Saturday, June 02, 2012

In this week's film news, I'm watching through the Alien quadrilogy ahead of Prometheus opening on Thursday. Today I took advantage of a rainy day and stayed in, getting through one and two. As a request from my workmate I've already prebooked my ticket for opening night with her and we've now made it an out-of-work gathering open to everyone. It's nice going to the movies with a group sometimes as opposed to by yourself like I'm so used to doing :)

But for this week...

What To Expect When You’re Expecting (M)

In yet another ensemble film to hit our screens, Hollywood has returned to the self-help guides for inspiration following He’s Just Not That Into You (2009) with a film about the differences in pregnancy women experience and the love it brings to couples and supportive friends. It seems reading is not enough in this age; the comedy and the tragedy make for fine viewing but a mother-to-be would hardly benefit from that if this film was her easy way of research.

Wendy (Elizabeth Banks) and Gary (Ben Falcone) fall pregnant after years of trying only to find out Gary’s father Ramsey (Dennis Quaid) is having twins with new, much younger partner Skyler (Brooklyn Decker). Meanwhile, Holly (Jennifer Lopez) and Alex (Rodrigo Santoro) look to adopt, but as part of an internal freakout Alex joins a ‘dudes group’ to learn about being a dad.

There’s also Rosie (Anna Kendrick) who falls pregnant after a brief encounter with Marco (Chace Crawford) and fitness guru Jules (Cameron Diaz) who has a similar occurrence with her partner from a celebrity dance show Evan (Matthew Morrison). Their lives have been made to intertwine as suggestion that different experiences of the same process aren’t far off.

Many women go through difficult pregnancies and some can not give birth, so when the perfect yummy mummy (to-be) comes along with no problems they just want to give her a kick in the pants. Here, that’s directed towards Skyler, who can’t help but be energetic and wear six-inch heels without breaking a sweat. As any pregnant woman does.




There’s no stone left unturned as the most affecting elements of a pregnancy are brought to the table. But it’s the dudes group that manages to stand out from all of this as something different, with hilarity that hopefully would not translate to real life from the likes of Craig (Thomas Lennon), Vic (Chris Rock) and his son Jordan (Reginald and Resan Womack). It’s their dealings of being dads and their fascination with their envisioned hot daddy Davis (Joe Manganiello) that are most entertaining.

Of the ladies, Banks is the most ‘normal’ and is portrayed as such, the comedian so relaxed at finding the nine months a pain in the arse and having a public breakdown. Her chemistry with Rebel Wilson as employee Janice is fun, Wilson continuing her Hollywood run with another peculiar character.

The film acknowledges pop culture like YouTube and the book on which it was based, described by some as “the Bible of American pregnancy”. Why a film needed to be made using a base that a large portion of the USA female population has read is surely lost on some, but director Kirk Jones has done well to keep a mix of the aforementioned comedy and tragedy.

His fourth film (following 2009’s underrated Everybody’s Fine) drags leading into the final half an hour, but the target female audience will appreciate the homage to childbirth. It largely brings what’s expected, but with a predominantly solid cast the film pulls its weight within the rankings of its ensemble cousins.
Rating: 3/5

*Published in the Daily Liberal (Dubbo), Western Advocate (Bathurst), Parkes Champion Post and Midstate Observer (Orange) from Saturday 2/6/2012


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Nosferatu: Phantom of the Night (1979)

As fate would have it, I was to pick another Werner Herzog film for my column this edition; it was random as it is every week, I promise you!

The second of five collaborations between Herzog and actor Klaus Kinski, the West German film also released in an English version as Nosferatu the Vampyre was a direct homage to F.W. Murnau’s Nosferatu, A Symphony of Terror. Herzog regarded Murnau’s 1922 film as the best production ever to come out of Germany and felt he could bring it to a new generation.

Jonathan Harker (Bruno Ganz) is an estate agent sent from his home of Wismar, Germany, to Transylvania to show plans for a house to prospective buyer Count Dracula (Kinski). The superstitions Johnathan was warned about become true one by one before Count Dracula makes his way to Wismar with plague-infected rats  and the knowledge Johnathan’s wife Lucy (Isabelle Adjani) will be near.

Kinski’s Count Dracula is one that longs for love and is almost pitiful before he unleashes his evil in the shadows. Apparently Kinski (surprisingly) got on rather well with his makeup artist over their daily four-hour routine. That’s lucky for Herzog - the rat-faced villain looks positively creepy.
With similar haunting music to that of Aguirre:The Wrath of God, Herzog makes his telling of the Dracula tale a mysterious one. As a horror, he doesn’t rely on blood or physical torture but instead the painstakingly slow movement of the story. But the most intriguing element of this film remains the leading couple’s helplessness at the hands of the monster.


*Published in the Mailbox Shopper (Dubbo) from Wednesday 30/5/2012


MISSED LAST WEEK'S REVIEWS? See what I thought of Men In Black 3 3D and Marnie.


 

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*I have two photos entered in the current Qatar Reflections competition. Please show your support for me by voting for either photo! Short backstory and links here.

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