Showing posts with label Demon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Demon. Show all posts

Wednesday, 22 March 2017

Movie Review - Ghost Rider: Spirit Of Vengeance

Ghost Rider: Spirit Of Vengeance

(2011)

Columbia Pictures / Hyde Park Entertainment / Marvel Entertainment /Avi Arad Productions / Marvel Knights : Warner Bros / Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

5.25 / 10

Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance Poster

This is the apotheosis of a hit and miss movie.  There are as many things wrong with it as there are right.

The most disturbing factor in the movie is Nicholas Cage's acting.  He doesn't even appear to be playing himself (as is the case with most of his movies).  For the entire movie, you get the feeling he would rather be elsewhere as his performance appears lackadaisical.  There's no conveyance of any character and no chemistry between Cage / Johnny Blaze and any of the others involved.

Then there are the soul-taking sequences.  These are way too long.  By the time the Ghost Rider starts to pull out a soul and actually remove it from its body completely, the bad guys have enough time to, get in their vehicles and drive to the nearest army base... overthrow the soldiers... hack into the weapons room... decrypt the nuclear missile codes... and launch them at The Rider... as I said, way too long.  These scenes verge on the ridiculous and I nearly turned off at this point.

Which would have been a shame because I would've missed some of the good things about this movie.  The concept of whatever The Rider rides becomes his hell on wheels is inspired as this allows for the transformation of a van and a drilling machine.  These are pretty awesome scenes.  The last chase scene is pretty decent and packed with action.

It was also pretty nice to see Christopher Lambert as the mad monk Methodius.

Apart from Nicholas Cage, the rest of the cast were okay.  Not outstanding by any means.  Though the strongest actor was Idris Elba as Moreau, and even he wasn't at his best.  This could have been down to the direction of Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor, who did a great job of all the action sequences but weren't too hot when handling the acting and there are too many sequences that feel "thrown in".

If you enjoyed the first Ghost Rider movie or enjoy the Comic Books then you may enjoy this but I would not recommend it to anybody who wasn't a fan of The Ghost Rider.



Thursday, 23 February 2017

Movie Review - The Babadook

The Babadook (2014)

Screen Australia / The South Austrailian Film Corporation / Entertainment One :  IFC Midnight / ICON Film Distribution

3 / 10


The Babadook Poster

This is one of those films where you shouldn't believe the hype.  After all I'd heard and read about this movie I was really looking forward to it.  However, while viewing I soon became aware this was not going to live up to its publicity... and it didn't... it fell woefully short.

Here you have a story of a single widowed mother and her peculiar son who are going through life in a stagnant haze.  Her son, Samuel (played by Noah Wiseman) is an intelligent child who has a knack for constructing weapons, for which he is reprimanded at school.  Samuel is a solitary child who finds it hard to make friends and keep them.  He also has a temper that makes him violent, both physically and vocally, when he's confronted.

Samuels mother, Amelia (played by Essie Davis) works at a care home and dealing with the close to death cronies has its effect on her.  She holds onto the memories of her seven-year dead husband, Oskar, in a proverbial death grip, even her own sister has given up on her.  Amelia won't let Samuel have his birthday on the date of his birth as Oskar died driving her to the hospital.

Even before the Babadook rears its head, the family is troubled and broken.  This should lead to well-rounded and deep characterisations.  Instead of this, we get depressed and moody bad parenting from Amelia and shouty stomping belligerence from Samuel.  This makes for two very unlikeable characters.  If the viewer cannot sympathise, empathise, or in some little way, relate to the main characters then the story and film will not hold their attention... it failed to hold mine... and to be bluntly truthful, I was only watching in the hopes that the Babadook had its evil way with them...  I was upset when it didn't.

These two characters are both worse than the snot filled blubbering idiot in The Blair Witch Project.

The there's the story, which in my eyes, tries to say and be too much.  It's not sure if it's horror, there are elements of horror in here, though too little for me to put it in the genre.  There's drama with all the elements of relationships in tribulation.  The film would've been a lot better if some of these elements had been trimmed back and some removed altogether, and the director chose a direction in which to take the film.

So that's what's wrong with the film in my opinion.

So what was right?

The acting from Essie Davis was pretty good especially, later in the film, when her temperament instantly changes.  This sent a chill up and down my spine.  Noah Wiseman was brilliant in the son's role.  I cannot fault the actors, the fault lies with story and direction, which falls on the head of Jennifer Kent who wrote and directed.

That said, apart from the direction of the characters and the story the film was well directed, and at times gave a few chills with prolonged shots of opened wardrobes and corners of rooms, where clothes were hung; the tension created was palpable.  So we know that she can direct.  Maybe she should've given the story synopsis, which was brilliant and well thought out, over to a writer!  I say this as the ending of this movie is why I've placed this into a Dark Fantasy, that and the reason of the Babadook ending up being wimpy (sorry for the spoiler) - this was the biggest let-down of all... a horror movie that tells you there's really nothing to be scared of.

I wouldn't recommend anybody watching this film; there's nothing to get out of it.  By the end, I was disheartened.