Showing posts with label fantasy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fantasy. Show all posts

Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs 2 (2013)

| Oct 16, 2013

Animated comedy. Starring the voices of Bill Hader, Anna Faris, Can Forte and James Caan. Directed by Kris Pearn and Cody Cameron. (PG. 95 minutes.)

" Cloudy Having a Probability of Meatballs Two " may be a humorous however unfocused romp, thus unwilling to settle on one theme which hyperactivity medication ought to be handed out along with the 3-D glasses.

The animated sequel starts as a really clever and somewhat sinister deconstruction of Silicon Valley culture, prior to morphing into your light-weight " Jurassic Park " parody, then morphing once more into your rousing " Avatar " -style nature versus devices battle. (The latter incorporates parts of the Battle of Endor, along with monster tacos rather than Ewoks.)

This worry of continuity looks to become a growing trend in animated family films, exactly in which talented filmmakers are given nice levels of freedom, then seemingly use each concept from their brainstorming session for the movie. " Despicable Me Two " had an identical vibe, as did the 2 most recent " Madagascar " films. The finish result feels as a dormitory food fight - such a lot enjoyable in the moment, prior to anyone walks far from the ugly aftermath sensation a bit guilty and questioning who's visiting shut down the mess.
read more...

Oblivion

| Sep 9, 2013

Tom Cruise back in a show of her acting prowess in science-fiction movies directives Joseph Kosinski, director before making the film TRON: Legacy. Directly adapted from a graphic novel artificial Kosinski, who then discussed again by some other reliable screenwriter, exists a sci-fi movie titled Oblivion. At first glance, this film impressed the result of a combination of several other sci-fi movies ever made like Star Wars, TRON, Independence Day until the The Matrix.
in the early days watching Oblivion, this film was amazing, especially thanks to the special effects used. Really makes us wonder, especially when watched with IMAX technology. But unfortunately, over time, the story began to seem sluggish and linear as well as setting the story feels similar movies sci-fi in general. Luckily, Oblivion was helped thanks to a thrilling scene.
read more...

Robocop 2014

| Sep 7, 2013

Remakes, remakes, and remakes. Yes, Hollywood is already a loss to produce an original work. But the remake is not really a problem, as long as quality and have the same essence with the original film without having copied frame by frame. It seems like it is done by Jose Padilha, director RoboCop remake to be aired on February 7, 2014.

Sony and MGM have released a trailer for the latest iteration of the movie RoboCop. And through the trailer, we can see the changes that occur in the bionic human figure. The trailer itself actually looks quite promising and give a new breath to the robot, while still showing the proper respect for the work of Verhoeven. The star, Joel Kinnaman (Snaba Cash, The Killing TV series) looks pretty fit to play Alex Murphy. Good indication? Could be. Although sometimes the trailer can be very deceiving.
read more...

Pasific Rim

| Sep 6, 2013

First heard the name of the Pacific Rim, for some reason that comes to mind is the Research In Motion smartphone devices.
Turns out it was a movie about mecha, big robot driven by humans. Pacific Rim is arguably marriage with ransformer Godzilla movie. Although the Transformer is not about the robot pilot.
Tells of horrific attack large creatures called cheese Kaiju (in Japanese it means vicious creatures or monsters) who suddenly appeared to destroy the city and kill hundreds of thousands, even millions!
read more...

Then and Now Superman movie

|

Superman first movie release in 1978, but the comic version had long previous releases. I will try to try to study from a source at Yahoo difference Superman Superman of the past with the present that looks more futuristic. Here is a comparison of the versions of Superman with Christopher Reeve Superman Henry Cavill.




read more...

Alice In Wonderland

| Mar 5, 2010

(CNN) -- "Alice in Wonderland" -- with its hat-wearing madmen, anxious rabbits and disturbing, smiling cats -- would seem to have filmmaker Tim Burton's name written all over it. After all, since he started producing and directing films more than 20 years ago, Burton's name has become synonymous with everything wondrously strange. Take the delightfully weird world of Roald Dahl's "Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory" that Burton brought to the screen in 2005 (with, it must be noted, very mixed reviews). Or the extreme spirits of "Beetlejuice." Or the gleeful aliens of "Mars Attacks!" While the reviews of "Alice" haven't been overwhelmingly positive, the expectations have been high. "He's one of the few filmmakers left where his movie release is an event," said Kristian Fraga, filmmaker and author of "Tim Burton: Interviews." Burton's rise is one that was largely quiet, Fraga said, but he's nonetheless made gothic part of the mainstream. His style of film has slowly but surely became a part of our moviegoing consciousness, Fraga said. It's taken the 51-year-old from being an unhappy Disney animator in striped socks, drawing romantic couples being shot in the skull by Cupid, to an indisputable, and at times indefinable, brand unto himself. "It's clear that he's a real visionary. He's one of the few directors out there that has a style that is unmistakably his own," Entertainment Weekly's Adam Markovitz said. "He's in a select group of directors that is his own brand. Burton is right up there with Hitchcock, the kind of director that is really identifiable in a single frame. You look at one frame, and you know who made it." Burton's twist on what can be classified as frightening was culled from a steady diet of monster movies consumed when he was a kid growing up in Burbank, California. "The word 'normal' always scared me, because that indicated something that was subversively terrifying," Burton said in the Museum of Modern Art's "Behind the Scenes" video for an exhibit displaying his art, most of which had never been seen before. Those movies, "where the monster was the outcast and the people were the villainous element," were always important to him, Burton said. On top of horror, he was a studious observer of humor, often clipping items from Mad magazine and creating his own jokes, said Ron Magliozzi, assistant curator of the Burton exhibit. After wading through Burton's archives, Magliozzi had something of an epiphany about what makes Burton "a rock star" with the fan base to match. "I went into it thinking of Tim as a dark, gothic artist, with these themes of dismemberment and the grotesque," Magliozzi said, "and I came out of it seeing him as something of an optimistic artist, and I think that's one of the keys to his popularity. He takes you to all these disturbing places, but there's always this note of optimism in it." Indeed, though Burton has been associated with the frightful and the odd, there's a quiet, unsuspecting layer of whimsy and sentiment that, when combined with the headless monsters and stitched-together characters, appeals to the audience's desire to see human stories on screen. "I was really taken as a kid with Burton's combination of horror, otherworldly and underworld sentiments with the real sense of whimsy," Variety film critic Justin Chang said. "Even when his movies aren't great, he offers this interesting combination of darkness and reassurance. It's a darkness that's made safe in a way." As a result, Markovitz said, Burton now has a name that can draw crowds in the same way a movie star can. In fact, he often draws in the movie stars themselves. In 1991, a 19-year-old Winona Ryder, who worked with Burton on "Beetlejuice" and "Edward Scissorhands," told Newsweek that she'd "do anything for Tim Burton," including bringing him water or being the coffee girl on one of his sets, just to be with him. More than a decade later, another of Burton's actresses, Anne Hathaway, who plays the White Queen in Burton's "Alice," said nearly the same thing. As she told InStyle for its March issue, as soon as she heard Burton was leading the troops into "Underland," as it's called in the film, she had to find a way to get on board. iReport: A virtual "Wonderland" Fraga said part of that affection is because with Burton, "it's not about 'how do I look?' ... Michelle Pfeiffer [who played Catwoman in 'Batman Returns'] said at the time, 'there are not many directors I'm going to dress up like that and swallow a bird for.' You're talking about some of the best actors in the world who get to work with this guy, and part of the fun is trying to figure out how you're going to pull this movie off." But Burton is not without his critics, with the chief complaint being that he's all show and no story. "Burton's only as good as some of his material," Chang said. "He gets so into the world and so into creating this immersive environment that the story eludes him. When he finds the right material, yes, he's a sublime storyteller. But I don't think that happens with every film. More like every fourth or fifth." For Chang, "Alice" is one of Burton's off moments. " 'Alice' is not exactly a glowing addition to the canon (or, for that matter, a boon to the rediscovered art of 3D)," Chang added. "The film confirmed for me that Burton, while clearly adept at creating fantasy worlds, is only as strong as his material." iReport: B+ for "Alice" Still, though "there are definitely people who feel that his visual style can overwhelm the story," Markovitz said, "what he does have is a great knack for connecting with the weirdos and the anti-heroes." He can take these outcasts and transform them into universally appealing characters, Markovitz said. And that, devotees observe, is the real wonder of Tim Burton. read more...