Saturday, June 8, 2013

After Earth: Promises so much, delivers so little

Before talking on After Earth, it would be insightful to know how this movie came to be. The story for the movie was conceived by Will Smith himself. It was then narrated to  screenwriter Gary Whitta (Book of Eli) who had the first screenplay written. Will Smith then contacted the director M. Night Shyamalan to take over the directing duties. It seems Shyamalan and Smith had been planning to collaborate for quite sometime and so Shyamalan  accepted. The screenplay was then further worked upon by Shyamalan and subsequently revised also by screenwriters Mark Boal (Hurt Locker) and Stephen Gaghan (Traffic). The film was to be produced by Will Smith's production company, Overbrook Entertainment, and due to its tie-up with Sony Pictures where the latter has the first right to choose to distribute the movies of Overbrook, Sony too got involved. After Earth was expected to be the beginning of a franchise. There were even books released such as After Earth: United Ranger Corps Survival Manual to add to the promotion of the movie. The reason I mention all this is so that one can understand there were a lot of efforts made in pre-production to turn After Earth into a spectacular sci-fi movie. Because after watching the movie, one would be left wondering whether anyone ever cared enough after all?


After Earth begins with a brief explanation on the destruction of the planet Earth that forced the human race to settle in another galaxy. When the new planet was attacked by alien beings, The Ranger Corps, a peacekeeping force, manage to emerge victorious because of the ghosting technique discovered by the Commander Cypher Raige (Will Smith), where one learns to suppress fear and thus becomes invisible to the aliens. Cypher's son Kitai Raige (played by real-life son Jaden Smith) is also trying to become a Ranger but has failed to advance so far. His relationship with his father is a bit strained, and so to ease things, father and son go together on Cypher's next voyage. During the space travel, the spaceship is forced to land on a quarantined planet, which is Earth. Cypher is injured in the crash landing and the way to survive is for Kitai to cover a 100-km journey to a beacon which is in a broken tail section that had been flung away. And so begins a mission for young Kitai to prove things to himself and his father and to bury his past ghosts. 


It is an interesting story, one that has so much to offer when you consider the potential. In the backdrop of the science-fiction theme, the father-son relationship could be explored deeper, and Kitai's journey to discover more of himself too. For great sci-fi films are not made by the grandeur of the visual effects, but by the depth of a story told in another time or another space altogether which makes the audience connect to the movie and at the same time experience the newness that the science fiction brings. After Earth had the story, but it never got the screenplay. Despite all those names that were mentioned earlier working on the script, the screenplay of After Earth is quite poor. The part of the movie until the crash landing is alarmingly boring, and that is quite a chunk of the runtime. The traits of the characters are thrust upon us rather than allowed to develop during the movie. And even the background score, despite being by James Newton Howard, is mediocre and does not do enough to enthuse. There are hardly any memorable dialogues, apart from the talk on 'Fear' that Cypher narrates to his son, and this too adds to the frustration of the weak screenplay. 


M. Night Shyamalan has worked on someone else's story for the first time, but even his previous The Last Airbender was not original material. That is saying something for a director who had started his career writing such wonderful stories as in The Sixth Sense and Signs, and then bringing them onto the big screen with crispness. Sony Pictures kept Shyamalan pretty much away from the movie trailers and promotions, pushing After Earth as a Will Smith movie. It is a fair strategy considering the fan reaction that is developing for Shyamalan after his movies are failing to live up to the reputation he once created for himself. But how much of the debacle of After Earth can be put on Shyamalan's shoulders?  This should not have been a Shyamalan film to begin with. The movie required visual appeal, a bit of splendour in the background. But the camera positioning did not seem to do justice to the set locations. There were too many close-up shots, or shots from behind following Kitai, limiting the wide angle shots that could have given a sense of the surroundings the actor was in. The action sequences were again wasted, that is not Shyamalan's forte. But one must acknowledge here the scene when Kitai jumps off a cliff and is then attacked by a condor mid-air. Splendid shot! Movie needed more of those, but alas, it wasn't to be! A director is however the one who calls the shots on the sets, and Shyamalan seems to have called the wrong ones. 


As for the acting, the biggest disappointment of the movie is Will Smith himself. Will Smith, who I thought could do nothing wrong. Well, there is always a first time. Smith's character was wooden, Smith's acting was wooden. We remember Will Smith as a man of varying emotions, who can light up the screen with his style and panache, be it the inquisitive and blabbering agent in Men in Black, the struggling but determined father in Pursuit of Happyness, or even the lonely man in I Am Legend. What Smith cannot do is play a Schwarzenegger of Terminator. He should never have played this role, it could have suited many more, but not him. His affable smile was missed here!


Jaden Smith had a tough ask to be the shining beacon for the movie. He does have his moments, manages to bring in more heart in the film which otherwise seemed pretty much extinguished. But he is not the finished product yet. He was lovable as the young kid in Pursuit of Happyness  and he surprised many by being the star of Karate Kid. But as the 15 year old grows, he would no longer be able to drive his movies through the 'cute' factor. After Earth though does not seem to be the platform to judge him, for it got things wrong on a lot of fronts and an actor shines better when things around him click too. These are still early days for Jaden Smith and as any great actor would tell him, you got to take the bumpy rides too in show biz! I would like to see him working on stronger projects, maybe stepping away from the protective custody of his father, allowing himself to learn his own lessons to mature as an actor. 

And a final word on M. Night Shyamalan, a director who I have still not lost faith in. Please, go back to what you did best! Starting with a story where each of the elements had a meaning, building a screenplay where each shot added more to the whole story, and then directing this in your style where things were not rushed but panned out at a pace that kept the audience hooked. There was no need for grand visual effects, no need for large budgets. It was movie making at its purest best, a director and his actors pouring their hearts out. Go back to the drawing board, Mr. Shyamalan, and I'll be eagerly awaiting your next movie!

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Commencement Speech by Joss Whedon

When certain people talk, you listen. Joss Whedon falls in that category. While many now know him as the director of The Avengers, his body of work exceeds that sole tag. He is the one behind the creation of quite a few TV series such as the popular Buffy the Vampire Slayer and the short-lived but cult hit Firefly, and is now working on Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. He was one of the co-writers for Toy Story. He wrote and directed Serenity, he wrote and produced The Cabin in the Woods, and he of course wrote and directed The Avengers. So when Joss Whedon was invited for the commencement speech by his Alma mater Wesleyan University from where he graduated in 1987, it was a big deal! 

Joss Whedon's commencement speech talks of the inner conflicts within us, and learning to accept them and grow along with them. The best piece I liked from the speech is quoted here.
If you think that happiness means total peace, you will never be happy. Peace comes from the acceptance of the part of you that can never be at peace. They will always be in conflict. If you accept that, everything gets a lot better.
It is an insightful speech, and quite funny too! Watch it below, for when Joss Whedon talks, one must listen. 


A Zenpencils webcomic on a Roger Ebert quote

A friend told me about a site where famous quotes were weaved into storylines and then displayed in a comic book style. It sounded something creative, intriguing. But when he talked about having been hooked to it for four hours straight, that sounded like an exaggeration. It wasn't! This website, zenpencils.com, is run by Gavin Thuan who has worked as a graphic designer and is a cartoonist. The website is filled with wonderful cartoons with themes created around quotes from famous men and women. Most of these quotes are inspirational, that would make you think and ponder on many aspects of life, may even act as the bright spot you needed on a rather dull day. 


And it is the latest post by Gavin that has got me writing here. It is a story created around a quote by Roger Ebert, the famous critic who recently passed away after a prolonged battle with cancer, written in his autobiography. A quote on kindness which says somewhere "To make others less happy is a crime". It is a beautiful comic, about a young man's love for movies right till his death, and the way in which he believed in the concept of kindness. The above picture is just the beginning, and the whole artwork by Gavin is available here. Do read it and if you are browsing around, check out the comics based on quotes by C.S. Lewis, Chris Hadfield, Muhammad Ali, Stephen Fry, if not more. Great work, Gavin!

And am reminded once again of the Chicago Tribune tribute for Ebert at the end of this post. Great one! 

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Knightley set to join Cumberbatch in the Alan Turing story

Alan Turing's life story is one filled with such contrasting emotions that you would be hard-pressed to find anything similar. A British mathematician, computer scientist and more simply a genius, Turing is considered the father of computer science and artificial intelligence. With such glorious epithets before his name, one would have expected Turing to have lived a life of prosperity and acclaim befitting a man of his intelligence, one who was instrumental in breaking numerous German ciphers during World War II. But as luck would have it, some people are born in the wrong era itself. At a time when homosexual acts was illegal in United Kingdom, Turing's homosexuality resulted in his criminal prosecution in 1952 and subsequent humiliating treatment at the hands of the authorities (in fact, in 2009, the then British Prime Minister offered an official public apology over the treatment of Turing). In June 1954, Turing was found dead. His cause of death, said to be from cyanide poisoning (contained in an apple), was declared to be suicide, though some claimed it to be accidental. And thus at the young age of 41, was lost one of the greatest minds of Britain.  


The Imitation Game is the title of the indie movie which plans to bring the story of Alan Turing on the big screen. The role of Turing will be played by the rising star of Britain, Benedict Cumberbatch, and that itself should be a good enough reason to keep your eyes open for this movie. Cumberbatch is already set to appear as Julian Assange in the biopic drama The Fifth Estate, later this year. Joining Cumberbatch, as Hollywood Reporter reports, is the recently married Keira Knightley, who will play "a woman from a very conservative background who not only forms a complicated relationship with Turing but is there for him until the end". Knightely has lost some steam in mainstream cinema post Pirates of the Caribbean, and it would be refreshing to see more of her on the big screen, starting with Jack Ryan opposite Chris Pine slated for a December 2013 release. But she has been involved in period flicks such as The Duchess and more recently, Anna Karenina, which could be a reason she is being sought after. The Imitation Game will be directed by the Norwegian Morten Tydlum, who was nominated for a BAFTA for 2011's Headhunters. There is no formal release date announced yet, though a late 2014 release could be on the cards if the casting goes ahead as planned. 

It seems like a strong casting for The Imitation Game, pairing Knightley with Cumberbatch, It's a mesmerizing story that deserves a narration on the big screen (only other movie on  Turing's life that I could locate is Breaking The Code, a 1996 TV movie). Hopefully, it will turn out to be something profound and thought-provoking, honouring the work and time of Alan Turing, in the way he deserves!   

Monday, June 3, 2013

After Earth crash lands at the box-office

Way back in 1999, a supernatural film titled The Sixth Sense from a relatively unheard of director released to an opening weekend earnings of about $27 million in North America. Fast forward fourteen years, and the latest film After Earth of the now no longer unknown director took in $27 million too from its opening weekend. The fate of the two movies could not have been more different. 


The Sixth Sense had released in only 2,161 theatres in the opening week and then slowly grew as the positive word-of-mouth propelled the movie forcefully forward. In contrast, After Earth opened in 3,401 theatres which would start declining soon. The Sixth Sense had a production budget of only $40 million, while the sci-fi After Earth has a budget of $130 million, more than three times. The Sixth Sense went on to gross $294 million in North America itself and $673 million worldwide. After Earth is not likely to find the legs to touch even $100 million in North America, and only Will Smith's international appeal can possibly save some reputation in the foreign markets. It seems M. Night Shyamalan's downward spiral as a director is refusing to slow down; when a sci-fi film with Will Smith in the cast, that looked so appealing from its trailer, and released in the prime summer time, fails, there is need for some deeper introspection here for Shyamalan. As I am yet to see the movie, I reserve my judgement on its quality, but it really did not turn out to be the life-saver one was thinking it would be. 

So who performed better last weekend than After Earth? Two movies in fact. Fast & Furious 6 took a serious fall, I mean really serious, with a 65% plummet for its second weekend earnings of $35 million and yet grabbed the top spot. It still is on track to do better than Fast Five. The surprise package of the weekend was Now You See Me with $28 million opening weekend earnings on a rather packed weekend. This movie of magicians with an ensemble cast has earned better reviews than After Earth, and is in fact the strongest debut for Summit Entertainment for a non-Twilight film. Star Trek Into Darkness is inching closer to the $200 million mark in North America and while it may fall short of its predecessor Star Trek domestically, it is all set to the become the biggest movie of the franchise in worldwide revenues. Epic on the other hand is well on its way to become the weakest movie for Blue Sky Studios. So mixed tales this weekend, and one more weekend left for the movies to build in their numbers... for Man of Steel flies into the theatres pretty soon!   

Sunday, June 2, 2013

Hans Zimmer back with Nolan for Interstellar

Casting news for a movie is one of the most interesting pieces of information that people scrounge for. But this casting, despite not being for any of the acting roles, would be loved and welcomed by many. For it attaches one of the greatest music composers of his era with one of the most awaited movies being made by one of the greatest directors in Hollywood at present. In other words, as Collider reports, Hans Zimmer has been attached to create the music score for the Christopher Nolan movie, Interstellar. Despite the movie slated for a November 2014 release, it seems the German composer has already begun work to create possibly another masterpiece!


Hans Zimmer is a legend in the Hollywood industry, having already composed music for more than a hundred movies. Not only are his compositions so clever in their style, it is the connection that he allows his music to create between the film and the audience which is exemplary. Of all the great works of Zimmer, who as a young boy would tie chainsaws to his piano to create different music, some of the most recent and prominent compositions include the scores for Nolan films, The Dark Knight trilogy and Inception. His music would again play an integral role in the highly anticipated Man of Steel where Nolan is the producer. So this Nolan-Zimmer partnership is just another reason to wait eagerly for Interstellar

Earlier this year, Nolan's Interstellar project had been announced with rumours of Mathew McConaughey to be cast in the lead role (an old post on this here). Those turned out to be true after all! So what we have so far on the movie is this... Christopher Nolan in the director's seat, screenplay to be written in collaboration with his brother Jonathan Nolan, McConaughey to star in the lead role, other leading cast include Jessica Chastain and Anne Hathaway, Michael Caine is back with Nolan too, Hoyte van Hoytema (Tinker, Tailor  Soldier, Spy) brought in as cinematographer for his first collaboration with Nolan, Mary Zophres (who has worked on many Coen brothers' movies) onboard as costume designer and now Zimmer as music composer. Still many slots to be filled in, but the anticipation is already building...

Saturday, June 1, 2013

Happy Birthday, Morgan Freeman!

June 1, 1937. The house of a school teacher and a barber in Memphis, USA, was blessed with their fourth child. A son. They named him Morgan. Morgan Freeman. While 76 years back no one could have envisaged the life's journey a young Morgan would have taken, now we cannot envisage the whole institute of Hollywood where the talented Morgan would not have been a part. The achievements of Morgan Freeman in the world of acting are too exemplary to even type, as words shall often fall short. The accolades he has won in this journey, numerous. The hearts he has won, plenty. The example he has set for many, inspirational. Morgan Freeman started late in Hollywood, but once he did, there was no stopping him. 

Acting is living, is the kind of line you would associate with Morgan Freeman. He makes it look effortless, as if there is no audience, there are no cameras, this is no job, it is simply living another chapter of your life. With the plethora of work that he has done in the past decades, Morgan Freeman may stand for something different for each one of us. Who is Morgan Freeman for you? Is he the patriotic Sgt. Rawlins from Glory, the illiterate driver Hoke Coleburn from Driving Miss Daisy, or the spent-out gun slinger Ned Logan from Unforgiven? Is he the prison inmate Red and the narrator of a soul-stirring tale from Shawshank Redemption, the retired boxer Eddie Dupris from Million Dollar Baby or the astute homicide detective Somerset from Seven? Is he the no-nonsense crime lord from Lucky Number Slevin, the gifted and perfect ally Lucius Fox in Batman Begins, or the all-powerful God from Bruce Almighty? And the list can keep going on further...

Everyone will have a Morgan Freeman role that will stand out and never be forgotten for ages to come. And there shall, I hope in all earnestness, be many more such roles to follow. As Morgan Freeman turns 76 today, we do only wish the best of things for him. Carry on the good work, Morgan... and thank you!


Morgan Freeman was nominated for his second Academy Award for his role in Driving Miss Daisy

Morgan Freeman starred alongside another great, Clint Eastwood, in the Western action flick Unforgiven

Morgan Freeman as Red in Shawshank Redemption in one of the most memorable roles in cinematic history

Morgan Freeman in the inspirational role of Nelson Mandela in Invictus 

Morgan Freeman as God in Bruce Almighty, a title he most certainly deserves