Best Picture Amour Argo Beasts of the Southern Wild Holy Motors Lincoln Looper The Master Moonrise Kingdom Skyfall Zero Dark Thirty Best Director Ben Affleck-Argo Kathryn Bigelow-Zero Dark Thirty Michael Haneke-Amour Paul Thomas Anderson-The Master Benh Zeitlin-Beasts of the Southern Wild Best Lead Actor Phillip Seymour Hoffman-The Master Dennis-Lavant-Holy Motors John Hawkes-The Sessions Daniel Day Lewis-Lincoln Joaquin Phoenix-The Master Best Lead Actress Jessica Chasstain-Zero Dark Thirty Jennifer Lawrence-Silver Linings Playbook Emanuelle Riva-Amour Quevenzhane Wallis-Beasts of the Southern Wild Rachel Weisz-The Deep Blue Sea Best Supporting Actor Alan Arkin-Argo Jason Clarke-Zero Dark Thirty Dwight Henry-Beasts of the Southern Wild Tommy Lee Jones-Lincoln Bruce Willis-Moonrise Kingdom Best Supporting Actress Emily Blunt-Looper Ann Dowd-Compliance Sally Field-Lincoln Anne Hathaway-Les Miserables Helen Hunt-The Sessions Best Adapted Screenplay Argo Beasts of the Southern Wild Lincoln The Perks of Being a Wallflower Silver Linings Playbook Best Original Screenplay Amour The Cabin in the Woods Looper The Master Moonrise Kingdom Best Foreign Language Film Amour Holy Motors Rust and Bone Best Cinematography Beasts of the Southern Wild The Master Life of Pi Lincoln Skyfall Best Costume Design Anna Karenina Cloud Atlas Lincoln Moonrise Kingdom Mirror Mirror Best Film Editing Argo Cloud Atlas The Master Zero Dark Thirty Skyfall Best Makeup and Hair Styling The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey Lincoln Snow White and the Huntsmen Best Original Score Argo Beasts of the Southern Wild Lincoln The Master Moonrise Kingdom Best Production Design Anna Karenina Cloud Atlas Life of Pi Lincoln Moonrise Kingdom Best Sound Editing Argo The Avengers Life of Pi Skyfall Zero Dark Thirty
Best Sound Mixing The Avengers Life of Pi Lincoln Skyfall Zero Dark Thirty Best Visual Effects The Avengers Life of Pi Looper Prometheus Skyfall
Directed by Ridley Scott (Alien, Gladiator, Black Hawk Down)
Written by Joseph Spaihts (The Darkest Hour), Damon Lindelof (Lost)
Starring: Noomi Rapace, Logan Marshall-Green, Idris Elba, Michael Fassbender, and Charlize Theron
When I looked at the June film releases I was giddy with excitement. Snow White and the Huntsman looked fun and like it would be the most entertaining of the legends adaptations. Rock of Ages looked fun, but with its release today it feels as though the fun has been sucked out of 80s music (which is hard to do). Next week is Pixar's first film with a female lead entitled Brave, another giddy moment. As reviews have trickled out the film looks less like Wall-E and Up and more like Cars or a decent Dreamworks film. I was excited for Magic Mike (and the gay man in me still is) but the trailers make this film look awful. Prometheus was a part of this group for me.
Prometheus is a part of the Alien world. The build up for this film was massive. When the film was announced there was this immediate response from fans of the quadrilogy assuming this was a prequel to all of the four films. This rumor was dispelled, but the creative team behind the film said that the film was a part of the "Alien world." The trailers helped with the build up, they made this film seem irresistible, a can't miss. This was actually one of the best trailers because it did not give away too much of the story, and made fans and non fans alike want to line up to see what the hype was all about.
The reason the trailer was good at not giving away the plot was because the plot is hard to giveaway. The film centers on two scientists Elizabeth Shaw (Noomi Rapace) and Charlie Holloway (Logan Marshall Green) who have found a pattern of cave drawings throughout the entire globe that fit the exact same pattern. These patterns fuel their belief that their is a life form out in space that connects all the pattern of these cave drawings. Two years after the discovery the two become part of a space expedition to explore the place that aligned with the cave drawings.
That's about as specific I can get about the plot without getting into spoilers or the material that makes the film too expositional. Joseph Spaihts and Damon Lindelof scripted a film that has an brilliantly close feel at the start to the first film, Alien. As the film progresses I can only assume that Lindelof, from Lost fame made the film more of an expositional. What do I mean by expositional? The film gets sidetracked by myth and lore rather than focusing on the simplicity that could exist within this Universe.
Ridley Scott must take some credit for the direction of this film; he has a wonderful vision and created and inspired landscape. Scott's is a masterful direction, and his connection with this world is apparent. The problem is that even within interviews Scott gives in to the myth as well. There are numerous connections to spirituality, like a cross Elizabeth wears, and this eternal belief she and Charlie have in something greater. While the myth has its moments that make the film interesting it sometimes bogs down the material, and makes you feel like within religion that the belief that this should be good overpowers the actuality that things may not be what you expected.
While the film was not everything I expected there were some aspects that steadied the ship and kept things from sinking too far. Michael Fassbender acted as the savior to this film; his role as the robot David was fantastic. David was meant to appear human, and there were times you almost felt as though he was, but even David himself says that he was made to look human for this sole purpose. Fassbender played manipulative and caring at the same time, but being that he was a robot he was not meant to have any emotions so conveying these concepts shows the skills this man possesses.
Along with Fassbender the film's technical aspects are strong. Dariusz Wolski's cinematography captures the starkness of the planet while also utilizing the lighting to capture some haunting images in the caves, and even in the ship Prometheus. Combined with the art direction, sound, editing, and visual effects, these elements make this film more than a lost soul, but a visionary world. Love it, hate it, or even if you do not get it this film will get you talking, and that is something that helps it rise above other films.
May was a bit of a bust, The Avengers is on track to beating The Dark Knight, and maybe even Titanic at the box office. The perk was that it is a great film. I wisely skipped Dark Shadows, Battleship, and a bunch of the other bland films. Men in Black III was shockingly better than the preview made it appear to be, and I was glad to see Will Smith back in movies; he really is a great modern day star I enjoy watching.
June looks the be the most promising summer month. There appears to be a great film opening every weekend, which makes incredibly happy. Here is a week by week analysis with June's great prospects, and some of the future Razzie nominees, Adam Sandler will be back again.
June 1st
Snow White and the Huntsman
With two movies about Snow White this year and the television series Once Upon a Time centering on the fairytale princess Snow White; she is seeing a lot of play this year. I have to say the television show did not do it for me, and Mirror Mirror with Julia Roberts looked bland, but this version looks dark/fun. I am not excited about Kristen Stewart as the the title character, but Charlize Theron as the wicked queen is enough to get me into the theatre. See it!
June 8th
Prometheus
Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted
I am beyond excited for Prometheus, this is the film I am most excited about this month (and there is a movie about male strippers). The Prometheus trailer is one of the best for the year so far, it really builds a thrilling experience that makes the viewer want to see the film. I am always baffled how these animated features make it to a third or fourth film. The massive campaign in theatres is brilliant, and looks charming but the preview proves otherwise.
June 15th
Rock of Ages
That's My Boy
I had no desire to see Rock of Ages on the broadway stage, but there is something about the preview and the cast that makes me excited about this film. I have been singing 80s rock this past week. Adam Sandler has made another crap film, and That's my Boy proves this "star" is on auto pilot; he will continue to isolate his audience and push people away.
June 22nd
Brave
Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter
To Rome with Love
Pixar has finally centered one of their films on a strong female character (it's about time), I am intrigued to see this film, and Pixar can usually do no wrong, but Cars and Cars 2 prove they have their duds. Is this a dud? The trailer reminds me more of Disney film than a Pixar film. Another vampire film? This one looks just plain bad, that's my simple analysis. Woody Allen was on fire with Paris last summer, and Rome looks to be a fun adventure as well. The Woodman is on fire (hopefully).
June 29th
Magic Mike
Ted
Beasts of the Southern Wild
Take this Waltz
What a week! So much variety. Magic Mike looks terrible, but a movie about male strippers, I hate to say it but i have to see it. Seth McFarlene finally makes it to the big screen, and his first venture has Mark Wahlberg, Mila Kunis and McFarlene voicing a dark teddy bear, I am there. Beasts of the Souther Wild is a Cannes favorite that looks beautiful. Seth Rogen and the lovely Michelle Williams battle with a struggling relationship in this film.
See it: Snow White in the Huntsman, Prometheus, Rock of Ages, Brave, To Rome with Love, Ted, Beasts of the Southern Wild
Skip it: Madagascar 3, That's My Boy, Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter
The past few months I have paid tribute to three different television shows, Murder She Wrote, Friday Night Lights, and The Golden Girls. Each tribute coincided with my re-watching each series. This month I have decided to pay tribute to two spectacular sci-fi/thriller films Alien and Aliens.
My friend Eric got the idea when we went to see Men in Black III on friday and saw the trailer for Prometheus. When many fans had heard about Prometheus their minds jumped to the conclusion that it was a prequel. Ridley Scott who directed the first film and is directing Prometheus has stated openly that Prometheus "carries the DNA of Alien" and "Prometheus is an original piece of science fiction" about "biotechnology, artificial intelligence, and the origins of the destruction of man." Sounds epic.
Scott started the ball rolling within the quadrangle of Aliens films. The brilliant thing about the all of the films (but in this case the first two films) is that while they center around the same story the stylistic undertone of the direction changes the feel for each film. The original film Alien was released in 1979, and was also re-released in 2003 with material that was found and not part of the original film. I saw this film for the first time in theatres during the re-release. No film had scared me as much as this film did in the theatre. Sitting in the pitch black multiplex at 10 pm at night with a small crowd, the experience was worth it, and why I love going to the movies. I refused to scream out in terror. Yet as the films tagline reads "No one can hear you scream in space."
As the mining ship Nostromo touches down on unknown planet for a distress call the terror builds and the audience is catapulted into following this crew as alien life form board their ship. As the films intensity builds Jerry Goldsmith's score carries the suspense to a whole new level. The music combined with Roger Christian and Leslie Dilley's art stark art direction, and Ridley's Scott's well paced directions creates this beautifully ominous tone. There is no doubt that Scott's direction is brilliant, but he also assembled an impressive cast.
The cast of the film is impressive but the film, and this series centered around the new comer Sigourney Weaver. Weaver's Ripley is an embodiment of something different; she is a feminist icon action hero who kicks ass instead of playing the victim. Like Jaime Lee Curtis who was dubbed the scream queen, Sigourney Weaver is the queen of sci-fi films. While Ripley is a bit quieter in the first film, mainly because the films pacing is a bit more like an old school thriller where the pacing is a build up. The sequel to Alien, entitled Aliens jumps right into the action.
After I had finished the first film I knew I had to rent the sequel (blockbuster still existed). Aliens (1986) is a different film from the original, mainly because it was directed by James Cameron instead of Ridley Scott. Cameron was a huge fan of the original and pitched the concept of doing a sequel to 20th Century FOX. While Cameron was contemplating the tone for this film he was also working on The Terminator (1984). The sequel was released so much later for two reasons, the first was that 20th Century FOX did not believe in a low budget film warranting a sequel (that has changed these days) and Cameron needed to prove himself, The Terminator was his staging ground. The Terminator was a monster hit, and well reviewed, and Cameron's new script impressed 20th Century FOX and thus Aliens was born.
Cameron's script for Aliens had a much different tone. The first film lead me on this terrifying journey, and was an all out thriller, while Cameron made the sequel more of an action film. Ripley is brought back with a militaristic squad to the planet where Nostromo landed. The team became a rogue squad battling and fighting for their lives against more than just one alien this time. There was incredible anticipation for this film because the original was so liked and the Ripley character was an incredible female character. Cameron knows how to blend the concept of the original with his own version of the story; he seamlessly blends the plot from the first film with his own while making this an incredibly great film.
Many people cite this as a sequel better than the original, but to me that's a Sophie's choice. While two films are about the same character, and are part of a series the direction by these two master craftsmen makes them hard to compare. Each film fits within a different genre. The first film is an old school thriller, and while the second film has those elements Cameron makes his sequel more action packed, which works too. Aliens was nominated for 7 Academy Awards including Best Actress, I think the first film deserved just as many accolades. Both of these films are incredible pieces of work. and have only built up my excitement for Ridley Scott to come back to this world.
The slight edge may go to Aliens and the scene below "Get Away from her you bitch."