plus 3, Shutter Island: movie review - The Christian Science Monitor |
- Shutter Island: movie review - The Christian Science Monitor
- Happy Tears: movie review - The Christian Science Monitor
- Movie Gallery to close one local store - MSN Money
- Superflat Monogram (movie) - Anime News Network
Shutter Island: movie review - The Christian Science Monitor Posted: 19 Feb 2010 04:16 PM PST Message from fivefilters.org: If you can, please donate to the full-text RSS service so we can continue developing it. Martin Scorsese's "Shutter Island" is a pretty terrible movie but I can't just leave it at that. It's the kind of bad movie only very talented people could make, and that gives it a fascination. I watched it in a state of rapt bewilderment. Leonardo DiCaprio, who has made almost as many movies by now with Scorsese as Robert De Niro, plays US Marshal Teddy Daniels, who, with his new partner Chuck Aule (Mark Ruffalo), is summoned to the forbidding, totally isolated Shutter Island to investigate the disappearance of a mental patient and murderess from the Ashecliffe psychiatric hospital. The time is cold-war-era 1954, which only adds to the already paranoid atmosphere. Zombiefied patients eyeball the marshals with blank fury; doctors in residence, including the elegant Dr. Cawley (Ben Kingsley) and the German-accented Dr. Naehring (Max von Sydow), seem by turns accommodating and sinister. Nothing is what it seems on this island, except maybe the weather, which kicks into Gothic hurricane mode halfway through. To an even greater extent than Quentin Tarantino, Scorsese is our leading film director-as-archivist. His movies are riddled with oddments and swipes and homages from the entire history of film, and none more so than "Shutter Island" (which screenwriter Laeta Kalogridis adapted from Dennis Lehane's 2003 bestseller). It's fun, in a film-school kind of way, to pick out the references: "Out of the Past," "Laura," "Isle of the Dead," and so forth. And yet no one but Scorsese could have made this film. For one thing, no one else could so obsessively have bound all these movie references together. But the question I kept asking myself throughout this overlong movie is: Why bother? Scorsese has made many movies in many modes, from "Raging Bull" to "Age of Innocence," and he deserves as much as any filmmaker alive the right to punch out a commercial project. But "Shutter Island" isn't as strictly commercial as, say, the egregious "Cape Fear." Even though Scorsese tricks the movie up with all manner of old-school frights, complete with buckets of blood and doomy music on the soundtrack, he's more ambitious than that. He wants to create a madman's universe patterned not only on cold-war creepies like "Shock Corridor" but also on German Expressionist classics like "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari." He wants to show us how the tactics of horror schlockmeisters can give rise to art. The problem is that Scorsese is more keyed into the schlock than the art. "Shutter Island" would have been better if it was less ambitious, less adorned with history-of-film pyrotechnics. The story line is replete with switcheroos and double whammies and flashbacks and fantasias, and some of the game playing is ingenious and scary, but ultimately this is a puzzle movie trying to be grand opera. The actors try their best to fit into this maelstrom. Kingsley and Von Sydow come off best, perhaps because their roles are the most clearly demarcated. Patricia Clarkson, Emily Mortimer, and Jackie Earle Haley give it their bughouse best. DiCaprio, whose character is racked by memories of liberating Dachau as a soldier and the horrifying demise of his wife (Michelle Williams), seems too callow – although the miscasting here isn't as startling as it was in Scorsese's "The Aviator," where DiCaprio's Howard Hughes seemed barely old enough to shave. Ruffalo is adept but somewhat recessive. On a second viewing of this film, after its mysteries are revealed, his performance probably makes more sense. But who would want to see "Shutter Island" twice? Scorsese has made some of the best horror films of the modern era, but their horror, as in "Taxi Driver" and "Raging Bull," is all psychological. "Shutter Island" is, ultimately, a psychological horror film, too, but you have to slog through an awful lot of loony-bin stylistics to get much out of it. It comes on strong, but in its bloody heart of hearts it's no more resonant than one of those old Vincent Price-Edgar Allan Poe contraptions – and less entertaining, too. Grade: C (Rated R for disturbing violent content, language, and some nudity.) Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
Happy Tears: movie review - The Christian Science Monitor Posted: 19 Feb 2010 04:02 PM PST Message from fivefilters.org: If you can, please donate to the full-text RSS service so we can continue developing it. In Mitchell Lichtenstein's "Happy Tears," Parker Posey and Demi Moore play two sisters, Jayne and Laura, who return to the house they grew up in when their cantankerous father, Joe, played by Rip Torn, goes a bit wobbly in the head. This is the kind of movie where life lessons are posted every quarter-hour. (I timed it.) The sisters, who grew apart, grow back together; Joe, with his crack-addict girlfriend (Ellen Barkin) in tow, learns the meaning of – well, I'm not sure he learns much of anything. He might as well have the word "rascal" pasted on his forehead. Lots of tears are shed but, despite the film's title, not many of them seemed very happy. Grade: C- (Rated R for language, drug use, and some sexual content including brief nudity.) Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
Movie Gallery to close one local store - MSN Money Posted: 19 Feb 2010 03:41 PM PST Message from fivefilters.org: If you can, please donate to the full-text RSS service so we can continue developing it. Lauren B. Cooper Movie Gallery Inc. will close one of its four Birmingham area stores as part of its Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection filing. The local store that will close is at 5361 U.S. Highway 280 South. On Feb. 2, the owner of the Hollywood Video movie rental chain filed for Chapter 11 and made plans to immediately liquidate about 760 stores, while maintaining about 900 stores that still have positive cash flow, according to the research and surveillance company Realpoint LLC. The company has also reported that the operating status of its remaining stores is "not yet clear" and that more closings are expected. Realpoint said occupancy will decline to less than 80 percent at 38 properties after Movie Gallery vacates in this round of closings. This is the second bankruptcy filing in just three years for Wilsonville, Oregon-based company. Movie Gallery, which at one time operated nearly 4,800 stores in North America, was founded in Dothan, Ala. The company also filed for bankruptcy in late 2007 after missing a debt payment. Its financial challenges were brought on by intense competition from video-by-mail services as well as the widespread availability of DVDs for sale. Copyright 2010 bizjournals.com Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
Superflat Monogram (movie) - Anime News Network Posted: 19 Feb 2010 02:50 PM PST Message from fivefilters.org: If you can, please donate to the full-text RSS service so we can continue developing it. Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
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