Showing posts with label Tom Cruise. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tom Cruise. 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  

Monday, December 24, 2012

Jack Reacher - Review

Jack Reacher
(2012 - December 21)
Action | Crime | Drama
2 hr. 10 min.

Rated: PG-13 Violence, Some Drug Material and Language | What parents should know
Grade: B+


Director: Christopher McQuarrie
Writers: Christopher McQuarrie (screenplay), Lee Child (book)
Stars: Tom Cruise, Rosamund Pike and Richard Jenkins | See full cast and crew

Six shots. Five dead. One heartland city thrown into a state of terror. But within hours the cops have it solved: a slam-dunk case. Except for one thing. The accused man says: You got the wrong guy. Then he says: Get Reacher for me. And sure enough, ex-military investigator Jack Reacher is coming. He knows this shooter-a trained military sniper who never should have missed a shot. Reacher is certain something is not right-and soon the slam-dunk case explodes. Now Reacher is teamed with a beautiful young defense lawyer, moving closer to the unseen enemy who is pulling the strings. Reacher knows that no two opponents are created equal. This one has come to the heartland from his own kind of hell. And Reacher knows that the only way to take him down is to match his ruthlessness and cunning-and then beat him shot for shot. -- (C) Official Site

Jack Reacher (previously titled One Shot) is a 2012 American crime film. It is an adaptation of Lee Child's 2005 novel One Shot. Written and directed by Christopher McQuarrie.

Jack Reacher is a fictional character created by British author Jim Grant (who writes under the pen name of Lee Child) and is the main character in 17 Books. The Jack Reacher (film) starring Tom Cruise was released on December 21, 2012.
Having never read any of the Jack Reacher books I have an unbiased perspective regarding the screenplay and whether it is true to the novel. After seeing the film I did a little research on the character Jack Reacher.
Lee Child, unemployed and midway through writing the first Reacher novel, had not been able to come up with at name for the main character. On day while shopping with his wife at their local supermarket, an elderly lady approached him and asked him to reach an item off a high shelf for her. His wife jokingly remarked: "Hey if this writing thing doesn't work out, you can be a reacher in a supermarket."

Jack Reacher is a former United States Army Military Police Major. He was born on a military base in Berlin in 1960. A graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, he served 13 years in the Military Police, during which time he became part of a fictional military police unit, the 110th Special Investigations Unit, created to handle exceptionally tough cases, especially those involving members of the United States Army Special Forces.

Though he was demoted from Major to Captain in the prequel novel The Enemy, he regained the rank of Major by the time he mustered out in 1997. He received many military awards during his career, including the Silver Star, the Defense Superior Service Medal, the Legion of Merit, the Soldier's Medal, the Bronze Star, and a Purple Heart for wounds sustained in the bombing of the US Marine barracks in Beirut in 1983.
After leaving the Army Reacher became a drifter wandering the United States, a reaction to having been told where to go, when to go and what to do for every day of his life from military childhood to military adulthood. He wanted to get to know his own country since most of his young life had been spent living overseas on military bases and at the military school West Point. He prefers to travel by bus or as a hitchhiker. He travels light as a drifter, his only possessions are money, a foldable toothbrush and, after 9/11, an expired passport and an ATM debit card. He doesn't have nor has he ever had a driver's license.








This film devolves into one of my 'pet pieves' the conflict comes down to a fist fight between the well armed hero and villain...just shoot the gun and put an end to it. It's supposed to be a dramatic 'mano a mano' moment but it's just plain stupid and annoying.

Plot
In his first film, sure to become a franchise, a sniper kills  five seemingly random Pittsburgh citizens.  The police quickly identify and arrest a suspect, former military sniper James Barr (Joseph Sikora) says little more than 'Get Jack Reacher' (Tom Cruise), a drifter and former Army Military Police officer. The authorities have no idea how to find him when he suddenly, Reacher, having seen a news report featuring James Barr prompting him to seek him out so that he can take care of unfinished business between himself and Barr. Reacher appears in the District Attorney Rodin's (Richard Jenkins) office. Barr's defense is pleased and relieved; but Reacher has come to bury Barr not to save him. He is shocked by Barr's request that Reacher prove his innocene and Reacher sets out to confirm for himself the absolute certainty of the Barr's guilt.










Appearances aren't quite what they seem to Reacher who agrees to work as an investigator for Barr's defense attorney, Helen Rodin (Rosamund Pike), who happens to be the District Attorney's daughter, and a local detective (David Oyelowo) to try to find out the truth behind the shootings and prove Barr's innocence. Reacher methodically begins to unravel a treacherous and deadly case involving a hired killer (Jai Courtney) and a Russian known only as "the zec"...the prisoner (Werner Herzog).   

In the book the film is based on One Shot, the events take place in a small Indiana town, the film moves the events to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. 

 Author, Lee Child, makes an brief appearance as the Desk Sergent. 

Cast
 
   Tom Cruise            Rosamund Pike
Jack Reacher                           Helen     
Emerson                              Rodin  
     Jai Courtney         Werner Herzog  
Charlie                            The  Zec