Showing posts with label James Franco. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James Franco. Show all posts

Friday, May 24, 2013

The Iceman - Review


The Iceman
(2013 - May 3 - Limited Release)
Crime | Drama | Thriller
1 hr. 45 min.

Rated: R strong violence, pervasive language and some sexual content  Read more
Grade: B-

Director: Ariel Vromen
Writers: Morgan Land (screenplay), Ariel Vromen (screenplay), Anthony Bruno (book "The Iceman: The True Story of a Cold-Blooded Killer"), Jim Thebaut (documentary "The Iceman Tapes: Conversations with a Killer")
Stars: Michael Shannon, Winona Ryder, Chris Evans | See full cast and crew

Inspired by actual events, The Iceman follows notorious contract killer Richard Kuklinski (Academy Award (R) nominee Michael Shannon) from his early days in the mob until his arrest for the murder of more than 100 men. Appearing to be living the American dream as a devoted husband and father; in reality Kuklinski was a ruthless killer-for-hire. When finally arrested in 1986, neither his wife nor daughters have any clue about his real profession.(c) Millennium 



The Iceman is a drama thriller film based on the life of notorious Mafia hitman Richard Kuklinski. It was released in 2012 at the Venice Film Festival. The Iceman premiered at the 2012 Toronto International Film Festival. It also screened at the Telluride Film Festival in 2012. The Iceman had a limited release in cinemas in the United States on May 3, 2013 expanding onto more screens May 17th.
The Iceman is a dark film, certainly not everyone's cup-of-tea. The direction and script, I think, could have been better, it needed to tell us more, delve a little deeper into what was going on in Richard Kuklinski's mind, help us fathom how someone can so compartmentalize his life, it's a question that just hangs out there waiting to be answered but never is.








The Iceman has the makings of a bloody good crime flick with some mobster drama tossed in for added depth.
The strength of The Iceman rests in the hands of Oscar-nominee Michael Shannon who takes the lead as the eponymous Iceman who, by some accounts, is believed to have killed more than 250 people between 1954 and 1985. This film has a host of other talented actors in the supporting cast which includes Winona Ryder, Chris Evans, James Franco, Stephen Dorff, David Schwimmer, and Ray Liotta

Winona Ryder is, well, pretty much what you expect, Winona Ryder, but the cast's most surprising performance comes from Chris Evans, Captain American himself, who is barely recognizable as The Iceman's mentor and accomplice. We usually see Evans as the clean cut good guy, he is so NOT that guy here, it's quite intriguing to see him expanding his repertoire as he treads some new water.


James Franco (127 Hours, Oz The Great and Powerful) does justice to his limited screen time. Stephen Dorff (electronic cigarette hawker, Shadow Boxer) is adept at playing an amoral sleazebag. David Schwimmer (Friends) is another surprise in the same vein as Chris Evans, but not nearly as captivating. Ray Liotta in a mob drama is always a sure bet.



I am always intrigued when something appears on screen that has a link to myself or someone or something close to me. Aside from the fact that I have driven all over the state of New Jersey did I find something in The Iceman? Why yes, I did.

Just a little tidbit of trivia: In the film Mr. Kuklinski's first daughter is born in a hospital in Elmer, NJ. Elmer just happens to be a small southern New Jersey town that was named after a distant ancestor of mine. Judge L.Q.C. Elmer, or Lucius Quintius Cincinnatus Elmer, some name eh? He muxt have been named after someone right? Right. Lucius Quintius Cincinnatus (519 BC – 430 BC?) was a Roman Statesman and military leader (As seen below).
Well, once again I digress, so enough of the trivia and on to my final comment on The Iceman. Unfortunately this film employes the full lexicon of crass, lewd, rude and profane language. It is, however, surprisingly less pervasive, gratuitous and offensive than many other recent films (i.e. Savages, End of Watch, The Master, This is 40, Pain and Gain, or Ted or Magic Mike,  just to name a few).

Barbara Kuklinski: Life married to the Iceman killer was no Hollywood movie

Barbara and Richard Kuklinski as teenagers. Photo: Courtesy of Barabara Kuklinski/ Mainstream Publishing

Richard Kuklinski killed hundreds in his job as a Mafia hit man - a job he managed to keep secret from his wife and children. As Winona Ryder plays her in a film based on the 'Iceman' case, his widow Barbara tells her true story to Adam Higginbotham.
When they finally came for him, in their unmarked cars and their helicopters, with their machine guns at the ready, Barbara Kuklinski still had no idea how her husband might have broken the law.
It was a cold morning in the week before Christmas, 1986, and the couple had just pulled out of the driveway of their split-level home on Sunset Street, a quiet road of comfortable middle-class houses in Dumont, New Jersey, where they lived together with their three children. Barbara, a tall, delicate-looking Italian-American, and Richard, 51 – a colossal slab of a man with a fondness for a Meerschaum pipe – had been married 26 years, and were well-regarded by their neighbours. They were on their way to breakfast at the Seville in nearby Westwood, where they ate together most mornings. But when Richard saw the column of black vehicles bearing down on them, he turned sharply into the curb; armed men swarmed around the car; one leapt on the bonnet; another tore open the driver’s door and held a cocked automatic at Richard’s head: “Don’t f------ move,” he said.
Barbara was pulled out and thrown to the ground by policemen, a foot planted in the middle of her back. Hands cuffed behind her, she was bundled into a car for the journey to the Bergen County Jail in Hackensack. There, as state troopers fought to subdue her enraged husband – according to Barbara, despite being shackled hand and foot, he shrugged and tossed three of them down the stairs – she struggled to grasp what was happening.
Finally, detective Pat Kane came to her and said simply, “He’s a murderer.” Abruptly, all the odd things she had noticed about Richard over the years, the incidents she had been too terrified to tell anyone about, tumbled into alignment. “And all of a sudden it was like, ‘I knew that,’” she says now. “I knew he was a murderer.”
Throughout their marriage, Richard Kuklinski had used the façade of the suburban family man – an usher at Mass every Sunday, barbecues by the pool in the summer, annual trips to Disneyworld – to conceal a litany of killing. There were murders committed in anger, others just for fun and still more for profit. For 20 years, he had made his living as one of the most proficient and prolific contract killers in the history of organised crime, a professional hitman whose claims of freezing his victims’ bodies to outfox forensic experts led the media to nickname him the Ice Man. -- By , New York
The Stars at various red carpet events.
Cast
Michael Shannon        Chris Evans     
Richard Kuklinski             Mr. Freezy        
   Stephen Dorff          Winona Ryder    
  Joey Kuklinski              Deborah Pellicotti
                                             Kuklinski 
   David Schwimmer      James Franco      
   Josh Rosenthal               Marty Freeman  
        Robert Davi               Ray Liotta        
 Leonard Marks                     Roy Demeo    

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Oz The Great and Powerful - Review

Oz The Great and Powerful
(2013 - March 8)
Adventure | Family | Fantasy
2 hrs. 10 min.

Rated: PG-13
Grade: B+

Director:
Writers: (screenplay), (screenplay), L. Frank Baum (novel "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz")

Disney's fantastical adventure "Oz The Great and Powerful," directed by Sam Raimi, imagines the origins of L. Frank Baum's beloved wizard character. When Oscar Diggs (James Franco), a small-time circus magician with dubious ethics, is hurled away from dusty Kansas to the vibrant Land of Oz, he thinks he's hit the jackpot-fame and fortune are his for the taking-that is until he meets three witches, Theodora (Mila Kunis), Evanora (Rachel Weisz) and Glinda (Michelle Williams), who are not convinced he is the great wizard everyone's been expecting. Reluctantly drawn into the epic problems facing the Land of Oz and its inhabitants, Oscar must find out who is good and who is evil before it is too late. Putting his magical arts to use through illusion, ingenuity-and even a bit of wizardry-Oscar transforms himself not only into the great wizard but into a better man as well. When small-time magician Oscar Diggs (James Franco) pulls one flimflam too many, he finds himself hurled into the fantastical Land of Oz where he must somehow transform himself into the great wizard-and just maybe into a better man as well. -- (C) Walt Disney












If you read my review of Jack The Giant Slayer you may recall that I said when I first saw the previews, I thought this film looks like it could be a great family film, a classic, and I was eager to see it but feared it was going to be a disappointment. My impression about Jack The Giant Slayer was right and I had the same impression about Oz the Great and Powerful, after seeing its trailers. I'm sorry to report that I was right about this film as well.



Oz the Great and Powerful falls short of the 1939 original in warmth, innocence, charm and most certainly in songs, however, it is most certainly a serviceable family film but when stacked up against a cinematic masterpiece  like The Wizard of Oz serviceable simply isn't good enough. Taking on the monumental task of producing a prequel to and icon, one of the most beloved films of all time is indeed a very tall order. Oz the Great and Powerful seemed, for me, to take a long time to get going, but then in retrospect, so did The Wizard of Oz, so I guess that's not a fatal flaw.
I saw the 3D version and it was OK but director Sam Raimi, who directed not only the original Spiderman Trilogy but also the Evil Dead series, uses the 3D like he is still directing a horror film, with scare tactics like spears rain down into the audience.

And then there is one of my pet peeves, stupidity and continuity errors. While the tornado is whisking Oscar 'Oz' Diggs away from Kansas to the land of Oz, his hot air balloon basket is riddled with splintered 2 x 4s (a scary 3D effect where Oscar barely escapes being skewered, more horror movie 3D effects) but in the next scene the projectiles are all gone and there is no sign of the holes in the wicker basket...AARG! Although the subsequent scene of weightless is really quite effective. At any rate, I doubt that you will miss much if you choose to see the 2D version and you'll get to go home with a couple more bucks in your pocket.

Visually, I thought the Dr. Suess type Curly Q mountains and the innumerable waterfalls and natural arches of this latest incarnation of the land of Oz were just a bit too ludicrous and distracted from the mood. In fact, pretty much most of the CGI of Oz looked like just that...CGI, it is very reminiscent of the old painted backdrops from the sound stage era of the Hollywood studios that produced the original The Wizard of Oz.
I also had a bit of a problem with some of the performances. James Franco's (Oz) toothy grins worked very well for the 1905 carnival huckster buy got old very quickly once he arrived in Oz. It takes the entire film before you start to care anything about him. Mila Kunis (Theodora) seemed out of her element and plastic. Her eventual transition into her green makeup was awful, she looked silly rather than frightening. When you are portraying the younger version of Margaret Hamilton, an iconic character that everyone recognizes, the epitome of the scary witch, why change what isn't broken.
Same problem with Michelle Williams (Glinda), she had none of the charm, warmth or class or Billie Burke nor did she have Glinda the Good Witch's signature curly blonde hair, aside from the fact that her acting rang hollow and flat. At least Rachel Weisz (Evenora) is a clean slate so they could pretty much do whatever they wanted with her character.

Since there is no Lion, Scarecrow or Tin Man in this story the Wizard needs some companions to help him on his journey to destroy the wicked witch and fulfill the prophecy...enter Zach Braff (Finley) and Joey King (China Girl).
By way of puppetry and CGI images they are two of the better performances. Several of the small supporting roles were every bit as strong as the starring roles.

Up to this point I have been quite critical of the film but all of that said, it is a good film, a good family film and and entertaining film. It just doesn't measure up to the classic film it is supposed to be introducing. It is much better than the very forgettable Return to Oz (also from Disney) staring Fairuza Balk and Nicol Williamson
Oz the Great and Powerful does get kudos for being profanity and sex free. In my opinion it is a bit too cerebral and perhaps a tiny bit too scary for the really small children.
If the Judy Garland classic had never been made you would most likely expect that this film would become a classic, but it will more likely become a soon forgotten footnote to the original.




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Cast
Oscar Diggs / Oz
Michelle Williams            Mila Kunis              Rachel Weisz  
Annie / Glinda                        Theodora                              Evanora      
Zach Braff                 Joey King 
        Frank / Finley                 Girl in Wheelchair /  
                                                  China Girl