Thursday, January 10, 2008

The Invasion (2007)


The Invasion, previously known as Invasion and The Visiting, is a 2007 science fiction film based on a screenplay by Dave Kajganich, originally intended as a remake of the 1956 film, Invasion of the Body Snatchers. Initially directed by Oliver Hirschbiegel with Nicole Kidman and Daniel Craig as leads, Warner Bros. Pictures later hired James McTeigue to shoot scenes rewritten by the Wachowski brothers. The story follows a Washington psychiatrist (Nicole Kidman) who unearths the origin of an alien epidemic, and also discovers her son might be the only way it can be stopped. Also Starring Jeffrey Wright.

Atonement (2007)


Ian McEwan, one of Britain's most accomplished novelists, has been in the habit of showing his books to his wife as soon as they're completed. When she finished reading Atonement, she did something unprecedented: She cried. That, McEwan has said, is when he knew he'd written something special. Which he had. An assured and deeply moving work, Atonement, is at once one of the most affecting of contemporary love stories and a potent meditation on the power of fiction to destroy and create, to divide and possibly heal. It is the kind of novel that doesn't get written very often or, if it does, rarely gets transferred to the screen with the kind of intensity and fidelity we find here. For, as directed by Joe Wright from Christopher Hampton's adroit script and acted with fervor by Keira Knightley and James McAvoy, this is one of the few adaptations that gives a splendid novel the film it deserves…... ~Kenneth Turan

Tripping (2006)


Tripping is a time travel action fantasy film directed by Taiwanese director Chen Yi Wen. It is a cross-cultural collaboration, combining talent from China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Japan. It tells the story of a rebellious Japanese-Taiwanese girl (played by Rena Tanaka from “Kitaro”) who gets transported back to ancient times and embarks on an adventure with a Taoist priest and a thief. On the road, the group encounters numerous dangers, stumbling upon a conspiracy involving a powerhungry sorcerer and the corrupt court.

Le Cinque Giornate (1973) by Dario Argento



This bloody and comical look at the 1848 Italian revolution was director Dario Argento's only foray outside the horror-thriller genres. Adriano Celentano wanders Milan with a goofy baker and witnesses the growing corruption and horror that turns a just cause into senseless violence, rape, and mayhem. Fans of Dario Argento will find it worthwhile, but the script is so insular that non-Italians are likely to find most of it uninvolving.

True North (2006)


The skipper (Gary Lewis) of the Scottish trawler PD-100 has worked for more than thirty-two years to buy his fishing vessel but is bankrupt and near to lose his ship to the bank. While in the port of Ostend, Belgium, his first mate and son Sean (Martin Compston) accepts a lot of money to smuggle Chinese illegal immigrants to Scotland to keep the trawler with his father. The crewman Riley (Peter Mullan) helps him in the scheme, and they hide the group in a store below the boatswain store. However, a Chinese teenager hides in the engine room, stealing food and leaving money in the galley. The cook (Steven Robertson), who is a little slow and has issues with sex, finds the stowaway (Angel Li) and helps her. Sean decides to stay longer in the North Sea to get catch and avoid problems with customs, leaving the immigrants in the most subhuman conditions. When one of the Chinese dies, despair is triggered leading the crew to tragic actions.

Dead Silence (2007) 1080p


From the brilliant horror masters that brought us the Saw franchise, we are offered up another taste of true fear. The story takes place after Jamie Ashen (Ryan Kwanten) comes home to find his wife Lisa (Laura Regan) disfigured and dead in their apartment just minutes after a mysterious, not to mention creepy, package was left on their doorstep containing an old ventriloquist dummy. With no alibi, a detective (Donnie Wahlberg)is left to assume Jamie as the prime suspect. Driven by an old ghost story, Jamie returns to Ravens Fair, his old hometown to prove his innocence. The story leads him to believe that the vengeful ghost of Mary Shaw was the real murderer. But when Jamie returns to Ravens Fair, he finds out more than he bargained for.

Kenji Mizoguchi - Akasen Chitai / Street of Shame (1956)


Five prostitutes work at Dreamland, in Tokyo's Yoshiwara district. As the Diet considers a ban on prostitution, the women's daily dramas play out. Each has dreams and motivations. Hanae is married, her husband unemployed; they have a young child. Yumeko, a widow, uses her earnings to raise and support her son, who's now old enough to work and care for her. The aging Yorie has a man who wants to marry her. Yasumi saves money diligently to pay her debt and get out; she also has a suitor who wants to marry her, but she has other plans for him. Mickey seems the most devil-may-care, until her father comes from Kobe to bring her news of her family and ask her to come home. Kenji Mizoguchi's last film.

Akira Kurosawa-Sugata Sanshiro ('Judo Story') (1943)


The directorial debut from one of the screen's greatest ever directors - Akira Kurosawa - this is the tale of the emergence of the fighting art of Judo in old Japan. Set in the late 19th century, the film follows a wayward young man Sugata and his quest for knowledge. After witnessing some Ju-Jitsu bullies beaten by a man with a new fighting style, Sugata yearns to learn the emerging art of Judo. As Sugata aims to beat the Ju-Jitsu masters he also fights a battle with his inner self. Heroic
Sanshiro, a strong stubborn youth, comes to the city to apprentice at a jujitsu school. His first night, he sees Yano in action, a master of judo, a more spiritual art, and he begs to be Yano's student. As the youth learns technique, he must also learn "satori," the calm acceptance of Nature's law. If he can balance strength and control, then judo may become the training regimen for the city's police, Sanshiro can gain respect from an old teacher in a jujitsu school, and he can win the hand of Sayo, that teacher's daughter, who is also sought by jujitsu's finest master, the implacable Higaki, who vows to kill Sanshiro in a midnight fight on a windswept mountainside. (http://imdb.com/title/tt0036400/plotsummary)
This film, Sanshiro Sugata (sometimes called Judo Saga in the West), is the first film where he's credited as director, and you can clearly see the beginnings of the precision, style and eye for composition that made him so celebrated a director later on. Heroic
The story's a very simple, almost minimalist one. It's 1882, in Japan. Sanshiro Sugata (Susumu Fujita) is a young man seeking training in the martial arts -- he's big, but wide-eyed and untrained. He seeks out some jujitsu masters, only to be swept along as they go to challenge an upstart who's threatening their appointment as police trainers. This upstart, Shogoro Yano (Denjiro Okochi), is a master of the new art of judo, which is looked upon with derision (and a touch of fear) by the established jujitsu schools. Sanshiro looks on in wonder as Yano rather effortlessly throws each of the jujitsu masters into a river, and at once decides to become Yano's pupil and learn judo. Heroic
Sanshiro Sugata is a very old film -- it was shot in 1943, during the war, and as such has been unfortunately cut by the Japanese censors of the time.Though it's not the masterpiece some of Kurosawa's later works were, it's got some standout scenes: in particular, the climactic battle with Higaki, filmed on the Sengokuhara plain during an enormous windstorm. Clouds race across the sky and the long grass is bent almost double as the two men face each other. Higata's a lovely character, all quiet venom and dressed to the nines in Western clothing. A suitably corrupt villain for the Japanese wartime censors, no doubt. Takashi Shimura (who would become the actor who most frequently worked with Kurosawa in major roles) is also in there and very good as the older jujitsu master who befriends Sanshiro even as he's beaten by him in a match. Heroic

My Friends Tigger & Pooh - Super Sleuth Christmas Movie (2007)


Tis the season for a timeless tale of Christmas cheer! So grab your hat, put on your mittens, and join Tigger, Pooh, Darby and all your favorite friends from the 100-Acre Wood for this very merry movie filled with holiday magic and wonderful surprises. Christmas comes tomorrow, and Pooh and his pals can hardly wait! But they might wind up waiting much longer than just one day when Santa s magic toy sack goes missing along with a little lost reindeer. Now it s up to the problem-solving "Super Sleuths" to work together and follow the clues to reach the North Pole in time to help Santa deliver his presents. Along the way, they ll meet new friends, make new discoveries and share in the true spirit of Christmas. Overflowing with unforgettable songs and your favorite beloved characters, My Friends Tigger & Pooh: Super Sleuth Christmas Movie is fun the whole family will treasure.

Point Blank


"Point Blank" is an expertly made, fast-moving film, based on the theme of the individual pitted against the large, impersonal organization. Here the central character is an old-fashioned loner of a gunman (Lee Marvin) embroiled with a large-scale, corporate criminal operation behind a respectable-looking 'front'. Without delving into psychology or motivation, the film places emphasis on action and surface appearances, superbly capturing the glossy, depersonalized feel of a 1967 Los Angeles--a nightmare landscape of concrete, glass and coiling freeways.

Lady and the Tramp II: Scamp's Adventure (2001)



One of the remarkable things about making an animated sequel is that actors don't age. It took Disney 46 years to make a sequel to its 1955 hit Lady and the Tramp, yet the events of this made-for-video sequel take place only six months later. Lady and Tramp are getting along fine with their human family, the Darlings, and they have four new puppies. The three girl puppies take after mom, the boy, Scamp, has a lot of dad in him. Scamp dreams of "being a real dog," and that means living on the street as a member of the Junkyard Dogs. Despite his dad's warnings, Scamp (voiced by Scott Wolf) runs off and goes through the trials of a mutt, including run-ins with Junkyard leader Buster (Chazz Palminteri); the dog catcher (Don Knotts); and a fellow stray, Angel (Alyssa Milano). The formula here is the same as other Disney direct-to-video sequels The Lion King and The Little Mermaid, and the justification to return to a classic movie is flimsy at best. To its credit, Disney has made a quality effort in the animation department, adapting sets and characters from the original with great success. But the story is never engaging, the songs are forgettable, and the impact unsustainable (and at 62 minutes, quite trite). Nevertheless, a Disney kid should dig Scamp's rough-and-tumble adventures and the cute tale of puppy love (Scamp and Angel even revisit the Italian diner).

Good Luck Chuck (2007)


It all started when Charlie Logan was ten years old. Breaking the cardinal rules of spin-the-bottle, Charlie refused to lip-lock with a demented Goth girl - and she put a hex on him. Now, twenty-five years later, Charlie (Dane Cook) is a successful dentist...and still cursed. While his plastic surgeon best friend, Stu (Dan Fogler), pursues as many of his patients as possible, Charlie can’t seem to find the right girl. Even worse, he discovers at an ex-girlfriend’s wedding that every woman he’s ever slept with has found true love - with the next guy after him. Before he knows it, Charlie’s reputation as a “good luck charm” has women - from sexy strangers to his overweight receptionist - lining up for a quickie. But a life filled with all sex and no love has Charlie lonelier than ever - that is, until he meets accident-prone penguin specialist , Cam (Jessica Alba).

Atonement (2007)


Ian McEwan, one of Britain's most accomplished novelists, has been in the habit of showing his books to his wife as soon as they're completed. When she finished reading Atonement, she did something unprecedented: She cried. That, McEwan has said, is when he knew he'd written something special. Which he had. An assured and deeply moving work, Atonement, is at once one of the most affecting of contemporary love stories and a potent meditation on the power of fiction to destroy and create, to divide and possibly heal. It is the kind of novel that doesn't get written very often or, if it does, rarely gets transferred to the screen with the kind of intensity and fidelity we find here. For, as directed by Joe Wright from Christopher Hampton's adroit script and acted with fervor by Keira Knightley and James McAvoy, this is one of the few adaptations that gives a splendid novel the film it deserves…... ~Kenneth Turan

Pinocchio (1940)


This Disney masterpiece from 1940 will hold up forever precisely because it doesn't restrain or temper the most elemental emotions and themes germane to its story. Based on the Collodi tale about a wooden puppet who wants to become a real boy, Pinocchio is among the most magical, mythical, and frightening films to come from the studio in its long history. A number of scenes make permanent impressions on young minds (just ask Steven Spielberg, who quoted the film more than once in Close Encounters of the Third Kind), and the songs ("When You Wish upon a Star") can't be beat. --Tom Keogh

The Brave One (2007)


New York radio host Erica Bain (Jodie Foster) has a life that she loves and a fiancé she adores. All of it is taken from her when a brutal attack leaves Erica badly wounded and her fiancé dead. Unable to move past the tragedy, Erica begins prowling the city streets at night to track down the men she holds responsible. Her dark pursuit of justice catches the public’s attention, and the city is riveted by her anonymous exploits. But with the NYPD desperate to find the culprit and a dogged police detective (Terrence Howard) hot on her trail, she must decide whether her quest for revenge is truly the right path, or if she is becoming the very thing she is trying to stop. Directed by Neil Jordan, “The Brave One” earned Jodie Foster a 2008 Golden Globe nomination for leading actress in a drama.

Persepolis


"Persepolis" is the poignant story of a young girl coming-of-age in Iran during the Islamic Revolution. It is through the eyes of precocious and outspoken nine-year-old Marjane that we see a people's hopes dashed as fundamentalists take power - forcing the veil on women and imprisoning thousands. Clever and fearless, she outsmarts the "social guardians" and discovers punk, ABBA and Iron Maiden.
Yet when her uncle is senselessly executed and as bombs fall around Tehran in the Iran/Iraq war the daily fear that permeates life in Iran is palpable.

The Warlords (2007)


During the war-plagued 19th century in the late Qing dynasty China, three men will become blood brothers and swear to be true to each other, despite all the political upheavals and unrest around them. Starring Jet Li, Andy Lau and Takeshi Kaneshiro, “The Warlords” will be one of the three films (the other two would be “Lust,Caution” and “The Sun Also Rises”) which will be presented by China to compete in Oscar 2008 consideration.

Saw IV (2007)


The film opens with the autopsy of the deceased Jigsaw Killer, John Kramer, who was killed in the ending climax of Saw III. During the operation, a wax-coated audio cassette is found in Jigsaw's stomach. Detective Hoffman is called to the scene, where he plays the tape which states that, although Jigsaw is dead, "the games have just begun."…