Showing posts with label aaron paul. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aaron paul. Show all posts

Friday, 11 October 2019

El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie (2019) Review

Review:

*Originally written October 11th* 
*Spoiler free*

Breaking Bad was something very special to me, a TV show that affected me like no other, to the point I'd call it my favourite piece of media ever made. It ended perfectly and nailed the landing where so many shows don't. I was very sceptical about the idea of a film continuing the story of Jesse Pinkman, even with the involvement of Breaking Bad's creator Vince Gilligan. I was certainly excited to go back into this world, but at the same time so ready for this to be an unnecessary disaster. 

Thankfully, this turned out to be so many things I didn't know I needed and more. El Camino follows on directly from the events of Breaking Bad's finale, showing Jesse escape his captivity and try to rebuild his life after suffering through these horrific events. It works perfectly as a epilogue to Breaking Bad, as Jesse is a character that deserved a redemptive finale after his unsure looking future based on when we last saw him.

Jesse Pinkman has always been my favourite character from Breaking Bad. While it was Walter White's story, Jesse always seemed more innocent and likeable, despite starting off as a burnout junkie loser before maturing and growing as the show went on. It was an interesting parallel to Walt, who only got worse as the show went on, while Jesse was always trying to better himself while going through the ringer when it came to horrific events and loss. 

Aaron Paul effortlessly steps back into the role, giving a powerful performance full of range and emotion. It's one of the rare times I've actually cared deeply about where things will go for a fictional character. It's amazing to see how much Jesse had changed over the course of the series. Paul portrays Jesse's emotional trauma with nuance and subtlety that brings so much to the character and events. We see a lot more of the time he spent in captivity and how twisted things got through flashbacks. 



Flashbacks has always been a trademark of Breaking Bad and used effectively. El Camino is no different, making use of showing Jesse during the events of the finale and over the course of show while bringing back some familiar faces that I won't spoil. All used to poignant and wonderful effect in order to show how much Jesse has changed. 

El Camino is exactly what I wanted in terms of plot. I love films and TV shows that put character over plot every time, taking time to get inside the characters head space rather than constantly trying to move the plot forward. In terms of plot, El Camino is simple and moves at a very slow-burning pace, while it's full of surprises and callbacks to Breaking Bad, your enjoyment will very much depend on how much you care about Jesse as a character. It's also very much worth mentioning that there is absolutely nothing here for you if you've never seen Breaking Bad. 

While character is certainly the focus here, that's not to say El Camino's plot is lacking. The endgame and stakes are set up very quickly and we follow Jesse as he has to get to this predictable, but very satisfying place. While it wraps up neatly and delivers a very bittersweet ending to one of the best written characters on TV, Gilligan does throw some curve balls and takes the plot to some unexpected places, making for some very intense and stomach churning watching. 

This could have easily felt like an extended episode of the show, but thanks to the shows incredible cinematography and cinematic style already, the transition to film is pretty seamless. This is a gorgeous film, making use of the beautiful cinematography of New Mexico and using some wonderfully inventive visual styles that make what could seem like mundane scenes feel engrossing and fun to watch. Dave Porter's pulsating score is also worth mentioning, filled with some callbacks to Breaking Bad's score, but feeling new enough to be its own thing. 

What really struck me is just how sad I was when this ended. I never thought I'd ever see this character in anything ever again and now 6 years later it might seem like that will actually be the case, but I'm okay with that. Vince Gilligan did the impossible, added to an already satisfying finale of TV with an equally as satisfying epilogue that leaves the story in a place that feels perfect and one I hope they don't ever revisit.

I know we've got another season or two of Better Call Saul on the way, but it feels like this story beyond that sequel has been wrapped up. I'm just a little concerned by the title "El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie". Does Vince Gilligan plan to release more films from the Breaking Bad universe with that subtitle? I guess it depends on the success of this, but I'm torn on it. Part of me doesn't want them to risk diluting a perfect thing, but then again, Vince Gilligan has proved here that he'd only return to Breaking Bad if he had a story worth telling and he clearly knows what he's doing. Time will tell.


El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie is everything you could possibly want as a fan of Breaking Bad. It's a tense, emotional, beautifully shot ride that says goodbye to one of TV's most sympathetic and compelling characters thanks to Aaron Paul's powerhouse performance playing Jesse Pinkman one last time. Yeah, bitch.

9/10 Dans

El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie is out now on Netflix in the UK
Watch the trailer below:

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Friday, 19 April 2019

Come and Find Me (2016) - Review


Review:

*Originally written November 28th, 2016*

Aaron Paul is an actor I adore. He was part of the heart and soul of Breaking Bad and gave one of the finest performances in TV history, but he really needs and deserves better film roles.

Come and Find Me is a dumb, uninspired and bland thriller. Paul's girlfriend goes missing one day and he's goes on a year long search to find her, but she wasn't who she says she was. This whole thing goes to such silly places that I wasn't expecting. 

It feels like the second film to riff on Gone Girl this year (Along with the painfully average The Girl on the Train), but once again it is nowhere near engaging as David Fincher's deranged masterpiece. This is a fairly cheap and by the numbers VOD thriller.



Paul gives a reliable performance as always, but everything feels so dull and it gets more stupid till it reaches boiling point with a very unsatisfying ending. Sometimes VOD films can give you hidden gems, other reasons it shows why it didn't make it to theatres. Come and Find Me is another one of those films that it's not surprising it didn't hit theatres.


Come and Find Me is a disappointing thriller and a waste of the talents of Aaron Paul, who really should just stick to TV unless he gets a decent film role. Because as it stands, his best post-Breaking Bad role is Need for Speed....


3/10 Dans

Come and Find Me is out now on DVD in the UK
Watch the trailer below:

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Friday, 28 July 2017

Triple 9 (2016) - Film Review

Review:

*Originally written April 3rd. 2016*

"Black and white"

I love heist films. I love Aaron Paul. I love bleak and gritty thrillers. So what happens when you mix them all together? Well, you somehow get a dull, boring and cliche mess that is Triple 9.

A bunch of criminals are forced to plan a heist by a Russian crime lord. So they decide the best plan would be to kill a cop and alert a 'triple 9' response that distracts all the police while they can commit their heist. There's also a load of underdeveloped side stories thrown in.

I was honestly so disappointed by this. I was expecting it to be in my top 10 of the year, but now it's looking to be in the bottom 10 at this point.


Aside from the cast and a few decent action scenes, there really is just nothing to Triple 9. It tries so hard with its bleak and gritty outlook that it almost gets comical. The film just forgets to make us care about any of these characters. Everyone is corrupt or bad in someway, but no one is compelling.

They try to explore the morality of what they're doing, but it fails pretty miserably. Had this not had the cast it had, then no way would it be having the solid reviews it got. I doubt it would have got a theatrical release either.

I sound really negative, but there is some good in Triple 9. Aaron Paul is excellent and easily the best thing about the film. I'm getting a bit worried about his post Breaking Bad career, he just doesn't seem to have much like finding films that are more than average. The rest of the cast are fine, except Kate Winslet, who is just really weird as the Russian crime boss with a hokey accent. I'm not gonna name the rest as the cast is insanely huge.


John Hillcoat's action scenes are pretty solid though. There is some decent visual flare, I liked the use of red smoke in the opening scene, that looked cool and the shield house invasion was interesting. 


Triple 9 is one the biggest letdowns for me this year. Despite some good performances and decent action, there really was nothing more to this complete slog of a crime thriller.

4/10 Dans

Triple 9 is out now on Blu-ray and DVD in the UK
Watch the trailer below:

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Thursday, 27 April 2017

Need for Speed (2014) - Film Review

Review:

*Originally written May 7th, 2015*

Need For Speed is the first in the franchise of films based on EA's Need For Speed video-games. The first thought you would have is "Based on a video-game it must suck", but thankfully due to Aaron Paul's performance and some extremely impressive practical effects and lack of CGI, Need For Speed is actually a very solid adaptation.

Aaron Paul plays Tobey Marshall a petrol-head who is framed by Dino Brewster (Dominic Cooper) for the death of his friend after a street race gone wrong. After being released from prison he and Julia (Imogen Poots) join a cross country race in order to exact revenge on Dino.

Practical car stunts
While the plot sounds relatively simple, it takes a really long time to get to the actually race. About an hour is given to building Aaron Paul's character, which is a nice change of pace from the way these films usually are, but at the same time it extends the running time of the film to a breaking point. A good 30 minutes of this film could have been cut.

The cast is pretty impressive. Aaron Paul is excellent and handles his first post Breaking Bad role extremely well, he isn't as good as he is in that, but he displays emotion and proves he can be a leading man for films. Imogen Poots is just there, she's fine and has solid Chemistry with Paul. Cooper is forgettable and pretty boring as the antagonist. The supporting cast is really strange, for some reason Michael Keaton is in this, he's OK and has some charisma and fun with his role, but he's mostly a non-entity.

Aside from Aaron Paul, the best and most surprising part of Need For Speed is its the very impressive direction and lack of CGI and a lot of practical effects, which is sadly far too underused these days. It makes the action and racing scenes that much better, you can really tell these were real cars getting trashed and destroyed.

Aaron Paul
People will compare this to Fast and Furious, which is a very fair comparison, but I felt that Need for Speed handled street racing far better than any of the Furious films. In all honesty the Fast and Furious films were never any good until they ditched the racing for over-the-top action and brought in The Rock, which fared the series much better than the Point Break rip-off story with increasingly worse sequels until the fifth.

Need For Speed might lack a strong script and goes on far too long, but thanks to the inclusion of Aaron Paul and practical effects, it's kept from being the rubbish everyone expected it to be. There's room for improvement and there is a sequel in the works, which is set in China. I just hope Aaron Paul's back for it.

6/10 Dans

Need for Speed is out now on Blu-ray and DVD in the UK
Watch the trailer below:

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Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order (2019) - PS4 Review

Review: *Originally written November 19th, 2019* There's no denying that EA has had a bad run with the Star Wars franchise since i...