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Saturday, January 31, 2015

Nightcrawler (2014)



Are you bored with movies that call them thrillers but offer the same old formula of blood and gore over and over again? Are you sick of stereotype villains and over dramatic performances by the actors in them? Have you lost your faith on thrillers that all the time is so far fetched and has no real meaning by the end? Then to restore your faith on the true colors of a thriller movie and what makes a darn good dark character possible, watch Nightcrawler.

Lou Bloom (Jake Gyllenhaal) used to be a jobless yet very enthusiastic man desperate to find his way out of the day-to-day petty thefts that makes him survive the day. But now he is a crime journalist doing his own pursuits for crime scenes at night and sells the footage to a local new broadcasting agency. But he is so desperate for a breakthrough story of his career finds an ideal opportunity one night. Lou draws a master plan to put him on the spot of a true crime scene and he is all set to get it on tape.

Nightcrawler’s plot is not common and unheard of. It peaks in to bitter yet very real circumstances of contemporary media culture.  And the movie brings in a very unique kind of a villain who is surprisingly the protagonist of the whole twisted plot. This character is very effectively and powerfully portrayed by the talented Jake Gyllenhaal, who is currently appearing in repeatedly challenging and better roles in his career. After last year’s less talked about yet one of the best of the years psychological thriller Enemy, his performance in Nighcrawler is indeed a plus point.

Nightcrawler has proper flow and very good cinematography. There is no moment where the movie unhooks the viewer from its grip. The plot rapidly grows with the main character and it builds the intensity at the correct phase. This movies is fine at its start middle and end. This is something very rare for a crime thriller and Nightcrawler is brilliant in its nature.

Genre: Crime | Thriller
Director: Dan Gilroy
Rating:  Genre 4.5/5 | Overall 3.5/5

Sunday, January 25, 2015

The Missing (2014) – TV Series





Honored to be one of the best 5 mini series of 2015 in the Golden Globes, The Missing is truly a brilliant TV show in the making. Though Fargo (2014) was more popular and grabbed the award, for me The Missing was more heart felt and sensitive to the core. If I call The Missing as the most hauntingly emotional television experience I had recently that would be correct. 

When the English couple Tony (James Nesbitt) and Emily (Frances O'Connor) goes to France for a vacation their small boy goes missing. Devastated by their loss the couple seeks every angle to find their son but fails. After 8 years Tony obsessed with the idea that his son is still alive returns to France to find him pursuing a lead. There he discovers some unbearable truths about his sons disappearance. 

The Missing’s’ plot and set up is very powerful. It takes place in a small French town where the atmosphere screams of a certain emptiness that creates a mind boggling mood overall. This atmosphere mixed with the disturbingly emotional plot the viewer gets dragged in to the investigation of this small boy. And right from the first episode things becomes really tense and for the next 7 episodes its nothing but beautiful expression of cinematic quality television drama. James Nesbitt and Frances O'Connor deliver commanding performances in this show and they are supported by another set of very talented international cast. Everything about The Missing is well planned and well executed and they apply to even the sub plots that make strong sense at the end. 

To return to the shows emotional brilliance I believe The Missing makes a child abduction plot to go beyond the usual detective or crime stories and makes it feel so dearly. The plot run in 3 parallel timelines where the most significant events related to the investigation takes place and each timeline is given equal importance. This is where the beauty of writing comes to play and the job is very well done. Even at the time of the ending the viewer will be left with so many things in their minds and arguments to fight.  And just like the father of the boy the viewer will be doing a silent struggle in their minds to understand the events more clearly. Being so The Missing offers a strikingly good ending. 

If you are a parent you will certainly feel disturbed by this show and will shed tears more than few times along the way. But it’s certain that The Missing is one of the most brilliantly told story of parents love. 

Genre: Crime | Drama | Mystery
Director: Tom Shankland
Rating:  4.5/5

Sunday, January 18, 2015

Leviathan (2014)








If I was asked to round up this movie in to one word most probably I will run out of a proper word. It is that brilliant in all its aspects of cinema and after a long time I can shout amazing and give the highest score possible.  If I compare Leviathan in to a living being the beauty of it is in its every molecule that makes a perfect living thing. Not only it has the best of looks it also feels warm and completely full of heart and emotion. And this mind bending contemporary tale of social drama from Russia will most probably numb your senses for a while. Director Andrey Zvyagintsev has delivered a pinnacle of creativity here and now I want to watch all his movies.

The plot of Leviathan is its strongest muscle. In a Russian picturesque coastal town an ordinary man is fighting a legal battle to save his property from getting demolished. On the other end of the lawsuit a corrupted politician grinds his teeth sensing his evident win of the case. But when a lawyer from Moscow comes with bitter information to burry the politician and to rescue the ordinary man things become heated beyond control. But the arrival of this lawyer turns in to misfortune than being a savior with certain unexpected events that starts to take place.

Leviathan is very good in presenting the plot in surprise elements. It builds from the scratch slowly but steadily. And every tough curve it takes it doesn’t become aggressive nor over dramatic. The movie manages to maintain certain calmness throughout but the viewer feels the intense calamity that brews step by step. How the director does this is mostly by the mood created with cinematography and subtle music. There are aggressive performances but they are not fueled by external cinematic elements. This is quite different to most of the movies we see but director pulls this stunt so swiftly that you may not even notice it. And when the movie ends some of it makes perfect sense while still most of it is a dark and a gloomy memory. Just like the cold empty shores with decaying skeletons of giant whales.

This brings me to the part where I admire the cinematography and acting of Leviathan. Right from the opening scene to the ending scene that makes a perfect connection of other scenes in between, this beautifully crafted movie is a piece of art in visual pleasure. Most of the wide-angle shots represent the atmospheric effects of this small and seemly remote town and its peoples life style. And the actors breaths life to a set of characters that looks simple at a glance but very complicated internally. They portray the good and the ugly with beautifully natural acting and for Leviathan it is a strong suit. These actors will make you remember the characters for a very long time.

To be frank I cannot recall a place where I can point as to be negative in Leviathan. There are no scenes or dialogues wasted and it seems like this is perfect cinema and we sure come across that kind very rarely. Definitely one of the best of the year and no wonder it’s running for the Oscars.

Genre: Drama
Original title: “Leviafan” (Russian)
Director: Andrey Zvyagintsev
Rating: 5/5

Fury (2014)





Coming from David Ayer who made some memorable movies in his career (Training Day 2001 and U571 2000 to be my favorites) and Brad Pitt in the cast I had high hopes of Fury. But it seems like Ayer was attempting to make a Saving Private Ryan but ended up losing the game. Don’t get me wrong Fury of course is not entirely a bad movie. But it is not what you call great. Comparing with Clooneys’ recent mega failure Monument Men this looks like its way ahead. But not really so. Monument Men at least spoke of true events and the plot was digestible. But this is more like Star Wars and quite far from reality.

Fury is a heroic tale based on the ending period of the WW2. Army Sergeant Don 'Wardaddy' Collier (Pitt) leading a group of tanks undertakes a deadly mission in the heart of Germany. When they become hopelessly outnumbered and outgunned this single crew must show utmost courage and bravery to face the enemy.

To speak of the good of Fury I believe the action sequences take the crown. When those bullets starts flying all hell breaks lose and for that few minutes the volume of adrenaline pumped is furious. And then comes acting. Dearly no complaints there as well. But I believe they could have done lot better. Maybe It’s something with the script that didn’t let them. Very good cinematography and set creation as well. The detailing is wonderful and it is in par with most of the high-ranking WW2 movies from the past. And for a movie of this genre the humor was quite good too.

But then why Fury doesn’t really make the cut to be great? I believe there is no true justice given for its run time. The movie goes from place to place with the tank crew but takes a long time to come to a point where the viewer should hang on to or have hopes of. The last battle is the moment of truth but the rest seems like some bitter justification to the fact that war is cruel. We already know that the war is cruel and we have seeing enough movies that proves the fact from the past. We want something more right now and Fury does not deliver that. And even the last battle seems too far-fetched and looks more Expendables than WW2 drama. These mistakes make this big production looks feeble and no matter how good it looks it doesn’t feel right in the mind.

Genre: Action | Drama | War
Director: David Ayer
Ratings: Genre 2.5/5, Overall 3/5

Saturday, January 17, 2015

New World (2013)




No matter what kind of an impression you had earlier regarding Asian action and gangster movies, New World will open your eyes to some thing so heart pounding that when it ends you will be hungry for more. With well-executed bloody action sequences and top of the line performances and with a  twisted  plot this movie just pulls you off the chair more than once.

Though some of Hollywood experts will call this a rip off of the great gangster flicks like the Godfather or Departed I solemnly disagree to that statement as for the fact that though this carries certain similarities it is brilliant and unique in mostly Asian way.

New World is a long movie that runs over 2 hours but it does not waste a minute. It has this elegance that the Asian crime movies commonly has with gangsters in dozens wearing clean suits and pitch-black and dustless cars that rolls on blood money. With that beauty of cinematography with panning and high angle shots New World creates a dramatically enjoyable crime thriller. And the music is so good it just swiftly blends in to the scenes and gives the viewer goose bumps.

The plot is not that complicated yet will take a while to make sense. It is twisty beware but some might be able to foresee the ending from far. But there is no solid assurance that thing will go as planned so viewer will stick to the end. Even at the end it gives some answer and leave the viewer with more questions perhaps. And all this thanks to the brilliant acting and direction.

Like I said at the start no matter what opinion you have around New World there is no doubt it is one of the finest of gangster crime movies you saw in a while.

Genre: Crime | Thriller
Original Title: "Sin-se-gae"
Country: South Korea
Language: Korean |Mandarine
Director: Hoon-jung Park
Rating : Genre 4/5 | Overall 3/5

-Priyantha Bandara

Friday, January 16, 2015

678 (2010)




This powerful drama from Egypt speaks of sexual harassment that woman faces day by day and how the majority of society reacts to them. Not to mention that it’s shameful to be seeing by men knowing that men has the sole power and control to eliminate this situation around the globe yet men don’t choose to do so. And in a society where woman pays the price for every harassment she goes through and their silent cries get disappears in the breeze. 678 will open up your mind to this ugly truth and the director has done a good job at making the message clear.

In a world dominated by men the voice of women is hardly heard. In some regions of the world (Including ours) woman has less opportunities to follow their dreams and live an honorable and an independent life. And many become tools of selfish men and harassment is not a rare thing.

678 is well directed. It is packed with strong acting by several lead characters mainly female. Though its storyline may seems a bit too coincident based it is loosely grounded on some events that took place in Egypt that led to controversial changes in law systems of the country.

It is not a surprise that the movie faced with controversy and several attempts of blocking of screening at cinema festivals etc. However it is to be understood that the subject is universal but not only limited to Egypt. 678 will give the viewers a fresh look at a silently burning issue and it is very heart felt.

Genre: Drama
Director: Mohamed Diab
Score: 4/5

අනෙක් අයත් එක්ක බෙදා ගන්න

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