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Rick's Flicks Picks on AWN

Blogs

MADE IN DAGENHAM (2010) (***1/2)

Rita O'Grady wasn't looking to become a leader of the equal pay for women movement. In director Nigel Cole's film, she is presented as a strong woman who found herself thrust into a leadership role because there was no one else. Many will be reminded of NORMA RAE and DAGENHAM star Sally Hawkins gives a performance equal to Oscar winner Sally Fields.

Hawkins plays O'Grady, a seamstress at the Dagenham Ford Motor Company plant. She is part of the team that hand sews the seat upholstery. The 100 plus women who work at the planet get paid less than the male skilled laborers. Ford doesn't consider them skilled. So the women go on strike for themselves. Their union reluctantly supports them, but the company will not budge. If they give these women equal pay they'll have to do it everywhere.

Blogs

A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET (2010) (*1/2)

Exec #1: Hey lets remake an iconic ‘80s horror movie. Exec #2: Sounds great, kids these days don’t want anything new; they just want to see the same story with more blood and shock. Exec #3: You’re right… and this way we really don’t need to hire screenwriters. Exec #4: We can just string all the best kills from the other films together with CG. Exec #5: Yeah, kids like CG. Exec #6: What’s for lunch?

That’s what you get in this pitiful excuse for a horror film. The story throws us right into a “creepy” dream with no character development. The first half of the film proceeds to be one kid falling into a dream where Freddy Krueger (Jackie Earle Haley, LITTLE CHILDREN) kills them. It literally goes from killing the first victim (Kellan Lutz, TWILIGHT series) to the blonde girl (Katie Cassidy, TAKEN) to her ex-boyfriend (Thomas Dekker, THE SARAH CONNOR CHRONICLES) before we even get to know the main character other than she’s a loner waitress (Rooney Mara, THE SOCIAL NETWORK).

Blogs

MARWENCOL (2010) (****)

On April 8, 2000, Mark Hogancamp was in a bar, which was a common occurrence for him at the time. He says the wrong thing to a group of young men. They follow him outside and beat him in the head savagely. When he comes out of a coma, he remembers nothing of his old life. So in an effort to make sense of the new world he has been thrust into, he creates his own world in his backyard using 1/6th scale World War II soldiers and Barbies.

The world, Marwencol, Hogancamp creates is detailed and elaborate. There is an on-going story where Hogancamp casts himself as a bar owner/soldier in a Belgian town. For the entertainment of the boys, the women stage fake cat fights. The Nazis are always looming around trying to ruin the fun. Hogancamp creates characters in Marwencol based on people from his real life. A married neighbor who he crushes on is his girlfriend in the world. He can't control the real world, but nothing happens in Marwencol that he doesn't control.

Blogs

SEX AND THE CITY 2 (2010) (*)

This film is everything I thought the first SEX AND THE CITY movie was going to be, but wasn't. The crass worship of excessive consumerism. I was surprised with how much I enjoyed the original film. That film turned out to be more than its sitcom roots. This one is a bad sitcom let loose with an enormous budget, gorging itself on every self indulgent wish possible.

Now Carrie (Sarah Jessica Parker, L.A. STORY) is married to Mr. Big (Chris North, TV's LAW & ORDER), who just wants to silently watch old movies at night. She on the other hand wants to talk, but what does she have to talk about? Nothing remotely interesting comes out of her mouth the entire film. And she's a successful writer?

Blogs

THOR (2011) (***)

Thor always seemed like he should be a DC comics character instead of a Marvel character. Now only the true geek might understand what I mean. DC characters, outside of Batman, were all all-powerful god-like heroes. Marvel’s characters were more human and thus flawed. With hammer in hand, Thor is virtually unstoppable. The battles of gods are less compelling than the struggles of humans. So I was delighted that Kenneth Branagh’s feature adaptation of the character brings humanity to both the drama of the gods and humans.

Blogs

HOBO WITH A SHOTGUN (2011) (*1/2)

Jason Eisener won Robert Rodriguez’s SXSW Grindhouse trailer contest for his fake trailer HOBO WITH A SHOTGUN, which was featured in Rodriguez and Quentin Tarantino’s GRINDHOUSE. Unlike that film and Rodriguez’s fake trailer turned feature film MACHETE, this film is simply an exploitation flick. The film has little purpose other than being violent and bloody.

Blogs

THOR (2011) (***)

Thor always seemed like he should be a DC comics character instead of a Marvel character. Now only the true geek might understand what I mean. DC characters, outside of Batman, were all all-powerful god-like heroes. Marvel’s characters were more human and thus flawed. With hammer in hand, Thor is virtually unstoppable. The battles of gods are less compelling than the struggles of humans. So I was delighted that Kenneth Branagh’s feature adaptation of the character brings humanity to both the drama of the gods and humans.

Thor (Chris Hemsworth, STAR TREK) is the arrogant son of King Odin (Anthony Hopkins, BEOWULF) of Asgard. When ice giants sneak into the castle to steal a powerful treasure, Thor seeks revenge, threatening the longstanding peace between Odin and ice giant king Laufey (Colm Feore, CHICAGO). Due to his ego, Thor is cast out, sent to Earth, where he is discovered by scientist Jane Foster (Natalie Portman, BLACK SWAN) and her colleagues Erik Selvig (Stellan Skarsgard, PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN) and Darcy Lewis (Kat Dennings, THE 40-YEAR-OLD VIRGIN).

Blogs

HOBO WITH A SHOTGUN (2011) (*1/2)

Jason Eisener won Robert Rodriguez’s SXSW Grindhouse trailer contest for his fake trailer HOBO WITH A SHOTGUN, which was featured in Rodriguez and Quentin Tarantino’s GRINDHOUSE. Unlike that film and Rodriguez’s fake trailer turned feature film MACHETE, this film is simply an exploitation flick. The film has little purpose other than being violent and bloody.

Here, the Hobo is played by Rutger Hauer. It is a testament to his professionalism that he gives a real performance within this muck. He’s a homeless vet looking to save enough money to buy a lawnmower so he can make an honest living. He comes to Hope Town, which is like a cross between Detroit in ROBOCOP and some punk run town in MAD MAX. Why he thinks this is a good spot to beg is unknown? I would have picked the suburbs before panhandling in a place where the town’s welcome sign is spray painted over to read Scum Town.

Blogs

Getting Buzzed - RFP’s 30 Most Anticipated Summer Films

No yammering this year. Just heading to the list. Enjoy.
30) Winnie the Pooh (July 15)
Trailer
It seems like a strange film to be releasing in the summer, especially due to the fact that the film is done and was released in Europe in the spring. Films that skew this young just don't do well at the box office anymore. But that doesn't mean the film won't be good. It takes four previous un-adapted Pooh stories from A.A. Milne and brings them to the screen. This could also be the last hand-drawn Disney film for the foreseeable future, so to see it on the big screen is a must.

29) Horrible Bosses (July 8)
This is the one of the only two films on the list that doesn't have a trailer yet. The story follows three friends who plot to murder their horrible bosses. I like dark comedies and director Seth Gordon made the awesome doc THE KING OF KONG. But then he also made the stinker comedy FOUR CHRISTMASES. So we'll see. But wait, check out this cast — Jason Bateman, Jennifer Aniston, Charlie Day, Jason Sudeikis, Colin Farrell, Jamie Foxx, Donald Sutherland and Kevin Spacey (who knows a thing or two about playing a horrible boss, just think SWIMMING WITH SHARKS). Can we hope that it's as good as SHARKS?

Blogs

WATER FOR ELEPHANTS (2011) (***1/2)

Director Francis Lawrence (I AM LEGEND) and writer Richard LaGravenese (THE FISHER KING) do a rare cinematic achievement when having a book as the source material — they make the story better. They made all the right choices in what to cut, keep and change. The changes make the film more dramatic, but not in a maudlin way. Everything that happens is more immediate. The Depression-era setting only reminds us of the melodramas of that age, which this film fits in with surprisingly well.

Blogs

WATER FOR ELEPHANTS (2011) (***1/2)

Director Francis Lawrence (I AM LEGEND) and writer Richard LaGravenese (THE FISHER KING) do a rare cinematic achievement when having a book as the source material — they make the story better. They made all the right choices in what to cut, keep and change. The changes make the film more dramatic, but not in a maudlin way. Everything that happens is more immediate. The Depression-era setting only reminds us of the melodramas of that age, which this film fits in with surprisingly well.

Jacob (Robert Pattinson, TWILIGHT) was taking his last final in veterinary sciences at Cornell when he gets word that his parents have died in a car accident. They had mortgaged their house and business to pay for his education, so the bank takes everything. Now orphaned, he decides to jump a train. Luckily, he ends up on a circus train in the car of Camel (Jim Norton, STRAW DOGS), a friendly, drunk roustabout who helps him get work. When it’s found that he is an Ivy League vet, he is taken before the boss, August (Christoph Waltz, INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS), an intimidating man who isn’t unfamiliar with violence as a way of making people do what he wants.

Blogs

ALL GOOD THINGS (2010) (***1/2)

Director Andrew Jarecki seems drawn to crime stories where the guilt of the accused is in question. He made the remarkable documentary, CAPTURING THE FRIEDMANS, which told the tale of a father and his son who were both charged with child molestation. Now he steps into a fictional tale, but one based on true life. Those who watch ID or read true crime books will know this as a veiled version of the bizarre case of Robert Durst, whose wife Kathleen McCormack mysterious disappeared one day without a trace.

In this film, the "Robert Durst" character is named David Marks (Ryan Gosling, THE NOTEBOOK), the son of a wealthy land owner in NYC named Sanford Marks (Frank Langella, FROST/NIXON). Sanford wants his son to follow in the family business, which includes the ownership of strip clubs and peep shows on 42nd Street. David has other plans. The young man meets Katie (Kirsten Dunst, SPIDER-MAN) when his father is too cheap to send a plumber over to one of his buildings to check out a leaky sink. She's from a working class family, which is exactly the kind of girl that will adequately piss off his father.

Blogs

AGORA (2010) (***1/2)

Over the history of cinema, the oppression of Christians by Romans has been well documented in sword and scandal epics. This historical film moves forward in time from those tales to a time when the Roman empire was well in decline and Christianity had begun to take hold. It argues that oppression isn't the sole flaw of any given belief system, but a result of fundamentalism fueled by power.

The story purposes the work of Hypatia (Rachel Weisz, THE CONSTANT GARDENER), and I say purposes because none of her work remains and details about her are sketchy at best. What is fairly established is that she was a mathematician, philosopher and astronomer, who taught in 4th century Roman Egypt. She was the daughter of Theon Alexandricus (Michael Lonsdale, MUNICH), the last librarian of the Alexandria Library in the Museum of Alexandria. She was been created as the inventor of the hydrometer, which is used to determine the relative density and gravity of liquids, and along with her father, the astrolabe.

Comedy Blogs

RIO (2011) (***)

The latest animated feature from Blue Sky Studios is like a Disney film circa OLIVER AND COMPANY. It's safe entertainment that skews for the younger crowd. And there isn't anything wrong with making a film for a specific audience. I certainly don't miss the crass pandering to the older viewers. It's replaced with the joy of love and song.

Blogs

RIO (2011) (***)

The latest animated feature from Blue Sky Studios is like a Disney film circa OLIVER AND COMPANY. It's safe entertainment that skews for the younger crowd. And there isn't anything wrong with making a film for a specific audience. I certainly don't miss the crass pandering to the older viewers. It's replaced with the joy of love and song.

The story follows a blue macaw who ends up in Minnesota. He is adopted by Linda (Leslie Mann, KNOCKED UP), who names him Blu (Jesse Eisenberg, THE SOCIAL NETWORK). They live a comfortable, conservative life running a small bookstore. But they are challenged one day to step out of their comfort zone when Tulio (Rodrigo Santoro, 300) shows up and informs them that Blu is the last male of his species. The Brazilian scientist wants to try and mate Blu with the last female blue macaw named Jewel (Anne Hathaway, RACHEL GETTING MARRIED).

Blogs

ABBOTT AND COSTELLO MEET CAPTAIN KIDD (1952) (**)

Certainly not one of the pinnacle of Abbott and Costello's career for sure. When it came to them meeting fictional characters, they should have stuck to monsters. This pirate spoof does little to skewer the genre. The pirate theme serves only as a new dressing for their old routines.

Bud Abbott plays Rocky Stonebridge and Lou Costello is Puddin' Head, a duo of tavern workers. On the way to work, Lady Jane (Fran Warren) gives them a love letter to give to the tavern singer Bruce Martingale (Bill Shirley, I DREAM OF JEANIE). Dinning at the tavern that evening are notorious pirates Captain Kidd (Charles Laughton, MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY) and Captain Bonney (Hillary Brooke, THE MAN WHO KNEW TOO MUCH) and Puddin' inadvertently switches the letter for a treasure map. Captain Kidd spends the remainder of the film trying to get the map back.

Blogs

HANNA (2011) (***1/2)

There are a bunch of movies that this thriller brings to mind. It's like THE PROFESSIONAL crossed with the BOURNE series and a touch of KICK-ASS. The first and last of those films because of the young female protagonist and the middle one for its reality grounded action. But then you get a dose of fairy tale woven in as well.

Blogs

HANNA (2011) (***1/2)

There are a bunch of movies that this thriller brings to mind. It's like THE PROFESSIONAL crossed with the BOURNE series and a touch of KICK-ASS. The first and last of those films because of the young female protagonist and the middle one for its reality grounded action. But then you get a dose of fairy tale woven in as well.

Hanna (Saoirse Ronan, THE LOVELY BONES) is 16 and has been living in the frozen woods with her father virtually her whole life. He is Erik (Eric Bana, HULK), a rogue CIA agent who has trained his daughter to be a ruthless killer. She is a smart girl who speaks multiple languages and can best her dad in a physical fight. He has prepared her for the inevitable day when Marissa, known as The Witch (Cate Blanchett, INDIANA JONES AND THE CRYSTAL SKULL), finds them. His motto is "adapt or die."

Blogs

SOURCE CODE (2011) (***)

Duncan Jones follows up his ingenious "ideas" sci-fier, MOON, with this more conventional sci-fi thriller. That said I'm not saying that film is mindless in the least. It actually has lots of ideas, maybe too many. It's like watching GROUNDHOG DAY filtered through Hitchcock and 12 MONKEYS.

Solider Colter Stevens (Jake Gyllenhaal, DONNIE DARKO) wakes up on a train. Christina (Michelle Monaghan, GONE BABY GONE) sits across from him and keeps calling him Sean. He thinks he's going crazy. The last thing he remembers is flying helicopter missions in Afghanistan. Then a bomb blows up on the train.

Stevens now finds himself in a capsule. Colleen Goodwin (Vera Farmiga, UP IN THE AIR), a soldier, talks to him over a screen. He demands to know what is happening to him. Scientist Dr. Rutledge (Jeffrey Wright, MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE) explains that he is part of a new technology that can send his consciousness into the last eight minutes of someone who recently died. His mission is to discover who planted the bomb on the train before the terrorist can act again. But Stevens still believes they are keeping something from him and so do we.

Blogs

Blu-ray: BLACK SWAN (2010)

Fox's AVC-encoded transfer of Darren Aronofsky's dark ballet thriller is true to its source. Aronofsky and cinematographer Matthew Libatique used a combination of 16mm film and digital cameras. For a relatively low-budget production, the smaller cameras were easier to move around and give the filmmakers a documentary feel. The 1080p Blu-ray is mixed bag of scenes with heavy grain and sharper digital imagery. So the noise to be found in the darker scenes, could be from the digital source. Despite these issues, the presentation provides nice detail in the brighter scenes. Note Nina's pink bedroom. That serves as a good transition into the transfers best quality. While the palette is mostly white, black and gray, those tones are represented in perfect contrast and inky black levels. As for any digital anomolies, I found none.

Blogs

Blu-ray: BLACK SWAN (2010)

Read my review of BLACK SWAN.

Fox's AVC-encoded transfer of Darren Aronofsky's dark ballet thriller is true to its source. Aronofsky and cinematographer Matthew Libatique used a combination of 16mm film and digital cameras. For a relatively low-budget production, the smaller cameras were easier to move around and give the filmmakers a documentary feel. The 1080p Blu-ray is mixed bag of scenes with heavy grain and sharper digital imagery. So the noise to be found in the darker scenes, could be from the digital source. Despite these issues, the presentation provides nice detail in the brighter scenes. Note Nina's pink bedroom. That serves as a good transition into the transfers best quality. While the palette is mostly white, black and gray, those tones are represented in perfect contrast and inky black levels. As for any digital anomolies, I found none.

Blogs

THE EXPENDABLES (2010) (**1/2)

What can I say about Sylvester Stallone's THE EXPENDABLES other than it gives you what you expect? Aging action stars. Explosions. Soldiers of fortune. Explosions. Lots of fisticuffs. Explosions. Snarky dialogue. Oh, did I mention explosions. For some that will be plenty, but for most it won't be enough.

Stallone plays Barney Ross, the leader of a group of soldiers of fortune. The film opens with the men on a mission in Africa where tensions boil between teammates Gunner Jensen (Dolph Lundgren, ROCKY 4) and Yin Yang (Jet Li, ONCE UPON A TIME IN CHINA) over hanging one of the Somali pirates. Later Ross meets with the secretive Mr. Church (Bruce Willis, DIE HARD), who offers his team a job to overthrow the dictator on the island of Vilena named General Garza (David Zayas, TV's DEXTER). Once there he discovers that he's been commissioned by the general's own daughter Sandra (Gisele Itie). Turns out, her father is just a puppet for ruthless ex-CIA agent James Munrow (Eric Roberts, THE DARK KNIGHT).

Blogs

MOTHER AND CHILD (2010) (***)

Director Rodrigo Garcia has history of making hyperlink films where the lives of various characters overlap. MOTHER AND CHILD actually focuses on less characters than his NINE LIVES or THINGS YOU CAN TELL JUST BY LOOKING AT HER. With a touch of poetry, the film is a character piece about what it means to be a mother and have a mother.

Karen (Annette Bening, THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT) is a nurse, who is caring for her ailing mother Nora (Eileen Ryan, MAGNOLIA). Though it happened more than 35 years ago, the dying woman won't let her daughter live down a teen pregnancy. That child was given up for adoption and later named Elizabeth (Naomi Watts, KING KONG). Now she's a ruthless businesswoman whose determination impresses her new boss Paul (Samuel L. Jackson, PULP FICTION). And turns him on. Meanwhile, Lucy (Kerry Washington, THE LAST KING OF SCOTLAND) is struggling with her inability to get pregnant and decides to adopt with husband Joseph (David Ramsey, CON AIR).

Blogs

GIALLO (2010) (*1/2)

Dario Argento is known for making giallos (bloody Italian thrillers). So one expects something special when you go into an Argento film titled GIALLO. But nothing could be further from the case here. Of all this film's I've seen, this is by far his worst. It's so amateurish it seems like it was a hack trying to make an Argento-esque film.

Giallo (Byron Deidra) is a serial killer using an unlicensed taxicab to abduct young woman, photograph his torture of them then once he's done dispose of their corpse. Linda (Emmanuelle Seigner, FRANTIC) is a flight attendant who has come to Turin, Italy to visit her model sister Celine (Elsa Pataky, SNAKES ON A PLANE). Celine is snatched by Giallo. Linda frantically goes to the police where she meets Inspector Enzo Avolfi, an Italian-American detective, who is feverishly working on the serial killer case out of a basement office at the station.

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