Watching Instantly

By Vijay Kumar

July 5, 2010

Is there some reason we are in black and white?

New at BOP:
Share & Save
Digg Button  
Print this column
The January Man

This is a standard whodunit involving a serial killer and a cop in search of redemption. I was a little curious why NetFlix classified it as a comedy, though. This confusion stems from the bizarre characterization and direction of the movie. The part involving Kevin Kline and Alan Rickman is bohemian in parts and can be considered comedy in some circles. Yes, you heard me right – Alan Rickman is used as comic relief. The other part, involving Harvey Keitel and the serial murders, is thankfully not comedic – intentionally or otherwise. While this confuses the narrative a good deal, the un- or underdeveloped plot points do not help the film’s cause in any way. Susan Sarandon, of all people, is the common denominator in a love triangle with Kline and Keitel. We then have Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio as the clichéd bait for the serial killer. She is the one who falls in love with Kline’s character, thrashing the possible chemistry in the aforementioned love triangle. In the end, I ended the movie just to find out the identity of the serial killer. I didn’t want the movie to have consumed so much of my time and not give me anything in return.

The Education of Charlie Banks

For an actor who is repeatedly typecast, Jesse Eisenberg, is finding quite a decent amount of work in Hollywood. This movie tests the outer boundaries of his limitations. He channels a little bit of the nerd-with-a-secret character he exhibited in The Squid and the Whale here as well. The story and even the screenplay have great potential. School bullies are indelibly tattooed in many a person’s memory of school life. Many see as life beyond school as the escape route from that nightmare. What if the nightmare follows you to college? Charlie Banks (Eisenberg) rats out a school bully, and to the police, no less. He then proceeds on to an Ivy League school with only good things to look forward to. The said bully (Jason Ritter) is out in the open and promptly bunks up with Charlie and a mutual friend, who happens to be Charlie’s roommate. Awkward… for Charlie at least. Cue for Jesse to mumble and stutter. There is room for good drama and some suspense given the friend or foe chemistry that one can expect between the two main leads. Ritter vacillates between angst and anguish but his portray is a little undercooked. A cast of young characters and a debutant director contribute to a movie with unrealized potential.

Ended up with…

Whilst checking out the above movies, I invariably end up fattening my instant watch queue with some new additions. These go into my “Ended up with…” list and the plan is to watch them during the week ahead. NetFlix keeps tempting me to move each one of them to the top of the queue but I resist. These are movies that I plan to check out in the days ahead.

Avatar: The Last Airbender (The Anime Series)

Nickelodeon’s Anime series is a swashbuckling martial art fantasy adventure all rolled into one. With words of Manoj Shyamalan failing to meet expectations (yet again) in the theatrical version of the acclaimed series, it is only but natural for me to go to the original and seek some solace.




Advertisement



Born Into Brothels

In every desolate place there is always scope for hope. In most cases, it is in the form of children. In the oldest profession in the world, there is very little room for love and compassion. I am hoping that this documentary will deal with the subject matter with a lot of dignity.

The Anderson Tapes

Sidney Lumet and Sean Connery combine to give us a crime caper that sounds like a Ocean’s Eleven precursor (or follow-up depending on the version). I am a sucker for cerebral thrillers. The pedigree of the talent involved promises a well laid-out con game.

The Black Dahlia

One of the most famous unsolved murders in Hollywood, Elizabeth Short’s murder gives ample scope for neo noir drama. The movie underperformed at the box office but in many cases that is not a strong indicator of good cinema.


Continued:       1       2

     


 
 

Need to contact us? E-mail a Box Office Prophet.
Friday, April 26, 2024
© 2024 Box Office Prophets, a division of One Of Us, Inc.