Archive for the ‘New Movies’ category

Movie, music stars mourn Whitney Houston in NJ hometown funeral

February 19th, 2012

After all the testimonials from relatives and friends, the songs from legends and pop stars, the preaching and even laughter, the raw emotion of Whitney Houston’s funeral came down to just one moment: The sound of her own voice.

As the strains of her biggest record, “I Will Always Love You,” filled the New Hope Baptist Church at the end of the nearly four-hour service Saturday and her silver-and-gold casket was lifted in the air, the weight of the moment was too much for mother, gospel singer Cissy Houston, to bear.

As she was held up by two women, she wailed, “My baby! My baby!” as she was led out the church behind her daughter’s body.

A few steps behind her was the pop icon’s daughter, Bobbi Kristina, also crying uncontrollably as she was comforted by Houston’s close friend, singer Ray J.

It was the most searing scene on a day with mixed moods as family, friends and a list celebrities — sometimes one in the same — came to the humble New Hope Baptist Church where she first wowed a congregation to remember one of music’s legends, but also a New Jersey hometown girl.

Houston died last Saturday in Beverly Hills, Calif., on the eve of the Grammys at the age of 48. Her death marked the end of a life that was marked by stunning achievements: Blessed with a voice of great power and beauty, Houston became one of pop music’s most successful artists over a career that spanned nearly three decades and segued into film with hits like “The Bodyguard.” » Read more: Movie, music stars mourn Whitney Houston in NJ hometown funeral

Contraband

January 15th, 2012

“Contraband” is like an “Ocean’s Eleven” movie, minus the glamour. Taut and suspenseful for the most part, the thriller substitutes a wily, working-class Mark Wahlberg (as smuggler Chris Farraday) for George Clooney’s urbane con artist, Danny Ocean, and replaces the globe-trotting milieu of casinos and museums with a gritty, claustrophobic freight ship.

Watching it leaves you feeling less buzzed than jittery and slightly nauseated. If the “Ocean’s” movies were martinis, “Contraband” is a thermos full of coffee.

In context, that’s kind of a compliment. “Contraband” is a remake of the Icelandic film “Reykjavik-Rotterdam.” Directed by actor-director Baltasar Kormakur – who played the lead in the 2008 original – it has a gloomy, propulsive, working-class energy that feels slightly more European than Hollywood-y.

If anything, it might be too exhausting.

When we first meet Chris, he has left the smuggling game to raise a family and build a legitimate business in suburban New Orleans. But when his wife’s younger brother, Andy (Caleb Landry Jones), winds up in hock to a volatile drug dealer (Giovanni Ribisi), Chris is forced to take up his old ways to pay off Andy’s debt.

Actually, it’s more to keep Andy from being shot in the head by Ribisi’s Briggs. Playing against type, Ribisi makes for a compelling, and frighteningly unhinged, villain. Briggs also threatens Chris’s wife (Kate Beckinsale) and his two young sons, unless Chris comes up with the money.

As Chris might say, whaddya gonna do?

A quick plan is thrown together to hop down to Panama on the next freighter and come back with a pile of counterfeit currency. But the plan – to be executed by Chris, Andy and a rogue’s gallery of blue-collar accomplices who work on the ship – spins rapidly, and bloodily, out of control, thanks to almost unbelievable betrayals and complications that leave the mission, and Chris’s family, in jeopardy. » Read more: Contraband

The Iron Lady

January 15th, 2012

Can a performance be too good?

Meryl Streep disappears so uncannily into former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher in “The Iron Lady” that her performance overpowers the movie it’s in – a perfectly executed triple axel that renders everything else just featureless ice.

The problem is that filmgoers who come to “The Iron Lady” to see Streep in action will see only that: an actress at the top of her game, delivering a bravura performance – not a thoughtful, provocative portrait of one of the most consequential figures of the 20th century.

That “The Iron Lady” fails on this count, of course, isn’t the fault of Streep but of director Phyllida Lloyd, who with screenwriter Abi Morgan has made a biopic that manages to be triumphalist and insulting at the same time, reducing Thatcher’s remarkable life to a series of psycho-biographical touchpoints and superficial montages.

Framed as a sequence of flashbacks Thatcher reflects on in late retirement, “The Iron Lady” dwells at length on the mental and physical frailties that have attended her later years. The result may be a more vulnerable, sympathetic portrait than the title suggests, but it also forces the filmmakers to leave far more vital aspects of her life and career on the cutting room floor.

Instead, we get a version of Thatcher’s life that’s one part Oprah and one part Wikipedia. After an admittedly ingenious opening segment featuring an anonymous elderly Thatcher buying milk for her husband, Denis (Jim Broadbent at his marvelous, open-hearted best), “The Iron Lady” takes filmgoers back to Margaret’s early years as the daughter of a conservative shop owner who, when his daughter tells him she has won a place at Oxford, tells her not to let him down. Lloyd and Morgan then tell a story that casts Thatcher both as a consummate father-pleaser and flinty feminist rebel, an impatient martinet in a bouffant and brooch who is fully capable of flirting when circumstances dictate. » Read more: The Iron Lady