Category: #WWMD

Watching With My Daughter – reviews (hopefully) tempered by the fact that I’m watching the movie with my girl…

  • Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)

    Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)

    #140RVW

    Maybe the greatest adventure film of all time (not counting ones with lightsabers). Lucas & Spielberg assemble a dream team of filmmakers…

    Raiders of the Lost Ark

    What’s more:

    Has there ever been another case of two of the most successful filmmakers in the world getting together to make something equal to their talents? It is so improbable that we’d get the chance to have Raiders of the Lost Ark in our cinematic landscape, which makes it all the more special.

    Raiders of the Lost Ark

    You know all the stories; the two directors were vacationing after Lucas completed his most recent film (Star Wars), a tradition for the friends, when Spielberg mentioned his desire to do a James Bond movie. This gave Lucas the opportunity to pitch his friend a “better” character, Indiana Smith. Lucas had developed the adventurer and the rough story for Raiders with Philip Kaufman before the latter went off to make The Outlaw Josey Wales and Lucas made a little space movie.

    What an amazing time! You’d have to go back to The Beatles to find an example of a few artists making such an impact over a short period of time. Think about it; in 1977 Lucas and Spielberg release Star Wars and Close Encounters of the Third Kind, respectively. They get together with brilliant screenwriter Lawrence Kasdan and bash out story ideas for Raiders over a four-day brainstorming session. They go off to make 1941 and The Empire Strikes Back. Then they make Raiders (some overlap here). While they are shooting, Spielberg works with Melissa Mathison (Harrison Ford’s then-wife) on the story for E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial. Unreal.

    The list of people who worked on this film reads like a Who’s Who of Hollywood talent. Many of the crew worked on all of these movies, and so there is a consistency to a lot of the films made by these filmmakers.

    Raiders of the Lost Ark perfectly captures the adventure spirit of the 30’s & 40’s serials which inspired it, but carves its own identity for those who have never seen those films. It’s hard to imagine how this movie could possibly be any better than it is, and it remains one of the greatest of all time.

    Raiders of the Lost Ark

    Play by play (thoughts written down as I watched the movie):
    • Right from the first moments, you know you’re in for a treat.
    • One of the very best film opening sequences in history. Maybe the single best.
    • The pizzicato strings when the tarantulas are climbing on Indy.
    • Stunningly gorgeous sets by Watts. How come newer films are less convincing with their “ruins”.
    • There’s so little dialogue here, nor is any needed. So much conveyed non-verbally.
    • “Throw me the idol, I’ll throw you the whip!”
    • Harrison Ford should be made to watch this film before starting a new picture to remind him not to be so grumpy.
    • Never has paper mache looked so threatening as with the giant stone.
    • One of the things that makes this movie work so well is the feeling that you are walking into an established world and timeline. You don’t need to know the backstory with Belloq & Jones – you instantly get everything you need to know within 30 seconds. The later films failed to do this convincingly, especially the opening scene in 4 which was clearly trying to recapture this magic.
    • Plane reads “OB-CPO”
    • I swear that I remember seeing Reggie the snake thrown from the plane when I was a kid. One of those messed up memory things that we’re all guilty of at some point, I guess.
    • The easy rapport with Denholm Elliot. He’s so good…
    • Deadly exposition scenes are bread & butter for Kasdan. He actually makes what should be a dull but necessary scene enthralling.
    • How many of us wanted to become archeologists after this movie?
    • The mattes are very believable.
    • Dennis Muren cameo as German on plane.

    Raiders of the Lost Ark

    • I never could tell the gender of the Nepalese drinker that Marion is dueling with.
    • Oh, Karen Allen. My first movie crush…

    Raiders of the Lost Ark

    • The sound effects are a bit crazy from this scene on; the shot glasses break like windows, the punches sound like slabs of meat, Indy’s pistol a cannon…
    • Sallah. Such a great character. John Rhys-Davies is essentially reprising his role from Shogun, but that’s ok – he’s brilliant.

    Raiders of the Lost Ark

    • The chase through Cairo. Everyone knows the story about the famous swordfight that was cut because Ford was sick, but it’s still great.
    • Schnell!
    • Love Marion’s theme.

    Raiders of the Lost Ark

    • Paul Freeman as Belloq has such great presence.
    • Tunisia stands in for Egypt as successfully as it previously doubled for Tatooine…

    Raiders of the Lost Ark

    • Map room sequence is captivating visually and storywise, even if the staff height doesn’t make any sense based on the translation earlier…

    Raiders of the Lost Ark

    • “Asps. Very dangerous. You go first.”

    Raiders of the Lost Ark

    • Well of Souls is another great set, although the obligatory Spielberg gross-out scene with dead bodies is just dumb.

    Raiders of the Lost Ark

    • The flying wing fight is so good. Spielberg at his best with this sort of thing.

    Raiders of the Lost Ark

    • Practical effects > CG – take notes, kids…
    • “I’m making this up as I go.”
    • Best car/truck chase ever? May be…
    • The mirror gag never stops being funny…
    • “It’s not the years, honey, it’s the mileage.”

    Raiders of the Lost Ark

    • Yes, he should have drowned when hitching a ride on the U-Boat. So what? NOW you’re starting to nitpick? Got the wrong movie. It likely never submerged, anyway. (The U-Boat by the way is from “Das Boot”, shooting at the same time.)
    • At the risk of stating the obvious, the music is just so good…
    • “Your persistence surprises even me. You’re going to give mercenaries a bad name.”

    Raiders of the Lost Ark

    • Belloq calling Indy’s bluff is one of the film’s better non-action scenes.

    Raiders of the Lost Ark

    • When I was a kid I never understood that the guy in the ceremonial robes was Belloq. Don’t ask me why. I was only 8…
    • This must have been a very tough ending to sell to the studio. It’s pretty odd. The whole Wrath of God thing, not the warehouse. The warehouse is one of the best and most unexpected twists since “Rosebud”…
    Poster:

    Trailer:

    Bechdel Test:

    Fail

    The Representation Test Score: C (4 pts)

    (http://therepresentationproject.org/grading-hollywood-the-representation-test/)

    Representation Test

     

    Main Cast Harrison Ford Indy, Karen Allen Marion Ravenwood, Paul Freeman Dr. René Belloq, John Rhys-Davies Sallah
    Rating PG
    Release Date Fri 12 Jun 1981 UTC
    Director Steven Spielberg
    Genres Action, Adventure
    Plot Archeologist and adventurer Indiana Jones is hired by the US government to find the Ark of the Covenant before the Nazis.
    Poster Raiders of the Lost Ark
    Runtime 115
    Tagline Indiana Jones – the new hero from the creators of JAWS and STAR WARS.
    Writers Lawrence Kasdan (screenplay), George Lucas (story) …
    Year 1981
  • Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace (1999)

    Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace (1999)

    140 Character Movie Review – #140RVW

    I don’t care what you say, I really like this movie. Does it have problems? Does it ever. I don’t fault anyone who hates it. But I like it.

    The Phantom Menace

    Spoiler-free Movie Review of Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace:

    The Phantom Menace
    And it begins…

    I am an unapologetic Star Wars nut. I will start this review by stating that I would rather watch a bad Star Wars movie than many good movies. So that should hopefully frame this review; my credibility is wobbly when it comes to the Wars…

    The Phantom Menace

    So many people get so incensed about this film. I have no interest in fanning the flames. If you hate it you have lots of company and nothing I say will change your mind. I am nearly incapable of hating a Star Wars movie. When something makes you incredibly happy and then later iterations are awful, it’s hard and disappointing and a host of other things. But I still struggle with hate. Just like Van Hagar albums or Godfather III, the originals have amassed so much good will with me that I can’t totally condemn later stuff. I can even find a few good things to say about St. Anger (if I stop and think about it for a real long time)…

    The Phantom Menace
    No, she doesn’t do anything in the movie, but she’s one of my daughter’s favorite characters, so here you go…

    You’ve already spotted all of the problems with this movie – I’m not going to point out anything that hasn’t been noted before. But I can’t be convinced that we aren’t better off with this movie and the prequels themselves than if they hadn’t been made. Even if I didn’t like the prequels at all (and I honestly do), what would we have if Lucas really did leave well enough alone as so many of my generation (those that grew up with the OT) wish he had? What would we be missing?

    The Phantom Menace

    • The only Jedi we would ever have seen in action would have been an asthmatic robot-man, an old man and a whiny half-trained kid. To be fair, we still get a whiny kid and an old man, but there are some seriously cool, intense, acrobatic fights that really expanded the possibilities of what you had imagined these Jedi capable of. I’d sit through another two hours of bad dialogue to get another fight like the hangar battle with Maul. And that’s just in this movie – the battles in Ep3 are even better.

    The Phantom Menace

    • No concept of the Jedi Order, the master/apprentice dynamic, what it was like to see the Jedi at the height of their power and what it really meant for the Emperor to crush them.
    • No Clone War, no Jedi as generals. The Battle of Endor would have been the last land battle you would have ever seen…
    • No boring Senate speeches, but no Order 66 either. The machinations of the Sith are truly cool and worth a few dull discussions about procedure. Barely…

    The Phantom Menace

    • Digital filmmaking would still be in its infancy. I recognize that many would view this as a good thing, and there are lots of great arguments against, from the look of some digital cinematography to the over-proliferation of CG effects. But Lucas’s push for digital has led to more uniform quality in cinematic presentation, the ability for simultaneous release dates throughout the world, day and date releases of independent films through multiple outlets, not to mention severe reductions in cost and production time leading to fewer barriers to entry and a much more accessible environment for new and independent filmmakers.
    • Six fewer hours of John Williams music. That should make you pause right there…

    The Phantom Menace

    But most importantly, the biggest thing we’d be missing is the presence of Star Wars in our lives. It was completely off the radar. Fans don’t like to admit it, but the Wars could very well have become just another old film series, no more relevant than the Back to the Future films. The landscape was pretty barren post Ep6, and while interest sparked up in the early 90’s with the return of novels and RPGs, you really cannot underestimate how much there needed to be new movies to really bring Star Wars into the modern age.

    Star Wars is now bigger than it has ever been. I can share it with my own child. And that’s what it’s all for in the first place. I don’t need each movie to be as good as the first few any more than I expect each Bond film to rival Goldfinger. The important thing is enjoying these things and sharing them.

    The Phantom Menace

    15 years ago today, on May 19, 1999, Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace opened to an unbelievably excited public. I got to sit with my parents and sister as I did when we saw the original films, but this time my wife (then girlfriend) was by my side. I bought a couple of Star Wars figures in the lobby to give to my parents as a minor way of thanking them for rushing out to buy Kenner R2 & 3PO figures for my sister and I after the first film. I never thought I’d get to see another SW film. I was able to revisit something from my childhood but bring it into my adulthood. I get to share this love with my daughter. Nothing is better or more important to that.

    I love The Phantom Menace for all of that.

    The Phantom Menace
    Explain to me again how this isn’t awesome?
    Poster:

    Trailer:

    Opening Crawl:


    Star Wars: Episode I The Phantom Menace Opening Crawl | StarWars.com on Disney Video

    Bechdel Test:

    Pass

    The Representation Test Score: C (5 pts)

    (http://therepresentationproject.org/grading-hollywood-the-representation-test/)

    Representation Test
    [schema type=”movie” url=”http://www.starwars.com/films/star-wars-episode-i-the-phantom-menace” name=”Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace” description=”Stranded on the desert planet Tatooine after rescuing young Queen Amidala from the impending invasion of Naboo, Jedi apprentice Obi-Wan Kenobi and his Jedi Master Qui-Gon Jinn discover nine-year-old Anakin Skywalker, a young slave unusually strong in the Force. Anakin wins a thrilling Podrace and with it his freedom as he leaves his home to be trained as a Jedi. The heroes return to Naboo where Anakin and the Queen face massive invasion forces while the two Jedi contend with a deadly foe named Darth Maul. Only then do they realize the invasion is merely the first step in a sinister scheme by the re-emergent forces of darkness known as the Sith.” director=”George Lucas” producer=”Rick McCallum” actor_1=”Liam Neeson” ]

    Main Cast Ewan McGregor Obi-Wan Kenobi, Liam Neeson Qui-Gon Jinn, Natalie Portman Queen Amidala/Padmé, Jake Lloyd Anakin Skywalker
    Rating PG
    Release Date Wed 19 May 1999 UTC
    Director George Lucas
    Genres Action, Adventure, Fantasy, Sci-Fi
    Plot Two Jedi Knights escape a hostile blockade to find allies and come across a young boy who may bring balance to the Force, but the long dormant Sith resurface to reclaim their old glory.
    Poster Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace
    Runtime 136
    Tagline Every generation has a legend. Every journey has a first step. Every saga has a beginning.
    Writers George Lucas (written by)
    Year 1999
  • It’s the Easter Beagle, Charlie Brown (1974)

    It’s the Easter Beagle, Charlie Brown (1974)

    140 Character Movie Review – #140RVW

    The 12th Peanuts TV special is actually my daughter’s favorite. Mostly due to Snoopy dancing with bunnies, but it all really is very funny.

    It's the Easter Beagle, Charlie Brown

    Review of It’s the Easter Beagle, Charlie Brown:

    I always think of this as one of the original classics, but in truth this was actually the 12th Peanuts TV special. It probably maintains that spot in my mind because it is so good. There’s so much good stuff here: Peppermint Patty’s failed attempts to teach Marcie to dye eggs, the repeated shopping trips to the department store that warns “Only 246 shopping days until Christmas”, Linus preaching the gospel of the Easter Beagle as enthusiastically as he spoke of the Great Pumpkin. It’s so good. Go watch it.

    It's the Easter Beagle, Charlie Brown

    Poster:

    It's the Easter Beagle, Charlie Brown

    Trailer:

    Bechdel Test:

    Pass

    The Representation Test Score:

    Yeah, I’m not doing this for a Charlie Brown cartoon…

    [schema type=”movie” url=”http://www.peanuts.com/” name=”It’s the Easter Beagle, Charlie Brown” description=”The Peanuts gang prepare for Easter in their own clumsy ways.” director=”Phil Roman” ]

    Main Cast Todd Barbee Charlie Brown/Schroeder (voice), Melanie Kohn Lucy van Pelt (voice), Stephen Shea Linus van Pelt (voice), Linda Ercoli Patricia ‘Peppermint Patty’ Reichardt (voice)
    Rating Atp
    Release Date Tue 09 Apr 1974 UTC
    Director Phil Roman
    Genres Animation, Short, Comedy, Family
    Plot The Peanuts gang prepare for Easter in their own clumsy ways.
    Poster It's the Easter Beagle, Charlie Brown!
    Runtime 30
    Tagline The Easter Beagle is coming! (2008 DVD re-release)
    Writers Charles M. Schulz (written and created by)
    Year 1974
  • Night at the Museum (2006)

    Night at the Museum (2006)

    #140RVW

    Ben Stiller PLUS Robin Williams peg the overacting meter in the red, but it’s not a deal-breaker, because this is such a fun family film…

    Night At The Museum

    What’s more:

    When this film was promoted I was very hopeful, simply because this story reminds me of the kind of book I read when I was a kid, like From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler. Makes sense, since it’s based on a 1993 children’s book of the same name by Milan Trenc. It’s a fantastic premise, simple though it is.

    Night At The Museum

    The big worry, of course, was the double threat of Ben Stiller & Robin Williams, two of the most shameless overactors of all time. But where Williams is funny if overbearing, I’ve never particularly cared for Stiller. Add in Owen Wilson & Steve Coogan, and this could have been a really unpleasant experience.

    Night At The Museum

    So no one was more pleased than I at how this turned out. Yes, Stiller is Stiller – a smug clown over-amused at himself – but his role as a struggling divorced father is a perfect vessel for him. He has an opportunity to show a quiet humanity and it suits him well. His interactions with his son are really sweet and make the picture.

    Night At The Museum

    Williams as Teddy Roosevelt is great casting; the blustery overbearing thing is actually well met here. Wilson is his usual whiny self – I completely miss the appeal of him – but Coogan is kinda fun.

    Night At The Museum

    A real pleasure here is Dick Van Dyke, Mickey Rooney & Bill Cobbs as the museum’s former night guards. So great to see these old farmhands practice their craft.

    (Note: this review was written on 4/7/2014 – word that Mickey Rooney passed away broke this morning. What an amazing talent we’ve lost.)

    Night At The Museum

    The effects are mostly good, although a few extra bucks of production value wouldn’t have gone amiss. Director Shawn Levy acquits himself nicely on his first big fx picture. It’s a really fun and not too stupid family movie and that’s not a bad thing at all. We need more of them…

    Poster:

    Trailer:

    Bechdel Test:

    Pass

    The Representation Test Score: B (8 pts)

    (http://therepresentationproject.org/grading-hollywood-the-representation-test/)

    Representation Test

    Main Cast Ben Stiller Larry Daley, Carla Gugino Rebecca, Ricky Gervais Dr. McPhee, Dick Van Dyke Cecil
    Rating PG
    Release Date Fri 22 Dec 2006 UTC
    Director Shawn Levy
    Genres Action, Adventure, Comedy, Family, Fantasy
    Plot A newly recruited night security guard at the Museum of Natural History discovers that an ancient curse causes the animals and exhibits on display to come to life and wreak havoc.
    Poster Night at the Museum
    Runtime 108
    Tagline This Christmas, it won’t be a silent night.
    Writers Robert Ben Garant (screenplay) &, Thomas Lennon (screenplay) …
    Year 2006
  • Kiki’s Delivery Service “Majo no takkyûbin” (1989)

    Kiki’s Delivery Service “Majo no takkyûbin” (1989)

    #140RVW

    1st Studio Ghibli film distributed in States by Disney is typically beautiful & lighthearted fare from Miyazaki-san. Short but not slight…

    ディズニーで米国で配布さ第一スタジオジブリフィルムは宮崎さんからの通常美しい&気軽運賃です。短いが、わずかではない···

    Kiki's Delivery Service

    What’s more:

    Kiki’s Delivery Service takes place in a world that is familiar yet seemingly more pleasant. For one thing, no one seems uneasy with the idea of witches flying around; it’s nearly commonplace. The story also takes place in a beautiful seaside city that seems generically European, combining the best elements of all of the major cities. I usually do some reading after watching a film and before writing about it (so I don’t influence my opinion of the film on first viewing), and I found comments by Miyazaki that he intended this to be set in a n alternate 1950’s Europe where no world wars had ever taken place.

    Kiki's Delivery Service

    So Kiki is born into an idyllic time, and when she turns thirteen, like all young witches, she is to go off and live alone for one year in training. It’s a perfect vehicle to examine how young girls explore their independence & no one writes for young girls better than Miyazaki.

    Kiki's Delivery Service

    Kiki’s constant companion is her cat, Jiji, who helps her work through her growing pains as she attempts to make a home for herself in the big city. Jiji speaks to Kiki but no one else. I asked why this was so and received a nasty look from my daughter, so just go with it.

    Kiki's Delivery Service

    Kiki finds the townspeople ill-disposed to a young witch, but after performing a small service for a local baker, finds herself a home and the means to start up a local delivery service. As she can make deliveries via flying broomstick, she seems to have made a good career choice, as long as she can sort out her feelings for a local boy.

    Kiki's Delivery Service

    Kiki’s Delivery Service is a fun little movie. It’s colorfully designed and beautifully realized. It’s not as serious or weird as some of Miyazaki’s movies, yet not as layered or ambitious either. It might be a good introduction to the style for newcomers. It’s very enjoyable.

    Kiki's Delivery Service

     As with all of the English dubbed films, it’s a mixed bag. While Kiki doesn’t have any of the serious cultural themes that get lost in translation, there may be subtleties lost in the subtitles.

    Kiki's Delivery Service

    The voice acting is unremarkable, which isn’t necessarily a bad thing. Kirsten Dunst does a credible job voicing a thirteen year old, as she wasn’t much older at the time, and she isn’t bad, which is usually the best you can hope for from her. Janeane Garofalo is also in it. Take everything I just said about Dunst and repeat.

    Kiki's Delivery Service

    Jiji the cat, is voiced in the US dub by Phil Hartman. While I absolutely love Hartman, it’s sort of an unfortunate choice, as they went for a very sarcastic approach that apparently isn’t consistent with the original Japanese version. The film was one of his last, released posthumously and dedicated to him.

    Kiki's Delivery Service

    I’d heartily recommend Kiki to Miyazaki newbies, particularly young girls and their families.

    Poster:

    Trailer:

    Bechdel Test:

    Pass

    The Representation Test Score: A (13 pts)

    (http://therepresentationproject.org/grading-hollywood-the-representation-test/)

    Representation Test

    Main Cast Kirsten Dunst Kiki (voice: English version), Minami Takayama Kiki/Ursula (voice), Rei Sakuma Jiji (voice), Kappei Yamaguchi Tombo (voice)
    Rating G
    Release Date Sat 29 Jul 1989 UTC
    Director Hayao Miyazaki
    Genres Animation, Adventure, Drama, Family, Fantasy
    Plot A young witch, on her mandatory year of independent life, finds fitting into a new community difficult while she supports herself by running an air courier service.
    Poster Kiki's Delivery Service
    Runtime 103
    Tagline I was feeling blue, but I’m better now.
    Writers Eiko Kadono (novel), Hayao Miyazaki (screenplay)
    Year 1989