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Jack J. Edgar (The Melancholy Immortal Son) And The Abysmal Christmas Heist

by King Sheep on November 11, 2011 at 5:12 pm
Posted In: Blog, humor, movie reviews, updates

This (double-sized) roundup title suggests irreverent crime from a tragically Greek figure (with an American name) during the Ho-ho-holidays. Linguistically, it’s non-specific.  Regardless, (present-stealing) thieves (ala the Grinch) catching people with their (Santa) pants down is “a dick move.” At least that was the opinion of the freshly White-Castled NPH before and (maybe) again in A Very Harold & Kumar Christmas (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).


“The filmmakers throw everything at the audience, literally and metaphorically, and the results are exhilarating rather than exhausting.” The A.V. Club Nathan Rabin

If you ever face an onslaught of everything (eg. literal, metaphorical, and linguistical) – duck.  If you are the onslaughter, remember the words of Steven Wright – “You can’t have everything.  Where would you put it?”

“Although still not as fun as the original, fans should enjoy this one better than the preachy second installment (more so if they’re slightly blitzed).” Kevin A. Ranson MovieCrypt.com

Is there a more fitting motion picture prescription than encouraging stoners to see stoner comedies stoned?  Try something harder.

Like caroling an Atheist’s house

“Because the “Harold & Kumar” universe seesaws so delicately between the subversively smart and the ineffably stupid, even the lamest jokes get a witty spin – and even the cleverest ideas can turn into groaners.” Boston Globe Ty Burr

A seesaw between making dumb (n.) smart (v.) and smart (n.) dumb (v.).

“I just hope Neil Patrick Harris meant what he said when he took his leave of the boys in his Radio City dressing room: ‘See you in the fourth one.’” Slate Dana Stevens

Is there a higher compliment for a franchise than “More please?”  On the other end of the seesaw, I doubt that anyone (especially my Mom) wants more nut shots on Christmas like the one performed on Santa (above). If I keep it up, I might find myself as The Son of No One (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).


“Muddled cop thriller The Son of No One has a top-drawer cast and a bottom-drawer script.” Christian Science Monitor Peter Rainer

Personal Quiz – What’s Worse:
The bottom of your top drawer
Or
The top of your bottom drawer?

“It all feels convenient and obvious, as do such casting decisions as hiring Liotta to play his millionth cop role and Pacino to play his billionth mobster.” Chris Hewitt (St. Paul) St. Paul Pioneer Press

It’s neither convenient nor obvious that you can count the number of romantic performances (for both actors) on one hand.

“Filled with competent but unexciting performances and, like its protagonist, is strangely lugubrious.” Time Mary Pols

Allow me to take the protagonist’s role for this self-effacing quip – I find having to look up the last word in a sentence lugubrious.

Lugubrious = Gloomy exaggeration

“Ineptly written and directed, the nihilistic The Son of No One flaunts an attitude best summed up by a cynical Pacino — “A man has to live with s–t.” Maybe so, Al, but audiences have the option of skipping this bomb.” New York Post Lou Lumenick

Aka – an audience doesn’t have to give a shit.  When you give up on life, work, and responsibilities (and self-censoring swear words), you become the super sad king/queen of Melancholia (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“A movie masterpiece…is Lars von Trier’s ecstatic magnum opus on the themes of depression, cataclysm, and the way the world might end.” Entertainment Weekly Lisa Schwarzbaum

Whatever date/time is credited as the end for humanity, it’s guaranteed to be a bummer.  That’s what I’ll be pondering at 11:11:11 am/pm on 11/11/11.

“Melancholia represents von Trier at his best and worst. Visually and thematically, Melancholia is a rich motion picture, full of nuances. Unfortunately, in his pursuit of an artistic vision, von Trier has thrown logic, physics, and coherence out the window.” ReelViews James Berardinelli

When artists throw coherence out the window, we get psychics from a poet.  Or would you prefer poetry from a physicist?

“Von Trier is a burr under the hide for many viewers, and the unconverted won’t be convinced. But it’s audacious, beautiful, tactful filmmaking and perhaps the perfect match for “The Tree Of Life” on a bipolar double bill.” Empire Kim Newman

Perfectly bipolar

“Nearly everyone in this film is unlikeable, their actions inexplicable. And the pace is so lugubrious that it’s hard not to succumb to Justine’s glum mood.” USA Today Claudia Puig

Glum = hearing “lugubrious” used lugubriously.

“Melancholia is his latest pile of undiluted drivel, nauseatingly filmed by a wonky hand-held camera and featuring a crazy, mismatched ensemble headed by Kirsten Dunst, who won an acting award in Cannes last year for looking totally catatonic.” New York Observer Rex Reed

It’s an actress’s best performance and the highest rated movie of the (11-11-11) weekend and it looks like “undiluted drivel” to Rex.  Perhaps he should give his eyes a rest and take a break from staring Into The Abyss (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“Underlying the occasionally harrowing, consistently mournful tone is a philosophy that, more than being explicitly anti-capital punishment, puts both family ties and the social contract at the center of people’s self-worth.” Slant Magazine Bill Weber

King Sheep personal aside – I’m against capital punishment because it assumes that a person’s worth can be something other than priceless.

“His film powerfully suggests that violent death of any kind, whether personal or state-mandated, transforms everyone in its vicinity.” The A.V. Club Scott Tobias

For Christmas, let's give him two weeks off

“The film is a river of pain, weirdly funny in places, as are all of Herzog’s filmic essays.” Chicago Tribune Michael Phillips

River of life (begin)
River of pain
River of death (end)
River Phoenix (repeat?)

“Into the Abyss, which bears the subtitle “A Tale of Death, A Tale of Life,” reveals itself to be an outlandish, compassionate and, at times, improbably buoyant film about life’s capacity for grief and horror and about how it bubbles on miraculously in the face of such things. It’s the best thing Herzog’s done in years.” Movieline Alison Willmore

Most critics are saying the same thing about Eddie Murphy in Tower Heist (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).


“Old school Eddie Murphy, where have you been?” Scott Nash Three Movie Buffs

Based on the number of times he’s co-starred with himself (and the physics of a poet), Eddie was split into multiple Eddie Murphy’s and has been trying to reform himself as a singular entity ever since.

“Tower Heist is as over-inflated as those Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade balloons that are featured in the movie’s climax. Also similarly, it’s entertaining in its own predictable way.” The Globe and Mail (Toronto) Liam Lacey

Maybe she shouldn't

“All of this is to say that Tower Heist winds up being a poor man’s Ocean’s Eleven.” Mathew DeKinder St. Louis Post-Dispatch

Being a poor man’s (insert any famous name) is better than being poor.

“The 99 percent get to pay $10 to watch a member of the 1 percent pretend to steal back their money. Who’s laughing their way to the bank now?” Jeff Meyers Metro Times (Detroit, MI)

What (blissfully ignorant) percentage of the 99% think they are (but aren’t) part of the 1%?

“Doesn’t demand much of the audience, sure, but it doesn’t provide much, either. It’s as if an all-star gang of would-be crooks got together to rip off…moviegoers.” Portland Oregonian Shawn Levy

If the movie industry is just a scam to steal moviegoer’s money, then we might need some flagrant governmental intervention – Ex. the Cold War FBI, under J. Edgar (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“Black’s script, in the wrong hands, could have come under fire for confusing Hoover’s twisted mind with his homosexuality or his problems with Mother. Eastwood doesn’t seem to give a fuck, and only opts for one overt visual match, depicting as mirror images Hoover’s lifeless corpse and the remains of the Lindbergh baby.” Slant Magazine Jaime N. Christley

Some critics fire S-Bullets, but that was the first F-Bomb I’ve heard dropped.

“As Lily Tomlin’s Ernestine once said, “There’s nothing like a Hoover when you’re dealing with dirt.” Clint Eastwood’s J. Edgar could use more dirt: This is a sensitive, sympathetic portrait of a scummy little man.” Movieline Stephanie Zacharek

So, the movie should be less sensitive/sympathetic and be more like a Hoover vacuum (i.e. suck)?

“J. Edgar is infuriatingly coy and noncritical about its subject, an undeniable patriot but also an alarmist and a ruiner of lives.” Time Out New York Joshua Rothkopf

Alarming ruination

“As a period biopic, J. Edgar is masterful. Few films span seven decades this comfortably. ” Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert

(Historical aside) Twenty-five decades ago, eager readers saw the first published version of the classic nursery rhyme about Jack and Jill (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“Yet the picture’s general stupidity, careless direction and reliance on a single-joke premise that was never really funny to begin with are only the most obvious of its problems.” Variety Andrew Barker

Translation: Everyone agrees it’s bad, but not everyone agrees on what’s worst.

“It’s as if, after years of playing characters with temper issues, Sandler has finally let some of that repressed rage leak out toward the audience.” Movieline Alison Willmore

There’s nothing funnier than comedians hating their audience for not laughing.  Except, you know, most things.

“Jack and Jill is a barrage of fart jokes and fat jokes and mean jokes that sincerely thinks it deserves to end with a hug. It doesn’t deserve awwwws – and it doesn’t deserve your money.” Boxoffice Magazine Amy Nicholson

The movie deserves one of these

“More than 24 hours has passed since I watched the new Adam Sandler movie Jack and Jill and I am still dead inside. It made me feel as if comedy itself were a dirty thing.” Time Mary Pols

This is a comedy that wants you to die (not laughing).  Killer comedies should only be enjoyed by the most bored, lazy, and nihilistic of The Immortals (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“Immortals is not only entirely without humor, but is dominated by a lot of huffing and puffing, thunderous self-importance and windy Socratic quotations about the immortality and divinity of men’s souls. You just have to roll your eyes after a while.” The Hollywood Reporter Todd McCarthy

Does eyeball spinning affect my enjoyment?

“Where are the gods of Olympus when you need them? I ask on behalf of “Immortals,” because mere mortals were apparently not able to create a movie that actually made sense.” Betsy Sharkey Los Angeles Times

If there is immortal God(s), and he/they chose to deliver his/they’re message to the flock through film, would it be dramatic fiction (e.g. parable) or historical interpretation (e.g. documentary)?

“Doesn’t Greece have enough problems?” Christopher Tookey Daily Mail [UK]

Probably, but how many American’s think that’s their problem?  (Ouch?)

“There’s fighting, disemboweling, limb and head-severing and blood – an entire hard drive’s worth of CG blood. There’s not nearly as much plot, in fact, as there is blood.” Marshall Fine Hollywood & Fine

It's beginning to look a lot like Christmas (for vampires)

“Your critic is torn between the responsibilities of the role (dutifully, I would warn cynics away) and the giddiness of a moviegoer who just had a great time at the pictures.” Simon Foster sbs.com.au

King Sheep loves parenthetical asides (yes he does)

└ Tags: A Very Harold & Kumar Christmas, Into The Abyss, J. Edgar, Jack And Jill, Melancholia, quip art, review roundup, The Immortals, The Son Of No One, Tower Heist
1 Comment

11/09/2011

by Major Sheep on November 9, 2011 at 12:01 am
Posted In: Comic
Comments Off on 11/09/2011

Snooooze

by King Sheep on November 3, 2011 at 8:37 am
Posted In: Blog

Hello all,

There won’t be a review roundup this week on account of me being away at a conference.  However, expect to see all of this week’s releases (A Very Harold & Kumar Christmas, Tower Heist, and The Son of No One) added to next week’s blog (which will include J. Edgar, Jack and Jill, The Immortals, and Melancholia).  We are nearing the holiday movie season and all the wacky shenanigans that entails.

So consider this week a dramatic pause.  Or a…

Snooooooooze

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In Anonymous Boots Diary

by King Sheep on October 28, 2011 at 12:50 pm
Posted In: Blog, humor, movie reviews, updates

Drunk journalists, heroic animated cats, revisionist histories, and sci-fi parables might be scary for some, but as the final movie releases before Halloween, they’re remarkably BOO-ring.  Okay, that was lame.  But if I’m lucky, the joke will get better In Time (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“That there are any ideas here to begin with marks enough of a victory for commercial filmmaking.” Geoff Berkshire Metromix.com

The movie has ideas!  Success?

“It’s a fascinating philosophical conceit delivered as a slick, hyper-stylized conspiracy yarn, juicy enough to deliver on both fronts, provided you don’t ask too many questions.” Variety Peter Debruge

Are there juicy questions we should be asking?

Like, wouldn't waiting all day to scare someone be BOO-ring?

“Pretty cast. Potent premise. Piss-poor execution.” Peter Travers Rolling Stone

Pontificating in P, while perusing petty peanut gallery proclamations can potentially perturb people.  If you prefer I postpone practicing pointless pronunciations, just say pretty please.

“A riff on the ‘Logan’s Run’ formula that rushes around in circles before collapsing in an exhausted heap…starts intriguingly, but it gets silly fast, and grows tiresome before long.” Frank Swietek One Guy’s Opinion

If you get tired, have a seat, order a drink, and open up The Rum Diary (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“A big, rambling, entertaining love letter to the late Hunter S. Thompson.” Miami Herald Connie Ogle

Raise your glass, drown a few sorrows, and cry your beer tears for the great Gonzo go-getter.

“Though it only rarely reaches the level of gonzo farce that it might have been, “Diary” is still an agreeably drunken stagger through the novel Thompson based on his formative year as a writer.” Orlando Sentinel Roger Moore

Disagreeably drunk

“The Rum Diary, Bruce Robinson’s amorphous hodgepodge of a film, wants to be many things: period recreation, social commentary, morality play, romance, an insider look at the newspaper game.” Slant Magazine Andrew Schenker

I’m glad it didn’t also want to be a Burton or Gillian inspired-twisted drug fantasy; then it might have been called the Cocaine, Meth, Weed, Heroin, Ether, and every other type of booze Diary.

“You can’t deny the fun of seeing Depp retro-construct a muted version of his Vegas mugging like De Niro riffing on Brando’s Don Corleone. (His reaction to swigging homemade rum is worth the price of admission alone.)” Time Out New York David Fear

In a duel of unequal sequel-prequels, it’s Depp’s retro-Raoul Duke versus Puss In Boots (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“All in all, the 3-D animations wow without gimmickry, Banderas purrs without peer – and it’s a cheerful movie.” San Francisco Chronicle Amy Biancolli

Its gimmick isn’t a gimmick, celebrities compare their purrs, and the movie is smiling at me.  Perhaps it’s the looming shadow of All Hallows Eve, but that review is oddly disconcerting.

“The movie has a devilish wit that works for parent and child alike, and it moves like a bobsled.” Boston Globe Ty Burr

The movie is a devil bobsled.  Got it.  But, also disconcerting.

“The results are so funny and irresistible audiences are bound to be swept away into this kitty’s universe.” Boxoffice Magazine Pete Hammond

The Wicked-Cute Witch of the West

“‘Puss in Boots’ is CAT-astrophically entertaining!” Jeanne Kaplan Kaplan vs. Kaplan

If there were a case of mistaKITTEN identity, one or more participants would be Anonymous (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“Emmerich has turned his attention to the past. He and screenwriter John Orloff have embraced a kitchen sink’s worth of 20th-century conspiracy theories about the provenance of Shakespeare’s plays, each wilder than the last. Oliver Stone’s “JFK” looks reasonable compared to this.” Time Mary Pols

Are Shakespeare scholars prepared for the Magic Sonnet Theory?

“Anonymous is a vulgar prank on the English literary tradition, a travesty of British history and a brutal insult to the human imagination. Apart from that, it’s not bad.” The New York Times A.O. Scott

Not half bad = not half good

“As the Bard probably would not say, Anonymous is some crazy shit.” Peter Travers Rolling Stone

“It’s Shakespeare as B-movie, if you will, or to borrow from the bard, a boffo blast, which I’m pretty sure is from either ‘King Lear’ or ‘Hamlet.’” Betsy Sharkey Los Angeles Times

It’s a boffo blast of crazy shit, just like Shakespeare might have said if he were alive to drink Starbucks.  Unfortunately, he didn’t and he isn’t, but if he was, movies like this guarantee he’d be pissed.

“The very qualities that fuel the historical hokum of Anonymous — over-the-top royal intrigue and incest, violent literary backstabbing, frothing conspiracy — also happen to make for wild entertainment.” Chris Vognar Dallas Morning News

King Sheep is skeptical of a Shakespearean anti-Shakespeare story

└ Tags: Anonymous, In Time, Puss In Boots, review roundup, The Rum Diary
1 Comment

Reborn Paranormal Musketeers

by King Sheep on October 21, 2011 at 1:49 pm
Posted In: Blog, humor, movie reviews, updates

Sadly, my computer imploded this week.  While I wish it could be reborn as a supernatural french swordsman, I am preparing myself for its (more likely) future as a paperweight, which is an even more useless desk accessory in our increasingly paperless existence.  There is nothing quite like technology woes to cripple the creative process, so instead of doing a roundup of reviews this week, I will simply give you a quick upshot  of what you’re likely to experience if you venture out to the cinema – three movies come out this weekend, two of which have the number 3 in the title, and while only one is a horror movie, the other two might be bad enough to scare you out of the theater.

First up, Paranormal Activity 3 (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic), the independent horror series that continues to impress critics, while pleasing audiences.  Perhaps most impressive is that it has finally dethroned Saw as king of the proverbial Halloween movie-mountain.  As long as it doesn’t spiral into suckage, let’s call that progress.

Unlike our next movie, which is closer to regress: The Three Musketeers (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).  Reimagined with flying ships, slow-motion exploding sword fight special effects, and poke-you-in-the-eye 3D, this movie looks like a cavalcade of bad.  The most impressive thing about it is that it has royal assassins.  Unlike previous royal assassins (killers who only target royalty), this version has assassins who happen to be royalty (and must be terribly bored to spend their time killing other rich people).

I couldn’t resist the Russian poster, which adds another cultural layer as an American version of a classic French story.  And speaking of culture, the British anti-Bond returns to theaters this weekend in Johnny English Reborn (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

Rowan was encouraged remake Mr. Bean or Blackadder next.  Those who liked it called it ‘amusing’ and ‘old-fashioned’ while those that hated it thought it was ‘unnecessary’ and relied too much on groin shots for laughs.

King Sheep hopes your weekend is more amusing than a nut shot, an imploding computer, or a zombie musketeer

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