Thursday, January 26, 2017

MOVIE REVIEW: LA LA LAND (2016)

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From IMDB:

Mia, an aspiring actress, serves lattes to movie stars in between auditions and Sebastian, a jazz musician, scrapes by playing cocktail party gigs in dingy bars, but as success mounts they are faced with decisions that begin to fray the fragile fabric of their love affair, and the dreams they worked so hard to maintain in each other threaten to rip them apart.

La La Land (2016) on IMDb

Reviews 518 user | 431 critic


Written and directed by Academy Award (R) nominee Damien Chazelle, LA LA LAND tells the story of Mia [Emma Stone], an aspiring actress, and Sebastian [Ryan Gosling], a dedicated jazz musician, who are struggling to make ends meet in a city known for crushing hopes and breaking hearts. Set in modern day Los Angeles, this original musical about everyday life explores the joy and pain of pursuing your dreams.

Rating: PG-13 (for some language)
Directed By: Damien Chazelle
Written By: Damien Chazelle
In Theatres: Dec 9, 2016 Limited
Box Office: $89,758,080.00
Runtime: 128 minutes
Studio: Liongate Films

TOMATOMETER 93%
Average Rating: 8.7/10
Reviews Counted: 305
Fresh: 283
Rotten: 22
Critics Consensus: La La Land breathes new life into a bygone genre with thrillingly assured direction, powerful performances, and an irresistible excess of heart.
AUDIENCE SCORE 87% liked it
Average Rating: 4.3/5
User Ratings: 43,401

Didn't I see this same scene in The Nice Guys? Nope, I guess not. ©Summit Entertainment

From the man who brought you the intense story of a young man trying to become a jazz drummer...

So, La La Land. This movie was just announced to have received no less than 14 Oscar nominations but it has already gotten 182 nominations for other awards and won a total of 134 of them. That's pretty impressive when you consider that for most of the world we just found out and saw this movie starting from a little over a month ago. Written and directed by Damien Chazelle who also wrote and directed the 2014 surprise hit that was Whiplash. The surprising thing is that La La Land was supposed to be made first before Whiplash but as the Chazelle was relatively unknown then and the script proved a little too difficult to bring to life, Whiplash was made instead.

How often do you do a swishy dance when you get dragged to a party? ©Summit Entertainment

Whiplash was a simple story but was so intense and brilliantly told and the music heightened that intensity. La La Land is at the other end of the spectrum. It's a Rom-Com coated in a quirky musical that pays homage to all of the musicals from the 40's and 50's, those movies with Fred Astaire, Gene Kelly and Ginger Rogers and the ones by made by Busby Berkeley. But they aren't as elaborate or as grand, except of course for that last one. But they are just as entertaining to watch. And underneath all that colourful choreography is a solid soundtrack that is heavily influenced by jazz.

How often do first meetings go so well that you end up doing a dance together? I know it happens a lot in Bollywood films too. ©Summit Entertainment

The story is pretty simple, a struggling actress meets and equally struggling jazz musician who dreams of buying an old jazz club and turning it into his own dream jazz club. They meet much like in any other Rom-Com, bumping into each other in unlikely places until that one moment where they finally get to talk and though they may at first rub each other the wrong way something does click and soon they fall in love. As with any other Rom-Com, there is, of course, that moment of conflict where they question their relationship and decide to go their separate ways in the case of La La Land the wedge between them is their respective dreams. But unlike most Rom-Coms, they don't end up together but they do have a sort of reunion near the end of the film. Their story is told not only through dialogue but through song and dance too.

Oh, look it's J.K. Simmons being mean to another jazz musician. ©Summit Entertainment

So, on to the likes.

  • The story. Nothing special about it but very well told and towards the end, not exactly the ending you were expecting but good nonetheless. Loved the little "what if" musical segment.
  • The music. Loved it.
  • The visuals. Loved it too. Beautifully shot and there were moments where Chazelle would use certain visual/camera compositions and lighting that was used back in those old movies.
  • The choreography. What's not to like? If you didn't like it, why did you go watch it, to begin with? You did see the trailers before going, right?
  • The cast. Brilliant performance by both Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone didn't know they could dance let alone sing.


The not so likes.
  • As good as the music is I sort of felt that the singing could have been a lot better.


The grandest and most colourful dance scene happens not when these two find happiness together... ©Summit Entertainment

All in all, La La Land is a beautiful tribute to those great dance musicals from the early days of Hollywood and not only is the music and dancing entertaining but it has a lovely little story brought to life by two very talented actors whom you can tell are really enjoying themselves. If they weren't we as the audience probably wouldn't have enjoyed watching it as much. Case in point, Toni Colette in xXx.

As with quite a few good love stories this one too has a scene in a cinema. ©Summit Entertainment

If you're looking for something different, something fresh, a story told very well but in a different way than pretty much every movie in the past year then go watch this. Or just go watch it to see why everyone's talking about it and why it's been nominated for so many awards and won quite a few. La La Land deserves a solid 4 out of 5.

Check out the trailer.













Wednesday, January 25, 2017

QUICK REVIEW: ARRIVAL (2016)

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From IMDB:

When mysterious spacecraft touch down across the globe, an elite team - led by expert linguist Louise Banks - is brought together to investigate. As mankind teeters on the verge of global war, Banks and the team race against time for answers - and to find them, she will take a chance that could threaten her life, and quite possibly humanity.

Arrival (2016) on IMDb

Reviews 699 user | 511 critic


From Rotten Tomatoes:

When mysterious spacecraft touch down across the globe, an elite team--lead by expert linguist Louise Banks (Amy Adams)--are brought together to investigate. As mankind teeters on the verge of global war, Banks and the team race against time for answers--and to find them, she will take a chance that could threaten her life, and quite possibly humanity.

Rating: PG-13 (for brief strong language)
Directed By: Denis Villeneuve
Written By: Eric Heisserer
In Theatres: Nov 11, 2016, Wide
Box Office: $95,664,632.00
Runtime: 116 minutes

TOMATOMETER 94%
Average Rating: 8.4/10
Reviews Counted: 301
Fresh: 283
Rotten: 18
Critics Consensus: Arrival delivers a must-see experience for fans of thinking person's sci-fi that anchors its heady themes with genuinely affecting emotion and a terrific performance from Amy Adams.
AUDIENCE SCORE 83% liked it
Average Rating: 4.1/5
User Ratings: 61,643

What goes through your mind when giant seed pods begin landing all over the earth? ©Paramount Pictures

I've heard quite a few people reference 1997's Contact when they talk about this movie...

Okay, so I saw Arrival this past weekend a half hour after I watched The Great Wall, The Great Wall was a big-budget summer blockbuster action movie sort that you watch without using your brain. Lots of nice shots, cool action scenes and little substance to the story to confuse you. Arrival, on the other hand, is on the other side of the movie spectrum.

Arrival, based on a short story called "Story of Your Life" by Ted Chiang, which was then turned into working script by the director Denis Villeneuve is a thoughtful and thought-provoking film, and in that way, it is similar to 1997's Contact. The only other way that Arrival is similar to Contact is that throughout the movie you follow a female scientist. That's it. In Contact, which was directed by Robert Zemeckis and based on a story by Carl Sagan and Ann DruyanEleanor Arroway (Jodie Foster) is an astronomer very much involved with the search for alien intelligence, she wants to meet an alien. In Arrival, linguist Louise Banks (Amy Adams) isn't. She's invited to lead the team tasked with establishing contact with the aliens but the experience at first terrifies her.

What do you do when someone tells you that you need to talk to aliens? And fast. ©Paramount Pictures

Contact takes us through the experience of a first extra-terrestrial contact through the eyes of Eleanor Arroway as she battles the sceptics who try to dismiss her and her findings and then decide to not pick her for the first mission after they've completed the machine that she helped piece together, albeit with the help of a suspicious billionaire named S.R. Hadden (John Hurt). The movie deals with that first contact from several viewpoints, from Arroway's point of view whose enthusiasm after finding a possible alien civilisation and of the possibility of meeting them blinds her to the potential dangers it might present, from the government's point of view which of course is suspicious and wary of it and from the point of view of the public where some are willing to embrace it and some in outright fear of it. 

And that you have to do it dressed like a spaceman in a huge condom? ©Paramount Pictures

Arrival too tries to deal with some of the things that were put forth in Contact, how nations and governments around the world try to deal with the possibility of first-contact and in this case of the aliens literally dropping in, of how the public might deal with but it differs greatly with how our protagonists deals with it. Both movies show us a personal side of the main protagonist that colour how they deal with the situation they find themselves in but it comes at it from different ends. Where Contact feels a little melodramatic and sappy when Arroway finally gets to "meet" the aliens, what Banks discover's is entirely personal and somewhat bittersweet, yes there is more to what she discovers but best you watch it yourself, if you haven't yet that is. 

When you came to the party overdressed and the only way you can chat someone up is to dress casually. ©Paramount Pictures

Anyway, on to the likes.


  • The story. Brilliant. As you watch it and you go through what's happening guided by Banks you're also given glimpses of what appears to be Banks memories but by the end, you realise that that's not what you were seeing at all. That revelation makes you think again about what all that she's gone through. 
  • The cast. Amy Adams is amazing. Jeremy Renner provides a nice balance and counterpoint to Adam's character. Forest Whitaker is entertaining as Colonel Weber, I like that he isn't the overbearing military character but someone trying to find balance not only in the situation but also in how he deals with everyone. Enjoyed Michael Stuhlbarg's Agent Halpern too. Every main character in this film is level-headed and rational and it doesn't hurt the drama or storytelling at all. Most movies would require at least one character to be the one that pushes the others to provide drama and conflict but here there isn't one unless you count General Shang (Tzi Ma) but when you find out why he does it it doesn't appear to be an exaggerated response.
  • The visuals. Beautifully shot. Every scene just lovely.
  • The soundtrack. Amazing music. Amazing soundtrack.
  • The science. Fascinating. 

What do you do when the hosts turns out to be gigantic pods with seven legs and have no faces? ©Paramount Pictures

I've seen Denis Villeneuve's Sicario (2015) that was a tense and gripping film from start to finish. An emotional ride as you follow Emily Blunt's character and her discovery of what is really going on. Arrival is just the same but more so. Because of it's subject matter you ask yourself even more questions, questions about not only what that first extra-terrestrial contact would be like but how we would deal with it, we question about what we understand as a language and we question would we do the same if we were given that same gift the Heptapods gave her after she truly understood their language, the gift that saved the world. 

I loved Arrival and am probably going to watch it again sometime in the future. I'm giving Arrival a 4.5 out of 5. It's just too good to pass up.

Here's the trailer if you haven't already seen it. 


Tuesday, January 24, 2017

MOVIE REVIEW: THE GREAT WALL (2017)

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From IMDB:

When a mercenary warrior (Matt Damon) is imprisoned within the Great Wall, he discovers the mystery behind one of the greatest wonders of the world. As wave after wave of marauding beasts besieges the massive structure, his quest for fortune turns into a journey toward heroism as he joins a huge army of elite warriors to confront the unimaginable and seemingly unstoppable force. 

The Great Wall (2016) on IMDb


Reviews 56 user | 41 critic



From Rotten Tomatoes:

Starring global superstar Matt Damon and directed by one of the most breathtaking visual stylists of our time, Zhang Yimou (Hero, House of Flying Daggers), Legendary's The Great Wall tells the story of an elite force making a valiant stand for humanity on the world's most iconic structure. The first English-language production for Yimou is the largest film ever shot entirely in China. The Great Wall also stars Jing Tian, Pedro Pascal, Willem Dafoe and Andy Lau.

Rating: PG-13 (for sequences of fantasy action violence)
Directed By: Yimou Zhang
In Theaters: Feb 17, 2017 Wide
Runtime: 104 minutes

TOMATOMETER 44%
Average Rating: 5.8/10
Reviews Counted: 9
Fresh: 4
Rotten: 5

Critics Consensus: No consensus yet.

WANT TO SEE 94% want to see
User Ratings: 8,672

Meet Pero and William. They've been riding across the desert for months only to end up at a wall. ©Universal Pictures

A movie that you wouldn't expect to see someone like Matt Damon in...

The Great Wall. From the very beginning of the film, much like that xXx: Return of Xander Cage movie, you know who is behind this film, who's paying for it. But unlike that movie, this movie actually has an impressive team behind it, in a way. Written by Max Brooks who wrote the book World War Z which was turned into a movie in 2013, Edward Zwick who produced movies like Legends of the Fall (1994) and The Last Samurai (2003) and directed movies like Glory (1989) and Blood Diamond (2006), and Marshall Herskovitz who also worked on the same films. It's directed by the acclaimed Zhang Yimou who directed The Flowers of War (2011), House of Flying Daggers (2004), Hero (2002) andRaise the Red Lantern (1991). So you're expecting something pretty amazing, right? Well, compared to xXx, yes you are. 

The man in black is the commander the others are the generals. The commander doesn't last long and guess which of the generals he chooses to take over his place. ©Universal Pictures

So if you've seen the trailer you know that this movie is about or takes place in China and more specifically the Great Wall of China. You also know that something monstrous is attacking said great wall and for whatever reason, a white man and his Spanish friend end up at said portion of the very long wall where the monsters are attacking. The white man named William Garin played by Matt Damon then decides to volunteer himself to help the Chinese army fight the attackers. His travel buddy Pero Tovar (Pedro Pascal) though has different ideas, he wants to do what they came to do which is look for something that the west has heard rumours of and wants very badly. He is aided by a man named Ballard (Willem Dafoe) who has been at the wall for 25 years for learning the existence of the thing that William and Pero have come looking for. 

As the film progresses you see William go through a change of heart and career, annoy his buddy Pero, gain the trust of Commander Lin Mei (Tian Jing) and her generals as well as Strategist Wang (Andy Lau), do amazing things with a bow and arrow and kill monsters whose origins and behaviour are pretty ridiculous. 


The movie says it takes place at the Great Wall but most of the time you're at this one section only. ©Universal Pictures

On to the likes.

  • The story. It isn't that bad actually. It isn't original for sure but it isn't completely horrible, full of plotholes or peppered with bad dialogue. It's simple and straight forward.
  • The cast. Overall not bad. If you like Matt Damon in the Bourne series you'll probably enjoy him here too. Same goes for Pedro Pascal whom most will remember as the dude that gets his eyes gouged out and then his head crushed in the Game of Thrones series. And of course Willem Dafoe, this is a minor role for him for sure but that doesn't mean he doesn't do a good job. And then there's the Asian cast of whom you'll have the pleasure of meeting two of them for most of the movie, Commander Lin Mei played by Tian Jing, an orphan girl who rises up the ranks and one day due to an unfortunate circumstance is given control of the Nameless Army and Strategist Wang played by Andy Lau, a kind of intelligence officer cum scientist for the Nameless Army. If you're a fan of Asian Cinema especially those coming out of Hong Kong then you know who Andy Lau is. Tian Jing on the other hand is a relatively new actress but she's shared the screen with Jackie Chan in Police Story: Lockdown (2013) and with Chow Yun-Fat in The Man from Macau (2014) and also Donnie Yen in Special ID (2013). 
  • What you see on the screen. That's pretty good too. The costumes are colourful and elaborate. The sets look impressive and quite real. The effects look good. The army makes quite an impression. The action scenes were quite good too.
And this thing here is what the Great Wall was made to keep out. Yes, that's his eyes near his shoulder. But these are the soldiers, wait till you meet the queen and her armoured bodyguards. ©Universal Pictures

The not so likes.
  • Well as mentioned before the story is not at all original maybe the only original thing is how the monsters, the Tao Tei came to be is and of course how they look. 
  • Which brings me to the second thing that was a little ridiculous or maybe really ridiculous, the Tao Tei's origins and what the Chinese empire knows about them. It just sounds ridiculous and this is a ridiculous movie.
  • Which brings me to another thing about the Tao Tei. They don't look horrible but seeing as how everything else around looks so good the Tao Tei sort of looks not as good. You get what I mean? Now as perfect as the other visual effects. 
This happens in the final battle. I'll let you figure out what happens. Or go watch the movie. ©Universal Pictures

Overall The Great Wall is a decent no-brainer action movie set in a familiar historical location with an unusual twist. The story has its good moments but it also has its silly ones too. If you know of Zhang Yimou and the movies he's done don't expect this one to be like those others, there are elements from them but overall this is closer to the Hollywood summer blockbusters than any of his elaborate period dramas or action films. Go and watch this with that mindset and you'll be okay. Go expecting something like House of the Flying Dagger or any of Matt Damon's other films and you may be a little disappointed. This is big-budget, colourful-action eye-candy more than anything else. I'm going to give this movie a decent 3 out of 5. 

Have a look at the trailer below.