Archive for category Movies

The Hurt Locker

I agree that it’s been a while since this movie has been out. I agree that I’ve bothered to review it after the Academy gave it 6 awards. I agree that I should’ve reviewed it a while back. But it just sort of slipped past my mind.

Hurt Locker Poster

The Hurt Locker

My Rating : 5/5

Directed by : Kathryn Bigelow
Featuring : Jeremy Renner, Anthony Mackie, Brian Geraghty

If you want to see a movie that grabs hold of you by the shoulders and rattles you, see The Hurt Locker. This movie, in one word, can be summed up as intense. Very intense. The story revolves around 3 members of the Bravo company, who form the bomb disposal squad – Staff Sergeant William James (Jeremy Renner), Sergeant JT Sanborn (Anthony Mackie) and Specialist Owen Eldridge (Brian Geraghty). James came in to replace Sergeant Matt Thompson (Guy Pearce), who was killed while trying to defuse an IED (Improvised Explosive Device). The 2 original members of the team try their level best to control their somewhat fearless, bordering on reckless new team leader.

The movie attempts to analyse and portray the psychology of the soldiers fighting in Iraq, and, in my opinion, succeeds. You’ve got James, the reckless bomb disarmer, with a gung-ho attitude; Sanbourne, who’s the real backbone of the entire team, and Eldridge, who is a nervous wreck through most of the movie.

James’ refusal to adhere to protocol, may result in a greater success rate at disarming bombs, and earn him his superiors’ praise, but it does not improve his somewhat strained relations with his teammates. The chemistry between the 3 protagonists is a plus point for the movie. You know Sanborn and Eldridge resent James to a certain extent, and it comes through at several instances. The tension is palpable, and you can feel it, in many scenes.

Also, the movie portrays less of real action. It’s the suspense that’s the real clincher for this movie. The team, inevitable, views anything and everything as a threat, which is not surprising. They are in a hostile environment, with a possible remote detonation imminent, and the natural conclusion is that anyone taking an unhealthy interest in the proceedings is considered a threat.

But the movie is not just about bombs blowing up. There is a particular scene, where one of our protagonists breaks into a house to pursue the killers of an innocent boy, and instead he meets a professor, who he holds at gunpoint, who just tells him:

You are a guest. Please…sit down.

I think this is one of the most important dialogues in the entire movie. It dawns upon him, that he is nothing but a temporary presence in the country. However, once he leaves the country, and returns, he is emotionally scarred. He constantly ponders over the war, the innocent civilians being killed, and eventually makes the decision to return to Iraq, this time for a 1 year stint with Delta company.

The cinematography in the movie really stands out. You’ve got super slow motion cameras to capture stuff like explosions and shells ejecting out of rifles, and that just makes the whole thing even more beautiful and surreal at one and the same time. Although a good amount of the movie is shot on cameras which are hand-held, it just adds to the raw action. While a bomb is being disarmed, the scene is shown from several different angles, including what it must look like to an onlooker, which just adds to the suspense. There isn’t much in terms of score, but what little does exist, blends in perfectly. More of a tension-builder, than a space-filler, really. But it works well.

Kathryn Bigelow does an amazing job of putting the grittiness and challenges of serving in Iraq on the screen. The story throws light on those parts of the war story that aren’t told often. This is a war movie unlike most others. And for that reason along, it deserves credit. Taking a stereotyped subject, and telling the story in a completely fresh way is indeed deserving of an award or two (6 Oscars, 72 wins and another 46 nominations at last count).

But the movie must be taken with a pinch of salt. As many real-life bomb disarming squad members say, no one is really as reckless and stupid as James, and that the movie,  in general, is nothing but a big joke. Anyway, my point is that if you haven’t seen this movie already, you must get your hands on a copy immediately. The reason why I gave it a 5/5, is that there is very little that I can find wrong in this movie. That’s how I rate movies. I don’t look for the good stuff, I look for the stuff that might put you off, and frankly, this movie doesn’t have much to offer in that field.

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Percy Jackson and the Lightning Thief

Ahem, another thing, I do occasionally watch some movies. So, after my exams got over yesterday, my friends and I bundled into a couple of cars and went to Ambience Mall, in Gurgaon to catch 2 movies (the plan eventually fell through. So after a quick bite, and a heated decision over which movie to watch, we decided on Percy Jackson.

This decision was of course, influenced to some degree by the fact that there were some Percy Jackson fans in the group. Thing is, we were late for the My Name is Khan show anyway, so we didn’t really have much of a choice.

Percy Jackson and the Olympians: The Lighting Thief

Percy Jackson and the Lighting Thief

My Rating : 2/5

Directed by : Chris Columbus
Featuring : Logan Lerman, Brandon T. Jackson, Alexandra Daddario, Jake Abel, Pierce Brosnan, Catherine Keener, Uma Thurman, Sean Bean

OK, for the uninitiated, like me, Percy Jackson is a series of books by Rick Riordan, and this movie, is based on the first of the series – The Lightning Thief.

The movie’s basically about what happens when a God and a mortal get busy i.e. demi-gods. Percy Jackson is a demi-God, which is apparent right from the outset of the movie, and our little hero has to fight seemingly insurmountable odds to prove himself.

Fine, so the movie has some really unbelievable stuff, like airborne-Converse shoes, and Uma Thurman with snakes for hair, but overall, the movie moves at a relentless pace. Unlike the books, there’s hardly any humour in the movie. It’s just a constant blur of fight and flee, which is not all that bad.

The graphics are pulled off quite well. Especially water. I can tell that it’s not that easy to refract light through water that realistically, but they did it quite well.

Logan Lerman, who plays Percy Jackson, doesn’t really come across as a demigod at any point, just another scrawny American teenager with an overdone accent. Alexandra Daddario does a decent job of the don’t-you-mess-with-me-or-I’ll-cut-your-vegetables-off, but not a particularly memorable performance. Brandon T. Jackson, who does Grover (who’s a mutant half-goat-half-man a.k.a satyr) would’ve done a better job, if his role was scripted better. It’s nothing but a constant flow of stereotypical I’m-the-black-guy-I-talk-with-a-swagger-and-keep-repeating-y’know-what-i’m-sayin. Honestly, that was definitely overdone. Apart from that, Pierce Brosnan and the others, like Steve Coogan, do a pretty OK job, but again, nothing that memorable.

If you’re a die-hard Percy Jackson fan, I might suggest avoiding this movie, or else, at least take someone along to restrain you and fit a muzzle on your mouth, at least, that’s what I was doing with 2 of my friends. They were constantly bemoaning the fact that the movie has very little to do with the book, which is inevitable what happens each time a book is adapted into a movie. But for someone like me, who hasn’t read the book it was a fun movie to watch. I’m now going to borrow the books and read them to find out for myself exactly how convoluted the story really is.

But the fact remains that this movie has little or no replay value. So it’s nice to see it once, but only once.

SPOILER ALERTSPOILER ALERT — SPOILER ALERT

Some details of the plot may be mentioned below.

So the story goes like this – young Percy, is a dyslexic boy, with ADHD, without the faintest inkling that he’s the son of Posiedon, the water God. What he does find out is that he’s not dylexic, just that he can read ancient runes better than English. Plus, the fact that his substitute English teacher is a fury with a rather nasty face, who wants the ‘lightning bolt’ back (poor Percy is completely confused by this), and that his best pal, Grover, doesn’t use crutches cause he can’t walk, but because he’s half-goat. This is followed by a spirited sprint to a camp, just off the highway, for demigods. Naturally, a light sprinkling of mythological creatures can be expected, and a Minotaur is quickly dispatched off. Percy’s mom, played by Catherine Keener, naturally, can’t get through the barrier, because she’s mortal, and this trend does continue, with her running full tilt into invisible barriers and then just moaning that she can’t come with her son, and that he must go on, and all that sentimental malarkey.

Then Percy has his ass whipped by femme-fatale-Jr. Annabeth, daughter of Athena.  This is followed by young Percy discovering that water turns him into a warrior of sorts. Then he gets to know Mom’s held prisoner in the underworld and naturally, he embarks on a quest with the crazy chick and the satyr. They do stop by Luke’s place, who lends Percy a shield.

This is followed by scampering over North America in a Ford Transit, finding little pearls to help them find their way to the underworld. On the way, they encounted Medusa (Uma Therman), who like gargoyles more than people, a Hyrda and they get high in a casino, and steal a Maserati. All this while, Gods prepare for war (cue stormy clouds).

All this while, Percy’s dad Posiedon, whispers advice into his ear, despite the fact that they’ve never seen each other. Plus, whenever Percy tries to exert his control over water, he does look quite constipated, without fail. Oh yeah, and the entrance to the Underworld is in Hollywood. I don’t particularly mind that, it’s just that does it have to between the letters of the Hollywood hill sign?!

This if followed by a round of unsuccessful negotiation with Hades, Percy’s uncle, who’s kept his mom prisoner. And voila, out of nowhere the ‘lightning bolt’ pops out of the shield. A considerable amount of confusion and back-stabbing later, they get rid of Hades, and using the 3 pearls, wing their way back to the Empire State Building, which is the gateway to Olympus, besides other things. Grover gets left behind, because there were only 3 pearls and Percy’s mom had to come as well, plus he found a rather nice lady friend in the underworld, and didn’t mind spending some private time with her.

Naturally, returning the lightning bolt to the gods wasn’t going to be that easy. So Luke turns up with another pair of flying Convers shoes, and they battle it out for the bold. By the way, Luke’s purportedly the real Lightning Thief. The best part is when cornered, Percy smashes a couple of water tankers, and Luke tries to fight it with the lightning bolt. Ideally, this is a recipe for disaster, but that’s for mere mortals I guess. The graphics are best at this point, the water effects are done pretty well.

Again, after returning to the Empire State Building, they get on an elevator of sorts to Olympus. Naturally Mom does the I-can’t-come-further-go-on-Percy thing again, and then Percy returns the bold and has a little one-on-one chat with his Dad, who basically abandoned him. All is well, end of story. They return to the camp, train a bit more, sexual tension between Annabeth and Percy and that’s it. The End.

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300

The title is quite misleading. I haven’t yet seen the movie, and most certainly am no qualified to write a review. Or I could just plagiarise Ankur’s movie review. Actually, is turns out this is my 300th post, disregarding Karthick’s occasional ones.

Psst…the last paragraph was 42 words long…nobody really cares though…

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