REEL CRITICS -- ALLEN MACDONALD
- Share via
With the arrival of “Pearl Harbor,” last month, it’s clear director
Michael Bay and producer Jerry Bruckheimer are striving for the respect
that has alluded their previous collaborations “Bad Boys,” “The Rock” and
“Armageddon.” From the movie’s first frame, it’s clear this was intended
to be an “important” film.
Unfortunately, Bay and Bruckheimer have instead delivered a bloated,
uneven motion picture centering around a shamelessly cliched love story.
The stronger than oak boyhood bond between Rafe McCawley (Ben Affleck)
and Danny Walker (Josh Hartnett) is quickly set up in the early scenes.
Their mutual dream of a life among the clouds is soon realized when they
become pilots in the Army Air Corps. It would seem nothing could drive a
wedge between them. Enter the alluring Evelyn Johnson (Kate Beckinsale),
volunteer nurse and the final corner of the love triangle that will pit
the men against each other.
This is a story we’ve seen before, and therefore, it offers few
surprises. Rafe meets Evelyn and they fall hopelessly in love. Only Rafe
has volunteered to join the British war effort and must leave the very
next day. Evelyn promises to wait for him.
But each plot turn becomes increasingly predictable. For instance,
when Rafe is reportedly shot down and killed in a dog fight, do we
honestly believe top-billed star Affleck has really died a mere 40
minutes into a three-hour film? Do we doubt for a second that Danny and
Evelyn will soon seek comfort from their mourning in each other’s arms?
Not likely.
It is only when the famed attack that provides the title finally
commences at the 90-minute point that “Pearl Harbor” begins to show some
signs of life. Bay is clearly most at home in the action arena. The
battle sequences are breathtaking in their sweeping scope, brilliantly
capturing the destruction in all its bloody, dizzying, chaotic horror.
Many comparisons have been drawn with “Titanic.” But where that movie
succeeded by creating two flesh and blood characters whose relationship
deepened as we followed them through tragedy, “Pearl Harbor” falls short
since the moment the actions starts, the character development ends.
Rafe, Danny and Evelyn are stock characters simply acting as fixtures
scattered at separate locations, allowing us to conveniently cut between
them. By the time the love story picks back up, the momentum has been
lost, and so has our attention span.
Affleck and Beckinsale achieve a degree of credibility in their roles,
but it’s Hartnett as Danny that shines brightest. He rings true as a boy
in that difficult transition to manhood, tripping among the many pitfalls
of love, emoting very real internal torment when the presumed dead
Affleck returns to reclaim the same woman Danny himself has now fallen
for.
The film feels tacked on, a fractured attempt to deliver a happier
ending than the events of Dec. 7, 1941 offered, reminding us that the
filmmakers were likely more interested in box office results than
underscoring the human cost of that particular moment in history.
o7 Rated PG-13 for sustained intense war sequences, images of
wounded, brief sensuality and some language.
f7
* ALLEN MacDONALD, 28, is working toward his master’s degree in
screenwriting from the American Film Institute in Los Angeles.
‘The Animal’ lacks all magnetismWith the exception of seeing
Colleen from “Survivor,” “The Animal” is a very short, crude and
disturbing comedy that has little going for it. The premise of a man
being put back together with animal parts would seem to offer loads of
ammunition for good comedic situations. But all we get is horse snorting
and toilet humor. And of course, the now obligatory old lady kicking
someone’s butt.
It has a few funny scenes, but we’ve seen most of them in the
trailers. The disturbing part was the under current of animal violence
running through the last half-hour. It had a kind of
werewolf/Frankenstein flavor to it.
The story is about Marvin (Rob Schneider), a hapless loser who works
as a police evidence clerk. His main goal in life is to become a “real”
policeman like his father, who was killed in the line of duty. The
problem is he just can’t seem to pass police training, especially the
obstacle course. To make things worst, one super cop, Sgt. Doug Sisk
(John McGinley), keeps rubbing his nose in it.
Left alone at the police station, he gets a 911 call. Unable to reach
anyone he decides to handle it himself. While juggling a portable phone,
he loses control and his car careens over a cliff. He realizes he’s hurt
pretty badly and dozes off. In a dream state, he sees lots of different
animals and a doctor looking down on him.
He wakes up back at his car not realizing what has happened. But when
he saves a boy using his heightened animal powers and beats out a horse
in a race, he starts to wonder. As it turns out, the doctor is a mad
scientist who has put him back together using animal parts.
While snatching a Frisbee away from a dog, he meets Rianna (Colleen
Haskell), an animal activist. They start seeing each other, but the
romance seems in trouble. Marvin just can’t control his animal
tendencies.
Schneider has his funny moments. And Colleen, a “Survivor” heartthrob,
does a good job as his warm, understanding and of course, very cute
girlfriend. But the best laughs come from Marvin’s black friend, who
associates every reaction to him, good or bad as reverse discrimination.
Ed Asner makes an appearance, as do a couple of Schneider’s “Saturday
Night Live” alumni. None of which helped much.
At the end of the 83-minute movie, Marvin wakes up realizing he
doesn’t know where he was last night or what he did. Some animal
carcasses are discovered, and there is a report of a hunter being
attacked. Marvin fits the description perfectly, so he flees. The movie
gets more interesting at this point, but then starts to unravel.
To sum it up, if you’re a “Survivor” fan, a definite must see.
Everyone else, you’re on your own. On my belly-laugh meter it gets a 1.5,
and on my rating scale it gets a C+. The plus is for Colleen.
o7 Rated PG-13 for some crude and sexual humor.
f7
* CLEM DOMINGUEZ, 57, is an aspiring screenwriter and film fanatic.
Look away if watching ‘Angel Eyes’
HIS VIEW:
If you are looking for a good date movie, one where there’s romance
for her and car chases for him, “Angel Eyes” is not the movie for you.
Not even a dozen gratuitous, extreme close-ups of Jennifer Lopez could
save the movie for me (and don’t even think you’ll get a little nudity
out of it).
The movie opens with policewoman Lopez saving the life of some
never-seen accident victim. She spends the next hour figuring out what
the audience surmised in five minute: the hunky, mysterious stranger whom
she falls for was the accident victim. As soon as Lopez has been
establish as a tough talking female cop who can hang with her male
co-workers, we never hear or see her as a police office again.
We spend the second half of the movie wondering why a woman with such
personal issues with domestic violence would fall for an obvious ticking
time bomb of a man. The other question that kept running through my mind
was why would a beautiful, strong woman with a thousand outfits date a
lonely drifter who wears only a dirty black trench coat. The director
apparently wanted to make a statement against domestic violence (is
anyone making movies with a pro-domestic violence message?) but bogs it
down with throwaway characters and tedious pacing.
It is so slow and ponderous, that you really have to love the actors
to stay until the end. This movie is awful.
HER VIEW:
I can’t believe I sat through all of this movie. It was so slow, the
story line so stupid that as I sat there I was thinking, “Is it the
script, her, (Jennifer Lopez) him (Jim Caviezel) or the combination that
is not working for me?
OK, I think there was a plot in there somewhere so let me give you the
brief synopsis and save you the $8 plus two hours of your time. Lopez
(sorry, I meant J.Lo) plays a Chicago cop with a Bronx accent and a
dysfunctional family that happens to be Caucasian (no, I’m not joking).
She’s a tough babe who can’t sleep at night, can’t get along with her
family -- you don’t find out why until an hour into the movie and by then
you’re thinking “who cares and what is the point?” -- and she seems to
have intimacy issues with men.
She rescues a man (Caviezel) from a car accident and a year later they
meet -- although neither can recall the fateful accident -- and fall in
love. She tries to help him cure his intimacy issues because it turns out
he lost his whole family in that very same car accident.
I usually like movies that are somewhat unrealistic, but this one was
way too unreal for me. It had its moments but in general, the story line
just didn’t flow. The best part was drooling at Caviezel’s beautiful
eyes. But is that worth my time and money?
I think I’ll download a picture instead.
o7 Rated R for language, violence and a scene of sexuality.
f7
* CRAIG VON FREYMANN, 33, Is an avid surfer who enjoys the quality of
life and numerous leisure activities the city offers. ANGELA LEE, 31, is
an avid moviegoer. Both recently received their master’s degrees at UC
Irvine.
‘Moulin Rouge’ gives flavor to movie musicalSatine, a beautiful
courtesan (Nicole Kidman) must choose between being in love but poor with
the penniless Christian (Ewan McGregor), or being rich but possessed by a
jealous coldhearted duke. This familiar story is resurrected and
transformed under the direction of Baz Luhrmann (“Romeo and Juliet” and
“Strictly Ballroom.”)
Set in 1900 in the underbelly of Paris, the Moulin Rouge is a
gathering place where the upper class congregate to satisfy their sexual
appetites and where struggling artists band together to create truth,
beauty and above all else, love. All things desired arrive at once for
the local inhabitants but not without a price or sacrifice to make. Love
or fame and fortune. Freedom or captivity. Heaven or hell.
“Moulin Rouge” is a kaleidoscopic mix and match of movie magic. It
incorporates inventive camera techniques from the likes of Orson Wells’
“Citizen Kane,” etc., with the wizardry of modern technology. The
combination pulls moviegoers in and out of the past and present story
line at breathtaking speed. The camera’s mobility of speeding through
streets and doors, scurrying over roof tops and distorting proportions of
people and places, transports the story from what the characters are
doing to what they are feeling and emotionally experiencing.
“Moulin Rouge” is a cultural musical. Although set in 1900, the music
is a collage of contemporary artists whose songs touch on the unifying
and coveted theme of love equally appropriate and fitting in 1900 or
2000. Kidman and McGregor, as well as the supporting cast, singers and
non-singers alike bring the music to life, giving new energy to a genre
that has fallen out of favor with the public since “Rocky Horror Picture
Show.”
“Moulin Rouge” is not for every one. It’s lightheartedness slips back
and forth between the seedy, greedy darker side of life. It’s MTV edits
and multiple flashes of the Cancan dancer’s undergarments aren’t going to
entertain or appeal to everyone.
o7 Rated PG-13 for sexual content.
f7 * PEGGY J. ROGERS, 29, produces commercial videos and
documentaries.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.