Saturday, August 29, 2009

Inglorious Basterds

Yesterday, I went to the movies and watched Tarrantino's new masterpiece - and indeed, THAT it is!

Never ever have I enjoyed the performance of an actor portraing the antagonist this much, nonetheless a German one. Christoph Waltz is incredibly amazing - this has to get him an Oscar!

The movie all in all is masterfully filmed and cut. Slow talking scenes are occationally broken by sudden and immediate (and intentionally short) violence - often extreme at that.

You wouldn't believe it but although the overall theme of the movie is World War II and by that anything else but funny, Tarrantino manages to include quite a bit well placed slapstick comedy.

If you have some knowledge of English, French and German and love really good movies, watch this one! If you can't speak any of these languages and can't read fast, this movie is not for you - it's VERY subtitle rich due to all actors speaking their native tongue (mostly).

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Hannibal

Well, I did it, I watched all four movies from "Silence of the Lambs" to "Hannibal rising".

Of course, "Silence of the Lambs" is THE classic, brilliantly played - what can I say.
"Hannibal", which like its sequels was unknown to me, proved to be the best of it all. Why? Sir Anthony Hopkins! Amazing performance! One can only admire his Hannibal Lecter (Dr. Fell in the movie). The pureness of his intellect, his total absence of remorse and pity - brilliant!

"Red Dragon" too much resembled "Silence of the Lambs". While it was enjoyable watching something predating the Oscar winner, the new villain was just too likeable, lacking evilness.

"Hannibal rising" had some great acting by the young star and surely has earned his place in its genre. But in comparison to the other three movies, Anthony Hopkins is missing.

Overall, in my opinion, the first two movies are the best of the quadrology.

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Delgo - the poor sucker... ;)

Just watched Delgo - which by the way isn't easy to get a hold of where I live - had to get it via BitTorrent.

The movie is, well, okay.

The visuals are amazing; the scenery, the animals and the people are imaginative and beautiful though the animation itself feels off a bit at times.
The story is quite dark for an animated feature probably targeted at a young audience. I'd rather recommend this one for young adults that are interested in fantasy worlds and love CGI.
The voice cast is great - many well known and popular names and good voice acting indeed.

All in all, it's a nice movie that's good enough to find its way into my DVD collection once there's a European PAL version DVD available. Apparently, as the movie flopped in theatres (boxoffice quite a bit under a million whereas summing up to 40 millions in production costs) it's currently only available in the U.S. as a simple NTSC DVD...what a shame...really!

Jerome Bixby's "The Man from Earth"

Watched this unusual movie yesterday, not really knowing what to expect.

Well, this one is a gem!

Okay, the picture quality of this DVD edition was terrible (it was like watching a VHS tape!) and there's no action in this movie - it could have been made into a theatre play easily - but nonetheless, it's a great movie, well, if you can let yourself be amazed by it's intentions.

Watching this movie made me buy the book by Jerome Bixby. That's a first! ;)
According to the web, this story's been Bixby's last big success.

All in all, it's a must-have for every sci-fi enthusiast - sci-fi without action and special effects just through the magic of words. Incredible!

Also, on a side note, quite an interesting cast: Tony Todd, John Billingsley and Richard Riehle - all three once portraying popular characters on Star Trek shows (Tony Todd as Worf's brother Kurn (among many other roles), John Billingsley as part of Enterprise's main cast as Dr. Phlox and Richard Riehle as the Irish holodeck character Seamus Driscol on Voyager's Fair Haven).