Monday, 17 December 2012

End Of Watch


Anyone who follows my little review blog on a regular basis will know that I have my fair few crushes on movie men (and occasionally on film females too ;0), but anyone who's followed my blog since last year - back when it was Film Reviews 2011 - will know that Jake Gyllenhaal is my prince among men. As such I look forward to his movies above all others, and where possible I see them as many times as I can at the cinema. Jake actually holds my record for the most multiple viewings of a film EVER with a total of 8 trips to see Brokeback Mountain.

Since 2011's magnificent Source Code however, it's been quite the wait for another Jake Gyllenhaal film. I believe this has had something to do with his appearance in the off-Broadway play 'If There Is I Haven’t Found It Yet', but it could also have something to do with the fact that there are several films on his IMDb filmography that state they're in post production. A state that I recall seeing them in more than a year ago. Having said this, End Of Watch did kind of creep up on me as I thought it was further down the line than some of Jake's other movies, and before I knew it, it was being released. 

The film has been shot documentary style to capture the gritty realism of a day in the life of a cop in South Central Los Angeles. We follow LAPD officers Brian Taylor (Gyllenhaal) and Miguel Zavala (Michael Peña) as they do their daily rounds, car chases, checking on the elderly, toning down house parties is all just part of their daily routines, but when the two officers start homing in on gang members in South Central they soon find that they are the ones being targeted.

Let me start by saying that this is not my kind of movie. At all. But having said that, I am glad that Jake made it as I wouldn't have seen it otherwise, and overall I am glad I've seen it. Maybe with someone else in the role of Taylor I wouldn't have liked the film as much, but as it was I thought Jake was great and he had a good spark with Peña. Their chemistry made their partnership believable, which in turn leant a lot of weight to the film. And the film certainly surprised me, in more ways than one. 

The only thing I didn't really like about it, and this will seem really frivolous, was the swearing. Just to put into context, one of my favourite gritty, true to life films is The Town. There is a lot of swearing in The Town. But not every other word. It just takes the whole thing from being realistic and believable to the exact opposite of the scale. No-one, I don't care what scummy town they come from or how little of a good upbringing they've had, no-one says the f word every other word. Yet one character in End Of Watch did just that. EVERY F*CKIN OTHER F*CKIN WORD. F*CK. It was just ridiculous and really hampered my enjoyment of the film.

Therefore, my recommendations for End Of Watch are as follows. If you enjoy gritty cop docu-drama's and don't mind the f bombs, you'll like this. If swearing, guns and drugs are not your bag, avoid. 6.5 out of 10.


Viewing Date - 5th December 2012
UK Release Date - 23rd November 2012

Cast Overview:
Jake Gyllenhaal ~ Brian Taylor
Michael Peña ~ Miguel Zavala
Natalie Martinez ~ Gabby
Anna Kendrick ~ Janet
David Harbour ~ Van Hauser
America Ferrera ~ Orozco 
Cody Horn ~ Davis

Director/Writer ~ David Ayer

Sunday, 9 December 2012

Silver Linings Playbook


As a fan of both Bradley Cooper and Jennifer Lawrence I was looking forward to seeing Silver Linings Playbook as soon as I saw the trailer for it a couple of months ago. 

The film tells the story of Pat (Bradley Cooper), who was diagnosed bipolar and admitted to a mental health facility following the breakdown of his marriage. We meet him just as he is being released from the facility to the care of his parents, although Pat is unwilling to come to terms with the fact that his marriage is over. Whilst rebuilding his life, Pat becomes friends with Tiffany (Jennifer Lawrence), a depressed young woman who is unconventionally coming to terms with being made a widow by sleeping with everyone in her office, causing her to lose her job. Tiffany persuades Pat to join her in a dance competition by promising him she will pass messages onto his estranged wife, but is she looking for more than a dance partner?

I must admit that I not only really enjoyed Silver Linings Playbook but I also found it quite a refreshingly sweet natured film with very little swearing and no sex scenes. Don't get me wrong, I like a good love scene as much as the next girl, but sometimes it's nice for a film to be the kind of film you could take your mum to see. Bearing in mind the fact that film also stars Robert De Niro, I think a lot of people will be surprised to see that this is such a tame film in terms of the lack of swearing and violence.

The only issues I had with Silver Linings is that it could have been funnier, and it is a tad on the predictable side, but neither of these niggles affected my overall opinion or enjoyment of the film. Cooper, Lawrence and De Niro - who I have never been a fan of - all put in solid performances and you find it very easy to like the characters they play, genuinely caring what happens to them. 

If you like your rom coms to come with honest dialogue and a backdrop of emotional problems, but ultimately to have a warm heart, then you'll like this one a lot. 8 out of 10.




Viewing Date - 4th December 2012
UK Release Date - 21st November 2012

Cast Overview:
Bradley Cooper ~ Pat
Jennifer Lawrence ~ Tiffany
Robert De Niro ~ Pat Snr
Jacki Weaver ~ Dolores
Chris Tucker ~ Danny
Anupam Kher ~ Dr Cliff Patel
John Ortiz ~ Ronnie
Shea Whigham ~ Jake
Julia Stiles ~ Veronica

Director ~ David O Russell
Writer(s) ~ David O Russell (Screenplay) and Matthew Quick (Novel) 

Tuesday, 4 December 2012

Ruby Sparks


A few months ago I posted a guest review of Ruby Sparks with the promise of a Lady K review to follow. Unfortunately I then missed my opportunity to see the film as it was only out at my local cinema for a week.

This weekend I happened to be up in London and decided to swing by my favourite Independent Cinema, The Prince Charles Cinema. I have spoken of my love for this place in many other reviews so I won't harp on about it here. I planned to see what was on and pick up a brochure of coming events. It was then, at 3pm, that I noticed that Ruby Sparks was showing at 3.35pm. Feeling like it was fate for me to be there, at my favourite cinema, with only half an hour to go before the screening of a film I'd missed and had so wanted to see, I decided to treat myself and see whether my guest reviewer was right when she said it was awesome.

Ruby Sparks tells the story of Calvin (Paul Dano), a writer who is suffering from a severe case of writers block. His shrink gives him an assignment to write about his timid dog Scottie, and how people interact with him. That night Calvin dreams of a girl who does exactly what his shrink had suggested and so he writes about her instead. Calvin's dreams become his inspiration and soon, without any idea of the how's or why's, Calvin's dream girl, Ruby (Zoe Kazan), appears before him. Thinking he's gone insane, Calvin sets off to prove to himself that Ruby is a figment of his overactive imagination. But he is soon faced with the realisation that not only is Ruby real, whatever Calvin writes about her comes true. Giving him ultimate control over her thoughts, feelings, actions and emotions. The question is, what will he do with this power?

Ruby Sparks starts out as a quirky and endearing love story but quickly turns into something much more sinister. The film raises a lot of questions about control and power and how people deal with the sudden gain, and loss, of that power. While I found the premise kept me intrigued, I have to say that I wasn't expecting the film to take such a dark path, and I wasn't prepared for it either. In that sense, I felt that the trailer somewhat misguided audiences as to the type of film Ruby Sparks is.

Don't get me wrong, it's a brilliantly acted and well scripted film, but it's also very serious and very dark in places and I don't think the trailer prepares the audience for what lies ahead of them when they take their seats. Having said that, I did like the end result and I would recommend that others see Ruby, but I would want them to be more informed before they commit to it.

If quirky but thought provoking is your bag, and you can stomach the heavy stuff, Ruby Sparks is one for you. 7 out of 10.



Viewing Date - 2nd December 2012
UK Release Date - 12th October 2012

Cast Overview:
Paul Dano ~ Calvin Weir-Fields
Zoe Kazan ~ Ruby Sparks
Chris Messina ~ Harry
Annette Benning ~ Gertrude
Antonio Banderas ~ Mort
Steve Coogan ~ Langdon Tharp
Elliott Gould ~ Dr Rosenthal

Director(s) ~ Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris
Writer ~ Zoe Kazan

Monday, 3 December 2012

The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2


For my review of Breaking Dawn Part 1 (and catch up on Twilight through to Eclipse) see here. Now on to Part 2.

You will know from reading my review of BDP1 that I was and still am a big fan of the Twilight movies and books. However, as BDP2 was filmed back to back with BDP1 I couldn't help but wonder why they weren't released closer together. They made the fans wait a year and a half between New Moon and Eclipse and I understood that this was due to the other filming commitments of the cast, primarily Kristen Stewart filming The Runaways (hence her awful wig for Eclipse). But there was no such reason for the year long delay between BDP1 and BDP2 so I felt like this was dragged out unnecessarily. 

In the year between movies I started to grow tired of the whole franchise. The constant noise in the press about RPatz and KStew and their eventual break up over her affair with Rupert whats-his-face. It had nothing to do with the film and if it has all been a ruse to generate publicity then I feel sorry for those whose lives have been ruined along the way. I digress of course, this is a review and not the Twilight cast biography. What I guess I'm trying to say is that my enthusiasm for the Twilight films waned. And as such I found myself feeling less than excited at the prospect of ANOTHER Twilight film. 

Having said that, I decided to give the films one last chance to win me back and I booked me and my bestie tickets to the midnight screening for her birthday. We'd seen all the others at midnight (with the exception of the first film) so it felt like a tradition we should see through to the end.

We set off at 11.30pm having watched Breaking Dawn Part 1 in preparation. All bleary eyed and wondering if we were just too old for all this nonsense. Mingling with kids half our age trying to get into the club next door to the cinema. Buying coffee to keep us awake. We settled into our seats and awaited the final film in the Twilight saga. We knew how it ended of course as we'd read the books, but as I had heard that the filmmakers had changed the ending of Stephenie Meyer's original story to be a more fitting cinematic experience, I still didn't quite know what to expect. 

Then as the opening credits appeared, I noticed something I hadn't seen on a Twilight movie before. A Producer credit for Stephenie. This immediately made me relax a little, and pushed my excitement up a notch. If Stephanie produced the film, surely she wouldn't have allowed any of the changes to be detrimental to the story she wanted to tell?

The film starts immediately where BDP1 ends. Bella wakes from her deathbed a vampire. We see straight away that unlike other newborn vampires, she is restrained and well, still her. But without the awkwardness. We meet Renesmee again who has grown substantially considering she is only weeks old, and we learn, as we suspected from the end of BDP1, that Jacob has 'imprinted' on her. We soon find out that the Volturi, the Italian vampire clan who keep the vampire world a secret from humans, have gotten wind of Edward and Bella's immortal child and that they plan to journey to Forks to kill the Cullens once and for all. As Renesmee is not immortal, a child born of a vampire but not bitten, Edward and Bella must gather those willing to stand up to the Volturi in order to protect their daughter, and themselves, from certain death.

I won't spoil the MASSIVE twist at the end but what I will say is that even those who've read the book will be surprised at how the filmmakers have manipulated Stephenie Meyer's book in order to give the film audience something that the readers were sorely lacking. I think that they've done a wonderful job of bringing the final part of the story to the big screen and I think fans of the book and those who haven't read it will equally enjoy what the film has to offer. 

BDP2 introduces some great characters to the saga and also some great actors. I particularly enjoyed the addition of Lee Pace to the cast as I've been a fan of his since I saw him in Pushing Daisies. I must also say that the existing cast look better in this film than they have since the first Twilight. I think they finally decided to ditch the wigs which were making actors like Peter Facinelli and Elizabeth Reaser look faintly ridiculous. 

So despite my trepidation, in the end I did enjoy BDP2 and I would recommend you see it. Even if it's just to put that final nail in the vampire coffin. 8 out of 10.



Viewing Date - 15th November 2012
UK Release Date - 16th November 2012

Cast Overview:
Kristen Stewart ~ Bella Swan
Robert Pattinson ~ Edward Cullen
Taylor Lautner ~ Jacob Black
Peter Facinelli ~ Dr Carlisle Cullen
Elizabeth Reaser ~ Esme Cullen
Ashley Greene ~ Alice Cullen
Jackson Rathbone ~ Jasper Hale
Kellan Lutz ~ Emmett Cullen
Nikki Reed ~ Rosalie Hale
Billy Burke ~ Charlie Swan
Chaske Spencer ~ Sam Uley
Mackenzie Foy ~ Renesmee
Maggie Grace ~ Irina
Jamie Campbell Bower ~ Caius
Christopher Heyerdahl ~ Marcus
Michael Sheen ~ Aro
Daniel Cudmore ~ Felix
Charlie Bewley ~ Demetri
Dakota Fanning ~ Jane
Cameron Bright ~ Alec
MyAnna Buring ~ Tanya
Mia Maestro ~ Carmen
Lee Pace ~ Garrett
Noel Fisher ~ Vladimir
Julia Jones ~ Leah
Booboo Stewart ~ Seth


Director ~ Bill Condon

Writer(s) ~ Melissa Rosenberg (Screenplay) and Stephenie Meyer (Novel)