REVIEW: X-MEN: DAYS OF FUTURE PAST (2014)

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X-MEN: DAYS OF FUTURE PAST (2014)

I really liked X-Men: First Class, it was a great way to reboot a series that had stumbled a bit and put together a really solid cast in both familiar and new roles. I was actually a little disappointed when I heard Matthew Vaughn had passed on the next installment, but remained hopeful upon hearing original franchise director Bryan Singer would return to the director’s chair. But sadly all the fun and energy that Vaughn gave his retro entry and even the spark and intensity Singer gave his first two films is, for the most part, lacking in this overlong and somewhat tedious entry that takes until it’s final act to really get going and by then it’s too little too late.

The complicated Terminator-ish story takes place in a bleak and war-torn future where mutants and any human who may have the potential to give birth to a mutation, have been hunted down and almost completely destroyed by the ruling power and their army of robot Sentinels which detect the mutant gene and eliminate those with it. But there is a slight hope. Professor Charles Xavier (Patrick Stewart) and Magneto (Ian McKellan) have devised a plan to used Kitty Pryde’s (Ellen Page) power to send Logan’s (Hugh Jackman) consciousness back to his pre-adamantium body in 1973 to contact their younger selves (James McAvoy and Michael Fassbender) and try to get them to work together and stop Mystique (Jennifer Lawrence) from murdering the Sentinel’s inventor Bolivar Trask (Peter Dinklage) and setting in motion events that will lead to the war that has ravaged the Earth and caused so many deaths. But at this point in history Xavier and Magneto are not allies and Mystique has gone rogue and Logan may only have hours to change the course of time before their time in the future is up… did you get all that?

Obviously, the film has a very complicated story that involves time travel which, always sets up it own set of difficulties, but considering that the film avoids being a mess, is more of a plus. The problem here is not the story details or the logistics of time travel and changing the course of history, but the deadpan tone with which the usually competent Singer directs this affair. Gone is the energy and fun of the first two X-Men films he directed and instead is a very by-the-numbers presentation of what should have been a fun and suspenseful tale. There are a few entertaining bits like Quicksilver’s (Evan Peters) speedy and clever way of getting our heroes out of a jam, but the film really has no spark until it reaches it’s climactic act and then we get a bit more of the movie we wanted to see, but it takes over 90 minutes of mostly ho-hum sequences to get there…sequences that should have been very tense and exciting but aren’t. The pace is also slow for a superhero film even one with a plot of such dire importance as this. And maybe that’s it. Singer just seems to take this story just a little too seriously and we rarely get those little witty character moments that made the previous film’s so fun. The camaraderie between the characters just isn’t there. Maybe it’s Simon Kinberg’s script based on a story by Kinberg, Jane Goldman and Matthew Vaughn that simply was too bleak and left out a lot of the fun. Either way X-Men:DOFP just really lacks something till the final scenes and, to be honest, wasn’t very involving till then. I was never bored, but was never fully drawn in. For the most part I was along for the ride, but never really interested in where it was going… and I should have been.

Again Singer works with a very large and familiar cast, but unlike his previous X-Men adventures, the cast here seem to be going through the motions from Stewart to Lawrence to Jackman to McKellen and most of his principles. There is no real passion or energy in their performances despite having all played their roles before save Dinklage. They all seem like they are just performing by the numbers with the only person really giving his role some pop is the young Peters with his smart aleck Quicksilver and sadly his screen-time is limited. Even the usually excellent Fassbender seems like he’d rather be somewhere else. There are plentiful mutant cameos, some familiar and some new, but few of them really resonate other then the amusement of seeing that familiar face or someone intriguing and new. And the new characters, aside from Quicksilver, are really given very little attention, certainly not enough to endear to us to them. Is it possible that these actors have tired of their roles?

It’s not all bad. It is tedious though I never actually got to the point of being bored. The film really did pick up in the last half hour for a pretty decent finale in Washington D.C. that interweaves with the battle raging in the future, though it certainly can’t hold a candle to the Washington D.C. set finale of the Captain America sequel The Winter Soldier and could have had a little more suspense and intensity. The FX are top notch and the scale of the film seems fairly large especially when the action finally starts. Newton Thomas Sigel is back doing the cinematography though, since the film is set in the 70s, I did miss the retro look of John Mathieson’s cinematography on First Class. And maybe that is what one of the problems is, that the film is set in the 70s, but never really felt like it… like, say American Hustle did. John Ottman returns to score from X2 and also did the film editing…busy man…and his score is adequate but a bit uninspired.

So, overall, X-Men: Days Of Future Past may not be an outright disappointment, but it is a letdown and certainly could have been much livelier considering the importance of what was transpiring. Maybe the whole back in time to fix the future thing has run it’s course, or maybe Singer’s time away from Xavier and company has dulled his passion for the material…or maybe it’s still too familiar to elicit a stronger passion. Either way, it’s not the worst X-Men movie, but far from the best. Also stars Nicholas Hoult as Beast/Hank McCoy.

2 and 1/2 X-Men.

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HAPPY BIRTHDAY JENNIFER LAWRENCE!

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MonsterZero NJ’s Movie Madhouse would like to wish a Happy 23rd Birthday to the lovely and very talented Jennifer Lawrence! I’m a big fan and to celebrate this young lady’s special day, we take a quick look back at some of her most popular and best work….

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WINTER’S BONE (2010)

Backwoods mystery thriller is a well made and interesting little film, it does have an incredibly slow burn and it is filmed in an almost documentary style but, that is deliberate on writer/director Debra Granik’s part though, I could see where that might confound and bore the average movie goer but, I was fine with it. But despite it’s slow pace there are some subtly intense moments throughout and leading lady Jennifer Lawrence has a quiet strength and intensity that help her carry this low budget indie quite well on her young shoulders. When all is said and done there really is very little mystery as it’s obvious how it’s going to end up but, what makes the film worth seeing is watching Lawrence’s Ozark teen, Ree make the strong-willed journey to get there. And the film is about the journey and not the pay off. Well done and a great acting job by newcomer Lawrence. Also stars the underrated John Hawkes.

3 Birthday Girls!

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X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (2011)

Not very familiar with the X-Men comics so, I am taking this origin film for what it is… and what it is, is one of the best movies of the 2011 summer and ranks with the best of the series so far. A great cast from leads McAvoy and Fassbender to the stunning and talented Jennifer Lawrence as a young Mystique, really make this character driven ensemble piece work. And that’s not to imply that there isn’t action, because there is plenty. It’s just director Matthew Vaughn skillfully mixes both quite well so we get some great action set pieces without ever loosing sight of his large cast of characters or his story. And the film tells the story of the beginnings of the X-Men, especially Prof. X and Magneto who start as friends but, become foes. It cleverly does this amongst the chaos of the Cuban missile crisis of the 60s which is actually a plot by villainous mutant Sebastian Shaw (Kevin Bacon) to end humanity so, mutants can take over the world. It’s part superhero flick and part James Bond movie and all the more fun for it. A really well done and very entertaining and smart movie.

3 and 1/2 Birthday Girls!

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THE HUNGER GAMES (2012)

I have not read the popular young adult book series that this film is based, which, to me, is a sort of mix of The Running Man and the cult Japanese classic Battle Royale although, writer Suzanne Collins states other inspirations. The story takes place in a totalitarian future where the controlling “Capitol” punishes rebellious districts by staging “The Hunger Games”. Two youths or “tributes”, 1 boy and 1 girl, are selected once a year from the 12 districts and forced to compete in a battle to the death till there is only one survivor. When teen Katniss Everdeen’s sister is picked, she volunteers to take her place. Jennifer Lawrence stars as Katniss and gives another strong performance. Winter’s Bone proved this young lady can act and she proves it once more even with lighter material. She gives Katniss some nice depth and three dimensionality. She is supported by Josh Hutcherson as fellow player Peeta, Woody Harrelson (another strong role, he really has found his groove since Defendor), a barely recognizable Elizabeth Banks and veteran Donald Sutherland. The performances are all good under director Gary Ross (Pleasantville) who also gives us some nice dramatic strength, despite the familiar aspects of the story and while he’s not an action director, the film moves at a decent pace and the action is fine enough for it’s intended young adult audience. More mature movie goers might have wished for a bit more intensity when our teens clash but, it serves the plot well enough. The FX are fine with most of the CGI being well done except for weak rendering of some large predators that appear in the last act. The design of the film’s utopian Capitol seemed like a mix of things we’ve seen before but, not to the point of derivative. The film is more about the characters and director Ross, who cowrote the script with Collins, gives us some well rounded main characters though the secondary characters are weak including the blood thirsty “tribute” Cato (Alexander Ludwig) who serves as the game’s bad guy. Overall an entertaining movie and a far better adaptation then the other young adult phenomenon, Twilight.

3 Birthday Girls!

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SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK (2012)

Pat (Bradley Cooper) is a bipolar man who has spent the past 8 months in a psychiatric hospital after beating his cheating wife’s lover half to death. Upon release, Pat goes to live with his parents, Pat Sr. (Robert De Niro) and Dolores (Jacki Weaver) and has every intention of trying to rebuild his life and get back with his wife, Nikki (Brea Bee) despite a restraining order. But, his plans take an interesting twist as he befriends an emotionally disturbed widow, Tiffany (Jennifer Lawrence) who claims to want to help him reach his wife, but, possibly has her own agenda. Silver Linings Playbook is written and directed with a nice offbeat style by David O. Russell, based on a book by Matthew Quick, who crafts a nearly perfect film that is both romantic comedy and emotional drama. He gets fantastic performances out of his cast. Lawrence fully deserves her Oscar as her performance is a tour de force portraying the emotionally damaged Tiffany and Cooper is right behind her as the determined but, still slightly delusional Pat. De Niro gives his best performance in years as Pat’s Eagles loving bookie father and Chris Tucker, in a supporting role as a friend of Pat’s from the hospital, gives the performance of his career. Who knew from Friday and the Rush Hour movies that he had such depth. I really have no major faults with this offbeat flick that is filled with emotion, heart and laughs too. It takes a little time to hit it’s stride but, that’s about it. A great movie that has depth and substance to go along with the heartfelt entertainment. Brilliant.

3 and 1/2 Birthday Girls!

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An award well deserved and a speech that proves she’s a doll…

*HAPPY BIRTHDAY MISS LAWRENCE!*

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