Geek For E!

Movie Review — The Purge: Anarchy

TwitView: Thought-provoking, violent and in-your-face.  This ain’t the first film. Cool. A-

Last year, people headed to the theater in droves to see The Purge.  Unfortunately, they hated it.   But with The Purge: Anarchy, writer/director James DeMonaco is hoping a more wide-scale view of his near-future distopia is more to your liking.  Apparently he knows the deal, and wants to give moviegoers what they wanna see in this new sequel.  Him-a culpa.

But is Anarchy any good?  If you like your satire jet-black with tinges of red, you betcha.  Class warfare, The Man as slaughter king, and shades of the Nuremberg Defense run rampant here.  I for one found it a fascinating look at how far things could get out of hand if absolute power was vested in people who may not have everyone’s best interests at heart.  In opening up the Purge landscape from a single house to the streets of LA, Anarchy gives us a taste of mayhem and the hopelessness of those who are unable to protect themselves.  There’s also a heapin’ helpin’ of old-school horror here, with the usual tropes played out.  In the Purge’s chaotic landscape, that’s comforting, and helps the film stay grounded rather than turning into an mish-mosh of aimless scenes.

No emergency services for 12 hours and all crime including murder is legal.  Let the anarchy begin!  

It’s 2023, a year after the events of The Purge.  The “New Founding Fathers” are showing signs that they’re as out of control as the Purge they hail as a method of peace.  As you’d expect, Purge Night is unfairly balanced against the homeless and anyone else who can’t afford elaborate security systems.  That the government has an ulterior motive shouldn’t be surprising, but it’s played out to detestable effect when the rich — possibly the untouchable Level 10? — have homeless and/or hapless citizens rounded up off the streets for their own behind-closed-doors bloodsport.  Rumbles of resistance begin around the country.  Meanwhile, 5 citizens try to survive the night:

  • Sergeant (Frank Grillo), a man who lost his son last year in a horrible accident.  He’s been waiting 12 months for payback.  But when he sees people on the street being dragged out of their homes, can he sit by?  Of course he can’t y’all.
  • Working class woman Eva, and her headstrong daughter Cali who questions the “integrity” of the Purge (Carmen Ejogo and Zoe Soul).  As their barely-safe-enough apartment complex gets attacked by what looks like an army, they must hit the streets.
  • Couple Shane and Liz (played by real-life husband and wife Zach Gilford and Kiele Sanchez) are snarking at each other on the way to wait out Purge Night at Shane’s sister’s house.  When their car breaks down minutes before the Purge begins, they have no choice but to run.  Fast.

There’s also a group of black-clad stormtroopers in huge tractor-trailers that seem to have a lot of money at their disposal, those fat-cats I mentioned earlier, and people with surprising (and unsurprising) scores to settle.  And let’s not forget the seriously creepy gang of masked Purge-ers that seem a bit too excited about Purge Night.

Film Title: The Purge: Anarchy

*shudder*

The Purge: Anarchy brings up ideas of how life would be in a society like the one in this film.  You’d have to be nice to everyone, all the time…or else who knows what could come through your door on the one night anything is legal?  Friends, family, co-workers, even that guy that says hi to you whenever you grab your daily coffee.  Do you have a foolproof security system to protect yourself from those you’ve wronged?  Are you sure?  If not, you better be nice to everyone, all the time.  I’m betting in this world security systems and ulcer meds are king.  (If you want to start a conversation pre-Anarchy, I suggest reading HuffPo’s piece on what the original film can teach us.  Good stuff.)

There’s hints of a third film, and I for one would love to see it.  But more still, this mythology screams for a short-story anthology, or at least a series of webisodes.  There’s so much more about the Purge’s mythology I’d like to know; what about folks too sick to leave a hospital — are medical staff locked in with those patients?  If so, is there a moratorium on Purge-ing medical centers?  Are  you safe in the country, or on a farm surrounded by nobody…or would you be a sitting duck?  So many questions.  ‘Til there are answers, I guess I’ll just be glad that The Purge: Anarchy was thought-provoking — and downright disturbing — enough to make me consider these things in the first place.

Movie Review – “Dawn of the Planet of the Apes”

TwitReview – “Dawn of the Planet of the Apes” proves that monkeys make everything better. The war begins between Apes and Humans. Great Ape battles and very dull humans (characters and acting). Grade: B

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TwiView: Think Like A Man 2 (2014), C+

What’s a Twiview?  It’s a movie review in Twitter form. 140 characters for a short attention span world.

Not a good sequel, not a good movie, more like the Kevin Hart show.  Redemption was in great flashback 90’s tunes.  C+

(and the plus is for the music)

Kevin Hart isn't THAT funny

Kevin Hart isn’t THAT funny

Movie Review: The Rover

TwitView: Fascinating & dark. Existential & bloody. A creepy slice of our possible future. B+

Wasting away ‘til the next season of The Walking Dead?  Dying for some post-apocalyptic action?  Well, The Rover probably won’t soothe your need for braaaaaaaains, but it’s a fascinating look at what life could really look like if our global economy went boink. And it’s a film where you may try your best to figure out what will happen, or what the end game will be, and you’ll have no idea.  Gotta give this film mad props for blowing up the usual tropes, and doing it in a way that left me with no other choice but to watch.

Okay, lemme get this straight; there’s a global economic collapse, and ten years later the AMERICAN DOLLAR is the strongest currency around?  Man, I worry about the human race.  But there you have it, and Eric (Guy Pearce, Memento) is just a man trying to take a load off out of the harsh Australian Outback sun.  But three bad guys steal his car, and instead of shrugging, Eric goes stalker and tries to get his car back.  Along the way he runs into Rey (Robert Pattinson, recovering sparklevampire), a brother of one of the guys that ripped off Eric.  And that’s the story.  Things go from bad, to worse, to kinda okay but still sucky, and then all over the freakin’ map as these two try to get Eric reunited with his car.  Before you pull out the Ashton Kutcher jokes, know this; that car, and the search for it, is a Macguffin; it’s the journey these two take that draws you in, not whether or not the car will ever be found.  And no, I’m not telling you.

TheRover_One-Sheet

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Movie Review: Jersey Boys

TwitView: A fascinating, fun film that shows the rough edges around those smooth melodies. B+

The Four Seasons. Mostly, I knew of ‘em thanks to the overuse of some of their 70s hits at the neighborhood pool where I grew up. Then there’s the fantastic 1994 remix of “December 1963 (Oh What A Night)” that is still rockin’. In 2005, there’s the Broadway peek into the inner workings of the band, a little musical called Jersey Boys. Seems like everybody and their mother (especially their mother) headed out to see that, everyone but me. So this is a long-winded way for me to say that I’ll be reviewing this film as a stand-alone entity.

Jersey Boys sometimes feels like a “Behind The Music” episode, with it’s ups-and-then-downs storyline. But director Clint Eastwood steers clear of the maudlin and instead goes straight for the jugular more than once, giving Boys more heart than VH1 could ever muster. This isn’t a gloss job to blow smoke on Hall of Fame rockers, it’s a fictionalized look at real people with tons of true tales mixed in. That means there’s the good (Number 1s! Fame! Fortune!) and the bad (financial irresponsibility, relationship problems, and death). Eastwood’s a smart cookie here, casting performers from Jersey Boys’ Broadway and touring cast (Michael Lomenda, Erich Bergen, and Tony winner John Lloyd Young; Boardwalk Empire’s Vincent Piazza is the only non-stage Season here), and keeping much of the “book” (storyline structure, for non-theater nerds out there) from the original musical.

jersey-boys

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Movie Review: How To Train Your Dragon 2 (2014), A-

As most of us out there have become accustomed to in this day and age of up to the minute updates, I thought I would start out with the bottom line. Give you the details of the movies in a quick excerpt.  Go see, it’s better than the 1st, by many a dragon!

There, now that you know my opinion, let me explain a bit about why it’s such a fantastic film.

Storyline:

As a young kid I was always picked on as being a momma’s boy. Would you rather not be a momma’s boy? Hiccup couldn’t have been as his mother was in the picture. It was always his larger than line, clan leading, stud Stoic who raised him into the small miniature viking we all know and love. The story follows Hiccup into a new world, 5 or so years after the first movie, in a struggle on who he is and what the world holds for him.   The way it unfolds is gorgeous, a true “love” story of types creating an even bigger story for us all to enjoy. I won’t give any away but I was selfishly delighted at what unfolded before my eyes.  And speaking of eyes – this is movie is gorgeous!!!

Animation:

I was lucky enough to bring my two older daughters with the film to me and we all looked fabulous in our sweet 3D glasses. The movie started and right from the get-go the animation was spotless. Such a beautiful world in which a story unfolds. From the wings of the dragons, the clouds in which the fly, the world that was brought to life was amazing.  The hair on the heads, the action scenes, the ice, the fire, the action scenes (did I say action scenes yet?) are amazingly detailed. I cannot wait for the HD version of this live on in my library on my Apple TV.  This second iteration looks amazing, detailed, brighter, better. Just a step up in so many ways.

Conclusion:

So many times we find ourselves in the movie theater watching an animated film that has one or the other, a truly great story with so so animation or a vividly wild experience with lack of story.  This is not the case with Hiccup and his rag tag crew of Vikings. DreamWorks Animation has stepped up it’s game and really has made folks pay attention and sit up. There was laughter, and a round of applause before we left the theater. Everyone, of all ages, enjoyed this film!  Straight from my 8 year olds mouth, “that is my favorite movie, more so than Frozen”. That is a BIG statement coming from the oldest of three girls. I am not sure how many times I have seen Frozen since it has come out, but I have lost count. I look forward to losing count with Hiccup and Toothless again soon!

Submitted by Geek For E’s – Matthew Snider

Movie Review: The Fault in Our Stars

Twitview: Great cast, sweet story. If you don’t tear up by the end you’re dead inside. B+

Every so often a story comes around that taps into a zeitgeist the world never knew it had.  John Green’s The Fault in our Stars, about two teens that fall in love despite the Cancer of Damocles hanging over their heads.  Narrated by Hazel (Shailene Woodley, Divergent), one of the young lovers, Green seemed to nail the voice of the young and terminally ill.  As a thyroid cancer survivor myself (18 years NEC!), it sounded real, and refreshing.  But the sweeping adoration for the novel and it’s young protagonists was a surprise to me.  Not that it’s not a good book; it’s a sweet story that you can’t help but plow through in one sitting, no matter how much you’d like to make the story last by rationing it out to yourself.  But the Harry Potter/Twilight-esque love of TFiOS puzzled me.  Until now.

By bringing this story to the screen, director Josh Boone (Stuck in Love) manages to show the love rather than imagine it, demonstrate exactly how difficult it is to live with illness rather than guess at it, and watch young lovers fall in love rather than see it from a single POV.  The Fault in Our Stars just works.

fault-in-our-stars-landscape-poster

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