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"Dreams feel real while we're in them. It's only when we wake up that we realize something was actually strange." -Inception
Showing posts with label Michael Fassbender. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Fassbender. Show all posts

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Movie Review: 12 Years a Slave


Steve McQueen's 12 Years a Slave is a film you can't forget once you watch it. Based on the heartbreaking memoir by Solomon Northup, a free man who detailed his arduous captivity.  His life is changed overnight after a decision to get some work with a traveling circus without the knowledge of his family. Instead he's duped, drugged and sold into slavery from the North into the South. From that point on, we the viewers are taken alongside his tortuous and difficult journey to regain his old identity and diginity. 

Chiwetel Ejiofor plays Northup, a talented violinist in his pre-slavery days who is reduced to hiding his ability to read once he is a slave. He soon realizes that his proclamations of being a free man and appealing to the humanity of the slaveowners fall on deaf ears.  He is even robbed of his name and rechristened 'Platt' as to lose all vestiges of his old self. Solomon must then survive this ordeal hoping that one day he will be free.  

But at every turn he and his fellow slaves come across people who only think if them as property or worse not even human. One mother, Eliza (played by Adepero Oduye), who's cruelly separated by her two children is told to forget them and when her sorrowful cries are still heard, she sent is sent away. Solomon himself keeps his head down and does his duty silently but there are moments when he attempts to break free of his life of drudgery. 

Unfortunately he has to attempt to do so under the watchful and paranoid eye of Edwin Epps (played menacingly by Michael Fassbender). Epps is highly religious and has a complicated relationship with his slaves. He believes he treats them well, but obviously they are at his mercy and he whips them, tortures them and abuses them at all times.  One such slave, Patsey (Lupita Nyong'o) receives the worst of his attentions.  He both is fascinated and horrified by her, a reaction that nobody including his wife (Sarah Paulson) understands.  

There are a few films that showed the ugly and harsh truths of what slavery did to America.  12 Years a Slave erases all of them with its depiction and lays them out bare.  You can't look away.  While the film is produced by Brad Pitt (who has an integral cameo in the film), the director and most of the actors aren't American.  It gives the movie a unique perspective as McQueen chooses to let the camera linger where others would have turned away.

Ejiofor is quietly magnificent as Solomon, a man who doesn't comprehend how is whole life is turned upside down.  A scene that especially stayed with me was when he finally joined in the other slaves singing "Roll, Jordan, Roll" as they buried one of their one.  It was one moment after he was brought into slavery where he allowed himself to let go and just be.  The rest of the actors including Fassbender, Nyong'o and Benedict Cumberbatch as just as great in their roles.

Eventually, though his ordeal does end and the climax of the film will leave you with a heavy heart.  While Solomon was able to escape, slavery did not end overnight.  Like 2012's Lincoln, 12 Years a Slave is a film I hope they will show to future generations on American history.  I hope this one film you all won't pass on.  

Directed by Steve McQueen, Screenplay by John Ridley; Based on the memoir by Solomon Northup; Cinematography by Sean Bobbitt; Editing by Joe Walker; Music by Hans Zimmer

Additional cast: Paul Giamatti, Paul Dano, Scoot McNairy, Taran Killiam, Garrett Dillahunt

Rating: 






Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Movie Review: Haywire





Haywire is one of those movies that went by so fast when it was all over, it still felt like unfinished business.  I still wanted to hang out with Mallory Kane and see what else she gets up too.

Mallory Kane (Gina Carano), bruised and banged up, arrives at a diner and barely has time to sip her coffee when she realizes trouble comes knocking.  Her associate Aaron (Channing Tatum), who looks annoyed and barely awake, has come to take her with him to meet the boss.  Apparently things didn't turn out well at the last assignment.

What assignment you say?  Wait, Mallory will explain it all in a convenient flashback as she fights Aaron, breaks his arm, takes a young hostage Scott (Michael Angarano) and goes on the lam.  Driving the car belonging to Scott, she tells him the backstory on how she got there.  She aids the American government as a private contractor for covert operations.  There was a mission in Barcelona where she thought she was rescuing a Chinese dissident being held hostage.  And then Kenneth (Ewan McGregor), who she works for, sends her to Dublin for yet another "assignment".

Except it's a trap.  She's there to meet Paul (Michael Fassbender), a MI6 agent, and complete the mission together.  But Paul's really there to eliminate her as part of the master plan.  This movie has some ferocious fights which are actually performed by Carano herself as she's also been a professional mixed martial arts fighter.  Back in Dublin, Mallory figures out what's going on and decides to play them at their own game.

She comes back to the US and draws them out one by one once she gains her allies, Coblenz (Michael Douglas) a government agent working with Kenneth who suspects something shady is afoot and her supportive father (Bill Paxton) and works to complete her revenge and clear her name.  The film is entertaining and fast with quick twists and turns.  You won't be bored.  Actually, my main quibble with it was it too short, I would liked to some more of Mallory kicking butt and enacting revenge.  But I think Soderbergh was wise to cut it off where he did and leave us wanting more.

Haywire is all Carano, a fine showcase to her fighting abilities and is aided by an impressive cast of McGregor, Douglas, Fassbender, Antonio Banderas and they all put in a strong supporting performances.   If you're tuning in to the men of Haywire, I'm sorry to tell you that they all have limited screen time.  But the film works because it's Mallory's story and she doesn't panic and go frantic when framed and accused.  But instead devises a systematic plan of action to figure out who is behind this.  Fun stuff!  While Carano is ace in the fighting department, she does say all her lines in the same tone.  But ignore that and enjoy the action.


Directed, Edited and Filmed by Steven Soderbergh, Screenplay by Lem Dobbs, Music by David Holmes


Rating: 
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