Is Anybody There? - Movie Review and Synopsis

Monday, April 13, 2009

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Is Anybody There? Set in 1980s seaside England, this is the story of Edward, an unusual ten year old boy growing up in an old people’s home run by his parents. Whilst his mother struggles to keep the family business afloat, and his father copes with the onset of mid-life crisis, Edward is busy tape-recording the elderly residents to try and discover what happens when they die. Increasingly obsessed with ghosts and the afterlife, Edward’s is a rather lonely existence until he meets Clarence, the latest recruit to the home, a retired magician with a liberating streak of anarchy. Is There Anybody There? tells the surprising, touching story of this odd couple – a boy and an old man – facing life together, with Edward learning to live in the moment and Clarence coming to terms with the past.

The hype machine wants you to know this is “Michael Caine’s best performance,” which is as eye-brow raising as as Caine’s decision to star in that ill-advised remake of Sleuth a couple years back. (Really, my attention is on Caine’s co-star, Bill Milner, who was wonderful in the criminally passed over Son of Rambow. May their combined talent lend some weight to this drama and keep it out of soft ‘n’ dewey territory.

Rated PG-13 for language including sexual references, and some disturbing images.

Director: John Crowley
Stars: Michael Caine, Bill Milner
Studio: Big Beach
Release Date: 1 May 2009 (UK)

Anvil! The Story of Anvil - Movie Review and Synopsis

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

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Anvil! The Story of Anvil At 14, best friends Robb Reiner and Lips made a pact to rock together forever. Their band, Anvil, hailed as the “demi-gods of Canadian metal, ” influenced a musical generation that includes Metallica, Slayer, and Anthrax, despite never hitting the big time. Following a calamitous European tour, Lips and Robb, now in their fifties, set off to record their 13th album in one last attempt to fulfill their boyhood dreams.

If you were an 80s metal head, chances are you either worshiped Anvil or saw them support one of your favorite bands during that pre-Nirvana era. (Jovi!) The word-of-mouth is strong here: it all started at Sundance in 2008, then started to fade until VH1 got behind Sacha Gervasi’s documentary and helped crank up the publicity amps by putting Anvil on a mini tour as the platform release unfurls this month. While the trailer reveals the band’s current fate, I am wondering whether the doc’s hopeful success will help Gervasi get his Hervé Villechaize project made.

Director: Sacha Gervasi
Stars: Robb Reiner, Steve ‘Lips’ Kudlow, Tiziana Arrigoni
Studio: Abramorama
Release Date: 20 February 2009 (UK)
Genre: Documentary

Dragonball Evolution - Movie Review and Synopsis

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

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Dragonball Evolution Upon discovering he was sent to Earth to carrying out a sinister plan, a humanoid alien named Goku (Chatwin) looks to fulfill his dying grandfather’s wish: Prevent the evil Piccolo (Marsters) and his alien forces from collecting seven mystical artifacts which would allow him to take over our planet. In order to fend off the attackers, Goku must find Master Roshi (Chow), who is the one person who can set him on the right path.

Speed Racer’ misfortunes have not stopped Hollywood from aggressively pursuing anime/manga titles to turn into feature films; Dragonball is only the first in a series of movies, which includes Ninja Scroll, The Last Airbender, and Akira (James Cameron has plans for Battle Angel Alita, too). Genre fans wrinkled their noses at just about every Dragonball announcement, save the casting of Yun-Fat Chow as Master Roshi and James “Spike” Marsters as Lord Piccolo, but the any publicity is good publicity cliché applies here, since anime purists have dissected everything from a leaked trailer to a 16-second clip that aired on Japanese TV in an attempt to get a definitive look at the direction in which Final Destination creator James Wong is taking the story. Many indicators tell me that movie fans at large won’t be pulling a Watchmen here and running out to the comic-book shop in order to brush up on this story.

Rated PG for intense sequences of action/violence and brief mild language.

Director: James Wong
Stars: Justin Chatwin, James Marsters, Yun-Fat Chow
Studio: Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation
Release Date: 25 March 2009 (Indonesia), 10 April 2009 (USA)
Genre: Action | Adventure | Fantasy | Sci-Fi | Thriller

Observe and Report - Movie Review and Synopsis

Observe and Report At the Forest Ridge Mall, head of security Ronnie Barnhardt patrols his jurisdiction with an iron fist, combating skateboarders, shoplifters and the occasional unruly customer while dreaming of the day when he can swap his flashlight for a badge and a gun. His delusions of grandeur are put to the test when the mall is struck by a flasher. Driven to protect and serve the mall and its patrons, Ronnie seizes the opportunity to showcase his underappreciated law enforcement talents on a grand scale, hoping his solution of this crime will earn a coveted spot at the police academy and the heart of his elusive dream girl Brandi, the hot make-up counter clerk who won’t give him the time of day. But his single-minded pursuit of glory launches a turf war with the equally competitive Detective Harrison of the Conway Police, and Ronnie is confronted with the challenge of not only catching the flasher, but getting him before the real cops do.

While the Foot Fist Way failed to make director Jody Hill a household name, the weird-o action comedy did capture Hollywood’s attention, and one of the undying movie trends in Los Angeles is the desire to push the boundaries of mainstream comedy. Call it the Apatow effect. From what we understand, OaR might even offend perverts with its uncouth behaviors. Rogen’s playing an unlikable character for the “first” time (that’s what Internet boys are saying, to which I say: Did you not see Knocked Up?), and his clashes with Liotta are reportedly as un-politically correct as his tryst with Anna Faris (playing a put-upon cosmetics-counter girl) is gag-inducing. Plus, full frontal male nudity. JoBlo has some scoop.

Rated R for pervasive language, graphic nudity, drug use, sexual content and violence.

Director: Jody Hill
Stars: Seth Rogen, Anna Faris, Ray Liotta
Studio: Warner Bros. Pictures
Release Date: 10 April 2009 (USA)
Genre: Action | Comedy

Hannah Montana: The Movie - Movie Review and Synopsis

Hannah Montana: The Movie As Hannah Montana’s popularity begins to take over her life, Miley Stewart, on the urging from her father takes a trip to her hometown of Crowley Corners, Tennessee to get some perspective on what matters in life the most.

If one takes into consideration this story’s thematic elements and combines them with Miley’s real-life trials and tribs, one might assert that the young star is boxing up her alter ego and preparing for the next chapter in her career. Affirming this notion is the fact that novelist Nicholas Sparks (he of Notebook fame) is customizing his first-ever screenplay to suit Ms. Cyrus, and the project is tentatively set to arrive around the time of her 18th birthday. Aiding the transition here is adult-fare specialist, director Peter Chelsom (Shall We Dance).

Director: Peter Chelsom
Stars: Miley Cyrus, Emily Osment, Billy Ray Cyrus
Studio: Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures
Release Date: 10 April 2009 (USA)
Genre: Comedy | Family | Music


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