Showing posts with label remake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label remake. Show all posts

Friday, 8 September 2017

It (2017) - Film Review

Review:

*Originally written September 8th*

"You'll float too"

2017 has been a very strong year for horror so far, with films such as Get Out, Raw and now It. I was never the biggest fan of the 1990 film/mini-series. I only watched it for the first time with year, and I wasn't very swayed by it. It's a mostly very poor and outdated film barely saved by Tim Curry's take on Pennywise. I've also never read the book (Which I will one day, I promise), so I can't comment on the changes.

This adaptation of Stephen King's book however is a massively different beast from the 1990 version. It's not toned down for a TV friendly audience and is allowed to flourish much more as a darker, more violent and overall better product. It's so different from the version that's not as good as your childhood remembers, and it's all the more better for it.

Its opening scene sets the tone for a dark and horrific tone to come. We're living in a darker time now and film has no problem presenting violence against children. This no holds bar approach creates a much more unsettling and frightening tone that is balanced with a surprising amount of heart and humour.

The Losers Club is the centre of the film. It really helps we spend so much time getting to know them. Making their adventure that much more worth investing in. It feels like an horrific mix between Stranger Things and Stand By Me. The Loser Club are also a mix of non-actors and some you might have seen from other things (A Stranger Things actor too no less). They all do a fantastic job. It's unusual we get a film like this led entirely by children where they're all great. There is usually some dodgy and hokey acting, but I gotta say, child performances have come a long way.

While we do get a lot of bonding between The Losers Club, we also learn about what makes them tick. Their fears and what Pennywise can exploit. Each of the characters initial encounters with the Clown perfectly set-up where each character's head is at and establishes their fears and what they need to overcome. These fears often go to some really dark places.



Bill Skarsgard had some very big shoes to fill as Pennywise thanks to Tim Curry's iconic take on the homicidal clown, but he does an amazing job bringing this character to terrifying life for a new generation. Curry's performance is commendably camp now, but Skarsgard goes for fear and he rocks it. His design is horrific and its helped with the more aggressive content this film is allowed to go for.  Pennywise truly is a formidable threat for The Losers Club and I loved near enough everything they did with him. 

While being a horror film, It is still interested in being a mystery film with an interesting story. We see the kids go through the town's history to find out why the mortality rate for adults and children in Derry is so high. It's this kind of investigative bonding I liked most in the film, there's a genuine mystery and lore behind what and why Pennywise is, and while it's a little short on answers, there was still a compelling story there.

Andy Muschietti's previous film 'Mama' was extremely mediocre to my taste, so I was so happy to see him deliver such a gorgeous and well presented film. There is a ton of iconic iconography introduced here. Some of it directly from the original and some new and horrifying. Muschietti perfectly understands how to extract fear from an audience.

 There might have been a few too many jump-scares for my liking, but I much preferred the eery, slow-building scenes that relied on a building score and tension. It's worth noting how fantastic Benjamin Wallfisch's score is, mixing creepy nursery rhymes mixed with a more traditional horror score. It worked to excellent effect.



If I had any problems with this revision of It, I'd say the tone is a bit schizophrenic at times and uses some very strange music choices for certain scenes. They used songs I liked, but their placement was really at odds with the tone of the film and made me feel like I was watching a scene from a completely different picture. I was a bit worried by the '80s setting too, but it wasn't massively obnoxious and in your face. Nostalgia is here, the kids have posters of films like E.T., Beetlejuice and cinema marquees show films like Lethal Weapon 2 and Nightmare on Elm Street 5 playing. I liked all that, it worked. It also made me want to see E.T. again.

I was also a little worried about the length. The previous film was a gruelling 3 hours, but this was cut down to 2 hours and 15 minutes, making for much easier viewing. And despite being part 1 of a 2 part film (The film ends "IT Chapter 1") it still feels like a told story and even if Part 2 is not very good, this can easily stand on its own as its own one and done story. I do look forward to Part 2 though and it will hopefully correct the awful second half of the 1990 film. I know the director wasn't even a fan of the decision that made, so I have faith.


It is one of the strongest horror films of the year. A terrifying and fun horror adventure with heart and humour. The comeback of horror is still going strong and a new generation have a new Pennywise to be traumatised by. Life is good.

8/10 Dans

It is out now in cinemas in the UK
Watch the trailer below:

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Wednesday, 16 August 2017

Point Break (2015) - Film Review

Review:

*Originally written March 13th, 2016*

"Point.... Shit"

I know I'm not the biggest fan of the original. I'm aware of what it is, pure '90s action cheese, and for that it's fine, I get why it got its cult status and why people love it, it just didn't do a lot for me, but it was still head and shoulders over this abysmal remake.

The production of this film has was an utter mess, it first started out as a sequel that probably would have been straight-to-DVD, but then it become a remake that was stuck in development hell over the years. I think Gerard Butler was attached at some point too? 

Eventually in 2015 (or 2016 for us in the UK), this remake hit the big screen. I just wish it stayed in its development Hell and eventually got cancelled. It tells the same story the first did, a rookie FBI agent goes undercover with a gang of thieves to bring them down. The two changes here are the fact that surfing is swapped for "extreme sports" and the rating has been watered down for a PG-13/12A audience.


It's a train wreck all around, despite the high-budget, it reeks of a cheap cash-in and has that really dull and ugly look that all these straight-to-DVD films, it's just so grey and drab. So boring and ugly to sit through.

While the original had this tongue in cheek charm of its absurd content, this plays it so dead serious. There's not a single ounce of even a sense of fun. It tells a lot when the scene it Hot Fuzz spoofing a scene from the original Point Break carries more of an emotional impact than the remake. There's no irony to any of the insane stuff on display. 

Utah lets Bodhi get away so many times that it becomes laughable. Both the leads are utterly cardboard and uncharismatic it's ridiculous. Luke Bracey's performance as Johnny Utah makes Reeve's acting looking Oscar worthy, there's not an ounce of charm to him, he's just so boring. I usually like Edgar Ramirez too, but here he suffers the same problem, he's just a pale comparison to the original. Ray Winstone also carries none levels of madness and entertainment Gary Busey managed to exhale with his performance.


Where I thought this remake might redeem itself was in the action department, being partly about extreme sports, I thought maybe there could be some inspired set-pieces, but no everything is fairly dull and boring. It doesn't help that the watered down rating took away from any of the impact, despite police being gunned down during a bank robbery, none of it felt violent at all. The fact they couldn't make any decent heist scenes too is disappointing. 


Point Break is a cheap looking, boring and uninspired watered down version of a film that didn't need a remake, and it shows. Thank god this flopped, hopefully Hollywood will realize nobody wants family friendly versions of '80s and '90s action films.

2/10 Dans

Point Break is out now on 4K UHD, Blu-ray and DVD in the UK
Watch the trailer below:

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Friday, 30 June 2017

Quarantine (2008) - Film Review

Review:

*Originally written June 29th, 2017*

"Braindead"

A rather pointless, albeit competently made remake of a much better Spanish horror film starring a TV actress.

People who are too lazy or stupid to read subtitles deserve films this uninspired. It doesn't help that I'd only rewatched the excellent REC very recently, so I felt like I'd seen it all before (Which I had, seeing as this is a more or less shot-for-shot remake).


God knows what the straight-to-DVD sequel to this is like, I'll probably get round to it at some point.

My favourite stuff in this was Jennifer Carpenter hanging out with the firefighters for the first 10 minutes or so.

Blah. I have nothing to say. Just watch the original REC instead, it's better, more effective and you'll thank me after.
  
5/10 Dans

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

Follow us:
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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...