For a DTV movie it's alright. I do think there's a genuine effort to make something interesting (Like a shot at the end of the film where the center of a spiral staircase is framed in a POV shot as if it's the extension of the barrel of a detective's gun) but most of the movie feels kind of cheaply made, and feeling like a riff of Se7en, while inevitable, doesn't do the movie a whole lot of favors. The end of the movie tries to cast some doubt on whether the real killer has been caught by the police, suggesting he either had an accomplice or has inspired a copycat of some kind- this isn't successful but I appreciate the attempt at ambiguity.
Al Pacino is here is doing his mumbly Pacino thing as a retired detective, Karl Urban (The guy that plays Bones in the Abrams Star Treks) does his best with what he's given as a detective whose wife was murdered in the past, and Brittany Snow as the reporter is alright I guess but her character is just kind of there for most of the film.
Why does Pacino keep doing these kinds of films? Not that DTV movies or B-movies can't be masterpieces, but for like 20 years it seems like Pacino only has been looking for easy projects he can kind of just sleepwalk through.
Also this was produced by Saban Films- the people behind Power Rangers of all things.
143. The High Sign (1921) - Although this was the first short Buster Keaton produced himself, it was not the first one he actually released. That honor went to the masterpiece One Week - Keaton felt The High Sign in comparison was not very good and waited a while to release it.
It's not bad. Buster plays a guy who, after running a fraudulent sharpshooter attraction, is hired to be a bodyguard for a man who owes debts to some gangsters and their hired assassins. However, Buster is also hired to BE an assassin by those gangsters and his target is even the other man who hired him so shenanigans ensue. My favorite gag is the long build up involving a police officer having his holstered pistol being replaced with a banana, only to try and pull the gun on somebody later on in the film. A criminal eats the banana, scaring the cop off, and then throws the peel to the ground. We get kind of a modern anti-gag as several people then walk over the peel without even tripping or falling.
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I quite liked this one. I was pleasantly surprised that the twist involving Adams' character got me.Lord_Lyndon wrote:I saw two that stand out for me. First one is Arrival (2016). I never thought I would cry at the end of some sci-fi movie. I must say I was deeply moved. Amy Adams, who is one of my favourite actresses, was fantastic.
Haven't seen this one though I tend to enjoy Nic Cage.Second one is Kick-Ass (2010), a sort of unconventional superhero/action/comedy movie. I really had a great time watching it, and I loved Chloe Grace Moretz' role in it. Nick Cage was also very cool. Always have a great time watching him.
I quite liked both of these. I thought Before Midnight was kind of a perspective flip on Before Sunset- when you think about, they're both essentially movies about Ethan Hawke cheating on his wife, though the context between them is so different and the big fight scene in Midnight is one of the more uncomfortable ones I've seen in an American movie in quite a while.I also loved two Linklater movies: Boyhood (2014) and Before Midnight (2013). I gave them 9/10 on imdb (Do you still rate movies there? I started doing it on a regular basis in 2014.).
Boyhood I quite liked, if only for the nostalgia I have for growing up in a very similar time and place and way as the main character. I'm glad to see that movies like Moonlight are using a similar structure (Even if they're not being literally filmed over 12 years) to tell stories of other experiences that exist in this country.
There may not be much point to it any longer but I still do rate things on IMDb. Old habits die hard I guess- I just didn't have the heard to delete the IMDb app off of my phone.
I have not seen either of these or any of the Zatoichi movies, believe it or not. In fact I haven't seen any of Kitano's films yet either. :( I'll be on the lookout for them.I saw two very good Asian movies recently and I would like to recommend them to you in case you haven't seen them. First one is Chaser (2008), an interesting serial killer movie from Korea. Second one is The Blind Swordsman: Zatoichi (2003), a film by legendary Japanese director Takeshi Kitano. Also check out some other Kitano's movies if you haven't already. By far my favourite Kitano is his most popular film Fireworks (1997).