Thursday, 27 August 2009

Indiana Jones

I'm one of the old school saw the movies in the theatre during their initial release, Star Wars, Empire, Jedi, CE3K, 1941, Alien etc, so when I heard news of a new project from Lucas and Spielberg; full of adventure and set in the 30s I was intrigued. I actually thought it was about Noah's ARK as I knew little or nothing of The Ark of the Covenant and its place in history. Even the early Steranko paintings in Starlog magazine confused me.
I wasn't familiar with the old Republic serials of 30s & 40s so when I did eventually see the movie at my local, past its best, ODEON cinema the point of reference I had was the Bond series. In fact of my fave Bond and Roger Moore movies were the most recent at the time (Spy Who Loved Me and the SW inspired Moonraker).

Raiders was fresh, exciting and full of energy and humour with a career defining central performance from Mr Ford. It was and still is visual filmmaking at its best. Spielberg's mastery of the medium shows throughout in the performances, editing, pacing, production and sheer energy. In a nutshell it could have been a film made in the 30s but with modern production values - particularly the sets, costumes and SPX. And of course Williams' music is pure romantic and bombastic Korngold inspired gold. I saw it several times and even got hold of my first VCR just to record a few clips from a TV review programme, Film '81 (coincidently hosted that year by TV's very own Historian and Archaeologist Michael Wood - he even wears a leather jacket!).

I'm one of the few people who actually thinks 'Doom' is as good as the others in the series. Sure its dark, set almost entirely in one country, with none of the supporting characters from the first film but its has a great score, wonderful story, lots of humour, a feisty and loud leading lady but most all it dared to be different. Lucas has the faith in his own judgement not to tread over familiar ground giving the canvas a much richer tapestry.

The slightly longer wait for 'Crusade' was worth it as it portrayed another history lesson told in a fun and exciting manner with great panache by a filmmaker on the top of his game. Casting Sean Connery was a master stroke (perhaps not on paper but with Connery's performance it made the movie) not only was it a great performance from Bond himself but it lifted Harrison's game to a new level as well. Again the music is different but full of memorable themes and instantly evokes just the right mood and period. My friend from University Ray and I travelled especially to see 'Crusade' in London at the UK's largest curved screen - The Empire Leicester Square in the summer of '89. An experience that will never be forgotten.

And finally to 'Crystal Skull', sure it hasn't quite got the pace and zip of the first three and a lot of water has passed under the bridge for all concerned. For Spielberg it must have been especially difficult - to 'unlearn what you have learnt' and make this is in the mould of the originals. In the most part he succeeded, with a lot of help from Ford. Mr Ford is the fittest 60 something male actor in films today - he has his own hair, teeth and lacks a middle-age spread. He carried the part of like a pro. The filmmakers, particularly Lucas were brave to acknowledge the passage of time and set the story in the 50s and going all the way and incorporating elements of that era within the fabric of the story. Also let's not forget that the late 50s and early 60s is Lucas' nostalgic era. I liked 'Crystal Skull', it has a great opening sequence, (in fact all four films have a unique but exciting opening segments) good production values and supporting players. The music is, in my opinion, weaker than the others but still streets ahead of the competition. The ending does seem a little 'tagged on', almost as if from another movie/genre but given the uphill task to bring Indy back at all after 18 yrs it was worth making. The success has certainly given the franchise a new lease of life with a promise of at least one more big screen outing for the world's favourite adventurer.

As I said in my previous piece I think Lucas and Spielberg will try and out smart the public and get round the issue of Ford's age by shooting TWO movies back to back. To be released over two summers, much in the way Robert Zemeckis did with Back to the Future II and III and Peter Jackson on a bigger scale with LOTR. Clever scripting and plotting could even see the two movies dovetail each other and possibly even one of the previous films. This adds depth to not only the characters but also the series as a whole.

Wednesday, 26 August 2009

Avatar Preview

Well, finally we get to see a preview and trailor of the long awaited and anticipated next movie of James Cameron - 'Avatar'. Friday 21st August was 'Avatar Day' all over the world, first with the release of exclusive trailer online which only gave avid viewers a taste of things to come and then came the industry first of a 15 min preview made up of 7 scenes from the first half of the film.

The special free presentation to the select few was presented in full 3D and only in digital and the large format IMAX theatres, giving those fortunate or savvy enough to get hold of tickets a super charged look at Cameron's first film since the all conquering 'Titanic' of 1997.

The presentation was professionally organised and came together smoothly I wish I could say the same about Cineworld Cinemas, the Birmingham one is staffed and managed by employees who no clue of what's happening in their place of work and the importance of the event. I've been to several regular film shows there when have been able to assist me with basic screening information and where the management is unprofessional at best and downright incompetent at worse.

The footage, or data, shown was just tremendous, crisp, clear, new and very slick. The much talked about CGI and live action combination looked fantastic, the gaudy colour scheme won't be to everyone's taste but at least its different and will stand out from the crowd. And let's put to rest all those views of whether the SPX is photo-realistic, well it shouldn't need to be. It is after all a sci-fi fantasy film set in the future and besides no film is 'real'. They are all versions of reality as dicdated by the filmmakers, this just happens to be on steroids!

I'm yet to be convinced of 3D in movies - it just seems like another gimmick to get audiences away from the internet and TV and to charge higher ticket prices. A good movie presented digitally is the best experience we can get with today's technology and distribution networks, so let's use that to the fullest. I was particularly pleased that 20th Century Fox and Cameron took the bold step and ONLY show the exclusive 15mins from the film in digital and IMAX theatres. It showed the film at it's best. Something I think George Lucas should insist on with all his films, afterall he is the grand daddy of digital cinema. 'Revenge of the Sith' should have had an exclusive 2 week engagement in digital theatres before being rolled out to the old 35mm brigade. This would have helped to boost the importance of the superior digital picture and sound presentation and given those die hard 'early bird' fans something special.

'Avatar' needs to be, should be seen in either the large IMAX format or in a digittally eqipped cinema come December.

Sure the story is derivative (many elements from Cameron's own back catalogue) but let's give the man credit for seeing his vision through and for pushing that cinematic envelope yet again. It's these kind of mavericks who are the mutations in the evolution of film so let's get them them room and the benefit of the doubt.