Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Zodiac

Horror scope
Review by Vives Anunciacion
Inquirer Libre May 30, 2007

Zodiac
Directed by David Fincher
Based on the book by Robert Graysmith
Starring Jake Gyllenhaal, Mark Ruffalo, Robert Downey, Jr.
R13/ 158 minutes
Warner Brothers Pictures
*** ½ (3 ½ stars)

Most suspense thrillers attempt to satisfy their audience with non-stop action chases, quick cross-cutting scenes, mega plot-twists and rising music. Meet the anti-thriller thriller.

Director David Fincher is best known for reshaping the crime thriller in the groundbreaking 1995 drama Se7en starring Brad Pitt. In that movie, two detectives (one of them played by Pitt, the other by Morgan Freeman) are thrown into the darkest pits of human behavior while on a chase to find a serial killer, known only as John Doe, who uses the seven deadly sins as MO.

In Fight Club (1999), Fincher vented suppressed male aggression when an unknown office employee (Edward Norton) and a soap salesman (Brad Pitt) start an organization that erupts into global anarchy. In both movies, the core of the narrative is a nameless person whose obsessions are hidden from the audience.

Unfortunately Fincher is also known to make typical Hollywood thrillers like Panic Room and the 1997 pseudo-reality thriller The Game starring Michael Douglas. So it is not surprising that a director who rarely makes movies would again try something different in the genre he is most literate with.

Zodiac is a retelling of the investigations on the Zodiac killer, who terrorized San Francisco in the 1960s and 70s, and the lives of the policemen and a certain newspaper cartoonist whose quest to find the Zodiac would obsess them for many years. YEARS. That means this movie’s narrative takes long to unfold (2 hours and 38 minutes to be precise), and the director doesn’t intend to rush things. Nor does he reveal the identity of the criminal.

Robert Downey Jr. plays San Francisco Chronicle’s star reporter Paul Avery, who gets assigned to the story after the newspaper receives cryptic puzzles from the killer who calls himself Zodiac. Taking an interest in the puzzles is the Chronicle’s resident editorial cartoonist, Robert Graysmith (Jake Gyllenhaal), who seems to be very good at solving puzzles. Mark Ruffalo leads the investigations as police Inspector David Toschi.

The investigation, which would last for decades and remain unresolved, would so consume Graysmith, Toschi and Avery that their relationships, their professions and even their physical health will surrender.

Utilizing a minimum of flair but still exuding a strong sense of foreboding, Zodiac is a very quiet, talky (meaning no big action sequences) almost CSI-like procedural on how the police would investigate such crimes. And since the investigation lasted for years and affected so many people, the filmmakers most likely wanted to make the audience feel the desperation, the madness and the loss of hope the main characters experienced, hence the slow, very deliberate revelations.

Downey is on fire as ace reporter Paul Avery, who seem to be an alter ego of the actor who himself famously battled substance addiction. A nomination for his portrayal isn’t surprising. Ruffalo is equally intense as Toschi, whose passion as a professional gradually erodes as years pass and failure sinks in.

But the highlight of the movie is when the investigators confront their number one suspect, Arthur Leigh Allen (played by John Carroll Lynch). In that crucial scene, Allen coldly dismisses each accusation with the most believable of alibis, his detachment to the crimes so chilling, the creepy crawls under your skin. That scene will stick with the audience until the end, when Graysmith finally finds him working in a small hardware shop and looks him in the eye.

This is not the ordinary thriller. This goes beyond.

Sunday, May 27, 2007

Mr. Bean’s Holiday

(review in Filipino)

Bean there, bean that
Rebyu ni Vives Anunciacion
Inquirer Libre, May 28, 2007

Mr. Bean’s Holiday
Direksiyon ni Steve Bendelack
GP/ 90 minuto
Universal Pictures/ Studio Canal
** ½ (2 ½ stars)

Kung tutuusin, isa siyang salot na may kasunod na disgrasya saan man siya mapadpad, anuman ang kaniyang gawin. Nakatatawa man si Mr. Bean (Rowan Atkinson) sa TV, hindi ibig sabihin ganoon din iyon kaagad sa pelikula. Buti na lang, pwedeng tiisin.

Sa Mr. Bean’s Holiday, panalo sa raffle ng trip to France si Mr. Bean (first name, ayon sa passport niya, ay Rowan). Dying to see the dagat si Mr. Bean, kaya tuwang-tuwa siya nang manalo. Pero gaya ng nangyayari sa kaniya sa TV, sangkaterbang kamalasan ang kanyang matitikman marating lang ang mainit na buhangin ng Cannes, France. Malamang hindi pa nila naririnig ang Boracay.

Gamit ang kaniyang handheld video camera, malilibot ni Mr. Bean ang magagandang tanawin sa France bago niya marating ang Cannes. Sa kanyang paglalakbay, makakasama niya ang isang batang lalaki na nahiwalay sa ama (dahil na rin kay Mr. Bean), pero buti na lang sa Cannes din sila lahat magkikita.

Halos walang dialogue ang Mr. Bean’s Holiday kaya konting tiis ang kailangan sa pagitan ng mga patawa at pangyayari. Mahusay na physical comedian si Rowan Atkinson kaya nga sumikat siya bilang Mr. Bean, pero sa mga panahon na wala masyadong nangyayari sa eksena, lalu na’t wala itong dialogue ay medyo nakakaantok ito. Ang ilang gag ay may kalumaan na, gaya ng pagsayaw niya sa gitna ng kalye sa iba’t ibang tugtog, at ang ilang sitwasyon naman ay hindi nakakaaliw, gaya nang mapadpad siya sa gitna ng shooting ng isang commercial.

Sa ilang sitwasyon naman, lalu na sa ending, masaya naman ang kinalabasan, dahil gaano man ka-weird si Mr. Bean, palaging happy ang ending sa kaniya. Hindi man nakabubusog ang kwento, busogin na lang ang panonood sa magagandang tanawin sa isa sa pinakamagandang bansa sa mundo.
[Not in the published review: It plays out like a traveler's nightmare, a murphy's law for tourists until it becomes some weird filmmaker's joke about becoming an attraction in the Cannes Film Festival. Tepid, tiresome and tragically inane, Mr. Bean's Holiday is better off as a sideshow short film in family-oriented theme parks than a commercial release. Parents, take your kids to the museum instead.]

Friday, May 25, 2007

Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End

(review in Filipino)
Yo ho, suki!*
Rebyu ni Vives Anunciacion

Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End
Directed by Gore Verbinski
Starring Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom, Kiera Knightley
GP/ 168 minutes
Walt Disney Pictures
*** (3 stars)



Tuloy ang pamimirata sa ikatlo at pinakamaaksiyon (pero malamang hindi pa huling) Pirates of the Caribbean kung saan magsasanib ang mga pwersa ng mga pirata laban sa East India Company. Huwag aalis ng sinehan hanggat hindi tapos ang end credits, dahil ang bonus na eksena’y malamang wala sa pirated dvd.

Nagpapatuloy ang mga adventures nina Captain Jack Sparrow (Johnny Depp), Will Turner (Orlando Bloom), Elizabeth Swann (Kiera Knightley) at Captain Barbossa (Geoffrey Rush) sa isang magulo, maaksiyon at makwelang palabas na magsasara sa mga kwento ng Pirates 1 at Pirates 2, pero magbubukas naman ng posibilidad para sa Pirates 4.

Sa At World’s End, magkikita sina Barbossa, Elizabeth at Will sa Singapore upang hingiin ang tulong ni Sao Feng (Chow Yun Fat) at ng lahat ng mga panginoon ng pirata para bawiin si Captain Jack Sparrow mula sa mala-purgatoryong Davy Jones’ Locker, at sa gayon din ay matanggal ang sumpa sa ama ni Will na si Bootstrap Bill Turner (Stellan Skarsgård).

Pero ang kanilang pagsasanib-pwersa ang maglalagay sa kanila sa kapahamakan dahil ang Royal Navy at ang East India Company, sa pangunguna ni Lord Beckett (Tom Hollander), ay susugod upang tuluyang burahin ang pamimirata sa karagatan, gamit ang makapangyarihang barkong Flying Dutchman sa ilalim ni Day Jones (Bill Nighy).

Tulad ng mga nakalipas na Pirates, convoluted pa rin ang malawak na kwento, makulay pa rin ang pananalita ni Barbossa at may pilantik pa rin ang mga daliri ni Jack Sparrow. Nagbabalik ang lahat ng nakagisnang karakter mula pa nang Pirates 1 at karamihan ng mga elemento ng Curse of the Black Pearl at Dead Man’s Chest ay bibigyan ng magarbong kahulugan (at katapusan?) sa At World’s End. Bida rin ang mga Asyano dito dahil mahusay ang labas ni Chow Yun Fat bilang pirate lord Sao Feng, pero huwag kaligtaan ang Fil-Am na si Reggie Lee bilang si Tai Huang na sidekick ni Sao Feng.

Di tulad ng Dead Man’s Chest na pantawid lang para iset-up ang ikatlong Pirates, mas may kabuluhan ang mga pangyayari at mas malaki ang aksiyon na parang walang katapusang amusement ride ang At World’s End mula puno hanggang dulo. Pero nagbabadya pa ang isang Pirates 4 na malamang may kinalaman sa Fountain of Youth. Kung ganito kasaya ang mga franchise movies, ok lang magkaroon ng ilan pang kasunod. Basta masaya. Sabi nga ni Beckett, “It’s all business.”


*my review for Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl in 2003 was titled "Ahoy, dibidi, dibidi"

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

just saw pirates of the caribbean: at world's end

yo, ho! that was a fun ride! will write the review for friday, but for now..

aaaargh!

Monday, May 21, 2007

Zodiac

oh my gods i just saw David Fincher's latest movie Zodiac and it's in-effing-credible. wow. well done. will write about it next week, i'm seeing At world's End on wednesday and am writing about that for a friday review.


meanwhile, next week's sched of screenings seem to be Mr. Bean's Holiday, Ocean's 13, and then first week of june will be Transformers, then Rise of the Silver Surfer, then Borne Ultimatum.

Wednesday, May 09, 2007

28 weeks later

my next review will be about 28 Weeks Later, opening today in the Metro. Pretty good direction from relative newcomer Juan Carlos Fresnadillo, thematically an improvement of the first and technically better (although it's already known that the first was successfully shot using a Canon XL2, the sequel uses Super16 celluloid most of the time). Better bring your barkada or any form of protection, you cannot be too sure that the person sitting next to you is not an infected zombie.

pray that the avian flu will not mutate like this. lordy.


Sunday, May 06, 2007

Spider-Man 3

Measure for measure
Review by Vives Anunciacion
Inquirer Libre May 7, 2007

Spider-Man 3
Directed by Sam Raimi
Written by Sam and Ivan Raimi
GP/ 140 minutes
Columbia Pictures
*** (3 stars)

No, Spider-Man 3 isn’t the best of the series, no matter how entertaining it is. But if this is the third of a trilogy, then it deserves a fourth installment – if only to save a series that shouldn’t end with a loser. Spoilers beware, so proceed with caution.

In the movie, Spider-Man is the toast of New York City, Peter Parker (also Tobey Maguire) is getting noticed as a photographer, and he is about to propose marriage to Mary Jane (Kirsten Dunst) when three supervillains appear to change all that.

An escaped convict (Flint Marko, acted by Thomas Haden Church) literally jumps into the middle of a scientific experiment, becoming Sandman. In a few short lines, Flint’s wife explains his condition to the audience (“You are a convict, you are being chased by the police, and I don’t like you anymore”). Why he doesn’t have a job isn’t explained, but because he stole money for his sick dying daughter, we just have to accept this shortcut in the story that Marko is really a good person.

New Goblin (aka Harry Osborn, both played by James Franco) reappears in the movie’s first action sequence to settle the score between Spidey and Goblin Sr. Their brief tussle ends in Goblin getting a big bump in the head and a strong dose of amnesia. In the morning, Harry wakes up with no notion about the friction between Spider-Man and Goblin. Just like a Pinoy teleserye, Harry and Peter are best friends once again, setting up the next twist in the story.

Mary Jane’s career flops after critics pan her Broadway debut (wonder why), but Spidey is too busy with his New York popularity that Mary Jane finds a shoulder to cry on Harry.

And then a black blob of alien goo drops from the sky and mysteriously attaches itself to Spidey’s suit while he is sleeping (wonder why he sleeps with his suit on). The black suit amplifies the host’s power and dark side (check out the Peter Petrelli-style hair bangs). I think I’ve seen this in Superman 3.

At this point Peter learns about Marko being responsible for his uncle Ben’s death, a new photographer threatens Peter’s professional career as well as Spidey’s as Venom (both Topher Grace), and Harry and Mary Jane are hooking up. How does Peter cope? Thanks to the black suit, by dancing. Aunt May (Rosemary Harris) magically appears to give him inspirational messages (“I knew something was wrong when you called…”). And in one quick scene, Sandman and Venom unite to fight Spider-Man (Venom: “I know you hate him, too, Marko, that’s why I’ve been tracking you for weeks”).

Full of clichés, narrative shortcuts and terrible, terrible acting, one can only wonder how this could go wrong considering the same team made the first two installments. To top it off, literally every character cries or sobs in the end as if it’s a Hollywood version of Filipinas. Yes it’s entertaining and the effects are, as usual, way cool, but so is Firehouse Dog.

A few instances are indelibly inspired comic-book style, as when Marko eyes are shown close-up and when Sandman first appears, but the final battle scene is merely an extension of the first.

Spider-Man 3 suffers from being too busy all the time, having to weave so many storylines that any emotion is sacrificed simply because it has to cut to the next villain. Is that good editing for the sake of running time and the so-called pace? Definitely not.

What is most disappointing is that it’s a rehash of story one, plus Superman 2 and 3. By contrast, the Ghostbusters had more New Yorkers cheering for them.

Thursday, May 03, 2007

El Laberinto del fauno (Pan's Labyrinth)


Look inside
Review by Vives Anunciacion
Inquirer Libre May 4, 2007

Directed by Guillermo del Toro
R 13/ 112 minutes
En Español, with English Subtitles
***** (5 stars)

"If you're listening, God,
Please don't make it hard to know if we
should believe the things that we see."
- Home, The Wiz

Esperar el inesperado. Metaphorically profound yet brutally literal at the same time, Pan's Labyrinth is ultimately a soul-stirring elegy on the coldness of reality and the comfort of fantasy. Believe what you want to believe in this impossibly heartbreaking adult fairy tale from Hellboy director Guillermo del Toro. Expect the unexpected.

Set in a military outpost in the mountains of 1944 facist Spain under the tyrannical rule of Francisco Franco, a recluse, twelve-year old Ofelia (Ivana Baquero) escapes the horrors of war and her sadistic and brutal stepfather (Capitan Vidal, deftly played by Sergi Lopez) when she discovers a magical world within a stone labyrinth where a faun (Doug Jones) reveals that she is the daughter of the King of the Underworld.

To claim the title of Princess, Ofelia is assigned three magical tasks involving a giant toad and a monstrous pale-skinned man. Ofelia narrowly fails to accomplish all tasks, in part because of her mother Carmen’s (Ariadna Gil) difficult pregnancy and the growing countryside insurgency, participated in by the outpost’s mayordoma Mercedes (Maribel Verdu).

Ofelia succeeds but terribly pays the price for her fantasies while the real world around her lights up in the red flames of revolution.
Complemented by Cinematographer Guillermo Navarro’s metaphorical play on light and darkness to stress the narrative’s clash of truth and non-truth plus Javier Navarrete's haunting 7-note lullaby, which has been playing in my mp3 player repeatedly for several weeks now.

Pan’s Labyrinth tells two parallel tales of horror and hope clashing within the imaginations of young Ofelia.

The last shot of a single flower opening to full bloom is a poetic symbol on how myths and legends begin.

The ending of Pan’s Labyrinth doesn’t ask its viewers a question, but offers a middleground to those who cannot reconcile whether one, both or neither of the parallel tales are true.

Believe what you want to believe in the stories of Pan's Labyrinth, it humbly offers a compromise to cynic realists and romantic idealists: either lose yourself in its happy fairytale ending, or accept a sad, cruel, and sometimes violent, real world.

Escapism and cynicism are both facts of life.

Still showing in cinemas this week, Pan’s Labyrith is the real fantastic tale.