Category Archives: Film Fodder

“Act of Valor” shows the heroism and hardships of real Navy SEALs

To my understanding, Act of Valor was originally to be a recruitment tool produced by the United States Navy in order to promote the Navy SEAL (Sea, Air and Land) program that evolved into a feature film. The SEALs are the elite of the elite. These guys are true badasses. Known as “operators,” these groups form a tight bond that is forged in combat and strengthened through hardship and time. Since a majority of the cast of Act of Valor is made up of active-duty Navy SEALs (whose real names are not revealed for obvious reasons), these hardships and bonds are on full display.

A Navy SEAL emerges from the water in "Act of Valor". Photo courtesy IATM LLC

Though the weaknesses in acting are noticeable, that doesn’t take away from the overall experience of the film. And there are some recognizable faces throughout the movie, but the meat and potatoes consists of the true operators. Watching the SEALs and actors interact is comparable to watching a truly athletic individual partake in a wrestling match for the first time: they’re not as good as those seasoned veterans, but you know that they are doing well.

One of the main points of the film (besides the kick-ass action) is the story of the families that these operators leave behind each time they leave for whatever remote location they are required to infiltrate to complete their next mission. One line in the movie says something along the lines of “these wives say goodbye to their husbands knowing that it might be the last time they ever see them again.” It’s hard to relate to these people and their situations unless you’ve personally experienced it in much the same way that most people can’t understand why wrestlers leave home to drive hundreds of miles for little pay unless they are wrestlers themselves. We do it for the love and passion; the SEALs do it because it is their job to protect our nation. They could choose to do something else, but they know that they belong and are doing the right thing. The difference is we are more than likely coming home after every trip, but they might not.

Lt. Rorke leaves for deployment in "Act of Valor". Photo courtesy IATM LLC

As a veteran who served more than eight years in the United States Army, what I appreciate in Act of Valor is that it’s not too overdone. It’s not over the top, it’s not a blow-as-much-shit-up-as-we-can kind of film, but the action is engaging and keeps your attention the whole time. One amazing moment in the film is when the sniper picks off one of the goons and before the body splashes into the water, another operator’s hands come up from under the water to gently pull him under. The communication and synergy between these SEAL Teams is unparalleled and quite amazing. I’ve seen it firsthand and it is truly a sight to behold.

I’m not going to give away any more of the film because I’d rather you see it and form your own opinions. But trust me, it is worth the trip and you will walk away with a different perspective on the military and the sacrifices that they make daily protecting our freedom.

Act of Valor. Directed by Mike McCoy and Scott Waugh. Starring Alex Veadov, Roselyn Sánchez, Nestor Serrano and Emilio Rivera. Rated R. www.actofvalor.com.

Review by dany only

Things just can’t seem to come together in Iranian film “A Separation”

A lot of stuff happens in A Separation. First an Iranian couple is arguing in front of a judge about getting a divorce because Simin, the pretty wife, wants to leave the country so their 11-year-old daughter Termeh can be raised in a less oppressive environment. Her husband Nader seems like a reasonable enough guy, but he has to think about his father, who is suffering from Alzheimer’s. When the two are unable to agree on the divorce, Simin moves out and Nader hires a housekeeper.

Because of her moral issues with some of the unexpected duties of taking care of a man with Alzheimer’s, the housekeeper quits after the first day. Desperate for the money, she reluctantly returns the following day, only to have Nader return home from work early to find that she has neglected his ailing father, whose condition seems to worsen as a result.

OK. So stuff is happening again and I’m wondering when it will all come together. I mean, the movie has received lots of critical praise and won all kinds of awards, including a Golden Globe for Best Foreign Language Film. And it was nominated for Academy Awards in Best Foreign Language Film and Best Original Screenplay. So I eventually have to have some reason to care about what is happening, right?

Well, an argument between Nader and the housekeeper ensues that results in Nader shoving her out the door and closing it. This is where stuff gets really interesting. The housekeeper accuses Nader of causing her miscarriage, Nader claims he didn’t know she was pregnant and Simin tries to find a compromise that will make everyone happy. The housekeeper’s hotheaded husband refuses to cooperate and even goes so far as to punch Simin in the face during a scuffle between him and Nader.

Throughout this ordeal, no one is being completely honest about what happened or what they were aware of. But they all have seemingly good reasons for not telling the full truth. Termeh, who is smarter than the adults give her credit for being, seems to see right through the lies and innocently questions the motivations of the adults telling them.

In the end, compromises are made, but no one seems to get full closure since no one is willing to fully reveal the truth of the matter. And the story comes full circle, this time with Simin and Nader agreeing to the divorce. But the ultimate decision is Termeh’s to make. And since her eyes have been opened to just what her parents (and other adults) are capable of, it’s a tough decision that will be hard for everyone to cope with, especially in the oppressive Iranian culture.

A Separation. Directed by Asghar Farhadi. Starring Leila Hatami, Peyman Moaadi, Shahab Hosseini, Sareh Bayat and Sarina Farhadi. Rated PG-13. www.sonyclassics.com/aseparation/.  

Review by Flash Gorem

“The Secret World of Arrietty” explores a magical world beneath our feet

It’s been a long journey for Arrietty to make it to the United States, especially for a girl as small as she is. But after debuting in 1952 in a series of children’s books called The Borrowers by British author Mary Norton, then being adapted for the screen by highly influential manga artist Hayao Miyazaki and Keiko Niwa, The Secret World of Arrietty became one of the biggest Japanese films of 2010 (and of all time, for that matter). Leave it to the magic of Disney to bring the Hiromasa Yonebayashi-directed animated fantasy to America.

Arrietty (voiced by pop singer Bridgit Mendler) and her family of Borrowers live in a little brick house in a Tokyo suburb. Their house is so small, in fact, that it exists under the floorboards of another house occupied by Beings. If you haven’t figured it out by now, the Borrowers are fairy-like creatures (small, but without wings or magical powers) whose world must be kept secret from the Beings (regular-sized human beings), but whose survival depends on “borrowing” what they need from the humans while the humans aren’t looking. Just before she is to accompany her father (a man of few words voiced by the gruff-sounding Will Arnett) on her first borrow (a rite of passage for a Borrower of her age), a human boy (voiced by How I Met Your Mother‘s David Henrie) catches a glimpse of Arrietty in the bushes of his aunt’s yard.

The borrow itself is one of the film’s many adventures, as Arrietty and her father traverse through the inner walls of the house, rappelling up and down cupboards in order to retrieve necessities (in amounts that will last the Borrowers weeks but are too small to even be noticed by the humans). After Arrietty inadvertently drops a sugar cube while returning from the borrow, the interaction between her and her human counterpart progresses into a friendship. Though she tries to keep this new friendship a secret from her parents (especially her neurotic mother, voiced by Amy Poehler), they soon find out. And even though she is confident that the Borrowers’ secret is safe with the boy, especially since he is terminally ill, her parents insist that they must move. History has proven that once humans learn of their tiny cohabitants, it never ends well for the Borrowers.

The human housekeeper (Carol Burnett) eventually catches on and proves just why Borrowers and Beings cannot coexist. Sadly she is the bad apple that spoils the bunch, since we also learn that the boy’s family has tried to befriend the Borrowers before, going so far as to build an elaborate dollhouse in hopes that the Borrowers would take up residence.

In the tradition of Miyazaki films like My Neighbor Totoro and Sprited Away, The Secret World of Arrietty takes the viewer into a world of childlike innocence that is threatened by the ignorance of an adult. And through such thoughtful details and accuracies as the way liquids pour in what appear to be large globs in the Borrowers’ world (they’d only be tiny drops to us), Arrietty offers a sense of authenticity despite its fantastical premise. And thanks to the resourcefulness of the two children, not even the crotchety housekeeper is able to fully expose the Borrowers as they prepare to move on to new adventures.

The Secret World of Arrietty. Directed by Hiromasa Yonebayashi. Starring Bridget Mindler, Amy Poehler, Carol Burnett, Will Arnett and David Henrie. Rated G. www.disney.com/arrietty.

Review by Jonathan Williams

The Rock’s pecs aren’t the only oversized things on “The Mysterious Island”

The Rock smells something, but it's not anything he's cooking.

Even those who have never read the turn-of-the-20th-century fantasies of Jules Verne are probably somewhat familiar with the adventures that took place within the pages of his books. One of his most famous tales is A Journey to the Center of the Earth, the basis of the 2008 film starring Brendan Frasier. Though Frasier’s character Prof. Trevor Anderson is not along for the ride this time, Journey 2: The Mysterious Island loosely adapts another of Verne’s classics, this time with wrestler-turned-action hero Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson starring as Hank Parsons.

The tenaciously venturesome teen Sean Anderson (played by Josh Hutcherson, the only returning actor from the first film) is at it again as he intercepts a nonsensical transmission from a mysterious locale. Luckily for him, his stepfather Hank is a former Navy codebreaker who quickly helps Sean decipher the transmission. Sean, whose teenage defiance makes him reluctant to accept his stepfather’s assistance, soon realizes that the message has come from an island in the Pacific Ocean that is apparently the same island referenced in Verne’s The Mysterious Island, as well as Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island and Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels. That’s right, not only were all three authors writing about the same island, but it’s a real place that has somehow been undiscovered by the rest of the world.

That is aside from Sean’s grandfather Alexander (Michael Caine), an explorer who Sean believes sent the message in hopes that Sean would receive it. By the time Hank and Sean get to Palau, they realize how far fetched it is to think there’s an island nearby that has yet to be discovered and documented. The only local willing to fly them out to try and find the island is a tour guide named Gabato (Luis Guzmán), whose dilapidated helicopter doesn’t look up for the challenge. But when Sean sees Gabato’s well developed daughter/business partner Kailani (High School Musical‘s Vanessa Hudgens), he’s suddenly willing to take the risk.

The Rock's going to take this little elephant, turn it sideways AND SHOVE IT STRAIGHT UP YOUR CANDY ASS!

Once they get to the area where they suspect the transmission emerged, they are sucked into an enormous storm funnel and crash safely on an Avatar-like island where elephants are not much bigger than house cats and lizards are the size of dinosaurs. They soon find Alexander and a Goonies-like adventure to get off the island ensues when they realize this island is also the lost city of Atlantis – and that it’s going to sink into the ocean again within the next day or so. The only means for escape? Captain Nemo’s sub the Nautilus from Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, of course. Good thing it’s in a cave on the island’s coast. Too bad that cave is now underwater as the island rapidly sinks.

Along the way, there are flights on the backs of giant bees, a volcano erupting gold and plenty of lighthearted verbal sparring between The Rock and Caine that is as entertaining as any of The Rock’s sharp-witted wrestling promos. And while Sean is crushing on Kailani, her father develops an awkward man crush on Hank that makes for additional chuckle-worthy moments.

As has been the case with many family films as of late, Journey 2 is preceded by an animated short. And it’s a 3-D Looney Tunes treat called Daffy’s Rhapsody, a fun throwback in which Elmer Fudd hunts Daffy Duck while Daffy is performing an opera about being hunted.

Journey 2: The Mysterious Island. Directed by Brad Peyton. Starring Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, Josh Hutcherson, Michael Caine, Luis Guzmán and Vanessa Hudgens. Rated PG. www.themysteriousisland.com.

Review by Jonathan Williams

Denzel Washington and Ryan Reynolds aren’t safe from anyone (including each other) in “Safe House”

Denzel Washington doesn’t usually play downright evil guys. But when he does, he does it well. Perhaps too well, considering that his despicable portrayal of a dirty cop in 2001’s Training Day won him the Academy Award for Best Actor.

In Safe House, Washington is back to his devious ways, this time as Tobin Frost, a rogue Central Intelligence Agency defector who has been trading government secrets for the past decade. Though he has evaded capture by living completely off the grid during this time, he suddenly walks into a United States Embassy building in South Africa and turns himself in while being chased by people who don’t want his latest intel acquisition getting into the wrong hands. Seems crazy, right? Well, Frost is a bit crazy, which is partially why he’s been able to get away with the damage he’s done since leaving the CIA.

Frost is soon taken to a safe house, where aspiring agent Matt Weston (Ryan Reynolds) has been waiting for his opportunity to break out of this dead-end position and prove his worth. He immediately recognizes Frost, not only as the most dangerous man in the world, but also as just the opportunity he’s been looking for. But before Frost even has a chance to be debriefed, the safe house is attacked by the same mercenaries that were after Frost at the beginning of the film. Weston and Frost escape, and for the rest of the film they strike a balance between looking out for each other while also maintaining their own self perservation. Frost’s objective is, of course, to regain his freedom and make a lot of money off the information he has obtained. Weston’s is simply to bring Frost in, establishing his career as a CIA agent with the capture of one of the world’s most wanted men.

It is this balancing act that keeps the viewer engaged, with the relationship between the two men turning into a passing of the torch of sorts as Weston refuses to back down from Frost’s intimidating demeanor. Safe House‘s tension is also elevated by the subtle use of sounds, with the faint buzzing of flies becoming just as important as a deafening gunshot. But the interaction between Washington and Reynolds (much like that between Washington and Ethan Hawke in Training Day) is a palpable torch passing of another kind as the veteran actor helps elevate the already established younger actor to new levels.

Though the nature of their relationship makes them natural adversaries, Frost and Weston grow to respect each other, with the younger agent learning that if he really wants to move up in such a cutthroat business, he’ll have to resort to some pretty nefarious acts in order to keep up with all the other self-interested members of the agency. But in much the same way the two men have to balance their own best interests, Weston eventually figures out a way to get what he wants without completely betraying his country (and he own ethics) the way Frost felt compelled to do.

Safe House. Directed by Daniel Espinosa. Starring Denzel Washington and Ryan Reynolds. Rated R. www.nooneissafe.com.

Review by Jonathan Williams

 

Daniel Radcliffe deals with a curse of a new kind in “The Woman in Black”

When it comes to classic gothic horror films, few would argue that Hammer‘s contributions have been some of the most relevant in the genre’s history. Seeing its heyday in the 1960s and ’70s, Hammer was establishing Dracula, Frankenstein’s monster and the Mummy as British horror icons while Universal was making these creatures household names in America. While  Hammer has been mostly dormant for the past few decades, it’s signature style of creepiness has been resurrected with The Woman in Black.

If he’s looking to break any potential Harry Potter spell, Daniel Radcliffe picked the perfect film as he plays the Jonathan Harker-like lawyer Arthur Kipps. When the still-grieving Kipps ventures to a small village to investigate the estate of a recently deceased woman, he soon finds himself in the middle of a horrific mystery involving inexplicable deaths and the perceived madness of some of the towns most prominent citizens. And the more time he spends in the deceased woman’s house, the creepier things get.

Much like last year’s frightful haunted house flick Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark, The Woman in Black feels much like one of the old Hammer or Roger Corman films (or an Edgar Allan Poe tale), especially considering that heartache, mental instability and the inexplicable deaths of children are the source of the horrors. And for some reason (perhaps his perpetual dwelling on his deceased wife, who died while giving birth to their son), Kipps seems to have no fear of death, at least until what started out as feint shadows and disembodied sounds progresses into full-on poltergeist activity and other overtly ominous happenings.

As the name implies, a ghostly woman in a black veil is the source of the film’s terror. And once Kipps has encountered her, it seems that he carries her curse (a somewhat Freddy Krueger-like determination to punish parents by possessing their children to indulge in fatal activities). It’s not until he realizes that his own young son, en route to visit Kipps in the village, is in danger of becoming part of the deranged woman’s curse that Kipps sets out to break it. And once he finds something to live for again, his determination to bring closure to the black-veiled woman’s own tragedy inadvertently brings about simultaneous loss and closure for Kipps himself. But it’s this type of irony and tragedy that makes The Woman in Black an apt successor to the Hammer films of old.

The Woman in Black. Directed by James Watkins. Starring Daniel Radcliffe, Ciarán Hinds, Janet McTeer and Liz White. Rated PG-13. www.womaninblack.com.

Review by Jonathan Williams

 

 

Liam Neeson faces the horrors of man and nature in “The Grey”

Being stuck in harsh circumstances can either bring out the best or worst in man. And when the setting is the caustic climates and dreary landscape of Alaska, it’s likely to bring out a little of both. Add a hungry pack of wolves to the mix and it’s time for full on survivalism for those being hunted.

Ottway (Liam Neeson) and his buddies get to play with doggies in the snow!

In The Grey, Ottway (Liam Neeson) leads a small group of men who have survived a plane crash through the Alaskan countryside. Unfortunately, it’s not just the elements that the men have to contend with as a pack of wolves begins to terrorize them as soon as the sun sets. Thankfully, Neeson’s character is an expert on wolves, seeing as his job is to use a sniper rifle to pick off any wolves that attempt to attack the oilers he works with.

As the men set up camp and try to figure out how they’re going to survive this ordeal, Ottway quickly takes charge of the group, confidently establishing his leadership skills and survival instincts. The hot-headed challenge of Diaz (Frank Grillo) not only tests the loyalties of the group, but also mirrors a similar power struggle happening between the nearby wolves, which is quickly put to rest when the alpha male bests his challenger. As The Grey progresses, the plights of the men continue to mirror the internal struggles of the wolf pack, setting up an interesting juxtaposition between man and beast.

Aside from its interesting philosophical perspectives, The Grey is a mixed bag of questionable continuity and impressive cinematography and dialogue. On the positive side, the plane crash scene is one of the most intense pieces of cinema ever recorded with its choppy effects and chaotic surrealism. The same can be said of the multiple dream sequences, in which people are whisked from euphoric serenity back to harsh reality with jolting clarity as they are assaulted by snow storms, the crashing plane and ravenous wolves. And after the plane crashes and the survivors regroup, The Grey, in  many ways, turns into a horror movie as the monstrous wolves systematically and graphically pick men off one at a time.

But a few things left me with a big question mark over my head. For example, unless I missed something, there is never any mention of trying to use a cell phone to call for help. Granted, all the phones could have been lost or destroyed in the plane crash, and it’s highly likely that no one would have reception in such a desolate area. But one or two lines of dialogue explaining those things would have resolved these issues completely. Also, aren’t airplane liquor bottles typically made of plastic now? If so, why are the ones on this plane made of glass? Maybe I’m being a bit nitpicky, but in a movie that otherwise seems hyper-realistic, these minor flaws become almost as jarring as the circumstances the men are facing.

Liam Neeson’s about to fight a wolf!

The Grey‘s climax is also a bit odd, as the alpha male from each tribe squares off for one final battle. It’s established earlier in the film that Ottway has little motivation to keep on living, so his willingness to stand and fight (and probably die) is no surprise. But even with the post-credit snippet that vaguely shows the result of the conflict, the viewer is left not knowing what the true outcome is.

These minor gripes aside, The Grey is an intense look at how man reacts when faced with the forces of nature. And even though the wolves are given an almost supernatural mystique, the similarities between man and animal reveal a few things about human nature that we don’t often take the time to consider.