Showing posts with label Nikolaj Coster-Waldau. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nikolaj Coster-Waldau. Show all posts

Monday, April 22, 2013

Oblivion - Review

Oblivion
(2013 - April 19)
Action | Adventure | Mystery
2 hr. 6 min.

Rated: PG-13 Sci-fi action violence, brief strong language, and some sensuality/nudity Read more
Grade: A-

Director: Joseph Kosinski
Writers: Joseph Kosinski (screenplay), Karl Gajdusek (screenplay), Michael Arndt (screenplay), Joseph Kosinski (comic book), Arvid Nelson (comic book)
Stars: Tom Cruise, Morgan Freeman, Olga Kurylenko | See full cast and crew

Jack Harper is one of the last few drone repairmen stationed on Earth. Part of a massive operation to extract vital resources after decades of war with a terrifying threat known as the Scavs, Jack's mission is nearly complete. Living in and patrolling the skies from thousands of feet above, his existence is brought crashing down when he rescues a stranger from a downed spacecraft. Her arrival triggers a chain of events that forces him to question everything he knows and puts the fate of humanity in his hands. -- Universal Pictures 

Production Budget: $120 million
Domestic Total: $38,152,000 (Estimate as of Apr. 21, 0213)
Worldwide: $150,152,000

I had said earlier that when I saw the trailers for Jack the Giant Slayer and Oz, The Great and Powerful that they looked good and would appear to be potentially really good films, but that both would probably be disapointments...and I was right. I thought the same thing about Oblivion...and I was wrong. This one actually was better than I expected. That being said, I went into it with low expectaions and ended up pleasantly surprised.
I saw the regular version but I am tempted to go back and see it again in IMAX. One of the greatest strengths of Oblivion is it's eye candy. It benefits greatly from its strong production values, visually it is very striking, very impressive. It could be said that it is thinly scripted but I enjoyed the story, In contrast to last years highly anticipated but very disappointing Prometheus, where even when you did get all the pieces of the story it still didn't make much sense, Oblivion's story does. The other great strength of Oblivion (something else that Prometheus didn't have) is an excellent performance from Tom Cruise. It is definitely his show and he is most certainly up to the task. This is the type of role that he shines in.
Olga Kurylenko, Andrea Riseborough, Danish actor Nikolaj Coster-Waldau (Game of Thrones, Mama (2013), Kingdom of Heaven) and Morgan Freeman co-star.





In the year 2077, Earth has been decimated by an intergalactic battle against an alien race known as the Scavs. The majority of mankind's survivors have migrated to a massive tetrahedral space station called the Tet and have established a colony on the moon Titan. Jack Harper (Tom Cruise) is Technician #49, a security repairmen, he and and his team partner, Victoria (Andrea Riseborough), are "a very effective team" and have developed an intimate relationship.  Jack and Victoria underwent a "security wipe" five years prior, which erased their memories and prevents them from giving up information under interrogation, they live together on an outpost high in the sky where they maintain contact with civilization via a video link with their commander at Mission Control on the Tet, Sally(Melissa Leo).
Jack's primary job is the maintenance and support of 'drones', autonomous airborne machines that patrol the landscape to hunt the remaining alien resistance and protect numerous huge resource extraction machines.


Their job is simple -- stand guard over the ruins of a once-great empire by patrolling the skies, and ensuring the drones continue to function. However, Jack suffers from recurring dreams and flashbacks of being with an unknown woman on the 86th-floor observation deck of the Empire State Building prior to the invasion, but that was 60 years ago and Jack appears to be a man in his late 40s. Jack also maintains a secluded wooded area featuring a lake and a small cabin, something Victoria knows nothing about, which he has stocked with relics of human civilization salvaged during the course of his duties, things like records, books, and other souvenirs.

Jack and Victoria have two weeks left before his mission ends and they rejoin their fellow survivors on Titan. Toward the end of a patrol Jack sees a spaceship crashing to the surface, brought down by a Scav homing beacon mounted on the top of the Empire State Building. The ship, the Odyssey, is carrying a number of sleeping pods containing human beings in hibernation. 

Jack is able ot rescues  only one, a woman, Julia (Olga Kurylenko), from the wreckage a drone that arrives and destroys the other survivors. He immediately recognizes Julia as the woman in his flashbacks.


The woman's arrival triggers a chain of events that culminates in Jack's nearly single-handed battle to save mankind...With mission control watching his every move from high up above the clouds, Jack embarks on a spectacular adventure that will not only challenge everything he's been taught about mankind's most defining battle, but will perhaps alter the course of human history.




On the set behind the scenes.


 Cast
   Tom Cruise          Andrea Riseborough      Olga Kurylenko
Jack Harper                       Victoria                               Julia       
  Morgan Freeman    Nikolaj Coster-Waldau       Melissa Leo      
Beech                                     Sykes                                  Sally  

Friday, January 18, 2013

Mama - Review

MAMA
(2013 - January 18)
Horror
1 hr. 40 min.

Rated: PG-13 Violence and terror, some disturbing images and thematic elements Read more
Grade: B

Director: Andrés Muschietti
Writers: Neil Cross, Andrés Muschietti and Barbara Muschietti
Stars: Jessica Chastain, Nikolaj Coster-Waldau and Megan Charpentier | See full cast and crew

On the day that their parents die, sisters Lilly and Victoria vanish in the woods, prompting a frantic search by their Uncle Lucas (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) and his girlfriend, Annabel (Jessica Chastain). Five years later, miraculously, the girls are found alive in a decaying cabin, and Lucas and Annabel welcome them into their home. But as Annabel tries to reintroduce the children to a normal life, she finds that someone -- or something -- still wants to tuck them in at night.

Right away knowing that Guillermo del Toro (executive producer) is involved with this film tells you that Mama is not going to be your typical slimy monster or 'dead teenager' horror film...and that's a good thing.

Mama is an unsettling story that presents both the good and bad in parents and parental figures. It is a truly creepy well crafted film, at least initially, it's when director, Andrés Muschietti (making his feature film debut), abandons the concepts of  the film that are so very intriguing and chilling that it begins to lose the suspense and creepy factor and eventually runs out of gas trudging along to a somewhat predictable supernatural end. All in all, however, the superbly crafted first two thirds of the film does lift Mama to a level above the average horror/supernatural film.
 
A distraught father, Jeffrey (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) who has presumably killed his estranged wife, flees with his two young daughters. Their car slides off an icy mountain road, all three survive the accident. The dad gathers up the girls and they continue on foot until they discover a long abandoned cabin in the woods. The grieving father is about to end all of their lives when a black-clad apparition swoops down and carries him away. The girl's uncle Luke (also played by Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) having never given up on finding his brother and the girls, five years later, just as his money has run out, finds the girls who have been surviving as grimy, creepy, feral little creatures.

The girls are turned over to the care of the state. With the help of the state assigned, self-serving psychiatrist, Dr. Dreyfuss (Daniel Kash), uncle Luke and his punk rocker girlfriend, Anabel (Jessica Chastain / Zero Dark Thirty) gain custody of the girls and they are brought to their new home, a “case study” suburban house, where the shady supervising psychiatrist retains access to further study the girls.

The older of the girls,Victoria (Megan Charpentier), vaguely remembers her uncle, through therapy she has regained the ability to speak and is beginning to readjust to civilization, while her little sister Lilly (Isabelle Nélisse) remains a feral, gnashing little creature, shoving fists of food into her mouth with her hands and skittering across rooms on all fours like some king of half dog half crab. What’s more, the girls didn’t spend those five years in the woods alone. Something was there with them. Victoria hints to Dr. Dreyfuss and to Luke and Annabel that “Mama” cared for them during their time at the cabin. Lilly is still very much attached to “Mama” and it is soon apparent that she has followed them to their new home.
There is an extraordinary scene where the girls’ bedroom is half in the frame and a hallway in the other half; Lilly, the younger girl is in the bedroom giggling and playing a friendly game of tug of war with a blanket with… some one, and in the hallway we see Victoria making it very clear that it’s not her sister with whom Lilly is playing. It’s both funny and genuinely chilling: a ghosts or demons playing a friendly game with a little girl who clearly loves, wants and needs them. Now that's not supposed to happen. There's something about this entity that indicates that it isn’t some sort of vengeful, killer spirit but rather a caring, nurturing “Mama”. It's unsettling in a way uncommon for this type of movie, that the ghoul, the focus of the film is in fact essentially a benign, loving, misunderstood visitor from the other side. This is the theme Mama employs in its riveting opening scenes. Mr. Muschietti masterfully uses inference, off-screen space, and one character’s impaired point of view to suggest a frightening otherworldly specter whose motivations are uncertain but quite possibly benevolent.
Almost immediately the film abandons this pretext, making it obvious that "Mama" doesn’t have good intentions, definitely not for the girls’ guardians or the doctor, and perhaps not even for the girls. The film then transforms to a new theme, briefly, where the girls’ slowly and sadly realize that their "Mama" is actually sinister and terrifying. A lot of good horror involves characters who discover that there is something evil and malevolent inculcated in the world they thought they knew, and here we see the threatening transformation of the young girl’s, up until now, beloved provider and guardian.
Unfortunately, the good work in the majority of the film is squandered when the 'less is more' approach is dropped and the filmmakers seriously spin out of control with a protracted finale that overexposes the titular monster (Javier Botet).

Cast
      Annabel                         Lucas / Jeffrey
Victoria                              Lilly
       Daniel Kash              Jane Moffat             Javier Botet      
  Dr. Dreyfuss           Aunt Jean/Mama's voice             Mama