Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Taken

            This movie, displays a great deal of strength in its set up. The realities of contemporary Europe and some of the biggest problems in the world concerning human trafficking and international forced prostitution are addressed in a very relevant and scary way. The execution of the man on a mission and revenge/justice epic is sad and regrettable as it’s really a poor acting job by Liam Niesen (Star Wars Episode 1: The Phantom Menace) in the lead as a former CIA operative who is divorced and attempting to reconnect with his spoiled daughter much to the distress of his ex-wife, played wonderfully dislikeable by Fammke Johannson (X-Men).
 
            When the daughter takes a summer trip to France, she is almost immediately kidnapped along with her friend, by a nasty group of Albanian gangsters who specialize in human trafficking. Niesan flips into action, basically going into killer mode, and taking no prisoners in his pursuit of those who have wronged him and his daughter.

            It plays out very formulaically, a cross between Ransom and Payback (both Mel Gibson movies) with a healthy dose of Man on Fire. This is actually very close to the original Man on Fire which is set in Italy, where Taken is featured in France. So through various circumstances and contacts, he tracks her down and kills everyone, and it’s just so plain, and so not original, and really not much of a bad ass movie, although Niesen can't really do any wrong as a character actor. For all that it alleges to be, I wouldn't watch it again, though I will probably check out the sequel. Definitely a 1.

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

The Bad News Bears

            This is daring for the time it came out. A baseball team of misfits that swear up a storm and fight like banshees, but in the end they pull it together. Oh, their coach is a drunk as well. Buttermaker (Walter Mathau, The Odd Couple) is a pool cleaner in the Southern California-San Diego area, and takes charge as coach of the Bears, the most rag-tag group of misfit kids that the director does not want allowed in the league.

            With the help of a few recruits, and some fundamentals, Buttermaker can get any team turned around. The Baseball action and cinematography is a bit unconventional and amateur, and the script leaves something to be desired, but the end is priceless.

            The kids are hilarious, and little Tanner, the four-foot-nothing shortstop that doesn’t take guff from anybody stands tall. New recruits include Tatum O’Neal (Paper Moon) who pitches a mean spitball, with the Vaseline on her hat brow, and Kelly Leak, the baddest kid around, who is also a well-respected loan shark and drives a Harley Davidson.

            Really just a classic story told in a campy 70's era So-Cal low budget way. It's raw and has an edge that just makes it endearing if you had any experience of being bad at something as a child but having someone believe in you none-the-less. So really, this foul-mouthed comedy speaks to the heart of anyone. A 2.

Saturday, November 7, 2009

The Scale

In case anyone reads this, I rate movies on a scale of 1-2, no decimals, in which a 1 simply means "I would never watch this movie again" and a 2 means "I would watch this movie again". There are definitely subjective and in-between feelings, but those are best left to description by word rather than number.

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

The Apostle

             This movie is a masterpiece exploration of the Pentecostal, southern tradition, and reflects much of writer/director/star Robert Duvall’s upbringing. It also represents a great deal of research and rehearsal by Mr. Duvall, who stars as the charismatic, yet tormented preacher who folks just call Sonny. He is a warrior for the Lord, and a master in the Pentecostal preaching technique. He is also s very conflicted soul, and struggles a great deal with self-control.

            From opening scene to close, this is a great work of art, detailing a man’s life. He is preacher and pastor of a church, which he founded, and is in one day voted out in a single day by his conniving wife, as well as abandoned by her for the youth minister. He then goes on a drunken rampage and kills the youth minister at a children’s softball game. All he can do is run. He sets out for Baton Rouge, and before long he finds himself making friends and taking jobs in another town. Under the alias “the apostle E.F.” He takes up the cause of the church again. He is constantly haunted by his personal struggles and inner conflict.

            The conclusion is dramatic and powerful, and through out the story, the snippets of southern culture turn up. Just a delightful redemption peace without any frills, other than solid character acting, brilliant dialogue, and a raw southern worldscape. A certain 2, this is rewatchable, and many great quotes pervade this thunderous movie.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

A New Day A New Way A New Blog

I used to have a few different places to express things, and then I condensed them all into 1. mattyo.blogspot.com. But I've opened this one to hopefully be a companion to some videos I might create, and also post reviews of films. Since I have over 300 movie reviews I've never shown to anyone. We'll see what comes of it.