Tampilkan postingan dengan label First. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label First. Tampilkan semua postingan

Kamis, 27 Februari 2014

Girls Before Swine: Why We Can’t Have ‘The Heat’ Without Having ‘Dirty Harriet’ First

the heat mccarthy bullock

Make no mistake, “The Heat” is definitely a bold step forward for representations of women in film, and I’m sure you’ll be hearing plenty about how Paul Feig’s “Bridesmaids” follow-up is a cinematic landmark. It’s the first buddy cop movie starring girls! It’s proof that the glass ceiling is cracking, genre lines are blurring, and “Bridesmaids” made its mark with studio honchos.  It’s a post-feminist film world, everyone!

Some of this is undoubtedly true. It is gratifying to see female-driven comedy, and there is a thrill in seeing two talented women tackling a typically male genre. Be that as it may, sight unseen I can’t help but see “The Heat” as a consolation prize.

This isn’t all the fault of the film. Action comedy is a very specific and very prickly genre. It hit its zenith in the ‘80s and ‘90s with films like “48 Hours” and “Lethal Weapon,”  and it’s struggled since.  Most 21st century filmmakers can’t figure out the special mix of action and comedy, and they tend to be too heavy handed with one ingredient over the other.  The films are impossible to take seriously or lightly, and they make for an uncomfortable viewing experience as we’re unsure if the film is just bad, or if it’s meant to be silly in its carnage.  (See: “Olympus Has Fallen,” a film I’m fairly sure was intended as serious, but many people viewed as crackling with intentional wisecracks.)

Now, the reason we had successful action comedies is because they sprang from slick and irreverent action films.  “Dirty Harry” and “Bullit” beget “Lethal Weapon,”  “Beverly Hills Cop,” and “48 Hours,” because they made working the beat cool. The heroes wore sexy sunglasses and leather jackets, and they rolled their eyes at rules and regulations.  They chased bad guys in screeching car chases, collateral damage be damned, and they threw their badges.  The dry sarcasm of Steve McQueen and Clint Eastwood was witty, and their crackling one liners could be nudged further into outright laughs.  (Watch “Dirty Harry” again. You’ll be surprised at how gleefully snarky Callahan actually is.)

The reason “The Heat” seems like something of a let down is that we have yet to enjoy a Dirty Harriet.  There was a time when it seemed she would appear thanks to characters such as Clarice Starling, Dana Scully, Lethal Weapon’s Lorna Cole, Holly Hunter in “Copycat” and even Angelina Jolie in “The Bone Collector.”  It felt like cinema was finally acknowledging that women did carry badges, guns, and could hold their own on the streets.  (Yes, I know two of those characters are FBI Agents, but it’s a variation on the same job, and I am trying to be generous.)  The movies were catching up to real life.

Yet we never did get a female cop as a lead character, like Martin Riggs or Bullit.   They’re usually sidekicks, and too often, they’re raw rookies who barely make it out of a film alive.   They’re variations on “The Enforcer” – aka “The One Where Dirty Harry Gets a Lady Partner” – where the policewoman spends the film trying to prove she can do the job, only to get shot for a rookie mistake.  “The Enforcer” ends uncertain as to whether women belong in uniform, and it set a pattern that films have followed since.  Look at “Lethal Weapon 3” – it ends nearly the same way as “The Enforcer,” and the next time we see Cole, she’s setting up house with Riggs, and pregnant with his child.   Even “Dredd,” a film bold enough to have a vicious female villain, couldn’t resist sending its female cop forlornly off the job.  Contrast this approach with any male-oriented cop film – especially one with a greenhorn partner – and you’ll see it ends with cigars, laughter, and congratulations all around. It’s always “You’ll be a hell of a cop, kid!”, not “Eh, not surprised I needed to bail you out, my delicate flower.”

the_heat_2

I feel like “The Heat” springs a lot from this tradition, rather than the cool and competent sarcasm that brought us Riggs and Murtaugh or Tango and Cash.  The movie is sold on images of Sandra Bullock and Melissa McCarthy being ungritty – despite the marketing’s insistence on McCarthy being the toughest cop of her station – and the laughs come from their inability to pull off the things Axel Foley could do in his sleep (to be fair, McCarthy is packing a rocket launcher on the latest poster).   To add giggles to girliness, they can’t handle the sight of blood! WOMEN!  They just fall apart at a little injury, whereas you can pump Stallone full of bullets, and he’ll laugh it off alongside the audience. Badasses take bullets; ballerinas break beer glasses and shriek.

It’s important to stress that “The Heat” isn’t the problem, and I’ve heard reports from those who have seen the film that it’s refreshingly assured in its empowering message, and nimbly avoids the traps that might make this yet another frustrating exercise in faux feminism.  Even so, this isn’t shaping up to be the Lady Lethal Weapon the world has needed, Paul Feig’s film playing instead like a female version of “The Other Guys,” a satire that benefits greatly from a sturdy genre tradition. We’re getting the satire without the subject, dessert before dinner, and so “The Heat” seems like swan song for a cinematic corner we never got to actually have.  If we never got our Dirty Harriet, will a film like “The Heat” ensure we never will?  Can you go gritty with a female cop protagonist after you already went goofy with her?

That’s hyperbole, of course.  Action comedy cops didn’t kill the police procedural, and never will.  But “The Heat” may make it that much harder for studios and audiences alike to take a female-driven version seriously.  After all, they haven’t been willing to do it before they shoved her into slapstick and Spanx jokes.  Why would they be willing to now?

Categories: Features

Tags: Beverly hills cop, Bridesmaids, Dirty harry, Elisabeth rappe, Hot fuzz, Melissa mccarthy, Paul feig, Sandra bullock, The Heat

Selasa, 06 Agustus 2013

First Trailer for ‘Thor: The Dark World’

[From MTV] With “Iron Man 3? a little more than a week away, Marvel has already given us a look at our next trip to the universe of superheroes and villains. The first teaser trailer for “Thor: The Dark World” premiered in the early hours of the morning, and even though the preview clocks in at just under two minutes, we can already see a much different adventure for the Norse god.

“Thor: The Dark World” picks up after the events of “The Avengers.” Thor (Chris Hemsworth) has returned home to Asgard, but a new force threatens both the god’s home world and Earth. As it’s revealed near the end of the trailer, Thor must turn to his brother and rival Loki (Tom Hiddleston) for assistance when trying to save the Nine Realms from the dark elves.

Natalie Portman makes a welcome return to the Marvel universe as Jane Foster, Thor’s Earth-bound love, who finds herself in Asgard shortly after the start of the preview. A menacing voice over from the film’s main baddie, the dark elf Malekith, played by “G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra” actor Christopher Eccleston, suggests that Jane may stand directly in harm’s way with only Thor to protect her.

Read more at MTV, and be sure to check out the brand new trailer, embedded above!

Categories: No Categories

Tags: Marvel, Thor: The Dark World, Trailer

Rabu, 03 April 2013

THE FIRST TIME (2012)

 

Tanggal Rilis : 7 February 2013 (Russia)
Jenis Film : Comedy | Drama | Romance
Diperankan Oleh : Dylan O'Brien, Britt Robertson, Victoria Justice


Ringkasan Cerita THE FIRST TIME (2012) :

Dave, a high school senior, spends most of his time pining away over a girl he can’t have. Aubrey, a junior with artistic aspirations, has a hot boyfriend who doesn’t quite understand her or seem to care. Although they go to different schools, Dave and Aubrey find themselves at the same party. When both head outside to get some air, they meet. A casual conversation sparks an instant connection, and, over the course of a weekend, things turn magical, romantic, complicated, and funny as Aubrey and Dave discover what it’s like to fall in love for the first time.

Kamis, 07 Maret 2013

Watch the First Trailer for Noah Baumbach’s ‘Frances Ha’

Just when we thought we had Noah Baumbach pegged, the “Greenberg” writer / director arrived at last year’s Telluride Film Festival with a little movie from left field that might just be the best thing he’s ever made. Shot digitally in luminous black-and-white, “Frances Ha” follows the adventures of a woman on the cusp of 30 (Baumbach’s muse Greta Gerwig naturally plays the titular lost soul), as she bounces around between friends, lovers and living situations, as the lines start to blur between all three. Low-key but brimming with an assured, lightning in a bottle energy — as if Baumbach and Gerwig shot the film on such short notice because they were afraid it might get away from them — “Frances Ha” is a winsome and winning delight, a coming-of-age story for those of us who seemed to skip over that part of our lives.

Also, for you “Holy Motors” fans (aka everyone, right?), keep your ears peeled for a toe-tapping homage to Leos Carax. And by “keep your ears peeled,” I mean “watch the trailer below, in which the reference will be abundantly obvious to anyone who’s seen ‘Mauvais Sang.’”

Read our full review of the film here, and check out the trailer below! (via Apple)

IFC Films will release “Frances Ha” on May 17, 2013.

Categories: Trailers

Tags: Black and white, Frances Ha, Greta gerwig, Ifc films, Noah Baumbach, Trailers

Selasa, 26 Juli 2011

Review: Captain America: The First Avenger Aims for Cheese … and Succeeds.

Captain America: The First Avenger has a strong opening hour, a noble achievement.  Unfortunately it can’t sustain that standard of quality, devolving into hackneyed melodrama in the final hour. This is a shame, because a world-beating Captain America film could have created unassailable momentum for The Avengers. Alas, it’s not to be. What we have here is a slightly below average movie, doomed by choppy editing and cringe-worthy characterizations. So it goes.

After the iconic Marvel Studios logo we’re greeted by distant headlights in the snow. Orchestral strings pace the opening moments, faceless men emerging from the shadows to have a look at what appears to be a spaceship. What is it that’s sticking out of the snow? And what does the futuristic-looking craft contain? Whoooosh, we’re whisked back to Norway in 1942, World War 2, at the outset of the Nazi occupation. Hugo Weaving is Johann Schmidt, but he’s doing his best Christoph Waltz impression, and he’s desperately looking for something. Something powerful. This mysterious power source eludes him, and it’s the final piece to his HYDRA puzzle. HYDRA is the super secret science-based weaponry unit that Hitler has funded, and Schmidt is the evil fellow who is tasked with evil project management. Believe it or not, HYDRA is WORSE than the Nazis, at least according to the mythology of Captain America.

Now I know what you’re thinking. “Umm, sure, but when does Captain America his own self enter the picture?” Next! He’s up next, and he stands about 5’4?, 130lbs at the outset of his introduction. He’s small, but scrappy, and he positively HATES bullies. Extra credit if you surmise that attribute might come up again. Anyway, he’s trying to join the army, but he’s striking out, because he’s too sickly. We’ve all been there. His best pal tells him to get over it, soon he’ll be the only eligible bachelor in a town with millions of single girls. The entire “smallification of Chris Evans” effect is handled with the help of Benjamin Button technology, and it’s effective enough to be jarring. Your mind knows real-life Chris Evans is yoked, but your eyes keep demanding that he’s wee. You’re certain that eventually a transformation will happen. But how, and more importantly, when?

At this point, we can all agree, based on the trailers and posters, that Captain America does join the fight. So we’ll leave the rest for your viewing enjoyment. As mentioned prior, the first half of the film comes off relatively well, Tommy Lee Jones plays a hard-nosed general who underestimates Steve Rogers’ abilities. Hayley Atwell (as Peggy Carter) is the love interest, she’s worried and charmed by the Captain’s transformation into an elite fighting machine. Finally, Stanley Tucci is the mad scientist on the American side of the equation, the natural counterbalance to HYDRA’s nefarious plots.

The real problems for Captain America: The First Avenger come when the momentum of the piece is undone by absolutely brutal editing and dialogue. Examples abound, but one good example is when Captain America is scheduled to receive an award … which he doesn’t show up to receive. They call his name, they’ve set up the podium, and the audience looks on expectantly. But Captain America is off doing his thing, or at least that’s the inference. But didn’t anyone think to check if he was actually there before they went up to the mic to introduce him? Did he RSVP? Little items like that kept adding up until they became a much bigger issue. Another example occurs when a gal throws herself at The Captain, he attempts to parry her physical advances, which of course leads to his actual love interest walking in to “catch them in the act,” all so we can have a 15-minute misunderstanding. It’s focus group character management at its worse. But as you’ve come this far, I’ll give you three more rapid fire moments of murderous interaction. In one scene Captain America has done something particularly gallant … to which one of his team members shouts, “Let’s hear it for Captain America!” Cue applause. Another primary character can be heard saying, “You don’t give up, do you?” and “Fire again, kill him!” in the thick of a battle. I get that the film glances wistfully back to a simpler and gentler time but the writing itself pales in comparison to modern hero narratives. No chances were taken, and nothing new was attempted. The film is a composite of what a superhero film should look like.

The film that Captain America: The First Avenger most homages? Pearl Harbor, a prime example of ham-fisted and forced relationships cribbing any sense of authenticity. Captain America punches and kicks his way through the Nazis (and worse), but the movie itself can’t find a foothold. Yes, in the final moments they manage to logically pivot to The Avengers, a film one can’t help but look forward to, but where lasting impact is concerned Captain America: The First Avenger comes up far short.

Grade: C-

FILM CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE FIRST AVENGER (2011)

FILM CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE FIRST AVENGER (2011)

Tanggal Rilis : 22 July 2011 (USA)
Jenis Film : Action | Adventure | Sci-Fi
Diperankan Oleh : Chris Evans, Hugo Weaving and Samuel L. Jackson

Ringkasan Cerita FILM CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE FIRST AVENGER (2011) :

Secara fisik, Steve Rogers (Chris Evans) memang tak memadai untuk menjadi seorang tentara. Karena itu pula ia gagal. Pantang menyerah, Steve kemudian mendaftarkan diri menjadi bagian dari eksperimen militer yang dikenal dengan nama Project: Rebirth. Tujuan program ini adalah menciptakan prajurit super yang bakal diturunkan ke medan laga.

Dengan teknologi yang ada, pihak militer AS kemudian mengubah Steve Rogers menjadi prajurit super bernama Captain America. Sayangnya, pemerintah kemudian menganggap eksperimen ini sudah menghabiskan biaya terlalu tinggi dan karena itu tak rela kalau Captain America turun ke medan peperangan. Sebagai gantinya, Captain America lantas dijadikan maskot untuk meningkatkan semangat juang para prajurit.

Tak lama kemudian tersiar kabar kalau seorang anggota Nazi bernama Red Skull (Hugo Weaving) ternyata punya rencana jahat untuk menguasai dunia dengan menggunakan benda berkekuatan magis yang dikenal dengan nama Tesseract. Steve Rogers terpaksa turun tangan untuk memburu Red Skull dan menjadi orang pertama yang bergabung sebagai The Avengers.

[IMDb rating : 7.9/10]
[Awards : - ]
[Production Co : Marvel Enterprises, Marvel Entertainment, Marvel Studios]
[IMDb link : http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0458339]


[Quality : Cam]
[File Size : 425 MB]
[Format : Matroska >> mkv]


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Selasa, 14 Juni 2011

Box Office: Super 8 Finishes First

Super 8 opened with an estimated $37 million, enough to win the weekend, though it was only the 10th-largest opening weekend of 2011. Still, it fared better than the other wide release, Judy Moody and the NOT Bummer Summer, which couldn’t even crack the top five.

Here’s the complete top five, courtesy of BoxOfficeMojo.

1. Super 8 $37,000,000
2. X-Men: First Class $25,000,000
3. The Hangover Part II $18,500,000
4. Pirates of the Carribean: On Stranger Tides $10,846,000
5. Bridesmaids $10,154,000

In limited release action, Midnight in Paris only had 944 theaters, but it still cracked the top 10 with almost $6.2 million in earnings. The Tree of Life also did well, taking in $875,000 from 47 theaters. Beginners and The Trip were also over $10k per theater, boding well for their fortunes when they gain theaters.

Next weekend, Green Lantern squares off against Mr. Popper’s Penguins. Who will take the crown?