Elysium (2013)

Elysium

In Movie Theaters August 9, 2013

Elysium release date August 9, 2013
Watch the Elysium trailer, starring Jodie Foster and Matt Damon, below.
In the year 2159, two classes of people exist: the very wealthy, who live on a pristine man-made space station called Elysium, and the rest, who live on an overpopulated, ruined Earth. The people of Earth are desperate to escape the planet's crime and poverty, and they critically need the state-of-the-art medical care available on Elysium - but some in Elysium will stop at nothing to enforce anti-immigration laws and preserve their citizens' luxurious lifestyle. The only man with the chance bring equality to these worlds is Max (Matt Damon), an ordinary guy in desperate need to get to Elysium. With his life hanging in the balance, he reluctantly takes on a dangerous mission - one that pits him against Elysium's Secretary Delacourt (Jodie Foster) and her hard-line forces - but if he succeeds, he could save not only his own life, but millions of people on Earth as well.
From the director of the Best Picture Oscar nominee District 9.
Sony Pictures seems to be the only studio that is able to release a movie during the month of August to tremendous effect at the box office.
Sometimes it is a Meryl Streep movie that hits the spot, but this year it is the second time they have released a Neil Blonkamp movie during the month of August. And they are hoping to strike lightning twice with this, Elysium, a movie with an unpronounceable title.
Although, anyone fluent in Greek knows that Elysium is the Greek word for Paradise.
STARRING: Matt Damon, Jodie Foster, Sharlto Copley, Alice Braga, Diego Luna, Wagner Moura, William Fichtner
DIRECTED BY: Neill Blomkamp
STUDIO: Columbia Pictures
RATING: R (For violence, language, adult situations)
ELYSIUM Official Website: www.sonypictures.com/movies/elysium




Phantom (2013)

Phantom

In Movie Theaters March 1, 2013

Phantom release date March 1, 2013
Phantom movie box office report:
Opening Day: $150,000
Opening Weekend: $437,427
Number of Theaters: 1,118
Total Gross: TBD
STARRING: Ed Harris, David Duchovny, William Fichtner, Lance Henriksen, Jonathan Schaech, Sean Patrick Flannery
DIRECTED BY: Todd Robinson
STUDIO: RCR Distribution
RATING: R (For violence, language, nudity)
PHANTOM Official Website: www.phantomthefilm.com
DVD Release Date: Sooner rather than later since the movie is one of the biggest bombs in motion picture history at the movie box office.
The About face: The latest in an array of movies that allege, albeit fraudulently, to be based on a true story.
The Wild side: The haunted Captain of a Soviet submarine holds the fate of the world in his hands. Forced to leave his family behind, he is charged with leading a covert mission cloaked in mystery.
The Movie facts: Ed Harris, nominated for a handful of Academy Awards, is the latest in a slate of former A and B-list actors who lend their talents to F-list movies.
Moreover, the movie Phantom, features a potpouri of former B, C and D-list actors, including Lance Henriksen, Sean Patrick Flannery, William Fichtner, Jonathan Schaech, all of whom have not been seen in a major theatrical release in ages.
Finally, Phantom, is released by RCR Distribution, another in a a slew of fly by night studios that are trying to but never will be able to compete with the majors and mini-majors. The End.






The Wolverine (2013)

The Wolverine

In Movie Theaters July 26, 2013

The Wolverine release date July 26, 2013
Watch The Wolverine trailer below.
Based on the celebrated comic book arc, The Wolverine finds Logan, the eternal warrior and outsider, in Japan. There, samurai steel will clash with adamantium claw as Logan confronts a mysterious figure from his past in an epic battle that will leave him forever changed.
From the director of the Oscar winning movies Walk The Line and Girl, Interrupted - and the box office bomb Knight & Day.
STARRING: Hugh Jackman, Famke Janssen, Will Yun Lee, Tao Okamoto
DIRECTED BY: James Mangold
STUDIO: 20th Century Fox
RATING: PG-13 (For violence, language, adult situations)
THE WOLVERINE Official Website: www.thewolverinemovie.com





Jack The Giant Slayer (2013)

Jack The Giant Slayer

In Movie Theaters March 1, 2013

Jack The Giant Slayer release date March 1, 2013
Jack The Giant Slayer movie box office report:
Opening Day: $7,710,000
Opening Weekend: $27,869,393
Number of Theaters: 3,525
Total Gross: TBD
Cast: Nicholas Hoult, Stanley Tucci, Ian McShane, Bill Nighy, Eleanor Tomlinson, Ewan McGregor
Director: Bryan Singer
Movie Studio: Warner Bros.
Rating: PG-13 (For violence, language, adult situations)
JACK THE GIANT SLAYER Official Website: www.jackthegiantslayer.warnerbros.com
DVD Release Date:
TBD
The Wild side: Originally entitled Jack The Giant Killer, Jack The Giant Slayer tells the story of an ancient war that is reignited when a young farmhand unwittingly opens a gateway between our world and a fearsome race of giants. Unleashed on the Earth for the first time in centuries, the giants strive to reclaim the land they once lost, forcing the young man, Jack, into the battle of his life to stop them. Fighting for a kingdom, its people, and the love of a brave princess, he comes face to face with the unstoppable warriors he thought only existed in legend--and gets the chance to become a legend himself.

The Movie facts: Loosely based on the Jack And The Beanstalk fairy tale. The movie, originally scheduled for a Summer 2012 releaase, was pushed back nearly a year - to Spring 2013.







The Last Exorcism 2

The Last Exorcism 2

In Movie Theaters March 1, 2013

The Last Exorcism 2 release date March 1, 2013
STARRING: Ashley Bell
DIRECTED BY: Ed Gass-Donnelly
STUDIO: CBS Films
RATING: PG-13 (For violence, language, adult themes)
LAST EXORCISM 2 Official Website: www.thelastexorcism2.com
DVD Release Date: TBD
The Last Exorcism 2 movie box office report:
Opening Day: $3,250,000
Opening Weekend: $7,892,471
Number of Theaters: 2,700
Total Gross: TBD

The About face: A sequel to the 2010 movie, this with a new director and new movie studio.
The Wild side: Continuing where the first film left off, Nell Sweetzer (Ashley Bell) is found terrified and alone in rural Louisiana. Back in the relative safety of New Orleans, Nell realizes that she can't remember entire portions of the previous months only that she is the last surviving member of her family. Just as Nell begins the difficult process of starting a new life, the evil force that once possessed her is back with other, unimaginably horrific plans that mean her last exorcism was just the beginning.
The Movie facts: The first The Last Exorcism was a critical bomb and earned $41 million in U.S. theaters. Lionsgate passed on the sequel and the failing CBS Films, which has never had a box office hit, bought the rights.






Safe Haven (2013)

Safe Haven

In Movie Theaters February 14, 2013

Safe Haven release date February 14, 2013
STARRING: Josh Duhamel, Julianne Hough
DIRECTED BY: Lasse Hallström
STUDIO: Relativity Media
RATING: PG-13 (For sexual situations, language, violence)
Safe Haven movie box office report:
Opening Day: $8,828,918
Opening Weekend: $30,259,000
Number of Theaters: 3,223
Total Gross: TBD
The About face: Does ANYONE, even the horrible, vile, evil movie studio, Relativity Media, (run by criminal billionaire Ryan Kavanugh), think that ten-years-past-his-prime, Josh Duhamel, is a box office draw, or that Ryan Seacrest's fake girlfriend, (beard), Julianne Hough, will be able to sell even ONE ticket to the movie Safe Haven?
The Wild side: When a mysterious young woman named Katie appears in the small North Carolina town of Southport, her sudden arrival raises questions about her past. Beautiful yet self-effacing, Katie seems determined to avoid forming personal ties until a series of events draws her into two reluctant relationships: one with Alex, a widowed store owner with a kind heart and two young children; and another with her plainspoken single neighbor, Jo. Despite her reservations, Katie slowly begins to let down her guard, putting down roots in the close-knit community and becoming increasingly attached to Alex and his family. But even as Katie begins to fall in love, she struggles with the dark secret that still haunts and terrifies her . . . a past that set her on a fearful, shattering journey across the country, to the sheltered oasis of Southport. With Jo's empathic and stubborn support, Katie eventually realizes that she must choose between a life of transient safety and one of riskier rewards...And that in the darkest hour, love is the only true safe haven.
The Movie facts: Another horrible movie based on an equally as horrible book by Nicholas Sparks. Sadly, director Lasse Hallström, multi-Oscar nominee (The Cider House Rules, Chocolat, My Life As A Dog) has become a fallen star, what with his previous movie, Salmon Fishing In The Yemen (yawn!) and with directing the D-list, at best, actors Julianne Hough and Josh Duhamel in Safe Haven.








G.I. Joe : Retaliation (2013)

G.I. Joe 2 AKA G.I. Joe: Retaliation

In Movie Theaters March 29, 2013

GI Joe 2 release date March 29, 2013.
The About face: In this sequel to G.I. Joe, which was released in theaters in 2009, the G.I. Joes are not only fighting their mortal enemy Cobra; they are forced to contend with threats from within the government that jeopardize their very existence.
The Wild side: Framed for crimes against the country, the G.I. Joe team is terminated by the President's order, and the surviving team members face off against Zartan, his accomplices, and the world leaders he has under his influence. The G.I. Joes are not only fighting their mortal enemy Cobra; they are forced to contend with threats from within the government that jeopardize their very existence.
The Movie facts: The first G.I. Joe movie in this franchise earned $150,201,498 in North American theaters.
Originally scheduled for release in August 2012, Paramount Pictures pushed back the release of G.I. Joe 2 to Spring 2013.
Oh, and did we mention... Channing Tatum is fucking hot. And REALLY nice in person. So is The Rock, for that matter, on both counts.
STARRING: Channing Tatum, Bruce Willis, The Rock, D.J. Cotrona, Byung-hun Lee, Ray Park, Adrianne Palicki, Jonathan Pryce, RZA, Ray Stevenson
DIRECTED BY: Jon M. Chu
STUDIO: Paramount Pictures
RATING: PG-13 (For violence, language)
G.I. JOE 2 Official Website: www.gijoemovie.com
DVD Release Date: TBD




Pacific Rim (2013)

Pacific Rim

In Movie Theaters July 12, 2013

Pacific Rim release date July 12, 2013
Watch Pacific Rim trailer starring Charlie Hunnam and Idris Elba below.
For one reason or another, even though Guillermo Del Toro has never had a box office smash hit, he is regarded (by some) as a masterful, genius, successful director. The facts are that he has never directed a box office hit. His most popular movie, Blade 2, took in a fair $82 million - and that much only because it was a fairly popular film.
When legions of monstrous creatures, known as Kaiju, started rising from the sea, a war began that would take millions of lives and consume humanity’s resources for years on end. To combat the giant Kaiju, a special type of weapon was devised: massive robots, called Jaegers, which are controlled simultaneously by two pilots whose minds are locked in a neural bridge. But even the Jaegers are proving nearly defenseless in the face of the relentless Kaiju. On the verge of defeat, the forces defending mankind have no choice but to turn to two unlikely heroes -- a washed up former pilot (Charlie Hunnam, star of the British version of Queer As Folk) and an untested trainee (Rinko Kikuchi) -- who are teamed to drive a legendary but seemingly obsolete Jaeger from the past. Together, they stand as mankind’s last hope against the mounting apocalypse.
With a $200+ million budget, and a cast of C and D-listers, is the movie is on track to follow in the tracks of the 2012 box office bomb Battleship? Well, yes, almost.
STARRING: Idris Elba, Charlie Hunnam, Charlie Day, Rinko Kikuchi, Rob Kazinsky, Clifton Collins Jr., Ron Perlman
DIRECTED BY: Guillermo DelTorro
STUDIO: Warner Bros.
RATING: PG-13 (For violence, language)
PACIFIC RIM Official Website: www.pacificrimmovie.warnerbros.com




(CAMrip)




Dark Skies (2013)

Dark Skies

In Movie Theaters February 22, 2013

Dark Skies release date February 22, 2013
Dark Skies movie box office report:
Opening Day: $3,094,178
Opening Weekend: $8,189,166
Number of Theaters: 2,313
Total Gross: TBD
STARRING: Keri Russell, Dakota Goyo, Josh Hamilton (not the baseball player),
DIRECTED BY: Scott Charles Stewart
STUDIO: Dimension Films
RATING: PG-13 (For violence, language, adult themes)
DARK SKIES Official Website: www.darkskiesfilm.com
DVD Release Date: TBD





Storyline

A psychological thriller about a suburban couple whose lives become a nightmare when a terrifying alien presence enters their home each night to prey upon their children. Increasingly isolated from skeptical friends and neighbors, the couple is forced to take matters into their own hands to save their family. 



21 And Over (2013)

21 And Over

In Movie Theaters March 1, 2013

21 & Over release date March 1, 2013
21 & Over movie box office report:
Opening Day: $3,340,000
Opening Weekend: $8,815,357
Number of Theaters: 2,771
Total Gross: TBD
STARRING: Miles Teller, Sarah Wright
DIRECTED BY: Jon Lucas, Scott Moore
STUDIO: Relativity Media
RATING: R (For pervasive drug use, underage drinking, language, violence, sexual situations, nudity)
21 & Over Official Website: http://www.facebook.com/21andOver
DVD Release Date: TBD
The About face: The movie studio Relativity Media, run by a vile bunch of publicists, lawyers and executives, including head honcho and billionaire, Ryan Kavanaugh, which has NEVER had a box office hit, will score another bomb with "21 And Over," a knock-off, F-version of "Project X."
The Wild side: Straight-A college student Jeff Chang has always done what’s expected of him. But when his two best friends Casey and Miller surprise him with a visit for his 21st birthday, he decides to do the unexpected for a change, even though his critical medical school interview is early the next morning. What was supposed to be one beer becomes one night of chaos, over indulgence and utter debauchery in this outrageous comedy.
The Movie facts: Relativity Media just may go kaput* with this stinker, which will no doubt (DID) bomb at the movie box office. And the cheap ass mother fuckers at the studio couldn't even spring for a real fucking website. And they are not even Jews, rather owned by a nasty fuck Irishman. They saved a few pennies and plagued Facebook with a free fucking website. We are very fucking happy that the movie bombed. One more step to the complete fucking demise of Relativity Media, a corrupt fucking movie studio run by a cunt lawyer, Lauren Goldberg. (She gives Jewish lawyers a really bad name. She is also an ugly fuck).
And poor, poor Miles Teller, whom we interviewed at the Rabbit Hole junket, the movie in which he costarred opposite Oscar winner Nicole Kidman. His career seems to be over.
* Since the year 1980, but especially since the year 2000, in order for a movie to be considered a box office success, (unless it is an independent film), it must earn $100 million or more during its initial theatrical release.
Relavitity Media launched their studio in 2011 with the box office catastrophe Season Of The Witch, starring Nicolas Cage. The movie made less than $25 million; rightfully so since it was one of the worst movies ever made.
Relativity Media has never had a release that has been able to earn $100 million at the U.S. movie box office.
Below, complete box office results for all Relavity Media studio releases. Keep in mind, movie studios only keep about 50% of a film's theatrical gross. The movie theaters keep the other half.
2012
1 Act of Valor $70,012,847
2 Mirror Mirror $64,935,167 (cost over $100 million to produce and market)
3 House at the End of The Street $31,181,277
4 Haywire $18,942,396 (cost more than $30 million to produce and market)
5 The Raven $16,008,272 (cost more than $35 million to produce and market)
2011
1 Immortals $83, 504, 017 (cost more than $100 million to produce and market)
2 Limitless $79,249,455
3 Season of the Witch $24,827,228 (cost more than $50 million to produce and market)
4 Shark Night 3D $18,817,568
5 Judy Moody and the NOT Bummer Summer $15,013,650
6 Take Me Home Tonight $6,928,068
7 Machine Gun Preacher $515,219 (cost more than $40 million to produce and market)
8 The Warrior's Way $106,945





Snitch (2013)

Snitch

In Movie Theaters February 22, 2013

Snitch release date February 22, 2013
Snitch movie box office report:
Opening Day: $4,162,673
Opening Weekend: $13,167,607
Number of Theaters: 2,511
Total Gross: TBD
STARRING: Dwayne Johnson, Susan Sarandon
DIRECTED BY: Ric Roman Waugh
STUDIO: Summit Entertainment
RATING: PG-13 (For violence, language, drug use)
Snitch Official Movie Website: www.snitch-movie.com
DVD Release Date: TBD

Synopsis
In the fast-paced action thriller Snitch, Dwayne Johnson stars as a father whose teenage son is wrongly accused of a drug distribution crime and is looking at a mandatory minimum prison sentence of 10 years. Desperate and determined to rescue his son at all costs, he makes a deal with the U.S. attorney to work as an undercover informant and infiltrate a drug cartel on a dangerous mission -- risking everything, including his family and his own life. 






Like Someone in Love (2013)

Like Someone in Love 

Genre:
Foreign, Drama
Director:
Abbas Kiarostami
Cast:
Rin Takanashi, Tadashi Okuno, Ryō Kase, Denden
Writers:
Abbas Kiarostami
Run Time:
109 minutes

 

 
 
Synopsis

Fresh from the triumph of his Tuscany-set Certified Copy (NYFF 2010), master filmmaker Abbas Kiarostami travels even further afield from his native Iran for this mysteriously beautiful romantic drama filmed entirely in Japan. Like Someone in Love revolves around the brief encounter between an elderly professor (the wonderful 81-year-old stage actor Tadashi Okuno, here playing his first leading role in a film) and a sociology student (Rin Takanashi) who moonlights as a high-end escort. Dispatched to the old man by her boss—one of the professor’s former students—the young woman finds her latest client less interested in sex than in cooking her soup, talking, and playing old Ella Fitzgerald records (like the one that gives the film its allusive title). Eventually, night gives way to day and a tense standoff with the student’s insanely jealous boyfriend (Ryō Kase); but as usual in Kiarostami, nothing is quite as it appears on the surface. Are these characters—who conjure in one another the specters of regret and roads not taken—meeting by chance, or is it fate? Is this love, or merely something like it?


The Jeffrey Dahmer Files (2013)

The Jeffrey Dahmer Files

“The Jeffrey Dahmer Files” screens at 9:15 p.m. Saturday, April 13 at the UW-Elvehjem (the original Chazen building), and at 8:30 p.m. Sunday, April 14 at Sundance Cinemas. Director Chris James Thompson will attend both screenings. Visit wifilmfest.org for tickets and other information.


Here’s what may be the most disturbing aspect of “The Jeffrey Dahmer Files”; there isn’t a drop of blood in the film.
Instead of diving deep into the gruesome crimes of Milwaukee serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer, director Chris James Thompson (who grew up partly in Madison) has made a film that sort of orbits around that evil in a innovative mix of documentary and drama. We hear about the crimes in detail, but we don’t see them. Instead, we see the effect that those crimes had on three people, innocent bystanders of a sort. Together, the three witnesses provide an intimate yet horrifying perspective of what was discovered in that cookie-cutter apartment building.
Thompson interviews Pat Kennedy, the detective who got Dahmer’s confession and was, briefly, a media celebrity. (“When I tell you what I tell you,” Dahmer told him in the interview room, “You’ll be famous.”)  He interviews Jeffrey Jentzen, the lead pathologist on the case, who maintains his professional composure as a case no coroner’s office was meant to handle arrived at his doorstep. And he interviews Pam Bass, a neighbor in Dahmer’s building who befriended him, and was became an unwilling focus of the media when the crimes were revealed. “How could you not have known?” everyone asks her, accusingly.
But of course, nobody knew. And that’s the point of “Files,” how long a polite young man was able to skate under the radar of the city, selecting young black men for his crimes in part because he knew the police were less likely to go looking for them.
Illustrating this point is the other half of “The Jeffrey Dahmer Files,” which features actor Andrew Swant playing Dahmer. But we don’t see Dahmer committing his crimes; instead, we see him doing seemingly ordinary, mundane things — sitting by an empty riverbed drinking beer, wandering around in the parking lot at the Wisconsin State Fair, buying large plastic barrels and other “supplies” at drugstores and warehouses. Of course, we know what he’s going to do with those things, but the bored clerks barely raise an eyebrow. Even when he takes a giant blue barrel on a bus, the other passengers don’t look up.
“The Jeffrey Dahmer Files” will likely disappoint horror fans hoping for a bloodthirsty recreation of Dahmer’s quiet rampage. Instead, Thompson’s film is something really different, a film as polite and as unnerving as its subject, one that burrows down deep into your imagination and stays there.




Escape From Planet Earth (2013)

Escape From Planet Earth

In Movie Theaters February 15, 2013

Escape From Planet Earth release date February 15, 2013
STARRING the voices of: Brendan Fraser, Sarah Jessica Parker, Jessica Alba, James Gandolfini
DIRECTED BY: Cal Brunker
STUDIO: The Weinstein Co.
RATING: PG (For crude humor, cartoon violence)
Escape From Planet Earth Official Website: www.escapeearthmovie.com
DVD release date: TBD
Escape From Planet Earth movie box office report:
Opening Day: $3,702,000
Opening Weekend: $16,066,000
Number of Theaters: 3,288
Total Gross: TBD

Another Smurf movie is due out this summer, but apparently someone’s market research indicated that the public appetite for blue animated characters might need sating before then. The result is “Escape From Planet Earth,” a children’s movie about space-traveling blue beings that has lots of high-flying escapades but fairly low aspirations.
The film features some recognizable names doing the voice work but gives them a boilerplate story, about polar-opposite brothers on a planet named Baab who end up in a pickle on Earth. Scorch (Brendan Fraser) is the muscular, heroic type who is dispatched to various points in the universe on rescue missions, while Gary (Rob Corddry) is his somewhat nerdy brother, who assists Scorch from the safety of mission control. When Scorch is lured to Earth by a fake rescue call orchestrated by an evil human, General Shanker (William Shatner), Gary has to find courage and try to save his brother.






No (2013)

No

In Movie Theaters February 15, 2013

No release date February 15, 2013
STARRING: Gael Garcia Bernal
DIRECTED BY: Pablo Larrain
STUDIO: Sony Classics
RATING: R (For langauge)
No movie box office report:
Opening Weekend: $74,500
Number of Theaters: 4
Total Gross: TBD
NO Official Website: www.sonyclassics.com/no
DVD Release Date: TBD


Storyline

Based on a true story, when Chilean military dictator Augusto Pinochet, facing international pressure, calls for a referendum on his presidency in 1988, opposition leaders persuade a brash young advertising executive, Rene Saavedra (Gael García Bernal), to spearhead their campaign. With scant resources and constant scrutiny by the despot’s watchmen, Saavedra and his team devise an audacious plan to win the election and free their country from oppression.





Saving Lincoln (2013)

Saving Lincoln

In Movie Theaters February 15, 2013

STARRING: Tom Amandes, Penelope Ann Miller, Bruce Davison,
DIRECTED BY: Salvador Litvak
STUDIO: Saving Lincoln LLC
RATING: Not Rated


Lincoln 2012 Review starring Daniel Day Lewis Tomy Lee Jones and Sally Field Lincoln Review
It seems that the legend of Abraham Lincoln is as prominent as ever in our cultural zeitgeist. The last year has brought us tale of “Honest Abe’s” secret war against the undead (Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter)  - and now, with Steven Speilberg’s Lincoln, Academy Award-Winning actor Daniel Day-Lewis attempts to convey the weight of burden the 16th President endured as he tried to pass the infamous Thirteenth Amendment, abolishing slavery in the United States.
Along the path to that historic achievement, we get brushstrokes of Lincoln’s life between 1864 and 1865 (his final year) – including the complicated relationship with wife Mary Todd (Sally Field) and sons Robert (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) and Tad (Gulliver McGrath). Outside of the personal, we also get an intricate look at Washington politics of the late nineteenth century – and all the eerie ways in which that era resonates with our own.

The title Lincoln might suggest a broad and sweeping look at the life of a historic legend – but in fact, Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter is more of a “biopic” than this film is. Spielberg’s Lincoln is a memoir (based on Doris Kearns Goodwin’s book Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln) dressed up as political drama. There is much about the film that will intrigue and amuse (more on that later), but there is little that will “excite,” as Lincoln is, ostensibly, a sequence of static, dialogue-driven scenes. As a whole, the movie is more stage play than cinema, with a nice amount of humor rising out of the ironically-reversed context of politics in that era. (For example, “conservative Republicans” of the time were anti-slavery “progressive radicals” we’d now associate with liberal Democrats.)
Tommy Lee Jones in Lincoln 2012 Lincoln Review
Tommy Lee Jones in ‘Lincoln’
Most surprising about the film is how very “un-Spielbergian” it is. The director’s usual signature – over-dramatized scenes punctuated with rousing musical scores – is  largely absent from the proceedings. In its place is a quiet, stripped-down approach, which both captures the rustic feel of the period in a genuine way, and allows the ensemble of actors free space in which to engage with one another. The overall sense  of stillness throughout many scenes is akin to watching a high-production stage play – which might throw-off some viewers who are expecting the sweeping movement of a biopic – and the technique works (for the most part), given the level of talent in the cast.
Daniel Day-Lewis inhabits the role of Lincoln completely and thoroughly. While the big speech monologues are great, it’s the little touches that Day-Lewis adds to his portrayal that make all the difference, creating an image of Lincoln that is at once human, but still larger-than-life.  We see the President as a quiet, almost zen-like figure – unassuming enough to go unnoticed in a room, but simultaneously shrewd enough to hold that same room’s attention with one of his zen-wisdom parables, delivered in the style of an old man’s doddering anecdotes. The actor’s choice of mannerisms, voice, and delivery are likely to become synonymous with Abraham Lincoln; we may never know what the man was actually like in person, but this portrayal suffices pretty well in reality’s stead.
Daniel Day Lewis as Abraham Lincoln Lincoln Review
Daniel Day-Lewis as Abraham Lincoln
Even the physicality is there: a tall, lanky, imposing figure who walks soft with the hobbling step of a weary ghost – fragile, vulnerable, sturdy and statuesque. Most of the time, Day-Lewis conveys the patience of a wise old grandfather enduring a petulant child (anti-abolitionist  mentality)  - but in several key scenes, the actor reveals a burning core that powers the idealist, instantly transforming him into a commanding figure – ready to break laws or compromise his morals when/where needed for the greater good – who can believably sway an entire nation to move in a seemingly impossible direction. It’s an awards-worthy performance, for sure.
The rest of the ensemble is made up of a cornucopia of familiar character actors and stars, including Sally Field, Tommy Lee Jones, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, David Strathairn, James Spader, John Hawkes, Hal Holbrook, Tim Blake Nelson, Jackie Earle Haley, Gloria Reuben, Michael Stuhlbarg (Boardwalk Empire), Luke Haas (Brick), Walton Goggins (Justified) and Jared Harris (Mad Men) as General Ulysses S. Grant. Rising stars also get brief moments to shine, including David Oyelowo (Red Tails), Dane DeHaan (Chronicle), David Costabile (Breaking Bad) and Adam Driver (Girls). The ensemble, as a whole, functions well and keeps careful viewers occupied with an eye-spy game that offers many self-satisfying rewards. Standouts are Lee-Jones as the cantankerous equality idealist Thaddeus Stevens, Field as Lincoln’s (bi-polar?) wife, and the hilarious trio of Spader, Hawkes and Nelson as nineteenth century-style lobbyists working under the table for the Lincoln administration.
Sally Field in Lincoln 2012 Lincoln Review
Sally Field in ‘Lincoln’
As stated, Lincoln is a movie of words, more than action. Aside from an opening sequence depicting the horror of a Civil War battlefield, the film is almost exclusively scenes of 19th century political theater. This will, inevitably, make it boring for some viewers whose tastes tend to skew away from this sort of genre. The movie can feel a little meandering and uneven at times (scenes of Lincoln’s personal life, for example, get somewhat overblown and soapy) – and in terms of traditional character arc Lincoln is not very satisfying. Tony Kushner’s (Munich) script leaves several story threads untied, but does manage to tie others off with nice surprise.
In its closing act, the Lincoln manages to capture the grandeur of the president’s great accomplishment – with Daniel Day-Lewis largely off screen, ironically enough. Though history already foretells the ending, seeing how close the determination of the nation’s fate actually was is still a tense experience – in no small part because the chords are so connected to the current political climate we live in. In the end, oddly enough, there is still a sense of mystery surrounding the man himself; after more than two hours we still come away wondering about what went on behind those weary, compassionate eyes, which were so attuned to a vision only he could see.
Lincoln is easily recommendable to those hoping for an intriguing and wittily-humorous look at a very pivotal (and still very relevant) point in U.S. history. Those hoping for a more expansive look at the celebrated figure, or a film that better captures the reality of war during that era, best look elsewhere. However, one thing we should all be able to agree on: Daniel Day-Lewis’ performance makes this a sure-fire contender come awards season.

Beautiful Creatures (2013)

Beautiful Creatures

In Movie Theaters February 14, 2013

Beautiful Creatures release date February 14, 2013.
STARRING: Viola Davis, Emmy Rosum, Jeremy Irons, Emma Thompson, Alden Ehrenreich
DIRECTED BY: Richard LaGravenese
STUDIO: Warner Bros.
RATING: PG-13 (For adult themes, violence, language)
Beautiful Creatures Official Website: www.beautifulcreatures.warnerbros.com
DVD release date: TBD
Beautiful Creatures movie box office report:
Opening Day: $2,542,317
Opening Weekend: $10,002,000
Number of Theaters: 2,950
Total Gross: TBD

Beautiful Creatures, from director Richard LaGravenese (Freedom Writers), is the latest project attempting to conjure box office success in the highly-profitable supernatural romance genre. The source material story of the same name is part one of four installments in the Caster Chronicles (followed by Beautiful DarknessBeautiful Chaos, and Beautiful Redemption) - a young adult book series from co-authors Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl about magical beings known as “Casters” locked in a struggle between light and dark.
At first glance, some viewers will no doubt dismiss Beautiful Creatures as Twilight with witches but just because a film includes supernatural elements and a romantic subplot doesn’t outright mean that it can’t deliver an entertaining moviegoing experience for fans outside of its core audience. Does LaGravenese present a movie with enough slick effects, intriguing characters, and worthwhile drama to expand the appeal of Beautiful Creatures to casual viewers – not just supernatural romance lovers?

Unfortunately, no. Beautiful Creatures is a choppy and melodramatic experience with very little payoff beyond the central love story. Worse yet, overlooking the usual on-the-nose dialogue about eternal love and sacrifice, this tale of star-crossed sweethearts is especially cheesy and unconvincing – even when compared to similarly heavy-handed young adult novel-turned-movies. Fans of the supernatural romance sub-genre will get about what they expect – a boy meets witch story with a few cool “Caster” variations along with scene after scene of teenagers ruminating about eternal love, duality, and Kurt Vonnegut. For that reason, Beautiful Creatures is serviceable but most moviegoers will find the film to be an overlong progression of disconnected scenes, weighed down with thick exposition and schmaltzy performances from its leads.






Safe Haven (2013)

Safe Haven

In Movie Theaters February 14, 2013

Safe Haven release date February 14, 2013
STARRING: Josh Duhamel, Julianne Hough
DIRECTED BY: Lasse Hallström
STUDIO: Relativity Media
RATING: PG-13 (For sexual situations, language, violence)
Safe Haven movie box office report:
Opening Day: $8,828,918
Opening Weekend: $30,259,000
Number of Theaters: 3,223
Total Gross: TBD

The About face: Does ANYONE, even the horrible, vile, evil movie studio, Relativity Media, (run by criminal billionaire Ryan Kavanugh), think that ten-years-past-his-prime, Josh Duhamel, is a box office draw, or that Ryan Seacrest's fake girlfriend, (beard), Julianne Hough, will be able to sell even ONE ticket to the movie Safe Haven?
The Wild side: When a mysterious young woman named Katie appears in the small North Carolina town of Southport, her sudden arrival raises questions about her past. Beautiful yet self-effacing, Katie seems determined to avoid forming personal ties until a series of events draws her into two reluctant relationships: one with Alex, a widowed store owner with a kind heart and two young children; and another with her plainspoken single neighbor, Jo. Despite her reservations, Katie slowly begins to let down her guard, putting down roots in the close-knit community and becoming increasingly attached to Alex and his family. But even as Katie begins to fall in love, she struggles with the dark secret that still haunts and terrifies her . . . a past that set her on a fearful, shattering journey across the country, to the sheltered oasis of Southport. With Jo's empathic and stubborn support, Katie eventually realizes that she must choose between a life of transient safety and one of riskier rewards...And that in the darkest hour, love is the only true safe haven.
The Movie facts: Another horrible movie based on an equally as horrible book by Nicholas Sparks. Sadly, director Lasse Hallström, multi-Oscar nominee (The Cider House Rules, Chocolat, My Life As A Dog) has become a fallen star, what with his previous movie, Salmon Fishing In The Yemen (yawn!) and with directing the D-list, at best, actors Julianne Hough and Josh Duhamel in Safe Haven.