizations of women in his prior films, but here, the two main women, though opposites in demeanor, one being elegant and soft, while the other hardy and tomboyish, both show surprising strength, integrity, and heroism that fits with their characters and makes it a pleasure to watch their story arcs unfold.

What I liked most about it is that a lot of the little details of Part One that seemed extraneous and out of place actually have a pay off in Part Two: Zhou Yu’s forgery skills, Kongmong’s farming knowledge, Sun Shang Xiang’s need to do something for her kingdom, her brave nature, and her need to be acknowledged by her brother Sun Quan. (even her knowledge of acupressure comes in handy), Zhou Yu’s wife, Xiao Qiao’s tea making skill, her beauty, her own determination.

Even the colt born in Part I, comes to symbolize first, the Shu/Wu alliance, a difficult birthing, and pays off by symbolizing a unified country at film’s end. How could Kongming not be talking about China in those last lines? And those doves, those infernal doves have come to use. Here is where Woo shows his grasp of film making as I do not know of any other director, no matter how well a writer-director they are promoted to be, can have the little details pay off in the latter half of their movies. Woo is back in the zone with this one.

Still, the only characters I wish had an emotional pay off were Liu Bei and his Other Brothers, Guan Yu and Zhang Fei. While their prowess in battle is shown, it is never in doubt. In fact, I wish Liu Bei had a scene where he admonishes his brothers for doubting him. But, all in all, I love their characterizations in the films. These three men are the primary focus of the Three Kingdoms novel and I am pleased at seeing them come to life on screen, because this movie is not based of the Three Kingdoms novel, and I can accept that.

Woo made it about the brotherhood borne of war and the need for unity among a disparate people, of the Davids overcoming the Goliaths. Woo took the history and the book and in essence, made a John Woo film. Only John Woo could have gotten away with it.

My favorite shot of the movie comes at the end, when Kongming appears wearing his now-famous garments of Prime Minister that everyone in China and fans of the book and images of Kongming are so familiar with. (see below) The battle of Red Cliff has set Zhuge Liang on his path to becoming Military Leader and Prime Minister for Liu Bei’s Han-Shu Kingdom. Sweet. This story is far from over. But the movie Red Cliff is.

All in all, though, it is an exceptional movie that I continue to play, over and over on my DVD player. John Woo has returned to his roots in a big way here and we are the beneficiaries of a master returned to form.

Highest recommendation

© 2009 Ernest M. Whiteman III



Monsters vs. Aliems 3D



view pic with 3D glasses! Courtesy EW.com


Wisdom of the Sages Reviews
Monsters Vs. Alie-ums 3D
A review by Ernest M. Whiteman III

I hope that with animated features, at least, that 3D does not get the bums rush as it did in the 50’s. "Serious" Film people like calling it a gimmick and that studios should focus on better and more original scripts and plots. While I agree with that, I do not think we should entirely dismiss the technology when it comes to some animated or other features, like concert films.

3D worked great with the concert film U23D. Here, with Dreamwork’s latest, Monsters vs. Aliens, it is an asset when the visuals are imaginative and helps sells the size and scope of the environments. It also helps that the story is funny and exciting. No, it is not the next big philosophical ideology or great American Movie, but animation was never supposed to be that. Animation is supposed to be this fun.

The story is about Susan, who is contaminated by a fallen meteorite on her wedding day, which causes her to grow. She is then recruited into a secret government program that simply houses monsters from years past. When aliens invade the Earth, the monsters are called on to fight them; hilarity ensues.

What I liked best about the story is that Susan comes to like being different and helping people and does not want to be rid of her affliction "to be accepted" as so many of these same characters do in these movie situations. She comes to like and appreciate the other monsters, even coming to a life’s realization after her first mission against the aliens.

The flick is filled with great and funny characters and a story that is a loving nod to the genre of 50’s Sci Fi. Plus, it has a great voice cast which helps. This was such a fun movie that Char and I talked about it the whole way home. And that is a great measure in its favor. It pleased my Boo.

High recommendation

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Let Me in the Sound



Let Me in the Sound
A review of U2 No Line on the Horizon
By Ernest M. Whiteman III


There seems to be this belief that U2 is somehow irrelevant because they have been around so long. Since the band has gotten so big since their humble Irish beginnings, many people feel that they have lost touch with their "punk" beginnings and are irrelevant. For me, U2 has continued to work hard in putting out quality albums.

The fact that they remain a top act for 28 years is testament to their longevity and strengths. They have outlasted many lesser acts and still do their best to put out the best music they can. Too many want the shiny and new rather than the tried and true. It breaks my heart that there is no new material coming from older acts, that wouldn’t come off as a gimmick or nostalgia tour deal. (Other than AC/DC, another band still putting out new material and rocking.) I am glad Led Zeppelin has not reunited. I mean, their fans would rather they plated all the old tunes in an effort to relive past glories rather than get a new album of material from them. Pity really.

This new album sounds a bit different than what general fans are used too. But so did "Achtung Baby". I remember hearing "The Fly" after years of "The Joshua Tree" and "Rattle and Hum". It was jarring and unlike the band I had come to love. But I stuck with them and was rewarded with songs like "One", "Mysterious Ways", "Zoo Station", and my favorite off that album, "So Cruel".

Since then, I have taken their subsequent albums in with more than the impression made on the initial hearing. Again, rewarded with such songs as "The First Time", "Lemon", "Gone", "Staring at the Sun", "Do You Feel Loved", "Walk On", "Kite", "Sometimes You Can’t Make It On Your Own", "Original of the Species" and all their b-sides and extra songs.

"No Line on the Horizon" has made the same impression. My favorite song is "White as Snow" which has a Sergio Leone vide with its opening guitar riff and horn section. The title track, "Magnificent", "Breathe", "Unknown Caller", and "Moment of Surrender" have made my list of favorite U2 songs. I cannot wait to hear them live. They seemed to have constructed song around Bono’s aging voice. But the passion is still there. It works.

Honestly, I care little if you like U2 or not. It does not bother me that people dislike U2 because of their contrary nature of being a champion of causes as well as rich rock stars. That they find it hypocritical that while Bono makes a ton of cash off his music he tries to help the poor in other countries. We are all contradictions. I live with that daily. U2 still makes really good music, which is more than most acts coming out these days do. They are still trying to be relevant while others fade out as soon as the sales fall. They are still trying, and that is what makes a band like U2 stick around for a long time.

No Line on the Horizon; I have not stopped listening to it. Highly recommended.

I Watches The Watchmen - A Review





I Watches the Watchmen
A Movie Review by Ernest M. Whiteman III

You will love it or not.

That seems to be the general reaction to the latest Zach Snyder film. Once again, he does not make an Alan Moore or Dave Gibbon movie, much like "300", he simply made another Zach Snyder movie. Now, there is absolutely nothing wrong with that. That is pretty much what I was expecting. How did I feel about the actual movie? Meh.

I liked the movie and I will have you know I did not really love the graphic novel either but I did like it. That will be the general excuse when it comes to liking or not liking this. Honestly, there is so much baggage with this particular graphic novel that many audiences will be divided about it. Not everyone will be completely satisfied with the movie.

Let’s see; you loved the comic and you love what Snyder did with it or you can live with the movie. You loved the comic and hated the movie and it’s differences. Me? Meh. I liked a lot of it but it did not grab me as Iron Man, X2 or the Dark Knight did.

THE GOOD:
I liked the visuals of the Watchmen but I would hardly call it visionary. Mainly because I knew they were realized in the comic book series. At times I got bored with how long he held a shot as if we would instantly recognize the framing from the comic. He did that terribly on "300", again, as if we were to break out our graphic novels and follow along.

While I liked the Nite Owl II character, he felt to be a Batman rip-off, which indeed he is meant to be in the comic, but more so in the movie because of his armored costume and pointed bat-like ears. I remember when the Trio and I saw the trailer for it in the theater, afterwards, Samantha, the oldest, remarked "They’re making too much like Dark Knight", a remark that never left my mind.

Still, I found Rorschach the most watchable character, mainly because he is given the most to do. He is the most interesting psyche to watch. Hell, I was the one to start the applause in the theater I was in when Rorschach finished his prison cafeteria rant. I am glad Jackie Earl Healey was chosen to play him. It was a good role and he fit the part, same with the actor that played Nite Owl. But, it was a little one note and tiresome, with his raspy voice and insouciance. I just hope he can build an acting career after this instead of tumbling into genre work like "A Nightmare on Elm Street".

Wow, honestly, could those be the only two things I enjoyed?

THE BAD:
I can live with the changed ending but it felt cheapened Zeidt’s goal in the manner he did accomplish it. While the condensations of the background stories worked, it all felt there were fewer nuances than the comic. He sold Zeidt short I felt. He should have gone into his background as a superhero, as an entrepreneur. Which brings me to another thing left out, the history of costumed heroes. You never get a sense of what the older heroes accomplished. You get a music video opening credits that summarizes this. It left the rest of it feeling shallow. Even punching up the blatancy of a lesbian character that was only hinted in the comic. Women kissing, this can only be for the FANBOYS!

Still, I can live with all that was left out and typically; no one will ever be satisfied with it, that is something I must re-iterate. It comes back to that "whether you liked or not liked the graphic novel" argument again. But not going into Zeidt's reasons made his motives less clear and shallow.

Honestly, cut it out with the slow motion and holding the shots too long. It’s boring. And there is another problem I had. The consequences and aftermath of the cataclysm did not seem a neat fit for me. Not like the comic, yeah, I said that. It just wasn't my cup of tea. The biggest sign that it did not have the impact it was supposed to was the fact that I am in no big hurry to see it again. It was not a homerun for me. I know for some they will say it was and I missed the point but it felt like it was trying to hard to please a certain audience and that audience either loved or hated it in context of how much they loved the comic.

It felt it was playing too much to the comic reader audience while never giving them exactly what they wanted. To me, framing Dr. Manhattan seemed a little too "Dark Knight"-esque for me. You either die a hero or live long enough to see yourself become the villain, right Dr. Manhattan? That’s the burden you bear, right?

THIS REVIEW’S PLOT TWIST:
A lot of people will go in wanting to love the movie and either be disappointed or justified. Justified because of their ideology about comic book heroes and geeky way of life or of their own intellect in having read the dense graphic novel and "got it". Others will go in wanting to hate it and they will either come out converted, or justified in their idea that Alan Moore’s brilliant comic book is un-filmable.

If you are thinking that I am covering all my bases with that particular critique trying to blunt any argument while at the same time not giving you anything sustentative in regards to how I felt about the movie Watchmen, well then, you got exactly what I got out of the Watchmen Movie.

I either loved it or not.

Recommend?

Here an image from my forthcoming trailer for "Watchgirls".



Charlotte's Happy Fry.