Winter Passing (AKA Happy Endings [UK Release])

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Directed By: Adam Rapp
Written By: Adam Rapp
Starring:
Zooey Deschanel
Ed Harris
Will Ferrell
Amelia Warner

“The Woman treated me as a mild curiosity all my life” – Reese

Winter Passing is the first feature film from playwright Adam Rapp.

It follows the story of Reese Holden (Deschanel) a struggling actress living in New York who is approached by a literary agent who offers her a small fortune which she will get if she can obtain letters of correspondence from her famous famous novelist parents Don (Harris) and Mary Holden (Mary has recently passed away) from early in their relationship. Reese agrees to the deal and travel back home to Michigan to be with hear father and try to find the letters. While there Reese meets the people that her father has taken in since her mother’s passing, handy(ish) man Corbit (Ferrell) and former student Shelly (Warner).

This is a really nice film and is well made by Rapp.

Zooey Deschanel is superb, she plays her character of a young woman reduced to rubble by her parents extremely well. For the first twenty minutes or so she carries the movie on her shoulders. Ed Harris gives a stirring portrayal as the reclusive writer Don Holden. Will Ferrell and Amelia Warner are really good as the supporting characters.

There is going to be people who will consider the movie a bit slow, but it is a joy to watch. All the characters are well rounded and interesting to watch interact with each other.

The music that was chosen for the movie fits in nicely where they are placed. The music adds to the tone the movie is setting.

Deschanel’s performance really fully evokes on screen how Reese is feeling, cold and lonely.

I love the first twenty minutes of the film, before we find out much about her parents, we can see the psychological damage that they have inflicted upon her, She now does cocaine and has resorted to slamming her hand in a drawer just to feel something.

His is a wonderful and emotional film with great characters, a solid story and would be worth watching for Zooey Deschanel and Ed Harris’ performances alone.

7/10 – Cody
N/A – Michael

70%

Clerks II

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Directed By: Kevin Smith
Written By: Kevin Smith
Starring:
Brian O’Halloran
Jeff Anderson
Trevor Fehrman
Jason Mewes
Kevin Smith
Jennifer Schwalbach Smith
Those fuckin’ hobbit movies were boring as hell. All it was, was a bunch of people walking, three movies of people walking to a fucking volcano – Randal

Clerks II is Kevin Smith’s sequel to Clerks. and return to the Viewaskewniverse after a five year hiatus.

After the “Quick Stop” store where Dante and Randal have worked at for over a decade burns down, both of them find new employment at “Moobys” a fast food franchise. A year later it is Dante’s last day working at Moobys, as he is about to move to Florida to start a new life with his wife to be.

Clerks II is a great sequel to Clerks as it is interesting to see where Dante and Randal are in life a decade after we left them in the first film. They are not the slacker twenty-somethings they were in the first movie they are now thirty-somethings and have more responsibility such as Dante now having a fiance.

This movie is hilarious, it is well written and directed by Kevin Smith. Most of the laughs in this movie come from what wise-ass Randal says and the always funny Jay and Silent Bob, while Jay and Silent Bob are a little more toned down in this movie they are still funny none the less. But for all the laughs the film still manages to be moving in parts

This is everything you could want from a Clerks sequel, it’s funny, it’s just as good as the first movie and it has just the right amount of humor and heart.

It is a must watch for all fans of Clerks and Kevin Smith’s other movies.

 
8/10 – Cody
N/A – Michael
80%

Clerks.

Clerks

Directed By: Kevin Smith
Written By: Kevin Smith
Starring:
Brian O’Halloran
Jeff Anderson
Marilyn Ghigliotti
Jason Mewes
Kevin Smith
Lisa Spoonhauer

I wasn’t even supposed to be here today – Dante

This job would be great if it wasn’t for the fucking customers – Randal

Clerks is Kevin Smiths rollicking directorial debut, this is the movie that launched his career and kick started the Viewaskewnivese.

It Follows the story of Dante Hicks (O’Halloran) who is asked to go into work on his day off. While there he passes the time by playing hockey on the store roof, mulling over life and conversing with best friend Randal (Anderson).

Made on a shoestring budget and film mostly at night at the store Kevin Smith worked in at the time, this film still manages to be just as good as any movie with a Hollywood budget.

The movie is humorous most of the way through due to some hilarious conversations mainly between Dante and Randal (which shows of Kevin Smith’s talent for comedic dialogue) but the movie does have serious moments that are fused into the movie between the comedy.

The movie is splendidly written and directed by Smith who seemed to be adept in his first role as a writer/director.

From “milkmaids” and hockey on the roof to conversations on if there were independent contractors working on the second death star when it blew up, this film is a very impressive comedy

This cult favourite is a must watch for any comedy movie fans

 
8/10 – Cody
N/A – Michael
80%

Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy

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Directed By: Tomas Alfredson
Written By: Bridget O’Connor & Peter Straughan (Based on the novel of the same name by John le Carré)
Starring:
Gary Oldman
Mark Strong
John Hurt
Colin Firth
Tom Hardy
Benedict Cumberbatch
Toby Jones
Ciarán Hinds
Stephen Graham
Amanda Fairbank-Hynes
 
There’s a mole, right at the top of the Circus. And he’s been there for years. – Oliver Lacon
 
She told me she had a secret, the mother of all secrets… – Ricky Tarr
 
Things aren’t always what they seem. – Easterhase
 
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy is the best MI5 film ever. It explores the actual intelligence and spy work done without clouding over the realism with pointless action and cheesy lines, like in Bond films. Although I love Bond movies, this film is so good it surpasses the limits of Bond and shows you how isolated and dangerous spy work is.
 
Tinker Tailor is set during the Cold War and follows the story of espionage veteran George Smiley, who after being forced into retirement, is asked by a livelong friend to undercover and find a Soviet mole in MI5. In this compelling story we taken back in time and shown the relationships between Smiley and his former co-workers, the former operations of suspects and then taken to the present and shown his search and investigation to find the Soviet spy.
 
Gary Oldman gives his best performance ever as George Smiley. He really should have won the Oscar for Best Actor instead of Jean Dujardin, who won for The Artist.
At one stage he is having a conversation with a colleague and when he is asked about a previous meeting he sits forward and has a conversation with an empty chair, recalling the exact meeting for his colleague. It is here that Gary shows the best of his humility in his subtle performance, he makes you feel as if you are in the room and that the meeting is actually taking place.
 
This film boasts one of the best British cast ever, even allowing Benedict Cumberbatch and Tom Hardy (as Peter Guillam and Ricky Tarr respectively) to showcase their profound ability. Apart from Gary Oldman, it is Mark Strong who stands out as the best actor in this film. He can change his expression with ease and shows you his suspicion, fear and loneliness extremely well.
 
The film has distracted many movie fans and even some critics as it is a slow film but if you pay attention all the way through to absolutely everything it will all make perfect sense. At first I didn’t like this film nearly as much as I do now, it took a second and definitely more attentive viewing to fully appreciate this films scintillating quality.
 
It’s cinematography is amazing and dark, the writing is very intricate and clever and the all round performances are well, just plain brilliant!
 
10/10 – Michael
10/10 – Cody
100%
 

Only God Forgives

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Directed By: Nicolas Winding Refn
Written By: Nicolas Winding Refn
Starring:
Ryan Gosling
Kristin Scott Thomas
Vithaya Pansringarm
Yayaying Rhatha Phongam
Tom Burke

Wanna fight – Julian

Only God Forgives is Nicolas Winding Refn’s ostentatious tale of revenge. It is his directorial follow up to 2011’s Drive.

The plot follows Julian (Gosling), the runner of a Bangkok boxing club and drug smuggler, who after his brother Billy (Burke) is killed, is called upon by his mother Crystal (Scott Thomas), to exact revenge upon Chang (Pansringarm), the police captain responsible for the killing.

Disappointing, is what this movie is. After the dramatic powerhouse that was Drive, I was expecting greater things from Nicolas Winding Refn’s most recent Cinematic outing, but I was wrong to get my hopes up after seeing the trailer for this film.

The movie is painstakingly slow  and although only 90 minutes long, it seems to drag on forever.

Ryan Gosling seems to speak only 10 sentences in total during the movie. Most of the time Nicolas Winding Refn lingers too long on particular shots, one such shot is where Julian stares at his hands while he slowly makes them into fists.

As a film watching experience the film is poor and the ending is anti-climactic, so it doesn’t really justify sticking the movie out till the end. To me the acting comes off as mostly wooden, apart from Kristin Scott Thomas and maybe a couple of moments where Ryan Gosling shows flashes of the great actor i know him to be.

At points the movie is just violent for violence sake, such as a moment where somebody cuts open the stomach of another character who is already dead, for what purpose is this done?

The cinematography in this film is beautiful (courtesy of Larry Smith) and Bangkok looks spectacular. Cliff Martinez‘s thumping score is great and even during the really dragged out bits (of which there are a lot), it keeps the movie pumping along

As I have pointed out above the cinematography is stunning and the film looks beautiful, its just a shame that there wasn’t anything more interesting going on onscreen, but regardless of this movie being disappointing I believe that Nicolas Winding Refn is still a filmmaker to watch closely and i would be interested to see what his next project is.

4/10 – Cody
2/10 – Michael
30%
 

(500) Days of Summer

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Directed By: Marc Webb
Written By:  Scott Neustadter & Michael H. Weber
Starring:
Joseph Gordon-Levitt
Zooey Deschanel
Geoffrey Arend
Chloë Grace Moretz
Matthew Gray Gubler
Clark Gregg

There’s no such thing as love, it’s fantasy… – Summer

(500) Days of Summer is Marc Webb’s stellar feature film directorial debut

This movie follows the story of greeting card writer Tom (Gordon-Levitt) who falls in love with the radiant Summer (Deschanel), who doesn’t believe that true love exists. The movie starts on day 488 and flips back and forth between the days as Tom remembers his relationship with Summer, the highs and the lows.

This film is easily one of the best romantic comedy movies ever made as it is more realistic, original and breaks away from the cinematic norm of what people expect a romantic comedy should be like. One part that is original in this movie that I personally love is the Expectations/Reality moment where we see onscreen in split-screen Tom’s expectations for a particular encounter, the reality and how different the two really are.

The acting is really great, Joseph Gordon-Levitt is wonderful as the lovelorn Tom and Zooey Deschanel is sublime as free spirited Summer. All the supporting Cast are very solid and funny especially Chloë Grace Moretz as Tom’s wise beyond her years sister Rachel and Geoffrey Arend & Matthew Grey Gubler as two of Tom’s Best Friends, McKenzie and Paul whose onscreen presence I really enjoyed.

This movie has a first rate script penned by Scott Neustadter & Michael H. Weber and is remarkably directed by Marc Webb.

The soundtrack is fantastic, the movie starts with the lovely Regina Spektor song “Us” and uses the Song “You Make My Dreams” by Hall & Oates in one of my favorite sequences in the movie, where Tom has slept with Summer for the first time the night before and is so happy that the song starts playing in his head and he precedes to walk to work, all the while imagining himself dancing in the street with the pedestrians around him. The film also contains songs from the always brilliant The Smiths and The Temper Trap.

This movie remains both funny and touching throughout the whole of its 95 minute run-time.

I really love this movie so very much, it’s smart, it’s sweet, it’s charming, it’s inventive and it’s quite brilliant.

10/10 – Cody
N/A – Michael
100%
 

Her

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Directed & Written By: Spike Jonze

Starring:
Joaquin Phoenix
Scarlett Johansson
Amy Adams
Rooney Mara
Olivia Wilde
 
The past is just a story we tell ourselves. – Samantha
 
Her is Spike Jonze’s groundbreaking and heartbreaking romantic/dramedy film.
 
It follows the story of Theodore Twombly, a lonely writer, who after a tough divorce buys an OS. An OS (Operating System) is an Artificial Intelligence that is suited to the user. He bonds with Samantha, his new OS and the two develop an unlikely relationship.
 
Now I know people are going to think that this is just an oddball romance with a loner and his computer but it is far from it. Yes it’s odd at times but it is a touching story that will impress all movie fans.
 
Joaquin Phoenix never ceases to amaze. He is just brilliant as ever, even though his character can be out of his comfort zone, which just shows that he is one of the best actors of today. He will make you laugh, he can make you cry but seemingly he can’t win an Oscar. Bullshit.
 
However, despite the fact that he didn’t get a deserved Oscar nomination he wins the audience’s hearts once again. All of the supporting cast are amazing however it is Joaquin who carries the film as it is mostly just him acting by himself.
 
The colourful and vibrant cinematography, the excellent score, the clever and funny screenplay, the brilliant directing and the amazing performance Her is my favourite romantic film ever. By the way, Silver Linings Playbook is better but it is more of a dramedy than a romantic film.
 
10/10 – Michael
N/A – Cody
100%
 
#4 On Michael’s list of favourite movies of 2013
 

Army Of Darkness (Evil Dead III)

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Directed By: Sam Raimi
Written By: Sam Raimi & Ivan Raimi
Starring:
Bruce Campbell
Embeth Davidtz
Ian Abercrombie
Hail to the king, baby – Ash
 
 
Alright you Primitive Screwheads, listen up! You see this? This… is my boomstick! – Ash
 
I’ve got news for you pal, you ain’t leadin’ but two things, right now: Jack and shit… and Jack left town – Ash

Bruce Campbell returns to kick undead ass and spurt one-liners as Ash in this madcap third outing in the Evil Dead franchise

After Ash is accidentally transported back to the 13th century, he must retrieve the Necronomicon and battle an army of the dead which he unwittingly unleashed in order to return home

Army of Darkness is clearly the most extravagant of the Evil Dead films. Here Sam Raimi tones down the horror and ups the ante on the humour which undoubtedly make for a more entertaining movie to watch than the first Evil Dead. I am not entirely sure if it was the best of ideas as I really do love the horror aspect of the previous two films.

While Evil Dead 2 was far better for having introduced comedy, to mainly do away with the horror was a bold move but they didn’t go too far wrong, as they did add a combination witty one-liners and more deadite killing action into the franchise which makes for an entertaining viewing

Writing and directing is good in this film and Bruce Campbell is just as great as ever playing an action hero Ash. The special effects are good but by today’s standards are noticeably dated

Army of Darkness may not be great but it is great fun and is definitely worth a watch

  7/10 – Cody
10/10 – Matthew
  6/10 – Jason
  N/A – Michael
  N/A – John
77%
 

A Streetcar Named Desire

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Directed By: Elia Kazan

Written By: Tennessee Williams

Starring:
Vivien Leigh
Marlon Brando
Karl Malden
Kim Hunter
 
STELLAAAAAAAAAAAAA!!!!! – Stanley Kowalski
 
A Streetcar Named Desire follows the story of Blanche DuBois who arrives in New Orleans to live with her estranged sister Stella. However, she did not expect Stella’s husband Stanley Kowalski to question her motive for arriving there. Is Blanche hiding from a dark past or is Stanley wrong about her?
 
A Streetcar Named Desire is a brilliantly written story as you should expect from the great playwright Tennessee Williams, who also wrote Cat On A Hot Tin Roof. This film has strong characters and an interesting story.
 
Marlon Brando is excellent as Stanley Kowalski. He demands a huge presence and is very charismatic which is exactly how Stanley should be portrayed. I think he should have won the Oscar for it as he can be very funny and also serious throughout.
 
Vivien Leigh is great as the tormented Blanche DuBois and although she comes across as very practiced and overacted, for the time she was very good, winning an Oscar for her role.
 
Karl Malden is very funny as the awkward and shy Mitch. He rightly picked up an Oscar for his excellent performance.
 
Overall, A Streetcar Named Desire is a classic that must be seen.
 
10/10 – Michael
N/A – Cody
100%
 
 

Blue Jasmine

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Directed By: Woody Allen
 
Written By: Woody Allen
 
Starring:
Cate Blanchett
Sally Hawkins
Alec Baldwin
Andrew Dice Clay
Bobby Cannavale
Louis C.K
Peter Sarsgaard

Anxiety, nightmares and a nervous breakdown, there’s only so many traumas a person can withstand until they take to the streets and start screaming – Jasmine

Blue Jasmine follows New York socialite Jasmine who after losing everything and suffering a mental breakdown, arrives in San Francisco to live with her estranged sister temporarily. As Jasmine struggles with memories of her privileged past, which are haunting her, she tries to recover in the present.

Blue Jasmine is a film of many strengths among them are that its wonderfully written and directed by Woody Allen

The acting is great in this film especially from Cate Blanchett who gives a brilliant and haunting portrayal of a woman struggling to cope

I think the flashback sequences are handled well and excellently done, the give us a glimpse of Jasmine’s past and the events which have led up to the present. They give a fantastic showcase and insight into Jasmine’s character.

This is a great movie, which has many funny moments, but is also touchingly poignant.

I firmly believe that Cate Blanchett deserves the Oscar for her performance, as she really blows her competition out of the water. This movie should be seen by any fan of Woody Allen or character studies.

8/10 – Cody
N/A – Michael
80%