Archive | Reviews

Let Them Eat ‘Cake’

Jennifer Aniston is a terrific comic television actress. This is not to damn her with faint praise – since the 1970s, comedians have done their best work in that medium – but it does mean she’s a less appealing movie star. With her predilection for double takes, cocked eyebrows, and talking from one side of the mouth, her shtick (like Sarah Jessica Parker’s and Tina Fey’s) has never successfully translated to the big screen. Magnified to that scale, she seems more like Ethel Merman on the Paleo Diet than a true screwball siren. Yet she soldiers on in film, even as most of her “Friends” costars have found their footing in the brave new world of premium TV.

So it’s no surprise that Aniston occasionally tries her hand at serious roles: She played a cleaning woman in “Friends With Money” (2006) and an unhappy clerk in “The Good Girl” (2002). But in both those films – as in “Cake,” which is now playing in wide release – she merely eliminated her shtick without replacing it with other colors. The resulting characters are Debbie Downers: flatliners from a woman capable of sizzling one-liners. “Cake” is a particular disappointment, though the blame cannot entirely be assigned to Aniston. It’s tough to warm up to another entry in the growing genre that Grantland’s Wesley Morris has called the “dead-child movies.” Continue Reading →

Far From Perfect, Perfectly Mann: ‘Blackhat’

The opening few minutes of “Blackhat,” Michael Mann’s first release in nearly six years, are its dullest, and I’m fairly certain that’s deliberate. Mann is a director who’s always practiced the slow burn, and a cruddy-looking, old saw of a beginning – the camera zooms through a mouse-colored maze of computer wires and microchips – is in keeping with his strain of bombastic understatement, especially in a film about the pyrotechnics of cyber-terrorists. It’s not that Mann is establishing himself as doggedly anti-technology (as point of fact, he’s not anti-technology at all); it’s that he’s setting the stage for a different kind of action movie, one in which its hacker hero reads physical books by Foucault.

The hero in question is Hathaway (Chris Hemsworth), and we’re introduced to him after an explosion at a Hong Kong power plant and an attack on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange are traced to the same “remote access tool” (RAT). Enlisted by Chinese officials to track down the mysterious “blackhat” (slang for dangerous hacker), programmer Chen Dawai (Wang Leehom) ropes in his computer engineer sister Lien (Tang Wei) and then convinces the U.S. to release imprisoned programmer Hathaway on furlough; while undergraduate roommates at MIT, Chen and Hathaway wrote the code on which the RAT is piggybacking. Rounding out the anti-cyberterrorism team is an unblinking Viola Davis as Morgan, a fed who’s been scarred by 9/11. Continue Reading →

The Timeless Blueprint of ‘Selma’

I have seen “Selma,” Ava DuVernay’s remarkable portrait of Martin Luther King Jr. and the three Alabama marches that inspired the 1965 Voting Rights Act, at two press screenings. The first took place in November, and I wept so copiously that I felt it my duty to see the film again in order to write about it objectively.

The second screening was held in mid-December. Common was still rapping, “That’s why we walk through Ferguson with our hands up” over the closing credits as I emerged into a Times Square filled with protestors. Some were silently standing in front of the police station; others were holding signs reading “I Can’t Breathe,” a reference to Eric Garner’s final words as he was choked to death by a cop. For a minute I felt like I was in the film itself, and that’s when I got it: There’s no objective way to see “Selma,” and that’s how it should be. King may have prescribed peaceful protest but he also stated adamantly that there is no neutrality when it comes to the issue of civil rights.

The only man from the twentieth century who has an American federal holiday named after him, Martin Luther King Jr. is almost inarguably our country’s most influential civil rights leader to date. Yet, as improbable as it may seem, “Selma” is the first feature-length film ever made about him. Wisely, DuVernay and screenwriter Paul Webb don’t compensate by covering the entire arc of King’s life. Instead, they pick up right where a more traditional King biopic might have ended: when awards have already been bestowed but important work is left to be done. Continue Reading →

"All, everything I understand, I understand only because I love."
― Leo Tolstoy