Jason

Stafford, Staffordshire, UNITED KINGDOM


Joined August 25th 2007

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Hello everybody

About Me
Hi my name is Jason and I am from England. I enjoy film a lot and am forever going to the cinema and making homemade movies and writing scripts to try and force myself into the film industry as a job. I am also a huge supporter of the famous Liverpool FC.

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Knocked Up Review

August 28th 2007 09:00
Plot:

To celebrate a surprise promotion, pretty TV floor manager Alison Scott (Heigl) goes clubbing with her uptight sister (Mann). Buoyed by happiness and booze, she hits it off with a friendly slacker called Ben Stone (Rogen) and takes him home for a spot of one-off sex. A series of pregnancy tests later, and a one-night stand is turning into a lifetime commitment...

Review:

Long before it became the sleeper hit of the American summer, Knocked Up had been championed as the sleeper hit of the American summer. It may, practically speaking, have been designed to be the sleeper hit of the American summer. Such is the predominance of the marketing man in the slipstreams of Hollywood that a relatively low-budget smash hit (at the time of writing it’s made $95,000,000) that no-one sees coming can be fully brainstormed at the concept stage. Knocked Up, the follow-up from the team that brought you The 40 Year-Old Virgin, was predestined to shine. And so it does.

As cynically stage-managed as that sounds, the movie feels the opposite. It’s loose-limbed and unpredictable; there’s something leftfield in its DNA, like a slacker version of Woody Allen without the neurotic noodling. It’s everything a sleeper ought to be, because it frankly shouldn’t work this well. After all, we’re talking low-low concept: what happens when a pretty go-getter from pop-flabby entertainment channel E! under-scores with a lolloping stoner who may be treasurably sweet but whose career aspiration is to launch a website cataloguing flashes of celebrity skin (he’s blissfully unaware this has long since been done).

It’s a one-night stand fuelled by Everclear and endorphins after she lands a swell promotion, and he lands her. After the bumpy muddle of self-conscious sex, they both land a big problem. That’s the Apatow revolution - his is not a film about how the klutz wins the princess, but about what happens when the princess ends up with klutz junior gestating inside of her.

Director-writer-producer Apatow, who’s drifted in from managing various Will Ferrell-athons and a pair of TV flops to hottest-thing-right-now, has found a way to have his cake and eat it. From a very literal conception to delivery, the film seesaws between outrageous and sweet, funny and touching, goofball and grown-up. He’s quite happy to pepper the script with pop-cultural wise-arsing, a kind of Quentin Tarantino jibber-jabber for the dweeb belt. “If any of us get laid tonight, it’s because of Eric Bana in Munich,” burps one of Stone’s fellow schlubs. Although the gag-bag posse of Jewish homies burbling comic-book references and rock-dude speak is the film’s least engaging thread. There’s also no stinting on gross-out, if with a uniquely gynaecological spin - the term “crowning” takes on a very graphic reality that has nothing to do with Aragorn’s destiny. Yet, impossibly, the film is never coarse or mean or dumb.

Along with star Seth Rogen (his sometime co-writer/muse), Apatow has pitched his genial circus upon a delightful hinterland between glassy Hollywood fairy tale and the peculiar foibles of real life: objective daydreaming, if you will. In 40 Year-Old Virgin, Steve Carell’s nebbish man-child was not a stooge but a lost soul, his eventual pairing (not to say uncorking) with Catherine Keener felt idealistic and normal. In Apatow’s TV variant, Freaks And Geeks, when the computer nerd wins the cheerleader it is strangely acceptable. But it’s hard to decipher exactly which way the director’s sensibility is flowing: does he make the dream-nonsense of movies human, or does he locate the soft glow of celluloid in the patterns of real life?

Yet before geekdom puts up bunting and settles down for a Grey’s Anatomy marathon, the film does have a warning - with great cheekbones comes great responsibility. The message, plumb for the proper-living ethos of our times, is that if you want the girl, you better get busy growing up.


The innocent proposals of the movie-world are about to get a morning after (if not a morning-after pill). That’s the whole point of Rogen’s Ben Stone. He’s got the shrill curls of a Brillo pad, the cuddly paunch of lapsed gym-membership, and the slack gaze of the bonged-up, but he also projects the candid longing for wisdom of “the guy girls fuck over”. This is not a study of male heebie-jeebies when maturity calls, but a guy struggling to decipher the rulebook for a game he has never managed to join. Somewhere inside the outer child, the inner-adult is making himself heard. It’s a journey, via pre-natal classes, couple dinners and the politics of requesting doggy-style when your partner’s six months pregnant, to a kind of self-awareness.

And contrary to the splurges of juvenilia that Sandler or Murphy annually dollop out in the name of box-office, the film is even better at demystifying women. If anything, Katherine Heigl is the performance of the movie - the poster girl facing the grubby business of practical parenting with a partner intent on totting up the naked breasts in Wild Things. She is obviously a stunner (the contrast with Rogen’s wobbly slacker is crucial), but she strips away the veneer of a thousand facials to find a very credible anxiety in Alison.

She - and indeed the ‘they’ she will have to become with Ben - is immediately contrasted with her sister’s loosening marriage. Alison hasn’t exactly got all of life’s necessities sussed herself - she’s lodging in her sister’s pool-house and getting an object lesson in the blunt realities of family life straight from the breakfast table. It’s another of Apatow’s gifts - giving care and attention to his secondary characters - and Leslie Mann (his actual wife) and Paul Rudd (another fellow campaigner) gleefully rise to the challenge of pecking at one another like angry sparrows, keeping things bitingly funny when the leads must get on with more sensitive issues. They are less seasoned parents than warring nations.

The shrewish Debbie has reached the point where her looks can no longer carry her, while Pete keeps flitting to unknown haunts and might be having an affair. He’s not; instead it’s the solace of male bonding he’s after - a fantasy baseball league - and they prove a sly reversal of the lead couple’s path to maturity: Debbie’s reverting to a self-absorbed flirt, Pete’s going geek.

If the film doesn’t lean into the rip-snorting laugh like a Dodgeball, it’s because Apatow is after more from his comedy - to decipher the sexual politics of our anxious age. Too optimistic a soul to engage with anything truly caustic (in the end, his film is just a bit more movie than reality), he’s ringing the bell for something quaintly square - parenthood, relationships, the absurd and unpredictable situations that somehow, magnificently join us together.

Verdict:

Knocked Up touches places most comedies wouldn't dare, some of them scarily biological, some of them scarily accurate. It's the sleeper hit of the summer, but don't worry: it's much better than that.

4/5


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This film does seem to be shaping up to be a very good film, with Brad Pitt on good form and westerns staring to make a bit of a comeback in Hollywood with 3:10 to Yuma also coming out later this year staring Russell Crowe and Christian Bale.

So here's the trailer, tell us what you think and if you agree with me that this film is going to be fantastic.

Really Long Link
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The Bourne Ultimatum Review

August 27th 2007 09:17
Plot:

With his fractured memory resurfacing and the CIA determined to keep him quiet, Jason Bourne (Damon) wants answers. He arranges to meet a British journalist (Considine), whose confidential source may hold the key to exposing Treadstone, the covert agency that trained Bourne, once and for all.

Review:

Not long ago it would have been tricky to imagine Matt Damon, the twinkly-eyed lad from All The Pretty Horses, playing a convincing action star. But five years, three films and scores of broken bodies later, it’s now all but impossible to think of him as anything else. The moment Jason Bourne’s almost-corpse was dragged from the Mediterranean in Doug Liman’s Bourne Identity, it became clear that the traditional thriller formula had slipped into anachronism. With Bourne, audiences were presented with a sharper, smarter and altogether more relevant breed of action thriller. That Paul Greengrass managed to create a sequel even more intense and technically proficient was nothing short of a movie miracle. And to those who questioned whether he could pull off the same trick twice, this third film answers with a resounding yes.

Picking up immediately after the Moscow-set showdown in Supremacy (the previous film’s coda is dropped in later), Ultimatum is less a sequel than the climax of a single, larger tale — and like all good adventure stories, the real excitement has been saved for last, as Bourne has given up his attempts to hide from the government agency that created him, and instead seeks answers/vengeance for their, and his, past crimes, with the help of Paddy Considine’s reporter. An early standout sequence, where Bourne directs Considine’s jittery Simon Ross through a crowd of hostile agents in Waterloo station, is so dazzlingly executed that you’ll be forgiven for assuming the film has peaked just 20 minutes in. But from there Greengrass sets an unrelenting pace, maintaining a baseline of buzzing adrenaline.

We have not one, but two blistering car chases to ensure that Bourne’s reputation for metal-wrenching pursuit remains unchallenged — but a frenetic foot chase across the rooftops of Tangier overshadows both. Part free-runner, part force of nature, Bourne hurdles from building to building, tumbling through open windows, living rooms and lives before exploding into the series’ most impressive fight sequence to date (two words: hardback book).

Throughout the taut, 115-minute runtime, Tony Gilroy, Scott S. Burns and George Nolfi’s globe-trotting screenplay ripples with invention, taking Bourne from Russia to Madrid, Paris, Morocco and ultimately New York. Joan Allen makes a welcome return as CIA investigator Pamela Landy, this time joined by an enjoyably amoral David Strathairn as the shifty CIA suit du jour. Less well utilised, though, is Albert Finney, whose appearance as Treadstone’s Mengele is tragically brief. Likewise Julia Stiles, despite a more substantial role, ends up feeling slightly redundant, with a clumsy attempt to tie her past more closely to Bourne’s perhaps the script’s only bum note.

Damon, however, has grown into his character like a second skin. His boyish good looks have hardened and, as never before, he is every inch the trained killer Robert Ludlum imagined. Nondescript in a crowd, cool without the need for quips and deadlier than a dozen Ethan Hunts, his Jason Bourne is surely the most efficient killer Hollywood has ever produced. It’s fitting, though, that, in his swansong, he is also at his most human, grasping at fragmented memories and emphasizing the underlying vulnerability that makes his character so convincing. His search for the truth of himself takes on an almost spiritual dimension — a mission to save his soul — and the answer at the end of the chase is as devastating as it is uncompromising. Greengrass is just genetically incapable of cliché.

In a summer of disappointing threequels, Ultimatum stands proud testament to the fact that great ideas don’t have to thin over time. Greengrass has surpassed himself with a compelling, immersive thriller that’s as exciting an experience as cinema can provide. And while it looks regrettably unlikely that The Bourne Legacy will ever make it to the screen, the legacy of Bourne is not something that will be soon forgotten.

Verdict:

The best blockbuster of the summer and the most accomplished thriller since, well, Supremacy. This is the payoff Bourne fans have been waiting for and the standard to which future blockbusters should be held.

5/5



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Big films of next summer.

August 25th 2007 17:06
Next summer seems to be set to be full of big blockbusters. But the two films that come to my mind straight away are The Dark Knight and Indy 4. The Dark Knight is the follow up to Batman Begins, which was Christopher Nolan's first film in his revamped versions of the Batman franchise. I am a big fan of Batman and can't wait to see it, especially sfter the teaser trailer that came out a couple of weeks ago. Check out the teaser link below.

Really Long Link
[ Click here to read more ]
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Welcome to Film News and Reviews

August 25th 2007 15:34
I would like to welcome everybody to this brand new site called 'Film News and Reviews'. This site is going to be dedicated to bringing the latest news in the world of cinema and delivering top-notch reviews of old and new films.

I hope you all enjoy this brand new site and I look forward to reading all of your comments. Also feel free to offer suggestions for the site to help it improve


[ Click here to read more ]
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Recent Comments

Comment by Jason
on The Bourne Ultimatum Review

August 28th 2007 08:22
Thanks Harry. I don't think they will make anymore as it was a perfect ending to the story, and if they have any sense they will leave it alone otherwise it will turn out very disappointing.

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Comment by Jason
on Welcome to Film News and Reviews

August 27th 2007 09:03
Thanks a lot Jon, I look forward to seeing them all.

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