Friday, April 26, 2024

Chris

Un gallo con muchos huevos (2015)*

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Title: Un gallo con muchos huevos
Rating: NR
Directed by: Gabriel Riva Palacio Alatriste and Rodolfo Riva-Palacio Alatriste
Written by: Gabriel Riva Palacio Alatriste and Rodolfo Riva-Palacio Alatriste
Starring: Bruno Bichir, Carlos Espejel and Angélica Vale
Release Date: 9/4/2015
Running Time: 98 minutes

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Toto, a young chick born the run of the litter, rises to the occasion when a rancher threatens his home and his family.


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Special thanks to Frank S. for this submission


Rosenwald (2015)*

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Title: Rosenwald
Rating: NR
Directed by: Aviva Kempner
Written by: Aviva Kempner
Starring: Peter Ascoli, Julian Bond and Stephanie Deutsch
Release Date: 8/14/2015
Running Time: 100 minutes

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Rosenwald, by Aviva Kempner, is a documentary about how Chicago philanthropist Julius Rosenwald, the son of an immigrant peddler who rose to head Sears, partnered with Booker T. Washington to build 5,400 Southern schools in African American communities in the early 1900s during the Jim Crow era. Rosenwald also built YMCAs and housing for African Americans to address the pressing needs of the Great Migration.


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Dedication/Memoriam: There were many and were missed. If we can get this info, we will post when we can.

Special thanks to Frank S. for this submission


Break Point (2014)

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Title: Break Point
Rating: R
Directed by: Jay Karas
Written by: Tim Calpin, Gene Hong, Kevin Jakubowski and Jeremy Sisto
Starring: Jeremy Sisto, David Walton, Adam DeVine and J.K. Simmons
Release Date: 7/21/2015
Running Time: 90 minutes

Official Site
IMDb

Two estranged brothers reunite to make an improbable run at a grand slam tennis tournament.


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Special thanks to Frank S. for this submission


Bloodsucking Bastards (2015)

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Title: Bloodsucking Bastards
Rating: NR
Directed by: Brian James O’Connell
Written by: Dr. God and Ryan Mitts
Starring: Fran Kranz, Pedro Pascal and Joey Kern
Release Date: 9/4/2015
Running Time: 86 minutes

Official Site
IMDb

An Office Space meets Shaun of the Dead action-packed horror comedy, BLOODSUCKING BASTARDS stars Fran Kranz as Evan Sanders, a low-level, dutiful employee stuck in a boring job at a soul-killing every corporation. Evan’s the kind of guy who does all the work and gets none of the credit, but at least he gets to spend his days with his beautiful co-worker/girlfriend Amanda and his slacker best friend Tim, so he soldiers on in the hope of one day getting his coveted sales director position.


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Special thanks to Frank S. for this submission


Rush Hour 3 (2007)*

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Title: Rush Hour 3
Rating: PG-13
Directed by: Brett Ratner
Written by: Jeff Nathanson and Ross LaManna
Starring: Jackie Chan, Chris Tucker and Max von Sydow
Release Date: 8/10/2007
Running Time: 91 minutes

IMDb

After an attempted assassination on Ambassador Han, Lee and Carter head to Paris to protect a French woman with knowledge of the Triads’ secret leaders.


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Special thanks to Malfoy for this submission


Meru (2015)

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Title: Meru
Rating: R
Directed by: Jimmy Chin and Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi
Starring: Conrad Anker, Grace Chin and Jimmy Chin
Release Date: 8/14/2015
Running Time: 87 minutes

Official Site
IMDb

Three elite climbers struggle to find their way through obsession and loss as they attempt to climb Mount Meru, one of the most coveted prizes in the high stakes game of Himalayan big wall climbing.


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Memoriam: In Loving Memory Yen Yen Chin, Alex Lowe and Mugs Stump

Special thanks to Frank S. for this submission


The Diary of a Teenage Girl Review – 5 out of 5 Stars

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Once in a blue moon, there will be a film that comes along that reminds me why I love cinema in the first place. A movie like this can present profound, unique things in a way that you can’t find in reality. It can use its own little world to show the things we didn’t think about in ways we couldn’t even imagine. At cinemas best, Boyhood can capture what it means for people to simply live life and Gravity can show us the deep heartbreak within us all using the vastness of space. The Diary of a Teenage Girl much like Inside Out earlier this year lands into this prestigious category. This is a film that speaks to its audience with such an incredible honesty and beautiful originality that I think it will reach out to every person of any age who goes to see it.

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The Diary of a Teenage Girl focuses on Minnie (Bel Powley), a 15 year old, aspiring cartoonist living in San Francisco in the mid 70’s. She stays with her younger sister Gretel and her charming but deeply flawed single mother Charlotte (Kristen Wiig). After she loses her virginity with her mom’s current boyfriend Monroe (Alexander Skarsgård), she believes that she has finally become an adult. What follows is Minnie’s exploration through drugs, sex and art as she tries to find an identity within her newly found maturity.

Earlier this summer, Paper Towns and Me and Earl and the Dying Girl showed us quite clearly what can happen when a young adult story goes wrong. At its worst, these movies pander to their audience and give them fake, hollow insight that sounds pretty but leads nowhere. There is such a huge market for these movies from the previously mentioned ones to the recent pseudo sci-fi flicks like The Host or The Maze Runner that if often feels like studios are trying to relate to its audiences without going the extra mile to deliver something of meaning and quality to them. The best examples are often the ones that either don’t direct themselves at that sort of audience like Whiplash or Inside Out or don’t even talk about growing up like Dope or The Hunger Games. That said, it’s nothing short of a miracle when I can find a film like this that for once was made for teenagers and doesn’t feel like its talking down or blatantly lying to its viewers of that age.

I don’t lie when I say that this movie refuses to patronize its audience. I was legitimately shocked with a few of the things this movie was able to show without an NC-17 rating. It says something about how graphic this movie can get when it got the highest possible rating of 18 on UK’s movie rating system. The movie shows and discusses a lot of things from intimacy to consent to experimentation that teens really need to know about but probably won’t get from the light, soft fare they’re provided by a big budget studio. Among the things this movie does, it has the balls to show abstinence only education as a joke. You can teach it all you want, but eventually a lot of teenagers are going to get curious and they’re going to want to try some things out. This naïve, crazy search for the meaning of sex is something a lot of teens go through and yet a lot of movies are prudish and try to shy away from it because no, who do you think you are to try to corrupt the youth?

The Diary of a Teenage goes after this area in a lot of ways from the bizarre relationship between Minnie and Monroe as well as Minnie’s experimentation with a variety of other people. And I don’t want to make it sound like it glorifies this as well. Even though these things get shown in great detail, the movie also shows how this is damaging and hurting the main character and the film concludes with her being a much more responsible person who knows how to control her feelings with more clarity after what she has gone through. But the really important part is that it isn’t done in a way that feels preachy or a part of an old after school special. Her journey feels real and the path she ultimately decides to go down by the end of the film doesn’t come off as cheap or lazy to quickly teach the audience a lesson. It feels like the conclusion she’s come to after trying to find herself. For once, a movie had the genius idea of showing one of the core aspects of growing up and not shaming its audience or telling them that it’s all sinful.

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The relationship between Minnie and Monroe makes for an excellently uncomfortable center for Minnie’s character arc. Minnie starts the film by idolizing Monroe as this kind, all knowing lover. The movie slowly proves this to be an incorrect theory on her part. First off, I shouldn’t have to explain how weird and irresponsible it is for this 30 year old guy to be having sex with a minor. But even if I let that slide, it’s his drinking that leads to them having a romance. He takes acid with her and engages in a three way with her friend when they’re all on drugs. After having sex with her multiple times, he makes the relationship all her fault and yells at her for being a bad person. He constantly breaks off the relationship and he keeps bringing it back. And to top it all off, he is still in an equally unstable relationship with her mom and constantly treats her like sh*t and encourages her alcoholism.

Monroe sounds like a guy that is very irresponsible and murky but what’s great about the movie is that the film still manages to humanize him and make him even a little sympathetic. Okay he’s not Gandhi or anything but he seems genuinely lost in life. This is partially due to how sincere and realistic the underrated Skarsgard is in the role but it’s also because how sympathetic he is in the film plays an important part for the rest of the movie. Monroe seems too late into his life to change or reshape any of the bad habits he made earlier on his teen years and he has them too locked in to do anything about them. I think he really does want to do something important but he’s too old to be able to fight his addictions or be the adult he needs to be with the relationship with Minnie. An important scene where he breaks down on acid is what it ultimately takes for Minnie to stop idolizing him and finally see him for what he really is.

Another person Minnie also has to lose as a hero throughout is her mother. First off, let me say that this is the best Wiig’s potential has been used to date. It’s felt like whenever she’s done a good job; the surrounding movie has been not nearly as good like The Skeleton Twins or Welcome to Me. This is the first time where she is giving an amazing performance in an amazing film. She knocks it out the part as this liberal figure who bounces back between being a sweet, charming person and this total wreck that needs for her children to be taken away from her. What’s heartbreaking is that you can tell that she loves her children but she is so messed up and she can’t help herself from being a bad influence on them. She has far more of a chance of redemption than Monroe but Minnie also has to realize that her mom can’t be the parental figure she wants her to be and she will have to rely on herself to have a better future and provide for her younger sister. One of the things about growing up is that you can’t play dumb anymore and you have to see the real people, warts and all. In both of these situations, Minnie has to rise above and see them for what they are and accept them for that as she grows up. She can love her mom but she can’t expect her to always be there for her and help her out. She sees where they went wrong and she has to be adult in these moments so that she can give herself a better life.

Last in the long list of things this movie does right about growing up is perhaps the most relatable one for me, Minnie is a worrying teenage artist trying to figure out what she wants to do with her life. She finds inspiration in the old 60’s and 70’s artists like Kominsky and Crumb and she spends her free time drawing self-portraits and making little comics about her daily life. I’ve got to be honest here, as a teen, I have all of the worries she has here as a young artist. She doesn’t know if she has any actual talent and she worries about being as good as her heroes. She’s afraid of whether or not she’ll be able to use her passion as a way to provide for herself and she often feels stressed out when she isn’t working as much as she wants to. Truth be told, they even got down how sometimes she puts their passion in front of school work. Her struggles in this area feel so real and so genuine that I sometimes felt like this movie spoke to me a little.

The movie evens goes out of its way to use her art in the real world. The movie uses animation in a lot of scenes like when she’s dreaming in the bath tub or talking to one of her idols or even growing wings while taking acid with Monroe. These little touches only add to the movie by bringing her dreams to life in a way that doesn’t seem gimmicky or self-indulgent. I give all the credit in the world to director Marielle Heller who managed to make a very visually creative movie with such a raw, intimate subject. From the uses of her artwork on screen to the very authentic look they gave to the mid 70’s with the costume and production design, this is a very impressive debut. The movie also gets points for an outstanding soundtrack which basically bumps this movie up to a positive rating just for using a song by Television. I want to see more movies by her in the future and I’ll be very disappointed if she doesn’t move on to bigger things after this.

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Finally, I have to give high praise to the film’s star Bel Powley. Her IMDB page doesn’t have much yet but I expect that to be changing. This is a performance that is so good that it would be near criminal for her not to get to go on to more leading parts. She makes you believe that this character is a real person. She presents her with a wild independence that you can only get from a teenager but at the same time she shows that Minnie is still in a lot of ways a child. She bounces back between snorting cocaine and acting like she owns the world and crashing down, crying in a telephone booth (I’m trapped in a glass case of emotion!) and exposing herself for actually being very insecure about everything.

The Diary of a Teenage Girl accurately portrays what it means to grow up. Most of the fears and risks and dreams of being a teen are shown here with the utmost clarity. The movie also puts its director and star on the map as true talent to look out for. Overall, this movie accomplishes so much that so many other films can’t reach and it does in a way that feels confident and assured. I loved this film way more than I thought I would and I will go as far as to say that this movie should be a required watch for anyone that’s somewhere within in the same age of the main character of this movie. You might think you’ve seen this film before but believe me when I say you haven’t, this is an experience that is massively different than anything else you will see this year in the theaters.

Rating:(5/5)

Review by: Ryan M.

Release Date: 8/7/2015

Rating: R

Cast: Bel Powley, Alexander Skarsgård and Kristen Wiig

Directed by: Marielle Heller

Screenplay by: Marielle Heller

Based on the novel by: Phoebe Gloeckner

Phoenix Review – 3.5 out of 5 Stars

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A movie is on the right track when the first film that comes to my head when I think of it is Vertigo. I guess I’ll share a little secret of mine and admit that Vertigo is my favorite film of all time. The movie has done something for me every time I’ve rewatched since I saw it for the first time when I was 12. It’s a beautiful, heartbreaking experience that’s centered on this epic, doomed love built by two equally lost souls. The places the film goes to are still as shocking to me as the first I saw them. So with that said, a film like Phoenix is on some sort of positive path when I can legitimately compare it to my personal favorite movie. This is obviously not nearly as good as Vertigo, but for what it’s worth, Phoenix is a subtle, well-made drama that will impress a lot of fans of Vertigo as well as fans of other movies from Hitchcock’s filmography.

Nelly (Nina Hoss) is a holocaust survivor whose face was badly damaged while she was in a concentration camp. Along with that, the rest of her family is dead and her husband went missing. Due to the injuries, Nelly’s face is remodeled with surgery and after the procedure she looks like a cross between her old self and a totally new woman. Due to the rest of her family being dead, Nelly has inherited a lot of money and she must pick up the pieces living in a post war Germany. Not soon after she receives a new face, she stumbles across her husband Johnny (Ronald Zehrfeld) working some odd jobs in a bar. He doesn’t recognize her but he notices how she almost resembles his thought to be dead wife. Not knowing the truth, Johnny hires Nelly to play herself so that they can collect her inheritance. Through this plot, a bizarre, questionable romance unfolds between these two old lovers.

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I’m probably already hyping this film up a little more than it deserves so I should be a little bit clearer. This is less of a Hitchcockian movie involving the holocaust and more of a holocaust drama with bits and pieces of a Hitchcockian style movie. For as over the top and out there as the story seems, the way the film plays it is surprisingly grounded. The music isn’t grandiose and thrilling in scale. The movie isn’t particularly fast paced or energetic. Furthermore, the movie doesn’t have any shocking, huge moments besides the ending scene. For all intents and purposes, you could call this film a very slow burn.

Director Christian Petzold basks in the lonely, uncomfortable, surreal landscape of Germany right after the holocaust. The towns are broken and only a few of the buildings still stand amidst the rubble created because of the war. The setting much like its people is lost and desperately tries to survive from the thing that has destroyed it. Much like the romance between Johnny and Nelly and the mask Nelly must wear at the beginning, the broken silent towns hint at something far uglier hiding beneath. In a specific scene, a friend of Nelly is angered at how the entirety of Germany has been trying not to talk about the things the Jewish population suffered from at their hands. In her own words, the victims are expected to return and forgive.

This rant gets to the core of what the movie is trying to say with the romance in comparison to what was happening after the holocaust. It’s hinted that Johnny gave up to the Nazis where Nelly was hiding to save himself. It’s this denial of what he did that obsesses him when it comes to shaping how Nelly appears. In his attempts to “perfect” her into Nelly, Johnny has almost purposefully forgotten the reality staring him directly in the eyes. In this way, Germany is trying to rebuild itself without facing the horrors that it gave out over the past decade or so. On the other side of the coin, the victims of Germany or in this case Nelly are going along with this out of fear and the hope of acceptance. This movie uses its old school mystery storyline to paint a picture of the quiet chaos that was going down during the reconstruction of Germany.

To admit what is so amazing and a bit unsatisfying about the final scene of the flick, I have to stress that this is a very slow film where the thrills come more from characters talking than anything else. Unlike Hitchcock, Petzold doesn’t ever seem to be going big on twists or murders and everything is played very natural and raw. It’s as I said, a slow burn. However, this movie ultimately proves that it is building to something that is worth the wait with this brilliant, jaw dropping moment involving an old song. I really don’t want to spoil it but it is an amazing scene that starts to put into perspective what the film has been saying all along and it also features a pretty impactful moment for its two main characters. Here, Nelly does something which would basically be the equivalent of dropping the mic. The movie built up to this great moment and all it has to do now is stick the landing. The problem is, the movie ends with this scene huge game changing scene without showing anything else. The ending leaves you wanting more, but this is one of the rare occasions where that isn’t a positive attribute.

To compare, Boyhood and Gone Girl are two films that have endings that leave you wanting to see more. But those movies do it in a good way because the endings to those two movies still seem complete and satisfying. There is a fine line between having an open ending and an incomplete one. Phoenix just doesn’t feel like a complete movie to me. It felt like this movie led to something great and just as it was hitting that, it started the credits. The movie is like a roller coaster that stops a quarter of the way down. It’s a shame because the scene is one of the most impressive of the year. If the movie had gone a little bit farther and added just a little bit more detail to what just happened, I would have a totally different review of this movie. As it is, this movie has way too abrupt of an ending for me to fall head over heels in love with it.

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Phoenix is an interesting, smart movie that has a lot to say about the social tensions in Germany following the war. The acting from the whole cast is great and the story does a good job invoking the big, twisted stories of the old Hitchcock films like Vertigo or Psycho. Who knows, maybe I would be calling this one of the best of the year if it had done a better job wrapping up. Unfortunately, the ending feels too unfinished for me to go one step beyond with this one. Nonetheless, I would still recommend it if you’re a fan of Hitchcock or historical dramas. Everyone else seems to love this so maybe I’m in the minority and you’ll be able find something more rewarding out of this films conclusion than I was.

Rating:(3.5/5)

Review by: Ryan M.

Release Date: 7/24/2015

Rating: PG-13

Cast: Nina Hoss, Ronald Zehrfeld and Nina Kunzendorf

Directed by: Christian Petzold

Screenplay by: Christian Petzold and Harun Farocki

Based on the novel by: Hubert Monteilhet

Transporter Refueled, The (2015)

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Title: The Transporter Refueled
Rating: PG-13
Directed by: Camille Delamarre
Written by: Adam Cooper, Bill Collage, Luc Besson and Robert Mark Kamen (aka. The Transporter Refueled: The IMAX Experience)
Starring: Ed Skrein, Loan Chabanol and Ray Stevenson
Release Date: 9/4/2015
Running Time: 96 minutes

Official Site
IMDb

In the south of France, former special-ops mercenary Frank Martin enters into a game of chess with a femme-fatale and her three sidekicks who are looking for revenge against a sinister Russian kingpin.


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Before We Go (2014)

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Title: Before We Go
Rating: PG-13
Directed by: Chris Evans
Written by: Ronald Bass, Jen Smolka, Chris Shafer and Paul Vicknair
Starring: Chris Evans, Alice Eve and Emma Fitzpatrick
Release Date: 7/21/2015
Running Time: 89 minutes

IMDb

Two strangers stuck in Manhattan for the night grow into each other’s most trusted confidants when an evening of unexpected adventure forces them to confront their fears and take control of their lives.


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