Saturday, 21 October 2017

Two Paragraph Review - Baby Driver (2017)

Copyright: Sony Pictures
This movie is all about the beats. Each shot and frame are designed to support the songs and their beat track, which is in itself an impressive feat. At the same time, the simple story of a reluctant heist driver caught below the paw of a big gangster is told well, adding another layer of deliciousness to this excellent cinematic dish. This way, Baby Driver isn�t so much about fast cars or cars of any kind, but about the way we keep our lives in the rhythm of it all.

The only difference is that the director chose to tell this in  the most extreme manner, glazing music and strong beats over everything, even eye movements and windshield cleaner swipes. This makes is one of the most intense movies that uses its score as the propagator of the plot ever since Whiplash came out. It also shares other things with it, making Baby Driver into an almost sequel-like work, but which confidently stands on its own feet. To put it plainly in musical terms, it has all the right grooves.

Tuesday, 17 October 2017

Indie Showcase: Pain & Music (2016)

Over the last few years or even the previous two decades, there have been some very solid cinematic works of art about the world of African-American music scene. Currently, Empire is a TV show that found mainstream success with its formula, while the slightly less-known Atlanta made by the brilliant Donald Glover is leagues in front of it when it comes to its simplicity and humor.

In the movie domain, Hustle & Flow made a few ripples over a decade ago but has practically disappeared since. Now, a new indie movie desires to continue on this path. It is called Pain & Music and it's currently available on Amazon Prime. Here's its official description:

Nevaeh Falls in love with Gunz a notorious stick-up kid from Virginia who promises to make her dreams come true at making it big in the music industry. A hood classic sure to leave you at the edge of your seat, full of twists & turns. Drugs, sex, murder, & music. Based on true events. A gangsta love story from a female perspective.

The description is honest and brutal just as much as the film aims to be, which its trailer shows off perfectly. The movie, just like its story, is often rough in its depiction of its character, much in the same way life itself treated them. While the glitz and the glamour of making it big on the music scene as an African-American seem to be a dream come true, the road to that dream is anything but dreamlike.

With an unapologetic approach to this cruel side of the show business, Pain & Music, which starts the multi-talented Shafone Collier is something you will definitely enjoy if you love the always-vibrant US "hood" genre.

Sunday, 24 September 2017

Short Film Review: Loyalty or Betrayal (2017)

A strong film can be made out of a huge range of elements which are set in an even bigger number of possible relations. This is why there is no definite recipe that makes a perfect film and also the same reasons why so many great yet wildly different movies exist. Still, most excellent works of art, including cinematography, come with a single distinctive advantage that either allowed them to be great or eventually made them that way. This element is called simplicity.

With a healthy degree of simplicity, any movie project stands a chance to become something extraordinary. Jonathan Vargas is a young filmmaker who has not created a masterpiece with his latest short film Loyalty or Betrayal, but has made a simple and incredibly effective work of art. It has its flaws, but it covers all of its bases in a wonderful manner, making it a dream come true for any jury on a short indie film festival.

Firstly, it showcases the director�s knowledge of cinematography to greatly expand on the things this production managed to acquire, which is aside from the actors, not much. But, in this film�s lens, ordinary rooms, garages, and backyards are transferred into places of immense suffering and soul-tearing decisions. The same locations faithful follow the simple-as-it-gets plot: a young criminal figure is tasked with taking out his own father after his betrayal of a crime organization is revealed.

The younger version of Vargas, who already made very ambitious projects like Gaby�s Revenge and Our Final Days Together, would most likely start building a more elaborate narrative from there. But instead, the more experienced Vargas left it with this simple premise which is this way made even more impacting.

Just like with the plot, Vargas works wisely with his actors. There is a whole universe in the not-speaking main character, but the director�s skills are best shown in his support cast, mainly Richard Sosa as the Vincent, the father and Kenneth Ruiz as another member of the crime organization. Both of them are excellent when it comes to the setup of the story and its girth � in fact, it could be said that both actually tell the story of the main character instead of him.

As the plot unravels in a manner that is not fully chronological, the viewers are left to wait until the end not just to see what happens, but to experience closure. In this act, the Loyalty or Betrayal shows itself as an excellent crime thriller that is condensed into 13 minutes and still manages to tell all that needs to be told. Vargas made with the film his best work so far and I have no doubts about this whatsoever.

Starting with simplicity and enforcing it with elegance and sharp storytelling, he created a fine short film, worthy of things like the early works of Steven Soderbergh. Technically, there is still room for improvement, but in its essence, Loyalty or Betrayal has no flaws as a narratively-focused work of art.

I�ll be bold enough to foretell a bright future for this work when it comes to indie film festivals. Also, it is definitely the thing that Vargas wants backing him up as an artist as he prepares for the next logical, but very demanding step � his first feature film.

Saturday, 23 September 2017

Indie Showcase: Beer & Seed

The history of contemporary film shows that one of the most grateful domains for indie releases is the genre of comedy. From Kevin Smith�s Clerks to Summer of Blood and Safety not Guaranteed, all of these great movies managed to get so much out of very little. Beer & Seed is a film that utilizes the same approach and goes for that dark comedy space in an otherwise familiar and friendly environment.

The official description of the film pitches it this way:

What happens when you follow a navy veteran who goes back to college? A world full of fat girl sex, drugs, gambling, violence. In a creepy comical look, Bill goes through the issues of working and trying to pass through college. In this well crafted Indy film, Bill Cox takes you on a journey where crazy is the reality at Central College in Beer & Seed, a classic "Stoner Film".

The film drops the unlikely character into a brand new world where the rules and social structure is very different. However, the protagonist is a person who has different ideas about all of that, mainly because of his military background. Essentially, it looks like the Beer & Seed rides on the tradition of the mayhem on college films like the cult Animal House, but adapts itself to the modern day and age. Here�s a trailer for it, which gives a sense of where the film will take its audience:



As the trailer shows, there is plenty of weirdness and sharp (no pun intended) humor in the film. For an indie release, these are the best choices for an engaging plot, while at the same time, Beer & Seed simply looks like a fun movie. Check out more about the film on Amazon and spread the word about it if you like it.



Thursday, 31 August 2017

Two Paragraph Review: Annabelle: Creation (2017)

Copyright: Warner Bros. Pictures
Dolls are creepy and Annabelle: Creation is weirdly a film about a creepy doll that (very commendably) doesn�t use the same object too much. This was a great move by its director, who fought off the impulse to make the doll front and center, which would do the story no favors. Instead, the film switches its focus between the girls of a Christian orphanage who get to travel to the middle of nowhere with their guardian nun and start living in the home of a good Samaritan dollmaker and his wife.

As the horror action begins to unravel, the director follows a single girl on her quest of moving from a victim to the main monster, switching perspectives smoothly and effortlessly. At the same time, frights are abundant and striking, but they also lead to a somewhat ineffective finish. While the ending and the last third are not bad, they do feel like a missed opportunity to score some bigger and more dramatic horror points. In this regard, Annabelle: Creation works much like its previous part, ending up a decent modern horror but still feeling very forgettable.

Monday, 14 August 2017

Two Paragraph Review: War for the Planet of the Apes (2017)

Copyright: 20th Century Fox
Like its predecessor, Dawn of the Planet of the Apes, this film works well inside of its own micro-genre - ape-based war drama (not counting humans in this ape category here). As a direct continuation of the second part in the series, War of the Planet of the Apes uses the expectations of the audience to its advantage, always staying a step ahead of them when it comes to the way the plot unravels. This time around, like Koba some years before, Caesar is also on the war footing, but this time his target is a deranged human colonel bent on their destruction, along with other maniacal plans.

The action in the film is impressive, but what I found most interesting is the use of close-up shots of both ape and human character and their emotional expressions. I think this was used for the purpose of blurring lines between the two species, forcing the audience to become emphatic to both in one way or another. While this prolonged exposition definitely added to the films somewhat too long run-time of almost two and a half hours, it completed its purpose perfectly. Because of this, War of the Planet of the Apes is first and foremost a touching film and this is an impressive feat for the entire cast and crew.

movie link

Two Paragraph Review: Sicario: Day of the Soldado (2018)

Many have wondered, not without reason, why did the Denis Villeneuve�s original film need a sequel. In truth, it didn�t, but it would be ha...