Wednesday, April 16, 2008

#99 - 12 Monkeys (1995)


Director: Terry Gilliam

Main Actors: Bruce Willis, Madeleine Stowe, Brad Pitt
Notable Supporting Actors: Christopher Plummer

Well, a time travel movie. Trying to figure out the science of time travel and its implications is hard enough let alone even considering the possibility of doing so. This movie takes a very strange approach to time travel and leaves you spinning in circles for a good portion of the movie while you try to figure out whether the main character, James Cole (played by Bruce Willis), is really insane or whether he is traveling back and forth in time.

I do not recommend this movie for everyone but if you're up for a good mind bending sci-fi ride then this one is as good and as solid as any. Not only will it compel you to think but it will also make you laugh in places as Brad Pitt pulls off an amazing performance as the insane son of a pharmaceutical scientist played by Christopher Plummer.

The soundtrack is quirky and fits in well with the strange plot and characters as Madeleine Stowe's character, Kathryn Railly tries to retain her sanity mixed in with this lot. She does an excellent job as a leading lady and doesn't force feed you her natural beauty as movies often do.

The film takes a very negative outlook on the future and does not make any attempt to exalt man as being a great pinnacle of the universe as it is through human weakness and frailty that the story is moved along. So I warn you do not go into this movie and expect to come out feeling wonderful, not saying there aren't any positive messages but you learn more from the mistakes in this film than in the right things they do.

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

#100 - 3:10 to Yuma (2007)


Director: James Mangold

Main Actors: Russel Crowe, Christian Bale, Ben Foster
Notable Supporting Actors: Logan Lerman, Alan Tudyk, Peter Fonda, Gretchen Mol

First off, I'm a huge fan of westerns to begin with so it's kinda great that I start off with one. I've watched this movie a lot recently because I love it so much. When I first popped in this film I was quite skeptical at first because the last modern western I watched (and didn't finish) was The Proposition (2005) and I was all excited for that one but it turned to a gore fest and the story was seeming to be too weak to have the violence excused. This was not the case with 3:10 to Yuma. Of course it does have its share of violence as most action-type movies to nowadays but not to the point of grossing one out. So with that in mind I will do my little review without trying to spoil too much.

Christian Bale's character, Dan Evans, is the protagonist in this little story and is a veteran from the Civil War who lost his leg presumably during the war. He's a rancher who has become on hard times as the drought has ruined his land and has not left much for his cattle to feed on. His family is quite close to starving and he can barely make payments to keep the land that he is renting from a man named Hollander who likes to burn down his renter's barns when they don't make payments I suppose (I'm not ruining too much it happens at the start of the film).

Russel Crowe portrays an outlaw named Ben Wade who's past is almost as mysterious as why he wears such a tiny hat. Ben Wade leads a gang of fast-drawing, fast-riding that is as multicultural as Toronto and also has a sniper (...like Toronto...). Crowe portrays his character well that has his own internal struggles with what he sees as right in his own eyes and get-rich quick schemes like robbing a stagecoach carrying lots of money around.

Without getting too deep into the film; the other characters that deserve to be noted are the doctor played by Alan Tudyk who provides that character whose outward sense of righteousness juxtaposes the crudeness of the Hollander stooge (played by Kevin Durand) and Peter Fonda's character of the bounty hunter who is Ben Wade's nemesis. Logan Lerman also portrays well the son of Dan Evans who sees his father as weak and strives to be better but as the story goes on learns to respect his father.

The main villain in this story is played by Ben Foster who has a great talent at portraying a villain who is loyal but also quite self-serving and evil.

The film captures the crudeness of the west as Hollywood likes to portray it but it presents it in a very realistic manner. As the story progresses you are at first moved to pity for Dan Evans who can't seem to get on his feet, literally, in life and then respect for him as he keeps trying despite the odds against him. You also learn to like Ben Wade as he tries to befriend Dan despite his ignorance to the odds surrounding him. The characters are all presented well and each is shown to have their own faults which they all have struggled to deal with in their own lives. Each one has some sort of dark or sad past that bubbles to the surface as Dan Evans and the rest try to get Ben Wade to a train to take him to Yuma Prison.

The story feels you with a sense of legacy and reputation. Each character has to fight against the labels that are put on them and the basic theme of the film is that: No matter what life throws at you, you have to stand on your two feet (or one) and withstand the adversity and try to leave a legacy of what is right, in our eyes or God's. I really enjoyed this film and the music was truly moving and keeps one right in the story. I really recommend this film and try to show it to everyone I know ever since I first saw it.