The year 2013 is slightly more than half way done. Though I haven’t been to the movies as much as I would have liked, there have been some highlights and here are three.
If I had to distinguish one movie as “best of the year, so far” it would be:
This is an excellent multi-character, generational family drama of the kind that you might have seen on a semi-regular basis 20 or maybe even 10 years ago. It’s becoming a clichĂ© to say that good character based dramas are rare these days, but it is true; and The Place Beyond the Pines is this year’s rarity. Spanning 15 years and 4 central characters this movie feels bigger in scale than I’m sure it’s budget could allow. This movie is essentially 3 different stories about fathers and sons and criminals and cops with overlapping characters. Bradley Cooper and Ryan Gosling are great, as you might expect, but seeing them work with material that is truly worthy of their talents is especially satisfying.
The Place Beyond the Pines comes out on DVD/Blu-Ray on August 6th.
Danny Boyle’s Trance is an excellent example of a “Neo-Noir”
film. Film Noir is the distinction applied to crime dramas from the 1940’s and
50’s that were dark in subject matter and style. They usually concerned
criminals or detectives and unsavory schemes. The definition of a film noir is
as detailed as it is changeable, depending on who you ask. If you ask me, the noir style
goes beyond the classic noir period of the 40’s and 50’s. Plenty of films made
since qualify as noirs since the central elements of a film noir are timeless. Trance
is about a group of art thieves trying to recover their recent theft from their
inside man, an art auctioneer played by James McAvoy, who is unfortunately suffering from
amnesia after double crossing them. The leader of the thieves, Vincent Cassel, goes along with a plan to
have a hypnotherapist, Rosario Dawson, help him recover his lost memories. The plot
twists and turns as memories are recovered and we learn more about the characters
and just exactly why McAvoy’s character decided to double cross his gang in
the first place. There are maybe one too many twists and turns, but this is
still an entertaining noir fueled by the energetic style of director Danny Boyle.
Danny Boyle's Trance comes out on DVD and Blu-Ray July 23rd.
So we’ve seen plenty of mismatched buddy cop comedies, more than
a few of them have been good, but it’s been a long time since we’ve seen one
about female buddy cops. It’s been a while since I’ve seen Sandra Bullock in a
decent comedy, too. Luckily, The Heat is a hilarious movie. Bullock plays a
straight-laced FBI agent in pursuit of a drug kingpin who crosses paths with
Melissa McCarthy, playing a wild card Boston cop in pursuit of the same
drug kingpin. They partner up despite their differences and hilarity ensues. I
know, it’s a formula, but all the correct variables were put in the right
places: comedic director Paul Feig, funny actresses Sandra Bullock and Melissa
McCarthy, and a script by Katie Dippold that is more concerned with making sure
the characters are funny people than bashing us over the head with “Hey, look! Women
can be funny!” A quote from Paul Feig, who also directed Bridesmaids, has been
circulating around the internet: “[I want] men to come away from it going,
like, ‘I’m not afraid of two women being funny’… These are just two very funny
people and you’re just going to laugh for almost two hours.” It’s true. You’ll
laugh for about two hours if you watch The Heat.
The Heat is currently in theaters.
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