Sunday, June 30, 2013

This Is the End

This is a picture of a corn dog.  It isn't even from the movie.
Seriously, I have nothing to say about this movie.

Friday, June 28, 2013

The Heat

As a number of feminist bloggers have pointed out, some jackass photoshopped the living shit out of Melissa McCarthy in this photo, to the point that she doesn't even look like herself.  Fortunately, she looks like herself in the actual movie, and she's very, very funny.
So some movie development person watched Bridesmaids and thought, "Melissa McCarthy is hilarious!  Why don't we have her play pretty much the same character in a really by-the-numbers buddy cop movie with two women instead of two men?"

They did that and the result is a lot of fun.  You should go see it.  McCarthy is the wacky cop and Sandra Bullock is the hard-nosed, by-the-book FBI agent who just needs to loosen up.  They're a charming comedy duo.  There are vagina jokes in place of dick jokes.  There are also dick jokes.

Until I saw this movie, I didn't realize how fatigued I'd become with a summer movie lineup full of self-serious, CGI-driven blockbusters in which zombies gnaw people's faces off, civilization crumbles to the beat of a relentless thumping musical score, sleek and muscular superbeings careen purposefully through the air, and by the end of the movie a major American city lies in smoldering ruins.

The Heat makes no such tiresome demands on the audience.  It's just a series of solid comic scenes wrapped around a plot involving crime or drug-smuggling or some damn thing that you will probably care about for forty-five seconds, total, over the entire course of the movie.  Time flew by in the dark theater, the audience all laughed together, and John and I walked out into the rainy night feeling happy, relaxed and refreshed.

Saturday, June 15, 2013

Man of Steel

This is SPARTA!!!!!1
I'm really not sure whether to recommend Man of Steel to you or not.  It's very wonderful to look at, a little bit too long, and absolutely gagging on its own sincerity.  I liked looking at it more than I liked watching it.  The pictures are pretty but the plot is a mess.

Like director Zack Snyder's earlier film 300, Man of Steel brings many of the pleasures of reading a graphic novel to the big screen.  Krypton is beautiful and ancient and corrupt and dying.  There's a great version of that old sci-fi trope, the Wise Alien Council, with elderly sages in robes and elaborately sculptural headdresses sitting in really fancy chairs in a cathedral-like throne room.

Kryptonian technology is Art Deco-y and full of nods to H. R. Giger in skull-like helmets and fabulously complex alien machines, many of which really look like stylized penises and vaginas.  (I'm not making this part up.  When the Kryptonian high council or whatever it is imprisons the evil General Zod and his minions in the Phantom Zone, they first seal them into giant flying space dildos.  Seriously.  Watch the movie and tell me I'm wrong.  Also, Superman's mother is frequently accompanied by a giant flying robotic uterus that talks to her.)

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Now You See Me

Mark Ruffalo and Mélanie Laurent appear baffled by this magical camera doohickey, which is festooned with fluorescent tubes for some reason.


Now You See Me, although a bit short on substance, is pretty to look at and fun to watch.  It has talented, well-known actors in it, delivering performances that are consistent with their brands.  Morgan Freeman is twinkly and avuncular and knows something you don't.  Dave Franco always smiles like he just got away with something, maybe something dirty.  Mélanie Laurent constantly looks like she's about to take a long drag on a cigarette, exhale while rolling her eyes, and then say something bored and world-weary, yet fascinating.  (I don't think she actually smokes in this film, she just always looks like she's about to.)  Woody Harrelson is once again a cute, non-threatening, stoned redneck.  And Mark Ruffalo is doughy and sweaty, yet still oddly attractive.

Anyway, the movie is the story of four magicians who get a big break from a mysterious benefactor who summons them to an abandoned apartment in New York's Chinatown using Tarot cards (each of them gets a Tarot card with an address on the back of it, and they all go to that address without questioning why they're doing it and they all arrive at almost exactly the same time even though some of them have to travel across the country.  Whatever.)  Anyway, using a rose and some dry ice, the mysterious benefactor instructs them to start doing expensively produced shows that involve magically stealing huge amounts of money and giving it, Robin-Hood-style, to the audience.  Interpol (Laurent) and the FBI (Ruffalo) end up chasing them through nicely filmed versions of Las Vegas, New Orleans*, and New York City.