Posts Tagged ‘Danny McBride’

Up in the Air - Minute Movie Review

Sunday, February 7th, 2010

Review:

George Clooney lives in the air - on planes and in airports. 322 days a year, he is on the really high road (sorry for that horrible joke) in his job of professional employment terminator, i.e. he fires people and helps them cope with the situation by painting it in bright colours as a chance for a better life. And he is happy in that life of hotels and airports without any real human connections. Things change when he meets a woman he actually falls for while also encountering the enthusiasm of a young colleague fresh out of college, who invented firing over the internet. He takes her on a trip to learn the ropes while his life of solitude slowly dissolves. The film is often extremely funny while also dealing with a real dramatic problem (being laid off), but ultimately falls a little flat. It’s great fun to watch for the most part, but the end is hardly satisfying and feels disconnected and unreal.

Random Observations:

Up in the Air at the IMDb

This is the sixth of the ten Best Picture Oscar nominees (more about the Oscar nominations here) I’ve seen and I’m still rooting for one I haven’t seen - The Hurt Locker. The film is also nominated for Best Director (Jason Reitman), Best Adapted Screenplay (Reitman and Sheldon Turner), Best Actor (Clooney) and Best Supporting Actress for both Vera Farmiga and Anna Kendrick. Out of those, Clooney’s performance and Reitman’s direction are the most deserving winners, but both are unlike to walk away with the Oscar exactly one month from now.

Because there was an unusually long queue at the ticket counter, I actually missed the first few minutes of the film, something which I absolutely hate, and feel somewhat reluctant about the validity of my critique.

For the most part, the film worked as a realistic tale of human life, but the fact that  somebody whose company fires people for other companies thinks that it might be a good idea to do so over video-chat, was too contrived and repeatedly took me out of the movie.

Pineapple Express - Minute Movie Review

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

Review:

When a stoner visits a murder, he naturally runs to his dealer. But he made a mistake - he left some of the precious and rare Pineapple Express marijuana at the crime scene. And now everybody is out to kill the two. The film was heralded as a funny stoner comedy - which it is not. The jokes are far and few between, the constant drug references more annoying than entertaining and the action scenes groan-inducingly bad. Coming from the creative team surrounding the new king of comedy Judd Apatow, I expected more, but this film just falls flat on its face. And then laughs about it.

Random Observations:

Pineapple Express at the IMDb

Okay, the film isn’t all that bad. There are a few funny moments.

A rather unusual role for James Franco as the drug dealer, who I last saw in Milk.

I’m fairly certain that when Seth Rogen (co-)wrote the film, he knew he was going to play the lead role and based some story decisions, such as his character dating a high school student, on that fact.

Minute Movie Review - Tropic Thunder

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

Review:

A movie about the making of a movie, Tropic Thunder tells the story of what happens when a novice director sets out to make the most expensive war movie. The comedy written and directed by and starring Ben Stiller, manages to poke fun at Hollywood and movie-making as well as the nature of celebrity and acting. The film drew some criticism for having a white actor appear in Black Face and the heavy use of the word “retard”, but since both occur to make jokes at the expense of neither black people nor mentally handicapped people, it is undeserved and should not distract from your enjoyment of a solid comedy.

Random Observations:

Tropic Thunder at imdb.com

The movie starts with fake trailers for movies starring the main actors. Method actor Kirk Lazarus (Robert Downey Jr.) is in a film about a gay monk, starring “Five Times Academy Award Winner Kirk Lazarus and Teen Choice Award Winner for Best Kiss Tobey Maguire”. I knew I was going to enjoy that movie when I heard that.

Especially funny is Tom Cruise’s performance as a overweight, balding, “slightly” crazy Studio Mogul. Cruise is barely recognizable in the make-up.

I’m not a big fan of Jack Black, but when he is set opposite actors that calm, his “bubbly personality” is bearable. That doesn’t make, however, the “jokes” for which the film uses him the least bit funny.