Tuesday, April 27, 2010

"Death at a Funeral" Review

‘Unnecessary’ is probably the best single word description of Neil LaBute’s “Death at a Funeral.” I mean, there’s really no precedent for the release of a same-language remake a paltry two and a half years after its original, and yet the guest list arrives for this new “Funeral” with almost as fast a turnaround as a Hollywood sequel. Hell, Chris Nolan hibernated on his second “Batman” film longer.

Nevertheless, the reality is that the decidedly Afro-American-friendly version of the dysfunctional family comedy (notable only because it really is the later film’s sole distinguishing feature), is now in theaters, leaving anyone who remembers the Frank Oz original to ponder why.

LaBute and star Chris Rock, who also served as a producer on the film, cheekily ‘adapt’ U.K. writer Dean Craig’s screenplay by peppering it with hip-pop pop-culture nods to Usher and R. Kelly, and leaving the rest, in essence, unchanged. On one hand, I appreciate the sentiment in that it doesn’t presume to outdo its progenitor, but that’s its problem as a standalone piece: it’s either identical or inferior in every conceivable way. As such, the majority of its first-time audience will probably appreciate the comedic build-up having not been spoiled on the gags, and that's fine for right now, but it poses a potential dilemma, say, ten years down the road.

When film buffs and historians look back on “Death at a Funeral” (which they honestly have little reason to), the choice between the two versions will be obvious. Plus, they’ll have no idea who “Usher” is.

Likewise, even today I’d recommend a rental of the 2007 film over a ticket to its 2010 counterpart, because, well, the original is the original, and for all its faithfulness, the remake actually accentuates what’s lost in translation. The pop-culture one-liners clash with the characters on the page, and leave them feeling half-formed and sloppy on the screen—Are we watching Chris Rock do what makes Chris Rock hilarious, or are we seeing him play a repressed, introverted protagonist? The answer, messily, is both.

On that level, there’s a creative integrity to the original performances that is impossible in LaBute’s version. Martin Lawrence, Danny Glover, Tracey Morgan, Zoe Saldana, Peter Dinklage, Luke Wilson, and others comprise an undeniably talented cast that does an admirable job performing characters that were written as upper-crust Englishmen, but watching Rock sulk his way through the film makes it abundantly clear that they’re not being themselves.

There’s also the not-so-insignificant matter of LaBute’s bland artisanship. In the past, he’s been responsible for equally lifeless big-screen adaptations of his own stage plays, and a spectacularly poorly-received remake of “The Wicker Man”—It begs the question, why was he asked and trusted to shepherd this project? There’s no single performance in the film that feels particularly informed by his hand, and LaBute fails to bring a single funny idea to the table. In adhering so rigidly to “Funeral” prime, his remake is marked by an absence of directorial and comedic vision.

I have no qualms with anyone who enjoyed “Death at a Funeral” for the first time via the LaBute/Rock version. A lot of what made the British comedy memorable has survived, and even with a jaded precognition of the gags, I mined a couple laughs. However, the fatal flaw of the 2010 adaptation is that the 2007 version exists. It’s not like it’s antiquated or anything; it’s three years old.

Anyone with an open mind can still appreciate the original “Death at a Funeral,” and its immediate availability for less than the cost of a night at the movies makes the 2010 remake quintessentially one thing—Unnecessary.

2/5

FARCE/FILM Episode 42: Death at a Funeral, The Losers

--> Episode 42: 04/25/10 <--
Hosts: Colin George, Brian Crawford, Jon Mauer

Intro – 00:00
Top 5 – 01:41
Death at a Funeral (spoilers) – 08:56
The Losers (spoilers) – 31:18
Movie Round-Up – 45:07
(Pushing Tin, Pink Flamingos, Master and Commander, Easy Rider, Little Children, The Lords of Dogtown, BASEketball)
Outro – 59:40


"Death at a Funeral"
Colin:
Crawford:
Jon:

"The Losers"
Colin:
Jon:



-- Weekly Discussion Question --
This week we argue that Neil LaBute's "Death at a Funeral" is an unnecessary remake, arriving only three years after the original without any substantial changes. What remakes, if any, do you think are successful? What constitutes a 'necessary' remake?

-- -- e-mail us your thoughts at farcefilm@gmail.com -- --

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

"The Good, the Bad, the Weird" Review

Off-kilter Korean neo-western “The Good, the Bad, the Weird,” is a frenetic genre mash-up packed with visceral, loopy violence. That isn’t a complement so much as it is a description.

Suffice it to say, if you’re into a modernist, freewheeling foreign take on Leone’s “The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly,” with cartoony characters and outrageous action, you’re going to have a blast; if you’re looking for a substantive or meditative reflection on the period or the original film, you’re in the wrong line.

Personally, I’m caught between the two perspectives. I appreciate the pure Peckinpah punch of the gunplay, but was in equal parts bored and bewildered by the overall film. Perhaps the principal flaw in writer/director Ji-woon Kim’s script is that he indulges in too much of a good thing. His action sequences are a lot of fun, and the über-stylized retro/modern aesthetic delivers bizarre and inventive visuals like a gunslinger in a deep-sea diving helmet.

But the deafening sound effects and quick cutting style wear thin if not appropriately paced, and “The Good, the Bad, the Weird,” is almost relentless in its drag race to the final showdown. I’m loathe to draw a comparison to “Transformers” here, but Kim proves that even good action has a threshold, and there are times in his film where it’s easy to let your eyes glaze over.

In its more quiet moments, the story, a very loose retelling of “The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly” follows a band of misfit thieves who come into possession of a treasure map sought by both Chinese thugs and the Japanese military. What’s maybe most interesting about the film is seeing the conventions, chronology, and geography of the western customized to fit eastern ideology, and China’s Taklimakan desert stands in for Manchuria circa 1940.

The tone is played as loose as the history, however, and Kim is never bogged down by self-seriousness or the oft-stringent requirements of a period piece. “The Good, the Bad, the Weird” is closer to a gleeful “Kill Bill” in tone than South Korea’s own operatic, ultraviolent “Oldboy,” and benefits from it. Kim easily leapfrogs from hard-hitting shoot-outs to charming comedy, a phenomenon that has everything to do with his incredible cast. Each of the title characters, Park Do-won (Good), Park Chang-yi (Bad), and Yoon Tae-goo (Weird), brings with him a distinct tonal octave that lends the film some much-needed variety. My lone gripe in this department is that it would have been nice to get to know them a little bit better. As it stands, their rifles seem to have far more to say.

And for many, that won't be an issue. I’ve no question that there exists a very appreciative audience for this film—I’m just not it. Nevertheless, I’m only too happy to report that everything basically works. The cinematography is frequently gorgeous, the performances are stellar, and the action is kinetic—There’s just too much of it. By the end of the two-hour engagement, what should be a satisfying, visceral finale comes off as extravagant hoopla.

As viewers we shouldn’t be conditioned to expect non-stop action, because once you pass the threshold, there’s a diminishing return on adrenaline, impressive as any sequence that follows may be. “The Good, The Bad, The Weird” gets all its forward momentum right, but could benefit from applying the brakes more frequently.

Then again, maybe that reckless pace is what made it such a fast, fun ride to begin with.

3/5

Sunday, April 18, 2010

FARCE/FILM Episode 41: Kick-Ass

--> Episode 41: 04/18/10 <--
Hosts: Colin George, Brian Crawford, Kevin Mauer, Laura Rachfalski

Intro - 00:00
Top 5 - 01:41
Kick-Ass (spoiler city) - 04:57
Second Opinion - 35:49
(Where the Wild Things Are)
Movie Round-Up - 41:45
(Saw V, Everybody's Fine, Deep Water)
Outro - 01:01:27


"Kick-Ass"
Colin:
Kevin:
Laura:
Crawford:


-- Weekly Discussion Question --
Roger Ebert argues that "Kick-Ass" is morally compromised by its graphic violence. Does the violence in "Kick-Ass" serve a dramatic or comedic purpose? Can it ever?

-- -- e-mail us your thoughts at farcefilm@gmail.com -- --

Saturday, April 17, 2010

"GasLand" Review

Allow me to alleviate your initial trepidation. “GasLand” is not another documentary about the oil industry. You’re on the right track, but first-time feature director Josh Fox has his sights set not on the gas you pump into your car, but the so called “natural gas” extracted from beneath your feet through the process of hydraulic fracturing known colloquially as “fracking.”

Issue films, like “Food, Inc.” or “An Inconvenient Truth” are notoriously dry, and Fox takes a welcome page from the Michael Moore book of documentary filmmaking, without the hard leftist political grandstanding. Rather, he adopts the format of painting himself a protagonist of sorts, though more justifiably than Moore. “GasLand” begins with an intimate history of the Fox family and their home, which lies just off of an artery to the Delaware River.

Positioned above the Marcellus Shale, a subterranean formation that stretches from New York through Pennsylvania to Virginia, and as far west as Ohio, the Fox home receives a lease offer for their land, a constituent slice of what energy companies have dubbed the “Saudi Arabia of natural gas,” and so Fox embarks for some first hand reconnaissance on the communities already tapped by hydraulic fracturing, and his findings are nothing short of alarming.

The chemicals used in the fracking process seep into the soil and water supply, leaving many families with bizarre aberrations like flammable tap water. Uh oh. And as Fox makes his way across the country, into dozens of areas crippled by decade-past drilling efforts, he collects bottles of yellow-brown water like postcards in some macabre travel diary.

If there is a problem with “GasLand,” it’s that as a story, it becomes a little redundant as we watch family after family set fire to their sinks, but perhaps all the more resonant for it. From a filmmaking standpoint, the effect is marginalized, but in making something so shocking feel almost normal, Fox underscores the breadth of the issue. This is happening everywhere, and with such clear evidence of the immediate health hazards, the question is, why?

Fox’s intimate approach and genuine stake in the issue is “GasLand’s” greatest asset. He never has to rely on talking heads or PowerPoint presentations, and even at nearly two hours, the film is positively gripping. His story comes full circle as he returns home, faced with the “speculative” fracking of the Delaware watershed, which provides water to rural towns, suburbs, and cities. The implication is truly disquieting, and Fox can only ask that the public make themselves aware of the issue and take a stand before it’s too late.

His film is an excellent place to start, and manages to entertain while outlining the severity of the problem, and to do so without an overreliance on the pitfalls of so many of its contemporaries. “GasLand” is just about everything you could hope for from a documentary of its type, and its Sundance special jury prize is testament to its impact.

The film has yet to see general release, but a distribution deal is reportedly immanent. Interested parties can join the mailing list and watch a potent 15 clip at www.gaslandthemovie.com.

Ignore that initial trepidation. “GasLand” isn't another documentary about the oil industry, but it’s just as important, if not more so.

4/5

You can hear more about "GasLand" on episode 40 of the FARCE/FILM podcast, including additional reviews and a roundtable discussion: Farce/Film Episode 40: GasLand

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

"Kick-Ass" Review

The ultraviolent, postmodern "Kick-Ass" is at the forefront of the comic book movie scene at a volatile turning point. The '00s were defined in no small part by Hollywood's Spidermen, Batmen, and X-Men, and until "Avatar" rolled around, they were the box office champions smashing records every year. Now Raimi's "Spiderman" has fizzled out and is being rejiggered by Sony, the "X-Men" franchise has devolved into schlock, and "Batman," while healthy, represents the superhero sub-genre at its most pointedly operatic.

"Kick-Ass" takes a fresh approach, smartly deconstructing comic book ideology in a meta-comedy that satirizes convention while simultaneously drawing from it. As a movie based on a comic book about comic book geeks, there's a degree of self-conscious irony to watching a fake superhero narrative snowball into a real one. It pokes fun at the melodrama of origin stories even as it unfurls its own. "Kick-Ass" follows protagonist Dave Lizewski (Aaron Johnson), who's as big a dweeb as Spiderman's alter ego Peter Parker, but without the chip on his shoulder and radioactive spider bite. Lizewski is roundly average, and ultimately more believable than Parker; his superhero dress rehearsal doesn't end victorious in an underground fighting ring—It ends in an ambulance after being knifed in a parking lot.

Undeterred, Lizewski tackles pet rescue and petty theft until a passerby records one of his more marginally successful street brawls on a cell phone camera, and his alias, 'Kick-Ass' becomes an overnight YouTube celebrity. His sudden prominence heralds dozens of copycat heroes, but even the progenitor finds himself outmatched by the likes of "Big Daddy" (Nick Cage), and his deadly 12-year-old daughter, "Hit-Girl" (Chloe Moretz), a character that truly tests the audience as accessories to vigilante justice.

There's already controversy brewing, though personally, I find it a little hard to buy into the offense. The exponential brutality of the violence perpetrated not only against Kick-Ass and Hit-Girl later in the film, but more importantly by them, is appalling on some level, sure. But it's taken to an extent that's pure slapstick. At heart, "Kick-Ass" is gory, bloody comedy.

But a comedy nonetheless. Maybe it's all the more troubling that Hit-Girl's casual propensity for murder is played for laughs, but I think we laugh at Hit-Girl for the same reason we laugh at Bugs Bunny, even when he's got a shotgun in Elmer Fudd's mouth: it's classic comedic role reversal. Who doesn't want to see the wabbit humiliate the hunter? If anything, "Looney Tunes" is less responsible in its depiction of violence because there's no consequence of the shotgun blast. Hit-Girl's action sequences are deliriously destructive, unbelievably graphic, and a hell of a lot of fun.

And that's really what I love most about "Kick-Ass." Even (or especially) in the face of violence, it doesn't take itself seriously, nor would I argue it directly purports its characters as heroes in the traditional sense. No one seems especially concerned that they're held up as role models, and what's endearing, hilarious, and horrifying about their behavior shines through because of it.

This is ballsy commercial filmmaking, which is likely why seven studios passed on the script last year. It takes risks that may alienate some in the mainstream, and its success has already been capped somewhat by the hard R rating, but I don't think "Kick-Ass" is the sort of film that will go out without a fight. If not a huge hit like the PG-13 Spidermen and Batmen of years past, it's got real cult appeal, and because it's uncompromising in its premise—Even to a fault in the uneven gradient from reality to comic book reality, "Kick-Ass" is the sort of film with staying power. And if this is where we're headed, count me in.

4/5

Sunday, April 11, 2010

FARCE/FILM Episode 40: Gasland, The Good The Bad The Weird

--> Episode 40: 04/11/10 <--
Hosts: Colin George, Brian Crawford, Suman Allakki, Laura Rachfalski

Intro – 00:00
Top 5 - 02:26
Gasland - 07:39
The Good, The Bad, The Weird – 24:53
Movie Round-Up - 37:12
(Avatar, It Might Get Loud, Million Dollar Baby, Saw V, The Pianist, House of the Devil)
Events and Outro – 59:52


"Gasland"
Colin:
Crawford:
Laura:


"The Good, The Bad, The Weird"
Suman:
Colin:
Crawford:
Laura:



-- Weekly Discussion Question --
In "Gasland", we argue whether a documentary should be more about style or content. Where do you draw the line?

-- -- e-mail us your thoughts at farcefilm@gmail.com -- --