Monday, May 14, 2012
Homework Movie - Night Moves (1975)
Saturday, May 12, 2012
Homework Movies Saw Series (2004 - 2011)
"I want to play a game."
Sitting in a dark room, sometimes the lights flicker on and there are puzzles to solve on the walls with clues to the next puzzle. This is what it takes for me to get ready to watch this series of movies known as Saw. In 2004 Director James Wan and Writer/Actor Leigh Whannell began a journey with their franchise starting entry into the life and death of reported serial killer named Jigsaw, played by Tobin Bell in every film in the series. Over the next 7 years at Halloween you came to expect to see a Saw movie coming out depicting some sort of violence carried out by it's own victims.
Each of the subsequent movies connects victims and their killers to another "Game" or sequence of events in the previous movies until the Final Chapter, where after several months of investigation, the accomplice to Jigsaw's masterminded crimes of imprisonment and torture is put down, not by the law, but to the other "rehabilitated" persons under the tutelage of Jigsaw is complete.
From the drug users, adulterous doctors to the criminal judge that didn't give a criminal a worthy sentence for murder, no one that has a disregard for human life is without reprieve. By the time we get to the fourth installment of the series, we learn that on top of an inoperable cancer, Jigsaw and his wife lost their child due to one of the first victims in the puzzle that Jigsaw devised. With a death sentence like cancer, you get the impression that Jigsaw wants to see people living their lives with better intentions.
From a business standpoint, these movies made Lionsgate a very large amount of money. The 1st movie was made for only 1.2 Million dollars and grossed over 55 million in America alone. Built on a good business model, the series was made on a very limited budget and was released during a season where it was expected to do well and it didn't disappoint. From beginning to end the series gave just enough information to get the audience interested and left enough time between movies to keep them waiting, salivating for more.
"If you're good at anticipating the human mind. It leaves nothing to chance"
That statement describes the fans of this series as much as it is a quote from John BKA Jigsaw to one of his disciples of torture. From the first movie to the second, there was a huge following for each movie afterward. Audiences bought tickets and waited in lines for hours before the movies started during the Halloween season in costume some times. It wasn't hare to tell the victims from the mastermind. A lot less blood on the Jigsaw characters than the slashed up people waiting to see the films.
The movies we watched this week were mostly slick bigger budgeted Horror films that gave the studios that produced them an edge for the youth market. Zack Snyder's remake of Dawn of the Dead takes the original Night of the Living Dead and the 70's movie of the same name and combined them for one big blockbuster. Even seeing the zombie that was pregnant give birth to a zombie baby was unpleasant, but not scary.
Homework Movie - Training Day (2001)
When the opportunity arose to change homework movies, I took it. Having missed the chance in class to watch Training Day directed by Antoine Fuqua, I asked to watch it at home, rather than The Departed for more than one reason. Denzel Washington and Ethan Hawke star in this gritty urban Neo-Noir about the corruption in the police department that Jake Hoyt (Hawke) is trying to get into and Harris (Washington) is the lead Detective of. Watching this movie was like watching every gangsta movie from the 90's from the lens of the criminal because even some of those bad guys wouldn't do the things that Harris was having Hoyt commit.
From the beginning, Hawke was on the straight and narrow while Washington was giving lessons to his rookie to behave in a manner that the crooks they were supposed to be busting wouldn't suspect they were police, walking a very thin line between cops and criminals. As each lesson came up, they were quickly reviewed and dismissed by the Det. because he "Ran these streets". But every time there was a gray area, Hoyt would say no because of the book he learned from until his Det. partner busted his chops for it. The crimes got bigger, and the cover-ups came at a higher cost to their lives or their reputations on the streets, which is a big deal for police trying to infiltrate criminal activity undetected.
Choosing to utilize their past experience in filmmaking, Fuqua chose the cast and put them in very comfortable roles that each has played before. Hawke was in several movies including Lord of War, a firm hand of the law that went by the book. Washington has always been able to flow between characters that were good and bad very well, with believable justifications for each.
Because we missed The Departed, the movies we watched in class are on two very separate sides of the fence for me. I'm not a big fan of David Lynch's work, and therefore Blue Velvet drew little interest to me. I did observe it for it's story and I found it hard to follow because he was looking for something that had already been found by someone else. However, the Stephen Frears movie, Grifters held my interests well. John Jusack and Angelica Huston play son and mother thieves making their income on hapless victims until the mother tries to steal from her own son. The banter in that movie was well worth seeing it again after more than 20 years.