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Monday, January 17, 2011

The Green Hornet


Columbia Pictures

Rated PG-13

Running time: 119 minutes


















Click below to watch The Green Hornet trailer.



In Columbia Pictures The Green Hornet, playboy Seth Rogen's stern newspaper publisher father Tom Wilkinson, who writes about corruption in the city - is murdered. While trying to do something crazy to spite his stern late father, Rogan and his driver, Jay Chow, stop a mugging. Rogan then decides to become the crimefighter "The Green Hornet."

In a campy remake of the short-lived TV show from the 1960's The Green Hornet, starring martial artist Bruce Lee, The Green Hornet movie is the opposite of Batman in that playboy Seth Rogan as Britt Reid becomes a crimefighter while pretending to be a criminal - while Michael Keaton as Bruce Wayne pretends to be a playboy in order to hide the fact that he has become a crimefighter that was wanted by the police for being a vigilante. While comedian Michael Keaton became too serious for playboy Bruce Wayne/Batman, comedian Seth Rogan is not serious enough as crimefighter Green Hornet/playboy Britt Reid. This is not surprising as the movie was co-written by Rogan. Although there are a couple of dramatic scenes for Rogan in which he was good at, there are very few of those scenes and the movie is really full of your typical Rogan comedic scenes. If we could combine the playboy Seth Rogan and the Michael Keaton's Dark Knight Batman, as well as treating the material seriously like The Dark Knight, we could have had the ideal dual identity/schizophrenic crimefighter.

Asian pop star Jay Chou as Bruce Lee's Kato is the brains of The Green Hornet duo - as Rogan's father's former mechanic, who not only designs and builds all of The Green Hornet's incredible gadgets - Kato also builds The Black Beauty, their car which kicks ass much better than The Batmobile. In fact, really The Black Beauty is why you want to see this action movie - with Jay Chou's martial arts the next reason. There is an homage to Bruce Lee with a sketch of him supposed to have been done by Kato, as well as homages to the old Batman TV show. It was great to hear the Green Hornet TV theme song at the end. The bad guy at first seemed to be a formidable foe, but he soon turned into a comic book character that even his henchman says that he is crazy. Rogan's secretary Cameron Diaz is the unsuspecting female brains of the duo as Chou and Rogan pick her journalistic brains to see what she thinks as to what the criminal "The Green Hornet" might do next.

Despite the fact that a paper newspaper seems old school, they have Edward James Olmos as the newspaper editor in the movie. Sadly - after an incredible performance in Battlestar Galactica - Olmos performance was practically non-existent in the movie as the newspaper editor, which is too bad as Olmos is in the perfect position to be Rogan's mentor. Rogan's desperation to upload incriminating evidence on the web seems very contradictory to the archaic newspaper technology in the newspaper plant that he finds himself fighting amongst. As friends of mine who work for newspapers will attest, the newspapers as a media for delivering news are moving more and more to being online and that there is less news paper being produced.

Rated PG-13 for violence. Running time: 119 minutes.

Pancho
All people smile in the same language.

Little Fockers


Universal Pictures

Rated PG-13

Running time: 98 minutes
















Click below to watch the Little Fockers trailer.



Universal Pictures Little Fockers has male nurse Ben Stiller being reluctantly made the family Godfocker by the family patriarch, ex-CIA man Robert De Niro. De Niro soon regrets this decision when, after using the Google search engine, he suspects Stiller of cheating on his daughter Teri Polo with medicinal drug representative Jessica Alba.

A sequel to Meet the Parents and Meet the Fockers, Little Fockers is a cute, but uneven film. Considering the title, you would think that Little Fockers would be more about the kids Daisy Tahan and Colin Baiocchi interacting more with Stiller and De Niro -  especially interacting with grandfather De Niro. It was great to see a scene with De Niro and Harvey Keitel, even if it is a short scene. I am surprised I have not seen these two actors together in a movie before. While De Niro is still a tough guy, it is hard to compare Little Fockers to the 30th anniversary Blue-ray edition of Raging Bull which had just come out. This is especially true with all the ED jokes with De Niro from Jessica Alba's new impotence drug, the treatment for which is quite traumatic. While Jessica Alba is hot, I also miss Alba doing the serious roles as well - like Dark Angel, the role which had made Alba famous. Laura Dern is interesting as the head of the school that Stiller and De Niro want to put the children in. As Dern says, "there are a lot of family dynamics at play here" when she Meets the Parents. New age guru Owen Wilson can get annoying as he horns in on Stiller's family. A cameo by self-improvement guru Deepak Chopra is cute although you wish the cameos by Dustin Hoffman and Barbara Streisand, as well as the cat Jinxie, would have been more. 

Rated PG-13 for violence and sexual situations. Running time: 98 minutes.

Pancho
All people smile in the same language.
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