Monday, June 30, 2008
2 Days in Paris
"2 Days in Paris" is the story Marion and Jack, a French expatriate and her whiny American boyfriend, spending two days in the City of Lights at the end of a European journey where they encounter her wacky family, friends and exes.
Written and Directed by actress Julie Delpy, who also stars in the film.
Starring Delpy as Marion and Adam Goldberg as Jack.
Released: 2007
REVIEW by Cinemagirl:
"2 Days in Paris" will seem familiar to anyone who has ever spent time in a country where they could not understand the language or fully grasp the culture.
Essentially, this problem lays the groundwork for all the action in the film. Jack, played by Adam Goldberg, spends two days in Paris with his girlfriend. The entire time they are surrounded by her crazy parents, an obese cat, strange artsy types, and a host of men who once dated Marion or at least had some sort of liaison with her.
The film is rife with French and American stereotypes, but it makes for a cute date movie. Nearly all the French people in the film talk about sex and the American tourists in the film are seen wearing Bush-Cheney '04 t-shirts. I don't think the people who even voted for them would dare wear those shirts to Paris. Being the "mean New Yorker" Jack deliberately gives the tourists incorrect directions to the Louvre so he can take their cab.
Throughout the film, Jack understands very little French and has no idea what anyone is saying. He misconstrues the meaning of the frequent kisses and friendly touches abundant in the French culture and suspects Marion of being involved with various men. Also, Jack is continuously confused because Marion will have lengthy conversations, even screaming fights, with former lovers and family members and yet never let Jack in on what is being discussed. Adam Goldberg's facial expressions and line delivery are great in this role of frustrated Jack.
Julie Delpy does a good job in several long scenes where she must simultaneously converse, in many cases, argue, in two languages. She also narrates the film from time to time.
The cinematography in this film is very loose. Most of it is handheld with natural light. It makes Paris very real and welcoming and not as austere and forbidding as films of yore or textbooks make it seem.
The opening of the film pulled me in. It begins with Marion and Jack asleep on a train coming into Paris. Marion narrates and amateur travel snapshots illustrating their European journey, up to this point, are seamlessly cut into the film.
Overall, I liked it and would recommend renting this movie. It's basically a romantic comedy, only without the stilted dialogue. Besides, it's only half in French so you only have to read subtitles half the time!
STORY: 7.5 - It was cute and original.
ACTING: 8 - Delpy and Goldberg made a believable couple. The crazy parents, especially the dad that keys cars parked on the curb, was a nice treat.
LOOK: 7.5 - the more real the better
OVERALL: 7.5
Monday, June 23, 2008
Scarecrow - 1973
Max Millan and Francis "Lion" Delbuchi are two drifters that some how meet up on the open road. Max, a recent convict, invites Lion onto a journey from California to Pittsburgh where he plans to open a car-wash.
112 min - Rated R - Dir. by Jerry Schatzberg (see Panic in Needle Park), Starring Gene Hackman as Max & Al Pacino as "Lion"
Review by LEWIS
First of all I would like to say, it is absolutely shocking to me that a worm hole didn't open up and suck the universe into oblivion when Al Pacino and Gene Hackman were put together in an intimate buddy movie such as this. Wow! My god, these are two of the greatest American actors to grace the screen.
With that said, this was a great movie. And it was very much an "actor's" movie. These two characters will remind you a little of George and Lenny from Steinbeck's "Of Mice and Men". Max (Gene Hackman) is a seasoned, gruff man who proudly wears a chip on his shoulder. He has become a wise man of street smarts, but has lost his ability to laugh. That's where Francis (or "Lion" as Max decides to call him) comes in. He's a little too naive, a little too trusting, but he's the funny guy. He doesn't like things to get too serious, and as soon as they do he'll find a joke in it.
Well this makes for a great buddy movie. Each character needs the other to balance things out. So we go on a cross country journey with the pair where we wind up in dive bars, Colorado work prisons, diners and other places full of grit and grime. It's great a great ride.
As I said before, the corp of the film is the buddy story and I don't know if I've seen it done so well. The characters seem so real, and the emotional ride the two go through would be an actors dream.
I don't really want to get into the scarecrow thing, because it's a really nice part of the film that should be experience when you watch it. Just know that the title is appropriate.
I highly recommend this movie if you love either of the actors, or you're a fan of buddy flicks. Honestly, if you like things like the Lethal Weapon series you love the play between these two ruffians.
ACTING - 9.75 (I really considered a 10...it's close to being worth it)
STORY - 8.5
LOOK - 8 (some real good scenic shots, but other things are not so special)
Tuesday, June 10, 2008
Clean
This film follows Emily through the drug-overdose death of her rocker husband, loss of custody of her son, and her attempts to work hard, get clean, and start a new life that will allow her to have her son back.
Directed by Olivier Assayas, Frenchman who most recently directed a short in Paris Je t'aime and directed Irma Vep.
Stars Maggie Cheung as Emily and Nick Nolte as her father-in-law Albrecht.
Released 2004. In English, Chinese and French (with subtitles).
Clean begins in Canada at a grimy music club where we first meet the heroin addicted Emily and her rocker hubby Lee. Lee soon dies of an overdose and Emily is sent to prison. She emerges from jail with a new perspective and a drive to reclaim her son, who has been living with Lee's parents for the past few years in Canada since Emily and Lee were too incompetent to care for him.
As rosy, feel-good and cheesy as this plot may sound, it is not. The film is very realistic is it follows Emily's struggles: her relapse into drug abuse, her inability to hold a job or unwillingness to behave on the job, her struggle to create music again - which is her passion. However imperfect she may be, she keeps trying to get it right. That's what's so nice about this story. It is believable.
Also, the cinema verite shooting style makes it feel all the more real and makes London, Paris and towns in Canada look all the more accessible, and less polished than we are used to seeing them in films.
Nick Nolte is a nice surprise in this picture. He plays the grandpa, who along with grandma, is raising Emily and Lee's little boy. He is a strong, practical person who very fairly sets the bar for Emily and constantly keeps the boy's well being in mind.
I liked that the film did not end on some glossy high note with mother and son riding off into the sunset. It left it on a very even keel, not dismal, but with hope that everything would be all right.
STORY: 7.5
LOOK: 8
ACTING: 8.5 (Maggie Cheung is excellent.)
I recommend renting this film.
Tuesday, June 3, 2008
This docu-drama follows five-time Mr. Olympia bodybuilding champ Arnold Schwarzenegger, Mr. Universe Lou Ferrigno and a cast of motley musclemen on their quest to win world titles at the championship competition in South Africa.
Released 1977. Recent 25th Anniversary DVD released for rental. Directed by George Butler and Robert Fiore. Stars "The Arnold" (future Conan the Barbarian and The Terminator) and Lou Ferrigno (future Incredible Hulk).
REVIEW by Cinemagirl:
If you want to understand the sport of bodybuilding or see a bunch of dudes traipse about in little briefs sporting glistening uber-muscles, this film is for you.
Pumping Iron is the original docu-drama, blurring the lines of reality and fiction. Arnold is portrayed as the Golden Boy, the charming Austrian who has won the biggest bodybuilding event five years in a row and, with his cocky attitude, has returned to slay the competition one last time before retirement.
Lou Ferrigno, at 6'5" and 275 lbs. is no slouch. He is the homegrown Italian kid from Brooklyn. He is mostly deaf. His father is his trainer. His mom makes his 6-egg omelets. While Louie is bigger than Arnold, he does not have the posing skills nor the finesse that the Austrian has.
The film is loaded with tons of great shots of the musclemen honing their craft. Arnold pumps at Gold's Gym in Venice Beach, California, with a whole crew of beefcakes and Louie pumps at a local gym in Brooklyn with his dad by his side. It is awesome to see these brutes hoisting 500 pound barbells and doing push-ups with people astride their backs like ponies.
The competition in the film and all the training is entirely real, but the tension in the subplot - Arnold being the cocky jerk, Lou being the young newcomer out to best his idol - is fabricated for drama's sake. However, none of these scenes feel fake. Arnold tries to play head games with Louie before the big Mr. Olympia competition in South Africa. Lou's dad is convinced that his son can take down the Austrian champ.
The film also features bodybuilders Mike Katz, a former pro football player-turned-teacher who has always strived to be the best; Franco Columbu, the tiny Italian who is so ripped he can lift Fiats out of their parking spots; and Ken Waller, the self-assured Mr. Universe of 1975.
This film made a lasting impact on the public. Americans were never so interested in bulking up until after this film hit the street.
The 25th Anniversary DVD contains plenty of extras, from an interview with a modern Arnold to a new doc, produced for Cinemax, called Raw Iron - The Making of Pumping Iron. This extra doc contains never before seen footage of the bodybuilders partying at Arnold's pad, hanging at an amusement park, and Arnold attempting to train a scrawny TV actor to lift weights. Luckily, these phony-feeling scenarios were cut from the film and the focus remained on the competition and working out.
STORY: 8
LOOK: 9
Definitely worth the rent. How many cool '70s films can inspire you to get in shape?
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)