|
Groovy Movie
Selector
for April 13, 2000
by Max Power
ERIN BROCKOVICH
–    
Or, Being Erin Brockovich.
Julia Roberts returns to where she needs to be. In a film that lets her
show off her talents as a truly fine comedic actress (and those dresses
don’t hurt, either). It’s based on the true-life story of Erin
Brockovich, a single mom who goes to work for a down and out lawyer,
wonderfully played by Albert Finney. While helping around the office
with his work, Brockovich uncovers damning evidence against Pacific Gas
& Electric and their pollutants and helps bring up one of the
biggest lawsuits against them (despite having no real legal knowledge
and background). Instead of legal savvy, she uses her body and wit as a
tool to get what she wants. Whether it means wearing a shorter skirt, or
pushing up her chest for maximum lift, she does what she needs to do in
order to get her way.
Director Steven Soderbergh
works from a true-life story and creates a smart, free-flowing film that
is delightful to watch. Unlike his last couple of films (Out Of Sight,
The Limey), Soderbergh stays away from the cinematic gimmicks that
he’s used to great effect before and forgoes them for a more
traditional approach with Brockovich. The result is a film that
gives terrific acting and most importantly, a fresh take on the tired
genre of little-law-firm-battling-big-bad-corporate-giant.
FINAL DESTINATION
–  
Alex (Devon Sawa), a high
school student, convinces a few of his classmates and teacher that they
should leave the plane that they just boarded. This was a good move
because the plane crashes. You see, Alex has the Shining. Oh,
wait, wrong movie. Alex has some sort of new ability to see when death
is coming. Alex thinks that Death is upset because he and the others
left the plane when their time was up and thus cheated him, so now Death
has to go after each one of them and take care of his business.
What could have been set up and
played out as a really intelligent horror flick for its target audience
(teens) was sorely missed. While some of the scenes are entertaining,
others are extremely gruesome and none of them come together well to
create anything of a real thrill ride, which is what this should have
been. Those who saw the original Scream a few years back when it
came out and liked it for what it did to the genre, would be
disappointed with this entry that fails to breath new life into the
horror category that Scream helped revive for a while.
REINDEER GAMES
-     
Director John Frankenheimer
resurrected his theatrical-release career a couple of years back with
the contemplative and adult action drama, Ronin. Before that, for
quite a while, Frankenheimer was relegated to fine television movies (Andersonville,
George Wallace) and poor box-office duds like Island of Dr.
Moreau and Year of the Gun. This, from a man who made such
classics as The Manchurian Candidate, Grand Prix, and
Black Sunday just to name a few. That’s why it is sad to see
that he got himself (or the rest of the fine cast), mixed up in this
rambling mistake. Ben Affleck is Rudy, a recently released ex-con who is
looking forward to spending time with his family and meeting Ashley (Charlize
Theron), a girl he’s read a lot about. Rudy meets up with Gary Sinise,
who plays Gabriel, a very naughty boy. Gabriel forces Rudy to help them
with a casino heist that Rudy’s old prison buddy was supposed to help
out with. Frankenheimer is very good at staging action sequences. If
anything can salvage this film it would be the fact that some of them
are very fun to watch, instead of the usual ‘crash that there,’ ‘blow
this thing up here’ boredom that some recent action films give us. For
Frankenheimer fans looking for one of his better films, stay away. If
you are looking for a jumbled action film that has some redeeming
explosive scenes in it, there isn’t much out there for you right now,
so you might as well see this.
WONDERBOYS
-     
Michael Douglas made a fine
script choice when he decided to be the lead in Curtis (L.A.
Confidential) Hanson’s new dramedy. Douglas is a writer and
Professor in Pittsburgh that has had his share of weddings and writer’s
block and now spends his time chasing a valuable historic dress and
getting frisky with the school’s (un-single) chancellor (Frances
McDormand). Boarding in Douglas’s house is a student, (Katie Holmes)
and she is very interested in our rumpled hero. And that’s just
the start of things to come in this unpredictable and enjoyable movie.
This film plays great for a mature audience as a comedy that has enough
emotional ingredients to make it truly endearing. Douglas gives a
wonderful performance, like none he’s given in quite some time, and
the rest of the cast shine along side him. With Tobey Maguire, Robert
Downey, Jr., Richard Thomas, and Rip Torn.
NINTH GATE, THE
–   
Johnny Depp has a pretty neat
job. He has to go around the world and track down priceless books, or at
least find out if they are forgeries or not. A rich booklover, played by
Frank Langella, commissions Depp to retrieve a mysterious old book for
him. Depp goes all around the world and begins to notice that everyone
who’s had some sort of history with this book has, gulp, died. The
film doesn’t rise to a truly scary and jolting level, but it tries to
keep a consistent mode of tension, and at least manages that. There are
a few surprises and some interesting characters that we get to meet
towards the end. Director Roman Polansky has fallen a long way from
films like Chinatown and Rosemary’s Baby. The fact that
this film has been sitting on Artisan’s shelves for over a year doesn’t
inspire much confidence, either. What it has going for it is some decent
atmospheric scenery (not to mention the numerous countries it is set
in), and a storyline that while not very good, doesn’t reach the
bottom of the barrel either.
MISSION TO MARS
–  
When astronauts on a mission on
Mars disappear, NASA has to send up another group to find them. What
ensues is a clichéd-ridden mess that only continues director Brian De
Palma’s spiral down the black-hole of poor filmmaking. De Palma has
made a good career for himself imitating, er, paying homage, I should
say, to Hitchcock’s work. Here, he takes after countless other
well-known sci-fi films (especially towards the last few minutes) and
forgets ho to steer this vessel into some original territory. Also to
blame are the writers. This film had at least three very talented
screenwriters and that could have been the overkill problem as well. The
cast is admirable with what they have and do the best that they can.
Gary Sinise, Jerry O’Connell, Tim Robbins, Don Cheadle and Connie
Nielsen all have to go to Mars and save the other crew. Drifting away
from sci-fi thriller and more towards sci-fi spirituality bogs the film
down too much, much like Contact, which flirted with the mystical
aspects of space a little too much. With a ‘PG’ rating, there is a
limit to where the film can take us with its gore-factor, but it does
give us some decent action scenes that make the film more bearable.
|