Sunday, April 22, 2007

Unbreakable - 2000

Director: M. Night Shyamalan

Cast: Bruce Willis, Samuel L. Jackson, Robin Wright Penn

Genre: Thriller, Supernatural, Comic Books

Rating: **** - "Really Liked it"

M. Night Shyamalan's follow up to the rounding success of the creepy but entertaining The Sixth Sense failed to excite audiences and was considered a disappointment compared to big box office numbers of The Sixth Sense. I'm not sure what audiences were thinking, but obviously many were expecting another Sixth Sense type of movie, which Unbreakable certainly was not. Personally, I enjoyed Unbreakable almost as much as I enjoyed The Sixth Sense, and would have liked it even more except for the way they ended the movie.

Unbreakable is the story of a husband in the middle of a broken marriage with a growing distance to his son. On the train back to Philadelphia from a job interview in NYC, there is an accident and Bruce Willis' character, David Dunn, emerges as the sole survivor - without a scratch on him - hence the title "Unbreakable". This amazing circumstance leads the strange and comic book obsessed Elijah Price, played by Samuel L. Jackson, to seek out Bruce Willis. Elijah Price is the polar opposite of David Dunn; whereas David Dunn is "unbreakable", Elijah Wood has a rare bone disease that makes his body incredibly fragile and subject to constant fractures. The two characters develop a growing, at times strained, relationship as Elijah Wood, using Comic Book analogies, attempts to convince David Dunn of his "unbreakableness" and suggests that perhaps Mr. Dunn should be doing something with his life that he hasn't. In the middle of all this is David Dunn's most broken family. He's been looking for work in NYC and
plans to move away from his wife and son. He and his wife sleep in separate rooms and he has at best a distant relationship with his son. All that slowly changes - for the better - as David Dunn begins to question his role in life and the possibility that he may indeed be unbreakable.

Bruce Willis does a fine job as David Dunn and Samuel L. Jackson, as always, is excellent. But this is not a creepy, at times hair-tingling, ghost thriller like The Sixth Sense. The heart of the movie is about comic books and the heroes and villains that lie therein, and one man's obsession to finding a link in the real world to the imaginary world of his comics. It's also about a man finding his way in life and with his broken family and wondering if he is indeed something special, as Elijah Price believes. Where Sixth Sense fans were looking for something to spook
them in their seats or some kind of shock ending, they instead found a well dialogued, lengthy movie about broken relationships and the search for something more in this life. This film is more about story then stunning scenes and that is probably why it turned off Sixth Sense fans. The movie also moves at a rather deliberate pace which makes it appear longer than it is, but I felt it was necessary to tell the story. Overall I enjoyed it and highly recommend it, just don't go in expecting another Sixth Sense or Signs.

What Parents Need to Know:
Common Sense Media rates this movie as:
15+ = For violence and sexual references:
This movie has a lot of violence. Although most of it is offscreen, its themes, including sexual assault, murder of the parents of two children, and genocide, may be especially disturbing. A child uses a gun. There is a brief vulgar reference and an implication of date rape.
Rotten Tomatoes rating: 67% (fresh)

Saturday, April 21, 2007

Versus: Director's Cut - 2000

Director: Ryuhei Kitamura

Cast: Tak Sakaguchi, Hideo Sakaki, Chieko Masaki

Genre: Martial Arts Action, Horror, Zombies, Gore, Sci-Fi, Crime

Rating: *** = "Liked it"

This ridiculously over-the-top Japanese martial arts/samurai blood-fest is a mix of Army of Darkness meets Evil Dead meets Resident Evil. It has everything a B-movie blood-and-gore horror fan would want: zombies? check. low-budget gore effects? check. weapons galore? check. blood spraying decapitation and dismemberment? check. hilariously over-the-top acting? check. barely understandable-but-who-cares plot? big check.

Tak Sakaguchi plays prisoner KSC 2-303. He escapes from a maximum security prison and meets up with some gangsters in a remote forest. For no real reason, he picks a fight with the gangsters, who have kidnapped some girl, shooting one of them dead, who, within minutes, immediately comes back to life. The rest of the movie has the gangsters, led by a mysterious figure who can not die, hunting down prisoner KSC 2-303 through the Forest of Resurrection, where they find out that anyone they kill comes back as murderous zombies. There's a whole good vs evil, eternal struggle sub-plot to the whole mess, but the weak plot simply serves as an excuse for a massive blood battle between the good guy and bad guys with intermittent zombies and living dead getting into the fray.

The film does have some pretty cool fast-camera martial arts action, which at times was fun to watch, but at 2 hours long the film drags and eventually you find yourself looking for the end. I liked it, but it's not something I would want to see again, hence the 3 stars.

What Parents Need to Know:
Common Sense Media has not rated this movie, but I would rate it as ok for teens above 16 years of age. The movie contains massive amounts of blood and gore but of the B-movie, laughable variety. The gore and effects are so low budget, the action so over-the-top, that it is hard to take this cartoonish movie seriously.

Rotten Tomatoes rating: 60% (Fresh)

The Last King of Scotland - 2006

Director: Kevin MacDonald

Cast: Forest Whitaker, James McAvoy

Genre: Drama, Political, Thriller, Based on True Events

Rating: **** = "Really Liked it"

Forest Whitaker won the Oscar and Golden Globe for his outstanding portrayal of brutal Ugandan dictator Idi Amin. James McAvoy also turned in a solid performance as the young Scottish doctor who becomes Idi Amin's naive personal physician.

I gave the movie 4 stars instead of 5 because, despite McAvoy's performance, I never liked his character, Dr. Garrigan, very much. Dr. Garrigan was portrayed as a stupid, naive young man who happily ignores the reality of the brutal world he has entered until it has become too late. And by that time the decisions he has made up til then and the people he had turned his back on make him a rather unsympathetic character.


Forest Whitaker's performance was a
tour de force, one moment a happy, laughing, charismatic figure and turning into a raging monster in the next. I don't know if they used special angles or editing when filming him, but he seemed larger than life and just filled the screen whenever he was in a scene. The movie covers the time Dr. Garrigan first arrives in Uganda, as Idi Amin has just taken over the country, and chronicles the time he spent as Amin's personal physician. The movie focuses on the evolving relationship between the two men and the growing realization on Dr. Garrigan's part that he is part of something awful and must get out. The film moves well and keeps the audience's attention throughout. It is a gripping drama of one of history's most infamous dictators.

What Parents Need to Know:
Common Sense Media rates this movie as:

17+ = For strong violence, gruesome images, sexual content and nudity, and language:
Parents need to know that this movie is based on the real life of Ugandan dictator Idi Amin and includes references to massacres, revenge killings, torture, and abuse. Some scenes depict such violence explicitly, including bloody bodies, shooting, knifing, and grisly torture.
Rotten Tomatoes rating: 89% (Fresh)

Thursday, April 12, 2007

Wake of Death - 2004

Director: Philippe Martinez

Cast: Jean-Claude Van Damme, Simon Yam

Genre: Action

Rating: * = "Hated It"

Boring. Formulaic. Drivel. The film is only 90 minutes long, but the pace is so slow it feels more like 3 hours. I found myself playing the DVD at 1.5x speed (where you can still hear and understand what they are saying) just to get through the slow parts (which are many). Van Damme is wooden and one dimensional at best and his age is showing as he no longer leaps and kicks bad guys asses - I can't remember a single leg kick above the waist. Simon Yam, a Hong Kong actor I normally enjoy, plays a cold blooded father who, for reasons never known, kills his daughter's mother and then hunts down the daughter in LA. The girl ends up with Van Damme's family and his wife is killed for her trouble, which of course sets off the angry husband's revenge spree. The action and chase scenes are slow and boring and nothing we haven't seen before. A painful movie to sit through. Avoid it.


What Parents Need to Know: No info on this movie from Common Sense Media,
but I would rate it as:
16+ : Vigorous usage of the f-word, a graphic torture scene involving a drill, some mild nudity and sexual contact, and of course let's not forget lots of criminal activity involving drugs, prostitution, and human trafficking. Ok for mature teenagers.

Rotten Tomatoes rating: none