Showing posts with label Laura Dern. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Laura Dern. Show all posts

Thursday, December 21, 2017

Star Wars: The Last Jedi (2017)

It's good to see an Asian in a leading role! And she's a cool character. Admittedly, Rose and Finn's (two minorities owning the screen!) plot on the casino planet of Canto Bight is kind of irrelevant to the grand scheme of the plot. It's a beautifully designed planet and the chase scene on the streets of Dubrovnik is incredible. There is an anti-war, anti-weapons (slash class warfare) message that is a little on the nose, but I think it's a necessary and welcome addition to the Star Wars galaxy.

They really talk a lot about the Force in this one. It's a good refresher on what the Force actually is. And this one really stretches the limits of the Force. We see new the Force do new things we've never seen before. I can see why the fans might be complaining about this. But I don't think these new powers are too out there.

The movie is quite long. There were a few times I thought the movie was going to end. That has to do with the many subplots having to be contrived together. But they do come together and then culminate in a battle--it is war after all. The final hour of the movie is very exciting. Laura Dern's character gets a brilliant plot that terminates in the most stunning shot of the film, a silent and still frame.

The direction is a clear departure from the previous films, it's artsier. The solid colors stand out: Laura Dern's hair and garb, and the deep red of Snoke's lair, and the red soil against the white dust. Though the movie is clearly a call back to The Empire Strikes Back. It's a little darker, more pessimistic for the Resistance. I won't spoil it all, but what was supposed to be fan service, catering to the fans by recalling the greatest Star Wars movie and then they didn't like it... You know it's a strange world when the critics praise Star Wars and the super fans are the critical ones. I, for one, enjoyed it. 

Saturday, August 19, 2017

The Founder (2016)

This movie tells the story of Ray Kroc, founder of McDonald's--that's not McDonald's the restaurant, but McDonald's the chain. It was a very interesting story that I didn't know about, a story of American business. It is really specially American. Ray Kroc essentially steals the idea and runs with it. He's concerned with money and money only. Who's the hero in this movie? I don't think it really glorifies American business. Michael Keaton does not play a particularly likable character. And his character does despicable things in the name of greed. And really, we have him to thank for America's fast-food reputation. Fast food could've been tasty and fresh and still fast if the McDonald brothers had any say. They were about quality control. Where is that now?

And the movie is really all about business. Ray's personal life is totally secondary. Laura Dern's role is very small. She plays his wife. And as their marriage falls apart, we don't really get to much insight. His second wife features in a few scenes. But we don't really see their relationship develop. It's all business all the time.

The best scene is the one in which the McDonald brothers explain their brilliant concept to Ray Kroc. There is a great rhythmic cadence to the scene that has excitement and momentum. It's really magical how they build their restaurant from the ground up bringing a new restaurant design and concept to the world. The brothers have fantastic awkward chemistry with each other, co-telling this story. The scene works really beautifully.

Sunday, February 8, 2015

Wild (2014)

This movie features a whole lot of hiking.   Hiking is a very slow sport.  To make matters worse, Reese Witherspoon is hiking in the middle of nowhere up the Pacific Crest Trail.  So for starters, this was not really my type of movie.  But I can appreciate what hiking means for Witherspoon's character Cheryl Strayed, whose memoir this movie is based on.  Hiking has a regenerative power.  She is giving herself new life and accomplishing a massive feat to prove that she can make it on her own.

The narrative is told with a lot of narration and time jumping, so to speak. I imagine the narrations giving us first-person insight into her thoughts are reflective of the story's origin in a book.  Strayed's hike is linear, but there are many flashbacks interspersed in the movie.  These are powerful memories, that don't only cause her to remember but take Strayed back emotionally.  She is emotive, expressing fear and frustration and moments of bliss.  Reese Witherspoon gives a gritty performance as the solo hiker. We see her anguish and her perpetual pain out in the desert.   Laura Dern, too, as Strayed's optimistic mother is good in the few scenes that she's in.