Thursday, October 22, 2015

Being a Steve Buscemi fan, it is hard to choose my favorite movie he is, but one sticks out in particular. In Fargo Steve Buscemi plays the role the not-so-scary kidnapper Carl Showalter. Although the movie is supposed to be a dark tragedy, Steve Buscemi playing the kidnapper turns it into dark humor. Also, the fact that is takes place in snowy North Dakota, and everyone has Canadian-like accidents, it just adds to the movies intended humor. The dialogue is almost hilarious because you get a sense that the director is making fun of Canadian accidents and how they are so friendly when talking to one another; but the setting is just as perfect as the dialogue. The movie takes place in a quiet small town, where the only police case is about a broken down car or a missing pet. So when this goofy car salesman hires Steve Buscemi's character to kidnap his wife and hold her for ransom, it kind of adds humor to the dark concept.
Steve Buscemi and the man (Gaear Grimsrud) next to him get hired to kidnap this low paid car salesman, and hold her ransom until the wife's father pays off the ransom. The car salesman goal all along is to hire these people to kidnap his wife- get his father-in-law to pay the ransom- then meet with the kidnappers and split the money. This elaborate goal is supposed to take the car salesman and his family out of a tight money situation, but sure enough, more and more problems occur, and the friendly pregnant policewomen gets involved in the case.
As the movies unfolds, you realize how stupid the decisions begin made by the characters are, and you are able to look past the fact that someone is begin kidnapped against will, by their own husband.

One of my favorite movies directed by one of my favorite directors, Christopher Nolan, Interstellar has the ability to to be one of the most original ideas for a movie. Nothing can be compared to its futuristic, yet present time realism of the portrayal of space and universes. There are movies that involve a real sense of space and astronomy such as Apollo 13 and Space Odyssey, but while watching Interstellar, you actually feel like you are orbiting around a planet (especially in the theater).

Not only is the idea of Interstellar original, but the way it was filmed and the choreography was pure originality. The idea of the soon to be apocalyptic stage of Earth has been seen before, but very few screen writes have told the story of Earth while it was decaying away. Most tend to do post or even pre-apcalyptic movies.  Nolan tells it in a incredible way, and then manages to shoot the movie even better than it was written.
Christopher Nolan, as much as it seemed, didn't use a green screen and CGI effects often. In fact, all the space ships and shuttles were actually built and the scene were they to the water logged planet, was actually a knee deep lake in Iceland. Nolan revolutionized filming and directing movies in Interstellar by the way he displayed the vast and unexplored vacuum known as outer space.

Thursday, October 15, 2015

Forrest Gump won 2 academy awards in 1994. Winning best picture and Tom Hanks winning best actor proved the movie was more than a simple man, cluelessly roaming the Earth. Although it seemed that way, I believe the message in Forrest Gump was much more.













Most people watch Forrest Gump and laugh continuously throughout the movie, because they either thought the way he said, "Jenny!" was funny, or the scenarios he got himself into were comical. What I believe, and what most might disagree with, is that there is extremely deep meaning to this movie. This not-so-smart, easy going man did everything in his life based off a simple question is it good or bad? If you noticed, in the movie he nearly does nothing bad (besides beating the man up who wouldn't leave Jenny alone). You can compare Forrest Gump to Jesus Christ even, although they lived in a drastically different time period and one was divine, they both acted upon morals. Forrest just did because he thought it was the right thing to do.













Even the times he didn't know he was doing a good thing, he was. He ran cross country (literally) while people raised funds and advertised Forrest. He went back into guerilla warfare to get Bubba and Lt. Dan. He went to the freedom speeches in D.C. and accidentally participated in rallies. Robert Zemeckis, the director, did an amazing job of incorporating Tom Hanks into actually footage of history. Another belief I hold is that this movie was to show a timeline of American history and peoples point of views while it was going on; and that Forrest Gump was to be an example of a simple man, who had the right opinion.
Even though the most recognizable quotes from this movie were, "Run Forrest, Run!" and, "Life is like a box of chocolates, you never know what you're gonna get." (an amazing quote) this movie has such a deep meaning, and could be a source of how to look at life.

Tuesday, September 29, 2015

In the past decades, motion pictures have become a popular way to get distracted from the daily, repetitive lives us people live. One of the best genres of movies is comedy. And very few people do it so well. Seth MacFarlane and Sacha Baron Cohen are the two funniest comedies of our time.

Seth MacFarlane, well known for Ted, Family Guy, American Dad, A Million Ways To Die in the West, has the satire, edgy sense of humor our parents tried to hide us from when we were children. Of course, we eventually began to watch such comedy.
Seth MacFarlane has always been doing something with animation, weather it was a whole show of cartoons, or a animated teddy bear edited into a movie. Either way, with or without cartoons, he gets the job done. Although he has some twisted humor, he is so well known and appreciated because he makes fun of the stuff you're not supposed to; and he gets away with it. If you take any other person off the street and have them tell a typical Seth MacFarlane joke, they will be viewed as racist, anti-patriotic, something along those lines. The way Seth MacFarlane does it can be considered an artwork. His comedy is obviously making fun of, not laughing with (he makes that clear) of people, ideas, events, etc. Just watch one episode of Family Guy and every minute or so they have a spin off making fun of something and really insulting it. I don't know how he does it, but he holds nothing back and is constantly funny. Seth MacFarlane is also known to do multiple voices, and he has a knack for doing musical notes in his writing, where he incorporates satirical humor into a song and has characters preform it. Oh, and he also hosted the Academy Awards, where he wrote a musical note to be preformed.

Sacha Baron Cohen has the same idea as Seth MacFarlane, where he is extremely satirical and edgy with his comedy. The only thing Cohen does different is he goes out into the real world as his characters. Sacha Baron Cohen may not be his most recognizable persona, but rather "Borat" or "Bruno" or my personal favored "Ali G". Yes, he is that guy that made one of the funniest, immature movies ever titled "Borat" where he played an innocent reporter from Kazakhstan just trying to get by in America (and meet Pamela Anderson). Cohen is a comedic legend because his comedy isn't written out, edited on a computer, and processed into a movie; instead it is filmed by an incognito camera man, where most of his dialogue is improve, and just going with the flow of the confused unprepared civilians he is dealing with. Although Cohen has gotten multiple lawsuits from his antics, he  surprisingly plays his role really well. Borat and Bruno are two movies where everyone in the movie had no idea he was playing a character. This comedy is so rare, after seeing Cohen do it, I don't think anyone can do it better. But, Cohen also does written out skits. He did that one movie, "The Dictator" where he played a foreign dictator that came over from America. Not his best work, but still a little funny. Also, he does this character "Ali G" where he plays an English wanna-be gangster who seems to know next to nothing and is very immature. He's interviewed hugely famous people like Kobe, Shaq, David Beckham, and then random people like small business owners, farmers, etc. But in every interview, he finds something that he can say to annoy the interviewee, or befuddle them with immense stupidity. Simple things like asking, "How many springs are in a basketball?" to Kobe can result in top quality comedy.

Friday, September 18, 2015

Where To Watch Movies

Since going to the movies now a days is too much time and money for our important lives, people have conveniently made websites with the theater movies in them. You can download a computer app called Popcorn time and watch almost any movie or TV show that has ever aired, or you can go onto putlocker.is and watch movies that came out only weeks ago (if you can click through all the ads). And since I find it helpful to watch full length films instead of doing my homework, I am here to tell you which ones to watch and which ones not to. 
Cop Car, a movie I recently watched featuring Kevin Bacon, very much met my expectations. The plot was more thought out than I thought possible for a film called "Cop Car", especially the fact that 2 of the main characters were kids. Jon Watts filmed and directed this in the scenic Colorado Springs, where 2  around find a cop car. One thing leads to another, and eventually they are in the car driving it. Yes this is a very simple story idea, but the reasoning behind why the car is there and what later happens to the kids and the car-less cop is remarkable.