Movie news on your iPhone today!
Advertisement
Sign in
Username   Password         Forgot password?
Wanna join? Sign up
Find movies you'll love

ilyusha Blog

  • A delightful fantasy

    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
    Under discussion:

    Stardust  (2007)

    As an admitted fan of fantasy, I was very much looking forward to finally seeing Stardust.  It did not disappoint.  Engaging plot, a universe populated by well-developed characters, a healthy sprinkling of magic - it all comes together to serve as a wonderful stage to explore The Big Idea.  Which happens to be not about an affirmation of some philosophical credo or a celebration of the triumph of good over evil, - make no mistake, the good does prevail, - but a simple lovely truth.

    A young man sets out to capture a fallen star, so that he can win the hand in marriage of the fairest girl in his village.  Little does he know that the star - who turns out to be a beautiful, if slightly neurotic, young woman - is greatly prised by two less-then-good forces: A clan of old witches who seek to recover their youth and the remaining members of a family of fratricidal princes who seek to assert each of their claims to the vacant throne.  Many perilous adventures ensue, the boy transforms himself - with a little help from an unconventional captain of the flying pirate ship - from a naïve shop assistant to a strapping romantic hero, and discovers that true love is about lighting up when the person that you love is with you.

    That the story is delivered in light tones makes it all the more entertaining - there is plenty of comical happenstance and dialogue interspersed with all sorts of wickedness.  It also makes the movie seem less than serious at times, which could be viewed as a negative.

    The heavyweights, Michelle Pfeiffer and Robert DeNiro - the latter, especially, - steal the show on more than one occasion, but the rest of the cast gives convincing performances all around.  The supporting characters, among them the devotedly protective pirate crew, the goat turned into a man, the fast-talking trader in magic goods, and the improbably good-natured troupe of specters, contribute their share to the delightful narrative, adapted from the novel of a contemporary fantasy luminary Neil Gaiman.

    One for my DVD collection, surely.

    This review is also posted on my personal website.


  • A great romcom

    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
    Under discussion:

    A Good Year  (2006)

    I admit that I am biased when it comes to travel flicks. Show me a knockout beauty with the backdrop of gorgeous vistas, and I start salivating. Sprinkle in some cultural subtext, fortified by the prominent role of local food and wine, and I am so ready to live vicariously through the on-screen characters, that the actual plot becomes rather unimportant. Make the locale one of my favorite places on Earth, and I will invariably give you a thumbs up.

    The events in A Good Year occur in Provence (Favorite place? Check! Vistas? Check!). The female lead is the ravishing Marion Cotillard (now, a newly-minted Oscar winner for her role in La Vie en Rose). The setting is nothing less than a vineyard estate. Everything is properly aligned for my enjoyment.

    And the movie is enjoyable, despite certain lack of believability around Russell Crowe as a romantic lead. He is, on the other hand, just flawless as a ruthless and haughty trader Max Skinner. Several members of the cast produce no less delightful performances, especially Archie Panjabi as Gemma, Max's witty assistant. Ms Cotillard shines as the local Provençal goddess, even though there is something inexplicably "only in a movie" about how she lets Max win her over.

    Flashbacks of Max's childhood that he spent with his late uncle at the estate, are seamlessly interwoven with current events and provide an insightful backstory to Max's [re]awakening from the world of cutthroat corporate finance to the world of unhurried country living (inheriting a vineyard does not hurt in this kind of journey). London, with its drab weather, acts as a perfect contrasting setting to the bliss of the sunny southern France, making an answer to the question "Which of the two places would you rather be at right now?" quite obvious.

    As behooves a romantic comedy, the movie is quite funny with enough situational mishaps supported by crisp dialogue. The exclamation of "Lance Armstrong!" may sound a bit incongruous coming from an Englishman (but then, who else can a Brit refer to in order to annoy a bunch of French cyclists?), but you'll feel an urge to cheer. "Remember: In France, the customer's always wrong" reinforces such a strong American-held stereotype that you won't be able to hold a snort. And "McDonald's - in Avignon. Fish and chips - in Marseille. Allez!" in response to insufferable American tourists doing their lamentable change-everything-on-the-menu-to-our-specific-tastes ordering routine is nothing short of priceless, an instant winged phrase.

    I suppose the credit for the dialogue goes to the author of the book on which the movie is based, Peter Mayle. Then, this is one of those movies that make me want to read the book.


    This review is also posted on my personal website.


 

Like what you're reading?

Subscribe
Search
  Go

Browse previous
<March 2008>
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
2425262728291
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
303112345

Dig through the archives

Categories
 


Advertisement