The Grandmaster - I opted to go and see this theatrically, despite the Weinsteins cuts, because, goddammit, Wong Kar Wai movies are better on the big screen and I'm fairly certain I will never get to see this uncut in a theater. I liked it a lot. It's really artsy fartsy and it feels a little flat as far as characterization goes, but it's pretty and the action is mostly pretty great. Zhang Ziyi's fight at the trains station was notably awesome.
The Dead Zone - Yeah, I'd never seen this before. Liked it a lot. ****in' Christopher Walken, man. It's not anywhere near Cronenberg's best, but it's solid.
The Assassins - I'm really surprised China keeps churning out these huge, historical movies when it seems like 75% of them aren't very good. This one was alright. Great set and costume design. Chow Yun Fat was great, naturally. He makes for a great ******* sometimes. The story wasn't too bad. Worth a rent.
Halloween II - Liked this quite a bit. It's nowhere near as awesome as the first one, but it's a worthy follow-up.
Terror In The Aisles - A documentary about horror films that was included on the Halloween II Blu-ray. Pretty entertaining, though maybe not much of a documentary. Lots of stuff from films I hadn't seen that I would like to. A good watch.
The Girl - A supposed true account of the relationship between Alfred Hitchcock and Tippi Hedren that I hope is more fiction than fact. If it's fact, Hitchcock was disgusting *******. As far as the movie goes... it was ok. Toby Jones and Sienna Miller were pretty good. I don't care if I never see it again, but it wasn't bad.
Margaret - After hearing ****loads of good things about this flick, I was excited to see it pop up during a free HBO/Cinemax preview weekend. It's a pretty interesting existential piece and there were a number of things I liked about it a lot, but overall it didn't really seem to click for me. At least, not in the way many other people seemed to have had it do. I liked it and think the director, Kenneth Lonergan, is someone worth keeping an eye on.
The Conjuring - This is the first James Wan movie that I think I can say I really, actively enjoyed. I liked Insidious just fine up until the end when it went overboard, but this one I thought was much more solid throughout. It had a couple parts I thought were effectively creepy and it made me interested in the Warren story to the extent that I'd like to actually read some of the books about them, including Amityville Horror.
Lesson Of The Evil - Takashi Miike returns to horror! This movie is ****ed up. Like, Battle Royale ****ed up. It starts off one way and about halfway through turns on it's head and goes a completely different, ****ed up direction. I liked it a lot. It's my favorite movie of his in almost the last decade (though in his defense, I haven't seen
that much of his more recent output). I hope it manages to get released out here at some point, but if you're curious, you can an HK Blu with english subs.
Snow White And The Huntsman - A tad bit better than I had expected in that it was actually watchable, but not by a whole hell of a lot. Meh.
Safety Last - Impressively well done stunts and some clever gags, especially for a silent film from 1923. I'm not as high on it as many film critics seem to be, but it was absolutely worth watching. I wouldn't mind owning it at some point, either. Really glad I decided to watch it.
Rollerball - ****in' James Caan, man. This movie is pretty dated, but the idea behind it is very much still relevant. I enjoyed it.
Battle Of Britain - Holy ****, man. The cast of this flick alone makes it a must watch. Michael Caine, Laurence Olivier, Christopher Plummer, Robert Shaw, Ralph Richardson, Michael Bates and a baby-faced Ian McShane that I didn't even recognize until I saw his name on IMDB while I was watching the movie. Beyond that, though, it's a pretty decent WWII flick that suffers a bit from, I think, trying to do too much. There are scenes from the German side and scenes from the English side and it feels like very few of the big moments are given enough screen time to properly sink in. Characters are killed in fighter planes and you don't even realize it until the battle is over and someone says so. It feels like this should have been a mini-series or something that they cut down into a 2+ hour movie. The performances are great, though, and the dogfight scenes, mostly without special effects are impressive as hell. They actually blew up, crashed and flew real planes for those parts and it's pretty awesome. There was just not enough time spent on any one thing to give it the emotional connection it needed. Oh, and there wasn't nearly enough Michael Caine for my taste.
Trouble With The Curve - Starring, but not directed by Clint, the movie feels just like one of his directorial efforts. It's fairly entertaining, but completely predictable and without surprise. Every single thing in this movie is telegraphed ahead of time so that you know exactly where every character will end up almost as soon as they're introduced into the movie. But, like I said, it's entertaining enough. Clint gets to do his crotchety old bastard routine, which is always fun and John Goodman is always awesome. Timberlake even has enough charisma to make him likable and I've always been a fan of Amy Adams, so maybe I'm a little biased. It's not really something I care to watch again, but it was an ok way to spend 90 minutes on the couch.
Killer Joe - Matthew McConaughey has come a long way in my eyes since he stopped doing nothing but romantic comedies. I really liked him in this. It's a pretty nasty little movie that I had no idea was directed by William Friedkin until his name popped up in the opening credits. The ending was somewhat frustrating, but I don't want to spoil it by discussing it here. I dug the movie, though. Quite a bit. And I will NEVER look at Gina Gershon or fried chicken legs the same way again. Ooof.
The Wrong Box - Another older British film that I watched solely for Michael Caine that ended up having a stellar cast. Ralph Richardson, Peter Sellers, Dudley Moore, John Mills... it's a very Python-esque type of comedy, although not quite at the same level of cleverness or hilarity. I did laugh out loud more than once, though. Thoroughly enjoyable.