Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Monsters vs. Aliens

Genre: Family

Synopsis
When California girl Susan Murphy is unwittingly clobbered by a meteor full of outer space gunk on her wedding day, she mysteriously grows to 49-feet-11-inches tall. The military jumps into action and Susan is captured and secreted away to a covert government compound. There, she is renamed Ginormica and placed in confinement with a ragtag group of Monsters: the brilliant but insect-headed Dr. Cockroach, Ph.D.; the macho half-ape, half-fish The Missing Link; the gelatinous and indestructible B.O.B.; and the 350-foot grub called Insectosaurus. Their confinement is cut short, however, when a mysterious alien robot lands on Earth and begins storming the country. In a moment of desperation, the President is persuaded to enlist the motley crew of Monsters to combat the Alien Robot and save the world from imminent destruction.

Scott's Review
This is definitly a feel good movie. The storyline was easy to follow and well written. Although this is a kids movie there are some adult type themes for the parents, such as the parallels between the president and our former president.

Scott's Rating
4 Frogs

Knowing

Genres : Sci-Fi, Action, Drama
Director: Alex Proyas
Starring: Nicolas Cage

Synopsis
A time capsule containing a cryptic message about the coming apocalypse sends a concerned father on a race to prevent the horrific events from unfolding as predicted in this sci-fi thriller directed by Alex Proyas (Dark City) and starring Nicolas Cage. 1958: As the dedication ceremony for a newly constructed elementary school gets under way, a time capsule containing student drawings of the future is buried on the grounds and scheduled to be unearthed on the school's 50th anniversary. Instead of submitting a drawing, however, one little girl scribbles a series of seemingly random numbers on her paper before it is buried. Fifty years later, the time capsule is unearthed for a new generation of students to examine. Young Caleb Koestler (Chandler Canterbury) is one of those students. The mysterious sequence of numbers falling into his possession, Caleb takes the paper to his father, Professor John Koestler (Cage), for examination. Studying the numbers, Professor Koestler soon discovers that they aren't random at all, but an encoded message containing the precise dates, death tolls, and coordinates of every major disaster since the time capsule was buried. Not only that, but the document also indicates that there will be three more such events, the last of which indicates a doomsday scenario that appears directly tied to Professor Koestler and Caleb. His desperate plea to authorities falling on deaf ears, Professor Koestler realizes that his only hope for preventing more lives from being lost is to take personal action. Though the author of the prophecies is no longer living, Professor Koestler is eventually able to track down her daughter Diana Wayland (Rose Byrne), and granddaughter Abby, who reluctantly agree to aid in the investigation. As the final date on the list draws near, Professor Koestler enters into a frantic race against time to prevent destruction on a global scale, in the process realizing that in order to save millions of lives, he may have to make the ultimate sacrifice.

Scott's Review
Hmm.... The storyline in this movie was only so so. I got the feeling that the writer wrote the story as the movie was being filmed. At times the plotline felt strained. Nicolas Cage's acting in the movie was ok but his character was poorly defined, he is a teacher, but a teacher of what? At the beginning I thought he was a philosophy professor but by the end of the movie he was acting more like a physics professor. The one question that I would like answered is, was the director/writer trying to pissoff or appease the religious community? Because elements of this movie will do both.

Scott's Rating:
2.5 Frogs

Watchmen

Genres : Sci-Fi, Action, Drama
Director: Zack Snyder
Starring: Patrick Wilson, Jackie Earle Haley, Matthew Goode, Billy Crudup, Car;a Gugino, Jeffery Dean Morgan

Synopsis
300's Zack Snyder brings Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons' critically acclaimed comic book Watchmen to the big screen, courtesy of DC Comics and Warner Bros. Pictures. Set in an alternate universe circa 1985, the film's world is a highly unstable one where a nuclear war is imminent between America and Russia. Superheroes have long been made to hang up their tights thanks to the government-sponsored Keene Act, but that all changes with the death of The Comedian (Jeffrey Dean Morgan), a robust ex-hero commando whose mysterious free fall out a window perks the interest of one of the country's last remaining vigilantes, Rorschach (Jackie Earle Haley). His investigation leads him to caution many of his other former costumed colleagues, including Dr. Manhattan, Night Owl (Patrick Wilson), Ozymandias (Matthew Goode), Sally Jupiter (Carla Gugino), and her daughter, The Silk Spectre (Malin Akerman). Heralded for bringing the world of superheroes into the literary world, Watchmen gave the super-powered mythos a real-life grounding that had been missing in mainstream comics to that point.

Scott's Review
Growing up as a huge comic book fan I was looking forward to seeing this movie. This adaptation of the movie followed the storyline of the comic with few deversions. Overall the acting was good. At no time did I feel that the characters were not believable (in thier world). I had two negative comments to make about this movies, those being; The sex scene between Night Owl and The Silk Spectre just did not belong. It added nothing to the movies plotline except the gratuitous tit shot. Along those lines, to please or attract the female audience, Dr. Manhatten spent most of the movie in the buff with several scenes showing his penis. Why? It was obvious that he was not afraid to wear clothing as we see him several times in just a g-string type outfit. Overall this is a very good movie and will definitly see (or own) it again.

Scott's Rating:
4.5 Frogs