
Essays, Reviews, Commentary, and Original Scholarship. A Film Blog that strives to be Art.
Sunday, October 31, 2010
Weekend Box Office (10/31/10): Saw 7 3D rules over one last Halloween weekend.

Thursday, October 28, 2010
Review: Saw VII 3D (2010)

2010
91 minutes
rated R
by Scott Mendelson
Saw VII is an unnecessary epilogue to a series that already had a pretty satisfying finale. Saw VI succeeded in returning Tobin Bell to the center stage, while devising a compelling story that brought the story full circle and tied up every reasonable loose end. Saw VII adds nothing of value to the universe, aside from a last-minute 'twist' that anyone with half-a-brain could see coming from the first reel. It also may very well be the worst film in the long-running franchise. It is sloppily plotted and abysmally-acted. Worst of all, it seemingly goes out of its way to avoid every element that made the series unique and worth defending. This is a Saw picture that makes one embarrassed to have enjoyed the prior installments.
Saw VII is an unnecessary epilogue to a series that already had a pretty satisfying finale. Saw VI succeeded in returning Tobin Bell to the center stage, while devising a compelling story that brought the story full circle and tied up every reasonable loose end. Saw VII adds nothing of value to the universe, aside from a last-minute 'twist' that anyone with half-a-brain could see coming from the first reel. It also may very well be the worst film in the long-running franchise. It is sloppily plotted and abysmally-acted. Worst of all, it seemingly goes out of its way to avoid every element that made the series unique and worth defending. This is a Saw picture that makes one embarrassed to have enjoyed the prior installments.
Goodbye John. A farewell to Saw, as Jigsaw lays his last trap.

For one half a decade, he has thrilled us with his adventures, amazed us with his discoveries, and inspired us with his courage. His traps were beyond imagination. His name has become legend, his cohorts the finest ever assembled. We have traveled beside him from one poorly-lit warehouse or factory to another. He has been our guide, our protector, and our friend. Now, you are invited to join him, for one last game...
Chris Evans as Captain America debuts in Entertainment Weekly.

Scott Mendelson
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Wow, actual Batman 3 news! The Dark Knight Rises will be 2D, with no Riddler.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Sunday, October 24, 2010
Right or Wrong, The Hangover 2 does not need Mel Gibson.

Weekend Box Office Review (10/24/10): Paranormal Activity 2 scores record $41.5 million. Hereafter nets $12 million. Holdovers hold strong.

Paranormal Activity 2 blasted into the record books over the weekend, grossing $40.6 million in its first three days. That's the biggest opening ever for a supernatural horror picture, the second-largest debut for any kind of horror picture (behind Hannibal's $58 million debut in 2001), the biggest horror debut in October history, the fifth-biggest October opening on record, and the 19th-largest R-rated opening ever. Costing just $3 million, the Paramount sequel capitalized on the much-buzzed about original, which had a stunningly successful platform release over last September and October. If you recall, Paranormal Activity grossed $7.9 million on just 160 screens over the second weekend in October, and eventually went wide over the weekend before Halloween, where it famously kneecapped the long-running Saw franchise. If the original film's box office run slightly mirrored the run of the original Scream (small opening weekend, slow jog to $100 million+), then Paranormal Activity 2 is definitely Scream 2 (the Wes Craven sequel also came out a year after the original and scored an eye-popping $33 million debut in December 1997).
Saturday, October 23, 2010
Friday Box Office (10/22/10): Paranormal Activity 2 grosses $20.1 million while Clint Eastwood's Hereafter grosses $4.1 million.

Friday, October 22, 2010
Paranormal Activity 2 scores $6.3 million in midnight screenings, a record for an R-rated film. What does it mean for the opening weekend?

Just in Time for Halloween: Ten of the Scariest Horror Films of the Last 20 Years.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010
The obvious gender double-standard of GQ's Glee photo shoot.


Look, Glee's Lea Michele is really hot, and Dianna Agron isn't too bad either. So as a heterosexual male, I have no objection if they choose to partake in a somewhat risque photo shoot for GQ Magazine, although I do wish they had arranged for Jayma Mays to participate as well. There are others who may partake in a certain amount of finger wagging on the whole principal of the matter, but I've always been of the live-and-let-live philosophy. But what I do find annoying, if not a little disturbing, is the obvious differences in how female leads Michele and Agron are shot versus how male lead Cory Monteith is photographed. The pictures above are the most obvious (and least risque) examples, and they arguably speak for themselves. But just in case you need the obvious pointed out: the women are shot in overtly salacious poses in a state of semi-undress. Monteith is photographed fully clothed and (in his solo photos) engaging in relatively asexual behavior such as playing the drums or goofing off in the gym. I certainly don't need or want to see Moneith's bare ass or the man who plays Finn in any kind of compromising positions, but why is it that the women must be photographed with imagery out of a pornographic fantasy, while the male lead (and in fact most male actors in glossy photo shoots) get away with not doing so much as unbuttoning their top buttons? If you were going to do an entire shoot with Michele and Agron playing off the 'naughty schoolgirl' fantasy, wouldn't it have been a little bit fair to at least have a couple shots of Monteith with his shirt removed? Again, I'm not trying to get on a high horse about sexism and the double-standard of how men and women are photographed in Hollywood, but well, once you glance at the Glee pictorial, it kinda makes the point for me.
Scott Mendelson
Scream 4 gets a mediocre, generic teaser.
Scott Mendelson
Monday, October 18, 2010
Why did Paramount sell off distribution rights for Avengers and Iron Man 3 to Disney for a mere $115 million?

The Fighter gets a darker, better second trailer.
Now THIS looks more like an awards contender. The first trailer seemed to be a star-filled variation on the kind of films that MMA puts on on DVD through their Tapout franchise. Of course, it didn't help that the film highlighted Mark Wahlberg (an actor I find quite overrated) and his relationship with Amy Adams, basically forced to play 'the girl'. This second trailer, which premiered on last night's Mad Men finale, highlights the family trauma between Wahlberg, brother Christian Bale, and mother Melissa Leo. The trailer is an artier, moodier little piece of advertising, which makes the film appear a whole lot more interesting. Alas, it still loses big points for not giving fellow Academy Award nominee Melissa Leo star billing in the cast role-call. This is just another example, along with Paramolunt's True Grit and Fox's Love and Other Drugs, of studios cutting one trailer for the 'general moviegoers' and another one for the film snobs. Anyway, The Fighter will be released on December 10th.
Scott Mendelson
Scott Mendelson
What does a cartoon have to do to get a 'G' these days? Tangled gets PG for 'brief mild violence'.

Sunday, October 17, 2010
Weekend box office (10/17/10): Jackass 3-D sets October, documentary records, while Red opens strong.

Friday, October 15, 2010
Why Peter Jackson signing on to direct The Hobbit is a tragedy.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010
Will be back soon...
As sometimes happens, real life gets in the way (nothing bad, just hectic), which explains the lack of updates over the last few days. Worst case scenario, I'll be back on Sunday for the usual box office review, and then we'll back to business. In the meantime, Dylan Baker is probably a bit pissed off right now, and Tom Hardy is a wonderful, inspired choice for Robin: the Boy Wonder. See you all soon...
Scott Mendelson
Scott Mendelson
Monday, October 11, 2010
Weekend Box Office Review (10/10/10): Social Network tops, Heigl underperforms, Lane opens to par, and Craven crashes.

Friday, October 8, 2010
A sigh of relief: Warner Bros. declines to release Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows part I in 3D. Will release part 7 on Nov 19th in 2D only.

Review: My Soul To Take: the 2D 35mm Experience (2010)

2010
107 minutes
rated R
by Scott Mendelson
I often discuss the weird parallel nature of certain filmmakers. By that I mean that certain would-be auteurs are wildly inconsistent in their output. Could the same M. Night Shyamalan who wrote and directed The Sixth Sense also craft The Last Airbender? And could the same Chris Columbus have made both Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone and Percy Jackson and the Olympians: the Lightning Thief? But there is no more inconsistent director out there than horror icon Wes Craven. Wes Craven basically defined the horror genre for a few decades, unleashing Last House on the Left and The Hills Have Eyes in the 1970s, giving us A Nightmare On Elm Street in the 1980s, and then revitalizing the slasher film with the Scream series in the 1990s. Unfortunately, My Soul To Take is very much a film from the director of Cursed, Vampire In Brooklyn, and Deadly Friend. In some ways, it's actually worse than those.
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
Sony confirms: Emma Stone cast as Gwen Stacy in Spider-Man reboot.

Zack Snyder gets the job to direct Chris Nolan's Superman.

Review: Red (2010)

2010
111 minutes
rated PG-13
by Scott Mendelson
There is something to be said for the simple pleasures of watching seasoned performers give weight and potency to relatively shallow material. Red is, on its own merits, a sloppy and thin piece of genre film-making, often lacking basic narrative coherency. It is tonally inconsistent and takes its time to truly establish itself. But it eventually delivers on what it promises: an action-comedy starring a bunch of 'serious' actors who are more than willing to goof off for our amusement.
Monday, October 4, 2010
Coen Brothers True Grit remake gets a generic, uninspiring trailer.
On second thought, maybe True Grit may not be a major Oscar contender. Last week's gorgeous teaser sold the film as some kind of powerhouse western drama, while this longer, more commercial trailer sells it as a rootin-tootin western adventure picture, where (according to the trailer) Hailee Steinfeld's Mattie Ross spends the second half of the picture as a damsel in distress in need of rescue by Jeff Bridges's Rooster Cogburn and Matt Damon's LeBouef from the diabolical Tom Chaney (Josh Brolin). What was teased last week as a piece of art now feels like a paycheck project for the Coen Brothers, a generic western remake that happens to have a solid pedigree. Again, we're judging what's being sold, not what is, but this trailer doesn't look nearly as impressive as the teaser.
Scott Mendelson
Sunday, October 3, 2010
Weekend box office (10/03/10): The Social Network scores, four horror films crumble, and holdovers remain steady.

Friday, October 1, 2010
Wonder Woman returns to TV, courtesy of David E. Kelly.

Coen Brothers True Grit remake gets a clever poster.

Scott Mendelson
Confirmed by Warner Bros: Mad Men's Jared Harris cast as Professor Moriarty in Guy Ritchie's Sherlock Holmes 2.

Harris is best known for his supporting role in seasons 3 and 4 of Mad Men. He also had a supporting role in Resident Evil: Apocalypse (easily the best entry in the B-movie franchise) and a reoccurring role on Fringe. Oddly enough (...useless trivia alert...), he also appeared in the fine straight-to-DVD horror picture From Within, which starred Elizabeth Rice, who reoccurs as Roger Sterling's daughter on Mad Men.
There isn't much to say about this one. Although it warms the heart to see that Guy Ritchie went with a somewhat unknown actor rather than cast whatever star would say 'yes'. I enjoyed the first Sherlock Holmes, finding it to be a messy and flawed, but genuinely engaging character-study/detective film. There is plenty of room for improvement, this is a step in the right direction.
Scott Mendelson
'Rumors from the crazy guy on the corner': Ridley Scott wants $250 million for an R-rated Alien prequel?
