Tuesday 26 November 2013

The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring (2001) - #7

Empire top 301: #7
IMDb top 250: #12

Rating 10/10

Director: Peter Jackson
Writers: Peter Jackson, Fran Walsh & Philippa Boyens
Starring: Elijah Wood, Ian McKellan, Sean Bean, Christopher Lee, Cate Blanchett, Liv Tyler, Orlando Bloom, Andy Serkis, Ian Holm, Hugo WeavingViggo Mortensen, Billy Boyd, Dominic MonaghanSean Astin & John Rhys-Davies

"One Ring to Rule Them All. One Ring to Find Them. One Ring to Bring Them All and In The Darkness Bind Them."

Set in Middle-Earth, Fellowship is the first in a three part story about the Dark Lord Sauron, who is seeking the One Ring. 19 magical rings were created and given to the Elves, Dwarves and Humans however, another more powerful ring was created the One Ring. This ring was forged out of all of Sauron's evil and malice and allowed him to control the other rings and conquer Middle-Earth. During a battle Prince Isilidur cuts the ring from Sauron's hand and destroys his human form. The ring passes through many carriers over the next 3,000+ years but Sauron is bound to the ring and the ring to he and as he grows stronger the Ring wants to return to it's master. The ring falls to Hobbit Frodo (Elijah Wood) who volunteers to take the Ring to Mount Doom in Mordor to throw it back into the fires where it was forged to destroy it. Eight companions accompany Frodo on his Journey to Mordor; Wizard Gandalf (McKellen), Hobbits Sam (Astin), Merry (Monaghan) & Pippin (Boyd), Elf Legolas (Bloom), Dwarf Gimli (Rhys-Davies) & Men Aragorn (Mortensen) & Boromir (Bean) - The Fellowship of the Ring. 



I'll start by saying I absolutely love The Lord Of The Rings trilogy and of the three Fellowship might just be my favourite. I've never read the books but from online comments from die hard fans Peter Jackson seems to have made a pretty faithful adaptation. When I first saw this movie at the cinema in 2001 I came out completely amazed and couldn't wait for the 2nd part. 12 years later I watched it and felt the exact same way. 

There are so many amazing things about this movie. The New Zealand landscape provides an absolutely beautiful backdrop as Middle-Earth, the cinematography is just awe-inspiring and rightly so won an Oscar. The make-up is fantastic from the Orcs to the ageing of characters, the costumes and sets are beautifully constructed and look great on screen, everything from The Shire to Gandalf and Saruman's staffs. The special effects are superb and still look great today, the battle scene in the Dwarf City of Moria with the goblins and Balrog are still impressive and exciting. 



Each and everyone of the cast are exceptional. Elijah Wood and Sean Astin are great as friends Frodo and Sam and although they can come across as a bit wet and whiny, they're really sweet and you really care for them and hope that they survive. Ian McKellen's Gandalf is one of the best things about this movie and the subsequent Middle-Earth movies, he's strong and wise but funny and caring and McKellen is perfect. Whilst only in the movie for a little while both Cate Blanchett and Liv Tyler deliver impressive performances that you remember, suppose a little easy when they're the only two speaking females in the cast, but really they are excellent. 

After seeing the movie quite a lot there are some bits that kind of annoy me now, like Merry and Pippin constantly causing problems and bringing dangerous attention to the group. If the fate of Middle-Earth was at stake they'd have been bumped off straight away. But this is just a small thing and doesn't take away my enjoyment of the film. 



At just a few minutes shy of 3 hours it is a bit of a stretch but it's filled with so much action, great acting and wonderful scenery those hours just fly by. The Lord Of The Rings series also has one of my favourite scores of all time. It's just brilliant. I'm a huge fan of fantasy movies so it was probably always a dead cert that I'd love this.

Honestly, one of the best movies ever!! 



Thursday 21 November 2013

The Crow (1994) - #241

Empire top 301: #241
IMDb top 250: -

Rating 5/10

Director: Alex Proyas
Writers: David J. Schow & John Shirley
Starring: Brandon Lee, Ernie Hudson, Michael Wincott, Anna Levine & David Patrick Kelly

"If the people we love are stolen from us, the way to have them live on is to never stop loving them. Buildings burn, people die, but real love is forever."

Eric Draven (Brandon Lee) returns home on Devil's night, to find his fiancĂ©e Shelly being brutally attacked by a group of local thugs. He is attacked and thrown out of a window to his death whilst Shelly is raped and also murdered. One year later Eric rises from his grave as an undead avenger intent on seeking revenge for his and Shelly's death. 



I didn't hate The Crow but I never really liked it either, it didn't bore me but it never really excited me either. I'm not really sure whether it was the cringey dialogue, all over the place nature of the film or the bad over the top acting that made me indifferent to the movie.

The script is just so corny, I was cringing for the actors having to deliver such awful lines. Whether this had an effect on their performances or not I don't know but it was all just too silly, the whole "fire it up, fire it up" thing was just ridiculous and didn't make the thugs seem at all threatening, if it wasn't for the knives and guns they were carrying you'd have just thought they were a bunch of simpletons! David Patrick Kelly, who I love in The Warriors, is just awful here as are the rest of his cronies! 

Michael Wincott is the absolute worst though, his performance is so over the top, but not even in a "Showgirls" type of way or one that befits the comic, it's just so cartoony and ridiculous. The young girl Sarah was also a major annoyance for me. I can't abide precocious children on screen or in real life and she has got to be one of the worst. Throughout I just wanted her to be run over by a garbage truck whilst she was skateboarding on the roads! 


   
Brandon Lee is amazing as Eric and I really love the character of The Crow and what he did. In a better movie, with much better dialogue and direction it would have been perfect, it's like he's giving a 10/10 performance in a 5/10 movie. I'd never seen the movie before but had known the story of Brandon's unfortunate death and I found myself watching the film waiting for that particular scene to come up and wandering how much had to be changed and re-shot and perhaps this affected my enjoyment of the movie. 

I found a lot the scenes quite dark, not in a moody sense, but in a "it's so dark I can't see a thing" kind of way and this annoyed me somewhat. It's definitely a movie I'd watch again at some point later in my life but I wouldn't rush to watch again just yet.



Monday 18 November 2013

Unforgiven (1992) - #150

Empire top 301: #150
IMDb top 250: #101

Rating 9/10

Director: Clint Eastwood
Writers: David Webb Peoples
Starring: Clint Eastwood, Morgan Freeman, Gene Hackman, Richard HarrisSaul Rubinek, Frances Fisher & Jaimz Woolvett

"You'd be William Munny out of Missouri. Killer of women and children."

Set in 1880 in Big Whiskey Wyoming, Clint Eastwood plays ageing killer William Munny an Old West gunslinger who comes out of retirement for one last job to kill two men who cut up a prostitute. Along with his old partner Ned Logan (Freeman) and a young man named the Schofield Kid they hunt down the two men accused with a view to killing them and getting the $1000 reward. Meanwhile, back in Big Whiskey the town Sheriff Little Bill requests all visitors submit their firearms to the sheriffs office on arrival and hopes to discourage any would-be-killers of entering his town to collect the reward. 


  
I really love Westerns and this is one of my favourites. So beautifully written by David Webb Peoples and it features some really exceptional performances from all involved. Clint does an amazing job of both directing and performing in the movie. He couldn't have made a more fitting tribute for Western great Sergio Leone.

Unforgiven is pretty brutal and tells the story of a man saved from his life of wickedness by his wife having to return to it for the sake of feeding his children. It shows the real dark side of the Wild West with unsavoury characters around every corner and plenty of violence throughout the story. 



Gene Hackman gives an Academy Award winning performance as Little Bill and whilst his actions in the film could be deemed as evil and excessive his intentions appear to be good. He has some great scenes with Richard Harris and Saul Rubinek and thoroughly deserved the Oscar for this. Morgan Freeman and Richard Harris are both great, as they always are but I want to mention Jaimz Woolvett as the Schofield Kid and Frances Fisher as Strawberry Alice as I think they give absolutely outstanding performances. I love their characters and think they're both played and written superbly. 

Unforgiven is a classic and definitely one of the best Westerns ever, it's so well made and has really stood the test of time. One to watch! 





Die Hard (1988) - #39

Empire top 301: #38
IMDb top 250: #104

Rating 9/10

Director: John McTiernan
Writers: Jeb Stuart & Steven E. de Souza
Starring: Bruce Willis, Alan Rickman, Paul Gleason, Reginald VelJohnson & Bonnie Bedelia

"Yippee-ki-yay, motherfucker"

Bruce Willis is John McClane an NYC cop visiting his family for Christmas in Los Angeles. He arrives at the Nakatomi Plaza building to reconcile with his estranged wife Holly (Bonnie Bedelia) who is at the company's christmas party. The party is disrupted by Hans Gruber (Alan Rickman) and his group of armed men intent on stealing $640million in bearer bonds held in the vault. McClane manages to escape capture from Hans and his men and sets about stopping the terrorists. 




Die Hard is quite simply a brilliant action film and the prototype for many movies that followed which featured a lone hero taking on a number of terrorists in a confined space. It's the movie that made Bruce Willis a star and gave the world the now iconic line "Yippee-ki-yay, motherfucker". The film is full of great dialogue and has so many twists and turns to keep you entertained. 

The character of John McClane has become a bit of a caricature now, diluted after 5 movies, 2 of which are pretty bad, IMO, but in Die Hard the character is brilliant. He's not some kick fighting, muscle bound, superhero killer he's an everyman with family problems who just so happens to be a cop. He's not a genius who manages to thwart the terrorists at every turn most of the time it's sheer luck, and/or craziness that gets him out of situations. Willis is great in the role delivering his comic lines with just the right amount of sarcasm and at this age he made for the perfect action hero. 



Rickman makes for a good villain, however the accent is a bit all over the place at times, part German part English part American but this is just a small thing. No complaints with the rest of the cast they all do a pretty good job. 

The action scenes are brilliantly executed with some epic explosions and shoot outs and having it set in a sealed off building with no escape just adds to the tension. After viewing all the other Die Hard movies it is easy to forget how awesome this one is but I assure you it is definitely worth its place on both Empire and IMDb greatest lists and the 9 out of 10 I have scored. 



Friday 15 November 2013

The Lion King (1994) - #66


Empire top 301: #66
IMDb top 250: #75

Rating 9/10

Director: Roger Allers & Rob Minkoff

"It means no worries for the rest of your days, it's our problem free philosophy. Hakuna Matata!"

The Lion king tells the story of Simba, the future King of the Pride Lands of Africa and his evil uncle Scar who is resentful of Simba as he replaces him as heir to the throne. Tricked by Scar into thinking he's killed his father, Simba leaves Pride Rock guilt ridden abandoning his responsibilities as King, leaving Scar to rule. 


I was 10 when The Lion King first came out. I remember seeing it at the cinema, getting very emotional when Mufasa died, being on the edge of my seat during the stampede and dancing along to the infectious soundtrack. I played the movie to death when we finally owned it on VHS. Nearly 20 years later I still adore this movie. It's a Disney classic.

Like so many Disney classics it's greatness lies in two things; the characters and the songs. It's songs written by Elton John and Tim Rice are so good and always have me singing along; from I Just Can't Wait To Be King & Circle of Life to the two stand outs for me Hakuna Matata and the Academy Award winning Can You Feel The Love Tonight. 


The Lion King boasts a superb all-star ensemble voice cast, led by the delicious tones of Mr Darth Vader himself James Earl Jones. The perfect choice for the majestic and powerful Mufasa. All the voices lent to The Lion King fit their characters perfectly from Rowan Atkinsons Zazu to Whoopi Goldbergs hyena Shenzi, but the real standout is Jeremy Irons as Scar, so charming and persuasive but with a real evil streak running through it. 

Scar is another perfect Disney villian, brilliantly voiced and written. It's really the supporting characters who steal the whole show; like Scar, and Timon and Pumba. They get the best lines and the best songs. The animation is very of it's time but it works, it's vintage yet classic Disney. 


The Lion King is a brilliant film, for the whole family and for me it's up there with The Little Mermaid, Aladdin and Beaty and The Beast as one of Disney's all time greats.