Showing posts with label Movie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Movie. Show all posts

Friday, October 23, 2009

Transformers 2 Reviewed


Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen is Michael Bay's sequel to Transformers. In the movie, we pick up two years later. Sam (Shia LaBeouf) and Mikaela (Megan Fox) are still together with Bumblebee still watching out for Sam. Optimus Prime (Peter Cullin) and Major Lennox (Josh Duhamel) have started a military organization called NEST to hunt down and eliminate the remaining Decepticons. In the beginning of the movie, we discover a couple disturbing bits of information: 1) Optimus Prime and Megatron were not the first of their alien kind to visit Earth and 2) there are two small shards of the Cube remaining on Earth - one is being kept under military guard and the second was found by Sam in the jacket he was wearing during the last major Autobot / Decepticon face-off.

The Primes set out to planets across the galaxy to take the energy of their sun, under one condition: the planet could not be inhabited by intelligent life. The Fallen broke that rule when he found Earth and decided to try to take the power of the sun. It is because of this decision to break the rules that this Prime was dubbed The Fallen.

When Sam finds the piece of the Cube in his jacket, he is zapped by its power and his brain is filled with alien codes and images. We later find out that the images are a map to find the machine built by The Fallen to steal the sun. The Decepticons have re-organized and gathered in greater numbers to find Sam, get the chips of the Cube, find the map to the machine, revive Megatron, start a new Decepticon army under the direction of The Fallen and take over the Earth.

But Sam doesn't want to have any part of this. He is 18 now and heading off to college. He even tells Bumblebee to stay at home so he can try to have a normal life. His first night away, he attends a party which is soon cut short by Bumblebee who takes Sam to Optimus Prime. Optimus tells Sam the bad news that Decepticons have stolen the Military protected fragment of the Cube and that the government is now questioning whether or not the Autobots are just as much to blame for the chaos and destruction going on. Sam still doesn't want to get involved and tells Optimus that it's not his war. Optimus ominously predicts that it soon will be.

The Decepticons use the Cube fragment to bring Megatron back to life and he meets with The Fallen. Since The Fallen is a Prime, he can only be defeated by another Prime. Since Optimus is the only one left, the plan is to get to Optimus and destroy him so that The Fallen and the Decepticons can take over the Earth. The Decepticons go after Sam to kill two birds with one stone: getting Sam will bring out Optimus, and Sam has the map to the machine in his brain. The plan works. They captured Sam, Mikaela and Leo (Ramon Rodriguez), Sam's college roommate. They are about to dig into Sam's brain when Optimus comes to his rescue. During their escape, Optimus gets into a battle with three Decepticons. He manages to kill Grinder and dismember Starscream, but then Megatron kills Optimus Prime. During the battle, Sam overhears that not only is there a machine on earth, but there is another power source like the Cube that can animate their race.

With Optimus out of the picture, The Fallen and the army of Decepticons make their presence known on Earth and demand Sam Witwicky. It seems all hope is lost: Optimus is dead, Autobots are severely outnumbered, they have lost the backing of the government and Sam is a wanted man. Sam thinks his only option is to turn himself in when it hits him. The map in his brain can be used to find the power source before the Decepticons find him and they can use it to revive Optimus to defeat Megatron and The Fallen.

A journey across the globe begins with the Decepticons in hot pursuit. Sam, Mikaela, Leo and Bumblebee enlist the help of a couple rogue Decepticons and ex-Sector 7 Agent Simmons (John Turturro) to decipher the alien codes. Once they figure out where the power source is, they call Major Lennox for reinforcements and to bring the body of Optimus. The race is on and the Decepticons, the military and the Autobots all converge on the power source's location at the same time and the battle begins.

This movie was non-stop action from beginning to end. The plot was pretty simple: Autobots wage the battle to destroy the evil forces of the Decepticons. The quality of the CGI Transformers was done just as brilliantly in the sequel as it was in the first movie. Shia is great again as the leading man: brave, sarcastic, witty, loyal. Megan Fox is gorgeous, but don't let her looks deceive you. She plays a strong leading woman who can take on the Decepticons just as bravely as any military officer did.

I did have a couple issues with the movie. First of all, Bumblebee is back to talking to Sam via the radio in audio clips to get his point across, but in the first movie, his vocal processor was fixed and he could talk just fine when he told Optimus that he wanted to stay with Sam. Second, the Twins (a pair of well-intentioned but juvenile Autobots) were a bit annoying with their antics. But, when you take into consideration that they learned how to speak based on our World Wide Web as mentioned in the first movie, you can see that each one would have a different personality. They weren't as annoying as JarJar Binks of Star Wars who nearly ruined the entire movie, but they were still annoying. And finally, The Fallen tells Megatron that only a Prime can kill a Prime which is why they need to get rid of Optimus. So then how is it that Megatron is the one who kills him?

Other than that, I thought it was thoroughly enjoyable. And they weren't too subtle about the option for a third Transformers installment. This movie will definitely find a home in my DVD collection and I'm already making room for the third one as I'm sure they have to be working on it right now. So what's the next movie that will be on my mind? We shall see . . .

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Fred Claus Reviewed


Fred Claus is the story of Nicholas Claus' (Paul Giamatti) older brother Fred (Vince Vaughn). It tells how the two brothers grew up and even though Fred was the older brother, he constantly lived in the shadow of Nick. We all know what Nick grew up to be, but what about his older brother? Well, he grew to be a well-intentioned, misguided Repo-man looking for his one big break. And that break is going to be a new casino, and all he needs is $50,000 to get it started. He schemes a plan to make some quick cash which gets the local Santa union riled up, lands him in jail and also in hot water with his girlfriend (Rachel Weisz). Out of desperation, he calls his brother Nick to bail him out and also hits him up for the 50 large. Nick agrees, but it seems he's in a bit of a bind himself and tells Fred he can have the money if he comes to the North Pole to help out during the Christmas Crunch time. There are more good kids asking for more toys than ever before and Nick is afraid they might not make it on time. To make matters worse, an efficiency expert Clyde Northcutt (Kevin Spacey) will be evaluating Santa's Toy Shop, and he's got a grudge against Nick. Clyde has already put the Tooth Fairy and the Easter Bunny on notice and would love nothing more than to shut them down and streamline their Toy Shop down to the South Pole.
Vaughn's character was completely predictable; however, just like his girlfriend Wanda (Weisz), we just can't help but love him. His quick, sarcastic wit keeps us chuckling. He's basically a nice guy, just needs something to prompt him to dig down deep to be the great man he's destined to be. Giamatti is great as Santa Claus and I applaud the original take on the story: he takes his generosity and jolly demeanor and becomes a holiday figure as his career. The story is original, seeing Santa through the eyes of his jaded older brother, however it is a Vaughn movie, so the sequence is the same as every other Vaughn movie: good guy, witty sarcasm, has one big scheme that will make everything alright, that falls through, a life lesson must be learned, and a happy ending is sure to follow. Spacey was great as the vengeful Efficiency Expert, but then again, Spacey is great in everything. Unfortunately, when there was about 30 minutes left in the movie, you could already tell exactly what was going to happen: you knew what Fred's moral conscience would force him to do, you knew why Clyde was so angry with Santa and what Santa would do to turn it around, and you knew what would happen with Christmas and with every relationship hanging in the balance.
As far as Christmas movies go, I give them credit for originality in story. The set was amazing. Santa's Toy Shop was something out of a modern Norm Rockwell variety. Probably one of the most original scenes, a scene I haven't seen in a Christmas movie before was Christmas morning at the North Pole where the elves all gather to watch the kids opening their Christmas presents. It did tend to get a bit goofy at times - certain sound effects were completely unnecessary and as silly as the "biff", "bang", "booms" of the old Batman TV series; and there was a brother's support group with Frank Stalone, Stephen Baldwin and Roger Clinton that was good for a slight chuckle, but really wasn't necessary. So I was delightfully surprised, but not blown away by this movie. Then again, it's not really intended to be one of those movies. I don't see this being a new Christmas Classic and I don't see it joining my DVD collection, but I did enjoy it more than I thought I would.
So kudos to Vaughn and Giamatti. And what is the next movie that will either blow me away or leave me wanting a refund? We shall see . . .