16/20
Showing posts with label Michael Shannon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Shannon. Show all posts
Friday, November 29, 2019
Electric
Knife's Edge
Knives Out has celebrity detective Benoit Blanc (Daniel Craig) solves (sort of) a whodunit at a remote suburb where a family - largely underserving in spades - looks forward to an inheritance from patriarch Harlan Thrombey (Christopher Plummer) - with a cast that includes a wastrel grandson in Ransom Drysdale (Chris Evans) and a near invisible domestic help in Marta (Ana de Armas) with ponderables of her own, it is an interesting if not extraordinary feat of deductive reasoning with a touch of the copybook thriller. Worth a watch, but Andhadhun (Hindi) or Badla (Hindi) frankly do a better job...

13/20

13/20
Saturday, June 15, 2013
Welcome to the Planet
Man of Steel owes its excellent execution of a hackneyed genre to some spot-on casting, and a Superman that cuts across a wide swath of dramatic turns - from saving cities and counterattacking aliens in space, to being mama's boy in a remote corner in Kansas. Superman/Clark Kent/ Kal-El (Henry Cavill) is supported particularly well by one Lois Lane (Amy Adams) of insatiable curiosity, and father Jor-El (Russell Crowe) who lives on in spirit - and as an uploaded intelligence over time. The story begins with Jor-El defying usurper General Zod (Michael Shannon) and transporting Kal-El through space to Earth. The same Earth, that becomes the target for Zod as he resurrects himself, and tries to terraform Earth into a Krypton-like world, and wipe out the human race in the process. Hopefully, Kal-El will find the humanity to bridge the races rather than have one survive at the expense of the other. Excellent rendition of a copybook franchise, and a near-unmissable summer entertainer
14.5/20
Sunday, December 23, 2012
Fixed Gear, Steel Frame, No Brakes
It is hard to come up with a genuinely
interesting and never-a-dull-moment script centered around the all-too-familiar
New York, and car chases. So, Director David Koepp changed the game – and
speeded up things by making them slower – on bicycle, in fact. Profiling the best-in-class
NY bicycle messenger Wilee (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), on a Premium Rush – a
high-priority dispatch – with a little help from girlfriend Vanessa (Dania
Ramirez) and arch rival Marco (Sean Kennedy), Wilee outruns everything in sight
– cars, people, other bicycles, and even stationary objects – as he helps one
Chinese student Nima (Jamie Chung) re-unite with her daughter. Get ready for an
unexpected rush from this under-rated movie
13/20
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