Wednesday, 16 October 2013

Blue is the Warmest Colour - Abdellatif Kechiche


"La Vie d'Adèle"

If you like lesbian sex, you would love this movie!

Despite my limited french I still went in to the cinema and tried to conquer this year's Palme d'Or winner.

I would like this movie more if it were shorter (at least 1 hour please), this 179 mins flick is not for everyone. 1/6 of the movie is basically graphic lesbian sex, by graphic I meant porn. Only if I were watching porn, I could at least skip to the interesting part! I felt like I was forced to watch almost all the possible ways lesbians could do it. (if you are into this kind of stuff, then I promise this is the movie for you). I was not prepared for this. At one point it was too predictable that what they are going to do next. Yes, the title already says it all, the life of Adele, I'm stupid enough not to put into thought that sex is one of the MAJOUR elements of ones life. It's just too much for me, that's all.

In general, it's a good movie. How Adele struggles to her live her life and deal with her sexuality, are pretty intriguing. We could easily find movie depicting gay people dealing with their problem but not a lesbian. I'm not saying there aren't any, it's just harder.
One advice, just prepare yourself before you walk into the cinema for this blue experience.

WIll update this when I watch it again with subtitles. 

Saturday, 10 August 2013

The Bling Ring - Sofia Coppola



This is a movie about how fame-obsessed our generation is becoming. Totally understand why Coppola put her hands on this topic. The flick directs us to the crime, the obsession, the truth is, the picture is way bigger.

I wonder how many of our younger generation check the boxes of what the movie depicts, not only they were  raised by consumerism under their roof, they are also in the age of social network. Let's put aside the crime for a second, if, I'm just saying only if they hadn't bragged about their visits or posting pictures (self obsession) on social network with acclaimed items, they wouldn't have been caught that easily. How many teenagers got caught per year because they bragged about their crime on social networking sites. I am not encouraging them to commit any crime but if they do, please be a little smarter! (For me this is actually something really sad, the brains of our younger generation are actually deteriorating.)

The rest of the story is just old wine in a new bottle. Same old reasons why teenagers commit crimes - single-parent family, peer pressure those kind of stuff. That's at least pretty much sum up the two leads in the flick Marc Hall (Israel Broussard) and Rebecca Ahn (Katie Chang). What interesting is when all the characters come together, how each of them represents a certain a type of teenagers. The insecure one, the bossy one, the bitchy one, the innocent one, the fake one. I would say they are troubled kids and the fact is they are basically everywhere. And who should we blame, the child or the parent?  Nicki Moore (Emma Watson) is the perfect example. How ignorant if the parent truly believed Nicki was innocent and nothing suspicious about her child, considering her kids went out late on a school night, having suspicious new dresses and stuff. (the real life Nicki (Alexis Neiers) is actually really intriguing, she got caught right after she filmed the pilot of her own reality show, and was placed right next to Linsey Lohan while she was in jail.)

Alright the crime, I think what made them bolder was Paris Hilton, the movie didn't touch on this matter much as Paris herself agreed on letting them film at her place but it didn't cover the fact that how stupid she was (in the original press release of the actual crime, the convicts dubbed her dumb as a reason why they broke into her apartment and it might actually be true!) They have at least broke into her place for like 7 times. Not until Miranda Kerr reported the crime with a surveillance TV footage, then Paris noticed that she had also been a victim too. If breaking into someone's property is like eating a piece of cake, key under the door mat, don't you think the kids would be encouraged? Or maybe the kids were not as stupid as we thought they were, despite the fact that they posted pictures of themselves at Paris' place on facebook. Is either Paris or the kids or both, you pick. 

This is a reminder to us of what we are doing to our kids. 



Friday, 18 January 2013

On The Road - Walter Salles




Not until the credits rolled up and Neal Cassady's name appeared on the screen then I realized this movie is about the Beat Generation. The bromance shared between Cassady and Kerouac was sort of like playing with fire (I really have to read the original), I need reasons why Cassady left his wife and found Kerouac, I need to know why they were so close, what connected them.

The frame of the movie is such an interesting story, a wonderful piece, perfectly depicting the generation in the 50s. What Jack Kerouac did was actually documenting his generation, one person in particular Dean Moriarty/ Neal Cassady. They were like the rock bands in the 70s and 80s but they were much more sophisticated, they were all writers. (I believe youth do drug in all scales, not only in one particular group of people. Only people in that group were not ashamed of what they were doing and saying it out loud makes the difference.) Everyone behind this story was interesting enough to have their own story/movie. Allen Ginsberg did, Howl. It would actually be more interesting when you start reading all those writers back in that time and start putting missing puzzles together.

What intrigues me is the story not the movie. Somehow the story and the movie are disconnected. The cast is not convincing enough to make me believe as ke$ha sings “let’s make most of our night like we’re gonna die young”. Kristen Stewart is a one-trick-pony, flashing her boobs doesn’t make her a good actress. 

Sunday, 6 January 2013

2012 MY Picks - Movies

There were huge blockbusters like The Avengers last year, one of the biggest openings of all time. The well anticipated The Dark Knight Rises, The Hobbit, Skyfall, The Life of Pi, The Twilight Saga Breaking Dawn Part. II (at least for me) and etc. And there were well made low bud, indie flicks like 360, Premium Rush, Prefect Pitch... The ones which made into my top 10 somehow strayed a little away from the mean stream. Of course one or two big production did make into the list.

There are not in any order. 


The Perk of Being a Wallflower – Stephen Chbosky
The Dark Knight Rises – Christopher Nolan
Noordzee, Texas (North Sea Taxes) – Bavo Defurne
Dans La Maison (In the House) - François Ozon
The Words – Brian Klugman, Lee Sternthal
Moonrise Kingdom – Wes Anderson
Perfect Sense – David Mackenzie
Shame – Steve McQueen
Les Misérables – Tom Hooper
W.E - Madonna





Here are some amusing movies which are also really good but just didn't make it on the list.

360 - Fernando Meirelles
Anna Karenina - Joe Wright
Les Bien-aimés (beloved)- Christophe Honoré
Skyfall - Sam Mendes
Intouchables - Olivier NakacheEric Toledano
Joshua Tree, 1951: A Portrait of James Dean - Matthew Mishory
Looper - Rian Johnson