A pretty clever heist movie, albeit unrealistic but it's still quite a bit of glamorous fun. Sandra Bullock plays the lead but among this star studded cast I think she gets outshone. Actually, though they're all good, none of them really get that opportunity to truly shine. Except Cate Blanchett. She could do anything. She commits herself to playing thief as she does to playing royalty or playing an elf.
I am a student at Johns Hopkins with a passion for film, media and awards. Here you will find concise movie reviews and my comments on TV, theater and award shows. I can't see everything, but when I finally get around to it, you'll find my opinion here on everything from the classics to the crap.
Showing posts with label Helena Bonham Carter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Helena Bonham Carter. Show all posts
Wednesday, October 3, 2018
Thursday, December 1, 2016
Alice Through the Looking Glass (2016)
Did we really need this sequel? No, not really. Tim Burton created an amazing vision of Wonderland in the first film. Then he stepped away and the world Disney re-created just wasn't quite as impressive or imaginative. Time Burton created an original story with familiar characters in the first one. The story culminated in an epic battle and was well done. This one just doesn't match up. Even the actors don't seem quite as invested in the project. No one asked for this sequel.
Friday, September 18, 2015
Sufragette (2015)
The protagonist, played by Carey Mulligan, is a young working class woman who does not like to be classified as a Suffragette, but when her husband predictably throws her out she takes up the cause wholeheartedly. Both Carey Mulligan and Helena Bonham Carter are excellent. Meryl Streep gets a brief moment in the spotlight as activist Emmeline Pankhurst. Her screen time is very brief, emphasizing to the audience that the groundwork done by average women was of utmost importance to the cause. Pankhurst served as inspiration, but the people had to act on their own--change is effected from the grassroots. Their method is militancy, and yet the audience is made to sympathize with the suffragettes who are thwarted by the patriarchal society of Great Britain.
The camerawork is very unsettling throughout the movie. Much like any effective activism, it is in-your-face. The camera is so close to Carey Mulligan's face, that the viewers are quite uncomfortable. But you should feel uncomfortable, because in order to upend the status quo, we cannot be satisfied with comfort. The cinematography understands this and does not let the audience forget it. The end of the film has a fade to white, followed by real, powerful archival footage from 1913, which is pretty incredible in and of itself.
I got to see an advanced screening of this movie at The Charles Theater by the Gender Studies Department at JHU!
The camerawork is very unsettling throughout the movie. Much like any effective activism, it is in-your-face. The camera is so close to Carey Mulligan's face, that the viewers are quite uncomfortable. But you should feel uncomfortable, because in order to upend the status quo, we cannot be satisfied with comfort. The cinematography understands this and does not let the audience forget it. The end of the film has a fade to white, followed by real, powerful archival footage from 1913, which is pretty incredible in and of itself.
I got to see an advanced screening of this movie at The Charles Theater by the Gender Studies Department at JHU!
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