Showing posts with label Elizabeth Banks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elizabeth Banks. Show all posts

Sunday, 18 May 2025

Movie Review: Brightburn (2019)


Genre: Horror  
Director: David Yarovesky  
Starring: Elizabeth Banks, Jackson A. Dunn, David Denman  
Running Time: 90 minutes  

Synopsis: In rural Kansas, farmers Tori and Kyle Breyer (Elizabeth Banks and David Denman) are unable to conceive a child. An alien spacecraft crashes onto their farm, and they adopt the baby that they find within it. Twelve years later, their son Brandon (Jackson A. Dunn) starts to receive alien messages and exhibit strange behaviour, and then discovers super powers. Brandon learns his mission on Earth is evil, and unleashes horror on the community and anyone who attempts to stop him. 

What Works Well: The premise of a far-from-benevolent alien in child form is intriguing, and the no-matter-what bond between mother and son creates a sturdy foundation for parental disbelief. The special effects are impressive, and director David Yarovesky effectively deploys moments of shock and gore. Jackson A. Dunn is chilling as a subdued force of evil causing havoc in a well-drawn small-town milieu. The pacing is brisk enough to pack plenty of carnage into 90 minutes.

What Does Not Work As Well: Ambitions exceed the capacity to deliver, the narrative caught between global menace and local slasher. Brandon's strengths, once revealed, are supercharged, and yet unleashed according to traditional and toying stalk-and-terrify-before-the-kill victim-by-victim rhythms.

Key Quote:
Brandon: I've realized I'm special. Because my real parents aren't from a stupid place like here.



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Sunday, 11 June 2023

Movie Review: Call Jane (2022)


Genre: Abortion Drama
Director: Phyllis Nagy
Starring: Elizabeth Banks, Sigourney Weaver, Chris Messina, Kate Mara
Running Time: 121 minutes

Synopsis: In Chicago of 1968, Joy (Elizabeth Banks) is a middleclass housewife married to lawyer Will (Chris Messina). They have a teenaged daughter Charlotte, and Joy is pregnant again, but a health scare triggers a stark choice: continuing with the pregnancy will endanger her life. With abortions illegal, she connects with the "Call Jane" collective of women providing secret abortion services. After her procedure, Joy meets the group's organizer Virginia (Sigourney Weaver) and starts to volunteer her time, causing a strain in her relationships with Will and Charlotte.

What Works Well: Inspired by the real-life Jane Collective, director Phyllis Nagy crafts a topical reminder of the US abortion landscape before 1973's Roe vs Wade Supreme Court decision. Mixing societal, feminist, and racial themes, this is a celebration of women's resiliency in the face of man-made laws, male-dominated hospital board decisions, men profiteering at the expense of women, and a patriarchal home environment. Elizabeth Banks as Joy brings the abortion trauma to mainstream living rooms with a minimum of melodrama, and Sigourney Weaver presents a robust counterpoint of activism.

What Does Not Work As Well: Although most of the tone is factual, moments of preachiness do surface. The running time is a good 15 minutes longer than necessary, and sub-plots involving Joy's daughter Charlotte and widowed next-door neighbour Lana (Kate Mara) flounder.

Conclusion: Important, impactful, and impressive.



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Saturday, 15 October 2022

Movie Review: Man On A Ledge (2012)

A dramatic thriller, Man On A Ledge is a wild-enough ride through a too-insane-to-matter plot.

Former police officer Nick Cassidy (Sam Worthington) is serving prison time for stealing and fragmenting a large precious diamond, a crime he denies committing. He escapes, and a month later books a hotel room in Manhattan, writes a suicide note, and steps out onto the ledge. Detective Jack Dougherty (Edward Burns) is first on the scene, but Nick demands to talk with negotiator Lydia Mercer (Elizabeth Banks). 

As the expected crowd and media hordes gather at street level, Nick's ex-partner Ackerman (Anthonie Mackie) and Sergeant Marcus (Titus Welliver) follow the drama with interest. They realize Nick's stunt is a distraction to allow his brother Joey (Jamie Bell) and Joey's girlfriend Angie (Genesis Rodriguez) to infiltrate the vault of corrupt real estate tycoon David Englander (Ed Harris) and steal the diamond for real, proving Nick's innocence. But Englander has many police officers on his payroll, and is determined to hold onto the diamond.

Written by Pablo Fenjves and directed by Asger Leth, Man On A Ledge is a heist movie jazzed up with a needlessly complicated backstory, but also handsomely mounted with a sense of glib bravado. Whether with Nick on a ledge threatening an instant death or with Joey and Angie navigating Englander's alarm systems, the tension of a misstep is always near. Leth finds edgy perspectives and keeps his cameras moving despite the potentially static premise.

The visual gloss is necessary, because the actual plot is well past ludicrous. The holes are large and obvious, starting with not a single police officer in New York recognizing the supposedly notorious Nick, who is keen to buy time by refusing to disclose his identity. A large building rooftop explosion attracts no attention, then Joey and Angie are clever enough to defeat the city's most elaborate security system, but need to radio Nick - on that ledge - to recognize a heat detector. 

The performances are of the adequate variety. Elizabeth Banks benefits from the most depth as her character deals with the trauma of a previous failed negotiation and is now forced to re-test her instincts. Ed Harris phones in a bad guy performance and does not look healthy doing it. 

As typically happens with thrillers tethered to one location, Fenjves starts to clutch at flimsy reasons to keep Nick suspended in place, and it's a relief when he finally abandons the jumper pretense and swings into action during the suitably chaotic climax. Man On A Ledge offers a good view, as long as the details are left unscrutinized.



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Saturday, 30 October 2021

Movie Review: The Next Three Days (2010)

A prison escape thriller, The Next Three Days features an ordinary man hatching an extraordinary plot to save his wife from a life behind bars.

In Pittsburgh, John and Lara Brennan (Russell Crowe and Elizabeth Banks) are a typical middle class couple raising their young son Luke. John is a community college teacher and Lara is an office worker, but their life is suddenly turned upside down when she is arrested and convicted for murdering her boss, a crime she strenuously denies committing. But with circumstantial evidence stacked against her, all appeals are denied.

In desperation, John consults with prison escape expert Damon Pennington (Liam Neeson), and starts to plan a breakout for Lara. He surveils the prison to identify weak points, attempts to buy forged papers from dangerous underworld types, and sells the house to raise money, all while holding onto his job, caring for Luke as a single parent, and regularly visiting Lara without revealing what he is up to. John's amateurish mistakes threaten his plan and endanger his life, but when he learns Lara will be transferred to another prison, he is forced to act.

Written and directed by Paul Haggis and delivered in a measured flashback structure, The Next Three Days is a remake of the 2008 French movie Pour Elle. This is a well-paced and tense thriller, building excitement around a familiar couple thrust into an existential crisis. The deep connection between husband and wife infuses John's otherwise insane quest with nobility, and the film asks how far an ordinary man will go to save his wife. The answer passes through plenty of bungling and missteps, providing the narrative with a thread of anxious fragility. 

The plot rides on John's everyman attributes as an undoubtedly smart man also indisputably out of his depth, and Russell Crowe admirably sinks into the role. This is Crowe with grim determination, an amateur's fresh set of eyes, some beginner's luck, and little else, starting from a clean slate of inexperience to try and devise an audacious breakout. Haggis wrestles dangerous charm out of his antics, but also pushes too hard in some muddled entanglements with thug-types.

Other less than stellar moments include patchy representations of police work consisting of several undefined detectives running in different directions, and only an abstract recreation of the trigger crime event with no sympathy for the victim.

Elizabeth Banks contributes steel and passion, but fades out for long stretches. The cast also includes Brian Dennehy as John's emotionally distant father and Olivia Wilde as a single mom in John's neighbourhood. With small but pivotal contributions, both will influence the outcome. 

The final third switches gears into the electrifying escape-in-progress, Haggis disclosing just enough about John's plan to confirm all will not go well. Unexpected twists and detours demand on-the-fly improvisation, and as John and Lara attempt to navigate their way out of a difficult maze, The Next Three Days deploys deliciously surprising ploys. An amateur has no clue but also no preconceptions, and the uncertainty delivers manic enjoyment.



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Thursday, 5 March 2020

Movie Review: Pitch Perfect (2012)


A bright comedy and musical, Pitch Perfect wades into the offbeat world of acapella college group rivalries.

Beca (Anna Kendrick) is a freshman at Barden University, where the all-boys Treblemakers compete with the all-girls Barden Bellas for acapella group supremacy. Beca is an aspiring DJ and only attending college to please her father, but joins the Bellas after meeting the group's leaders Aubrey (Anna Camp) and Chloe (Brittany Snow). Another freshman, an Australian who calls herself Fat Amy (Rebel Wilson), is also among the group's newcomers.

As the academic year progresses the Bellas strive to improve and qualify for the regional and national championships. But the champion Treblemakers, led by the brash Bumper (Adam DeVine), provide tough competition. Beca clashes with Aubrey over the Bellas' choice of music, and starts to catch the attention of Jesse (Skylar Astin), a Treblemaker, although the Bellas have a rule against hookups with the competition.

Shining a spotlight on a corner of campus weirdness, Pitch Perfect adapts the non-fiction book by Mickey Rapkin as an unironic celebration of quirkiness. The characters inhabiting the acapella world all know they are somewhat nerdy, but stop short of frivolous self-awareness. The collegiates take the singing and competitions seriously, and their ecosystem, like any other campus niche, is a microcosm of the growing into adulthood experience.

The smart screenplay by Kay Cannon deserves much of the credit for sufficiently rounding several of the Bellas within their acapella world while maintaining a caustic edge. Beca is a change agent, Aubrey the defender of the status-quo, while Amy is uninhibited and unfiltered. Chloe is perhaps the most complex, a peacemaker with an open mind caught between loyalty and advancement. They are all starting to accumulate life's emotional baggage, and growing into people worth knowing.

The romance elements between Beca and Jesse are more standard and relatively underdeveloped, and the film's other loose strands include Beca's relationship with her father. The darkest humour comes from the competition commentators played by Elizabeth Banks (who co-produced the film) and John Michael Higgins. They infuse their booth duties with all the overinflated seriousness of major sports coverage, laced with a large dose of politically incorrect banter.

Director Jason Moore populates the film with plenty of peripheral fun in the form of typical college residents and tensions, from the student-run radio station to dorm roommates knocking on the edges of eccentricity. Even some of the rank-and-file acapella group members pop with personality.

The music is a mix of familiar and restless, Beca's penchant for innovative mixes just waiting for an impeccable moment to burst forth. Imminently likable, Pitch Perfect hits most of the right notes.






All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Friday, 22 July 2016

Movie Review: What To Expect When You're Expecting (2012)


A multi-story ensemble cast romantic comedy, What To Expect When You're Expecting is as bad as can be expected. The concept of adapting a pregnancy guidebook into a movie was only ever going to result in a trivial experience, and the outcome is the blandest from of purée.

Five stories unfold in parallel. Jules (Cameron Diaz) is a celebrity television fitness instructor who finds herself unexpectedly pregnant after sleeping with her dance partner Evan on a reality television show. Both are type-A personalities and clash over every detail. Freelance photographer Holly (Jennifer Lopez) is desperate to adopt a child and makes plans for an overseas adoption from Ethiopia. Her husband Alex is less ready to start a family.

Wendy (Elizabeth Banks) runs a maternity shop and becomes pregnant after years of trying with her husband Gary, who is locked in a lifelong competitiveness contest with his ex-racing car champion dad Ramsey (Dennis Quaid). Sure enough, Ramsey's much younger trophy wife Skyler (Brooklyn Decker) is also pregnant, and with twins. And food truck operator Rosie (Anna Kendrick) finds herself pregnant after hooking up for one night of sex with former high school flame Marco, who runs a competing truck.

Directed by Kirk Jones, What To Expect When You're Expecting borrows the title from Heidi Murkoff's go-to pregnancy guide but is otherwise a banal exercise in stars cashing cheques for doing little. The film predictably follows the five mini-stories from conception to delivery, with plenty of bare but fake baby bumps, barely any laughs, no depth of character and nothing new to offer.

The best that Jones can come up with in terms of surprises is one pregnancy that terminates early, one inconvenient loss of employment causing financial stress, and routine plot devices involving dads feeling not ready for the major upcoming change in lifestyle. It's all dealt with in the most superficial, obvious manner with no style to cover up the lack of substance.

The performances are uniformly overexcited, with Dennis Quaid suffering the most embarrassment as the insufferable dad engaged in a perpetual hobby of humiliating his son. In relative terms, Anna Kendrick emerges with some credit, and it's no surprise that her role aims for more drama and less fluff. Chris Rock makes an appearance as part of a group of dads who meet in the park with their kids to try and provide comic relief, and Rebel Wilson plays store owner Wendy's sidekick.

What To Expect When You're Expecting is as tedious as that eighth diaper change at the end of an exhausting day filled with baby poop and burps.






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Friday, 4 September 2015

Movie Review: Definitely, Maybe (2008)


A romantic comedy with an amiable twist, Definitely, Maybe is a backstory of multiple romances leading to a divorce, as told by a father to his young daughter.

Will (Ryan Reynolds) is in the midst of a divorce. He is pressed by his 10 year old daughter Maya (Abigail Breslin), who has just had her first sex education class, to recount the story of all his serious relationships leading up to his marrying her Mom. Will agrees to do so, but hides the real names of his romantic partners to keep Maya guessing as to the identity of her mother.

As a young man Will was a political activist in Wisconsin, deeply in love with college sweetheart Emily (Elizabeth Banks). They remain committed to each other as Will moves to New York to work on Bill Clinton's first presidential campaign. In the big city he becomes friends with fellow campaign worker Russell (Derek Luke), and meets the sophisticated Summer (Rachel Weisz) and scrappy photocopy girl April (Isla Fisher). Summer was Emily's former roommate, and is now in a relationship with the much older pompous professor Hampton Roth (Kevin Kline). April is skeptical about politics but struggling to define what she is passionate about.

Will starts to develop feelings of genuine affection for April, but with Emily about to visit New York, Will prepares himself to remain faithful to his first love and propose marriage. But Emily has a surprise and all does not go according to plan. Will's future includes more complex relationships with Summer, April and Emily as Maya is kept guessing as to the identity of Mom and the ultimate destination of Dad's heart.

Written and directed by Adam Brooks, Definitely, Maybe does not stray far from the fundamental tenets of the romantic comedy genre but finds a fresh twist in packing three mini-romances into a charming puzzle as told to a child. The premise allows the film to neatly side-step the predictably of the preordained happy ending demanded by the genre. While it is certain that Will's tale will find an upbeat conclusion, the script is clever enough to conceal which partner will prove to be Maya's mother and the winner of Will's enduring affection.

The three-in-one format also allows the relationships to remain crisp and concise. Emily, Summer and April are provided with enough definition and quirkiness to come to life as individuals. Emily is the small-town girl struggling with her partner's big city political ambitions; Summer travels in literate circles and enjoys the company and mentorship of men like Hampton, and April is struggling to live up to her own potential and move beyond in-built sarcasm to constructive achievement.

All three are appealing and relatively well-rounded women, and it's easy to believe that Will can develop deep relationships with them. The film maintains interest by nurturing three complex affairs of the heart, rather than the typical struggle to maintain momentum with the artificial ups and downs of just one central romance. But in the final 30 minutes Brooks does start to push his concept beyond the limit, cycling through possibilities ever faster to turn a sweet romance into a more cheesy guessing game.

The performances are of the marginally above average variety, with Reynolds, Banks, Weisz and Fisher doing what is expected and a bit more. Fisher emerges with the most compelling portrayal as April, a woman who drifts in and out of Will's life, sometimes as a witness, sometimes as a participant, and always looking for something more meaningful for both of them, just as she is looking for her lost copy of Jane Eyre.

Definitely, Maybe is definitely bound by romantic comedy rules, but just may be bright enough to create some welcome and original wriggle room.






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Monday, 6 July 2015

Movie Review: Love And Mercy (2014)


A tender biography of musician Brian Wilson, Love And Mercy explores two episodes in the life of the Beach Boys' songwriter: as a young talent at the peak of his creative process, and 20 years later as an older man struggling to find love and regain his footing in the world.

The film unfolds in parallel narratives. In the mid-1960s, the Beach Boys are at the peak of their popularity. After suffering a panic attack, the band's inspiration and main songwriter Brian Wilson (Paul Dano) abandons the latest tour and returns to the studio to write and prepare the recording of the album Pet Sounds. Despite creating a wildly innovative sound, Wilson faces a mountain of criticism for veering towards a more serious musical direction and abandoning the band's successful formula of simple and fun surf tunes.

In the second narrative, it's the 1980s, and an older Wilson (John Cusack) meets Cadillac saleswoman Melinda Ledbetter (Elizabeth Banks). They start a romance but Melinda soon discovers that Brian is a deeply distressed man, suffering under the controlling hand of Dr. Eugene Landy (Paul Giamatti). Landy manipulates Wilson emotionally and keeps him on a steady diet of medications. Melinda has to decide how badly she wants to fight for the chance to salvage a true relationship.

Directed by Bill Pohlad, Love And Mercy closely follows the facts and unveils the ups and downs of superstardom, as expectations collide with personal ambition to create emotional train wrecks. The film is excellent at capturing a deeply personal drama as the young Wilson fights the demons of his upbringing and the desire of his bandmates to keep churning out hits. Instead he unleashes his instrumental and harmonic creativity with some substantial help from mind-altering substances, a decision that cements his status as a genius songwriter and sows the seeds of his decline.

The more modern narrative is almost equally compelling. Wilson the grown man is a shadow of his former self. Years of drug abuse led him into the clutches of Doctor Landy, and smelling a big pay day, Landy assumed control of Wilson's life. The romance between Wilson and Melinda is handled with the maturity that comes when adults carrying plenty of luggage fall in love, and the strength of their nascent bond becomes the foundation on which Melinda will decide to make her unlikely stand.

Pohlad recreates a carefree 1960s filled with parties, music and the heady promises spawned by early success. The film's best moments are in the studio, as Wilson works with experienced session musicians to bring his ideas to life, Love And Mercy a rare film that invests the time to show the hard work behind seemingly effortless creativity. The film peaks with Wilson and the band conjuring up the single Good Vibrations, an iconic song that defined the band and its generation. Good Vibrations was the massive hit that wasn't on Pet Sounds, but it could only have been created in the album's wake.

The 1980s segments are good, but just a bit less inspired. Landy emerges as a smarmy villain, and the battle for Wilson's soul between the evil doctor and the well-intentioned Melinda is still remarkable for being true. But the resolution is rushed, Pohlad's admirable dedication to tell two stories finally catching up with him and the 121 minutes of running time.

Both Paul Dano and John Cusack are excellent in portraying Brian Wilson at very different stages of his life. Dano creates a wide-eyed artist still not quite realizing neither the enormity of his talent nor the trouble he is hurtling towards. Cusack is all about Wilson as damaged goods, a fervent spirit still residing deep in his heart but for the moment concealed by years of abuse, both self-inflicted and dished out by the likes of Landy. Elizabeth Bank is a revelation as Melinda Ledbetter, a woman who has to convince herself that she has the inner strength to both love and fight for a passionate artist in trouble.

Love And Mercy treats its subject with deserved respect, a slice of musical history that transcends an over-hyped industry to celebrate an often overlooked prodigy.






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Monday, 20 October 2014

Movie Review: The 40 Year-Old Virgin (2005)


An uproarious sex comedy, The 40 Year-Old Virgin hits all its targets by mixing wild humour with the gentle awkwardness of a man struggling to make the jump into full adulthood.

Andy (Steve Carell) is a lonely 40 year old, living on his own and working in the stockroom of a technology superstore. Andy is into comic books and toy collectibles, and has no social life to speak of. His work colleagues include David (Paul Rudd), still not over a failed relationship, Jay (Romany Malco), a loud and fast-talking ladies man, and Cal (Seth Rogen) who is smarter than he looks and in search of kinkier experiences. When Andy's co-workers find out that he is still a virgin and has almost given up looking for a meaningful relationship, they set about trying to help him.

Andy is hesitant but starts to take the advice of his new friends. Predictably, most of the experiences end in disaster. However, he does slowly gain some confidence to interact with women, and local business owner Trish (Catherine Keener) catches his eye. Bookstore clerk Beth (Elizabeth Banks) is also a potential partner, while Andy's boss and store manager Paula (Jane Lynch) graciously offers her services to help him with his predicament. But Andy gathers up his courage and embarks on a relationship with Trish without revealing to her that he is a virgin, and also gets to know her teenaged daughter Marla (Kat Dennings), herself grappling with upcoming initial sexual experience issues.

Directed by Judd Apatow, who co-wrote with Carell, The 40-Year Old Virgin is a laugh-fest driven both by characters and situations. Andy and his friends are just on the right side of believable as underachieving men searching for new ways to remain irresponsible, keeping the film away from farce. The comic set-pieces also maintain a toehold in the realm of the possible, from Andy receiving a chest waxing to joining Marla at a pregnancy prevention clinic.

The wilder moments are more hit and miss. A highlight is Andy, whose driving skills are limited to a bicycle, getting trapped into a car ride from hell with a very drunk driver in the form of club girl Nicky (Leslie Mann, Mrs. Apatow in a memorable and nonchalantly oblivious turn). Not as funny is a truncated and unnecessary encounter with a transvestite prostitute.

Amidst the mayhem, the film manages to explore the role of sex in a relationship from the male perspective. An annoying hindrance, an absolute necessity, a dangerous distraction, and the ultimate expression of commitment, sex proves to be important in all the ways that Andy feared and craved. Meanwhile, David, Jay and Cal also get their own dose of sexual education, and not in any way that they expected.

Steve Carell is crucial to the film's success, and his performance as Andy nails the essentially likable man drifting into a life of loneliness due more to inertia than any actual hang-up. Catherine Keener emerges as the perfect counterpart, a woman who has had perhaps too much life happen to her too soon, and is happy to go slow with a man who clearly needs to.

The supporting cast is rich in comic talent, with Apatow frequently deploying them in an undercurrent of dangerous mischievousness rather than brazen madcappery.

The 40 Year-Old Virgin is prodded out of his comfort zone and onto the path of responsibility in an adult world. And it's a laugh-out-loud transition, worth the years of waiting in unintended abstinence.






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Monday, 9 December 2013

Movie Review: The Hunger Games: Catching Fire (2013)


The second installment in the adventures of Katniss Everdeen based on the Suzanne Collins novels, The Hunger Games: Catching Fire provides depth to the story but limited forward progression. The movie suffers from middle-child syndrome, lacking a proper opening and leaving the ending for another day. But the film does fulfill its objective of transforming Katniss from naive competitor to potential revolutionary leader.

After surviving the 74th Hunger Games along with fellow District 12 competitor Peeta (Josh Hutcherson), Katniss (Jennifer Lawrence) tries to overcome the trauma of the Games by seeking comfort with boyfriend Gale (Liam Hemsworth). However, Katniss and Peeta's act of rebellion in both surviving the Games begins to inspire an uprising in various Districts. President Coriolanus Snow (Donald Sutherland) insists that Katniss and Peeta pretend to be true lovers and loyal to the Capitol, as they travel through Panem on a victory tour with chaperon Effie Trinket (Elizabeth Banks) and previous District 12 winner Haymitch (Woody Harrelson).

But with an insurgency spreading, Snow conspires with new game-master Plutarch Heavensbee (Philip Seymour Hoffman) to throw Katniss and Peeta back into the arena by re-casting the 75th Hunger Games as a battle among previous winners. Facing another duel to the death among 24 competitors to be broadcast live by gleeful presenter Caesar Flickerman (Stanley Tucci), Katniss and Peeta forge an alliance with electronics expert Beetee (Jeffrey Wright), the athletic Finnick (Sam Claflin) and the resourceful Johanna (Jena Malone). But these Games will be different, with vicious fights for survival against elements unleashed within the arena, and an unexpected outcome.

Catching Fire is one long bridge from the original premise of the first movie to the climactic battles to come. There is a sense of biding time, as the first half is preoccupied with the Victory Tour, and Katniss beginning to sense that something has changed in Panem. Her small act of defiance has triggered a new, flickering hope throughout the land. With the regime clamping down with heavy handed brutality, Katniss slowly realizes that whether she wants to or not, she is becoming a symbol of rebellion and the public face for a movement that she does not yet understand.

The second half of the movie is an unfortunate retread of the original, Katniss and Peeta thrust back into the arena for another battle to the death. The 75th Games are more of a strategic struggle against the elements, not too different from a rather tiresome episode of television's Survivor.  In succession, a poisonous mist, killer baboons and Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds create a litany of "what next" challenges thrown at the competitors, triggering several rounds of frantic running around and arm waving.

As much at Katniss tries to remain the protagonist, there is no escaping the reality that in these Games events happen around Katniss, and members of her alliance are busier than she is fending off the threats. Katniss and Peeta evolve into treasures to be protected rather than problem solvers, and with the central role elevated to a symbol rather than a heroine, Catching Fire begins to flounder.

Outside the arena, Director Francis Lawrence does create a grim environment throughout Panem, colouring the film with depressed greys and relatively pale greens as the winds of violent change start to travel through the land. He also extracts good performances from the cast, Jennifer Lawrence again providing the magnetic centre of the film in an intense, introspective performance full of growth from warrior girl to rebel leader. However, Lawrence does suffer from a Katniss who has to endure a uniformly grim disposition in this episode: she has no opportunity to be anything other than upset or angry.

In support Woody Harrelson makes the biggest impact, as he often does, here giving Haymitch a knowing glint in the eye, offering Katniss the strongest clues that things are different, while still enjoying large quantities of booze at every opportunity. Donald Sutherland delivers a standard evil hissing dictator performance, but Philip Seymour Hoffman looks a bit lost, his attempt at conveying Plutarch's mysterious agenda coming across as rather disinterested. Tucci is as over the top as can be expected from an intentionally aggravating television show host.

The actors representing the three boys in Katniss' life hover around Lawrence like dark planets orbiting the sun. Josh Hutcherson, Liam Hemsworth and Sam Claflin are all steady, with Claflin the most animated and least dewy eyed, but all three are quite overshadowed by the girl in the middle of their lives. The revolution in Panem may be catching fire, but the career of Jennifer Lawrence is burning hotter than the flames in the streets of the Districts.






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Thursday, 10 May 2012

Movie Review: The Hunger Games (2012)


The first book in the Suzanne Collins trilogy is given a grand screen treatment, and delivers an astounding experience. The Hunger Games is a triumph of soul and style over a brutal subject matter.

In a dystopian future, the concept of reality television has extended to a real-life on-screen competition-to-the-death among children. Every year, all of the12 subservient Districts of Panem (a future North America) are compelled to send a boy and a girl between the ages of 12 and 18 to compete in a televised death match until one child survivor is declared the winner of what are termed The Hunger Games. The competition is held for the viewing pleasure of the masses, including the ruling elite who reside in the Capitol. The Hunger Games are a depraved punishment and remembrance ritual for a destructive civil war in which the Districts rebelled against the Capitol, currently ruled by a cold hearted President (Donald Sutherland).

In District 12, a mining outpost and the furthest and poorest District, 16-year-old Katniss Everdeen (Jennifer Lawrence) volunteers to participate in The Hunger Games to save her randomly selected younger sister. Peeta Mellark (Josh Hutcherson), a baker's son, is the other District 12 representative. Katniss has strong survival skills and is an expert archer, while Peeta is less inventive but has strong upper body strength. After some rudimentary training and mentoring by the semi-drunk Haymitch (Woody Harrelson), District 12's only previous winner, Katniss and Peeta start the merciless tournament against 22 other kids, some of whom have trained their entire young lives for this competition.

Creating an enthralling cinematic experience out of a potentially repellent premise was never going to be easy, but director Gary Ross, co-writing with Collins and Billy Ray, pulls it off with panache. Ross allows his cameras to catch only glimpses of the horror of children killing children, and focuses instead on the unfolding human drama of Katniss discovering the world, herself, and hints of her future.

Katniss of course kills only when she has to and in self-defense, and has to resort to quick thinking and brains over brawn to rescue herself from several back-to-the-wall situations. She is also the beneficiary of the kindness of others, survival requiring a sometimes unexpected helping hand.

The Hunger Games is also a celebration of story ahead of special effects. While there are plenty of eye-popping computer-generated visuals, they never dominate and are firmly in third place behind the powerful narrative and interesting, colourful and mostly well-defined characters.

Jennifer Lawrence is the heart of The Hunger Games, and she carries the film gracefully while creating an enduring heroine. In an uncanny extension of her role in Winter's Bone Lawrence is all defiant ability masking deep insecurities while pushing back against a rising tide of panic at her destiny. The other child competitors do achieve individuality but without much depth. Josh Hutcherson is several notches below Lawrence and is unable to convincingly embody an emerging warrior with romantic intentions.

Woody Harrelson and Donald Sutherland provide the supporting adult heft, Harrelson particularly memorable as the could-not-care-less Haymitch is sparked by the potential that he sees in Katniss. Elizabeth Banks and Stanley Tucci add interest as two over-the-top supporting characters, Banks a fashion catastrophe as the over-elaborately coiffed District 12 chaperon and Tucci as a most aggravating evolution of today's television talk show host.

The Hunger Games presents a chillingly unpleasant but imaginable dark future. While the horrors multiply, hope persists that the pure of heart will leave their mark.






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