Saturday 29 December 2012

Theater Whore: Rise Of The Guardians | rise of guardians | rise of the guardians 2

Rise Of The Guardians

Let me start off by saying that I loved this movie. I really did. There have been few things that had such an emotional impact on me. To name a few there was An American Tail, Antwone Fisher, John Q., and watching Eddie Guerrero tributes on Youtube. I didn’t expect this movie to be as good as it was and it was a super surprise to me. Okay. Now that that’s out of the way lets begin.

Rise Of The Guardians

This is about Jack Frost who is pretty much the ignored spirit of the holidays. He’s hanging out in a small town helping some kids have fun by creating a snow day for them. He feels unappreciated by everyone and asks The Man In The Moon aka Sky Jesus to help him out and gets no answer. At the North Pole Santa Claus senses that something is wrong and calls all the guardians together including Frost who is confused since he doesn’t consider himself one of them.

Rise Of The Guardians

Sandman aka Sandy, Bunny, and Tooth Fairy show up and are told that Pitch Black otherwise known as The Boogieman is back and ready to wreck stuff. Frost and Bunny do not get along due to an incident years ago where Frost snowed out Easter. They all need to fight together to keep children believing in them or else they will no longer exist.


They arrive at Tooth Fairy’s place and it is being swamped by shadow horses that they fight off. They discover that all of the fairies have been taken and kids across the globe wake up with no gift under their pillows and begin to not believe in her anymore so her powers start to vanish. They decide to help her out and race around the world giving gifts for teeth. His kis named Jamie wakes up and spots them in the room and is eventually knocked out by Sandy…along with everyone else in the room. Jamie’s little sister grabs Santa’s globe and teleports away.


Pitch Black finds out that they are all working together and tries to convince Frost that they are alike since no one believes in neither of them. Black has been infecting kids minds with nightmares. Sandy and Frost fight Black with Sandy kicking his ass. Sandy doesn’t talk so little images made of sand pop up over his head when he communicates with everyone. Black ends up spearing him and he dies. It was sad as hell.


Even with the loss of Sandy they still need to help Bunny continue Easter. They get to his land and Jamie’s sister is almost attacked by them when Bunny senses something wrong. They get all the eggs ready and Frost volunteers to take the little girl back home. While there Frost and a little fairy named Baby Tooth end up chasing down Black into his lair. Frost doesn’t remember his life before becoming what he is and Black mocks him. All childhood memories are held in our baby teeth apparently.

Black ends up snapping Frost’s staff and tossing him into a cavern. He checks his tooth and gets a look at his life before he got powers and escapes. He arrives and Bunny’s land is wrecked and now there is no Easter. Kids around the world give up looking for eggs except for Jamie who still believes. Still, Bunny loses his powers.

Rise Of The Guardians

Black starts to win with kids all across the world not believing in any of the guardians anymore. Santa cant fly his sleigh, Tooth Fairy loses her wings, and Bunny is now a tiny cute little bunny with the same tough voice. They begin to battle Black and get help from Jamie and his friends right before Jamie loses hope in the guardians altogether. The final battle is pretty damned cool and I cheered at some surprising twists.


I’m having a hard time explaining why this movie was so much fun. When I was little I believed in Santa and the Tooth Fairy. This movie made me feel kinda bad for not anymore. If you loved How To Train Your Dragon you’ll love this as well. It takes a lot for me to like a CGI film let alone love it. I got goosebumps watching it multiple times.

Rise Of The Guardians

And I have to mention the crazy ass elves in the movie. They aren’t in it a ton but when they are they are funny as hell. If you have a kid please see this movie. This movie featured the voices of Alec Baldwin, Chris Pine, Jude Law, Hugh Jackman, and Isla Fisher.

Celebrating Batman: The Animated Series 20 years later

Batman: The Animated Series was not her introduction to Batman.  She was born about nine months before the premiere of Batman: The Brave and the Bold.  At that point she wasn't so much watching television as playing with me while I had something on in the background or on as I rocked her to sleep at night.  Just before she was two years old, she walked up to the TV and exclaimed "the Batman".  So yeah, she quickly noticed that daddy was a Batman junkie.  She eventually got into Superfriends, which gave me a new appreciation of that iconic 70s toon (it may be silly, but it's not dumb and it's not boring).  After that, it was the 1960s Batman show, which happened to be running on the Hub network.  She watched her first episode of Batman: The Animated Series sometime last year.  What's arguably noteworthy is that I find myself showing her the very episodes that I thought least of when they originally aired.  I was twelve when they aired and my daughter was four last year.  I find myself grateful for the 'kiddie' episodes.  The very episodes that I felt were too juvenile and not 'mature' enough when I was a kid are now the perfect introductory adventures.


Celebrating Batman
My daughter doesn't care that "I've Got Batman In My Basement" is silly, she just enjoys watching The Penguin getting his butt kicked by two kids just a little older than her.  She doesn't mind that "The Last Laugh" is basically plotless, she enjoys the silly jokes, Captain Clown, and Joker telling Batman he's going to fry like a grilled cheese sandwich.  "The Cat and the Claw" may have subpar animation in the second half and a pretty atrocious  final act (let's blow up the compound and hope that the flames kill the deadly virus), she sees it as a fun Batman/Catwoman adventure with a female villain to boot.  Speaking of females, I was never thrilled as a kid by how many of the New Batman Adventures featured Batgirl, preferring the solo Batman episodes.  But now I'm glad to have a crapload of Batgirl episodes to choose from.  Episodes like "Batgirl Returns" and "Girl's Night Out" may be lacking in substance, but tell that to the four year old thrilled to watch Batgirl and Supergirl teaming up to kick the respective asses of Livewire, Harley Quinn, and Poison Ivy. Some of these episodes are better than the others, but none are boring and all offer the show's inherent thrills without having to deal with some pretty adult subject matter.  

Celebrating Batman


I can wait until she's a little older before explaining why the invisible man is kidnapping his own daughter, why The Joker is threatening  to murder Charlie's family, or why in the world The Riddler is trying to kill his old boss.  You try explaining patent law, work-for-hire contracts, non-competitive clauses, and royalties to a five year old.  It's not a matter of some episodes being too violent or dark so much as certain episodes being far too complicated for a very young child to understand ("Why did Batman spear that guy's car with his Batwing and threaten to drop him?").  And since Allison has never been one to accept anything at face value (I always thought Star Wars: A New Hope was a simple story... lesson learned!), it's a matter of allowing her to enjoy the show without having to explain the characters' oft-complicated motivations.  For the moment I've realized how important those lighter, kid-friendly episodes really were, to say nothing of the heavy female presence.  In an era when heavy female presence in action cartoons is almost non-existent (She-Ra: Princess of Power would be almost subversive today), I'd argue the consistent rooster of three-dimensional female characters (Poison Ivy, Renee Montoya, Leslie Thompkins, Catwoman, Harley Quinn, Talia Al Ghul, Batgirl, etc.) is a big reason, if certainly not the only reason, why the show has maintained such a strong female fan base over the last two decades.

2012 in Film: The Runner-Ups.

As we continue recapping the movies that arguably defined 2012, we move on to what I like to call 'The Runner-Ups'.  These films are all very good if not great.  Either they didn't quite make my 'favorite of the year' list or they aren't the kind of thing that belongs on a traditional best-of-year list (you'll see which ones I'm referring to below).  Anyway, consider this a 'great films that aren't among the very best but I darn-well wanted to highlight them' list.  As always, the films below are in alphabetical order.  Without further ado...
Argo  


Argo (review):
In a year where old-school big-studio genre films for adults solidified their comeback, this Ben Affleck political period piece is the defining example of everything going right.  It cost just $45 million, so it didn't need to be a massive hit to make a profit, but a massive hit it was.  With around $105 million at the domestic till so far, it's among the year's top Oscar contenders, and I still have an inkling that Ben Affleck is going to walk away with the Best Director statue this year (the somewhat false 'comeback kid' narrative is too good to resist).  Argo, concerning a true story of the CIA's attempts to rescue six Americans trapped in Iran during the embassy hostage crisis of 1979, is a pretty terrific film through-and-through.  The only reason it doesn't rank higher is that it's really not about anything other than itself.  It's a caper film, a procedural, but with no attempts at any additional relevancy.  That's not a bad thing per-se, but it arguably prevents the film from being anything other than a terrific piece of old-school moviemaking.  That's not exactly an insult, as it's still a top-notch piece of meat-and-potatoes entertainment.

Amour (review):
Michael Haneke's newest is an emotionally draining look at the slow, sad death-by-aging of one previously energetic and active woman (Emmanuelle Riva), as well as the trials of her husband (Jean-Louis Trintignant) as he becomes a full-time caregiver in order to keep her out of a nursing home.  The film is basically what it is, unflinching, somber, yet occasionally funny and always honest and true.  Whether or not this reads like your cup of tea, I cannot say.  And I'd be lying if I told you I was looking forward to ever watching it again.  But it is among the year's best films, doing what it sets out to do with unmitigated success.

Chronicle
Chronicle (review):
2012 is the year where found-footage became more than just a form of low-budget horror and became an all-around tool for filmmakers in all genres.  Max Landis and Josh Trank used the found-footage format to create a stunningly powerful and often striking superhero/sci-fi fable.  Dane DeHaan, Alex Russell, and Michael B. Jordan make up a trio of completely fleshed-out and sympathetic teenagers who stumble upon a meteorite that gives them super powers.  The film goes in some rather dark and disturbing directions, becoming less of a superhero fable and more of a classic alienated youth tragedy.  What's most impressive is how director Josh Trank use the 'found footage' format to make the cliches of the genre, the discovery of powers, the experimentation, the first flight, and the eventual super-powered smack downs all feel refreshingly intimate.  Chronicle presents a classic story but makes it feel like we're seeing this stuff for the very first time.

Detachment (review):
Consider this the Cedar Rapids of 2012.  For much of the year, this film counted as among the year's best films, but the steady flow of terrific films eventually pushed it down to this list.  That's no slight against Tony Kaye's surreal, intense, and sadly authentic look at the public school system.  Adrian Brody leads an all-star cast as a man who finds himself in a position to 'save' the people in his life, never mind how unwilling or unable he is to succeed in this noble goal.  The film ticks off cliches about the current public education system (unfunded mandates, burned out teachers, hostile or apathetic parents, etc.), while in turn asking us why such things are no longer considered shocking.  The film doesn't end on a high note, and there are one too many subplots, but the overall effect is powerful and draining.  Come what may, in a time when even seemingly progressively-minded films about public education (Waiting For Superman, Won't Back Down, etc.) are secret charter school propaganda which treats unions as the enemies, Detachment doesn't turn teachers into the enemy, but rather the victims of a seemingly failing public education system.    

The Deep Blue Sea
The Deep Blue Sea:
Terence Davies's engaging melodrama is highlighted by a powerhouse performance from Rachel Weisz.  This  was one of the first great films of 2012, so I'm heartened to see that Weisz hasn't been forgotten in the year-end awards blitz.  This is a thoughtful examination/deconstruction of that old cliche of romantic drama, that of the young woman who sacrifices emotional and financial comfort for reckless passion in the form of Tom Hiddleston.  Out-and-out romantic dramas are pretty rare outside of the Nicholas Sparks sub-genre, but this is an awfully good one that deserves not to be forgotten as the year's worthwhile films are tallied up.  

Game Change:
One of two great HBO films, Game Change is another terrific Jay Roach-helmed HOBO political drama following Recount.  This time the spotlight is one the 2008 John McCain presidential campaign, specifically the final months when Sarah Palin was selected as his vice presidential candidate.  The film tells much of what anyone who followed the news already knows, but it tells its story with a potent empathy that doesn't refrain from judgment.  Julianne Moore gives us a three-dimensional Sarah Palin, someone who was tossed in the deep end without anyone realizing that she couldn't swim.  Yet while the film puts us in the shoes of John McCain (Ed Harris) and his upper-level staff (personified by Woody Harrelson and Sarah Paulson), it also doesn't let them off the hook for putting politics over country by putting a clearly unqualified person a heartbeat away from the presidency.  But thanks to strong performances and razor-sharp writing, this is just a great political drama regardless of one's political stripe.   

Hemingway and Gellhorn
Hemingway and Gellhorn
Another fantastic HBO film, this one being an abashedly old-school sweeping epic the likes of which we don't see all that much of anymore.  Philip Kaufman helms this decades-spanning adventure film, detailing the tumultuous love affair between Ernest Hemingway (a terrific Clive Owen) and Martha Gellhorn (an equally good Nicole Kidman).  With a billion strong character turns (Robert Duvall, Tony Shalhoub, David Strathairn, etc.) and a genuine sense of the times, both socially and politically, this terrific big-screen epic (which of course was shown on television screens) is the closest thing to Warren Beatty's Reds that we've seen since... well, Warren Beatty's Reds.

Lincoln (review):
It is fantastic that, forty years down the line, Steven Spielberg is still making films as good and as relevant to the national discourse as Lincoln.  Daniel Day-Lewis delivers an 'Acting with a Capitol A' performance and is relentlessly entertaining in another chameleon-esque turn.  The film is a a wonderful hybrid, blending sentimental optimism about the real good that government that accomplish with a eyes-wide-open look at the sheer trickery and bribery that often must take place to accomplish great social change.  The film doesn't turn Lincoln into a saint, not shying away from his extra-legal executive orders or his discomfort with the idea of freed slaves becoming full-fledged citizens.  Screenwriter Tony Kushner delivers a witty and literate screenplay while Spielberg once again proves that he's still among the greats of his profession.  Lincoln works both as an educational tool (it will be shown in schools for decades) and unabashed entertainment.    

The Master (review):
Paul Thomas Anderson's would-be Scientology picture is actually something far more intimate and pinpoint.  The picture keeps its audience at an arms-lengths while obfuscating any clear-cut moral or message until nearly its very last scene.  This 70mm epic tells a surprisingly small story, that of a wealthy would-be cult leader (Phillip Seymour Hoffman) and a mentally unstable veteran (Joaquin Phoenix) who is taken under his wing.  The film is cryptic and sometimes frustrating, but it is one of the great originals of the year, a thoughtful examination of how all people crave some kind of leadership and/or authority to answer their questions.  With some of the year's great performances and one of the most gorgeous-looking movies of the year, this is the kind of film we all say we want.  

This Is Forty:
It's about 15-20 minutes too long (mostly the material involving Mann's store, which doesn't figure into the main conflicts and wastes a game Megan Fox), but this is an unabashedly raw and thoughtful look at the challenges of maintaining a family while constantly dealing with well, family.  Paul Rudd and Leslie Mann are superb while Albert Brooks and John Lithgow are pretty great too in supporting roles.  Leslie Mann deserved a Best Supporting Actress Oscar nomination for Knocked Up back in 2007 and now she darn-well deserves a Best Actress Oscar nomination for expanding and deepening that same character.  Neither struggling husband nor struggling wife are let off the hook, and Judd Apatow cleverly contrasts their marital difficulties with the sibling conflicts of their two daughters.  Married couples will see themselves in both flattering and unflattering lights throughout, even as the picture makes a point to tell a specific story about this family's specific relationships. Refreshingly, Apatow doesn't end with a magical solution to Rudd and Mann's specific problems.  This is a big, messy romantic comedy about the very real mess that is family life and all of its complications.

Rise of the Guardians (2012) is a stunning disappointment

Rise of the Guardians 2012
 
Rise of the Guardians
2012
97 minutes
rated PG

by Scott Mendelson

Rise of the Guardians is an astonishing exercise in generic storytelling, with so little new to bring to the narrative plate that even a morsel of good ideas can't save it from tedium.  I can't speak to the source material, but the film amounts to a high concept idea ("What if the various holiday mascots formed a superhero group?") where no more imagination was offered after the initial pitch.  The story is basically a Mad Libs team-superhero origin story, where we follow a new recruit into a new world and learn the mythology through his eyes.  That the story shamefully rips off the first X-Men is less of a problem than the heroic cohorts having almost no discernible characteristics beyond their costumes and holiday-related duties.  With paper-thin characterization and no real surprises in the offering, Rise of the Guardians amounts to a mostly dull effort that diminishes both big-budget animation and superhero stories at the same time.

The story basically concerns an attempt by the evil Pitch Black (Jude Law, giving what is easily the best vocal performance in the picture) to basically regain his hold on the subconscious of the world's children.  In his way stands four 'Guardians', keepers of holidays who also moonlight as superheros if the occasion calls for it.  Santa Claus (Alec Baldwin as a Russian, because casting Rade Serbedzija was just too damn perfect), The Tooth Fairy (Isla Fisher, who is um... the girl?), The Easter Bunny (Hugh Jackman in his natural accent which lends irony to the obvious parallels to X-Men), and The Sandman, who has no dialogue and thus has no celebrity vocalist at the helm find themselves drafting a new recruit, one Jack Frost (Chris Pine, benefiting from actually getting a real character to play).  Frost has no memory before he became the guy who makes snow and ice, and 300 years later he is forever pained because no one really believes in him anymore.  If he has what it takes to be a Guardian, he may just discover where he came from and whether or not he has the power to make children believe in him.

The four holiday icons have almost nothing of interest to say or do, providing little but half-hearted comic relief and periodic displays of superpowers.  Only Jack Frost and Pitch Black hold any rooting interest and their scenes together are easily the highlight of the picture.  The idea that these holiday icons can't be seen if they aren't believed is an interesting one, although the film does very little with it. Does Pitch Black merely want to be believed in the only way he knows how, or does he indeed put a paramount on instilling fear?  The film never goes into *why* it's remotely important to believe in said holiday characters, why said believe can't be restored with decisive action, nor why said characters will be harmed if they aren't believed (one presumes that heroism would be its own reward even if done in secrecy).  Pitch Black hasn't been 'believed' since the Middle Ages, yet he seems quite able to wreak chaos as the story begins.  The film misses an opportunity to deal with the various kinds of fear, be it rational fear or irrational paranoia (think Gavin de Becker) and it blatantly mistakes visual proof for faith and hope several times throughout the story.

Obviously Dreamworks had no intention of making an animated version of Candyman, but a number of fascinating ideas are ignored or skirted over in favor of a series of monotonous high-flying action set pieces.  Even those sequences lack any juice since we have no investment in the characters doing battle and there are no set rules about how the various super powers actually function (one seemingly important second act action sequence occurs entirely off-screen) .  To add insult to injury, the film doesn't even work as a visual marvel.  Oh there are intriguing sights and sounds, but the film seems shaded with a muted color palette that will remind audiences of the last time they messed up the "Tint" function on their television.  I personally think the 3D is to blame, as it takes an already muted color scheme and renders it oddly somber. If you've ever taken your glasses off during a 3D movie and looked at the image, you'll have a pretty good idea of what Rise of the Guardians looks like *with* the glasses on. From a studio that has produced some of the prettiest animated films of recent years (Puss In Boots, Kung Fu Panda 2, etc.) this is a staggering disappointment.

But far more important than the visual whiff is the by-the-numbers screenplay is the lack of worthwhile characterization or even clever dialogue.  My five year old is usually quick to proclaim the lead female character in a given cartoon as her favorite (sadly there is usually only one or two to choose from), but The Tooth Fairy is so painfully thin that she first named Pitch Black's evil horse(s) as her favorite character.  Absolutely no time was spent making distinctive characters for us to cheer during the major battle scenes and little time was given any of these characters anything interesting to say.  The quality of dialogue in this film barely rises above that offered in a random episode of Superfriends let alone the likes of Justice League, Wolverine and the X-Men, or even the just-ended Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes.  The heroes are so generic that you'll find yourself rooting for Jude Law's Pitch Black as a thank you for mere entertainment value. 

There are fewer bigger defenders of Dreamworks Animation (essay), so it gives me no joy to report how unsatisfying their latest effort has turned out.  But Rise of the Guardians is a film whose imagination died after the initial pitch session and what followed was an assembly-line construction with no distinction to be found on the character or screenplay levels.  Since it appears that these characters were initially introduced in their own separate William Joyce-penned stories, this film adaptation resembles nothing so much as a team-up story where all of the character development happened in prior adventures that we didn't get to see.  Imagine Bryan Singer's X-Men crafted in a fashion where you were already expected to have read the comics and/or watched the 1990s cartoon before entering the theater and you have an idea of how this film plays out.  It's full of flash and noise but almost no substance.

Sunday 23 December 2012

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