Chris At The Pictures: john boyega
Showing posts with label john boyega. Show all posts
Showing posts with label john boyega. Show all posts

Sunday, 25 March 2018

'Pacific Rim: Uprising' - Review

3/25/2018 09:31:00 pm 0
'Pacific Rim: Uprising' - Review

★ ★ ☆ ☆ ☆

In a move designed seemingly to please only the signatories of internet polls, this drift-incompatible sequel to 2013’s monster mash has double the action but half the charm. The Kaiju threat has returned, and now Jake Pentecost (John Boyega), son of the late great Stacker (Idris Elba) must begrudgingly rejoin the Pan Pacific Defence Corp and assist old drift partner, Lambert (Scott Eastwood), in training a breed of new recruits to pilot the giant mechanoid Jaegers against the aliens.

Guillermo Del Toro’s fling with giant-sized filmmaking did a lot of things (bring smiles to lovers of Godzilla movies, prove you could make a movie about robots punching each other an enjoyable experience, and allow Ron Perlman a fine slice of ham), but ‘demand a sequel’ wasn’t one of them. It was a flight of fancy; a chance for the Mexican director to take a break from horror and pay his respects to long-gone titans of entertainment like Ray Harryhausen and Toho. When Del Toro spoke about the Jaegers, he carried a gleeful geeky grin as he waxed lyrical about their fusion of World War 2-era aesthetic and futuristic tech. He sweated the small stuff and ensured the giant mechs had personality, or as much personality a honking, creaking mass of metal and gears can have. When one arrived on screen, a sense of perspective and scale was maintained by low-angle shots and thundering sound design. Now, the revamped Gypsy Danger is slimmed-down, polished to a mirror shine, and wields a lightsaber-esque sword; little more than a Lancaster Bomber turned Megazord.

That awe-inspiring sense of scale is abandoned almost entirely here. Save for a few quick shots of giant feet threatening to crush faceless civilians, most of the combat is shot as though the robots are the characters. Entire city blocks are demolished with all the impact of collapsing card castles, and there’s no moment to equal - let alone top - the moment from Del Toro’s original where Gypsy Danger wields a cargo liner like a baseball bat and wallops a Kaiju in the face. Dan Mindel’s (Star Trek, Star Wars: The Force Awakens) grainy cinematography works wonders with the in-cockpit action and physical props, but reduces the Jaegers themselves to little more than weightless action figures. 

That’s in the moments his images survive the atrocious editing, anyhow: this is a film not so much cut together as hacked and shunted into something vaguely resembling a coherent whole. It takes an awful lot for a film to dump the vacuum of charisma that is Charlie Hunnam and somehow get worse, but Uprising is just that: a lot. The narrative moves at a ridiculous pace, squashing at least three hours and change worth of plot, subplot, character building and sequel setup into less than two. We barely have time to get acquainted with our new batch of Jaeger pilots before moving on to more of Charlie Day’s gurning, then whip-panning back to Boyega and Eastwood sweating at each other. 

Boyega, mountain of engagement that he is, almost singlehandedly ropes everything together with bravado and some expertly-timed delivery, but is overwhelmed by the film’s insistence on pushing past him to the next scene. Eastwood is there purely to grin “Hell yeah” every once in a while, and Day has all the personality squashed out of him. Newcomer Cailee Spaeny (playing a Rey-like scavenger who cobbles together her own miniature Jaeger) has just about enough room to make an impression, but falls victim to the film’s preference for breaking over building.

No-one’s going to hold up the original as a bastion of great characters: Hunnam’s Raleigh Beckett and Rinko Kikuchi’s Mako Mori (the former is absent without explanation, the latter appears for little more than a motivational cameo) were thumbnail archetypes, but they were deliberately and almost brilliantly so. You didn’t leave the cinema struggling to remember their names, unlike the cast of  Uprising, who are barely permitted three sentences before another plot thread has them carted off-screen.

That’s not to say there isn’t the ghost of a good time banging around inside the shell: Burn Gorman returns as the cantankerous Doctor Gottlieb, and is having a great deal of fun stuttering through the scenery he’s chewing, A brief moment of quiet that pits John Boyega against the contents of an ice cream-filled freezer while Eastwood looks on is pure deadpan joy. Humour on the whole is rather broad here, comprised of scale-game gags involving the Jaegers and some oddly dated internet references (including an appearance from Eduard Khil’s “I Am Very Glad, as I'm Finally Returning Back Home”). The very instant the BBFC warning for ‘rude gesture’ appears, you’re counting down the minutes until inevitable payoff.


Yet by the time even that promise is sealed, too many others have been broken. Everyone involved from director Steven S. DeKnight to Boyega (who shares a production credit) talks loud and proud about honouring the original, but the (and I can’t relive I’m typing this) legacy of Pacific Rim is not so much respected as ransacked. Del Toro’s enjoyable homage to the monster movies that fuelled his imagination as a child is now soiled by needless expansion, and I can’t for one moment imagine he’s truly happy with the dead weight which will forever drag down his blockbusting indulgence. Pacific Rim didn’t need a plot, and Uprising’s ruthless determination to create one betrays its true form as an empty machine in search of a soul. 

Saturday, 19 December 2015

'Star Wars: The Force Awakens' - Review

12/19/2015 11:56:00 pm
'Star Wars: The Force Awakens' - Review


★ ★ ★ ★ ½


Note: this review comes a few days after my viewing of The Force Awakens, as last Thursday’s midnight screening left me so shell-shocked that forming coherent thoughts was a bit of a challenge. With the dust slowly settling and the reviews pouring in from every angle, here’s my two cents: 

We pick up thirty years after Return of the Jedi to find that the galaxy-wide celebrations heralding the end of tyranny were a tad premature. Farm boy-turned-saviour Luke Skywalker has disappeared, and the villainous First Order has seized the power gap left by the Empire. While a small Resistance group led by the courageous General Leia Organa (Carrie Fisher) and dashing pilot Poe Dameron (Oscar Isaac) muster the will to fight back, other pockets of rebellion begin to emerge, primarily in the form of disillusioned Stormtrooper Finn (John Boyega) and lonely desert scavenger Rey (Daisy Ridley). Heroes old and new converge, all threatened by mysterious and erratic First Order acolyte Kylo Ren (Adam Driver).

Having touched on my own hype and expectations in a previous piece, I’ll dive right in with the essence of my reaction: The Force Awakens is everything I never knew I wanted in a Star Wars film. 

Rather than a familiar trip down memory lane (we’ll get to that later), it left me feeling how movie-goers back in ’77 must have felt walking out of A New Hope: so many new creatures, locations, spaceships, characters and sounds fly straight off the screen at you that it’s impossible to comprehend them all in one sitting. Abrams and his team have done remarkably well in continuing the extraordinary world building of the previous six films with very little exposition outlining the state of the galaxy far, far away.

Our new heroes are wonderfully engrossing: Boyega brings the charisma and humour he established back in Attack the Block, whilst Daisy Ridley is an absolute revelation as Rey, snatching the title of 2015’s best female character from Fury Road’s Imperator Furiosa with ease. Isaac slips effortlessly from rising talent to full-blown movie star as Poe, an energetic and daring fusion of Harrison Ford and Bruce Campbell. They’re all joined for the ride by heroic rollerball droid BB-8, who proves to be so much more than just ‘the new R2-D2’.

But the surprise star of these wars is Driver. When J.J. made great strides to iterate that Kylo Ren would be like nothing we’d ever seen, boy, he wasn’t making it up! Ren is gifted to us as an amalgamation of weighty physical presence and emotional complexity hitherto unseen in this saga, but which Driver embodies perfectly. 


When we do get throwbacks, nostalgic nods and Easter eggs, they’re just as wonderful: the moment Han and Chewie step into frame, it’s the audience more than the characters who own the line “we’re home!” 

Ford is visibly having a ball, and his interaction with the young newcomers has a sweet and often very funny meta-textual thread running through it. Other treats include rip-roaring homage to classic scenes from the original trilogy, injected with fresh vigour by Abrams’ swift direction, John Williams’ magical score and Dan Mindel’s fabulous cinematography. Any doubt that this film wasn’t made for me quickly vanished with the sight of TIE fighters emerging, wraith-like, from a burning horizon: a shot realized frame-by-frame from a dream I had as an eleven year-old. 

Thrills, drama, humour, and jaw-dropping moments of wonder aplenty…what more could we have possibly asked for? It’s not perfect, but I didn’t need it to be. I’m not even a little embarrassed at how much of a stuck record this whole piece makes me sound; I loved it.