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TrevorG.
Reviews
Cruel Intentions (1999)
This movie blows goat balls!
I just watched this movie with some friends and I was actually 'sushed' - booed for making the sarcastic comments this movie so desperately, desperately deserved. Cruel Intentions now officialy joins my list of modern movies that will someday wind up on Mystery Science Theater 3000, or its latter-day equivalent.
This cinematic offal-heap features marginal actors reading a marginal script with marginal skill... truthfully the only thing we're watching for is a never-seen breast shot of any of the hot young actresses. The movie's sole saving graces are extremely short plaid skirts and the unbelievably cool car.
Don't be fooled by your friends or family - this movie exists solely to elicit your wittiest and most humorous wisecracks. Live it up and give Cruel Intentions the roasting it so richly deserves!
Final Note: Do NOT, repeat, do NOT see this movie sober!
The Blair Witch Project (1999)
Not only are the actors lost in the woods, so is the film.
The Blair Witch Project flounders helplessly without a cohesive script, stranded in the horror hierarchy just one notch above the story about the escaped mental patient with a claw for a hand. (And then... they found a hook dangling from the car door!)
The Blair Witch Project is a movie that is desperately, desperately in need of a script. It has a story, it even has a plot of sorts. But virtually every line of dialogue committed to film is ad-libbed, and it shows. Painfully. The basic story elements (creepy undefined horror in woods, cocky filmmakers go out to chase it, and the horrible clever ending which I won't reveal) float freely in a swampy morass of random noise from our 3 stars. And every third sentence, of course, invokes that sacred refrain of the indie film, the word 'f**k'.
Being a hard-core fan of H.P. Lovecraft, the basic premise of the Blair Witch Project sounded great to me. Three innocent kids go into the back woods of New England and are driven insane by an unspeakable eldritch horror. Groovy, right? The problem is, the horror is so unspeakable, and so eldritch, that it becomes unfilmable, too. The Blair Witch Project has absolutely zero explanation of the Witch's nature, and the viewer is left more confused than tantalized. I'm not suggesting that what was needed was footage of the actual Witch, but a sense of closure, provided more by the story than the action.
I realize people make a big stink about Blair's 'unorthodox' and 'refreshing' new style, but I prefer to think of it as cheap and insulting. I'm not saying I wanted to see CGI bursting from every frame (perish the thought), but some basic competence would have been nice. I realize the film makers are shooting for the pseudo-documentary look, but the results do not justify the premise. Heck, the movie would have been a lot more interesting if the witch was pitted against a professional documentary crew.
The fact that The Blair Witch Project is so believable actually stems from its greatest weakness: it looks exactly like what would happen if you and your buddies grabbed a camcorder and went off into the woods to hunt ghosts. In the end, what Blair Witch lacked wasn't a larger budget, or special effects, or computers, or big-name stars, but simple screenwriting. It's hard to believe that the directors of the Project had any directing to do; they just had to hunt through the actors' film and edit together a semi-coherent chunk of movie.
Bowfinger (1999)
Welcome back, Steve!
Steve Martin hits it just right again in this beautifully funny new comedy. This goes down in history right along side previous triumphs for Steve like 'Roxanne' and 'LA Story'. Every one of the main characters is fascinating, and the front-line actors deliver a beautiful performance. Especially good is Heather Graham as the just-off-the-bus starlet. Bowfinger also features a surprisingly bold swipe at Scientology and other nutty Hollywood cults. Go see it a lot and enjoy!
Æon Flux (1991)
Mind warping non-Japanese animation, for once.
If you're looking for the series that breaks Japanimation's stranglehold on quality mature cartoons, this is it. Aeon Flux is Peter Chung's twisted brainchild, a fantastic future world where everyone and no one are everything they seem, and more, and less. This is not the series you want if you're looking for easily acceptable doses of comprehensible violence and sex. Aeon Flux attacks your brainpan directly through your optic nerve, inducing afterthought in the brain. If you are ready to go beyond, to enjoy boundary-cracking animation that switches in and out of characterization, plot, action, and even dialogue, then go find this tape. Buy it. You'll thank me later.