Thursday, 3 April 2014

The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014)


Continental breakfast with a side of Peculiarity ?

An Author (Wilkinson) is reminiscing about his visits too which was once one of the most luxurious hotel in Europe in the 60’s, here the young author (law) meets the owner a Mr Moustafa (Abraham) how he can obtain the building from M. Gustave (Fiennes) the story involves the theft and recovery of a priceless renaissance painting and a battle of an enormous family fortune. All between the back drop of a suddenly and dramatically  changing continent.

The Grand Budapest Hotel continues the director’s upward curve with Fantastic Mr. Fox, but with the Darjeeling Limited, a project that was losing a lot of creative steam. Like Mr. Fox, Grand Budapest hotel is another film yet again with heavy emphasis on production design, with lavish sets and costumes. Anderson invests in interiors- target the life aquatic with a huge diagram of a submarine set-think Darjeeling with the outlandish Bollywood train; Moonrise Kingdom with the maze-like bishop household. Anderson always delivers with his overt the top sets, which makes everything seem just perfectly wonderful, and like your really there.

With The Grand Budapest particular detail has been used in little Georges Méliès-style cut out panorama’s with small silhouettes back packing up hillsides and elevators scenes wobbling up and down. Anderson revealed a new strength with his most handcrafted film to date, this had allowed him to control every aspect from Landscape to weather, this seemed as if it was one of his most soulful films.

Anderson is recognized for child productions but this was a adult project by far, this film was more broadly funny and subversive, to his dysfunctional family content of his earlier more deadpan and sombre films.

The film takes place in it’s own world away from anywhere- the republic of Zubrowka, where the currency is ‘Klubeck’ there are even two Budapest hotels: first the ornate, pastel-coloured Xanadu of the early 20th century, then the un-idealistic no frills shadow of itself that it has become in the cold war ‘60’s. We are focused on the latter of the two hotels as the films narrating author travels there, in flashback, as the young man meets the hotels reclusive owner, Mr. Moustafa. The hotel is now shadowed with an eerily calm place surrounded by soviet intrigue, almost taking from ‘The lives of others’ with an expo of police informants and hidden microphones.

The film is a doubling of memories and more memories which effectively is the authors recollections of Mr. Moustafas memoir who is the true hero of the film is the adorable M. Gustave (Ralph Fiennes) There are two framing devices within the Grand Budapest Hotel; the author as he is today (Tom Wilkinson, who stares dejectedly into the camera almost sending a direct commercial messages to the people watching) and then as he was in in the late 60’s (Jude Law) a more spirited and adventurous personality. There is no reason at all for this, but it certainly suits the shaggy-dog nature of this bizarre tale.

Such details of this film will be widely appreciated by dedicated followers of Anderson although the film is sent to a new level of stylization that many would tire of it’s relentless fussiness and also its often stiff body language, but for those willing to immigrate into the strange and marvelous mind of Wes Anderson, there is plenty to enjoy.

Whether the film works or not it is certainly in the eye of the beholder, and the Grand Budapest hotel will be as divisive- with of course the exception of Fantastic Mr. Fox – as all the others. This may be among his better films, on eof the view that repay prepeated viewings.

A stylish deadpan Wes Anderson movie the is almost on the brink a masterpiece and imbecility

Friday, 28 March 2014

Monuments Men (2014)

Frank Stokes (Clooney) summons a crew of men with an expertise of fine art and architecture to brave the extreme front lines of war torn Europe. There is a close race to rescue the continents heritage from both the Nazi and Soviet Party.

The Famous faces that were spread across the film posters for this second world war escapade it is hard to decipher whether they are meant to be stone faced art enthusiast or smirky school children, also struggling to decide just how seriously the matter is at hand. The plot is also promising a group of old friends hunting down lost pieces of fine art in dangerous territories of Nazi ridden Europe, to stop them destroying the culture of humanity – paintings, books, sculptures and icons. The main question in this film is a work of art worth more than a Human life. Is IT really though?

The film is made up of moments with sections of Bill Murray's (Campbell) hearing a recording on a tanoy of his family at Christmas. Matt Damon’s (Granger) hanging a painting in an abandoned Jewish home in post-occupied France. Also when Jean Dujardins (Clermont) and John Goodman’s (Garfield)  discovery of a thoroughbred horse, but then becomes a dangerous discovery of something else.

These moments tend to fall short ever so quickly and so does Clooney. Theres No extravagant rescue of fine Art just montages where the group split up almost very representational of Scooby doo. This shows very little chemistry to group until the last 20 minutes. I also find the editing is sloppy and the extra story line added in there with ‘lets always have Paris’ this spurious-romance between Damon and Cate Blanchett (Claire) its very pointless and manipulated.

With its sparkling and wonderful cast this film would have been better as a mini series with more detail and story to each rescue of art, where its threads seemed cut off so frustratingly short. 

They had so much substructure to build from like ‘the Train’ (1964) which is intensely engrossing account of the sabotage of the Nazi endeavor to smuggle a trainload of art treasures


Unfortunately the film is inadequately constructed due to the dazzling cast.
The film felt like a slow rush.


George Clooney
Frank Stokes

Matt Damon
James Granger

Bill Murray
Richard Campbell

John Goodman
Walter Garfield

Jean Dujardin
Jean Claude Clemont

Tuesday, 25 March 2014

Dallas Buyers Club (2014)



A true tale of Ron Woodroof (McConaughey) a straight but extremely  promiscuous lowlife discovers he is HIV positive in 1985 Texas. Protesting to accept the worst, Ron Woodroof turns to a black-market medicine and becomes the unlikeliest savior.

Ron Woodroof is a pure Texan Trailer-trash through and through, he is an oil company electrician trading former rodeo glories for cheap sex, hopped on numerous crappy drugs impetuous to his declining health until a accident lands him in hospital. He is awakened by doctors who informs him he has less than a month to live. He is HIV positive a diagnosis he chooses to ignore but then defies, To realize Woodroof Deterioration, McConaughey has exposed to a Christian Bale-in The-Machinist extremes, the ultimate artistic gesture of self-distortion, he looks frail and ill, a complete dissemblance to his eau du cologne self.

However who he becomes discarded by his cheap friends, fired from his job, Woodroof ventures to Mexico to score contraband drugs and alternative treatments that suspend the disease. Woodroof realises he can make a “good buck” which is a manifestation of heroism, creating the Club of the title, a sly legal dodge in which desperate flanks of AIDS sufferers at his door do not buy the illicit medicine but pay a monthly fee for membership where the drugs are a perk and you are given security with the membership.

Matthews McCohnaugheys latest categorization of his newfound serious acting talent, Magic Mike and Mud risked tipping the renaissance into overkill. This was a full-engrossment illness trip which was Hollywood’s passkey into many awards ceremonies this year. A journey of self-discovery in which the disease might destroy a body but a soul can be healed. McConaughey has turned the impression of a victim narrative inside out with a perfect and convincing portrayal of a bitter but  indestructible spirit.

With Shooting around dilapidated backstreets of Dallas, jean-marc Vallee with a sport film reminiscence with knockdowns and comebacks with a engaging effect the delicacy of incidental detail distracting our attention fro dramatic liberties as homophobia turns to hope. Plotting his melodramatic days-days still spent alive Events develop into a battle of wits between this wily Robin Hood, running his shenanigans from a fleabag motel, and the Federal Drug Agency suits dogmatize over fine print. Yet there are magical, contemplative pauses — Woodroof at a Mexican clinic in a tank of butterflies struck by the wonder of life’s touch. At other times, it gains a goofy, capering note as he dodges customs disguised as a priest and (hopelessly) romances Jennifer Garner’s doctor with a twinkle of the faded Lothario, but it is another relationship that shapes the story.

To steer his Dallas Buyers Club, Woodroof gains an unlikely guide in Jared Leto’s urbane transsexual Character Rayon, another AIDS refusing to be victimized it’s a inconceivable meeting of opposites with the two keeping tragedy and despair just at bay. You might describe this film as feelgood-feelbad.

Terrific performance By Matthew McConaughey and Jared Leto elevate this socio-medical drama out of the realms of the ordinary into something quite remarkable.