Big Screen: Rare Exports

This movie will definitely be in my top 5 for the year.

It’s called Rare Exports. It’s Finnish. It’s about Christmas. Fantastic writing, fantastic acting, fantastic directing. A fairytale that you would never predict or expect.

It opens in Chicago Christmas Eve at the Music Box. I believe it opens in NYC then as well. I hope word of mouth gets the film to more cities and more theaters because it is such a wonderful experience.

It is a piece of wildly creative, truly inventive, FANTASTIC filmmaking.

Thumbs up to the uppest of possible degrees.

DVD: Taking Chance

Calm. Slow. Elegaic.

I cried approximately 100 times during the 78 minutes it took to watch this flick.

I would say this movie* should be required viewing for those deciding to send our young’uns off to war…if I didn’t think those people were 90% jerks who don’t care about anyone but themselves and even seeing this couldn’t move their stonecold hearts.

*Along with others, like In the Valley of Elah, Hurt Locker, and Stop Loss–just to name movies made about THIS war. There are of course many other great movies made about other wars. They should get them all in a pack like Oscar voters. “Before making a really bad decision, take a minute and attempt to understand what these movies have to say about war.”

Big Screen: The Town

LOVELOVELOVELOVELOVE does not even begin to describe how I feel about this flick. This is some EXCELLENT moviemaking, y’all, and I encourage you to get yourself to a theater to see it. Now. Before I buy all the tickets. (I’ve seen it three times already.) It’s my #1 movie for 2010, edging Inception aside. I loved that flick, but I became much more emotionally involved with this one.

I was on the edge of my seat, spellbound, from beginning to end. Great performances, great mood, great settings. So well done. Serious kudos to Ben Affleck on becoming such a great director after such an oddly varied acting career. He also does some great acting in this and he’s totally rocking the Mark Messier skeletor look btw. Jeremy Renner is great; Jon Hamm is great; the gray-haired dude whose name I can never remember even tho he’s on my favorite show Sons of Anarchy is great (this dude); Blake Lively blows the roof off, her performance is a stunner and what a surprise.

Great car chases on one-way cramped up streets in Boston. Great performances by the neighborhood gangster thug florist and his right-arm: the feelings of menace are just so well done here. Hamm’s last line of dialogue: SUCH a great threat. I want to have a reason to use that line. Fun to see so many people from Affleck’s previous directing flick (Gone Baby Gone) popping up again here in very different roles.

SO steeped in its time and its place and its smalltown-in-the-big-city focus. SO many randomly great moments: the nuns getting out of the car and the cop turning his head; the hand on the tattoo when leaving the table; the pictures at the barbecue; the late-night walk to the AA meeting; the “CSI. All the CSIs. Bones.”… I could go on and on.

A heist movie that feels so original and so beyond the constraints of a heist.

I just loved it. Obv. Anyone need someone to go see it with them? 🙂

[p.s. quick DadReaction: pretty well done heist movie, but he hated the ending and thought one thing specifically was just “nope! wouldn’t happen!”]

Big Screen x2: Mesrine: Killer Instinct and Mesrine: Public Enemy #1

(en français)

Based on the true life of French gangster Jacques Mesrine, sometimes compared to Dillinger.

These are gritty violent and nasty movies. They’re not stylized glamour pieces AT ALL*. I liked the first one better. You could see the evolution from a frustrated angry young guy into a vicious gangster. Not excusing it at all, but you could sort of see where he got set on his path. By the second movie, he is far too into his legend and convinced that people see him as a folk hero** while much of his violence is the result of his inability to control his own anger.

Vincent Gallo is really great in this role…and really horrifying. Although repellent at times to a degree that it was hard to believe that woman after woman would agree to be involved with him. But I partially have a rough time with that actor due to Irreversible, a movie I hope none of you are ever forced to watch. Horrifying.

These were both good, both were seeing. But be prepared.

*i.e., this ain’t no Public Enemies.
**He broke out of a prison that had insanely inhumane conditions (later closed on that account) and then went back and tried to help others escape.

Big Screen: Salt

Basically a female Jason Bourne movie. AND WHO WOULDN’T LOVE THAT. Angelina knows how to play fierce. The fight scenes were excellent. There was never a moment of hesitation.

Sure there may have been a few too many twists and turns and a few too many plot situations at which you had to suspend your disbelief. SO WHAT. It’s an action flick. It was fun! Entertaining! Great chases! And fights! FIGHTS!!

I guess I’m just a little sick of action movies getting panned for being…wait for it! (a.k.a. Barney)… ACTION MOVIES.

I was entertained. I wanted to immediately sign up for a million karate classes and get in lots of fights. And that’s exactly how I want to feel after a movie like this. Thumbs up.

Big Screen: Scott Pilgrim vs. The World

So! Much! Fun! And I didn’t even know the source material! Made me laugh, out loud, a lot. Michael Cera’s shtick was a little less loneresque here and really worked well. The music was great, the “this is a video game!” effects were great, the story was fun and entertaining. YAY!

and p.s. Brandon Routh and Chris Evans were, to my mind anyway, playing roles that hilariously mocked their usual casting. Loved both their bits.

Big Screen: The Kids Are Allright

For the most part, I really liked this flick. Good performances, great chemistry between ALL the actors really, well-written dialogue.

There is a lot of disagreement on this flick out there in the world wide web, including MANY articles that slam it for being a straight dream of what gay life is like…or something along those lines.

What I liked was I felt it was a very realistic portrait of a marriage and the possibility that infidelity isn’t necessarily the be all/end all of a relationship. I felt it was very true in its portrayal of how a family works (both when it works well and when it so badly does not) and what makes a family truly a family to begin with and the kinds of things that happen in a looooong long-term relationship and how making the CHOICE to be married to someone is a choice you have to keep making over and over and over again.

Big Screen: Knight & Day

So basically it seems that everyone thinks Tom Cruise is sooooo crazy now that he’ll never get a decent review again in his life. Did they not see that he was crazy before the couch jumping? It’s not like he JUST became a scientologist.

Eh, whatevs, losers. Not an academy award winning drama, no. But a perfectly fun, suitable entertaining action flick? Yes.

I mean, what were they expecting???

In a funny side story, so I had seen Inception on that Saturday, this on the Sunday, and then on the Monday I went in for my shoulder surgery. I was really wacked-out confused waking up from the anesthesia (plus at that point you haven’t eaten in like a million hours) and I had this drug-induced sort of daydream hallucination that Peter Sarsgard (from K&D) was pushing Leo (from Inception) in a wheelchair through the recovery room (some random dude in real life was getting pushed around). It was QUITE surreal, lemme tell ya.