THE BRUTALIST – Review

Adrien Brody (center) in THE BRUTALIST. Courtesy of A24

If you get a chance to see THE BRUTALIST at a 35mm showing, please seize the opportunity. You will not regret it. THE BRUTALIST was shot on 35mm film, and it’s visual gorgeousness is best seen that way. But any way you see it, THE BRUTALIST is a masterpiece, a remarkable, moving drama with breathtakingly beautiful cinematography and starring Adrien Brody in one of the best performances of his career. Brody plays a Jewish-Hungarian modernist architect, working in the then-new “brutalist” style, who survived the Nazis’ brutality in his home country and now, post-war, immigrates to America. The architect arrives with the high hopes of many immigrants but soon is struggling to find his way in this new and very different land.

THE BRUTALIST is a masterpiece on all levels, an award-winner and leading Oscar Best Picture contender. Adrien Brody’s performance rivals his Oscar-winning one in THE PIANIST, sparking its own Oscar buzz, and both Guy Pearce and Felicity Jones are being touted as Oscar contenders for their portrayals of wealthy business titan Harrison Lee Van Buren Sr. and the architect’s Holocaust survivor wife, respectively. The photography is breathtaking, shot on 35mm film, and the late 1940s -early 1950s period costumes and sets are impressive, particularly those representing the architect’s work. The script is fiction but so engrossing and believable that it is hard to accept that this is not a real person. The editing and pacing is perfect in this epic, so one does not really feel it’s considerable running time (thankfully, split by a brief, well-placed intermission). It is, simply put, essential viewing for any serious fan of cinematic art.

Brutalist architecture is a minimalist modern style that rose to prominence in the 1950s, a style stripped clean of ornamentation in favor of structure, and using raw, basic elements like exposed concrete and bare brick. Brutalist structures were often imposing, monumental works that divided public opinions, leaving some cold and others impressed, but few unmoved. Many of its leading figures came from Europe, and director Brady Corbet saw parallels between post-WWII psychology and post-WWII architecture. Director Corbet and co-writer Mona Fastvold saw parallels between the post-WWII experience and the brutalist architecture that flourished after the war. Unable to find a real person who fit their idea of a renowned Jewish architect with his own firm, who fled Europe post-war to restart in America, they decided to create a fictional one, drawing on various post-war immigrant experiences. While, personally, I am not an admirer of brutalist architecture, director Corbet makes good use of the idea of an artist whose career was disrupted at it’s height as the leading edge of that movement, and now finds himself struggling to start again as a stranger in a stranger land.

As the film opens, Laszlo Toth (Adrien Brody) jubilantly arrives in America, with all the starry-eyed hopes of generations of immigrants before him, but with an extra joy at having survived Hitler’s deadly plans. Upon arriving, Laszlo is greeted by a cousin he had been close to in his youth, but who had immigrated earlier, The cousin offered the architect a place to stay and help – more than many arriving refugees of the war had. But Laszlo quickly discovers that things are very different than he expected and that life in this new land will not be easy. He also quickly discovers that his wife Erzsebet (Felicity Jones), from whom he was separated by the war early on, has also survived but is stuck in Europe, along with their niece Zsofia (Raffey Cassidy). As they work to join him in America, Laszlo confronts the hard realities of immigrant life in this new land.

In THE BRUTALIST, Laszlo Toth is a renowned modernist architect, working in the innovative, cutting-edge if chilly brutalist style. In his native Hungary, Toth is a famous and lauded figure, lionized as an artist by both the public and those in his own profession, a name that commands respect and admiration. But in America, Laszlo Toth is an unknown, just another Jewish refugee from war-ravaged Europe, and even his cutting edge style of architecture, brutalism, is an unknown to many in America as well.

After his hopeful arrival in America, Laszlo finds himself living in a tiny room of the furniture store owed by the cousin and the cousin’s non-Jewish wife in Pennsylvania. While the cousin has left his Jewish faith and identify behind, Laszlo still seeks out and attends a local synagogue, as we see in a few scenes. Still, even there, he sticks out as an immigrant, and still feels an outsider. Laszlo gets occasional letters from his wife, from time to time, but when, or even if, she will be allowed to leave Europe is unclear. Meanwhile, the architect does menial work for his cousin’s furniture store, which is filled with old-fashioned but newly made furniture, in a style that the the artist abhors.

A stroke of luck brings Laszlo a ray of hope in this grim situation, when his cousin recommends the architect to Harry Lee (Joe Alwyn), the son of wealthy businessman Harrison Lee Van Buren Sr. (Guy Pearce). The business titan’s grown son wants to hire someone to remodel his father’s library, as a surprise for his father while the industrialist is away. Harry thinks Toth is just a construction worker, but the architect seizes that chance to return to his profession. Laszlo remakes the library room in a fully modern style, in a redesign that solves the many of the problems in the original room, and making it both more practical as well as visually striking. Actually, the remodeled library is more in the manner of Frank Lloyd Wright’ Prairie style than brutalist form, and when the business titan returns, he initially is angered by the changes – until his better-informed friends point out it’s ground-breaking artistic merits and its practical solutions to the spaces problems. His mind changed, Van Buren puts the architect under contract for a bigger project, and appears to take him under his wing, inviting him to live on his estate while working on the new project.

But having this powerful patron has a cost, as Laszlo and his wife, finally arrived in America but in fragile health, find out. As Laszlo fights to restart his career under his new employer, he must also find a way to reconnect with his wife, from whom he has been separated for many years. There is pain and trauma, and communication is difficult at first yet the film also gives us a touching love story of these damaged but still striving people.

Laszlo’s story is both heart-breaking and inspiring. The “foreignness” of this new place to him, combined with post-war Americans’ tendency to treat these new arrivals as if they are uneducated as well as penniless, adds an extra layer of social commentary, as well as challenge for the architect and his wife.

There is human story here too, of a husband and wife parted by war, as well as the more universal immigrant one. There is also the very particular experience of Holocaust survivors who fled to America for a new life, one version of all their myriad, individual, and astonishing stories. Despite the sense of the “real” that surrounds this moving epic story, this is fiction, and the main character is not based on one real person. Yet, that character feels so real, thanks in large part of powerful Adrien Brody’s performance, but also aided by director/co-writer Brady Corbet and co-writer Fastvold’s script, inspired as it was by the post-war period in America and immigrant experiences, particularly of the many Jewish refugees who sought a new start in America, far away from Europe.

Adrien Brody is superb in this role, a performance that rivals the one he gave in THE PIANIST. He presents the great range and complexity of emotions that he goes through, confronting the strangeness of America, facing the hardships and grappling with restarting his marriage. The supporting cast are all strong but Guy Pearce, as the American business titan deserves special mention, in a haunting portrayal of perhaps the film’s villain. There is a moment of disturbing violence in the second half of the film, for which audience should be braced, but the moment serves a narrative purpose in Laszlo’s dramatic American journey.

This film is a true epic, and the running time fits that description as well, but fortunately, wisely, THE BRUTALIST has a short intermission. It is well-placed in the story and not so long that you forget where the story left off, yet long enough for a refreshing re-set and rest. With so many films, particularly ambitious one like this, now sporting running times in excess of 3 hours, adding a brief intermission like this is a wonderful idea, an example that, hopefully, other films will follow.

THE BRUTALIST explores post-war America from this outsider’s view and also offers overall social commentary on the nation and that time period, with social class, privilege, post-war prejudices and lingering antisemitism all in the mix. Beyond that, the film also explores the tentative, fragile relationship between a husband and wife traumatized by war and the Holocaust. They are both haunted by their history and experiences in the war, and stripped of their past before the war. As the drama follows Laszlo’s path of discovery in America, it also explores aspects of differences in cultures, flaws in 1950s America, ethnocentrism, the undercurrent of barely-buried antisemitism and the sense of privilege in the wealthy businessman and his circle. The result is an unforgettable epic story, told with a power and style that reflects the monumental if difficult architecture the protagonist creates.

THE BRUTALIST opens Friday, Jan. 10, in theaters.

RATING: 4 out of 4 stars

HARBIN – Review

A scene from the South Korean historical epic HARBIN. Courtesy of Well Go USA Entertainment

The Korean epic HARBIN is billed as historical and biographical, but I don’t know enough to vouch for the accuracy of either. It chronicles a specific plan by Korean resistance fighters against the occupying Japanese forces in late 1909. The focus is on General Ahn (Hyun Bin), who led a successful raid, but made a decision that proved costly to his band of rebels. Most of the running time concerns his next big plan of offense to revitalize the willing patriots.

That first encounter earned him the vicious enmity of defeated Japanese Major Mori (Park Hoon), who then made it his life’s mission to kill Ahn, as an even higher priority than protecting and advancing his country’s goals of annexation and dominance over their neighbor. As in every action film from China or Korea covering any period of Japanese invasions and occupations, the outsiders are depicted as ruthless and brutal. I don’t think they plan on selling many tickets in Tokyo theaters.

The producers spared no expense in providing exceptional sets, scenery, props and costumes. That includes some locations in Latvia, since part of the heroes’ plot unfolds in wintry Russia. Several action sequences are also riveting in scope and detail. The first major clash is not for the faint of heart. Same for some of the torture methods deployed against captured resistors. There’s an extra element of suspense provided by reasons to believe there’s a mole among the Koreans’ inner circle. There’s no use of martial arts or f/x-enhanced fighting to detract from the sense of historical realism.

For Koreans, or those who identify with them, the story should feel inspirational, as the resistance fighters are shown as noble and determined despite overwhelming odds against them. Even when they disagree over tactics, their commitment to regaining freedom is unwavering. For others, the intrigue may grow a bit tedious, as quiet machinations and discussions in dark, secretive locations take up a huge chunk of the nearly two-hour running time. For the amount of dialog, we learn relatively little about the main characters’ backstories and natures compared to most such offerings. That limits the degree of empathy one might develop with any of them. Even so, there’s much to admire – especially for those who connect viscerally with the period and events.

HARBIN, in Korean and Japanese with English subtitles, opens in theaters on Friday, Jan. 4.

RATING: 2 out of 4 stars

DUNE: PART 2 – Review

TIMOTHÉE CHALAMET as Paul Atreides in Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ action adventure “DUNE: PART TWO,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. © 2023 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved

If you were perhaps underwhelmed by the first DUNE movie, DUNE: PART 2 brings the real pay-off for the hype of the first. DUNE: PART 2 is a true movie epic, with big name cast led by Timothée Chalamet, great special effects battles and a fight for freedom with a tense, stirring tale with competing ambitions more in the vein of “Game of Thrones” than Marvel’s straightforward good versus evil battles, with a religious prophecy mixed with space-spanning political ambitions in a fight for independence and over valuable resources. The first movie was needed to set the stage for this epic struggle but it was mere prologue compared to this massive, immersive tale that is part coming of age, part fight for freedom by an oppressed indigenous people, the power of belief, a master plan for power, and a struggle for control of an empire, all brilliantly pulled off in grand entertainment. A struggle for self-determination on a resource-rich land, a struggle for control in a grand chess game of power, along with personal dreams and the power of belief, has the ring of the contemporary world and human history, as well as enduring themes of literature.

Oscar-winning French-Canadian director Denis Villeneuve, whose past successes include BLADERUNNER 2049, again directs, and truly makes this one a thrilling epic. In addition to stunning visual effects, masterful direction, great storytelling, DUNE 2 has an impressive cast of international stars, including Zendaya, Rebecca Ferguson, Javier Bardem, Florence Pugh, Dave Bautista, Christopher Walken, Stellan Skarsgård, Charlotte Rampling, Austin Butler, Léa Seydoux, and Josh Brolin.

Nearly all good science fiction tales are commentary on human society, despite being set of distant planets and battles in outer space. Not everyone is a fan of science fiction, and no matter how good the story, and the novel “Dune” also added the challenge of blending in medieval-like aspect of fantasy tales, with nobles, wizards and court-intrigue. But for those of us who enjoy science fiction’s ‘what-if” speculations, like this writer, or the space-set fantasy novels that followed Frank Herbert’s genre-bending novel, DUNE 2 is that rare movie that truly captures the imagination and message of a classic science fiction world, and experience that is magical and thrilling both.

DUNE 2 picks up where the first film left off, although it opens with a little recap to refresh the memory, on the desert planet of Arrakis, called Dune by the native population, the Fremen. Young Paul Atreides (Timothée Chalamet) and his mother Jessica (Rebecca Ferguson) are all that remain of their family after the invading brutal House of Harkonnen, led by bloated, floating, evil Baron Harkonnen (Stellan Skarsgård) and his nephew Beast Rabban (Dave Bautista), wiped out both the fighting forces and other members of the House of Atreides, including Paul’s father, Duke Leto Atreides.

Although it was the House of Harkonnen that attacked, it was the Emperor (Christopher Walken) who was behind it, advised by his Bene Gesserit priestess-advisor Reverend Mother Mohiam (Charlotte Rampling). The Emperor removed control of the valuable planet Arrakis, the lucrative source of the “spice” essential for interstellar travel, from the House of Harkonnen with hopes it would spark a war that would wipe out the House of Atreides, a secret plot revealed in the first film. With the Atreides seemingly eliminated, the Harkonnen, led on planet by Dave Bautista’s hot-tempered Beast Rabban, set out to subdue the troublesome Freemen and re-start the lucrative “spice” mining industry.

Escaping from their Harkonnen captors, with the help of the special psychic skills of Paul’s mother, a member of the powerful, witch-like order of the Bene Gesserit, Paul and Jessica flee into the desert. Two connect with the indigenous Fremen people, meeting Fremen leader Stilgar (Javier Bardem) and beautiful rebel warrior Chani (Zendaya). Aided in part by a prophesy about a messiah that Paul seems to fit, young aristocrat Paul and his mother Jessica join the Fremen in their fight for freedom, setting the epic on its way.

But that prophesy is also part of a chess game set in motion by the shadowy Bene Gesserit. They have blended in with the Fremen, whispering about a savior from off-planet among the Freemen until a religious belief takes hold. When Paul appears, he shows all the foretold signs and, despite his denial of being the Mahdi, the belief grows among the Fremen along with a powerful following.

Previous attempts to bring Frank Herbert’s bestselling science fiction novel “Dune” to the big screen have not met with success, despite the novel being an enormous, genre-changing hit when it was first published in the mid-1960s and into the 1970s. But that has changed with this film, partly because of advances in F/X but also due to this director and fine cast, and the decision to treat the story as the human epic tale it really is. Although set in a future time and place far, far away, the story is grounded in human struggle, greed and ambitions, against a backdrop of the power of religious belief and filled with battles over precious resources and for freedom.

DUNE 2 works on every level, with fabulous special effects, a twisty tense story grounded both in human history and the present, and an epic hero tale on a grand scale, with excellent action performances and pulse pounding action. Director Denis Villeneuve brings to bear the same skill he showed in his previous science fiction tale BLADERUNNER 2049, and his skill with difficult human storytelling he showed in films like Incendies

Art direction helps craft the worlds along with world-class F/X. The Harkonnen world is often in black-and-white, suggesting increasingly the films of Nazi power and even the military parades of the Soviet Union. At other times, it is the coliseum-packing gladiator battles, with Austin Butler, shedding his Elvis charm (and most of his hair) as a crazed, violent young member of the famously-vicious Harkonnen. Location shooting in Jordan helped create the desert planet of Arrakis, called Dune by the native Fremen, and the sandworms are huge, impressive and plentiful.

Even if you didn’t care for the first one, DUNE: PART 2 is an epic delight well worth a trip to the theater, hopefully to see in on the biggest screen possible.

DUNE opens Friday, Mar. 1, in theaters.

RATING: 4 out of 4 stars

KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON – Review

Lily Gladstone and Leonardo DiCaprio in “Killers of the Flower Moon,” premiering in theaters around the world on October 20, 2023. Courtesy of AppleTV+

In the 1920s, the people of the Osage Nation became the richest people on earth after oil was discovered under their supposedly worthless land. The money drew ambitious white men and not long after, Osage began to die in a series of suspicious deaths, some of which were clearly murder. Based on journalist David Grann’s bestselling non-fiction book “Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI,” Martin Scorsese’s KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON turns that non-fiction book into drama that combines elements of romance, mystery, and the history of the 1920s Osage murders, in an epic Western thriller starring Leo DiCaprio, Robert De Niro and Lily Gladstone.

Grann’s non-fiction book details these killings and suspicious deaths, which occurred as fortune-hunting white men found that marrying Osage women was a way to access the Osage Nation’s wealth. Their arrival was followed by a series of brutal, mysterious deaths, first noticed in 1921, but continuing for a long time with little investigation by the local authorities charged with overseeing law enforcement on tribal lands.

Scorsese turns this horrendous bit of history into an epic tale of evil, greed and deceit set in a sweeping Western landscape with one of unexpected love, in a visually lush, moving, tragic film. The film was a hit a Cannes, where it debuted out of competition. The film has resonated with both critics and audiences, but the most positive responses seem to come from those who read the bestselling non-fiction book. There is no need to have read the book to follow the story but it seems that having done so might deepen understanding of the Osage Nation’s plight. Scorsese’s film focuses primarily on this one story, while the non-fiction book takes a broader view.

Scorsese’ movie follows the deaths in one particular Osage family, of which Mollie Kyle is one daughter of the ailing matriarch, played by legendary Native actresses Tantoo Cardinal. Ernest Burkhart (Leonardo DiCaprio) returns from World War I with a war injury that limits the kind of physical work he can do, and comes to stay with his uncle William Hale (Robert DeNiro), known as King, hoping to find work. The uncle has a prosperous ranch within the Osage reservation but his land has no oil. Having lived there so long, King Hale has established friendly ties with the Osage Nation, and even speaks the language, but he is also a powerful man some fear. King sees an opportunity with his handsome but not-too-bright young nephew, and before long he is hinting that his nephew might want to marry one of the Osage women, and even offers some advice when speaking to them.

Ernest listens politely but doesn’t entirely buy his uncle’s idea. Still, in addition to doing odd jobs for his uncle while living in his mansion, Ernest also drives an informal taxi service since most of the Osage don’t drive. While richer Osage have chauffeurs but others just hire taxis like Ernest’s. Waiting for potential fares, he spots and taken by one pretty young Osage woman, Mollie Kyle (Lily Gladstone). She coolly rebuffs his offer, and his flirtatious advances. Yet, later when she does need a ride and he again badgers her to let him drive her, she begrudgingly gives in.

She remains stand-offish during the ride but over the next days, his persistence and good humor start to amuse her, and she softens. “He’s dumb but he’s handsome,” she tells her sister, shortly before she invites him to dinner at her home, a mansion she shares with her aging mother Lizzie Q (Tantoo Cardinal).

Ernest is truly smitten almost from the start and Mollie eventually falls for him too. The love match certainly is convenient for the uncle who has his own plan for his nephew’s new wife and her family.

Leonardo DiCaprio and Robert DeNiro are excellent, essentially playing against type with DiCaprio’s dimwitted Ernest manipulated by DeNiro’s Machiavellian uncle. But the big revelation is Lily Gladstone, in what may be a star-making performance. Scorsese cast Native actors in several roles as Osage, including Lily Gladstone, who is of Piegan Blackfeet and Nez Perce heritage and grew up on the Blackfeet reservation, but she is also a cousin of British former prime minister William Gladstone. She gave standout performances in small roles in two Kelly Reichert films, CERTAIN WOMEN and FIRST COW, but this larger starring part gives her a chance to really shine. And shine she does, nearly stealing the movie from her more famous costars.

Robert DeNiro’s uncle King is all sweetness and solicitousness when dealing with the Osage, and even his nephew Ernest, most of the time, but he can forcefully, frighteningly pivot if he doesn’t get his way. Even in his smiling mode, DeNiro’s King has an underlying current of menace. The Osage deal with him as a friend in public but when just among themselves, there is fear and growing suspicion. Ernest isn’t the only white man to marry into Mollie’s family, and the family trait of diabetes means that Mollie, her mother and one sister are often sickly, in this pre-insulin era. DiCaprio’s Ernest gives mixed messages about who he is and his true motives, seeming to truly waver between good and bad, although we are never certain, and perhaps Ernest isn’t either.

But as people start to turn up dead, even in Mollie’s family, in freak accidents and even clear murdered but with no suspect found, things grow tense and then frantic. The Osage leaders know the community is under attack but are powerless to stop it.

Several messages and messengers are sent to the federal government back east, alerting them to the murders, with little effect. Finally a representative of the newly-formed FBI appears, in the form of seemingly mild-manner official, played well by Jesse Plemons.

Epic is the right word to describe this drama, as this film runs about three and a half hours. However, the film is so well structured, so involving and gripping, and so perfectly paced, that one does not feel the running time.

The photography is stunning, as are the costumes and careful attention to period details, making the film both an immersive experience and visually pleasing. In an opening scene, oil gushes from the ground, spewing over some Osage men transversing the windswept plain, symbolicly covering them. In another moment, a huge fire fills the screen in a nighttime scene, creating a horrifying image that mirrors the growing panic of the Osage people under attack by the hidden foe. Eventually tTension is so thick as the drama unfolds that both the characters and the audience are on edge.

Scorsese also skillfully uses a number of period-appropriate techniques to give us a strong sense of time and place for this moving drama. These include written text in a form that resembles title cards in silent movies of the era, newspaper headlines and newsreel footage in movie theaters referencing the Tulsa Massacre, which overlapped these events, and period appropriate jazz, blues and old-time country music. Towards the end, Scorsese uses a radio drama format in a thrillingly effective scene.

One does not have to have read the excellent non-fiction book to follow this tale of love, betrayal and murder, but having read the book deepens one’s understanding of the history it depicts. The film only lightly touches on details such as that Osage were among the peoples relocated to what would become Oklahoma in the Trail of Tears tragedy. Like the Cherokee, the Osage had made a decision to partly assimilate while retaining parts of their culture, in their own fashion, trading with the white economy and adopting some of white culture such as a written language. The hope was to avoid the annihilation happening to other Native peoples, by becoming “civilized” and working in partnership with whites.

The drama unfolds in stages, smoothly shifting at each step, first a romance and family drama, then a crime drama and mystery, then a courtroom drama. At each pivot point, the characters develop and transform, revealing more of their true nature or being changed by events. The end is both heart breaking and exactly as it should be. It all adds up to a stunning piece of cinema on a unjustly forgotten moment of in the long history of injustices toward Native peoples. KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON is a masterpiece movie by a master filmmaker, which seems a likely Oscar winner.

KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON opens in theaters on Friday, Oct. 20.

RATING: 4 out of 4 stars

OPPENHEIMER – Review

Cillian Murphy is J. Robert Oppenheimer in OPPENHEIMER, written, produced, and directed by Christopher Nolan. Courtesy of Universal

“Now I am become Death, the Destroyer of Worlds” is the famous quote from the Bhagavad Gita that physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer spoke upon witnessing the first denotation of a nuclear device, as the world entered the new era of nuclear weapons. OPPENHEIMER is Christopher Nolan’s epic drama about Oppenheimer, his work on the Manhattan Project, and his treatment after the war. The biographical drama starts like a historical thriller and ends like a profound warning to the world, all set against the sweep of history that changed the world.

Based on the Pulitzer Prize-winning biography “American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer” by Kai Bird and Martin J. Sherwin, Nolan’s epic film in fact opens with a reminder of that myth of the man who stole fire from the gods and was punished eternally for his deed. OPPENHEIMER explores the theoretical physicist’s life, particularly his work on the WWII race to build a nuclear bomb before the Nazi Germany, known as the Manhattan Project, and then the post-war aftermath, when Oppenheimer, haunted by the world-destructive weapon that he helped unleash on the world, sought to rein in that danger, which pitted him against a military eager to launch the Cold War arms race, making Oppenheimer a target for communist-hunting investigations.

J. Robert Oppenheimer (Cillian Murphy) was the brilliant theoretical physicist who was selected to run the Manhattan Project, the secret U.S. project to beat Nazi Germany to building an atomic bomb. The young physicist is recruited for that job by Lt. General Leslie Groves Jr. (Matt Damon). Oppenheimer seemed an unlikely choice, the New York-born son of a wealthy Jewish family and an autodidact who read literature and poetry, spoke several languages and read the Hindu sacred text, the Bhagavad Gita, in the original Sanskrit, yet Oppenheimer actively seeks the job, eager to help defeat the Nazis, partly because of what was happening to Jewish people in Europe. Oppenheimer shared his family’s left-leaning political views, and even partied with some communists, but none of that was remarkable or uncommon in that time period, when Americans were still unaware of what was really happening in Stalin’s Soviet Union.

Immediately, Oppenheimer realizes the Manhattan Project has an unexpected edge over the Nazis, despite Germany’s over-a-year head start on developing a nuclear bomb. Hitler’s hatred of the Jews will drive the Germans to purge Jewish scientists from their nuclear bomb research, and Oppenheimer, having visited Europe as a student, knows many of the top physicists are Jewish or have Jewish backgrounds or links. Oppenheimer sets out to recruit as many of those Jewish refugee physicists as possible, using Hitler’s hatred against him.

And recruit them he does, including Edward Teller (Benny Safdie), Niels Bohr (Kenneth Branagh), and Hans Bethe (Gustaf Skarsgard), along with Jewish-Americans Richard Feynman (Jack Quaid) and Robert Serber (Michael Angarano). Enrico Fermi (Danny Deferrari) wasn’t Jewish but his wife was, causing them to flee fascist Italy, and he joins the effort too. Although Oppenheimer knew Albert Einstein (Tom Conti), and the two were friends, he did not invite Einstein to join the project, but Einstein does appear in the film at a couple of points, and has an important part in the film’s powerful ending.

For the secret project, Oppenheimer selects a remote location in the New Mexico desert, Los Alamos, near an area he has vacationed many times, a region he loves. The desert landscape creates a perfect canvas for Nolan to build this thrilling chase for the bomb.

The impressive cast also includes Robert Downey Jr as Lewis Strauss, the non-scientist who heads the Princeton academy that includes Einstein. Josh Hartnett as Ernest Lawrence (as in Lawrence Livermore laboratory) and David Krumholtz as Oppenheimer’s friend Isidor Rabi.. Emily Blunt plays Oppenheimer’s wife Kitty, a biologist frustrated by the era’s confining roles of wife and mother, and Florence Pugh as Oppenheimer’s troubled ex-lover, leftist psychiatrist Jean Tatlock. Many other recognizable faces appear, in a host of small roles.

Nolan’s film, perhaps his best, is a true epic and its length is epic too, at about 3 hours, but OPPENHEIMER is so engrossing and tense that one does not feel the running time. This excellent film has much to recommend it – its riveting and significant content, timely message about ethical consequences of technology, its outstanding performances from an impressive cast (particularly Cillian Murphy), its powerful and largely accurate historical storytelling, plus its visual artistry and technical achievements – to mention a few of its admirable aspects, meaning that it is hard to know where to start in describing the film. Those who know Nolan’s work will find that OPPENHEIMER is very much in his wheelhouse, perhaps the film he was always meant to make.

OPPENHEIMER is divided in two parts, which Nolan labels “Fission” and “Fusion,” for the pre-bomb and post-bomb world. The epic starts out as biography and a gripping thriller, as the young Oppenheimer ascends and the Manhattan Project races to build the first atomic bomb. Post-war, it shifts to taut drama about his fall, as the now-famous Oppenheimer is haunted with guilt over giving mankind the power to destroy the world, and seeks use his fame to limit nuclear weapons, which angers the Pentagon, eager to start the arms race, and makes him the target of a investigation in the rising tide of the Cold War and a shifting political climate. The pivot point between these two parts is the testing of the first nuclear device, Trinity, in which what had been theoretical suddenly becomes horrifying reality, prompting that famous quote from Oppenheimer.

The film jumps back and forth in time, as Nolan film’s sometimes do, and has three threads it follows. But there is no trouble following the narrative, even if the significance of a single scene might not be immediately clear, and the director aids that by presenting one of these threads is in black-and-white. Two of the thread are focused on Oppenheimer, before and after the Trinity nuclear test, while the third, in black-and-white, is centered on a Congressional hearing to confirm Lewis Strauss for a cabinet-level post. What that thread has to do with the story is not clear until later in the film, but it’s significance is powerful.

From the start, ethical and moral questions are part of the equation. Why try to create the most destructive weapon ever seen? In one scene, the physicists debate that question but one fact looms over all: Hitler’s Germany is already working on such a weapon. If they can’t be stopped, the next best thing is to get the weapon first. “I don’t know if we can be trusted to have such a weapon but I know the Nazis can’t,” Oppenheimer says in the film.

The film’s pivotal moment is the test of the first nuclear device, the Trinity test, where what had been only theoretical becomes devastatingly real, and changes the world forever. It is a heart-stopping, showstopper sequence that is the cinematic highlight as well as pivot point of the film, where the realization of the true significance of what they have done causes Oppenheimer to utter that famous quote. Nolan handles this immersive sequence with brilliance, giving the audience an unsettling feeling of being there in the moment. The lack of awareness of the danger of radiation actually poses is one reason some scenes are so harrowing to watch.

The scenes of the detonation are riveting but the film does not include footage of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, as the story is told from Oppenheimer’s view and it is not something he witnessed. Once the two bombs are created, they are whisked away, and Oppenheimer learns about their use and targets the same time and way as everyone else- on the radio. Instead, there is a sequence after the bombs are dropped, where Oppenheimer speaks to the Manhattan Project scientists and staff. As he speaks, shots of the jubilant people in the crowd sometimes slowly morph into images that suggest the bombs’ victims, a haunting, horrifying effect that reflects Oppenheimer’s inner turmoil at that world-changing moment.

Post-war, Oppenheimer finds himself suddenly famous but consumed with guilt, and tries to use that fame to press for limits on nuclear weapons, hoping the horror of the atomic bombs will put an end to all wars. But not everyone has grasped how the world has been transformed by the new technology, and Oppenheimer fails to see the shifting political landscape of the coming Cold War, making him a target.

The post-war second half adopts a deeper, more thoughtful tone, more like a courtroom drama, as it examines how Oppenheimer was treated after the war. Suddenly, Oppenheimer is world famous, and the scientist tries to use that fame to press the government of the nation he served so well to take seriously the danger of new power unleashed on the world. He wants them to grasp, as one character notes in the film, that this is not a weapon but a new reality for the world. But even after Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the devastating effects of ionizing radiation emerged, many do not see it. Instead, Oppenheimer’s activities, particularly his opposition to the development of a hydrogen bomb, angers the Pentagon, focused the dawning Cold War and arms race.

The film basically gets the history and science right, although it is careful not to overload the audience with the latter. However, this is important to note this is basically biography, told from the subject’s view, and not a definitive exploration of the Manhattan Project and the resulting bombings. That means that some may feel that there are things it overlooks or doesn’t cover in sufficient depth but historical completeness was never the intent of the film. As the film depicts, Oppenheimer did not pick the targets, and after the Trinity test, all control is taken out of his hands. Oppenheimer learns about the bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki the same way every American did, on the radio.

Much of the reason the film is so immersive and gripping is how Nolan shot the film, which is analog, on 65mm film in large-format15-perf IMAX, with ten times the resolution of standard film, and the highest resolution film ever used. This is a must-see epic that is best seen on an large IMAX screen. In 19 lucky locations around the U.S., it is also being shown in 70mm format, the best choice.

Oppenheimer’s lack of understanding of the political shift underway post-war as the Cold War dawns is illustrated in a scene where he meets President Truman (Gary Oldman). The physicist wants to take the opportunity to speak out against developing the more-powerful hydrogen bomb, but Truman isn’t open to that topic. Frustrated, Oppenheimer tells Truman he feels he has “blood on his hands” a grave error in speaking to the President who ordered the dropping of those bombs, who abruptly ends the meeting.

The scene also illustrates the way in which Oppenheimer became his own worst enemy in the post-war world he helped create, as well as the target of an angered Pentagon, a theme further expanded as Oppenheimer faced an investigation about renewing his security clearance, where questions about his pre-war left-leaning political associations, once considered inconsequential, were raised anew in the commie-hunting atmosphere. The film culminates in a powerful sequence that brings all its threads together and leaves us stunned.

OPPENHEIMER seems a sure thing for Oscar nominations, an engrossing, brilliant epic that mixes a rise-and-fall biography of a complicated genius, with tremendous ticking-clock historical thriller followed by a revealing drama about a struggle over a technology with the power to destroy the humankind, and the ethical choices around it.

OPPENHEIMER opens Friday, July 21, in theaters.

RATING: 4 out of 4 stars

ASH IS PUREST WHITE – Review

Liao Fan as Bin and Zhao Tao as Qiao, in Jia Zhangke’s ASH IS PUREST WHITE. Courtesy of Cohen Media.

A searing epic of a gangster couple’s romance set against a backdrop of a changing China spanning near two decades, director Jia Zhangke’s ASH IS PUREST WHITE is an unforgettable journey. Ranging from the spring of 2001 to nearly the present day, we see the shift in ordinary Chinese life in the north, far from Beijing and Hong Kong, from coal mining region and the Three Gorges region, while we follow the lovers’ rocky path. This is a striking epic drama likely to haunt you long after the film ends, a personal story with universal human themes of love, loss and heartbreak told in a powerfully realistic way, as well as a revealing look at the enormous changes in China during their lives.

Jia’s brilliant and moving drama has been a hit at film festivals around the world and has been hailed as masterpiece from an already lauded director, winning the Palme d’Or and Best Actress at Cannes. The story opens in April 2001, with local gangster leader Bin (Liao Fan) and his young girlfriend Qiao (Zhao Tao) in the Mah jongg parlor they run in a small town in a coal mining region. Bin is a big fish in this small pond, fawned over by his gangster underlings and dancing the night away to Western music, while running the gang’s illegal loan sharking and gambling businesses for the area’s older gang boss. The parallels to THE GODFATHER are unmistakable: respect is a big deal, the gangsters call each other brothers, and locals come to Bin with problems. Everything is very formal and organized.

Qiao is Bin’s assistant as well as his girlfriend, and her work as a courier takes her home to the coal mining town where her aging father lives alone. Dad is a sad broken man, still fighting the Revolution by urging the coal miners to rise up against the mine boss, even though coal business is fading and the mine is rumored to close soon. He’s also unhappy with his daughter’s gangster life, but she tells him he must let her go.

Despite her work, Qiao doesn’t consider herself a gang member as much as Bin’s girlfriend. Yet when she talks of settling down, Bin is non-committal. Their conversation proves revealing about both Bin and Qiao’s essential natures as well as their relationship. In another revealing scene, Bin decides to show Qiao how to shoot his illegal handgun, following an attack on him by a couple of young thugs. As she fires the gun, she turns her head away, as if rejecting what she is doing. It is a striking visual moment. The gun later plays a pivotal, tragic role in both their lives.

ASH IS PUREST WHITE spins its tale of a changing China and the characters’ lives side by side, jumping forward in time at crucial moments for both. At one point, the characters find themselves in the Three Gorges region just before the historical villages in the area are submerged by the massive dam being built. Tourists coming to see the area’s sights before they are lost under water mix with lost-looking local villagers being dislocated by the project.

Director Jia Zhangke is a masterful visual storyteller, using striking images and carefully built scenes to draw us into the drama if lives of these two people, as well as the sweeping epic of the wrenching changes the country is undergoing. Where the events take place, the scenes in the background and the minor characters that come and go, say as much as what is happening the characters in the story at that moment.

Although this is the story of a love affair, the real star is Zhao Tao as Qiao, who is really the focus of the story. The actress is the director’s longtime collaborator (and now his wife), and pair create magic on screen, with a character who evolves from a confident girl to a broken soul to a tough as nails woman. While both characters change as their circumstances do, their basic natures remain the same. Liao Fan is perfect as small-time gangster Bin, who projects a tough guy persona but harbors a hidden ego-driven brittleness. The raw emotion of the shifts in their lives and relationship is particularly affecting as it plays across Zhao’s sensitive, expressive face.

Power plays a central role in this story, both literally in the sense of coal, hydroelectric and nuclear and emotionally in the shifting relationship and fortunes of the two characters. The two leads are brilliant in their roles, taking the characters from a kind of cocky innocence to a worn realism, as the actors age from youth to middle age. Zhao is especially good, transforming herself from obedient girl to a self-possessed and masterful woman. She is a joy to watch.

ASH IS PUREST WHITE is a masterwork, an true epic tale of love, loss, change and power in a shifting China as well as heartbreaking, realistic personal story. ASH IS PUREST WHITE, in Mandarin Chinese with English subtitles, opens Friday, April 5, at Landmark’s Tivoli Theater.

RATING: 5 out of 5 stars

NEVER LOOK AWAY – Review

Oliver Masucci as Professor Antonius van Verten, in NEVER LOOK AWAY. Photo by Caleb Deschanel, Courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics

Art and history meld in the Oscar-nominated NEVER LOOK AWAY, a German-language epic tale that begins in 1937 Nazi Germany, and follows Kurt, an artistically-gifted young German, from his boyhood under the Nazis, to life in communist East Germany, and finally in the West in the 1960s. The personal story is used to explore life in eastern Germany under two repressive regimes, and those regimes shifting views on modern art under those regimes. Naturally, the drama also touches on Nazi war crimes, the war itself and its aftermath under communism but the lens is this child’s experience in wartime and then as a young artist.

NEVER LOOK AWAY is an Oscar nominee in this year’s Foreign Language category and also in the Cinematography category, for Oscar-winner Caleb Deschanel’s stunningly lush work. The visual lushness is a must for a period film centered on art, but three-time Oscar winner Deschanel far exceeds expectations, creating one of the many elements that make this dramatic film so compelling to watch.

German director Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck also wrote and produced this excellent film. His feature film debut, 2006’s THE LIVES OF OTHERS, won the Foreign-Language Oscar. That drama also touched on the treatment of artists in communist East Germany. Sebastian Koch, who played a lead role in THE LIVES OF OTHERS, returns in this film, appearing as a Nazi doctor, Professor Seeband.

NEVER LOOK AWAY is as much art history as political history, and both form the backdrop for a absorbing personal saga. We first meet Kurt (Cai Cohrs) as a young boy in 1937 Germany, when he and his aunt Elizabeth (an amazing Saskia Rosendahl) are visiting a Nazi exhibit on “Degenerate Art.” While the tour guide descries the various “evils” of the modern art works on display and praises traditional art, Kurt and Elizabeth listen politely. Hanging back as the tour group moves to the next gallery, Elizabeth whispers to her nephew that she likes the “degenerate” art anyway. Elizabeth is Kurt’s mother’s teenage sister, and she is as wild and creative as she is beautiful. Kurt adores her and she encourages Kurt’s drawings, urging her nephew to “never look away” from anything in life.

The period drama has a truly epic scope, covering about 30 years, and a running time to match, at just over 3 hours. Yet the film does not feel long, never drags and keeps the audience engaged and even absorbed in its sweeping story. Love, art, tragedy, family and sweeping change all suffuse this outstanding film.

At first, the family, who live in an idyllic rural area near Dresden, think they have nothing to fear from the Nazis since they are “Aryans.” Kurt’s father, a teacher, finds Nazi ideas personally distasteful, yet he joins the Nazi party at his wife’s insistence, and her belief that it will advance his career. The rest of the family goes along as well, with the older boys in the Hitler Youth and then the army, and pretty blonde Elizabeth, the picture of the Nazi ideal, chosen to hand a bouquet to a Nazi leader visiting her school. Their expectations turn out to be tragically wrong, starting when Elizabeth’s behavior becomes unstable and she comes in contact with Nazi doctor Professor Seeband (Sebastian Koch).

Tom Schilling plays the teenage and then grown-up Kurt, as the drama follows him and his family through the sweeping changes of the war and its aftermath. Kurt does become an artist, a very gifted painter, through a circuitous path that takes us through the shifting landscape in post-war East Germany.

NEVER LOOK AWAY takes a different tack on history than audiences might expect, skipping some more familiar subjects usually covered in WWII set films. The epic is as much art history as political history, and all the history is more backdrop for this personal story. The drama picks and chooses historical details, based on aspects that touch the main character directly. The war and Nazis are depicted through the child Kurt’s experiences, thus it focuses on Nazi ideas about eugenics and extermination of those they deemed “defective” rather than the atrocities heaped on Jewish people. Rather than multiple battles, the film depicts the firebombing of Dresden, in a horrific, powerful sequence. After the war, the hunt is on for Nazis but party members in name only, like Kurt’s father, are as likely a target as real ones like Seeband.

On the art history side, we see Nazi repression of modern art replaced by the communists’ focus on only propaganda-laden Socialist Realism. Even in the non-communist West, the arbiters of artistic taste tell painter Kurt that “painting is dead” and he must embrace some other medium.

Still, the particular events in this life do play symbolic roles to highlight some aspects of the history, noticeable enough that it seems like more than mere chance is at work where some character story lines intersect. Donnersmarck does a masterful job blending the personal and the historic in this art-focused epic.

The acting is as outstanding as the powerful story and beautiful photography. Tom Schilling is superb as the young artist, effectively depicting him from a teen to an ambitious young man. The actor captures to struggle of the artist to express himself despite the strictures of the cultures he finds himself in, and the hunger to create.

Yet audiences might be as taken with the two young women in Kurt’s life. As star-crossed aunt Elizabeth, Saskia Rosendahl is hypnotic, radiating charisma and madness in an emotional, pivotal role. Paula Beers, who was so fabulous in FRANTZ, plays the young fashion designer Kurt meets at art school, a role she carries off with enormous charm.

Sebastian Koch as the doctor is a perfect villain, a fully-rounded person with the impulse to protect his family, but fully committed to the Nazis’ cold ideas. The complexity and intelligence of the character makes him all the more chilling, as he becomes entwined in Kurt’s life in ways neither expect. It is a relationship fraught with tension and secrets, some that neither realize until much later. The other cast are strong as well, with Oliver Masucci as art school teacher Antonius van Verten particularly effective.

It is best to approach this film without expectations built on its historical setting and just let it sweep you up in its flow. One of the year’s best, particularly for fans of art, NEVER rewards well those willing to make the effort to read subtitles and be patient with its epic length. It is well worth it.

NEVER LOOK AWAY opens Friday, February 15, at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Cinema.

RATING: 5 out of 5 stars

15 Best Film Scores of 2013

2012-film-scores

Contributed by Melissa Thompson and Michelle McCue

The sets. The hair and makeup. The cinematography. The story. The sound. All of the work of talented crafts people are pulled together under the very heart of any good movie – the score.

With the Academy Award nominations on Thursday, January 16, looming like the drumline at the head of a marching band, we thought we’d have a look back at some of the finer scores of 2013.

Listen and watch a handful of Hollywood’s leading composers discuss the art of scoring a film in The Hollywood Reporter’s round table discussion. With one hundred fourteen scores from 2013 vying for nominations in the Original Score category for the 86th Oscarswe suspect some of these names will be announced .


(THR)

Honorable Mention: INSIDE LLEWYN DAVIS from T Bone Burnett.

The soundtrack for INSIDE LLEWYN DAVIS transported us to another time and place. The documentary feeling of the film stems from the Coens Brothers decision to shoot and record the music live with no playback and we joined right in the folk-song revival.

For more on the music, read a Q&A with T Bone Burnett HERE.

GRAVITY soundtrack

1. GRAVITY – Steven Price

For Alfonso Cuarón’s thriller, Price created a groundbreaking score, blurring the lines between electronic and organic sounds, incorporating a wide range of elements, from glass harmonicas to string and brass sections. The score captures the on-screen emotion and vacuum of space as another character in the film and left our hearts pounding.

Read our interview here: https://www.wearemoviegeeks.com/2013/10/interview-wamg-checks-in-with-gravity-composer-steven-price/

900

2. THE PLACE BEYOND THE PINES – Mike Patton

American singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Mike Patton, best known as the lead singer of the alternative metal/experimental rock bands Mr. Bungle and Faith No More, has composed a brooding and emotionally charged original score. Patton’s music guides the viewer through this multi-generational drama, linking characters, time periods, and locations with a harmonic convergence of jazz, folk, rock, blues and classical.

Patton’s score features an eclectic selection of music including selections by Arvo Part and Ennio Morricone.

all is lost

3. ALL IS LOST – Alex Ebert

In a film so devoid of dialogue, this great musical score assumed special importance. Director J.C. Chandor turned to acclaimed singer-songwriter Alex Ebert, leader of the band Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros, to compose the film’s score—his first such project.

“It was sort of a shocker in some ways,” says Ebert. “It’s amazing that J.C. would have that kind of faith in someone who hadn’t scored a film.”

Ebert says Chandor initially asked him to deliver very subdued materials, drones and low notes that sustained over scenes. He also specifically requested that the instrumentation avoid piano. That was challenging for the composer, who had already written some pieces on piano, but he understood Chandor’s reasoning.

“The piano has this inherent emotion to it,” he says. “We didn’t want anything that was ’emotion in a can’ or ‘tension in a can.’ But eventually I started taking more chances, and after some back and forth with J.C., we landed in this middle spot that I think was perfect.”

“It’s about beauty,” he says. “It’s emotional and everything that comes along with life and death, and nothing less. I think that’s the primary subject of humanity—and it’s something that you might want to stay away from because it would be overdramatic. But this dude’s in the middle of the ocean on a raft. Let the music be emotional because it is emotional. We followed the movie’s lead.”

http://alexanderebert.com/

philomena

4. PHILOMENA – Alexandre Desplat

The very emotional score from Alexandre Desplat’s PHILOMENA broke our hearts. We laughed and cried from beginning to end with Philomena Lee’s heart-wrenching story.

Oblivion

5. OBLIVION – Anthony Gonzalez,  M83, Joseph Trapanese

The score was one of the best of 2013 and an intregral part of OBLIVION’s sci-fi landscape.

Read more about it here: https://www.wearemoviegeeks.com/2013/04/m83-joseph-trapanese-and-the-music-of-oblivion/

artworks-000058730164-otv9bo-t500x500

6. CAPTAIN PHILLIPS – Henry Jackman

Jackman displays versatility in capturing both the intense, desperation and terror in the story of Captain Richard Phillips’ hostage situation with Somali pirates as well as the humanity of the circumstances. Hitting the right musical balance of drama and intensity was a challenge in minimalism for Jackman, so as not to manipulate the audience.

nebraska

7. NEBRASKA – Mark Orton

A member of the bluegrass folk collective Tin Hat, Orton’s vibe for Americana music was sought out by director Alexander Payne. Horns, acoustic strings and organ are some of the primary elemental instruments fueling the musical emotion to this story, capturing both the vast landscape and people of the flyover states. Orton, a graduate of the Sundance Filmmaker Institute, also scored the music to the 2014 Sundance premiere Drunktown’s Finest.

Click here to listen: http://markortonmusic.com/nebraska/

despicable-me-2-soundtrack

8. DESPICABLE ME 2 – Heitor Pereira

A celebrated musician and former member of the platinum-selling group Simply Red, Pereira sings to the hearts of children through his scores for Despicable Me 2. The sequel, which follows the further adventures of the notorious spy Gru, Pereira created specific themes for the new characters, specifically 1960s romantic comedy tones for his love interest Lucy and Latin-mariachi rhythms for the evil El Macho.

smb_soundtrack

9. SAVING MR. BANKS – Thomas Newman

Newman has composed music for nearly 100 motion pictures and television series and has earned 11 Academy Award® nominations and six Grammy® Awards. His score goes hand-in-hand with the back story of Walt Disney and PJ Travers making of MARY POPPINS and left us looking for tissues by the film’s end.

frozen

10. FROZEN – Christophe Beck

The second of Disney’s movies that showed young girls it was okay to be their very own heroes!

rush

11. RUSH – Hans Zimmer

With their collaborations on blockbusters from The Da Vinci Code and Angels & Demons to more intimate projects such as Frost/Nixon, director Ron Howard and Hans Zimmer, a Grammy, Golden Globe and Academy Award® winner, once again joined forces for the sounds of RUSH.

Balancing the racers’ simple desires with their frenetic-yet-controlled behavior on the track was a challenge for Howard and Zimmer as they created the soundtrack to the film. The composer captured the spirit of the Formula 1 world.

epic

12. EPIC – Danny Elfman

The rousing score for The Leaf-Men. Enough said.

pacific rim

13. PACIFIC RIM – Ramin Djawadi

Okay, so maybe it didn’t live up to everyone’s expectations, but hot damn if the score to PACIFIC RIM wasn’t one of the coolest of 2013. Made us want to suit up as Jaeger pilots and make a last stand in our ‘Gipsy Danger’.

WWZ_CD-Bklt_VA-15B-560x560

14. WORLD WAR Z – Marco Beltrami

Animal skulls and teeth combined with percussion add to the tension of utter panic and anxiety in a world being overrun by a Zombie pandemic.

Listen here: http://www.marcobeltrami.com/world-war-z

Read our interview here: https://www.wearemoviegeeks.com/2013/06/interview-wamg-talks-to-world-war-z-composer-marco-beltrami/

artworks-000057536474-3q4hba-t500x500

15. PRISONERS – Jóhann Jóhannsson

Giving you the sense of dread and desperation, Jóhann Jóhannsson’s score for PRISONERS left us with aches and chills over a parent’s worst nightmare.

croods

We couldn’t end our list without a quick mention for composer Alan Silvestri’s music for THE CROODS. While the film score conveyed beautiful themes and resonated on a deeper level than words could ever say, we were fans of how Silvestri combined the Abbey Road Orchestra  and the USC Trojan Marching Band… especially the percussion section!

EPIC – The Review

epic

EPIC’s world, which unites the familiar and the fantastic, is a forest unlike any we’ve seen before: tiny seeds look like boulders; rocks are the size of spiky mountains; flowers are gigantic and complex; and a butterfly is nothing short of a flying tapestry. In this world, director Chris Wedge interweaves spectacular battle scenes with intimate and emotional character interactions, and seasons the tale with humor, fun and romance. While the film’s visual wonders breaks new ground in animated spectacle, realism, action and adventure, it is EPIC’s characters and the actors who portray them that take center stage.

Amanda Seyfried plays Mary Katherine (she prefers M.K.), a smart, spirited and headstrong 17-year-old who finds herself on the journey of a lifetime. After returning to her childhood home to connect with her estranged father, Professor Bomba (Jason Sudeikis), M.K. loses patience with his endless stories of unseen people who live in the woods. His life has been dedicated to studying a civilization of tiny people he’s never seen. But when M.K. disappears, Bomba must put his own dreams under the microscope, and find what he’s really always been looking for. When she is magically transported into the Leafmen’s world, she gains a new perspective. To find her way home, M.K. must do more than believe in this world; she’ll have to help save it. But M.K.’s incredible journey to a secret universe in the forest changes many things about her, not the least of which is her feelings about her dad.

M.K.’s stumbles upon a resident of this unseen realm, Nod (Josh Hutcherson), who is all about bucking the rules and flying solo. But his brazen individualism doesn’t square with the Leafmen’s ideals of teamwork and unity, so he quits the squad. Only after M.K. enters his world does Nod discover what it takes to be a true hero. The two find an instant connection M.K. by the circumstances of her unsuccessful reunion with her father, and Nod by his rebellious nature, which he directs mostly toward his father figure, the Leafmen’s chisel-faced, battle-hardened leader, Ronin (Colin Farrell). During a fast-and-furious dogfight, the filmmakers hurtle Nod, his opponents – and the audience – through trees, brambles and fields in an electrifying competition.

EPIC

Ronin’s and his Leafmen’s mode of transportation are hummingbirds – part motorcycle, part helicopter. (The Leafmen characters are inspired by William Joyce’s book The Leaf Men and the Brave Good Bugs, which introduced the Samurai-like warriors. The author also co-wrote EPIC’s story and screenplay and serves as an executive producer and production designer.) Sworn to protect all life in the forest, the elite corps of warriors are my favorite characters and could easily have their own movie. When the forest is invaded, Ronin rallies the Leafmen into action with bravery and wry humor. Ronin’s closest and most powerful ally is Queen Tara (Beyoncé Knowles). Beautiful and strong, Tara is the life force of the forest, which she presides over with respect, compassion and humor. Her unique connection with nature gives her additional and powerful allies. Director Chris Wedge has created some of the most beautiful and silent moments in the scenes showing the powerful connection with her and the land.

EPIC

Queen Tara’s home is Moonhaven, a veritable Eden formed out of living plants and stone, and which emanates perfection and harmony. One of Moonhaven’s most sacred enclaves is a patch at the end of a pond where two of her subjects tend to pods from which Tara will select her heir. Once every 100 years a new pod blooms to take over for the current queen. And who does Tara entrust with this crucial task? Mub (Aziz Ansari), a slug and self-characterized “ladies’ man” and his sidekick Grub (Chris O’Dowd), a snail and wannabe Leafman. Kids will absolutely fall in love with this slug-and-snail comedy duo and their quest to save their world.

Moonhaven’s future has been entrusted to amorphous blobs with extended eyeballs, who fancy themselves as heroes. The efforts of Mub, Grub and the Leafmen will be needed to protect the pod and the Queen’s legacy against the forces of darkness known as the Boggans – malevolent creepers that seek to destroy Moonhaven. The Boggans hail from Wrathwood, a dark, tunnel-filled place. The chief force behind the darkness and destruction is the Boggans’ ruler, Mandrake (Christoph Waltz) who has the ability to bring destruction to anything he touches. Mandrake and his Boggan minions are the arch-nemeses of the Leafmen. Mandrake is tired of hiding in the shadows, and with his son Dagda (played by Blake Anderson) by his side he plans the ultimate revenge – to claim the forest he believes should have always been his. Waltz plays it to the hilt – Mandrake is devious, dangerous and droll. His eloquent and sharp musings and threats are complemented by his vampire-like appearance. The effect is heightened by Mandrake’s bat cape and the fact that the nocturnal and feared rodents are the Boggans’ preferred mode of transport.

On the side of the Leafmen is Nim Galuu (Aerosmith’s Steven Tyler). Nim is the consummate party animal, but don’t let this larger than life caterpillar fool you – his wisdom and practical know-how make him a key behind-the-scenes player in the epic battle to save the forest. Another character in the mix is voiced by rapper/singer/songwriter Pitbull – Bufo. A tough-guy toad, Bufo profits no matter which side wins or loses. With this eclectic group of performers, the famous voices fit perfectly with the characters so it doesn’t pull you out of the movie. The emotional father-daughter dynamic is touching.

From the visuals to the production design to the costuming, the combination in this animated movie is a real spectacle and one for the ages. Blue Sky Studios characters in EPIC are very sophisticated while still looking human. Production designer Greg Couch’s work is very magical and mesmerizing. Art director Michael Knapp transforms a forest into a kind of alien universe with such bright colors. Supervising animators Galen Tan Chu and Melvin Tsing ChernTan make the characters and creatures so real. Academy Award-winning sound designer Randy Thom’s (The Incredibles) work is interwoven with Danny Elfman’s score to create additional magic. Everyday sounds such as leaves rustling in the wind become something otherworldly.

A lovely film for young women, much like last year’s BRAVE, girls will find positive role models in the determined characters of MK and the Queen. The showstopper of EPIC is the spectacular battles between the Leafmen and the Boggans. Filled with giant action, EPIC is storytelling on a grand scale.

5 out of 5 stars

Photos: Blue Sky Studios – TM and © 2013 Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation. All Rights Reserved.

Bring The Family To The Advance Screening Of EPIC In St. Louis

epic-Epic_Poster_rgb

EPIC is a 3D CG adventure comedy that reveals a fantastical world unlike any other. From the creators of ICE AGE and RIO, EPIC tells the story of an ongoing battle between the forces of good, who keep the natural world alive, and the forces of evil, who wish to destroy it. When a teenage girl finds herself magically transported into this secret universe, she teams up with an elite band of warriors and a crew of comical, larger-than-life figures, to save their world…and ours.

Beyoncé voices the leader of this magical world – Queen Tara. Beautiful, agile and strong, Tara isn’t just the Leafmen’s Queen; she’s the life force of the forest, which she presides over with respect, compassion and humor.

EPIC

Other members of voice cast are Colin Farrell, Josh Hutcherson, Amanda Seyfried, Christoph Waltz, Aziz Ansari, Pitbull, Jason Sudeikis and rock legend Steven Tyler.

EPIC charges into theaters nationwide on May 24, 2013.

Twentieth Century Fox Animation, Blue Sky Studios and WAMG invite you to bring the whole family to see EPIC. Enter to win a Pass (good for 4) to the advance screening on Saturday, May 18th at 10am in St. Louis.

ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTION: Beyoncé starred in what 2006 film?

OFFICIAL RULES:

1. YOU MUST BE IN THE ST. LOUIS AREA THE DAY OF THE SCREENING.
2. SEND YOUR NAME AND ANSWER TO: michelle@wearemoviegeeks.com
3. WINNERS WILL BE CHOSEN THROUGH A RANDOM DRAWING OF QUALIFYING CONTESTANTS. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. PASSES WILL NOT BE SUBSTITUTED OR EXCHANGED. DUPLICATE TICKETS WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED.

The film is rated PG for Mild Action, Some Scary Images and Brief Rude Language.

EPIC

Get ready to experience EPIC in theaters May 24th.

http://EpicTheMovie.com
http://twitter.com/epicthemovie
http://instagram.com/epicthemovie
http://youtube.com/epicthemovie

EPIC

Buffo (Pitbull) is a wheeler and dealer tough-guy toad who plays all the angles: he profits no matter which side wins or loses.

EPIC

MK (Amanda Seyfried) encounters a slug named Mub (Aziz Ansari), a self-described “ladies´ man.”

EPIC

Grub (Chris O´Dowd), Mub (Aziz Ansari), Ronin (Colin Farrell) and Nod (Josh Hutcherson) prepare to aid a fallen comrade.

EPIC

M.K. (Amanda Seyfried) doesn´t understand the madcap antics of her father, Bomba (Jason Sudeikis), as he searches for a hidden world.

Photos: Blue Sky Studios – TM and © 2013 Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation. All Rights Reserved.