Sunday, 2 May 2021

Mel Gibson Is An Impotent Force of Nature

Force of Nature

Director - Michael Polish
Writer - Cory Miller
Starring - Emile Hirsch, Mel Gibson, Kate Bosworth, Stephanie Cayo, David Zayas

Force of Nature is a throwback action movie largely set in a single apartment building which immediately draws unfavourable comparisons to Die Hard and The Raid. The screenplay attempts to update the straightforward no-nonsense action movies of the past to 2020 standards with token references to policing issues such as racial profiling, minority representation in policing, and police shootings while also being a pulpy action movie centered around stolen Nazi art. The two are not completely incompatible but is a very fine line to balance which it is not surprising that the Mel Gibson straight-to-VOD move fails to get right, ultimately failing at both.

Saturday, 7 March 2020

Theatrical Experience - Bad Boys for Life

Bad Boys for Life

Directors - Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah
Writers - Chris Bremner, Peter Craig and Joe Carnahan
Starring - Will Smith, Martin Lawrence, Paola Nunez, Joe Pantoliano

"Nostalgia is denial - denial of the painful present" - Midnight in Paris

There is perhaps no more powerful force in the entertainment industry than nostalgia. It so rarely fails to turn a profit that the rare times it does are noteworthy (i.e. Independence Day: Resurgence). It comes as no surprise that Hollywood would make a third Bad Boys movie 17 years after the second.

There's just one thing about nostalgia. Oftentimes it fails to discriminate between what was good about an era and what was bad. Through the celebration of their 50th anniversary the Vancouver Canucks are bringing back every jersey worn by the team throughout the years. Naturally there are strong nostalgic feelings towards the colours of the 90s and they are great looking jerseys but there has also been nostalgia to the flying V jerseys of the 80s, by any measure one of the worst jerseys any team of any sport has worn. The Bad Boys films are the flying V jerseys of the late 90s-early 00s and it would be better if we left those films in the past where they belonged.

Sunday, 29 July 2018

Theatrical Experience: Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again

Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again

Director - Ol Parker
Writers - Ol Parker, Richard Curtis and Catherine Johnson
Starring - Amanda Seyfried, Lily James, Pierce Brosnan, Christine Baranski, Julie Walters, Colin Firth, Stellan Skarsgard, Dominic Cooper, Cher

Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again is The Godfather Part II to Mamma Mia's original Godfather. Boom. That's called a hook right there. Comparing the ABBA karaoke musicals to two of the most revered movies ever made. Boom. You're hooked. You need to keep reading to see how I justify it. Well, let me let you in on a little secret, it's all razzle dazzle, much like the outfits in this film.

Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again and The Godfather Part II are both simultaneously sequels and prequels to their predecessors. They use their structure to draw parallels between the main parental figurehead's life and how they got their station in the first film and the direction of their adult child's life after the events of the first film. The Godfather Part II explored Vito Corleone's violent rise to power in the criminal underworld as he became the titular Godfather while showing Michael's continued descent into the criminal life after assuming leadership as the end of The Godfather. Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again explored Donna's (James) post-graduation dreams as she travels to the Greek island of Kalokairi while having whirlwind romantic encounters with the three men who would go on to share paternity of Sophie by the end of Mamma Mia while Sophie (Seyfried) attempts to honour her mother's memory by reopening the Bella Donna Hotel on the same Greek island.

Friday, 29 June 2018

An Incomplete List of Stupid Things From Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom


It's Colin Trevorrow's world and we're just living in it

It's no surprise that the newest mega budget dinosaur action blockbuster is a very stupid movie. It's the fifth movie in the Jurassic franchise and the fourth consecutive stupid entry. If you were expecting this movie, wherein the heroes of the Jurassic World get back together to go to an island that is literally exploding due to volcanic activity to save the dinosaurs, to be a smart, nuanced tale that expertly explores scientific methods, environmental protectionism and activism then you may be a direct relative of Colin Trevorrow (hello Colin's mom! I love your son's work, I sincerely mean that). Maybe you expected a reasonable, entertaining popcorn movie; well did you see the first Jurassic World? It was a fucking trainwreck of a film. And did you see The Book of Henry? That's the most special movie in the whole wide world.

Well I figured a movie of this magnitude couldn't possibly be covered by a normal review. It's such an avalanche of hilarious, stupid shit that trying to talk about it a normal, coherent manner is all but impossible. A word of warning though: I will not be holding back, there will be spoilers.

Sunday, 6 May 2018

Audrey Hepburn and Albert Finney Are Two for the Road

This Should Be Way More Famous: Two for the Road

Director: Stanley Donen
Writer: Frederic Raphael
Starring: Audrey Hepburn, Albert Finney

Welcome to a brand new feature here as Schurmann Film, This Should Be Way More Famous. I don't really feel the need to explain it, largely because I think anybody who truly needs the concept explained to them almost certainly won't be able to follow the twisting, non-linear story of Mark and Joanna Wallace's (Finney and Hepburn) various trips through southern France that make up the 1967 classic, Two for the Road.

Saturday, 31 March 2018

Bill Murray Misses The Darjeeling Limited

Opening Act: The Darjeeling Limited


Welcome to Opening Act, an analysis of the greatest opening scenes in film history. Today, the black sheep in the Wes Anderson filmography, 2007's The Darjeeling Limited. Darjeeling is perhaps the only Wes Anderson film apart from his debut, Bottle Rocket, to not be held in high regard by his fans. Rushmore, The Royal Tenebaums, The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou, Fantastic Mr. Fox, Moonrise Kingdom, The Grand Budapest Hotel. All highly regarded films with perhaps the small exception being The Life Aquatic but I feel like that film has completely overcome its initial divisive reactions. The Darjeeling Limited however always seems to be near the bottom of Wes Anderson rankings though the consensus isn't that it is bad, merely that it isn't great. Personally, I think it's a film with a bunch of great moments but it just feels lacking in areas in ways that I can't quite put my finger on. The central relationship between the brothers played by Owen Wilson, Jason Schwartzman and Adrien Brody is great but something about it just feels like Wes Anderson on autopilot. But, let's move on, we're only here to talk about the amazing opening scene, Bill Murray racing through an Indian city to try and catch the titular train.

Tuesday, 13 March 2018

A Jared Leto Yakuza Netflix Movie??? There's No Way The Outsider Is Terrible!

The Outsider

Director - Martin Zandvliet
Writer - Andrew Baldwin
Cast - Jared Leto, Tadanobu Asano, Shiori Kutsuna, Min Tanaka, Kippei Shiina

It takes a total of 10 minutes before a characters commits (or more accurately, stages committing) harakiri in The Outsider, a journey into the heart of the Yakuza shortly after the destruction of World War II and our guide is Jared Leto. Following in the sacred footsteps of brave white men like Tom Cruise (The Last Samurai) and Sir Daniel Day-Lewis (The Last of the Mohicans), Jared Leto boldly plays a White man assimilating himself almost perfectly into a non-white culture. Of course, Cruise and Day-Lewis are mere amateurs compared to the method acting genius of Mr. Leto (or Leto-san because you gotta respect the craft). Who else would mail used condoms to his costars as an act of getting into character, wear blacked-out contact lenses to truly experience blindness, wax his entire body to win an Oscar for playing a woman or eat melted ice cream with olive oil and soy sauce so as to gain the necessary weight for a film literally nobody saw. Jared Leto is the truest thespian of our times.

Sunday, 4 March 2018

2017 Schurmys - The Major Awards

2017 Schurmann Film Awards

The Major Awards

Dunkirk
We're here. The last stop for the 2017 Schurmann Film Awards. We've handed out awards for everything from Visual Effects to Worst Ensemble and now it is time for the major awards. Everything else only barely counted. These are the big ones. These are the ones to put on your mantle for everybody to see. And now, the final step on the Schurmy journey for 2017, the Major Awards.

If you want to relive this journey, either in part or in full, here's a link to the hub containing links to all seven parts of the 2017 Schurmann Film Experience.

Saturday, 3 March 2018

2017 Schurmys - Hall of Fame

2017 Schurmann Film Awards

Hall of Fame

The Post
Today we are enshrining the second class of the Schurmy Hall of Fame. 5 legends of film and/or television will be given the greatest honour possible. A Schumy Hall of Fame induction.

A quick note on the rules for this Hall:
- No more than 5 inductees shall be honoured in a given year. Last year 10 were done but as the first year a larger class was allowed
- Eligibility shall be determined as being 30 years after the first relevant credit on IMDB or death, whichever comes first. Last year Philip Seymour Hoffman was the only honouree to meet eligibility in a tragic manner.
- Persons shall be eligible for work in the television and film industries across as role.
- Groups of persons shall be eligible only considering the work they accomplished together

Friday, 2 March 2018

2017 Schurmys - The Worst Awards

2017 Schurmann Film Awards

The Worst of 2017

The Book of Henry
Welcome to the bottom of the barrel. The place where Colin Trevorrow makes twee family drama-brain cancer-vigilante murder films. The place where the director of Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy just forgets to film half his movie and forces Scorsese's editor to try and make something of existing footage revolving around a character named Harry Hole. The place where Charlize Theron and Jarvier Bardem sexily brush their teeth at each other amidst random African genocides. This is the place where Will Smith waxes poetically about the status of fairy lives. These are the worst movies I saw from 2017. While I went out of my way to see some truly horrific trainwrecks I did not subject myself to shit like Transformers: Oh God Why Is King Arthur In This or Pirates of Caribbean: Johnny Depp Doesn't Want to Learn His Lines so consider this section to be less complete than the others.