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Posts Tagged ‘Michael Douglas’

The Bounty Hunter (2010 film)

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Thursday’s Top Ten

  1. The Social Network: Eduardo flies out to California to meet up with Mark and he is soaking wet, his hair and bangs are down on his face.  Then he meets privately with Mark and in one of the camera cuts his hair is back in place, his bangs is off his forehead AND clearly he had no time or opportunity to fix it.
  2. Wall Street 2 – Money Never Sleeps: Several times when Jacob is riding his motorcycle, you can see the cameraman in the reflection from his helmet.
  3. Wall Street 2 – Money Never Sleeps: Gekko and his future son-in-law are riding in a cab and the meter reads $2.90 and the extra fee reads $1.50 –  at the end of a fairly lengthy ride the meter still reads $2.90.
  4. The Town: In the scene where Doug and his brother are talking at the cemetery, Doug’s jacket’s zipper goes from completely zipped to halfway unzipped all by itself.
  5. Easy A: After Olive has been to the principal’s office, she and Rhiannon are walking away leaning on each other in the front-on shot and immediately following are standing a foot apart.
  6. Devil: In the scene when the  fire department arrives in the pouring rain and when they get inside they are dry.
  7. Devil: The maintenance man falls onto the elevator but when they finally open the elevator, his body is not on top.
  8. Shutter Island: When Leo is laying hid dead kids on the grass, the little girl’s eyelids flutter and she is visibly breathing.
  9. The Book of Eli: The type of book Eli is protecting would be just a fragment – the bible in Braille composes about 18 books.
  10. The Bounty Hunter: Milo gets out of the car to pump gas but they are in New Jersey where it is illegal to pump your own gas.

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Welllll what happens when there is way too much hype about a movie is what happened here – it doesn’t live up to the publicity campaign!  A couple of friends had already seen it and said, “oh you’re going to love it”! NOT

The first thing that put me off the movie was the music.  I am ALWAYS suspect of a movie that uses songs to express an emotion that the script has failed to convey.  It’s almost as if the music is used to fill in the blanks left in the screenplay.

I understand and appreciate Oliver Stone‘s attempts to expose the excesses and abuses of the wild wild west of  Wall Street.  But you can’t do that when you use stars in your movie because they get paid a lot of money and only major studios and large production companies can pay those prices.  Exposeé cinema is the work of Michael Moore.  There were two other story lines played out; the relationship between Jake and Winnie and Winnie and Gekko – predictable.

The movie was predictable right from the very first scene – I mean you HAD to know that Winnie (Carey Mulligan) was going to be the daughter of Gordon Gecko.  And that Jake (Shia LaBeouf)  with his innocent looks and clean-shaven face would be the perfect foil for Gordon GekkoMichael Douglas) and Bretton James (Josh Brolin) characters.  Greed is good.

For awhile I thought that after 8 years in prison Gordon was reformed, repentant and rehabilitated-NOT! Two clichés come to mind: Old habits are hard to break and a leopard doesn’t change his spots. However, in thinking back to first meeting between Jake and Gecko, I should have seen the foreshadowing in the trades. But then again, Michael Douglas is a star and of course the movie couldn’t end with him still being a prick – predictable.

The movie is filled and I mean filled with the vernacular of Wall Street; so much so that I believe most of the audience had no clue as to what the characters were talking about and there was no explanation offered either verbally or visually. Sub prime, insurance-swapping, margin calls, selling short, off-shore funding and on and on.  It was nice that the research was done to make it authentic but if so much of the dialogue is in vernacular, it is lost on the general public.

Let’s talk about the acting;  this is the second movie I’ve seen recently that had former leading actors and actresses in minor roles AND the greats walked away with the scene every time!  Eli Wallach was powerful in the role of Jules Steinhardt, Susan Sarandon once again displayed her ability to shine in a comedic role and Frank Langella as Louis Zabel inhabited the character.  Shia is good looking but not a great actor, Carey was too doe-eyed for me and Josh Brolin is a bit of enigma-I think he should be better than he is and yet he has had two leading roles recently.

As far as the cinematography goes, well…what New Yorker doesn’t love to watch a film shot in New York City?  The street shots were great, I actually recognized a few but there were too many skyline shots.  Could you identify what organization was being honored  when the Empire State Building came into view and each time it had a different light configuration?

From my point of view, Wall Street 2 is entertaining, I enjoyed seeing Michael Douglas but it was contrived, not real enough – EVEN with all the product placement!  It lacked meatiness and soul and I  don’t know why  those particular words came to mind but they do.

Just in case you’re wondering what product placement I’m talking about, consider these:

Dunkin Donuts

The Bowery Hotel

Is Greed good? Wall Street 2, Money Never Sleeps

Michael Douglas

Heineken

Nintendo

Lay’s

Shun Lee

Johnny Walker

Red Bull

Cracker Jacks

and many many more!!!!



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