“Vinyl” is a show that seemed destined for greatness, built upon a foundation of elements that should have all led to guaranteed success: Martin Scorsese returning to HBO as producer of the series (and director of the pilot), a collaboration with Mick Jagger as a legendary rocker with unique insight into the industry and time period, and a premise approaching the 1970s music industry in a manner similar to the way “Mad Men” tackled the advertising business in the 1960s. With the constantly shifting landscape of rock during this decade, it seems like a show that should have written itself. There should have been a plethora of material for the first season of “Vinyl,” but instead we end up with a repetitive character study centering on the endlessly flawed protagonist.
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Vinyl: The Complete First Season Blu-ray Review
Extra Confessional: An Atypical Hail, Caesar! Blu-ray Review
I regularly lecture my students on the significance of Audience Reception Theory in the interpretation of each film we watch, though I found myself a student of this very lesson while viewing Hail, Caesar!, with the Joel and Ethan Coen as my (presumably) unwitting professors. This film theory essentially argues that each viewer’s interpretation of art will be affected by their own background and personal experiences. In the plainest sense, this means that viewers of Hail, Caesar! with previous experience watching classics from the golden age of cinema are more likely to appreciate the references to Esther Williams, Gene Kelly, Carmen Miranda, and countless others. But the latest Coen brothers film took on additional significance for me, having had the experience of being on set while it was filmed.
In a Lonely Place Blu-ray Review
Actors: Humphrey Bogart, Gloria Grahame, Frank Lovejoy
Director: Nicholas Ray
Format: Widescreen
Language: English
Region: Region A/1
Number of discs: 1
Rated: Not Rated
Studio: Criterion Collection
Release Date: May 10, 2016
Run Time: 93 minutes
Despite being adapted from a novel by Dorothy B. Hughes, In a Lonely Place says more about the director and stars than it does the author of the source material. Films about Hollywood have this tendency of bringing out the honesty from filmmakers who understand the cynicism of the text better than most, and beneath the violent noir narrative are raw performances and parallels with real life events. Bleak as the film may be, it also offers audiences one of the more unadulterated perspectives of the industry from those who knew it best. Nearly 70-years later and In a Lonely Place remains one of the most accurate depictions of the battle between art and commerce, reputation and reality, and the way that Hollywood often confuses them for each other.
Triple 9 Blu-ray Review
If Triple 9 feels vaguely familiar, that’s because it resembles countless other similarly mediocre crime films. There is nothing inherently bad about it, but the unoriginality plagues the narrative until each derivative moment begins to feel like a parody of the genre, despite (or perhaps because of) a deadly seriousness with which the material is approached. A good ensemble cast and solid direction from John Hillcoat (The Road, Lawless) can’t make up for the derivative screenplay which plateaus in the opening sequences.
Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping Review
Every aspect of Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping feels calculated and constructed for success. The structure of the film is largely borrowed from Rob Reiner/Christopher Guest’s classic mock-rockumentary, This is Spinal Tap, with a bit of VH1’s “Behind the Band” to update the format for younger audiences. It also updates the subject, switching from the fading hair bands in the 1980s to an indictment of pop/hip-hop stars of today, primarily focusing on a character very obviously based on Justin Bieber. While the jokes are consistently funny for at least two-thirds of the film and the music parodies created by The Lonely Island are at least as successful as the work they have done for “Saturday Night Live” over the years, something about Popstar feels a bit too safe. Even a scene of graphic male nudity (thanks to a contribution from producer Judd Apatow, who takes his efforts to use male genitals in a majority of his film one step further by offering his own for this gag) can’t save this film from being less shocking than reality itself. Anyone who has read about the spoiled-brat behavior of Bieber over the years or follows the narcissistic ramblings of Kanye West’s twitter feed will realize that real life is far more absurd than anything offered in Popstar.
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies 4K Ultra HD Review
I can’t judge how the blending of zombie horror with Jane Austen’s classic text worked in Seth Grahame-Smith’s novel, but it was an all-around awkward cinematic endeavor in Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. The film adaptation by Burr Steers tries to please too many audience demographics and instead succeeds at none. Many have remarked that the most successful aspects of the film are those which remain closest to Austen’s original story, and though I would agree, these are also the parts of the film that reminded me of the far superior adaptation by Joe Wright a little over a decade ago. Like Spider-Man, apparently this is a narrative we must endure a new incarnation of for each generation.
Rise of the Legend Blu-ray Review
In the latest adaptation of the Wong Fei Hung narrative, Rise of the Legend, comparisons are bound to be made with previous martial arts film classics that have tackled the same subject. Unfortunately, this latest endeavor starring Eddie Peng in the iconic role lacks the humor of The Legend of the Drunken Master, the epic qualities of the Once Upon a Time in China franchise, and the charisma of their stars, Jackie Chan and Jet Li. What Rise of the Legend does have is polished visuals that modernize the cinematic action to emphasize cinematography over the pure physical abilities of its star. The past films were more about the action choreography, whereas Rise of the Legend becomes about the camera work instead. Sometimes this emphasis on visuals works as a welcome distraction to the obvious shortcomings in other areas of filmmaking, though it occasionally runs the risk of being as soulless as any number of CGI-filled summer blockbusters.
Song of Lahore DVD Review
Song of Lahore DVD Review
For the first twenty-minutes of Song of Lahore, I struggled to find an interest in the material. There were too many individuals introduced into the documentary narrative, without any context to explain to me why I should care about each of them. I’ll admit that I even began writing this review in my head, prematurely condemning the filmmakers for a lack of focus. Though these individuals eventually came into focus over the course of the film, it was the ideals and faith which turned the narrative into a cohesively moving piece. Like the jazz music the documentary is centered on, Song of Lahore is about the spirit of the individuals coming together to create, despite adversity and oppression faced in their daily existence.
The Boy Blu-ray Review
I almost feel as though two reviews are needed for The Boy; one for the final climactic sequence and another for the remainder of the narrative building up to that point. They simply feel so disjointed from each other that it is almost unfair to compare them together. Far too much of the screenplay relies upon a final twist of sorts, but it mostly just made me feel as though I had been cheated. Had this been a short film, I would not have minded, but the feature length narrative forces the audience to invest in far too much of the slow-burn mystery for the end revelation to be such a cheap cop-out.
Hostile Borders DVD Review
Hostile Borders DVD Review
There needs to be some reason for a film to keep my attention, and hating the main character does not suffice. For this reason, I often found Hostile Borders nearly unbearable. Despite ample opportunity within the unique set-up to discuss politics, this inexplicable drama instead forces melodrama and cheap thrills. We spend the entire film with a character that has no apparent opinions beyond her own selfish desires, and even these are often difficult to discern amidst the sparse dialogue given to her and the one-note performance from the lead. Even the most obvious character development you might expect to see is thrown away for mindless action sequences, which are poorly shot and have no gravity since I had no compassion for anyone involved.
20th Anniversary Independence Day Screening
Emelie Blu-ray Review
Actors: Sarah Bolger, Joshua Rush
Director: Michael Thelin
Format: Widescreen
Language: English
Region: Region A/1
Number of discs: 1
Rated: Not Rated
Studio: Dark Sky Films
Release Date: May 3, 2016
Run Time: 82 minutes
Emelie is a slow-burn thriller that is
extremely efficient in building tension and suspense, keeping me captivated
until the letdown of an uninspired final act. Without the strength of Sarah
Bolger’s convincing performance as the title character, a psychotic young woman
disguised as an average middle-class family’s new babysitter, Emelie would have been far easier to
dismiss before the screenplay’s shortcomings failed the film. Instead, I was so
impressed with the set-up of the narrative, it made the lackluster final reveal
that much more disappointing. It builds wonderfully for more than half the
run-time before reaching a monotone plateau act, ending with a whimper when it
should have been a bang.
Son of Saul Blu-ray Review
Actors: Géza Röhrig, Levente Molnár, Urs Rechn
Director: László Nemes
Format: Subtitled
Language: Hungarian
Subtitles: French, Portuguese, Spanish, English
Audio Description: English
Region: All Regions
Aspect Ratio: 1.37:1
Number of discs: 1
Rated: R
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Release Date: April 26, 2016
Digital Copy Expiration Date: December 31, 2019
Run Time: 107 minutes
Nearly every
year there seems to be a Holocaust film competing (often successfully) for
award-season recognition. Last year it was Poland ’s
Ida that won Best Foreign Language
Film at the Academy Awards, and this year Son
of Saul received the same accommodation for Hungary . Although there have been
countless Holocaust films to win this award, this was only the second time a
film from Hungary
has won an Oscar, and the first time winning a Golden Globe. Skeptics might
automatically assume that the subject matter alone was enough to earn this
honor, but Son of Saul is a
technically meticulous piece of filmmaking deserving of endless praise.
Meet the Hitlers DVD Review
Actors: Gene Hitler, Romano Hitler, Emily Hittler
Director: Matthew Ogens
Format: Color, NTSC, Widescreen
Language: English
Region: Region 1
Number of discs: 1
Studio: Virgil Films and Entertainment
DVD Release Date: April 5, 2016
Run Time: 84 minutes
Meet the Hitlers is a seemingly narrow
documentary about people with the name Hitler, and how it has impacted their
lives. Although I found the premise for this documentary intriguing, I was
concerned that there would not be enough material to hold my attention for an
entire feature. This problem is helped a great deal by adding a secondary story
about the investigation into Hitler’s actual bloodline, but the greater
solution comes in the filmmaker’s ability to make this a film about the people
rather than their name, which also seems to align with the overall message
within the narrative.
The Great Hypnotist DVD Review
Actors: Xu Zheng, Karen Mok
Director: Leste Chen
Format: Color, Dolby, NTSC, Subtitled, THX, Widescreen
Language: Chinese
Subtitles: English
Region: Region 1
Number of discs: 1
Studio: Well Go USA
DVD Release Date: April 5, 2016
Run Time: 104 minutes
As I watched The Great Hypnotist, I couldn’t help but
feel that there was something being lost in the translation. There is a
fantastic tradition of dialogue-heavy narratives with two characters verbally
dueling through a series of twists and revelations, and this certainly seems to
be a fitting categorization for this film as well, but it had little success in
captivating my attention. This is why I wondered if it was the subtitle
translation preventing me from becoming gripped by the dialogue, or if it were
merely uninspired writing to blame.
Stealing Cars DVD Review
Actors: Felicity Huffman, William H. Macy, John Leguizamo
Director: Bradley Kaplan
Disc Info : Subtitled, NTSC
Language: English
Subtitles: French, Portuguese, Korean, Mandarin Chinese, Thai, Spanish, English, Japanese
Dubbed: French, Japanese
Region: Region 1
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Rated: R
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
DVD Release Date: April 5, 2016
Run Time: 101 minutes
It would be too
easy to criticize Stealing Cars for
having an unoriginal plot, though that is certainly the case, but it isn’t the
existence of other troubled youth narratives that are the problem. The real
issue comes from the construction of this film, which done well would have
helped excuse the unoriginality in the narrative. Instead, each cloying moment
in a screenplay that feels written by an angst-filled film student is then
indulged without logic or balance by the director.
Only Angels Have Wings Blu-ray Review
Actors: Cary Grant, Jean Arthur, Rita Hayworth
Director: Howard Hawks
Disc Info: NTSC, Special Edition, Subtitled, Widescreen
Language: English
Subtitles: English
Number of discs: 1
Studio: Criterion Collection
Release Date: April 12, 2016
Run Time: 121 minutes
Only Angels Have Wings is sandwiched
between two other collaborations with Cary Grant in the filmography of Howard
Hawks, showcasing his range as a director along with the star’s versatility.
1938’s Bringing Up Baby and 1940’s His Girl Friday gave audiences two
different personas for Grant, one meek and bookish with the other cocky and
masculine, but both utilized his comedic abilities within the screwball
sub-genre. While 1939’s Only Angels Have
Wings also made use of the witty repartee and masculinity, it gave
audiences a chance to see Grant in a dramatic role and allowed Hawks to capture
the excitement of aerial action sequences.
Mediterranea DVD Review
Actors: Koudous Seihon, Alassane Sy
Director: Jonas Carpignano
Format: Color, NTSC, Widescreen
Language: Arabic, English, French, Italian
Region: Region 1
Number of discs: 1
Studio: MPI HOME VIDEO
DVD Release Date: March 29, 2016
Run Time: 110 minutes
Director Jonas
Carpignano’s stylistic approach to Mediterranea
often feels akin to a documentary, limiting the musical score’s encroachment on
the narrative and enough shaky handheld camera work to help the audience feel
each jarring moment with an enhanced level of discomfort. And it is a subject
which both the truthful depiction and uncomfortable realism, one which remains
narrow in its character depiction while simultaneously telling a story with
universally wide relevance. The African immigrants depicted in Mediterranea could very easily be any
number of other immigrants across the globe, and that is why it is important to
also anchor the realistic narrative with a character to empathize with.
The Hateful Eight Blu-ray Review
Actors: Samuel L. Jackson, Kurt Russell, Bruce Dern, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Tim Roth
Director: Quentin Tarantino
Format: Color, NTSC, Widescreen
Language: English
Region: Region A/1
Number of discs: 2
Rated: R
Studio: The Weinstein Company
Release Date: March 29, 2016
Run Time: 168 minutes
Combining (and often enhancing) the
social commentary and western setting of Django
Unchained with the simple story structure and collection of violent
character types found in Reservoir Dogs,
The Hateful Eight seems an accurate
composite of Quentin Tarantino’s entire filmography, from beginning to present.
In terms of violence, The Hateful Eight continues
the progression of extreme and exaggerated practical effects, which seems to
have started in the universe of Kill Bill
with spurting blood. At the same time, the amount of violence is often
surprisingly restrained; when your cast of characters is limited by remote
location, each death is that much more significant. It is the simplicity of
this plot, the restraint in storytelling that it demands, which ultimately
allows Tarantino to create one of his greatest cinematic achievements.
Killing Them Safely DVD Review
Actors: Rick Smith, Tom Smith
Director: Nick Berardini
Format: Color, NTSC, Widescreen
Language: English
Region: Region 1
Not Rated
Studio: MPI HOME VIDEO
DVD Release Date: March 29, 2016
Run Time: 95 minutes
I can’t say that
I ever put much thought into TASERs beyond an instinctual feeling to avoid
them. I haven’t been in a situation which put me in the line of fire and have
no intentions of ever discovering what it feels like, but the documentary Killing Them Safely gave me facts to
back up my instincts. Even if a majority of those hit with the latest
police-issued weapon are left without permanent damage, I still see no reason
to take the risk of becoming one of the few that don’t survive. And even more
importantly, this is just another piece of evidence in recent scrutiny of
police behavior, and it is the poor discretion of the users which is far more
frightening than the weapon itself.
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