Tuesday, May 8, 2018

Avengers: Infinity War Review













Avengers: Infinity War


Release Date: 25th April 2018 - Australia


Production Companies
Marvel Studios

Distribution
Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures Australia


Genre: Action

Rating: M

Runtime: 149 minutes


Budget: $400,000,000

Box Office Gross: $2,048,359,754 (Worldwide)


Plot Summary
The quest begins for Thanos, an intergalactic warlord, as he ventures to the cosmos to search for the Infinity Stones that will give him the power to eradicate half of the universe. Now it's up to the Avengers, with Doctor Strange, Spider-Man, Black Panther, and the Guardians of the Galaxy, to risk everything to stop the invincible Mad Titan before he collects all the stones and carries out his insane plan.


Cast
Chris Evans - Steve Rogers/
Captain America
Robert Downey, Jr. - Tony Stark/Iron Man
Mark Ruffalo - Bruce Banner/
Hulk
Chris Hemsworth - Thor
Chris Pratt - Peter Quill/
Star-Lord
Josh Brolin - Thanos
Scarlett Johansson - Natasha Romanoff/Black Widow
Don Cheadle - Lt. James
Rhodes/War Machine
Benedict Cumberbatch - Doctor Strange
Tom Holland - Peter Parker/
Spider-Man
Chadwick Boseman - T'Challa/Black Panther
Benedict Wong - Wong
Zoe Saldana - Gamora
Karen Gillan - Nebula
Tom Hiddleston - Loki
Paul Bettany - Vision
Elizabeth Olsen - Wanda
Maximoff/Scarlet Witch
Anthony Mackie - Sam Wilson/The Falcon
Sebastian Stan - Bucky Barnes/Winter Soldier
Idris Elba - Heimdall
Danai Gurira - Okoye
Vin Diesel - Groot (Voice)
Bradley Cooper - Rocket Raccoon (Voice)
Gwyneth Paltrow - Pepper Potts
Dave Bastille - Drax the Destroyer
Pom Klementieff - Mantis
Peter Dinklage - Eitri
Benicio del Toro - The Collector
William Hurt - Secretary of State Thaddeus Ross
Letitia Wright - Shuri
Sean Gunn - On-Set Rocket
Terry Notary - Cull Obsidian/
On-Set Groot
Tom Vaughan-Lawlor - Ebony Maw
Carrie Coon - Proxima Midnight
Michael James Shaw - Corvus Glaive
Winston Duke - M'Baku
Florence Kasumba - Ayo
Kerry Condon - F.R.I.D.A.Y. (Voice)
Monique Ganderton - On-Set Proxima Midnight
Jacob Batalon - Ned (Cameo)
Tiffany Espensen - Cindy
Isabella Amara - Sally
Ethan Dizon - Tiny
Ariana Greenblatt - Young Gamora
Ameenah Kaplan - Gamora's Mother
Ross Marquand - Red Skull
(Stonekeeper)
Stan Lee - Bus Driver (Cameo)
Samuel L. Jackson - Nick Fury (Cameo) (Uncredited)
Cobie Smulders - Maria (Cameo) (Uncredited)

Crew
Directors - Anthony & Joe Russo
Based on the Marvel Comics/Groot Creator/
Executive Producer - Stan Lee
Based on the Marvel Comics/Captain America
and Groot Creator - Jack Kirby
Star-Lord/Mantis Creator - Steve Englehart
Star-Lord Creator - Steve Gan
Gamora, Thanos and Drax Creator - Jim Starlin
Groot Creator - Larry Lieber
Rocket Raccoon Creators - Bill Mantlo and
Keith Giffen
Mantis Creator - Don Heck
Captain America Creator - Joe Simon
Screenplay - Christopher Markus and
Stephen McFeely
Associate Producer/Senior Visual Effects
Producer - Jen Underdahl
Associate Producer/Unit Production Manager -
JoAnn Perritano
Executive Producers - Louis D'Esposito,
Jon Favreau, Michael Grillo, James Gunn
and Trinh Tran
Producer - Kevin Feige
Co-Producer - Mitchell Bell
Casting Director - Sarah Finn
Production Designer - Charles Wood
Concept Artists - Bob Cheshire,
Sean Hargreaves, Andrew Redder.
Paul Catling, Paul Chandler,
Roberto Fernandez Castro, Tim Hill,
Chris Kesler, Oliver Pron, Pete Thompson
and Ivan Weightman
Head of Visual Development - Ryan Meinerding
Visual Development Concept Illustrators -
Anthony Francisco, Rodney Fuentebella,
Ian Joyner, Alexander Mandradjiev,
Jerad Marantz, Fausto De Martini,
Josh Nizzi, Andy Park, Phil Saunders,
Constantine Sekeris, Tully Summers,
Justin Sweet and Jackson Sze
Supervising Art Director - Ray Chan
Art Directors - Julian Ashby,
Thomas Brown, Jordan Crockett,
Jann K. Engel, Beat Frutiger,
Kevin Houlihan, Chris 'Flimsy' Howes,
David Scott, Mike Stallion and Brian Stultz
Set Decorator - Leslie Pope
Property Master - Russell Bobbitt
Costume Designer - Judianna Makovsky
Hair Stylist: Ms Saldana - Peter Tothpal
Makeup Department Head - John Blake
Department Head: Prosthetics Makeup,
Legacy Effects - Brian Sipe
Makeup Effects Consultant: Vision - Mike Elizalde
Director of Photography - Trent Opaloch
Director of Photography: Additional
Photography - Paul Hughen
"A" Camera Operator: Second Unit/
Edge Director of Photography - Ronald Hersey
First Assistant Camera: "A" Camera - Taylor Matheson
"B" Camera: 2nd Unit, Edinburgh - David Worley
Production Supervisor - Jason Tamez
Supervising Location Manager - James Lin
Location Managers: UK/Scotland -
Duncan Bradfoot, Lindsey Powell,
Aurelia Thomas and Naomi Liston (Uncredited)
First Assistant Director - Chris Castaldi
First Assistant Director: Second Unit - David Sardi
Second Assistant Directors - Jeff Okabayashi
and Matt Haggerty
Second Unit Director/Director of Photography:
Second Unit - Alexander Witt
Additional Second Unit Director/Fight (Uncredited)/
Stunt Coordinator - Sam Hargrave
Aerial Coordinator/Pilot - Cliff Fleming
Stunt Coordinator - Vic Armstrong
Stunt Coordinator: New York Unit - Stephen A. Pope
Fight Coordinator/Stunt Double (Uncredited) -
James Young
Fight Coordinator - Daniel Hernandez
Motion Capture/Movement Choreographer -
Terry Notary
Picture Car Coordinator - Dennis McCarthy
Special Effects Supervisor - Daniel Sudick
Legacy Effects Supervisors - Lindsay MacGowan
and Shane Mahan
Senior Visual Effects Supervisor: Weta Digital -
Joe Letteri
Visual Effects Supervisor - Dan DeLeeuw
Visual Effects Supervisor: Digital Domain -
Kelly Port
Visual Effects Supervisors: Weta Digital -
Matt Aitken and Charlie Tait
Visual Effects Supervisors: ILM - Russell Earl,
Jeff Caprogeco and Dan Snape
Visual Effects Supervisor: Method Studios -
Greg Steele
Visual Effects Supervisor: Cinesite - Andrew Morley
Visual Effects Supervisor: Framestore - Patric Roos
Visual Effects Supervisor: Cantina Creative -
Stephen Lawes
Visual Effects Supervisor: Additional - Swen Gillberg
Associate Visual Effects Supervisor: ILM -
Robert Weaver
Associate Visual Effects Supervisor: Cinesite -
Aleksandar Pejic
Additional Visual Effects Supervisor: Second
Unit - Mark O. Forker
Senior Visual Effects Producer: Double
Negative - Melinka Thompson-Godoy
Visual Effects Producer - Lisa Marra
Visual Effects Producers: ILM - Katherine Farrar
Danielle Legovich and Cabral Rock
Executive VFX Producer: RISE Visual Effects
Studios - Florian Gellinger
DFX Supervisor: Digital Domain - Scott Edelstein
Animation Supervisors: ILM - Kevin Martel,
Shawn Kelly, Eric Leong and Gang Trinh
Animation Supervisors: Weta Digital -
Sidney Kombo and Paul Story
Senior Animation Supervisor: Method Studios -
Keith Roberts
Animation Supervisors: Method Studios -
Daniel Mizuguchi and Christopher Perkowitz-Colvard
Animation Supervisor: Cinesite - Eamonn Butler
Animation Supervisor: Digital Domain -
Jan Philip Cramer
CG Supervisors: Weta Digital -
Gourdal Sebastien, Glen Sharah and
Sean Noel Walker
CG Supervisor: Cinesite - Chris Petts
Senior Virtual Production Supervisor - Matt Madden
Digital Model Supervisor - Bruce Holcomb
Compositing Supervisor: Framestore - Christian Zeh
Compositing Supervisor: Lola Visual Effects -
Edson Williams
3D Stereoscopic Supervisor - Evan Jacobs
Editors - Jeffrey Ford and Matthew Schmidt
Sound Designer - David Farmer
Sound Designer/Effects Editor (Uncredited) -
Nia Hansen
Supervising Sound Editors - Daniel Laurie
and Shannon Mills
ADR Supervisor - Daniel Laurie
Sound Mixers - Arda Koca and John Pritchett
Re-Recording Mixers - Tom Johnson and
Juan Peralta
Foley Artists - Shelley Roden and John Roesch
Music Supervisor - Dave Jordan
Music - Alan Silvestri
Score Recordist - Peter Cobbin


Review
When Thor: Ragnarok premiered to acclaim in 2017, followed by Black Panther in the following year. Both of these films strengthened box office records while outperforming most films that aren't even part of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. The hype has grown as the wait is over for the newly released film AVENGERS: INFINITY WAR, which the public has been enthusiastic about for its larger-than-life scale. Better than Age of Ultron, this is the franchise's darkest and most unexpected movie. It contains a melancholic cliffhanger borrowed from the same scenario as The Empire Strikes Back. This ending is heart-wrenching and may shock and surprise everyone who isn't a Marvel aficionado.

INFINITY WAR has a profound emotional impact on the storyline, with action sequences and splendid visuals. The additions to the movie consisted of heroes who had just crossed over from previous stand-alone films of the MCU. These include Spider-Man, Black Panther, Doctor Strange, and Guardians of the Galaxy. (except a few, such as Ant-Man, The Wasp, and Captain Marvel, who all have forthcoming movies before they appear in the second part of the feature). This big movie comes with an excessive running time of 149 minutes. It is even better than the first instalment of The Avengers.

The actors are back in the large ensemble cast, playing lead and supporting characters for this hugely structured and big-budgeted crossover. Josh Brolin is one of those actors. He gets a chance to portray the known villain Thanos after being introduced to the character in earlier Marvel movies. Brolin gives all he has to make the infamous Mad Titan a complex character with powerful motives. It achieved a more threatening antagonist than the MCU has envisioned in Killmonger and Loki. The music score was perfect, thanks to the continued collaborations of Alan Silvestri, who has returned to compose the third instalment of The Avengers.

INFINITY WAR is a thrilling, edge-of-your-seat experience and the best movie in the MCU. I recommend watching the first two films before deciding which one you plan to see, assuming it's this one.

Star rating: (10/10) Best Movie Ever

Tuesday, April 24, 2018

In Memory of Verne Troyer (1969-2018)







Verne Troyer (1969-2018)

Verne Troyer, the diminutive actor best known for his role as Mini-Me, the pint-sized clone of Dr Evil in the "Austin Powers" franchise, passed away at age 49 on April 21st, 2018. He was considered one of the shortest men in the world due to his condition of cartilage-hair hypoplasia, which resulted in him being 2 ft 8 inches (81 cm) tall.

Troyer had started his film career as a stunt double with some minor comedic roles in several films during the mid and late 1990s, including "Baby's Day Out," "Dunston Checks In," "Jingle All the Way," "Men in Black," etc. The pint-sized actor came into contact with film director Jay Roach whom they discussed portraying the character of Mini-Me in "Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me." Mike Myers, the film's leading actor, was impressed with Troyer's performance. He rewrote the script to add more screen time for Mini-Me and remove the character's death. Troyer reprised his "Austin Powers in Goldmember" role three years later and joined Myers again for "The Love Guru."

After his success in the "Austin Powers" franchise as Mini-Me, Troyer portrayed supporting and minor characters in several films, including the goblin Griphook in "Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stoneand Percy in Terry Gilliam's surrealistic movie "The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus."


Wednesday, April 18, 2018

In Memory of R. Lee Ermey (1944-2018)







R. Lee Ermey (1944-2018)


Hello everyone. It's been a while since I've done a news update on my blog. I've got sad news to tell you about the former U.S. Marine and actor R. Lee Emery, best known for his iconic performance of Gunnery Sergeant Hartman in "Full Metal Jacket" and his distinctive, commanding voice as the leader of the Plastic Army Men Sarge in the "Toy Story" series, died from complications of pneumonia at age 74 on April 15th, 2018.

He was born Ronald Lee Ermey in Kansas and served eleven years in the Marine Corps before spending fourteen months in Vietnam and then in Okinawa, Japan, where he got promoted to staff sergeant. Ermey's first appearance in a film was in "The Boys in Company C." The following year, he was in an uncredited role of a helicopter pilot in Francis Ford Coppola's war epic "Apocalypse Now," while working as a technical advisor on set. Ermey was originally a technical consultant on "Full Metal Jacket," where he convinced Stanley Kubrick to cast him as the profane, sadistic drill instructor through an instructional tape, even allowing him to ad-lib 50% of his dialogue in the film. It resulted in his performance being worthy and acclaimed in the film, earning Ermey a Golden Globe nomination as Best Supporting Actor.

Typecast as an authority figure, Emery appeared in such films as "Mississippi Burning," "Se7en," "On Deadly Ground," "Toy Soldiers," "Prefontaine," "Fletch Lives," and "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre." Emery even lent his voice talents as Sarge in the animated feature "Toy Storyas well as two sequels and his television appearances in "The Simpsons," "Family Guy," "SpongeBob Squarepants," "Miami Vice," "Kim Possible," "Scrubs," "The Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy," etc. In addition to that, he also hosted two documentary series on the History Channel and a reality show on the Outdoor Channel in America.

Thank you for your service, R. Lee Emery, and may you rest in peace, sir!

Monday, April 16, 2018

Tomb Raider Review














Tomb Raider


Release Date: 15th March 2018 - Australia


Production Companies
Warner Bros. Pictures
Metro Goldwyn Mayer
SquareEnix
GK Films

Distribution
Roadshow Distribution


Genre: Action/Adventure

Rating: M

Runtime: 118 minutes


Budget: $90,000,000

Box Office Gross: $274,650,803 (Worldwide)


Plot Summary
When the fiercely independent Lara Croft finds herself on the island where her adventurer father disappeared, she must push herself beyond her limits. (Source - Metro Cinemas)


Cast
Alicia Vikander - Lara Croft
Dominic West - Lord Richard
Croft
Walton Goggins - Mathias
Vogel
Daniel Wu - Lu Ren
Kristin Scott Thomas - Ana
Miller
Derek Jacobi - Mr. Yaffe
Alexandre Willaume -
Lieutenant
Hannah John-Kamen -
Sophie
Josef Atlin - Bruce the Boss
Billy Postlethwaite - Bill
Roger Jean Nsengiyumva -
Rog
Jaime Winstone - Pamela
Michael Obiora - Baxter
Nick Frost - Pawnbroker Alan
(Uncredited)
Shekhar Varma - Mr. Ahuja 
Rekha John-Cheriyan - Mrs.
Ahuja
Antonio Aakeel - Nitin
Maisy De Freitas - Young
Lara (7 years old)
Emily Carey - Young Lara
(14 years old)
Duncan Airlie James - Terry
the Trainer
Annabel Elizabeth Wood -
Rose

Crew
Director - Roar Uthaug
Story - Evan Daugherty
Story/Screenplay - Geneva Robertson-Dworet
Screenplay - Alastair Siddons
Executive Producers - Noah Hughes, Patrick McCormick and Denis O'Sullivan
Producer - Graham King
Production Designer - Gary Freeman
Supervising Art Director: UK - Simon Lamont
Costume Designer - Colleen Atwood
Co-Costume Designer - Timothy A. Wonsik
Cinematography - George Richmond
Stunt Coordinator - Mark Henson
Special Effects Supervisors - Max Poolman and
Ivan Janse Van Rensburg
Special Effects Supervisor: UK - Richard Van Den Burgh
Special Effects Coordinator - Lise-Marie Bothma
Visual Effects Supervisor - Hubert Maston
Film Editors - Stuart Baird, Tom Harrison-Read
and Michael Tronick
Music - Junkie XL


Review
I’m so sorry for putting this blog into a three-week hiatus, I haven’t had time to think as I was too busy dealing with other projects as well as a portfolio and interview preparations. Remember when the early 'Tomb Raider' movies were adapted into the big screen from its notable video game franchise and the first instalment was a smash hit and a career-defining moment for one of Hollywood’s contemporary leading actresses, Angelina Jolie. Now there’s a new cinematic interpretation that is said to have been inspired by the video games’ rebooted origin stories and takes a new spin into the iconic female character Lara Croft, into her new setting and personality. I’ve never played any of these games elsewhere but this new movie was much grittier and realistic and a bit of an improvement to its predecessors which were both subpar to everyone’s opinion. 

Most moviegoers have anticipated this picture and I just didn’t care how much has changed in the revised film adaption of 'TOMB RAIDER'. I’m sure this new movie will go far and succeed as one of the few good movies to be based on a video game unlike each one that turns out to be lacklustre and has brought nothing new and exciting to the official game template. The adventurous feel is still there in 'TOMB RAIDER' but the storyline feels like a cut-and-paste translation of other origin stories. I feel that it’s the filmmaker’s doing of trying to convene a gritty look in the picture. The action scenes are terrific and more interesting is how the film contains some decent effects as well as a splendid pace.

Angelina Jolie was the original actress that portrayed Lara Croft, she has now retired from playing the character and will be deeply missed. Alicia Vikander is nearly as terrific and seems to be enjoying her performance despite her own take of the female adventurer/archeologist being passable. It’s not hard to see and understand why she was chosen for that imperfect role since she was younger than her predecessor.

I believe the filmmakers have actually got some of the right aspects, even though it’s close to being the best video game movie adaptation. 'TOMB RAIDER' is currently awaiting for its release in stores and online-streaming. I wish you all the best, if you give the movie a try.

Star rating: (7/10) Good Movie

Monday, March 19, 2018

Black Panther Review












Black Panther


Release Date: 14th February 2018 - Australia


Production Companies
Marvel Studios

Distribution
Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures Australia


Genre: Action/Sci-Fi

Rating: M

Runtime: 134 minutes


Budget: $210,000,000

Box Office Gross: $1,347,597,973 (Worldwide)


Plot Summary
After his father has died, T'Challa returns home to an advanced kingdom hidden in the continent of Africa known as Wakanda and becomes its new ruler. As both king and alter ego, Black Panther, he gets put to the test when drawn to a conflict that puts his country and the whole world at risk. Can T'Challa defend Wakanda from a challenger who wishes to assume the throne?


Cast
Chadwick Boseman -
T'Challa/Black Panther
Michael B. Jordan - Erik Killmonger
Lupita Nyong'o - Nakia
Danai Gurira - Okoye
Martin Freeman - Everett K. Ross
Letitia Wright - Shuri
Winston Duke - M'Daku
Sterling K. Brown - N'Jobu
Angela Bassett - Ramona
Forest Whitaker - Zuri
Andy Serkis - Ulysses Klaue
Florence Kasumba - Ayo
John Kani - T'Chaka
David S. Lee - Limbani
Nabiyah Be - Linda
Isaach De Bankolé - River Tribe Elder
Connie Chiume - Mining Tribe Elder
Dorothy Steel - Merchant Tribe Elder
Danny Sapani - Border Tribe Elder
Atandwa Kani - Young T'Chaka
Ashton Tyler - Young T'Challa
Denzel Whitaker - James/
Young Zuri
Francesca Faridany - Museum Director
Seth Carr - Young Killmonger
Stan Lee - Thirsty Gambler (Cameo)
Sebastian Stan - Bucky Barnes (Cameo) (Uncredited)

Crew
Writer/Director - Ryan Coogler
Based on the Marvel Comics/Executive Producer - Stan Lee
Based on the Marvel Comics - Jack Kirby
Writer - Joe Robert Cole
Executive Producers -
Victoria Alonso, Jeffrey
Chernov, Louis D'Esposito
and Nate Moore
Producer - Kevin Feige
Co-Producer - David J. Grant
Casting Director - Sarah Finn
Dialect Coach - Beth McGuire
Production Designer - Hannah Beachler
Head of Visual Development - Ryan Meinerding
Visual Development Concept Illustrators - Anthony Francisco, Rodney Fuentebella, Ian Joyner, Vance Kovacs,
Khang Le, Alexander Mandradjiev,
Fausto De Martini, Jerad Marantz,
Josh Nizzi, Andy Park,
Constantine Sekeris, Tully Summers,
Jackson Sze and Henrik Tamm
Supervision Art Director - Alan Hook
Art Directors - Jason T. Clark,
Joseph Hiura, Alex McCarroll,
Jay Pelissier, Jesse Rosenthal and
Dominic Silverstri
Set Decorator - Jay Hart
Property Master - Andrew Petrotta
Costume Designer - Ruth E. Carter
Specialty Costumes Supervisor - Russell Shinkle
Hair Department Head - Camille Friend
Makeup Department Head - Joel Harlow
Director of Photography - Rachel Morrison
Director of Photography: South Korea Unit -
Igor Meglic
Director of Photography: Atlantis Second Unit -
Bruce McCleery
"A" Camera/Steadicam Operator - P. Scott Sakamoto
Camera Operators: South Korea Unit -
Onofrio Pansini, Jacques Hatkin,
Maurice McGuire and Chris Duskin
Second Assistant Camera: South Korea Unit -
Andrew Crankshaw, Chris Burket,
Harry Jamieson, Jimin & Ted Lee and
Michael Luntzel
First Assistant Directors: South Korea Unit -
Marvin Williams and Jigwang 'Jerry' Ko
Second Unit Director - Darrin Prescott
Second Unit Director (Uncredited)/Stunt
Coordinator - Andy Gill
Supervising Location Manager - Ilt Jones
Stunt Coordinator - Jonathan Eusebio
Stunt Coordinators: South Korea Unit -
R.A. Rondell, Yoohun Chung, Wonjong Song
and Hank Amos
Supervising Stunt Coordinator: Additional
Photography - George Cottle
Stunt Coordinator: Additional Photography -
Brycen Counts
Co-Stunt Coordinator: Additional Photography -
Dan Brown
Fight Choreographer: Additional Photography/
Stunts - Chris Brewster
Picture Car Coordinator - Dennis McCarthy
Special Effects Supervisor - Daniel Sudick
Special Effects Coordinator - Jesse Noel
Visual Effects Supervisor - Geoffrey Baumann
Visual Effects Supervisor: ILM - Craig Hammack
Visual Effects Supervisor: Cantina Creative -
Stephen Lawes
Visual Effects Supervisor: Lola - Edson Williams
Visual Effects Supervisor: Additional -
Jesse James Chisholm
VFX Supervisor: Scanline VFX - Bryan Grill
Visual Effects Producer - Lisa Beroud
Visual Effects Producer: ILM - Lee Briggs
Visual Effects Producer: RISE Visual Effects
Studios - Florian Gellinger
Visual Effects Consultant: Scanline VFX -
Stephan Trojansky
Visual Effects Art Director: Scanline VFX -
Claas Henke
Lead Visual Effects Editor - Kevin J. Jolly
Animation Supervisors: Method Studios -
Matt Kowaliszyn and Daryl Sawchuk
Animation Supervisor: ILM - Matthew Cowie
Animation Supervisor: Luma Pictures -
Raphael A. Pimentel
Motion Capture Supervisor - Simon Kay
Visualisation Supervisor - Scott Meadows
Previs Supervisor: The Third Floor - Kyle Robinson
Stereoscopic Supervisor - Evan Jacobs
Editors - Debbie Berman and
Michael P. Shawver
Additional Editor - Claudio Castello
Sound Designer - David C. Hughes
Re-Recording Mixer/Supervising Sound
Editor/Sound Designer (Uncredited) - Steve Boedekker
Supervising Sound Editor - Benjamin A. Burtt
Dialogue/ADR Editors - Cheryl Nardi
and Chris Gridley
Sound Mixer - Peter J. Devlin
Re-Recording Mixer - Brandon Proctor
Foley Artists - Shelley Roden and
John Roesch
Music - Ludwig Göransoon
Original Songs - Kendrick Lamar
Music Supervisor - Dave Jordan


Review
Audiences and fans have quickly rejoiced for the Black Panther. Now he's got a movie of his namesake. Thanks to Marvel for its ongoing cinematic franchise. The Black Panther character makes his screen debut in Captain America: Civil War. Because of this, Marvel planned a spin-off feature, cementing Black Panther's transition from the comic-book world to the big screen. Many viewers waited patiently for this movie until it opened in cinemas in 2018. BLACK PANTHER precedes the upcoming film Avengers: Infinity War, which will follow up with the former flick, at least in a few months.

BLACK PANTHER reminds me of The Lion King because it has a few mystical aspects integrated into its futuristic theme. The CGI was an absolute splendour, and the city of Wakanda was incredibly detailed, thanks to the many visual effects. The CGI artists have brought this production element to a new level of creativity. Director Ryan Coogler of Creed fame was involved in making this feature, and it is not the first black superhero movie to receive a circle of widespread attention. Fewer films have tried that (with the semi-exception of Blade). None could even attain the positive response from its intended audience, which Coogler's films have.

Having looked into Civil War, I didn't mention Chadwick Boseman, who plays the eponymous hero, as I first critiqued the previous film. He was terrific in his performance, which made him a household name. He doesn't disappoint in this spin-off. Michael B. Jordan lands in a definitive portrayal as Killmonger, a would-be usurper who has gained empathy from fans and viewers about his troubled backstory. Among the all-star cast was Andy Serkis as the mercenary Ulysses Klaus, whom he reprised. In BLACK PANTHER, Serkis' character is supposedly the main villain, only to be bumped off by Jordan's standout role. Forest Whitaker and Lupita Nyong'o also appeared in this prominent feature.

I enjoyed this movie for its style and visuals. I appreciated that BLACK PANTHER didn't go unnoticed by anyone, for it was the worthy middle child of Phase 3 in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Before the session times are over, this could be your last chance to see the film in cinemas. It is suited to all Marvel fans who are familiar with the character from reading the comics.

Star rating: (9/10) Excellent Movie

Thursday, March 8, 2018

Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle Review












Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle


Release Date: 26th December 2017 - Australia


Production Companies
Columbia Pictures (presents)
Matt Tolmach Productions
Radar Pictures
Seven Bucks Productions

Distribution
Sony Pictures Australia


Genre: Adventure/Comedy

Rating: PG

Runtime: 111 minutes


Budget: $150,000,000

Box Office Gross: $962,544,585 (Worldwide)


Plot Summary
When four high school teens discover an old video game console they've never known about before, they are transported into the game's jungle setting and become the adult avatar bodies they chose. With their newfound skills, they'll have to put them to good use as they embark on the most dangerous adventure of their lives. The only way to get back home is to finish the game or be stuck in it forever.

They soon discover that you are not just playing JumanjiJumanji plays you.


Cast
Dwayne Johnson - Spencer
Kevin Hart - Fridge
Jack Black - Bethany
Karen Gillan - Martha
Nick Jonas - Alex
Alex Wolff - Young Spencer
Bobby Canavale - Van Pelt
Ser'Darius Blain - Young
Fridge
Madison Iseman - Young
Bethany
Morgan Turner - Young
Martha
Rhys Darby - Nigel
William Tokarsky - Bread
Vendor
Rohan Chand - Boy at
Bazaar
Colin Hanks - Adult Alex
(Uncredited)
Marc Evan Jackson - Principal Bentley
Sean Buxton - Alex's Father/
Jogger
Tim Matheson - Older Alex's
Father/Old Man Vreeke
(Uncredited)
Missi Pyle - Coach Webb
Michael Shacket - Fussfeld
Maribeth Monroe - Teacher
Marin Hinkle - Spencer's Mom
Tracey Bonner - Fridge's Mom
Natasha Charles Parker -
Bethany's Mom
Mason Guccione - Gamer
Jamie Renell - Male Gym Teacher
Marc Evan Jackson - Principal Bentley
Kat Atman - Lucinda
Carlease Burke - Miss Mathers

Crew
Executive Producer/Director - Jake Kasdan
Based on the Book "Jumanji"/
Film "Jumanji" Screen Story - Chris Van Allsburg
Based on the Film "Jumanji" Screen Story/
Screenplay - Greg Taylor and Jim Strain
Based on the Film "Jumanji" Screenplay -
Jonathan Hensleigh
Screen Story/Screenplay - Chris McKenna
Screenplay - Erik Sommers, Scott Rosenberg
and Jeff Pinkner
Executive Producers - Ted Field, Dany Garcia,
Dwayne Johnson and Mike Weber
Executive Producer/Unit Production Manager -
David B. Householter
Producers - William Teitler and Matt Tolmach
Co-Producers - Hiram Garcia and Melvin Mar
Production Designer - Owen Paterson
Art Director - Steve Cooper
Art Director/Assistant Art Director: Hawaii -
Hugo Santiago
Set Decorators - Ronald R. Reiss
and Ken Chocolate (Uncredited)
Property Master - Josh Roth
Costume Designer - Laura Dean Shannon
Assistant Costume Designer - Carrie Grace
Director of Photography - Gyula Pados
Helicopter Technical Advisor - Doug Scroggins III
(Uncredited)
Location Manager - Laura Sode-Matteson
Unit Production Manager - Basil Grillo
Second Unit Director - Jack Gill
Stunt Coordinators - Gary Hymes
and Oakley Lehman
Motorcycle Coordinator - Justin Kell (Uncredited)
Dance Fight Coordinator - Nito Larioza
Special Effects Supervisor - J.D. Schwalm
Special Effects Coordinators - Eric Cook and
Eric Frazier
Visual Effects Supervisor - Jerome Chen
Visual Effects Supervisor: MPC - Robert Winter
Editors - Steve Edwards and Mark Helfrich
Re-Recording Mixer/Sound Designer/
Supervising Sound Editor - Julian Slater
Supervising Sound Editor - Joel Shryack
Sound Designer - Jon Title
Foley Artists - Gary A. Hecker and
Michael Broomberg
Production Mixer - John Pritchett
Re-Recording Mixer - Kevin O'Connell
Music - Henry Jackman
Music Supervisors - Manish Raval
and Tom Rolfe
Score Recordist and Mixer - Alan Meyerson


Review
Most people would have seen the original 1995 film adaptation of Jumanji as children and may be understandably biased towards the latest release in the Jumanji story. A supposed reboot of a movie could be distasteful for those who have read the book and grown up with the previous cinematic version. It would be especially so when this reboot has revolved around a video game instead of a board game. Moreover, for some Jumanji fans, the leading actor, Dwayne Johnson, would not save the film and live up to the standards set by the late Robin Williams. However, I was surprised that this was an actual continuation, not a senseless remake derived from pure egotism. WELCOME TO THE JUNGLE is a cleverly updated version that adds a video game/body switch premise. Its lighthearted tone proves to audiences that this sequel is entertaining for even the most nostalgic viewers.

WELCOME TO THE JUNGLE's comedy is over-the-top but gets outrageously funny at an accelerated pace. The film delivers innuendos not suited for children under the age of six. The cast was terrific, with the four lead actors, including Johnson, Kevin Hart, Jack Black, and Karen Gillan, having fun with their performances as teenagers trapped in their avatar bodies. Black portrays a teenage girl in her male avatar, which adds to the outrageous humour. It would not be the only time Johnson had visited the genre, as he had done before with Journey 2 several years ago. His macho persona hasn't prevented Johnson from handling the role better than his ill-fated on-screen part in Baywatch. Karen Gillan looks much brighter compared to her early years in Doctor Who. She is very remarkable in her role. One of the younger Jonas Brothers gets a role as a pilot and is doing it okay, and I liked Kevin Hart as the other source of funny comic relief.

WELCOME TO THE JUNGLE honours Williams' dying wish and is a literal game-changer. It eventually continues the lost spirit of the classic 1995 movie, buried in a pile beneath the family category. I recommend this movie to audiences like you - or wait until it comes out on DVD, Blu-ray, and online streaming.

Star rating: (8/10) Very Good Movie

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Tuesday, March 6, 2018

Winners of the 90th Academy Awards






And The Oscar Goes To... (90th Academy Award Winners)

In the last two weeks, I’ve been busy. I apologise because I haven’t had time to publish any reviews or news updates. Now, without further ado, here are the winners of the 90th Academy Awards.

It was better than last year’s ceremony, where there had been a mix-up with the envelope announcing the winner of Best Picture. Thankfully this didn’t happen again in this ceremony! I was slightly disappointed that Dunkirk didn’t win Best Picture or Best Director. Then again, it would’ve been the proudest moment for Chris Nolan to receive this award instead of coming out empty-handed without a gold trophy.


Best Visual Effects
Blade Runner 2049 - John Nelson, Gerd Nefzer, Paul Lambert and Richard R. Hoover

Best Film Editing
Dunkirk - Lee Smith

Best Costume Design
Phantom Thread - Mark Bridges

Best Makeup and Hairstyling
Darkest Hour - Kazuhiro Tsuji, David Malinowski and Lucy Sibbick

Best Cinematography
Blade Runner 2049 - Roger Deakins

Best Production Design
The Shape of Water - Production Design: Paul Denham Austerberry; Set Decoration: Shane Vieau and Jeff Melvin

Best Sound Mixing
Dunkirk - Mark Weingarten, Gregg Landaker and Gary A. Rizzo

Best Sound Editing
Dunkirk - Richard King and Alex Gibson

Best Original Song
"Remember Me" from Coco - Music and Lyrics by Kristen Anderson-Lopez & Robert Lopez

Best Original Score
The Shape of Water - Alexandre Desplat

Best Animated Short Film
Dear Basketball - Glen Keane and Kobe Bryant

Best Live Action Short Film
The Silent Child - Chris Overton and Rachel Shenton

Best Documentary - Short Subject
Heaven Is a Traffic Jam on the 405 - Frank Stiefel

Best Documentary - Feature
Icarus - Bryan Fogel and Dan Cogan

Best Foreign Language Film
A Fantastic Woman (Chile) in Spanish - Directed by Sebastián Lelio

Best Animated Feature Film
Coco - Lee Unkrich and Darin K. Anderson

Best Writing - Adapted Screenplay
Call Me by Your Name - James Ivory based on the novel by André Aciman

Best Writing - Original Screenplay
Get Out - Written by Jordan Peele

Best Supporting Actress
Allison Janney - I, Tonya as LaVona Golden

Best Supporting Actor
Sam Rockwell - Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri as Officer Jason Dixon

Best Actress
Frances McDormand - Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri as Mildred Hayes

Best Actor
Gary Oldman - Darkest Hour as Winston Churchill

Best Director
Guillermo del Toro - The Shape of Water

Best Picture
The Shape of Water - Guillermo del Toro and J. Miles Dale

Academy Honorary Awards
Agnès Varda
Charles Burnett
Donald Sutherland
Owen Roizman

Special Achievement Academy Award
Alejandro González Iñárritu for his virtual reality project Carne y Arena

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