Showing posts with label EmmyRossum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EmmyRossum. Show all posts

Sunday, 19 December 2021

Poseidon (2006)


The string of action setpieces that makes up Wolfgang Petersen's 2006 remake of The Poseidon Adventure, including high-up tightrope walks over flames, underwater traversal of long winding corridors, and crawls through air ducts and elevator shafts, keeps the adventure, um, buoyant, but it is hard to care much given the disaster movie's, um, lack of depth: the uncharismatic group of survivors we follow through the upturned cruise liner are nothing more than faces - a sad-duck daughter of a former New York mayor, the former New York mayor, a stowaway, and a grifter of some sort - and we get no bigger picture of them or of the disaster itself - how, for instance, does the group know which way to go; do any of them have anything they care about back on land; why do they only encounter a next and a next obstacle and not, say, other people, and what is happening at all anywhere beyond their confined-space sphere of action - in the ballroom or in a rescue operation team somewhere, say, or, say, anywhere else in the world?

★★★☆☆

CINECAL: ONE SENTENCE REVIEWS

Friday, 14 August 2020

Cold Pursuit (2019)

In the township of Kehoe in the Colorado Rocky Mountains, against a backdrop of five-metre snows and glacial waterfalls, a snowplow driver seeks grisly revenge on those responsible for his son's death, and as in Harry Brown - because that's who this unlikely vigilante reminds you of, a snowplow-driving Harry Brown - there's a grim satisfaction to be gotten from watching smug druglords receiving their comeuppance from an unlikely avenger, but the movie makes you contend with a snowstorm of Fargo-style detail -the background details and idiosyncracies of oddball characters - that for the middle two-thirds of the movie, sends the plot and fun into hibernation.

★★☆☆☆

CINECAL: ONE SENTENCE REVIEWS

Friday, 16 December 2016

Beautiful Creatures (2013)


Teens familiar with the book series might appreciate this tiresome movie in which ancient feuding families, let's say "the Muggles and the Capulets", have their rift exascerbated by the blossoming love of Eric and Lena, a star-crossed pair of opposites a little like magic-casting Twilight versions of Romeo and Juliet with Southern accents.

★★☆☆☆

CINECAL: ONE SENTENCE REVIEWS


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