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Posted: 6/24/2009 - 1 comment(s) [ Comment ] - 0 trackback(s) [ Trackback ]
Category: Movie Review

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What’s funny about Night at the Museum: The Battle of the Smithsonian is that it’s a movie that you assume you know from watching the trailers on TV. Even if you didn’t see NATM 1, you can tell from the trailers what it’s about-or so it seems.

But, it’s not really true. In fact, the movie is far funnier than even it appears. The first movie was indeed very funny and Ben Stiller was at his usual best, which I don’t think he is in this movie. Stiller has produced some really fine comedic “everyman” films from Reality Bites to There’s Something About Mary and he deserves his due for this. And while he certainly has some very fine moments in this movie, some that make you laugh pretty hard, he may well reach the “everyman” part just a bit too far. He’s almost too likable and it seems that this is done on purpose as a kind of cinematic fait accompli–”we know what you want from this character, Larry-so, we’re going to give it to you” and they do. In fact, they serve up Stiller’s character on a silver platter.

But that’s really the only strong criticism I have of the movie. It’s funny, though it’s not very original. In fact, its lack of originality is one of the things that makes it funny and allows it to capitalize on the first film. Hank Azaria’s villainous Pharaoh come back to life is an absolute show stealer. Why Azaria has remained on the b-list of Hollywood comedy is beyond me. This guy’s talent is undeniable and his ability to do voices and accents, here he presents a profound lisp and deep, resonating European accent, is beyond remarkable.

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Amy Adams
turn as Amelia Earhart and later, a young lady who flirts a bit with Larry, is also undeniably delightful. Look, she’s a beautiful young woman and her talent at playing perky is real and even varied. Being the father of an 8 year old girl, I saw Adams in Enchanted and thought her tremendous in that role. Without a doubt, her naivete and energy were downright infectious as they are here. Yes, she’s also very easy on the eyes and the camera makes that altogether clear, following her for long shots as she walks in and out of scenes. It just had to be said.

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The story is secondary, a kind of total reconnection to the first film. In many ways, it’s a trick on the audience. If NATM 1 was so good, then NATM 2 can be even better, but only if we do more of the same kind of stuff. There’s nothing terribly new here or any real dramatic range being portrayed. There’s no real change from the first film as far as the plot. The only real difference is the characters are in a new museum, the Smithsonian, and there are a few new characters. And yet, the film is able to pull off this seemingly mundane retread with verve and a kind of lighthearted and yet totally uproarious fun.

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NATM 2 is a really fine and silly comedy. It’s totally suitable for the family and the special effects, not to mention the fun bits of history that it briefly brings to life are great fodder for discussions with the young ones. Peanut wanted to know more about Amelia Earhart and I was more than happy to oblige. She laughed as hard as anyone in the theater when General Custer tries to pronounce Sacagewea’s name and fails more than a few times.

So, there it is – it’s a silly, fun comedy that doesn’t take itself or its audience very seriously and it stimulates family discussion. What more do you need?

UP
Posted: 6/9/2009 - 3 comment(s) [ Comment ] - 0 trackback(s) [ Trackback ]
Category: Movie Review

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Reviewing a Pixar movie is rather like reviewing a piece of chocolate cake or a freshly made pizza; you know it’s going to be good, the question is just how good? How rich is it? How fresh are the ingredients?

I stand by my claim that Pixar, for all their mastery of the art and craft of storytelling, is essentially telling the same story over again. John Lasseter and the Emeryville magicians have been reading Ernest Hemingway and they believe that what he said is true: All modern American literature comes from one book by Mark Twain called ‘Huckleberry Finn.’…All American writing comes from that. There was nothing before. There has been nothing as good since.”

Hemingway was right, too. The ultimate American tale is simply a story that never ends and is full of constant potential. It features two unlikely friends from different walks of life who are thrown together for any number of reasons and embark on a journey searching for their freedom–only to discover they were free all along, at least metaphorically. And that’s what Pixar has done. A Bug’s life, Toy Story, Finding Nemo, The Incredibles, Wall-E, Ratatouille, all of them are variations on a theme–and the theme is Mark Twain’s.

And there is nothing, I repeat, nothing wrong with that. So, when the adds for Up, began appearing, I was excited. There hasn’t been a Pixar film I’ve disliked, not one. Often times, I’ve found myself ruminating on whether or not they’re due for a stinker, and they are, of course. After all, Lasseter, Docter and the rest of the crew are only human, entitled to the odd mistake. As long as they “keep moving forward,” then mistakes are infinitely forgivable.

But, if indeed Pixar is due for a mistake, then they still are. Up is as engaging a story as the animators have yet assembled. It’s a different film with a different sensibility and a kind of maturity not seen in other Pixar films. Yet the magic is still there. All of the suspensions of disbelief, placed at just the right point, are in-tact and the result is pure poetry.

Rather than give a full synopsis, I’d prefer you see the movie, I’ll just point out a few things here if I may be so bold. The main character, whose voice is none other than Ed Asner, is Carl Fredericksen, a crotchity old widower who, in the commercials, is just short of mildly sympathetic.

But the first twenty minutes of the film reveal Carl from his childhood, maturing into a young man who becomes a loving husband, even doting, to a woman not unlike himself. Through a series of un-dialogued vignettes, we learn that “Ellie” is unable to have children and so the two spend their lives together, chasing adventures they thought they wanted. It’s also one of the most touching pieces of film-making, animated or not, in recent memory. Handled with deft craft, with shadow and sparseness, with music that isn’t sappy or syrupy and with visuals that are heart-wrenching and gorgeous.

Russel is the Huck to Carl’s Jim. If Jim was a slave in Huck Finn, then Carl is a slave to his own memory, at least and his inability to get beyond the narrow confines of a reality that he has sewed for himself, with just enough thread to allow for one more adventure. Unfortunately for him, he didn’t intend to have it with a young Explorer Scout who gets caught up in his plans.

The comic genius of the film is “Dug,” the dog whose master has fashioned collars for his pack of dogs that allows them to talk. Dug too is an outcast in his own pack, seeking praise and acceptance from those with whom he’d really rather not associate. But in true dog fashion, Dug speaks in literal terms and the geniuses of Pixar have given all of the talking dogs something of a grammar lesson that allows their literal translations to provide comedy. Thus, when Dug is offered a chance to fetch a ball, “wanta play with the ball, boy? Wanta fetch?” His answer is a resounding and unfettered, “OH, YES I DO WANT THE BALL, EVER SO MUCH! PLEASE THROW THE BALL AND I WILL GO GET IT AND BRING IT BACK TO YOU!”

One of the more hilarious things about Pixar films is that, unlike their progenitor Mr. Twain, the funniest moments in the films have to be seen and heard. Just telling the jokes or talking about the gags isn’t enough. The visuals marry with exact precision to the dialogue and the result is symbiosis unlike most other films today.

Up is a well-crafted, engagingly written and poetic story about letting go, trusting yourself, loving and being loved and allowing for mistakes to help guide you. It is, in short, a story all of us are in need of time and again, like Huck Finn. It’s a reminder that the best journeys are the ones on which we learn something not only about ourselves, but about those whom we thought we already knew. It’s a film that I wanted my daughter to see now, at 8 years old, but it’s a film I’ll want her to see when she’s 25, too and 35 and 50 and so on.

There’s nothing quite like Up in film today and yet, the film is indeed a re-hashing of some very old and simple American ideals. That, perhaps, is what Walt Disney meant all along by “keep moving forward…”