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Miss Bala Review

This review may contain subtle spoilers.

Although the review below does not contain any specific spoilers, the gist of it could allow the reader to guess the movies final outcome, especially the penultimate paragraph.

Miss Baha is a film that is almost great but not quite there hence my 7/10 rating. It’s the story of Laura, a 23 year old working class Mexican girl who with her friend is trying to get a rung up the ladder by entering a beauty contest. Miss Congeniality this is not. Through a series of unlucky breaks and circumstances, Laura falls into a spiral of ever more perilous situations. Every decision she makes pushes her further away from her previous normal existence as she becomes ever more entwined in Mexico’s de facto civil war between the US backed authorities and the Mexican drug cartels.

The film despite being almost 2 hours long never loses your attention as the plot unfolds at quite a pace. The lead actress Stephanie Sigman gives an excellent performance as a normal person having to cope with ever more dangerous circumstances.

Noe Hernandez playing the besieged leader of the drugs cartel portrays a man who seems to know that even though things are looking bleak for him, he somehow instinctively knows that he’ll probably survive. He portrays the characters evil and violent deeds in a very matter of fact way as though he is so used to the violence that it’s just another day in the office for him. A very good performance.

The film has scenes of real menace when you just don’t know how Laura is going to escape her latest predicament and has very well handled action scenes. There’s a good sense of realism and a big pat on the back should go to the sound crew who have created an excellent sound mix with very realistic and naturalistic sound effects punctuated by ear shattering gun shots and explosions.  The desaturated photography adds to the gritty realism and use of mostly close up and medium shots add to the claustrophobic situation that Laura finds her self in.

Now for the problem. Having thought about the movie over night, it ends up being a procession of ever more dangerous episodes for Laura rather than being what was probably intended as an expose of the chaotic Mexican drug war. For Laura to be in the situations she is in. she must have bought a number 13 raffle ticket, walked under a ladder while tripping over a black cat and breaking her fall by smashing into a mirror. However as the film progresses it does clearly show the corruption in Mexican society and the futility in trying to do the right thing.

Recommended to see in a cinema because of the 2.35:1 wide screen photography and the excellent sound or just rent the Blu-ray if you’ve got a big TV and good surround sound.


Fast Tube by Casper

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Man on a Ledge Review

As you’d expect, “Man on a Ledge” is a Swiss-cheese plotted heist and “prove his innocence” movie but taken as just that, it’s quite an enjoyable movie. I suppose after having seen enough of these kinds of movies, I shouldn’t expect perfection in how every plot thread is tied up since very few movies manage it. However, what the movie does excellently is setup the plot and build up the situation perfectly. Just starting as a literal man on a ledge, we see subtle layers added until we get this full on crescendo of diamond heists, negotiators, cops, convicts, bad guys, good guys all happening on in a single block in New York. So, given that you’re willing to suppress your tingling plot-hole sense, it can be an enjoyable movie.

The cast is quite good and the acting and tension is par for the course. The leads Sam Worthington and Elizabeth Banks do a great job. Seeing Worthington as an ex-NY cop, ex-convict and Banks as a negotiator/psychologist with a past is surprising on paper but they manage to pull it off very well. However, Jamie Bell is one of the heist-team but his opposite who plays Angie make for some cringe-worthy comedy, like some Sofia Vergara slapstick in the middle of a tense situation. Ed Harris looks emaciated but equally sinister as the villain and there are a host other minor NY characters.

I can hear the Hollywood pitch for the movie in my head, “it’s like The Negotiator combined with The Italian Job but happens in NY and instead of a hostage situation we have a jumper.” And, essentially it’s just that – a movie that heavily recalls other movies from the past except perhaps for the man on ledge. On a side note, it seems that every NY movie nowadays has a reference to the OWS movement and what a typical OWS protester might look like.

The movie is at its best when it clamors for our hero who desperate and is fighting all odds to clear his name as he shouts from his ledge, “I am innocent and this is my retrial.” The movie is at its worst when it’s ungainly roping in all the plot threads it cast out but can’t seem to put it together. Overall, it’s a good enough movie for people who like these kinds of movies. If you’ve caught yourself bitterly berating the many plot holes in heist movies, maybe this isn’t for you.


Fast Tube by Casper

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Underworld: Awakening Review

When details finally came out about “Underworld: Awakening,” my heart sunk a little. True, the second installment wasn’t very good, and the third was a prequel, but I was still looking forward to seeing further adventures of the vampire, Selene (Kate Beckinsale). As it turns out, she’s the only returning cast member. Everyone else is gone from the project, leaving her the one tie to a series (seemingly) well past its prime. “Awakening” also clocks in at under 90 minutes, making the first film’s two hours seem like days in comparison.

The plot this time around is told to us in the form of exposition. After “Evolution,” humans discovered that lycans (werewolves) and vampires exist, and decided to wage war against both mythical creatures. They decided that genocide was the only option, and all but wiped out both species. So, how did Selene manage to survive? Well, she was captured by some scientist folks who decided to keep her alive, but frozen, for the past twelve years. Michael (previously portrayed by Scott Speedman), her vampire-lycan hybrid lover, has presumably died.

So, you’ll be unsurprised to find out that Selene eventually escapes from her prison, fits back into that catsuit that she has grown accustomed to, and begins trying to find out just what the world has become in her absence. Of course, she still believes that Michael is still alive, so she sets out on a quest to find him. Meanwhile, she’s also getting random visions flashing in front of her. It turns out, as anyone who has seen Evolution will have assumed, she has given birth to a daughter, Eve (India Eisley), and the two are linked via their sight. She can see what Eve can see if they are close to one another.

The villain this time around is the head of the scientists, a man named Jacob (Stephen Rae). I suppose the humans are also the bad guys, as they want to kill any vampire they come across, although the one human whose name we learn, a detective named Sebastian (Michael Ealy), ends up helping Selene. She’s also eventually joined by another vampire, David (Theo James). Lycans also still exist, and they end up becoming more frequent as the film progresses after a plot twist is revealed that you’ll probably see coming from a mile away, if you haven’t already guessed it.

There isn’t really a central plot that’s worth discussing. “Underworld”: “Awakening’s” screenplay reads as both lazy and very loose. It’s hard to even reflect back on it and try to remember key moments. It doesn’t care about secondary characters (they’re plot devices), and it doesn’t care for its main one all that much either, although Beckinsale’s Selene does have to show a tad bit more emotion than in previous installments. But not much more.

Essentially, we’re here for the action scenes, which serve both as the main material as well as the glue that holds it together. In what is probably the most action-packed and gory iteration in this series, “Underworld”: “Awakening” certainly doesn’t have many boring moments. There’s no substance to the plot or characters, but if you’re watching the fourth “Underworld” film, chances are you don’t care about that kind of thing. You’re here to see Kate Beckinsale in a tight leather catsuit running around, doing flips off walls, shooting at anything that moves, and doing it all with a blue tinge. You get that with “Awakening.”

Initially, I couldn’t quite put my finger on why I still didn’t have a great time with this film. It did most of the things it needed to right, and was overall quite exciting. But it lacked substance, and I don’t just mean in its story and characters. Even at its worst point (“Evolution”), the “Underworld” series has always maintained some depth to the world that the characters inhabit. An entire back story was mapped out, and we understood the history of both supernatural clans. “Awakening” seems dedicated to both ruining and ignoring all of that previous work.

Here is a film that’s premise involves the destruction of the majority of both species’ members. Presumably, artifacts and historical documents were also destroyed, rendering much of the back story unknown to the survivors. Those who do know, like a man named Thomas (Charles Dance), have no proof of it and have no need to bring it up. The world is no longer an “Underworld” one; instead, it’s just a generic action movie with vampires and werewolves. All of the work that went into the crafting of this universe is destroyed with “Awakening.” It almost seemed like directors Måns Mårlind and Björn Stein went with this story just so that they didn’t have to include any depth, even if that depth is what made “Underworld,” well, “Underworld.”

Maybe I’m overthinking things. Like I said, you’re watching “Underworld: Awakening” to see Kate Beckinsale in a bunch of physics-defying action scenes while dressed in her character’s signature leather outfit. You get that here. The action scenes are slick and well-made, the lycans look better than they ever have before, and the ending sequence, involving at least three distinct battles, is satisfactory, even if the ending as a whole promises much more than it delivers. I did have a good time, even if this installment completely ignores all of the history and back story of its universe. This is a movie for the “Underworld” fans. If you’re one of them, you’ll have a good time here. Newcomers will want to start at the beginning. If you aren’t a fan, this one has less depth and more action than earlier iterations, so make your decision accordingly.

[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bor9gCAB9qM&feature=fvst]

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