Paprika

I’m not a big anime fan, but the idea behind this film of a machine that could invade your dreams brought the sci-fi geek ready and willing to give this film a a shot.  Paprika isn’t a great film, but it is an entertaining one with terrific animation, a strong story, and some intriguing ideas about dreams and reality.  For fans of the genre should be pleased, and it might even satisfy a few others, who like me, aren’t big fans of anime but are just looking for new and interesting stories told in a compelling way.

Paprika
3 & 1/2 Stars

“This is your brain on anime.”

Scientists have created a new experimental dream machine which allows therapists to enter a person’s dreams in an attempt to help them with their problems from inside their own mind.  When several of the machines are stolen, however, everyone who has ever used the machine becomes susceptible to its influence, whether asleep or awake, and the walls between reality and dreams break down.

Attempting to retreive the device and stop the criminal are a beautiful scientist (Megumi Hayashibara) who lives as ‘Paprika” a sort of guide and savior for those trying to understand and overcome their fears and doubts in their dreams, and a cop (Akio Otsuka) who is haunted by dreams of a recent case.

The film is a more straightforward mystery than many anime films, which is probably why I enjoyed more than most.  In the final act however as the walls between reality and dreams breakdown it marches proudly into crazywackofuntown as the higher ideas and discussions of the film are lost in unleashed chaos.

The ideas of invading one’s dreams and then having the ability to inflict others with the fevered dreams and nightmaes of strangers is a terrific hook for the film.  A dream machine might be a wonderful thing, but, as shown here, in the hands of the wrong person it could a terrible weapon.  The film succeeds as a sci-fi film and as mystery, and although I got a little bored when the story started to drag as the craziness took over in the final third of the film, it comes together in a satisfactory ending.  It is not a must-see, but for fans of something different and more thought-provoking than the usual summer fare you might want to invite Paprika into your dreams.

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One Disappointing Evening

Evening isn’t a disaster.  It contains several good performances from its talented cast and does a fair job of recreating the time period of the 1950’s.  I know that I’m not exactly the target audience for this film, which I assume is white women over the age of 60 with much more time and patience than I was willing to give, but the film wastes its talent, and the audience’s time, on a long, tedious, and drawn-out story that just left me bored.

Evening
2 Stars

The late great film critic Gene Siskel had a simple standard he held all films to when he judged whether or not they were worth seeing.  He would simply ask himself, “Is this film more or less interesting than watching the same people (the actors in the film) eat dinner?”  Well, according to that criteria, and others, Evening is a real letdown.

The untold story of Ann Grant (Claire Danes) is told to us through a series of flashbacks to the 1950’s and a fateful weekend which changed her life forever.  Balanced against the past events is the present where a much older Ann (Vanessa Redgrave) is dying and being cared for by her two daughters, the responsible married mother Constance (Natasha Richardson) and the spirited screw-up Nina (Toni Collette).  The pair seem to only agree on one thing, that they don’t agree.

The balance of the film is odd, as much of the middle of the film is one long flashback ignoring the life and death struggle of Ann, and the individual struggles of her daughters.  The whole set-up seems strange as we are allowed to view Ann’s past, but her daughters are not.  Ann doesn’t tell them the story of her life; she only dreams it in her drug induced state.  Also troubling is the drama unfolding in the present, which finally comes to fruition in the films closing moments, is much more interesting than any of the flashbacks.

This film feels like a book which was adapted by someone unwilling to accept the necessary changes in the format.  The story may work well in the original novel by Susan Minot, but comes off here unfocused and more than a tad boring on screen.

Even with these problems there are several nice performances, mostly by the women in the cast including Danes, Collette, Regrave, and Mamie GummerGlenn Close and Meryl Streep also stop by in what are little more than cameos with little to no impact on the main plot of the film.  One huge casting fault is to cast a pair of leading men in Patrick Wilson and Hugh Dancy who are about as exciting as watching paint dry.  No, paint drying would be a party to these guys.  Nor do either fit their roles particularily well, though the each give a respectable performance.  Dancy, as the madcap alcoholic, provides some cheap laughs but is impossible to take seriously, and nothing about Wilson’s character gives us any clue to why the women find him so charming or desirable.

A final note about the script which calls for Danes’ character to be a nightclub singer.  Danes’ has a nice enough voice, but hardly one that would generate the oohs and ahhs she receives when performing or would allow her to make a career out of doing so.  The flashbacks are meant to imply she was a good singer who never made it because of her life’s tragedies, but due to Danes limited singing ability it comes off quite differently.

Evening isn’t a bad film, and I have no doubt that there will be many who will look past its obvious flaws and enjoy the movie for the strong female performances and the overall style and look at the film.  I appreciate both, but no film this drab and boring, no matter how well dressed or performed, is one I can recommend.  Although I enjoyed moments in the film, mostly in the final twenty-five minutes, overall I was left with a sense of disappointment and regret that the film couldn’t find a way to engage me in any real way.

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Movie News

Hitchcock Redux is becoming a genre all its own.  Sony announced that they have greenlit a remake the 1927 silent Alfred Hitchcock thriller about a a man suspected of being a serial killer, The Lodger.  Writer/director David Ondaatje (Waiting for Dr. MacGuffin) will write, direct, and produce a new updated film based off the novel by Marie Belloc.  This marks Ondaatje’s feature film debut as a director, but hey, anybody can do Hitchcock nowadays, right?

The Lodger
N/A

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The Best Movie Ever?

  • Title: Live Free or Die Hard
  • IMDB: link

live-free-or-die-hard-posterOkay, probably not.  In fact, it’s definitely not the best movie ever, but it’s a summer movie chock-full of over-the-top thrill moments perfect for the season.  It’s a stupid, stupid movie, but don’t let its mindlessness fool you – Die Hard kicks enough ass to make up for it.

It’s the 21st Century, and war ain’t what it used to be.  The armies only comprise of a few dozen hackers and a handful of guys carrying guns, and the good guys only have their information stolen – never their lives.  But Bruce Willis still knows how an stick his boot up a pooper or two, and movie-goers should be thankful for it.  After an often lackluster-ish Spider-Man 3 and the complete failure of Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End, summer has finally given us a good ol’ fashioned, buffet-of-explosions action flick that we can enjoy for just being a fun waste of time and thinking.

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Comic Movie News

Samuel L. Jackson will appear as Nick Fury in a cameo performance in next year’s Iron Man, which also leads you to wonder if this means Jackson will also star in the proposed Nick Fury feature film.  The Ultimate-line version of Nick Fury was modeled after Jackson, so the casting makes perfect sense, but I just hope this doesn’t mean other Ultimate-line choices will take prescednece over the established Marvel Comics history if and when the much rumored Avengers movie gets made.  Also no word yet on if Jackson has contacted David Hasselhoff for advice on portraying the character.

Iron Man
N/A

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