Showing posts with label JOHNNY DEPP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label JOHNNY DEPP. Show all posts

Sunday, July 7, 2013

Box Office Fireworks

The minions outlawed The Lone Ranger over the grandly profitable Fourth of July week/end extravaganza.  The story isn't so much that it was surprising that Despicable Me 2, the sequel to 3-D animated 2010 hit, led the box office with such robust numbers, it's that Disney's overly expensive $215+ Ranger utterly failed.  Badgered by bad buzz that stems from while the film was still in production, deadly reviews, Armie Hammer's lack of movie star charisma and Johnny Depp ennui, the Gore Verbinski directed western based on the radio and television classic that nobody under forty has the faintest clue of, has taken the summer movie season's preeminent punchline prize from past bombs After Earth and White House Down.  That sounds harsh, but there's a valuable comeuppance that needs to be bridged from time to time when studios shell out hundreds of millions of dollars on wannabe franchises that nobody wanted to begin with.


  1. Despicable Me 2- $82.5 / $142.0 total (new)
  2. The Lone Ranger- $29.4 / $48.9 total (new)
  3. The Heat- $25.0 / $86.3 total
  4. Monsters University- $19.5 / 216.7 total
  5. World War Z- $18.2 / $158.7 total
  6. White House Down- $13.5 / $50.4 total
  7. Man of Steel- $11.4 / $271.2 total
  8. Kevin Hart: Let Me Explain- $10.1 / $174 total (new)
  9. This Is the End- $5.8 / $85.5 total
  10. Now You See Me- $2.7 / $110.4 total
  11. Star Trek Into Darkness- $1.3 / $223.0 total
  12. Fast & Furious 6- $1.0 / $235.4 total

LIMITED RELEASES
Fox Searchlight's Sundance success story led the limited engagements this holiday weekend with The Way, Way Back netting a $30,000 per screen average in its first weekend of play.  The dramedy stars Steve Carell (whose had a pretty stellar week), Toni Collette, Sam Rockwell and newcomer Liam James and was written and directed by Jim Rash and Nat Faxon, Oscar-winning screenwriters of The Descendants.  In other news, 20 Feet From Stardom, a documentary centered on back-up singers, expanded nicely in its second week and will be one of the highest grossing docs of the year, surely, and a potential Oscar candidate thanks to its glowing reviews, while Before Midnight officially became the top-grossing film in the series, topping the $5.8 million that Before Sunset earned in 2004.

The Way, Way Back- $0.5 (new)
Before Midnight- $0.5 / $6.6 total
20 Feet From Stardom- $0.5 / $1.1 total
Much Ado About Nothing- $0.4 / $2.9 total
The Bling Ring- $0.3 / $5.0 total
Mud- $0.1 / $20.7 total
I'm So Excited- $0.1 / $0.3 total
Frances Ha- $0.1 / $3.6 total
The Kings of Summer- $0.09 / $1.0 total
Stories We Tell- $0.04 / $1.4 total

Friday, May 11, 2012

Dark Shadows

As a child growing up in awe of Edward Scissorhands, in all its strange, gothic charm, further lead down into a path where imagery from The Nightmare Before Christmas and Ed Wood continue to delight and wallpaper my memories, it's difficult in any fairness at this point to feel nothing for Tim Burton but a sense of regret and near embarrassment.  Whatever happened to his imagination that encompassed grandeur and offbeat humor and child-like innocence, now reduced to wannabe franchise mediocrity featuring fleeting bits of the idiosyncrasies that made him such a worthy and strange talent.  That sense of pity, foreshadowed in 2010's Alice in Wonderland hits it's till with Burton's adaptation of the 60s vampire soap opera Dark Shadows, a wan, tonally discordant, glacier paced piece of opulent production design in search of a script, story and direction of any kind.  There's passing moments that perk up the drab affair, and a few facets that point to a decent idea, but Dark Shadows mostly wanders, and coasts on the formidable relationship between director and his muse, Johnny Depp as its sole reason in existing in the first place, and the only discernible cause for moviegoers to shell out buckets of money to see it.

The Collins family, originally immigrants from Liverpool, established a massively successful fishing company in a small burb of Maine in the late 1700s.  Living richly, the town itself was named after their lineage, and Barnabas Collins (Depp) was the token part of that heritage.  His weakness was for women, falling madly for a comely lady named Josette, while having sideline fun with a fair lower class servant (Eva Green.)  Problem was that the help was madly in love with Barnabas, and quite mad herself-- she's a witch who cursed Barnabas into a hellish immortality by turning him into a vampire, and brandishing him to the town, who revolted in burying him.  Some 200 years later, Barnabas is dug up in 1972, where his descendants have fallen hard financially and mentally-- having a descendant that's cast aside for growing fangs has a toll on a family's reputation, I suppose.  But Barnabas, still in Victorian garb and refined British accent comes back to his estate to help salvage his doomed family.  There's a slight giddy thrill when Johnny Depp tackles a character, meant in great harmony and silliness, where his cartoonish tendencies are an asset, and his coiled, beatific speak has a charm and anachronistic spunk to it at the beginning, but that grows tiring and draining as Dark Shadows plods along.

There's a surprise as the witch who cursed him to begin with is still toiling around town, a bleached-blonde executrix now under the name Angelique Bouchard, who for two centuries has plotted to destroy the Collins name and family.  She's established a fishing company that's taken over the northeastern seas, and is jolted by the newly awoken return of her long lost love.  The spark of Dark Shadows, and there is truly only one, is the nearly transcendent performance of Eva Green.  The brunette beauty, who emerged as art-house hottie in Bernardo Bertulucci's The Dreamers (2003), breathes a freshness, a light but menacing sense of play, balancing the kitsch and camp with such a rare evocation, one only wished the rest of the production were at her speed.  She flirts and haunts, but nearly every one of line readings (some of which, as written, are terribly banal), she maintains the right sense of playful cartoonishness.  The problem is that Burton pulls away from that more often than not-- this isn't serious; nor should it drag.

The biggest drag is the character of Barnabas himself, who speaks in poetic rhythms but also is an undeniable danger due to the whole fang thing.  There's too much back and forth inconsistency on how to feel about him, which might be an interesting take had this been Ingmar Bergman's Dark Shadows, but moral complexity is out of reach in this script written by John Logan and Seth Grahame-Smith.  There's more of an sense that, oh well Johnny Depp will bring to it what he chooses, rather than much thought on conception.  This ambiguity grows especially tiring was Barnabas grows a fondness for the Collins' governess Victoria, played by a Bella Swan-inspired Bella Heathcote.  One passing joke that grows more and more tiresome is Barnabas' anger that she lets anyone call his crush by the oh-so-low class Vicky.  Their relationship has a bit more heft to it, but Burton and team give it so little attention, it hardly seems one should care a whip.  Instead, the production design, and costumes are fitting and continue the brand that this filmmaker has long established.  Longtime collaborators Rich Heinrichs and Colleen Atwood do a marvelous job as always, but that embarrassment comes in again, as they appear to again be creating things they have long ago mastered.  The story itself seems mostly jettisoned by its period soundtrack.

That embarrassment thing hits its reach in a sex scene between Barnabas and Angelique, who after a meeting of trading insults engage in gymnastics sex that's so awkward to watch, one feels sad for the furniture that was built, only to be destroyed for the couples kinkiness.  That scene especially, but others also establish a near auto-pilot response from Burton, once a conjurer of imagination, now a mere cog in a the movie making world of excess and dollar signs.  His cast includes talents like Michelle Pfeiffer (who was such a memorable part of his Batman Returns) as the Collins' matriarch who poses imperiousness well, but is largely ignored, his wife Helena Bonham Carter as the Collins' live-in psychiatrist, whose along for hubby, but saddled with a ridiculous side story, Jackie Earle Haley as the family's butler, who appears bored, and Chloe Grace Moretiz as the family's rebellious daughter, who scowls, per normal.  There's ingredients that make Dark Shadows appear that it might be the campy, bad in a good way fun like Burton's Mars Attacks, but Burton himself seems uninterested, as does, sadly, his once faithful audience.  C 

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Absolutely Nothing in Moderation




The long gestating adaptation of the Hunter S. Thompson novel looks like it could well be a straight out mess, but at least they're having fun with it.  Johnny Depp stars, in what hopefully will be a redeemable vehicle after an endless stream of cartoon-y nonsense.  The upstart company Film District is handling the project, and after a terrific year of the surprise horror hit Insidious, the Christian polemic Soul Surfer, and the cult-potential of Drive, this might be a a juicy property to add to their strange little library.


Then again, the trailer could have used some of the spunk in the one-sheets.

Monday, March 9, 2009

Public Enemies Trailer

Another official trailer of another of my most eagerly awaited films is out, and while it looks a bit ho-hum on the outset, I believe the film will work in the end-- Michael Mann's brilliance isn't exactly the sort that makes for great previews-- try and encapsulate Heat or Collateral into two minute sound-bytes. Very excited!

Thursday, January 3, 2008

Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street


For a proper cinematic staging of Stephen Sondheim’s classic musical Sweeney Todd, throats must be sliced and buckets of blood must gush and spray. And in Tim Burton’s adaptation it does, it pours in thick red paint splendor, an orgy of blood, sliced from the throats of unknowing victims of a doomed demon barber. Sweeney Todd is an old story and in its nearly 150 year origin has been told numerously but none is more famous and prominent than Sondheim’s groundbreaking horror musical. With its music inspired by the great Bernard Herrmann, this masterpiece of American theater invites us to attend the tale of Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, a man falsely imprisoned back at his old stomping grounds vowing his revenge on the corrupt ones who wronged him:

“Barker, his name was…Benjamin Barker.”
“Not Barker…Sweeney Todd now…and he will have his revenge.”

What makes this piece of work so thrilling is not just that it’s frightening, but also incredibly funny and witty in that intellectual Sondheim way. It’s not very conventional, but satisfying. Sondheim’s music is grand and baroque, while his lyrics are hilarious in there sense of doom. I got to see a concretized version of the stage show nearly ten years ago, and it was thrilling. I’m sure I didn’t understand a lot of it, and missed quite a bit of the quick Sondheim lyrics, but in the years of being enamored by the original soundtrack, I’ve fallen for it, completely succumbed to it’s power and depth and hilarity. When I heard of the movie version finally coming about, directed by Tim Burton, I was scared and excited. Al I kept thinking was…please don’t screw it up…please…pretty please.
Happy to report-- Burton has concocted his richest film since Ed Wood, and that the marriage with Sondheim seems to be perfectly justified. This isn’t quite all Sondheim, Burton, with the capable screenplay by John Logan (Gladiator, The Aviator) has removed a few characters, cut and spliced some of the songs, but it’s enough Sondheim to appease the die-hards, and enough Burton to possibly convert a few neophytes into exploring the original. The story itself really hasn’t been tampered with, and that proves the malleability and total strength of the material itself, I believe. Johnny Depp stars as Sweeney, and is completely captivating-- he uses his grand movie star charisma and starts to wilt away at it, and this crafty thespian willingly goes the dark demented places needed. He sings too, and it’s not half bad, but he’s really selling the character from his look, not his vocal cords. And Helena Bonham Carter plays Mrs. Lovett, one the wittiest and most complex roles in modern theater history and while her singing voice is a bit off now and then, her porcelain corpse bride look and knotted hair naturally suite the striking pale actress.
The movie opens as Sweeney returns to London and takes up at the residence of Mrs. Lovett (Helena Bonham Carter), a widower pie shop owner, and the proprietor of “The Worst Pies in London.” The barber begins anew, vowing revenge on the evil Judge Turpin (Alan Rickman) who falsely imprisoned him years ago, stealing his beautiful wife and holding his daughter captive in that time. After first showing up a flashy tonsorial fraud, named Pirelli (Sasha Baron Cohen), he is blackmailed and thusly killed by the hands of Sweeney. At which Sweeney proclaims with great glee, “they all deserve to die,“ in the first act climatic song, entitled, “Epiphany.” Upon this Mrs. Lovett comes up with a solution for both their problems (her fledgling business, his killing problem) and resolves to use his clients meat in her piece, in what she calls, “enterprise,” in the stage play\movie’s most thrilling moment, “A Little Priest.”
There’s more, plenty more-- it’s rich and complex material, all the more impressive the way Burton keeps it flowing while still remaining true to its source. One thing that was drastically altered but turned out be a great idea was making the role of Toby, the boy eternally devoted by Mrs. Lovett and skeptical of Sweeney and his evil deeds, into a kid. He’s played by Edward Sanders and does a brilliant job. Not only does his have the best singing voice in the company of non-singer actors, but gives a natural performance, embodying the only innocence of the story. The only real misstep is the subplot of Sweeney’s sailor friend Antony (Jamie Campbell Bower) trying to wow the lovely Johanna (Jayne Wisener), who happens to be Sweeney (or Benjamin’s daughter)-- it stilts rather than shines, partially due to the lack of screen time of the two, but mostly to their inept glances passing as screen chemistry. However Bower’s ballad, “Johanna” is still quite lovely.
Sweeney Todd is a visual feat-- no surprise there with Burton at the helm. Dante Ferretti’s gothic and gray production design is lovely in it’s dirty claustrophobia, and nearly as impressive as his recreation of old New York in Gangs of New York. Colleen Atwood’s costumes remind of her work on Burton’s Sleepy Hollow, but since that was so inspired in itself, it’s still beautifully disheveled. And Dariusz Wolski’s (Pirates of the Caribbean) cinematography is perfectly dark-- with the thick red blood overflowing the screen in otherwise unsaturated muted hues of gray and black.
My personal favorite moment in the film is while Sweeney is singing his version of the ballad, “Johanna,” and it’s inter-cut with his slashing of arbitrary personage’s throats, and that mixture of poignant sad music laced with ultra-violent killing is the great thing about the story, how it deepens and surprises and somehow makes us laugh and cry all the midst of a hideous tale of revenge and malice. There’s no redeeming these tortured people, and they all know it, and get their just desserts in the end, but it’s thrilling to watch. It was thrilling to watch it on stage, and to my utter delight, it’s thrilling to watch in Burton’s hands, as the blood pours out, an American classic is reborn. B+
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