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Showing posts with label Harrison Ford. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harrison Ford. Show all posts

Monday, December 21, 2015

STAR WARS: THE FORCE AWAKENS


Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures

Rated PG-13

Running time: 135 Minutes

Click below to watch a movie trailer of Star Wars: The Force Awakens from YouTube.
 

In Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures Star Wars: The Force Awakens, the old generation meets the new in this Star Wars sequel.

The seventh installment of the Star Wars series, the movie takes place thirty years after Star Wars: Return of the Jedi - and released thirty-two years after Return of the Jedi, thirty-eight years after Star Wars: A New Hope. Produced, Written, along with Lawrence Kasdan, and Directed by J.J. Abrams, Based on Characters Created by George Lucas, this is a worthy successor to the Star Wars legacy and the first of a new trilogy. With the transition of Lucasfilm over to Disney, Lucas stated that this was a way to pass Star Wars on to a new generation of filmmakers. The movie has all the elements of a Star Wars film including the original cast and I felt that the movie has more action and more story in this movie than in the other movies. I think that is mainly because, not only does the movie have the feeling of the original trilogy, the movie also has the feeling of the Star Wars Expanded Universe.

Thirty years after Return of the Jedi - Luke Skywalker/Mark Hamill, the last Jedi has disappeared. The First Order has risen from the fallen Galactic Empire seeks to eliminate Luke/Hamill and the Republic. The Resistance, led by Luke's twin Sister Leia Organa/Carrie Fisher opposes The First Order while looking for Luke/Hamill.

Meanwhile, former stormtrooper Finn/John Boyega escapes the First Order with the help of pilot Poe Dameron/Oscar Isaac and crash on a desert planet - where Finn meets scavenger Rey/Daisy Ridley as they continue to escape from the First Order with the help of Han Solo/Harrison Ford and get to the Resistance with a map to find Luke/Hamill.

I saw this movie at a 9:00 am Saturday showing opening weekend and the theater was packed. The audience reacted positively to the movie and cheered when the Star Wars logo appeared. They also cheered when Han Solo/Harrison Ford as well as the Millennium Falcon appeared. While the original cast appeared in the movie, the movie definitely is the film of the new generation - Daisy Ridley, John Boyega, Oscar Isaac. Nonetheless, Harrison Ford received top billing in the movie - his first time for a Star Wars film, as well as being the first non-Jedi character to be credited first in the series.

It was wonderful to hear John Williams music during the opening title crawl. I knew I was finally watching a Star Wars movie after all these years when I heard the music. Not only does the movie has new music like Rey's theme, but the movie also uses familiar music like Luke's theme. Just hearing the full 90 piece orchestra and 24-voice men's chorus made me feel like a teenager again experiencing a Star Wars movie. There were times where I teared up a little during the movie as well as yelling YES during some of the scenes.

The aerial battles and the ground battles were incredible for me and felt more realistic when done on planet as compared to being done out in space. Watching in 3D - while I blinked a couple of times with debris flying out at me - at times the aerial and space battles felt like watching a video game to me. The stormtroopers were more ruthless and deadly than in the previous movies, especially one particular stormtrooper. I am looking forward to how the filmmakers are going to treat Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, which is coming out in 2016 and is supposed to be more of a war movie than a space movie.

There are more new aliens, although most of them were not major characters. The movie does have some subtitles for an alien language that was spoken.

The droid BB-8 is an actual droid created by Disney Research and not CGI and seven different BB units were used in the film with the actors. It was wonderful to see BB-8 in action and definitely had a personality and felt like the new R2-D2 for the movie. The movie used more practical miniature models and real locations rather than CGI to make it aesthetically closer to the original trilogy. Interestingly enough, at $200 million dollars, this is the highest budgeted Star Wars film so far.

While this is the second Star Wars film that is released in IMAX, this is the first film using IMAX cameras on some scenes during filming. Star Wars: The Force Awakens is being shown on every IMAX screen in North America for four straight weeks.

By the time the movie was over, you definitely get the feeling that there will be more stories to tell and more movies - and it has been announced that everyone will be back for the sequel, Star Wars: Episode VIII.

At the end of the movie the audience applauded.

J.J. Abrams Director's credit as with all the other credits appeared at the end of the movie, just like in all of the other Star Wars movies.

At $100 million, Star Wars: The Force Awakens broke the record for pre-sales, breaking the previous pre-sale record holder The Dark Knight Rises three times over which had $25 million in pre-sales as well as initially crashing the ticket selling websites after starting ticket sales. It also had a record breaking $57 million from Thursday night "previews" and the first film to gross more than $100,million in a "single" day, the fastest to $100 million. This is significant as this is the first live-action Star Wars movie released in December with the widest December release while all the previous movies had been released in the month of May. As of 2015, Star Wars: The Force Awakens holds the record for highest grossing opening weekend at $215 million. Click this link from Box Office Mojo for more domestic records that Star Wars: The Force Awakens broke.

After twelve days, Star Wars: The Force Awakens became the fastest movie to reach $1 billion dollars.

Rated PG-13 for violence. Running time: 135 Minutes.

Pancho 
All people smile in the same language.



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Friday, December 6, 2013

ENDER'S GAME


Summit Entertainment

Rated PG-13

Running time: 114 minutes



Click below to watch an Ender's Game movie trailer.



In Summit Entertainment's Ender's Game - Earth had been attacked by aliens, so now Earth is readying soldiers to fight them. These soldiers are children - especially the chosen leader Ender Wiggin/Asa Butterfield.

Directed by Gavin Hood - who plays the giant in the mind game - and Co-Written by Hood, the movie is based on Orson Scott Card's book Ender's Game, and is Produced by Card who also wrote the screenplay in order to preserve the vision of his book. This live-action movie of Ender's Game is a study in the near future of how desperate the human race would be if we were trying to prepare ourselves for another invasion. The use of training children from the start with war games instead of normal play with educational kid games is rather sad. Too bad several themes from the book never really got a chance to be developed in the movie as they were concentrating on Ender's/Butterfield's story.

Actually, despite what the trailers may imply, this is Ender's/Butterfield's story. You see Ender/Butterfield going from student to being recruited to Battle School as Mankind's last hope of a military leader against the aliens. You also see the jealousy of the other students for Ender's/Butterfield's brilliance, and I felt for his isolation and his manipulation by Harrison Ford. In a sense, this is the ultimate bully movie as Ender/Butterfield fights back.

While initially I did not think Ben Kingsley's facial tattoos were unnecessary and detracted too much for me from appreciating Kingsley's performance in the movie, the tattoos were explained in the movie as part of his Maori background and I accepted them.

The movie is actually very close to the book. While not everything could not be put in and explored, at least all the major themes were mentioned. The children were more young teenagers from high school instead of the elementary school children from the book however. This is probably due to the fact that you can not do this kind of graphic material with very young children, as well as having the marketing factor of having teen aged stars being in the movie. The videos of the aerial battle with the alien Fomecs used contemporary military fighters, so the alien invasion could have taken place today - and the battles in space were believable too. I like the fact that the U.S. Marines have Ender's Game as recommended reading for lessons in leadership.

Having read the book in college, I have always wondered how they were going to do the zero gravity effects of Battle School - if this would be an animated film or a live action film. As a live-action film, the zero G Battle School scenes in Earth orbit were very believable - especially as the young actors were trained in wire-work by Cirque du Soleil. The performances by the Academy Award Nominee stars Hailee Steinfeld, Viola Davis, Abigail Breslin, Harrison Ford, and Academy Award Winner Ben Kingsley make you get into the characters. I think this is the best military science fiction movie I have seen. As for Ender Wiggin/Asa Butterfield - this is no game.

Rated PG-13 for violence. Running time: 114 Minutes.

Click below to watch another movie trailer of Ender's Game.



Pancho
All people smile in the same language.

 Pancho's Movie Reviews



Sunday, May 5, 2013

42


Warner Bros.

Rated PG-13

Running time: 128 Minutes



Click below to watch the 42 trailer.



In Warner Bros. 42, World War II is over and America's baseball players return home from the war to the game of baseball. Brooklyn Dodgers team executive Branch Rickey/Harrison Ford wants to increase attendance - by bringing in a black player, Jackie Robinson/Chadwick Boseman.

Based on the true story of Jackie Robinson and the part he played in American history, and written and directed by Brian Helgeland, this biographical movie basically showed Robinson's/Boseman's 1946 season with the Montreal Royals in Panama and Robinson's/Boseman's first season as a Brooklyn Dodger in 1947. I am rather surprised that this is only the second theatrical biography of Jackie Robinson - with the previous one, The Jackie Robinson Story in 1950 which stared Robinson as himself. Although some of the material was created for dramatic purposes, such as Pee Wee Reese's line about the Dodgers someday wearing the number 42 - which in reality was actually said by Dodgers outfielder Gene Hermanski in 1951 - I felt that I got to know Jackie Robinson and got a glimpse of what his life was about. It was incredible to see what an all around great player Robinson/Boseman was, and Boseman went through weeks of baseball training to prepare for being such a great player. With Birmingham, Alabama's Rickwood Field - the oldest surviving professional baseball field in the U.S. - being used in the movie, the baseball stadiums felt very authentic for the time period. It was great to hear about and see such famous names of Dodger baseball, such as Leo Durocher/Christopher Meloni and Pee Wee Reese/Lucas Black in the movie.

Because there was a huge crowd for the Negro League Baseball players, Rickey/Ford wanted to bring that crowd to Major League Baseball. Granted, Rickey/Ford had a great respect for the talent of the Negro players and really wanted to bring that talent to the game and breaking the baseball color barrier instead of being that interested in the money. To see Robinson/Boseman signing the contract to be a Brooklyn Dodger was a great moment to see for me.

The prejudice at that point of time after WWII was intense. You can kill for them, but you can't play for them. Certainly the Dodgers did not want Robinson/Boseman playing for them, let alone the entire baseball league. The most graphic display of the Major League's prejudice was the Philadelphia Phillies manager Ben Chapman/Alan Tudyk's treatment of Robinson/Boseman. I had never knew that the Dodgers had a petition going that they would not play with Robinson/Boseman. Considering Robinson's/Boseman's supposed temper, which was why he got court-martialed while he was in the Army, I was expecting to see Robinson/Boseman to be seething most of the time while playing baseball and trying to hold in his temper. I felt that Robinson/Boseman was too laid back in the movie while everyone was insulting him. Actually, I felt that there was more tension shown with Robinson/Boseman in the trailer than what there was shown proprotionately in the movie. Robinson's/Boseman's court-martial was only just mentioned in the movie and they did not go into it. The story of Robinson's racist court-martial is more covered in the TV movie The Court-Martial of Jackie Robinson.

Seeing Robinson's/Boseman's wife Rachel Robinson/Nicole Beharie encounter a White's Only restroom for the first time emphasized the difference between their California home and the rest of the country. It reminded me of my Asian Filipino cousin's travels in the Southeast with her white American husband.

What got to me was how much of a hero Robinson/Boseman was to the black kids, which was incredible - while the prejudice of a white kid in the stands was disturbing to me and my boss, who saw the film before I did. Actually, the movie made me think of the red tagged You're Black, They're White segment in the raunchy film Movie 43 that in a sense represents blacks in all sports. As black sportswriter Wendell Smith/Andre Holland has told Robinson/Boseman, "you are not the only one with something at stake here."

I must admit when I first heard of 42, I was thinking that the movie was the answer to the ultimate question from Douglas Adam's The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. While I knew of Jackie Robinson and is a hero of mine, I never knew his number. Now, I can not forget Robinson's jersey number - even though Adam's number 42 has no connection to Robinson's number 42.

It was great Jackie Robinson Day at the end of the movie and to hear during the end credits Count Basie's song Did You See Jackie Robertson Hit That Ball from 1949 which reached number 13 on the music charts.

Click below to watch another trailer of 42.



Click below to watch behind the scenes of 42.



Pancho
All people smile in the same language.

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Cowboys & Aliens


Universal Pictures

Rated PG-13

Running time: 118 minutes



Set in the old west, Universal Pictures Cowboys & Aliens has amnesiac Daniel Craig waking up with an alien weapon strapped to his wrist and soon comes up against aliens from space.

When Craig arrives in a frontier town, the townspeople realize he is a wanted criminal and the sheriff arrests him. Cattle rancher Harrison Ford wants revenge on Craig for what Craig did to his son and wants Craig for himself, but before Craig can get shipped off to a larger town for trial - aliens arrive and kidnap some of the townspeople, including Ford's son, the no good Paul Dano. Mysterious Olivia Wilde convinces Craig to go after the townspeople which would in the process help Craig recover his lost memory. Craig joins Ford as they go on a quest to bring Ford's boy and the rest of the townspeople home from the aliens.

This film is True Grit meets Battle Los Angeles with the film being mostly a western. There is hardly any hi-tech gadgetry aside from Craig's wrist gun and the foo fighters.

The reason the aliens are here is not really explained aside from the initial reason - nor the reason why the beastial aliens kidnapped people in the first place, although Craig looks like he was part of an experiment. With Ford turning out to be a former Army officer, the movie soon turns out to be an Indiana Jones meets James Bond movie, although I accepted British Craig as an American. Soon, all the various human groups - townspeople, cattle ranchers, stage coach robbers, and native americans - join forces against the aliens in a battle for survival.

I was upset the dog was not used more throughout the movie. What should be obvious with the dog, but then he would just be there, then disappear, then show up again and that was rather irritating for a such a neutral character. Other than those things, I thought this off-beat movie was pretty good.

The director Jon Favreau also insisted the film should only be shot on film since this is a Western, so I do not think there will be any 3-D versions of this film.

See UFO Bob's video review of Cowboys & Aliens:


Rated PG-13 for violence. Running time: 118 minutes.

Pancho
All people smile in the same langauge.