Showing posts with label Kyle Chandler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kyle Chandler. Show all posts

Saturday, August 31, 2013

The Spectacular Now - Review

The Spectacular NOW
(2013 - August 2) [Limited]
Comedy | Drama | Romance
1 hr 35 min

Rated: R Strong language throughout including frequent use of F*** and its variations, drinking alcohol by adults and teens, drinking at high school and at school events, driving while drunk and teens engaging in sex.  Common Sense Media says OK for kids 16+. More on child suitability
Grade: C-

Director: James Ponsoldt

Writers: Scott Neustadter (screenplay), Michael H. Weber (screenplay), Tim Tharp (novel)

Stars: Miles Teller, Shailene Woodley, Kyle Chandler | See full cast and crew

With sly humor and an intensity of feeling, THE SPECTACULAR NOW (directed by James Ponsoldt) creates a vivid, three-dimensional portrait of youth confronting the funny, thrilling and perilous business of modern love and adulthood. This is the tale of Sutter Keely (Miles Teller), a high school senior and effortless charmer, and of how he unexpectedly falls in love with "the good girl" Aimee Finecky (Shailene Woodley). What starts as an unlikely romance becomes a sharp-eyed, straight-up snapshot of the heady confusion and haunting passion of youth - one that doesn't look for tidy truths. The film was written by Scott Neustadter and Michael Weber (500) DAYS OF SUMMER and also features wonderful supporting turns from Brie Larson, Kyle Chandler, Jennifer Jason Leigh, and Mary Elizabeth Winstead.

The critics like this one so you know what that means...I nearly walked out on this one.
The promos say he falls in love with 'the good girl'. Not in my book. On the first date he has her drinking whiskey from a flask and he teaches her to stand up to her mother by using profanity i.e., 'Get off my M-----F---in' back, mom!', and by the third date they are having sex with condoms she supplies. Not quite what I would describe as a 'good girl'.
Everyone is supposedly 18 and in high school but as usual they have cast actors in their 20s and 30s. They all drink openly at school, at parties, school dances, at work, at bars. Driving while drinking is more humorous than a serious problem. They are all sexually active. They all use profanity, liberally. Religion, we've evolved too much to believe in any of that. Traditional family values, backward and repressive, over rated and unobtainable anyway. These kids would be a nightmare to any reasonable parent, but then these are not reasonable parents either. There is no one in this film that is likeable. The philosophy of hedonism and moral equivalency is rampant, or in other words there is no such thing as morality.
In the end the loser alcoholic 18 year old 'hero' has seen the light and is pledging to turn his life around and you know it's never going to happen. I hate movies like this that tell teens this type of behavior is cool and the way to be popular, and that in the end just like in a 30 minuet sit-com, when it starts to crash in on top of you, all the bad behavior all the damage all the bad habits can be dropped by simply saying I'm going to change. A fairy-tale 'do over' ending. Yeah, right. I can't in good conscience recommend this film.
Cast
           Miles Teller           Shailene Woodley  
Sutter                                      Aimee
    
         Brie Larson            Kyle Chandler      Jennifer Jason Leigh
  Ex girlfriend / Cassidy          Dad / Tommy                     Mom / Sara       

Friday, January 11, 2013

Zero Dark Thirty - Review


Zero Dark Thirty
(2012 - January 11, 2013 USA)
Action | Drama | History
2 hr. 37 min.

Rated: R Language, Brutal Disturbing Images and Strong Violence Information for parents: Common Sense Media says Iffy for 16+. Read More
Grade: B+

Director: Kathryn Bigelow
Writer: Mark Boal (screenplay)
Stars: Jessica Chastain, Joel Edgerton and Chris Pratt | See full cast and crew

The Academy Award-winning duo behind The Hurt Locker (Kathryn Bigelow and Mark Boal) reteams for this drama detailing the hunt for Osama bin Laden, and starring Oscar-winner Jessica Chastain as the intelligence expert who dedicated a decade of her life to tracking down the world's most wanted terrorist. In the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, the CIA began interrogating suspected Al-Qaeda agents across the globe in a bid to locate the elusive bin Laden. Upon arriving at a CIA black site and witnessing the brutal interrogation tactics firsthand, driven CIA operative Maya (Chastain) aids her unpredictable colleague Dan (Jason Clarke) in gathering the intelligence that will help bring bin Laden to justice. Over the course of the next decade, numerous false leads and dead ends make the search seem more futile than ever. Meanwhile, numerous suicide bombings all across the Middle East and Europe hint that Al Qaeda won't go down without a fight. Then, just when it seemed as if the trail of clues had finally dried up, an old piece of evidence leads Maya to a suspect who may work directly for the man charged with planning the worst act of terrorism ever committed on American soil. Joel Edgerton, Edgar Ramirez, Mark Strong, Chris Pratt, and James Gandolfini co-star. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi





Knowing the the team behind The Hurt Locker, Kathryn Bigelow and Mark Boal, was also the creative teams behind Zero Dark Thirty, I was skeptical. I hated the former film and was not looking forward to a 2 hr. 37 min. leftist propaganda film/Obama campaign video. I was pleasantly surprised. It is a serviceable, well made film and interesting once it gets going and far less political than I had anticipated (not to say that it isn't). Aside from the earliest scenes where it threatens to become a relentless liberal harangue over interrogation methods and torture, it ends up being somewhat ambiguous.
Zero Dark Thirty, is a small step above a good made for TV movie. None of the characters are written with any depth with the exception of the 'star' Maya (Jessica Chastain) and unfortunately her performance is hollow and forced and tends to drag the entire film down. What could have been a gripping story of the hunt for Osama bin Laden becomes bogged down in an all too repetitive 'I am woman hear me roar' whine-fest. The rest of the cast is pretty much cardboard cutout window dressing for Maya's single minded dedication. This operation could never have happened without the touch of a woman who acts like a man, illustrated by her climactic vindication with CIA Director (James Gandolfini) when he asks who she is and she responds, I'm the m*****f****r who came up with this plan. Classy eh!
Maya is certainly not the only one that has a tendency to use vulgar language in this film. It could have all been done without the foul dialogue but it still isn't as pervasive as it was in ARGO. It is not full of torture scenes as some have implied, certainly nothing approaching what can be seen by anyone on Al Jazeera and that torture is real, truly authenic not Hollywood theatrics (Thank you Al Gore for selling your network and becoming a lobbyist to and for the popaganda outlet for Islamic jihadists, but I digress). All that said, the film is still worth a look but leave the kids and younger teens at home.

Cast
    Jessica Chastain            Jason Clarke   
Maya                                             Dan
Kyle Chandler            Jennifer Ehle              Reda Kateb
Joseph Bradley                          Jessica                                    Ammar        
     Joel Edgerton            Chris Pratt      
Patrick                                    Justin
Squadron Team Leader             DEVGRU