Tuesday, April 22, 2008

MOVIE: CLOVERFIELD


ABOUT: "Cloverfield" follows five New Yorkers from the perspective of hand held video camera. The movie is exactly the length of a DV Tape and a sub-plot is established by showing bits and pieces of video previously recorded on the tape that is being recorded over. The movie starts as a monster of unknown origin destroys a building. As they go to investigate, parts of the building and the head of the Statue of Liberty come raining down. The movie follows their adventure trying to escape and save a friend, a love interest of the main character.

REVIEW: "Cloverfield" is fun. It starts of interesting and keeps it that way all the way till the end. The hand held shaky cam stuff doesn't hurt the movie but makes it better and does not get in the way of the viewing experience at all. The only time the movie slows down however is the scene where the main character goes to rescue his sort of girlfriend. The scene just doesn't fit with the rest of the movie and we don't care about these characters enough for the scene to work. It is not a bad thing that we don't care though because the movie isn't about them. It's about the monster.

As far as the monster goes, it's effective, but not that effective. In far away shots it works but not in close-ups. The CGI isn't all that great, so when we do see the monster close-up it doesn't work. What works is the scenes where we don't see the monster, but hear it and see it off in the distance. "Blair Witch Project" worked because we never saw the Blair Witch and "Cloverfield" would have worked better if we saw less of the monster in bad shots.

BASICALLY: "Cloverfield" is fun and you should see it. 

MOVIE: I WANT SOMEONE TO EAT CHEESE WITH


ABOUT: Life has its downs for James, living with his mom in Chicago at 39, an aging performer at Second City, eating and weighing too much. A woman he's been dating drops him, as does his agent, her brother. James turns down roles in local TV, roles that make him sad. Someone's remaking his favorite movie, "Marty," a role he'd love, but he doesn't even get an audition. He has a minor meltdown when talking at a grade school career day. Things look up when he meets the quirky Beth at an ice cream shop. Can James make a career for himself, move out from mom's, and find someone to eat cheese with? Or is he destined to watch Jackie Gleason and be Marty for the rest of his life?

REVIEW: I love Jeff Garlin (on "Curb Your Enthusiasm") but in "I Want Someone To Eat Cheese With" I only kind of like him. The movie is full of great comedic actors but because they all come from a background in improv, the movie doesn't work. You can tell there was a script that was probably 3 pages long and the rest is improv, in movie form that just doesn't work. Thats why improv belongs on the stage or on TV.

There are so many scenes that just don't go anywhere and random characters come and go adding nothing.



We think Silverman's character is going somewhere but then something happens and just like that she leaves the film. Bonnie Hunt probably has the best character in the whole film but we don't see very much of her. Even the ending is awkward and uneventful.

BASICALLY: I want someone to not watch this movie with me.

MUSIC: EMILY JANE WHITE "DARK UNDERCOAT"


Emily Jane White is a rare solo performer who can cut through noisy club din and turn antsy foot traffic into apt listeners. Her voice pierces the egos of those within earshot; it's a low, lilting alto, often compared to Chan Marshall and Hope Sandoval. Ghostly melodies float through her songs on ornate piano passages and simple guitar figures. But no matter how you find your way into White's world, it's easy to stay there. Like the best songwriters, the San Franciscan leaves room for the listener's subjectivity, with lyrics that read more like a Cormac McCarthy novel than a diary entry.

ALBUM: DARK UNDERCOAT

SONGS TO LISTEN TO: DARK UNDERCOAT.MP3



BUY "DARK UNDERCOAT" FROM "TWIST & SHOUT" FOR ONLY $9.99!

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