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Saturday, November 22, 2014

Whiplash: 10/10



Being an artist, whether writing something, filming something, or playing something, requires a special edge. This special edge is a passion that not everyone can possess, and not everyone can maintain. This special edge can alienate you from the rest of society, can cast you as a black sheep, can drain all your willpower, but at the end of the day if you are good at your craft this is all that matters.

Whiplash is a grandiose work of cinematic bittersweet delight that explores that darkness of said passion and the drawbacks that comes with it. It is required viewing if you ever want to know what it feels like to be a tortured soul determined to be the best. There were only 12 people in the theater when I watched this: we all wound up clapping in the end.

Whiplash thrashes around like bebop jazz: initially inviting, then becomes loud, unexpected, twisted, daring, violent, and entertainingly tedious. On the surface it looks like a simple tale of an aspiring jazz drummer entering a tough course with a nasty instructor becomes something much more. It is about two people that seek perfection in their craft in an art form that can easily hide the blemishes. It is about two people trying to succeed in a type of music that is a far cry from what it used to be. The olden days are referenced aplenty, from style to music to the victim artists within the genre.

On the surface, it may look like a simple film to direct. But Whiplash contains a heavy and hyper dosage of extreme close-ups, long shots, fast alternating cuts, and just a dizzying cinematographic energy that is on par with the best action films. Damien Chazzelle not only writes the strong script that is far from predictable, but also gives the movie a strong flavoring of authenticity from the small details to the music that is ultimately performed in front of our very own eyes.

The acting deserves Oscar nominations all around. Although J.K. Simmons will receive almost all the (well-deserved) attention for a spellbinding and flawless performance as a profanity-laced and dangerous perfectionist teacher that becomes a tyrant once the class starts, Miles Teller also deserves just as much acclaim for bringing his extremely devoted yet sympathetic lead character to life. The jazz action is intense, the blood, sweat and tears are frighteningly real. The tension is heavy in an unlikely Hitchcockian sense, and by the time you get to the climactic scene you will simply be swept away by the musical, emotional, and psychological madness.

It is not an easy movie to stomach, it is a tough pill to swallow. But surviving the intense thrill dramatic ride of passion brings enough catharsis and snarky emotional payoff to have you hooked from beginning to finish. Whiplash is easily one of the best films of 2014 as it all comes together perfectly like a great jazz ensemble.

Being an artist is zealous torture, plain and simple. Whiplash perfectly personifies this fact of life.

And this type of torture is exactly why I am writing this review at 4 in the morning. And whether you understand this aspect of my life or not, I wouldn't have it any other way.

Interstellar: 5/10




Interstellar is like trying to consume a 10-inch slice of pizza in your mouth without chewing: we know the pizza is always good, and we know that the more pizza the better, but then after a point it becomes pure overkill. That is what Interstellar is: cinematic overkill that overstays its welcome, overstays its logic, and lingers around long enough for you to notice the rapidly-thinning plot. The technical aspects were indeed spectacular in every sense of the way, which arguably keeps the movie afloat for as long as it possibly can before the third act weighs everything down with its left field conclusion.

What really limits Interstellar more than anything else is the plot and the script. Movies that use a backdrop as vast and expansive as space needs a smaller story to keep the audience and the logic in check. This is what worked for Wall-E, Gravity, and to a lesser extent 2001: A Space Odyssey. With Interstellar however, too much is explained, and the audience is required to make massive leaps of faith that we may not be willing to make---especially after already going through two hours of it. The dialogue is slightly overblown and loses authenticity, and by the climax too much is being discussed and not enough is being shown.

The performances and the technical details keep the dialogue and story from disappointing us too much. Matthew McConaughey carries this film well as he becomes simply a man concerned about the future of his family in the midst of the grand space adventure that takes too many twists and turns that requires a second viewing to fully realize it all. Anne Hathaway, Jessica Chastain, and Michael Caine did a swell job with the minimal material handed to them. They each added a sense of believability to a plot that was quite devoid of them as the movie went on.

The cinematography and special effects were top-notch, although they suffered a few setbacks if you compare them to 2013's Gravity. Interstellar hides its space scope with far too many closeups of the crew in the space station, when there was an entire universe to be explored. The other locales themselves were quite lacking in eyecandy and creativity, leading to us longing for more scenes of outer space.

Also hurting this film was that too much was happening at the same time, not in plot but in presentation. Sometimes the dialogue audio was battling the musical score and sound effects, resulting in a loud mass that made it tough to hear and comprehend the scene. In the case of Gravity and 2001, it was made sure the music was front and center, toning down just slightly when dialogue was needed to be said.

Christopher Nolan is a go-big-or-go-home type of director. Simplicity is not in his resume, he loves his stories and films complex, full of wonder, full of questions, and full of awe-inspiring scenes. However, simplicity is what is definitely lacking in Interstellar. If the film spent more time showing instead of telling, then we would have had a better visual feast ahead of us. A movie of this kind, with so much room to explore, needs to be more like Jurassic Park (simple, yet incredibly thrilling) and less like Contact (psychologically and philosophically inducing).

I truly wanted to enjoy this movie, considering the time, effort, and sheer labor put in to this cinematic space opera. But the entire affair was too bloated, too overdone, and just altogether didn't leave much to the imagination. Each of the pieces were good from the acting to the directing to the cinematography to the special effects. But altogether none of it really meshed, even with a running time of over 160 minutes.

In space, nobody can hear you. In the movie theater however, every yawn can indeed be heard, now matter how pretty it looked...

Friday, November 21, 2014

The Top 30 Films in the Official Walt Disney Animated Features Canon (Part 2)



This is a continuation from the list I had started a few days ago. Let's continue...





#20: Tarzan
Last Time: 15


Where is the love for this one? Great action, superb cast (Minus an annoying Rosie O’Donnell), Phil Collins, strong family themes, vibrant colors, and an ability to water-down the drama? Tarzan was the last great film from the Disney Renaissance before it was followed by a Wild Card and a series of flops and disappointments—and seriously Phil Collins and that spellbinding soundtrack. But seriously though, Rosie O’Donnell….why??




#19: Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
Last Time: 10


The original. The classic. The gem. We all know Snow White, but do we remember it truly? Snow White may have been the first, but it set the benchmark already sky high just like what Toy Story did to computer animation. From music to characters to gags to the archetype villain that was pretty much created here, Snow White may have created a formula that was improved upon many, many times---it did create the formula.

Walt Disney went for broke with this one. Amidst allegations that animated movies would ultimately destroy your eyes and that children would never be able to survive such a long period of time seeing animation, Snow White would become the biggest film in the short history of the cinema. It would become the blueprint for the next several decades of Disney animated films.




#18: Winnie the Pooh
Last Time: n/a


This movie is short. This movie is devoid of any drama, devoid of any villain, devoid of any conflict whatsoever. But this under-the-radar gem was full of heart, full of humor, and has more charm than ten animated movies put together. It boasted a nice laid-back soundtrack powered by Zooey Deschanel and a flawless voice cast. It’s arguably the perfect film for the young-younglings if you want to get them started on the world of Disney.

Yes, ranking this small, tiny flick above Hunchback, Tarzan, and Lion King seems rather strange. However, unlike the previous three films, there is no inconsistency here. From start to finish it set out on a simple goal to merely glide from the first minute to the last and there were no bumps along the way.





#17: Frozen
Last Time: n/a


Ah, the Let it Go Movie. Frozen became arguably the Little Mermaid for Millenials and the Twitter Generation. A powerful song highlights a great soundtrack that sounds straight out of Broadway, and combining that with flawless animation and two strong likable princesses----one of them has amazing powers. Honestly it’s the music that runs this movie and allows for Frozen to fly past a weaker third act to become quite the anti-Disney movie with its strong feminism and themes of individualism.

Some movies become blockbusters and burn out quickly, others just linger and remain in the American psyche for a long period of time. Some movies just hit the right note at the right time. Frozen would not have been as big a hit in 1994, or 2001, or 2004 even. But in 2014, with Disney in full swing, reputation improved from earlier, and with the equal rights movement exploding alongside Twitter, Instigram, and Tumblr, Frozen took the global culture by storm. Even if it won’t ever be considered Disney’s best, it can be arguably the most successful movie on this list.




#16: One Hundred and One Dalmatians
Last Time: 8


In the entire barometer of the Disney Animated spectrum, there are a few movies that has a very unique art style. It can make the movie (Sleeping Beauty---later in the list), it can break the movie (Home on the Range…ugh). 101 Dalmatians’ art style was very jazzy/deco 1920s and was one of the strongest parts of the movie---which miraculously managed to compose of millions of spots from dozens of Dalmatians without breaking the willpower of all the animations involved. In terms of achievement alone, 101 Dalmatians is just as powerful and groundbreaking as Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.

Now, let’s throw in a psychotic villain, superb cast of humans AND animals, lots of memorable moments (remember the rubbing scene?), plenty of subtle tension, and a nice villain song to hold it all together and you have yourself a bonafide Disney classic.





#15: Mulan
Last Time: 16


Probably the strongest female heroine in the entire Disney line, Mulan is not just front and center, she is a strong character with strong will, strong values, and kicks plenty of butt—especially against an underrated Disney villain and Chinese tradition. The movie boasts a great soundtrack, well-directed and edited animated action sequences, and does a good job staying away from the typical Disney tropes. It was a unique story driven by great writing and great characters. Seriously, watch it again, its still a darn good film.

I love how Frozen convinced everyone to forget that we had a strong female heroine to look up to. I love how Shrek convinced everyone to forget that Eddie Murphy had a similar strong sidekick performance right here. And finally, before Let it Go, we had Reflection. Mulan would create some of the necessary steps to make the eventual global phenomenon Frozen---and yes, usually the original is superior.




#14: Big Hero 6
Last Time: n/a


Shockingly buzzing past most of your Disney classics in terms of quality, Big Hero 6 is a very powerful film in terms of emotion and caps it off with an abundance of action comedy that entertains and prevents you from hitting full depression. Becoming a wonderful origin story that has all the style and tone of your classic Marvel comics, Big Hero 6 is sure to become a successful franchise down the road. But thanks to Beymax, Hiro, and the rest of the fun cast, you won’t mind seeing them again in the near future. A very likable film, this is the film that cements Disney Animation as fully rejuvenated after the Eisner downfall in 2000.

Love or hate Disney, they have the perfect formula for crafting a successful animated film: heavy loss, very likable and relatable lead character, superb supporting cast and required great best friend, villain that tinkers the line between interesting and intimidating, and always leaving room for growth via sequel or television show. This formula may make the Disney films predictable, and Big Hero 6 is quite predictable---but knowing you are going to have a blast witnessing it is half the fun.




#13: Princess and the Frog
Last Time: 18


To go back to the winning formula and start the Disney Renaissance II however, you needed to go back to the past. So Disney reached out to the directors of Aladdin/Little Mermaid/NobodySawThis Treasure Planet to introduce the world to Disney’s first black princess. And thanks to high energy, an awesome villain, delightful cast, and nice focus on Cajun detail, Princess and the Frog is fun, feels fresh, feels truly genuine. And lastly it was the beginning of the unraveling of the usual Disney tropes that had been hovering above the brand for decades.

Similar to Martin Campbell whom saved the Bond franchise twice, there isn’t enough love for Ron Clements and John Musker. These two are responsible for three Disney Renaissance films, and the one that started the sequel Renaissance. They know how to pace, they know how to keep the audience riveted, and knows how to keep the Disney magic flowing regardless of the setting—while at the same time give each film its unique voice.




#12: The Little Mermaid
Last Time: 20


Snow White. Cinderella. The Jungle Book. Fox and the Hound. These films jump-started new eras in Disney animation---for better or for worse. The Little Mermaid is part of this list, because it started the Disney Renaissance while at the same time obliterated the Don Bluth rivalry once and for all. And of course in order to become a major success and start a movement, the movie has to actually be good. The Little Mermaid became the first Disney film that flowed and sounded like a Broadway musical. You weren’t watching a film, you were watching an entertainment extravaganza of music, humor, action, and romance. Beautiful varied music, illustrious animation, and a memorable cast of characters to boot.

Argue what you will about her intentions, Ariel became the first Disney princess to truly defy the norm and truly have a wholesome adventurous personality that girls and females in general can look up to. She wasn’t a damsel in distress most of the time, she was out there chasing her dream. But Little Mermaid also became the first Disney movie to give the Prince a good personality as well. Little Mermaid set a new bar, and even though it does get raised down the road in the 90s, this film pretty much saved the Disney company.




#11: Pinocchio
Last Time: 9

Snow White may have been the original that laid out the tracks, but Pinocchio would be the locomotive that would steer the company into quality and financial heights. Pinocchio is a gem from start to finish. Not a single lost moment, not a single dull moment, and also was quite the ballsy film for its time. The slightly religious Wish upon a Star, the sinful and scary Pleasure Island sequence, the overpowering Monstro the Whale sequence, and the beautiful ending made for a complete work of art.

Pinocchio was about a simple creation transforming into a full human full of values, full of mistakes, and full of love and redemption that would overcome his weaker moments on his quest for becoming real. It was a beautiful story about family, about growing up, and about sacrificing for one another. It was about appreciating the important people in your life, and it was a quest for happiness. Right now we are entering flawless territory, where the classics become masterpieces. Pinocchio is an animated masterpiece, without a doubt. Nearly top-notch perfect from animation to music to the aesthetics.


The top 10 is coming up. Be ready to complain.....

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

The Top 30 Films in the Official Walt Disney Animated Features Canon (Part 1)



With Big Hero 6 now out in theaters and earning goblets of money for the House of Mouse, and with the 25th anniversary of the animated film that jump-started the original Disney Renaissance (The Little Mermaid), I decided to revisit my ranking of the main Disney Animated Films canon. I have updated the list to include the new films and switched around a few movies to make it more accurate. Some of these animated gems have aged better than others, while others didn’t get as much respect as they should have earned the first time.

Instead of ranking alllll of them, I took the 30 that are my favorite, and have ranked them in the blogosphere for you all to read, enjoy, and potentially complain. I will split this into three chapters, just to increase the tension.




#30: Fantasia


Similar to what happened to 2014’s Boyhood, Fantasia is a great achievement that is marred by a production that could have been better. There definitely were some awesome sequences, and then there were some that should not have existed. Nonetheless there is a beautiful marriage of music and animation that will set the bar to how animated movies should look and sound for decades to come.




#29: Meet the Robinsons


Acting as the bridge between nearly-comatose Disney Animation and the Disney Renaissance II, Meet the Robinsons is a very charming and sweet tale about an orphan that meets a delightful family in the future. Without spoiling too much, time travel, multiple timelines, and random zany humor gets woven together to create an uneasy yet slightly engaging family experience. The third act nearly eradicates all the issues from the rest of the movie by providing a powerful climax. This one is a light gem that time has forgotten.




#28: The Lion King


Probably my pick that will cause the most controversy, I have one of Disney’s biggest smash hits on the lower end of the countdown. Hear me out, this movie is a bit slow, a bit uneven, and can never truly end as strong as it started. As a matter of fact if it weren’t for Timon and Pumbaa who knows if the tykes would have survived the second half and the ho-hum climax. The Lion King has superb animation and music, but suffers from being a bit overbearing. Nonetheless, it resonates with kids and adults nicely, and fits the Disney Renaissance themes of loss, fighting the odds, and overcoming your fears. There’s just better out there.




#27: The Hunchback of Notre Dame


If you want darkness, look no further. As a matter of fact, Disney had to toy around with the movie (adding funny gargoyles, muting the music of Hellfire) to prevent the used-to-be-box-office-poison PG rating. And honestly the scaling back is what prevented Hunchback from truly entering the required dark territory to become a dark animated masterpiece. From a commercial standpoint, made sense to lighten the mood a bit with a few nice musical numbers and kids humor. On the artistic standpoint, oh boy what it could have been….But it will earn lots of points for the superb animation, demonic villain, and musical soundtrack.




#26: Robin Hood


I had pointed this out in the previous list, but Robin Hood is marred by all the limited budget restrictions. Lots of recycled animation, lots of unused ideas, lots of unmet potential. In spite of this there is an underrated folk soundtrack and plenty of delightful characters to follow. Robin Hood loses points for inconsistent pace and tone, marred by a final sequence that gets dark out of nowhere.




#25: Wreck-It Ralph


Even though it’s a kid’s movie disguised as a gamer movie, Wreck-It Ralph became a surprise hit with its blend of creativity, great voice acting, strong main/supporting character relationship, and just an overall uniqueness that was definitely missing in most animated movies. And yes, extreme bias will plant this lower on the list because it was missing a deeper embedding into the gaming/gamer culture that could have made this another Scott Pilgrim vs. the World---great movie that ages perfectly well because it never took itself too seriously. Nonetheless, at least watch it for Sarah Silverman and John C. Reilly’s flawless performances.




#24: Hercules


A little underrated, a little understated, and was marred by heavy box office competition and the fact that boy’s movies just don’t get the same love as princess/female-driven movies in the Disney barometer. However, Hercules has a nice cast, one of the strongest heroines in Disney history, one of the best villains in ANY animated movie, and a Karate Kid swagger that turns a boring mythology into an entertaining movie.




#23: The Sword in the Stone



A good chance that most of you have not seen this one. Don’t worry, this applies to most of America. The Sword in the Stone is a quiet gem that combines rich animation with a lot of activity that keeps the film moving and prevents it from being predictable or boring. The climactic battle was unexpected, the ending breaks the fourth wall, and to be honest there isn’t a dull moment to be found. It lightly stays above water and never sinks.




#22: The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad


Combine two very different but very entertaining stories together and what do you have? Another forgotten Disney gem that was released in the World War II days that blends two dastardly different tones and creates a sugar/spice combination that gives you a wholesome feeling by the end of the movie. Well-animated, plenty of whimsical (and slightly British) humor, and more evidence of the zaniness that sometimes comes from the usually-serious Walt Disney Studios.





#21: Dumbo

One of the more inspiring movies in history, Dumbo follows a baby elephant as he rises from a mere circus animal into a circus sensation in a quick, beautiful, cinematically poetic 64 minutes. Within that mere hour, we are met with one of the creepiest sequences in film history (Pink Elephants on Parade), a beautiful mother/child scene, and a heck of a cathartic climax that would inspire generations to come. The animation is beautiful, the story was very original at its time, and would catapult the company into a new realm of success.


The list will continue in a couple of days. See you then......

Sunday, November 16, 2014

The Quality Drainage of the 76ers




Want to know what is preventing the NBA from rising out of the third/fourth place ranking in the American sports market?



The Philadelphia 76ers.




It may not seem like a big deal, especially when the NBA has bigger problems like bloated season, flopping, the LeBron lovemaking, the existence of a basketball team called the Pelicans, and the fact that the Seattle Supersonics still hasn’t returned. There are bigger things, and let’s not even get started on Adam Silver wanting to bank in on sports gambling (which will open up a Pandora’s Box that the league may never be able to control). But the 76ers are wrecking the NBA, honestly.

This awful Philly team is leading the wave of floppers, quitters, and might-as-well-be-non-existent teams that are just coasting through the season without conflict, without a plan, without an attempt to be in the playoffs. They are run by awful management that smokescreens the idea of getting good picks to cover up the fact that they are just in the league to collect the profits and nothing more. Losing by over 50 points to any team while being a professional team is inexcusable. Only the 86 Celtics, 96 Bulls, 96 Sonics (Sorry, needed to reference that former franchise again), 87 Lakers, and 92 Bulls should beat you by that much---nobody else.

There is no way that a collective group of players who dreamed, worked, sweated, bled, clawed, sacrificed, and viciously fought their way into the professional field would throw games. This isn’t the fault of the players, it’s the fault of the lottery system, and the decision to not attempt to put out the best product on the court by upper management. This style of survival in the NBA is bad for the coaches, bad for the players having their basketball lifespan get sacrificed unfairly, and bad for the league because every match they play is essentially a throwaway game---like the one against the Mavericks. There were people reading the newspaper in Dallas midway through the second quarter because the game was so stupidly out of reach.

Do you really want to go to your home court to watch the 76ers play? Of course you don’t. You would rather pay to see two teams put out full effort. This mindset is extremely damaging. Unlike the other leagues that sells hope (NFL and its extremely streamlined 16-game schedule), the NBA from the very beginning eliminates a slew of ballclubs from ever considering competing for a shot at the playoffs, let alone the title. There is this belief that there is no hope to catch fire mid/late season and sneak their way to the top like the Royals of 2014, the Ravens of 2013, and the *insert yearly catching fire NHL team*. Automatically, you see white flags being held up left and right, and the 76ers are your prime example.

Look what happened the night after the beatdown: they took the Rockets to the very end of the game. Granted this team isn’t going to win a championship, but they should be able to at least put up some sort of fight and stay relevant. I assure you the massive backlash contributed to the actual attempt to win a basketball game the night after. But with a world that communicates a lot better, faster, and with more research to choose from, you cannot throw a game and expect to get away with it.

Adam Silver needs to address this because pure suckage teams like the 76ers waters down the overall product. And yes, we have always had bad teams every single season, but before there was more bite in the junkyard dogs of the conference boondocks. Even the first-year Vancouver Grizzlies notoriously talked trash to MICHAEL JORDAN ON HIS PRIME one night. Do you currently see anyone in Philadelphia attempt to talk trash to a high-caliber team like the Warriors or Spurs? I severely doubt it.

I have always dreamed of a concept that would force the worst teams to have to fight to deserve their spot in the NBA by competing in a tournament against the D-League squads. And yes I know that 999 out of 1000 times we will see the awful NBA team walk out alive, but the scare alone would prevent pathetic teams from continuing its patheticness without punishment. It devalues the league having teams like the Philadelphia 76ers behave the way they are currently behaving. No team that used to have Wilt Chamberlin and Charles Barkley should behave like this----ever.

Until the NBA fixes this issue, it can never be a competitive league to the likes of the NFL (Which is the best at this, I shall admit), the MLB (Which saw 12 teams hit Wild Card Berth territory in September), and the NHL (Which seemingly shuffles its playoff teams every year). The 76ers are a cancer, and it needs to be controlled.

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Big Hero 6: 8/10




There was an interesting cinematic juxtaposition that occurred on the weekend of November 6th, 2014.

Just as the silently sputtering and problematic Pixar announced yet another sequel, this time a pointless one to a masterpiece of a trilogy that ended perfectly, we see the Walt Disney Animation division deliver yet once again another surprisingly powerful and entertaining film. Continuing a quality streak that began with 2009's Princess and the Frog, Walt Disney Animation Studio has essentially created a second Renaissance that has delivered quality Oscar-winning films (Frozen) as well as a few surprises (Wreck-It Ralph). With Big Hero 6, we see a great animated film devoid of a love story or princesses that is full of humor, heart, action, and overall entertainment.

The Disney formula is alive and kicking in Big Hero 6, as we have the themes of heavy loss, the strong villain, the essential supporting cast that steals the show, and of course minimal surprises that doesn't deviate the movie too far from its main course of entertaining the kids and adults alike. And although the Disney formula prevents Big Hero 6 from reaching the necessary shock in your better comics and comic book inspired movies like The Incredibles, it's still a fun flick that becomes a nice departure from your recent influx of animated and superhero sequels.

Part of the requirements of making the ultimate comic book film includes a unique look and feel that distances itself from other works—whether it's the toxic dark Gotham City or mythological-laden Asgard. One of the best aspects of Big Hero 6 is how deep and engaging the world of San Francisokyo is, as the visual range of the city is just as expansive as the environments of recent Disney movies like Frozen, Tangled, and even Wreck-It Ralph. This gives the added visual flair to the chases and action sequences sprinkled throughout the two hours.

Just as spellbindingly good as the animation was, it was the powerful and quick-moving script that propels Big Hero 6 to the next quality level. Although it is based off of a Marvel comic, the adaptation is extremely loose, extremely watered-down, and toned down to appeal to a wider audience---while at the same time giving it a necessary dosage of likability that was absent in the original comic. The trio writing team crafted a screenplay that acts like an origin story but paces like a complete film. There just isn't enough time to give the correct amount of attention to the delightful supporting cast of characters (and its crafty anime-influenced villain) but luckily our well-rounded hero (aptly named Hiro) and his robotic pal have strong personalities, and a strong friendship to propel the movie forward. Beymax has layers of depth that the trailers and commercials could never convey.

Although the tropes and current financial strategies of the Disney company (and suddenly Pixar) prevents Big Hero 6 from truly reaching the stars (Because we all know what happens to successful Disney animated movies), we are still treated to a well-directed wholesome blend of comedy, drama, and action swirled around a cool comic book setting wrapped in a Disney bow. From beginning to end this film will entertain, will move you, will make you laugh, and will make you cry. Even if it's a few feet from reaching 1999-2009 sans-Cars Pixar level (then again, this epic run may not happen again from any film studio), Disney Animation is doing a fantastic job fully recovering from Eisner's attempted murder of the animation studio.

After spending years following in Pixar's footsteps, it looks like the Walt Disney Animation Studio has just about caught up.

Sunday, November 2, 2014

Nightcrawler: 8/10



David Fincher would be absolutely proud.



Nightcrawler is a melancholy subtle thriller that laces fantastic acting with a strong script with plenty to say and wrapped together by tight editing, incredible cinematography, and a moody James Newton Howard (who has been exceptionally busy lately) score that has a very unexpected Ross/Reznor feel. Dan Gilroy's directorial debut is arguably among the best since Shyamalan's Sixth Sense---another impressive debut with the similar under-the-bubble suspenseful psychological horror that keeps you on edge until the final minutes.

How the writer behind Reel Steel and Two for the Money managed to imitate Fincher I'll never know, but it sure does help to have some Oscar-worthy acting at front and center. Jake Gylenhaal as Louis Bloom is easily the strongest aspect of the film, as his character is like a bone-crushing car accident: brutal, uneasy to look at, but you still can't look away. This is Gylenhaal's movie easily, as his cold eyes, anti-social demeanor, and psychotic way of life makes his character one of the best you'll see in cinema nowadays.

Similar to how End of Watch (Also…Jake Gylenhaal) took a known lifestyle and then displayed the grim dark side of it, Nightcrawler chronicles the late-night lives of people that record and deliver the late-night news—while simultaneously showing the ugly underbelly mannerisms behind what you see on television. Dan Gilroy's script pulls no punches as he not only writes an interesting character in an interesting premise, but also interweaves some clever and biting commentary about the pursuit of success and the murky morality during the rise to the top.

But the movie never appears preachy because it still has a good story to tell, and consistently prevents you from figuring out how far, how deep, and how wicked it goes. Nightcrawler has a slow yet steady pace as it morphs from a glimpse of a lifestyle to a scenario that stems from it. The ascetics enhance the mood as the cinematography transforms Los Angeles into an eerie environment with heinousness creeping out of the dark corners everywhere. What is more surprising than Gilroy's superb directing debut is Howard's score which deviates far from his normal blockbuster orchestral feel and gives us a low-volume high-intensity score that undermines and bubbles under the silent terror of the hunt for grisly footage.

What honestly kills some of Nightcrawler's momentum in the Oscar run and attempt to be the best film of the year is ironically David Fincher and Gone Girl. Gone Girl not only came out first, but also has the biting commentary that oozes out of its script, superb directing, and a phenomenal musical score that ties together a story that has few heroes, and even fewer chances of the audience figuring out its next direction. Gilroy makes a grand entrance, too bad it had to follow up the master of the broody underground cinema scene—similar to how the wonderful David Bowie had to unfortunately follow (and never have a chance to surpass) Queen's legendary performance in Live Aid 1985.

However it is cruel to bring up another movie when the one currently being discussed is still a great work of cinema. Gylenhaal, Gilroy, and Howard are Oscar-worthy as their skills blend together to create one of the best films of the year, and a hell of a thriller overall. Even if the ending underwhelms and dissatisfies a little, there is no denying that Nightcrawler will leave an impression on you from the character of Louis to the slick writing and camera-work that perfectly unites him and the midnight environment slums from which he comes from.

Nightcrawler is dark, dark chocolate: satisfying, fulfilling, and with that nice bitter aftertaste.