Tuesday 12 April 2016

What we've been watching (March)


We watch quite a lot of movies; at the moment LOVEFiLM send us two discs every week... although I'm always considering the best way to get our movies.


So this is what we watched in March - come back to see what April has brought us.




The Lobster
In a dystopian society, single people must find mates within 45 days or risk being transformed into animals.

Quirky would definitely be the first word I use to describe this film. All the cast give solid acting performances, the film is well written and well realised. These are not the problems. The almost painful self-awareness in crafting the universe and dialogue are quite distracting from the movie... and as for the string quartet that provide a lot of the score - I was rather hoping that the twist in the tale might be someone going to the woods to shoot them.





Agent 47 Hitman
No comment as the movie was switched off after about five minutes. The plot didn't grab me, neither did the staging or anything else about it.





The Walk
Philippe Petit takes his love performance beyond simple street acts, all the way to the top of the World Trade Centre.

Once you get past the French accent employed by the main cast member this is a surprisingly good film. I didn't know the story behind it so I also go the commentary highlights afterwards from Rich who did know the story. It is superbly well acted and the mix of special effects with live performance works really well.





Walk in the Woods

Bill Bryson (yes, the author) decides to walk the Appalachian Trail.

This is a fairly pedestrian movie, although it has some stunning scenery; the best bit of the film is that it manages not to make you feel bad about not having walked the Appalachian Trail!




Heist
A botched casino robbery leads the thieves to hijack a city bus.

Despite the fact that Jeffrey Dean Morgan is the least convincing villain (ever) this was a reasonably enjoyable movie. Do keep watching to the end, it might seem like a typical robbery movie - but there is a twist in the tale.






Dark Places
Confronting the murder of her mother and two sisters when she was a girl Libby Day faces the possibility that her brother, jailed for the crime, might be innocent.

This was well acted and probably well written, just not really my type of film - far too stern and serious.






Date Night
Feeling that they are stuck in a rut the couple at the centre of the story decide to go on a date night and try something different, with disastrous consequences.

Whilst I'm not fond of films that are too serious I don't like films with slapstick ridiculous humour either. There is a limit to my ability to swallow ridiculous scenarios.




American Ultra
The small town stoner at the centre of this story spends most of his time writing graphic novels and getting high; if only he knew he has his own comic book life as a trained CIA assassin.

I was fairly determined not to like this film, but the superb acting from Jesse Eisenberg and the rest of the cast managed to win me over.