Touch Season 1 DVD Review (Kirk Haviland)

Touch Season 1 DVD

Starring Kiefer Sutherland, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, David Mazouz, Roxanna Brusso and Danny Glover

Created by Tim Kring

New on DVD from Fox Home Entertainment is the first season of the new series from Heroes creator Tim Kring, Touch. The mid-season replacement from earlier this year is another high concept production from Kring, this time focusing between the relationship of a father and his son. But of course with Kring things are never quite that easy.

Martin Bohm (Sutherland), a former reporter who now works at the airport, is a widower and single father.  His wife was a victim of the 9/11 attacks and he has been left with his 11 year old son Jake (Mazouz). Jake has never said a word in his entire life and reacts violently if anyone tries to touch him. But when Jake is taken into the custody of the state after an incident, Martin discovers that Jake can communicate and see the future through numbers, complex algorithms that Jake has the inherent ability to decipher. It’s up to Martin, with the help of Jake’s primary caretaker Clea (Mbatha-Raw) and a disgraced doctor (Glover) who specializes in numbers himself, to help Martin decipher the clues and help the people Jake sets him on to.

Touch is the welcome return to weekly television for Kiefer Sutherland that people have been waiting for since Sutherland’s series 24 finished  a couple of years ago. Creator Kring brings his trademark sense of style and flair for intricate and complex storytelling that weaves throughout an entire season. Characters appear in their ‘highlight’ episode, only to re-appear as supporting characters in later episodes as the story twists and turns throughout the season. Kiefer is his typical solid self, his Martin carrying many of the strong willed and intuitive characteristics of his classic Jack Bauer character. The rest of the cast does solid work. Brusso’s very shady care home supervisor whose intentions are very questionable is a highlight, as Kring writes ensemble pieces like this well. The situations and mysteries play out throughout the episodes as seemingly unrelated incidents are shown to be related in different ways, some are more ridiculous and preposterous than others, a ‘Dance Contest’ in one of the episodes really does not work, but the writing is solid enough to keep you engaged throughout the craziness.

The show itself carries tones of Kring’s Heroes, hopefully it can stay relevant for more than the two seasons Heroes was before its massive tailspin though, 24, Numbers and The Missing. It’s well produced and looks great, the setting of New York playing into the storylines on multiple instances, and the directors of the episodes showing a steady hand behind the camera. The ways that are used to describe and physically show Jake’s numbers and equation and how they fit together are scenes that could easily be disastrous but they are expertly handled and played out onscreen.

The disc comes equipped with deleted scenes and an extended pilot episode. The pilot plays out well and the deleted scenes are mainly items cut for pacing that will hardly be missed. There are also two behind the scenes featurettes included about the filming of the series.

In the end, Touch is a well-crafted piece of television melodrama with a seasoned actor in the lead and an accomplished creator behind the camera. Touch Season 1 on DVD is a solid rent and a decent buy option, and in the end Touch is a recommend.

Till Next Time,

Movie Junkie TO

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Reel Asian Film Festival 2012: Graceland Review (Kirk Haviland)

Reel Asian Film Festival 2012

Graceland (2012)

Starring Arnold Reyes, Menggie Cobarrubias, Dido De Le Paz and Ella Guevara

Written and Directed by Ron Morales

One of the grittiest films to play Reel Asian this year is the crime thriller Graceland from the Philippines. Not to be confused with the lavish estate of Elvis in Memphis, Graceland in this case refers to the seedy underground that inhabits and seeps out of every pore of the city of Manila. A place where everything has a price and nothing appears to be as it seems.

Marlon Villar (Reyes) is a pious family man who minds his own business, takes care of his daughter Elvie (Guevara) and visits his bed-ridden wife at the hospital every night. He holds down a day job as a chauffeur for a powerful and corrupt politician named Chango (Cobarrubias). Marlon’s world falls apart when Elvie becomes the victim of a botched kidnapping and ransom plot against Chango, when the kidnappers mix her up with Chango’s daughter. As the sole witness, Marlon becomes tangled between the kidnappers, Chango and the police, all while stopping at nothing to get Elvie back.

A well thought out script and tight direction is at the heart of this tense thriller. Reyes and Cobarrubias are both excellent here. The men are at different ends of the social ladder yet they both are bonded by Chango’s secret activities of which Marlon has been pressed to be complicit in. The desperation of Reyes’ Marlon is matched by the stoicism of Cobarrubias’ Chango, Marlon being his number one suspect. The film jumps between the parents trying to track down the children and the kidnappers trying to stay ahead of them. The film creates a sense of atmosphere and building tension around each corner instead of your typical action shoot out.

The city of Manila, and all its griminess, becomes an integral supporting character in the film as we work through the backstreets in and out of brothels and seedy hotels along the way. Even the hospital, in which Marlon’s wife stays, feels like it has a thin layer of grime on everything. Manila is a place where you can buy a 14 year old girl, the same age as the daughter in question, for your sexual pleasure almost as easily as food on the street. The level of corruption on display plays heavily in to the motivations and decisions of the characters we follow throughout the film.  The actions of the past rest heavily on the shoulders of these two fathers.

One of the better thrillers I have seen all year, Graceland has a way of staying with you after it’s over. A bold film that is not afraid of taboo subject matter, Graceland is definitely a film to keep an eye out for. Graceland is a solid recommend.

Till Next Time,

Movie Junkie TO

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Skyfall Review (Dustin SanVido)

Skyfall (2012)

Starring Daniel Craig, Javier Bardem, Judi Dench, Ralph Fiennes, Naomi Harris, Ben Winshaw, Albert Finney and Bernice Marlohe

Written by Neil Purvis, Robert Wade, John Logan, and Ian Fleming

Directed by Sam Mendes

A familiar character, who we’ve surely all missed, is back with his latest adventure. We all know who he is, his story, and what to expect based on his adventures over the last five decades. Could the familiarity of the same characters and narrative beats still be as effective as they were throughout the past 23 films? Has our favorite spy lost a step at the hands of the evil bungling studio executives who kept his latest movie in limbo for years while they settled the death and resurrection of a broken studio, not unlike said titular spy? Does he still possess the qualities which caused onscreen women to blatantly throw themselves at him which were lost in the seriousness of the new series? Could the latest 007 recoup the swagger, fun, and allure of previous entries after the blandness of “Quantum of Solace”? I assure you the answer is a resounding and capital YES! YES IT CAN AND YES IT HAS! Bond is back and better than ever. And it makes me so happy to say that Skyfall is without any doubt or debate the best bond film this side of Goldeneye, and may very well be the greatest bond ever.

Skyfall begins with a pulse pounding and richly satisfying opening sequence in Istanbul, Turkey involving the theft of a top secret list containing the identities of undercover NATO agents throughout the world that sets up the new rules and stakes of the game. 007 has aged, matured, and is quite vulnerable, these traits echoed in the ruthlessness of the agency he is employed by, traits that have never been realized so organically and emotionally as they are in this new Bond. Any person who has seen a trailer or has the smallest snippet of common sense knows things don’t work out so well for Agent 007 at first and this leads to a chase across the city by jeep, motorcycle, and train ending with an emotional punch to the windpipe. I will admit I’m neutral with Adele’s theme song but don’t think it’s as good as prior entries (can’t a man get some serious love for Tina Turner and Duran Duran in the Bond Cannon in terms of theme songs?) but is supported by another masterwork of artistic design and effects.

We spend the rest of the film following Bond as he traverses the globe by way of Scotland, London, and Shanghai among a few other places, seeking out the list, finding those responsible for the attack on international security, dealing with the repercussions and influences of bureaucracy in modern times as well as the sins of the past, and an ingenious albeit predictable passing of the torch to a fresh but familiar cannon of supporting characters using a minimal and focused narrative in the final act.

Skyfall works in so many different ways and on so many different levels. It oozes the need to be revisited again so that the many riches found within can be properly digested. The film pays homage to many Bonds of the past while reinvigorating the franchie for future installments with the small, once fleeting moments that made the older bonds so memorable. Skyfall is still well aware that it’s a James Bond story, and wisely returns to a certain level of comedy found in wonderful moments sprinkled throughout the story which were sorely missed in past Craig films. It is worth noting I chose to watch skyfall in the Imax format and unbeknownst to me there is a conversion to the Imax format that compounds the image onscreen to take full advantage of the format. Even though it’s obvious for the majority of Skyfall that it was not framed and shot with IMAX in mind, many scenes in the film benefit greatly from the larger screen that adds size, scope, and depth to the film.

Let’s take a moment to reflect on the fantastic performances found within this espionage juggernaut, mainly the performance of 007 and his latest nemesis. Daniel Craig has TRIED to portray an effective and worthy James bond for two films prior to this, but in Skyfall Daniel Craig IS James bond. The emotional journey Bond travels in Skyfall reveals a wounded and vulnerable man at a crossroads in his life and Craig sells this so well his mental struggles over arch the narrative and really pull you into the drama unlike any performance I have seen in the series and, frankly, in Craig’s varied career. His Bond is burned out, out of shape and weakened by the sense of disillusionment after the full realization of his circumstance in something he lost during his exodus. His aim is untrue. He’s on his way to the bottom in a way only Tony Stark may appreciate, and yet, he is still BOND.

Javier Bardem is terrific as the main baddie who would make Alec Trevelyen (Sean Bean), Owen Davien (Phillip Seymour Hoffman) and the Joker quite proud as a “moving Rubik’s cube” of menace and villainy that reveals more of himself and his relationship with MI6 as the film rolls along, peeling away layers and machinations that create a classic Bond-villain feel in the best way. And he does all this while not appearing until the second half of the film. His turn as Silva, a super-hacker terrorist with a connection to M is a mirror image of Bond, in that Bond can see this is a path his life could lead to under similar circumstances. Judi Dench once again returns to the roll she has owned for quite some time and continues a wonderfully and emotionally subtle relationship with 007 that reaches its pinnacle in Skyfall, this is also where the film is most dramatically effective. Her quieter scenes with Bond are the fully realized intentions of the writer’s concept of M being a motherly figure to Craig’s Bond. Not wanting to reveal any more than I have, I felt the solid additions of Ralph Fiennes, Ben Winshaw and Naomi Harris provide the groundwork for new supporting characters that will surely continue in the films to come, each making their presence felt mano-a-mano alongside 007 and impacting the story in their own unique but familiar way.

All this and I haven’t even mentioned the women of Skyfall. Aside from Harris’s Eve, who offers far more rewards to fans of the series who show a little patience in the story, the Bond girls do little else than bring 007 from point A to B. And while one is given an emotional backstory that is a testament to Bond’s ability to read people, they’re throwaway characters that each provide a test to Bond’s fractured psyche. And pass he does folks, in a very artful and tasteful manner for a PG release. Also to note, the latest women to grace the series are stunningly gorgeous, but I prefer the first part!

In direction, Sam Mendes was simply a terrific choice to continue the series. In fact all the directors for the Craig bonds were fantastic choices in my opinion; I’m still of the belief that Marc Forster realized that his great script on paper didn’t translate to an interesting or entertaining story onscreen halfway through the process and had to turn something in to the studio. That something was Quantum of Solace, and we all thank him for his effort. But Sam Mendes is a theatrically trained stage director and his understanding of emotional resonance and the power it can give to any sudden moment of the story from scene to scene is superb. Other directors would never have the nerve or stones to make Bond anything weaker than a superhuman, not to mention the savvy, action hero type with very simple flaws and the most basic of emotions. Mendes and the writing team’s decisions to strip away the mystique of Bond’s world and let us in on a little familial history has rewarded the viewers with the ability to emotionally connect with the character in ways we have never before. Oh, and he’s also delivered some brilliant jaw-dropping action sequences, standing on the shoulders of past giants.

Mendes’s long-time collaborator Thomas Newman and cinematographer of all things Coen Bros. Roger Deakins have again proven themselves to stand alongside Mendes and continue their illustrious collaborations as a similar triumvirate not unlike Zimmer, Physter, and Nolan. The threads found in similar scores Newman has provided are all here, which makes the score that much better. He also knows just the right time to inject that classic overture and uses it to utter perfection. Deakins and Co. have finally taken the series into the digital age, and although I’m not a big fan of anything digital, I enjoyed the ability it granted Deakins to stage so much of the Skyfall using darks and silhouettes. At 2 hours and 22 minutes the film moves very quickly and proficiently. The few times the narrative slows you are so enthralled with the tension and suspense it feels like the highest note of a classic symphony being held for as long it can.

It’s weird to say with only one film dividing the initial reboot of the character, but Skyfall also feels like a restart to the series, in the best possible way. A film unlike any bond before it, there is emotional impact after nearly every scene that effectively ratchets up the suspense throughout, not unlike a certain favorite of mine. It wears its influences on its sleeve proudly, the most obvious inspirations on the surface being The Dark Knight, Home Alone, actually every Nolan film, and Goldeneye, but underneath there are many influences far more subtle if you care to revisit Skyfall sooner rather than later. Point emphasized, when was the last time James Bond had a western feel to it? In fact, much of the script is so clearly inspired by the work of Christopher Nolan and his brother Jonathon, not to mention the many, many visual cues, that you’d think there may be a special thanks to the brothers somewhere near the end of the credits. In closing, if this is the path for which Bond is set to follow, it’s safe to say we’ll all be there with him waiting to see what direction the many, many, many, many, many bullets will be coming from.

Rest easy James, you’re in great hands now.

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Lincoln Review (Nadia Sandhu)

Lincoln (2012)

Starring Daniel Day-Lewis, Sally Field and David Strathairn

Directed by Steven Spielberg

Don’t let the period costumes in the trailers fool you, Lincoln is no ordinary biopic. In point of fact, this film is not a biopic at all, but rather a snapshot of a final heroic act of politicking by one of the smartest  politicians to ever grace monetary currency.  The film opens as Lincoln is re-elected to a second term and the Civil War is dragging on towards its foregone conclusion.  Political intrigue and legal maneuvering are the order of the day as the president races to codify his maybe not so legally binding Emancipation Proclamation in the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution  – the abolition of slavery.

You won’t get to see how Abraham went from log cabin to the White House, or why his election in 1860 caused rich plantation owners who didn’t vote for him to rise up and secede from the Union (I’m looking at you @realDonaldTrump).  Rather, Lincoln is a movie about the vision and tenacity that makes a great leader and stands in marked contrast to the recent US Election Sideshow.  One hopes newly re-elected President Obama watches this film for useful political instruction STAT.  Actually one hopes the Republican backroom boys head out en masse as a timely reminder that political leadership is not the same thing as good business management and maybe, just maybe, Karl Rove’s heart will grow two sizes as he is reminded what being a Republican has meant to his country. I digress.

Masterful filmmaking meets THE acting performance of the Millennium (to date) as director Steven Spielberg and lead actor Daniel Day Lewis pull back the curtain on a dramatic, violent, emotional period where a pragmatic, rational, but no less visionary man used every trick in the book to successfully perform a political sword dance that safe guarded basic principles of democracy while still maintaining the sanctity of the law (even if it had to be bent to achieve the former).

It is not every day that a film comes along that everyone must see, but this is that film. See it tonight. Skyfall can wait! (Ed – Skyfall can’t wait, see both!)

Wrong Turn 5 Blu-Ray Review (Kirk Haviland)

Wrong Turn 5 Blu-Ray

Starring Doug Bradley, Camilla Arfwedson and Simon Ginty

Written and Directed by Declan O’Brien

New on Blu-Ray from our friends at Fox Home Entertainment is the newest entry in the mostly direct-to-video series Wrong Turn, Wrong Turn 5: Bloodlines. The original Wrong Turn was a passable genre romp that has somehow managed to spawn four sequels, the last three being directed by O’Brien. But should the series have ended before it started?

In Wrong Turn 5 we begin in a small West Virginia town that is hosting the legendary Mountain Man Festival on Halloween. The concert is where throngs of costumed party goers, some in traditional Halloween Garb, others dressed as deformed hillbillies, gather for a wild night of music and mischief. But the inbred family of hillbilly cannibals, Three Finger, One Eye and Saw Tooth that are in all of these films, kill the fun by trying to abduct a group of vacationing College students. The plan goes awry when the group’s patriarch, Maynard (Bradley) is arrested by the local Sherriff (Arfwedson). The three ‘boys’ go on all out killing spree, decimating everyone in their path to recovering their Uncle Maynard.

Wrong Turn 5 is an utter disaster. The acting is porous and extremely amateurish, even Bradley, Pinhead himself, is a lame duck sitting here. In Bradley’s defence the script is poor and almost non-existent, the “plot” simply there to drive us from one kill scene to the next. In many ways this feels like a ten year old uneducated horror junkie’s idea of a masterpiece. I will say that the location was good, as somehow they found a convincing enough part of Bulgaria to play the West Virginia town the film takes place in.  But the actual sets are poorly constructed, the jail house and a particular store that are key locations to the plot both look very fake. In fact the jail cells do not appear to have locks on them all, prompting Arfwedson to laughably “airlock” and unlock the cells.

The kills, the main reason these films still get made, are lacklustre and unoriginal. We’ve seen these all before and done way better. The limited budget is most evident in the particularly low budget effects work. Most of the practical effects here, while I can admire their commitment to use practical effects, could be better realized and rendered by film school students. I have seen films with micro budgets, like indie comedy Manborg deliver much better practical work with a fraction of the tools available.

The entire cast is from the UK, filming in Bulgaria, pretending to have U.S. accents. Why this was not a warning light I do not know, as there is more than one actor here that cannot convince us they are faking an accent. And the constant cackling of one of our main killers here, especially in the last act of the film, is not fear inducing or tension building, but grating and downright painful.

The Blu-Ray includes a very uninspired couple of behind the scenes featurettes, an actually effective set of director diaries, and an audio commentary by the director. As fun as the director’s video diaries are, it is nowhere near enough to compensate for the rest.

Ultimately the last people in this process I can blame are those at Fox Home Entertainment. These films still sell and make the studio tons of money. That said Wrong Turn 5 is awful. I did not think I would give a harsher criticism to a film than I did for Inbred, but I was sorely wrong. Do not buy, rent or stream Wrong Turn 5, it is strongly, strongly not recommended.

Till Next Time,

Movie Junkie TO

Make sure to keep up with what’s going on at Entertainment Maven by liking our Facebook page and having updates delivered right to your Facebook News Feed. It’s the only way to stay on top of all of our articles with the newest blockbusters and all the upcoming films, festivals and film related events in Toronto.

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