Sunday, June 7, 2020

Gone With The Wind (1939)

Based on the best selling 1936 novel by Margaret Mitchell, this film adaptation is nothing short of an American cinema classic. Since its release in 1939, it has remained one of and if not the greatest film ever. It also just happens to be the highest-grossing film of all-time with inflation. This Civil War epic is a perfect picture of the tumultuous time period and is crafted utterly elegantly. With it being one of the longest films ever made, it packs in a ton. Despite its controversial reception from today's modern era of film audiences, it still is an iconic film unlike anything in the history of cinema. It is a timeless cinematic gem. 

Director Victor Fleming & Producer David O. Selznick's masterpiece of cinema is a true treasure of the cinematic arts. This film paints the biggest picture of the "Civil War" and its utter beauty is a sight to behold. The film is massively crafted. With its stunning sets and scenery, this film takes viewers into the era of the "Civil War" in such grace and utter flawlessness. 

What makes this film brilliant is the story itself, but also the incredible cast. Leads Clark Gable & Vivien Leigh are utterly fantastic in this film. Their chemistry is perhaps the greatest of any film duo to date. This cast broke lots of barriers too. Costarring as "Mammy", a black house servant, is Hattie McDaniel (who later won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for the role, and the first black actor to win an Oscar.) Leslie Howard & Olivia de Havilland also star in the film. This cast is remarkable in every sense of the word. It's clear that this film set the standard for cast ensembles because this cast is amazing. 

Composer Max Steiner's legendary score is just as iconic today, as it was 80 years ago with the film's original release. His theme for the film is an instant classic, everyone who hears the theme they know exactly where it's from. With a beautiful film to go along with it, this score is beyond beautiful. 

Given that the film is based in the "Civil War" era, it is not a real story. Regardless, this film is an utter masterpiece. Times have changed. Audiences decades later may feel sour about the film, but I highly beg to differ that this film is offensive or controversial nowadays. 

It has been decades since the film was first released, and it has even been rereleased throughout the years as well. With how groundbreaking and remarkable this film is, I feel in awe every time I watch it. The legacy of this film has made an enormous impact on cinema, and I have zero doubt in my mind that this film's legacy and historical representation will not fade anytime soon. 


Gone with the Wind (1939) - IMDb

Poster courtesy of MGM Studios


Rate: A+ 

Director: Victor Fleming 

Starring: Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh, Hattie McDaniel, Leslie Howard, and Olivia de Havilland 

MPAA Rating: G 

Runtime: 4 Hours 

Synopsis:
Epic Civil War drama focuses on the life of petulant southern belle Scarlett O'Hara (Vivien Leigh). Starting with her idyllic on a sprawling plantation, the film traces her survival through the tragic history of the South during the Civil War and Reconstruction, and her tangled love affairs with Ashley Wilkes (Leslie Howard) and Rhett Butler (Clark Gable).




Thursday, June 4, 2020

Citizen Kane (1941)

It has been considered the greatest film of all time by film critics ever since its release in 1941. I quite frankly have to agree with them. It's intricate and complex narrative is one of the most entertaining of all time. The Orson Welles classic is a truly American film. It's a film that must be seen by everyone whether you live the "American Dream" or not, this film is beyond imaginative and renews a human spirit in us that even the most successful of people among us have their demons. 

It embodies the "American Dream" in such a way that it is as authentic then as it remains the same almost 80 years later. I have no doubt that this tale of the "American Dream" will remain that way for decades to come. Welles's creation is an extraordinary tale of the rise and fall of what the "American Dream" can be. 

Iconic actor and director Orson Welles's first film is one of the most unique of all time. His vision of intricacy and bewilderment is pulled off very elegantly and savvily. The direction is unique and is one of the most underappreciated ever. The narrative is as complex and unique as its direction is. What the film manages to do is put audiences on edge and keep them wondering throughout the whole film. This film remains an underappreciated cinematic gem that audiences must watch. 

Not only did Welles direct and write the film, but he is also the star of the iconic motion picture. His iconic role as the newspaper tycoon. It's one of the single greatest performances by an actor in any film. He is a brute force onscreen and delivers an extraordinary performance as the successful yet embattled Charles Foster Kane. His performance is memorable, to say the least, and it shows just how impactful the film is overall. 

Iconic film composer Bernard Herrmann's score is as iconic as the film itself. Herrmann's score has just as much elegance as the film itself. It remains just as iconic after so many years just like the film overall.   
 
The legacy of this film is ever-present. The iconic film has one of the cinemas most meaningful stories. It is a story of failure and success and should be seen by everyone. This film is more relevant than ever before with its allegorical presence. With masterful storytelling, bombastic performances, and a crushingly engrossing narrative, this film is an iconic film in every sense of the word.


Poster Courtesy of RKO Pictures 


Rate: A+ 

Director: Orson Welles 

Starring: Orson Welles, Dorothy Comingore, Joseph Cotten 

MPAA Rating: PG 

Runtime: 1 Hour & 45 Minutes 

Synopsis: 
When a reporter is assigned to decipher newspaper magnate Charles Foster Kane's (Orson Welles) dying words, his investigation gradually reveals the fascinating portrait of a complex man who rose from obscurity to staggering heights. Though Kane's friend and colleague Jedediah Leland (Joseph Cotten), and his mistress, Susan Alexander (Dorothy Comingore), shed fragments of light on Kane's life, the reporter fears he may never penetrate the mystery of the elusive man's final word, "Rosebud."

Friday, May 29, 2020

Uncut Gems (2019)

It's one of the most talked-about films of the past year. This drama starring Adam Sandler is beyond bizarre and strange, yet it somehow finds its way to entertain me. It's bizarre in so many ways that it somehow finds a way to entertain. It has something that Adam Sandler's past films have not had: depth. It's an intriguing film, to say the least, and I commend the Safdie brothers' direction and their writing talents, because, though the film is strange, it is a thoroughly entertaining film.  

New faces Safdie Brothers direct this thrilling drama. This is the single most odd film I've ever seen. They are able to, despite its very strange and bizarre narrative, craft a thrilling film that entertains from start to finish. The duo writes with a crisp rawness of a burst of authority with excessive profane language, it is able to emphasize the emotional drama of the film overall. 

This film is perhaps usual funnyman Adam Sandler's most poignant role to date. His role as a tough and boisterous addicted gambler & jewelry store owner is one hell of a character. He packs no punches as this tough New York-based businessman. His performance is riveting and highly compelling, all thanks to the craft that the Safdie Brothers have made here. 

Scoring the drama is Daniel Lopatin. His score is of electric and upbeat characteristics which help speed up the drama of the film overall. It helps the film be as thrilling as it is with this score. It's as fast-paced and exuberant as the film itself. 

Some films aren't just to my liking. This film is however entertaining, it's just very strange and its approach is very bombastic and flashy. That being said, I do think its a good movie, just not a great film that requires a second viewing. With the film seemingly all over the place, it just doesn't seem like a film many would be interested in watching. 

It's one of the strangest most bizarre films I've ever seen. Adam Sandler's performance is nothing short of dramatic yet somehow, this film is just not as great as it claims to be. Audiences will not go into this film with the expectation to laugh but rather indulge in the theatrics of Sandler's dramatic role in a slightly overwhelmingly odd and bizarre film that may not win over many people. 

Poster Courtesy of A24 Pictures 

Rate: C 

Starring: Adam Sandler, Kevin Garnett and  Idina Menzel 

Directors: Josh and Benny Safdie 

MPAA Rating: R  (for pervasive strong language, violence, some sexual content and brief drug use)

Runtime: 2 Hours & 15 Minutes 

Synopsis: From acclaimed filmmakers Josh and Benny Safdie comes an electrifying crime thriller about Howard Ratner (Adam Sandler), a charismatic New York City jeweler always on the lookout for the next big score. When he makes a series of high-stakes bets that could lead to the windfall of a lifetime, Howard must perform a precarious high-wire act, balancing business, family, and encroaching adversaries on all sides, in his relentless pursuit of the ultimate win.

Monday, May 25, 2020

Doctor Sleep (2019)

It is the sequel to one of cinema's most thrillingly suspenseful films of all time. The iconic Stanley Kubrick's "The Shining" from 1980 gets a long-anticipated sequel and is the second story from author Stephen King. This film 40 years after the acclaimed 1980 predecessor is just as thrilling and suspenseful, not by much, it still has that same thrill factor of the original film but it just struggled a little during the first half of the film. 

Horror cinema has evolved dramatically since 1980 and the release of the Jack Nicholson thriller. With this direct sequel 40 years in the making, it has the same thrill and suspense factors just like the previous film, but I still think that the Kubrick original is slightly better than this sequel. 

Director Mike Flanagan is no stranger to thrillers and the horror scene. He is better known for his work on the Netflix show "The Haunting of Hill House". His take on this film is horrifying and lives up to the legacy of the original film. His vision of thrilling horror escapades goes deeper into the world Stephen King has created and while offering nostalgia to viewers who have seen the 1980 Kubrick horror masterpiece. 

Playing adult Danny Torrence is none other than Ewan McGregor. McGregor does an outstanding job as the traumatically grown-up version of the character. His performance is nothing short of dramatic and sharp. Starring alongside McGregor, are Rebecca Ferguson (Mission Impossible: Fallout) and young breakout star Kyliegh Curran. 

Ferguson stars as the villain of the film in a menacing and hellbent on gaining immortality. Curran plays a young girl who has the same supernatural abilities as Dan Torrence. Their performances are all equally dark and terrifying, which I think audiences will be entertained by. 

Scoring this horror-thriller flick are the Newton Brothers. They are also no stranger to the horror-suspense thriller scene. They have also worked on the hit show "The Haunting of Hill House". Their score is as haunting as the original films. With a new spin on Wendy Carlos', Rachel Elkinds', and Chuck Cirino's theme from the original film, their score is as dark and electric as the film itself. 

It's been forty years since the world first saw the dark and horrifying "Overlook Hotel". Now return to the iconic world and hotel once again in this new film. This new film lives up to the original film and the Kubrick style overall. Audiences of the original film will no doubt enjoy this film even more now that this sequel dives deeper into the world of the "Shining" unlike anything ever before.  Horror fans of old and new generations will be on the edge the whole time. This film does the original 1980 film justice in a menacingly thrilling fashion. 


www.gstatic.com/tv/thumb/v22vodart/15586677/p15...
Poster courtesy of Warner Bros. 





Rate: B

Director: Mike Flanagan 

Starring: Ewan McGregor, Rebecca Ferguson, and Kyliegh Curran 

MPAA Rating: R (for disturbing and violent content, some bloody images, language, nudity and drug use)

Runtime: 2 Hours & 32 Minutes 

Synopsis: 

"Doctor Sleep" is the continuation of Danny Torrance's story 40 years after the terrifying events of Stephen King's The Shining. Still irrevocably scarred by the trauma he endured as a child at the Overlook, Dan Torrance has fought to find some semblance of peace. But that peace is shattered when he encounters Abra, a courageous teenager with her own powerful extrasensory gift, known as the "shine." Instinctively recognizing that Dan shares her power, Abra has sought him out, desperate for his help against the merciless Rose the Hat and her followers, The True Knot, who feed off the shine of innocents in their quest for immortality. Forming an unlikely alliance, Dan and Abra engage in a brutal life-or-death battle with Rose. Abra's innocence and fearless embrace of her shine compel Dan to call upon his own powers as never before-at once facing his fears and reawakening the ghosts of the past.

Saturday, May 23, 2020

The Sound of Music (1965)

It is the single greatest musical film ever made, no question about it. For over 55 years, Rogers and Hammerstein's "The Sound of Music", still reigns supreme as the greatest musical-film of all time. It still manages to delight decades after its release. Even after so many years, the iconic film is still as great a film now as it was back then. It's iconic because of not just the vocal talents of Julie Andrews and Christopher Plummer, but its scenery and overall spectacle. It's the single greatest film of its kind and I think that's why audiences continue to watch and sing along to the film. 

The films' director Robert Wise has created something so charming and magnificent that it's irresistible. His vision of telling this iconic story is marvelous and heartfelt. It's because of the stunning scenery and story that makes the film all the more charming. His work will live on forever with the creation of this beautiful film. 

Leads Julie Andrews and Christopher Plummer give towering performances in the iconic film as Maria and Captain VonTrapp. They are the best part of the movie, but the kids are the real showstopping stars of it all. With the rambunctiousness of the VonTrapp kids, they are the funniest thing about the film. 

This film stands out among the rest in its genre, because it's not only just a film musical, it's a real-life story. This film is the most memorable and iconic in so many ways, but the fact that this film is based on a true story is why this film is so unique in every possible way. 

Not only does this film have excitement at every turn, but the songs are also very iconic. That is yet another reason why this film is so entertaining. The musical numbers are the one thing that this film makes so iconic. Yet, after 55 years, these songs and its score are still popular today. 

It is the greatest musical film ever made. With its iconic Austrian scenery, a marvelous cast and catchy tunes, this film stood the test of time. It is indeed the all-time greatest film not just in the musical genre but one of the best films ever made. I have no doubt that the legacy of the film will continue to grow for ages. 

The Sound of Music (1965) - IMDb
Poster courtesy of Fox 


Rate: A+ 

Director: Robert Wise 

Starring: Julie Andrews & Christopher Plummer 

MPAA Rating G 

Runtime: 2 Hours and 55 Minutes 

Thursday, May 14, 2020

Crip Camp: A Disability Revolution (2020)

For the longest time, disability has been underrepresented. Now, a full-length documentary shining a light on disability is here. The disability community finally gets the representation its been looking for from "Hollywood". What makes this documentary the perfect portrayal and representation of disability is the authenticity and appreciation the directors have for disability. 

It is one of the best films to depict and showcase disability in a way that we can be proud of and appreciate even more than ever before. This film is a remarkable and groundbreaking achievement in film and getting the path set on the accurate and authentic portrayal of disability that we crave. 

Directors James LeBrecht and Nicole Newnham make an extraordinary film. LeBrecht, who has Spina Bifida, knows just how to portray disability as it should be. The directing duo does an amazing job of making a film that actually captures the real and authentic picture of disability as a whole. I have no doubt this film will be a wake-up call to Hollywood and show them that this is how disability should be shown. 

Famed composer Bear McCreary scores this film. McCreary makes a score that is as lighthearted and jubilant as the film as a whole. His jubilant score is of blue-grass and honky-tonk qualities. 

One of the biggest things facing disability in the media today is representation. With films like this, disability in film and television can be just like this. But if only Hollywood listens, we won't get anywhere. This film, however, is at the forefront of accurate disability representation in film and television.  
Crip Camp (2020) - IMDb


Poster Courtesy of Netflix



Rate: A 

Directors: Nicole Newnham and James LeBrecht

MPAA Rating; R (for some language including sexual references)

Runtime: 1 Hour & 47 Minutes 

Synopsis: In the early 1970s, teenagers with disabilities faced a future shaped by isolation, discrimination and institutionalization. Camp Jened, a ramshackle camp "for the handicapped" in the Catskills, exploded those confines. Jened was their freewheeling Utopia, a place with summertime sports, smoking and makeout sessions awaiting everyone, and campers felt fulfilled as human beings. Their bonds endured as they migrated West to Berkeley, California -- a promised land for a growing and diverse disability community -- where friends from Camp Jened realized that disruption and unity might secure life-changing accessibility for millions.

Sunday, April 12, 2020

The Passion of the Christ (2004)

One of the most historically and religious events to ever happen in the history of mankind gets an extraordinary film portrayal. This event, the crucifixion of Jesus, and the last hours of his most extraordinary life. This iconic film is brought to life by none other than legendary director and devout Christian, Mel Gibson. Gibson makes this film even more meaningful while maintaining accuracy from the Bible. The film is not one for weak stomachs, this film as in the most bitter of graphics, is the most violent and disturbing films ever made. It will continue to be a staple in Hollywood but also for believers in Christ and non-believers for ages to come. 

There aren't many people who can portray the legendary and miraculous messiah in any media form. That being said, Jim Caviezel, is outstanding as Jesus. Not only does he try and resemble the presumed look of Jesus, but he is essentially the best actor to portray him in any film or television program in history. Caviezel has outdone himself in the best way possible, playing Christ is his best performance. It is heavy, undoubtedly emotional and is especially very impactful on anyone who has seen it or those who still have yet to watch. 

As I mentioned earlier, Mel Gibson brings histories most influential figures to the big screen everso triumphantly and with dignity and precision. Gibson stays accurate in telling the story of the death of Jesus very authentically and original that will delight audiences forever. Though the film is extremely violent, some may say that it is the most violent film ever made, albeit it certainly is, it does have its nonviolent sequences which are primarily in the form of flashbacks to the "Last Supper", are as impactful as the graphic nature and emotional moments throughout the entire film. 

Jesus, being multi-lingual, Gibson wanted to tell this story in the way of the ancient language of Aramaic. Aramaic is the language in which parts of the middle east spoke at the time of Christ. That being said, the film is entirely subtitled, but it is as effective even if it's not in English. The emphasis that this language and the dialogue has on the film overall, is stunning and is a first for films of religious value. 

Not only is the makeup, costumes, and sets so powerful to witness, but the score is even more powerful. Scoring this historical take on the most extraordinary events is John Debney. Debney makes the film even more dramatic. With a heavy inclusion of drums, a solo artist and the effect on this film overall, this is one of the eeriest and haunting compositions of music for a film, that I have ever heard. 

This film is an essential cinematic viewing. It has the power to impact believers and non-believers in so many ways. With this film, there is no telling that this won't impact every single person that watches this extraordinary work of cinema. This film is life-changing and will always be life-changing for as long as humanly possible. It is the single greatest faith-based film to ever be made in Hollywood. 

Poster courtesy of Icon Productions



Rate: A 

Director: Mel Gibson

Starring: Jim Caviezel 

MPAA Rating: R (for graphic violence throughout) 

Runtime: 2 Hours & 10 Minutes 

Synopsis: In this version of Christ's crucifixion, based on the New Testament, Judas expedites the downfall of Jesus (Jim Caviezel) by handing him over to the Roman Empire's handpicked officials. To the horror of his mother, Mary (Maia Morgenstern), Magdalen (Monica Bellucci), whom he saved from damnation, and his disciples, Jesus is condemned to death. He is tortured as he drags a crucifix to nearby Calvary, where he is nailed to the cross. He dies, but not before a last act of grace.