"Well, that was invigorating!"
Bringing Captain Underpants to the big screen, this is clearly a lower-league DreamWorks animation but it has a lot going for it. George and Harold, our two young (and quite endearing) protagonists and comic-book creators of the film's eponymous hero, frequently break the fourth wall and share a warm friendship that gives the movie heart, ultimately bringing their superhero creation to life by hypnotising their fun-hating headteacher. The animation is simple but fluid and colourful for its budget level, and whilst squarely aimed at young children (although adults will find themselves smiling at times in spite of themselves!), it has sufficient creativity and (slightly) anarchic energy to get by. Pitched somewhere between the Peanuts cartoons and the Wimpy Kid movies, Captain Underpants is a mild and inoffensive offering that is not up there with the big hitters, but it is pleasant and enjoyable enough.
Wednesday, 26 July 2017
Sunday, 23 July 2017
FILM: Dunkirk IMAX (dir: Christopher Nolan, 2017)
"We have a job to do."
This is nothing like a typical World War II, and you will not be prepared for the experience it offers. Dunkirk is an extraordinary and magnificent movie. The tension and impact is there from the very start, and it never lets up, with the clever interplay of three main narrative strands (Fionn Whitehead's young soldier trying to leave the Dunkirk beach, Tom Hardy's fighter pilot and Mark Rylance as the skipper of one of the civilian rescue armada's tiny boats) and a completely visceral and emotion-shredding visual and aural assault on the senses (especially in IMAX) that is overwhelming. Hans Zimmer provides an incredible score/soundscape that gives an effectively contemporary edge and complements the sounds of warfare brilliantly as well as generating fantastic tension. The film is deceptively simple in its pared-back dialogue, limited colour palette (that pays off at the end) and very focused locations and narrative, but every frame counts and is superbly constructed. The uniformly excellent performances are naturalistic to the point of understatement, with the (at times) almost documentary style of shooting giving the film a raw and utterly credible feel, with no room for sentimentality or Hollywood tropes. The term 'visionary' is too often thrown about for lesser directors, but the term definitely applies to Christopher Nolan, and this is his best work so far.
This is nothing like a typical World War II, and you will not be prepared for the experience it offers. Dunkirk is an extraordinary and magnificent movie. The tension and impact is there from the very start, and it never lets up, with the clever interplay of three main narrative strands (Fionn Whitehead's young soldier trying to leave the Dunkirk beach, Tom Hardy's fighter pilot and Mark Rylance as the skipper of one of the civilian rescue armada's tiny boats) and a completely visceral and emotion-shredding visual and aural assault on the senses (especially in IMAX) that is overwhelming. Hans Zimmer provides an incredible score/soundscape that gives an effectively contemporary edge and complements the sounds of warfare brilliantly as well as generating fantastic tension. The film is deceptively simple in its pared-back dialogue, limited colour palette (that pays off at the end) and very focused locations and narrative, but every frame counts and is superbly constructed. The uniformly excellent performances are naturalistic to the point of understatement, with the (at times) almost documentary style of shooting giving the film a raw and utterly credible feel, with no room for sentimentality or Hollywood tropes. The term 'visionary' is too often thrown about for lesser directors, but the term definitely applies to Christopher Nolan, and this is his best work so far.
Saturday, 22 July 2017
FILM: Cars 3 3D (dir: Brian Fee, 2017)
"Looking for your lost mojo?"
This bizarre franchise trundles on, fuelled by stellar merchandise sales and mystifying everyone but the very young, who must be sorely tested by this third outing. The first film was all about the concept, the second a chaotic genre-pastiching mess, but this third one is unexpectedly stripped back in terms of story and fully focused on character and dialogue, leading to some very heavy and wordy scenes Taking some story beats from the middle Rocky films, the big themes of ageing and new technology are rather adult-targeted, even if delivered by cute animated talking cars. The ridiculously high budget for Cars 3 is gloriously evident on screen: some of the photorealism in exterior scenes is outstanding, a couple of set-pieces are stunningly realised - the animation in the Crazy-8 demolition derby sequence in particular is hugely impressive - and the lighting job in this film is a technical triumph. As a dramatic piece, Cars 3 does work to a large extent and may well be the best of the three, but it seems curiously at odds with its target audience.
This bizarre franchise trundles on, fuelled by stellar merchandise sales and mystifying everyone but the very young, who must be sorely tested by this third outing. The first film was all about the concept, the second a chaotic genre-pastiching mess, but this third one is unexpectedly stripped back in terms of story and fully focused on character and dialogue, leading to some very heavy and wordy scenes Taking some story beats from the middle Rocky films, the big themes of ageing and new technology are rather adult-targeted, even if delivered by cute animated talking cars. The ridiculously high budget for Cars 3 is gloriously evident on screen: some of the photorealism in exterior scenes is outstanding, a couple of set-pieces are stunningly realised - the animation in the Crazy-8 demolition derby sequence in particular is hugely impressive - and the lighting job in this film is a technical triumph. As a dramatic piece, Cars 3 does work to a large extent and may well be the best of the three, but it seems curiously at odds with its target audience.
Wednesday, 12 July 2017
FILM: War For The Planet Of The Apes 3D (dir: Matt Reeves, 2017)
"They said you were smart, but that's impressive."
The 2010s incarnation of the Planet Of the Apes franchise has surprised with its intelligence and quality, with War... providing a superb (and possibly trilogy-closing) film that is emotionally challenging, extremely well-made and utterly compelling from start to finish. Starting off as a war film that pitches somewhere between Aliens and Apocalypse Now, it smartly moves forward to take in tropes from the western and prison genres and also addressing war on the large and personal scales. It is a beautifully shot movie, mostly placed in grim wintry settings that look epic on the big screen. Matt Reeves does a stunning job of not only marshalling the big sequences but also creating extraordinarily affecting single moments, Michael Giacchino's score is often deceptively subtle in its impact, and Andy Serkis's creation of Caesar is a simply remarkable performance, with Woody Harrelson at his best as the lead human antagonist. The third act lead-up to the amazing double-finale is perhaps a shade too long, but this is a minor quibble in this impressive and wonderful movie that is both a technical and emotional triumph.
The 2010s incarnation of the Planet Of the Apes franchise has surprised with its intelligence and quality, with War... providing a superb (and possibly trilogy-closing) film that is emotionally challenging, extremely well-made and utterly compelling from start to finish. Starting off as a war film that pitches somewhere between Aliens and Apocalypse Now, it smartly moves forward to take in tropes from the western and prison genres and also addressing war on the large and personal scales. It is a beautifully shot movie, mostly placed in grim wintry settings that look epic on the big screen. Matt Reeves does a stunning job of not only marshalling the big sequences but also creating extraordinarily affecting single moments, Michael Giacchino's score is often deceptively subtle in its impact, and Andy Serkis's creation of Caesar is a simply remarkable performance, with Woody Harrelson at his best as the lead human antagonist. The third act lead-up to the amazing double-finale is perhaps a shade too long, but this is a minor quibble in this impressive and wonderful movie that is both a technical and emotional triumph.
Wednesday, 5 July 2017
FILM: Spider-Man Homecoming IMAX 3D (dir: Jon Watts, 2017)
"You're terrible at keeping secrets."
"You'd be surprised."
It has become increasingly clear just how important was the short appearance by Spider-Man in Captain America - Civil War, and this third big-screen iteration in the last two decades more than fulfils the promise of that brief introduction and quickly dispels any worries about hasty rebooting. Homecoming is fun, funny, thrilling and hugely entertaining throughout. A key factor is Tom Holland's terrific performance, instantly likable and conveying infectious enthusiasm and energy, whilst showing continued development as a very strong young actor (as introduced in 2012's memorable The Impossible) in delivering spot-on humour and drama. Also, the film is notably written for a truly younger teenage protagonist and for the contemporary teenage audience, giving it an almost relentless pace and entertaining secondary characters, particularly Zendaya as the off-centre Michelle and Jacob Batalon as Peter's endearing best friend Ned. Keaton makes for a good antagonist as The Vulture with an effective narrative arc that also manages one terrific surprise if you do not see it coming. Indeed, Homecoming is a very well-written film, not just in its snappy dialogue but in the amount of plot content over its two-hours running time and its very secure references that link Spider-Man and this film's story into the MCU very effectively. The action/fight set-pieces are pacy and ambitious, with the Washington Monument sequence and the superbly-constructed finale as stand-outs. As a bonus, the final ten seconds of the film got one of the biggest cinema audience laughs of this year! Homecoming is a delightful, pleasing and thoroughly entertaining popcorn movie, ably demonstrating that there is plenty of life left in Marvel yet.
"You'd be surprised."
It has become increasingly clear just how important was the short appearance by Spider-Man in Captain America - Civil War, and this third big-screen iteration in the last two decades more than fulfils the promise of that brief introduction and quickly dispels any worries about hasty rebooting. Homecoming is fun, funny, thrilling and hugely entertaining throughout. A key factor is Tom Holland's terrific performance, instantly likable and conveying infectious enthusiasm and energy, whilst showing continued development as a very strong young actor (as introduced in 2012's memorable The Impossible) in delivering spot-on humour and drama. Also, the film is notably written for a truly younger teenage protagonist and for the contemporary teenage audience, giving it an almost relentless pace and entertaining secondary characters, particularly Zendaya as the off-centre Michelle and Jacob Batalon as Peter's endearing best friend Ned. Keaton makes for a good antagonist as The Vulture with an effective narrative arc that also manages one terrific surprise if you do not see it coming. Indeed, Homecoming is a very well-written film, not just in its snappy dialogue but in the amount of plot content over its two-hours running time and its very secure references that link Spider-Man and this film's story into the MCU very effectively. The action/fight set-pieces are pacy and ambitious, with the Washington Monument sequence and the superbly-constructed finale as stand-outs. As a bonus, the final ten seconds of the film got one of the biggest cinema audience laughs of this year! Homecoming is a delightful, pleasing and thoroughly entertaining popcorn movie, ably demonstrating that there is plenty of life left in Marvel yet.
Sunday, 2 July 2017
FILM: Despicable Me 3 3D (dirs: Kyle Balda, Pierre Coffin and Eric Guillon, 2017)
"Life is like that sometimes: you're hoping for a unicorn, you get a goat."
Although Despicable Me 2 did mega-box office, it was an adequate film at best. This threequel puts a bit more of the focus back on Gru and creates a stronger central storyline, but even then sidelines the Minions into their own subplots instead of integrating them properly into the story. Fallen 80s child-star villain Balthazar Bratt is a fun creation ("Dance fight!") and Gru's newly-discovered twin Dru is again well-voiced by Steve Carell, but both characters could have been given a little more to do in the overall film - the children and Kristen Wiig's Lucy are all but sidelined. Despicable Me 3 is well made - the character animation is particularly impressive, 3D perhaps less so here - but it is no Pixar movie for sure, and the thin and slightly messy story underwhelms for anyone above the very young target audience.
Although Despicable Me 2 did mega-box office, it was an adequate film at best. This threequel puts a bit more of the focus back on Gru and creates a stronger central storyline, but even then sidelines the Minions into their own subplots instead of integrating them properly into the story. Fallen 80s child-star villain Balthazar Bratt is a fun creation ("Dance fight!") and Gru's newly-discovered twin Dru is again well-voiced by Steve Carell, but both characters could have been given a little more to do in the overall film - the children and Kristen Wiig's Lucy are all but sidelined. Despicable Me 3 is well made - the character animation is particularly impressive, 3D perhaps less so here - but it is no Pixar movie for sure, and the thin and slightly messy story underwhelms for anyone above the very young target audience.
FILM: Baby Driver (dir: Edgar Wright, 2017)
"I'm drivin'."
If Edgar Wright's mission statement for this movie had been 'be cool and be entertaining', then Baby Driver meets expectations and succeeds fully. The sheer joy of making this film leaps off the screen ranging from the big set-pieces (which are at times gob-smacking) to the endlessly cool and well-chosen soundtrack (to which the foley artists and editors take syncing the sound effects to new heights) to the evident glee of the performers. It is an eclectic but immensely strong cast: Ansel Elgort absolutely nails the lead role, Kevin Spacey does his hilarious/menacing shtick with aplomb, whilst supporting cast such as Jon Hamm, Jon Bernthal and Eliza Gonzalez create real characters. Baby Driver might not be particularly original or memorable, but as an action movie it really motors along (sorry!), it leads to a great finale that really delivers, and as pure big screen entertainment it simply works to the max.
If Edgar Wright's mission statement for this movie had been 'be cool and be entertaining', then Baby Driver meets expectations and succeeds fully. The sheer joy of making this film leaps off the screen ranging from the big set-pieces (which are at times gob-smacking) to the endlessly cool and well-chosen soundtrack (to which the foley artists and editors take syncing the sound effects to new heights) to the evident glee of the performers. It is an eclectic but immensely strong cast: Ansel Elgort absolutely nails the lead role, Kevin Spacey does his hilarious/menacing shtick with aplomb, whilst supporting cast such as Jon Hamm, Jon Bernthal and Eliza Gonzalez create real characters. Baby Driver might not be particularly original or memorable, but as an action movie it really motors along (sorry!), it leads to a great finale that really delivers, and as pure big screen entertainment it simply works to the max.
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