Friday, April 12, 2013

42 review


Adam: This is probably one of the fastest turn-arounds we've ever had in terms of posting reviews. Then again, this is probably because I wrote both of these yesterday and I'm just really excited to get them both posted.

This review is for the new movie 42 that opens today. It really is worth seeing, but if you haven't seen Evil Dead or Jurassic Park in IMAX yet, go see those instead. If you've seen everything else you want to see, or Evil Dead just isn't your cup of blood--erm, tea, then this one is a nice little trip to the movies (as long as you know what to expect). It seems I expected too much from this movie, but I do believe that if I saw it again, I would enjoy it more. Just don't expect a game-changer and you'll be fine.

But enough with this pre-review review. Let's get to the real thing.

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42: A Movie About Trying Something New That Doesn’t


The new Jackie Robinson biopic 42 could have just as easily been titled Race-ball. We’ve seen it before: a hyper-inspirational movie about overcoming racial equality (through sports, no less) that makes the audience feel really good about not being racist, but doesn’t actually tackle anything new or show racism for the monster it is. Honestly, I could end the review there, but I’m going to go more in-depth because there are actually some really good things in this movie, despite the fact that it follows a list of clichés.

42 is the story of Jackie Robinson, the first African-American baseball player to break the baseball color line. I’d like to say, “but it’s more than just a racial sports movie” here, but I can’t. I will say, however, that it executes a lot of the usual tropes very well. The cinematography captures the era nicely, and all of the actors do a great job bringing life to the mediocre writing (seriously, some of it is so dang cheesy). The melodramatic tone of the film is almost laughable in some parts, bringing eyerolls instead of teardrops when the inspirational score plays over preachy dialogue, but not all of the sermons hit a sour note. This film is tailored to a crowd that just wants to see racists be utterly destroyed by “forward thinking” without having to face a real depiction of 40’s racism.

I do, however, feel the need to mention a few specific things that I feel made this movie worth watching and decent (because overall, it is in fact a decent movie). The first, and most obvious, is Chadwick Boseman’s depiction of Jackie Robinson. I’m not that familiar with the real Robinson, but I will say that even I could tell how powerful Boseman’s feelings were about this part. He never once played the victim card, a pitfall of many racially focused films, but rather looked the hatred in the eye and faced it head-on, not with blind courage, but with a real strength that I admired throughout the entire film.
The second was a potent, yet small, interaction between a child and his (I’m assuming) father at a baseball game. It starts with the child’s excitement over the sport, to which the father responds kindly. But when Robinson takes the field and the crowd (including the father) scream racial obscenities, the child has a moment of conflict before joining in with the hateful crowd. This was heartbreaking to me. But the moment is redeemed when the child’s hero (Pee Wee Reese, if I remember correctly) puts his arm around Jackie as an act of acceptance in the face of such hatred. The child stops screaming hate and we can see the absolute regret, yet change of heart, which the adolescent faces. Beautiful.
The third thing that impressed me about this movie was Alan Tudyk’s portrayal of Ben Chapman. I simply cannot stop thinking about it. He plays the manager of the Phillies, and is an absolutely unforgiving manifestation of racism. I’m pretty sure 95% of the uses of the “n-word” came from this man. Being familiar with his other work (A Knights Tale, Wreck-It Ralph, Tucker & Dale vs. Evil, Dodgeball, Firefly), I was shocked to see him play a despicable racist so unapologetically, but boy was it effective. The audience is forced to hate him as his two-dimensionality prevents him from actually seeming human, but he gets his dues in a way that had me rolling with laughter. I’d go so far as to say this movie is worth watching for his performance alone.

And yes, Harrison Ford does a great job (even though he had some of the cheesiest and unrealistic monologues in the entire film).

Overall, I would recommend 42 to fans of sports movies and films that safely tackle racial inequality without committing to the real harshness of racism. As for me, I’ll be watching (the historically inaccurate but realistically harsh) Django Unchained again.

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Evil Dead review


Adam: Hello, everyone! Sorry about the long break in reviews. Riley and I haven't forgotten about you, we promise. But rest assured, we are back in full swing, and picking right up again with a review of Fede Alvarez's vision of Evil Dead. 

I'd like to say this is as full of a review as I would like to have written, but it's not. You should be really happy to read that, though, because I could probably write a book about The Evil Dead series. They are, without a doubt, some of my favorite horror films of all time. But enough gushing. Read the review.

(And there will be another review tomorrow, so check back!)

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Evil Dead: Hail to the Queen, Baby!

Sam Raimi’s 1981 splat-tastic classic The Evil Dead is widely regarded as one of the greatest horror films of all time. Shot in an old cabin with just Raimi and a few friends, an almost non-existent budget, and brutal filming conditions, the finished product would go on to achieve cult status, acquire a rabid fan base, and inspire countless horror films to this day. It would also birth one of b-movies’ biggest stars, the chin-credible Bruce Campbell, who also played the chainsaw-arm-wielding hero, Ash, in Evil Dead II and Army of Darkness (the two Raimi-directed sequels to The Evil Dead). But Army of Darkness came out in 1992, and Raimi and Campbell had both stated many times that a sequel/remake of The Evil Dead would not happen. Lucky for Evil Dead fans everywhere, director Fede Alvarez changed their minds.

Evil Dead (2013) isn’t so much a remake or a sequel as it is a rebirth of a series that had lied dormant for years. It stays true to the formula set up by the original (college friends go to a cabin in the woods and unleash hell via the Book of the Dead), but breathes a fresh, disgusting, undead life into it, and the result is something bloody brilliant.

In this new film, four friends go to a cabin in the woods to help their fifth friend Mia overcome her drug addiction. Right away, this is a stronger plot than The Evil Dead. But their good intentions only make it more difficult to watch as they discover the Book of the Dead in the basement, reading it and unleashing the demonic power it contains. One by one, the friends are possessed and dismembered in fantastically gory ways, made only better by the fact that no CGI was used (except for “touch-ups”) in this film, until a bloody climax that will stick in my mind forever. The signature dark humor is still present, despite the serious nature of the movie, and the blood literally rains from the sky. I’ve never been so grossed out from sounds alone, and the cringe-worthy dismemberments make the Saw movies look like Bambi. Fans of the series will also be pleased to find a treasure trove of nods to the original films, including (but not limited to): Mia wearing a Michigan State sweatshirt, the necklace Ash brings for his girlfriend, the infamous tree-rape scene, and of course, the chainsaw. Not to mention the grooviest after-credits scene I have ever seen.

The biggest criticisms other reviewers have made deal with the lack of humor, that the movie took itself too seriously, or that the plot was weak and the scares were cheap. However, the original Evil Dead also took itself seriously, and had a basic plot. It was just so low budget and campy that it was hilarious. Personally, this new movie scared the hell out of me on multiple occasions, and it is without a doubt the best horror movie I’ve ever seen in a movie theater. I’m not entirely sure what the naysayers were expecting, but as for me, I couldn’t be happier with Alvarez’s vision (not to mention Sam Raimi and Bruce Campbell both approve).

As a die-hard Evil Dead fan myself, I was beyond satisfied with this new film, and I’m bursting with anticipation for Alvarez’s announced Evil Dead 2 and Sam Raimi’s also announced Army of Darkness 2, as well as their ambitious possibility of a seventh film in the series that combines the storylines of Ash and Mia. But while I wait, I’ll kill time by going to see Evil Dead again and again. Well done, Alvarez and company. Hail to the King Queen, baby.