Showing posts with label 2015. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2015. Show all posts

Friday, October 23, 2015

Review: Beasts of No Nation (2015)


On Friday October 16, 2015 Netflix released its first original film
Beasts of No Nation (2015) simultaneously on its streaming service as well as theaters. This is an important moment for both streaming services and cinemas, and it’s sadly been fairly overlooked by the public. Original TV shows by Netflix, Amazon and Hulu are already having major impacts on the future of how television works; now streaming services are challenging theaters. Most major theater chains have banned the movie because it violates their traditional 90 day exclusivity release rights, but the film has still been released in a few indie theaters across the country, which will ensure it will be in the award race. As Netflix has more original films being released down the road, and other streaming services have similar plans, this may be a watershed moment for the future of cinema. Now for my review:

The film is set in an unnamed African country and tells the story of a young boy named Agu (played brilliantly by newcomer Abraham Attah). A coup is held and the whole country falls into chaos. His mother and younger siblings flee, but Agu, his father and his brother are forced to stay behind. Soldiers of the new government soon attack the village and kill Agu’s father and brother and while Agu is fleeing, he is captured by rebel forces. The rebels are led by an enigmatic leader simply known as The Commandant played by Idris Elba. The Commandant submits Agu to a grueling training and slowly strips away at his innocence to turn him into a child soldier in his army.

Idris Elba has had an impressive career known for movies like Pacific Rim (2013) and Prometheus (2012) as well as for TV shows like The Wire and Luther, giving incredible performances in almost everything he does, but this is possibly his best performance to date. In most films like this The Commandant would be turned into a cruel man who forces his soldiers to do terrible things simply because he says so, but Elba makes him seem caring and portrays him as a father to his soldiers; they follow him not out of fear, but out of respect and love. Idris Elba always exudes this strong sense of power and he uses it well here. He stands out on the battlefield and, while everyone else ducks and flinches as bullets fly past him, he hardly moves--a bit reminiscent of Robert Duvall in Apocalypse Now (1979). His charisma is equal parts tender and cruel, which is what draws Agu and the other young soldiers to him. Equally brilliant is Abraham Attah as Agu, who does an incredibly convincing job of showing the development of his character as he is submitted to war, violence, murder, rape, sexual abuse, drugs and starvation. He goes from childlike innocence to murderous to disillusioned and yet is somehow still able to bring some hope to the story through a monologue at the end. This is the type of performance that would be near impossible for an experienced actor to pull off, which makes Attah’s performance that much more impressive.

Of course great performances are nothing without a good script and direction, and luckily Beasts of No Nation was written and directed by Cary Joji Fukunaga (Sin Nombre, Jane Eyre and the first season of True Detective) who finds a great balance of showing enough violence and horror to draw you in and help you understand the hell Agu is living in without taking it too far. Even in the few scenes where it seems violence is treated nonchalantly, I think it is attempting to show Agu’s disillusionment toward violence. The topic of child soldiers is an intense one; there aren’t many people who would be willing to take it on, and there are even less that could do it well, but Fukunaga took up the challenge and succeeded.

It’s an interesting choice by Netflix to release this as their first film as it’s not attempting to draw in the average viewer and it’s a pretty controversial subject. The movie has received a lot of flak for depicting Africa as a war zone filled with monstrous men, when in reality it is actually largely peaceful, which is an understandable complaint. I wish there were more films that showed the peaceful side of Africa, but at the same time I think it’s important to not forget that stuff like this is happening every day in some countries. The film isn’t trying to say men like this only come from Africa. Men like this have come from every country including America. They are bred out of anarchy and chaos and simply want to create more. They kill because they can and take everything for themselves. They have no nationality or creed. They are hardly even men anymore; they are beasts of no nation.

Review By: Ben Ritter

Rating: 4.5/5

Monday, March 16, 2015

Jeff's Top Ten Favorite Films


I honestly can’t remember a time of my life without movies. There were movies I watched so many times as a kid that I can’t remember when I first saw them and the VHS tapes eventually wore out. Some of these included the original Star Wars trilogy (1977, 1980, 1983) and Steven Spielberg films like E.T. (1982), Hook (1991), and Jurassic Park (1993). To me as a kid movies were these sort of other-worldly awesome things that I never saw as anything more than entertainment. All I knew was that I enjoyed them and couldn’t wait for the next Batman movie, the next Star Wars prequel movie, or when they were finally going to turn Harry Potter into a movie. So at that time I had no interest in movies that weren’t handed to me by current mainstream pop culture.

But then when I was fourteen years old I watched Stanley Kubrick’s adaptation of The Shining (1980). It wasn’t a movie that terrified me (at first) but I remember that after it was over I was just sort of staring blankly at the screen as the credits rolled. I remember thinking “So was he a ghost? Did the hotel consume him? What was with that bear costume?!?!?” I remember having questions that just weren’t answered and never were when I watched the movie again. And again. And twenty more times. I had never experienced that in watching a movie; something that challenged me and didn’t give me a resolution that I wanted but one that was still satisfactory. So began my journey as a cinephile. I thank Stanley Kubrick for showing me the way, haha.

Like Charlie, it took me a while to pinpoint a list of ten favorites. I would say 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), Citizen Kane (1942), and City Lights (1931) have been my absolute favorites for a long time. Recently I’ve been fixated on Brazil (1985) and Groundhog Day (1993) so I knew they should be on the list. Take note that this list is in alphabetical order because I feel it would be unfair for me to place one above any other on the list since I love them all for so many reasons.  

2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
Brazil (1985)
Citizen Kane (1942)
City lights (1931)
Dr Strangelove: Or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964)
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004)
Fight Club (1999)
Groundhog Day (1993)
Vertigo (1958)
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1975)


Honorable mention would include The Royal Tenenbaums (2001), The Big Lebowski (1998), and…ok fine I’ll say it, Die Hard (1988). 


Saturday, March 14, 2015

REVIEW: What We Do in the Shadows


Good comedies are hard to come by these days. I mean good comedies that do more than beg for laughs by providing a good cinematic foundation for those laughs. For me, the contemporary Hollywood “funny movies” rarely ever work, and we’re bombarded with their kind constantly throughout a given year. However, there is a subgenre perfectly tailored to aim for laughs and still hold on to its artistic merit: the mockumentary.

This is Spinal Tap (1984), Waiting For Guffman (1996), and Man Bites Dog (1992) are some good additions that come to mind within this subgenre, and What We Do in the Shadows is up there with the best of them.

Many documentaries tend to follow a person or group of people in order to expose how they get through life, or how they will overcome an obstacle. By documenting this footage, we simply watch someone progress through life, and if that person is interesting, it makes the movie memorable. What We Do in the Shadows takes this documentary structure and adds an absurd fictional concept: What if a documentary crew followed five vampires around in contemporary society? As a result, a new classic is born.

Thursday, March 12, 2015

Charlie’s Top Ten Favorite Films of All Time


My story is probably pretty common. I started watching movies at home with my Dad, watching whatever he wanted. The first film I recall watching with him was The Blues Brothers (1980), matter of fact, that’s the first movie I remember ever watching. That movie has stuck with me my entire life. I still watch it every so often and love showing it people who haven’t seen it. I think we all have that film. You know the one. That one movie that doesn't have the best writing, perhaps the cinematography could have been better, or the acting is a little bit cheesy. But it’s still a movie that gets you excited every time you get to watch it.

The Blues Brothers is that film for me.

With that being said, choosing a list of favorite movies is really hard. For me, that list is in constant flux. There are movies that I love for my own personal reasons (The Blues Brothers), and then there are movies that are well produced that I have a high level of respect for and really enjoy watching. So really, I suppose there are two lists that are constantly evolving and changing in my head. Yet there comes a time where one must buckle down and make some decisions, and that’s what's about to happen. I’ve struggled with the order and what movies should be on a list of this sort, but I shall toil no longer! I present you with…..

Charlie’s Top Ten Favorite Films of All Time 
(at this exact moment in time anyway)

#10 DIE HARD: WITH A VENGEANCE (1995)
#9 PULP FICTION (1994)
#8 DIE HARD (1988)
#7 CABIN IN THE WOODS (2012)
#6 THE BIRD WITH THE CRYSTAL PLUMAGE (1970)
#5 STAR WARS: A NEW HOPE (1977)
#4 RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK (1981)
#3 BIRDMAN (2014)
#2 THE BLUES BROTHERS (1980)
#1 FIGHT CLUB (1999)

This list was really difficult to produce. Not all of these movies had a profound effect on the way I view cinema, but they are, indeed, movies that I cannot turn off and that I love. Please take special note of two movies from the Die Hard franchise making it onto this list. As you may find out in a later article about franchises - Die Hard is, unquestionably, my favorite movie franchise. What you see is not a mistake! And I promise I'll explain myself.. eventually. 

If you were to ask me tomorrow about this list, I can almost guarantee that the order may change or even the movies maybe different. But as of writing, this is it. My favorites. Have you seen any of them? Do you agree? Disagree? Question my sanity? Leave it in the comments!

Austin's Top 20 Favorite Films of All Time! (Part 1)


Hello, my name is Austin Glidden, and I am president of the Cardinal Film Society. I have been a cinephile since fall of 2003 when I saw Jean-Pierre Jeunet's Amelie (2001). It changed my life. Since then, I have dedicated my time to studying movies from all generations. I love film and the power it has to make real change, and I'm happy to provide this Top 20 list to give you, the readers, more insight into my interests.

To preface my list I'd like to make it known that these Top 20 are not necessarily what I consider the most well-made films, but rather, my personal favorite films of all time; my desert island movies, so to speak. I had very little criteria going into this list. I simply chose the films that I'd watch over all others. If I could only have twenty, I believe these would be it.

#20 THE GOOD, THE BAD, AND THE UGLY (1968) 
#19 LET THE RIGHT ONE IN (2008) 
#18 THE THIN RED LINE (1998) 
#17 CITY LIGHTS (1931) 
#16 REAR WINDOW (1954) 
#15 THE GODFATHER (1972) 
#14 TAXI DRIVER (1976) 
#13 BLADE RUNNER (1982) 
#12 ON THE WATERFRONT (1954) 
#11 A CLOCKWORK ORANGE (1972)

Those are my 11-20, and are films that have contributed to my understanding of film, and influenced the lens in which I watch them. I wish I could have 50 titles so to bring in more variety, but if I'm true to my history, it all starts with these ten and the next.

The remaining Top 10 will be posted after our first podcast episode. They are deeply personal to me, and each one is attached to a story that is important to my personal journey through cinema. I have tried to recount some of those memories in order to better explain my reasoning behind my choices. I will add them here soon. Be sure to listen to our first show to find out!