Posts Tagged ‘Hugh Jackman’

Update (or, don’t watch!)

Friday, June 19th, 2009

X-Men: Wolverine

X-Men: Wolverine is a prequel to the X-Men series, of which I have only seen the first one. I only watched Wolverine because of Hugh Jackman and he turned out to be the only good thing about the film. The story, apart from the usual X-Men setting of having mutants with special powers living on earth, is fairly ordinary. Two brothers drift apart because of differences in opinion and realize later that blood is still thicker than water when it gets really bad. I just think they could have come up with more than that. They created this entire world which is actually really cool (who wouldn’t want to have special powers?) and then write a story that a hundred other movies have already used. Weak! The special effects are quite good and Jackman certainly brings a cool-factor into the film, but the story-line and dialogues ruin it completely. I do agree with Rachel on Rachel’s Reel Reviews though, seeing Wolverine naked makes it almost worth watching this film ;) .

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

The basic story: Benjamin Button (Brad Pitt) is born old and ages backwards until he is a baby. He falls in love with a young girl named Daisy (Cate Blanchett). This movie was so hyped with all its Oscar nominations and awards and its star cast so that I was really looking forward to seeing it. But I have to say that I found it extremely boring. The introduction with the old Daisy and her daughter is too long, Benjamin’s old age (or childhood), after he is born is even longer, his middle age still longer and once he gets really young (at the end of his life) it is hurried as if the filmmakers needed to end the movie quickly. The idea of the story (adapted from a short story by F. Scott Fitzgerald) is quite fun and quirky, but the script just didn’t milk it enough. The scriptwriters Eric Roth and Robin Swicord  didn’t seem to realize that the special thing about this film is that Benjamin ages backwards. How could they have missed this little detail? The main story and the longest part of the film is about his middle age, when he is basically just doing what everyone else is doing. He gets work, goes to war, falls in love, gets his girlfriend pregnant, things don’t work out, and he leaves. Great, well done… What they should have focused on are his differences to regular people. Especially the beginning of his life and the end. To be fair, they did put quite a big focus on the beginning of his life, but there is nothing really special about it. Instead of being a normal child he is born old and grows up in an old people’s home. But nothing ever happens. And the end of his life when he gets younger is so hurried and mostly about Daisy that it seems irrelevant. Plus, Brad Pitt hardly had to act, why is everyone so dazzled by his performance?

Twilight

Alright, so I knew when I watched Twilight that I was in for a teen-movie. But I thought, great, Clueless, for example, is on my top 100 list, plus I adore vampires. But again, the art of scriptwriting seems to have faded into oblivion. So, the main vampire Edward (Robert Pattinson) is supposed to be extremely cool and to have lived for hundreds of years (I assume that this means he has accumulated some sort of wisdom), but the writers just make him say the most stupid things. After saving the lead girl Bella’s (Kristen Steward) life by pushing a big car away from her with his bare hands, she confronts him about it. His first reaction is “Oh, you don’t know what you saw, you were in shock and confused at the time.” She doesn’t buy it so he says “Well, nobody is gonna believe you anyway”. What?! What kind of vampire wouldn’t have a better excuse? And the dialogue just goes on like this throughout the entire movie. Do I really want to watch a film about a moron vampire? Well, that sounds like a fun comedy but not a wannabe serious teen movie. My advice to all screenwriters: Think, then write!

Oscar Night – The 81st Academy Awards

Monday, February 23rd, 2009

And the Oscar goes to…

…Hugh Jackman

His performance at the Academy Awards is worthy of an Oscar! He dances, sings, simply performs as if there is nothing on earth he would rather do! What a great host.

The whole show was new and exciting. There have been some great improvements. It feels quicker and there is a theme to it, showing the audience how a film is being made from make-up to editing to sound mixing etc.

As for the actual Awards: I am quite pleased with a lot of them. Penélope Cruz really deserved the Supporting Actress Award for Vicky Cristina Barcelona, WALL – E was my favourite for Best Animation and Sean Penn did a swell job on Milk, but what’s up with giving an Oscar to Heath Ledger? I love him, his acting and especially his Joker, but couldn’t they have given him an Honorary Award or something like that? It is so unfair to the actors who are still alive. Obviously they had no chance!

But now the best thing about the 81st Academy Awards: Kate Winslet finally got the Oscar she should’ve gotten five times before! And she gave such a beautiful speech.

Update

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

Picnic at Hanging Rock

Australia, Valentine’s Day 1900, a class of girls from a boarding school go on a picnic at Hanging Rock. When four girls go for a little walk away from the rest of the class, only one comes back. The others go missing. The film deals with the people who are left behind, rather then with the missing ones.

Picnic at Hanging Rock is not exactly made in a documentary style, but it does merely document the events that happened in 1900 (without being based on a real story). There is no judgement or revelation. Director Peter Weir used internationally unknown actors which, in my eyes, adds to the film’s realistic feeling because the viewer is not distracted by familiar faces.

What I liked most about this film is its subtlety. The class of girls are shown in a very beautiful, almost painted, way, lying on the grass in the heat, running up the Rock and interacting in an innocent way. It is all very peaceful and quiet, even though terrible, unexplainable things are happening.

Australia

There are a lot of mixed reviews about this film. But since I am the ultimate Baz Luhrmann fan, I loved Australia.

Nicole Kidman is Lady Sarah Ashly, a British upper class woman who goes to Australia to persuade her husband to sell his farm house and come back home. When she arrives at the farm, she finds him dead. After discovering how her husband had been wronged, she takes over the ranch and with the help of Drover (Hugh Jackman) brings business back.

It is an absolute epic story showing a lot of Australia. It is almost a love letter to the country. It has everything, from love, to loss, magic, travel, war and cowboys. What bothered a lot of people is that the film is a bit over-the-top cheesy. But this is Baz Luhrmann. I would have been disappointed if the film had been completely straightforward. I thought Australia was almost magical.

The Shining

Jack and Wendy Torrance (Jack Nicholson and Shelley Duvall) agree to look after a big hotel on top of a mountain for the winter. They don’t know that their young son has disturbing visions of the terrible things that happened in the hotel in the past. After some time, the solitude is getting to Jack, who alienates himself from his family.

Even though I am not a horror film person, I love The Shining. Jack Nicholson is unbelievably creepy and the settings are amazing. Stanley Kubrick, originally coming from photography, really has an amazing eye for shots. Everything seems so intentional which adds to the eerie feel of the film. It is definitely a masterpiece.

All three films get the MovieCat award for being outstandingly well-made films.

Coming Soon: Australia

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

The world premiere of Baz Luhrmann’s newest film Australia is going to be in Sydney on the 18th of November. New York will host the US premiere on the 24th of November.

This is supposedly the biggest and most expensive film ever to come out of Australia (at least it’s giving the country a lot of publicity). The divine Nicole Kidman will play alongside Hugh Jackman in the leading roles. Baz Luhrmann’s wife Catherine Martin (who won the Best Costume Oscar for Moulin Rouge) did the set and costume design on this film. Should be great!

The Australian (as in he is Australian and he directed the film Australia…) Baz Luhrman has directed three of my favourite films: Moulin Rouge!, William Shakespeare’s Romeo + Juliet and Strictly Ballroom. I have been eagerly waiting for his next film to come out since 2001!

Watch the trailer here:

Other opening dates around the world:

Germany: 25.12.08, France: 24.12.08, New Zealand: 26.12.08, Argentinia: 1.1.09, Japan: 28.2.09