For some actors, playing an iconic character can sometimes doom him or her into a career where they are constantly type cast or trying to avoid being type cast. Daniel Radcliffe starred in eight Harry Potter movies in a ten year period. It’s too soon to tell if he will be able to shake the audience perception that he is “the boy who lived”. So begins Radcliffe’s challenge, to prove he is more than just the boy wizard, Harry Potter. Good luck, dude. Continue reading Daniel Radcliffe carries spooky low key thriller, ‘The Woman in Black’ — movie review
Category Archives: Movies
‘Man on a Ledge’ is ambitious but predictable thriller — movie review
Sam Worthington has a track record of being in big budget movies that for the most part are all flash and no substance. In his brief career, he has appeared in “Terminator Salvation” and both “Clash of the Titans” and “Wrath of the Titans”. He’s also starred in the #1 box office movie movie of all time, James Cameron’s “Aliens”. The thing about the guy is that while he has always been serviceable in the movies he’s been in, he hasn’t ever made them better, which is what a movie star needs to do. Continue reading ‘Man on a Ledge’ is ambitious but predictable thriller — movie review
‘The Grey’ is far deeper than Liam Neeson vs. wolves concept — movie review
The game is survival. The playing field is the harsh frozen Alaskan tundra. The opponent? Ravenous wolves. Yeah, it sounds a bit silly but “The Grey” takes itself very seriously. Throw in Liam Neeson, who is quickly becoming one of the biggest bad asses in movies today and the result is a tense action thriller directed by Joe Carnahan (Smokin’ Aces, Narc).
We are introduced to the main protagonist, Ottway (Liam Neeson), who early in the movie seems slightly suicidal. He is haunted by visions of his wife. He boards a plane as part of a team of oil workers heading to the Alaska. The group is your usual rag-tag group of tough guys. There isn’t much time for character development before the plane goes down in an intense crash sequence. Only seven men survive the crash. This is where the movie gets surprisingly interesting. Stranded in the frozen Alaskan wasteland, the men must fight not only the freezing cold temperatures to survive but a pack of gigantic wolves that seem to be hunting the men as they try to find rescue.
To the man, each character seems pretty cliche but they are each portrayed in a way that makes them feel real. Each of them is given a moment to build character that is usually followed by someone being torn to shreds by the wolves. If it seems dark, it is. As for the wolves, they’re handled in a manner that makes them menacing monsters but given these guys are on their territory, it makes sense.
On the surface “The Grey” is almost like a slasher film but instead of some crazy maniac you have– yeah– wild dogs. It’s quite brilliant actually. But the movie is so much more than that. As these men, led by resident bad ass Liam Neeson, try to get to safety, they not only bond with each other but embark on an existential self explorational journey. These men are sure they are going to die either from freezing to death, starvation or just having their faces eaten off by one of the monstrous wolves. It is an interesting take on the strength of the human spirit.
But the real fun comes when the wolves are hunting them. Sometimes it seems like they are taunting Liam Neeson and his buddies. It’s like Jaws has been reincarnated as a pack of man eating dogs and let loose on some primal hunting game. It’s tons of fun and one hell of a movie.
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