Sunday 31 January 2010

Game Over

The original intention of this blog was to ascertain whether an Unlimited Cineworld card was actually value for money. I've kept track of every film I watched across 12 months (feb to feb), tagging it when it was a cineworld viewing and whether I would have actually paid money for it.
It turns out if you are me, it is value for money representing a saving of £40 across a year, and as an added bonus throwing in 17 films for free that I would never have paid for.

I did the same for Lovefilm to see what I was actually paying for a film, turns out it's roughly £2.28 each, or £5.28 each for the good ones and 23 bollocks ones for free.
I thought these statistics would provide me with some interest, but it's actually quite a hollow discovery that does make me question what the hell I've been doing for a year.

On the plus side I do enjoy trying to capsule review films (particularly the bad ones) and across the year I've watched 151 films (152 if you count the fact I saw Transformers 2 twice, I must have taken the 2 as a literal instruction). So rather than dribble on about statistics let's do some praising and slamming:

10 favourite new films I saw in a cinema:

1: Antichrist
To see Stalker and Evil Dead amalgamated into one film was a fantastic experience, then add a bit of bonus genital mutilation to round it off! How could this not be my favourite film of 09, why Mr Von Trier you had me at 'Chaos Reigns'.

2: Watchmen
Due to love of the book I already have the story and characters concreted in my head, all I needed was a director with bucketloads of visual flair and who lacked any sort of imagination that might fuck with what I already loved. Perfect match.

3: Avatar
Yeah, I know it's somebody else's story and you can poke sticks at the cliches all you want, but at the end of the day this film is the closest in a long time that my adult brain has got to the head rush I would experience as an eight year old when watching films.

4: The Imaginarium Of Doctor Parnassus
There are few directors able to vividly recreate such pure imagination on screen and always get an incredible result. Gilliam is one such director. Lynch is another, but he didn't make a film this year.

5: Drag Me To Hell
What happens when you let a fantastic director off the leash so he can run round and have some fun. Raimi's love of the genre is so evident you can see the glee dripping off the screen in such quantities that there is no option but to be swept along by it.

6: Up
Pixar seem to be the only animation studio to realise that although you can use immense CGI technology to polish turds, you can get better results if you use CGI technnology to polish diamonds.

7: Brüno
This film broke me. I laughed so hard at the midget sex I could barely function. Probably the most I've laughed at a flat screen covered in dancing lights all year.

8: Paranormal Activity
This kind of thing isn't new any more, but it's still being done extremely well. Massive praise for keeping the hauntings as true to real life reports as possible and eschewing all the OTT bollocks for (almost) the entire duration.

9: Sherlock Holmes
Just fun. Really fucking fun. My opinion may be skewed by my watching it during the Christmas holidays - a 14 day period of which I mainly subscribed to sobriety when I slept. It was great fun though.

10: Transformers: Revenge Of The Fallen
Yes, erm. My high brow pretensions do tend to melt away rather sharply when there's giant robots hitting each other. Particularly when they're using trees for the hitting parts.


5 brilliant films I watched on a telly

It's harder to start picking out favourites from stuff you watch at home because you're not forced into such limited choices. I also tend to watch a lot more crap at home, the excuse being I'm searching for gems. Well here's 5 gems that had a larger impact on me than most:

1: Salo, or The 120 Days Of Sodom
There is nothing that can prepare you for this film. Like having your emotions scoured with wire wool. Incredible.

2: Le Donk & Scor-Zay-Zee
Genius. Genius concept, genius acting, genius humour and unbelievably genius rapping.

3: Pulse [Kairo]
Turns Japanese ghost cinema on it's head, which is a nice thing to see when the genre is beginning to get lazy.

4: The Fall
What I said about Gilliam above also applies to Tarsem here.

5: The Ruins
I watched this knowing nothing of it, and it pleasantly surprised me. Even when I began to figure things out, it still had surprises in store.


10 Shittest films I saw

1: The Grudge 3
Truly apalling. Like pressing play on the DVD player only to find somebody has shat in your telly.

2: 2012
If a child had come up with this you'd struggle to praise it, but then Emmerich's earnest tone which trys to present this garbage as Something Important accelerate it to levels of shit usually only attained by actual feacal matter.

3: One Missed Call [Remake]/Pulse [Remake]/ Shutter [Remake]
All essentially the same bollocks idea, which is remaking excellent eastern horror cinema into something far inferior. The analogy is somebody in Japan trying to remake The Shining with a cast of Down's Syndrome actors. Actually this is a brilliant idea, but it still doesn't justify what the Americans get up to.

4: The Happening
Aptly titled, because as you watch it's difficult to believe that this kind of filmmaking ineptitude is actually happening.

5: Repo! The Genetic Opera
Made by someone who didn't realise that The Rocky Horror Picture Show was a one off-never to be replicated, so don't fucking bother-total fluke.

6: Paul Blart: Mall Cop
I've forgiven an awful lot that I've watched with the child saying things like "oh, but it's for kids", but this wasn't for kids it was for people who laugh at Police Academy movies. Yet not even they would laugh at such cack handed bollocks.

7: Vinyan
I would love to speak to the director to find out where his mind was when he made this, but I believe he's still trying to find his way out of his own arse. The irony being that this is probably exactly where his mind was all along.

8: Prom Night
Advice: Remaking an old shit film as a new shitter film is nothing to be proud of. It's just something that makes people want to tell you to fuck off.

9: My Name Is Bruce
Possibly one of the most embarassing things I've ever watched. Campbell is basically prostituting himself to the nerds who keep telling him how wonderful he is at being shit. Keep rereading that sentence, there really is nothing right about this situation.

10: Zombie Strippers
The kind of film a 16 year old boy will rent and be severely dissapointed by. That dissapointment seems to become even more acute at double his age. Films like this make me sad, why do I watch them ? Did you read the title?


Well, I don't need them tags any more.

Saturday 30 January 2010

Surveillance


A nice little knot of confusion that is picked at and untangled across the film's duration.
Although the ending did make me think that it would be refreshing to see a film like this where the twist was that the filmmaker had the confidence to realise that not every thriller needs a ludicrous over-signposted twist, and so left it out.

Wednesday 27 January 2010

The Road


A study in futility that musters a joylessness bordering on extravagance.

The House Bunny


Obviously apalling, yet has an incredible capacity to render teenage boys completely silent, a quality that is only useful when stuck on a bus full of them. I was.

Superhero Movie


I laughed more than I expected, which is actually just a complicated way of saying "I laughed".

Tuesday 19 January 2010

The Hangover


A bunch of dicks and an idiot pretending to be a dick muddle their way through a series of contrivances that faintly resemble a less funny Dude, Where's My Car, a film which wasn't exactly a laugh riot to begin with.

Sunday 17 January 2010

The Book Of Eli


Apparently in the apocalyptic near future the world's population will be roughly divided into 2 groups:
1) People who are killed by Denzel Washington and,
2) Denzel Washington.

Jin-Roh: The Wolf Brigade [Jin-Rô]


The constant dissapointment of nobodys face exploding into a mass of seething tentacles at any point distracted me from the huge amount of scenes of people stood still talking to each other about complicated plots, counter plots, counter-counter plots and fairy tales. Which means I quickly lost my way, although I did enjoy the 10 minutes of outrageous over the top violence at the end.

Saturday 16 January 2010

Vinyan


Art school pretension slams this through the brick wall of sense into total incomprehensibility.
Just massively crap.

Monday 11 January 2010

Mega Shark Vs Giant Octopus


Three things that are amazing about this film:
1) It's level of ambition, which is so far beyond it's capabilities that the film may as well be trying to represent the word of God.
2) Debbie Gibson, whose CV must read "Good at smiling but pretty bollocks at acting".
3) It is unbelievably shit. It was never going to be great, but it's consistent inability to do anything well is mesmerising. Ironically this is the only real positive to the whole experience.

Moon


Takes some massive, quite exciting concepts and then underplays them to the point of banality so they don't get in the way as we concentrate on shedding a tear for the poor lonely man.

Kung Fu Panda


Contains a flimsy, childish story and shoddy stereotypes in place of characters, but then these aren't the things I watch Kung Fu movies for. I watch them for the Kung Fu which in this case is AWESOME.

Thursday 7 January 2010

Tokyo Gore Police [Tôkyô zankoku keisatsu]


Yes, that's right. Tokyo Gore Police.
The title sums the film up perfectly; it's basically completely insane.

Sunday 3 January 2010

Shutter


Watching this shorn of all the nonsensical baggage heaped on it by the american remake reveals it to be an above average Ju-On homage with a great parting shot.

Saturday 2 January 2010

The Forbidden Kingdom


A most ridiculous mixture of The Karate Kid and The NeverEnding Story.
Jackie Chan looks slightly embarassed and Jet Li talks like a robot for the entire duration.