Limitless - 6/10
Not exactly cinema for those with a brain.
I gotta say those folks at Relativity Media really do
pick some nice films to pick up and peddle.
But this isn't one of 'em even if
this made some monster bank over cost.
The two things I find most interesting is that first I guess this is how Joe Schmuck American thinks that the only way to get ahead in this dog eat dog world is that the only way the rich and powerful can become rich and powerful is to take some kinda "super brain" drug, and second this and Inception are two stories which are based upon fairly mundane and average occurrences, the former on various commonly understood aspects of dreams, the latter on how is it some people just seem to do so much better than the rest of us?
Building a whole story/film around generally understood ideas/subjects/premises seems like a potentially interesting trend I'll keep note of over the next decade.
Mother and Child - 3/10
#26 on my
2010 Independent Film Distribution & Revenue Analysis list.
Turned it off 10min into it.
I cannot stand this unrecognized genre of "F#cked-Up-Dysfunction-Exposé as Entertainment".
Ten miles out I could see that this was going to be an excrutiating 125min "Life is a miserable piece of sh!t... for some of us" watch-me-feel-bad-fest.
I just ain't got time for this.
Too bad. So sad. Sux2BU.
Sorry.
Get Low - 8.5 guilty I ain't giving it a 9/10
#11 on my
2010 Independent Film Distribution & Revenue Analysis list.
This is... almossssst a delightful little film.
It could have benefited from just two more heaping teaspoons of dry humor to overcome the bitter taste of the concluding story, but I recognize that as a director/editor's personal touch as to how they wanna play that hand. I think they just played it a little tight.
I liked not only the story but the characters, the setting, the actors and camerawork.
The DVD director/producer/actor commentary + other bonus material is very good and definitely worth watching - and learning from.
Several times two person conversations that last only a couple minutes on screen were actually shot on two different days, each from the OTS perspective of one character.
This is one of the very few indie films in the Analysis batch worth watching and examining.
I enjoyed this film and don't really understand how it didn't do so much better in the box office than Winter's Bone, which I also begrudgingly enjoyed only in retrospect.
Up next: Mao's Last Dancer (#24) and
The Gene Generation which I wonder if it's going to be like a crappy version of
Johnny Mnemonic.