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Showing posts with label Marina de Tavira. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marina de Tavira. Show all posts

Saturday, August 21, 2021

MOVIE REVIEW: REMINISCENCE

 



A scientist discovers a way to relive your past and uses the technology to search for his long lost love. Whilst a private investigator uncovers a conspiracy while helping his clients recover lost memories.

Director: Lisa Joy

CastHugh Jackman, Rebecca Ferguson, Thandiwe Newton, Cliff Curtis, Marina de Tavira, Daniel Wu

Rated PG-13 for strong violence, drug material throughout, sexual content and some strong language

Release Date: August 20, 2021

Genres: Mystery, Romance, Sci-Fi, Thriller

Runtime: 1h 56min

Review:

Writer, director Lisa Joy's Reminiscence is a sci-fi noir thriller that's sweeping and ambitious with a A List cast.  The strange thing about the entire affair is that during it's ambitious world building it forgot to create a story that's as engaging as the concepts presented.  Joy's visuals evoke memories of Blade Runner and dashes of Alex Proyas' Dark City if you bought them from a dollar store.  Hugh Jackman leads the film with relative ease even though he feels miscast for the role and doesn't ask much from him outside of acting sad and angry. Jackman is typically a magnetic performer but this role just doesn't seem to fit him the way it should, the odd voiceover throughout the film doesn't help.  Likewise, Rebecca Ferguson is usually an engaging performer but in this film she's stiff and bland throughout.  Cliff Curtis is the primary villain who pops up in the third act and he chews up his screen time with weird out of place monologues that scream of overkill.  Thandiwe Newton is the lone bright spot who comes out unscathed with a strong performance which the film doesn't take full advantage of.  Reminiscence ends up feeling like a missed opportunity with ideas that needed more time to marinate and mature.  As is, it ends up being another forgettable sci-fi film that feels more like a middle of the road tv show than a big budget film. 

C

Sunday, December 23, 2018

MOVIE REVIEW: ROMA








































A story that chronicles a year in the life of a middle-class family's maid in Mexico City in the early 1970s.  From Academy Award winner Alfonso Cuarón, director of "Gravity" & "Children of Men." Written and directed by Alfonso Cuarón.

Director: Alfonso Cuarón

Cast: Yalitza Aparicio, Marina de Tavira, Marco Graf, Daniela Demesa, Enoc Leaño, Daniel Valtierra

Rated PG for frenetic sequences of animated action violence, thematic elements, and mild language

Release Date: November 21, 2018

Genres: Drama

Runtime: 2h 15min

Review:

Alfonso Cuarón’s Roma is an experience and one of those films that truly captures a slice of life in an authentic and meaningful way.  Roma plot is simplistic by nature but it’s deceptively deep at the same time.  Cuarón frames each shot with such an impressive technical mastery that you’d need to revisit the film a few times to capture everything he’s laid out for you.  Your enjoyment of the film will depend on your connection to its characters and Yalitza Aparicio does a fine job of carrying the better part of the film.  There’s an air of authenticity about every movement and reaction that makes the film a special quality that’s rarely seen.  Roma’s themes are deep and universal but it’s hard to overlook that Cuarón has made a decidedly Mexican film which speaks to the culture and heritage in a meaningful way while tackling larger human moments that define a life.

A
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