Because it's so much more entertaining to tear something down if you have someone to blame.
Wednesday, May 28, 2014
Neighbors, or Seth Rogen Kind of Grows Up.
I no longer know how to write about comedies without being tempted to go on a long tirade about why there are so few great ones nowadays. Maybe someday I'll provide you with that lecture, but for now let me try to focus on Neighbors, the latest entry in a long line of comedies that we can at least consider adequately amusing.
In Neighbors, Seth Rogen and Rose Byrne play a young couple with a cute baby who are trying to keep the youthful dream of having sex in the kitchen alive. Unfortunately, they're now old and sleep deprived, so their efforts are typically stifled by their child, exhaustion, or Seth Rogen's declining sexual prowess. When a fraternity moves into the house next door, Seth and Rose attempt to become fast friends with the fraternity leadership (Zac Efron and Dave Franco) in the hope that their friendship will convince their new neighbors to keep it down while they're trying to sleep.
Tuesday, May 27, 2014
X-Men Days of Future Past, or Terminator 2: Motivational Speaker Edition.
"You need to make stronger life choices, son." |
It's the future, guys. It's really dark in the future. And the
The resulting film is an X-Men family reunion composed largely of motivational speeches, since the majority of the plot is articulated to us within the first fifteen minutes by narration, and then relayed to the X-men of the past via Wolverine's first of many motivational speeches to a young Professor Xavier. Thankfully, we're also treated to the obligatory getting-the-band-back-together sequences, which are the moments in which Days of Future Past actually remains bearable for a while.
Thursday, April 24, 2014
Noah: Aronofsky's Guide to Adaptation.
Singin' in the rain, just singin' in the rain. |
Thursday, April 10, 2014
The Grand Budapest Hotel, of Which I Start Writing Four Different Things and Then Forget What My Point Was.
I assume the rule of thirds is applied here by accident. |
Saturday, March 1, 2014
The Top Ten Films of 2013
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
Oblivion: At Least Will Smith Isn't In It.
Sunday, April 14, 2013
The Place Beyond the Pines, or How to Ruin a Movie with Bradley Cooper.
Dear Derek Cianfrance,
I think I see what happened here. I'll bet you had this really great idea for a film, and the whole time you were writing it you were thinking, "Damn, this is good." And you kept writing it, it kept being brilliant, and then you finished it and realized that it was only forty-five minutes long.
And in this instance, you blew it. The first segment of The Place Beyond the Pines is fantastic and the rest of it is a sub-par addendum; devoid of any real emotional or thematic connection to its predecessor.
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