Here's a list of movies I've seen over the past month or so
Me And You And Everyone We Know
I love this movie. I haven't seen it in almost 7 years so once I saw it on Netflix, I absolutely had to watch it again. It's just endearing and charming and funny. I can't recommend this movie enough. ))<>((
Cashback
Another movie I haven't seen in years. I actually own this on DVD but I didn't watch it again until Netflix recommended it to me. Netflix is starting to know me very well. I'm going to be honest. I first heard about this movie because I found out Keeley Hazell (look her up, you won't be disappointed) had a bit part in it. I really like this movie. I think it's artsy without being pretentious. The climax and falling action are rushed and the ending is a bit too clean. None of those things ruin the movie but if I had to fish for marks against the movie, I'd start with those things.
Hollow Man
Ugh... The only reason this movie exists is so Rhona Mitra could brush her hair topless and then get invisible raped off-screen. I feel like I missed the part where the invisibility compound gave Kevin Bacon superhuman strength. In the 20 minute mayhem part of the movie, there were way too many completely implausible moments, even for a movie. Then, the protagonists would get these sudden fits of retardation. For example, it took Elizabeth Shue's character seeing almost her entire team get killed before she triggered the sprinkler system so she could FUCKING SEE HER INVISIBLE ENEMY. Why the **** didn't an entire group of scientists think of that sooner? I can't suspend my disbelief enough to buy that level of stupidity.
Ironclad
I didn't even know this movie existed before I came across it on Netflix. It wasn't bad. It was bloody for the sake of being so but it didn't aspire for more. Ironclad was a popcorn flick through and through. I enjoyed it for what it was and it didn't insult my intelligence.
From Dusk Till Dawn
I feel like this is one of those movies that you really have to watch without knowing anything about it which is almost impossible even for a movie that came out in 1996. The first half of the movie is decidedly not a vampire movie. This was the second time I've watched it but I knew it was a horror movie when I saw it way back when. The horror part comes out of no where then the movie becomes this weird, campy B-movie. It's not Quentin Tarantino's or Robert Rodriguez's best but I don't think this movie could have been done correctly written and directed by anyone else.
Season of the Witch
Goddammit... Why do I watch Nicolas Cage movies? I should have known better. I've only liked 2 movies in the last 10 years with Nicolas Cage in it: Matchstick Men (which I hated the first time because of the ending) and Kick Ass. It's not even about a witch. Face + palm. The only positive thing I can really say about the movie is that Claire Foy is pretty and that's not even about the movie. Thanks Mr. and Mrs. Foy for that.
Red State
There's a 15 minute anti-gay sermon in the middle of the movie. I get it (in terms of plot and characterization) but it was still 15 MINUTES LONG. Red State does a little switcheroo a little over half way through and becomes an action movie with a giant shootout capped off by killing Kevin Pollack's character who I didn't even know was in the movie until he showed up then got shot in the eye 3.286 seconds later. I have nothing against a filmmaker trying to expand his horizons. It's still odd that Kevin Smith even attempted to make a movie like this considering he built his career on dick and fart jokes. He didn't do too bad here but it takes a really skilled filmmaker to pull this off. Smith isn't bad necessarily; he's just not good or experienced enough to make this work completely. And he clearly saw No Country For Old Men and decided to steal heavily borrow from the ending. I wish he stuck with the original ending which had an angel literally coming down from heaven and killing everyone then the apocalypse starting. That would take balls. If he was willing to pull a Kansas City Shuffle and change genres midway through the movie, might as well go the extra mile.
And finally...
Bitch Slap
This has been in my Netflix queue for over a year. I saved it because the I laughed at the title. I decided to actually watch it because I recently found out Julia Voth got top billing. Julia who? Her likeness was used for Jill Valentine's redesign in the Gamecube remake of the original Resident Evil. Most regulars of this message board probably know that I'm a fan of all things Jill Valentine. I even named my new car after her. Yeah, I know... /looks down in shame
Anyway, Bitch Slap is actually not terrible. It's not good but it's not terrible. It's clearly following in the footsteps of Tarantino/Rodriguez's Grindhouse but Rick Jacobson is no where near as talented. Bitch Slap is something of a throwback to old grindhouse exploitation films and a parody of that genre but it commits to neither and that's where it suffers most. It edges closer to the former which I thought was a big mistake because it doesn't want to be that; it doesn't want to be that sleazy. Oh, it's still sleazy. There's tons of boob grabbing and chicks kissing. In one scene, the girls inexplicably just start splashing water on each other followed by a lesbian sex scene. There's also sexy shoveling. If anyone legitimately tried to dig a hole that way, it would take hours. Anyway, if they were aiming for parody, they didn't quite get there. However, parody is one of the most difficult forms of comedy to do correctly. One hopes for Young Frankenstein but usually gets Epic Movie.
The special effects are cheesy but intentional so, in a way, they're actually quite good. I think they achieved the look they were going for. There's a lot of green screen use when they could have easily filmed on location. The story isn't particularly strong but I don't think it aspired for depth. There are A LOT of flashbacks which I feel should be used sparingly in movies because most movies don't do reverse storytelling as well as Memento. Additionally, I thought the ending was predictable. The Usual Suspects didn't invent the twist ending but it's definitely responsible for numerous twist endings over the past 15 or so years that are neither as clever nor as well done. So, the ending here makes sense and it fits but it's also inexplicable due to a certain character's age.
The acting is probably the most interesting part of this movie and what spurred me to write this fairly extensive review. At first, I thought a lot of the acting was way too over the top, particularly America Olivo and Julia Voth. Until the end. I couldn't decide if Voth's acting was really terrible or borderline brilliant, depending on whether my prediction of the ending was correct. She plays up the ditzy, naive, weak, vulnerable tart to the point where you suspect she either sucks at acting or her character is up to something. In a parody or even one struggling to be a parody, one should expect the acting to be over-exaggerated. You can't fake good acting, but good acting allows you to fake bad acting. In retrospect, Voth's performance won't win any awards but she did a fairly good job of intentionally playing the part over the top. In the scene that called for her to be serious, she toned it down and her inflection is spot on. And good Lord, she is gorgeous.
Also, for a movie called "Bitch Slap," there wasn't a lot of bitch slapping. It could have used more.