Friday, February 28, 2014

Be Kind, Please Rewind


He’s Spraying it Forward. He’s the…

Vidiot


Week of February 28, 2014

The real lotto winners are your relatives. First up…


Nebraska


The first thing you should do after winning a million dollars is fake your own death, leaving no will.

Regrettably, the winning senior in this dramedy visits his family.

Determined to walk from Montana to Nebraska to collect a sweepstakes worth $1 million, Woody (Bruce Dern) is repeatedly picked-up by police and returned to his wife (June Squibb).

Despite the mail-in prize’s bogus appearance, Woody’s son David (Will Forte) agrees to drive him to Lincoln.

Along the way they visit Woody’s hometown, where his relations and his rival (Stacy Keach) vie for his newfound fortune.

Earnest by nature, this black and white road movie features many subtle yet superb performances from an unlikely cast.

That understated quality also applies to the surprising amount of comedy that punctuates the overall depressing narrative.

Incidentally, nothing makes children want to take care of their aging parents more than their parents winning the lottery.  Yellow Light


Blue is the Warmest Colour


When women have sex with one another do they take turns faking their orgasms?

Thankfully, the Sapphic lovers in this drama answer that question, and more.

Despite attempts to date the opposite sex, Adèle (Adèle Exarchopoulos) can’t fight her attraction to the same-sex - specifically a blue haired artist she encounters on the street.

Serendipitously, at her first lesbian bar Adèle meets the indigo girl, Emma (Léa Seydoux), and they begin a torrid love affair.

Over time, the pair makes a life with one another. But Adèle’s housewife routine isn’t enough for Emma (Léa Seydoux) whose art is starting to sell.

With lesbian love scenes that rival most porn, this French comic-book adaptation uses the waning intensity as a metaphor for the failing relationship.

Unfortunately, that relationship never feels authentic enough to care about. Neither is the 3-hour running time.

Incidentally, in an all-female relationship who gets to nags who?  Yellow Light

***Finger in the Dyke***

Show Me Love


The upside to women dating each other is that it takes them both 3 hours to get ready.

Needles to say, there’s no impatient man waiting on the ladies in this drama.

When Elin (Alexandra Dahlström) and her sister Jessica (Erica Carlson) attend Agnes’ (Rebecka Liljeberg) 16th birthday, Jessica dares her sister to kiss Agnes, who is rumoured to be a lesbian.

Embarrassed and suicidal over the incident, Agnes is saved from death by Elin, who is still unwilling to admit her true feelings.

It’s not until she has given herself to a boy (Mathias Rust), does Elin realize her desires for Agnes.

However, her outing won’t a private affair.

Capturing the innocence and beauty of young love, this Swedish film doesn’t exploit the same-sex relationship for cheap thrills but for a commonality we all share. 

Ironically, the greatest contributors to the lesbian movement have been sexually inept teenage boys.

He’s a Throw Rug Muncher. He's the...

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Friday, February 21, 2014

Be Kind, Please Rewind


He’s a Ragnarök Star. He’s the…

Vidiot


Week of February 21, 2014

Norse Gods used tons of detangler. First up…


Thor: The Dark World


The upside to being the God of Thunder is that you have a solid excuse every time you fart.

Thankfully, the fair-haired deity in this action movie isn’t passing gas.

When a cosmic event creates porticos between realms, Thor’s (Chris Hemsworth) girlfriend Jane (Natalie Portman) travels through one portal and ends up being contaminated by an ancient weapon.

Jane’s contagion awakenings a Dark Elf (Christopher Eccleston) who wants to use her ailment to bring about the elves evil empire.

To prevent this, Thor must collaborate with his greatest enemy - his incarcerated half-brother Loki (Tom Hiddleston).

And it’s solely that brotherly interplay that makes this sequel acceptable.

While all the exciting elements of the original are present, Dark World lacks a villain with enough oomph to save a simplistic script that fails to venture beyond its comic book derivation.

Incidentally, the Mighty Thor is the ideal Halloween costume for Jesus.
Yellow Light

Gravity


In the 1960s women were only permitted to be astronauts so they could prepare their male counterpart’s food tubes.

Fortunately, times have changed, and the lady astronaut in this thriller can now prepare tubeless meals.

With debris from a damaged satellite fast approaching, the space-walking occupants of the Explorer - Lt. Kowalski (George Clooney) and Dr. Stone (Sandra Bullock) - prepare for impact.

Unfortunately, Stone is jettisoned from the shuttle during the shower and is set adrift in space with little oxygen, and even less of a chance of surviving.

Her only hope lies in reaching a Chinese space station, by way of a Russian module.

One of the most mind-blowing movies about space, what Gravity lacks in character development and overall story, it makes up for in awe-inspiring scenery and nerve-racking tension.

Furthermore, astronauts don’t typically take space-walks unless Chris Hadfield is strumming one of his folksy tunes again.  Green Light

***The Sun of God***

Apollo 13


The worst aspect of space travel in the 1960s was African American astronauts had to sit out on the shuttle’s wing.

Oops, my mistake. NASA had no black astronauts at the time this drama is set.

Intent on reaching the moon like his compatriot Neil Armstrong, Jim Lovell (Tom Hanks) heads up the ill-fated Apollo 13 mission.

From a sick pilot (Gary Sinise) to his rookie replacement (Kevin Bacon) to a disinterested public, Lovell’s mission gets worse by the day.

But it reaches its pinnacle when an explosion aboard Apollo forces the crew into the evacuation module.

With their air supply in danger, they must jury-rig a way to turnover the shuttle’s engine.

Based on the harrowing true story, director Ron Howard emulates the claustrophobic environment of a 1960s space capsule precisely.

Furthermore, NASA really needs to helm a mission back to the moon so they can pick-up their garbage.

He’s Full Moon-walking. He’s the…

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Thursday, February 13, 2014

Be Kind, Please Rewind


He’s a Fool’s Gold Medalist. He’s the...

Vidiot


Week of February 14, 2014

Where’s the Skijoring podium? First up…

Ender’s Game


The upside to sending children to war is you save money on smaller coffins.

Mind you, the military in this sci-fi movie is more motivated by young people’s instinct.

Recruited by the International Fleet to join Earth’s battle against an alien threat, 15-year-old Ender (Asa Butterfield) is touted by Colonel Graff (Harrison Ford) and Major Anderson (Viola Davis) as a born tactician.

The prodigy bit, however, doesn’t sit well with the other cadets and Ender is immediately ostracized.

Eventually he makes friends (Hailee Steinfeld, Aramis Knight, Suraj Parthasarathy) and surpasses everyone in the anti-gravity war games.

Commanding his own squadron, Ender must now endure one final exercise to ultimately set about his destiny.

Based on the award-winning book, this adaptation may alter its source material but it delivers in weightless action and provocative concepts about combat.

Furthermore, we can use that gamer acumen to finally kill that giant barrel-tossing gorilla.  Green Light

About Time


To make big bucks in time travel bring retro furniture back to sell to deep-pocketed hipsters.

Regrettably, the transporter in this romantic movie cannot return with bubble chairs.

On his 21st birthday Tim’s (Domhnall Gleeson) father (Bill Nighy) tells him he has inherited time travel abilities.

Restricted to only traversing backwards, Tim uses his newfound powers to rectify his bumbling present until it works in his favour.

This technique is never used to exertion more then when he encounters Mary (Rachel McAdams).

But what happens when Tim has a life-altering experience that he cannot alter?

A hybrid of fantasy and romance, About Time isn’t great at conveying either genre accurately.

With an awkward-looking lead, crater-sized plot holes, and an abortive approach to the laws of love and time travel, this twaddle is prosaic in any epoch.

Incidentally, on a non-time-traveling 21-year-old’s birthday, their dad usually tells them to move out.  Red Light

The Counselor


The worst part about working with Mexican drug cartels is that you not only have to buy a coffin for your wife’s body but also her head.

Surprisingly, the attorney in this thriller in under the impress he’ll need neither.

Interested in exploiting his crooked cliental, The Counselor (Michael Fassbender) partners with an importer (Brad Pitt) who’s in on a truckload of cocaine coming up North.

But when the girlfriend (Cameron Diaz) of The Counselor’s friend (Javier Bardem) hijacks the shipment, The Counselor’s wife  (Penélope Cruz) is left to pay the price.

Directed by Ridley Scott and written by Cormac McCarthy, The Counselor is a polarizing picture to say the least.

While most scenes feature deeply profound dialogue laced with allegories, there are also unforgettable scenes of strange sex and gruesome violence. 

Incidentally, if lawyers started working alongside their clients there’d be lots of lawyers exposing themselves in the park.  Yellow Light

***Space Playstation 4***

Explorers


Sending children into outer space is a great idea because it gets them off of Earth.
However, if the kids are as intelligent as the ones in this sci-fi movie then they can stay.

Inspired by a dream he had of a computer circuit that would enable space flight, Ben (Ethan Hawke) approaches his whiz kid pal Wolfgang (River Phoenix) to help build a replica.

Eventually, the pair creates an airtight force field capable of flight and protecting them from the harsh elements of space.

Employing another friend (Jason Presson) to construct a spacecraft, the trio treks into the unknown universe, discovering some harsh truths along the way.

An obvious product of its 1985 environment, this lesser known teenager space adventure has enough pseudo science, subversive sexuality and absurdity to deserve cult status.

What’s more, since there is no night or day in space, child labour laws do not apply.

He’s a Houston Problem Solver. He’s the… 

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Thursday, February 6, 2014

Be Kind, Please Rewind


He’s in an Uncompromising Position. He’s the…

Vidiot


Week of February 7, 2014

Stubborn people win by capitulation. First up…

Dallas Buyers Club


When told you have 30 days to live, you should go buy furniture you don’t have to pay a cent for until 90 days.

Strangely, the dying man in this drama isn’t interested in ottomans.

In one fell swoop, homophobic bull rider Ron Woodroof (Matthew McConaughey) is diagnosed with HIV and given one month to live.

Unwilling to accept that fate - but unsatisfied with the approved medicine - Ron and his afflicted friend (Jared Leto) establish a network of ailing buyers for the unsanctioned AIDS medication Ron smuggles in from Mexico.

As he surpasses his death-date, Ron’s struggle against the FDA to distribute the magic pill intensifies; meanwhile the disease cuts down his customer base.

Based on true events, DBC captures the confused climate of the 1980s, while McConaughey embodies the physical and emotional strain of the impartial syndrome.

Thankfully, today, HIV/AIDS is a more manageable STI like pregnancy.  Green Light

Escape Plan


The easiest way to breakout of prison is to shank your way through the concrete walls.

Mind you, the incarcerated pair in this action movie would prefer a less strenuous plan.

Hired by the CIA to escape-proof their maximum-security penitentiary, jailhouse escape artist Ray (Sylvester Stallone) goes undercover as an inmate.
  
In the big house, he aligns himself with Emil (Arnold Schwarzenegger), a con that can help Ray get a message to his outside team (Amy Ryan, Vincent D'Onofrio, 50 Cent).

But a rat on Ray’s side is pulling the strings on the secret lockup, sending the warden (Jim Caviezel) and his men (Vinnie Jones, Sam Neill) to end Ray and Emil’s getaway.

Despite its big names, Escape Plan is a sub par throwback to the poorly acted ‘80s actioneers that made Stallone and Schwarzenegger stars.

Besides, at his age, shouldn’t Stallone be breaking out of an old folks home?  Red Light

***Take Action Hero***


The Ryan White Story


The only disease children had to worry about contracting in the early-1980s was Cabbage Patch Fever.

Unfortunately, as this biography shows, by the mid-1980s HIV/AIDS appeared.

In one fell swoop, 13-year-old Ryan White (Lukas Haas) contracted the virus through a blood transfusion and was given 30-days to live.

But it was not only the disease that weakened him, but his school banning him from attending, out of fear of infection.

Unwilling to accept the fate the doctor had prescribed and the principal has assigned her son, Ryan’s mother (Judith Light) hires a hardnosed lawyer (George C. Scott) to take the school to task.

Based on the true story of one of the first non-homosexuals to get the disease, this heart wrenching made-for-television movie may be schmaltzy, but it helped bring sympathizers to the syndrome.

Mind you, the new poster child for the fight against HIV/AIDS is now Magic Johnson’s robot.

He’s a Medical Miracle Working. He’s the…

Vidiot