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GOO Reviews

~ An Edmonton-based movie blog

GOO Reviews

Category Archives: Films

Interstellar

15 Saturday Nov 2014

Posted by Thom Yee in Films

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Drama, Nolan, Sci-Fi, Space

My apologies to Matt Damon

by Thom Yee

Interstellar images courtesy of Paramount Pictures.

Interstellar images courtesy of Paramount Pictures.

There are a lot of stories surrounding Interstellar, mostly because of director Christopher Nolan. There are stories about the technical detail Nolan displays in the film’s direction and in its science; there are stories about the film’s place in the pantheon of Nolan’s almost universally well-received movies; and there are stories about Interstellar being Nolan’s most ambitious film yet. But mostly the biggest story seems to be that Interstellar sucks. And that it got beaten at the weekend box office by a Disney movie.

If you didn’t see Interstellar this past weekend, that wouldn’t be a huge surprise. Interstellar’s opening was obviously never going to compare to Nolan’s Dark Knight trilogy $100 million plus openings (because no Batman), but even compared to Nolan’s overtly intellectual Inception, Interstellar pulled in about $15 million fewer dollars. Continue reading →

Guest Review: The Book of Life (2014)

08 Saturday Nov 2014

Posted by dleboot in Films

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

film review, The Book of Life, The book of Life review

by Danielle LeBouthillier

the_book_of_life_1

All Images belong to Reel FX and 20th Century Fox

As a young teen, I was absolutely in love with Halloween, which eventually led me to research its origins and try to discover similar holidays. It was during one of these fateful Wikipedia searches that I learned about the Day of the Dead. Thus, to understand the movie I’m about to review, I’m going to give the unaware a basic idea of what the Day of the Dead is about.

Mostly celebrated in Mexico and regions with high Hispanic populations, the Day of the Dead is a holiday about remembrance. Continue reading →

Guest Review: Dune

01 Saturday Nov 2014

Posted by Colin Kiddine in Films

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by Colin Kiddine

Dune_Poster

All images courtesy of Churubusco Studios and Universal Pictures.

Dune was one of those books that blew my twelve-year-old mind. It was something that was more than the sum of its parts, something that Frank Herbert used to explore questions of politics, gender, sexuality, economics, environmentalism, religion, why it sucks to be a messiah—and simpler questions, too, like, “What do you do when a grotesquely fat floating dude murders your dad?”

The sheer scope of the book is something that can only be appreciated when you re-read it more than once. Which is probably why it took so friggin’ long to make a film out of it. And also why it turned out to be a hot, surreal mess. But when it’s a hot, surreal mess written and directed by the likes of David Lynch, I guess it’s to be expected.

Continue reading →

Wish I Was Here

25 Saturday Oct 2014

Posted by Thom Yee in Films

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Good luck exploring the infinite abyss again

by Thom Yee

Wish I Was Here images courtesy of Focus Features

Wish I Was Here images courtesy of Focus Features

I watched Garden State again last night. Written by, directed by and starring Zach Braff, Garden State told the story of Andrew Largeman, a young, minor celebrity actor who returns to his hometown for his mother’s funeral, whereupon he reunites with old friends and family, finds new (first?) love, and faces the demons of his youth. Over the last ten years it’s gained a reputation as perhaps the pre-eminent modern movie symbol of angst, unearned self pity, Peter Pan Syndrome, and, of course, the Manic Pixie Dream Girl. It’s also a movie I rag on a lot, but the truth is, up until just now, I really didn’t remember that much about it. I watched Garden State again last night, and y’know what? It was actually pretty good.

Garden State, the virtually forgotten The Last Kiss and now Wish I Was Here form Braff’s ode to young adulthood, from early 20’s all the way up to married with kids, and while the preceding volumes of this quasi-trilogy arrived fully formed, Wish I Was Here took a much more visible road in its production process. Continue reading →

Gone Girl

11 Saturday Oct 2014

Posted by Thom Yee in Films

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Don’t Get Married… and Don’t Have Kids… and Don’t Trust Anyone

by Thom Yee

Images courtesy of 20th Century Fox

Images courtesy of 20th Century Fox

When I was a kid, I never understood why marriage was so tough. Why is it such a big deal? Why does it take so much hard work? And maybe most of all, how can two people who (in most cases) consciously and willingly entered into a relationship end up hating each other so much? While there may not have been many of them, there were people in my life who I could act normally around, spend enormous amounts of time with, and never really get that tired of. Was it really that different being married?

Examining the marriages I had most ready access to, generally it seemed like the best most couples could hope for in their days of supposed wedded bliss was quiet back talking and mild relief that that inevitable fight would have to wait for another day. It took me a long time to realize why it was so different finding friends and confidants — with whom communication came easily, without guile or deceit — and finding somebody to spend the rest of your life with. It took me a long time to see the difference, but eventually I figured out why a good marriage is so hard to find.

It’s because all you married couples suck. Continue reading →

Begin Again

27 Saturday Sep 2014

Posted by Thom Yee in Films

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Tags

Drama, Music, Summer Movies You Missed

Music can change the world because it can change people. Because people suck.

by Thom Yee

Begin Again images courtesy of The Weinstein Company

Begin Again images courtesy of The Weinstein Company

Ask any artist, any real artist, about what they do, why they do it, or who they think they are, and you’ll probably either get an intentionally pithy, almost rehearsed and ultimately empty answer or some vague construct built equally on furtive musings and deliberate concealment. More often than not, artists don’t know who they are or what they’re doing, and least of all what they want, and if they do, it’s usually more as the result of what others have said about them than any genuine self-reflection.

In general, I think it’s a falsehood for anyone seeking true self-expression to really know what’s going on, and the best most artists can ever hope for is to access and then continue finding that space where the images, notes and words just keep flowing like a force from on high, barely conscious of the material bursting forth, as they try to record, shape, and ultimately contain it all.

Continue reading →

Chef

20 Saturday Sep 2014

Posted by Thom Yee in Films

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Comedy, Drama, Food, Summer Movies You Missed

After this you should probably get something real to eat

by Thom Yee

Chef images courtesy of Open Road Films

Chef images courtesy of Open Road Films

The cult of celebrity chefs may be one of the more peculiar developments of the early 21st century, but it’s a celebrity that’s at least a lot more earned than many of the other celebrities that have risen and fallen over that same time. Rather than trading explicitly in their looks, notoriety or leaked nudes, the celebrity chef must use his implicitly earned skills, often developed over years of a culinary schooling several times more difficult and demanding than your common business or dental schools (though who am I to talk, all I ever learned in school is how to write things down I hope make me seem thoughtful or clever).

However, it’s also true that the chefs for whom celebrity has come most naturally tend to be those who combine some level of photogenic intangibles and an unpredicted twist (e.g., they act crazy and wear sunglasses on the back of their head or… maybe they yell a lot), but there’s also a warmth in their tone and methods, an invitation to a world that’s not so far from our own that lets us all know that these are people often worth respecting, doing something much more worth watching.

Continue reading →

Snowpiercer

13 Saturday Sep 2014

Posted by Thom Yee in Films

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Action, Dystopia, Future, Sci-Fi, Summer Movies You Missed

I am a hat, you are a shoe. I belong on the head, you belong on the foot. Know your place. Keep your place. Be a shoe.

by Thom Yee

Snowpiercer images courtesy of RADiUS-TWC

Snowpiercer images courtesy of RADiUS-TWC

One summer movie you probably didn’t see or even contemplate over the last few months is Snowpiercer. For its North American theatrical release, the film opened in a grand total of eight locations, followed by a slightly wider release to 150 mostly art house theatres the next week, and straight to video-on-demand services the week after that. All of which suggests a real piece of crap, but It’s also a piece that broke box office records in South Korea during its initial release in the summer of 2013, and has gone on to earn $100 million worldwide. A sci-fi actioner starring Chris Evans, Tilda Swinton and John Hurt — in what’s kind of an odd mirroring of Only Lovers Left Alive, another art house movie I reviewed recently, only swap out Captain America for Loki — you might ask what happened given its overseas pedigree and potential mainstream appeal. Surely if there had been any concerted effort at all to market the movie, some people would have seen it. Perhaps so, but as with all things that sound stupid in show business, the answer comes down to yet more Hollywood Upstairs Accounting. Continue reading →

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