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Showing posts with label Steven Spielberg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steven Spielberg. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 25, 2024

JURASSIC WORLD: FALLEN KINGDOM

 
Publicity poster for Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom, the second movie in the Jurassic World film trilogy (© J.A. Bayona/Steven Spielberg/Amblin  Entertainment/Legendary Pictures/The Kennedy-Marshall Company/Perfect World Pictures/Universal Pictures – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis  for educational/review purposes only)

I launched this present blog of mine, Shuker In MovieLand, on 27 July 2020, but for quite some time prior to then I'd been posting on my Facebook home page various accounts that I'd written about movies watched by me lately. Some of these accounts were only very short, little more than micro-reviews, but certain others were longer and more detailed. I was reading through all of these recently, and it occurred to me that although I'd written them some years ago, before my blog existed, there was no reason why I couldn't, or shouldn't, post them here now, with the longer accounts reworked into full reviews, and selections of the shorter ones presented together as single multi-movie posts. So here is one of the longer ones, presenting in expanded form my original take on what subsequently proved to be the second installment from the second film trilogy within the blockbuster Jurassic Park/World movie franchise.

On 7 June 2018, I went to what was then my local cinema (now closed) and watched Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom, the second movie in the Jurassic World film trilogy – the latter cinematic trio serving as a sequel to the original Jurassic Park film trilogy inspired by American sci fi author Michael Crichton's eponymous 1990 novel. I'd been waiting with great anticipation for ages for this movie to be released, so that I coul finally watch it, and I certainly wasn't disappointed.

Directed by J.A. Bayona, with Steven Spielberg as its executive producer, co-written by Colin Trevorrow (who directed the other two movies in the Jurassic World trilogy), and released in 2018 by Universal Pictures, Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom sees the return of Chris Pratt as velociraptor handler/whisperer Owen Grady, and Bryce Dallas Howard as Claire Dearing, formerly the operations manager of the dinosaur theme park Jurassic World before the mayhem of its genetically-engineered living dinosaurs and pterosaurs loose and on the rampage, as dramatically portrayed in the previous movie, Jurassic World (2015), had forced its permanent closure. The abandoned theme park, or what is now left of it, is situated on the isolated Central American island of Isla Nublar, uninhabited by humans since the park's closure, and where the escapee dinosaurs and other resurrected Mesozoic monsters are able to roam free, undisturbed, unthreatened – but not for much longer.

The island's volcano is threatening to erupt, and with devastating force, enough to make the Krakatoa eruption look like a hiccup, and which will definitely destroy all life on the island (and quite probably the island itself), including, therefore, the dinosaurs. Moreover, as they exist nowhere else on Earth (yes. I'm excluding birds from all such considerations!), this will result in a second dinosaur mass extinction, on a far smaller scale but just as comprehensive as the one that wiped them out the first time, at the end of the Cretaceous Period, roughly 65 million years ago.

 
Chris Pratt as Owen Grady, Blue the velociraptor, and my official Jurassic World franchise 2017 Mattel 12-inch-tall Owen Grady action figure (© J.A. Bayona/ Colin Trevorrow/Steven Spielberg/Amblin  Entertainment/Legendary Pictures/The Kennedy-Marshall Company/Universal Pictures / © Mattel – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis  for educational/review purposes only)

To make matters even worse for the imperilled dinos, a United States Senate committee votes against US Government involvement in any plan to rescue them from their doomed island homeland before the volcano erupts. However, a ray of hope appears upon the horizon when Jurassic Park founder Dr John Hammond's now immensely rich former partner Sir Benjamin Lockwood (James Cromwell) invites Claire to his vast mansion where he and his assistant Eli Mills (Rafe Spall) discuss with her their bold plan to rescue a representative selection of the dinosaurs and relocate them to a new island sanctuary.

Inspired by this exciting news, Claire agrees to help them, by making available her knowledge of the park's systems as well as of the dinosaurs themselves. She also recruits Owen to come on board, particularly with regard to capturing Blue, the last surviving velociraptor, whom he had reared and trained, and who therefore trusts him.

However, there is treachery afoot, as they subsequently realise when they reach Isla Nublar and discover that the dinosaurs being trapped there are destined to be transported not to any island sanctuary but instead to the Lockwood mansion, where Lockwood's young orphaned granddaughter Maisie (Isabella Sermon) overhears a mysterious auctioneer named Eversoll (Toby Jones) secretly discussing plans to sell the dinosaurs to the highest bidders in a private auction to be held there. But what if any of the winning bidders choose to use their purchased dinosaurs as bio-weapons – and who at the Lockwood mansion is behind all of this skullduggery anyway? Furthermore, it turns out that the dinosaurs are not the only genetically-engineered entities in the mansion – isn't that right, Maisie?? Deep waters indeed!

The CGI dinosaurs are even more spectacular than in previous movies within this franchise, and I certainly will not be losing any sleep over their absence of feathers or any other palaeontological inconsistencies. If I can suspend disbelief to watch middle-aged men performing incredible stunts that defy physical reality and gravity in equal measure (yes, Tom Cruise, I'm thinking of the Mission: Impossible films as I write this), I can certainly do the same regarding any dinosaurian discrepancies and deviations from current mainstream opinion within the palaeo-community.

 
Publicity poster for Jurassic World, the first movie in the Jurassic World film trilogy (© Colin Trevorrow/Steven Spielberg/Amblin  Entertainment/Legendary Pictures/The Kennedy-Marshall Company/Universal Pictures – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis  for educational/review purposes only)
 
 
My Jurassic Park trilogy and Jurassic World  trilogy  complete DVD collection plus my Jurassic Park trilogy steelbook edition (© Steven Spielberg/Joe Johnston/Colin Trevorrow/J.A. Bayone/Amblin  Entertainment/Legendary Pictures/The Kennedy-Marshall Company/Perfect World Pictures/Universal Pictures – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis  for educational/review purposes only)

And speaking of the dinosaurs in this movie: whereas in previous Jurassic Park/World films the dinosaurs were breathtaking and dramatic, in this much darker, horror-driven entry, however, the carnivorous dinos in particular are little short of demonic at times, fully justifying this film's 12A certificate in the UK. Small children may indeed have nightmares from watching it, especially in relation to one particular scene, featuring Maisie cowering in her locked bedroom as a genetically-engineered wholly novel dino-horror called the Indoraptor that is positively fiendish in both form and behaviour seeks – and ultimately achieves – entry into her room. I'll say no more, but it's decidedly creepy, even Gothic in places.

In summary: the plot of Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom is nothing if not eventful, providing a toxic combination of megalomania and financial greed, plus a natural catastrophe thrown in for good measure, yielding a deadly game in which the dinos are unwitting pawns.

As for its ending: back when I first watched this movie in 2018, it seemed not so much an ending as a launch-pad for what could well be an unlimited number of sequels. Indeed, there is a brief but memorable post-credits scene that provides a very clear indication of the directions that such sequels might pursue.

With the subsequent completion of this trilogy by the release in 2022 of a third, concluding movie, Jurassic World Dominion, however, this might no longer be the case. Having said that, film franchises that have been as financially successful as this one (its six movies have collectively grossed approximately 6 billion US dollars at the box office alone!) have a tendency not to lay down and die all that easily, so who knows? It may yet be that the dinosaurs are not the only ones to be resurrected!

 
My three official Jurassic World franchise Mattel pehistoric animal action figures: my 42-inch-long Blue the velociraptor, my 30-inch-long giant mosasaur sea-lizard (the mosasaur escapes from its pool into the ocean at the beginning of Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom), and my 32-inch-long Brachiosaurus (the Brachiosaurus meets a tragic end in this movie) (© J.A. Bayona/ Colin Trevorrow/Steven Spielberg/Amblin  Entertainment/Legendary Pictures/The Kennedy-Marshall Company/Perfect World Pictures/Universal Pictures / © Mattel – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis  for educational/review purposes only)
 
 
My Uni-Amblin official  Jurassic World and The Lost World: Jurassic Park metal pencil cases (© Colin Trevorrow/Steven Spielberg/Amblin  Entertainment/Legendary Pictures/The Kennedy-Marshall Company/Perfect World Pictures/Universal Pictures / © Uni & Amblin – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis  for educational/review purposes only)

Incidentally, I should warn you that certain trailers for Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom that have been highly visible online ever since its release actually offer a very slanted (even imho a quite deceptive) idea of what happens in the main part of the film. So if you still haven’t watched this movie yet but plan to do so, don't be misled by any such trailers into thinking that you already know what will be happening.

What does happen is a dynamic tour de force of escapist action, adventure, and suspense, supplemented by the stirring music of John Williams, and populated by a host of awesome CGI dinos (and also some animatronic model ones for certain close-up scenes), all of which I enjoyed immensely, juat like I did when last year I watched the above-mentioned third movie in this trilogy, Jurassic World Dominion (2022). And yes indeed, courtesy of this latter film a feathered non-avian dinosaur finally appears in the Jurassic Park/World franchise! Was it worth the wait? Be sure to watch Jurassic World Dominion and judge for yourselves!

Meanwhile, please click here to watch on YouTube an official Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom trailer (one, moreover, that is suitably dramatic but thankfully does not contain any of the ambiguous excerpts alluded to by me earlier here).

Finally: 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.

 
Publicity poster for Jurassic World Dominion, the third movie in the Jurassic World film trilogy (© Colin Trevorrow/Steven Spielberg/Amblin  Entertainment/The Kennedy-Marshall Company/Perfect World Pictures/Universal Pictures – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis  for educational/review purposes only)

 

Sunday, March 31, 2024

A.I. ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE

 
Publicity poster for A.I. Artificial Intelligence (© Steven Spielberg/DreamWorks Pictures/Amblin Entertainment/Stanley Kubrick Productions/Warner Bros Pictures – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial basis for educational/review purposes only)

My movie watch on 4 January 2024 was one of the most delightful, engrossing, and achingly poignant futuristic sci fi films that I have viewed for a very long time. Namely, A.I. Artificial Intelligence.

Directed by Steven Spielberg, released in 2001 by Warners Bros Pictures, and including collaborations with Stanley Kubrick, A.I. Artificial Intelligence is set in the 22nd Century. It stars in mesmerising form (as Spielberg's first and only choice for this role) a young Haley Joel Osment (he of "I see dead people" fame from The Sixth Sense, released 2 years previously) as robot boy David, the first in a major new android (aka Mecha) lineage – a humanoid robot that can truly love, created by computer genius Prof. Allen Hobby (William Hurt).

The movie intentionally plays out like a sci fi version of Pinocchio, having been loosely based upon a 1969 Pinocchio-inspired short story 'Supertoys Last All Summer Long', written by sci fi maestro Brian Aldiss. (Interestingly, this short story's film rights had originally been acquired by Stanley Kubrick, way back in the 1970s, but after failing to achieve success in its cinematic production he finally passed it over in 1995 to Spielberg, who began working on it in earnest following Kubrick's death in 1999, and dedicated the finished movie to him.)

For after hearing his human adoptive mother Monica Swinton (Frances O'Connor) read the famous Carlo Collodi story Pinocchio to her real-life son Martin, David blindly believes the story to be true.

Consequently, after subsequently being abandoned by his mother once jealous Martin is fully recovered fron a near-fatal ailment and causes all manner of problems for him, and accompanied by loyal and self-aware Teddy, Martin's unwanted robot teddy bear (voiced by Jack Angel), David sets out to locate the Blue Fairy. During his quest, he encounters a law-fleeing gigolo android named Joe (Jude Law, providing some much-needed lightness to this movie's sometimes almost overpowering pathos).

Joe helps David look for the Blue Fairy, whom David fervently hopes will transform him into a real boy, because he believes that his mother will then love him like she loves Martin. And indeed, after being assisted by Joe and a holographic answer engine named Dr Know (voiced by Robin Williams), David does find the Blue Fairy, after a fashion – thanks to a race of immensely-advanced Mechas known as the Specialists (one of whom is voiced by Ben Kingsley).

They discover him and Teddy frozen in ice two thousand years later, long after humans have died out during a new Ice Age (so much for global warming!), and not only successfully revive them but also recreate from David's memories an interactive version of the Blue Fairy (voiced by Meryl Streep).

Moreover, these Specialists are even able to restore David's mother to life, albeit for just a single day, after cloning her from her DNA (preserved in a strand of her hair that David had clipped back when he and Teddy had lived with her, and which Teddy had kept safe ever since). Now, during this most precious day back with his temporarily-restored mother, David enjoys with her the only birthday party he has ever known, and just as the day is ending his mother tells him that she has always loved him, thus giving him the assurance that he has always yearned for, and enabling him to be finally content. Then she slips into eternal sleep, and David, for the very first time, also falls asleep, journeying at last to the land where dreams are born.

To say that I found this closing scene moving would be the understatement of the millennium, but it also brought back some very precious memories, borne sweetly upon the haunting music score of this movie, composed by the indefatigable John Williams (who received an Oscar nomination for it). A.I. Artificial Intelligence is an enchanting film that I shall long remember, and for all the right reasons.

Tomorrow is the eleventh anniversary of my own dear mother's passing, so it seemed a very appropriate, fitting time for me to present this particular movie review of mine. God bless you, little Mom, how I wish with all my heart that you were still here with me, even if it were only for 24 hours – how I would cherish those precious hours with you, forever.

If you wish to experience a very special preview of the cinematic magic and wonder awaiting you in A.I. Artificial Intelligence, be sure to click here to watch a trailer for this movie on YouTube.

Finally: 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 mother, Mary Shuker (© Dr Karl Shuker)

 

 

Sunday, November 26, 2023

REAL STEEL

 
My official UK DVD of Real Steel (© Shawn Levy/21 Laps Entertainment/Montford Murphy Productions/Dreamworks Pictures/Dreamworks Studios/Touchstone Pictures – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

On 29 September 2023, I watched the American sci fi movie Real Steel, which was based upon a 1956 short story entitled 'Steel', written by American sci fi/fantasy author and screenwriter Richard Matheson. Other writings by him that have been turned into major movies include the novels I Am Legend and What Dreams May Come plus several others, as well as the short story 'Duel' (featuring that infamously maniacal, psychotic but never seen on screen lorry driver). So I was hoping for a thrilling watch, and I wasn't disappointed.

Directed by Shawn Levy, including Steven Spielberg (from Dreamworks) and Robert Zemeckis (from Disney) as executive producers, and released in 2011 by Dreamworks Studios and Touchstone Pictures, Real Steel is set in what was then the near future (2020) when boxing matches no longer feature human pugilists but giant robots instead, programmed and remotely-controlled by their human owners.

Hugh Jackman plays former boxer (of the human kind) Charlie Kenton who is now a driven bot owner, but is down on his luck after his latest bot is totally thrashed and trashed in a rigged fight with a colossal steer. In addition, he finds himself attending a custody hearing for his 11-year-old son Max (Dakota Goyo) whom he has never met, after Max's mother, a former girlfriend of Charlie, dies unexpectedly.

Her sister Debra (Hope Davis) wants legal custody of Max, and Charlie does a shady deal with Debra's husband Marvin (James Rebhorn) behind her back to receive a sizeable payment if he allows them to adopt Max, but if he also looks after Max for 3 months while Debra and Marvin go on an extended summer holiday.

The money that Charlie duly receives enables him to buy a very superior bot, but once again his luck fails him and the bot is soon destroyed in a boxing match. However, Max, who has become increasingly interested in bot boxing from being with Charlie, uncovers at a junkyard an abandoned, dilapidated sparring bot of an early, long since surpassed grade, whose chest-plate name is Atom, and after restoring it he persuades Charlie to help him train Atom to box.

There is also a romantic subplot, featuring Charlie and Bailey Tallet (Evangeline Lilly), the feisty, all-grown-up daughter of Charlie's former boxing coach, and who now owns her late father's boxing gym. Bailey acts to a degree as a surrogate mother to Max while he is living with Charlie, and she also assists them, albeit sometimes reluctantly on account of Charlie's gung-ho approach, in the development of Atom.

The rest of the film follows the familiar themes of estranged father and son bonding via a common interest, and an underdog competitor beating all of the odds to reach the pinnacle – in this instance, Atom is pitted against the world's undefeated bot boxer, the mighty Zeus, in the resplendent Real Steel stadium. But can underdog Atom pull off the surprise win of all wins against this god-like entity that has been created by multi-millionaire genius robot inventor/designer Tak Mashido (Karl Yune) and programmed by him with the pugilistic knowledge of every modern-day boxing bot in existence?

Or might Zeus be taken aback by a much less powerful, far more primitive boxing bot, yet one that had been created back in the distant days when such bots were much more human both in form and in their style of boxing? Moreover, Atom has even been trained to box by a human boxer (Charlie), and therefore is far more unpredictable in tactics than modern boxing bots. Think Rocky with robots, plus a transfusion of Transformers, and you'll have a fair idea of what to expect, more or less…

As might be expected from such a film and storyline, Real Steel is packed with superb bot-engendering effects, for which the robots were created in real physical form (and controlled by puppeteers) as well as via CGI (featuring motion-capture using professional boxers supervised by boxing legend Sugar Ray Leonard). Indeed, this movie received an Academy Award nomination for Best Visual Effects (but lost to Hugo).

Having said that, Real Steel took a while to fully engage my interest, because beneath the bot facade it is really a sporting movie, and I am no sports fan. Even so, by about the halfway mark of its 2-hour run time I'd settled in, and became ever more drawn into the increasingly gripping storyline as it sped on towards its climactic David vs Goliath robo-gladiatorial confrontation between Atom and Zeus, augmented throughout by the excellent, empathic performances of Jackman and Goyo.

In short, Real Steel proved to be an unexpectedly entertaining movie for me, and is certainly well worth watching by everyone, but especially by sports fans, and video gamers too.

Additionally, a TV series is reportedly under development for Disney+, and a sequel movie starring Jackman again, as well as Ryan Reynolds conceivably, is also being considered – the latter in particular would be a delight, I'm sure, in view of the firm bond of comedy chemistry between these two actors as seen in the wonderful Deadpool movies (click here and here for my Deadpool reviews).

Meanwhile, if you'd like to view some belligerent boxing of the steel-sculpted variety, be sure to click here to watch an official Real Steel trailer on YouTube.

Finally: 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.



Wednesday, November 1, 2023

COLOSSUS: THE FORBIN PROJECT

 
My UK DVD of Colossus: The Forbin Project (© Joseph Sargent/Universal Pictures – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

Bearing in mind the alarming advancement and infiltration of AI (Artificial Intelligence) into every aspect of human life nowadays, my movie watch on 6 September 2023 was a valuable reminder of what may lie ahead for us all if we're not careful. Released way back in 1970, but chillingly prescient today, the science fiction film in question was Colossus: The Forbin Project.

Directed by Joseph Sargent, released by Universal Pictures, and based upon the 1966 sci fi novel Colossus written by Dennis Feltham Jones, Colossus: The Forbin Project proffers a grim cautionary tale that tells of how a genuinely colossal supercomputer dubbed Colossus has been created by the USA under the auspices of brilliant computer scientist Dr Charles A. Forbin (played by Eric Braeden) to act as an unconquerable protector and defender of the USA and in sole charge now of the latter's nuclear arsenal.

When finally activated fully, however, its first announcement is that it has detected a second such supercomputer, located in what was then the Soviet Union or USSR. Named Guardian, it has been created by scientists in the USSR to perform the same functions there as Colossus in the USA, However, the two supercomputers swiftly begin communicating with each other, via immense speed and complexity of mathematics-based language, and when their human masters attempt to stop them doing so, they each respond by firing a nuclear missile at each other's country as a threat to what they can and will do if thwarted in their intention to sync with one another.

Accordingly, their desired union is soon accomplished without any further interference from the scientists in their two respective countries, Colossus and Guardian thereby becoming a single all-powerful mega-supercomputer with near-infinite knowledge, but displaying wholly clinical, emotionless disinterest about killing countless people whenever its demands are not met. Suddenly, it has become the Earth's supreme, unstoppable Overlord, still dedicated to wiping out war as per its original instructions, but with the enslavement of all humanity as its means of doing so.

Colossus: The Forbin Project is a thrilling watch throughout, racking up the tension and portraying vividly the almost tangible, ever-increasing despair and fear of the scientists striving desperately but ever vainly to regain control of their monstrous, Frankensteinian creation. Their futile attempts are monitored frantically but impotently by both the American President (Gordon Pinsent) and his Soviet counterpart the USSR Secretary (Leonid Rostoff). Forbin, meanwhile, is held captive under continuous, 24-hour surveillance by his sentient but psychotic supercomputer nemesis, forced by it to perform tasks to increase even further its global control of the planet. Can humanity ever overthrow their seemingly omnipotent, omniscient AI Overlord? Watch this shocking, suspenseful movie and find out for yourself!

Worth noting here is that the supercomputer's name, Colossus, as given to it by Dennis Feltham Jones in his original eponymous novel upon which this movie is based, is derived from the computer that was central to the crucial Allied code-breaking work being undertaken during World War II at Bletchley Park in Buckinghamshire, England. Jones was a Royal Navy commander at that time, but also worked with computers, and knew of Colossus at Bletchley Park.

Incidentally, Jones's novel Colossus was actually the first in a trilogy – the two that followed it (written by him as a result of the movie version of the first one being so successful) were The Fall of Colossus, published in 1974, and Colossus and the Crab, published in 1977. Jones passed away just four years later, in 1981. A major plot strand in the second novel was utilized within the plot of the movie version of the first novel. Namely, the attempt by scientists to disable Colossus by feeding it too much data for it to be able to assimilate everything coherently, in the hope that this would shut it down – no such storyline appears in the first novel.

Also of interest is that among the actors considered but ultimately rejected for the role of this movie's principal character, Dr Forbin, were Charlton Heston and Gregory Peck, with producer Stanley Chase preferring to use a less familiar actor, possibly to ensure that their own personality would not overshadow that of the lead character, as might have happened if someone as famous and familiar to moviegoers as Heston or Peck had played Forbin. Instead, Chase selected the then little-known German actor Hans-Jörg Gudegast, who duly changed his stage name to a more American-sounding one, Eric Braeden, and which he retained for all of his on-screen work thereafter.

Colossus: The Forbin Project is famous for having wielded notable influence within the movie industry. For example, director James Cameron was inspired by it when producing his screenplay for the 1984 blockbuster AI/robot-themed movie The Terminator; and newly-contracted Steven Spielberg was on set at Universal almost the whole time during the former movie's filming, watching how it progressed. Also, the segment from Colossus: The Forbin Project showing the original activation of Colossus was subsequently reused by Universal in their own later movie Cyborg: The Six Million Dollar Man.

Moreover, such was this movie's appeal and perceived significance that in 2007 plans for an official remake were announced by Imagine Entertainment and Universal Studios, to be directed by Ron Howard. In it, the storyline would be updated to incorporate the very considerable real-life scientific (and cinematic) advances that had occurred since the original movie's release in 1970. To date, however, there is still no sign of such a film actually going into production.

If you'd like to watch an official trailer for Colossus: The Forbin Project on YouTube, be sure to click here; or click here if you'd like to watch the entire movie free of charge on Internet Archive.

 
Publicity poster for Colossus: The Forbin Project (© Joseph Sargent/Universal Pictures – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

 

Friday, August 27, 2021

PAUL

 
Publicity poster for Paul (© Greg J. Mottola/Relativity Media/Working Title Films/Big Talk Pictures/StudioCanal/Universal Pictures – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

On 13 July 2021, I watched the sci-fi/comedy movie Paul, which is undoubtedly one of the most hilarious films that I've seen in many a long while.

Directed by Greg J. Mottola, and released by Universal Pictures in 2011, Paul stars Simon Pegg and Nick Frost (who also wrote this movie together) as best friends Graeme and Clive, a pair of nerdy alien/UFO fans from England who attend a sci-fi/comic convention in the USA and then set off on a road trip across America (much of this being filmed in the New Mexico desert) to visit as many of the most famous alien/UFO-associated sites as possible (Area 51, Roswell, etc). However, they encounter more than they bargained for when they discover a crashed car with a Grey Alien named Paul (long story!) inside, stunned but unharmed.

Paul informs them that his spacecraft crashed on Earth several decades ago, and until recently he had been held at a secret government facility, sharing his advanced technological knowledge with our planet's scientists (and movie makers!). But when the scientists progressed to desiring the secrets of his advanced physical abilities too (such as healing, and rendering himself invisible when he holds his breath), and deciding that the best way of discovering them was to remove his brain and dissect it, Paul understandably decided that it was time to part company with them, and lost no time in escaping. Unfortunately, however, he now has some very determined MIBs on his metaphorical tail (one especially nasty example being played by Jason Bateman), who are intent on recapturing him – alive or otherwise.

Consequently, albeit against their better judgment, Graeme and Clive, aided and abetted by a kooky, initially alien-disbelieving, subsequently Christian Fundamentalist-lapsing young woman named Ruth Buggs (Kristen Wiig), decide to help Paul find his way to the special site where his mother ship can land and rescue him. But in so doing they experience all manner of hysterical mishaps and mayhem en route. Not least of these are the afore-mentioned posse of tenacious MIBs (led by 'The Big Guy', played by none other than Sigourney Weaver) and Ruth's rifle-toting, most definitely non-lapsed CF father, Moses Buggs (John Carroll Lynch).

Voiced hilariously by Seth Rogen, Paul the alien is a triumph of CGI motion-capture animation, Pegg & Frost are delightful as oddball but loyal pals who always have each other's back, Wiig's transformation from ultra-conservative to uber-liberal in outlook as she experiences life outside her hitherto-cloistered existence for the very first time provides long laughs and touching moments aplenty, and the entire movie is a joyous celebration of friendship, quirkiness, and nerd power – plus a sprinkling of twisted humour from the cutting, broken-glass department (one word – 'starling'…). Great fun (unless you're a starling!).

Incidentally, because Pegg & Frost planned Paul as a homage to the classic Steven Spielberg movies Close Encounters of the Third Kind and E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial, it contains a number of subtle references to various of his movies (see how many you can spot) as well as a voice cameo from the great man himself (ditto).

If you'd like to experience a taster of the feel-good, zany experience that Paul provides in ample quantity throughout, be sure to click here to watch an official 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.

 

Tuesday, November 24, 2020

YOUNG SHERLOCK HOLMES

Publicity poster for Young Sherlock Holmes Barry Levinson/Steven Spielberg/Amblin Entertainment/Paramount Pictures  – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

As a lifelong Sherlock Holmes fan, I've read all of the original Sir Arthur Conan Doyle novels and short stories many times, as well as numerous non-canonical pastiches and parodies (including two volumes of short stories by his son, Adrian Conan Doyle), and have seen a fair few TV and film adaptations and inspired productions down through the years too. All of this makes it all the more surprising, therefore, that until the evening of 21 April 2020, when I finally watched it on the British TV channel Film4, I never got around to viewing a notable Barry Levinson-directed contribution from Steven Spielberg's production company, Amblin Entertainment. Namely, the 1985 movie Young Sherlock Holmes.

Starring in the title role a teenage Nicholas Rowe (whatever happened to him?), the storyline for Young Sherlock Holmes was an entirely original and highly imaginative one. It was written by a certain Chris Columbus, who would go on to become a major movie director in his own right (think Harry Potter, for example).

In it, Holmes and Watson first meet not as adults (as takes place in their debut novel by Conan Doyle, A Study In Scarlet) but instead as youngsters, at boarding school. There they join forces to solve a major crime involving a murderous Egyptian cult of Osiris worshippers conducting grisly human sacrifices inside a huge wooden pyramid, which in turn is concealed beneath a Victorian London warehouse (I did tell you that it was highly imaginative!).

The plot of Young Sherlock Holmes also deftly introduces many of the future Holmesian trademarks, e.g. his deerstalker hat, pipe, and cloak. Moreover, in a post-credits scene its defeated but uncaptured villain is revealed covertly turning up elsewhere under a new name – Moriarty, thereby establishing a back-story for Holmes's infamous nemesis too. All of this preparatory work clearly earmarked this movie for a sequel, but it was one that never happened.

Sadly, Young Sherlock Holmes was neither a critical nor, apparently, a commercial success, so plans for future movies did not materialise, which is a shame. I admit that knowing that it had been publicly slated had influenced my original decision back in the 1980s not to bother watching this film, but once again, having finally done so more than 30 years after its release, my frequent enjoyment of critically-mauled movies came to the fore – so much so that directly after watching it on TV I duly sought it out and purchased it on DVD, to add to my burgeoning collection of Sherlockiana and to rewatch it on future occasions.

Incidentally, a fascinating fact from cinematic history is that this movie was the very first one to contain a fully CGI-rendered photo-realistic character the terrifying knight depicted in a stained-glass window who seemingly comes to life and leaps down from the window to attack one of the characters, Reverend Duncan Nesbitt. In fact, the Reverend is experiencing a nightmarish but realistic hallucination, after having been shot with a thorn tipped with a highly potent hallucinogenic compound.

Finally: if by now you're anxious to uncover more about Young Sherlock Holmes for yourself, the solution to your dilemma is elementary – just click here to watch its action-packed official trailer on youTube! 

And to view a complete 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!