Man of Steel (2013) – Part dreary rehash, part CGI-over-reliant
generic blockbuster, this heavy-handed, frequently irritating film has some
good performances, but it’s got more product placement than it does character
development, and it’s never really all that interesting; unfaithful as it is to
the spirit of the title character, it’s got only the barest flashes of what
makes Superman such a great character. 5
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Friday, December 27, 2013
Castle in the Sky
Castle in the Sky (1986) – Like you expect, it’s good
looking and imaginative, with a fine Hisaishi score, but it embraces many of
anime’s sillier conventions, and the slow, thin story lacks much of the wonder,
the weight, the character development, and the emotional impact of Miyazaki’s best films. 6
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
Alien: Resurrection
Alien: Resurrection (1997) – What a thoroughly mixed bag
this is: Jeunet has an effective visual style, but his tone is often jarringly
campy; there are a number of intriguing ideas—including a sufficiently fresh
spin on Ripley to keep things interesting—but Whedon’s script isn’t particularly ambitious
from a storytelling standpoint, and it’s got a ton of throwaway
dialogue that isn’t nearly as clever as it thinks it is; and while there are
some good performances by the supporting cast—plus Weaver, of course—Ryder feels
out of place and Hedaya is ridiculous. 6
Friday, December 20, 2013
Alien 3
Alien 3* (1992) – It begins by criminally throwing away much
of the significance of Aliens, but it
nonetheless manages to start off decently strong even so, due in large part to
fine performances by Weaver (as usual), Dance, and Dutton; it has a few highlights, but the effects are decidedly subpar, and the film spends most of its
second half as poorly paced, pedestrian horror populated by indistinguishable
and undeveloped characters, in which its well-known development fiascos shine
through with some bad script and plot moments. 5
*I watched the 145-minute Assembly Cut.
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
Aliens
Aliens (1986) – If we can get past how mind-bogglingly
counterproductive it is for Ripley to be taken on the mission, this is an
excellent action movie with a number of solid characters and some impressive
work from Cameron; it’s reasonably predictable, but it’s quite satisfying, and
it has little trouble rising above its action movie clichés. 7
Friday, December 13, 2013
Alien
Alien (1979) – With fantastic practical effects, striking
art design, unforgettable visuals, a classic monster, and a slow-building, stripped-down,
raw approach from Ridley Scott, this film sits at the top of the survival
horror heap with only Carpenter’s The
Thing for company. 8
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