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Red Dog (DVD) – A canine brings the Aussie outback together

4th June 2012 By Tim Isaac


Being released in the same year as War Horse, Red Dog can’t help but invite comparisons. Both films tell the episodic story of a noble beast touching the lives of all the humans he encounters and both have a tendency to become seriously sentimental. The crucial difference is that War Horse was brought to us by Steven Spielberg, who is the master of presenting sentimental stories so that the audience doesn’t feel like they’re being manipulated, and with a few notable exceptions (Hook anyone?) his films manage to avoid syrupy corniness.

Red Dog could have done with a bit of Spielbergian magic because, despite being based on a true story, it wanders into some dangerously corny territory. The titular canine was a mysterious stray that wandered into an isolated Western Australian mining town in the early 70s. The mining crew were made up of lonesome men from all over the world and Red Dog’s arrival brought them together and the intrepid pooch came to represent the spirit of the community.

The film is presented as a series of interlinking stories as newcomer Thomas (Luke Ford) arrives in town a decade after Red Dog first turned up and finds the locals gathered around his deathbed. Several of the miners and local barkeep, Jack Collins (Noah Taylor), then tell Thomas the story of how they met Red Dog and what he meant to them. Through these stories we learn the tragic story of John Grant (Josh Lucas), the American bus driver who adopted Red Dog and the incredible journey Red Dog took in an effort to be reunited with him.

It’s a fairly remarkable and emotional story to begin with, so it’s a shame that writers Daniel Taplitz and Louis de Bernieres decided to heap on the cloying sentimentality and that director Kriv Stender gives the film such a glossy, superficial sheen that it feels like watching a commercial. It’s episodic structure also means that it has a wildly uneven tone – one moment you’re watching the humorous tale of Vanno (Arthur Angel) using Red Dog to chat up a veterinary nurse and then suddenly you’re hearing about Jocko (Rohan Nichol) being driven to the brink of suicide by the loss of his family. This makes it frustratingly difficult to get involved with the story and you can’t help but wish the film spent more time with Red Dog himself and less time trying to tug your heartstrings.

Overall Verdict: Its heart is definitely in the right place but unfortunately Red Dog is too sentimental to make this real life tale effective.

Reviewer: Adam Pidgeon

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Snow White Tops US Box Office – Taking a decent $56 million

4th June 2012 By Tim Isaac

Prometheus doesn’t reach the US until next weekend, leaving the box office clear for Snow White And The Huntsman to take a big bite out of the US box office with $56 million in its first three days. While that’s not exceptional, for a film that isn’t a sequel it’s certainly not a bad start at all, especially considering it’s ahead of the first three day take of last week’s Men In Black III.

It probably helped that it was the only big new release, although the likes of The Avengers had decent holdovers too. Indeed The Avengers has now taken over $550 million at the US box and with more than $1.3 billion worldwide, has overtaken the final Harry Potter movie to become the third highest grossing movie ever.

The only other new entry in the US top 10 was the Mexican historical epic For Greater Glory, which took a rather tepid $1.8 million. Take a look below for the full top 10 for the weekend of June 1st-3rd.

Rank Title Weekend Gross (millions) Total Gross to date (millions)
1 Show White And The Huntsman $56.2 $56.2
2 Men In Black 3 $29.3 $112.3
3 The Avengers $20.2 $552.7
4 Battleship $4.8 $55.1
5 The Dictator $4.7 $64.8
6 The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel $4.6 $9.3
7 What To Expect When You’re Expecting $4.4 $23.8
8 Dark Shadows $3.8 $18.4
9 Chernobyl Diaries $3.0 $395.8
10 For Greater Glory $1.8 $88.6

 

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Big Miracle (DVD) – John Krasinski & Drew Barrymore love whales!

3rd June 2012 By Tim Isaac


Everybody love whales, right? Indeed they’re so adored that the original name of this film was Everybody Loves Whales, before being changed to the more generic and slightly meaningless Big Miracle. Indeed it’s a change that seems indicative of the slightly ballsed-up marketing this movie’s had, as it deserved to get a big audience and is just the sort of film many families will love. Instead of selling it properly though, it was merely slipped out and made just $20 million at the US box office. Hopefully it’ll find a bit more of an audience on DVD.

John Krasinski plays Adam Carlson, a news reporter for a small TV station who’s been sent to Barrow, Alaska to talk about what it’s like to live in the Arctic circle, in one of the most northerly towns in the world. Just as he’s about to leave, he happens upon three Gray Whales trapped in a small breathing hole in the ice. It’s too far for them to swim to the open ocean without drowning and their outlook seems bleak.

His report is picked up by the national US news and soon the story has become an international cause celebre. Adam’s ex, Greenpeace activist Rachel Kramer (Drew Barrymore), begins to take saving the whales very personally, while the media pours into the town, keen to report on every deal of the fight to keep the animals alive. Soon an unexpected coalition begins to emerge, including the Inuit who normally hunt whales (and think the outsiders are crazy for wanting to save these three), an oil tycoon (Ted Danson) who thinks this could be good PR, Greenpeace, the National Guard and even the White House. However there’s still a big problem, a pressure barrier of ice stand between the whales and the Ocean and it’ll need some major power to break through it. The Russians may be the only ones who can help, but this is 1988 and the Cold War is still raging.

Big Miracle is one of those movies that sets out to gladden your heart and does so with aplomb. It’s a film about the power of co-operation and shows that sometimes people can put aside their differences to come together for a good cause. It’s nice that it doesn’t completely gloss over some of the complexities of the tale, realising that everyone involved may have their own agenda, but just because someone wants to spin something a particular way and use it to promote their own ideas, doesn’t necessarily mean they can’t be useful or that they’re being secretly completely evil. It may not explore these ideas fully, but it does a lot better than the black and white world we’re normally presented with in this kind of film.

Mainly though it’s about trying to save some whales and the power these animals have to pull people together in extraordinary ways. Based on a true story (and with footage over the credits to show that many of the more extraordinary aspects of the tale are 100% factual), it shows that things were going viral long before social media, and that when something sparks people’s imagination it can bring out a shared humanity we often forget about. Some will undoubtedly find the film cheesy or sentimental, but while it has its manipulative moments, underneath that is a basic sweetness and truth that ensures it works. You’d have to have a hard heart not to be hoping the whales escape by the end.

The Blu-ray includes a couple of featurettes, but sadly the DVD is feature-free. Luckily though the film is great. If you have an animal loving kid (who won’t get distraught at the idea of whales in peril), or you just like films that make you feel warm and give you hope that humankind is basically good, Big Miracle is definitely worth watching.

Overall Verdict: An extraordinary true story that’ll leave you feeling warm, not just because it’s about whales, but because it shows the extraordinary things people can do by working together.

Special Features:
None

Reviewer: Tim Isaac

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Brad Pitt Producing Andrew Dominik’s Blonde – A biopic of Marilyn Monroe

2nd June 2012 By Tim Isaac

Before he went off to make Killing Them Softly, The Assassination of Jesse James director Andrew Dominik was developing a film about Marilyn Monroe. It was a semi-fictional take, based on Joyce Carol Oates’ novel Blonde, which imagines Monroe’s thoughts.

It seems that while Dominik put the project to one side while he made Killing Me Softly with Brad Pitt, he hasn’t given up on it and now he’s even got Pitt involved, as the star’s Plan B production company will now produce Blonde, according to the LA Times. Dominik comments, “I wanted to make a $15-million movie. I wanted to make a movie that was cheap and could make its money back, because I’d like to keep working with Brad and I’d like us to have more expensive playdates than the last one. I would like to make someone some money.”

At the moment it seems Pitt is only attached to produce, but he may end up starring. It’s also unclear if Naomi Watts is still involved, who was set to play Monroe a couple of years ago.

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Prometheus – Ridley’s return to the world of Alien is finally here!

2nd June 2012 By Tim Isaac


After one of the biggest and most hyperbolic marketing campaigns ever, which did all but suggest that Ridley Scott’s return to sci-fi is a bigger deal than if Jesus returned, Prometheus is here. Ever since it was announced, there’s been a lot of talk about exactly how it’s related to Alien. Scott himself has distanced the film from his earlier effort, saying only that strands of ‘Alien DNA’ would be apparent and that it only becomes a prequel in the last few minutes.

Well, the truth is that this doesn’t just have ‘Alien DNA’, it’s a full-blown prequel. The reason for Scott distancing it is the same as it often is with marketing nowadays – the assumption the audience is stupid (which, to be honest, is often quite a fair assessment for a lot of cinemagoers). There aren’t any xenomorphs (well, pretty much), and so it appears Scott wants to make sure audiences aren’t expecting the iconic facehuggers and aliens and are then disappointed by their absence.

However one of the reasons for the lack of HR Giger’s creatures are because parts of the film are essentially an origin story for the creatures that went on to bother Ripley 40 years after this is set. However the world it’s set in is very much an Alien world, revealing more about things seen in Alien but which weren’t explored in the 1979 sci-fi horror. The main one of these is the so-called ‘space jockey’, a huge mummified creature seen relatively briefly in the alien ship Ripley and co. investigate before they come across the facehuggers, and which becomes more important here.

Two scientists, Elizabeth and Charlie (Noomi Rapace and Logan Marshall-Green), discover that different ancient civilisations across Earth have left clues that point to a particular star system. They’re sent as part of a team to a moon orbiting a planet around this star. Elizabeth stills believes in a higher power while Charlie is less spiritual, but both believe the moon holds clues to mankind’s origins, and the ‘engineers’ they believe seeded human life on Earth.

Just after they arrive, they discover an enormous round structure, which seems too uniform to be natural. Exploring inside they soon come across the bodies of dead aliens, and it appears something has wiped the humanoid creatures out. Elizabeth and Charlie are keen to see what answers they can find – although sad that it appears all the engineers are dead – but this being the world of Alien, there are competing agendas. As franchise fans may suspect, those agendas come from the Weyland Corporation, with android David (Michael Fassbender) apparently doing their bidding.

There are also various other members of the team, from Idris Elba’s captain to Charlize Theron’s mysterious Meredith Vickers, who seems even more devoid of emotion than David is. As you may have guessed, quite a few of these people are there mainly so they can die as strange creatures start to appear and the truth behind what was going on in the alien installation is revealed.

While Alien was small and claustrophobic, Prometheus is a much more epic movie. Indeed one of the most impressive aspects of the film, as you’d expect from Scott, is the world-building, where they seem to have absorbed the lessons of Avatar, where creating a fully formed sci-fi universe doesn’t just look cool, but doing it right actually helps make the 3D seem more integral than tacked on – and the 3D does work extremely well, adding to the experience without becoming distracting. It’s an awesome looking movie with some great action set-pieces and should more than satisfy those looking for a well-made, good-looking, effects filled sci-fi flick.

My main reservations were thematic and with the fact there seem to be a lot of plot holes – well, kind of. To be honest a lot of the time it’s difficult to tell whether certain things are holes or deliberately left unclear. After all, the script was co-written by Damon Lindelof, who became the king of leaving things hanging with TV’s Lost. His love of answering questions by raising more questions is very much in evidence here, with the script seeming to revel in only suggesting answers to things from the original Alien by suggesting 100 other things. However there are certain things that do appear to be major holes that have been papered over, which is kind of annoying when so much care has been taken elsewhere.

More frustrating for those into such things are its thematic failures. Prometheus is a movie that set out its stall to ask big questions – Why are we here? Where did we come from? Is there room for a God? What is the relationship between the creator and created? Early on in the films its big idea after big idea and the whole things builds as if it’s going to be an interesting look into the possibilities of these things. However it eventually becomes apparent that the film feels asking the questions is enough and ought to be patted on the back just for that, as it doesn’t really have much to say about these things that haven’t been said 100 times before.

By about halfway through, its themes start tripping over one another until they become pretty meaningless. There’s still the odd interesting idea, but these start to seem like small realisations in the script they’ve happened on something potentially intriguing rather than something that goes somewhere. Ultimately its thematic weaknesses and its love of leaving things open means that by the end it’s tough to tell whether the movie was actually ‘about’ anything, or if it’s just been doing a big dance to try and get people to think it is.

To be honest it’s not as big a problem as it could have been. The film does so much right around this, from the universe it’s set in to the pacing to the slow reveal of how things piece together (and how they relate to Alien), all ensuring it’s still very entertaining. Indeed I almost wish it hadn’t bothered with all the initial thematic fireworks, as for me, who loves that sort of thing when done well, it became distracting when it started to falter. There are some themes it handles well though, and as with the earlier Alien movies, many of its most interesting ideas surround its android.

Michael Fassbender outdoes Ian Holm and Lance Henriksen on this score, with an eerie performance as David. The script seems far more interested in David than pretty much everything else in the film. He’s far better developed and more fascinating than any of the other characters. Indeed, from the early scenes where he copies lines from Lawrence Of Arabia and apparently dyes his hair to look more like Peter O’Toole, it’s clear this in an android we need to know more about.

While Noomi Rapace’s Alien-style woman-in-peril act occasionally gets a little tiring, especially when it decides to go with the franchise stalwart of finding an excuse for her to run around in her underpants, David never stops being utterly fascinating. Admittedly some of the biggest plot holes/unexplained things swirl around him, but he’s also the centre of its thematic strengths – particularly concerning his role as the creation of a species that has just discovered it was created itself – and Fassbender is utterly beguiling in the role.

Prometheus is a good film and much better than we’ve come to expect from the summer blockbuster season, but it’s flawed. The ending suggests we could well be getting Prometheus 2, and there’s a decent chance some of the things that appear to be problems could well be explained there (particularly the fact that what we see towards the end of Prometheus – and which on the surface appears to be setting things up for the arrival of the Nostromo and Ripley 40 years later – is different to what we see in Alien).

To be honest, those just looking for an extremely well-made, gorgeous looking sci-fi thriller are unlikely to have any problem with it at all. However if you’re the type of person who likes big ideas in a movie, prepare to be promised a lot in the first hour only for it to fizzle out – with a few intriguing exceptions – in the second.

Overall Verdict: A beautiful looking and entertaining trip back into a world that contains more than just ‘Alien DNA’, although it’s a shame the script couldn’t have been a little tighter and more thematically satisfying.

Reviewer: Tim Isaac

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Kathleen Kennedy Takes Over LucasFilm – As George Lucas retires

2nd June 2012 By Tim Isaac

After 41 years at the head of the company he founded, filmmaker George Lucas is retiring from LucasFilm, and producer Kathleen Kennedy has been named as his successor. Lucas will still serve as chief executive and will be a co-chairman alongside his successor for one year.

Lucas commented, “I’ve spent my life building Lucasfilm, and as I shift my focus into other directions I wanted to make sure it was in the hands of someone equipped to carry my vision into the future. It was important that my successor not only be someone with great creative passion and proven leadership abilities, but also someone who loves movies.”

Lucas has spoken before about his desire to be able to make more personal films, and it seems stepping back from Lucasfilm is a way to do that.

58-year-old Kathleen Kennedy has long been one of the most important producers in Hollywood, with her most important relationship having been with Steven Spielberg (as well as her husband and fellow producer Frank Marshall), who’s she’s worked with on blockbusters such as E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, The Goonies, Back to The Future, Schindler’s List, Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, and War Horse, to name just a few.

Here’s what Steven Spielberg had to say about the announcement, “Kathy has been a member of both of our families going into a fourth decade so it does not feel like she is going to another galaxy far, far away. She will get just as much support from me with Lucasfilm as George has given both of us all these years.”

Kennedy will oversee LucasFilm, the special effects house Industrial Light and Magic, Skywalker Sound, the video game arm LucasArts, and an animation unit which produces the TV series Star Wars: The Clone Wars.

While Lucasfilm doesn’t currently have any live-action feature films in production, Kathleen Kennedy will continue to oversee the 3D conversion of Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones all the way through Star Wars: Episode VI – Return of the Jedi. There is also an untitled animated movie in the works, of which no details have been revealed. And Star Wars Detours, the live action television series based on the popular franchise, is still moving forward.

Here’s what Kathleen Kennedy had to say about taking over for the legendary filmmaker, “I thought it was an incredible opportunity for George to ask me to step into what has become such an incredible legacy that he has created over the years. George and I have not had time to sit down and focus on the specifics. I’m certainly fortunate that he’s not going anywhere.”

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