Saturday, January 26, 2013

TRAILER&REVIEW:Les Miserables


Like a diabolically potent combination of Lionel Bart and Leni Riefenstahl, the movie version of Les Misérables has arrived, based on the hit stage show adaptation of Victor Hugo's novel set among the deserving poor in 19th-century France, which climaxes with the anti-monarchist Paris uprising of 1832. Even as a non-believer in this kind of "sung-through" musical, I was battered into submission by this mesmeric and sometimes compelling film, featuring a performance of dignity and intelligence from Hugh Jackman, and an unexpectedly vulnerable singing turn from that great, big, grumpy old bear, Russell Crowe. With the final rousing chorus of "Do you hear the people sing?", the revolutionary-patriotic fervour is so bizarrely stirring, you'll feel like marching out of the cinema, wrapped in the tricolour, and travelling to Russia to find Gérard Depardieu and tear him limb from limb.

Just as some celebrities are so successful they come to be known only by their first names, this is known everywhere by its abbreviation: Lay-miz, impossible to say without a twinkle of camp. It's enjoyed staggering global success on stage since 1985. This version, directed byTom Hooper, of The King's Speech fame, has all the singing recorded live on set, with actors listening to a pianist via earpieces, and the orchestral soundtrack added later. The result is a bracing, rough-and-ready immediacy from performers who can and do hold a tune.

Les Misérables tells the story of Valjean (Jackman), a proud and decent man imprisoned for stealing bread to save his sister's family from starving. Once released, he is viciously pursued by police officer Javert (Crowe) for breaking the terms of his parole, but makes a Hardyesque career leap into respectability, becoming a mayor and factory owner. His path crosses that of his poor employee Fantine (Anne Hathaway) whose grownup daughter Cosette (Amanda Seyfried) is to fall fatefully in love with revolutionary firebrand Marius (Eddie Redmayne) just as Paris erupts in violence, and as Valjean must make his final reckoning with Javert.


It conquers its audience with weapons all its own: not passion so much as passionate sincerity, not power so much as overwhelming force. Every line, every note, every scene is belted out with diaphragm-quivering conviction and unbroken, unremitting intensity. The physical strength of this movie is impressive: an awe-inspiring and colossal effort, just like Valjean's as he lifts the flagpole at the beginning of the film. You can almost see the movie's muscles flexing and the veins standing out like whipcords on its forehead. At the end of 158 minutes, you really have experienced something. What exactly, I'm still not sure. But just as the inquisition got Galileo to recant just by showing him the instruments of torture, I felt that Hooper had stepped from the unparted curtains before the feature began, fixed my gaze, pointed at a large wringer he had brought on stage and said: "Whinge all you want. You're going through this."

The most affecting scene comes in his movie's opening act, as Valjean is astonished and moved by the Christ-like charity of the Bishop (Colm Wilkinson) who takes him in, and forgives him for attempting to steal silverware, making him a present of it and protecting him from arrest ("I have saved your soul for God"). Jackman sings a soliloquy directly to camera ("Why did I allow this man to touch my soul and teach me love?"), eyes blazing with a new knowledge. There's no doubt about it, this scene packs a massive punch.

Other moments are less successful. Hathaway's fervent rendition of theSuBo standard I Dreamed a Dream, in extreme close-up, has been much admired, but for me her performance and appearance is a bit Marie Antoinette-ish. Her poverty-stricken character is supposed to have pitifully sold her teeth to a street dentist. Conveniently, this turns out to mean just her back teeth: her dazzlingly white front teeth are untouched.Sacha Baron Cohen and Helena Bonham Carter are great as the dodgy innkeepers M and Mme Thénardier, but the crowd scenes have a thumbs-in-the-waistcoat feel, and when smudgy-faced urchin Gavroche (Daniel Huttlestone) addresses grownups in Cockney as "my dear" then we really are in Jack Wild territory.

The star is Jackman. But Crowe offers the most open, human performance I have seen from him. His singing is so sweetly unselfconscious that there is something paradoxically engaging about his Javert, even when he's being a cruel, unbending law-officer and royalist spy. I'll never love Les Misérables the way its fans love it, and I'm agnostic about Claude-Michel Schönberg's surging score, with its strange, subliminal weepiness. But as big-screen spectacle, this is unique.

by Peter Bradshaw

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

TRAILER&REVIEW:Hansel & Gretel:Witch Hunters







Tommy Wirkola’s Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters is the latest in a growing trend of genre mashups that retrofit familiar fairy tales or historical figures with action-packed supernatural elements. Similar efforts have experienced mixed (and in some cases downright poor) responses from critics and moviegoers but there’s still reason to believe that, under the right set of conditions, a film hybrid that refashions timeless stories with action-horror set pieces could provide a fun viewing experience.
After a nine month delay from its original March 2012 release date, Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters is finally here – starring Jeremy Renner and Gemma Arterton as the titular survivors-turned supernatural bounty hunters. Shot entirely in 3D, does the film make clever use of its tongue-in-cheek setup and deliver a campy but exciting example of genre mashup done right?

Despite aiming for a deeper character story, Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters only succeeds as mindless and overly-bloody entertainment that is about as thin as its fairy tale source material. Moviegoers who were intrigued by the film’s core premise and further enticed by the trailers will find exactly what they were expecting – and little more. Characters and story often take a backseat to action as Wirkola’s film is downright brutal – relying instead on a number of crowd-pleasing (read: bloody) moments to make it memorable. A fair share of moviegoers will likely be surprised by the amount of violence and contrived vulgarity in the movie – much of which comes across as forced-in for the purpose of marketing the experience as “hardcore” action-horror. For some viewers, the blood and gore will be Witch Hunter‘s biggest selling point, for others it’ll further undermine any (flimsy) attempts to be taken seriously.



Famke Janssen as Muriel in ‘Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters’


The core setup for Hansel & Gretel, the Witch Hunters, isn’t all that different from the fairy tale. As children the pair, recently orphaned by their parents, stumble upon a delicious looking gingerbread house in the woods. However, when the witch inside attempts to prey on Hansel and Gretel, the siblings successfully fight back, burn the witch alive, and set the stage for a future work trade. Years later, Hansel and Gretel move from town to town hunting supernatural creatures via gadgets and blunt-force trauma. Following a string of child abductions, the siblings are contracted by the mayor of Augsburg – a job that puts brother and sister in the sights of an especially dangerous coven of witches seeking immortality.
Given that Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters focuses more on blood-soaked action set-pieces rather than its titular heroes, the story is adequate – keeping moviegoers in the moment instead of exploring potentially underwhelming tangents. Still, there are a number of characters, relationships, and core plot points that remain underdeveloped – without worthwhile payoff. Given that the film runs a mere 88 minutes, it’s clear that Witch Hunters has been significantly trimmed down to keep the pace fast-moving – excising any elements that might slow things down. To Wirkola’s credit, this was probably a smart move, given that there’s only so far a filmmaker can stretch the Hansel and Gretel kill witches premise. In fact, attempts to humanize the pair, explore their relationships with other characters, or explain witch mythology, are easily the least successful pieces of the film – paling in comparison to the entertainment provided by requisite witch hunting sequences.
In his effort to present a hardcore fairy tale story, Wirkola has delivered two of the least likable protagonists in recent memory. Hansel and Gretel are cold and expressionless – not to mention disinterested in nearly every single person around them. Despite competent performances from both Renner and Arterton, the portrayal of their brother and sister relationship is a missed opportunity – as it could have been the one area where the two leads would be able to drop the stoic-faced machismo and have some fun. Sadly, in keeping with the focus of the film, there’s nothing for them to talk about – except for hunting witches. As a result, the dynamic between Hansel and Gretel is thin and muddled.



Gemma Arterton and Jeremy Renner in ‘Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters’


A few head-scratching edits by the filmmaker – a sensual shot of Gretel’s naked legs stepping over Hansel in their bedroom or a prolonged scene of stilted staring and hugging – could, as it is depicted onscreen, cause moviegoers to mistake the characters’ relationship for a repressed love affair, instead of healthy (albeit stagy) sibling affection. It’s unlikely that Wirkola was actually implying a forbidden romance between the two but the awkwardly drawn scenes are symptomatic of a larger problem – the characters are so buried underneath fighting, cursing, and bleeding that audiences will have little to no idea how they feel about anyone or anything that happens in the film. They hate witches, which is apparent in a brutal and off-putting torture scene where, after capturing a fleeing spellcaster, Hansel straps on brass knuckles to beat information out of their detainee.
Unfortunately, few of the side characters are given an opportunity to help break the proceedings away from Hansel and Gretel’s preference for violence-over-substance. Local want-to-be witch hunter Ben (Thomas Mann) tries to lighten the mood while Mina (Pihla Viitala), a mysterious woman who was nearly burned at the stake, is meant to add emotional gravity but the witch hunters’ reaction to these well-meaning people is so flat (and in certain cases mean-spirited) that the tone rarely makes a successful shift.
In a cast that also includes Peter Stormare and Rainer Bock, Famke Janssen is the only memorable supporting actor. Janssen is uncompromising in her depiction of evil sorceress Muriel and, despite lines of corny exposition and bland dialogue, she’s the one side player with enjoyable flare and actual personality. Edward, a brutish troll who serves the witches, is a worthwhile addition but many moviegoers will be distracted by the stiff mix of practical effects used to bring the character to life.
Hansel on the hunt in ‘Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters

Nevertheless, amidst a host of missed opportunities, Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters succeeds in its primary goal: gory and hyper-stylized action. Wirkola has crafted a diverse mix of entertaining battle sequences – ribbing on traditional witch mythology with some crafty changes to the formula. In combat, Hansel and Gretel (the characters and the film) both come alive – providing a smart combination of super-powered fisticuffs/spell-casting and slick (modern) twists on colonial-era weaponry. As mentioned, the film manages a brisk pace, one action set piece after another with only minor drama beats in between, so moviegoers who can overlook the predictable story and thin personalities will find plenty of crowd-pleasing moments to punctuate the campy experience.
That said, there’s no reason to see the film in 3D or in IMAX. Few shots make use of the increased depth, which is especially surprising given that Wirkola filmed the movie using 3D cameras. A handful of gory moments are slightly heightened in 3D but the majority of onscreen visuals are pretty flat. Not to mention, there’s a lot of frantic camera work during action scenes – meaning that the overall film could be easier to follow, and subsequently more enjoyable, in 2D.
Anyone looking for an interesting twist on the Hansel & Gretel legend will likely be underwhelmed by the storytelling and characters in Witch Hunters. It’s a bland, and at times downright flawed, narrative with flat leads and predictable twists. Yet, the film succeeds in its fundamental goal – to show the humble fairy tale survivors mercilessly burning and beating witches in an over-the-top action-horror adventure. Basically, Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters is exactly what potential viewers should expect (plus a bit more gore) based on the film’s premise and marketing – whether or not that’s a good thing will be subject to individual taste

Friday, January 4, 2013

One Day


Sometimes I lay
Under the moon
And thank God I'm breathing
Then I pray
Don't take me soon
Cause I'm here for a reason
Sometimes in my tears I drown
But I never let it get me down
So when negativity surrounds
I know some day it'll all turn around
Because
All my live I've been waiting for
I've been praying for
For the people to say
That we dont wanna fight no more
They'll be no more wars
And our children will play
One day [x6]It's not about
Win or lose
Because we all lose
When they feed on the souls of the innocent
Blood drenched pavement
Keep on moving though the waters stay raging
In this maze you can lose your way (your way)
It might drive you crazy but dont let it faze you no way (no way)
Sometimes in my tears I drown
But I never let it get me down
So my negativity surrounds
I know some day it'll all turn around
Because
All my live I've been waiting for
I've been praying for
For the people to say
That we dont wanna fight no more
They'll be no more wars
And our children will play
One day [x6]One day this all will change
Treat people the same
Stop with the violence
Down the the hate
One day we'll all be free
And proud to be
Under the same sun
Singing songs of freedom like
One day [x2]All my live I've been waiting for
I've been praying for
For the people to say
That we don't wanna fight no more
They'll be no more wars
And our children will play
One day [x6]

Daylight



Here I am waiting, I’ll have to leave soon, why am I holdin’ on
We knew this day would come, we knew it all along
How did it come so fast
This is our last night, but it’s late and I’m tryin’ not to sleep
‘Cuz I know, when I wake I will have to slip away

And when the daylight comes I’ll have to go
But, tonight I’m ‘gonna hold you so close
‘Cuz in the daylight, we’ll be on our own
But, tonight I need to hold you so close

Oh whoa, oh whoa, oh whoa
Oh whoa, oh whoa, oh whoa

Here I am starring, at your perfection in my arms; so beautiful.
The sky is getting bright, the stars are burnin’ out.
Somebody slow it down.
This is way too hard, ‘cuz I know when the sun comes up I will leave
This is my last glance that will soon be memories

And when the daylight comes I’ll have to go
But, tonight I’m ‘gonna hold you so close
‘Cuz in the daylight, we’ll be on our own
But, tonight I need to hold you so close

Oh whoa, oh whoa, oh whoa
Oh whoa, oh whoa, oh whoa

I never wanted to stop, because I don’t want to start all over, start all over
I was afraid of the dark, but now it’s all that I want, all that I want, all that I want

And when the daylight comes I’ll have to go
But, tonight I’m ‘gonna hold you so close
‘Cuz in the daylight, we’ll be on our own
But, tonight I need to hold you so close

And when the daylight comes I’ll have to go
But, tonight I’m ‘gonna hold you so close
‘Cuz in the daylight, we’ll be on our own
But, tonight I need to hold you so close

Oh whoa, oh whoa, oh whoa
Oh whoa, oh whoa, oh whoa
Oh whoa, (yeah) oh whoa, (yeah) oh whoa (yeah) (yeah)
Oh whoa, (yeah hey) oh whoa, (yeah hey) oh whoa

Wednesday, December 26, 2012