Showing posts with label Denzel Washington. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Denzel Washington. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 16, 2021

Movie Reviews - "The Little Things" and "The Dig"


 

Got around to watching "The Little Things" last night.  From director John Lee Hancock, this one features an All-Star Ballot of a cast - Denzel Washington, Rami Malek, and Jared Leto, each of whom own a little trinket called an Academy Award.  What's not to look forward to?

Washington plays Joe "Deke" Deacon, a deputy sheriff in a hick county in California.  When he has to travel to Los Angeles to pick up piece of evidence, we are soon made aware that Deke used to be big time detective in LA, but something happened in his past that drove him away from the big city to the boondocks.  What could it be, and does it have anything to do with a serial killer that is currently terrorizing Los Angeles and is being investigated by rising young hotshot detective Jim Baxter, played by Malek?

Deke decides to take some vacation time and stays in the big city to investigate on his own, and Baxter, reluctantly at first, agrees to have Deke help him out in the investigation ("but if you end up pissing on my leg and tell me it's raining, we're through").  Deke soon uncovers a creep named Albert Sparma who comes under suspicion, and, trust me, Leto can do "creep" as well as just about anyone in show biz.

This movie is pretty standard fair police crime drama.  It won't make any top ten lists or win any awards, but it is quite entertaining, and it certainly does hold your interest.  The trio of Washington/Malek/Leto also lifts this one above the average cop potboiler.  I especially like Denzel Washington's hair in this one: cut very short and predominantly gray, much like The Grandstander's!!

Malek, Leto, and Washington

Three Stars from The Grandstander.

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We also watched "The Dig" on Netflix this week, and we both enjoyed it very much. We categorize it as a very "gentle" movie. It stars Carey Mulligan, Ralph Fiennes, and Lily James. Based on a true story of an archeological discovery on a wealthy widow's property in England on the very eve of World War II. Wonderful performances and beautifully shot. I like how my pal skip categorized it, "A love story on many levels, a home front war story, and an historical event all in one."

Two and Three-Quarters Stars from The Grandstander.




Wednesday, September 28, 2016

On "The Magnificent Seven" and Movie Remakes


As the title of this post and the picture above will tell you, we saw "The Magnificent Seven" this afternoon, and I have to say that we both liked it, and The Grandstander gives it three stars on his always reliable scale.  This movie is, of course, and remake of the 1960 classic western that was directed by John Sturges and starred, among others, Yul Brenner, Steve McQueen, Charles Bronson, and James Coburn.  This version was directed by Antoine Fuqua and stars Denzel Washington, Chris Pratt, and Ethan Hawk.

You may know the story.  A small western town is held as a virtual hostage to evil mine owner, played perfectly by Peter Sarsgaard.  A beautiful young woman (Haley Bennett), widowed when her husband was killed by the vile Sarsgaard, appeals to bounty hunter Washington, who then puts together his "magnificent seven" to save the town.  It's a familiar theme that has been told countless times ever since Hollywood began churning out  westerns.  That doesn't mean that it can't be an appealing story.  This one is beautifully filmed, and there is lots of action in it.  And violence.  Lots of people die in this one.

And how can you not like Denzel Washington.  He's terrific.  This will not make anyone's Ten Best List for 2016, but it is pretty good entertainment, and worth seeing.



Oh, and I am not going to give a spoiler here, but make sure you are in the theater as the closing credits begin.  Fuqua and the current film makers give a special sort of tribute to the original movie, and I loved it.

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Discussing a movie like this becomes tricky sometimes because it is a remake of what many consider to be a classic.  Why does Hollywood do this, people often ask.  Why take something that everyone loves and mess with it?  And can a remake possibly be better than the original?

Well, this summer a remake of 1959's epic "Ben-Hur" was released and if you blinked, you missed it.  It bombed big time with the critics and audiences, and it was gone after a week in the theaters.  "Magnificent Seven" seems to have been given a better fate, critics may not be in love with it, but most liked it, and it grossed $34.7 million in it's first week of release.

My own feeling is that a remake should be judged on its own merits.  I saw the original "Magnificent Seven", but it has been so long that I honestly can't make a comparison to this new version.  So, I went into this one today with pretty much of an open mind. 

Some remakes are bad.  Director Gus van Sant, in a massive ego trip, remade Hitchcock's "Psycho" a few years back, and it was awful.  Never should have seen the light of day.  On the other hand, a few years back, a remake of the John Wayne Oscar winner "True Grit" was made that starred Jeff Bridges.  Was it as good, or better than the original?  Who knows, but I liked them both.

Sometimes a different spin can be put on a movie and a great improvement can be realized.    In 1931, a movie version of the Charles MacArthur-Ben Hecht play. "The Front Page" was made that starred Pat O'Brien and Adolph Menjou.  It is a fairly well regarded movie, although I confess that I can't remember ever seeing it.  In 1940, however, Howard Hawks did a remake of the movie, but made one of the reporters a female, cast Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell as the leads, and renamed it "His Girl Friday", and that movie is an undisputed classic.  In 1974, one of the great directors of all time, Billy Wilder, took another stab at "The Front Page", and it became one of Wilder's more forgettable movies.  It starred Jack Lemmon, Walter Matthau, and Carol Burnett.  My memory of that version was that Wilder felt the need to have Lemmon and Matthau used the f-word way, way too often.  Not a good movie.

One of the more charming romantic comedies of the last twenty years or so was "You've Got  Mail" with Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan.  Great movie, and most people who saw it didn't realize that it had been done in 1940  as "The Shop Around the Corner" with James Stewart and Margaret Sullavan.  That one shows up often on TCM fairly often, and both versions of this story are delightful.

Denzel Washington seems to be making a career of doing remakes.  "Magnificent Seven" is the third one he has done.  The first was a remake of "The Manchurian Candidate", and it was completely forgettable.  The original with Frank Sinatra, Laurence Harvey, and Angela Lansbury is one of the great political thrillers of all time.  All the new version proved was that this was one instance where it was losing proposition to mess with the original.  In 2009, Washington also did a remake of 1974's "The Taking of Pelham One Two Three", which starred Walter Matthau.  All I remember about the '09 version was a lot more cursing.  I'll never watch it again, but I'll watch the Matthau version every time it is shown on TCM.  It looks like he will do better with the "Magnificent Seven" than he will do with those other two.

(This has spawned a lot of gags, by the way about what Washington will do next.  Rick Blaine, Charles Foster Kane, Rhett Butler?  My friend Al Cotton has suggested he play Kevin McCallister in a "Home Alone" remake.)

I suppose that there are lots of reasons to do remakes.  Studios think that they can make money.  Sometimes they are pure vanity projects for actors or directors.  Sometimes a director thinks he can say something "different" with the material, and sometimes, the film maker may even be right about that.  In all instances, the movie going public will be the final judge of whether or not it was a good idea to remake a movie.

And, of course, one of the great by-products of all of these remakes is that it might send the audience back to look at the originals.  As for me, I am going to see where I can rent, buy, or stream the 1960 "Magnificent Seven" (which itself was a remake of a Japanese classic movie, "The Seven Samurai) sooner, rather than later.