François Truffaut once said that "Film lovers are sick people." He may have been on to something.
Showing posts with label bill murray. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bill murray. Show all posts
Sunday, April 17, 2016
Film Review: The Jungle Book (2016)
One of the more surprising (not to mention lucrative) developments in recent years has been Walt Disney's decision to reach back into their cavernous back catalogue to create live-action versions of their animated classics. It's surprising both because of how successful those films have been (most notably Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland, which grossed more than a billion dollars worldwide back in 2010), but also because it's such a simple idea that it feels like it should have happened ten times over already. With a steady stream of similar adaptations due over the next couple of years (some of which make more sense than others), Disney's nostalgia-mining looks set to continue for some time. We can only hope that the next installments display as much love and wit as Jon Favreau's take on Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book. Or, more accurately, his take on the 1967 Disney version of The Jungle Book, since the story and design of Favreau's film has much more in common with that than the original stories.
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Saturday, April 12, 2014
Film Review: The Monuments Men (2014)
The core argument of The Monuments Men is one that is provocative in the abstract, though less than compelling as the driving force for a lavishly produced war drama. In telling the true story of art scholars who went to the European Front to find, identify and protect great works of art stolen by the Nazis, co-star, co-writer and director George Clooney reframes the conflict as not just being between conflicting ideologies. It was also a battle for history, and the Nazi effort to steal art - and, later in the war, to destroy it - was an attempt to rewrite the very history of the world. In that context, the efforts of the Monuments Men to protect the past seem important, even noble, rather than something flip or insubstantial when compared to the death happening around them.
Friday, May 25, 2012
Film Review: Moonrise Kingdom (2012)
Over the course of nearly twenty years, Wes Anderson has cultivated a distinct and idiosyncratic body of work that has made his one of the most easily and readily identifiable voices in American cinema. So much so that, from the very first frame of Moonrise Kingdom, it is obvious that only one man could be behind the camera.
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