A BLOG DEDICATED TO MY LOVE OF THE SILVER SCREEN
Established May 2010.


Gordie: Do you think I'm weird?
Chris: Definitely.
Gordie: No man, seriously. Am I weird?
Chris: Yeah, but so what? Everybody's weird.
-STAND BY ME

Film Critic for Twin Cities Live

Member of THE LAMB: The Large Association of Movie Blogs LAMB #1588

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Showing posts with label Rosamund Pike. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rosamund Pike. Show all posts

Saturday, October 4, 2014

TWIN CITIES LIVE--October 3, 2014

TWIN CITIES LIVE
October 3, 2014












I was excited to give another new release my 5 Ticket Stubs rating! Find out which one below...

1. GONE GIRL, Starring: Rosamund Pike, Ben Affleck, Tyler Perry, Neil Patrick Harris
2. THE EQUALIZER, Starring: Denzel Washington, Chloe Grace Moretz
3. CHEF, Starring: Jon Favreau, Sofia Vergara, John Leugizamo

Here's the video:



Video courtesy of Twin Cities Live/KSTP



You can find all of my past segments HERE.

As always, thank you so much for watching and your continual support. I truly appreciate it!
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Friday, October 3, 2014

Movie Review: GONE GIRL

GONE GIRL
Director: David Fincher
Starring: Rosamund Pike, Ben Affleck, Neil Patrick Harris, Tyler Perry, Carrie Coon, Patrick Fugit, Kim Dickens, Missi Pyle, Sela Ward


When I heard that David Fincher was going to tackle the big screen adaptation of Gillian Flynn’s hot bestseller Gone Girl, I knew that he was the perfect choice. I have proclaimed my love and adoration for the guy many times before. With films like Zodiac, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, and Se7en under his belt, he has tackled his fair share of thrillers, mysteries, and devious crimes. Amy (Pike) and Nick (Affleck) Dunne seem like the perfect couple. They are smart, creative, attractive, and live in a wealthy neighborhood. She grew up in the spotlight, as she was the subject of her parents’s “Amazing Amy” children’s books. The fictional Amy was always one step ahead of the real life inspiration.


One their fifth wedding anniversary, Nick stops home and discovers their glass coffee table has been shattered, and Amy is nowhere to be found. Her disappearance causes a media frenzy that shakes the neighborhood, and Nick becomes the number one suspect. Press conferences, continuing police interrogation, and a candle light vigil continue to put Nick in the spotlight even though he claims he had nothing to due with Amy’s disappearance. The only people he feels like he can trust are his sister Margo (Coon) and his hot shot lawyer Tanner Bolt (Perry).


If you have read Flynn’s novel, you know it is a juicy pager turner. It will be a relief to any moviegoer to know that she also wrote the screenplay, so you can trust that it’s a faithful adaptation. Even down to the structure of how the book is laid out, the film stays true to that  without feeling like it’s been compromised for a different medium. From the outside, you may think this seems like your standard murder mystery. She is cunning in that just when you think you’ve got it figured it, she flips the whole story on its head and takes it to a whole different dimension, much like the marriage of the main two characters. I read the book some time ago, so some of the more minute details were not as fresh on my mind when watching the movie. Despite knowing the major twists and turns she takes us on, I was still hooked and drawn in as if I was watching this all unfold for the first time.


I would assume with her involvement in the movie, she was fairly particular with who would be directing the film. David Fincher’s last film was the adaptation of the bestselling mystery The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. He has become the master at these types of pulsating thrillers that wrestle inside of you. He has a way of digging deep into something and finding a layer that rumbles deep within. If you saw The Social Network, you know that it’s more than just some movie about Facebook. He can take a novel like Gone Girl and shape it into something that’s more than a bedside page-turner. Part of this comes from his use of the media and how it plays out like an integral character in the movie. Fincher really drives home the power that the media and various news outlets can have on a crime as shocking and mysterious as the disappearance of Amy. Immediately Nick becomes the target of a Nancy Grace type news reporter played by Missi Pyle (The Artist, Big Fish). Cameras, news vans, and hoards of people station themselves in front of Nick’s home watching his every move. It’s a powerful commentary on this sensation that we live in a 24-hour news society. You see very easily how the citizens react and trust anything that they hear in the news. Nick’s interview with another reporter (Ward) is expertly crafted to show him in just the right light in hopes of winning back the people’s support.


Fincher continues his collaboration with composers Atticus Ross and Trent Reznor who won the Oscar for their score to The Social Network. Their music here may be their most subtle work to date. It rests in the background perfectly complimenting each scene without ever feeling that it’s taking over the scene itself. Only in the film’s more shocking moments does it ring out loud and clear like a Bernard Hermann score.


Whoever doubted Fincher’s casting of either Rosamund Pike or Ben Affleck or even Tyler Perry (yes, Madea himself) should remember to trust all of his casting decisions. He likes casting unknown actresses or actresses that don’t come with a background of work that we may stereotype them for. You may have seen Pike as a Bond girl in Die Another Day or in The World’s End, but she isn’t a huge household name yet. Here’s hoping she is the talk of the awards season as she gives a dynamic performance that will be one of the best of the year. Amy Dunne is such a rich and complex character. I would hate to spoil too much by talking about the ins and outs of her character, but Pike digs deep into the soul and psychological depth of Amy that starts to unfold in the movie. Affleck gives one of the best performances of his career. Fincher cast him due to his relationship with the media and the scrutiny he is under being part of a Hollywood power couple. There are stereotypes and visions we have of Affleck that are brought on by the media that work in conjunction with his character. Affleck keeps Nick guarded and on the verge of being unreliable. He’s always playing and toying with the idea of whether or not Nick is a bad guy. He isn’t the weeping and inconsolable husband when Amy goes missing, but does that automatically make him guilty?


Fincher is known to be a meticulous director often demanding an abundance of takes and a sharp look at every piece of the puzzle. With a film like this, you have to have a detail-oriented craftsman in charge. Flynn’s novel is a winding road of twists and turns taking the audience on a very specific journey. You have to know what you are doing in order to stay ahead of the audience. Fincher’s eye and ways of working with his actors keeps us in the palm of his hand. We continue to second-guess who’s in charge in this he said/she said world. We grow to question, not just the characters of Amy and Nick, but of those others around them as to whether they are allies or enemies. Gone Girl is another homerun for David Fincher. It has a high place on my best of the year list, and I cannot wait to see it again.

Is It Worth Your Trip to the Movies? Absolutely. I don’t think they could have made a better adaptation of Gillian Flynn’s novel.

RATING: 5 out of 5 TICKET STUBS

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Monday, April 14, 2014

Movie Trailer: GONE GIRL

GONE GIRL
Director: David Fincher
Starring: Ben Affleck, Rosamund Pike, Neil Patrick Harris, Missi Pyle, Tyler Perry, Patrick Fugit, Scoot McNairy, Sela Ward


When it was first announced that David Fincher would tackle Gillian Flynn's bestseller novel "Gone Girl", I got a giddy excitement inside of me. I am a huge fan of Fincher's work, and he is perfect at those dark, mysterious stories. He completely nailed The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. If you have read the book, you know you will be in for one hell of a ride. Amy (Pike) and Nick (Affleck) Dunne seem like the perfect gorgeous couple. On their fifth anniversary, Amy goes missing and Nick becomes the number one suspect. What follows is a twisty ride of deceit, deception, and mystery that was their marriage. It should be known that author Gillian Flynn wrote the screenplay for the movie. In an article in "Entertainment Weekly", Ben Affleck mentioned how she rewrote the whole third act of the movie that takes it in a different direction than the book. Who knows if that is true or a ploy to keep the movie a mystery, but I am intrigued to see what these changes are going to be like.

RELEASE DATE: October 3, 2014

Here's the trailer

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Thursday, September 5, 2013

Movie Review: THE WORLD'S END

THE WORLD'S END
Director: Edgar Wright
Starring: Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Martin Freeman, Paddy Considine, Eddie Marsan, Rosamund Pike


The thought of doing a pub crawl through twelve different bars having twelve pints of beer just sounds exhausting and a recipe for disaster. Yes, it sounds epic and riotous, but I am not in college anymore. I know I would be in trouble after bar number five. Maybe I am already giving myself too much credit there. For Gary King (Pegg) the thought of finishing off the Golden Mile pub crawl is exactly what he needs in life. Some twenty years ago, Gary and his friends attempted to complete the Golden Mile but never made it to the final pub known as "The World's End".


He is bound and determined to get the gang back together and finish what they once started. Gary could not be more thrilled about this adventure, but the other guys are less than enthused. He seeks each one of them out to convince them to return to their old stomping grounds of Newton Haven to do the Golden Mile one more time. Unlike Gary, they all seem to have moved on in life. They are married, some have kids, and they have successful jobs. Gary has none of that. As Gary says to the guys, he can do whatever he wants whenever he wants. He does not have to report to anyone. He still seems to be living in the past and has not really gotten anywhere in life. He still drives the same beater car with the same mix tape in it from twenty years ago. The four friends, even sober Andy (Frost), decide to join him and they quickly realize he has not changed or grown up in the slightest. The first few pubs are not quite as Gary remembers them. They are quiet, slow, and nobody seems to remember the infamous Gary King. After a bathroom brawl with a young punk kid, Gary is shocked to find out the kid is actually a robot that spews blue ink. Like the zombies in Shaun of the Dead, these robots have taken over the town.


Your average moviegoer may only know Simon Pegg as Scotty from the Star Trek reboot or as one of Ethan Hunt's partners in the last two Mission: Impossible movies. There is no doubt that he is fantastic in those roles, but I would urge people to seek out The Three Flavors Cornetto Trilogy consisting of 2004's Shaun of the Dead, 2007's Hot Fuzz and now The World's End. These films have received a cult following for a very good reason. The script by Edgar Wright and Pegg is so chock full of witty lines, banter, and physical comedy, it is downright hysterical. Do you need to see the other two movies first? Not necessarily as there is not a continual storyline in each one. Each film stands on its own with different characters and a different plot. There are similar themes, concepts, jokes, cinematography, and casting choices that run among all three of them, hence the “trilogy”. One of those references is the subtle use of Cornetto Ice Cream found in each movie. I love that each film is a blend of genres as they add their comedic style to a zombie horror film or in this case tackling the sci-fi genre and the apocalypse. If you are a die-hard, you may even pick up the subtle references to other films of the genre as well. I would go into each of these motifs more specifically, but I would hate to get into spoiler territory.


One thing that kept sticking with me throughout was the more serious and mature tone in this one. Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz are a bit more slap sticky and are goofy romps while The World's End got a bit more serious in tone. Maybe that comes with the territory of it being the end of a trilogy. There is the continual discussion between the guys about their friendships, where they are at in life, what has changed, and how Gary has not changed. I kept thinking about the friends in my life, especially the college group. There are many I do not see anymore. We have moved to different states, taken on new interests, and our focus in life has changed. We have families, jobs, and other priorities that don't necessarily involve Thirsty Thursday. For four years, I lived in a college town where the streets were lined bar after bar after bar. You could do any sort of crawl you could imagine. I remember some of those more adventurous nights. Some nights, I do not remember.


As I think back on the films I have seen this summer, and frankly all year, Edgar Wright has crafted a fine movie that gets it right in so many ways. He is sharp and detailed at crossing genres and executing each of those elements precisely. I expected the script to be one of the funniest movies of the year, and it succeeded. I cannot wait to see it again to pick up little gems and references I may have missed the first time around. Along with the comedy comes the action and sci-fi moments. The bar brawls have some of the best and most realistic fight choreography I have seen all year. These characters fight like real people not like action stars. Each of his films have these epic bar fights and I always get a kick out of them. The friendship between Wright, Pegg, and Frost is very evident throughout this trilogy and makes these films, especially this one, a bit more special and meaningful. I am sure they drew from their own lives for many of the jokes and gags. There was a continual grin on my face from ear to ear from start to finish. This was the last film I saw of the summer movie season and it ended on a high note!

RATING: **** (4 out of 5 stars)

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