Archive for February, 2015
68th Golden Globe Awards
68th Golden Globe Awards
Took place on Sunday 16th January 2011 hosted by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association
Golden Globe Winners in The Film Categories:
Best Film Drama – The Social Network
Best Director: David Fincher – The Social Network
Best Film Musical or Comedy: The Kids are All Right
Best Actor Drama: Colin Firth – The King’s Speech
Best Actress Drama: Natalie Portman – Black Swan
Best Actor Musical or Comedy: Paul Giametti – Barney’s Version
Best Actress Musical or Comedy: Annette Bening – The Kids are All Right
Best Supporting Actor: Christian Bale – The Fighter
Best Supporting Actress: Melissa Leo – The Fighter
Best Foreign Language Film: In a Better World (Denmark)
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/68th_Golden_Globe_Awards
67th Golden Globe Awards
67th Golden Globe Awards
Took place on Sunday 17th January 2010 hosted by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association
Golden Globe Winners in The Film Categories:
Best Film Drama: Avatar
Best Director: James Cameron – Avatar
Best Film Musical or Comedy: The Hangover
Best Actor Drama: Jeff Bridges – Crazy Heart
Best Actress Drama: Sandra Bullock – The Blind Side
Best Actor Musical or Comedy: Robert Downey Jr. – Sherlock Holmes
Best Actress Musical or Comedy: Meryl Streep – Julie and Julia
Best Supporting Actor: Christoph Waltz – Inglourious Basterds
Best Supporting Actress: Monique – Precious
Best Foreign Language Film: The White Ribbon (Germany)
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/67th_Golden_Globe_Awards
No Messing with Mills
Taken 3
Director: Olivier Megaton
Cast: Liam Neeson, Maggie Grace, Famke Janssen, Dougray Scott, Forest Whitaker, Sam Spruell, Don Harvey
Oscar Nominee for Schindler’s List Liam Neeson reprises his role as ex-CIA operative Bryan Mills in the third installment of the hugely successful Taken franchise. French director Olivier Megaton with a script by Luc Besson and Robert Mark Kamen, Taken 3 does not disappoint as a gritty muscular and tenacious thriller aimed for the 35 plus age group.
The first film Taken was set in Paris and the second film was set in Istanbul and now Taken 3 sees the much blighted Mills family in their home city of Los Angeles.
When Mill’s ex-wife Leonore St John played by Famke Janssen is mysteriously murdered, he is framed for the crime. Not wanting to becoming a guest of the LAPD, Miller ingeniously escapes from the police and goes on a vicious quest to find out who really killed his ex-wife and mother of his beloved daughter Kim played by Maggie Grace, who was the victim of a kidnapping in Taken and nearly sold into the sordid sex trade of Paris.
As the intricate plot of Taken 3 unfolds, it is revealed that Leonore’s relationship with her estranged and slimy husband Stuart St John played by Dougray Scott (Ripley’s Game, Mission Impossible 2) is not what it appears. St John owes large amounts of cash to the Russian mafia through some dodgy arms deals who can be particularly unforgiving when one doesn’t pay their debts.
Veteran ex-CIA agent Bryan Mills knows there is a frame up and in a terrifying and exhilarating cat and mouse game Miller is pursued by wily LAPD detective Frank Doltzer wonderfully played by Oscar winner Forest Whitaker (The Last King of Scotland) who soon realizes that Mills is no ordinary opponent. Liam Neeson has the gravitas and the tough guy image to be taken seriously as a hardened father who does not let anyone mess with his family. For there is no messing with Mills -he will find you and kill you.
Without spoiling the rest of the story, Taken 3 is a fast-paced well directed and gritty action thriller which sees Mills cause havoc on a Los Angeles freeway, at a University campus and in the penthouse of nefarious Russian mobster Oleg Malankov played by Sam Spruell (The Hurt Locker).
This is a shoot first and ask questions later film, with stunning action sequences and a fitting way to end the third installment of a gritty action trilogy.
With the razor sharp editing and unforgiving hand to hand combat sequences, the original Taken was such a surprise hit, with its trademark of unrelenting violence in a mature machismo style, it was no wonder that two more sequels were in order.
Taken 3 does not disappoint action fans and those that loved the first two films. Highly recommended viewing for those that like their action heroes older, tougher and wiser.
It’s a Hard Knock Life!
Annie
Director: Will Gluck
Cast: Quvenzhané Wallis, Jamie Foxx, Rose Byrne, Bobby Cannavale, David Zayer, Cameron Diaz, Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje
The 21st century film version of the hit Broadway musical Annie is no match for the 1982 cinematic treatment of the musical by director John Huston. In the 2014 version, director Will Gluck has chosen to rather focus too much on making it a contemporary New York tale and less of a classy musical.
Although that does not distract from the onscreen sparkle of the lead actress Quvenzhané Wallis, who embraces the role and become famous for being one of the youngest performers to ever be nominated for an Oscar for Beasts of the Southern Wild. The updated version of Daddy Warbucks, is a cellphone billionaire Will Stacks, wonderfully and almost gleefully played by Oscar winner Jamie Foxx who embellishes the role with humour and charisma.
The supporting cast is equally good including the rising actor Bobby Cannavale as Stack’s scheming publicity driven press officer Guy and his real life wife Rose Byrne who is brilliant as Grace. The casting of the film was diverse and brilliantly done with the exception of Cameron Diaz as Miss Hannigan, whose performance was jarring and questionably overplayed.
Audiences should expect all the wonderful songs of the Broadway musical with a more edgy tunes thrown in along with every available social media innovation that has beset American urban life in the last ten years including Facebook, Twitter and Instagram woven into an increasingly frenetic social narrative.
This Annie is no down and out orphan in Depression era America, but a rising vivacious star in a 21st century post-recession America, emphasizing that the gap between the rich and the poor has widened considerably in the last eighty years.
Excluding any social commentary, the 2014 Annie is a great feel good film and director Gluck makes fill use of the Big Apple as his primary location especially the spectacular scenes at the Guggenheim Museum, the Brooklyn Bridge and stunning aerial shots of the New York skyline.
If audiences are expecting a polished and flawless musical such as Into The Woods, then Annie is not for them. Will Gluck’s Annie is a much thinner, at times disjointed and very light hearted version which comes off slightly messier as the rags to riches storyline gets updated from its original 1930’s period setting to appeal to a the millennial generation.
Whilst the effort can be applauded and the production design including Stacks’s smart internet connected New York penthouse is a must-see, this Annie remains a tamer version of the 1982 classic film. Definitely suitable for children and those that want to avoid a hard knock life!
66th Golden Globe Awards
66th Golden Globe Awards
Took place on Sunday 11th January 2009 hosted by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association
Golden Globe Winners in The Film Categories:
Best Film Drama: Slumdog Millionaire
Best Director: Danny Boyle – Slumdog Millionaire
Best Film Musical or Comedy: Vicky Christina Barcelona
Best Actor Drama: Mickey Rourke – The Wrestler
Best Actress Drama: Kate Winslet – Revolutionary Road
Best Actor Musical or Comedy: Colin Farrell – In Bruges
Best Actress Musical or Comedy: Sally Hawkins – Happy Go Lucky
Best Supporting Actor: Heath Ledger – The Dark Knight
Best Supporting Actress: Kate Winslet – The Reader
Best Foreign Language Film: Waltz with Bashir (Israel)