Showing posts with label action. Show all posts
Showing posts with label action. Show all posts

Sunday, 9 June 2013

Snitch (2013)


Dwayne Johnson (or 'Samoan Hulk' as Roman in Furious 6 rightfully christened him) is fast becoming my favorite actor with potential. He was able to pull off the concerned father willing to go the distance to save his son, quite admirably.

Which is not to say that the rest of the acting performances weren't as good. The screen time was allocated quite judiciously and the lesser known actors playing the families of the protagonists did quite well. There was even a conscious attempt to make John Mathews (Dwayne's character) as civvie as possible despite his rippling muscles. Well, he had his shirt on at all times. Susan Sarandon makes for a hot corrupt district attorney. Agent Cooper's (Barry Pepper) metal-head goatie did not come in the way of well-rendered restrained performance.

The failing of the movie was that it was not the tight plot that it could have been and the production quality was abysmal. There was a half-baked attempt to build an aura around the cartel lord and some of the twists in the narrative were confusing. For example, I did not understand why Daniel (Jon Bernthal) had to take out Malik's smalltime gang around the same time that the big cartel cat was about to be apprehended. It did seem like the movie had a hurried end considering the buildup till the second act. The visuals left a lot to be desired with mostly flat medium shots and not-so-gripping action.


I'm more than glad if this can be Dwayne Johnson's ticket to the mainstream.

Monday, 12 February 2007

Mad Max (1979)




About Max and why he goes mad. I was curious about this cult film for a long time. Little did i know that its cult value was derived from tasteless violence and speed fetishism. The dialogue as well as acting is pasty and uninspired. At best, a B-grade revenge drama involving fast cars and bikes, and related crashes and pyromania. It seems loosely inspired by The Clockwork Orange, which is brilliant and wonderfully nuanced by far despite its Ultraviolence. One would expect atleast an expounding of biker culture but this film's wheeler dealers are subhuman morons with a leader who tries pathetically at enigmatism. Don't watch this film unless you enjoy beholding the beauty of the early 80's australian roadways.