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GOO Reviews

~ An Edmonton-based movie blog

GOO Reviews

Category Archives: Films

The Way, Way Back

14 Saturday Dec 2013

Posted by Thom Yee in Films

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Tags

Comedy, coming of age, Drama

by Thom Yee

Way, Way Back - poster

Images courtesy of Fox Searchlight Pictures

The Way, Way Back opens with Duncan, our main character, being asked to rate himself on a scale of one to ten by his mom’s latest boyfriend, Trent.  And if you’re a particularly sensitive person whose childhood wasn’t all that it could’ve been, that should be a polarizing moment for you.  That’s the moment when you know you’re either going to be all in, for every one of this film’s emotional struggles, or you’re just going to watch a decent movie that’s occasionally funny.  For me, it’s one of the greatest, most resonant and meaningful openings I’ve ever seen.  There’s so much in that moment, so much pain and torment and truth, and it completely sets the tone and direction of the rest of the film.

The Way, Way Back isn’t very innovative or new; for most of us, it’s not going to be a revelation that will change the course of our lives.  But for just the right viewer, that person who’s felt what Duncan is feeling and remembers what it was like back then, when you couldn’t stand what was happening, you didn’t have any control, and you had no space of your own, it’s an emotional journey that manages to be substantial but not heavy, heart warming but not cloying, truthful without being awful, and absolutely right about the things that mattered to us most.

No wonder nobody saw it.


Duncan, a shy, introverted 14-year-old, is forced to spend the summer with his mother and her new boyfriend (and his teenage daughter) at his beach house in Cape Cod.  Duncan soon finds himself isolated and alone in this place filled with confident, athletic teenagers and oblivious adults enjoying their own versions of a mid-life spring break.  Wanting nothing more than to spend the summer with his biological father on the West Coast, it’s not until he discovers Water Wizz, a local water park, and is taken under the wing of park manager Owen, that he finds a place for himself.

I don’t know if there’s anything about that description that would make really make anyone want to see this movie.  It doesn’t sound substantially different than any other coming-of-age tale, and without produced-for-Oscar-season writing, all-star casts, a mind-bending plot, or at least one supernatural element, The Way, Way Back isn’t exactly designed to stand out.  Like I said, if you watched that rate yourself sequence and didn’t feel a slight prick and then a sharp pang of anxiety, then this movie probably might not be for you.  But if you did feel those things, if you felt an instant connection with Duncan as you heard him rate himself a six only for his surrogate father figure to rate him a three, then I would urge you to watch this movie.

Way, Way Back - Jim Rash

Just looking at him, I’m sure Jim Rash had a wonderful, non-tormented childhood.

Written and directed by Nat Faxon and Jim Rash, the Oscar-winning writing team behind 2011’s The Descendants, The Way, Way Back doesn’t boast the same level of prestige or self-importance as that George Clooney vehicle, nor does it have auteur director Alexander Payne (Nebraska, Sideways, About Schmidt) to take the lion’s share of the credit.  But where The Descendants is about the horrors of adulthood and the things adults do to each other, The Way, Way Back picks right up as a movie about the horrors of childhood… and the terrible things adults do to their kids.  It’s also better (and less desperately emotional).


It’s hard to watch The Way, Way Back and not feel an instant connection with Duncan.  He goes to the beach like he’s told, plays with kids younger than him like he’s told, and does his best to find places other than his room to hang out like he’s told.  He’s awkward around everyone, especially girls his own age, and far from having any self-confidence or ability to fit in, he doesn’t even believe he can exist in this place so diametrically opposed to everything he wants or needs.  As I watched him go through his days, being singled out as the only one who has to wear a life jacket, waiting to be excused from dinner tables populated by unconcerned adults (and no kids to talk to), staying out late exclusively to avoid talking to his parents, it almost felt like the producers were drawing from moments straight from my own life.  Faxon and Rash display an uncommon knowledge and remembrance of places best left forgotten and times we hope we’ve grown up from even as we let them scar us much farther into our adulthoods than they should.

Along the way, however, you also start picking up on other perspectives.  Duncan is our protagonist to be sure, but as you watch his mother going through the motions of what will no doubt become another failed relationship, you start to realize how hard it must be to live your life in the aftermath of failed relationships.  When I was growing up, most of my friends’ parents were divorced, and, frankly, it sounded kind of great.  Two houses, two living experiences, sometimes even two parents competing with each other.  In the ‘90s, I think most North American concepts of marriage had moved well past the idea that divorce represented some kind of failing, and I never once got the sense that any of my friends held themselves guiltily responsible for their parents’ breakup(s).  I, on the other hand, grew up with married parents that I always wanted to see get divorced, and I can tell you that this “stay together for the kids” notion doesn’t work when it’s obvious the two shouldn’t be together.  But as much as I’ve hated my parents when I thought I was right, come to rely on them when I shouldn’t have needed to, learned from them even when they didn’t have a lesson to teach, and wondered aloud why they would ever continue in a relationship like theirs, I can at least appreciate where they’re coming from after watching The Way, Way Back.  It’s that sense of and dedication to authenticity that makes The Way, Way Back absolutely shine.


Way, Way Back-Susanna

Don’t worry if you lose touch with Susanna after this one magical summer, Duncan. I’m pretty sure her fresh face and knowing looks end up becoming this.

In terms of acting, The Way, Way Back benefits from a strong cast, including Toni Collette as Pam, Duncan’s mom, AnnaSophia Robb as Susanna, Duncan’s age-appropriate girl-next-door crush, Allison Janney’s perpetually drunk Betty, Rob Corddry’s Kip, and Amanda Peet’s overtly flirtatious Joan.  Relative newcomer Liam James is utterly convincing as the type of outsider teens like to mess with and adults don’t understand.  I get the feeling he actually is one of those kids and that he’s not acting at all.  Steve Carell, in a complete 180 from his more familiar roles, is pitch perfect as Trent, a bully of a surrogate father who you know, deep down, is even more of an asshole than he is on the outside.  Sam Rockwell, as Owen’s manager and eventual mentor, is charismatic, deeply caring, and completely understanding of what Duncan’s going through in a role that shows the actor’s ability to fully inhabit the roles he’s given.  Especially given how often Iron Man 2 seems to be on TV lately, it’s jarring to see how different Rockwell can come across in a role like Justin Hammer, a sleezy, loathsome, underhanded weapons manufacturing head.  It’s not as if Rockwell’s Justin Hammer delivers his lines in a markedly different manner or exhibits wildly different physical mannerisms.  There’s just something about Rockwell’s portrayals that makes you want to get away from Hammer as soon as possible, even as you would spend all of your time with his Owen.  Finally, Maya Rudolph, as Owen’s long-suffering assistant Caitlyn, brings depth to a character who is easy to overlook.

There’s enough character material on display in The Way, Way Back that, if this were a movie brought to us by a cruder, more Apatow-esque creative team, it wouldn’t be hard to imagine spin-off movies about Owen’s continuing need to grow up and become the man Caitlyn deserves, Trent’s need to grow out of his narcissistic tendencies to become the father his daughter needs, or Betty’s continued descent into drunken-ness in her search for a man.  Even though I don’t really want to see a Faxon/Rash franchise stable of recurring characters in movies of varying validity (not that I don’t enjoy Judd Apatow’s better movies), this wellspring of fully realized characters with their own stories, motivations and needs all greatly assists in delivering The Way, Way Back’s central theme — that no matter how angry we have every right to be, we all have to take control of our own lives (even if we’re not all lucky enough to have people and places around us to help).


For a certain type of person, The Way, Way Back is deeply arresting for its message and execution, but for me it wouldn’t have meant as much to me if I had seen it in my teens, even if it’s fundamentally about being a young teenager.  Its themes are universal enough that it maintains essential meaning to almost anyone of any age, but in some significant ways, it almost feels like it’s the perfect movie for someone like me, and it managed to hit me just about as hard as it could.  Even at my advanced age of “somewhere over twenty-five”, when I’ve already compartmentalized most of my childhood traumas, sorted my thoughts on the universe, and now have epiphanies only occasionally, I still vividly remember (and occasionally recall) the various tragedies and triumphs of youth that would define me as a person.  It’s exactly that kind of close yet distant feeling, that proximity to out formative years no matter how long ago those years may have been, that the film plays off most, and its that formation of self that it captures so well.  It’s a film that reminds us that we have to take care of ourselves, because our parents, our role models, our family and friends all have their own sh*t to deal with.  And even though there’s still a significant distance between my knowledge of that advice on an intellectual level and my acting that advice out in real life, I still feel like I’m a little bit better of a person for having seen The Way, Way Back.

The Way, Way Back final score:  9.5


Oblivion

07 Saturday Dec 2013

Posted by Thom Yee in Films

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Tags

Existence, Sci-Fi, Tom Cruise

by Thom Yee

Oblivion

Oblivion images courtesy of Universal Pictures

Here’s a list of all the Tom Cruise movies I’ve seen and enjoyed:

Jack Reacher, all of the Mission:  Impossibles except II, War of the Worlds, Collateral, The Last Samurai, Minority Report, Vanilla Sky, Interview with the Vampire, Born on the Forth of July, Top Gun, and Risky Business.

I enjoyed all of those movies, I feel they were all a worthwhile use of my movie-going time, and I think they all benefitted from Tom Cruise’s performances.

When it comes to Tom Cruise movies (and just about every movie he’s in is a Tom Cruise movie, no matter how large or small his part), I always feel like I have to explain myself.  It was about eight months ago that I reviewed Jack Reacher, and everybody I talked to couldn’t get past the Tom Cruise part of that movie enough to go see it let alone take my review of it seriously (not that we’re really angling for our reviews to be taken seriously).  Sure, there’s the Scientology, the erratic behavior, the maniac laughter, the obviously manufactured-for-public-acceptance personal life… but none of that’s bad enough that it should necessarily be a drag on his box office returns. Continue reading →

The Hunger Games: Catching Fire

30 Saturday Nov 2013

Posted by ghcrawford in Films

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by Grace Crawford

poster

All Catching Fire images courtesy of Color Force and Lionsgate.

Catching Fire, the sequel to the somewhat-loved and somewhat-hated Hunger Games, is getting all kinds of awesome reviews all over the place. People love it because it adheres to the book pretty strictly, which is very true, and I applaud them for that. It can be  difficult to stay true to a book (*cough*PrisonerofAzkaban*cough*), especially when it’s one jammed full of so much action.

Following the events of the 74th Annual Hunger Games, the districts are revolting against their Capitol oppressors. They look to Katniss and her act with the berries as an example of defiance, and President Snow personally comes down to District 12 to ask—well, threaten—Katniss to keep everyone in line by setting a different kind of example. So she tries to be the very example of Capitol loyalty, but this blows up in her face as the people of the districts only grow more and more angry at her obvious performance.

Continue reading →

Thor: The Dark World

16 Saturday Nov 2013

Posted by Thom Yee in Films

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Tags

Action, comics, Fantasy, Marvel, MCU, superhero

by Thom Yee

Thor - The Dark World poster

Thor: The Dark World images courtesy of Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures

Looking at the core Avengers, my favourite by far is Hawkeye, though that’s entirely for his comicbook interpretation rather than what little they gave him to do in the film.  Second would be Captain America largely because of the strength of Ed Brubaker’s run on the title (much of which directly inspired the upcoming Winter Soldier) and because they got the character so right in The First Avenger.  Thor is a distant third after those two, and yet for me, his film reigns supreme in the entire Marvel Studios pantheon thus far.  I was incredibly impressed by Thor, much moreso than what I had expected, and I came out of the theatre with a true sense of the character and his world.

As with all things supehero, though, when it came time for the sequel, I felt a bit of trepidation, unsure that a new director would be able to effectively re-capture what I liked so much in the first.  When that first teaser hit, if nothing else, the thing that most excited me about Thor:  The Dark World was the suggestion of a world even bigger than the one we’ve seen and seen hinted at in all of the films so far.  What finally really made me excited though was just the image of Thor being thrown back by a punch from the film’s villain, Malekith: Continue reading →

Thor

09 Saturday Nov 2013

Posted by Thom Yee in Films

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Tags

Action, comics, Fantasy, Marvel, MCU, superhero

by Thom Yee

Thor-poster

Images courtesy of Paramount Pictures and Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures

I kind of feel like I owe you guys an explanation.  At the beginning of our Iron Man 3 simul-review from this past summer, I put forward the following as my list of Marvel Studios movies (best to worst):

1. Thor
2. Captain America
3. The Avengers
4. The Incredible Hulk
5. Iron Man 2
6. Iron Man

I put my list forward knowing full well that very few would agree with it.  First, I should say that, as a comic fan and from as impartial a place as I can come from, I think all the Marvel Studios movies are generally strong, even while acknowledging that none of them are my absolute favourite superhero movie.  I liked them all, have no major complaints so far, and I find the overall consistency of the movies almost astonishing; not a Green Lantern among them.

I put my list forward knowing full well that it might seem contrarian and designed to go against the grain of conventional wisdom.  Thor as the best of the Marvel Studios movies?  That’s not a popular sentiment.  It’s rated relatively well among them, but it’s still well behind the obvious favourites (Iron Man and The Avengers).

I put my list forward knowing full well that, at some point, I would probably have to defend my position.  That point, that day, just before we enter into the Dark World, is today.

Continue reading →

American Psycho

26 Saturday Oct 2013

Posted by Thom Yee in Films

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by Thom Yee

Images courtesy of Lions Gate Films

Images courtesy of Lions Gate Films

So it’s October.  In fact, it’s the last Saturday in October.  And it turns out there’s this thing called Halloween that only happens in and tends to dominate October, and, because of this event, horror movies are at their most popular in October.  And we haven’t reviewed a single one.  Not even close.  Though there are some who would label American Psycho a horror movie.  Technically.

I saw American Psycho during a very formative part of my life, and in the intervening years between then and now, it’s become an important part of who I am and how I see the world.

Believe it or not, there’s a contingent of people out there who would hear a statement like that and think there must be something wrong with people like me.  That we must be obsessed with violence, with graven imagery, with the mutilation of humanity; that we must have some inhuman need to see the worst happen to the people around us and that our cold distance, our murderous stares must be fed by our disdain for all the glories the world has built around us — without us.  Glories that we couldn’t begin to understand.

But you and I… we know better.

Continue reading →

Gravity

12 Saturday Oct 2013

Posted by Thom Yee in Films

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by Thom Yee

All Gravity images courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

All Gravity images courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

“One tiny crack in the hull, and our blood boils in thirteen seconds. Solar flare might crop up, cook us in our seats.  And wait till you’re sitting pretty with a case of Andorian shingles. See if you’re still so relaxed when your eyeballs are bleeding!  Space is disease and danger wrapped in darkness and silence.” ~ Leonard McCoy, noted physician

And perhaps truer words (except the Andorian thing) were never spoken.

It’s probably almost impossible to fully understand actually being in space without literally going there (and that’s a lot of adverbs).  We’ve read, heard, and seen (and possibly even attempted to write) science fiction stories set in space, most of which, in one way or another, ignore or bypass many of the basics of what we know.  There’s nothing to keep us, no gravity when we really might need it, our inertia carrying us endlessly forward.  There’s nothing for us to breathe, no atmosphere to protect us, just hard vacuum, so absolutely, big, bulky suits are a must.  In space no one can hear you scream, let alone hear all the explosions of the spectacular space battle of our fantasies (that we’ve no doubt imagined ourselves the rebel heroes of).

Continue reading →

She Says/He Says: Moulin Rouge!

28 Saturday Sep 2013

Posted by ghcrawford in Films, He Says/She Says

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She Says

by Grace Crawford

moulin rouge poster

All Moulin Rouge! images courtesy of Bazmark Films, Angel Studios, and 20th Century Fox.

When I was fifteen, my school put on a production of Les Miserables (which, as you know, is one of my favourite stories of all time). It was my first year in musical theatre, and I was absolutely psyched—until they cast me as, and I quote, “Whore #3.” Obviously it was exactly the sort of role that every girl dreams about getting, and I didn’t even go home crying about how my teachers obviously thought I was a tramp or anything.

My point is, I was young and had no idea how to act like a hooker, which was necessary for the dock scene in Act 1. No, it wasn’t like I had to mount one of my male classmates on stage in front of a thousand strangers (one of the older girls got to do that), but I did have to gyrate like a deranged stripper with a feather boa. And as the stage manager informed me, I wasn’t slutty enough. So she told me to go home and watch Moulin Rouge!.

Continue reading →

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