by Kris Katz
Brief spoiler-free entertainment reviews

Saturday, August 25, 2007

The Bourne Ultimatum (2007)

Right from the opening scene, you know you're in for something special. And the next two hours don't disappoint in the least, giving you what amounts to a two-hour chase scene that spans the globe, capping off with some of the most breathlessly intense auto action I've ever seen, and some damn satisfying narrative closure. With this entry, the Bourne trilogy as a whole actually manages to do something highly unusual: every film in the series is better than any of the ones that came before it in almost every way. Paul Greengrass' direction here is tighter than it was in Supremacy, which was itself more compelling than Doug Liman's work on Identity. With Ultimatum, the action is set at a blistering pace with some exceptionally unpredictable twists thanks to its adherence to a believable but exaggerated action, while the drama of Jason Bourne's identity comes to a head in unexpected ways. About the only complaint any reasonable person could have with it is how the camera work all has that shoulder-mounted, nausea-inducing look to it, but really it just makes everything feel even more spontaneous and plausibly improvised. Action films don't come any better, smarter, more interesting, or more intense than the Bourne films, and this is the best of the lot.

10 out of 10.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Babel (2006)

Probably the very definition of a movie that is not for everyone, this quiet drama manages to exist almost entirely in the space between "Oh" and "shit," as you watch each of the major characters in their own story arcs deal with, avoid, and run straight into one horrifyingly real catastrophe after another. It's the perfect movie for a film class to watch, since it's deeply layered so as to be analyzed a hundred different ways (is it about the people who have had contact with a fateful rifle? Or maybe about how hard and yet necessary communication is to our lives? Or just about the consequences of being a child in an world with ever-more-dire consequences?), but as for the individual viewer your mileage may vary. If you're curious about it, and open minded enough to watch a piece of fiction that feels more real than most documentaries, then it is worth watching; there is true quality here. But if what you're looking for is entertainment, just move along.

8 out of 10.

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

The Queen (2006)

An absolutely pitch-perfect perfomance by Helen Mirren, surrounded by solid work all around make this character examination of England's royalty's reaction to the end of Princess Diana's life a wonderful study of English culture itself. Michael Sheen shines as a newly elected Tony Blair. All good things aside, though, it lacks any kind of real emotional payoff for what is essentially a tragedy from the first ten minutes on. Your mileage may vary on the film itself, but the acting and scripting are definitely worth a watch.

8 out of 10.

Sunday, August 5, 2007

Zodiac (2007)

Methodical, thorough, and exhausting, Zodiac is a film as extensive and draining as the true crimes its based on. Adapted from the novel by Robert Graysmith, which itself is a recollection of the case files of the Zodiac Killer of southern California, this film provides not only a superb resource for information on the case, but is as near-to-perfect a procedural cop drama as you could hope to ask for. Every “i” Is dotted, every “t” is crossed, and by the end you feel both educated and full. Director David Fincher is in rare form, stepping back from his usually rich visual style to provide the stark realities of investigative work, and his stars, particularly Jake Gyllenhaal as Robert Graysmith and Robert Downey Jr. as his confidant Robert Avery, provide an exceptional illustration of how obsession with the impossible can lead to ruin. The result is a film whose only flaw is its extensive level of detail, leading to something that feels longer than it actually is. In every way, this is a classic for the cop drama. It's smartly built, poignant, and honest, while maintaining a level of workmanship that remains absolutely fascinating from start to finish.

9 out of 10.

The Simpsons Movie (2007)

If the first 20 minutes of this movie had been made into an episode of the show, it would've been the funniest episode they ever did. Sly jabs at the hand that feeds the creators, as well as plenty of exceptional Simpsons tomfoolery takes place. The laughs here simply never stop. Unfortunately it slips from absolutely brilliant to pretty-damn-great for the next hour and 10 minutes as the location changes, and the film settles into its plot. Much of this is still quite amusing (with more than a few deep belly-laughs to be had), but the onslaught of the earlier portions of the film make the latter 2/3rds feel like a slight step back. It's all still very smart writing, though. The sometimes-vicious and often issue-driven humor of the show is readily apparent through the whole film, so even when things slow down it's still great fun to watch. Really, this is more an homage to what Simpsons used to be than what it currently is. The subversive spark that brought the series into so many homes in the first place is back, if only on the big screen.

9 out of 10.

Saturday, August 4, 2007

Flags of Our Fathers / Letters From Iwo Jima (2006)

Flags of Our Fathers:
Sadly, this is a mishandled movie about the costs of war, wherein we learn the history of the men who became famous because of the iconic Iwo Jima Flag Raising photograph. While the performances are generally solid, the movie manages to lack character, and appears to have been edited by sledgehammer. The narrative jumps all over the place, from modern day, to the battle of Iwo Jima itself, to the years following the war, to even further after the war, and it does so without any of the grace that good non-linear narrative films have, but rather just decides to spend 15 mintes here, 5 there, and sprinkle in a step-by-step double-flashback anywhere. It's point about the costs of building celebrity on the blood of one's friends is a poignant one, certainly, but the movie is just not up to the task.


6 out of 10.

Letters From Iwo Jima:
Telling the story of the Japanese defenders of the little island off the coast of Japan provides for compelling narrative with some real weight, and for the most part offers wonderful focus. Instead of leaping all over the 20th century like a chihuahua full of jumping beans, the entire movie stays fixed on the Japanese soldiers as they prepare their defenses, stage their battle, and ultimately give their lives. Eastwood has to be commended for creating not only a legitimately original war movie, but doing it in Japanese, and in the process making a movie that even holds to many of the tenets of actual Japanese cinema. It does have a bit of an acquired taste, however. Being an Eastwood movie means it's a slower, more ponderous excercise about the characters and less about the battle itself. Generally an excellent movie.


9 out of 10.


As a pair:
Taking the two together is more difficult than one would expect, given they were both shot at the same time, about the same battle, and even use a few of the same camera shots. In a way, you could say they're about the costs of war, where Flags is about the costs for the living, and Letters the costs for the dying. Or you could say the pair is about sacrifice to one's country and whether or not that's a good thing. The biggest problem, though, is that Flags is only an okay movie, whereas Letters is pretty damn good. My honest opinion is that a person watches Letters first, and either watch Flags only if you desperately feel the need to know more, or just skip it entirely. Letters is worth seeing, but being connected to the disjointed Flags just weighs it down.


Score for the pair: 7 out of 10.

Saturday, July 14, 2007

Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (2007)

Color me impressed! So far, the third movie held the benchmark for the series (a fun mystery, fantastic camerawork, and the series' first turn toward the darker aspects of its story) but I think this one might just have it beat. It's certainly darker (tell me the opening doesn't remind you of 28 Days Later), moodier (Voldemort is finally starting the feel like the Sauron-esque boogeyman that everyone says he is), and much more subtly paced. Sure, it loses a lot of the fun that the earlier entries have, but in its place are a genuinely powerful performance by Radcliffe as Potter, a deliciously forboding atmosphere, and the feeling that all the chess pieces are really sliding into place for the series' big finale. Wonderful stuff!


9 out of 10.

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

Transformers (2007)

Two hours of explosive, nerd-happy action. Honestly a movie like this doesn't need to be anything more than 140 minutes of Godzilla-bots beating the crap out of eachother. Mission accomplished.


9 out of 10.