I got to see "Monsters vs Aliens" with my three kids and my brother Jesse and my sister Jill. This was a fun movie for all ages, with the visuals and action for the little kids and the humor and cultural references for the bigger kids. If Matt hasn't seen this yet, I'm sure he'll love what the President (as played by Stephen Colbert) does to try to communicate with the aliens. This was a Dreamworks movie, and it had some of the feel of the Shrek series, but I liked it better. It seemed to have more depth and life flowing than Shrek, if you know what I mean. So many of these computer animated movies seem so flat and bland, maybe that's just the consequence of being compared to Pixar films. "Monsters vs Aliens" is on the high side of sub-Pixar movies, so it's doing about as good as can be expected. I guess what does disappoint me about a movie like this is how close it comes to being so much better... There are moments, there are ideas, there are characters that are really interesting or funny. But as a whole it felt more like a long Cartoon Network show than a feature length animated film. Maybe that's what some people like, but I was hoping for more, like I got from "Up".
"Ping Pong Playa" didn't make it to any theaters near me, and I don't know if I would have given it a chance even if it had. It's one of those impulse Netflix viewings that paid off. The star of this movie is a young Chinese American man who doesn't want to grow up, but desperately wants to play in the NBA, like Yao. Unfortunately he is neither tall, nor is he any good at basketball. He has always been overshadowed by his older brother, who is a kind of local Ping Pong hero. His parents are very disappointed in him, and he doesn't really have anything going his way. What balances this all out is that he's got lots of energy and a colorful personality. When his brother gets injured weeks before the big Ping Pong tournament we see right away where the plot of this film is taking us. In this case that's not a bad thing. I can handle a predictable movie, as long as its entertaining in the way it gets to the inevitable conclusion. I also liked how this movie walked the fine line between funny and inappropriate, and succeeded in remaining funny. The main character uses that Urban vernacular, but perfectly placed basketball bounces protect our ears from the harmful descriptive verbs. The movie also takes what could have been a one-idea gag, and creates a thoughtful story and set of supporting characters which save it from being shallow comedy.
Rob and I saw "The Hurt Locker" at our local art house theater. Ben had given me the heads-up on this one, and although I had heard good things about it, I didn't really know much about the story. Well, there isn't much of a story, this is more of a character study, which was alright by me. When I saw "In The Valley of Elah" a year or so ago I had that feeling that I was being taken advantage of. You know, when a movie gives you a set-up and introduces you to characters and locations, but before long you realize that everything is just a device to preach at you and impose a certain point of view. "Elah" was all about how war is hell, and there's nothing good about it, there's never any good reason to go to war, and the outcome is always ever bad... At least the movie had an opinion I guess instead of being empty and hopeless like some. Well, back to "The Hurt Locker". Here we see our men on the ground in Iraq, dealing with the day to day, reacting according to emotion, training, minds and hearts. We are following a team of demolition experts, on the prowl for roadside explosives. (Here I'd like to say "hello" our friendly NSA operative). This film had some of those "Apocalypse Now" moments where the stuff that happens is so horrifying that it's almost surreal. The movie never gets to heavy though, it's more of a documentary in the way it presents the information, but a very intimate one, in which we really get to see the Marines in their highs and lows. I think I've seen enough action movies, and dramas with war as a backdrop. I prefer to see a film like this that specializes in examining one aspect or idea concerning something that is real, but worlds away for me.
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