Chris At The Pictures: kristen wiig
Showing posts with label kristen wiig. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kristen wiig. Show all posts

Tuesday, 19 September 2017

'mother!' - Review

9/19/2017 10:29:00 pm 0
'mother!' - Review

★ ½ ☆ ☆ ☆

After the big budget blowout of Noah, Darren Aronofsky returns to simpler times with this deliberately provocative tale of a man and woman (Javier Bardem and Jennifer Lawrence, whose characters remain unnamed) living peaceful, but soon-to-be interrupted lives. Basking in their Eden-like seclusion, Lawrence’s eponymous matriarch sets about restoring the house (with which she shares a mysterious, organic connection), while Bardem plays a troubled poet looking to write his masterwork. Just as inspiration appears to strike, an unknown couple (Ed Harris and Michelle Pfeiffer) stumble upon the pair, bringing with them the unspoken threat of upset and destruction.

For all it’s unclear narrative strokes and ambiguous dialogue, mother! is not a subtle film. The instant it’s central metaphor takes root, it's nigh-on impossible to focus on anything else. The intended discomfort and tension as Harris and Pfeiffer encroach upon the couple’s handiwork is totally undermined by an allegory so ham-fisted you could slice it up and serve it in sandwiches.

That a film so steeped in parable and analogy is playing in multiplexes should be something to celebrate, making Aranofsky’s failure to combine symbolism with a compelling story that much more infuriating. The overriding thesis of the film – at least, as it was apparent to me – is one I sympathise with, but I can’t see it winning over the average movie-goer. As evidenced by the movie’s plummeting CinemaScore across the pond, they’re likely to remain resolutely alienated by a mood piece comprised mostly of Jennifer Lawrence gasping and shrieking at the camera.

To see Lawrence return to comparatively ‘out there’ cinema after her string of mainstream roles is an exciting prospect, and sadly remains just that: something still to come. Her role here (to use the word ‘character’ seems generous considering her deployment as reflection or caricature) gives us nothing but fear and loathing, of which she gave ample demonstration across all four instalments of the Hunger Games series.

Pfieffer tries to save what she can (largely through a particularly delicate method of sipping lemonade), but it’s a hopeless effort. She – along with Harris and brief spells from Dohmnall Gleeson and Kristen Wiig – becomes just another face in the crown of walking, talking emblems that slowly but surely begin to overwhelm the isolated abode.

This increasingly fraught and claustrophobic home-invasion section of the film is where things truly go to pot. In terms of pure technical construction, there should be much to admire as time, space and bodies fast-forward, tighten and twist in a finale clearly designed to shock and awe. The established composition of mother! (a repetitive, clumsy and dull array of close-ups and over-the-shoulder shots) instead consigns us to crock and bore.

Wednesday, 13 July 2016

'Ghostbusters' - Review

7/13/2016 12:06:00 pm 0
'Ghostbusters' - Review

★ ★ ★ ½ 

Paul Feig’s cruelly-dismissed reboot of 1984’s chummy sci-fi comedy finally arrives on the scene wielding its proton blaster with unabashed confidence, stuffing the whinging, disembodied hordes into a box before turning to high-five the audience.

After her connection with paranormal researcher Abby Yates (Melissa McCarthy) is brought uncomfortably back into the spotlight, particle physicist Erin Gilbert (Kristen Wiig) is denied a position at Columbia University (the news delivered by a reliably grumpy Charles Dance). Erin begrudgingly joins Abby and oddball engineer Jillian Holtzmann (Kate McKinnon) in their new effort to prove that ghosts exist, using both the scientific method and the tried-and-tested practice of spouting techno-babble whilst waving around L.E.D.-smothered equipment.
Our trio are soon joined by Patty Tolan (Leslie Jones), a New York subway worker whose subterranean explorations alert the team to the sinister plans of Rowan (Neil Casey), a sweaty-faced, unfortunately-sideburned creep who plans to unleash a horde of spectres upon the city to pester the living. 

Ghostbusters is yet further proof that comedy of any kind doesn’t translate well to trailers: the flaky marketing efforts only seemed to add to the mithering disparages of the internet hive-mind, but the finished product puts paid to that within moments (“did he just say ‘face bidet?’”). Each member of the quartet brings something fresh, and set themselves apart from the sardonic, blue-collar nature of the original cast with quick-fire interpersonal energy. Abby is the earnest leader of the troupe, flitting between exasperation at her team’s failings and enthusiasm for science, whilst Erin is the put-upon optimist. Leslie Jones thankfully brings Patty out of the ‘street-wise’ racial stereotype suggested by the ad campaign: her contribution to the group is crucial, self-aware, and very, very funny (see the encounter with a dragon-like spirit at a metal concert).

But the real star of this film is, without a shadow of a doubt, Holtzmann. Kate McKinnon, Kate McKinnon, where have they been hiding you? A static-haired, mischievous wink of a character, Holtzmann is sporadic and unpredictably funny: you have no idea what she’ll say next, but it’s guaranteed to make you laugh, and her straight-faced witticisms subvert her companions’ bickering with the cheekiness of a gum bubble popping in a silent school assembly.

Just as in the original, what sells the film more than the innate talent of each cast member is the fun of seeing them gel. Regardless of how they’re brought together plot-wise, the four leads could easily have been friends for years; the chemistry between them is wonderful. An added bonus arrives when Erin’s efforts to flirt with smiling numpty of a receptionist, Kevin (Chris Hemsworth, illustrating a hitherto-smothered knack for comedic timing), are met with an oblivious grin from his ever-cheerful face and a doubled-over chortle from the audience. Indeed, Hemsworth appears in constant danger of unseating the ‘Busters themselves from the limelight several times, before McKinnon whips back into frame and shows everybody up.

The sense of outright liveliness contrasted with the ’84 film’s reluctant heroism is further exacerbated through the pin-perfect production design and candy-coloured aesthetic: the proton packs still pack a visual wallop, but the ghosts themselves – enhanced with the marvels of modern CGI – are wondrous, varied, and genuinely creepy. With the exception of a certain returning green blob, they all exist at the shiver-then-laugh level of the librarian. 

Though there are plenty of cameos from Ghostbusters past alongside references to the original (some subtle, others not so much), they’re odd little vignettes that occasionally feel crowbarred in, out-of-kilter with the bouncing energy of a film that seems so determined to exist (for the most part) on its own terms. For all the wrong ways it might attempt to honour the past, the propensity to deliver a great-looking, laugh-a-minute romp makes it near-impossible to dislike. Sequel, please!

Saturday, 19 July 2014

'How to Train Your Dragon 2' - Review

7/19/2014 12:45:00 pm 0
'How to Train Your Dragon 2' - Review


Riding high on the universal success of its predecessor, How to Train Your Dragon 2 continues the story of young Viking Hiccup (Jay Baruchel) and his dragon Toothless. Set five years since the Viking town of Berk made peace with their former foes – a swarm of dragons – Hiccup is faced with inheriting the mantle of chief from his father Stoick (Gerard Butler) and escapes into the wilderness, but soon finds himself at the centre of an approaching conflict between a mysterious Dragon Rider (Cate Blanchett) and warlord Drago (Djimon Hounsou).

The first thing to grab your attention during the film is the extraordinary animation. In a time when 3D animation flicks are churned out en masse – usually aimed at kids whom the studios believe are easily entertained – it is a wonderful breath of fresh air to see something so meticulously detailed and lovingly crafted. To those of us that were once amazed at being able to see each of Sully’s individual hairs in Monsters Inc., the work that has gone into this film has taken things to a whole other level, and I think you’d have to be very cynical to find it anything but beautiful. 



But a great film is nothing without great characters, and How to Train Your Dragon 2 has that in droves: the friendship between Hiccup and Toothless evolves well, with both now committed to protect each other no matter the cost, Hiccup having matured greatly from the bumbling nobody of the previous film, and the dragon providing enough charm to fill three whole human characters. Stoick and Gobber (Craig Ferguson) still carry a bickering but dependent relationship with each other, and greater attention has been paid to the role of female characters, notably the twists that emerge from Cat Blanchett as the mysterious newcomer, and Hiccup’s partner Astrid, who feels less of a hanger-on in this film and is given a lot more to do. 

The film romps along at a great pace, delivering impressive action sequences but also taking its time to develop characters, and dish out a fair share of set pieces which carry real emotional depth that will have you grinning from ear-to-ear one moment, and then reducing you to tears the next. Those of you – like me – who never expected anything to match the beautiful moment in the first film where Hiccup finally reaches out to Toothless will be proven wrong in the best possible way. Much like the first film, a great deal of the emotional weight is carried by returning composer John Powell’s rich and unashamedly fanfare-heavy score.

How to Train Your Dragon 2 is probably best seen as an antidote to Transformers: Age of Extinction. It is a film which has great big battles between gigantic evil monsters but instead of just throwing things at the screen, it takes time to flesh-out characters, to make the audience care about what happens to them and earns the right to end with a bombastic, adrenaline charged finale that (despite feeling a little rushed and jumbled) leads to a satisfying conclusion. It is a dragon-breathed fireball of pure-spirited adventure, and delivers on everything a great sequel should.

4.5 stars