David Edelstein http://publicradioeast.org en 'Into Darkness,' Boldly And With A Few Twists http://publicradioeast.org/post/darkness-boldly-and-few-twists Before I tell you about J.J. Abrams' second <em>Star Trek</em> film, with its youngish new Starship Enterprise crew, let me say that just because I've seen every episode of the original <em>Star</em> <em>Trek</em> and of <em>The Next Generation, </em>and most of the spinoff series, and every movie, I'm not a Trekkie — meaning someone who goes to conventions or speaks Klingon or greets people with a Vulcan salute.<p>But hey, even President Obama can give the Vulcan salute; it's mainstream. We live — thanks to the Internet — in a fan culture. We can all get up to speed on anything quickly. Thu, 16 May 2013 16:16:00 +0000 David Edelstein 14183 at http://publicradioeast.org 'Into Darkness,' Boldly And With A Few Twists 'Iron Man 3': Tony Stark As Homebrew Hero http://publicradioeast.org/post/iron-man-3-tony-stark-homebrew-hero The third time might be the charm for some things, but the number three after a movie title is typically shorthand for a deal with the devil.<p>The studio thinks there's more money to be squeezed from a particular property, and voila: <em>Spider-Man 3</em>, <em>Superman III</em>, <em>The Godfather</em> — God help us<em> — Part III</em>. OK, <em>The Godfather</em>'s a special case. Most other threes, though, are what happens when a too-thin plot meets a too-fat budget.<p><em>Iron Man 3</em> conquers the curse of the 3 in a novel way: It pretty much takes Iron Man out of the equation. Fri, 03 May 2013 15:41:00 +0000 David Edelstein 13191 at http://publicradioeast.org 'Iron Man 3': Tony Stark As Homebrew Hero Two Indie Directors Go Confidently Mainstream http://publicradioeast.org/post/two-indie-directors-go-confidently-mainstream Studios are putting most of their eggs in $100 million baskets these days, even as American independent filmmakers go hungry from lack of mainstream attention. But two of my favorite American indie writer-directors, Jeff Nichols and Ramin Bahrani, have new films with bigger stars than they've had before — films they hope will break through to wider audiences. The results, at least artistically, are impressive.<p>Nichols' first feature, <em>Shotgun Stories,</em> was a small masterpiece, the story of a blood feud between half-brothers that turns tragic. Wed, 01 May 2013 17:42:00 +0000 David Edelstein 13017 at http://publicradioeast.org Two Indie Directors Go Confidently Mainstream Tom Cruise's Latest Headed For 'Oblivion' http://publicradioeast.org/post/tom-cruises-latest-headed-oblivion Transcript <p>TERRY GROSS, HOST: <p>In December, Tom Cruise starred as the title character in the film "Jack Reacher." In "Oblivion," which opened on Friday, he plays another Jack, one of few humans left on an Earth devastated by an alien invasion. "Oblivion" is based on a graphic novel co-written by Joseph Kosinski, who went on to direct the film, and it costars Morgan Freeman and Melissa Leo. Mon, 22 Apr 2013 16:03:00 +0000 David Edelstein 12285 at http://publicradioeast.org Terrence Malick And Every Man's Journey 'To The Wonder' http://publicradioeast.org/post/terrence-malick-and-every-mans-journey-wonder The voiceovers from Terrence Malick's <em>To the Wonder</em>, which has a lot of them, are intoned on the soundtrack while the characters stare into sunrises or sunsets — whenever the light is right, what cinematographers call, "the magic hour." This film and Malick's last, <em>The Tree of Life</em>, suggest that he's evolved into a blend of director and Christian minister: These are psalms writ on film. Fri, 12 Apr 2013 15:48:00 +0000 David Edelstein 11585 at http://publicradioeast.org Terrence Malick And Every Man's Journey 'To The Wonder' Going 'Mental' And Enjoying The Ride http://publicradioeast.org/post/going-mental-and-enjoying-ride <em>Mental</em> is madder than madcap. I heard one critic sniff, "It's kind of broad" — and, Your Honor, the defense agrees! But if broad means "unsubtle," it doesn't have to mean "unreal." <em>Mental</em> makes most other movies seem boringly, misleadingly sane.<p>Why "misleadingly"? Because writer-director P.J. Hogan aims for a tone that's more concentrated in its craziness — and thereby serves up more concentrated truths about human nature. Tue, 09 Apr 2013 15:57:00 +0000 David Edelstein 11299 at http://publicradioeast.org Going 'Mental' And Enjoying The Ride With Vengeance And Violence, 'Olympus Has Fallen' Flat http://publicradioeast.org/post/vengeance-and-violence-olympus-has-fallen-flat What surprises me about the ongoing discussion of violence in cinema and whether it influences violence in the real world is how people fail to engage with the male <em>fantasy</em> behind these films. There's a template for them, a theme; it hinges on violation and vengeance. A seminal action picture of the last 50 years is 1988's <em>Die Hard</em>, in which a lone male cop operates behind the scenes after an ingeniously orchestrated foreign attack on American soil. He's symbolically emasculated — he has no gun or even shoes, his wife is now going by her maiden name. Fri, 22 Mar 2013 17:59:00 +0000 David Edelstein 10034 at http://publicradioeast.org With Vengeance And Violence, 'Olympus Has Fallen' Flat Three New Films Examine What It Means When Girls Act Out http://publicradioeast.org/post/three-new-films-examine-what-it-means-when-girls-act-out In the '60s, some fervent rock groupies formed a band called the GTOs — short for "Girls Together Outrageously" — and while it didn't last, the name captures the impulse behind stories in which women chafe against the male-centric society that pulls their strings. Fri, 15 Mar 2013 15:43:00 +0000 David Edelstein 9493 at http://publicradioeast.org Three New Films Examine What It Means When Girls Act Out 'Oz': Neither Great Nor Powerful http://publicradioeast.org/post/oz-neither-great-nor-powerful <em>Oz the Great and Powerful</em>. Say that name aloud and you will smile, I guarantee you: It will conjure up so many images, characters, actors, songs. Fri, 08 Mar 2013 17:04:00 +0000 David Edelstein 8974 at http://publicradioeast.org 'Oz': Neither Great Nor Powerful A Disappointing Thriller Channels Hitchcock And Bram 'Stoker' http://publicradioeast.org/post/disappointing-thriller-channels-hitchcock-and-bram-stoker <em>Stoker</em> has a ripely decadent, creepy-crawly feel that would have gotten under my skin if the tone weren't so arch and the people so ghoulishly remote. It's like a bad Strindberg play with added splatter. But director Park Chan-wook certainly works to make you uncomfortable. Take the early shot in which the teenage girl protagonist, India Stoker, played by Mia Wasikowska, sits in a meadow and muses in voiceover on the subject of free will versus destiny. She says, "Just as a flower doesn't choose its color, so we don't choose what we are going to be" — while draining a blister. Fri, 01 Mar 2013 19:26:00 +0000 David Edelstein 8448 at http://publicradioeast.org A Disappointing Thriller Channels Hitchcock And Bram 'Stoker' 'Caesar' Comes Alive In An Italian Prison http://publicradioeast.org/post/caesar-comes-alive-italian-prison In the early '80s, Italy's Taviani brothers, Paolo and Vittorio, made one of the true modern masterpieces, <em>The</em> <em>Night of the Shooting Stars</em>. Set in the last days of World War II, when Germans laid mines all over Tuscan villages and Fascists loyal to Mussolini killed their own countrymen, it was a very cruel film.<p>But unlike, say, the more recent <em>Pan's Labyrinth</em> — where I found the violence bludgeoning — the movie was leavened by scenes of erotic passion, of farce, of transcendence that gestured to a world beyond the atrocities. Fri, 08 Feb 2013 16:53:00 +0000 David Edelstein 6822 at http://publicradioeast.org 'Caesar' Comes Alive In An Italian Prison 'Gatekeepers' Let Us Inside Israeli Security http://publicradioeast.org/post/gatekeepers-let-us-inside-israeli-security The Oscar-nominated documentary <em>The Gatekeepers</em> centers on Israel's occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, but from an unusual vantage — not the Palestinians or Israelis on the ground, but six men at the pinnacle of the country's security apparatus: the former heads of the security agency Shin Bet.<p>The opening scroll of <em>The Gatekeepers</em> identifies the Shin Bet as the agency charged with defending Israel against terrorism, espionage and the release of state secrets and asserts that its heads have never been interviewed about their work. Fri, 01 Feb 2013 15:17:00 +0000 David Edelstein 6271 at http://publicradioeast.org 'Gatekeepers' Let Us Inside Israeli Security 'Mama': A Good Old-Fashioned Horror Movie http://publicradioeast.org/post/mama-good-old-fashioned-horror-movie I was weaned on horror movies and love them inordinately, but the genre has gone to the dogs — and to the muscle-bound werewolves, hormonal vampires, flesh-eating zombies, machete-wielding psychos, etc. It's also depressing how most modern horror pictures have unhappy nihilist endings in which everyone dies and the demons pop back up, unvanquished — partly because studios think happy endings are too soft, but mostly because they need their monsters for so-called franchises.<p>But <em>Mama</em> is an entertaining step in the right, which is to say backward, direction. Fri, 18 Jan 2013 16:51:00 +0000 David Edelstein 5267 at http://publicradioeast.org 'Mama': A Good Old-Fashioned Horror Movie 'The Sessions': Sex, Comedy And Something More http://publicradioeast.org/post/sessions-sex-comedy-and-something-more In 1983, Berkeley poet and journalist Mark O'Brien wrote an article about sexual surrogates — women and men trained to help people with disabilities learn to use their bodies to give themselves and others erotic pleasure.<p>For O'Brien, the subject wasn't academic. After a bout of childhood polio, he had spent much of his life in an iron lung. He could talk, and tap out words on a typewriter holding a stick in his mouth. He could feel things below the neck. Fri, 19 Oct 2012 14:51:00 +0000 David Edelstein 4060 at http://publicradioeast.org 'The Sessions': Sex, Comedy And Something More 'Argo': Too Good To Be True, Because It Isn't http://publicradioeast.org/post/argo-too-good-be-true-because-it-isnt Ben Affleck's <em>Argo</em> is two-<em>two-</em>TWO movies in one, and while neither is especially original, by merging them Affleck pulls off a coup. First, he gives you espionage with the <em>You Are There</em> zing of a documentary. Then he serves up broad showbiz satire. For his final feat, he blends the two into a pulse-pounding nail-biter of a climax. And this all really happened. Most of it. Except for that climax.<p>The prologue is newsreel-style. A female narrator recounts the U.S. Fri, 12 Oct 2012 16:38:00 +0000 David Edelstein 3538 at http://publicradioeast.org 'Argo': Too Good To Be True, Because It Isn't At College, A 'Pitch Perfect' Musical Comedy http://publicradioeast.org/post/college-pitch-perfect-musical-comedy Critic David Edelstein reviews a film that may sound a lot like a campus-bound version of Glee, but has more to it than that label might suggest. Fri, 05 Oct 2012 18:10:00 +0000 David Edelstein 3035 at http://publicradioeast.org 'Looper': Time-Travel Nonsense, Winningly Played http://publicradioeast.org/post/looper-time-travel-nonsense-winningly-played I adore time-travel pictures like <em>Looper</em> no matter how idiotic, especially when they feature a Love That Transcends Time. I love <em>Somewhere in Time</em> with Christopher Reeve and Jane Seymour, <em>The Time Traveler's Wife</em>, even <em>The Lake House</em> with Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock in different years sending letters through a magic mailbox. So terrible. So good. See, everyone wants to correct mistakes in hindsight, and it's the one thing we cannot do. Thu, 27 Sep 2012 20:12:00 +0000 David Edelstein 2426 at http://publicradioeast.org 'Looper': Time-Travel Nonsense, Winningly Played The Art Of Preserving A High School 'Wallflower' http://publicradioeast.org/post/art-preserving-high-school-wallflower The hero of both the novel and the film <em>The Perks of Being a Wallflower</em> is a high school freshman loner named Charlie whose best friend committed suicide the previous spring. He's on psychiatric meds, lots of them, and still has blackouts and mysterious visions of a doting aunt who died when he was 7.<p>At school, he's shoved by bullies and jeered at by girls, and he's literally counting the days until he graduates. Fri, 21 Sep 2012 15:34:00 +0000 David Edelstein 1924 at http://publicradioeast.org The Art Of Preserving A High School 'Wallflower' 'The Master': Filling A Void By Finding A Family http://publicradioeast.org/post/master-filling-void-finding-family Paul Thomas Anderson's <em>The Master</em> is both feverish and glacial. The vibe is chilly, but the central character is an unholy mess — and his rage saturates every frame. He's a World War II South Pacific vet named Freddie Quell, played by Joaquin Phoenix to the hilt — the hilt above the hilt. We meet him at war's end on a tropical beach where he and other soldiers seek sexual relief atop the figure of a woman made out of sand.<p>No, it's not your father's war — at least, the war portrayed in most sagas of the so-called Greatest Generation. Fri, 14 Sep 2012 17:10:00 +0000 David Edelstein 1344 at http://publicradioeast.org 'The Master': Filling A Void By Finding A Family 'Bachelorette' Sounds Dark Comedic Depths http://publicradioeast.org/post/bachelorette-sounds-dark-comedic-depths Long before <em>Bridesmaids</em> convinced studio executives that a raunchy, female-centric comedy could find a huge audience, Leslye Headland was busy adapting her play <em>Bachelorette</em> into a movie. So this isn't a copycat rom-com, but the themes do overlap. Each film turns on a female rivalry: In <em>Bridesmaids</em>, it's between the maid of honor, Kristen Wiig, and the bride's rich friend, played by Rose Byrne. In <em>Bachelorette,</em> the rivalry is more complicated, more ... ugly. Fri, 07 Sep 2012 17:55:00 +0000 David Edelstein 830 at http://publicradioeast.org 'Bachelorette' Sounds Dark Comedic Depths