Friday, December 18, 2009
James Cameron's AVATAR- A journey of one fan
Whenever I am pressed with the almost impossible question: what is your favorite movie? I always have to trip and scramble over the hundreds of candidates... How am I feeling today? Is it Halloween? Is it summer? On a typical day I will say it is split between three films, pinnacles of many avid film buffs, and movie lovers, Star Wars Ep.V The Empire Strikes Back, Jurassic Park and Aliens. After tonight it became apparent that those films would have to scoot around, and open up a fourth spot for a newcomer, James Cameron's Avatar.
Cameron's Avatar first popped up on my radar about 2 years ago, figuring now to be about half way through it's production. For that period of time, people interested in the picture only had one still frame to be excited about, a picture of Cameron overlooking a tube like structure with green screen in the background. That was all we had up until this summer.
This last summer brought one of the most eagerly anticipated trailers. A countdown started days prior to the release of the Avatar teaser trailer. I waited patiently until the morning of its release. Of course, so did many others, and quicktime.com/trailers...crashed. I waited and waited until finally it was made available and I sat and watched. The teaser was fantastic, filled with extraordinary visuals of Pandora, the planet the film takes place on, the Na'vi, the natural inhabbitants of Pandora and of course the many creatures that roamed its surface. The teaser was fantastic but didn't get me jacked, it was great, but not mindbending. The trailer was released a few months later and to my relieft was miles better then the teaser, an even closer look into a story so underwraps that people were growing concerned....What was this story even about?
Finally, after it was announced that for one day only, fans of the future film would be able to sit in IMAX's around the country and experience 15 minutes of AVATAR in 3D, Myself and a couple of buddies registered and sat for an hour in line waiting for our actual AVATAR teaser. The subsequent scenes put the few doubts in my mind to rest. This 3D blew me away, and that very moment I knew I was watching history unfold. The next Star Wars was on screen. Another benchmark in cinematic history was about to be revealed.
Cut to, last night, dinner time, a large group of us head out to Easton to catch dinner and prepare to sit for a couple of hours to finally see AVATAR, a 12:01 A.M showing. After sitting for almost an hour in the theatre, the lights dimmed, and the thumping of the 20th Century Fox fanfare started to play. The following 2 hours and 45 minutes were filled with explosive actions scenes, a moving story about divided civilizations, vehicles, creatures, a beautiful soundtrack and so much more. AVATAR is a rare film, perfect in almost every way. This is the film you follow up Titanic with. Cameron's hiatus birthed a film that will be pitted against other staples of the industry, from Citizen Cane to the Wizard of Oz, from Star wars to Alien. From Titanic to Dark Knight. The trailers could not do the film justice. Those "ridiculous blue smirfs" that online participants complained about were more real then the actors of last years Academy Award contendors. Never once did I question the reality of the landscapes that the camera ventured through. Never once did I question the preying six legged predators of the forests of Pandora. Never once did I question...the story.
Although Director's have claimed that their motion capture is the next step, only Cameron's Na'Vi have succesfully bridged the gap between real acting and CGI. They look just as real as their human counterparts.
The film is a very emotional ride. Cameron has a unique ability for making us question what we know. He has managed to make a film that makes the viewers hate our own species. We side with the foreign alien speices, a species we have only been aware of for mere hour before we begin to pick sides. Each of his characters are fully flushed out. It is not as easy as saying "that guy is bad, and that guy is good." Cameron reminds us that the road to hell is paved with good intentions, that even the best of people sometimes do wrong, and the bad guy can sometimes prove good.
The score by James Horner is one of the most elegant and beautiful I have heard since Gladiator and of course the Star Wars prequels. This is one of the last films in recent memory where the music took front and center stage, and moved the story in ways that could not be possible without it. Horner's beautifully emotional pieces played as explosions ripped a village apart in silence. I plan on picking up the Score today, a must have for any fan of film music.
During the climactic final fourty minutes or so of the film it hit me...AVATAR is one of "those" films. A film that will inspire small children the way Jurassic Park and Star Wars inspired me. Whether it is to become a concept artist, modler, director, actor, scientist, soldier, so on and so fourth... this is film that makes adults, kids again and makes kids the shapers of tomorrow. I was choked up for the better part of the finale, as I though about what this meant to a new generation of film goers, what this meant to older film goers, and especially what this meant to me. Avatar is a sign of things to come. It took one man's unique vision and a team of talented artists and film makers to bring the magic back to the silver screen. This is what going to the movies is all about.
Avatar ****/****
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Fantastic Mr. Fox
This weekend I found myself in the wonderful world of New York City. Craig and I went on an adventure around the city and ended up at the theater. We were planning on seeing Men Who Stare At Goats but we found out that Fantastic Mr. Fox opened that night. Without hesitation we got tickets and were so excited to watch this film so early.
All I can say is...this movie was...FANTASTIC. I was laughing throughout the entire film. The animation was brilliant. It was a true Wes Anderson film. I fell in love with the characters because I felt their laughter, their excitement, their sorrows, and their adventures. I wanted to watch it again after it was over.
The facial expressions were amazing, the soundtrack was beautiful, and the voice actors did a fantastic job (George Clooney, "the great" Meryl Streep, Jason Schwartzman, Bill Murray, Wally Wolodarsky, Michael Gambon, Eric Anderson, and Willem Dafoe).
It opens up Thanksgiving. This film deserves to be watched. It also deserves to be nominated for an Academy Award. I have a feeling that this years race for Best Animated Film is going to be amazing (Up, Christmas Carol, Coraline,...so many more).
I wish I had time to write a longer review but it is 3:28am and I need to sleep. I will re-post this weekend.
Tuesday, November 3, 2009
Righteous Kill
I finally got to watch Righteous Kill. A ground-breaking movie that basically caught the attention of De Niro and Pacino fans because, well, it contains both of them. Yes for a rare moment, both actors starred in the same movie. We had this before if you recall The Godfather Part II, where De Niro plays the younger Vito Corleone, but he never appears in the same scenes as Pacino (who plays the adult role of Michael Corleone in the "present" of the film.) In Heat, a crime thriller, they're both the stars, but are rarely acting in the same scene again.
Now in Righteous Kill, they're together throughout most of the film. I got to say guys, this movie was NOT as good as it should have been. I don't know if it was poor writing, sketchy plot, or just acted in a poor manner, but the movie did not deliver for me.
Al Pacino, the whole time I watched him, I felt like he just didn't care. I felt like he wasn't acting, and he was kinda on a coffee break when motioning through his lines. There wasn't the passion we saw him display in the Godfather, and he didn't even overact as he did in Scarface. In this movie, he just simply, shrugged and said, well we're going to get our money back on this movie for being in it.
De Niro is average, but I don't think the script allowed him to be more than that. De Niro didn't portray someone new to me.
The plot...ehh..it tried to be playful and tricky, but it kinda left a lot of open questions. It wasn't genuine. This movie might have worked much better 20 years ago. It's just too much for it's own good. De Niro and Pacino are old...give them something to portray in that perspective.
Monday, November 2, 2009
"Where The Wild Things Are" Illustration Wildness
A group of students guided by our dear CCAD Film Society, decided to work on a set of poster illustrations for the movie "Where The Wild Things Are". Weekly we will show what they came up with. This week we start with my great friend Graham Erwin. The posters are for sale now for 5 dollars 11X17.
Sunday, October 18, 2009
Stealing Aschenbrand The Screenplay?
It appears that all the rumors are true. Luis La Torre is working in a new film, and from what we can tell from the name, it involves our dear Dean of Advertising Richard Aschenbrand. We are working to get an interview with Luis sometime soon next week, so he can tell us more about this new project of his.
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
2009 New Summer Movies
The objective was to watch 50 new movies from the day after school to the beginning of the new semester. Thanks to David E Merz III's Movie Wednesdays, the Columbus Metropolitan Library, Netflix, Luis La Torre, Youtube, Grant Oaks (Simone, Yoshi, KB, Meg, and Alex), Justine Arreche, the Greyhound, Craig Cusano, and everyone else who helped me reach this goal. I made it to 70 new films and I am continuing a list for the school year.
1.) Apocalypse Now
2.) Monsoon Wedding
3.) The Iron Giant
4.) The Ideal Man
5.) The Motorcycle Diaries
6.) La Via En Rose
7.) Unfaithful
8.) Kung Fu Panda
9.) Vanilla Sky
10.) Up
11.) Mall Cop (I should note that I saw this on the bus ride from Youngstown)
12.) Super Size Me
13.) Bowling for Columbine
14.) Angels In America
15.) Volver
16.) Star Trek
17.) The Prestige
18.) The Birdcage
19.) Airplane
20.) Music of the Heart
21.) Syriana
22.) Stardust
23.) Dead Poet Society
24.) Other Boleyn Girl
25.) Breakfast at Tiffany's
26.) Away We Go
27.) Led Zeppelin Part II
28.) Academy Awards 2007 Short Animated Films
29.) Gone Baby Gone
30.) The Grifters
31.) The Philadelphia Story
32.) The Great Gatsby
33.) Let The Right One In
34.) Bernard & Doris
35.) Married Life
36.) Dr. Strangelove or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love The Bomb
37.) The Counterfeiters
38.) A Mighty Heart
39.) Amadeus
40.) Persepolis
41.) Sophie Scholl
42.) Lucky # Slevin
43.) Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince
44.) (500) Days of Summer
45.) Happy Feet
46.) Treasure Planet
47.) Chicken Little
48.) An Inconvenient Truth
49.) Rocky
50.) Sicko
51.) Vertigo
52.) Desperately Seeking Susan
53.) Thank You For Smoking
54.) Recount
55.) Risky Business
56.) Step Brothers
57.) Big Fish
58.) Blazing Saddles
59.) It Happened One Night
60.) Fried Green Tomatoes
61.) Trainspotting
62.) Public Enemies
63.) Spartacus
64.) Paris Je'Taime
65.) Ray
66.) Julie and Julia
67.) Spirited Away
68.) Surf's Up
69.) G.I. Joe Rise of the Cobra
70.) Next (I only saw the beginning and the end of this film, no one should go through this much pain)
Tuesday, July 7, 2009
Movie Nights
I have been hosting movie nights here in Columbus at my apartment on Wednesday nights during the summer break. If anyone would like to join us, give me a ring or hit me up on Facebook.
Kyle! I would like to see you come sometime man!
Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Transformers Review later today!!!
I cannot wait to review this incredible film! But first I need to get some sleep before work
stay tuned
br()wnie
stay tuned
br()wnie
Thursday, June 18, 2009
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
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