Sunday, April 28, 2013

Crude but Effective



The overprotective Neanderthal caveman Grug (Nicholas Cage) finds his match in daughter Eep (Emma Stone) who is anything but amenable to being kept indoors (or in a cave, as it may be). It takes the intervention of the inventive and vastly evolved boy Guy (Ryan Reynolds), a precocious early man who invents fire, prognosticates the end of the world - fairly cataclysmic and disruptive tectonic events - that force  The Croods to change their habitation and their very way of life. Without the intensity of the likes of Wall-e and Finding Nemo, The Croods is nevertheless an effective and exciting watch and quite the unmissable one for children this summer

13.5/20

Saturday, April 27, 2013

Man of Iron


Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr) is Iron Man, in Iron Man III, with or without the eponymous battle suit. Faced with the challenge of the unknown Mandarin, Tony Stark must save Pepper Potts (Gwyneth Paltrow), right hand man  James Rhodes (Don Cheadle) and the entire US leadership - after challenging the Mandarin to open combat. The journey takes Tony Stark to faraway Tennessee and the combat between the once-spurned villian Adrian Killiach (Guy Pearce) and his nefarious scheme, and our superhero, is as intense as it has ever been in the Iron Man franchise. Iron Man III delivers, and delivers well, and for some reason trails off with Mark Ruffalo and the promise of more to come

13.5/20

Saturday, April 13, 2013

Oblivious Workers




Jack (Tom Cruise) and Julia (Andrea Riseborough) work out of an earth-based station to protect installations that mine sea water for energy production. It is a ravaged earth, with a few survivors (scavs, short for scavengers) kept in their place by droids. Jack’s undying curiosity, leads him to rescue Julia (Olga Kurylenko), who he finds to be his wife. Things are not quite what they seem, and an ostensibly hostile encounter with the scavs including their lader Beech (Morgan Freeman) leads him to discover the reality behind his existence, and the role played by Sally, the intelligence that has assigned Jack and Julia (s?) their roles. Oblivion is entertaining, but has borrowed liberally from Moon (clone-based mining) and Independence Day (destroy an intelligence hovering over earth bent on annihilating mankind). Notwithstanding the obvious sources of inspiration, a good if not quite edge-of-the-seat entertainer

13.5/20

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