Friday, April 05, 2013

JURASSIC PARK 3D Doesn't Quite Pop

Opening today at a multiplex near you:

JURASSIC PARK 3D

(Dir. Steven Spielberg, 1993)


To celebrate its 20th anniversary, and to create franchise awareness for the big ass IMAX 3D event spectacular JURASSIC PARK IV set for Summer 2014, Steven Spielberg’s action adventure epic has now been outfitted in 3D for a theatrical re-release opening today.

That’s all well and good, but at the advance screening I attended, the image looked faded. 
The colors were much more vibrant in a revival screening I saw the same week of THE MUPPET MOVIE (part of the Cool Classics series at the Colony Theater in Raleigh), and that was an original 35 mm print 15 years older than JURASSIC PARK! 

I know, I know, it's digital and I can only speak for how it looked at the one screening I saw, so I’ll be curious to know if any other movie-goers experienced such a dim image. When I see TV spots for the film, the color looks over-saturated, as if to make up for the faded picture. But anyway, on to the actual movie.

I could tell from the feel of the packed auditorium (and overhearing some random chatting) that many there had not seen the original JURASSIC PARK before. It has been a long time since I’ve seen it in full, but it has been on television so often that I’m very familiar with large chunks of it.

The Spielberg sense of otherworldly awe, that shined blindingly in such classics as CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND , RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK, and E.T., takes its last glorious gasp here.

The scene where Richard Attenborough introduces Sam Neill, Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum, and the less famous kids (Ariana Richards and Joseph Mazzello) to the wide landscape of cloned dinosaurs still has jaw-dropping impact, but the 3D-ness present this time is only intermittently effective throughout the film (the shot with the T-rex roaring into the jeep mirror with the disclaimer “Objects may seem closer than they appear” is one effective in-your-face instance). But most of the time, I didn’t even notice it.

The storyline (based on the 1990 novel by Michael Cricton, who co-wrote the screenplay with Spielberg cronie David Koepp) hasn’t really aged well - i.e. billionaire Attenborough brings a team of paleontologists and scientists (Neill, Dern, Goldblum), and a blood-sucking lawyer (Martin Ferrero) to inspect his new cloned dinosaur island theme park, but things go wrong (thanks to the conniving ways of Newman from Seinfeld) and they spend the rest of the movie being chased by CGI dinosaurs - but does it matter with so many genuine thrills on display? No it doesn’t.

It also has a number of entertaining elements such as a pre-PULP FICTION Samuel L. Jackson (“hold on to your butts!”) as the park’s chief engineer, the before mentioned Newman (actually Wayne Knight) providing snotty comic relief (Goldblum provides the more egg-headed kind), and a great suspenseful sequence with the kids trying to escape from a few raptors in the lavish kitchen in the visitor’s center, so the film still largely holds up.

It’s not even that dated - I only noticed Knight drinking a Jolt Cola, and Richards identifying herself as a “hacker” reminded me how new a term that was 20 years ago.

However, over and over I could tell that in this new 3D presentation, the things that got rises from the audience (many of whom were kids) came from Spielberg’s film making drive being in fifth gear, not the 3D enhancement, which, as I said before, didn’t look very good.

If your kids haven’t seen it, or only seen it on TV, a matinee may be in order of Spielberg’s crowd-pleaser, but contrary to Attenborough’s repeated boasts throughout the film, it looks to me like they did spare some expense with this re-tinkering, so brace yourself for a picture that doesn’t quite pop.

Sigh. If only a 2D 20th anniversary re-release was an option at the multiplexes.

More later...

Full Frame Documentary Film Festival 2013: Day One



It was a dark and rainy first day of the 16th Annual Full Frame Documentary Film Festival at the Carolina Theatre (and a few accompanying venues) in Downtown Durham, one that felt darker and rainier when news spread that Roger Ebert died.

Since I have a lot of film loving friends on Facebook, it seemed like every one of them posted a link, fond memory, or sad acknowledgement of the man who was possibly the most famous movie critic ever. I’ll post my own tribute to Ebert very shortly, but in a “show must go on” spirit let me tell you about the non-fiction films I saw today at Full Frame:

FREE ANGELA & ALL POLITICAL PRISONERS

(Dir. Shola Lynch, 2012)


This was one I’ve been looking forward to the most and it didn’t disappoint. Shola Lynch (who made the equally awesome CHISHOLM ’72) tells a story that everybody should know, the story of radical activist Angela Davis, whose trial on charges of murder, kidnapping, and conspiracy riveted the nation in the Nixon-era.

Recent interviews, archival footage, newspaper headlines, tastefully done recreations (Eisa Davis stands in for her aunt Angela in brief flashbacks to link passages), and a lively score by Vernon Reid (formerly of the band Living Colour) all combine beautifully in this labor of love that Lynch told the audience after the screening in a Q & A was 8 years in the making. FREE ANGELA goes into limited release tomorrow, Friday the 5th, so be sure to look out for it.

(Dir. Brian McGinn, 2012) 

Ashrita Furman, a man who has spent his life setting hundreds of Guiness World Records, is the subject of this short biodoc that amounts to little more than a human interest story. At first it’s fun to see him walking with a full milk bottle on his head, chopping apples with a Samurai sword, skipping in a marathon, space hopping, hula hooping in the world’s largest hula hoop and so on, but it drags when a trip to train to climb a mountain on stilts is squashed by poor planning. As the film is less than a half hour long, this definitely hurts it. Still, it’s a passable human interest story with some funny moments.

BATTERY MAN (Dir. Dusan Cavic & Dusan Saponja, 2012)




A much better short (55 min) biodoc about a very different kind of World Record breaker: Serb Slavisa Pajkic, a man who can use his body as an electric conductor. No joke, he can fry sausages with his hands and withstand 20,000 volts (he aims to try for 1,000,000 volts for the Guiness record) all the while baffling scientists. Pajkic uses his powers for showbiz purposes and for a questionable healing practice, examples of both are a blast to watch in this pleasingly punchy film. A Popeye-ish little guy who complains about people not wanting to shake his hand (can you blame them?), Pajkic dreams of being a “wireless laser man” and his attempts to go about this make this one Hell of a memorable little movie.

SPINNING PLATES (Dir. Joseph Levy, 2012)



The stories of three unique restaurants are intertwined in the first full length feature by Californian producer, writer, director Joseph Levy in an engaging way that radiates a lot of warmth.


We learn about the ups and downs of the very cutting edge Alinea in Chicago, Balltown, Iowa’s 150-year old Breitbach’s Country Dining, and the Mexican eatery Cocina de Gabby in Tucson, Arizona. Chef Grant Achatz of Alinea speaks of his passion for artistic food presentation that never wavers even when battling cancer of the tongue, we see the community of Balltown come together to rebuild their beloved Breitbach’s after it burns down twice in a 10 month period, and the young couple who opened Cocina de Gabby pull the heartstrings when speaking of their love of family helping them through tough financial times. It’s a well constructed, and sharply shot doc that could be a real art house crowd-pleaser if given the proper promotion.

Okay! That's all the doc talk I got for now. Tomorrow I will cover docs about Nixon (who cameos in FREE ANGELA btw), Napster, Muscle Shoals, among other subjects. Please check back and read all about it.


More later...

Tuesday, April 02, 2013

New Releases On Blu Ray & DVD 4/2/13



The biggest release, literally, today on Blu ray is the Marvel Cinematic Universe: Phase One - Avengers Assembled (10-Disc Limited Edition Six-Movie Collector's Set). The set contains: 

MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS (Blu-ray 3D + Blu-ray)
CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE FIRST AVENGER (Blu-ray 3D + Blu-ray)
THOR (Blu-ray 3D + Blu-ray)
IRON MAN 2 (Blu-ray)
THE INCREDIBLE HULK (Blu-ray)
IRON MAN (Blu-ray)

Also included are deleted scenes, extended scenes, featurettes, animatics, collectible packaging with exclusive memorabilia (prop reproductions and artifacts), and an exclusive inside look at IRON MAN 3 and other films from Phase Two of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Looks pretty f-in’ exhaustive which is great for Marvel movie fanboys, but may come as across as overkill to casual fans like me. I mean, I wouldn’t even have room on any shelf in my house for the damn thing!


Anyway, on to what I think is the best release of the day: Don Coscarelli’s 2012 horror comedy JOHN DIES AT THE END. I saw it a few months ago at the 14th annual Nevermore Film Festival at the Carolina Theatre in Durham (same place I’ll be in a few days for Full Frame), and it’s a meta treat. Special features include a commentary with Director Coscarelli, stars Chase Williamson, and Rob Mayes, and producer Brad Baruh, “Getting Sauced: The Making of JOHN DIES AT THE END” featurette, “Creature Corps: The Effects of Soy Sauce” featurette, deleted scenes; casting sessions, Fangoria interview with Giamatti, and theatrical trailers, one of which you can see here:


The Bible: The Epic Miniseries also comes out today. That’s the one made by the History Channel that has come under fire for having an actor playing Satan in it that some think resembles President Obama. As that’s all I know about it, I’ll move on.

A classy yet dull HBO telefilm, Philip Kaufman’s HEMINGWAY & GELLHORN drops today on Blu ray and DVD. Concerning the romance between Ernest Hemingway (Clive Owen) and WWII correspondent Martha Gellhorn (Nicole Kidman), the lofty production starts off interestingly enough with a charismatic meeting of the leads at a bar in Key West in 1936, but gradually becomes a stiff set of scenes, narrated by Kidman in docudrama style, that all too routinely tell the tale. 

The attempt to replicate old grainy footage of the era doesn’t quite work either. The intriguingly chosen cast - an odd mix of recognizable faces including Parker Posey, Tony Shaloub, David Straithairn, Robert Duvall, and Metallica’s Lars Ulrich (!) - helps keep it moving from historical footnote to footnote, but at 155 minutes it often drags maddeningly. For those who are fans of the actors or the Hemingway angle, there are a few Special Features worth checking out: Audio commentary with Kaufman and editor Walter Murch, and a few “Making of” featurettes. 

Several films that I haven’t seen come out today as well: Barry Battle’s action comedy THE BAYTOWN OUTLAWS starring Billy Bob Thornton (which looks awful), Ricki Stern and Anne Sundberg’s baseball documentary KNUCKLEBALL (which looks possibly good), and Nick Love’s update of a ‘70s British TV crime drama THE SWEENEY, starring Ray Winstone (which looks like it could go either way).

More later...