Saturday, December 4, 2010

Harry Potter & the Deathly Hallows

I’ve remarked before that The Chamber of Secrets and The Goblet of Fire would appear at the bottom of any list I made ranking the potter films. The former is thoroughly bland and based on the least interesting novel, and the latter is just a terrible adaptation. Incidentally, I’m quick to cheer on The Half Blood Prince which is an even more injudicious adaptation but still ends up being a fine film – for me, at least. The moral of the story is that an imprudent adaptation does not necessarily result in a poor film. That’s an important note in the context of the latest Potter instalment. Like any Potter diehard (you know yourselves) I had no qualms about the splitting of the final book into two films, although I was a bit unnerved at the point they decided to split it. More than a few fans have complained about X moment being cut from the film and the solution seems astute, but it doesn’t really work out that way...

As much as the Potter books are about magic Rowling is not an expressly visual author, the whole point to her writing is that magic is only a by-the-way in inclusion and that sort of writing doesn’t work when the adaptation is so judicious. The essential problem about the film is that it seems torn between being an all-round visual tumult or an emotional examination (which is what most of the actual book is). This uncertain tone makes the film somewhat erratic. This instalment was always going to be the biggest risk, film-wise, because it doesn’t occur in the hallowed hall of Hogwarts leaving the trio to fend for themselves. Grint is still easily the strongest of the lot for me, and it’s not that Radcliffe and Watson can’t work on their own because there’s a sweet moment where the two of them dance in the woods that’s surprisingly moving but the pacing of the film is lacking that distinct sense of foreboding that is necessary for us to feel the tension that the narrative needs. Rowling can get away with it, but a film – which is making attempts at having a sort of omniscience or at the very least object in the narrative – doesn’t have as profound effect. We can’t focus for so long on the Ron/Hermione/Harry dynamic alone because we’re only to judge their plight if we measure it against the outside world. This is why the strongest moment of the film is the opening as we switch from the homes of our three leads and seeing how the current times are affecting them. It’s a well constructed moment on Yates part that especially affecting but what comes after – a smattering of too on the nose humour that works in literature but doesn’t in cinema – robs the moments of its importance.
 
As a fan of all things Harry Potter I can appreciate what happens because I’m a general fanboy (sue me), but I’ll admit that though there are smattering of moments work they’re too often followed by moments that don’t. The tale of the Hallows works well, the unfolding of Mr. Lovegood’s character doesn’t – at all. Ron’s growing resentment for Harry works (thanks, mostly, to Grint) but his departure and return don’t resound as much as you’d expect. I wouldn’t say I’m disappointed, because the film is not terrible (it’s fairly good, really) but it’s a perfect example of something falling short when it tries to please all. No matter if they decided to do away some plot points you know that fans would have still flocked to see it, so instead of going the easy way and doing a fairly rote cinematic version of the book I’d have been more impressed if Yates and company actually did the brave thing and made a movie of their own “based on” the novel. Ah well, here’s the second instalment.
        
B-

Friday, December 3, 2010

"If I Linked You..." (time and again I would try to say...)

I'm shining the spotlight on Twister's performance review of Jennifer Grey's performance in Ferris Bueller's Day Off. (Sidenote: My mom has an exasperating appreciation for "Dancing With the Stars", and Grey seems really frosty but, eh. Whatever.)
 
The blogosphere was a buzz this past week with the news of James Franco and Anne Hathaway set to host the Oscars. The Mad Hatter and RC  were just two that weighed in, but I was particularly amused by Jose's thoughts. In case you don't know, he's obsessed with Anne. Only last week he was planning on abducting her to keep her as a memento in his pocket...(or something like that...)

   
I don't know if he has any open slots, but Castor's hosting Part II of his Fantasy Draft.
                     

Ben Stiller recently got good reviews for his work in Greenberg. His only good performance as far as I can recall, Darren recalls Meet the Parents - a movie I find painful to watch (except for the lovely Blythe Danner who is just as resplendent as her daughter, moreso even).
          
Jess thinks I'm going to love Burlesque. I have no idea if she's right or not, but I love this post.

Nicholas does an extensive writeup on Serendipity. I have weird thoughts about John Cusack and Kate Beckinsale, they both seem nice enough but I'm really uncertain about their "talents".
Paolo recently saw Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? while reading the book, that movie's a winner and so is the play...only recently Alex gave a short review of it.
      
Speaking of great movies...how great is The Little Mermaid? Very great says Luke, I agree....and on the topic of animation check out Rob and Robert (two different people) and their takes on Tangled
        
Remember Scott Pilgrim vs the World? I still love it very much, CS reviews it. (I'm still not sure why everyone keeps saying it's one for a niche-audience though. Unless I'm weird, I have no interest in video-games and no knowledge of this one, but the movie just amazing.)
       
And kindly head on over and congratulate Nick on this three-year blog anniversary
       
(PS. This screen-shot via Twister made my day.)

Cinematic Knowledge: Moulin Rouge!"

"This is what I want, naughty words."
"Oh, it's so bad."
"Don't, don't, don't stop!"
"Give me more, YES!"

Lesson Learned: a)Poetry just may be the most powerful aphrodisiac. 
(b) Satine is easily turned on (Christian finds it disturbing) 
(c) Elton's John's lyrics are actually useful.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Cartoons from the 70 s

Although Scooby Doo is one of the cartoons from the 70 s, it's undeniably a hit in the following decades. According to Wikipedia, Scooby Doo started its telecast since 1969 so it's not only a cartoons from the 70s but also in 60's.

Don't know who's Scooby Doo? It's the name of the dog of the same cartoon show along with the four teenagers namely  Fred "Freddie" Jones, Daphne Blake, Velma Dinkley, and Norville "Shaggy" Rogers that solves mystery behind the ghosts or monster they encounter in a certain episode.

The group usually solves the mysterious monster they encounter by unveiling the mask of the enemy which normally are those who are with them in the earlier part of the episode. Scooby and the rest of the gang call themselves as Mystery Inc and regularly drive around in the Mystery Machine van.

Google Doodle featured Scooby Doo as their doodle for this year's Halloween celebration featuring five images cycling around if navigated. Scooby is often associated with Halloween since most of their episodes covered ghosts, monster and other mysterious creatures.

Since Facbook users like you must be searching for Cartoons from the 70s, you may also check my Cartoons from the 90s featuring cartoon characters like Dexter, Gon, Pokemon and San Goku.

For Colored Girls

Tyler Perry’s latest, For Colored Girls, opens to a dancer (Anika Noni Rose) accompanied by a piano and violin. As the dance intensifies we hear snatches of a poem, narrated by each of the main women in the cast as we flash to them at small moments in their lives. It’s not a slight at the film that those five minutes are the most beautiful of it all because there is one inherent problem with For Colored Girls. It’s a musical, but it doesn’t have a score – only lyrics. Someone unfamiliar with Ntozake Shange’s original play would probably find the monologue-breaks jarring, but I’m inclined to think that For Colored Girls deserves the same suspension of belief we give to book-musicals where characters break out (injudiciously it seems, sometimes) into song. The very fact that Perry takes a collection of soliloquies and turns them into a cohesive drama is praiseworthy enough, but For Colored Girls manages to transcend his earlier work – unevenly, but still not without a payoff.

There’s always an issue with films that decide to tackle ensembles in the way that For Colored Girls attempts to. A group of unrelated people need to have a connection to make an ensemble work – sometimes the vignettes are broadly painted, I’m not a fan of Crash but I’ll admit that the linking of the stories is easily its strongest attribute. And for Tyler Perry, For Colored Girls could claim that strength too, for the most part. The segues in the first half work beautifully, as Anika Noni Rose’s dancer just happens to make a donation after receiving a pamphlet on religion from Whoopi Goldberg’s charlatan. It’s those light connections that make buoy the realism. The ironic thing is, as the film develops in the second half and the characters have reasons to interact the film begins to get a little disingenuous. The first half, the rising action, is beautifully orchestrated but there’s something about the fall that feels inadequate. The thing is, the screenplay is simultaneously responsible for helping the film and damaging it. But I’ll be Perry’s champion and say that it never reaches the depths of horror that he always ends up being connected with. It’s not praise to say that Perry is far from the worse director, but I have a feeling general prejudices prevents the average critic from seeing For Colored Girls with an unbiased vision. There are moments of uncertainty, but just as quickly as he’ll fall into a rote choice he’ll surprise you with something poignant.
But it’s the performances that are the true treasure of For Colored Girls. It makes you realise just how many talented black women are lacking roles. She doesn’t get the strongest role, and she doesn’t deliver the strongest performances but I was entranced by Anika Noni Rose who has such a winning charm that I’m confused as to why she’s not in more movies. Theatrical would be a word to describe her, and it makes me think of all the performances. For some reason theatrical has imprudently become a synonym for melodrama. Inaccurate. What’s more, theatrical doesn’t mean “bad”. For Colored Girls is theatrical – and so is life at times. The monologues reach greater importance because the voices of these women is literally what defines them. It’s no surprise then that Loretta Devine* with her potently “theatrical” (interpret it as you will) delivers the strongest monologue, even if her character is painted in the broadest strokes. That final scene is jarring, but like the entire film its root is in the women it portrays and there’s something about the melange of talent there that’s difficult to resist. It’s foolish to accuse For Colored Girls of seeing one side of the story when it immediately tells you it does. It’s not that movie is only for “colored girls”, but the story is theirs....and what a story it is.

B- (the Acting: A, the writing: B-, the direction, C/C+, MVP: Thandie Newton)
       
*A/N: I find it vaguely interesting that Loretta Devine played Lorrel Robinson in the Original Broadway Production of “Dreamgirls”, the role Anika Noni Rose recreated on film.

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Ruminations on Eat, Pray Love (Film, Literature, Julia Roberts and Ryan Murphy)

Because I’m an uninhibited fan of literature I have a slight affinity for adaptations. The thing is, some books just shouldn’t be adapted to film. It’s not the case of a Doctor Zhivago or The English Patient where adapting is a chore. Film is a visual medium, literature is not –Eat, Pray, Love, from what I’ve gleaned from it, is a vaguely nonfictional work about a woman’s journey to self-fulfilment. It sounds woefully tawdry, and not to knock at Elizabeth Gilbert’s journey (who me? never) it probably is. I’ll take a wild guess and assume that Ryan Murphy’s adaptation is mostly meticulous – and that’s the essential problem of Eat, Pray, Love. Elizabeth’s journey is itself a bildungsroman (of sorts), and try as Murphy might there’s little connectivity from New York to Rome to India to Bali. The only connection we have is Julia’s Elizabeth and truth be told, Julia Robert is kind of brilliant. She wouldn’t make my list of 25 favourite actresses, although I do enjoy her acting. I didn’t realise that I’d been missing a good Julia Roberts romp until earlier this year at the Golden Globes when she was just so delightfully caustic all the while being so well-meant when some ridiculous EW reporter asked her if she passed over the lead role in The Blind Side. I sort of loathed The Blind Side, but even if her talents are doubted more often than not Julia has the power to turn muck into some feasible. Granted, Eat, Pray, Love but the four divergent stories only get a semblance of fluidity because Julia’s general resplendence makes it one.
Ryan Murphy has a knack for episodic writing (Nip/Tuck first season is still excellent in retrospect) and that becomes an issue with these four divergent storylines. He’s smart enough to weave masses of exposition in interesting (mildly at least) dialogue but that’s a problem. We keep meeting these characters, we get interested and it’s as if we’re waiting for the second episode of the pilot – and it never comes. True to form, Murphy loves to wow us in the beginning, the New York chapter of the tale opens organically and the fact that’s gifted with the likes of Viola Davis, Mike O’Malley, Billy Crudup and James Franco makes it all the better. No matter how interesting Italy is, a follow-up to that can’t help but be disappointing. It’s easy to feel that Liz is just a rich woman with too much that she doesn’t know what to do. There’s just that slight feeling that her journey’s just a bit too self-centred to make an entire film about – film doesn’t get the chance to be as personal as literature. But Julia has a knack for turning harsh characters into softer hues (re Closer, My Best Friend’s Wedding) and she manages to accomplish the same for the most part – but the entire film can’t help but feel a little limp, because at the end of the day we’re left there wondering “what’s the point?”. Why are we supposed to care about this woman’s journey when everyone around her seems more interesting than she does? At the end of the day, Julia’s the reason we care. Elizabeth’s experiences seem decidedly ephemeral; Julia’s performance is a little more worthwhile.
        
C+/B- (Julia: B+)

Katy Perry at Victoria's Secret show

Katy Perry rocked the Victoria's Secret fashion show with her outstanding performance of Firework. Perry already performed Firework during the American Music Awards from where Justin Bieber bagged four major awards.

Katy Perry's performance at Victoria's Secret fashion show was also a powerful one while fan admit that it was much better than her AMA 2010 performance.

If you're that excited, you can watch Katy Perry's Victoria's Secret fashion performance from video embedded below.


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