Bob GarverContributorLike many critics, I despised the 2019 CGI version of “The Lion King.” The new animation was ugly and the rehashing of the story from the 1994 classic without many changes made the whole thing seem unnecessary. But unlike many critics, I’m not ready to throw prequel “Mufasa: The Lion King” away just because of the sins of its predecessor. I’m not saying that it’s not still inextricably tied to the 2019 film, especially with its still-terrible CGI animation, but the story and characters can do some roaming on their own that makes for a breath of fresh air.The film opens with Simba (Donald Glover) and Nala (Beyoncé Knowles-Carter) going away on some adult lion business and leaving their cub Kiara (Blue Ivy Carter) in the care of comic relief me
Movie Reviews
‘A Man Called Otto’ Review: Tom Hanks in a Predictable but Touching Portrait of Grief and Resilience
The poster for A Man Referred to as Otto invitations us to “fall in love with the grumpiest man in America.” However actually, was there any doubt, contemplating that he’s performed by Tom Hanks? The inevitable transformation of the title character from ill-tempered sourpuss to lovable softy wouldn’t generate a lot suspense anyway, because the movie is a remake of the hit 2015 Swedish movie A Man Referred to as Ove, tailored from the best-selling novel by Fredrik Backman. Add to that the truth that you may have the modern-day heir of Jimmy Stewart’s mantle enjoying the lead, and you may just about predict the movie’s each beat.
However that doesn’t it make any much less gratifying or transferring, because of its reliably efficient redemption arc, narrative construction and Hanks’ enduring enchantment. Not like the Swedish movie’s lead actor, Rolf Lassgard, who was genuinely intimidating in his curmudgeonliness, Hanks is rarely actually convincing as a perpetually aggrieved, hostile widower who takes his grief over his spouse’s demise out on the world. However you may sense how a lot enjoyment he’s getting out of enjoying in opposition to his widespread picture, and also you fortunately go alongside for the journey.
A Man Referred to as Otto
The Backside Line Plucks your heartstrings successfully.
Set in an unnamed Rust Belt city that has clearly seen higher days (the film was filmed in Pittsburgh), this American model directed by Marc Forster (Discovering Neverland) intently follows its Swedish predecessor in most regards. Otto, who has lately been pushed out of his engineering managerial job, primarily spends his time scowling and grunting at anybody who has the temerity to cross his path and imposing the foundations of his gated neighborhood, which is managed by the type of real-estate firm whose smarmy consultant (Mike Birbiglia, in a task making little use of his comedian abilities) would have made an appropriate villain in a Frank Capra film.
Sure, Otto is cranky, alright. He yells at a younger girl for letting her canine urinate on his garden, a supply truck driver for unauthorized parking, a neighbor for exercising too vigorously in a skintight outfit, and a stray cat for displaying up on his property. He’s even keen to spend treasured time arguing over being charged 33 cents an excessive amount of in a big-box ironmongery shop. He greater than lives as much as a bystander’s description of him as a “grumpy previous bastard.” However we quickly perceive the reason for his despair, which prompts him to make a number of unsuccessful suicide makes an attempt. He’s childless and alone, having lately misplaced his beloved spouse Sonya to most cancers.
His humanity solely emerges throughout his common visits to her grave, the place he makes it clear that he intends to affix her quickly. It’s additionally revealed in a collection of flashbacks to his youthful days, wherein the younger Otto (Truman Hanks, Tom’s son, bearing an uncanny resemblance to his previous man) has a meet-cute with Sonya (Rachel Keller, suitably endearing) when he boards a practice going within the fallacious route with a purpose to return a e book she’s dropped. We see the couple transferring into the house the place the middle-aged Otto nonetheless lives and making associates with their neighbors, after which Sonya getting pregnant and tragically dropping the newborn in a bus accident that leads to her being confined to a wheelchair.
Because the movie progresses, you end up counting the minutes till Otto will regain his soul. It begins to occur with the arrival of a younger household within the neighborhood, consisting of the feisty, very pregnant Marisol (Mariana Trevino, in a breakthrough efficiency), her klutzy husband (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo, The Magnificent Seven), and their two younger daughters. At first, Otto resists Marisol’s good-natured efforts to be pleasant, however he finally finds himself getting concerned together with his new neighbors regardless of himself. You’ll be able to really feel his resistance melting when he takes the primary bites of a scrumptious home made meal she’s gifted him, though in his thank-you notice he can solely begrudgingly describe the meals as “attention-grabbing.” However it isn’t lengthy earlier than he’s babysitting the cute tykes and instructing Marisol drive.
The storyline’s much less convincing components embrace Otto turning into a social media sensation after he’s filmed rescuing an aged man who’s fallen onto practice tracks. That permits him to take advantage of his newfound fame when the actual property firm makes an attempt to evict his longtime neighbors after they expertise main well being points. It’s the type of melodramatic plot contrivance that feels wholly pointless, as if screenwriter David Magee didn’t belief that the story of a grief-stricken man regaining his will to dwell would carry sufficient emotional weight.
However it’s onerous to thoughts an excessive amount of, because of Hanks’ completely modulated, understated efficiency — he’s actually transferring while you really feel Otto’s frost slowly beginning to thaw — and the welcome comedian moments that alleviate the movie’s extra heavy-handed elements. There’s a very great second when Otto winds up within the hospital after collapsing on the street and Marisol is gravely knowledgeable that his coronary heart is “too huge.” As an alternative of registering alarm, she collapses into hysterical laughter, with Otto having the grace to completely get the joke.
Though A Man Referred to as Otto by no means absolutely rises above its apparent plot machinations, director Forster fortunately applies a reasonably restrained, delicate strategy. The result’s a movie to which you in the end end up succumbing though you by no means cease being conscious that your heartstrings are being shamelessly pulled.
Full credit
Manufacturing firms: Playtone, SF Studios, 2DUX², Columbia Footage, Stage 6 Movies, Creative Movies
Distributor: Sony Footage Releasing
Solid: Tom Hanks, Mariana Trevino, Rachel Keller, Manuel Garcia-Rulfo, Truman Hanks, Mike Birbiglia
Director: Marc Foster
Screenwriter: David Magee
Producers: Fredrik Wikstrom Nicastro, Rita Wilson, Tom Hanks, Gary Goetzman
Govt producers: Marc Forster, Renee Wolfe, Louise Rosner, David Magee, Michael Porseryd, Tim King, Sudie Smyth, Steven Shareshian, Celia Costas, Neda Backman, Tor Jonasson
Director of pictures: Matthias Keonigswieser
Manufacturing designer: Barbara Ling
Editor: Matt Chesse
Composer: Thomas Newman
Costume designer: Frank Fleming
Casting: Francine Maisler, Molly Rose
Rated PG-13,
2 hours 6 minutes
Movie Reviews
Movie review: ‘Mufasa: The Lion King’
Movie Reviews
Movie Review: 'Mufasa: The Lion King' – Catholic Review
NEW YORK (OSV News) – You don’t have to be Dr. Dolittle to understand what the animals are saying in the musical adventure “Mufasa: The Lion King” (Disney). That’s because director Barry Jenkins’ prequel to the popular franchise uses the same technology employed in the 2019 remake of the 1994 animated kick-off of the series to enable them to talk.
How much viewers will enjoy the varied creatures’ dialogue, however, is another question. The movie’s strong suit is visual rather than verbal and the upshot is a sweeping spectacle that lacks substance.
As narrated by Rafiki (voice of John Kani), a wise mandrill, the story looks back to the youthful bond between two princely lions, Mufasa (voice of Aaron Pierre) and Taka (voice of Kelvin Harrison Jr.). Though the duo quickly become friends, their situations are very different.
Taka is right at home under the protection of his royal parents, Queen Eshe (voice of Thandiwe Newton) and King Obasi (voiced by Lennie James). When Taka first encounters him, by contrast, Mufasa has been forcibly carried away by a sudden flood from his home, family and inheritance and is on the point of being eaten by crocodiles when Taka steps in to rescue him.
As their relationship flourishes, the pair treat each other as adoptive brothers. But plot complications — primarily involving Sarabi (voice of Tiffany Boone), a lioness they both befriend — eventually drive them apart.
Beyond the importance of unity and the corrupting effect of jealousy, there are few thematic elements to ponder as these events unfold. So viewers will have to be content with lush landscapes and some pleasant tunes from composer Lin-Manuel Miranda.
While free of objectionable elements, Jeff Nathanson’s script does flirt with shamanism and suggests that the dead achieve immortality through their influence on the living. Along with the numerous dangers through which the central characters pass, that may give some parents pause.
The film contains potentially frightening scenes of combat and peril. The OSV News classification is A-I — general patronage. The Motion Picture Association rating is PG — parental guidance suggested. Some material may not be suitable for children.
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Movie Reviews
Identity Review | Expensive, Expansive and Excessively Complicated
One thing I have noticed about the scripts of Akhil Paul, one of the makers of the new Tovino Thomas starrer Identity, is how he notices certain peculiar things in stuff we see almost regularly. In movies like 7th Day and Forensic, he has used those details to deceive the audience or to deceive certain characters. When it comes to Identity, his third film as a writer and second film as a director, along with Anas Khan, the ambition is really huge. But somewhere, the convolutions of the story from being a simple revenge story to an almost Mission Impossible-level tragedy evading heroic thriller tires you. And rather than making us figure out how it all unfolded more subtly, Akhil and Anas are explaining everything less enticingly. While a part of you do appreciate the movie for being ambitious with the scale, the over-explained, complicated script reduces the wow factor of the film.
The trailer of the movie has not really revealed much about the film. So, I will try to keep it spoiler-free. But some spillings will be there, so be cautious. Haran Shankar is our hero who lives with his two sisters. Haran, who lived with his abusive father till the age of seven, has developed a very obsessive character trait. And since his late mother was a sketch artist in the police force, Haran knows the science of that as well. What we see in Identity are the events that happen in the life of Haran when a Bengaluru-based police officer becomes his neighbor in his apartment. The police officer is accompanied by a witness who is experiencing face blindness after a hit-and-run incident. How the sketch artist capabilities of Haran help these two and how that journey unfolds is what we see in Identity.
The agenda of the bad guy in this movie is so elaborate and meticulous that while I was driving back home after watching the movie, I was trying to think about the story in a linear way. So, when you look at the story from a linear point of view, the hero almost becomes a character who happens to be in a subplot of the villain’s story. See, people like Christopher Nolan and Dennis Villeneuve have also gone after complicated scripting methods to make the movie compelling for the viewers. Forget foreign films, one of my absolute favorites of last year, Kishkindha Kaandam, also made a linear story complicated to give us that cinematic high. The issue I felt with Identity is that the complications in the story and when they eventually get revealed, it feels more like a deliberate distraction rather than a well-crafted twist.
In terms of using minute details about professions or medical conditions, the writing is definitely great. From facial blindness to sketch artist psychology, and to flight protocols, one can see that the director duo have done really good research in bringing authenticity to subplots and set pieces they have imagined. But somewhere, I felt the theatrical euphoria you associate with the revealing of a twist was just not there in the directorial aspect of the film. And I feel a larger part of that is because of the spoon-feeding exposition through dialogues. We are not picking information from the scenes. It is more like we are getting informed about what really happened literally by some character.
The wider aspect ratio of the film gives it the option to make things look grand and slightly larger than life. And Akhil George plays with the color palette pretty effectively to give sequences a particular mood. A lot of back and forth is happening in the movie to reveal the twists, and Chaman Chacko uses aggressive cuts to make those portions work. The production quality of some of the chase sequences is pretty good. While the fight inside the flight made absolute sense, and the execution was really impressive, the car chase sequence felt slightly outlandish.
Tovino Thomas tries to follow this stiff body language to show the precision obsession of his character. While that style looked very stylish whenever he does that, along with dialogues, in the initial portions of the movie where he is mostly silent, that body language somewhat reminded me of Small Wonder. In an interview, when Akhil Paul was asked about the casting of Trisha in the film, he was sincere enough to say that the bigger budget of the movie made them cast a bigger name to widen the market. Well, that very much gives you an idea. Her character, Alisha, is important to the story. But in terms of scope to perform, it offers minimal opportunity to the actor. Vinay Rai, in his typical style, carries the tone shifts of the character effectively. After a point, Allen Jacob was all about swagger. Shammi Thilakan was perhaps the only performer who was able to reduce the rigidness of the dialogues through his dialog rendering. Aju Varghese gets a police role we really don’t see him play often.
In terms of scale and imagination, Identity definitely has managed to pull off an appreciable output on screen. At a time when people are willing to decode things on their own after watching a film, I thought a bit more refinement on a writing level would have made Identity a quality film by all means. Similar to what I said about Marco, despite these movies having shortcomings or issues, it is really promising to see that within the constraints of having a small market, our makers are trying ambitious stuff.
At a time when people are willing to decode things on their own after watching a film, I thought a bit more refinement on a writing level would have made Identity a quality film by all means.
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