Where a Movie Fan Reviews Movies

Thursday, April 27, 2017

The Fate of the Furious Review

Who would have guessed that a film about hot heads who love to drive cars would spawn a franchise? Let alone eight films which are up there with Star Wars and Harry Potter. I'm of course talking about The Fast and the Furious franchise, which has to crank out films 2001. So going into the film, you know what to expect. You expect shiny cars, pretty girls, and fast action. After seeing the film that has not changed but I'm happy with what I got.
The film starts off with Dom (Vin Diesel) and Letty (Michelle Rodriguez) on their honeymoon in Cuba as they and are ready to settle down. Then a mysterious woman named Cipher (Charlize Theron) forces Dom to work for her terrorist organization and betray his family. So now it is up to Letty, Luke Hobbs (Dwayne Johnson), former enemy Deckard Shaw (Jason Statham), and the rest of the gang to stop Dom and Cipher. 

The best part of the film is the setup. The big mystery of the film is why Dom all of a sudden turned on his friends and if the gang can stop their former leader and Cipher. This leads to some great build up and suspense which comes to a head in the climax.

The performances are also serviceable. Vin Diesel and Dwayne Johnson reprise their roles as good-hearted guys who you probably do not want to get into a fight with. Charlize Theron is a lot of fun as a conniving and calculating James Bond-type villain. Tyrese Gibson and Ludacris serve as the comic relief and have a lot of funny moments. Jason Statham also returns but this time plays a good guy. The best scenes in the movie are when Statham and Dwayne Johnson are arguing with each other. It is like Woody and Buzz Lightyear except with swearing. In fact, I wish we would have gotten more scenes with them.

The film can also be entertainingly over the top. Even though there are some really dark moments, there are a lot of moments that are so over the top that you help but be entertained by them. And in a franchise as silly as The Fast and the Furious, they do not feel out of place. One example is a scene in which Jason Statham is fighting Cipher’s henchmen while carrying a baby. I am not joking. 

There are some issues with the film. We are introduced to a new character named Eric Reisner/Little Nobody (Scott Eastwood) who I am guessing is Paul Walker’s replacement. Even though he is not a terrible character, I did find kind of useless and he does not have the likability that Paul Walker brought to Brian O’Conner.

There are also many moments that force you to take a leap in logic. There is a scene in which Vin Diesel asks someone for a favor in 5 minutes while not being seen by Cipher, who is following him through every single security camera. You would think that there is no way possible to do all this in 5 minutes. Not to mention he somehow gets a friend to help him out and I am not sure when he would have the time to contact him or figure out a plan to hide from Cipher. 


Like in every Fast and the Furious film you get a car chases that make Monster Jam look like Go Kart racing, hard action, and improbable escapes that would make the Avengers scratch their heads. There is also a message about togetherness and family and togetherness just like in the last Fast and the Furious film. If your someone who wants a film that is dark and realistic, this is not the film for you. But if you want a film that is silly and over the top while  being silly at the same time, then this is the film for you. 

Tuesday, April 18, 2017

Power Rangers Review


‘Power Rangers’ is the latest film in the trend of making a movie based on childhood nostalgic properties while aiming at a PG-13 audience. Example include Transformers, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, G.I. Joe, and now Power Rangers. For the record, I did not grow up with Power Rangers, so I went into this film with no real expectations. It also did not help that the trailers look pretty mediocre to me. Having seen the film, I will say that the film is better than I expected. However, that is the best thing I can say about the film.
The film is about 5 average teens named Jason, Kimberly, Billy, Trini, and Ludi who are considered outcasts in the small town of Angel Grove. One day when they come together at a gold mine, they obtain powers after discovering 5 Power Coins. As a result, they are each chosen to be the Power Rangers by Zordon (Brian Cranston). At the same time, the evil Rita Repulsa (Elizabeth Banks) has reemerged and is planning to destroy Angel Grove and eventually the world. So now it is up to our heroes to prepare and learn how to fight as a team.

The biggest surprise is that acting and characters in the film are really good. Each of the actors playing the Power Rangers convincingly plays teenagers who struggle with real life issues like autism and sexual orientation. This helps make each of the main character more likable and relatable. Brian Cranston is also fun as Zordon even though he looks like a speaker in Dr. Dre beats commercial. 

Each of the 5 main characters had great chemistry together and as a result, you buy their camaraderie. They even individual go through their own character arcs. Each character has their own personality and issues and by the end of the film, each character discovers something about themselves. My favorite scene is when they are at a campfire and telling each other their deepest secrets. For a moment I had a flashback to the Breakfast Club.  

However, the film has quite a few issues. One is that the film can be tonally inconsistent. In one scene the movie will be dark and grim, and then in other, it would be silly like the original TV show. We get a scene of a fisherman’s funeral after being murdered by Rita Repulsa and then we get a scene that has a joke about a cow’s genitalia. 

Then there is Elizabeth Banks who seems to have a blast playing the over the top and evil Rita Repulsa. In another movie like Flash Gordon, I could see Rita Repulsa as an effective and fun villain. But in this movie, which does a great job at showing the serious and personal drama that each of the main characters faces, it feels really out of place.

Also, those people who want to see the Power Rangers fight might be a bit disappointed since the Power Rangers costumes do not show up until the end of the film. Most of the movie is spent on developing our main characters to fight as a team. While that is not conceptually a bad idea I do believe the film does drag this part of the film bit too long. The film also repeatedly uses the Zack Snyder slow motion effect which gets really tedious and distracting. 

Overall I cannot say that ‘Power Rangers’ is a bad film. It does a good job at developing its characters and has some really solid acting. However, it suffers from tonal inconstancies and the story dragging a bit. I also am a bit confused on who this movie is aimed at. It is definitely not aimed kids who are fans of Power Rangers since it is PG-13 and it does not seem to aim at hardcore adult Power Rangers fans since the Power Rangers barely show up. So I would say if you really want to see this, give it a watch. You could do worse. 



Friday, February 24, 2017

OJ: Made In America Review

OJ: Made In America Review

What makes OJ Simpson such a fascinating figure? It has been more than 20 years after OJ Simpson was acquitted in the “Trial of the Century” and it seems that he is as relevant as ever. Not that long ago, the FX show “The People vs. OJ Simpson: American Crime Story” aired and was a huge hit. Is it that we are fascinated with crime stories? Is it that OJ Simpson fell from a football hero to a pariah? Or maybe nostalgia is a big thing now? 

There is some truth to all of these theories but after seeing “OJ: Made in America” I realized what makes OJ such a captivating figure. OJ Simpson is a product of America and it’s indiscretions. While the 7-1/2 hour documentary is about OJ Simpson, it also touches on racism in America and the downsides of the American Dream. The film is thought provoking and haunting, and it is one of the most mesmerizing documentaries I have ever seen. 

Throughout the film, Ezra Edelman uses OJ Simpson’s story as a template to talk about America’s history of racial divide and the American Dream which is becoming successful at any cost. With video and photos, he illustrates the American Dream as OJ Simpson is pursuing fame while also illustrating America’s history of racial divide by showing the story of the racial tensions in LA since the 1960s.

In the first two parts, we see OJ’s rise to fame. OJ was born in the projects in San Fransisco. Then he becomes a football star at USC, rushes for 2000 yards in one season for the Buffalo Bills, and then becomes a spokesman for companies like Hertz. After he retires from football he even becomes an entrepreneur and an actor. 

At the same OJ is having success, tensions between blacks and whites increase due to years of racism. In the 60s, the Civil Rights Movement is at its peak and athletes like Muhammad Ali and Jim Brown are speaking on segregation and social issues. In the 80s and 90s, racial prejudice is exhibited by the LAPD (Los Angeles Police Department) as they destroy black people's homes in search of drugs that were not there. Then it seems that justice system was racial bias as the cops beating up Rodney King shown on the video were acquitted of any assault charges. 

With amazing editing, Ezra Edelman is able to perfectly contrast the world of celebrity that OJ is in with the world of Civil Rights and racism that the rest of Black America have to deal with. Edelman does this by showing footage from OJ’s perspective and then showing footage of the perspective of African Americans outside of OJ’s perspective. In one scene in part one, we see comedian Bob Hope making jokes about OJ Simpson at USC while it is being announced that Dr. Martin Luther King was shot.   

However as OJ is perusing the American Dream, he is losing his identity. When OJ is asked to be a Civil Rights Activist he refuses. To OJ, image and fame are everything to him. We see at very young age, OJ Simpson’s goal was to be famous. He even tells his friends that someday their kids will look up to him. He believed that in order for him to be successful he needed to be seen as more than just black. His motto was “I’m not black. I’m OJ”. So the more successful OJ became, the most he ingratiated himself with rich white people. He even marries a white woman named Nicole Brown.

Also because OJ was a celebrity he got special treatment from the media and LAPD which creates two sides to OJ. One is the warm and charming guy that the public sees on TV. The other side is a narcissistic egomaniac who got what he wanted because he was OJ Simpson. This lead to his abusive relationship with his wife Nicole Brown Simpson that got so bad that Nicole tells people that OJ is going to kills her.

Then in the climax, or in the third and fourth part of the film, the stories come together when OJ Simpson is charged with the murder of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman. While a majority of white America thinks that he is a murderer due to the mountain of evidence against him, most of black America believe he is innocent because of their distrust of the LAPD that arrested OJ.  OJ’s defense team then decide to use the LAPD’s racist history to smear the evidence against OJ. In an ironic twist, OJ’s defense is trying to convey OJ as a black victim of a racist LAPD when OJ did what he could to not be identified as black.  

We also learn a lot from the people being interviewed in the film. These included interviews with OJ Simpson’s former friends, LAPD, and other who are somehow connected to OJ. Two interviews that really stand out are Joe Bell, one of OJ’s childhood friends, who talked about what OJ was like when he was younger and a juror who confessed that the jury acquitted OJ as payback for Rodney King. 

As someone who knew quite a bit about OJ Simpson and the trial, I was shocked how much more to the story there is. On the surface, OJ’s story is a tragedy about somebody who became a celebrity and then became an outcast. But when you look deeper his story it is the result of America’s faults. Like the title says, America made OJ Simpson.

Grade: A+

Sunday, February 12, 2017

The Lego Batman Movie Review

The Lego Batman Movie Review

In the 78 year
 history of Batman, it seems like there is a repeating pattern with all the Batman movies. First, there was the film adaptation of the light and campy 60’s TV show, then we got the dark and gothic Tim Burton films, then the franchise was ruined by the flashy and homoerotic Joel Schumacher films, and then it was revived by the dark and grounded Christopher Nolan films. 

Now we have ‘The Lego Batman Movie’ which has a very light and silly tone like many of the films before it. But what's great about this film is that is self-aware of the previous incarnations of Batman while also being a great Batman film. 

The film focuses on our favorite caped crusader always saving the day but while also being alone. Even though this is affecting him he is too stubborn to admit this as he does not want to be seen as soft. However as the Joker is trying to destroy Gotham and as Robin is forced into his life, it seems Batman much learn to work with others. 

Like I said before, what I like the most about this film is that it is very self-aware of itself. One thing the film is self-aware off is the characteristic flaw of the Batman character. To the public, Batman comes across as cool and edgy as he can take care of any situation by himself and rapping about how awesome he is. 

But behind the scenes, Batman is sad because he is alone and fights crime to get acknowledgment from others. This is best shown as he watches Romanic Comedies like Jerry Maguire in his spare time because he desires a relationship. I think what makes this a great Batman film is the arch of Batman learning to work with others.

The film is also aware of the weird relationship between Batman and Joker as they need to fight each other. Throughout the film, Joker is trying to make Batman acknowledge that he is his greatest villain after Batman refuses to acknowledge that. While their relationship is not as complex as the Batman/ Joker conflict in ‘The Dark Knight’, it is still hilarious to watch. 


The animation is unsurprisingly amazing. Like ‘The Lego Movie’, it is very detailed and the lego characters and lego pieces move like it was made in stop motion. When Batman is flying in his Bat-plane, the flames move like actual flames except made out of lego. 

The voice acting is also really good. Will Arnett returns to play Batman after playing him in ‘The Lego Movie’ and he does a great job playing Batman as someone trying too hard to be cool. Michael Cera is pretty funny as Robin, playing someone who is dorky and naive. Zach Galifianakis is surprisingly unrecognizable as the Joker.

There are also a lot of joke about previous incarnations of Batman, especially the 60’s TV show. There is a joke about shark repellent from the Adam West TV show. In one scene, the Joker says that Superman is not a villain which is a reference to when Batman saw Superman as a villain in ‘Batman vs. Superman’. There is even a jab at ‘Suicide Squad’ when Batman says it is stupid to make villains fight other villains. 

The movie does have some flaws. There are times when jokes are thrown at the audience at a rapid pace and most of the jokes are not subtle either. At one moment, there would be a joke about how Batman has many suits and in a second there is a joke about how Robin is barely wearing pants. This is really distracting as it makes it really hard for us to focus on the main plot with a ton of joke being thrown at us. If some of the jokes were a little more subtle then I think the jokes would be less distracting.

I think ‘The Lego Batman Movie’ is a ton of fun. It is a must-see for families and Batman fans alike as it is fun and has a love for the source material. I had a blast and I think everyone will to. 

Grade: A-