Sisterly Secrets

April 21, 2016

MPW-113010The Huntsman: Winter’s War (2016).

D: Cedric Nicolas-Troyan. DP: Phedon Papamichael. W: Evan Spiliotopoulos and Craig Mazin. Starring: Charlize Theron/Chris Hemsworth/Emily Blunt/Jessica Chastain/Nick Frost/Rob Brydon/Sheridan Smith/Alexandra Roach/Sam Claflin/Sope Disiru.

Spring may be a time of renewal, a chance for the resurrection of the beauty of spring. Yet it can also be a time to clean out lives or ideas and see what else can still work together. In an effort to continue to capitalize on the fairy tale explosion of this decade, Universal brings us the new film The Huntsman: Winter’s War. It is as boring as its title suggests and should have been more amply titled: The Queens’ War.

Director Cedric Nicolas-Troyan hails from a visual effects background and was the second unit director on both Snow White and The Huntsman and Maleficent. An in house Universal project from start to finish, the film was (despite reports) clearly commissioned to work around the exclusion of Snow White, played by Kristen Stewart in the previous film. The Huntsman: Winter’s War is thus both a prequel and a sequel. It is constructed to introduce Freya (Emily Blunt) as Ravenna’s (Charlize Theron) sister before the first film’s events. Out of grief from the loss of her child Freya then creates her Huntsman army that includes Eric (Chris Hemsworth) and his lady huntsman equivalent Sarah (Jessica Chastain). The film then jumps seven years later to a point after Ravenna’s defeat at the hands of Snow White and Eric.

The central drama of the film surely lies with Ravenna and Freya. Blunt does well to make Freya fragile yet hard hearted. It is a testament to Blunt’s likability that I excuse her blind trustfulness of her sister, the story is far too simple anyway. Hemsworth physical presence still pounds through the screen, but he is not convincing as an emotional romantic lead. Chastain’s Scottish brogue is decent, but the pair don’t have memorable chemistry. They are all a bit too Hansel & Gretal: Witch Hunters for me. The film’s production values are probably more interesting that its actors; the visual effects get you through a flimsy script.

Oscar laden costume designer Colleen Atwood continues to do stunning work. In fact the most exquisite part of the production is her work. Ravenna’s gold dipped feather coat or Freya’s crystal heavy gown are simply breathtaking. Both women wear finger length rings that tap against the ice and stone fortresses they build. The concept of Freya’s icy power unfortunately seems a bit Elsa from Frozen, but Ravenna’s birth from the gold mirror and black tar oozing violence is fit for the dominating presence of Theron.

The Huntsman: Winter’s War has come under scrutiny for attempting to be a kind of feminist vehicle toting developed female characters but failing. Sadly each character is defined by a lack of love of a man or a child. Ravenna speaks of being destined for something else, but not without recognizing her initial desire for motherhood. Her quest for power comes from vanity she sees reflected in her beloved mirror. Her vanity pushes her to build an empire, nothing more. The film ultimately becomes a love drenched cheese fest that falls short of the more beguiling Maleficent.

Women on the Verge

April 20, 2016

The first trailer from Universal Pictures has dropped for the film adaptation of Paula Hawkins’ novel The Girl on the Train. Directed by Tate Taylor (The Help, Get on Up) and re-located to New York City (the novel was set in London), the film stars Emily Blunt as alcoholic Rachel Watson whose intrigue into the lives of others unravels her messy life. The film releases on October 7th and the trailer gets the full Gone Girl wash complete with a Kanye West song. The novel is not up to Gillian Flynn’s book, but perhaps it might make a good film. We shall see!

The Girl on the Train

Second Time Round

July 7, 2015

New trailer for the Steve Jobs project from Aaron Sorkin’s screenplay and director Danny Boyle…

Steve Jobs

Dino-Mania!

June 14, 2015

MPW-99530Jurassic World (2015).

D: Colin Trevorrow. DP: John Schwartzman. W: Rick Jaffa, Amanda Silver, Colin Trevorrow & Derek Connolly. Starring: Chris Pratt, Bryce Dallas Howard, Irrfan Khan, Ty Simpkins, Vincent D’Onofrio, Omar Sy, Nick Robinson, Jake Johnson, BD Wong, Lauren Lapkus, Judy Greer, Andy Buckley. (based on the characters created by Michael Crichton)

One of the most anticipated re-ignitions of a franchise is definitely that of Jurassic Park. Released in 1993 the original spawned two sequels and an inordinate amount of money at the box office and beyond. Over twenty years since the original, Jurassic World abandons original characters for the sake of the rebuilt park that is dealing with launching its newest attraction, the genetically created Indominus Rex.

Firstly, Jurassic World never skimps on spectacle. The film itself feels like one long amusement park ride, which I am sure has massive commercial appeal. The introduction of the park is even through two kids attending for the first time. Their discovery of the park while its inner workings are being hammered out by the adults is an easy enough structure that never gets interesting. Yet the spectacle is immense. The visual effects are the driving force of the film and for that it is enjoyable. Indominus Rex makes the originals look like play things. There are far too many nods to the original, you’ll get a bit fatigued by them all. But thankfully the kids played by Ty Simpkins and Nick Robinson never get too schmaltzy, despite an “our parents are getting divorced” cry.

The ultimate, and most discussed about, drawback of Jurassic World is its old fashioned approach to gender dynamics between its two leads played by Bryce Dallas Howard and Chris Pratt. There was a clear opportunity here to do something different or even modern and unfortunately two writing teams still endorsed jokes about running in heels and man as action hero and woman as stiff who needs to let loose. Creatively next to Mad Max: Fury Road this is atrocious, but in the context of Hollywood corporate machine this is just shamefully boring. Trust me there is one epic shot of Howard running in heels from a dinosaur while holding a flare, in an all white ensemble. Could we be more retrograde?

Yet somehow Pratt’s Owen is able to stay likable, even despite some silly lines and lots of panic staring. His character is no where near as developed in Guardians of the Galaxy yet his raptor scenes, including a big chase, are excellent. But frankly no one is really developed, all the money is in the spectacle not the script. I am glad Jake Johnson was there to gives us much needed lift and genre commentary through his nerdlicious tech dude Lowery. Himself a cliche at least he was aware of it. The money is already raking in and the Terminator trailers have begun. We shall see if that one shapes up to be better.