Adolescent humor at its worst
A couple of married guys are given "hall passes" by their wives from marriage. They have an entire week away from their wives to do whatever they want. Hall Pass is the latest offering from the Farrelly Brothers, the team responsible for Dumb and Dumber, Shallow Hal, There's Something About Mary, and other slapstick comedies. The only reason I watched this is because I was at my in-laws for Xmas and they were watching it. About halfway through it, I started reading a book. Consisting mostly of crude jokes about sex and bodily functions, this film feels like it stole a few of my IQ points.
Slightly amusing, but mostly offensive, Hall Pass gets 1 out of 5 Poblanos!
Director: Bobby Farrelly, Peter Farrelly
Writer: Bobby Farrelly, Peter Farrelly, Pete Jones, Kevin Barnett
Starring: Owen Wilson, Jason Sudeikis, Jenna Fischer and Christina Applegate
Rotten Tomatoes: 35%
Metacritic: 45 out of 100
“Film as dream, film as music. No art passes our conscience in the way film does, and goes directly to our feelings, deep down into the dark rooms of our souls.” ― Ingmar Bergman
Friday, December 30, 2011
Thursday, December 29, 2011
Vampires (2009)
Twilight meets Spinal Tap
These documentary filmmakers follow a vampire family to learn about vampire life. Did I mention that this is also a dysfunctional vampire family? This tongue in cheek mockumentary, set mostly in Belgium and partly in Quebec, is very refreshing especially in the face of all the serious, angsty vampire fare out there. The film doesn't take itself or the subject too seriously. It is a pretty dang funny film - goofy, quirky, ridiculous.
With lots of laughs, Vampires kills with 4 out of 5 Poblanos!
Director: Vincent Lannoo
Writer: Vincent Lannoo, Frédérique Broos
Starring: Carlo Ferrante, Vera Van Dooren, Pierre Lognay and Fleur Lise Heuet
Rotten Tomatoes: no review
Metacritic: no review
These documentary filmmakers follow a vampire family to learn about vampire life. Did I mention that this is also a dysfunctional vampire family? This tongue in cheek mockumentary, set mostly in Belgium and partly in Quebec, is very refreshing especially in the face of all the serious, angsty vampire fare out there. The film doesn't take itself or the subject too seriously. It is a pretty dang funny film - goofy, quirky, ridiculous.
With lots of laughs, Vampires kills with 4 out of 5 Poblanos!
Director: Vincent Lannoo
Writer: Vincent Lannoo, Frédérique Broos
Starring: Carlo Ferrante, Vera Van Dooren, Pierre Lognay and Fleur Lise Heuet
Rotten Tomatoes: no review
Metacritic: no review
Tuesday, December 27, 2011
Exam (2009)
Time's up, pencils down
Eight candidates competing for the same
job are seated in a room for an exam. Each is given a piece of
paper, a pencil, and very little instruction. Told that the first
candidate to answer their question is the winner, they are given 80 minutes and the instructor leaves the room. Each
candidate turns his or her page over to find it blank. And the next two
hours are pretty wild. Exam explores the limitations, possibilities,
and dangers that one room can hold. I put this film right alongside
Hitchcock's Rope or Rodrigo Cortés' Buried. Minimalistic and
intense, this film is a great thriller which had me hooked from the
opening credits.
Exam passes the test with 4 out of 5
Poblanos!
Director: Stuart Hazeldine (Exam is
his feature film directorial debut. He has written
screenplays for Knowing with Nicholas Cage, Scott Derrickson's
remake of The Day The Earth Stood Still, and the upcoming screen
adaptation of Milton's Paradise Lost.)
Writer: Stuart Hazeldine, Simon Garrity
Rotten Tomatoes: 63%
Metacritic: not reviewed
Saturday, December 24, 2011
Attack the Block (2011)
Aliens don't stand a chance in the ghetto
When aliens attack a tower block (the British equivalent of the ghetto) in London, they get a rude awakening. A group of teenagers takes it upon themselves to defend their territory no matter the cost. Reminds me of a passage from Deadline about Oakland, CA when it was invaded with zombies "...they had a lot of places they could hole up, and they had a lot of guns. Maybe most important of all, thanks to the gang violence I mentioned earlier, they had a lot of people who actually knew how to use the guns". This is the kind of film I loved as a kid - a film about kids having adventures and being heroes. Loads of fun, fast paced, full of action, and the kids save the day, Attack the Block is part Goonies, part Gremlins, and part Kick Ass and is a total good time.
Attack the Block kicks some serious behind with 4 out of 5 Poblanos!
Director: Joe Cornish
Writer: Joe Cornish
Starring: Nick Frost (Spaced, Shaun of the Dead, Hot Fuzz), John Boyega, Jodie Whittaker, Luke Treadaway (Clash of the Titans)
Rotten Tomatoes: 90%
Metacritic: 75 out of 100
When aliens attack a tower block (the British equivalent of the ghetto) in London, they get a rude awakening. A group of teenagers takes it upon themselves to defend their territory no matter the cost. Reminds me of a passage from Deadline about Oakland, CA when it was invaded with zombies "...they had a lot of places they could hole up, and they had a lot of guns. Maybe most important of all, thanks to the gang violence I mentioned earlier, they had a lot of people who actually knew how to use the guns". This is the kind of film I loved as a kid - a film about kids having adventures and being heroes. Loads of fun, fast paced, full of action, and the kids save the day, Attack the Block is part Goonies, part Gremlins, and part Kick Ass and is a total good time.
Attack the Block kicks some serious behind with 4 out of 5 Poblanos!
Director: Joe Cornish
Writer: Joe Cornish
Starring: Nick Frost (Spaced, Shaun of the Dead, Hot Fuzz), John Boyega, Jodie Whittaker, Luke Treadaway (Clash of the Titans)
Rotten Tomatoes: 90%
Metacritic: 75 out of 100
Paul (2011)
Out of this world road trip
English pals Graeme and Clive (Simon Pegg and Nick Frost respectively) make their geek-dream pilgrimage to Comic Con in San Diego. The pals then hit the road to visit 'alien' sites throughout the southwest. They meet up with Paul, an alien who takes them on a madcap road trip fraught with rednecks, government agents, and fundamentalists. Paul works well as a tribute to E.T. and Close Encounters of the Third Kind with nods toward Men In Black and the Alien franchise. Pegg and Frost have great chemistry and the film is a fun watch with a a few laugh out loud moments. But Paul pales in comparison to Shaun of the Dead and is not quite as good as Hot Fuzz. The film hovers mainly in the area of 'amusing'.
A fun film that falls a little flat, Paul gets an out of this world 3 out of 5 Poblanos!
Director: Greg Mottola (Superbad, Adventureland)
Writer: Nick Frost, Simon Pegg
Starring: Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Seth Rogen, Jason Bateman, and appearances by Jeffrey Tambor, Jane Lynch, and Sigourney Weaver
Rotten Tomatoes: 72%
Metacritic: 57 out of 100
English pals Graeme and Clive (Simon Pegg and Nick Frost respectively) make their geek-dream pilgrimage to Comic Con in San Diego. The pals then hit the road to visit 'alien' sites throughout the southwest. They meet up with Paul, an alien who takes them on a madcap road trip fraught with rednecks, government agents, and fundamentalists. Paul works well as a tribute to E.T. and Close Encounters of the Third Kind with nods toward Men In Black and the Alien franchise. Pegg and Frost have great chemistry and the film is a fun watch with a a few laugh out loud moments. But Paul pales in comparison to Shaun of the Dead and is not quite as good as Hot Fuzz. The film hovers mainly in the area of 'amusing'.
A fun film that falls a little flat, Paul gets an out of this world 3 out of 5 Poblanos!
Director: Greg Mottola (Superbad, Adventureland)
Writer: Nick Frost, Simon Pegg
Starring: Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Seth Rogen, Jason Bateman, and appearances by Jeffrey Tambor, Jane Lynch, and Sigourney Weaver
Rotten Tomatoes: 72%
Metacritic: 57 out of 100
Prometheus trailer
Ridley Scott's new film Prometheus is set in the same universe as Alien. Here's the trailer as seen on Collider:
Monday, December 19, 2011
The Nines (2007)
What the heck is going on?
Ryan Reynolds (Green Lantern, Buried, Blade: Trinity) stars as three different characters alongside two other actors who also play three different characters. Sound confusing? It is, but in a good way. John August (screenwriter of several Tim Burton films - Big Fish, Corpse Bride, and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory) tells a story of characters whose lives are intertwined. Using the same actors for multiple roles could have been a confusing mess but August pulls it off well. Mislabeled as a 'thriller' because it was not very thrilling. It was however engrossing, funny, and unpredictable.
A good film with an interesting pay-off, The Nines gets 3 out of 5 Poblanos!
Director: John August
Writer: John August
Starring: Ryan Reynolds, Hope Davis and Melissa McCarthy
Rotten Tomatoes: 65%
Metacritic: 52 out of 100
Ryan Reynolds (Green Lantern, Buried, Blade: Trinity) stars as three different characters alongside two other actors who also play three different characters. Sound confusing? It is, but in a good way. John August (screenwriter of several Tim Burton films - Big Fish, Corpse Bride, and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory) tells a story of characters whose lives are intertwined. Using the same actors for multiple roles could have been a confusing mess but August pulls it off well. Mislabeled as a 'thriller' because it was not very thrilling. It was however engrossing, funny, and unpredictable.
A good film with an interesting pay-off, The Nines gets 3 out of 5 Poblanos!
Director: John August
Writer: John August
Starring: Ryan Reynolds, Hope Davis and Melissa McCarthy
Rotten Tomatoes: 65%
Metacritic: 52 out of 100
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