SIN CITY: A DAME TO KILL FOR – The Review

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SIN CITY: A DAME TO KILL FOR, Robert Rodriguez and Frank Miller’s belated follow-up to the most visually inventive comic book adaptation to make its way to a movie screen, is black and white and red all over. There’s plenty of blood in the sequel, either represented as the color of fresh snow or its natural red. Stark monochrome with the occasional color splash of blood, fire or lipstick is the hallmark of the ultimate town without pity, which comes roaring back to life in this superb follow-up that serves as a sequel and prequel at the same time. Characters that died are back while earlier incidents serve as motivation. SIN CITY: A DAME TO KILL FOR presents new characters and old ones played by different actors. But the film’s look and artistry and the barn-burning 3D mayhem is so exhilarating that one quickly forgives its lack of logic and you gotta admire a film that’s so in-your-face about its lack of morals, values, ethics, or any sense of wholesomeness. SIN CITY: A DAME TO KILL FOR is violent, vulgar, full of nudity, and highly recommended.

The plot will be confusing if you haven’t seen the original and even if you have, I recommend a re-viewing to catch all the references. Marv, the loveable hulk played so well by Mickey Rourke is back in SIN CITY: A DAME TO KILL FOR. This time his story is less tragic and he just has a good time upping up the body count. Dwight, played by Clive Owen in part one, returns as well, though he’s now Josh Brolin (a throwaway line about plastic surgery clears that up) who seems to be in a growling competition with Rourke. Michael Clarke Duncan’s Manute has been replaced by Dennis Haysbert, who’s fine though casting another big black giant like Duncan would have better fit the material. Powers Boothe’s sinister Senator Roark is the central villain this time out and the actor has a great scenery-gnashing time. The major new male character is Joesph Gordon Levitt’s Johnny, a cocky young gambler whose luck runs out when he crashes Roark’s backroom poker game. Other new guys include Jeremy Piven and Christopher Meloni as doomed cops and Christopher Lloyd, hilarious as a doctor who shows how much surgery 40 bucks can buy.

The film’s title is appropriate. While the estrogen-enriched story is told through the eyes of its roughest male characters, there are indeed plenty of dames in SIN CITY: A DAME TO KILL FOR to kill for. Jessica Alba is back as Nancy, the stripper hell-bent on revenge for the death of Hartigan (Bruce Willis back as a ghost only she can see – I kept waiting for her to say “I see dead people!”). Alba (whose bod doesn’t show she’s had two kids since SC1) apparently attended a stripper school that teaches that clothing stays on, but this time she gets to wield some high-powered weapons and join in the grisly fun. Rosario Dawson returns as Gail as does Jamie King as both Goldie and Wendy. Devin Aoki has been replaced as the head-hacking swordstress Niho by Jamie Chung and Lady Gaga and Juno Temple each shine in one-scene roles. But there’s no chick so fierce as the sequel’s best new character: Eva Green’s Ava, the most aggressive movie maneater since….well….. Eva Green in 300: RISE OF AN EMPIRE! Green gives a physical and over-the-top perf as the ultimate black widow who effortlessly manipulates men into murderous acts. She’s flat-out spectacular in the kind of unapologetic arch-villain role that is all-too rare for actresses. In a perfect world Green would cop an Oscar nom for her work here. She plays many of her scenes in the buff and after ScarJo in UNDER THE SKIN and Olivia Wilde in THIRD PERSON, 2014 is shaping up to be a stellar year for exciting actresses in their prime performing nude (I hope that doesn’t sound pervy).

Some may complain the tone and look of SIN CITY: A DAME TO KILL FOR is too similar to its predecessor and that it doesn’t break any new ground. That may be true, but I loved the stylized representation of the first film which so artfully bridged the differences between performance and static comic art in exciting, sometimes beautiful ways and I for one was glad the sequel didn’t go in new directions visually. The 3D is brilliant, adding a cool razor-sharp dimension to Frank Miller’s flat comic panels. The nine year wait has paid off big: SIN CITY: A DAME TO KILL FOR is the most ambitious, entertaining, and artistically magnificent adult film of the summer.

 5 of 5 Stars

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SIN CITY: A DAME TO KILL FOR Comic-Con Red Band Trailer

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This week, at San Diego Comic-Con, SIN CITY : A DAME TO KILL FOR debuted an all new red band trailer, and WAMG has it for you! Check it out below.

Co-directors Robert Rodriguez and Frank Miller reunite to bring Miller’s visually stunning “Sin City” graphic novels back to the screen in SIN CITY: A DAME TO KILL FOR. Weaving together two of Miller’s classic stories with new tales, the town’s most hard boiled citizens cross paths with some of its more notorious inhabitants. SINCITY: A DAME TO KILL FOR is the follow up to Rodriguez and Miller’s 2005 groundbreaking film, FRANK MILLER’S SIN CITY.

FOR MORE INFO : 

WEBSITE : http://sincity-2.com/
FACEBOOK : https://www.facebook.com/SinCityMovie

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SIN CITY: A DAME TO KILL FOR Poster

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Check out the brand new teaser poster for SIN CITY: A DAME TO KILL FOR.

Co-directors Robert Rodriguez and Frank Miller reunite to bring Miller’s visually stunning “Sin City” graphic novels back to the screen in SIN CITY: A DAME TO KILL FOR.

Weaving together two of Miller’s classic stories with new tales, the town’s most hard boiled citizens cross paths with some of its more reviled inhabitants.

Starring Jessica Alba, Powers Boothe, Josh Brolin, Roasrio Dawson, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Eva Green, Dennis Haysbert, Stacy Keach, Jaime King, Ray Liotta, Jeremy Piven, Mickey Rourke, and Bruce Willis, SIN CITY: A DAME TO KILL FOR is the follow up to Rodriguez and Miller’s 2005 groundbreaking film, FRANK MILLER’S SIN CITY.

The film will be in theaters August 22, 2014.

https://www.facebook.com/SinCityMovie

MACGRUBER Red-Band Trailer Explodes

The question of whether the 30-second MacGruber skits on SNL can translate to the big screen or not is one step closer, as Rogue Pictures released the trailer for MACGRUBER today.   My money is betting on “No,” and, after watching this trailer, which you can view right now over at Rogue’s official site, that “Yes” isn’t making itself any more evident.

The first half of this trailer is completely devoid of laughs, and then the red-band-ness of it all kicks in, and there are a couple of chuckles here and there.   It still isn’t selling it for me, and I couldn’t help but notice even with this being red-band there is still some obvious dubbing going on here.

What the f*@% is up with that?

Nevertheless, anything with Powers Boothe and Val Kilmer is win enough to get my hard-earned cash.

Here’s the official synopsis:

Only one American hero has earned the rank of Green Beret, Navy SEAL and Army Ranger.   Just one operative has been awarded 16 Purple Hearts, 3 Congressional Medals of Honor and 7 Presidential Medals of Bravery.   And only one guy is man enough to still sport a mullet.   In 2010, Will Forte brings Saturday Night Live’s clueless soldier of fortune to the big screen in the action comedy of MACGRUBER.

Check out these official stills:

MACGRUBER hits theaters on April 23rd.

DVD Review: ‘The Final Season’

The Final Season was released in theaters but ended up being kind of a sleeper. Even myself, a self-proclaimed hopelessly unwaivering baseball nut, failed to see this in the theater … and I can’t even use the excuse that it didn’t play in Saint Louis, because it did. No, it just sort of passed under the radar. The movie was directed by David M. Evans, who’s no stanger to baseball, having directed The Sandlot and its sequel.

The movie tells the true story of the high school baseball team in Norway, Iowa. The school had a tradition of baseball, lived for baseball and ultimately feared its own demise without baseball. The school had boasted 19 Iowa state championships out of the last 24, but with the next season potentially their unprecedented 20th championship year, things were looking grim. The school of fewer than 200 students in a town of fewer than 600 residents was being forcefully merged into a larger surrounding school district. This meant the Norway Tigers would be no more. After fighting fior the team’s cause, rookie coach Kent Stock (Sean Astin) takes over for one final season after the school released legendary coach Jim Van Scoyac (Powers Boothe) due to his opposition to the merger. What the school doesn’t expect is that Stock may still coach the team to their 20th championship, despite their plan to ensure the team closes its final season with a humiliating loss.

While The Final Season does feel at times like a Hallmark after-school special, it also tells a wonderfully, if not sad, story about a legendary town’s legendary baseball tradition. Powers Boothe actually delivers a classicly gruff performance as Coach Von Scoyac and the young actors playing the teammates clearly know a thing or two about baseball. I never felt like I was watching actors pretending to play, but ball players who happened to be actors as well. The film also stars Rachael Leigh Cook, Michael Angarano, Larry Miller and Tom Arnold.

[rating:3/5]

DVD Features:

  • Audio Commentary
  • The Real Season, a documentary featurette about the true story