Showing posts with label Olivia Wilde. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Olivia Wilde. Show all posts

Monday, March 18, 2013

Sometimes Magical Yet Incredibly Uneven: Our Review of "The Incredible Burt Wonderstone" (2013)


Directed By: Don Scardino (30 Rock

Starring: Steve Carell, Steve Buscemi, Olivia Wilde, Jim Carrey, Alan Arkin

Rating: PG-13 for sexual content, dangerous stunts, a drug-related incident and language

Run Time: 1 hour, 40 minutes

Synopsis: Burt Wonderstone and Anton Marvelton (Carell and Buscemi) are two of the most famous magicians on the Las Vegas Strip. After 10 years though, their show has become stale and their friendship strained, and when an outlandish street magician named Steve Gray (Carrey) comes along to make things worse, it causes Anton to quit the show and Burt loses his job. Resorting to being an entertainer at a retirement home, Burt meets his childhood hero, an old magician named Rance Holloway (Arkin), who combines with Burt's former assistant Jane (Wilde) and inspires Burt to rediscover why he became a magician in the first place.

REVIEW

Andrew: Hello readers! Sarah and I are back from our hiatus now that, for all intents and purposes, I’m finished with this past season of college basketball and my schedule is about to open up. We apologize for the lack of content recently but we can assure you that we’re back and we’ll be coming out with our usual reviews and posts. We might even be able to start cranking out more columns like our New Year’s Resolutions said we would.

All of that said, we kicked off our return by catching a matinee showing of Steve Carell’s new comedy, The Incredible Burt Wonderstone. Carell stars as a Las Vegas magician named Burt Wonderstone…

Sarah: And Steve Buscemi (HBO’s Boardwalk Empire) plays his best friend and partner Anton Marvelton, but their show is getting old and stale and they’re in-fighting is tearing them apart.

Steve Carell and Steve Buscemi play off each other pretty well as "The Incredible Burt Wonderstone & Anton Marvelton," but this truly is Carell's movie for better and worse.

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

For a Movie About Books, The Storytelling is Quite Weak: Our Review of "The Words" (2012)


Directed By: Brian Klugman & Lee Sternthal

Starring: Bradley Cooper, Zoe Saldana, Jeremy Irons, Dennis Quaid, Olivia Wilde

Rating: PG-13 for brief strong language and smoking

Run Time: 1 hour, 37 minutes

Synopsis: Clay Hammond is a celebrated author and has a new book called "The Words" about a struggling writer named Rory (Cooper) who finds an old manuscript, publishes it as his own and is then confronted by the true author of the story (Irons). During a public reading of his novel, Hammond catches the attention of a student (Wilde) who wants to know more about the book.

REVIEW

Andrew: Hello readers! Sarah and I caught a late afternoon showing of The Words yesterday afternoon. Starring Bradley Cooper (The Hangover), Zoe Saldana (Star Trek), Jeremy Irons (Die Hard: With a Vengeance), Dennis Quaid (The Parent Trap) and Olivia Wilde (Tron: Legacy), this is a movie whose trailer we have seen a million times…

Sarah: Both in actual trailer form and with those AMC “First Look” things they play before movies. So we’ve been seeing about this movie forever.

A: And it didn’t come out wide until just recently (or at least didn’t hit our neck of the woods until recently) and is one that had our interest. Now that we’ve seen it I have to say…I’m having trouble deciding how I feel about this movie. Because there are parts of it that I really liked and then there’s one large thing about it that total irks me and it’s throwing things up in the air for me.

S: I definitely have mixed feelings on it, too.

A: The primary reason for those mixed feelings, for me, is that in all the trailers and everything else we’re lead to believe that the movie is about Bradley Cooper’s Rory, who’s an aspiring novelist that has been rejected a few times and finds a manuscript in an old briefcase while in Paris, he decides to publish the manuscript as his own and is eventually confronted by an old man, played by Jeremy Irons, who actually wrote the manuscript. We’re lead to believe that’s what the main story is about and we never really know from the trailers how Dennis  Quaid and Olivia Wilde play in to the plot.

Well the hook that’s throwing me for a loop is that  Quaid plays a famous novelist named Clay Hammond who has written a book called “The Words” and it turns out that Rory, his wife Dora (Saldana) and Iron’s Old Man (he’s never given a name) are characters in Hammond’s book. So it’s a storytelling device and it’s completely thrown me.

Saturday, June 30, 2012

An Exercise in the Strength of Casting: Our Review of "People Like Us" (2012)


Directed By: Alex Kurtzman

Starring: Chris Pine, Elizabeth Banks, Michelle Pfeiffer, Olivia Wilde

Rating: PG-13 for language, some drug use and brief sexuality

Synopsis: Sam Harper (Pine) is in debt after a major mistake he makes at work, and when his estranged father dies back in L.A., he reluctantly returns home. It’s there that his father’s lawyer gives him $150,000 – but tells him to give it to a woman named Frankie Davis (Banks) and her son. Sam soon discovers Frankie is his half-sister that he never knew about and has to make a choice: does he give her the money or use it to get himself out of debt?

REVIEW

Andrew: Hello readers! Last night Sarah and I made the dangerous journey to the movie theatre on a Friday night, made it through the throngs of women who were there to see Magic Mike, and we slipped into a smaller theatre to see this weekend’s new Chris Pine/Elizabeth Banks drama People Like Us.

Sarah, we talked about this in our weekly preview on Thursday and were both looking forward to it. I didn’t know a whole lot about the movie up until a week ago, but you had. So what are your thoughts after a night of sleeping on it?

Sarah: Well I had seen trailers for it for a while now and I would have to say that I enjoyed it. It was very heartwarming, which is what I expected. It tugged on the heartstrings, and although it was a semi-predictable premise once you got into the movie, it was still good! I enjoyed it! What did you think?

A: I really enjoyed it! Yes it’s a bit predictable at times, which I don’t think is a bad thing because it’s a relatively simple premise, but I look at it kind of like Seeking a Friend for the End of the World, where you can kind of see what’s going to happen coming, but it’s HOW they get there and how the actors do. And I think the strength of People Like Us, bar none, are the two leads, Chris Pine (Star Trek) and Elizabeth Banks (What to Expect When You’re Expecting).

I totally bought them as half-siblings and they’re both so charismatic…

The charisma and likability of Elizabeth Banks and Chris Pine are the strength of People Like Us

S: And they had such great on-screen chemistry! And that’s point I want to make: this was a powerhouse cast. Everybody gave such amazing performances, even Olivia Wilde (Cowboys & Aliens), who is a minor character in the grand scheme of things. For being a pretty A-list actress, she took her role for what it was and did a great job. Michelle Pfeiffer is killing it these days now that she’s playing older roles, great roles that really fit her well.

And then this new kid comes along, Michael Hall D’Addario, who plays Frankie’s son, Josh, and he just does an amazing job. He was actually probably my favorite character. He did such a fantastic job, this young kid…

A: He reminded me of Jonah Bobo as Robbie in Crazy, Stupid, Love.

S: Yes, a lot like him.

A: The acting was phenomenal really, and the casting choices were even better I think. Pfeiffer, I totally bought her as being able to be Chris Pine’s mother. I think the eyes had a lot to do with it, all three of the leads have very blue eyes. But just the subtleties they play…like Pine’s Sam is really kind of a selfish jerk for half the movie. There are a lot of things about him early on that make him an unlikable character, but Pine is just so earnest and inherently likable that you can’t help but like Sam despite the mistakes he makes. You just go, “C’mon, man, just do the right thing!” You really just want him to succeed, make the right choice and tell Frankie the truth.

S: But at the same time the characters were so well developed… I didn’t really think Sam was such a jerk. I kind of knew the premise and you have to imagine things…neither one of these kids grew up with a father. The guy probably did the best that he knew how but just wasn’t cut out for the whole fatherhood thing. And so both of his kids suffered for it in very different ways, yet ended up pretty similar. They had great chemistry as a brother/sister couple and you could tell that they could grow to love each other as a family.

Then you have Pfeiffer’s character, who really had to live with the knowledge that her husband was unfaithful and had another family. You have to imagine the toll that would take on people. So it was just very interesting and impressive for an ensemble cast like this to pull it off.

A: Can I just point out real quick that Chris Pine is quickly becoming one of my favorite actors in Hollywood? He just has that charisma you look for in a leading man and there are very few new ones nowadays. He’s perfect as Captain Kirk in the new Star Trek films, I liked him in This Means War, and I liked him in this.

Anywho….a criticism I could see some people having with this movie, and it’s not one I have of it personally, is that it takes Sam such a long time to finally tell Frankie what’s really going on. But that Frankie and her son just accept Sam, this stranger that appears out of nowhere and kind of works his way into their lives, and they hang out…

S: Yeah, they accept him pretty quickly, don’t they?

We thought this trio right here (Pine, Banks and D'Addario) made a very believable and cute family
A: That’s the one thing I think some people might go, “That’s unrealistic.” I didn’t have a problem with it. I can see how some people might, but I think it goes to the strength of the writing and the actors that you bought that these two individuals needed each other and that there’s a sort of destiny that they needed to do this. They just made a cute, believable family unit.

It’s a bit of a tearjerker, it got to me a little bit because it hit a little close to home.


S: It was about halfway through the movie where I figured it might hit close to home with you.

A: And I knew it would.

S: I wasn’t prepared for that.

A: Well when I first saw the trailer and saw what the real premise is, I knew it would. So it hit a little close to me, but even if it weren’t for that, I still think this is a very good movie. If anything, see it because of Pine, Banks and Pfeiffer. They all knocked it out of the park.

S: It truly is a great cast.

A: And it’s a good directorial debut by Alex Kurtzman. I was looking forward to how he would do with this. I liked the way he used Los Angeles, he didn’t use it in a flashy “Hollywood” sort of way, he used it in more of a warm, West Coast way.

S: It felt a lot more like a small-town feel to me, which is different for a L.A. movie. Like, you didn’t feel like you were in this ginormous city. It felt intimate in a city that has millions of people in it.

A: And that’s a totally different take and I enjoyed that. I definitely look forward to more directing jobs by Kurtzman. So what’s our final grade?

S: I don’t think you need to see it in theatres. It would make a nice matinee, but you can wait to Netflix it. That said, this might be one that ends up on our shelf!

(Out of Five Clapboards)