Action! Reaction! A film blog covering the banished and ever-lowly genre of action movies.

Monday, December 7, 2009

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Good poster

I hadn't come across this one before... Very nice:



I'll be seeing it either today or at the very latest Monday. Review to follow.

So true

"Will Girly Running Impede Steven Seagal's Lawman Debut?"



I love the guy, but you can't deny he looks a little strange on his feet.

Nabbed a few days late from Movieline. Don't know how I missed it!

Friday, December 4, 2009

Goddamn you, Jason Reitman

...for maturing so fast in your career. Faster than Paul Thomas Anderson, that's for sure. With each film, that trademark, annoying, indie-hipster vibe backs off a little bit more, and the emotionally-ripe meat flows in. I still think you can't direct worth shit (you and that Chris Nolan guy), but you can tell a story, and write dialogue when it matters most.

And not only that, but you've got, no doubt, the best performance out of George Clooney ever. You got a performance out of George Clooney period. Easily his best since Three Kings and even better. I think he should take home the fucking award. It's a genuine, fully-fledged performance that carries a whole lot of weight, rising above the 'effective Clooney' and into something we've never really seen before...

Many questioned when Vera Farminga was cast in The Departed, and at the time she did feel a little out of place with all that * power around her, but she's proven herself to be one helluva contender, putting many of her contemporaries to shame. Go Vera.

And man, Anna Kendrick...halfway through I thought she had stole the movie. And if it wasn't for the damn good ending(s), she would've. The other supporters...J.K. Simmons, Zach Galifianakis, Amy Morton (though, I must note, sleazy Bateman and wise Sam Elliott have been done before), and the real American people, goddammit, how'd you do it? I don't even want to know...

So, in sum, Mr. Reitman, I doubt we'd ever get along, see eye-to-eye on movies or even share an effective, casual joke, but man, whoever compared you to Billy Wilder was right, for now. You've captured a zeitgeist and ran with it, having fun (a lil' bit of wit) but staying tough just as expertly as the man himself. You're now officially on that path. Don't mess it up.


~ Patrick Fryberger

Brooklyn's Finest trailer

I've been waiting a long time for this one, and I'm glad to say it looks worthwhile, at least on a Street Kings type level. Have a look:



It may not be Antoine Fuqua's return to form (i.e. Training Day), but hopefully it's a step in the right direction. We'll keep you posted.

Source: /Film

More Clint

I agreed a lot more with this section:



Source: The House Next Door

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

It's time, homie



Sorry, but it is.

"Hell Rode With Him"

I've never really been one for Clint Eastwood, but I would agree his work is worthy of discussion, and especially when it's coming from MZS!:



Source: The House Next Door

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Review: Red Cliff


Tony Leung looking for something more to blow up in Red Cliff.

Note: This is a review of the American release.

Beginning with a mind-numbingly dumb voiceover and frequent subtitle-aids, Red Cliff seems doomed from the start by its embarrassingly-outdated Americanization. Throw in director John Woo's inability to handle drama (evidenced as early as A Better Tomorrow II and Hard Boiled), and you've got yourself one helluva shaky start. I almost walked out, actually, planning on holding for the original, two-part epic. But, fortunately, I remembered the golden rule of any given Woo film: you've got to wait, and then you've got wait some more. As they say, 'good things come'... and in the case of Red Cliff, great things come, very great things.

The story, so mashed and rushed out the door, is nonetheless compelling, especially once you escape the muddy opening. The setup is more or less this: in 208 AD, a war-mongering Prime Minister (and his puppet Emperor) in the North looks to further his power, taking the fight to two clans in the South—one a perennial loser, the other never having fought a battle. Naturally, they come to be allies, and from there, we're off into an adventurous, larger-than-life world of spectacular battle sequences and genuinely memorable characters. Woo veteran Tony Leung proves he's still got that leading-man swagger, carrying the film brilliantly as Viceroy Zhou Yu, while newcomer (at least to my American eyes) Takeshi Kaneshiro has a great role as the wily military strategist, Zhuge Liang. The baddie, Minister Cao Cao (Fengyi Zhang) is kinda lame, but stays classy and doesn't detract from the picture. Also worthy of note is the supporting role of Wei Zhao, in a Miranda Otto-LOTR kind of role that is just strappingly badass.

The John Wooziness (quick fades/dissolves, choppy slow mo, doves) is on full display here, making his valiant return to China a greatest hits of sorts but which nonetheless goes for broke. The action is simply amazing, full of the raw, unhinged energy that made his Hard Boiled-Hard Target peak so invigorating. The contrived battle tactics seem cheesy at first, but after seeing the "turtle formation," you will be hooked, and waiting for what's to come next. This is where Cliff breaks away from Lord of the Rings material and goes above and beyond, really finding its niche in the legacy of the cinematic battlefield. The finale takes on the classical 'Ewoks vs. Empire' mold, but unlike 300, Woo actually makes it believable, cumulating in a solid 45 minutes of EXPLOSIONS AND DEATH with so much aflame that yelling "Fire!" in the theater would not be unwarranted!

Someone should shoot me for saying this, but there's something to be said but cutting out the fluff. Just as the allied forces pack themselves into a turtle, the action packs itself into the condensed material, capitalizing on an iconic director's strengths and ultimately putting on a really good show. I still plan on seeing the full version, hoping for a Ran-like scope, but for now, this pure-concentrated-epic version will have to do. Pure-concentrated-awesome.


*** out of ****

~ Patrick Fryberger



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