Showing posts with label Anne Hathaway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anne Hathaway. Show all posts
8/27/2014
Blu-ray Review: Rio 2 (2014)
Blue Sky Studios’ globally-minded musically driven 3D CG-animated adventure movie Rio brought its aptly named Blue Macaw Blu and his bookish owner Linda (voiced by Jesse Eisenberg and Leslie Mann respectively) from Minnesota to the titular Rio in the infectious 2011 original that enchanted viewers with its high-spirited energy and fast moving storyline which danced at a steady Samba pace.
Unfortunately while it’s as beautifully vibrant as ever in a visually breathtaking opener that once again feels like it's an animated half-pint version of the Carnival classic Black Orpheus, the second film is an undeniably busy, ambitiously overstuffed and disappointingly episodic return to the delightful high-flying world of Rio.
Strategically released to coincide with the World Cup, Rio 2 incorporates a soccer fueled scene that’s – like everything else in the film – ratcheted up a million degrees so that it’s storyboarded less like a regular match and more like a spectacular Harry Potter styled aerial game of Quidditch.
And despite its pro-nature message about preserving the Amazon Rainforest (as well as the endangered birds in another through-line admirably carried over from the first film), far too much gets lost in the shuffle of individually isolated “scenes” in a movie that ultimately lacks the cohesive focus of a well-conceptualized whole.
As Rio 2 begins, we check back in with the paired off lovebirds (Eisenberg and Anne Hathaway) from the original as the couple and their three young flappers leave Rio behind before flying into acquaintances both new and old in the sequel’s dominated Rainforest setting.
Essentially a feathered version of Meet the Parents for the small set, in Rio 2, Hathaway’s Jewel is stunned to discover that the family she’d long thought to have been deceased is alive and well in her old Amazon home.
While indulging in his opportunity to play the Robert De Niro like Parents heavy, voice actor Andy Garcia is clearly having a ball as Jewell's long lost father who takes an immediate dislike and disapproval to Blu by admonishing him as a mere “pet.” However, the biggest surprise is musician Bruno Mars, who steals several scenes in an often screamingly funny role as a childhood friend who still clearly carries a torch for Jewel.
Burning through subplot and supporting characters (including a return of the first film’s fan favorite Jemaine Clement who’s now partnered with Kristin Chenoweth), from its snappy one-liners to obligatory pop songs and brightly colored, firework-fast diversions, Rio 2’s key takeaway about preserving plant and animal life on Earth gets pushed into the periphery.
Sloppily written, the film shortchanges its talented cast and expectant audience alike with a collection of sitcom level scenes edited together with a few eye-opening epic moments (such as the aforementioned opener) buried in between in order to satisfy the shortest of attention spans.
A pleasant enough diversion for your tiniest tots especially given the multiple format combo pack release which boasts a Blu-ray, DVD and digital copy, director Carlos Saldanha’s effort works better than a majority of run of the mill fare like The Nut Job.
And likewise given the studio's dedicated to discovering new topics, techniques, and terrain (even by way of a preexisting template), it is a stronger than average follow-up as far as animated movies go.
Nonetheless there’s still no beating the South American spirit of Blu’s original opus that showed ticket-buyers that outside of the frozen tundra of the impressive Ice Age franchise, Blue Sky has a bright future ahead of them in the sun.
Text ©2014, Film Intuition, LLC; All Rights Reserved. http://www.filmintuition.com Unauthorized Reproduction or Publication Elsewhere is Strictly Prohibited and in violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. FTC Disclosure: Per standard professional practice, I may have received a review copy of this title in order to evaluate it for my readers, which had no impact whatsoever on whether or not it received a favorable or unfavorable critique.
4/28/2009
New on DVD & Blu-ray for the Week of 4/26/09
Jen’s Pick of the Week:
JCVD
JCVD
Bookmark this on Delicious
Print Page
10 Minute Solution:
Dance Off the Belly Fat
Dance Off the Belly Fat
Absolute Beginners Fitness
Alain Renais: A Decade in Film
Amazing Journeys
American Dad: Volume Four
Ashes of American Flags: Wilco
Beethoven Family Double Feature
Bird by Bird with Annie:
A Film Portrait of Writer Anne Lamott
Bride Wars
Brideshead Revisited [Blu-ray]
Comics Without Borders:
Complete Season One
The Concerts: Barbra Streisand
The Da Vinci Code
(Two-Disc Extended Cut + BD Live)
[Blu-ray]
Complete Season One
The Concerts: Barbra Streisand
The Da Vinci Code
(Two-Disc Extended Cut + BD Live)
[Blu-ray]
Da Vinci Code Blu-ray Gift Set
[Blu-ray]
[Blu-ray]
Decoding the Past
Divina Confusion
Empire of Passion
(Criterion Collection)
(Criterion Collection)
Fallen Angel
Frost/Nixon:
Complete Interviews (2pc) (Spec)
Gangland: The Complete Season Three
The Gray Man
Gummibär: I am a Gummy Bear
The Hairdresser's Husband
Hallelujah! The Complete Collection
Hearts of War
The Hit
Complete Interviews (2pc) (Spec)
Gangland: The Complete Season Three
The Gray Man
Gummibär: I am a Gummy Bear
The Hairdresser's Husband
Hallelujah! The Complete Collection
Hearts of War
The Hit
Hotel for Dogs
In the Realm of the Senses [Blu-ray]
Criterion Collection
Inu Yasha: Seventh Season
Jetsons
JCVD
Johnny Got His Gun
Kanon: The Complete Series
Kavanagh Q.C.
Legally Blondes
Little Dorrit
The Looney, Looney, Looney Bugs Bunny Movie
Martyrs
Mission Impossible: The Sixth TV Season
Never Surrender
Nicholas Sparks Film Collection
(Nights in Rodanthe / The Notebook /
Message in a Bottle / A Walk to Remember)
Criterion Collection
Inu Yasha: Seventh Season
Jetsons
JCVD
Johnny Got His Gun
Kanon: The Complete Series
Kavanagh Q.C.
Legally Blondes
Little Dorrit
The Looney, Looney, Looney Bugs Bunny Movie
Martyrs
Mission Impossible: The Sixth TV Season
Never Surrender
Nicholas Sparks Film Collection
(Nights in Rodanthe / The Notebook /
Message in a Bottle / A Walk to Remember)
Nothing But the Truth
Pete Seger: Live in Australia 1963
Quo Vadis
Quo Vadis
The Reader [Blu-ray]
Romance Double Feature:
Emma and Jane Eyre
The Rookies: Season 1
Seven Deadly Sins
The She Beast
Spectacular Spider-Man Vol. 4
Spin City:
The Complete Second Season
Star Trek: The Original Series:
Season 1 [Blu-ray]
Stranded
Storm Cell
UFO Hunters: The Complete Season Two
Romance Double Feature:
Emma and Jane Eyre
The Rookies: Season 1
Seven Deadly Sins
The She Beast
Spectacular Spider-Man Vol. 4
Spin City:
The Complete Second Season
Star Trek: The Original Series:
Season 1 [Blu-ray]
Stranded
Storm Cell
UFO Hunters: The Complete Season Two
The Uninvited
The Waltons:
The Complete Ninth Season
The Complete Ninth Season
What Doesn't Kill You
What's Up, Scarlet?
While She Was Out
X-Men, Volume 1 & 2
(Marvel DVD Comic Book Collection)
What's Up, Scarlet?
While She Was Out
X-Men, Volume 1 & 2
(Marvel DVD Comic Book Collection)
3/24/2009
New on DVD & Blu-ray for the Week of 3/22
Jen's Pick of the Week:
The 400 Blows:
Blu-ray
Bookmark this on Delicious
Print Page
Andy Richter Controls the Universe:
The Complete Series
The Complete Series
Bolt
Or Get it On iTunes

The Cake Eaters
Or Get it on iTunes

Care Bears: Cheer, There & Everywhere
Craig Ferguson: A Wee Bit 'o Revolution
The 400 Blows
(Blu-ray)
The Fast and Furious Trilogy
(Blu-ray)
Fling
Forbidden Hollywood Collection:
Volume 3
(TCM Archives)
Happily N'Ever After 2
James Bond Collection 3-Pack (Blu-ray)
The Kite Runner
(Blu-ray)
The Last Metro:
Criterion Collection
Lilo and Stitch: 2 Disc Big Wave Edition
Master of the Game
A Mighty Heart
(Blu-ray)
Midsomer Murders: Set 12


Moonraker
(Blu-ray)
The Odd Couple
(Paramount Centennial Collection)
Passengers
Quantum of Solace
Or Get it on iTunes

The Riches:
Season 2
Room 222:
Season One
Secrets of the Furious Five
(Single Disc Version)
Stephen Hawking and the Theory of Everything
Taggart: Set 1
Things We Lost in the Fire
(Blu-ray)
To Catch a Thief
(Paramount Centennial Collection)
Watchmen:
Tales of the Black Freighter & Under the Hood
Or Get it On iTunes

The World is Not Enough
(Blu-ray)
Other Ways to Buy, Rent & Watch

Or Get it On iTunes
The Cake Eaters
Or Get it on iTunes
Care Bears: Cheer, There & Everywhere
Craig Ferguson: A Wee Bit 'o Revolution
The 400 Blows
(Blu-ray)
The Fast and Furious Trilogy
(Blu-ray)
Fling
Forbidden Hollywood Collection:
Volume 3
(TCM Archives)
Happily N'Ever After 2
James Bond Collection 3-Pack (Blu-ray)
The Kite Runner
(Blu-ray)
The Last Metro:
Criterion Collection
Lilo and Stitch: 2 Disc Big Wave Edition
Master of the Game
A Mighty Heart
(Blu-ray)
Midsomer Murders: Set 12
Moonraker
(Blu-ray)
The Odd Couple
(Paramount Centennial Collection)
Passengers
Quantum of Solace
Or Get it on iTunes
The Riches:
Season 2
Room 222:
Season One
Secrets of the Furious Five
(Single Disc Version)
Stephen Hawking and the Theory of Everything
Taggart: Set 1
Things We Lost in the Fire
(Blu-ray)
To Catch a Thief
(Paramount Centennial Collection)
Watchmen:
Tales of the Black Freighter & Under the Hood
Or Get it On iTunes
The World is Not Enough
(Blu-ray)
Other Ways to Buy, Rent & Watch
11/03/2008
New on DVD for the Week of 11/2/08
DVD Pick of the Week:
Transsiberian
Transsiberian
Click on the Title to Read the Review:
Browse All of This Week's
New Releases Below:
Available to Own from Amazon.Com
New Releases Below:
Available to Own from Amazon.Com
6/24/2008
Get Smart
Director: Peter Segal
When the first Get Smart poster hit the multiplex, it looked like Nick at Nite by way of Neutrogena with a jaw-droppingly gorgeous glamour shot of Anne Hathaway given a perfect salon blowout coupled with flawlessly air-brushed skin all but drowning out her film’s costar and lead actor, Steve Carell. Needless to say, this image went off like a fanboy bat signal in cyberspace signaling panic in those who cherished the clever humor and inventive James Bond inspired 1960’s television spoof created by Mel Brooks and Buck Henry and immediately cried foul, bracing themselves for the worst as they nervously anticipated every new detail of the big screen version of Smart. The poster and reaction reminded me of the quintessential cinematically captured moment of advertising letdown in Cameron Crowe’s great Almost Famous wherein lead singer Jason Lee discovers that his band-mate, the impossibly pretty “Golden God” Billy Crudup has been featured in the foreground of the tour t-shirts, relegating Lee-- much like Smart’s Steve Carell-- as decorative background or as Almost’s Lee quipped, to his position as "just one of the out of focus guys.”
Granted, it seemed like an odd marketing strategy indeed in hoping to lure in ticket buyers to a comedy with a built in Baby Boomer and Generation X audience with Generation Y sex appeal and seemed like it would've been as out of place as if the poster for Charlie’s Angels had only featured Bill Murray’s face or Will Ferrell had been the only one on the DVD box for Bewitched, yet honestly, after seeing what the filmmakers did with the update of the classic series Get Smart, they may have made the right choice, given the fact that in a quiet, unintentional way, the twenty-five year old Anne Hathaway manages to steal the entire movie from her forty-five year old veteran comedic costar. And while her character’s Agent 99 was always the loyal, brainy, loving woman tirelessly “standing by her Max" in the original series, given Carell’s terrific talent and excellent source material, it really shouldn’t have been this way.
As a stark contrast to the suave, highly unbelievable James Bond, part of the show’s charm and in fact-- no doubt its very inception-- was to have a bumbling, klutzy secret agent who can never manage to work his high tech equipment including the running gags of the cone-of-silence and shoe-phones supplied for him in his work within the American spy agency Control. Yet in the update, Maxwell Smart a.k.a. Agent 86 (Carell) has been inexcusably transformed into a formerly obese and still emotionally scarred highly valuable pencil pusher, who-- as his chief and fellow Little Miss Sunshine costar Alan Arkin explains-- is Control’s best analyst with raw human data, deciphering a counter-agent’s productivity based on the number of carbs they eat or if they’ve spent the past few nights in marital discord sleeping on the couch.
The updated version of Max is still as accident prone as ever but now his eccentricities are dismissed as minor negatives overshadowed by the ultimate positive that he’s a man so good at his job in crafting reports that the chief can’t bear to think of promoting him to field agent. As a Get Smart purist, this is unacceptable on so many levels, but more than that, it literally destroys the film’s main source of comedy. And when the cone-of- silence, shoe phone gags or his memorable “Would you believe?” lines are inserted, they feel like they’re puzzle pieces that have been forced into weird alignment by over-eager children at a birthday party waiting for cake or worse, like they've been tossing those of us who enjoyed the show a few retro bones to play fetch with on a Nick at Nite styled scavenger hunt whereby the end of the running time, our checklist is mostly blank and what's more, all the cake has been eaten.
I’m all for reinvention and re-imagination rather than forgoing creativity for stale reproduction, but by not offering us anything intriguing about Max, it’s easy to get distracted by the supporting players including a hilarious, under-used, tongue-in-cheek Dwayne Johnson as the ultra hot Agent 23 who nonetheless manages to walk into a wall when checking out a perky receptionist but especially, the pitch perfect Hathaway as the film’s saving grace of 99—the gifted field agent grudgingly assigned to working alongside Max after Control is attacked by KAOS madmen led by a Beethoven obsessed Terence Stamp.
Perhaps predicting the audience’s discomfort in the twenty year age difference between the stars, the screenwriters work out a plastic surgery excuse to explain that they’re chronologically closer than one would think. However, it’s a wasted reason as once the two are together, the chemistry just clicks into high energy flirtation and fascination where age is a forgotten number allowing each one a chance to step back and let the other one shine, although in the case of Smart, diplomatically it seems like it’s Hathaway who’s trying to underplay and make her partner funnier but try as he might, Carell just isn’t given the benefit of quality material, making 99 the one for whom we’re continually rooting.
As an escape from the over-abundance of superhero films slated for release this summer and a surprising lack of good family comedies, no doubt Get Smart will reach its targeted generations of built in fans plus kids and grandkids and as it stands on its own, it’s passable but not worthy of a recommendation for those who know and love the show. Although the best result would be if it inspired unfamiliar audience members to track down old episodes of the series. Therefore, even if it took a manipulative air-brushed, magazine quality poster to get them to do that, then kudos to the publicity department at Warner Brothers for helping people learn how hip it is to Get Smart.
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