Showing posts with label Chris Pine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chris Pine. Show all posts

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Star Trek Into Darkness - Review

Star Trek
Into Darkness
(2013 - May 16)
Action | Adventure | Sci-Fi
2 hr 12 min

Rated: PG-13 Intense sequences of sci-fi action and violence. Read more
Grade: B+

Director: J.J. Abrams
Writers: Roberto Orci (written by), Alex Kurtzman (written by), Damon Lindelof,
(written by), Gene Roddenberry (television series "Star Trek")
Stars: Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto, Zoe Saldana, Benedict Cumberbatch,  

The crew of the Starship Enterprise returns home after an act of terrorism within its own organization destroys most of Starfleet and what it represents, leaving Earth in a state of crisis. With a personal score to settle, Capt. James T. Kirk (Chris Pine) leads his people (Zachary Quinto, Karl Urban, Zoë Saldana) on a mission to capture a one-man weapon of mass destruction, thereby propelling all of them into an epic game of life and death.


I reviewed the 3D version, honestly I don't feel it added all that much. There were a few good spots where its utilization was effective but otherwise many times it seemed a distraction. It is obvious that they are using this film to set up a franchise of sequels. I liked the film but I don't think it is as effective as its predecessor.

That said, I do like this franchise incarnation better than any of the others, be it TV original, The / or Patrick Stewart film series, or The Next Generation etc., etc. The majority of Trekkies will probably think J.J. Abrams has committed some degree of heresy but the Trekkies were never really the intended audience (loyal as they are their numbers are not enough to fund a blockbuster).






I like the energy that Chris Pine brings to the Capt. Kirk character, and he is a lot easier on the eyes than is either Shatner or Stewart. The entire young cast of the two latest J.J. Abrams films are great fun to watch, they have been cast so well to look like the youthful Shatner cast that they are supposed to be.
I found this film not quite as entertaining as the first one directed by Abrams, but enjoyable it is, and yes there is a cameo appearance from one of the original cast members. Should this franchise continue (and I understand Star Trek 3 is already in the works) I wonder how many more of the originals will be ready and willing to lend their faces and support.




There is one unnecessary scene with Kirk in bed with twin alien girls with tails, thankfully it isn't at all graphic but the whole aspect of his promiscuity is an unwelcome distraction. 
There is a lot of action, perhaps a bit too much, it seem that they go from one life threatening scene to another with precious little respite in between. Is anyone's life really packed that full of adventure and excitement. They are constantly on the go. 

Star Trek Into Darkness has plenty of violence, they battle Klingons, there's gunfire, fights and people being killed, falling to their deaths or being sucked into space, or shot or blown to bits, Starships shooting at each other and buildings and their inhabitants destroyed, and characters are frequently being placed in life threatening danger. 

There is also a little use of profanity but generally not any worse than what you find on TV, I applaud the writers and director's restraint. This is one you can safely take your family to see.



Behind the scenes with director J.J. Abrams.
Directing a bespectacled Chris Pine

Cast
       Chris Pine           Zachary Quinto  
  Kirk                                 Spock
  Zoe Saldana             Karl Urban              Simon Pegg 
    Uhura                             Bones                              Scotty     
    John Cho             Anton Yelchin  
   Sulu                                 Chekov 
   Peter Weller              Alice Eve     
   Marcus                                Carol 
  Pike                                Khan 

Saturday, November 24, 2012

Rise Of The Guardians - Review

Rise of the Guardians
(2012 - November 21)
Animation | Adventure | Family
97 min.

Rated: PG  Thematic elements and some mildly scary action
Grade: A-

Director: Peter Ramsey
Writers: David Lindsay-Abaire (screenplay), William Joyce (book)
Stars: Hugh Jackman, Alec Baldwin and Isla Fisher | See full cast and crew

Rise of the Guardians is an epic adventure that tells the story of a group of heroes - each with extraordinary abilities. When an evil spirit known as Pitch lays down the gauntlet to take over the world, the immortal Guardians must join forces for the first time to protect the hopes, beliefs and imagination of children all over the world. -- (C) Official Site 

After seeing the trailer for this film I was not excited about seeing it and avoided it until there wasn't anything else to see. I had read that the 3D version was worth the extra couple of dollars but I chose to see it in the regular 2D.

Will the children find Rise of the Guardians interesting? Definitely. Will parents be bored to death? I don't think so.

I was quite pleasantly surprised and I might, in fact, see it again in the 3D version. The animation in Rise of the Guardians along with Frankenweenie is probably the best of the year, perhaps the best in several years.
My main objection to this film is the banishment of any Christian relevance in the Christmas and Easter holidays in deference to the Hollywood pagan or humanist standards. This may leave you asking why does Santa have a Russian accent and why are his arms covered with tattoos and why is the Easter Bunny a six-foot tall Australian, but those are conundrums that you can discuss with your children. Those questions aside there is plenty of fantasy, adventure, tension and drama in The Guardians, and yet it still employes plenty of values, morals and life lessons in its story like loyalty, friendship, working together, discovering your purpose in life and so on, plus there is the Tinkerbell like mystery of 'Do yo believe in fairies?'. The film is based on "The Guardians of Childhood," a series of books by William Joyce.
Rise of the Guardians is a little bit like The Avengers, sort of a Hall of Fame band of children's Super-Heros. It is bursting with childhood icons like Santa Claus, the Tooth Fairy, the Easter Bunny, the Sandman, Jack Frost and the Man in the Moon. This film is action packed with some mild violence revolving around the scary 'bad guy' Pitch Black a.k.a. the Boogie Man.
Pitch takes the dreams of children, left by the Sandman, and turns them into nightmares with his cavalry of wispy, menacing stallions. I would suspect that some of these scenes will seem more intense and frightening for the little ones in the movie's 3-D version. It includes some taunting language like "coward" and "selfish" and "go suck an egg," and includes the death of some characters. Whether they personally believe in these characters or not, kids will root for the Guardians as they fight the forces of chaos and despair.

Plot
Don't want to give anything away so we'll keep it brief and generic. Jack Frost loves creating fun for children. He is especially proud of 'Snow Days' when kids get a break from school and can play in the snow and have snow ball fights (some parents may be unsettled by the direct hits to the head some of the kids take). Suddenly Jack is captured and delivered through a portal to Santa's kingdom when an evil specter called Pitch Black becomes bent upon taking over the world by inspiring fear in the hearts of kids everywhere. Jack was summoned because the Man in the Moon has told the existing Guardians that Jack Frost has been chosen to join them, they must convince him to take up the cause before Pitch can snuff out the light of hope in every child of the world, but Jack isn't sure he wants to be a Guardian. The Guardians are a band of superheroes, who possess their own special powers. They must now join in opposition of a common foe, and they need Jack. The Guardians must heed the call and combine their powers to defeat Pitch and protect the world from his campaign of fear.
Cast
Jack Frost (voiced by Chris Pine), a carefree immortal figure who creates winter fun for children who don't really believe in him. Pitch Black (Jude Law) rallies his nightmare forces to cause worldwide despair and make children stop believing in the Guardians of Childhood: Santa Claus (Alec Baldwin), the Easter Bunny (Hugh Jackman), the Tooth Fairy (Isla Fisher), and the Sandman.
   Chris Pine   Hugh Jackman   
Jack Frost     Easter Bunny
    Isla Fisher     Jude Law  
    Tooth Fairy    Pitch Black
   Alec Baldwin    Sandman
   Santa
Jamie Bennett (voice)