Ninety percent on Rotten Tomatoes and the whole Aint It Cool news writing team singing its praises. Critics went crazy for it, and I’m late watching it!! The hype for Attack the Block came my way during summer 2011, I just had so much going on I didn’t have the opportunity to get out and see it. But I watched it at home and consciously saved it for a ‘special time’ as I do with many movies. I wish I didn’t have the stupid habit of putting off watching some films because ‘the time isn’t right’, time of day, day of the week kind of thing. Attack the block was my final film of the holiday break 2011 into 2012, the night before going back to work. I watched an episode of The Walking Dead with my wife while intermittently having to get up to put my 2 year old back in to bed, as he is at the age where he refuses to go to bed in any sort of calm manner. But eventually 10pm came around, and it was me and the TV and the big choice to send off an 11 day Christmas break, I chose Attack the Block.
January 4, 2012
October 26, 2011
John Carpenter's The Ward
I got really excited when I first read that John Carpenter was returning to the director’s seat to make a horror movie. I think the last thing I saw that Carpenter made before The Ward was his episode(s) of the masters of horror series. We have spent long enough without the coolness that usually surrounds anything that John Carpenter makes, whether it be an iconic anti-hero, A blistering rifftastic score, or simply the material to encourage a good old out and out debate on whether his latest offering is actually any good, where the Carpenter faithful usually manage to find hidden genius in something that others may deem a complete train wreck. I loved Ghosts of Mars, but a lot of people didn’t. I’ve defended that film more often than I can remember, I know it’s not a great film, but it wasn’t as bad as some people try to make out. So, The Ward, is it any good? I think the better question for a fan may be, how John Carpentery is it?
October 20, 2011
The Way Back
I love Peter Weir, his films always seem to have the most infectious characters, a relatable ‘human’ story, and are usually visually mind blowing. Those people who gave their time to really appreciate the grand scale of master and commander, it’s awesome performances from Russell Crowe and Paul Bettany, and the awe inspiring photography, ‘The Way Back’ could become a really important movie in your life for years to come. With equal quality performances from the whole cast, the named actors Ed Harris, Jim Sturgess, and to some extent Colin Farrel and Mark Strong genuinely shine in these roles. It felt effortless to watch them play here, I believe they all had a deep empathy for the real life story and the people involved that they are portraying onscreen. This is an epic movie of huge scale and beauty.
October 10, 2011
Sniper
Watching Tom Berenger armying around in the jungle really gives me some fond memories. Although Sniper was released only 7 years after platoon, in 1993, I have only just made my way into checking out this movie which as of 2011 has become a 4 film franchise. My expectations were neither high or low with this one, I love war movies and it’d have to be a complete bomb for me to not get at least a couple of enjoyable scenes out of it. The plot while not exactly original was decent enough, straight forward and pretty generic for this kind of thing, but plotting isn’t where I usually put my focus in an action movie, especially one called Sniper starring Tom Berenger and made in 1993. I was expecting Snipery style tension, action, and cool head shots! Did it deliver, it sure did! But what it made up for in decent action it certainly lacked in finesse.
September 6, 2011
Centurion
Centurion was ok, not a great film, not a bad film, maybe not even an average film! It had some kick ass action, fantastic locations, story wise it worked well because it was a straight forward ‘hiding from the enemy, fighting to survive’ fare, and it had some very good acting, led by Michael Fassbender. On the flipside, the characters were only ok: all in dire need of being more fleshed out allowing us to associate with them as people rather than expendable Roman soldiers. But the films greatest flaw was its lack of a definitive good side. I really didn’t know who was good and who was bad, the oppressors or the oppressed. Convention would usually be that the Oppressed are the Victims, the Oppressors are the baddies. But centurion does not play it this was round. As for the films take on this, it’s quite clear who the good guys are, who we meant to be routing for, it’s just why would you want to?
August 30, 2011
Insidious
Everybody has their ‘inner expert’ telling them whether a horror movie is any good or not, and I believe in each individual case, it’s 100% reliable. Did it scare you, did it engage you, did you like the characters, fear for them, empathize with them? Fear is a strong emotion, and to invoke that through a movie is a pretty big deal, it can have a physical impact on the human body, but that said, only if it works for you would you feel anything like this. Firstly, I get absolutely nothing from jumpy films (Gotcha’s as Roger Ebert calls them), 10 seconds after the stupid “jump” all is forgotten, that’s not a horror film, yeah it provokes a physical response, but that reaction is temporary, and I think it’s too easy to make a film designed to make people jump, but not actually put the fear into them. The jump formula is simple, and even the editing sequence and timing can be easily copied from a reliable example, with the audio in the right place, you’ve got a guaranteed audience reaction. Some people like that, and fair enough, for them it’s a reaction they like. There’s no denying that there isn’t a tension building moment, there’s a wait for it…………..aghhhhh! then the “Oh it was her stupid jock boyfriend who just climbed in through the back toilet window” or maybe you would even see something scary. But are you going to go to bed that night, still thinking about the jump, when handsome jock #2 put his hand on Generic blonde #3’s shoulder. Probably not.
August 21, 2011
World's Greatest Dad
Watching this movie seriously reminded me of watching Napolean Dynamite. Let me just say I thought ND was ok, but that dancing at the end of the film was kind of a strange necessity to make people think they’d actually just watched a movie, otherwise you may just think what the hell was that? I just didn’t see any kind of resolution in ND, no heroic end-of-the-third-act moment, other than, “yeah the guy learned how to dance”, So........... WGD, very niche humour, weird, gross out comedy. I don’t find it funny to just hear people swear or say sexually suggestive things in a movie, Superbad was as unfunny as comedies come in my opinion. WGD was a movie that centered fairly uninteresting people (not characters, it goes deeper than that), specifically a teenager with a sick mind and poor social skills, and the normal people with little more than generic twenty first century live's that surround him. The best thing about this movie was by far, Robin Williams. He is such a fantastic versatile actor, and the emotional performance he gave to this film, is just down right phenomenal. I began to love his character, I was amazed, almost shocked at how this man handles his life. WGD is a sad, depressing, but mildly amusing, and (for some) a fascinating film.
August 6, 2011
Unstoppable
It’s kinda rare i’ll write about a movie a week after watching it, but I kept thinking about this one so I thought I’d get something down on screen. Unstoppable, Tony Scott, Denzil Washington, and Chris Pine. I don’t know much about Chris Pine, I liked most of Star Trek and thought he was pretty good in it, but another Scott/Washington partnership is nothing to turn your nose up at. I enjoyed the film, but I didn’t necessarily think it was that great, but, I don’t think it was really........trying to be. Tony Scott sure wanted to make the best out of what he had to work with, but a film of this kind of subject matter, could it really be any better than this? Unless it goes all dusk til dawn on your ass and turns into a vampire massacre, but it doesn’t. The movie is about a train carrying some kind of toxic chemicals belting towards a small town in a grim looking Pennsylvania, it’s going at full speed and there’s nobody driving it. Pretty tense huh?
July 23, 2011
Frozen
Simple set up for this one. Three Students go on a skiing trip somewhere in New England and get stuck on a ski lift after the park closes down and are left to freeze to death. The scenario is brought about through mis-communication between the Ski lift operators, where the guy that let the students on for one last run gets called away from his post, he lets the guy that takes over know that there are still 3 people to come down and to wait for them before he shuts the lift down. The catch is, he was bribed with cash to let the students on this late for their last run, and if he had said there are still 3 people on their way up, things may have been ok for them, but the operator could have got into trouble, but we wouldn’t of had a movie called Frozen, maybe a short called “The Ski Lift and the weak willed operator”. So the relief operator see’s 3 skiers/boarders, pull up at the bottom of the mountain and assumes they are the last 3, and shuts the lift down.
July 13, 2011
Splice
Splice feels like an interesting & simple idea that had a movie squeezed out of it. Wouldn’t it be awesome to make a movie about what would happen if you spliced human DNA with DNA from an animal, and made some half human half animal type creature? Good idea, but the movie doesn’t quite live up to that premise. I try not to be so overly “to the point” critical when I have watched a movie and decide to write about it, but there is little else I could say about this flick. So where do you go from this idea without going into Hammer type territory? They tried to keep it realistic and very human, there was no kind of fantasy with this story, and regardless of how fantastical the premise might be I’m not a bio scientist so I have no idea whether this would actually be possible to splice Human DNA with animal DNA. But if it were, Splice tries to present this in the most rational way possible.
July 12, 2011
21
I usually get a good feeling from the glamour of Las Vegas even when it’s on screen. I’ve only been to Vegas once as of this writing and it was only for one evening, but the place is incredible. The amount of people all doing the same thing as me, the sounds, the lights, the buildings. Even if you don’t gamble, it’s a great place to visit. The Oceans movies are great to watch not only for the intricate & engaging plotting and top notch acting by some of the best screen actors in the business, but the Vegas setting is just awesome to invest your attention in. 21 gave me this same feeling at times, I enjoyed watching it mainly due to it being set in Vegas for the majority of the movie, but that wasn’t quite enough to put this movie up there for recommendation.
July 2, 2011
The Kingdom
The 80’s brought us a plethora of Vietnam war movies, some of them were incredible and could easily stand up as some of the best films of the decade, Platoon, Casualties of War, The Killing Fields, Full Metal Jacket, and some less highly regarded but awesome flicks such as Bat21, Uncommon Valour and Good Morning Vietnam. Growing up in the 80’s and having parents cool enough to let me watch war movies meant that many of these flicks, particularly those mentioned, remind me a lot of my child hood and I have a warm place in my heart for them. So in the future when I’m in my 50’s I often wonder if I will have the same affection for the plethora of middle eastern set ‘war on terror’ movies that have come to grace the 00’s as their decade of prevalence (for obvious reasons). I think so! Movie’s such as Body of Lies, Black Hawk Down, The Hurt Locker, Lions For Lambs, are all excellent movies that I think will come to stand as some of the best war movies that define my 20’s and 30’s.
July 1, 2011
Devil
For a game of football/soccer to work you need all the right people (players) in the right places. you need a goal keeper to stop goal attempts, a line of defenders to prevent attacks reaching the goal, a line of mid field players to feed the attack, strikers to receive the ball and finish the attacks. You also need a coach/manager to organise and strategise with the team, a referee to keep control and a lineman to call off-sides. If any one of these vital elements were missing then the game will either become horribly unbalanced, or pointless to even continue playing, but the sport as we know it is free-form to a degree. Imagine a carefully pre-determined game of football/soccer where all the players must be in exactly the right positions at exactly the right times in order for the game to work as planned, even when it feels completely unnatural then anything like this would actually happen. That is how this movie works through and through, it’s a strange analogy I admit, but the situation, the events are so contrived that you have to accept the story within the story, told by a narration over the movie, that the devil himself has the power to pretty much influence anything he wants, down to the finest detail.
June 28, 2011
S.W.A.T
I kind of put 2003 right in the middle of the great CGI assault on cinema. We saw the 21’st century in with a different kind of action movie, a kind that many would agree would never live up to their practical stunts/effects clad counterparts of the 70’s and the 80’s. Writing now in 2011, this flick is 8 years old and we may be now living in a time where over used CGI is being noticed by so many people all at various levels of film fan-ism. The days of flash editing and Computer graphics are not and will never be behind us, I just think that film making teams are slowly figuring out how to use certain techniques to enhance a film without it being so focally evident that it is being relied upon 100% for creating all the action scenes in a movie. Subtlety vs. Practicality. But fast editing will probably always be used to cover up badly designed, performed & choreographed action.
June 12, 2011
Passchendaele
Trench warfare during World War 1 was horrific. Not just because of the combat methods employed by the fighting forces, but the conditions under which soldiers lived made for high casualties from both sides. Trench warfare as a fighting method had to be resorted to for one major reason, to compensate for advances in weapon technology against the lack of development in mobility. Soldiers were under constant threat from being shot by snipers, blown apart by heavy artillery, and being shot by regular rifles if they were ever visible to the enemy. Most attacks were carried out on foot against occupied fighting lines meaning that usually the defending army had the advantage.The battle of Passchendaele occurred in 1917 in Belgium and is one of the famous battles of World War 1. I cannot say that I am any wiser about the real events of the battle having watched this movie, it affirms the horrors of the battle, but when the movies driving theme isn’t military related, it tends to be a bit sketchy on the real gruesome and more interesting details. Passchendaele is a Canadian movie set against the “distant” back drop of WW1 but the films events mostly take place in Canada.
June 6, 2011
Legend of the Fist: The Return of Chen Zhen
I watched The Green Hornet movie a few weeks ago, Seth Rogen was way out of his depth and Christoph waltz was criminally misused, and the action was pretty much all slow mo mediocreness. That’s my review within a review! So last night I watched Legend of the Fist: The Return of Chen Zhen, which is also, a movie featuring The Green Hornets sidekick Kato. It’s a better “Green Hornet movie” than the soulless Hollywood release, but at times the plot gets a little convoluted.
Donnie Yen reprises the part of Chen Zhen, a character first played by Bruce Lee in Fist of Fury, then again by Jet Li in Fist of Legend. I enjoy writing about plot when I decide to review a movie, and of course my experience, but.....I really don’t want to go too deep into the plot details of this movie here, there were multiple subplots running simultaneously, pretty much every conversation that took place in the movie introduced a new scenario, character, plot development, double cross, allegiance, twist or whatever. It sure was all over the place as far as the narrative goes, but still really enjoyable with some quality Donnie Yen directed action.
May 30, 2011
Dial M For Murder
I guess It takes a real crazy sick kind of individual to possess the capabilities to commit a murder, to actually take the life of another person, to be able to walk up to somebody or in this case behind somebody and kill them, you have to be either a cold blooded evil mother fucker or just plain crazy. The first thing that slightly detracted me from this awesome story is the lack of emphasis towards human emotion when faced with the prospect of having to commit a murder. Tony Wendice (Ray Milland), jealous of his wife’s brief love affair with Robert Cummings, and rightly so, blackmails his old college buddy Alexander Swan (Anthony Dawson) into murdering his unfaithful wife (Grace Kelly) whilst her ex love interest is in town. This is the only difficulty I had with this movie, the guy he’s blackmailing seems like a smart and educated guy, not psychopathic or even in the right mind and out and out evil, he was just a guy trying to keep himself out of Jail as Ray Millands character had him pinned with details of his slightly dishonest, but not necessarily murderous or violent past.
May 28, 2011
The Astronaut Farmer
The premise of this movie is complete and utter bullshit. But it works in a strange kind of way. The dramatic elements are generally pretty good and I did kind of get into it, but the shortcomings were just a big huge black mark over the screen for the duration of the movie. Who the fuck, regardless of how super clever and rich you are, can build a full scale fully functioning space rocket in their back yard and launch it into space? In this flick, Billy Bob Thornton does just that.
I think this is one of those movies that get’s a decent budget, a star player, and a full commercial release, but nobody really gives a shit about it. I just have a hard time imagining 2 months prior to release a group of movie fans going “yeah Astronaut Farmer’s out soon, I really want to check that shit out”. This was probably enjoyed in theatres by majority whim ticket purchasers, people who turn up at the cinema to watch a movie, or see what’s showing online after they have decided that’s what they’re doing. AF totally passed me by in 2006, I actually came across it in an Amazon sale and read a synopsis, I just thought “wtf”, so i watched it and yes, as far as films go it was ok, it wasn’t terrible, but it wasn’t that good either.
May 19, 2011
Spartan
This kind of caught me off-guard last night. I bought this on DVD about 4 years ago and I only just got around to watching it, some movies do that too me, when deciding what to watch I think about them too much and try figure out what I’m in the mood for. In the past with Spartan the blurb on the back of the case always seemed to push me back a notch in my contemplation for whatever reason. I think the fact it was written and directed by David Mamet sold it to me in the shop as opposed to an explosive description of what will probably turn out to be a mediocre execution of said description. So, as for being caught off-guard, Spartan is slightly more than a straight ahead thriller, with enough shifts in the story and new developments/goings on adding to a pretty dense plot throughout the whole movie. This is a slick as hell, fast paced and punchy film.
May 16, 2011
Dragon Tiger Gate
Dragon Tiger Gate was a pretty cool movie that I didn’t enjoy as much as I really wanted to. It had one of those stories that I don’t like, it’s straight forward but pointless. This is a Kung Fu movie starring Donnie Yen so why does it need a good story? It’s the action that speaks here. Well maybe if the movie was actually full of action with a throw away storyline then that would be ok, but that isn’t the case. It’s fantasy, a superhero movie. Everybody has powers and super crazy Kung Fu moves, but I just found it quite boring.
DTG is a school for orphans where they are trained from a young age to do kung fu to protect themselves from criminal gangs and the like. Dragon Wong (Yen) and Tiger Wong (Nicholas Tse, New Police Story) are step brothers who knew each other as young kids. Dragon Wong was adopted by a Triad boss (Ma Qwun) after his mother was killed in a fire; he grew up to become his body guard, now a kick ass kung fu master and gangster. So the whole thing revolves around a plaque called the Luocha Plaque, which is a symbol of authority within the Luocha gate (A criminal gang), and its holder is considered second most powerful to the Luocha Gate leader Shibumi (he’s a crazy masked demonic type evil fucker with superpowers and kung fu skills). So this plaque goes missing and Yen is sent out to retrieve it, this reunites him with his step brother Tiger, and another dude called Turbo they meet after a huge showdown in a Japanese restaurant (who’s wicked with Nunchaku, but according to the master at DTG he needs practice).
DTG is a school for orphans where they are trained from a young age to do kung fu to protect themselves from criminal gangs and the like. Dragon Wong (Yen) and Tiger Wong (Nicholas Tse, New Police Story) are step brothers who knew each other as young kids. Dragon Wong was adopted by a Triad boss (Ma Qwun) after his mother was killed in a fire; he grew up to become his body guard, now a kick ass kung fu master and gangster. So the whole thing revolves around a plaque called the Luocha Plaque, which is a symbol of authority within the Luocha gate (A criminal gang), and its holder is considered second most powerful to the Luocha Gate leader Shibumi (he’s a crazy masked demonic type evil fucker with superpowers and kung fu skills). So this plaque goes missing and Yen is sent out to retrieve it, this reunites him with his step brother Tiger, and another dude called Turbo they meet after a huge showdown in a Japanese restaurant (who’s wicked with Nunchaku, but according to the master at DTG he needs practice).
April 18, 2011
Wanted
It took me two years to get round to watching this one. I didn’t really have any anticipation for it or any desire to rush out and watch it. I found myself pressing the record button on the remote after reading it’s synopsis a couple years down the line figuring it’d be an easy watch after a busy weekend or something. Well, most of my uninformed preconceptions of this film were backed up by what I saw, an utterly ridiculous over the top combo of forgettable action scenes and a totally flawed story line. The first thing I want to mention, James McAvoy. I thought he played well, but I hated his character. The guy deserved everything shitty going on in his life. So he was in a job he hated, his girlfriend was cheating on him with his alleged best friend, although the film doesn’t show us any signs of a close friendship between him and his buddy, he was just a guy he works with. Apparently he doesn’t really care about anything in his life, he’s a confused unhappy dude in his late twenties and I cannot see how an audience is meant to identify with such an annoying character, he’s a fucking loser with little desire to pull his finger out and fix things. I think the only people that could avoid being distracted by this character are those who couldn’t give a crap about whether they like him or not and just want to watch explosions, average CGI driven action scenes and Angelina Jolie. Which to be honest seem to be the movies strong points as far as what ‘Wanted’ wanted to achieve.
April 15, 2011
Repo Men
Not to be confused with the 1984 Emilio Estevez flick. That was Repo Man and was about repossessing cars, but in this one the story focuses on two people in the repossession business, hence the name Repo Men, but these guys don’t repossess cars, they repossess Organs. Not the musical kind, the human kind, although the organs aren’t actually human organs, they’re artificial human organs! Sound crazy! This is the year 2025 man, the world has gone completely bat shit crazy according to this movie.
Jude Law and Forrest Whittaker both work for a corporation called ‘the union’. They have weird little tattoos on their necks of the company’s logo. The Union has perfected the design and manufacture of artificial human organs. They sell them from their outlets to people in desperate need of hearts, lungs, livers, pancreas’ etc. They’re very expensive, there’s a scene near the beginning with a guy being sold a pancreas, $600,000 dollars, at something like 23% APR (I can’t remember over how many years, but still). However there’s a huge catch, you have 3 months, and if you fail to make a payment after 3 months the repo men will come and take your organ back. Simple!
April 3, 2011
Command Performance
When people that can’t play drums try to play drums whether in real life, on film or whatever but you can’t hear what they’re doing (you can only see them play), you can usually tell they can’t play for shit. I think it’s pretty obvious if you look closely. I was shocked to find when this movie kicked off that Mr Lundgren can clearly play drums. Having looked this movie up on IMDB apparently Dolph is a drummer in real life. That’s Wicked, I didn’t know that. But, I could tell from watching him play in this movie, that he had a natural posture and actually was co-ordinating his body to play something that could pass as a drum beat.
That’s right, Dolph Lundgren is the drummer in a rock band in this one. He must be the oldest member of the band, but he plays without his shirt and in a pair of aviator sunglasses and looks as cool as fuck!
Command Performance basically rehashes the Die Hard formula but does it in a way where it doesn’t really matter, there are enough subtle differences and the movie is entertaining enough that you just go with it and enjoy it.
April 1, 2011
Felon
This movie directed by Rick Roman Waugh, a stuntman on Tango & Cash, Universal Soldier, True Romance, Hard Target, Last Action Hero, The Last Of the Mohicans, Lethal Weapon 2, They Live, Ghost Dad(?).....Just to name a few. So with a pretty neat script, a camera or 2, a prison set, Val Kilmer & Stephen Dorff. This fella has crafted a decent prison movie.
Stephen Dorff plays a mid 30’s family man, he has a young son, a caring wife, a nice house; he’s just secured a business loan to expand his construction business. Set up nicely for something real shitty to happen, and for sure it does. He hears an intruder in his house one night and takes a baseball bat and chases the guy off, but once the robber is in retreat, Dorff takes a swing right to the back of the melon, knocks the robber down and kills him instantly. This is quite a heavy moment from a character point of view, my only complaint with this particular part was the actual impact between the baseball bat and the head wasn’t hard enough in a filmatic sense, they should’ve used a bigger and louder sound effect, and cut it in a way to really show blistering impact, it was a a little weak, but the guy is lying dead on the floor and Dorff stands their crapping himself.
March 30, 2011
Flash Point
This one is a Hong Kong action movie starring kung fu master Donnie Yen, also another one teaming Donnie (also the action director ) with director Wilson Yip (IP Man, Dragon Tiger Gate). It’s pretty cool, but was slow to really kick off. It builds the pieces of the story by introducing us to a smuggling gang of 3 Vietnamese brothers, Donnie Yen as the cop on their case, and Donnie Yens partner Wilson (Louis Koo, Dragon Tiger Gate) as an undercover cop working with the Vietnamese brothers. I think this story has been told thousands of times, its generic & unoriginal and I think it’s just an easy vehicle on which to base some fucking incredible action scenes.
The movie is very well played, the acting is excellent, Louis Koo’s performance clearly stood out as that of a solid actor, he’s been in allot of movies I haven’t seen but I think he’s better known in Hong Kong as a serious actor as opposed to an action star. The best thing about this movie is by far the action. The fights are incredible, the gun play is well designed, coherent and enjoyable to watch. The movie combines these two styles of action fairly evenly. When the action becomes hand to hand combat it goes one step ahead of being a kung fu fight. Donnie Yen uses MMA in this sucker! Mixed Martial Arts! These are techniques we see in the ring, in the UFC. The amount of fight styles we see on screen is incredible. I got to be honest and say I wasn’t sure exactly what some of the different styles were by name, but watching the extras on the blu ray told you allot about what they were trying to accomplish. The fighting is noticeably different from Donnie Yens usual approach.March 28, 2011
Sherlock Holmes
Being unfamiliar with the source material or previous interpretations of Sherlock’s adventures on film kind of put me somewhere near the bottom of the list of people really looking forward to this movie. I kind of knew who he was, but I couldn’t have told you a thing about him. Sherlock Holmes is a fictional British detective created by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Unorthodox in approach to his investigations, a bit crazy eccentric, dark and mysterious, insecure maybe even homosexual, I didn’t know he was a cocaine addict but that too. The suggestions that were made about the character Sherlock Holmes in this Guy Ritchie flick lacked any real depth, seemed to purposefully avoid the hard facts and at times were ambiguous, because this is a family fun film.
March 24, 2011
Fatal Move (Duo Shuai)
Typically gangster flicks deal with many characters. They usually have large families and a hierarchy of ranks and responsibilities within the enterprise. Fatal move is the story of a Chinese Triad gang led by ‘Big Bro’ Sammo Hung. It’s a solid gritty and violent movie, the plot is pretty standard for most of the film. Gang loses territory-has to take it back from rival gang-cops are onto them for gang type illegal activities-drug shipment raided by cops-gang divides and sub sections fuck each other over for money, That kind of stuff. But I couldn’t help but actually find myself slightly confused as to who was on whose side as the film came to a close, I think a second watch would make this clearer, but the double cross element of the movie ended up a little on the convoluted side. This isn’t usually a major problem I bump into when watching subtitled films, but once Sammo’s gang divided, all the names I’d associated with characters all of a sudden started to not match up to who I thought they were, this may not be a major flaw in the movie, it probably isn’t, I actually think it’s just one of the few problems with not understanding the language the film is performed in, subtitles are fine or pushing the story along, but having to deal with 20 or so Chinese names, putting them to faces, learning who they were with, who’s side these dudes eventually end up on, they (the subs) actually held me back a bit here. But it didn’t stop me from enjoying the movie.
March 23, 2011
A Bridge Too Far
The amount of times I’ve made a mistake, no matter how huge, and I’ve stood there for a second and tried to justify why I made it, the reasons, what went wrong eventually trying to persuade myself it wasn’t actually my fault. Kind of makes you feel better sometimes, but when it involves the lost lives of thousands of allied soldiers, I’m not sure I could forgive myself that easily. A Bridge too far tells the epic story of the largest airborne military operation in history, codenamed operation market garden. The plan was pretty much to end the war early with this huge allied invasion. The beginning of the movie sees Dirk Bogardes’character Lieutenant General Browning briefing his generals (Sean Connery, Ryan O Neal, Gene Hackman), with the plan, apparently conceived by future US president General Eisenhower (the highest ranking officer in the allied forces during WW2) and his two top generals, Patton and Montgomery. Sir Dirk Bogarde shows, on a map exactly what’s going to happen, and he makes it sound so simple. The German armed forces are beginning their decline, at this point of WW2 (1944) they were fighting in the east of Europe, in Russia, in north Africa, the German war machine is spread thin, supplies are low, so is ammunition, and so is morale, which is obviously just as important as food & bullets. So the allies plan to fly 35,000 men and drop them something like 30 miles behind enemy lines in Holland, then capture 3 bridges and hold them, then the advancing land forces, heavy armor (tanks) and infantry can push forward eventually into the “industrial heartland of Germany”. Sounds plausible, if it works the war could be over and everyone gets to come home, happy days! But there were a number of problems that makes this outcome extremely unlikely, as I’m watching a movie I can obviously see what the Germans are currently up to in Holland, the allies couldn’t, they had to rely on reconnaissance and intel. At the beginning you are given pretty detailed exposition regarding the intentions of both sides, the overly ambitious allies, and the weakening Germans.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)