Movie Reviews

Dueling Reviews – Margot at the Wedding

  • Title: Margot at the Wedding
  • IMDB: link

There’s always a little disagreement over films among critics, but every once in awhile there’s a big one.  Margot at the Wedding aggressively divided us.  Both December and I were amazed the film even got made, let alone released, but Ian, and our pal Eric from Scene Stealers both really enjoyed the film.  Who’s right?  Who’s wrong?  We’ll obviously Eric and Ian are in need of some serious mental help, but don’t just take my word for it.  Inside you’ll find excerpts and links to all four reviews, allowing you to decide.

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Man in the Chair

  • Title: Man in the Chair
  • IMDb: link

Man in the Chair

Cameron Kincaid (Michael Angarano) is a troubled kid, in trouble at school, with the law, and at odds with his overbearing step-father (Mitch Pileggi); his only escape is through film.

One day after school he meets Flash Madden (Christopher Plummer), a drunken loudmouth who seems to know more about films than anyone Cameron has met.  Flash worked for years as a gaffer in the movie biz and was given his nickname from Orson Wells (Jodi Ashworth) on the set of Citizen Kane.  Cameron strikes up an uneasy friendship with Flash and convinces him to help make a student film.  Flash persuades his friends at the nursing home, all of whom worked in the movie business, to help and Cameron finds himself with the most experienced crew any student has used to shoot his first film.

There are many things which work in the film.  First off the performances are good across the board especially those of the leads, Plummer and Angarano.  Although Plummer’s performance smells a little of Oscar Bait there’s enough to enjoy.

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The Golden Compass

The Golden Compass is fine.  That might not be exactly the word the studio would want me to describe their $150 million dollar special effects bonanza, but at least it’s not the train wreck it could have been.  No doubt you have heard, or you will hear, about this evil film based on evil books preaching against religion and God.  Well, if you go in expecting some malevolent and insidious anti-religious propaganda piece then I think you’ll be pretty disappointed, but if you’re looking for a teenage fantasy flick with some good effects, fight scenes, and some pretty good acting, then here’s a holiday treat for you.

The Golden Compass
Custom Rating

“That is heresy!”
“That is the truth.”

The story centers around Lyla Belacqua (Dakota Blue Richards) a young girl with a great destiny, in a parallel world ruled by a theocracy known as the Magisterium.  In this world a person’s soul exists outside their body in the form of an animal who can talk and think.  Children’s souls, or Daemons as they are called, are able to change shape until the beginning of adolescence where their Deamon chooses a permanent shape.  The reasons for this are a substance known as Dust, but we’ll learn more about that later.

Lyra leaves the comfort of Jordan College with the lovely but secretive Ms. Coulter (Nicole Kidman).  With the help of an Alethiometer, a small golden compass which can tell the truth of the future and the past, Lyla learns much about herself, Ms. Coulter, her uncle Lord Asriel (Daniel Craig) and others, and begins an adventure over the seas and through the Arctic with Gyptians, witches, and armored polar bears.

Although quite pretty and filled with talking polar bears, Daemons and witches, the story doesn’t always feel as magical as it should.  There are several good special effects including the Daemons themselves changing shape, talking, and reacting emotionally to various stimuli.  I also quite enjoyed the different looking technology of the world.  And the look of the witches, especially Serafina Pekkala (Eva Green), flying through the air and fighting in battle is well done.  Throw in a huge polar bear fight, the horror of intercision, and some bloody battles and you’ve got the basis for a fun ride.

In a film centered around a child the casting becomes hugely important.  Luckily for us Dakota Blue Richards does a great job as Lyra capturing her rambunctiousness and independent attitude.  Ben Walker and Charlie Rowe also have some nice moments as Lyra’s friends from Jordan College.  Hopefully the casting of Will in the sequel will be as good.

There are more than a handful of characters introduced over the course of the film, and more to come in the next one.  Because of this some of the nuance has been cut away or simply lost in this trimmed down film version.  We don’t learn as much about the Gyptains or the Polar Bears as we do in the books.  One of my favorite scenes from the books, involving the discussion of Lyra and Iorek Byrnison (Ian McKellen) about the differences between humans and bears and why you can fool one but not the other, has been removed completely.

Religious NoteSome are going to object to the theocracy of the Magisterium as casting the church or organized religion as the villains of the piece, but it is a fantasy world where polar bears talk and people’s souls are outside their body changing shape and talking to people!  Simply put – it’s fantasy, deal with it.  And for those who don’t believe that a church run state can take it’s power too far and act in ways that can only be described as evil, I’d suggest you take a short look through history, starting with The Inquisition.  Now back to the review…

Although the film works in many ways there are some problems.  The first is the film’s lack of focus and flow early on.  We jump through different scenes all meant to introduce the characters and the world, but they are only loosely and hastily cut together in a way that seems more like greatest hits from the book than a film version of the full story.

Also troubling is how long the film takes to let us in on the secrets of the world and the point of the story.  In a novel you can tease the reader, but in a film (especially one which has to remove much of the excess scenes and plot to make its under two-hour running time) you need to explain such a dramatically different world a little better.  Those who haven’t read the book may wonder just what Dust is and why it’s so important.  Stay patient, the explanation is coming, though you’ll have to wait about 100 minutes to get to it.

I would recommend reading the books, at least the first one, before seeing this film, or taking someone with you who can answer your questions.  At the screening I attended those who hadn’t had experience going in with Philip Pullman‘s world seemed lost and bewildered for most of the film.  And much like The Two Towers those who have read the book may be upset by the chosen ending of the film which leaves a large portion of the first novel untold.  Is it a great adaptation?  No, not really, but it’s passable, and likely the only one we’re ever going to get.

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The Walker

  • Title: The Walker
  • IMDb: link

The WalkerI’m not big on gossip, the tawdry dalliances of people with too much money and time on their hands leaves me tired, and writer/director Paul Schrader‘s latest flick is full of such nonsense.  There are many who will no doubt like this film more than me, but although the film included some interesting characters it mars them in the middle of one of the most boring murder mysteries in recent memory.  Is it worth seeing?  Yes.  Is it worth gossiping about?  Hardly.

Paul Schrader has penned some great scripts (Taxi Driver, Raging Bull, The Last Temptation of Christ), he also wrote Light of Day (and directed Cat People).  The Walker, which Schrader wrote and directed, falls somewhere in between.

Carter “Carr” Page III (Woody Harrelson) is an escort to the wealthy and influential woman of Washington D.C.  He’s what is known as a “walker,” he walks ladies from place to place providing company, juicy gossip, and companionship.  Although he delights in telling his clients about the hot topics in our nation’s capitol, he speaks very little of his own life or of his long time relationship to a struggling artist (Moritz Bleibtreu).  To some he’s an acquaintance, to others an embarrassment of his name and the legacy of his father.  Harrelson does well in balancing the different facets of the character who will turn the other cheek and offer a smile even in the most dangerous circumstances.

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Margot at the Wedding

  • Title: Margot at the Wedding
  • Rating: No Stars
  • IMDB: link

Margot at the Wedding is one of those films that make me wish I wasn’t a film critic. I feel obligated to watch said film, but completely bored out of my mind and furious that I felt I needed to set through such torture. Unlikable characters, odd situations and ultimately terrible commentary makes this movie a big bomb, a big bomb I had wished someone would have landed at the end of the film. I think that the film would have greatly benefited from a mass murder from the crazy neighbors or maybe some freak accident of nature. Simply put, I couldn’t wrap my mind around any one thing in this film.

Characters who care very little for others and only care about themselves, make the audience really hate what they see going on in front of them. The relationships between mother & son or sister & sister, are completely off base and way too far in left field to be the list bit convincing.

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