Friday, 30 March 2012

The Hunger Games (2012)



Dir: Gary Ross

Starring: Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson, Wes Bentley, Donald Sutherland

                Suzanne Collins’ popular young adult novel gets the Hollywood treatment.
                It is the future and the country is separated into various districts, ruled by the capital and the tyrannical President Snow (Donald Sutherland). Every year all the districts hold a lottery where one boy and one girl between the ages of twelve and eighteen are picked to take part in a battle to the death, known as The Hunger Games. This year the sister of Katniss Everdeen (Jennifer Lawrence) is picked to take part. Katniss volunteers to go in her place and so the other tribute Peeta Mellark (Josh Hutcherson) and herself enter the Hunger Games.
                Adapting any book is problematic, you have to cut out so much and streamline it that you will always have people complaining that their favourite parts have been taken out. You have to find something in the book to base the whole film around and unfortunately The Hunger Games has to be added to the list of failed adaptations.
                The films main problem is that you never get a feel for any of the characters or their relationships. They are so lightly touched upon that the characters end up so two dimensional that they’d blow away in the wind. If you have no feeling for any of the characters then you do not care about any of the characters. This means that you don’t care what happens to them. This is a major problem when the second half of the film is all about the characters fighting to the death. The first half of the film is all about the build up to the Games and it manages to feel rushed as you barely learn anything about anyone and somehow also manages to drag terribly. I was hoping that things would pick up when the Games started and they almost did with a fairly effective opening first few minutes but by then all the damage to the characters had been done and so I had to sit through an hour of boring, neutered action. All the other competitors in the Games are so thinly drawn that it would be hard to recall their names if I hadn’t already read the books and so I didn’t care about them. Kids were killing each other and yet I felt nothing. I need to get to know the characters so I can actually care about their fates.
 Another problem was the depiction of violence in the film. I know that the film had to get a 12a certificate so that it wouldn’t alienate most of its target audience and I agree that you don’t have to graphically depict violence for the viewer to feel it or be shocked by it but the complete lack of anything in the film left me feeling like no one was particularly in danger. Katniss just looked like she was having a couple of days away in the woods.  We don’t get a feeling for the death of the competitors, we just have to take it as a given that they're dead because the film just tells us so. Most of the time we just get told their dead because the sound of a cannon going off signals it. A huge fight to the death has never been rendered so dull and lifeless.
                The film does have some redeeming features. The districts and the arena are well realised and for the most part the casting is good, like Donald Sutherland, Woody Harrelson and Stanley Tucci, even if they are disappointingly underused, and the acting is good. The problem with the dogs, one of the biggest problems with the book, is sorted out and showing us the workings outside the Games is an interesting touch. Also the films sparse use of music makes for a more claustrophobic and more realistic air to it, particularly in the Reaping scene at the beginning, but these are just small things which don’t manage to make you see past the films big problems which left me almost mind numbingly bored.
                A disappointing attempt which takes all the bite and interest out of an already filmic novel. Just read the book instead. Or watch Battle Royale or The Running Man, two films which have the same basic premise but actually do something with it. Let’s hope they can give us something to actually care about in the inevitable sequel.

2 out of 5 Buttons

Monday, 5 March 2012

Chronicle (2012)

Trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i-M5Qx57_UU

Dir: Josh Trank

Starring: Dane Dehaan, Alex Russel, Michael B. Jordan

 
The superhero and handheld found footage genres collide in a surprisingly original new film.
            Andrew (Dane Dehaan) is a teenager living in at home with a drunk abusive father and a dying mother. He is the typical teen outsider, bullied at school with few friends. He decides to start filming his life. While at a party with his only friend, his cousin Matt (Alex Russell), Andrew, Matt and their soon to be new friend Steve (Michael B. Jordan), the popular kid at school looking to be class president, stumble upon a mysterious hole which houses an unknown object which gives them super powers. They record the progress of their new growing powers but things take a turn for the worse as Andrew uses his powers against the people who bully him.
            The superhero and found footage genres are nothing new and there are plenty of films of these genres coming out each year. Though it came with a slightly dodgy trailer, Chronicle has gained good reviews. Its strength lies in putting the superhero powers in a realistic context. The characters are easily relatable and identifiable as real teenagers, the casting of unknown actors helping to solidify this. The film is not just a straight forward superhero film; it is also a teen drama. Andrew’s home life is set up straight away as we see a confrontation with his dad at the beginning of the film. It is Andrew’s struggles and problems in life which hold up the film and which ultimately lead to his change.
All three of the main characters are well rounded and ably played by the cast so we actually care about them. We get to see the three characters become good friends as they play around with their powers. These sequences are put side by side with Andrews problems at home and we see the problems caused by the powers which start to strain their relationship. Realistic problems of trust and jealousy are set effectively to a background of superpowers. We all know the feeling of friends being better than us at things or losing them to girlfriends or other new things. These are real human situations but they also just happen to have super powers.
            The film gets to play around with the handheld format. Andrew uses his powers to manipulate the camera, floating it around him so the film is able to gives us more cinematic and normal filmic shots than can usually be found in a hand held film. It also allows us to stay firmly with the characters as one of them is always going to be manipulating the camera. The film isn’t concerned with what it was that changed them, and it won’t bother you either, it’s just the characters that matter and we get to be right there in the fun when they discover each facet to their powers, a sequence in which they learn to fly is exhilarating and fun and leads to a dramatic conclusion.
            Chronicle comes unstuck slightly when it gets to its big ending set piece where its lower budget starts to cause strain. Attempts are made to keep the hand held format to the camera but credibility of this is lost as they contrive different ways to keep the conceit up. The final battle is entertaining but not as good as earlier parts, such as when Andrew takes on a group of older men in the street, and it is a shame we didn’t get to see more of this sort of action before the big ending. However, this is only a small criticism of a good film and shouldn’t discourage you from watching it.
            Not perfect but definitely doing something interesting and different with the found footage and superhero genres, Chronicle is a pleasurable surprise which deserves to get the audience of worse films such as Paranormal Activity. With fun action sequences, proper drama and likable characters you can actually care about it is a breath of fresh air.

4 out of 5 Buttons

Thursday, 1 March 2012

The Muppets (2012)



Dir: James Bobin

Starring: Jason Segel, Amy Adams, Chris Cooper

                The Muppets make their comeback in a film written by comic actor Jason Segel and featuring the creative forces from Flight of the Conchords.
                Walter is a massive Muppets fan. His brother Gary (Jason Segel) is planning a trip to Hollywood with his long term girlfriend Mary (Amy Adams) and invites Walter to come and visit the Muppets studio. They find the studio in ruin and Walter stumbles upon a plot to buy up the studios and mine the oil underneath it. Walter, Gary and Mary go about getting the Muppets back together to raise the money to buy back the studio and save it.
                It’s been many years since the Muppets have last appeared on our screens and it is Muppets fan Jason Segel who has brought them back.  Luckily he has given them enough jokes and silliness to appeal to an audience of fans and newcomers alike. The film shows a love for the material and for the Muppet characters which its writers and makers share. It is a pleasure to see the Muppets back in a return to form. The film plays on the fact that the Muppets have been away for so long with a story about getting them all back together. We get to see what happened to all the Muppets when they disbanded, tales laced with comedy and sadness. In the best, Fozzy the bear is now a part of a band called the Moopets, with Dave Grohl on drums, his dressing room in an alleyway outside of the building. It’s a story with comedy, “Save the cushions”, and pathos as Kermit apologises for not being there for him. All the classic Muppets get a look in in the film, even if maybe your favourites don't get as long on screen as you'd hope, and with Walter we get a new Muppet who should hopefully become part of the gang.
                Bret Mackenzie of Flight of the Conchords provides the songs which are as funny as you would hope. It’s hard not to think of the Conchords during songs like ‘Me Party’ and ‘Life’s a Happy Song’ and it’s a shame that he didn’t appear in the film. The actual celebrities that do appear are a little disappointing. Even though there are some greats such as Neil Patrick Harris, Zack Galifianakis and Dave Grohl you also get that girl going out with Justin Beiber and that kid from Modern Family, two actors more well known in America but still disappointingly slight. Hopefully in the next film the Muppets will have gained their popularity back and they can get the A-list stars that they used to pull in.
                A welcome return from a classic comedy troupe bolstered by some great modern comedians. Enough jokes and silliness to remind you why they were so great.  Hopefully we shall be seeing more of the Muppets from now on.

4 out of 5 Buttons