Wednesday, December 27, 2017

Film Review: Dunkirk (2017)

Written and Directed By: Christopher Nolan (The Dark Knight, Inception, Memento)

Starring: Fionn Whitehead , Tom Hardy , Kenneth Branagh

Since the release of The Dark Knight in 2008, Christopher Nolan has had his way with Hollywood.  Sure, he was far established by then with incredible directing efforts with Memento, Insomnia, Batman Begins and The Prestige, but 2008 marked the beginning of Christopher Nolan's domination of the big screen.  His advanced understanding of time structure, storytelling and character development was only overshadowed by his keen eye for beauty and grandeur.  As a result, we were awarded such amazing follow ups as Inception, Interstellar and The Dark Knight Rises.  What we really were getting was an auteur mastermind of filmmaking who had refined his craft to the teeth.  His efforts as a filmmaker could only be quenched by his need to tell amazing, original stories.  From all of this, after the superhero franchise trilogy and the space odyssey and the magic show, Nolan was finally ready to make his passion picture, Dunkirk.  While he takes many risks with this war film based on the true story of British and French soldiers during World War II evacuation, there isn't an inch of this film that isn't addressed with complete adore and attention worth watching.  This is Nolan reminding us that he isn't just another director, he's a filmic genius and we need to stop forgetting.

First, let me just say I loved Dunkirk for what it was, a story without telling a direct story, built on actions and scenes of motion rather than a cast of characters explaining everything to the audience as if they weren't smart enough to grasp it.  Nolan never insults his audience that way, however some people find his work in Inception to be insulting for the complexity of the story as "arrogant".  Nolan has a specific vision within his mind and attempts at the most finite level of everything to get his shots the way he sees them inside his mind.  Does this alienate the audience?  I always looked at it this way, would you rather have a person trying to cash a check by making the same crap you've seen twenty times or a person who would go through personal trials to take the risk of doing something original or amazing with the utmost respect for the source?  No brainer, right?  That is why 90% of Michael Bay movies have over-dramatic explosions and trash-bin reused one liner jokes and Christopher Nolan won Oscars with a Batman movie.

Dunkirk is built on the concept of telling the story in three phases, land, air and sea.  We get to jump through the beaches of Dunkirk, where the soldiers are nothing but sitting ducks for the constant swarm of enemy fighter planes bombing them, to the air where Tom Hardy seems to battle the entire enemy sky fleet on his own, then focus on the rising water of a sinking ship as the young men soldiers pile out into open waters to survive.  Without a focused narrative, Nolan is able to build this  "snowball effect" he attempted to create purposely where everything builds up throughout the entire movie on it's own.  Without force.  That is a kind of skill almost no filmmaker has besides Nolan.  In fact, he is perhaps the greatest director of all time when it comes to juggling scenes within different time frames, while still holding the integrity of the drama.  What he does great in Dunkirk is find a young cast, led by Fionn Whitehead in an almost silent role, to display the desperation of the British soldiers in limbo.  We follow them, wanting to know what will happen next, but the split between the sky and the sea make for a nice pace of action and story.

If nothing else, the air battle scenes with Tom Hardy are a calculated adventure to behold.  Everything about his character, from the beginning of the film to the end is powerfully placed as a reminder of the slow spots on land or sea, where people are trying to survive, that there is still a war above them.  With great performances all around, Nolan's care of casting is safely managed by his actors.  He then places them in danger and lets them slip in and out of it like waves on a constant tide.

Visually, the film is a wonder, but that was a given considering how much Nolan loves IMAX cameras and widescreen format.  He continues to be the closest grand scale director to Ridley Scott, who's The Martian mirrored Interstellar visually in a lot of ways.  Nolan has taken his visual talent to many different levels however and seems in complete control of everything in Dunkirk.  His care of the fictional characters telling a real life story have purpose and meaning, which is missing in so many movies these days.  If nothing else, Dunkirk is further evidence that Christopher Nolan should be given $200 million and let loose upon the Earth whenever he has an idea.  Dunkirk was born in the 90's, when he traveled the route of the English Channel that rescue boats from England took to save soldiers.  He refused to make it until he had enough experience with action films.  That kind of care, waiting twenty years to make a movie right, is a dying art in cinema and one that we are ALL rewarded with by the masterpiece that is Dunkirk.

8 out of 10

Tyler Baker


Tuesday, December 26, 2017

Film Review: Netflix's Bright

Director: David Ayer
Writer: Max Landis
Starring: Will Smith, Joel Edgerton

Back when the script for Bright was circling studios to produce and distribute the film, Netflix outbid everyone and quickly attached Will Smith to headline the flick.  It was obvious by the $90 million price tag on the film, it was meant to be a stepping stone for Netflix's film division, the only part about the streaming giant that hasn't taken off.  They've produced a few mainstream movies, from Beasts of No Nation to this year's War Machine with Brad Pitt, but nothing with a budget as big as Bright.  When they elected to bring in David Ayer as director (and script re-writer) it signalled that Bright would more than likely be a dreadful affair.  Sure enough, the one trick pony who couldn't execute the stolen episode of Arrow he used for a shooting script in Suicide Squad once again takes a could be original film and turns it into a slipped disc of fractured filmmaking.  The end result is a very underwhelming, utterly predictable and overall boring film with an eventual boring sequel already green-lit.

When I first heard of Bright, it was somewhere after I had watched Suicide Squad, entirely against my better judgement and hearing the news that Will Smith was coming to Netflix enthralled me.  Then I got the grave news that the film would be manned by David Ayer and that he would rewrite Max Landis' script.  Well, Neither Ayer or Landis are on a hot streak lately.  Landis most recent film credit was writing Victor Frankenstein, one of the worst films of last year.  Ayer, who I believe peaked with his writing credit for Training Day, has failed to make three other films that aren't just some rehashed, scene jumbled play on that same Training Day script.   Ayer showed his complete inability to manage a big budget or create an original script in Suicide Squad.  Putting them together with Will Smith, who hasn't exactly been going hard at the acting game lately, just seemed too problematic for Bright to work.  Still, I watched it opening day like everyone else.

What I found was a lazy use of fantasy elements, which was the focus of the trailer all along.  It was obvious that Ayer had rewritten the script, since every scene from Training Day was in the film, with the exception of the scene where Ethan Hawke smokes crack.  Over and over, I kept cursing at the screen for having to see the same five scenes in every David Ayer corrupt cop drama, but this time it didn't even make sense.  When he used the fantasy elements, he only used them in little pop up mentions to service the lazy, gutted story that went nowhere.  Hell, there was a dragon in one scene so brief and unexplained, most people probably missed it.  It was this lack of depth in the conceptual stage of the film that suffers the most.  Besides the fact that Ayer is a mess behind the camera, lacks true cinematic vision and can't assemble an action shot with any rhythm, the real problem is his constant need to insert the same tropes in all his movies.  Everyone is racist and cops are corrupt is his main draws.  You saw this in Training Day, Deep Blue, Street Kings, and End of Watch.  This reason alone should be enough to keep Ayer's name off cop drama directors lists; but apparently Netflix had to learn the hard way.

Don't expect any character development or the story to be rightfully explained.  There is no real story, just the quick references of everything magical that is never fully displayed and otherwise serves somewhat the same as a skinny guy flexing at the gym; this movie has no muscle.  It is driven from A to B to C without common reasoning and leads to scenes where Will Smith says, "We need to change clothes, their looking for two cops" only to give up his police issued bulletproof vest for a hoodie, walk outside and then INSTANTLY be found by everyone who is chasing him anyway.  It is that lack of knowledge of their own script and scenes prior that insult people who waited months for a Will Smith Netflix movie.  With a handful of secondary characters who we never even know by name or real purpose and called in acting from the great Will Smith, I couldn't help but feel bad for poor Joel Edgerton, who spent hours and hours a day in makeup to be the ONLY person who showed up to act.

Where they go with the second film, we don't know, all we do know is Will Smith is on board and I personally hope David Ayer will get blackballed from filmmaking sometime next year.  Until then, plan on seeing bad versions of Training Day over and over again.  I wouldn't even value the cgi, which was only utilized in one scene really, a scene Ayer loved so much he spent more time going back to it then developing the main characters.  This is the kind of film that is too lazy to name it's Orc main character anything other than "Nick".  This is the kind of film that shouldn't be called a film, it should be called an overpriced piece of shit, because that's what David Ayer created.

3 out of 10

Tyler Baker

Film Review: Only The Brave (2017)

Director:   Joseph Kosinski Writers:   Sean Flynn  (based on the GQ article "No Exit" by),  Ken Nolan   |   1 more credit  ...