Home Tags Posts tagged with "Movie Reviews"
Tag:

Movie Reviews

Film Review: Kidnap

by Desha Winborne

Writer: Knate Lee

Director: Luis Pietro

Cast: Halle Berry, Sage Correa, Chris McGinn

Karla Dyson is a doting mother who would do anything for her son Frankie. Her love is put to the ultimate test when her pride and joy is kidnapped right under her nose. With no time to spare Karla heads out on the journey of a lifetime to save her boy and she’ll do anything to protect him. These kidnappers picked the wrong mom to mess with.

0 comment
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestLinkedinTumblrRedditWhatsappTelegramEmail

Writer: David Koepp

Director: Alex Kurtzman

Cast: Tom Cruise, Sophia Boutella, Jake Johnson, and Russell Crowe

Ahmanet (Sofia Boutella) was an Egyptian princess with an insatiable hunger for power. Fate and black magic propel her to commit unimaginable crimes against her family. As punishment, the princess is mummified and imprisoned for eternity. Her slumber is interrupted by a soldier of fortune and relic robber, Nick Morton (Tom Cruise) in his haste to rob the tomb. Ahmanet The Mummy arises, determined to regain her strength, and create a new world with the Egyptian God of Chaos, Set. In order for Set to rule in the flesh a human life must be sacrificed. Unfortunately, for Nick, he is the chosen one. Tomb Raider Nick has no interest in being a sacrificial lamb and sets off on a wild adventure, hoping desperately to escape the mummy’s clutches and himself.

0 comment
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestLinkedinTumblrRedditWhatsappTelegramEmail

Film Review: Snatched

by Desha Winborne

Writer: Katie Dippold

Director: Jonathan Levine

Cast: Amy Schumer, Goldie Hawn, Ike Barinholtz and Wanda Sykes

After Emily (Schumer) is fired from her job and dumped by her boyfriend. She convinces her overly cautious mother to join her on what would have been a romantic getaway. Emily’s mom Linda (Hawn) is a quiet careful divorcee and the polar opposite of her carefree offspring. The duo embarks on a relaxing vacation only to find themselves drugged and kidnapped by a gang of angry locals. Despite their naivety, the pair proves to be too much for their captors and ultimately leave them wishing they had never snatched them.

0 comment
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestLinkedinTumblrRedditWhatsappTelegramEmail

Film Review: The Fate of the Furious #F8

by xoJohn

Director: F. Gary Gray

Writer: Chris Morgan

Cast: Vin Diesel, Charlize Theron, Dwayne Johnson

Our faithful hero is finally enjoying some rest and relaxation. Retirement looks good on a weathered Dom (Diesel) as he carves out a decent life for his family in Cuba. His life of leisure comes to a screeching halt when he comes across a dangerous woman who lures him into a job he cannot refuse. His new assignment puts him against everything he stands for, forcing him to fight the family he is sworn to protect.

This eighth installment of the Fast and Furious franchise, titled The fate of the furious, is bad. It is really bad. As the first film since Paul Walker’s untimely passing, the film falls flat in story development, plot, and realism. If you are familiar with the previous films then you know that the formula is the same throughout. Typically the crew is chasing some drug lord or pulling off some heist that requires high-speed chases and insane stunts. This time around they are up against a diabolical villain bent on world domination. Expecting the often comical crew to get drugs off the street is one thing, but stopping nukes is a huge leap in the wrong direction. Realism takes a sharp nosedive in this movie as outrageous stunts and gratuitous fighting replaces plot and dialogue. In one of the first action sequences Dom is driving a beat up old car that catches fire, flips over, and crashes over a bridge but somehow he leaps out of the fiery vehicle completely untouched. Not even a ripped shirt or scar; his white tank top bright and crisp as if nothing at all happened. In another scene, Roman (Tyrese Gibson) is saved from a watery grave by a car door and is dragged through icy tundra on that door while angry henchmen shoot directly at him missing every single shot. Despite the usual insanity of the stunts we have come to expect some degree of realism in their aftermath. To have our heroes in peril and not see a single scratch as evidence, is insulting. This oversight is unforgivable especially as they face their most dangerous threat to date.

Charlize Theron joins the cast as the terrorist Dom can’t resist. She is smart, manipulative, crazy, and lives on an airplane with a team of doting henchmen. She isn’t the usual greedy mobster looking for a payout. She isn’t chasing revenge. She just wants the entire world at her feet. Comic book fans should find this familiar territory and would be right to expect this threat to be handled by a team of super humans and a good looking alien or two. Unfortunately, this isn’t another bit of fodder fueling the DC versus Marvel debate. It is the Fast and the Furious, so we don’t get super humans just really good drivers in really fast cars. Despite the unrealistic plot, Theron is a worthy adversary.  She isn’t the usual cherub-faced beauty. Her look is darker and more sinister; pure evil. A role we loved seeing her in. As a terrorist she is willing to go to extremes to get what she wants, even killing a defenseless baby. In one of the pivotal scenes, she has someone killed in front of loved ones just because she can. She’s just in the wrong movie. Her antics are far too extreme and go well beyond what should be an acceptable threat. This is the eighth film, by now we’ve become accustomed to a certain formula and her darkness just doesn’t fit in.

As for the crew not much has changed. The smart guy and comic relief are still chasing the pretty tech girl. The tough girl is still in love with the lead bad ass and there is still a grizzled government agent leading the way.  The last member of the team is, of course, the gorgeous heartthrob, a role originally played by Paul Walker. Scott Eastwood tries to fill this void, but it is a little too soon. He looks the part but he doesn’t quite connect with the rest of the cast. He’s the odd man out and it shows. In fact, the cast is as disjointed on film as they are in real life. By now everyone is aware of the feud between Johnson and Diesel.  Their grievance shows up on film with a noticeable distance between the two.

In summation, the loss of Paul Walker has taken its toll on the franchise. From the writing to the direction there is a noticeable shift.  This film feels rushed and thrown together like two scripts trying desperately to become one complete movie. The Fate of the Furious is a grief-stricken ode to what could have been. As loyal fans, we enjoyed the fast cars, fight scenes, and familiar twists but we can’t deny there is something missing. With any luck, they’ll figure it all out before the next one if there is a next one, OK there will probably be a next one! We hope they take a long break before that happens.

The Fate of the Furious hits theaters this Friday, April 14th.

 

0 comment
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestLinkedinTumblrRedditWhatsappTelegramEmail

Film Review: LIFE

by Desha Winborne

Director: Daniel Espinosa

Writers: Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick

Cast: Jake Gyllenhaal, Rebecca Ferguson, Ryan Reynolds and Olga Dihovichnaya

A team of celestial explorers on a fact-finding mission unearth an organism from the soil on Mars. The excited astronauts report their findings to Earth and celebration commences. The masses are fascinated by the discovery and the team is encouraged to learn as much as possible. Unfortunately, elation soon turns to terror as tiny organism quickly evolves into a monstrous creature beyond their expectations and control. What was once regarded as a harmless creature morphs into Earth’s biggest threat which forces the crew into a fight to the death to save Earth from annihilation.

0 comment
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestLinkedinTumblrRedditWhatsappTelegramEmail

Movie Review: The Great Wall

by Desha Winborne

Director: Yimou Zhang

Writer: Carlo Bernard

Cast: Matt Damon, Tian Jing, Willem Defoe

Guns for hire travel to Asia in search of the next great weapon, black powder. Their quest is interrupted by a massive army charged with protecting the great wall, who holds them as prisoners. Unfortunately for the mercenaries, their captors are knee deep in a battle to save their land from a horde of angry bloodthirsty beasts. Matt Damon stars in this grand action adventure as “William,” a talented soldier who brings his combat expertise to the far east. Unlike some epic battle films, there isn’t a long tedious build up to the action.

0 comment
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestLinkedinTumblrRedditWhatsappTelegramEmail