30 April 2013
MAY 2013 MOVIE PREVIEW
Sumer is icumen in, and bringing with it the usual glut of big damn blockbusters. I learned a very important lesson last year, about not going in with expectations one way after another: looking forward to the best summer season in a decade and getting, instead, the worst summer in at least that same decade will do that to a fella. So let's just take it one film at a time, and not try to make sweeping proclamations, though if I were going to do that, I would probably err on the side of "boy, does all of that look oppressively safe, or what?"
3.5.2013
Having already sucked up a virtually unimaginable amount of money overseas, it's hard to imagine Iron Man 3 failing to be the big film of the year, or at least the summer, and given that Robert Downey, Jr's sarcastic man of metal is pretty consistently the best thing about the increasingly musty and corporatised Marvel Cinematic Universe, I'll even cop to being more excited about this than any of the year's other superhero movies (though goddamn almighty, after the sparkly and bland The Avengers, the shabby and grinding The Amazing Spider-Man, and the insurmountably disappointing The Dark Knight Rises, I have a pretty terminal case of superhero fatigue). Minimally, it's nearly impossible to conceive of it being any worse than the vanilla-but-not-awful Iron Man 2, and I'd be on-board for Shane Black and Downey re-teaming under pretty much any circumstances whatsoever.
10.5.2013
Tentatively, foolishly, and mostly because all the other options have some major crippling limitation in my eyes, I think that The Great Gatsby might be my most-anticipated major release of the summer. This is not because I think that the trailers suggest an appropriate, or even tolerable, marriage of content and style; or because anything has happened since Leonardo DiCaprio was announced as the title character to make me feel that it was a defensible casting choice. It's because I would follow Baz Luhrmann off a cliff, honestly, and the way this one is shaping up, I won't be entirely surprised if that's exactly where we go.
The annual token, yawning attempt to cater to a black audience this summer: Peebles, which is produced and presented by Tyler Perry, but not otherwise created by him, which doesn't speak entirely well of it being interesting in any particular way.
17.5.2013
Long-time readers may recall that I got my first-ever death threats for daring to give Star Treka 6/10 but rotten review back in 2009, being (if I recall correctly) only the fifth negative review on Rotten Tomatoes. Sadly, I have not repeated the trick since then, and I'd had high hopes that Star Trek Into Darkness was going to be the film that put me back on the map, but given the "oh, well it's okay, but not as exciting as the first" tenor to the very earliest reviews, I don't think that it's going to have the same absurdly heightened response as the first. Also, that's not the kind of tenor that makes me excited about the movie whatsoever, particularly on top of its rousing but somewhat generic action movie trailers.
Anyway, if you all love me, you'll threaten to take me out back and shove bamboo splints under my fingernails once the review happens. Because I miss feeling like I actually mattered.
24.5.2013
If Gatsby is sort of my tentative, not hugely convinced most-anticipated wide release, Fast & Furious 6 is surely my runner-up and maybe more realistic hope, even though I am very, very sad that they didn't pick a more outré title. After Fast Five did quite a bit, actually, to spice up a franchise that had never managed to rise above crushingly mediocre, I've been prepped for two years for a follow-up that I could love unreservedly (in fact, I thought Fast Five already was that movie, but at the time I gave it a negative review, so obviously I had some significant problem with it that I no longer recall). The car stunts in the ads make me feel like we're in pretty good hands, and despite all the evidence, I do want to like big dumb summer tentpoles.
Over here on what's essentially pre-ordained to be the most gigantic weekend of the year, we have The Hangover, Part III. Part II lost me enough that I'd be incapable of actively looking forward to this one, but even setting that aside: Christ, those trailers! Those TV spots! Why are they trying to advertise this as not being a comedy?
Other wide release: Epic, a cartoon about a human woman being shrunk and fighting slug armies, or whatever. It's the new Blue Sky movie, I'm sure I'll see it but by God, I will not pretend that I'm interested in it beforehand.
Of course, the weekend's big news is the release of Before Midnight. Limited release only, I am heartbroken to say, but hopefully that will be a big enough limit that I won't have to wait until June. Because this isn't just my most-anticipated movie of the summer, after Gravity it's my #2 of the whole year. And this is as good a point to mention that this blog is a strictly Before Midnight spoiler-free zone, including any production photos or anything else that might accidentally hint at the film's content in the vaguest sense.
26.5.2013
Not a movie release as such, but certainly, the fact that Season 4 of Arrested Development arrives on Netflix the same day that Steven Soderbergh's last film (or, whatever ends up happening), Behind the Candelabra airs on HBO is obviously worthy of comment, and maybe the clearest proof you'll get in 2013 that cinema is dead.
31.5.2013
The only out-and-out dumping ground weekend until August has seen a lot of shifting scheduling: first it was just The Purge, then Now You See Me came to join it, then After Earth joined them, and then The Purge jumped back to the next weekend. Which is all as much to say, whatever opens, all of it is meant to be hidden from view as much as the budgets permit, though I'm interested in a wholly clinical way to see what M. Night Shyamalan, working with a script he didn't write, managed in After Earth.
3.5.2013
Having already sucked up a virtually unimaginable amount of money overseas, it's hard to imagine Iron Man 3 failing to be the big film of the year, or at least the summer, and given that Robert Downey, Jr's sarcastic man of metal is pretty consistently the best thing about the increasingly musty and corporatised Marvel Cinematic Universe, I'll even cop to being more excited about this than any of the year's other superhero movies (though goddamn almighty, after the sparkly and bland The Avengers, the shabby and grinding The Amazing Spider-Man, and the insurmountably disappointing The Dark Knight Rises, I have a pretty terminal case of superhero fatigue). Minimally, it's nearly impossible to conceive of it being any worse than the vanilla-but-not-awful Iron Man 2, and I'd be on-board for Shane Black and Downey re-teaming under pretty much any circumstances whatsoever.
10.5.2013
Tentatively, foolishly, and mostly because all the other options have some major crippling limitation in my eyes, I think that The Great Gatsby might be my most-anticipated major release of the summer. This is not because I think that the trailers suggest an appropriate, or even tolerable, marriage of content and style; or because anything has happened since Leonardo DiCaprio was announced as the title character to make me feel that it was a defensible casting choice. It's because I would follow Baz Luhrmann off a cliff, honestly, and the way this one is shaping up, I won't be entirely surprised if that's exactly where we go.
The annual token, yawning attempt to cater to a black audience this summer: Peebles, which is produced and presented by Tyler Perry, but not otherwise created by him, which doesn't speak entirely well of it being interesting in any particular way.
17.5.2013
Long-time readers may recall that I got my first-ever death threats for daring to give Star Treka 6/10 but rotten review back in 2009, being (if I recall correctly) only the fifth negative review on Rotten Tomatoes. Sadly, I have not repeated the trick since then, and I'd had high hopes that Star Trek Into Darkness was going to be the film that put me back on the map, but given the "oh, well it's okay, but not as exciting as the first" tenor to the very earliest reviews, I don't think that it's going to have the same absurdly heightened response as the first. Also, that's not the kind of tenor that makes me excited about the movie whatsoever, particularly on top of its rousing but somewhat generic action movie trailers.
Anyway, if you all love me, you'll threaten to take me out back and shove bamboo splints under my fingernails once the review happens. Because I miss feeling like I actually mattered.
24.5.2013
If Gatsby is sort of my tentative, not hugely convinced most-anticipated wide release, Fast & Furious 6 is surely my runner-up and maybe more realistic hope, even though I am very, very sad that they didn't pick a more outré title. After Fast Five did quite a bit, actually, to spice up a franchise that had never managed to rise above crushingly mediocre, I've been prepped for two years for a follow-up that I could love unreservedly (in fact, I thought Fast Five already was that movie, but at the time I gave it a negative review, so obviously I had some significant problem with it that I no longer recall). The car stunts in the ads make me feel like we're in pretty good hands, and despite all the evidence, I do want to like big dumb summer tentpoles.
Over here on what's essentially pre-ordained to be the most gigantic weekend of the year, we have The Hangover, Part III. Part II lost me enough that I'd be incapable of actively looking forward to this one, but even setting that aside: Christ, those trailers! Those TV spots! Why are they trying to advertise this as not being a comedy?
Other wide release: Epic, a cartoon about a human woman being shrunk and fighting slug armies, or whatever. It's the new Blue Sky movie, I'm sure I'll see it but by God, I will not pretend that I'm interested in it beforehand.
Of course, the weekend's big news is the release of Before Midnight. Limited release only, I am heartbroken to say, but hopefully that will be a big enough limit that I won't have to wait until June. Because this isn't just my most-anticipated movie of the summer, after Gravity it's my #2 of the whole year. And this is as good a point to mention that this blog is a strictly Before Midnight spoiler-free zone, including any production photos or anything else that might accidentally hint at the film's content in the vaguest sense.
26.5.2013
Not a movie release as such, but certainly, the fact that Season 4 of Arrested Development arrives on Netflix the same day that Steven Soderbergh's last film (or, whatever ends up happening), Behind the Candelabra airs on HBO is obviously worthy of comment, and maybe the clearest proof you'll get in 2013 that cinema is dead.
31.5.2013
The only out-and-out dumping ground weekend until August has seen a lot of shifting scheduling: first it was just The Purge, then Now You See Me came to join it, then After Earth joined them, and then The Purge jumped back to the next weekend. Which is all as much to say, whatever opens, all of it is meant to be hidden from view as much as the budgets permit, though I'm interested in a wholly clinical way to see what M. Night Shyamalan, working with a script he didn't write, managed in After Earth.
17 comments:
Just a few rules so that everybody can have fun: ad hominem attacks on the blogger are fair; ad hominem attacks on other commenters will be deleted. And I will absolutely not stand for anything that is, in my judgment, demeaning, insulting or hateful to any gender, ethnicity, sexual orientation, or religion. And though I won't insist on keeping politics out, let's think long and hard before we say anything particularly inflammatory.
Also, sorry about the whole "must be a registered user" thing, but I do deeply hate to get spam, and I refuse to take on the totalitarian mantle of moderating comments, and I am much too lazy to try to migrate over to a better comments system than the one that comes pre-loaded with Blogger.
http://www.buzzfeed.com/awesomer/10-disney-films-you-totally-forgot-about?s=mobile
ReplyDeleteJust in case you don't think you matter, here is you being quoted by Buzzfeed in probably the most hilariously scathing Critics' Quote of the ten.
Having seen Iron Man 3, I can promise that Black (as writer, given that Marvel don't believe in ridiculous things like "directorial authorship") and Downey re-teaming is pretty much the only reason to be at all excited about Iron Man 3.
ReplyDeleteI'm also inordinately amused that your Fast Five review promised that you'd forget everything but the popcorn spectacle shortly after seeing it and thus end up excited for the sixth film, and then promptly seem to have done exactly that. It's also my most-anticipated Summer release, save maybe Pacific Rim, which has more potential but dispiriting trailers.
So you've seen Kiss Kiss Bang Bang! Do you think you'll ever review it? I've always hoped you would. It might be the most fun movie I've ever seen.
ReplyDeleteAll this summer movie stuff is all well and good as far as it goes, but the thing I'm looking forward to the most is a bright shiny new Antagony & Ecstasy review of the new Shyamalan movie.
ReplyDeleteBecause holy crap, your other reviews of his films are among my favorite things I've ever read on the internet.
I preferred Iron Man 3 immensely to the first two films, and would in fact call it my #2 favourite of the Marvel Cinematic Universe movies just below The Avengers. That said, I was lukewarm towards the first film and flat out didn't like the second one, so take from that what you will.
ReplyDeleteBrian- I beg your pardon, sir: the two most hilariously scathing &c. That's awesome!
ReplyDeleteChris- Right there with you on Pacific Rim. I have absolutely no reason not to love everything about that idea and that director in concert, but I'm getting the worst vibe off of it right now.
And yeah, self-fulfilling prophecy going on there with the Fast Five review. I should perhaps re-watch it, but now I'm scared to.
Christian- Oh, I don't "think" I'll review KKBB. Keep your eyes peeled.
Rick- Aye, well, the man is a dismal clown. He's just so much fun to make fun of.
Thrash- At the level of The Avengers is really all I'm hoping for, so that gives me hope. Though I do very much prefer IM1 to the rest of the Marvel movies, so we'll see how that translates.
For what it's worth, I think you've been vindicated on the Star Trek reboot. Aside from lens fare jokes, I don't think anyone's thought about it in a couple of years now.
ReplyDeleteTim, I think you'll enjoy Iron Man 3 a lot more than you think. It's a very different Iron Man film and you can tell the director is different. The tone is darker and it has some very interesting twists (that I don't want to spoil). Plus, unlike many other actors in their third (fourth if you count The Avengers) outing as a popular character, Robert Downey Jr. still finds plenty to do with Tony Stark and some interesting places to take him. I'm also curious to see what you think of Ben Kingsley in this (I thought he stole every scene he was in, but let's see what you think). It's not a perfect film but it is a lot of fun.
ReplyDeleteI think I've asked this here before, but now's as good a time as any to bring it up again: genuinely curious why your movie title links go to IMDB (as opposed to your own reviews of those movies, when applicable)?
ReplyDeleteEspecially when referencing a previous review that got you death threats, all I want to do is click through to read it! :)
Well, you see it's a couple things. One is a fixation on consistency: I want to have every title I mention link to further info about that movie, but since I haven't reviewed every movie, some of them must go to the IMDb, so rather than have a random hodgepodge of links here and there, I just standardise it.
ReplyDeleteThe other thing is that I can't help but feel it smacks of arrogance: "oh, the only further info you need is what I've previously written about this movie."
There are of course some cases where a link to my review is appropriate, and if I'd realised that the death threat post I did link to didn't have a further link to the review, I'd have included it the first time around, as I have now done.
I'm disappointed that I couldn't find the death threat in the comments. Was it in the middle of one of the novel-length blocks of discussion on lenses, 'cause I Hodad to skip them. I did see someone call you a douchebag, though. That made me upset.
ReplyDeleteStar Trek has aged horrendously, so much so I can't watch it anymore. I think the fact it had been so long since a Trek film had come out that everyone overlooked the immense flaws and gave it a pass for the shiny (lens flares -ha) package it was delivered in. And I'm right there with you on summer 2012, the most deflating and disappointing summer I can recall. I went from Nolan fan to hater in an instant.
ReplyDeleteGatsby and Ironman: stoked. Baz does well when adapting classic material.
"Epic": I watched the trailer for this thing and actually found it depressing. That's what will do nowadays as an animated adventure yarn? Maybe I'm too old for that kind of stuff. The premise sounds to me like "Ferngully: the last rainfores" with a gender switch.
ReplyDelete"Behind the candelabra": Michael Douglas can't be too happy about that, he can't get an Oscar nod if the movie isn't released theatrically first, right?
@ Brian - If I remember correctly, the death threats that Tim was so proud to receive were comments on the Rotten Tomatoes posting. Although, I just took a quick peek over there and did not find any way to see that, at least easily, so maybe RT did not archive that section? Or maybe I'm completely wrong and Tim should answer this himself.
ReplyDeleteRebecca is quite correct, they were RT comments, and I have no idea how long they get saved there.
ReplyDeletejavi75- "Depressing" is a perfect word to describe the Epic trailer, particularly the bit where it cares more about the voice cast than the plot or characters.
Okay, let's ease up on the "Epic" snobbery. In a comment from another review, I said that the title sounded ridiculous, but now, I'm actually anticipating it. Guess the marketing worked for me.
ReplyDeleteBut seriously, its a William Joyce adaptation, and although it seems to stray from the children's book, "The Leaf Men and the Good Green Bugs," I will give "Epic" a chance out of my Bill Joyce love.
I don't know if you've seen it yet but I just got back and according to the title card that opened the movie, its title is "Furious 6."
ReplyDelete