Publicity posters for Fallen, Black Panther, and Abominable
(© Scott Hicks/Lotus
Entertainment/Silver Reel/Mayhem Pictures/Apex Entertainment/Vertical
Entertainment / © Ryan Coogler/Marvel Studios/Walt Disney Studios Motion
Pictures / © Jill Culton/DreamWorks Animation/Pearl Studio/Universal Pictures –
reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review
purposes only)
I've been
watching a fair few films lately, far too many to be able to prepare a
full-length review of each one. So here, instead, is another series of
mini-reviews, this time highlighting no fewer than twelve very diverse movies
that (for the most part) I've particularly enjoyed viewing during the past few
months.
My
official DVD of White Snake (© Amp
Wong/Zhao Ji/Light Chaser Animation Studios/Warner Bros Far East/Joy Pictures –
reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for
educational/review purposes only)
WHITE SNAKE
As a life-long Disney fan, I have always
believed that when at the top of its game this studio cannot even be equalled,
let alone bettered, in creating superlative animated features – but after my movie
watch on 6 April 2022, I have been forced to change my opinion. For that was
when I viewed White Snake. Directed
by Amp Wong and Zhao Ji, and released in 2019 by Joy Pictures, White Snake is a Chinese-American
computer-animated fantasy co-production movie with animation by China's Light
Chaser Animation Studios, and is based upon the traditional Chinese story 'Legend
of the White Snake' (which is all about a female white snake demon who can
assume the guise of a beautiful young maiden and, while in that guise, falls in
love with a mortal youth). And it is by a country mile or three quite simply
the best, most spectacular, and most sensational animated movie that I have
ever seen – and I have seen A LOT of animated movies down through the decades.
The level of animation is so stupendous as to be indescribable, so I won't even
attempt to. If, like me, you love animation, you must see this movie! And yet,
as a further example (following on from numerous and varied comments by others
of late) of just how irrelevant film awards and award ceremonies are nowadays,
this truly incredible example of dazzling, awe-inspiring animation at its
absolute zenith of achievement was never even nominated for an Oscar or Bafta
award (let alone going on to win one). Never mind. To paraphrase what was once
said of a world-famous, undeservedly-reviled, and tragically short-lived
princess by her grieving brother in his eulogy to her, this movie needs no
award for it to continue to generate its particular kind of magic. Click here
to watch an official White Snake
trailer on YouTube.
My
official UK DVD of Congo (© Frank
Marshall/The Kennedy/Marshall Company/Paramount Pictures Pictures – reproduced
here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review
purposes only)
CONGO
My movie watch on 5 April 2022 was the
1996 sci fi movie Congo, based upon
the eponymous Michael Crichton novel from 1980, which I had read many years previously.
Directed by Frank Marshall and released by Paramount Pictures in 1996, Congo features as the crux of its plot a
gorilla named Amy whose ability to communicate with humans via sign-language
has been technologically augmented by a device that transforms her signs into
actual vocal speech, Amy participates in an expedition to the Congo seeking
rare blue diamonds to fuel a revolutionary new laser, but the team unexpectedly
stumbles upon a fabled lost city, Zinj, not to mention its hidden diamond mine,
said to be the source of fabulously wealthy King Solomon's diamonds. For me,
however, the most fascinating part of this movie is the discovery of the mine's
guardians – a scientifically-unknown species of grey gorilla, which had been
trained by the city's long-bygone human occupants to be extremely aggressive,
so much so that they eventually killed all of the humans living there. Now they
aim to do the same to the expedition's members, but can Amy's unique input make
a difference? And what about an ominously rumbling volcano close by – is the
lost city of Zinj about to be lost again, but this time on a permanent, irrevocable
basis, along with everyone currently in it, when the lava begins to flow? Congo stars Laura Linney as electronics specialist
Karen Ross, sent to retrieve the blue diamonds, Dylan Walsh as Berkeley primatologist
Peter Elliott, who has trained Amy to communicate and treats her as a friend
rather than as a scientific subject, and Tim Curry as wily, fake philanthropist
Herkermer Homolka, obsessed with confirming the reality and continuing
existence of Zinj (not to mention its priceless hoard of gems!). Click here
watch an official Congo trailer on
YouTube.
My
official UK DVD of Fallen (2016) (© Scott
Hicks/Lotus Entertainment/Silver Reel/Mayhem Pictures/Apex
Entertainment/Vertical Entertainment – reproduced here on a strictly
non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)
FALLEN (2016)
During the afternoon of 19 March 2022, I
chilled out (literally – it was very hot outside that day) watching the
young-adult fantasy movie Fallen.
Directed by Scott Hicks and released in 2o16 by Vertical Entertainment, Fallen is based upon the first in a six-book
series of novels by Lauren Kate. She basically sanitizes and rehabilitates
fallen angels in much the same way that Stephenie Meyer did with vampires in
her Twilight series of novels, but
gives them sparkly wings instead of sparkly skin. No major acting names are present
other than Joely Richardson as Sophia Bliss, an enigmatic teacher of religious
philosophy at the secure school where shadow-stalked heroine Luce (Addison Timlin)
and other 'problem' teenagers – notably Daniel (Jeremy Irvine) and Cam (Harrison
Gilbertson), who compete for Luce's attention – are sent and confined by the
authorities. There is plenty of adolescent angst abounding, as you'd expect
from a YA movie, and a plot incorporating reincarnation and a recurring curse that
is reminiscent of the storyline in the 1990 vampire comedy movie Rockula (which I've reviewed here).
However, it boasts good special effects once the teenagers finally transform
into teen angels and become airborne. In short, Fallen is an undemanding, relaxing 90 minutes of viewing, though
the movie's inconclusive ending demonstrates all too readily that this was
originally planned to be the first in a movie franchise, but which – unlike its
angels – never materialised. Click here
to watch an official Fallen trailer
on YouTube.
My
official UK 2-disc DVD of Inception
(© Christopher Nolan/Warner Bros Pictures/Legendary Pictures/Syncopy – reproduced
here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review
purposes only)
INCEPTION
On 4 March
2022 I watched the 2010 sci fi movie Inception,
written and directed by Christopher Nolan, and I'm very glad that I followed a
friend's advice and read up on the plot beforehand (something I don't normally
do), because, exactly as he'd said, without having done so I'd have been
totally swamped by the fiendishly complex storyline and presentation. (One of
its stars, Tom Hardy, has allegedly confessed in an interview somewhere that even
he didn't understand the full plot.) Basically, however, it's all about a
process called inception, in which a team of skilled dream workers is able to
infiltrate a target's dreams in order to discover secrets about him/her or,
even more difficult, implant an idea not of the target's own conception in
order to influence the target's future actions in whatever way the person or
company covertly hiring the dream workers desires. In this instance, however,
the plan goes awry, and the team finds itself locked inside several layers of
dreams – dreams within dreams within dreams, etc – with no guarantee that they
will ever wake up back in the real world. Its starry cast includes Leonardo
DiCaprio (as team leader Tom Cobb), Marion Cotillard (Cobb's deceased wife Mai,
who haunts his dreams, literally!), Tom Hardy (Eames, the team's master
impersonator/identity thief/forger), Cillian Murphy (Robert Michael Fischer,
the team's target/victim), Tom Berenger (Peter Browning, Fischer's godfather),
Pete Postlethwaite (Maurice Fischer, Fischer's dying father), and Michael Caine
(Prof. Stephen Miles, Cobb's mentor and also father-in-law). Overall, Inception is a very enjoyable film,
though I felt that the culmination scene went on for so long that it lost its
momentum, to the point that I finally started clockwatching, praying for the
end to hurry up and come, which rather defeated the object of all of the
extensive plotting leading up to it. Nevertheless, this movie presents a very
intriguing, original concept ably supported by a dazzling on-screen execution. Click here
to watch an official Inception
trailer on YouTube.
My
official UK DVD of Abominable (© Jill
Culton/DreamWorks Animation/Pearl Studio/Universal Pictures – reproduced here
on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes
only)
ABOMINABLE
I didn't get around to viewing the DreamWorks/Pearl
animated movie Abominable when it was
shown on TV last Christmas here in the UK (though I did watch the new
similar-themed animated featurette The
Abominable Snow Baby), because I already owned it on DVD, so I could view
it whenever I chose to, which I duly did on 13 January 2022. Directed by Jill
Culton and released in 2019 by Universal Pictures, Abominable is a delightful movie, with three quirky but plucky
Chinese youngsters (Yi, Peng, and Jin) determined to return to his parents in
the Himalayas a young yeti, dubbed Everest, who has been kidnapped by eccentric
animal collector Mr Burnish (voiced by Eddie Izzard). The scenic visuals are
extraordinarily beautiful, and although diehard cryptozoologists will be uneasy
about not only Everest's white fur and that of the other yetis (in reality,
this Asian man-beast is reported by eyewitnesses to be brown or reddish-furred)
but also his magical abilities (he can substantially enhance the growth rate of
plants, conjure up whirlwinds and blizzards, etc), Abominable is meant to be a fun-filled fantasy movie (not a
cryptozoological documentary), and it succeeds at this very comprehensively. My
own (albeit only) quibble is that I wish the animators hadn't given poor
Everest a pair of massively over-sized jaws that resemble a man-hole cover cut
in half! He deserved a more photogenic face, surely, but his innocent playful
demeanour is so enchanting that I can overlook this (just!). Abominable is a lovely movie, one of the
nicest family-oriented animated features that I have seen in a long while.
Click here
to watch an official Abominable
trailer on YouTube.
My
official UK DVD of Spider-Man: Into The
Spider-Verse (© Bob Persichetti/Peter Ramsey/Rodney Rothman/Columbia
Pictures/Sony Pictures Animation/Marvel Entertainment/Arad Productions/Lord
Miller Productions/Pascal Pictures – reproduced here on a strictly
non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)
SPIDER-MAN: INTO
THE SPIDER-VERSE
On 2 January 2022, I watched the Marvel animated
movie Spider-Man: Into The Spider-Verse,
which was directed by Bob Persichetti, Peter Ramsey, and Rodney Rothman, and
was released in 2018 by Sony Pictures. Whereas I love Marvel comic books and
Marvel CGI-enhanced live-action movies, despite being a massive animation fan
since my earliest days I personally find that their wholly animated movies
often come across as an uncomfortable half-way house between the other two
formats – but not this one! I thought that nothing could surprise me any more
in the field of animation, but this incredible movie took me to an entirely new
dimension of animation – several new dimensions, in fact. Which is only to be
expected, bearing in mind that in this movie there is not just one Spider-Man
but seven, including two female Spideys and even, I kid you not, a porcine
equivalent named Spider-Ham! Voiced by the likes of Nicolas Cage, Chris Pine,
and Shameik Moore – Moore taking on the role of our own universe's latest
Spider-Man, Miles Morales, following Peter Parker's death – five of them have
been drawn from their own respective parallel universes within the multiverse
into ours. This is due to the cataclysmic effects of super-villain Kingpin's
catastrophic attempts with a particle collider to draw from a parallel universe
his late wife and son, killed in a vehicle smash that he unfairly blames upon
Spider-Man. The animation is beyond spectacular, beyond colourful – how I'd
have loved to see this movie on the big screen! But it was more than enjoyable
and thrilling even on my TV's small(ish) screen. Another fantastic MCU feature
film duly viewed, so click here
to watch an official Spider-Man: Into The
Spider-Verse trailer on YouTube.
Publicity
poster for Black Panther (© Ryan
Coogler/Marvel Studios/Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures – reproduced here on
a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)
BLACK PANTHER
On 28 December 2021, I watched another
Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) super-hero movie. Directed by Ryan Cooglet, and
released in 2018 by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures, this one was Black Panther, starring the late,
greatly-missed Chadwick Boseman in the title role. Except that this was NOT
just 'another Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) super-hero movie'. Ever since its
release, and especially since the tragic passing of its lead star, I have read
so much about how great a film this is. I disagree. Black Panther is not a great film – it is, quite simply, one of the
most incredible films that I have ever been privileged to watch. And I'm not
just talking about its CGI effects, even though they are so stupendous as to
defy description. I am talking about everything – the exemplary performances of
all of its stars (who include the likes of Forest Whitaker, Michael B. Jordan,
and Andy Serkis), though none more so than Chadwick Boseman himself as T'Challa,
king of the (fictional) African kingdom of Wakanda, whose alter-ego is
super-hero Black Panther; its unexpected depth and emotional impact, which I do
not generally expect from a super-hero movie – it was more like watching Hamlet or its Disney derivative The Lion King than any
comic-book-inspired production; the stirring music and vibrant costumes; and
above all else the emphasis upon culture and tradition. Black Panther won no fewer than three Oscars at the 2019 Academy
Awards (for Best Costume Design, Best Original Score, and Best Production
Design), but it so deserved to have won at least two more (Best Picture, and
Best Actor). If you watch this fantastic movie, as everyone should, you will
never again think of comic-book super-hero films as lightweight or juvenile, I
can guarantee that. Click here
to view an official Black Panther
trailer on YouTube.
Publicity
poster for Sonic the Hedgehog (© Jeff
Fowler/Sega Sammy Group/Original Film/Marza Animation Planet/Blur
Studio/Paramount Pictures – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair
Use basis for educational/review purposes only)
SONIC THE
HEDGEHOG
On 5 December 2021, courtesy of the UK's
Channel 4 TV station, I watched the movie version of Sonic the Hedgehog. Directed by Jeff Fowler, and released in 2020
by Paramount Pictures, it is inspired by the famous Sega video game franchise
featuring the eponymous and exceedingly fleet-footed alien blue hedgehog and
his megalomaniacal nemesis Dr Robotnik, aka Eggman. As someone who has never
been into playing video games, I had no background knowledge regarding Sonic,
but I thoroughly enjoyed the movie nonetheless. Voiced by Ben Schwartz, Sonic
is a CGI creation, whereas Jim Carrey in one of his typically restrained,
understated performances (sarcastic, moi??) plays Robotnik, but in such a
frenetic manner that it is sometimes difficult to determine which character is
real and which is CGI! It also stars James Marsden as small-town (Green Hills,
Montana) cop Tom Wachowski who befriends Sonic and helps him elude Robotnik's
clutches. The importance of friendship is emphasised, albeit not unduly so, and
the special effects are undeniably very special indeed, exactly as they'd need
to be when bringing to the big screen such an animated character (in every
sense!) as Sonic. Well worth a watch – so click here
to view an official Sonic the Hedgehog
trailer on YouTube.
Publicity
poster for Mouse Hunt (© Gore
Verbinski/DreamWorks Pictures – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial
Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)
MOUSE HUNT
My movie watch on 23 November 2021 was
the slapstick fantasy/comedy Mouse Hunt.
Directed by Gore Verbinski, and released in 1997 by DreamWorks Pictures. Mouse Hunt stars Nathan Lane and Lee
Evans as a pair of brothers, Ernie and Lars Smuntz, who inherit a dilapidated
but exceedingly valuable old house from their father, and decide to renovate it
for selling at a huge profit. However, they are thwarted at every turn by its
small furry squatter – an exceptionally clever, enterprising house mouse. This
results in increasingly manic slapstick attempts by the brothers to evict or
destroy said rodent, but the only thing that is ultimately destroyed is not the
mouse but the house. In their respective roles, Evans and Lane have been
compared to Laurel and Hardy, but in my view they are far more similar to the
late great British comedy actor Norman Wisdom, and David Jason (in his Del Boy
character from the popular UK TV sitcom Only
Fools and Horses). This would be no bad thing, were it not for the sad fact
that the slapstick goes on, and on, and on, unrelentingly, for far too long
with ultimately far too little effect. Less is more, whereas here more is definitely
less. For instance, the section featuring Christopher Walken as an eccentric
vermin exterminator named Caesar, could, I feel, have been excised in its
entirety with no loss at all to the movie's humour quotient. Overall, Mouse Hunt is a decent but overlong comedy
film imho, though the special effects featuring the mouse's dastardly activity
are first-rate and help to offset the eventual tediousness of the human
characters' contributions. Click here
to watch an official Mouse Hunt
trailer on YouTube.
My
official UK DVD of The Happening (© M.
Night Shyamalan/Dune Entertainment/UTV Motion Pictures/Spyglass Entertainment/Blinding
Edge Pictures/20th Century Fox – reproduced here on a strictly
non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)
THE HAPPENING
My DVD movie-watch on 19 November 2021 was
the very unusual sci fi film The
Happening. Directed by M. Night Shyamalan, and released in 2008 by 20th
Century Fox, The Happening stars Mark
Wahlberg as New York-based science teacher Elliot Moore, who is caught up in an
initially-inexplicable, terrifying wave of mass suicides occurring extremely
rapidly (within the space of a single day) throughout the eastern coastal
states of the USA. Wahlberg's co-stars include Zooey Deschanel as Elliot's wife
Alma, John Leguizamo as their friend Julian, and Betty Buckley as sinister rural
recluse Mrs Jones. In my DVD collection, I have categorised this one as a monster
movie, but whereas the monsters in such movies frequently are unequivocally
bloodthirsty elusive horrors of the fictitious mutant or prehistoric survivor
kind, those in this film are all too real, only too visible to everyone
everywhere, and ostensibly innocuous, thus making The Happening a surprisingly creepy film. If you haven't already
seen it, I won't say any more about the monsters, for want of a better term (other
than SPOILER
ALERT!! they're predominantly green in colour and photosynthesise!).
However, I found it to be an unusual, suspenseful movie, and in spite of its
very high death count there is scarcely any of the nowadays-standard/obligatory
blood'n'gore that you might have expected – and is all the better for its
absence, thereby leaving far more to the imagination, which is unquestionably
the greatest source of fear ever created. Hitchcock would surely have approved!
Click here
to watch an official The Happening
trailer on YouTube.
Publicity
poster for Crack in the World (© Andrew
Marton/Paramount Pictures – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair
Use basis for educational/review purposes only)
CRACK IN THE
WORLD
On 16 October 2021, I finally watched in
colour on the UK TV channel Film On 4 a thrilling sci fi/disaster movie that
I'd only ever previously seen in b/w, and a great many years ago – Crack in the World. Directed by Andrew
Marton, and released in 1965 by Paramount Pictures, Crack in the World is all about how a scientific atomic explosion
at the Earth's core, engineered by brilliant but impetuous scientist Dr Stephen
Sorensen (Dana Andrews), which was meant to release magma and harness its
geothermal energy, goes horrifically wrong. For it creates an immense
thermonuclear blast instead that sends a devastating crack through the planet's
crust via a pre-existing fault, threatening to split Earth in half and thereby
destroy it. Much of the footage of volcanic eruptions and lava flows were stock
footage, obviously, but incredibly vibrant, certainly needing Technicolor to do
them full justice in a way that b/w could never do, and made even more compelling
by the stark knowledge that this wasn't sfx, this was real – real eruptions and
real lava – Nature at its most potent but visually glorious, an extravaganza of
excess. And also a timely lesson that we meddle with Nature and the workings of
our world at its (and our own) peril. Click here
to watch an official Crack in the World
trailer on YouTube.
Publicity
poster for Elephant Walk (© William
Dieterle/Paramount Pictures – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair
Use basis for educational/review purposes only)
ELEPHANT WALK
On 23 September
2021, I watched an engrossing movie very different from my more usual sci
fi/fantasy-infused film fayre – Elephant
Walk. Directed by William Dieterle, and released in 1954 by Paramount
Pictures, Elephant Walk stars an
exquisite Elizabeth Taylor (who replaced Vivien Leigh after she suffered a
breakdown during its filming), plus Peter Finch and Dana Andrews. This movie's
premise is wealthy tea plantation owner John Wiley (Finch) from what was then
still called Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) marrying lovely bookshop owner Ruth
(Taylor) during a whirlwind romance in England, then whisking her back to his
opulent mansion in a remote location in Ceylon. Here, John's bull-headed late
father Tom 'The Guv'nor' Wiley had deliberately built the mansion directly
across a traditional path used for untold centuries by the area's wild
elephants to access water, and which now caused regular confrontations with
these great beasts. Once they arrived there, it didn't take long for Ruth to
discover (via a storyline not dissimilar from that of the Daphne Du Maurier novel Rebecca) that despite being dead, The Guv'nor still held John, the mansion's
native staff (especially their head man, Appuhamy), and even John's friends in
thrall, with everything maintained just as he'd left it, and with a huge tomb
containing his mortal remains built in the gardens. Any suggestions for change
made by Ruth were brusquely rebuffed by John and Appuhamy, leading her to seek
solace in the company, and eventually the arms, of John's business partner,
Dick Carver (Andrews), the one person immune to Wiley Snr's baleful influence –
and then there's the far from insignificant matter of the seriously disgruntled
elephants taking matters into their own hands – or trunks and tusks, to be
precise! Both the on-location sequences and the indoor studio sets are lavish
and sumptuous, and Taylor is at her radiant best throughout. Click here
to watch an official Elephant Walk trailer
on YouTube.
To view a complete chronological listing of all of my
Shuker In MovieLand blog's other film reviews and articles (each one instantly
accessible via a direct clickable link), please click HERE, and please click HERE to view a
complete fully-clickable alphabetical listing of them.
My official plush model of Everest, the young yeti from Abominable (photo © Dr Karl P.N. Shuker)
My official Marvel 12-inch-tall Black Panther action figure (photo © Dr Karl Shuker)