Sunday, September 16, 2018

The Predator

Directed and cowritten by Shane Black, The Predator is the fourth film in the series, though sixth with the two Alien crossover films. This installment deals with a group of soldiers and scientists who have to deal with two different Predators who both have their own agendas. Expanding on the lore of the franchise, it turns out that the Predators don't just hunt those they consider worthy, but use the genes they extract to upgrade themselves to become better hunters. The film stars Olivia Munn, Boyd Holbrook, Sterling K. Brown, Jacob Tremblay, Keegan-Michael Key, Thomas Jane, and many others. While all of their performances are very good, one huge problem is that they're sometimes over the top and try to be too funny many times. The comedy can work but can sometimes come off as overly sexist and rude, which I think is trying to capture the very 1980s manly feel that the original film and many others at the time had but just comes off as trying to hard. A lot of the editing, particularly when going from one scene to another, is very jarring and sudden. The way people learn about something new, like Holbrook finding the Predator's weapons and Brown's science team learning about the true reason why the Predators are on Earth, feels way to easy without time and very rushed. Some of the things many of the characters do throughout the film tend to either not fit with the character we've seen before or the motivations they have, like the smaller Predator being part human and wanting to help Earth even though he ends up killing a lot of people. The action scenes are fun to watch, especially the last one, if not a little over edited and hard to see in the night scenes. While it has great acting, a cool ending that hints at the future, and awesome effects, it suffers from over the top characters that we know little about, a story that's not very new and tries too hard and also not enough, and numerous moments that sometimes try to be way too macho. Over all: 87%
2018 top list so far:
1. Won't You Be My Neighbor?/BlacKkKlansman (tie)
2. Incredibles 2
3. Avengers: Infinity War
4. Mission: Impossible - Fallout
5. Solo: A Star Wars Story
6. A Quiet Place
7. Deadpool 2
8. Black Panther
9. Ant-Man and the Wasp
10. Ready Player One
11. Sicario: Day of the Soldado
12. Ocean's 8
13. Isle of Dogs
14. Game Night
15. Thoroughbreds
16. Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again
17. The Predator
18. Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom

Sunday, September 2, 2018

Wonder Woman (2006-2011) #1

Set after the events of Infinite Crisis and during DC's One Year Later storyline, Wonder Woman (2006-2011) #1 sees Donna Troy taking on the mantle of Wonder Woman after Diana disappeared due to her past actions and fighting her old villains to protect Steve Trevor. When she gets captured, a team is tasked to help find her with Diana part of the team disguised as an agent named Diana Prince. This is the first of three Wonder Woman digital comics that I got for free after seeing 2017s Wonder Woman, the first to focus on Donna Troy, the first to deal with the events of Infinite Crisis which I have not read but know enough about it to understand what's going on, and the first to download from ComiXology. While at first a bit confused why Wonder Woman was going by a different name, looking up what happened before helped me understand and appreciate the issue more. Though there was a bit too much exposition given in nearly every page that felt distracting, the story is well told and the artwork by Terry Dodson is very fresh and smooth. The fight scenes between Donna and Wonder Woman's old foes is the best part and the ending has some good surprises. Over all: 81%
Top list so far for 2nd set of comics:
1. Free Comic Book Day 2018 Invader Zim: Floopsy Bloops Shmoopsy
2. The Adventures of Superman Vol. 1 #500
3. The Unworthy Thor (2016-2017) #1
4. Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II #5
5. Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II #6
6. Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II #4
7. Thor: God of Thunder Vol. 1 #1
8. Wonder Woman Free Comic Book Day 2017 Special Edition (2017-) issue #1
9. Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II #2
10. Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II #1
11. Incredible Hulk (1999-2007) #92: Planet Hulk Part One
12. Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II #3
13. Wonder Woman (2006-2011) #1
14. Star Wars: Rogue One Adaptation #1
15. Tate's Not At Comic Con Local Indy Anthology #8

Sunday, August 12, 2018

BlacKkKlansman

BlacKkKlansman is the true, inspirational, and very poignant story of Ron Stallworth, the first black cop in Colorado Springs, Colorado who teamed up with another officer to infiltrate the local chapter of the KKK and stop their next terrorist attack in 1972. The film is unapologetic when it comes to the true life bigotry of anyone who has ever joined the organization and their feelings toward anyone of color or different beliefs. As the director and one of the cowriters, Spike Lee crafts a superb detective drama that adds a bit of comedy here and there, while also making one uncomfortable in such a way that you keep getting invested. The decision to end the film with footage of modern day alt-right protests over white pride, the Charlottesville car attack in 2017, and Trump's response shows how much little has changed but how much like the events of the movie can bring people together against such threats. John David Washington and Adam Driver pull of not only great performances but have such an amazing chemistry. All of the actors portraying the KKK, especially Topher Grace as leader David Duke, all do too good of a job at making us hate them. Both the music and cinematography do a fantastic job at evoking and capturing the era in which the film is set. This is a film that, no doubt, will leave an impact on so many people, will inspire so many, and will be impossible to just forget about, especially in today's current climate. Over all: 100%
2018 top list so far:
1. Won't You Be My Neighbor?/BlacKkKlansman (tie)
2. Incredibles 2
3. Avengers: Infinity War
4. Mission: Impossible - Fallout
5. Solo: A Star Wars Story
6. A Quiet Place
7. Deadpool 2
8. Black Panther
9. Ant-Man and the Wasp
10. Ready Player One
11. Sicario: Day of the Soldado
12. Ocean's 8
13. Isle of Dogs
14. Game Night
15. Thoroughbreds
16. Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again
17. Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom

The Unworthy Thor (2016-2017) #1

The third and last of the free digital comics after seeing Thor: Ragnarok, The Unworthy Thor (2016-2017) #1 takes place after Thor has lost the unworthiness of being able to lift Mjolnir and is now on a quest to find another version of Mjolnir that belonged to the Ultimate version of Thor. Although I haven't read the comics that have to do with the new Secret Wars event or Thor losing his hammer, the comic itself gives information about those events as well as learning about them from comic book video reviewers. You get to see a Thor who is more vulnerable than he's ever been as he fights large enemies without the use of his magic hammer. The issue has a perfect balance of Thor's expositional narration and the fight scenes that he takes part in. It had an artwork very similar to the previous Thor comic I read, and just like the former this is really good. One of my favorite moments was when Thor ran into Beta Ray Bill and agreed to help in, and this is the first time I read a comic with Bill. As the other Thor comic and the first issue of the Planet Hulk storyline, this has elements that Ragnarok would use, mainly Thor losing his hammer and much like how Infinity War played out he goes after a battle axe version of it. Over all: 100%
Top list so far for 2nd set of comics:
1. Free Comic Book Day 2018 Invader Zim: Floopsy Bloops Shmoopsy
2. The Adventures of Superman Vol. 1 #500
3. The Unworthy Thor (2016-2017) #1
4. Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II #5
5. Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II #6
6. Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II #4
7. Thor: God of Thunder Vol. 1 #1
8. Wonder Woman Free Comic Book Day 2017 Special Edition (2017-) issue #1
9. Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II #2
10. Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II #1
11. Incredible Hulk (1999-2007) #92: Planet Hulk Part One
12. Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II #3
13. Star Wars: Rogue One Adaptation #1
14. Tate's Not At Comic Con Local Indy Anthology #8

Sunday, July 29, 2018

Mission: Impossible - Fallout

The sixth entry in the Mission: Impossible film series, Fallout has Ethan Hunt and his team set out to recover stolen plutonium from the same terrorist organization as the last entry while being monitored by the CIA. While I liked Rogue Nation, I didn't love it as much as Ghost Protocol, this one was a huge improvement over the last one though I find it to be second best to Protocol. And to be clear I still haven't seen the first three films nor the television series that they're all based on. Tom Cruise, Ving Rhames, Alec Baldwin, Simon Pegg, Rebecca Ferguson, Michelle Monaghan, and Sean Harris all return alongside newcomers Henry Cavill and Angela Bassett and they all provide great performances. The action scenes, in my opinion, are all better done compared to the last one though some of the fight scenes, like one that takes place in a bathroom, as well done as they are feel laking since you expect someone to draw blood and they don't. Fallout's best quality is the various twist and turns, reveals, and plot twists that keep on coming every minute. Returning to direct and write, a first for the series, Christopher McQuarrie does a phenomenal job at creating brisk and amazing sequences while telling a great story with heart pounding moments. You learn the reason why, despite being abandoned and disavowed numerous times by the IMF, why Hunt is willing to do what he does time and time again and it makes you root for him constantly. Over all: 100%
2018 top list so far:
1. Won't You Be My Neighbor?
2. Incredibles 2
3. Avengers: Infinity War
4. Mission: Impossible - Fallout
5. Solo: A Star Wars Story
6. A Quiet Place
7. Deadpool 2
8. Black Panther
9. Ant-Man and the Wasp
10. Ready Player One
11. Sicario: Day of the Soldado
12. Ocean's 8
13. Isle of Dogs
14. Game Night
15. Thoroughbreds
16. Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again
17. Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom

Saturday, July 28, 2018

Fathom Events-Princess Mononoke

My second Fathom feature and the first time I went to see a rerelease of an older film, the Fathom screening of Princess Mononoke is part of a year long showing of Studio Ghibli and Hayao Miyazaki films. Set during the Muromachi period in Japan, the film deals with a village prince struck by a curse  from the gods and sets out to stop a war between mortals destroying the forrest and the gods and other creatures that inhabit it. One of the reasons I went to see Mononoke was because even though I'm not into anime, I once saw Spirited Away and fell in love with Miyazaki's style. The animation and visuals are all breathtaking and the various different colors are just so amazing and beautiful. While the English dub has some amazing talent behind it, like Billy Crudup and Claire Danes, and a lot of the dialogue is well done, some of the things the characters say either has weird deliveries or feels unneeded. As an animated film the fact that it's over two hours long and has a lot of very violent moments that fit the story is something many American animated films should look at and not be afraid to try. Although, while the fight and battle scenes are well done, there are odd moments where people loose their limbs way too easily and at times without them reacting as much to it. All in all, this Ghibli entry was good, beautiful, and had a good environmental message to it but not on par with Spirited.