Tagged with Film

Training Day

Training Day

So last night I saw Training Day and, in all honesty, it wasn’t amazing. I mean, it’s good but not great. Having said that, Denzel Washington was phenomenal in this and easily deserving of the Oscar that he won because of this role; he managed to portray Alonzo Harris, a menacing and commanding corrupt cop, brilliantly and his presence is ultimately what makes this film watchable because Ethan Hawke has a relatively easy part to play and the ending is rather lame. Most of all though, I’ve seen it all before.

If I had seen this before The Wire or Collateral (a film that has a slightly similar dynamic between an anti-hero and the real hero) I might have been more inclined to like it. As it is though, Collateral is a much better film and one that has been unfairly overlooked whilst The Wire deals with corruption in the police force in a way that is unbeatable.

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Coffee and Cigarettes

Coffee and Cigarettes

Coffee and Cigarettes is a bizarre and slightly odd film; it’s comprised of thirteen shorts of usually two – maybe three people – involved in conversation over…well, coffee and cigarettes. The segment ‘Somewhere in California’, featuring Iggy Pop and Tom Waits, is really strong and is perhaps the most sincere of the lot. I know Iggy Pop is a massive sell-out, but I liked him a lot. Two other stand outs both have the name Cousins in the title; the one that features Steve Coogan and Alfred Molina (‘Cousins?’) is gripping in its awkward and stilted dialogue and the same can be said about the one featuring Cate Blanchet (‘Cousins’), which sees her playing two roles.

The rest of it is fairly hit and miss but it made for a good ‘Monday film’.

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Toy Story 3

Toy Story 3

For a while I always thought that you can’t ever take away your sense of youth. I was never quite sure that I had properly grown up. Yes, I am a relatively mature person for my age but I always felt like I had many childish qualities that I thought might never disappear. Last night, I went to see Toy Story 3. Having waited months to see this and having had a bit of time to take it all in, I think that my childhood has officially ended.

Monday 19th July at 9:10pm, to be more precise. For the previous two hours me, my girlfriend and a friend of ours had sat down in our seats in a screening that wasn’t bursting with people (because I think, unlike us, everyone went to see the 3D version and also since the heat may have put off cinema-goers that evening) to witness the end of an era. When the original Toy Story came out, I was only six years old. When its sequel came out, I was eleven. My age has doubled since then and this film not only felt like an end to a superb trilogy but also the end of childhood and adolescence and the beginning of acting like a ‘real person’.

About the film itself, without giving away any key plot spoilers, if you loved the previous two installments of the franchise, you will love this too. I found it to be on an equal par with the previous two and agree with Mark Kermode when he says that it’s the best movie trilogy of all time. It’s very hard to think of others that have had such an outstanding (not to mention outstandingly consistent) triplet of films. I mean, even Star Wars’ legacy got screwed over by its creator with the unnecessary prequels. The fact that this happens to be an animated trilogy aimed at all the family is merely a sidenote, although it is funny how things turned out.

Its themes are also pretty dark, even for a film aimed at kids. Death, the discarding of toys, separation, moving on…quite tough subject matters. But Pixar are masters of storytelling and do so in a way that doesn’t feel too dumbed down for adults but also doesn’t feel too sinister and bleak for kids. However, nothing will prepare you for the film’s conclusion. Without giving anything away, the last ten-fifteen minutes will probably make you cry like a baby who has lost his/her rattle or at the very least well up with tears.

So long Toy Story. So long my childhood.

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Fantastic Mr. Fox

Fantastic Mr. Fox

I finally got around to watching Fantastic Mr. Fox, the Wes Anderson-directed stop-motion animation, based on the book by Roald Dahl. I was well aware that critical acclaim seemed to be unanimous except for one person named Mark Kermode, so watching it felt like judging who was right: Kermode Vs. Rest Of The World if you will. In something I find to be rare, I pledge my allegiances to the latter. I found it rather charming, amusing and featured a story that was well told – all things I wasn’t expecting from this at all. I can see why Kermode thinks that it is a smug, self-indulgent film that goes against the spirit of the book. Then again, and call me ignorant all you want, I never read the book in the first place. For what it was, I quite enjoyed it, and on Good Friday that is all I wanted to watch.

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Something to read, watch and listen

Mark Kermode

Read:

It’s Only A Movie by Mark Kermode. I’m already halfway through it after two days and it is a fascinating read, full of funny and entertaining anecdotes. I wish there were still tickets left for the upcoming London leg of his book tour at the Clapham Picturehouse but it’s sold out.

Watch:

Invictus, which is a very satisfactory and well-directed film based on the South African team that stunned the world of rugby union to win the World Cup in 1995 in the midst of a nation coming to terms with the aftermath of apartheid. Morgan Freeman is terrific as President Nelson Mandela and the film in general, if you can forgive the ultra corny ending, will provide good entertainment for two hours.

Listen:

A short podcast but a highly emotive one from the Today programme on Radio 4 (This is a direct mp3 link, so right-click and save it to wherever you keep such files). Ray Gosling speaks about his confessions in a regional Inside Out documentary on the BBC that he suffocated a former lover who was dying with an Aids-related illness under the instructions of a pact that was made between the two of them. It’s an absolutely unbelievable story that has caused quite a debate and this interview, although brief, is well worth a listen.

On a non-related note, I’m currently busy with the following:

  1. A feature project for uni that is now going in the right direction, for once. I don’t think any of my features have been smooth going so this will be a relief if all goes to plan.
  2. The ‘project that shan’t be named at this moment in time’. Slowly but surely we’re getting there but things have stalled in one area.
  3. Constant Musical Chairs posts but I’ve got plenty of things to write about, which is good.
  4. Work experience/job applications.

I’d like to say I’m busy, but the weather today, which was a depressing grey and rainy day isn’t an inspiring backdrop. Oh well.

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