Pages

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Goodfellas (1990)



Synopsis: Henry Hill (Ray Liotta) enjoys a meteoric rise through the Mafia until one bad day when he starts seeing helicopters...

Blurb From the VHS Jacket: “You have to see it to believe it – then watch it again. Goodfellas explores the criminal life like no other movie.”

What Did I Learn?: If a ‘made’ guy decides to bust your balls a little during his I’m-out-of-jail party, maybe you should just shrug it off and find another bar.


Really?: 1) Why don’t the other wiseguys involved in the Lufthansa heist either leave town or whack Jimmy Conway (Robert De Niro) when he starts to bump everybody off? 2) Considering Paulie (Paul Sorvino) gave Henry a stern warning against selling drugs, and Henry faced maybe 25 years in the slammer for dealing, why does Paulie give Henry $3,200 out of his own pocket? Why doesn’t he just have him whacked?

Rating: Goodfellas is a character-driven masterpiece with many strong performances. 10/10 stars.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0099685/


Monday, November 21, 2011

Night and the City (1992)



Synopsis: Bottom-feeding, ambulance-chasing lawyer falls even further down the food chain when he tries his hand at being a boxing promoter.

Blurb From the VHS Jacket: “Buy 5 and get the unreleased 1950 version free!” [yup –that’s all there is, besides a few positive reviews]

What Did I Learn?: Regis Philbin doesn’t like it much when total strangers approach him as he’s eating.

You Might Like This Movie If: You love both Robert De Niro and boxing, but you don’t want to watch Raging Bull.

Really?: 1) It's awfully convenient that De Niro’s adversary in the film (Alan King) can usually be found dining in De Niro’s neighbourhood bar/restaurant. 2) Jessica Lange is suspiciously forgiving after she gives her boyfriend $5000 to buy a liquor license and he brings home a forgery.

Rating: Jessica Lange is sexy, Alan King is menacing, and De Niro gives a tour-de-force performance as a sleazy lawyer trying hard to keep it all together. Night and the City is a good movie, but it becomes obvious mid-way through that our increasingly unlikeable hero is on his way towards an epic fail. The film is a little tough to watch from that point on. 7/10 stars.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0105001/

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Casino (1995)



Synopsis: ‘Ace’ casino manager bets on the wrong philly as little buddy generates more unwanted heat than a small intestine filled with jalapenos.

Blurb From the VHS Jacket: “In an era of over-the-top glitz, Sam ‘Ace’ Rothstein (Robert De Niro) is riding high as front man for the Mob’s multi-billion dollar Las Vegas operation. To protect their ‘investment’, the bosses send in Ace’s boyhood pal, hot-headed Nicky Santoro (Joe Pesci). It’s a winning hand: Ace’s brain and Nicky’s muscle – until sexy wild card Ginger McKenna (Sharon Stone) turns up the heat.”

What Did I Learn?: Placing somebody’s head in a vise – and getting an eye to pop out of its socket – is a more effective means of extracting information than poking a man’s testicles with an icepick.


Really?: Ace knows that Ginger is a money-hungry call girl; she tells him she doesn’t love him, and discourages the idea of getting married. Instead of um...listening, he cajoles her into marriage anyway, and even gives her sole access to a safety deposit box filled with money and jewels. Yeah – way to play all the angles, Mr. ‘Ace’ bookmaker.

Rating: Casino is a fun look at a bygone era. De Niro, Pesci, Sharon Stone and James Woods (this blog’s favourite bad dude) offer top-notch performances, even if they’re all playing greedy, violent and manipulative characters. 8/10 stars.  

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0112641/


Saturday, November 19, 2011

Trees Lounge (1996)



Synopsis: Sad sack slugs spirits, swigs suds, squanders soul.

Blurb From the VHS Jacket: “All Tommy wants from life is what everyone else has – a job, a girl, a good time. But the harder he tries, the worse things get. And the more time he spends at TREES LOUNGE, his Long Island neighbourhood bar, the more involved he gets with the lives of the colourful characters he meets there.”

What Did I Learn?: 17-year old girls are trouble.

You Might Like This Movie If: You enjoy snappy barroom banter.

Really?: Buscemi’s character desperately needs a job, and he’s mad at his former boss for stealing his wife; the boss fired him for stealing $1500 from the till one night. Considering the boss actually buys him a beer at one point, I have to think the two of them could theoretically sit down and work something out – even just an employment reference.

Rating: Trees Lounge is a sometimes-funny, sometimes-insightful, character-driven drama, and Steve Buscemi is loveably sleazy. 8.5/10 stars.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0117958/

Friday, November 18, 2011

Once Upon a Crime (1992)



Synopsis: It's laughs galore when rich, old lady gets dismembered and innocent - albeit obnoxious - tourists take the fall.  

Blurb From the VHS Jacket: “What do you get when you combine a compulsive gambler, four bumbling American tourists, a $5000 pup and dead body? ‘Inspired lunacy!’ answers Village View, praising this fast-paced laugh-fest starring Cybill Shepherd, John Candy, James Belushi, Sean Young and Richard Lewis.”

What Did I Learn?: If your betting-crazy husband assures you he isn’t going to gamble your trip money in the casino, you can be pretty sure he’s going to gamble your trip money in the casino.

You Might Like This Movie If: You would watch anything featuring John Candy.

Really?: 1) Did John Candy’s character have an accent? He seemed to slip in and out of using one throughout the film. 2) There are six people on the VHS jacket, and only 5 names - didn't Ornella Muti deserve a credit?

Rating: Once Upon a Crime is a sort-of funny mystery/comedy. An old lady gets murdered, and instead of coming clean with the cops, innocent people decide they’re better off concocting pathetic lies which don’t last very long. Candy is hilarious, while Richard Lewis delivers some nice deadpan lines; the only weak link is Belushi and Shepherd... the first time she elbows him in the face, it’s mildly amusing. The fifteenth time, not so much. 7/10 stars.  





Thursday, November 17, 2011

Uncle Buck (1989)



Synopsis: Loveable oaf prevents unwanted teen pregnancy.

Blurb From the VHS Jacket: “Uncle Buck is the last person you’d think of to watch the kids. But with a little luck and a lot of love, he manages to surprise everyone in this heartwarming family comedy.”

What Did I Learn?: Nobody appreciates a drunk clown.


Really?: 1) Wouldn’t Buck face charges of kidnapping, assault, and maybe a few other offences after he tied up Bug, forcibly confined him in the trunk of his car, and then fired golf balls at his head? 2) If you dropped a rare decorative plate on the floor and it failed to shatter, would you really hit it against the corner of a table to see if it was unbreakable?

Rating: Uncle Buck might be John Candy’s best movie. Even two decades later, it’s still rather charming, and some of the exchanges between Buck and Bug (the sleazy high school student who wants to sleep with Buck’s niece) are just priceless. 8/10 stars.

The Best of John Candy on SCTV (1992)



Synopsis: Big laughs from a big guy.

Blurb From the VHS Jacket: “Get ready for non-stop John Candy in this hilarious collection of classic moments from the brilliant SCTV series... If you like Candy – and who doesn’t – you’ll crack up with The Best of John Candy on SCTV!”

What Did I Learn?: SCTV was much more hit-and-miss than I remember it. Some of the skits were indeed rather funny, although it often seemed as though the sketch comics tried a little too hard.

You Might Like This Movie If: You’ve always wanted to watch a Soviet-themed King of Kensington spoof.

Really?: Quite a few of the skits on this tape featured Candy as part of an ensemble. Couldn’t they have included more from Mayor Tommy Shanks, or a few of Johnny LaRue’s restaurant reviews, for instance?

Rating: While it was indeed wonderful to see the late, great John Candy in action once again, this tape left a lot to be desired. Many of the skits included are hacked to pieces. The tape is only 62 minutes long, and it was obvious that WIC wanted to pack it with as many wacky characters as possible, instead of showcasing Candy’s funniest work. 6.5/10 stars.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0181975/

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Reality Bites (1994)



Synopsis: Bright Young Thing is torn between brooding slacker and high-powered douchebag.

Blurb From the VHS Jacket:Winona Ryder, Ethan Hawke and Ben Stiller (directing his first feature film) star in this wildly funny romantic comedy that looks at life, love and the pursuit of gainful employment through the eyes of a generation sandwiched somewhere between The Brady Bunch and Melrose Place!”

What Did I Learn?: If you sell your documentary film to the “In Your Face” network (essentially a knockoff of MTV), there’s a pretty good chance they’re going to selectively edit it into a piece of exploitive trash.


Really?: I had a little trouble believing that Ryder, who plays a college valedictorian with a $400/week job in TV, would date a pot-smoking idiot with a chip on his shoulder, or hang out with a bunch of slackers. It’s also funny when she’s offered a job at the GAP, given her later problems with the long arm of the law.

Rating: Reality Bites is an interesting companion movie to Singles (I shudder to think how these two films have defined Generation X to the world, by the way), but is probably best viewed as a time capsule of the early/mid-1990s. It’s an enjoyable movie, but it needed a re-write; for a valedictorian, Ryder’s character is a mess, Hawke is just a surly loser, and everyone over the age of 30 is some sort of selfish twit. Watch for John Mahoney (best known as Fraser’s dad) as an obnoxious TV host, and David Spade as a fast food manager. 6.5/10 stars.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0110950/


Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Cartoons Go To War (1995)



Synopsis: American artists join the war effort against racist, violent, hyper-nationalistic enemies by pumping out, um...racist, violent, and hyper-nationalistic cartoons.

Blurb From the VHS Jacket: “On the eve of the Second World War, as patriotic men and women across the nation were lining up to do their part in the fight against fascism, the US Signal Corps inducted some unlikely civilians: a rabbit and two ducks.”

What Did I Learn?: Cartoon animators wear some truly hideous shirts.

You Might Like This Movie If: Deep down, you know that cartoons can also be used to convey positive messages. [Oops – this is the real PSA]


Rating: Cartoons Go To War is a 50-minute A&E documentary look at the men and women who produced wartime propaganda classics such as Private Snafu, Mr. Hook and Der Fuehrer’s Face. Interesting stuff. 7/10 stars.

[No IMDB.com listing]

Dinner With Friends (2001)


Synopsis: Foodie couple hosts dinner party, close friend drops emotional turd in the punchbowl.

Blurb From the VHS Jacket: “When a close friend leaves his wife for another woman, whose side do you take? Is he deserting his family? Has she been sabotaging their relationship all these years? Life can be funny; but not as funny, frustrating or unexpected as simply having DINNER WITH FRIENDS.”

What Did I Learn?: 1) Apparently, a family of four can afford a beautiful home and a cottage in Martha’s Vineyard(!!) by writing freelance articles for Gourmet magazine. 2) Polenta can be substituted for white flour when you bake an almond cake.

You Might Like This Movie If: You enjoy watching dinner parties.

Really?: 1) Near the beginning, Toni Collette breaks into tears during a dinner party and informs her best friends that her husband is having an affair, and the marriage is on the rocks. Instead of ‘checking on the kids’, or beating a hasty retreat, Dennis Quaid continues to sit at the kitchen table with the ladies and even makes a blowjob joke. 2) Toni reveals that Dennis told her husband not to marry her in the first place; since the movie provides flashbacks of 12 years earlier, couldn’t they have filmed that exchange, and provided some context for the remarks?

Rating: Dinner With Friends is an intelligent, character-driven look at infidelity, and its effect on long-standing friendships. My big complaint would be that the characters didn’t sound ‘real’ – the movie is based upon a successful play, and it seemed overly wordy at times; I kept thinking: “that’s not how real people talk”. 7/10 stars.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0271461/




Monday, November 14, 2011

Mulholland Falls (1996)



Synopsis: Nick Nolte beats up people and growls a lot. [Oh wait – that could describe a lot of Nick Nolte films]


Blurb From the VHS Jacket:This isn't America, this is Los Angeles[Taken from imdb.com...the only blurb on the VHS jacket is a review, along with: “$12 million Box Office Hit, 54 Day PPV Window”]


What Did I Learn?: If a military officer ever asks you to take a ride in an airplane that doesn’t have a door – DON’T.




Really?: Oh wow, where to begin? 1) Nolte’s character savagely roughs up three FBI agents and a couple of military police officers and gets away with it. 2) Ok, I realize the Hat Squad’s job is to kick the crap out of gangsters from other parts of the US and run them out of town, but is it really a good idea to do that sort of thing in a crowded restaurant filled with potential witnesses? Why not wait until the guy is finished his meal and jump him in the parking lot?


Rating: Mulholland Falls is an enjoyable film noir, set in late 1940s/early 1950s Los Angeles. The main problem I had is that it’s tough to sympathize with Nolte and his crew; as members of the infamous Hat Squad, they trampled the Bill of Rights and they’re the good guys in this movie! 7/10 stars.


http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0117107/

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Three For the Road (1987)



Synopsis: Charlie Sheen takes a drive in the country with Ferris Bueller’s uptight buddy and an underage wild child. WINNING!

Blurb From the VHS Jacket: “[Charlie] Sheen is an aspiring politician; Sheen’s roommate, a budding poet. The two must escort a Senator’s outrageously misbehaved daughter to a reform institution. All three have nothing in common – but a knack for finding trouble... THE COMEDY OF THE YEAR, WITH THE HOTTEST STAR OF THE YEAR.”

What Did I Learn?: If you park a stolen Porsche in an auto junkyard, right next to some precariously-stacked wrecks, there’s a really good chance it will never be the same again.


Really?: 1) Ok, here’s the situation...Sheen and Ruck have their car stolen (along with their wallets and clothes, but that’s a separate robbery), so they in turn steal a Porsche. When Charlie finds the car he’s legally allowed to drive, he continues to drive the Porsche, anyway. WTF? 2) Sheen’s character is 21 in this film, yet he falls for Kerri Green, whose age is never disclosed, but it’s suggested she’s still a teeny-bopper. Did anything think this was a little creepy? Or that the Senator gave Sheen a pair of handcuffs to use if his daughter gets out of control?

Rating: Three For the Road is a mess; for starters, I had trouble with the basic casting... who could  believe that Alan Ruck would entertain the ladies all night long as Charlie Sheen(!!) totally ignores a wild party in order to finish a position paper for some slimy Senator? Things go downhill from there. 3/10 stars.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0094140/


Saturday, November 12, 2011

Singles (1992)



Synopsis: Grungy Seattle 20-somethings experience the pleasures and pains of romance as they take in lots and lots of Alice in Chains and Soundgarden.

Blurb From the VHS Jacket: “Romance in the ‘90s is where you find it. But what do you do to make it happen in today’s hilarious mixed-up Singles world?”

What Did I Learn?: The TV show “Friends” was a total rip-off of this movie.


Really?: Let me see...there’s the environmental activist who owns a 1970s gas guzzler and says: “I love my car”; the rocker with more jobs than Grover, and who never seems to  smoke a joint; and the coffee shop waitress who has the money for boob enhancement surgery as she’s struggling to pay off her student loans.

Rating: Singles is an enjoyable stroll down Memory Lane (funny how the future seemed much more limitless back then, but maybe I’m just getting older), but the characters - and dating itself - are timeless. 7.5/10 stars.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0105415/trivia


Bellman and True (1987)



Synopsis: Boozy brainiac burgles bank, busts brigands, babysits boy.

Blurb From the VHS Jacket: “When gangland thugs kidnap his beloved stepson, an alcoholic British computer genius (Bernard Hill) is forced to aid the criminals in a dangerous and complex bank heist”

What Did I Learn?: Even hardened bank robbers enjoy singing “I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus.”

You Might Like This Movie If: You love British bank robberies.

Really?: 1) waving your arms like an idiot near an airport runway probably won’t prompt an ascending plane to pick you up. 2) One of the bank robbers is crushed in an elevator shaft, screams bloody murder, and the guards don’t seem to notice.

Rating: Bellman and True is a slow-moving, but enjoyable little low-budget British heist drama. 7/10 stars.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0092636/

Friday, November 11, 2011

The Longest Day (1962, colourized version)




Synopsis: It’s like Saving Private Ryan, except...nobody’s scared.

Blurb From the VHS Jacket:The Longest Day is a vivid, hour-by-hour recreation of this historic event [D-Day]. Featuring a stellar international cast, and told from the perspectives on both sides, it is a fascinating look at the massive preparations, mistakes, and random events that determined the outcome of one of the biggest battles in history.”

What Did I Learn?: John Wayne is capable of walking on a broken foot if you lace up his boots really tight because he’s the Duke, damn it!

You Might Like This Movie If: You think every good war movie needs a few laughs.

Really?: While I’m sure I would welcome the Allied invasion if I were a Frenchman living under German occupation, I really don’t think I’d be jumping up and down with joy as the naval bombardment destroys my lovely home on the coast.

Rating: it’s tough to rate The Longest Day because the movie is clearly a product of its time, and tastes have changed since the early 1960s. Sure, the film won a couple of Oscars, it boasts an all-star cast, and a lot of time, money and effort went into making it. Unfortunately, after viewing The Thin Red Line and Saving Private Ryan, I had trouble taking The Longest Day seriously (especially when John Wayne swaggers around like a buffoon). Leaving aside the graphic violence of TTRL and SPR, both films portrayed ordinary soldiers realistically: scared absolutely out of their minds. In this film, front-line grunts are either gung-ho excited about going into battle, or they’re focused on crap games and impressing the dames when they hit Paris. Even worse, dialogue frequently descends into patriotic editorializing. 6.5/10 stars.





Thursday, November 10, 2011

A Bridge Too Far (1977)



Synopsis: Epic retelling of an epic fail.

Blurb From the VHS Jacket: “An epic retelling of World War II’s most tragic blunder, a Bridge Too Far meticulously depicts the ambitious plan which resulted in more Allied casualties than the entire Normandy landing.”

What Did I Learn?: When you’re surrounded by the Germans, your radios don’t work, the Jeeps you need haven’t arrived, and the lunatics from a nearby asylum are laughing at your misfortunes, a nice cup of tea can’t hurt.

You Might Like This Movie If: You drank Crystal Pepsi, drove a Ford Pinto, and always wanted a pair of Bad Idea Jeans.

Really?: 1) Gene Hackman does a terrible Polish accent. 2) The opening narration claims that Hitler was winning the war and controlled most of Europe until the D-Day invasion; considering the Germans were losing big-time on the eastern front, and the Soviets inflicted something along the lines of 90% of German casualties, that claim seems a bit misleading.  

Rating: A Bridge Too Far is the story of Operation Market Garden: an ill-conceived scheme to drop thousands of Allied paratroopers behind enemy lines in the Netherlands and hold three important bridges. The all-star cast is first rate, and you have to love the scene when James Caan orders an overworked surgeon (at gunpoint!) to save the life of his wounded comrade. My only complaint would be that I expected the film to show what happened after the disaster (who covered their asses, who got into trouble, how did the rivalry between Monty and Patton play out, etc....) and it didn’t provide any follow-up. 8/10 stars.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0075784/


Wednesday, November 9, 2011

The Thin Red Line (1998)



Synopsis: Extremely self-aware American GIs reflect on life’s big questions as they open a can of whoop-ass during the Battle for Guadalcanal.

Blurb From the VHS Jacket: “A powerful frontline cast – including George Clooney, Sean Penn, Nick Nolte and Woody Harrelson – explodes into action in this hauntingly realistic view of military and moral chaos in the Pacific during World War II.”

What Did I Learn?: If your commanding officer tells you: “we’re in this together”, he’s probably full of shit and just wants to make a name for himself.


Really?: I had a little trouble believing eight different soldiers would each provide strikingly similar-sounding, stream-of-consciousness voice-overs, such as: “We were a family. How'd it break up and come apart, so that now we're turned against each other? Each standing in the other's light. How'd we lose that good that was given us? Let it slip away. Scattered it, careless. What's keepin' us from reaching out, touching the glory?”

Rating: Originally nearly 6 hours long, The Thin Red Line was cut down to 170 minutes (which explains why George Clooney appears for maybe 5 minutes right at the end. He shows up, explains the war isn’t about to end by Christmas, and then...the movie is pretty much over). It’s a good film that's marred by too many characters spouting the same psychobabble. 7/10 stars.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0120863/


Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Saving Private Ryan (1998)




Please note: the tone of Schuster at the Movies is meant to be light-hearted and fun. With Remembrance Day just around the corner, I want to make it clear that while this blog may critically assess, and even poke some good-natured fun at WWII classics such as The Longest Day, A Bridge Too Far and Saving Private Ryan, none of my reviews are intended to disrespect either our veterans or the sacrifices they made on our behalf.
Synopsis: Tom Hanks finds that touring the French countryside is vastly overrated.

Blurb From the VHS Jacket: “Internationally acclaimed by critics and audiences alike, Steven Spielberg’s Saving Private Ryan is an unforgettable film achievement that has had profound and lasting impact throughout the world.”

What Did I Learn?: American soliders enjoy listening to Edith Piaf songs as they await a big battle.

You Might Like This Movie If: Deep down, you know that Rangers Lead the Way.

Really?: Considering they were low on ammo, and their mission was to save Private Ryan, I’m still not sure why Tom Hanks’ character decided to take out that machine gun nest and risk further casualties.

Rating: Saving Private Ryan is a brilliantly-made film achievement and well worth viewing. That said, the violence depicted is extremely realistic and bloody – it’s not a movie for kids. 9/10 stars.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0120815/


Monday, November 7, 2011

Empire of the Sun (1987)



Synopsis: Precocious British lad goes away to camp...for a long time.

Blurb From the VHS Jacket: “Steven Spielberg’s first film as a director since The Color Purple is an inspiring, action-packed epic of a small boy in a great way. That boy is Jim Graham, a young Briton whose unconquerable spirit soars high and free above the harsh confines of a Japanese internment camp.”

What Did I Learn?: Japanese Air Force sentries don’t like it much when POWs attempt to hug the combat aircraft they’re guarding.


Really?: I had a little trouble believing Graham (Christian Bale) would still idolize the Japanese Air Force after four years in a hellhole, or that his fellow survivors would appreciate him carrying around a toy Zero airplane.

Rating: Visually stunning, Empire of the Sun is a masterpiece. My only complaint would be a few scenes that were cringe-inducing (Graham watching an older British couple having sex, or Graham applying CPR to a dead Japanese soldier he had befriended as he repeats: “I can bring everyone back!”) and went on far too long. 9/10 stars.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0092965/


Sunday, November 6, 2011

The Train (1964)



Synopsis: Pissed-off Burt Lancaster choo-choo-chooses to railroad art-crazy Colonel.

Blurb From the VHS Jacket: “Burt Lancaster (Birdman of Alcatraz) stars in this action-packed, WWII thriller about a French railway inspector whose low-key Resistance efforts become vitally urgent when the Nazis try to steal a trainload of France’s most treasured paintings, and it’s up to him to stop the train.”

What Did I Learn?: Waving your arms is not an effective means of communicating “we’re on the same side” to a British Spitfire pilot as he’s machine-gunning your train.

You Might Like This Movie If: You loved this music video.

Really?: 1) Kinda funny how everyone in this movie has either a French or German accent...except Burt Lancaster. 2) How did the Resistance come up with all that fake signage on short notice? 3) This movie was made in 1964 – couldn’t John Frankenhemier have used colour film?

Rating: The Train is a suspenseful (albeit long – 2 hours and 13 minutes!) WWII thriller. 7.5/10 stars.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0059825/

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Windtalkers (2002)



Synopsis: Inspiring story of how Caucasian and Navajo Marines set aside their racial prejudices in order to work together, build life-long friendships,  and... um...mutually hate the Japanese.

Blurb From the VHS Jacket: “In the brutal World War II Battle of Saipan, Sargeant Joe Enders (Academy Award winner Nicolas Cage) guards – and ultimately befriends – Ben Yahzee (Adam Beach), a young Navajo trained in the one wartime code never broken by the enemy, the Navajo Code.”

What Did I Learn?: Knowing only one word of Japanese, a Navajo Marine can put on a captured uniform (without any blood stains, of course) and pose as an enemy soldier without prompting any suspicions.


Really?: Aren’t Cage and most of the other cast members a little old to be playing front-line Marines? And do radio operators really see that much action? I also had a little trouble believing that Enders could just help himself and get hammered on a cache of captured Japanese rice wine when they’re in a combat zone.

Rating: Windtalkers is formulaic, flat and forgettable. 5/10 stars.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0245562/

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Catch-22 (1970)



Synopsis: When the rules don’t make any sense, Alan Arkin takes off his clothes and acts crazy.

Blurb From the VHS Jacket: “Mick [sic] Nichols superbly directed this cinematic adaptation of Joseph Heller’s scathing black comedy, a tale of a small group of flyers in the Mediterranean in 1944. There are winners and loser, opportunists and survivors. Separately and together they are nervous, frightened, often profane and sometimes pathetic. Almost all are a little crazy. Catch 22 is an anti-war satire of epic proportions.”

What Did I Learn?: It’s surprisingly easy to transform a US military unit into the new, local mafia.


Really?: Catch 22 is meant to be surreal, so it might be a bit unfair to judge it in this category. That said, wouldn’t a grieving mom, dad and brother clearly know that Alan Arkin wasn’t their son/brother, Harvey? And was it common for New Yorkers to travel across the Atlantic near the middle of WWII to be there for loved ones dying in hospital?

Rating: Filmed at the height of the Vietnam War, Catch 22 is a biting satire of bureaucratic military culture that does something almost unthinkable today – it actually pokes fun at the Second World War. While the film seems a bit dated at times, it’s well-written, and boasts an impressive cast. There’s a scene where the private syndicate within the US military makes a deal with the Germans: we’ll bomb our own airbase and you’ll buy our shipment of surplus cotton. Interestingly, such a scenario doesn't seem all that far-fetched anymore. 7/10 stars.  

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0065528/

The Sea Wolves (1980)



Synopsis: 007 teams up with old farts to thwart U-boats off the coast of India.

Blurb From the DVD Jacket: “They were the unlikeliest heroes of World War II – the gray-haired veterans of the Calcutta Light Horse, who hadn’t seen action since the Boer War, but were fated to become The Sea Wolves. Gregory Peck, Roger Moore, David Niven, Trevor Howard and Patrick Macnee head the top-notch cast of this retelling of the wartime exploits hidden until the 1978 British Official Secrets Act lifted security restrictions.”

What Did I Learn?: It must be really easy to dispose of a dead body from a hotel room, because it happens more than once, and nobody gets into any trouble.


Really?: 1) Our heroes stole a river boat from poor Indians? That was a bit low... couldn’t they have just bought one, as the real Culcutta Light Horse did in real-life? 2) It also seemed a bit un-Bondish when Roger Moore threatened the lives of the Governor-General’s kids in order to get him to play ball. 3) In spite of the DVD jacket, neither Roger Moore nor David Niven ever wore a German uniform in this movie.

Rating: Partially based on a true story, The Sea Wolves is a fun little action/spy movie. 8/10 stars.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0081470/

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

The Guns of Navarone (1961)



Synopsis: It’s kinda like The Gun on Ice Planet Zero...except there aren’t any Cylons.

Blurb From the VHS Jacket: “Gregory Peck, Anthony Quinn and David Niven are Allied saboteurs assigned an impossible mission – infiltrate an impregnable Nazi-held island and destroy the two enormous long-range field guns that prevent the rescue of 2,000 trapped British soldiers.”

What Did I Learn?: If you’re going to spy on your Resistance buddies, and you want to claim the Nazis left you with horrible scars on your back, it’s a really good idea to actually have a few scars to show off.  


Really?: Let’s see...our heroes 1) outran a tidal wave while abandoning a sinking ship, 2) climbed a nearly-vertical faced mountain at night, during a thunderstorm, 3) escaped from the Gestapo by faking a heart attack, and 4) fortunately dodged a lot of machine-gun fire. It’s also lucky the Allies had Gregory Peck around, as he was described as being fluent in Greek and German, he had survived a year and a half behind enemy lines, and he was the “world’s best mountain climber” before the war.  

Rating: The Guns of Navarone is a fun and action-packed, albeit rather implausible WWII thriller. The heart of the movie, though, is Carl Foreman’s snappy dialogue, and the interactions between the stone-faced professional (Peck), the cut-throat man of honour (Quinn) and the demolitions expert who hates war and just wants to hold on to whatever humanity he has left (Niven). 7.5/10 stars.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0054953/

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Midway (1976)



Synopsis: The Japanese Navy attempts to pry Midway Island out of Charlton Heston’s cold, dead hands.

Blurb From the VHS Jacket: “the Battle of Midway sounded its furious thunder in June 1942, just six months after the attack on Pearl Harbor. Midway interweaves the dramatic personal stories of the men who fought the courageous battle that was to be the Pacific turning point for the United States. The all-star cast and breathtaking war footage convey the Battle of Midway with powerful reality and epic sweep.”

What Did I Learn?: Nobody in the Navy really cares if codebreakers don’t bathe on a regular basis, or if they wear non-regulation smoking jackets in the office and carry jars of strawberry jam into the map room.


Really?: Admiral Halsey (Robert Mitchum) is laid up in hospital with a skin condition and one of his flunkies agrees to his request to chop down a tree because it blocks his view of the naval yard.

Rating: Midway is a long, star-studded (watch for brief cameos from Dabney Coleman, Erik Estrada and Tom Selleck) epic dramatization of a pivotal battle. Midway is a good movie that tends to drag in places, especially when it turns away from battle strategizing to focus on the love-hate relationship between Heston, his son, and the Japanese girl he wants to marry. 7/10 stars.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0074899/


Tora! Tora! Tora! (1970)



Synopsis: America gets Pearl Harboured...um, literally!

Blurb From the VHS Jacket: “The classic Pearl Harbour epic, one of the most spectacular action films ever made, meticulously recreates the stunning attack on American forces by the Japanese.”

What Did I Learn?: Japanese diplomats apparently believed that giant white bow ties looked really cool.


Really?: Did the naval band at Pearl Harbour really speed up the last few bars of the national anthem as the bombs began to fall, or would anyone with any sense just start running?

Rating: Tora Tora Tora is a well-made and intriguing recreation of the events – military and diplomatic - leading up to the events of December 7, 1941. It’s amazing to see just how unprepared the Americans were for the attack, although it's a bit much to witness all of the US characters roughly divided into two categories: those who wanted to act like normal people (thinking about getting dinner, going home, etc...) and those who just knew an attack was coming, and felt it was necessary to go way beyond established procedures even if it upset the apple cart. At 145 minutes, TTT is a bit too long (just one example: why did the filmmakers waste a minute by showing the signing of the tripartite Axis agreement in Berlin?) and characters often sound as though they’re reading dialogue. 7/10 stars.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0066473/