LEGEND – The Review

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An actor uses different means to convey a character to the audience. Tom Hardy’s main strength resides in his voice. Whether it is creating a bombastic and operatic voice for the villain Bane in THE DARK KNIGHT RISES, delivering lines in the manner of a Southern preacher in LAWLESS, or conducting conversations in a charming Welsh accent in last year’s criminally underrated LOCKE – not to mention his restrained growl in this year’s MAD MAX: FURY ROAD – Hardy consistently shows a knack for bringing to life memorable characters through his unique vocal inflexions and speech patterns.

LEGEND is no different. Except this time around, Hardy is given the task to create voices and characters for twin brothers who share some similarities – both have a bad habit of getting into trouble – but are quite different. Hardy plays the famous 1960s English gangsters the Kray brothers. Reggie is the suave ladies man while his brother Ronnie is more of a gruff brute who has a soft spot for the men. As you can expect from Hardy, he gives each of them their own style of speech and physical mannerisms. Both brothers fuel the other’s drive to succeed. Furthermore, they pick up each other when one falls down; as can be seen when Reggie hatches a plan to get Ronnie out of jail at the onset of the film. However, all this changes when a new woman steps into Reggie’s life. Frances (Emily Browning) pushes for Reggie to focus just on running his nightclub, but the pressure from other gangsters, a rival mob, and some Italian-Americans from Vegas, all pull Reggie and his loose cannon brother the other way. And as trouble mounts more and more, so too does the interest of the police.

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The star of the show are the stars themselves. Hardy and Browning… and Hardy… are all fantastic. The three… I mean two of them… propel the story forward much more so than Brian Helgeland’s limp direction. Perhaps it’s the lack of camera coverage in a number of scenes or perhaps it’s Helgeland’s apprehension to tell a more intimate story, either way, LEGEND fails to pull you into its crime web.

At 2 hours and 11 minutes, Helgeland’s film feels about 30 minutes too long. What makes this all the more apparent is not having a strong story that runs throughout the film. Sure, the Krays are dynamic in and of themselves, but a lack of a narrative drive as well as dangling subplots that never take off like they should all amount to a long affair. A rival gang threat never really lights a fire under the boys. The Vegas mobsters that travel to London to do business with the boys doesn’t add a whole lot of dimension that we already didn’t know or expect from the duo. Even the police investigation is used better as a joke at the beginning of the film than a working plot device towards the end. If you are a fan of gangsters talking shop and flexing their bravado, there’s some stuff here to chew on. LEGEND isn’t a complete time waster even though it wastes too much time between the good stuff.

As a result, the film rests solely on its actors and on the throwback musical tunes from the 50s and 60s interspersed throughout – which is certainly better than the hamfisted musical score by Carter Burwell. Browning delivers much more than the script allows. Maybe I’m just a sucker for her doe eyes and soft features, but her internal concern and struggles are evident in the scenes opposite Hardy. Likewise, you can see the love he has for her in his eyes.

It’s no easy feat bringing to life two characters in one film. It’s even harder when the character carries such complex internal baggage with him or her – as is the case with the tortured Ronnie. LEGEND, as a film, may not live up to its namesake, but the same can’t be said for its captivating and dashing star. Tom Hardy is a modern film legend, and this is yet another entry that showcases his artistry.

OVERALL RATING: 3 OUT OF 5 STARS

LEGEND opens nationwide
Wednesday, November 25, 2015.

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Tom Hardy And Taron Egerton Star in Epic First LEGEND Trailer

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1960s icons the Krays live again through the double-barrelled performance of Tom Hardy as he takes on the roles of both Reggie and Ron Kray in WORKING TITLE FILMS and STUDIOCANAL’s beautifully cut trailer for LEGEND.

LEGEND takes us into the secret history of the 1960s and the extraordinary events that secured the infamy of the Kray twins.

LEGEND is written and directed by Brian Helgeland (LA CONFIDENTIAL – Academy Award Best Screenplay; MYSTIC RIVER; 42), and is based on John Pearson’s book THE PROFESSION OF VIOLENCE.

Hardy leads the cast joined by Emily Browning (POMPEII), David Thewlis (HARRY POTTER), Christopher Eccleston (THOR), Chazz Palminteri (THE USUAL SUSPECTS), Tara Fitzgerald (GAME OF THRONES) and Taron Egerton (KINGSMAN: THE SECRET SERVICE).

In cinemas Sept 11.

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Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures Put 42 On Deck For April 12, 2013; Stars Harrison Ford

Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures are teaming up with director Brian Helgeland for “42,” the story of baseball great Jackie Robinson. Slated for release on April 12, 2013, the film will open in time to commemorate the 66th anniversary of Jackie Robinson Day—April 15, the date of his first game as a Brooklyn Dodger—and on the heels of the opening of the 2013 Major League Baseball season. The announcement was made by Dan Fellman, President, Domestic Distribution, Warner Bros. Pictures.

“42” will star Academy Award® nominee Harrison Ford (“What Lies Beneath,” “Air Force One,” “Witness”) as the innovative Dodger’s general manager Branch Rickey, the MLB executive who first signed Robinson to the minors and then helped to bring him up to the show, and Chadwick Boseman (“The Express”) as Robinson, the heroic African American who was the first man to break the color line in the big leagues. The film also stars Nicole Beharie (“Shame”) as Rachel Isum, who would become Robinson’s wife, as well as Christopher Meloni (upcoming “Man of Steel”) and T.R. Knight (TV’s “Grey’s Anatomy”).

“42” is set to start production on May 14 in Birmingham, Alabama, with additional locations to include Macon and Atlanta, Georgia, and Chattanooga Tennessee, where the production will mount much of the film’s baseball action at Engel Stadium, double for Brooklyn’s Ebbets Field.

Academy Award® winner Helgeland (“L.A. Confidential”) will direct from his own screenplay. Thomas Tull will produce, with Dick Cook, Jon Jashni, and Jason Clark executive producing. Oscar® nominee Don Burgess (“Forrest Gump”) is the director of photography, Richard Hoover (HBO’s “Temple Grandin”) is production designer, and Caroline Harris (“A Knight’s Tale”) is the costume designer.

Review: GREEN ZONE

At the beginning of Paul Greengrass’ new, action extravaganza, GREEN ZONE, we are quickly introduced to Chief Warrant Officer Roy Miller, played by Matt Damon.  Set in 2003 in the days after the US coalition invaded, Miller and his troops are set with the task of going to locations which they are told house weapons of mass destruction.  In the opening moments, we watch Miller lead his troops down a narrow alley, towards a building where a sniper is aiming for them.  They, eventually, get past the sniper but not without careful planning, swift execution, and a bit of luck.  What they find in the building, in the room where the materials are supposed to be housed, is absolutely nothing.

This opening segment establishes very well the painstakingly harsh task set before these soldiers and the payoff involved at the end of that tunnel.  Pointless is a hard word for it, but if the shoe fits, as they say.  It is with this last outing and coming up empty, along with the three that came before it that we don’t see, that Miller decides enough is enough.  Thus begins a film that, despite its awkward sentimentality in many of the scenes and the way in which digs a little too pointedly, it ends up being a very enjoyable action thriller that, if for nothing else, makes you think a little bit.

The first issue that comes from GREEN ZONE stems from how fast-paced and action-driven the film is.  We know Miller is a soldier who works hard, but here is a man who would rather do some good than be a brainless cog in a machine.  He questions authority.  When the opportunity arises for him to investigate a potential meeting of some of Saddam’s higher ups, he steps away from the task he has been handed to follow his own instincts.  Why?  We are never told.

Point of fact, we know as much about Roy Miller as Jason Bourne knew about himself in the opening of that film.  It is this lack of context for this character that never allows us to fully believe in his purpose.  Sure, once the action starts, we want him to fight back, we want him to take out the bad guys and run, jump, and shoot with the best of them.  But, when it comes time to understand why he is so dead-set on uncovering the truth about the WMDs, we are given nothing.

He simply is, and this could very well be what Greengrass and screenwriter Brian Helgeland were going for, a nameless soldier who should have, could have, and did step up when it was found out he and the rest of his country were being lied to.  It might have worked better were we given anything about his character outside the war, but we aren’t ever even made aware of if this man is married or not.

Much of Helgeland’s work here is reasonably heavy-handed, as well.  There are moments here and there throughout the film that serve as cheap, reaction getters from the general audience.  Watching as a group of soldiers and Washington suits are having dinner in the middle of Saddam’s emptied palace as the “Mission Accomplished” footage plays in the background is one such scene.  Other moments scream pure Hollywood as people, usually Miller, show up right at the perfect time, usually to take out a bad guy before the bad guy can take out someone important to the story.

Nonetheless, the film serves itself to action more than any, other genre, and even the more chintzy or cliched sections are surrounded by hard-pressing and non-stop action.  Greengrass’ shaky camera work, made famous from the second and third film in the Jason Bourne Trilogy, is the best of its kind, always moving, always curious of the action going on around it, but, somehow, never blurred or jumbled.  Despite its constant movement from left to right, bobbing up and down as it follows soldiers running down darkened alleyways, it rarely loses you in what is going on.  There are pieces here and there throughout the action that lose you just for a bit, especially in an end chase scene that, for me, was served too dark for its own good.  Regardless of these moments, Greengrass always has a way of pulling you right back into the middle of the action and without feeling like you’ve missed much of a beat.

And what action it is.  Every moment of action, whether you are fully invested in who Miller is, what he is doing, or why, is unbelievable crafted, shot, and edited together.  It starts early, and much of the rest of the film is a string of events that lead you from one action piece to the next.  It is all absolutely suspenseful, as well.  Much of it is aided in Greengrass’ amazing ability to recreate the bombed out streets and palaces of Baghdad, particularly Saddam’s palace, which is beautifully crafted here (much of the film was shot in Spain and the UK).  Greengrass and his team spare no detail in the handwork that went into creating these elaborate and complex palaces, and the rubble that remained after they had been devastated.

At the heart of GREEN ZONE is Miller, and, whether we know much about him or not, he is brought to equally believable life by Damon.  Damon is becoming a powerhouse actor in action film such as this, and his talents make him just as believable when he is taking on someone in a knife fight than when he is getting into a verbal spar with the film’s, lead, political villain, played by the always impressive Greg Kinnear.  Also along for the ride are Brendon Gleeson as a CIA chief and Amy Ryan as a foreign correspondent.  Each of them are effective in their prospective roles, even if those roles are a bit, too been-there-done-that.  Really?  A female journalist covering the action?  Not exactly groundbreaking character establishment there, Helgeland.

And so it goes with GREEN ZONE, a film that succeeds on so many levels yet falters on a few others, notable falters that take you out of the story at hand even if ever so slightly.  Luckily, even thankfully, Greengrass is always there with a net to catch you after Helgeland knocks you out of the roller-coaster with those moments that have their finger on their nose instead of on the pulse.  GREEN ZONE ends up being a grand feast of exciting action, a striking wick of dynamite that holds you in its grasp, even if the frayed ends leave you wanting for more in other departments.

Overall Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

‘Cirque Du Freak: The Vampire’s Assistant’ Trailer Gets a Little Freaky

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Evidently, I didn’t get the memo that vampire is the new black.   Everything that has ever been connected to the vampire sub-genre is getting a revitalization for the big screen.   Mix that with the idea of bringing a series of novels to feature film life, and you’ve got a perfect pitch for a studio to jump on.

Enter ‘Cirque Du Freak: The Vampire’s Assistant.’   Yeah, it’s a lengthy title.   In fact, it derives its name from the first two books of the series of books by Darren Shan.   The story centers on a young boy (Shan in a fictitious past) who is taken in by a vampire, a member of a traveling group of freaks.

Today, we bring you the trailer for the movie.   Check it out:

It looks like a fun bit of entertainment, full of Hollywood-riffic sight gags, familiar faces, and plenty of CG.   It’s a little bothersome that John C. Reilly doesn’t come off as the cultivated vampire lead you might expect.   It’s a little distracting, in fact.   Let’s just say he’s no Bill Compton and leave it at that.   Regardless, it could be a whole lot of fun, and, if the film is any kind of success, look for the ‘Cirque Du Freak’ franchise to take off.

‘Cirque Du Freak: The Vampire’s Assistant’ is set for release on October 23rd.

Source: Moviefone