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| Issue #41, January 19th, 2007 |
Dave's MINI – MOVIE REVIEWS
The Hitcher
Graduating from One Tree Hill to the big time
B-movie world of the horror remake, Sophia Bush plays the female lead
in this remake of the 1986 ‘classic’. The story’s
simple enough: young, happy couple pick up ghoulish looking stranger
with predictably unfortunate results. Sean Bean, once flying high
as a strong British export, crash lands as the murderous title character.
The Dead Girl
Brittany Murphy plays the eponymous corpse whose demise brings to
light various other strands and characters who hold the clues to her
murder. The film’s focus could do with being tighter and perhaps
enough isn’t made of the excellent cast (including Giovanni
Ribisi and Toni Collette) but with some stunning and tender moments,
Karen Moncrieff is certainly a director to watch.
The Good German
Steven Soderbergh returns with this heart-on-sleeve homage to Carol
Reed’s classic The Third Man. Although this never reaches the
dizzying heights of that classic, George Clooney plays a convincing
lead as a hapless American journalist who falls into a murder-mystery.
Strong support comes from Cate Blanchett, Tobey Maguire and the excellent
Tony Curran.
Freedom Writers
Hilary Swank continues her streak of deathly dull, soon-to-be-Oscar-nominated,
social justice stories with this tale of a young teacher trying to
improve the lot of her class of at-risk children. It’s not that
this is bad but it feels too much like painting-by-numbers for all
involved, especially in the light of last year’s similarly-themed
but extraordinarily realised Half Nelson.
Happily N’Ever After
Surely, to the delight of nobody, this heralds the steady continuing
stream of CGI films. Here things hit a new low with CGI plagiarising
CGI in this suspiciously Shrek-like story. Cinderella (voiced by Sarah
Michelle Gellar) must battle her evil step-mother (Sigourney Weaver)
for control of the fairytale world. Tedious and clumsy.
Miss Potter
Having perfected her English accent for the Bridget Jones films, Renee
Zellweger gets the chance to whip it out all over again in this literary
biopic of children’s author, Beatrix Potter. This is delightful
fare with Zellweger acting with a subtlety and tenderness she’s
not shown before. The supporting cast, headed up by the ever-wonderful
Ewan Macgregor and Emily Watson, do her proud.
Arthur and The Invisibles
CGI once again but this comes with a slightly different pedigree.
Luc Besson, director of 1994’s superb Leon and the flawed but
visually fascinating The Fifth Element, turns his attention to a children’s
book of his own writing concerning a ten-year-old boy and his adventures
with garden fairies. It’s by no means great but it lacks the
cynical and easy recycling of much of contemporary children’s
cinema.
Stomp the Yard
The director of I’ll Always Know What You Did Last Summer, Sylvain
White, turns his eye to somewhat more realistic concerns in this film
about stepping and African-American college fraternities. DJ (Columbus
Short) plays a freshman, trying to recover from the death of his brother
and ultimately finds his life transformed by the community he finds
in college.
Alpha Dog
This is a flashy biopic of the young Southern Californian drug-dealer
Jesse James Hollywood, from Nick Cassavetes, the director most recently
responsible for loveable schlock-romance The Notebook. Cassavetes
is great at handling his mostly young cast and the film manages to
engage with what is attractive about that lifestyle without simply
glorifying it.
Code Name: The Cleaner
Cedric the Entertainer, Lucy Liu and Desperate Housewives’s
Nicolette Sheridan join forces to fill in for the lack of an A or
even B-list lead in this absurd action comedy. Cedric plays Jake,
a man who wakes up having lost his memory and somehow bumbles his
way into a government conspiracy. Straight-to-video.
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