Showing posts with label Zach Braff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zach Braff. Show all posts

4/21/2009

Blu-ray Review: The Last Kiss (2006)

Now Available on Blu-ray



Previously Available Editions






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Million Dollar Baby screenwriter Paul Haggis adapted Gabrielle Muccino’s Italian film L’Ultimo Bacio for director Tony Goldwyn in this superb remake that does an admirable job of navigating viewers through the often messy and sometimes brutally painful evolution and deterioration of relationships.



Although in one of several making-of-featurettes included on DreamWorks Home Entertainment’s brand-new Blu-ray version of the film, Haggis humbly described his job as essentially translating the film into English with the exception of one major different twist as a character in the American film admits to an indiscretion—one can’t help he’s belittling his material since there's nothing European about the work which still feels remarkably accurate three years later.


While most Hollywood films focus on the good times, not too many filmmakers are willing to go the distance in revealing the bad as well as the good in modern long-term romantic couplings. Whether it's through revealing the things we may think but do not say such as when one character confesses that he believed having a child with his beloved would bring them closer together but instead all it's done is make them feel trapped or questioning aloud that if you love someone, why is it we feel the need to have a photo album filled with snapshots “of drunk people in tuxedos to prove it”-- every single one of the characters in the film (whether or not they’re fully developed is to be debated) feels as though they’re someone we could meet walking down the street, or someone we’ve been at one point or another, or someone with whom we’re involved.


Now seeing the 2006 film again on Blu-ray and thus right around the same age bracket as a majority of the characters—Haggis’ dialogue rings truer than ever and illustrates the promise that was to come for the future Oscar winner whose work with Kiss was sweetened by those involved who helped him during the arduous process of financing his upcoming Million Dollar Baby (eventually directed by Clint Eastwood) and Crash.




In a role that couldn’t be any further from his recurring Scrubs character of John Dorian who is prone to fantasies, silliness and childlike naïveté-- Garden State's Zach Braff is excellent as our uncertain and admittedly selfish lead Michael, who at the start of the film faces three life-altering events. Namely these consist of the pregnancy of his long-time girlfriend Jacinda Barrett and the possible commitment issues that go along with it, his thirtieth birthday, and the beginning of a casual flirtation with a young, bright college student (The O.C.'s Rachel Bilson) whom he meets at a wedding that begins to make Michael wonder if he’s really ready to settle down.




It’s the wedding that opens the film that sets the stage for all of the internal crises that follow as director Tony Goldwyn notes in the “Filmmakers Perspective” Blu-ray extra-- the depiction of the perfect relationship is precisely the right jumping-off point to ask “but what happens when [relationships] don't go that way?”

And in answering that, he introduces us to a group of characters all struggling to make sense of their lives in an age where as Bilson’s character notes, “our metabolism” is faster and we’ve begun “to freak out way before our parents” did.


While the film mostly surrounds Michael and his other equally stressed male friends-- all with varying levels of personal crisis of their own-- there is a surprisingly riveting subplot involving Blythe Danner as Barrett’s mother who is going through a rough patch in her marriage to Tom Wilkinson after she admits to an infidelity.

On a second viewing in fact-- it’s Danner and Wilkinson’s courage in showing the evolution of a marriage that’s reached (possibly one of several) breaking points that feels sharper than ever and their performances are both extremely brave-- and par for the course of the rest of the movie-- highly authentic.


Similar to Braff's Garden State, the wonderful soundtrack of Kiss helps make the admittedly dark, intense and sometimes just excruciatingly confrontational themes and moments a bit easier to bear although it’s probably not the best choice for a date movie or a companion feature for a low-key romantic evening in as this is the type of film that could cause an argument, despite raising some valid, mature, and accurate issues.




Likewise, by the end of the film, even though we’d spent so much time with a majority of the characters over the onscreen events of roughly two weeks, I still found myself feeling a sense of incompleteness as-- although we fully understand the male characters--it would’ve definitely been interesting if the females had been given more screen time to wholly understand their points-of-view.

After all, even though as they sing in “As Time Goes By,” “a kiss is still a kiss,” it can mean two incredibly different things to each participant, since in this film and truer to life—going against the lyrics—a sigh isn’t just a sigh but a deeper indication of a unique perspective and one I longed to explore in greater detail.


Perhaps a more challenging filmmaking exercise would’ve been to not simply remake the film but pull it apart and switch it up so that the same situations could’ve been seen from both genders as Haggis proved so deftly capable of in stringing together narratives and layers of characters and situations for his Oscar winning Crash.


Yet as it stands, The Last Kiss is still one of the braver and truer to life “quarter-life" and "mid-life" crisis works Hollywood has produced in years and one that works as a very welcome antidote to the endless string of films about middle-aged men who act like thirteen year old boys currently in vogue at the multiplex.

As producer Gary Lucchesi acknowledges in yet another behind the scenes extra that shares the last thoughts on the film by those involved, he says that he senses American audiences are yearning for more intimacy and more reality in works that feel a bit rawer.


And despite the fact that these are exactly the films that people are running away from now during our economic recession three years later-- for anyone going through any of the “personal inventory” taking as they reach 20, 30, 40, 50, or up there's something reassuring in the realization that it’s a universal and instantly relatable existential crisis and that it’s one that only evolves with age along with our wisdom and relationships.


Featuring multiple commentaries involving both the filmmaker and also the cast as well as greater analysis of certain scenes and an intensive making-of featurette, along with some of the standard requirements like a less than amusing gag reel, deleted scenes, and the Zach Braff directed music video “Ride” by Cary Brothers, the Blu-ray definitely increases the sense of depth perception however the overall picture and sound leave a bit to be desired.

Essentially, within moments you’ll need to punch up the muddied color by tweaking with the brightness or vivid settings on your television or player as well as raising the volume fairly high since the work is filled with intimate, whispery conversations and quiet confessions (that of course counteract the intense blow-up in your face arguments). Thus, a greater balance should have been achieved in the transfer from DVD to justify the price-tag and decision to move the work to Blu-ray without sharpening up the contrast of the image and up-and-down sound that had this reviewer reaching for her remote far too often, ultimately detracting from the overall cinematic experience.


While it’s recommended for those who were a fan but hadn’t yet made the purchase of the film-- those who already own it on DVD may want to give the Blu-ray a rental test-drive before gambling on an upgrade—sort of like weighing one’s options before you say “I do.”

4/13/2009

New on DVD & Blu-ray for the Week of 4/12/09

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Miniseries:

Pride and Prejudice [Blu-ray]


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Obscure '80s Release:
Irreconcilable Differences



TV on DVD:

Ruth Rendell: Set 4



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8 Mile [Blu-ray]



Cranford [Blu-ray]



Dark Matter



House of Saddam



Knot's Landing:
The Complete Second Season



The Last Kiss [Blu-ray]



Lost in Austen



Mary Higgins Clark Collection



Mask of the Ninja



Mean Girls [Blu-ray]



November Son



Paris



Pillow Talk:
50th Anniversary Edition



The Pope's Toilet



Pride and Prejudice [Blu-ray]



The Reader



Ruth Rendell: Set 4



She Fell Among Thieves



The Spirit



Strange Wilderness [Blu-ray]



Wings: Final Season




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11/04/2008

TV on DVD: Scrubs-- The Complete Seventh Season


No Co-Pay Necessary:
Braff, Chalke, McGinley & Co.
Fill Your Prescription for Laughter


Check Out Exclusive Footage in our Video Screening Room



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Although it's earned an Emmy, a Humanitas Award, the 2006 Peabody Award for Excellence, and countless nominations at the Golden Globes and the Primetime Emmy Awards, Scrubs is one of those offbeat, off-the-wall, and off-the-beaten path shows that has never earned the audience support or the media attention it deserves. When you ask an average television viewer about the show, most admit to seeing it a few times but it seems to be one of those that's more popular on disc and in reruns than when it airs.

Perhaps part of its charm is that the series masquerades as a hospital spoof. Or more specifically, it appears to be a nice warm-up to E.R. with a gag-a-minute lines, fantasy sequences, and characters that are so strange they don't resemble anyone we could possibly encounter in real life. However, on closer inspection, I realized that it's the intelligence and creativity driving the show that has kept me engaged each and every year to the hospital comedy as opposed to E.R. which hasn't held my interest since before the millennium.

Cloaked in bizarre humor and wacky plot points that at times border on juvenile and nonsensical, series creator Bill Lawrence (Spin City) never fails to layer the long-running sitcom with moments of melancholy, pathos, ups-and-downs, and true life-affirming medicine made so much tastier with the crazy shenanigans of the staff of the thankfully fictitious Sacred Heart Hospital. Instantly recognizable and one-of-a-kind, it's unlike anything else on television, yet there's something about it that speaks to an American society that's been so frustrated by our health care system, we're still able to see kernels of truth in the craziest of subplots and frankly we need the laughter of the show to cope with the all-too-true conditions we face.



While the show has been rumored to be on its last legs for several seasons, plummeting in the ratings despite a loyal global fan-base and success in syndication, Scrubs has been given another shot of adrenaline by its parent network ABC Studios who are bringing the series over from where it aired with a dwindling lifeline at NBC. Returning as a mid-season replacement for a committed eighth season, Scrubs will begin making more rounds on ABC in the near future, as you can see below.



However, until that happens, thankfully fans of the show including those of us who had difficulty following its haphazard scheduling debacles last year in the wake of the Writer's Guild Strike can relish in the November 11 release of the seventh season from Walt Disney Home Entertainment with this two-disc set. Capturing all eleven episodes that found the characters undergoing major storyline changes and filled with the wild bonus footage, commentaries, and behind-the-scenes featurettes Scrubs fans have come to expect and cherish with the previous DVD releases, it makes the ultimate primer to catch back up with the goings-on of the gang at Sacred Heart.

Trailer



Aside from the overly crowded and frustratingly difficult DVD menu that initially leads to some confusion when trying to choose which episode to play, the first disc picks up where we left off with "My Own Worst Enemy" as J.D. (Zach Braff) and Elliot (Sarah Chalke) contemplate both their relationship with one another and those to whom they're committed. The on-again/off-again pair shakes off their near-kiss and in classic Scrubs fashion, via J.D.'s constant narration as he relates his experiences in voice-over, we realize that all of the characters at Sacred Heart have to confront their own impulse towards self-sabotage and figure out how to move on.



For J.D., it's finally admitting to his "baby mama," the beautiful Dr. Kim Briggs (Elizabeth Banks) that although he loves the fact that she's delivering his child, he's not exactly in love with her. Culminating in a hilarious episode called "My Hard Labor," which finds Kim and J.D. confronting the end of their relationship as their son is born and Elliot ultimately admits that she's more in love with the idea of marriage than in love with her fiance, "the Dudemeister," they realize they have to begin taking responsibility for their own actions.

While J.D. and Elliot struggle personally, they thrive professionally but their superiors, Dr. Cox (the perpetual scene-stealer John C. McGinley) and Bob Kelso (Ken Jenkins) encounter difficulties of their own. In the brilliant season opener, Cox finds himself so distracted by the fact that he cares about and likes a patient that he can't diagnose him and midway through the season Kelso's real age is revealed by an insistent Elliot intent on throwing him a birthday party, which results in him facing mandatory retirement.



Of course, comedy ensues throughout as J.D.'s series-long, unexplainable, enigmatic, and still nameless Janitor (Neil Flynn) conspires against everyone whether it's taking it upon himself to become the official "Environmental Officer" at the hospital after watching the Al Gore documentary An Inconvenient Truth, starting an investigative newspaper called "The Janitorial" where he reveals that all Dr. Cox really wants is for everyone to hug him, or crafting a brain trust along with Doug, The Todd, and Ted in Kelso's office that they nickname "The Brainhouse."

Although Cox jokes that now married, Turk (Donald Faison) and Carla (Judy Reyes) have become a two-headed witch in the Braff directed fantasy-laced season ender "My Princess" which was aired out of sequence due to the strike, the two start contemplating having another child and Turk pulls an ultimate surprise on his wife when he takes it upon himself to learn her native language.

Yet, during all of the pranks and sight gags as well as the return of old supporting cast-mates who show up for cameos like Tom Cavanaugh's welcome return as J.D.'s previously irresponsible yet now mature older brother, Scrubs still manages to raise ethical and moral questions. This specifically shows up in a few heart-wrenching episodes wherein Elliot questions whether or not she should report a patient's plan to die with dignity and, torn between his role as a father and doctor, Cox contemplates informing a child he has cancer when his parents announce their wish to keep it a secret.

While you'll zip through the eleven episodes rather quickly, perhaps the brevity of the season benefited Scrubs in not dragging out plot-points or relying too much on some old favorite stand-bys like the never-ending soap opera between J.D. and Elliot, Cox's ongoing flirtatious battle with his equally emotionally cool wife Jordan (Christa Miller Lawrence) and just enough hilarious scenes of "bromance" between Turk and his other spouse, J.D. so that it doesn't overstay its welcome.

Although as a fan, I worry that when a show is on the air for so long it will begin to lose some of its creative spark (for example--see Frasier and Desperate Housewives), the ABC move sounds like a solid decision and will hopefully refuel the show with renewed energy now that its airing directly out of the studio that owns it. And not to mention that with a mid-season show, it won't have to try and produce twenty-four to twenty-six brand new episodes right off the bat, without taking the time to regroup and decide just where the show will go from there.



And while admittedly it's hard to imagine that J.D. and Turk will ever grow up or that Scrubs will get the Emmy love it should (similar to the Susan Lucci and Lauren Graham snubs), I for one am looking forward to its new network premiere and hope it can garner enough interest from casual fans who enjoy the show to actually remember to tune in, set their DVRs or start regularly checking ABC's website to ensure it finally gets the audience it so richly deserves.

So in the end, the doctor will see you as scheduled but will you keep the appointment? It's up to you and don't worry-- they'll treat you with or without insurance yet you always have the assurance that they'll do their very best to keep you entertained (which is more than one can say for most medical offices).