Cloud Atlas – Top Wachowski Films

CLOUD ATLAS

TOP WACHOWSKI FILMS

The siblingdirectorial pairing of Lana and Andy Wachowski teamed up with Tom Tykwer to create the powerful and inspiring epic Cloud Atlas, based on the best-selling novel by David Mitchell.To celebrate the film’s release on 22 Februarywe are going to take a look at the Wachowski’s best work to date, including The Matrix and V for Vendetta.

THE MATRIX

In 1999 the Wachowski’s brought us the ground-breaking and genre-defining Sci-fi film,The Matrix, starring Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne and Hugo Weaving. The film blew audiences away with its ground-breaking introduction of a visual effect now known as ‘bullet time’, which allows a shot to progress in slow-motion while the camera appears to move through the scene at normal speed. The Wachowski’s both wrote and directed this visual masterpiece which grossed over $450 million at the worldwide box-office. The film spawned two sequels, The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions, bringing in a whopping $1.6 billion total box-office for the franchise.

THE MATRIX RELOADED

The Wachowski’s returned in May 2003 to bring audiencesThe Matrix Reloaded, the second instalment in The Matrix trilogy. In the second film Neo and the rebel leaders learn that they have only 72 hours before Zion is destroyed by 250,000 sentinel machines. Neo must try to save Zion while also saving Trinity from the dark fate which plagues his dreams. This second instalment in the franchisegrossed a box-office of over $740 million worldwide.

THE MATRIX REVOLUTIONS

The Matrix trilogy ended in November 2003 with the release of The Matrix Revolutions. The final film in the trilogy follows Neo as he fights to end the war between the machines and humans. Neo must finally defeat the rogue Agent Smith while the human city of Zion defends itself against invasion by the machines. The Matrix Revolutions made over $425 million at the box-office worldwide and provided audiences with an explosive ending to the franchise, packed with ground-breaking CGI and an epic one-on-one battle between Neo and Agent Smith.

V FOR VENDETTA

The Wachowski’s wrote the 2006 thriller V for Vendetta, based on the comic book of the same name by Alan Moore and David Lloyd and starring Hugo Weaving, John Hurt and Natalie Portmanand was directed by James McTeigue. The film followed a shadowy freedom-fighter known only as ‘V’ who uses terrorist tactics to bring down the totalitarian society in which he lives. Caught in between the government and ‘V’ is Evey (Portman), who must decide whose side she is on before the explosive finale.

CLOUD ATLAS

The Wachowski’s latest release is the epic Cloud Atlas, based on the best-selling novel by David Mitchell and stars an award-winning cast including: Tom Hanks, Jim Broadbent, Ben Wishaw, Jim Sturgess, Hugh Grant, David Gyasi and Susan Surrandon. This powerful film is full of drama, mystery, action and enduring love, thread through a single story that unfolds in multiple timelines over the span of 500 years.  Characters meet and reunite from one life to the next. As the consequences of their actions and choices impact one another through the past, the present and the distant future, one soul is shaped from a killer into a hero, and a single act of kindness ripples across centuries to inspire a revolution.

Cloud Atlas is in cinemas this Friday 22nd February.

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Dark Shadows

Dark Shadows (2012)

One of the many fond memories I have as a child growing up in the late 60’s and early 70’s was running home from school everyday to watch the gothic soap opera, Dark Shadows.  I remember it came on at 4pm and I barely had time to rush off the school bus and dash inside to catch the then live performance of my favorite vampire, Barnabas Collins.  It was filmed in black and white and sometimes you could see flies land on the actors’ faces but they never lost character or even acknowledged the pests.  The iconic series ran from 1966 – 1971 and gained a devoted following, which has made it into a cult favourite.

You can imagine my delight when I found out that a project was in the works to bring the popular soap opera to the big screen.  Dark Shadows, the movie opened in theaters on May 11th and although it was a bit different from what I remember about the series, it kept enough of the original plot and characters to bring back childhood memories.

The movie opens in the 1700’s to explain a bit of the history of the Collins family and the reason for the curse by Angelique (Eva Green) which turns Barnabas Collins (Johnny Depp) into a vampire for his love of Josette (Bella Heathcote).  Angelique then traps Barnabas in a coffin and buries him for almost 200 years until a construction crew accidentally unearths him.  Barnabas returns to his family home of Collinswood Manor and must adapt to the new world to which he has awakened.  He soon discovers that not only is Angelique still alive and beautiful but also that his nephew, David Collins’ (Gulliver McGrath) tutor Victoria Winters (also played by Bella Heathcote) is a mirror image of his beloved Josette.  This is where most similarities fade and Tim Burton/Johnny Depp quirks begin.

For some reason, Johnny decided to play Barnabas Collins in thick white make-up and the only outward similarities I saw was in the hair and cane.  With that said, what I love about Depp is the many layers he is able to bring to each character he plays.  His portrayal of Barnabas Collins was as much campy and silly as it was serious and blood thirsty.  I think I would have enjoyed a little less oddball humour and more emphasis on his desire to defeat Angelique and his pursuit of Victoria.  But then it wouldn’t have been a Tim Burton film.

Helen Bonham Carter plays David’s psychiatrist, Dr. Julia Hoffman who sets out to help Barnabas become human again by giving him transfusions of her blood.  As in the original series, she has alternative motives, which brings the wrath of the vampire to an apex.

I was glad that during the party scene, all of the surviving actors from the original series had cameos.  Jonathan Frid, Lara Parker, Kathryn Leigh Scott, and David Selby were happy to participate and enjoyed being a part of the movie.  Sadly, Jonathan Frid died a few weeks ago but, I understand, graciously gave Depp his blessing to portray the character for which he was most known.  I just wish the original players had been given larger roles in the movie.  As it is now, you really have to look close to catch them and in fact, I will have to use slow motion when the movie is released on DVD.

The one scene that I really had objection to was the love scene between Barnabas and Angelique… way over the top silly and not really needed.  Although I am sure the two actors had fun creating it.

For those who expect the movie to be a carbon copy of the original series, you will be entirely disappointed.  But for those who love Tim Burton and Johnny Depp movies and who simply want to be entertained, you should get a kick out of it.  All in all, I enjoyed the movie but it did make me want to find DVD’s of the original series to rekindle more childhood memories.

Written by Joyce Parnell

The Road

The Road by Cormac McCarthy

The Road by Cormac McCarthy


Cormac McCarthy was born in Rhode Island in 1933. One of six children, Cormac’s family moved multiple times in his childhood as his father accepted different occupations. In 1951, McCarthy attended the University of Tennessee majoring in Liberal Arts. Midway through his studies, McCarthy served in the Air Force for four years. After his service, McCarthy returned to college, writing his first short stories. In 1959 and 1960, he won the Ingram-Merrill Award for Creative Writing. Mccarthy’s first novel, The Orchard Keeper, was published in 1965. Several years, grants, and fellowships later, McCarthy published SuttreeBlood Meridian, and All the Pretty Horses marking his rise in literary acclaim. McCarthy is widely considered one of the great modern American authors and many of his works have been translated to film.
(New York: Vintage International, 2006. 287 pp)

Back to Basics

 In The Road, Cormac McCarthy explores the idea of innocence, good and evil, and the idea of “carrying fire”, where he explores innocence and human resilience. Unlike so many dystopian novels that merely explore what humanity’s darker sides are, McCarthy uses the harrowing and depressing post apocalyptic landscape to ultimately show the brilliance of the human spirit.

The Road opens in a post-apocalyptic world which sees humanity reduced to its most basic elements. A never named father and his son journey across the landscape.

“He’d had this feeling before, beyond the numbness and the dull despair. The world shrinking down about a raw core of parsible entities. The names of things slowly following those things into oblivion. Colors. The names of birds. Things to eat. Finally the names of things one believed to be true. More fragile than he would have thought. How much was gone already? The sacred idiom shorn of its referents and so of its reality” (88).

Filled with ash and devoid of any living animals and vegetation, many humans have resorted to cannibalism or committed suicide. The boy’s mother gave up after the disaster and evidently committed suicide before the story begins. The more sophisticated elements of human civilization have been obliterated, but perhaps more importantly concepts such as altruism or the ability to hope no longer exist. The boy, however, is told to carry “the fire” by his father, a concept developing throughout the book.

Good versus Evil

In Starkian fashion, the man realizes winter is coming, and decides to take the boy south, where it’s warmer. The father is sick, coughing blood occasionally, but continues south with his son, hoping to get him to where it’s warm before he dies. The father’s love for his son is incredibly deep. He vows to take care of his son no matter what.

“You wanted to know what the bad guys looked like. Now you know. It may happen again. My job is to take care of you. I was appointed to do that by God. I will kill anyone who touches you. Do you understand?

Yes.

He sat there cowled in the blanket. After a while he looked up. Are we still the good guys? he said. Yes. We’re still the good guys.

And we always will be.

Yes. We always will be.

Okay” (77).

The father, carrying a pistol with only two rounds, killed one of the cannibal attackers on their journey. He justifies the killing as a sacrificial act, but a difference in innocence begins to emerge. The father doesn’t doubt they are the “good guys”, but conversely the son wonders having murdered someone if they can truly be considered “good”. The father wants to protect his son at all costs, but with the new world in which he lives, the rules of good versus evil have changed, morality is different, and he struggles to transform with the times, finding himself an alien in this new hopeless landscape.

 Carrying Fire

The Road is one of the darkest most hopeless books I’ve read. Perhaps showing a bit of McCarthy’s philosophical stance on human life, the book serves to tell of how humans will always strive for hope, to carry the “fire” (as McCarthy puts it in the novel) of humanity’s greatest achievements forward. But, the universe is indifferent. In the wake of the unnamed calamity, the earth has left humanity no foreseeable future. But, despite the universe’s disinterest, life goes on.

“He walked out in the gray light and stood and he saw for a brief moment the absolute truth of the world. The cold relentless circling of the intestate earth. Darkness implacable. The blind dogs of the sun in their running. The crushing black vacuum of the universe. And somewhere two hunted animals trembling like groundfoxes in their cover. Borrowed time and borrowed world and borrowed eyes with which to sorrow it” (130).

The boy and the man still carry the “fire”. The fire isn’t literal fire to survive with, but a symbol of hope and human resilience. The man consistently tells the son to carry the “fire”. No matter what horrors they encounter, the boy never desires to hurt others, and through his innocence, protects the human condition. People will always carry the fire, but sadly, far too many people choose self-preservation at the cost of genuine love and concern for others. Our world is more complex than the one in which the boy and his father live, but this truth remains the same: the fire of human compassion is too easily lost. McCarthy seems to argue that innocence is the only thing that can preserve it. His characterization of the boy is an attempt to show that innocence in the juridical sense is one of the most important human attributes. Though The Road is dark, hopeless, harrowing and depressing, the truth extrapolated from the text is worth a read.

Written by Andrew Jacobson

(www.wherepenmeetspaper.com)

Grimm

Grimm

Grimm

There seems to be an influx of televisions shows based on the Grimm Fairy Tales.  “Once Upon a Time” focuses on the characters we are most familiar with…Snow White, Prince Charming and even Alice in Wonderland.  On the opposite side, there is “Grimm” which focuses on the creatures or monsters in the stories, for instance, the Big Bad Wolf and ogres. Continue reading

breaking dawn part 1

The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 1 (2011)

Twilight: Breaking Dawn

I want to talk about the id. See, Sigmund Freud, the crazy granddad of psychology, had a theory. The simple (and mercifully short) version is that the mind is broken up into three areas; the superego, ego and id, the last of these being a sack of basic animal desires and emotions. I feel this last part comes in very handy to explain the appeal of properties such as Real Steel, Transformers and Twilight, as these films’ sole aim is to connect straight to the id of their audiences. Continue reading

Wrath of the Titans

Wrath of the Titans (2012)

Wrath of the Titans (2012)

I think what I appreciated most about Wrath of the Titans is that, unlike its 2010 predecessor, I wasn’t forced into making comparisons between versions. Clash of the Titans was, of course, a remake of the 1981 film of the same name. Many people thought I was insane for liking that film. Many more were angry that I had the gall to say the remake was better than the original. As much as I don’t like to fan flames, there’s really no getting around this: It was better. Continue reading