Posts tagged James Cromwell
“Surrogates” Derivatives
Sep 30th
Posted by Channel 1 Networks in Hotshots Movie Reviews
Derivatives
“Hotshots” looks at a movie!
SURROGATES is a classy looking science-fiction thriller starring Bruce Willis, and the first thing you are going to notice is all the weird-looking blond hair he has.
No, wait! That isn’t Willis’s character with all the hair. That is his surrogate, a realistic android that most people use to go out into society in place of them while the owners stay at home in a room hooked up to a device that allows them to be the “operators,” the eyes, ears, mouth, and flesh of their surrogate.
So, right away the audience is going to be confused between knowing what is a surrogate and what is a real person, and that confusion is going to result in more than one plot point.
Now, here is where I should say that the film is based on a series of comic books–Excuse me! “graphic novels”–called “The Surrogates,” written by Robert Venditti, who went to college with the dream of becoming a novelist.
In fact, in an interview Venditti said, “I was going to be the next Hemingway.”
Venditti is 35, and I am surprised he even knows anything about Ernest Hemingway.
Anyway, back to our movie.
Willis and his surrogate play FBI Agent Tom Greer, who are investigating a seemingly random murder that involves an unregistered surrogate.
Agent Greer has a partner, Agent Jennifer Peters, and she is a beautiful young woman played by Radha Mitchell.
After all, this is based on a comic book, remember?
Their investigation leads them to Dr. Canter, played by James Cromwell, the man who invented surrogates and ran the company that built them.
But before you say, “Uh oh! Wasn’t this already done in the 1982 BLADE RUNNER?” you are going to be reminded of the 2002 MINORITY REPORT when we learn about Agent Greer’s dead son.
And, in fact, when Cromwell shows up, you are also going to be reminded of the 1996 STAR TREK: FIRST CONTACT.
Now, I used to make fun of recycled plots by saying that Hollywood has run out of ideas. Now I am going to say that writers have run out of ideas.
The frame of reference for young writers isn’t literature anymore. It is old movies, and by “old,” I mean within the past 30 years.
SURROGATES is not bad, but should be called DERIVATIVES.
I’m Dan Culberson and this is “Hotshots.”
Surrogates – Movie Trailer
Sep 25th
Posted by Channel 1 Networks in Movie Trailers
The filmmaking trio behind the hit sci-fi sequel Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines re-team to explore a future in which humans live in isolation while only communicating with their fellow man through robots that serve as social surrogates and are better-looking versions of their human counterparts. Bruce Willis stars as an FBI agent who enlists the aid of his own surrogate to investigate the murder of the genius college student who invented the surrogates. As the case grows more complicated, however, the withdrawn detective discovers that in order to actually catch the killer he will have to venture outside the safety of his own home for the first time in many years, and enlists the aid of another agent (Radha Mitchell) in tracking his target down. Jonathan Mostow directs co-screenwriters Michael Ferris and John Brancato’s adaptation of the graphic novel by author Robert Venditti and illustrator Brett Weldele.
“W.” Greek Tragicomedy
Oct 24th
Posted by Channel 1 Networks in Hotshots Movie Reviews
Greek Tragicomedy
“Hotshots” looks at a movie!
W. is an outstanding film by Oliver Stone that should be seen by everyone regardless of political affiliation or how you did or didn’t vote in any election.
And I don’t mean because of its subject matter, which is a dramatization of the adult life of President George W. Bush. I mean because of the outstanding performances of the actors.
Josh Brolin has a lock on an Academy Award nomination for his portrayal of “Bush 43,” if not on the award itself. Richard Dreyfuss could easily get one for his portrayal of Dick Cheney. Elizabeth Banks is tremendous as Laura Bush, and the list just goes on and on, including Toby Jones as Karl Rove, the advisor who sits on Bush’s shoulder and tells him what to do.
Just don’t expect a hatchet job, which would be too easy, given the subject matter and the emotions caused by the years of the Bush Administration.
Instead, expect a well-made film about a fascinating person who didn’t exactly have greatness thrust upon him so much as grabbing greatness with his own two hands and wrapping it around his weak, undeserving shoulders.
The film begins in 2002 as President Bush and his advisors struggle to come up with his notorious “Axis of Evil” phrase. Then it shifts back to 1966, and we watch “George College” at his drunken fraternity pledge week impress the brothers with his ability to name the active members and give them clever nicknames.
The story then continues to shift back and forth between Bush’s presidency and his younger years of trying to find a career for himself and pleasing his father, a theme that runs throughout the film.
When George meets Laura for the first time, he tells her, “Call me anything but ‘Junior.'”
There are obvious strains between George and his father, whom George calls “Poppy.”
There is nothing new to be learned, and the only scenes of fancifulness are a few showing that George would rather have had a career in baseball than in politics. Also, there is the strong implication that George’s drinking problem had a lot to do with shaping him and preventing him from succeeding at anything.
So, think of the film as a tremendous dramatization of someone we have already come to know and love or hate.
W. is the stuff of Greek tragicomedy.
I’m Dan Culberson and this is “Hotshots.”