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Showing posts with label Adrianne Palicki. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Adrianne Palicki. Show all posts

Friday, November 28, 2014

JOHN WICK


Summit Entertainment

Rated R

Running time: 101 Minutes

Click below to watch a movie trailer of John Wick from YouTube.



In Summit Pictures John Wick, widower John Wick/Keanu Reeves has his car - a vintage '69 Mustang - stolen by punk Alfie Allen from his home. After losing everything he cares for, Wick/Reeves - also known as Baba Yaga, or the Bogeyman - goes after Allen and Allen's father Michael Nyqvist, who is the head of the Russian crime syndicate in New York City and for whom Reeves used to work for, in revenge.

The movie is really a personal story between former syndicate associates Nyqvist and Reeves, with Allen almost being a MacGuffin. The respect that Nyqvist had for Reeves as a surrogate son - as opposed to his arrogant spoiled son Allen - was nice to see. The same relationship, but on a different level,  between hit men Willem Dafoe and Reeves was also nice to see - and you never know which way Dafoe was going. It was also nice to see Adrianne Palicki in the movie, who also learned judo and ju-jitsu. After several action roles, Palicki has become the new action heroine of this generation.

Reeves was pretty bad ass in the movie as a retired hitman. He was not psycho, but very reserved and focused. Reeves trained in judo, Japanese ju-jitsu, and Brazillian jiu-jitsu as well as training with members of the LA SWAT and the Navy SEALs that Director Chad Stahelski and Co-Director/Producer David Leitch had known and did 90% of his stunts for this role. And Wick's/Reeves double tap shooting of his opponents was quite believable as a result. Because of all this, I liked this movie better than The Equalizer. I really liked Wick's/Reeves beagle puppy Daisy and I thought that his dog humanized him a lot. Wick's/Reeves wife Bridget Moynahan did not know anything about Wick's/Reeves past, but she is not onscreen long enough to really know and care about her. I did like the hotel, owned by Ian McShane, in the middle of the movie that was used as a neutral ground centerpiece for this underworld.

The subtitles for the Russian language were most interesting in that they were not shown at the bottom of the screen as with typical subtitles, but in the style of a graphic novel.

The last few shots of the movie I felt were too rushed story wise as I felt it was too cute. I would have preferred a couple more shots to bring out the emotion of the movie tag.

On a technical note, when I saw this movie there was a problem with the video projection when the movie started so all we heard was the audio. It was a 9:00 a.m. showing and there were only a half dozen of us in the theater. There was a girl in the audience with us, and she laughed saying that all but one of the guys, including me, went out to complain. I thought what she said was funny. John Wick is definitely a guy's movie.

Click below to watch another movie trailer of John Wick from YouTube.



Rated R for violence, language, sexual situations. Running time: 101 Minutes.

Pancho
All people smile in the same language.

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Thursday, April 4, 2013

G.I. JOE: RETALIATION

Paramount Pictures

Rated PG-13

Running time: 110 Minutes



Click below to watch the G.I. Joe: Retaliation trailer.



In Paramount Pictures G.I. Joe: Retaliation, the G.I. Joe team has been wiped out and the few survivors, Dwayne Johnson, D.J. Cotrona, and Adrianne Palicki go underground determined to find out why.

In this sequel, G.I. Joe: Retaliation seems like a more adult version of of the prequel G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra - despite the James Bond type of plot. A crawl at the beginning of the movie introduces the concept of G.I. Joe with Channing Tatum in command. Tatum and Johnson's relationship was great, not just as Joes, but as friends as well. The ninja scenes with Storm Shadow - Byung-hun Lee - and with Snake Eyes - Ray Park - and Jinx - Elodie Yung -  were great, especially when compared with the military action scenes. My favorite scene was with Storm Shadow/Lee and Snake Eyes/Park when they first meet each other. While Snake Eyes is not supposed to talk, I am looking forward to when martial artist stuntman Park actually gets a speaking part.

After a mission in Pakistan to confiscate nuclear warheads from terrorists, the Joes are wiped out in a military strike by Cobra. Storm Shadow/Lee rescues Cobra Commander, Luke Bracey with the voice by Robert Baker, from prison - while Snake Eyes/Park and Storm Shadow/Lee's cousin Jinx/Yung go after Storm Shadow/Lee. The Joe survivors from the military strike seek help from the original Joe - General Joseph Colton, Bruce Willis, in order to stop Cobra.

I have always felt that with Jonathan Pryce as a Welshman, Pryce was not an appropriate actor to be President of the United States. Certainly, Pryce did not have the presence to be President and was a little goofy. It was hard for me to believe Pryce as the leader of the free world. There is a worldwide presence to the movie that gives the movie more of a scope than what you might think of when watching this movie and adds to the James Bond feeling of the movie. The use of orbital kinetic bombardment weapons is interesting, especially since the military concept has been around since the 1950's but has never been implemented as far as I know. After having just watched the movie Olympus Has Fallen, the Presidential scenes in G.I. Joe: Retaliation in comparison to that movie were very cartoony.

General Joe Colton - Bruce Willis - from whom the Joes were names after, was not as strong a character as I was expecting. I was really expecting him to take over command of the rest of the Joes when they contacted him. Especially since the Joes were named after him Joe/Willis, I was expecting some kind of possessiveness from Willis about the Joes - as well as a little history about the Joes. Johnson was still basically the leader of the Joes, even with Joe/Willis joining the team. With very few characters from the original movie making an appearance in this one, it would have been nice for Joe/Willis reminiscing about the Joes he has served with. And the friends that Willis supposedly brought in as support to the surviving Joe  team were not seen.

The Cobras were not the super-soldiers from G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra, but just a military force and was not such a menacing force as you would think. The ninjas were more menacing, and frankly more fun to watch. Cobra Commander was not a major character in the movie either. The movie could have been made without him and would not have changed a thing. I felt the guards where Cobra Commander was being held were too old to be prison guards and made me glad to see what happened to them. The resolution between Snake Eyes/Park and Storm Shadow/Lee is interesting, and I wonder what will happen between them in the next movie.

The movie apparently did so well during it's opening weekend, that the studio has reportedly commissioned a third G.I. Joe movie.

Rated PG-13 for violence. Running time: 110 Minutes.

Click below to watch my favorite trailer of G.I. Joe: Retaliation.


Pancho 
All people smile in the same language.
 

Monday, November 26, 2012

RED DAWN

FilmDistrict/Metro-Goldwyn-Meyer

Rated PG-13

Running time: 114 Minutes

 

 Click below to watch the Red Dawn trailer.

 

In FilmDistrict's/Metro-Goldwyn-Meyer's Red Dawn, high schoolers must defend themselves and their home - when America gets invaded by North Korea.

In a remake of 1984's Red Dawn, this film starts out with the high school football game with Josh Peck of the Wolverines trying to prove himself during the game to his Police Sergeant father Brett Cullen and his veteran Marine brother home on leave, Chris Hemsworth. When North Korea invades their hometown, Cullen sends the motherless Peck and Hemsworth off to their cabin in the woods for safety and to eventually make war with the Korean troops.

I have not seen the original Red Dawn since it first came out in 1984, but from what I remember I think that the new Red Dawn is a better film than the original and seems more of a regular fun action film. I enjoyed the action in this movie. With stars from current TV shows like Adrianne Palicki, Isabel Lucas, Alyssa Diaz, Edwin Hodge and Jeffrey Dean Morgan, I am sure the young audience can relate to these characters like my generation related to the young stars like Charlie Sheen of the original Red Dawn. The feel was very much like The Hunger Games and the Twilight saga movies, as well as the V TV series, when the teens are out training with the various guns and developing their fighting skills in the woods, especially with Josh Hutcherson from The Hunger Games as one of the teenagers. I liked the family aspect of the movie between the brothers and their relationship, and how all the other Wolverines had family of some kind or another as well.

The opening montage sets up the movie with news clips, including clips of President Barack Obama and Senator Hilary Clinton of the escalating tension from North Korea and it's military and the technological and economic vulnerabilities of America, especially the vulnerability to a new kind of weapon. While the Koreans tried to hunt down the Wolverines, the fact that the Koreans do not take any retaliation against the population, or at least the prisoners located at the stadium for the Wolverines actions was illogical to me.

I have always wondered - both back in the 80's and now - how it would be if my high school, Estancia High School, was the one that was involved in the movie. Our mascot, the Eagles, would have been more patriotic mascot symbol for the city to rally around against the North Korean army as the kids that I went to  high school with fight the Koreans. I can imagine everyone crying out Eagles!

Originally the film was made in 2009 and was supposed to be released in 2010, keeping in mind the post-9/11 world that we are in. However, due to the financial difficulties of MGM, the released was pushed back to 2012. As a result, the enemy was supposed to been China, which would have been logical, given their resources - but with the opening up of Chinese availability of Western products, MGM wanted the Chinese box office, all references to China was changed during post production and computer graphics to make the enemy North Korea. With backing from another source, it made it more believable that North Korea could pull off such an invasion. With both Chinese and North Koreans being Asian, it was a simple matter of changing the logos and flags through CGI. With Chris Hemsworth as the leader of the Wolverines, the movie's late release works to the movie's advantage as Hemsworth is a bigger name as an action star now.

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

Pancho 
All people smile in the same language.