The Incredibles (2004)

Posted by Devanshu in Reviews on November 7th, 2004

Many critics will take the easy way out in reviewing this film by saying “the film lives up to its name”. I think I’ve just about had enough of that kind of writing. You know what I’m talking about- some movies are just asking for it, though. In any case, Pixar’s ‘The Incredibles’ is great, fun, edge-to-edge, start-to-finish, chock-full of things to look at and admire. But we’ve come to expect so much of Pixar that none of this is a surprise. The easiest way to review this is- better than ‘Bug’s Life’, ‘Toy Story’; as good as ‘Monster’s Inc.’ but not as good as ‘Finding Nemo’ and ‘Toy Story 2’. Does that help? As a side note, however- the director Brad Bird is a genius and if you’ve missed his ‘Iron Giant’ go see it now!

Ray (2004)

Posted by Devanshu in Reviews on November 5th, 2004

‘Ray’ has so much going for it that it surprises you when it fails to impress. With one of the greatest performances of the year by Jamie Foxx and a life story that was bubbling with details, ‘Ray’ surprisingly overstays its welcome. There were many interesting story arcs in there, unfortunately the movie was devoted to all of them and none of them. The best moments are when the film concentrates on the musical genius. When was the last time there was a ho-hum movie with an Oscar worthy performance? ‘Training Day’ perhaps?

Before Sunset (2004)

Posted by Devanshu in Reviews on August 4th, 2004

Absolutely spectacular ‘nine-years later’ look at Before Sunrise, which was a Linklater masterpiece. As is this one. Pick up any movie by Richard Linklater and you will be amazed by how each actor seems like he’s speaking his mind, not reading lines from a script. This has never been more true than in this movie, where the actor’s actually contributed to their parts of the screenplay. This gives the effect of actually having watched two people play out the games we all play in course of conversation, but also have them say it like they mean it. We’ve seen these two characters (by Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy) twice before (Before Sunrise and a short sequence in Waking Life) and I’d take another dozen movies with just them over most of the movies I try hard to avoid.

Five Easy Pieces (1970)

Posted by Devanshu in Reviews on August 4th, 2004

Jack Nicholson almost makes this movie work for me, but in the end it fall shorts. But for a couple of spectacular scenes (chicken salad sandwich and Jack playing piano on a truck) and a masterful final act, the film would have been a complete dud for me. I sincerely wanted it to work, but it didn’t.

Mr. Deeds Goes to Town

Posted by Devanshu in Reviews on July 21st, 2004

When was the last time you saw a movie that had ‘For He’s a Jolly Good Fellow’ as it’s theme song and took it seriously? The time was 1936 and you could sing that song without sounding cynical. Or so I believe now, nearly 70 years later. It seems, though, that people must have been equally cynical back then. Post-depression, between wars. However, if you’re Frank Capra, you could get away with it over and over as you pit the likes of Gary Cooper and James Stewart as small-town bumpkins against ‘the man’, the system. This time, it’s Gary Cooper who’s inherited a vast sum from his big city uncle and must deal with the pressures inherent of being a Frank Capra character. If you’ve seen the Adam Sandler version, you haven’t seen anything. The premise is same- however, in that version, the jokes are turned up and told twice for effect.

Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex * But Were Afraid to Ask (1972)

Posted by Devanshu in Reviews on July 20th, 2004

Woody Allen takes on the infamous book by Dr. David Reuben in a series of seven shorts. One wonders what kind of a job Monty Python would have done with this, considering I just saw The Meaning of Life. And just like that film, some of the sketches work: Woody Allen as the anxious sperm, Gene Wilder as.. well, see that one for yourself to believe it; and some of them don’t work. Like many of Woody Allen’s early movies (Bananas, Sleeper), the story telling gets in the way of the jokes. And when you have 10 minute shorts, you can’t afford too much of that. All in all, though, worth a watch for those moments of sheer genius.

City of God (2002)

Posted by Devanshu in Reviews on July 20th, 2004

City of God, Cidade de Deus. In the beginning I begin to suspect influences from Scorsese and Innaritu but then half way through I realize this is a whole different animal. Still, the comparison to Goodfellas is inevitable, because it is a similar kind of story- a narrated, almost documentary-like chronicle about.. gangsters. But where Goodfellas was a story you about familiar kind of people from familiar places, City of God transports you to a place where the fate of these people is inevitable- the slums outside Rio, where everything seems alien.. yet familiar- for they are only children. Expect a full review very soon! This one is for the ages.

De-Lovely (2004)

Posted by Devanshu in Reviews on July 18th, 2004

De-Lovely, the story of Cole Porter’s life, has a brilliant opening act and closes with a flourish. It’s quite a shame it has a meandering middle. I think most of the problem lies in the fact that the story and character development solely relies on the telling through Porter’s songs. While this is novel to start with, when my wide-eyed wonder begun to dim, I was wondering if I was reading too much or too little in to the songs. Kevin Kline is super in the role and carries much of the material alone. Overall, serves as a masterful requiem for Porter that will bring his fans to smiles and cheers. But don’t expect it to do much else.

Control Room (2004)

Posted by Devanshu in Reviews on July 18th, 2004

Spectacular documentary about the inner-workings of controversial Arab news channel Al Jazeera. The news channel has been called the ‘mouthpiece for Osama’ by the president of the USA and has been castigated in Arab countries for being a western influence. The role of Al Jazeera in a culture where free speech is a novel concept is very interesting. If Farenheit 9/11 was the story you knew if you read all the right newspapers, then Control Room is the story you sort of suspected.

Alice (1990)

Posted by Devanshu in Reviews on July 15th, 2004

I just counted- with this film, I’ve now seen 24 directed by Woody Allen. That’s easily more than any other single director; easily more than most have made in a lifetime. And you know what? He probably has the best success rate with me as well. Anything Else is his only effort I’ve been seriously disappointed with. This film, Alice is a delightful exercise in psychotherapy of the title character played by Mia Farrow- psychotherapy through herbal medicines, opium and hypnosis by a strange doctor in Chinatown. But all that is just subterfuge, just waving hands, simply a plot device that allows Woody Allen to make Alice have bizarre personal experiences- ghosts of her past, a muse, invisibility- that help her understand and then change her life for the better. This was also the last film Farrow did for Woody Allen.