Archive for December, 2008

Is that emotion I’m feeling or is it my stomach eating itself? Sunshine review

So I have a bunch of movies on my computer that I’ve recently…acquired…in HD. Not Blu-Ray level, exactly, but it looks like they were ripped from Blu-Rays and compressed just slightly. Every time I…acquire…them, they say 720p, and I’m inclined to believe that. Most of the movies I have like that are ones I’ve already seen, that I just wanted in high quality, because when you have an HD-capable screen such as that of the MacBook Pro, you want to test its capabilities. And these certainly pass that test.

However, there are a couple movies that I acquired that I hadn’t seen, and figured HD was the way to do it.  The first of these that I’ve seen is Sunshine, the last movie from director Danny Boyle before he made critical darling Slumdog Millionaire, which I’m still waiting to see.  Let me tell you – I do not ever want to see this movie in any lower quality now.  The visuals here are completely breathtaking.  Is this what HD movies really are all like? Because the other ones I have look incredible, but they don’t quite look like this one.  Maybe it’s the sci-fi aspect of it, whatever.  I’m getting a little preoccupied here.

And the fact that the visuals are incredible really informed my opinion of this movie more than visuals usually do, and they kind of keyed a mindset change for me.  I’m going to try to do that every time – not say “well, this movie has great visuals, but it sucks because the story’s stupid.” I think that’s a bad way to look at movies –  a movie can be bad despite great visuals, but the visuals still have to come into play – good visuals make a movie better, simply.

And I don’t think this movie is terribly smart, but I have a positive feeling about this movie because of the sheer wonder of the visuals.  The score gets a little too imposing at times, but for the most part it just serves the visuals perfectly, like at the beginning, when you’re getting the feel of the spaceship.  The string swells are so warm, I felt welcomed to this place – Danny Boyle’s trademark, everyone says, is highlighting the pure humanity of his characters.  Here you get that a lot.

But though the characters were incredibly fully realized, I thought they fell a little too much into tropes.  For this bullet point section, there are abundant SPOILERS.

  • Cillian Murphy as Capa: The main character, thoughtful, a little introspective, is blamed for a lot of things, a bit of a martyr complex, a bit reflective of all the neuroses of the rest of the crew.
  • Cliff Curtis as Searle: The guy who has an obsession with something weird that creeps out the rest of the crew, that is reflected in his demise.
  • Michelle Yeoh as Corazon: The female crew member who is all about good-naturedness (and nature); her name’s fucking Spanish for heart, for chrissakes.
  • Hiroyuki Sanada as Kaneda: The captain who is chill and under control, self-sacrificial.  He dies pretty soon, of course.
  • Rose Byrne as Cassie: She’s a little out of place, because her character is a straight-up horror movie chick character – and I mean chick.  All she does is get scared and do things as a result of being scared.  Actresses who bore the crap out of me in interviews when they say “I only want to play strong roles” say things like that because they’re complaining about these characters.  Come on.
  • Benedict Wong as Trey: The guy who fucks up, and can’t get over it.  Easy.
  • Chris Evans as Mace: The badass/asshole who gets everything done.  Generally, you’re not supposed to like characters like him 100%, but I do.  He’s totally badass, and the mission would have gone nowhere without him.  The crew seems to like him begrudgingly, but they also seem to recognize that he’s always right – about EVERYTHING.
  • Troy Garity as Harvey: The smug prick with a little power who is always looking out for #1.
  • Mark Strong as Pinbacker: You’ll find out.

And since I don’t want every meaningful bit of analysis to be spoiler-laden, let me just say that I had problems with the ending.  Everything stops making sense, which Sam Walker tells me (and Danny Boyle would agree, I’m sure) is by design, but that didn’t get through to me while I was watching it.  There were just too many what-the-fuck moments that took me out of the film at the end – things that are in bad horror movies that badass mofo’s like myself who are NEVER SCURRED laugh at because they’re totally stupid.

But like I said earlier, I have to give this a positive review – the negative things I pointed out were really my only problems with it, and this movie was exquisitely watchable (in the most positive connotation of the word), and had a sort of surreal/real interplay – the story was obviously not grounded in reality, but the psychology of the characters seemed very realistic and relatable – something that I canNOT enjoy a movie without.  And that makes me very excited for Slumdog Millionaire, which I plan on seeing very soon.

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Forgetting Sarah Marshall review, because I can

Warp speed, captain! Spoilers ahead!

I should have seen this before, Apatow, yah yah, well, it’s very funny, but not elite like Superbad or Knocked Up or Anchorman…Jason Segel, you could have made this movie without showing us your penis…Kristen Bell is good in this and there’s plenty almost-boobage, but she doesn’t do the comedy as well as she does the emotional scenes – shame…Russell Brand is un-fucking-believable as the rocker.  A brand of humor we haven’t seen before in Apatow movies – mayb it’s the British thing.  Best line in the movie is his introduction, “Excuse me, missus, I’ve lost a shoe… like this one. It’s like this one’s fellow… it’s sort of the exact opposite in fact of that – not an evil version but just, you know, a shoe like this”…Jonah Hill has finally become annoying…Mila Kunis is smoking hot when she’s not acting like a shallow high school bitch in That 70’s Show…I couldn’t help thinking every time the black bartender was on screen that Craig Robinson could have done it better.  Still, he had some awesome one-liners…I really hope that the Dracula song gets the Oscar for best song – it’s in the final 50, at least…I don’t know, Paul Rudd, you had a lot of classic potential in this character, but you played up the stoner aspect too much…I was constantly expecting a hilarious joke from Bill Hader while he was on screen, but he was painfully straight…best moment of the movie is easily Jason Segel’s reaction when the photos are deleted.

Good breakup movie – the emotion is genuine, as we’ve come to expect.  But you can feel with this movie that the Apatow gold had finally worn off – this was still better than most comedies this year, but something was missing.  And then Drillbit Taylor came out.

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THE LISTS, part 2 – Top Albums of 2008

Ugh.  I began to write this entry while procrastinating a week’s worth of hell, and I finished it doing the same thing.  Only this time it was a different week.  Regardless, this list took a lot longer than the last, for obvious reasons, and only makes me dread making part 3 (the movies list) sometime in later January in ways that still somehow allow me to look forward to it.  Either way, it’s a nice feeling of relief to know I’m done with this, and I like my picks.  I’m eager to see how different mine are from Pitchfork.  After all, that’s the only reason I wanted to put this out so soon – to beat Pitchfork and to prevent myself from being influenced.  Anyway, here goes.

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Ultimate Mixtape mailing list

Some readers of this site were recipients of my first-ever Ultimate Mixtape around the holiday season last year. For those who weren’t, it was a year in review in mixtape fashion – different from my top songs of the year, even though this year there are 40 in both. All of these songs I love, but these were picked to have a little more variety and to create a totally badass mix. I recommend it for those who would maybe like to get a look inside my head (musically, any other way would be weird) or at least maybe get exposed to something they otherwise wouldn’t. I promise that everyone who hears this mix will have something they haven’t heard before.

So I would like to extend an offer to my lucky readers. If you would like me to mail you a copy, just comment saying so and maybe send me an email (matthew.rothstein@oberlin.edu) with your address. If you’d like me to give you a copy in person, please tell me so I can burn enough CD’s now to give them all out the first time I see somebody.

I promise you that you will enjoy this mixtape. Two discs of me flossing my extreme mixmaking skills.  And they are extreme.  And they are skills.

And no, I haven’t seen any movies lately.  And the albums list is under construction.  Thanks for asking.

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THE LISTS, part 1 – Top Songs of 2008

I was thinking that I should stop at 25 as far as top songs go, otherwise I would have three or four songs from each of my favorite albums of the year, and that would kind of get pointless.  But then I realized when compiling the list that all of that happened within the top 25 anyway, so I expanded to 40, and here we go.  Unlike last year, for those who remember, I will give a short explanation for each track.  I won’t compare, because that would be ridiculous, but I hope that my synopses are appropriately glowing for each place in the list.  In it are The Walkmen, Born Ruffians, TV On The Radio, Beach House, Bon Iver, Fleet Foxes, the Dodos and much more, but this post is huge – you’ll have to hit the jump for it all.  Plus, you wouldn’t want to ruin the surprise immediately, would you?

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