Monday, August 19, 2013

Movie Monday #21: Inception



 “An idea can transform the world and rewrite all the rules...which is why I have to steal it.”

--Leonardo DiCaprio as Dom Cobb, Inception 

If there was ever a movie that totally blew my mind and left me with my heart pounding and my jaw on the floor, it was Inception.  I bought it back in January on a whim after hearing people talk about it online and hearing how it got nominated for all those awards.  I was wary of watching another Christopher Nolan vehicle, considering how boring The Prestige had been and how utterly ridiculous and confusing The Dark Knight was. 

Inception opens with our hero, Dom Cobb (played deftly by Leonardo DiCaprio), lying on a beach in Japan.  Brought inside to an old man’s home, the homeowner (Ken Watanabe) and Cobb have a mysterious exchange that’s intriguing but doesn’t make any sense.  As the old man reaches for a gun on the table, the film cuts to the past, where a younger Cobb and younger homeowner, who we learn is named Saito, are discussing a matter of security.  You’re led to believe that Cobb and his associate Arthur (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) are secret agents of some kind...but then you discover that they’re actually operating inside Saito’s mind--specifically, his dreams.

Cobb, Arthur, and many others live in the near future, where the next level of espionage and thievery has been raised to a person’s subconscious.  Through an experimental device and sedating drugs, anyone can enter anybody’s dreams and extract their deepest, darkest secrets (bank account numbers, troop locations, etc.) and sell it to the highest bidder.

There are some basic rules to how this works, however.  You must have someone build the dream world for you (this person is called the “architect”).  If you’re killed in a dream, you wake up.  If you’re simply shot, it causes excruciating pain on the other side.  To wake someone, you “kick” them--knock them off a chair, dunk them in water, or push them off a building.  It’s the falling sensation that wakes them up, you see.  And the biggest trick of all is the “totem”--an item that tells you when you’re back in the real world (i.e., Arthur’s totem is a pair of loaded dice).

In the opening action sequence inside Saito’s dream, we’re also introduced to Cobb’s wife and nemesis, Mal (Marion Cotillard), who always shows up when he’s least expecting it and undermines whatever operation he’s trying to run.  Needless to say, Cobb’s operation goes to hell when Mal shoots Arthur and the dream collapses (which causes the entire building to fall apart like it’s in an earthquake), but they escape with their skin (and their brains) intact.

Unfortunately, Saito catches up to Cobb and Arthur and offers them a deal--instead of stealing ideas, normally referred to as “extraction,” he wants to know if Cobb can plant an idea, referred to as “inception.”  Arthur says it can’t be done.  Cobb says it can.  He takes the job, and Saito promises him that if he’s successful, he’ll be able to return to his children, who he hasn’t seen in several years.

For this job, Cobb’s going to need a new architect.  He travels to London and visits his grandfather, Miles (played by Michael Caine), who brings his brightest student to our hero’s attention--Ariadne, played by the underrated Ellen Page.  In an interesting job interview, Cobb asks her to draw a maze in two minutes that it would take him one minute to solve.  After several tries, Ariadne draws a giant ring and puts other, smaller rings inside of it, so there’s no way in or out.  The smile on Cobb’s face tells us that this is what he was looking for.

Gathering the rest of his team, Cobb prepares for the biggest gamble of his life--they’re going inside the mind of entrepreneur Robert Fischer, Jr. (played by a very grown-up Cillian Murphy) to plant the idea that he break up his father’s company and be his own man, thereby paving the way for Saito’s company and other companies to open the market.  To do this, they need to go three layers deep--a dream within a dream within a dream--and get so deep into Robert’s subconscious that he won’t remember them being there. Once this gets under way, the movie is a no-holds-barred, non-stop, adrenaline-pumping thrill ride.  I don’t intend to spoil it for those who haven’t seen the movie (and shame on you if you haven’t), but I’ll tell you this much: it will take your breath away.

This was my first time watching Leonardo DiCaprio in a film, and I was very impressed.  I guess the reason I’ve stayed away from his work was the ridiculous performance he put up in Titanic, but he’s grown up a lot since then, and so have his acting skills.  He’s the perfect guy to play Dom Cobb, a man haunted by his past who can’t even dream without the aide of a machine and some drugs.  You instantly connect with him, you feel sorry for him, and you want him to overcome his past in order to seize his future.  This was some of the best acting I’ve seen out of anybody in a long time, so hats off to DiCaprio for a job well done.

I’d only seen Ken Watanabe in one other film (that being The Last Samurai) before Inception, and I’ve got to say that I really like him.  The Japanese film industry isn’t known for its actors or its films (it’s safer to say that Americans identify better with the anime and manga they produce), but Watanabe-san is probably one of the best Japanese actors I’ve seen in a while.  He’s vastly improved over his performance in The Last Samurai, and the intriguing twists his character takes in the film allows for more range in his acting ability.  Hopefully we’ll see more of him in the future.

Joseph Gordon-Levitt plays a very reserved and very respectable role as Arthur, the guy who’s been through the thick and thin with Cobb.  He’s the one who reveals to the viewer that Mal is Cobb’s wife, and the other shocker that she’s dead--what you see in Cobb’s dreams is his projection of her.  Levitt is a very intelligent, very talented actor who I always thought was capable of so much more, and he proves that he is in Inception.

I first saw Ellen Page in the off-beat dramedy Smart People, and I was left wondering where the hell they’d been hiding her all these years.  Now that she’s getting larger, better roles, I was really excited to see what she could do in Inception.  I wasn’t disappointed.  Ellen has the skills and depth of an actress twice her age, and the little touches of her growing closer to Cobb added some much-needed compassion to a movie that, otherwise, would have been very, very weighty.  I think Miss Page has a long career ahead of her, and I’ll be highly anticipating her upcoming projects.

The supporting cast also performs well, but the one actor I couldn’t figure out was Tom Berenger, who played Fischer’s advisor.  This is probably just me, but I’ve never seen him as an A-lister or even a B-lister, and with his age, he really didn’t fit in with the rest of the cast.  Even with those issues, this was probably one of his better performances, so we’ll leave it at that.

The music by Hans Zimmer was just astounding.  I’ve been very wary of Hans ever since his awful Tears of the Sun score, and I was beginning to wonder if he was losing his touch.  He earned so much respect from me with the score to Inception that I went out and bought the soundtrack CD, grinning like some idiot who had just won the lottery.  In a way, I had--the orchestral/electronic score that Hans devised for this film showcases every single aspect of Christopher Nolan’s vision.  The powerful crescendos, the orchestra hits, and the electronic percussion all comes together to make this one of my favorite film scores of all time, and proves that Hans Zimmer is simply the best at what he does.

The production design by Guy Hendrix Dyas was, in a word, beautiful.  The locations and the sets all look so real that you forget you’re watching a movie, and I guess that was the point--to make all of this look like it was really happening, even though it was inside someone’s mind.  Dyas also gets extra points for constructing a staircase to nowhere and discovering the trick to making it look like it really did loop around itself.

The cinematography by Wally Pfister only added to Dyas’s beautiful production work.  Pfister captures all the varying exteriors, interiors, and locations perfectly, and everything looks gorgeous not only on DVD, but also in high-def, something that’s becoming rare these days. 

Christopher Nolan seems to be at his best when he’s universe-building, and it shows in Inception.  Here he presents to us a future where everything seems impossible and possible all at once, with compelling characters in very dire situations that could spell their life and death (in the real world and in the dream world).  While some people laughed at the movie and called its concepts “ridiculous,” I fell in love with the universe Nolan built and found myself in very familiar territory, trekked by the sci-fi and fantasy writers of old.

Besides my dislike for Tom Berenger and the lengthy run time (nearly two and a half hours), Inception is a perfect film.  You feel for the characters, the revelations are all in the right places, the bits of humor are well-spaced, and the rhythm of the plot is intoxicating.  If you haven’t seen Inception yet and you can catch it at a good price, then grab a copy, sit back, and prepare to be blown away. 



Monday, June 3, 2013

Movie Monday #20: Drive



"I don't sit in while you're running it down. I don't carry a gun. I drive."
--Ryan Gosling as Driver, Drive 

When I first saw Drive, it was on my computer screen as a glitchy screener rip that someone posted on BT Junkie.  I'm not proud that I downloaded the movie first, but when all of the rental stores have closed in your town, downloading becomes your renting.  My impression from that first viewing was that the film was a masterpiece, so much so that after it was done, I watched it all over again (something I rarely do).  The 80's-influenced electro-pop soundtrack, the superb acting, and the subtleties in the script made this one of my top ten favorite films of all time.

Recently I finally acquired a Blu-Ray player and a HD-TV and needed a cool movie to test them out on.  I headed down to my local Dollar General and found a DVD copy of Drive for eight bucks.  Knowing that my Blu-Ray would up-convert the anamorphic widescreen print to 1080p, I popped it into the player and sat back with a Sprite and a McChicken to experience this masterpiece again, the way I should have seen it the first time.

Ryan Gosling plays a nameless Hollywood stunt driver who moonlights as a wheelman for crooks.  He also works at a car garage run by Shannon (Bryan Cranston), an overly-friendly guy who has taken "Driver" under his wing and affectionately calls him "kid."  Driver lives in the same apartment building as Irene (Carey Mulligan), a waitress whose Latino husband, Standard (Oscar Isaac), is serving time.  Driver makes quick friends with Irene's son, Benicio, and soon a romance blossoms between Driver and Irene, only to be thwarted by Standard's release from prison.

One night while returning from a drive, Driver spots two rough-looking characters in the parking lot of his building.  Exploring a little, he finds Standard beaten to a pulp and Benicio cowering in fear.  According to Standard, he's behind on protection money he paid some toughs while he was in prison, and every time they come asking, the amount doubles.  They also want him to rob a pawn shop that reportedly has the money that will pay off his debt.  Driver agrees to be Standard's wheelman...but when the heist goes to hell, Driver's life--and everyone else's--falls into jeopardy.

The first thing you'll notice about Drive is its electro-pop soundtrack.  Featuring the likes of Kavinsky, Desire, College, and a mesmerizing number by The Chromatics called "Tick of the Clock," the music just drips coolness.  Add to this the astounding visuals of Los Angeles and Driver cruising the streets at night, and you've got yourself a winning combination.  The musical score by Cliff Martinez (who I've loved since Steven Soderbergh's "Solaris") is an astounding electronic mixture that captures all the moods, emotions, and tragedies of the film perfectly and compliments the electro-pop numbers on an even level.

The second thing you'll notice is Ryan Gosling as "Driver."  This was the first time I'd ever seen him in a film, and I was supremely impressed.  He doesn't say very much, but each line is delivered with the appropriate inflection and meaning, like he was born to play this role.  Sometimes he doesn't say anything at all, and a twist of the head or a shift of the weight sufficed (watch his conversation with Standard in the bathroom for evidence of this), and even that carried the necessary gravity to get the point across.  And even when Gosling had to show Driver's anger, it was also measured and proportioned, like he was holding it all back in case he needed it again.  This is one of the best performances I've seen in modern film, and I can't recommend it enough.

Carey Mulligan plays Irene, Standard's wife and Driver's love interest.  This was the first time I'd ever seen her in a film, and I instantly fell in love with her.  She looks so sweet and innocent, but plays Irene as a woman who's struggling between her duty to her husband and her feelings for Driver.  Bryan Cranston totally owns the role of Shannon, and evokes such sympathy for the character when his plans go down the tubes.  Oscar Isaac fleshes out the role of Standard and even makes you feel sorry for the guy, who gets caught up in circumstances beyond his control.  Ron Perlman, Christina Hendricks, and Albert Brooks round out the cast, but it should be noted here that Albert Brooks turns in one chilling performance as the lead villain, Bernie Rose, proving once again that he can play anybody.

The script by Hossein Amini was refined by director Nicolas Winding Refn after the project was purchased from Universal, where it had sat in development hell for six years.  Both Amini and Refn create something unique--a movie that starts out still and quiet and slowly spirals into chaos.  It's very reminiscent of the 80's crime thrillers Thief and To Live and Die in L.A., which are two of my favorite 80's movies and some of the best crime thrillers I've ever seen.  Director Refn worked with Newton Thomas Sigel as his director of photography, and Sigel captures all of Los Angeles, both day and night, in such beautiful and subtle ways that even florescent lighting in a parking lot looks alluring and vivid.  Add to this the unique production design by Beth Mickle, the superb editing by Mat Newman, and the awesome costume designs by Erin Benach (including Driver's white-and-gold scorpion jacket), and you have yourself a masterpiece.  

Drive was the sleeper hit of 2011, but for me, it's the perfect film.  It has everything I love about movies--drama, romance, cars, crime, and a great soundtrack.  If you love those same elements, then you're going to love "Drive" as well...and don't be surprised if you find yourself cruising around the streets of your town at night, windows down, blasting some electro-pop of your own. 


Monday, February 18, 2013

Movie Monday #19: Burn Up!

"Donuts.  Now."
--Don Huffman as Banba, Burn Up!

Remember when people didn't watch anime for the pretty colors and the boobs?  Remember when things like cars, trucks, and robots were hand-drawn instead of computer-generated because computers couldn't do that yet?  And remember when anime girls actually gave you wood?  If you're one of those people, then "Burn Up!" is the anime for you.  Released in 1991 at the peak of the anime boom in Japan, "Burn Up!" is a 50-minute one-shot OVA that follows the adventures of three traffic cops (Maki, Reimi, and Yuka) as they go on an illegal undercover assignment to break up a slave trading ring operating in Tokyo.  When Yuka gets kidnapped by the slave traders, it's up to Maki and Reimi to break every protocol in the book by getting her back in a no-holds-barred, balls-to-the-wall battle with the white slave trader Samuel McCoy and his mansion full of gun-toting thugs.

Sound stupid by today's standards, doesn't it?  But that's the thing about "Burn Up!" that I love--it's unpretentious fun.  This OVA knows it's nothing but an excuse to get sexy anime girls in skin-tight body armor and have them blow McCoy and his army to kingdom come.  And I love it for that.  It's a reflection of a time in Japan when producers were taking chances on ambitious animators and their projects, and "Burn Up!" was most likely one of them.   It's attractive characters (designed by Kenjin Miyazaki), the 80's-style mechanical animation (for the cars, bikes, tanks, and the like), the production design (by Gasho Tano), and the bright color palette all speak to the glory days of anime when the creativity was flowing and everything wasn't based off a manga or PC game.

With that said, there are some awesome action sequences here, especially the opening chase between Maki, Reimi, Yuka, Kenji (Maki's boyfriend), Banba (Reimi's "potential" boyfriend), and a red BMW filled with three McCoy gangsters and one female hostage.  The shading techniques in the animation are just brilliant, the screaming guitar music (by none other than Kenji Kawai) gets your heart pumping, and the way Maki's bike slices its way through the cars on the interstate has to be seen to be believed.  And my personal favorite part of it all are the old-school sound effects that would perpetuate many an anime show for years to come. 

If you're going to watch "Burn Up!", please watch the Japanese version, featuring Yumiko Shibata as Maki, Miki Ito (of "Project A-Ko" fame) as Reimi, and Kumiko Nishihara as Yuka.  Norio Wakamoto plays the devilish McCoy, while Sayaka (one of McCoy's slave girls) is played by Yuri Shiratori.  All of them are perfectly cast to their roles and give each line the correct meaning and inflection.  These seiyuu (along with the entire cast) were very popular throughout the 80's and 90's, and one of the best parts of watching "Burn Up!" in Japanese is going "Hey, I recognize that voice!" whenever these actors speak.

The English dub of "Burn Up!" is from 1995 and was ADV Films' first English dub, which introduced everyone to their mainstays Tiffany Grant (as Maki), Amanda Winn (as Reimi), and Kimberly Yates (as Yuka).  Also in the English cast is Milton Lawrence as Kenji (who actually does a first-rate job, given the script) and Rob Mungle (of "Guy" and "Gunsmith Cats" fame) as Captain Hashima.  The problem with the English dub is its age (the 90's were infamous for unnecessary swearing and ridiculous rewrites), and the fact that Amanda Winn is miscast as the soft-spoken Reimi.  Tiffany Grant plays Maki well enough, but most of what she does involves screaming, roaring, and being generally pissed off (and generally missing the point of Maki to begin with).  Kimberly Yates suffers from a poorly-written script that turned Yuka into an airhead from the get-go and didn't give her much room to act.  All three of these ladies would go on to do bigger and better things, and for that all of otaku-dom (or me, at least) is eternally grateful.

Unfortunately, both editions of "Burn Up!" (the original ADV Films release & the Sentai Filmworks re-release) are out of print, so your best bet to snag a decent copy would be off the Amazon marketplace.  If you're lucky, you might end up with the ADV Films version, which included a bonus previews disc that showcased their latest anime acquisitions.  Even if you're not, you've still got "Burn Up!", an anime that simply entertains the pants off the viewer without throwing their brain through the wringer and their heart under a bus (like most anime titles today).  I'm all for a story about love, romance, and the eighteen beautiful girls that are vying for my hand in marriage (yeah, right!), but sometimes I like to watch something that's actually fun and doesn't require that I sign over my soul to a shinigami in a note book.  If that's the kind of anime you're looking for (and you appreciate the days when anime didn't come in a "complete season" pack for 20 bucks), then "Burn Up!" is the anime for you. 


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Here's a link to the original ADV Films VHS trailer for "Burn Up!" back in 1995.  It features some of the awesome music from the soundtrack and some cool scenes from the anime.

http://youtu.be/BTUYip0wyHo