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February 8, 2010
Movie Trailer: Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time
It could just be a quirk of mine but I honestly don't see the draw of Jake Gylee...Gyllenellel...no, Gy...Gyelenhally...dang, Jake Gyllenhaalalaalaalaal, ah, screw it. Like his sister, he has very little presence on screen. For example, he played opposite Heath Ledger in that gay cowboy, er sheepherder, flick Brokeback Mountain. Now, when I was dry heaving and fumbling for the fast-forward button, it was obvious in that film which of them was the actor and which one wasn't. Ledger had presence, depth. Jake Gyllennenhell...Gel In Hall is flatter than a week old cup of Dr. Pepper.

Now, Gemma Arterton? Oh, there's plenty of presence there.

"The gods have a plan for you." Well, since there are no "gods" but only "God" whatever plan "they" have for you will probably stink.






Screenwriters: Doug Miro (The Great Raid) and Carlo Bernard (The Uninvited)
Director: Mike Newell (Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire)
Actors: Jake Gyllenhaal (Brokeback Mountain), Gemma Atherton (Quantum of Solace), Ben Kingsley (Transsiberian) and Alfred Molina (Spider-Man 2)




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February 3, 2010
50 Dead Men Walking (2008)
Should I see it?
Nope.


Competently directed and well acted, this film about young thug from Belfast in the 1980's who infiltrates the IRA to gather information for the British cops asks a bit too much. Yes, the audience is given a clear look at life in the conflicted city and the horrors that became a daily occurrence during the conflict. However, the audience isn't given a hero they can fully back nor a storyline that is engaging enough to warrant sitting through all of the misery on screen.

Jim Sturgess (Across the Universe, 21) is a solid actor and is well cast as the thieving Martin, the young man who becomes a mole. Too bad his praise-worthy performance is buried in the mix. Director Kari Skogland is a good director, but it seems the cursory elements, the locations, side conflicts, the need to explain the history, got in the way of her storytelling.

This isn't a film I'd advise searching out. If it is available, you may want to give it a look however.


Cautions: This film presents sexual situations, gory violence and plenty of foul language.



Related Reviews:
Ben Kingsley movies
The Assignment (1997)
Transibberian (2008)


Other Critic’s Reviews:
NY Movie Guru
Reel Talk



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December 26, 2009
Movie Trailer: Fifty Dead Men Walking
Ladies and gentlemen, the most useless trailer ever.

Watch this thing and tell me what the movie is about. No, tell me WHY you should go out of your way to watch the movie. The whole point of a trailer is to capture my attention and make be believe I have to see this film. Other than the idea that some guy has crossed some line and he can't "turn back" (whatever that means) there is no other information. Oh wait, there's some fire. I know there's fire. And Gandhi is wearing a wig.

So, we have a guy walking over lines without turning back while there's fire near a hairy Gandhi. The more I write, the more this is starting to sound like something I'd be interested in seeing.



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Screenwriter: Kari Skogland (The Stone Angel)
Director: Kari Skogland
Actors: Ben Kingsley (Sexy Beast), Rose McGowan (Planet Terror), Kevin Zegers (The Jane Austin Book Club), Jim Sturgess (21) and Natalie Press (Cass)




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June 2, 2009
Gandhi (1982)
Should I see it?
Of course.

 Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi

There are times when it appears an actor is born to play a specific role. If this were true, Ben Kingsley work portraying Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi would be the best example. Kingsley gives one of the great screen performances as the meek peace loving icon. The film is worth viewing just for Kingsley command performance. He humanizes the icon in a kind, promotional fashion that supports the legend more than the man. Now granted, Gandhi was a man who did great things with his life, but he was also a very flawed individual capable of some rather odd behavior (his disturbing sexual proclivities are one for starters.) This film wasn’t meant to show the real man but to lionize a fallen leader. Kingsley presents the legend with great conviction to where his performance solidified the man’s iconic status in the Western mind.

Director Richard Attenborough has crafted a patient, sprawling look at Gandhi’s life. There are a number of points where the story lags but these dips are short lived and the film as a whole is worthy of the praise that has been heaped upon it. It is a fascinating film to watch simply out of its masterful construction. Other than a few dry spots and the heavy “Gandhi as living saint” agenda, there is little I can find to criticize in this film. It is simply good cinema. It has a compelling lead, an engaging story and a writer and a director work perfectly in tandem – if only more films had so much going for them.

The one thing that has always stuck in my craw with Gandhi’s beliefs is that he promotes non-violence as a tool to shame the powerful into acting humanely. Gandhi confronted the British Empire, a society built on social order and appearances. Gandhi’s non-violence stance assumes the aggressor has a conscious. Would he done so well against Nazis, or Islamofascists? Believe it or not, there are belief systems out there that promote amorality and people committed to those ideologies are capable of inhuman brutality. It seems to me that Gandhi’s philosophy was so successful because he was dealing with civilized men, not true barbarians.

This is a brilliant film that is something you should at least try to sit through at least once. Those who have short attention spans or aren’t big on sprawling biopics, you may not make it all the way through. The more patient audience will find one of the better films ever made. Just remember that you’re watching an agenda piece more than a true biography.


Related Reviews:
Biopics
Patton (1970)
Milk (2008)


Other Critic’s Reviews:
Roger Ebert
Classic Film Guide



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December 31, 2008
Transsiberian (2008)
Should I see it?
No.


The biggest problem with this film is that it doesn't have a point. The only proper reaction to the finale of this movie is to shrug and grumble "Whatever."

An American couple, portrayed by Woody Harrelson and Emily Mortimer, get on a train crossing Siberia. On the train they meet up with a clearly troubled mixed nationality couple (Kate Mara and Eduardo Noriega) and a Russian narcotics officer (Ben Kingsley). Five people and there's not a likable one in the group. Harrelson's Roy is a affable guy but he's portrayed to be so clueless that he seems mildly retarded in some moments. Kingsley overplays his role, his performance bringing so much gravity to the film that he feels like a transplant from a better movie. Mara, in another film where she is brutalized, and Noriega are a comely couple but have very little to do other than read their lines. At the center of the film is Emily Mortimer who, along with her unstable American accent, offers an uneven performance drifting between scared damsel in distress and jaded slut.

Writer/Director Brad Anderson (The Machinist) has submitted a hollow production that doesn't live up to his resume. Unless you get it for free and have a spot of time you need to waste, there is not reason to watch this film.




Related Reviews:
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After the Sunset (2004)
No Country for Old Men (2007)


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October 7, 2008
Schindler's List (1993)
Should I see it?
Yes.

Schindler's List


A master director's masterpiece. This landmark film about Oskar Schindler, a German entrepreneur/conman, who despite his nature, works to spare the lives of Jewish workers during the Holocaust. Schindler is a scheming man who plays the Nazi machine for everything that its worth. He opens a munitions factory and brings in Jewish slave labor. Schindler manipulates the system to move more and more Jewish workers into his factory which means they will be spared the certain doom of the concentration camps. Even at the risk of his own life, and even though his factory fails to produce anything, he manipulates the Nazi authorities into giving him more workers. With every name on his work roster, he has spared another soul.

At the center of the film is Liam Neeson as Schindler. He is wonderfully understated in the role and actually offers the audience little to attach to. The character is a slippery fellow and Neeson doesn't make him too approachable. Until the end, Spielberg avoids presenting the man in a theatrically heroic light. Much of his character's arc is masked and the man is left remarkably untouched by Steve Zaillian's script. We end the film not knowing much more about Schindler than we did at the beginning other than the enormous gift he gave to those under his care. In this sense, the man himself seems to be of little consequnce when compared to the greatest of his deeds.

The entire film is masterfully handled. Spielberg, who can get heavy handed (watch Amistad and Artificial Intelligence: A.I.), is very delicate with how he handles this production. He approaches every scene with a strange calmness. Even scenes of sharp violence are handled with gripping documentary feel. Even though it's shot in black and white, the film carries the gravity of reality. Spielberg smartly allows his scenes to naturally play out and gives the actors space to work. A major reason this is Spielberg's best film is because this is the best he has ever done working with actors.

Ben Kingsley portrays Schindler's accountant Itzhak Stern. Kingsley has made some serious horrendous films (Suspect Zero, Bloodrayne, The Last Legion) and his performance here reminds us that a man of his talent stooping to do such films is like Pavoratti singing Britnet Spears songs. Stern acts as Schindler's conscious and often directs him through the moral minefield of his acts. Like Neeson, Kingsley keeps his performance toned down and lets the story speak for himself. His unaffected performance perfectly contrasts with the brutish, emotionally troubled figure on the other side of Schindler's life, Amon Goeth, portrayed by Ralph Fiennes. This film made Fiennes' career and for good reason. He nearly steals the show as the violent narcissist head of the concentration camp. The image of his flabby, tired body poised on a balcony using his prisoners are target practice is chilling. As we get to know Goeth, we come to understand how his thinking would lead him to perform such a cruel act. Spielberg doesn't slap a simple "Nazi" sign on his forehead, he delves into the man's troubled mind and shows the fragile human behind the monstrous sins. In my opinion, Amon Goeth is one of the great villains ever put to film.

This is one of the rare films I think should be shown in high schools, not only because it is a reminder of what happened but as a reminder that it can happen again. It also shows that even though the greatest evils are committed by individuals so are good deeds. We decide the course of history and what we do has an impact on the generations that follow. If you have not seen this film you really need to watch it as soon as possible. It is one of the films I think everyone should see once in their life.


Cautions: There is shockingly graphic violence and full frontal nudity throughout this film. Even if you're against such things, I will point out that of all films it is this one where I know it is absolutely called for. None of the violence, none of the sexuality or violence is put in for any other reason other than to advance the story and bring reality to the production. The film would be lessened without it.


Related Reviews:
Steven Spielberg movies
Saving Private Ryan (1998)
Munich (2005)


Other Critic's Reviews:
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July 15, 2008
Movie Trailer: Elegy
Ben Kingsley plays David Kepesh, a old bachelor who falls hard for his young student Consuela (Penélope Cruz). Based on the work by Philip Roth, this looks like pretty haughty stuff.



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Director: Isabel Coizet (The Secret Life of Words)
Screenwriter: Nicholas Meyer (The Informant)
Actors: Sir Ben Kingsley (Sexy Beast), Dennis Hooper (Land of the Dead), Penélope Cruz (Vanilla Sky), Patricia Clarkson (The Green Mile) and Peter Sarsgaard (Jarhead)


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June 22, 2008
Movie Trailer: Transsiberian
I like how this looks and the setting, a trans-Siberian train ride, is refreshing. The casting of Woody Harrelson in the lead is a huge red flag that bad filmmaking awaits. On top of this, Ben Kingsley's inclusion doesn't help matters. Sure Kingsley has made some great films (Schindler's List, Gandhi) but is also known for making films so bad its shocking he didn't sue to have his name removed from the credits (BloodRayne, The Assignment, The Last Legion, Species)

Time will tell, but I'd approach this one with some caution.






Screenwriters: Brad Anderson (Session 9), and Will Conroy
Director: Brad Anderson
Actors: Woody Harrelson (White Men Can't Jump). Sir Ben Kingsley (Suspect Zero), Emily Mortimer (Lars and the Real Girl), Kate Mara (Shooter), Eduardo Noriega (El Espinazo del Diablo (The Devil's Backbone)) and Thomas Kretschmann (King Kong)

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June 14, 2008
The Assignment (1997)
Should I see it?
No.



Except for a few mildly interesting but ultimately fleeting moments, this entire film feels like its made out of the dropped scenes from a thousand better action films. Aiden Quinn, Ben Kingsley and Donald Sutherland recite lines and hit their blocking as they sleepwalk through this unfortunate, derivative production about a Navy officer that is tasked by the CIA to impersonate a terrorist. It would have been better if the filmmakers impersonated people who could make a reasonably good movie.


Related Reviews:
Ben Kingsley movies
Suspect Zero (2004)
The Last Legion (2007)


Other Critic's Movies:
The Stop Button
Roger Ebert

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February 20, 2008
The Last Legion (2007)
Should I see it?
Nope.



Entirely lacking in any inventiveness or intelligence, this film is a lethargic bore. The solid cast fronted by Colin Firth, Aishwarya Rai, and Ben Kingsley sleepwalk through the mundane plot about a group of heroes who fight to save a young and exiled Romulus Augustus Caesar. This could have been a wonderful film for boys if there had been a script worth producing. What could have been a spry adventure story ends up being a flat waste of time. Too bad.


Related Reviews:
Ben Kingsley movies
The Assignment (1997)
Oliver Twist (2005)


Other Critic's Reviews:
The Armchair Critic
Reel.com

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