September 9, 2009
Ponyo (2009) ***
Another wonderful animated film from Hayao Miyazaki. Like "My Neighbor Totoro", it's a gentle fairy tale for children, but it also explores many important ecological themes (just like several of Miyazaki's more serious films, such as "Nausicaä" or "Princess Mononoke").
Whatever Works (2009) ***
Star Trek (2009) ***
The Timekeeper (2009) ***
The Lovely Bones (2009) ***
Peter Jackson's adaptation of Alice Sebold's bestselling novel about a 14-year-old girl (Saoirse Ronan) murdered by a serial killer (Stanley Tucci). While a few film critics (like Rolling Stones' Peter Travers) have praised the movie, others savaged it mercilessly, calling it "deplorable" (Roger Ebert), "erratic" (L.A. Times' Kenneth Turan) and "doubly appalling" (Village Voice's J.Hoberman). The most vicious of all was Salon's Stephanie Zacharek, denouncing it as "a perfect storm of a movie disaster: You've got good actors fighting a poorly conceived script, under the guidance of a director who can no longer make the distinction between imaginativeness and computer-generated effects. The result is an expensive-looking mess that fails to capture the mood, and the poetry, of its source material". However, it is S.F. Chronicle's Mick LaSalle who's hit the nail on the head by pointing out that "Jackson made as good a film as could be made, and (...) the flaws of "The Lovely Bones" as a film were built into the story's design". Indeed. And while it is far less daring than Jackson's own "Heavenly Creatures" (which shares a lot of similarities with "The Lovely Bones"), its emotional impact is overwhelming.
Krolik po berlinsku (2009) ***
Polish documentary about the Berlin Wall, presented from the point of view of rabbits. Length: 50 min.
Fantastic Mr Fox (2009) ***
Wes Anderson's best film since "Rushmore", an elegant and entertaining adaptation of Roald Dahl’s classic tale about a sly fox going to war against three evil farmers. The film's delightfully ambiguous treatment of many issues even succeeds in provoking hilariously midsguided interpretations of it by commenters like Lauren Bans on doublex.com, who actually called it racist: "Fox raises his hand into the black power sign—arm straight, fist closed-- and the wolf is finally responsive, raising his black arm into the black power sign in return". Needless to say, while the scene in question is described quite accurately, its alleged racism is entirely a figment of Bans's paranoid imagination.
Up (2009) ***
2012 (2009) ***
It's nowhere as bad as most critics would have you believe. As disaster epics go, this is definitely a very impressive achievement, with enough iconic images (Los Angeles disappearing into the San Andreas fault, Yellowstone volcano blowing up, Las Vegas collapsing under the tectonic plates, Washington D.C. destroyed by a tsunami, etc.) for a dozen movies. More surprisingly, the story is very effective as well. And not just suspense-wise. We actually care about the characters and about who lives and who dies. And the film's political message, about how the rich can buy their way into safety, while the poor perish en masse, is quite provocative. Unfortunately, there is no nudity, unless we count Woody Harrelson's butt crack (and he isn't even playing a plumber!).
The Young Victoria (2009) ***
Excellent histrical drama about the early years of the famous British queen. Emily Blunt is terrific in the title role. Despite some minor inaccuracies (Prince Albert was never injured in an assassination attempt, and Lord Melbourne - played by 37-year-old Paul Bettany - was 60 years old when Victoria and Albert were married), it's a fascinating history lesson.
Rapt (2009) ***
Based on a true story, this is a serious psychological drama about the kidnapping of a rich French industralist. Taut and suspenseful, but also incredibly rich in psychological complexities.
Paranormal Activity (2009) ***
Confessions Of A Shopaholic (2009) ***
J'ai tué ma mère (2009) ***
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)