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Archive for August, 2012

“CELESTE & JESSE FOREVER” My rating: C (Opens Aug. 31 at the Glenwood Red Bridge, Town Center 20 and Studio 30 )

91 minutes | MPAA rating: R

Despite some laughs and the presence of the ever-amusing Andy Samberg, “Celeste & Jesse Forever” is not a comedy.

Rather, it is a sincere attempt to analyze the breakup of a marriage. It raises some interesting points.

Unfortunately, it delivers them in a repetitive and not-very-engrossing way.

We meet the titular characters (Rashida Jones, who co-wrote the screenplay, and Samberg) driving to meet friends for dinner. They appear to be a perfect couple, keyed in to each other’s emotions, sharing little private games.

It’s only when they sit down with their pals that we realize that Celeste and Jesse have been separated for several months in anticipation of a divorce. But they still feel like a couple. In fact Jesse now lives in the garage/studio behind Celeste’s house.

This setup creeps out their friends as unnatural. But for C and J it’s the ideal, civilized, non-acrimonious breakup, one that doesn’t force their acquaintances to side with one or the other partner.

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“COSMOPOLIS” My rating: C (Opening Aug. 31 at the Glenwood Arts)

108 minutes | MPAA rating: R

Because it stars “Twilight” hottie Robert Pattinson, some of his loyal tweener fans  and their moms may think about seeing his latest film, “Cosmopolis.”

Think again.

Our first glimpse of Rob-Pat as Eric Packer, a billionaire master of Wall Street, does remind a bit of his “Twilight” persona. Packer is pale, red-lipped and hides from the sun behind a dark pair of glasses. And you could describe him as a vampire, at least in the economic sense.

But beware, ladies. This film was directed by David Cronenberg, who has made a career of psychopathy (see “Crash,” “Dead Rigners,” etc.), and over its nearly two-hour running time Pattinson’s Packer has sex with several women, kills someone (for no apparent reason) and submits to the longest prostate examination in medical (and certainly movie) history.

Moreover, “Cosmopolis” is a dispiritingly leaden movie, one populated less with characters than with archtypes. People here speak in long, theatrical monologues. They might as well be wind-up toys.

It wears out its welcome long before the closing bell. (more…)

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Shia LaBeouf, Mia Wasikowska“LAWLESS” My rating: B- (Opening wide on Aug. 29)

115 minutes | MPAA rating: R

Reeking of period atmosphere and packed with faces that seem to have stepped out of the WPA  photographs of Dorothea Lange (or maybe the Skid Row portraiture of Weegee), the period crime drama “Lawless” certainly looks good.

Guy Pearce

But the latest from Australia’s John Hillcoat (who gave us the Down Under western “The Proposition” and the post-apocalyptic “The Road”) is a dramatically fuzzy venture, one that clumsily attempts to balance vintage bootlegger clichés and hard-core violence with moments of oddball humor.

The subject of the screenplay by Nick Cave (the eccentric Aussie rock star who also scripted “The Proposition”) are the backwoods Bondurants of Virginia, a real-life clan that in the early years of the Depression ran a major bootlegging operation  providing illegal liquor to speakeasies all over the East Coast.

Forrest Bondurant (Tom Hardy, last seen – barely —  beneath Bane’s mask in “The Dark Knight Rises”) heads the operation. A veteran of the Great War who has a reputation as unkillable, Forrest is socially uneasy loner who says little (he croaks like Billy Bob Thornton in “Slingblade”) and radiates an arresting blend of primitive strength and intimidation. Folks hereabouts know better than to cross him.

Helping out with the heavy lifting is brother Howard (Jason Clarke), a shaggy fellow a bit too in love with the family product to be wholly reliable.

Baby brother Jack (Shia LaBeouf) is eager to get into the bootlegging game, but Forrest wants him to go slow, figuring Jack lacks the cut-throat inclinations the job demands.

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“THE QUEEN OF VERSAILLES” My rating: A- (Opening Aug. 24 at the Tivoli)100 minutes | MPAA rating: PGIt’s a testament to the evenhandedness of Lauren Greenfield’s documentary “The Queen of Versailles” that I didn’t end up hating its money-centric subjects.

These are precisely the kind of filthy rich people who usually piss me off.

David Siegel, 73, and his trophy wife Jaqueline, 43, are – at the film’s outset, anyway – among the richest people in America.

He is the founder and president of the world’s biggest time share operation, which typically dangles free show tickets or other perks in front of vacationers if they’ll make room in their schedule to hear the sales pitch.

She’s the stay-at-home mother of eight…although all the real work falls to a small army of servants, including a Filipino nanny who hasn’t seen her own child for 20 years and confides to the camera that she considers herself to be the true mother of the Siegel kids.

What Jackie Siegel is really good at is spending money. And she’s got so much that no matter how many consumer sprees she launches, she can’t burn through it. Now if she only had a modicum of taste.

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Jude Temple, Matthew McConaughey

“KILLER JOE”  My rating: B- (Opening Aug. 24 at the Glenwood Arts and Alamo Draft House)

102 minutes | MPAA Rating: NC-17

If a cough syrup-addicted John Waters made a film based on a pulp novel by Jim Thompson, the results might resemble “Killer Joe,” veteran director William Friedkin’s descent into murder and lust among Texas’ trailer-court trash set.

The film is a blood-splattered comedy of stupidity which, ironically, features a very smart performance by Matthew McConaughey, who in recent films (“Magic Mike,” “Bernie”) has been busy proving that when freed of stifling rom-com conventions he’s a freakin’ fine actor.

“Joe” is based on the stage play by Tracy Letts, who won a Pulitzer a few years back for his “August: Osage County.”

“Killer Joe,” though, is more akin to an earlier Letts play, “Bug,” a paranoid yarn about a couple in a seedy motel room who are convinced insects from a secret government experiment are breeding in their bodies.  Friedkin (“The Exorcist,” “The French Connection”) filmed “Bug” in2006; obviously he’s on Lett’s wavelength.

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“AI WEI WEI: NEVER SORRY”  My rating: B+  (Opening August 17 at the Tivoli and Glenwood Arts)

91 minutes | MPAA rating: R

The movies go through heroes like McDonald’s goes through cows. But “Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry” offers us a real-life hero unlike any we’ve ever seen.

It’s not just that Ai doesn’t look like your conventional leading man. He’s fat, with a scraggly beard in a constant state of evolution. He resembles a scholar depicted in an old Chinese screen…except that ancient Chinese scholars were rarely seen flipping the bird (literally, the obscene hand gesture) at the authority figures in their society.

Ai Wei Wei, the subject of Alison Klayman’s documentary, is an artist by profession. He was one of the designers of the Bird’s Nest, the spectacular arena that was the centerpiece of Beijing’s 2008 Summer Olympics, and his art –usually in the form of huge installations using found materials — in recent years has been featured in solo shows in London, Munich and Sao Paolo.

But Ai’s true art may be found in his embrace of the truth and his disdain for hypocrisy.  He’s a social critic of the first order, a gadfly who devotes himself to poking China’s Communist leaders in the eye at every opportunity. (more…)

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“NEIL YOUNG JOURNEYS” My rating: B (Opening Aug. 17 at the Glenwood at Red Bridge)

90 minutes | MPAA rating: PG

Neil Young looks like an old hobo. He’s not big on personal hygiene or sartorial statements. He rarely shaves and wears clothes that probably wouldn’t pass muster at any self-respecting thrift store.

But he’s a musical genius – a great songwriter, a superb instrumentalist, and possessor of one of the great bad voices in rock. By that I mean that like Bob Dylan, his singing isn’t good by technical standards, but it’s exactly what his songs require.

Jonathan Demme’s “Neil Young Journeys” is a concert documentary capturing Young’s solo performance at Toronto’s Massey Hall as part of his 2010 tour to promote his “Le Noise” album.

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“RUBY SPARKS” My rating: B+ (Opening Aug. 10 at the Glenwood Arts, Studio 30, Cinemark Palace)

104 minutes | MPAA rating: R

The bittersweet comedy “Ruby Sparks” has been so well written that if I’d been told it was from a script by Woody Allen, I’d have believed it.

The movie’s fabulist hilarity and aching emotions would fit quite nicely among Allen titles like “The Purple Rose of Cairo,” “Midnight in Paris” and “Alice.”

Actually, “Ruby Sparks” was written by Zoe Kazan, 29, who also plays the title role, appearing opposite her real-life significant other, actor Paul Dano.

These two and directors and Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris (the team behind the wonderful “Little Miss Sunshine”) have fashioned a delicately modulated movie that tickles the funnybone, pokes the intellect and tugs at the heartstrings.

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“THE BOURNE LEGACY” My rating: B- (Opening wide on Aug. 10)

135 minutes | MPAA rating: PG-13

There was  no reason to expect much from “The Bourne Legacy,” the fourth in the “Bourne” series and first without star Matt Damon. Going in, the whole thing smacked of a desperate case of sequel-itis.

But darned if it doesn’t actually work.

Oh, by comparison to the other “Bourne” titles it’s a tad thin, but writer/director Tony Gilroy (who’s been with the series since the beginning) provides the film with so much forward momentum and furious action that he almost overcomes a ridiculously stretched-out running time.

The picture begins in a remote part of Alaska where a lone man (Jeremy Renner) battles wolves, climbs mountains and exhibits astounding strength, endurance and agility. His name, we learn, is Aaron Cross, and he – like Damon’s Jason Bourne – is a product of Treadstone, that nefarious CIA-sponsored project to create superior secret agents.

But unlike Bourne – who merely had been brainwashed to be a conscienceless assassin – Cross is one of a new generation of genetically-altered agents. Only problem is that he’s dependent on these special pills. If he doesn’t get them he’ll have a mental meltdown. (more…)

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Michelle Williams, Seth Rogan in "Take This Waltz"“TAKE THIS WALTZ” My rating: C+ (Opening Aug. 10 at the Tivoli)

104 minutes | MPAA rating: R

Some nagging voice in the back of my head tells me I should have liked “Take This Waltz” a whole lot more.

But I cannot lie. I didn’t.

Going in, it sounded like a winner: Michelle Williams starring in the new film written and directed by Sarah Polley, whose Altzheimer’s drama “Away From Her” was one of the best movies of 2006.

But I found “Take This Waltz” pushing me away instead of pulling me in. In part this is because Polley has fashioned a romance of indecision, a brave move but not one filled with big emotional hooks.

Another problem may be that “Take This Waltz” is very much a woman’s picture. I don’t mean that in any sexist way…rather, it feels as if Polley has dedicated herself to capturing a woman’s view of life and romance on the screen with such singlemindedness that those of us with our plumbing on the outside may feel excluded.

Maybe women will view the film differently.

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