It has been so long since I’ve been both truly surprised
and genuinely thrilled at the movies that I’d almost forgotten the feeling, but
Jack Reacher reminded me of exactly
the reason why I love sitting in a darkened cinema several dozen times a year.
It is not the best movie I’ve ever seen. It’s not even the best movie I’ve seen
this year. But it did exactly what I expect an action thriller to do and it did
it competently, excitingly, originally, and without pandering to the lowest
common denominator audience members. I loved this movie. I loved it almost
unequivocally. I loved it for all the reasons it could have been a standard
genre film, but wasn’t. Loved it for all the ways it managed to enthrall me
from one minute to the next. Christopher McQuarrie, who wrote the hugely
popular (though not well-liked by me) The
Usual Suspects, adapted the story from the eponymous character created by
author Lee Child and more specifically from one of the sixteen books featuring
Jack Reacher as the main character.
A blog mostly dedicated to cinema (including both new and old film reviews; commentary; and as the URL suggests - movie lists, although it has been lacking in this area to be honest), but on occasion touching on other areas of personal interest to me.
Showing posts with label Richard Jenkins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Richard Jenkins. Show all posts
Sunday, December 30, 2012
Saturday, April 28, 2012
The Cabin in the Woods Movie Review
Joss Whedon has built a strong cult following around his
projects that have a tendency to subvert genre conventions and put a new spin
on familiar stories. His short-lived TV series “Firefly” and the follow-up film
Serenity was a sci-fi space western. Buffy the Vampire Slayer, which most
people forget was a movie before it was a popular TV show starring Sarah
Michelle Gellar, took the dumb blonde caricature who is always the first to die
in horror films and made her the hero, an ass-kicking, smart-talking, wooden
stake-wielding defender of humanity. As co-writer along with Drew Goddard, who
directs, and producer of The Cabin in the
Woods, Whedon turns his attention to the slasher/horror/torture porn set of
genres and sub-genres.
Tuesday, August 30, 2011
Flirting with Disaster Movie Review
One of the most criminally undervalued comedies of the 90s was written and directed by a man was an Oscar nominee this year for the critically acclaimed The Fighter. But back in 1996 he made a modest comedy, his follow-up to the indie hit Spanking the Monkey. Sporting a great cast and some fantastic comedy writing (combining situational comedy with great one-liners), Flirting with Disaster deserves a lot more notice than it has gotten over the years.
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97th Academy Awards nomination predictions
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