Showing posts with label Hugh Jackman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hugh Jackman. Show all posts

Sunday, June 1, 2014

The Seven Day of X-men (Xmen (2000)

Over the next seven days I will be reviewing the Xmen films.  Part of this is that I noticed I am reviewing mostly good films, and I needed to review a few poor films to counterbalance all these good reviews.  Don't get me wrong, The most recent and Xmen 2 are very good films, but you have some films in the series that are poor.  




Movie: X-men (2000)
Rating: Pg-13

Starring: Patrick StewartHugh Jackman, James Marsden, Halle Berry, Femake Jennsen, 
Anna Paquin, Ian McKellen,  Rebecca Romijn, and Shawn Ashmore
Score: 7 out of 10 stars
Family Friendly: 3.5/5 (minor action violence, one guy turns to water)
Recommended: Anyone who likes superhero films.

Plot Summery (No Spoilers):


In the future, people with Mutations that give them superpowers come into being, and the battle between those who want to eliminate humanity and those who want to protect it begin. 

Plot Summery (Spoilers): (From Wikipedia)



In 1944 German-occupied Poland, a 13-year-old Erik Lehnsherr is separated from his parents upon entry to a concentration camp. In attempting to reach them, he causes a set of gates to bend towards him, as though attracted by a magnetic force. Decades later, in the not too distant future, Senator Robert Kelly attempts to pass a "Mutant Registration Act" in Congress which would force mutants to publicly reveal their identities and abilities. Present are Lehnsherr, now known as Magneto, and the telepathic Professor Charles Xavier, who privately discuss their differing viewpoints on the relationship between humans and mutants.
In Meridian, Mississippi, 17-year-old Marie D'Ancanto accidentally puts her boyfriend into a coma upon kissing him which was caused by her unknown superhuman ability to absorb the life force and mutant abilities of anyone she touches. In fear that she is harmful, Marie, now going by the name of Rogue, runs away to Laughlin City,Alberta. While at a bar, she meets Logan, an amateur fighter known as "Wolverine", who also possesses superhuman healing abilities, heightened senses, and metal claws that extend outwards from between his knuckles. While on the road together, both of them are attacked by Sabretooth, a fellow mutant and an associate of Magneto. Cyclops and Storm arrive and save Wolverine and Rogue, and bring them to the X-Mansion in Westchester County, New York. They are introduced to Xavier, who leads a group of mutants called the X-Men, who are trying to seek peace with the human race, educate young mutants in the responsible use of their powers, and stop Magneto from escalating the war with humanity.

Senator Kelly is abducted by Magneto's allies Toad and the shapeshifter Mystique and brought to their lair. Magneto uses Kelly as test subject of a machine that artificially induces mutation. Kelly uses his new mutant abilities to escape imprisonment. After an accident causes Rogue to use her powers on Wolverine, she is convinced by Mystique (disguised as classmate Bobby Drake) that Xavier is angry with her and that she should leave the school. Xavier uses his mutant-locating machineCerebro to find Rogue at a train station. Mystique infiltrates Cerebro and sabotages the machine.
At the train station, Wolverine convinces Rogue to stay with Xavier, but a fight ensues when Magneto, Toad and Sabretooth arrive and kidnap Rogue. Kelly arrives at Xavier's school, shortly before dying due to the instability of his artificial mutation. The X-Men learn that Magneto was severely weakened in the test of the machine on Kelly, and realize that he intends to use Rogue's power-transferring ability so that she can power the machine in his place, putting her life at risk. Xavier attempts to use Cerebro to locate Rogue, but Mystique's sabotage causes him to fall into a coma. Fellow telepath Jean Grey fixes and uses Cerebro, learning that Magneto plans to place his mutation-inducing machine on Liberty Island and use it to mutate the world leaders meeting for a summit on nearby Ellis Island.

The X-Men scale the Statue of Liberty, defeating Toad and incapacitating Mystique, before Magneto and Sabretooth incapacitate the group and continue with their plans. Magneto transfers his powers to Rogue, forcing her to use them to start the machine. Wolverine escapes and defeats Sabretooth. Storm uses her weather-controlling powers and Jean her telekinesis to lift Wolverine to the top of Magneto's machine. Wolverine saves Rogue when Cyclops knocks out Magneto, and destroys the machine. Wolverine touches the dying Rogue's face, and his regenerative abilities are transferred to her, causing her to recover.

Professor Xavier recovers from his coma. The group learns that Mystique is still alive, and impersonating Senator Kelly. Xavier tells Wolverine that near where he was found in Canada is an abandoned military base that might contain information about his past. Xavier visits Magneto in a prison cell constructed entirely of plastic, and the two play chess (Xavier seems to have the upper hand). Magneto warns that he will continue his fight, to which Xavier promises that he and the X-Men will always be there to stop him. As Xavier is being taken away from the prison by a guard, Magneto pushes his king chess piece over.

My Thoughts:
For anyone who loves, or hates superhero films, you should love or hate this film.

Back in 2000 Superhero films was dead.  Prior to the Xmen films you had a handful of Christopher Reeve Superman films from the 80s, the Batman films that Started strongly with Batman (1989) and had degraded to the rubber nipple/codpiece "Badman and Robin" in the late 1990s.  You also had some campy batman film in the 1970s and a Fantastic 4 film that was never released due to it being so bad and it was made solely to maintain rights over the intellectual property.   . 

For those who are too young, or took too many mood enriching chemicals to remember, In 2000 Superhero films did not exist, was no plans for a new Batman Film, and no films starring  Ironman, Thor, Captain America, Watchmen, or Avengers, .   Let Alone the idea that the X-men line would spawn at least Seven movies in the next 15 years.   

So imagine if you are a moviegoer watching Xmen movie.  It starts out with people being herded into a death camp in World War 2,as soon as you think it is a historical film,  then suddenly it shifts to modern day suburbs , with a very teenage looking Anna Paquin and her randy boyfriend upstairs.   You can cut the teenage hormones with a knife as they kiss, and he goes into what appears to be a bad case of epileptic seizure as she sobs.   Then we cut to the Yukon and we see a bare knuckles boxing match in a cage.  

Welcome to Superhero films.  



As a film, this movie has a lot of strong points.   The Xmen films are noted for having amazing casts and many times, excellent directors.   Singer, fresh off his Usual Suspects filming, does a excellent job with this movie, however it is very disjointed at times.  However the star of the film, even in this ensemble cast, is Jackman as Logan/The Wolverine, a man who does not know his past,. but has superhuman healing , and can extend metal claws from his hands that can cut anything.   
Also on the stage is two great actors, Patrick Stewart (Picard!) and Ian McKellen,(Gandalf!) playing two roles in the civil right movement for Mutants.   Stewart, playing Professor Xavier, plays the Martin Luther King peaceful role, while Ian McKellen, playing Magneto, plays the more Militant Malcolm X type role.   Giving him the background as a survivor of german camps gives him more gravity to the role.  



The background is that you have elected officials who wish to register mutants (political aside, and people wonder why registration, be it persons, firearms, or money causes concern, as a note, the only reason why a government will want to register something is for future seizure, end political aside)  as a danger to society, Professor X wants to show society that mutants and humans can co-exist, while Magento wants to end human rule as they are a danger to mutants.   This works as you have great actors taking the role seriously.  

The planned plot of using a machine to induce mutations in world leaders is not a bad one as comic book movies go, but it is mostly a mcgruffen to move the plot along.

However the plot is disjointed, and leads to the general rule that in modern superhero films, the 2nd movie in the series is best, as you do not need to spend a ton of time explaining everything and get to the movie.


The movie is hurt by two things, the low budget tat at times has not aged well, and the disjointed pacing.  I will go over the pacing first.   This ignores the horrifically bad lines given to Halle Berry playing "Storm".   

The pacing is odd in this movie, first off you have the odd start up, as described above. Some parts work wonderfully.   For example, Jackman as Wolverine and Paquin have a ton of chemistry, to the point that you could cast them as  a May-December type relationship. However they instead do the more normal protector/protected setup, and it really works, these actors can really make you buy into this. Less so for the romantic lead for Paquin (though no fault to the actor, as he works very well with Ellen Page in later films.  Instead they have Logan get into a romantic triangle for the love of Jean Grey.  

However as soon as they really start to click, you end up at the Xmen school, a school for Mutants who many graduate to join the X-Men hero team, letting you find such comic book heroes as Cyclops (who shoots lasers from his eyes), Jean Grey (mental powers), and Storm (who can control weather).  Logan is a loner who does not want to join the team, but when Magneto kidnaps Paquin character, he willing to suit up and join the Xmen in a battle around the statue of Liberty.   The force of direction and acting skill makes this work, however the fact that the entire 2nd act of the film is reserved for exposition means that much of the actual plot is flat as a soda left out in the warm summer sun.  

The second issue is that it has not aged well.   The budget was not the largest, and much of it was wisely spent on good writers and actors, however this means that much of it feels small.   Magneto base looks like something out of a Trek Trek episode, and the final battle in the statue of liberty shows all the signs of being shot in the studio with obvious green screen shots when they happen.  


However, no matter it flaws it did quite well, for it showed that comic books could be the source of something more then a campy fun, and that serious actors could talk about serious topics while in a comic book movie.  I have a rule of thumb, if a comic book movie is not as good as the First Xmen, then it not a good comic book movie, as it a good bellwether for a decent movie.  


It may surprise a few that know me, but I am not a comic book fan.  I never grew up with comics (long story) and it is really hard to tell a story that would interest me in the limited page count of comics.   The only exception that comes to mind is "Watchmen" which I agree with Time magazine as a top 100 novel of the 20th century.   However, I am biased towards anything with the criminally underused dutch born Famke Jennsen, who has been in my mind's eye the perfict woman since 1992 when she starred in Star Trek TNG "Perfect Mate".       

And as a note on my usual rating rants, this is actually a classic case of what PG-13 is.   There is action violence, there is no harsh cussing, no blood, and while it has a moment of body horror (as one guy becomes a liquid) their is nothing that I would even think of being concerned about a 13 year old seeing.   Compired to the recent "Xmen Day of Future Past" which also had a PG-13 rating shows how much more the rating system is allowing in movies. 



 


Thursday, May 8, 2014

Prisoners (2013)

Time for the second review dealing with Torture, but this time a much closer to home form of torture.   What would you do to get your daughter back?  That is the general theme of Prisoners, the dark and very underrated 2013 film. 


Movie: Prisoners (2013)
Rating: R

Starring: Hugh Jackman as Keller Dover, Jake Gyllenhaal as Detective David Loki, Viola Davis as Nancy Birch, Maria Bello as Grace Dover, Tarrence Howard as Franklin Birch, Melissa Leo as Holly Jones, Paul Dano as Alex Jones

Score: 8.5 out of 10 stars
Family Friendly: 2/5 (dark themes, personal violence)
Recommended: Anyone who enjoyed Zodiac  and anyone who wants to see the best ensemble acting of 2013.

Plot Summery (No Spoilers):

Two families meet for thanksgiving, and the youngest daughters go missing, driving everyone involved to the edge of darkness in each persons heart. 

Plot Summery (Spoilers):

Hugh Jackman (aka Wolverine) is a god fearing preper who in the opening sequence is taking his son to hunt deer.  Soon you learn it is thanksgiving, and the Dovers go to the Birch family to share thanksgiving.  



In the moment that I have been told that is every parents nightmare  (I am childless, and at the current rate, will remain childless) the two youngest girls go missing.   Soon the police id a suspicious RV, and find a man-child (Alex Jones, played by the always excellent Paul Dano) in on it.   He is the main suspect. 

Detective Loki questions him, but is unable to pin any crime on him, as the RV is clean and there is nothing to hold him on.   Jackman's Keller assaults Jones and then is told to calm down and be with his family.

The plot then goes into two main threads, both of them excellent, one is Detective Loki's investigation as he increasingly deals with darker matter as he carries out his investigation, and we watch the two families deal with the horror of missing the girls.

Keller decides to take the investigation in his own hands, and kidnaps Alex Jones (the character, not the crazy radio host) and ties him up in a old apartment complex to question him.   Leading to the moments where Keller does anything to try to save his daughter. 



Near the third act the plot gets more convoluted and to sum it all up, Alex Jones mother is not really his mother, but her and her late husband would kidnap kids to make religious parents loose faith.  Loki is forced to kill her and rescue the remaining girl, while Keller is buried in a pit on the property to die.   The last moments of the film is Loki perhaps hearing Keller to rescue him.


My thoughts:

My thoughts focus on these catagories

excellence in acting. 
Well crafted storytelling
God, faith, and and prepping
Plot Issues



Excellence in Acting


This is one of the best acted films of 2013.   Everyone is at the top of their game.   Jake Gyllenhaal does a older reprise of his excellent Zodiac characterization, but with many minor changes.   He is able to carry the movie, but even if he does excellent work, the amazing work by his fellow cast almost overshadows him. 

Maria Bello is a gorgeous woman and talented actress, and has the thankless role of a woman who cannot handle the situation.   She plays it with aplomb, going from cheerful, to stunned, to the so depressed she can't get out of bed.  

Tarrence Howard takes a very unexpected and wonderful turn as the emotional center of his family, playing a role that many times would be reserved for the female, but works so well as the father of his family that you buy it from the first moment to the end of the movie.  


Viola Davis plays the wife of Howard's sensitive type, and is the rock to the family.   She is unforgettable as the woman who daughter is missing and makes the final choices on what the Birch family will do to resolve the horror of their missing girl. 


Then we have Paul Dano and Hugh Jackman.  Both play their near leading roles with skill.   Dano has a very tough role.  As anyone who seen Tropic Thunder knows, you never want to go full retard. (Before anyone gets offended, that is the quote of the movie, and send the complaints to the producers of the movie) But Dano's LSD addled man-child really is a amazing performance, both showing the raw emotion and the complete confusion on why he is being singled out for Keller's desperate drive to find his daughter. 

Jackman's character of Keller could of easily been cartoonish, and to many Hollywood directors, he would be.   He is a God fearing man who feels duty bound to protect his family, thus is a prepper once you see his basement, a recovering alcoholic, and is willing to do horrible things so that he might have a chance to get his daughter back.   Any of these traits with a lazy director or actor could be made excessive, but it hangs in balance and you feel compelled for Keller, even when he makes bad choices.  

Also, Melissa Leo (who been in in dozens of TV shows and movies, most famous most likely for "Homicide, life in the street") is unreconizable under her makeup, but plays the villain with just the right taint so that near the end, you look into those eyes and you know she is capable of what she done. 




Well crafted storytelling

I will be first to say that plot issues exist in this movie.   However the movie is well told and compelling as we move forward.  Late in the third act it gets a little over complicated (But not as disappointing as say, Sunshine) but the well shot, top performances and general plot movies it along for much of the movie.   It also has little things that made me enjoy the film.  

Of the main families, one is white, one is black, and its not even mentioned.   They are both middle class and nothing feels wrong with it.  It also handles some subjects that movies almost always get wrong.


God, faith, and and prepping


God and faith is something that Hollywood movies almost always get wrong.  Most of the time, you can tell the director feels that it so quaint that it is silly.   However in this movie you see a deeply flawed person in Keller who has faith, and while he in no way lives up to the heights of his faith, you can see that his faith is one of the foundational eliments of his life and it how he is able to hold on for the most part.   And is never condescending.  



Also Keller is a Prepper, and while I expected him to be made into a fool for it, it is just shown as part of his charicter, a man who is dedicated to protect his family, and the crisis when his daughter goes missing and what steps he is willing to get her back. 

Plot Issues

At times the plot goes for too many plot twists, this movie would of been a truly great film except that it falls apart a bit at the end, with a suicide as the cutoff moment  where it goes from perfection to a flawed masterpeace.  Everything up to and including that moment is brilliant, and then it falls to "Just" a 7 out of 10.  

This is a adult movie.  I am not talking about it being Porn, but it is a movie intended for mature adults and how they deal with horrific situations.   There is no teen romance angle, or other distractions, it is just pure storytelling of a investigation and two families being torn apart by the seismic forces of a missing member.   It is a top five movie of 2013.