Friday, April 8, 2011

Limitless (2011)

Nick's Breakdown –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Entertainment: 4
The core idea for this movie is a winner, and gives an otherwise roughly executed story mileage. However, this movie barely stands inside the "like" category. I found I was excited to see the movie finishing as it wrapped up--never a good sign--as the plot bogged down and got boring somewhere in the middle.

Writing: 2
While the main idea was good, execution was lacking. The main character (Eddie) is unlikable, and the amoral approach to the script feels like a missed opportunity to get viewer buy-in.

Presentation: 4
The visuals were decent though occasionally nauseating. 

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Karate Kid (2010)

5/18 (Nick)


Nick's Breakdown –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Entertainment: 2
I had some hopes for this film as some had said it was really good. Unfortunately, it wasn't very good. I found myself very bored within 20 minutes.

Writing: 2
Just like the original, only more poorly done. The script had a ton of fluff and repetitiveness. I was irritated that they called the show Karate Kid when it was all Kung Fu and set in China (Karate is Japanese). In fact, at one point they disparaged Karate in this movie, making me feel a little irritated that they had used the name at all.

Presentation: 1
The visuals were ok but nothing fantastic. I was a little irritated during scenes of them training on the Great Wall of China--as if that would ever happen.

The Smith kid poorly interpreted the character. I didn't like the performance and didn't care for the character. Some of that was undoubtedly the writing, but a good portion was his acting.

In the end, I felt like this whole film was a kind of marketing campaign by the Smith parents for their son--right down to the cheesy rap he performs during the ending credits. I don't blame them for trying to give their son a boost into the industry, but I didn't enjoy this attempt at all.

The Sorcerer's Apprentice (2010)

7/18 (Nick)

Nick's Breakdown –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Entertainment: 3
It failed to capture my imagination and really draw me in to that world. I didn't hate it, but I wasn't fully entertained.

Writing: 2
Cliched, flat characters with typical flaws. Inconsistent world that never feels buyable. Under edited.

Presentation: 2
Despite poor writing, the actors do reasonably well with what they've got and save it a little. However, the overall visuals felt all wrong in several parts, and moderate the rest of the time.

Monday, December 13, 2010

Ip Man (2008)

16/18 (Nick)

Nick's Breakdown –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Entertainment: 6
This is a foreign martial arts film that is actually about the story rather than the fighting. Don't let the R rating fool you. This show has very little gore, profanity, sexuality, or other potentially offensive imagery. What it does have is a well acted and gripping "semi-biographical" account of the man who popularized Wing Chun. Most martial arts films are fight scenes loosely strung together by a poorly presented or campy story. Instead, this film takes on a Chinese man's struggle to survive Japanese occupancy of his homeland, with fight scenes happening naturally rather than to keep the movie paced. This is one of the best martial arts films I have ever seen, and I have seen many (both foreign and Hollywood varieties).

Writing: 5
The writing is clean, concise, and tight. It avoids loose ends and extraneous ideas. Nevertheless, it was not amazingly original or creative, so a 6 is not justified.

Presentation: 5
I must admit, I am fan of the washed out, nearly black-and-white filming style used in this movie. In this case it fit well with the story as it was set in the 1930s and 40s. I did not get the feeling that the filming was just a gimmick. Many of the fight scenes are visually beautiful. The acting advanced the overall feel of the movie. I especially thought the lead owned his role.

Saturday, September 4, 2010

The Blind Side (2009)

13/18 (Nick)

Nick's Breakdown –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Entertainment: 5
Inaccurately marketed as a football film. The Blind Side is a light (considering the topic) and heartwarming drama. It was refreshing to watch a show about a teen/adult interaction that was not all about teen angst. That said, it moves a little slowly at times. Overall, this show a feel good character driven drama that is well worth watching.

Writing: 4
While the writing is acceptable, there were several points where I felt the writer had intended more than made it into the movie. One example, there seemed to be some conflict between Sandra Bullock's character and her daughter, but nothing materializes later. I could name several other inconsistencies, but most were minor.

Presentation: 4
Visually this show was acceptably presented. The acting was very good but the visuals were quite standard.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Harry Potter 6

Before I get into my commentary, I wanted to note that Jared has graciously allowed me to contribute to his blog. I may not be as proliferate or elaborate in my reviews, but I am thoroughly excited for the opportunity to learn more about all art forms, especially film. All comments and view points are very welcome.

--John


I don't remember the last time I saw the sixth movie in a series and was confident it was the best of them all. Albeit a little distant from the book, this movie was far more profound than any of the other Potter films.

My favorite character in this movie was Draco Malfoy, hands down. So cold, dark. Alone. There was so much tension inside of him, and it was portrayed beautifully. This picture captures the scene well.

The lines in the background cross each other and cause a lot of tension. The view from the mirror is great because it implies that Malfoy is exposed! Who is the real Malfoy? It's a very soul searching moment and it speaks so much to an internal struggle (which we see all the way to the end of movie). The coloring in this scene is brilliant too.


In context with the other films, this film stands very strong. Having read the book though, I wished they had more about "The Half Blood Prince". It didn't seem to be very important in the movie who the Half Blood Prince was nor did it seem to be real concern. Considering all of the other things they cut out from the book, I think they would have cut out all the Half Blood Prince references in the movie if it weren't the title of story.

What are your thoughts on the movie in any aspect - acting, directing, diegesis, etc.?

Sunday, August 9, 2009

An Overview

Before diving into this madness, let me preface what this blog is all about. I am a recent graduate of the BYU Film Program, wherein I regularly and thoroughly studied, analyzed, and criticized art in its several forms (film being #1 on my list). Because film is my craft, and above all just for fun, I've decided to maintain a modest library of analyses and criticisms of movies and other forms of art. Hopefully this will keep me critically sharp and diverse, and stimulate some good conversation (feel free to contribute, agree, disagree, etc., just please refrain from using excessively artful and colorful language in the process). :-)