The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus This Terry Gilliam fantasy is wonderfully acted, thrillingly imaginative and terrific to look at (--it would be a wow in 3-D). All in all, it’s a generous entertainment even though I often didn’t know what was going on. It’s also a broken film as its star died before it was completed. The fix applied is like the gold glue used to repair broken porcelain in Japan. With lines of gold clearly visible along the cracks, a dish achieves a different interest, a new beauty. And so it is here, where the obvious repair, regrettable but necessary, produces an arguably more interesting movie than the original would have been. (4 stars out of 5)
Surrogates A high concept, futuristic thriller: humans spend all day at home on the couch, living their lives out in the world through idealized robot versions of themselves. And Bruce Willis. He’s a charismatic actor but is defeated by the makeup job required to become his idealized (read younger) self, and proves that no one can act their way out of a plastic mask. Unfortunately I didn’t care about the characters and the chases were mostly routine, which left just an awesomely terrifying helicopter crash and the briefly suspenseful finale. Oh, yes, there’s robot dismemberment and extreme human-on-robot violence, which doesn’t count as it’s human-looking robots not human-looking humans being beaten to a pulp. The preview’s cool though. (2 stars out of 5)
The Lovely Bones I have no interest in supernatural wish fulfillment, but this movie won me over because it’s a good story, it’s eye-poppingly imaginative, and is seamlessly, wonderfully made, with top-notch photography, editing, and music. There’s also a luminous performance by Saoirse Ronan (who played the girl who betrayed the lovers in Atonement). My two favorite critics dumped on this movie, and I wonder how much more I appreciated it going in as I did with zero expectations, so that I was, “Hey, this is actually, most of the time, not half bad.” (4 stars out of 5)
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