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Friday, January 20, 2012

The Movie Report #654, January 20, 2012

The Movie Report

#654, January 20, 2012


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F3Sports: Vernon Davis, NFL Tight End, Confronts the Tough Issue of High School Attrition in His Hometown of Washington, DC

Film Flam Flummox

PRESS RELEASE

VERNON DAVIS, NFL TIGHT END,
PRO BOWLER AND TWO-TIME TEAM CAPTAIN,
CONFRONTS THE TOUGH ISSUE OF HIGH SCHOOL
ATTRITION IN HIS HOMETOWN OF WASHINGTON, DC

Davis Challenges DC Area Youth at His Former High School
to Become MVPs Both on and off the Field
by Improving Their Classroom GPAs and Attendance Records
With Support From a Free 10-Week Academic and
Sports Mentoring Program He Launches Tomorrow

WASHINGTON, DC -- NFL All Pro Vernon Davis is not only scoring winning touchdowns on the field and making football history, as in last week's playoff match-up between the New Orleans Saints and the San Francisco 49ers, but the two-time team captain is also confronting the issue of high school attrition in his hometown of Washington, DC. Tomorrow, Saturday January 21st, 50 high school athletes from Dunbar Senior High School, which Davis attended, will begin "The Vernon Davis Sound Mind, Sound Body Saturday Tutoring and Mentoring Program." The goal of the free 10-week mentoring program is to boost students' math (algebra), reading comprehension and writing skills, thereby raising their SAT scores, all in the hopes of making college education possible for participants.

"I grew up like many of the student athletes at Dunbar, with little money, but lots of commitment and a drive to achieve something better for my life," says Davis. "Most of my friends growing up are either in jail today or dead and I know this would not be the case if they had gone to college. So this program is about giving young men the academic support they need to succeed, not only in high school and college sports, but in life."

The curriculum will be taught by some of the leading academic instructors in the Washington, DC area where a number of educators in the public school system estimate that as many as 40% of 9th grade students do not return to high school for their 10th grade year.

"The whole purpose of teaching is to awaken the natural curiosity of young minds," says Dunbar Senior High School Assistant Principal Semanthe Bright, who is heartened by this program which she believes will help make college a more certain reality for young students who might otherwise miss the life changing opportunity.

"You need something to look forward to when you're working hard and giving your all," says Davis, who plans to spend a day in DC with all of the student participants and has also created additional incentives to encourage them along. Students with the most improved SAT test scores, consistent and improved classroom attendance and those who demonstrate leadership qualities in school will receive iPads and gift bags full of San Francisco 49ers paraphernalia, among other things.

Siraaj Hasan, President and co-founder of the Lifting As We Climb Foundation, which will run this program, says having NFL players, especially a history making star such as Vernon Davis, maintain a presence with these young men can help save lives. "Vernon showing up shows he cares and that helps inspire these young men," says Hasan.

Davis's longtime off-season trainer Myron Flowers, a Washington, DC-based sports performance veteran who has been working with Davis for nearly a decade since his college years at the University of Maryland, will run the program's athletic training curriculum. Flowers, who will be with Davis this weekend in San Francisco where the 49ers will play against The New York Giants for a shot at the Super Bowl, says Davis' involvement in this program brings his notoriety in the world of sports full circle. "I couldn't be more proud of Vernon for giving back to kids who are just like he was and helping to shape the lives of these young men."

The program is being funded through the Vernon and Vontae Davis Family Foundation and spearheaded by The Lifting As We Climb Foundation. For more information go to www.davisfamilyfoundation.org.


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Thursday, January 19, 2012

Review: Red Tails

The Movie Report


***; Rated PG-13
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One quality of Anthony Hemingway's Red Tails likely to receive a bit of criticism from snarkier-than-thou mainstream movie media is actually one of its strongest virtues: the sincere, unironic, unapologetically throwback sensibility, playing much like a product from or directly after the WWII era. That its stalwart hero pilots engaging in aerial dogfight derring-do to a shamelessly swelling musical score happen to be African-American then rather pointedly highlights just how unfair it's taken this long for the legendary Tuskegee Airmen to get their proper, larger than life big screen treatment. After all, what they did do in real life was just as, if not more than, impressive than what white military heroes would do in reel life at the time. That old fashioned, almost square approach, from the archetypal lead characters to broadly sneering Nazi villainy to what are now war movie story conventions (e.g. love with a European local; being trapped behind enemy lines), adopted by Hemingway and screenwriters John Ridley and Aaron McGruder thus feels like a corrective to that long-standing cinematic inequity, to finally give these oft-overlooked patriots a retro rah-rah-worthy vehicle of their own.

But there is also more going on here than old school genre homage: it's also a solidly executed example of such an inspirational entertainer, equal parts excitement and heart. In the former category, Hemingway has fun using all the decidedly un-retro 2012 Industrial Light and Magic digital effects toys at his disposal for the many aerial warfare sequences. Given that this is a Lucasfilm Ltd. production, similarities to Star Wars (most specifically, the original) will inevitably be called out, but that's not exactly an insult for action filmmaking. What has long proven to work with X-Wings and TIE Fighters very much translates in thrilling fashion to an Earthbound combat context.

None of characters here are based on any specific real-life figures, and as such they fall for the most part into conventional character types; that said, they are all lent human dimension by the actors. Given the size of the cast (Tristan Wilds, Elijah Kelley, Ne-Yo, Michael B. Jordan, Method Man, Andre Royo, Marcus T. Paulk, Cuba Gooding Jr., and Terrence Howard are among the recognizable faces here), some of men in the unit inevitably get more screen attention than others, but serving as an equalizing force is the unforced and genuine camaraderie between the guys, helped by some amusing banter from Ridley and McGruder's pen. That chemistry is especially evident between the lead buddy pair of Nate Parker and, the certain breakout of the ensemble, David Oyelowo. As, respectively, the hard-drinking captain and reckless daredevil of the group, they forge a believably brotherly tough love rapport and have the effortless gravitas to sell and serve as a compelling emotional anchor for all the action.

But, of course, what makes this film that is (per the opening titles) "inspired by real events" certain to inspire future real events is the enduring legacy of the Airmen. If Red Tails isn't quite the information-heavy lecture of a historical drama some may be expecting, the Tuskegee Airmen's genuine spirit of courage, dedication, and brotherhood is rather fittingly honored and embodied by what is a rousing adventure picture.

Order the Red Tails poster here.
Order the Red Tails DVD here.
Order the Red Tails Blu-ray here.
Order the Red Tails soundtrack here.


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The rush of The Raid

Film Flam Flummox


I won't post anything formal about the film until closer to its March 23 release date in both the U.S. and its native Indonesia (that is, unless I get clearance from the Sony Pictures Classics publicists), but I haven't quite shaken the rush of Gareth Evans's The Raid since my screening of it yesterday afternoon. This trailer (the original cut from Indonesia rather than the domestic one, for it more clearly sets up the story scenario) will go a long way toward explaining exactly why.

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Monday, January 16, 2012

Idris Elba's Golden Globe acceptance speech

Film Flam Flummox


Idris Elba deservedly won a Golden Globe Award from the Hollywood Foreign Press Association for Best Actor in a Television Movie or Miniseries last night for his work in series 2 of Luther. Below is his eloquent acceptance speech from the stage as well as his comments from the backstage press room.




Buy the Luther series 2 DVD here.
Buy the Luther series 1 DVD here.


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Friday, December 23, 2011

The Movie Report #652, December 23, 2011

The Movie Report

#652, December 23, 2011


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Review: Don 2

The Movie Report


*** 1/2; Not Rated
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While a sequel to his 2006 global action hit, Farhan Akhtar's Don 2 is really the first film to truly reflect what an ongoing Don film series would look like should it continue. After all, being a remake of a 1978 film, Akhtar's first Don was thus beholden to a certain arc and plot beats (which he not only revisited but reinvigorated with a slicker, sleeker style and sensibility); but more importantly--and intriguingly--the film closed on a note that would then send any proper follow-up in a wildly different direction from the original '70s incarnation. To try to both satisfy expectations built by a wildly successful film and follow a distinctive, divergent path that still feels valid and consistent within the original framework is a daunting challenge--but for a filmmaker like Akhtar, it's also very much a galvanizing dare that leads him to up the ante in just about every respect and fully claim the Don mythos as his own.

Akhtar and co-writers Ameet Mehta and Amrish Shah have wisely written in the five-year gap between releases into the movie world, making for a conveniently organic opportunity to reshuffle and reboot where necessary. The titular crime boss (Shahrukh Khan) has by now conquered the Asian drug trade, which makes him prime target for the kingpins in Europe, who suspect him to have their territory next in his sights--which, of course, he does, and figuring in his plan is an unlikely ally: archenemy Vardhaan (Boman Irani), who had been left to rot in prison in the last half-decade. With the European underworld after him as well as the international authorities--led by Roma (Priyanka Chopra), now officially carrying an Interpol badge to support her ongoing personal revenge mission--it would have been easy for the script to once again go with the chase film format of the first film( s ). But the pursuit, while still very much an important element, takes a back seat to what is essentially a tightly wound heist picture, as Don, Vardhaan, and a few new recruits (including Kunal Kapoor as a computer hacker and Lara Dutta as Don's latest right-hand moll) plot a potentially game-changing robbery in Berlin--the game of which is, naturally, constantly in flux with its players' self-serving interests and shifting allegiances.

Akhtar milks the mechanics of the complex caper for all their suspenseful worth as expertly as he handled the first film's fights, car chases, and all other manner of slam-bang mayhem--which are all still very much present here and just as polished, aided immeasurably by the work of cinematographer Jason West and editor Anand Subaya. In adding yet another layer of genre convention into the blockbuster action mix (which is already laid on top of the standard Bollywood conventions), plot and character could have easily and, to be frank, understandably been sacrificed, but that admirably isn't the case. Unlike most action sequels, this is neither a retread nor a self-contained "Don's Next Scheme" episode, but an organic continuation of existing story elements (in fact, a key plot catalyst stems from a more casually played moment in the first film) and, more importantly, character. The inevitable twists and turns are far from arbitrary, for the film remains firmly rooted in the established personalities. This does mean that the newcomers are neglected to a degree (Dutta cuts a striking figure but is only sparingly used; Sahil Shroff gets even less to do as Roma's besotted partner), but they ably serve their ultimate function in supporting the ever-compelling goings-on with the returning cast. In a rather gutsy move, Akhtar doesn't take the easy way out in bowing to the character's popularity and soften Don into a more palatable "antihero"; Don remains gleefully, unrepentantly evil (and retains his fondness for Tom and Jerry cartoons), making for a rather refreshing villain's perspective-driven actioner, and a fiercely energized Khan clearly relishes this latest opportunity to break away from his trademark roguish romantic hero persona. Even more important, however, in fueling the drama are the ever-evolving relationships between those familiar characters, the most fascinating continuing to be that between Don and Roma, whose tense and still-intense erotic electricity ignites further complications, manipulations, and uneasy yet undeniable truths.

That wicked waltz becomes quite literal in one memorable scene that is emblematic of Akhtar's savvy, narrative-focused use of Indian popular cinema tropes. Given Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy's infectiously old school funk-inflected song score (an inspired way to carry over the '70s homage vibe now that Don has no longer dons flamboyant pimpdaddy fashions this time out), it is a bit disappointing that song and dance is at a relative minimum here. But the one full-blown production number, "Zara Dil Ko Thaam Lo" ("Hold on to Your Heart"), arises where it makes story sense (and nicely mirrors the touchstone "Main Hoon Don" number in the first film), and Akhtar and West make it count in a big way, going all-out with the spectacle, marrying the memorable music with Viabhav Merchant's creative choreography and a stunning, silhouette-driven visual design. Similarly, in an especially clever touch, Akhtar trots out the old Bollywood cliché of a surprise superstar cameo in a way that actually serves, rather than distracts from, the plot.

But then it doesn't take any familiarity with Hindi film or any such conventions, or even to have seen Don, to enjoy Don 2. More than a worthy sequel, it is simply an exciting and downright fun thrill ride of a movie, period, and Farhan Akhtar deserves his due as one of the great mainstream film talents currently working anywhere, period.

Order the Don 2 DVD here.
Order the Don 2 soundtrack here.
Read my review of 2006's Don here.

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Wednesday, December 14, 2011

African-American Film Critics Association announce 2011 award winners

Film Flam Flummox


The African-American Film Critics Association (AAFCA) announced the winners of their 2011 awards at a press conference held at the Universal City Hilton on December 12, hosted by AAFCA president and founder Gil Robertson IV and actress Salli Richardson-Whitfield.

Top 10 Films of 2011

  1. The Tree of Life
  2. Drive
  3. Pariah
  4. Rampart
  5. Shame
  6. Moneyball
  7. The Descendants
  8. A Better Life
  9. My Week With Marilyn
  10. The Help
Best Actor: Woody Harrelson, Rampart
Best Actress: Viola Davis, The Help
Best Supporting Actress: Octavia Spencer, The Help
Best Supporting Actor: Albert Brooks, Drive
Best Foreign Film: Alrick Brown, Kinyarwanda
Breakout Performance: Adepero Oduye, Pariah
Best Director: Steve McQueen, Shame
Best Screenplay: Ava DuVernay, I Will Follow
Best Song: "The Show," Moneyball - written by Jason Reeves & Lenka Kripac
Best Independent Film: Pariah, directed by Dee Rees
Best Documentary: The Black Power Mixtape 1967-1975, directed by Göran Olsson

Cinema Vanguard: George Lucas
AAFCA Legacy: Richard Roundtree
AAFCA Horizon: Hattie Winston
Institution: Sony Pictures Entertainment

The awards will be handed out on Sunday, January 8, 2012, at a private dinner held at the Lightspace Studio in Culver City, California.

Gil Robertson IV and Salli Richardson-Whitfield
Gil Robertson & Salli Richardson-Whitfield
(photo by Michael Dequina)

(Special thanks to AAFCA)

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Christian Bale's The Flowers of War party for Zhang Yimou

Film Flam Flummox


Last night, Christian Bale, hosted a special reception in Beverly Hills for director Zhang Yimou in celebration of his powerful new film The Flowers of War (which I will write in more length about in time for its awards-qualifying run beginning on December 23). Joining Zhang and Bale for the event were his co-star in the film, talented newcomer Ni Ni, as well as reception co-hosts Alejandro Gonzalez Iñarritu and David Linde.


Zhang Yimou
Zhang Yimou
(photo by Michael Dequina)

ZNi Ni
Ni Ni
(photo by Michael Dequina)

Order the The Flowers of War DVD here.
Order the The Flowers of War Blu-ray here.
Order the The Flowers of War soundtrack here.


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Sunday, November 27, 2011

Briefly... on the Don 2 soundtrack

Film Flam Flummox


While making sequels to blockbuster films is a long-standing Hollywood tradition, the practice has only become more common fairly recently in Bollywood--and that's the only reason I can come up with for the mixed initial reactions to Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy's Don 2 soundtrack. One common complaint is the recurring use of the recognizable theme melody of Farhan Akhtar's 2006 Don, which some have taken to be laziness on the part of the celebrated composing trio. I say it's anything but lazy and downright difficult to incorporate that melody line into different tunes in seamless, organic manner, making for an uncommon musical unity across an Indian film's entire song score, which more often than not runs the gamut from club-ready bangers to traditional dress dance numbers to romantic ballads. But there's another, more inspired unifying element to the songs here; early footage from the film suggests that Shahrukh Khan's title character has abandoned the cheeky-cool pimpdaddy costuming this time out, but Akhtar and Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy keep the retro spirit alive in the music, for every non-remix track here bears strong elements of 1970s funk and R&B--a sound that perhaps comes off a bit (for lack of a better term) alien to longtime Hindi film soundtrack listeners and reviewers. But this is no mere throwback pastiche; Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy marry the rich, soulful instrumentation with the modern electro elements they brought to the first film, making for a music masala as unique as it is utterly irresistible. Here's hoping the film proper can accordingly fall in line come December 23.

Order the Don 2 soundtrack here.
Read my review of 2006's Don here.




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Friday, November 11, 2011

AFI Fest presented by Audi 2011 Reviews

The Movie Report


  • The Artist ****
  • Beyond the Black Rainbow **
  • Butter ***
  • Carnage **
  • Carré Blanc ** 1/2
  • Coriolanus ***
  • The Color Wheel ** 1/2
  • Footnote *** 1/2
  • Haywire ****
  • The Invader *** 1/2
  • Jeff, Who Lives at Home ***
  • Jiro Dreams of Sushi ***
  • Kinyarwanda ****
  • The Lady ** 1/2
  • Mama Africa ***
  • Melancholia ** 1/2
  • Miss Bala *** 1/2
  • My Week with Marilyn ***
  • Restless City ***
  • Pina ***
  • Rampart ***
  • A Separation *** 1/2
  • Shame *** 1/2
  • We Need to Talk About Kevin ** 1/2

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