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Archive for the tag “1987”

Evil Dead II

Review No. 475

“Evil Dead II” – Where cabin fever becomes hemophilia.

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DIRECTED BY SAM RAIMI. WRITTEN BY RAIMI AND SCOTT SPIEGEL. STARRING BRUCE CAMPBELL (ASHLEY J. “ASH” WILLIAMS), SARAH BERRY (ANNIE KNOWBY), DAN HICKS (JAKE), KASSIE DEPAIVA (BOBBY JOE), AND RICHARD DOMEIER (PROFESSOR ED GETLEY). ALSO STARRING TED RAIMI, DENISE BIXLER, JOHN PEAKS, AND LOU HANCOCK. DISTRIBUTED BY ROSEBUD RELEASING ON MARCH 13, 1987. PRODUCED IN ENGLISH BY THE UNITED STATES. RUNS 1 HOUR, 24 MINUTES. CURRENTLY DISTRIBUTED UNRATED; PREVIOUSLY RATED R BY THE MPAA.

EVIL DEAD II WAS WATCHED ON MAY 10, 2013.

“You’re goin’ down. Chainsaw.” –Ash (Bruce Campbell)

You know how it’s going to begin. A man makes the big mistake of bringing his girlfriend to a cabin. He doesn’t know it’s the same cabin that killed his friends when he was in college, because the bridge–the single route there–has been refurbished. When he enters, he finds the Necronomicon, the “Book of the Dead” that unleashes spirits when it its recited. Clearly, he doesn’t want to recite it, but there is an audio recitation already loaded in the cassette player. And we know how it’s going to end. (Well, sort of.)

Evil Dead II preserves 90% of its predecessor’s plot, which, contrary to one’s expectations, is a brilliant idea. It’s difficult to follow through your typical sequel, but this one must have been a Herculean task; beyond the story, there’s no job here that we can call simple. 1981′s The Evil Dead was distributed simultaneously to theaters and VHS; it became a hit, regardless, and lives on as a tremendous “cult classic.” The rave it earned in the early ’80s demanded a sequel, and once that project went into production, the film crew became far larger than that of the original. What’s worse, the project was budgeted at $3.6 million, and it had to be as far from a Hollywood flick as possible. It needed to seem like what it was: a follow up to something that five college students made with less than $500,000.

Consider that it takes more effort to look like you did absolutely nothing, than to look like you’ve created a masterpiece. It’s probable that within a matter of six years, Sam Raimi’s natural writing doesn’t look like a mess of clichés and written ad lib, so he has to make it look like that, without making the clichés obvious. And Bruce Campbell’s acting ability has improved, so it’s impossible to not act. But he can’t look like a good actor either, nor can he look like a god-awful actor. He has to act like someone who doesn’t have a clue how to act; someone who spontaneously looks at the camera, someone who accidentally recites his lines with the wrong facial expressions. And none of this can look intentional. Amazingly enough, none of it did.

Although Evil Dead II is a lot of fun, it tends to restrain itself–something its predecessor never would have dreamed of doing. You can tell that there are several great ideas it just isn’t sure about putting onscreen; it’s increasingly self-aware, as well. But I can excuse it for not being the perfect Halloween movie. It has its moments, and they come numerously. Perhaps the most side-splitting scene occurs after Ash tries to shoot his possessed (and dismembered) hand after it has crawled inside a hole in the wall. The result is a hurricane of blood that looks like paint. And as the red paint runs out, you can almost hear these special effects supervisors yelling, “Get some black paint!” There’s several of these scenes in this sequel and, although they don’t pervade the film, they make it well worth watching (so long as you enjoy the outrageously bizarre, gruesome attitude).

A MINUS

TOMORROW, ON CINEMANIAC REVIEWS…

Tomorrow, on Cinemaniac Reviews… (no, this isn’t a typo)

Broadcast News

Review No. 451

Breaking News: A charming, funny, and well-written (if unoriginal) romantic comedy!


Directed by: James L. Brooks
Written by: James L. Brooks
Jane Craig: Holly Hunter
Tom Grunick: William Hurt
Aaron Altman: Albert Brooks
Also Starring: Lois Chiles, Christian Clemenson, Joan Cusack, Peter Hackes, Robert Prosky

Distributed by 20th Century Fox on December 16, 1987. Produced in English by the United States. Runs 133 mins. Rated R by the MPAA–mature themes, sexual situations, infrequent language.

Broadcast News was watched on March 9, 2013.

“I’ll meet you at the place near the thing where we went that time.” –Aaron Altman (Albert Brooks)

I’m a fan of James L. Brooks’s work. Part of it is because he seems to know his cast, but if I were to pinpoint one key reason, it’d be that the man can actually write and direct a romantic comedy–a candid, authentically human romantic comedy.

In the case of Broadcast News, we’re given that most clearly. The film seems like “chick flick” fare: a TV producer working for the local news is, essentially, torn between two guys, one with brains and one with beauty. One who calls the plot “new” or “surprising” has successfully managed to avoid everything featuring Julia Roberts, Jennifer Aniston, or Katherine Heigl in a leading role.

That’s as close as I can possibly venture to comparing Broadcast News to those films without implicitly insulting it. The screenplay is marvelously written. It doesn’t want to be consistently and bombastically hysterical, something for which I’ve always honored Brooks. He always seems to flawlessly levee his humor for the sake of an equally sincere drama.

And so we care deeply about Holly Hunter’s lead, feeling sympathy for her, in her own pity. She’s constantly neglected by lesser men who see her as a jewel without an inner brain. We love her like we loved Jack Nicholson in As Good As It Gets, or Debra Winger in Terms of Endearment.

I enjoyed Broadcast News. This is a clever spin on formula, topped off by a strong ending and an excellent cast.* This isn’t a movie for the ages. It’s memorable, charming, and funny, but what takes Ms. Hunter the entire movie could take another woman two to seven minutes in another movie. And the thin plot does give the movie a bit of drag every now and then, but for the most part, it helps maintain a free, lifelike, amusing mood.

*I’d like to add that Jack Nicholson, in his minimal screen time, delivers as much as Joan Cusack, in the lead, but you know very well that I’m biased. For whatever reason, though, his performance went without billing; it’s very much noticeable, and there’s even a joke on his iconic smile.

B

TOMORROW, ON CINEMANIAC REVIEWS…

Almost Famous

The Untouchables

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Bottom Line: Memorable, at best.

Directed by: Brian De Palma
Eliot Ness: Kevin Costner
Jim Malone: Sean Connery
Agent Oscar Wallace: Charles Martin Smith
Agent George Stone: Andy Garcia
Al Capone: Robert De Niro
Frank Nitti: Bill Drago

“I am like any other man. All I do is supply a demand.” –Al Capone

I’m a sucker for the crime genre. Especially when presented more as a drama than a thriller, and placed in the hands of a prestigious director, don’t expect me not to be along for the ride. Proof: Francis Ford Coppola’s The Godfather and Martin Scorsese’s GoodFellas. I wouldn’t say I’d remember The Untouchables as Brian De Palma’s film. Sure, he’s the director of several notable titles. Yes, this one’s well-made. I say this for the same reason I wouldn’t remember Mission: Impossible as his film (it is): it’s good but not quite a classic for which he deserves praise.

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Raising Arizona

Bottom Line: Turn to the left. Turn to the right. Laugh for me, will ya?

Directed by: Joel Coen
Starring: Frances McDormand, Holly Hunter, John Goodman, Nicolas Cage, Sam McMurray, T.J. Kuhn Jr., Trey Wilson, William Forsythe

In the cinelestial realm of storytelling, brothers Joel and Ethan Coen are geniuses. The characters they have created absolutely subvert the standards of classical writing, with characters we simply cannot adhere to without viewing several of their stories with full concentration. Whereas typical scribes generally contrive an equal balance between characters we root for and characters we despise, Coenistic characters bear an inexplicable divide between those awkward enough to love, and those we detest to the very point of admiration. These are the kinds of characters that would visit nursing homes and venture door-to-door asking, “Hi, can I have your stuff?”; the kinds of characters who would shout the word “Touché!” at the most unexpected moments, just because it rings to them as the word of all words. There are certainly people on this earth similar to these characters, but if it weren’t for the Coens, the cinematic world would have led us to believe otherwise.

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Wall Street

Bottom Line: An engaging, well-made drama.

“Greed, for lack of a better word, is good.” –Michael Douglas as Gordon Gekko

Directed by: Oliver Stone
Starring: Charlie Sheen, Chuck Pfeifer, Franklin Cover, Hal Holbrook, James Karen, John C. McGinley, Leslie Lyles, Martin Sheen, Michael Douglas, Tamara Tunie

For at least eight months, I’ve been severely on the fence as far as my thoughts of director Oliver Stone.  When I watched his extended, three-and-a-half-hour cut of 1991′s JFK early last year, I was stunned.  I’ve seen dozens of great films since then, but that picture still remains in the higher portion of my top 100.  I finally got around to revisiting the director this past December with another presidential study, W.  Most of the reviews I read for that one were fairly middling, but I personally found it to be insulting and dare I say a bit difficult to sit through.  I’ve finally given in to watching another Oliver Stone film after seeing two polar opposites in quality.  Wall Street changed my mind about the director.  Not completely, especially after reading poor reception to his most recent, Tarantino-esque affair Savages, but the film is quite possibly one of the most commendable dramas of the 1980s.

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Ferris Bueller’s Day Off

It was sometime within the last two months that I decided I should revisit some of my old favorites and write up about them.  Yet with so many of those films lacking reviews on this blog, I didn’t know where to start.  I’d like to thank an anonymous fan who recently emailed me and encouraged me to watch and review Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, her favorite film.  What perfect timing, since I was stuck on what film to watch, and this, in fact, is a film I love to the very core!  Plus, as I own it on DVD, I had direct access to it.  Now, friends, fans, followers, and everyone in between…please twist and shout with a review of Ferris Bueller’s Day Off!

Bottom Line: Not terribly realistic, but still hysterical and relevant more than two and a half decades later.

“You’re not dying, you just can’t think of anything good to do.” –Matthew Broderick as Ferris Bueller

Directed by: John Hughes
Starring: Alan Ruck, Ben Stein, Charlie Sheen, Cindy Pickett, Edie McClurg, Jeffrey Jones, Jennifer Grey, Lyman Ward, Matthew Broderick, Mia Sara

Don’t we wish we could all be Ferris Bueller?  It doesn’t matter if we’re adult or teen (though a lot of it works well for the latter demographic), whether at school or work, we all need a “day off” of some sorts.  I put that phrase in quotation marks because when Ferris first employs it in the beginning of the film, the only way anyone could ever be able to know where he is about to take his day is by having seen this timeless film before.  A bored Chicago teenager, Ferris (Matthew Broderick) fakes an illness, skips school, and hits the city with his equally fun-loving girlfriend Sloane Peterson (Mia Sara) and his worrisome best friend Cameron Frye (Alan Ruck).  He even gets his own charity–”Save Ferris”, one of the most prominent yet most unforgettable jokes the film has to offer–for credibility’s sake.  Unbeknownst to him, his irate principal Ed Rooney (Jeffrey Jones) is on the hunt for him, as he has missed nine days during the semester.

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Planes, Trains & Automobiles

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Bottom Line: Could you say a VERY odd couple?

Directed by: John Hughes
Starring: John Candy, Laila Robins, Steve Martin

“Six bucks and my right nut says we’re not landing in Chicago.” –John Candy as Del Griffith

Hectic (and that’s absolutely undeniable!) road comedy about Neal Page (Steve Martin), a Chicago businessman on a New York work trip just before Thanksgiving. He boards a plane to get home in time for a festive dinner with his family; on that flight he happens to meet Del Griffith (John Candy), an obnoxious slob of a shower curtain ring salesman who doesn’t seem to have an “off” button. After landing in Wichita, Kansas due to intense weather, Neal struggles to get home–with Del travelling alongside him.

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Au revoir les enfants

Bottom Line: If Schindler’s List were set in a boarding school, Au revoir les enfants would be the result.

Directed by: Louis Malle
Starring: Francine Racette, Gaspard Manesse, Raphael Fejto

Reverent Holocaust drama encapsulates the story of Julien Quentin (Gaspard Manesse), a student who arrives at a Catholic boarding school during World War II. The school has always been safe from any threat of war, until Jean Bonnet (Raphael Fejtö) arrives as a student. Julien befriends Jean upon learning that he is Jewish and he has been sent to boarding school to keep safe from Nazis, and swears not to tell anyone of it. Upon the arrival of a Nazi investigation, both become afraid that Jean’s secret will be discovered.

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