Showing posts with label Johnny Depp. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Johnny Depp. Show all posts

Tuesday, 27 October 2015

Tusk

***DISCLAIMER*** The following review is entirely my opinion. If you comment (which I encourage you to do) be respectful. If you don't agree with my opinion, that's fine. To each their own. These reviews are not meant to be statements of facts or endorsements, I am just sharing my opinions and my perspective when watching the film and is not meant to reflect how these films should be viewed. Finally, the reviews are given on a scale of 0-5. 0, of course, being unwatchable. 1, being terrible. 2, being not great. 3, being okay. 4, being great and 5, being epic! And if you enjoy these reviews feel free to share them and follow the blog or follow me on Twitter (@RevRonster) for links to my reviews and the occasional live-Tweet session of the movie I'm watching! It's The Human Centipede...but about turning the Mac kid into a Walrus...and made by the guy who was Silent Bob.






Tusk ? 2 out of 5

I consider myself a casual fan of Kevin Smith.  I like him more as a person who shares my interests than him as a filmmaker and writer (or as someone who can?t take criticism very well).  I can?t watch his old films anymore because the humor just doesn?t have the staying power for me, so things like Clerks and its sequel, Dogma, Chasing Amy, and Mallrats are unwatchable now and completely unfunny.  And don?t get me started on Cop Out.  However, I still like Jersey Girl (George Carlin?s performance in that film was incredible) and Red State might be the greatest film from the man I have ever seen.  But when I heard he was making Tusk and found out what it was about, I was sold because I love really fucked up films.  I was actually really excited to see it?and then the disappointment hit.
Ah, podcasting...just as annoying as blogging.  Wait, what did I just say?!?
Wallace Bryton (who is played by Justin Long and has a name that suspiciously sounds like ?walrus?) is a podcaster with his friend Teddy (Haley Joel Osment).  One day, he heads to the Great White North to visit a viral video star but learns that the star is no longer around and he?s left without a story.  He stumbles upon a mysterious and worldly man named Howard Howe (Michael Parks) and thinks he found something to talk about on his next podcast.  Granted, he totally did but he?ll never get to tell his story because Howe wants to surgically transform Wallace into a walrus.  Now it?s up to his girlfriend Ally (Genesis Rodriguez) and Teddy to locate and save him.  On the way, they find themselves teaming with a mysterious lawman named Guy Lapointe (Johnny Depp) who has been hunting Howe for some time.  Can they reach Wallace before the transformation is complete?
They don't...hashtag Fuck Yo Spoilers!

I love ridiculous films and this one, based on a story that Kevin Smith and his buddy came up with on his podcast, sounded all kinds of insane and I instantly fell in love with the concept.  Not to mention, it?s pretty damn cool that Kevin Smith had the means to make this silly idea a reality.  Not all creative types have the means, financial support, or the faculties to get anything they come up with off the ground and made?so, the fact that Tusk exists is already something cool and I can get behind?of course, just because I think it?s cool that a movie exists or appreciate its existence due to its influence on free speech, creativity, and the advancement of storytelling and filmmaking doesn?t necessarily mean I enjoy it or think it?s a good movie.  I think The Texas Chainsaw Massacre was a revolution for horror films but I still think it's a terrible movie.  I also think Pink Flamingos is a bold statement in the world of filmmaking but that doesn't mean I find any entertainment value from it.
Typical guy, polishing his walrus tusk.

Tusk starts out fantastically?for the most part.  The premise is established and built upon terrifically and it feels like it is really going somewhere amazing.  Sure, it felt like a bad mockery of The Human Centipede but I found that film both unsettling and entertaining so I thought why wouldn?t I enjoy a film that feels like a silly parody of it?  Then, to add to it, Michael Parks is giving off an absolutely unbelievable performance and he makes the character of Howard Howe simply captivating and thrilling to watch.  However, it?s not long before the film starts to slip?
However, Parks made the film a must watch, I can't emphasize that enough.

The second the film starts, it?s obvious that Justin Long will not be a sympathetic character.  He?s brash, abrasive, disrespectful, loud, and an all-around asshole.  Within the first ten minutes, I wanted his character dead and gone and that is what makes the film and its story hard to deal with.  Part of the magic with The Human Centipede was the fact you felt sorry for the hell the nutso doctor was putting the victims through.  I had no sympathy for Justin Long?s character of Wallace.  I get that he is meant to be a parody of a travelling American and was there to annoy the Canadian characters but it was so hard to feel anything for him during the horror he was going through because he was so damn unlikable.  At no point is he redeemed either and, as the film progresses, we learn that he actively cheats on his girlfriend.  So, he doesn?t get better, he only gets worse.
I like you Long but, gawd damn, I hated your character.

Secondly, the film has some truly abysmal humor.  I was hoping for a great dark comedy and it definitely has its moments that are twistedly funny but so many of the jokes in the film are hack material.  Such gags can work when you utilize the whole ?it?s funny because it?s really unfunny? kinda stuff that the alt comics love to do (and I am guilty of in my stand up) but when an overwhelming majority of the jokes in the film are cheap shots at Canadians with the intention of being unfunny so the jokes become funny, it starts to make the humor in the film look lazy and weak.
I tried to laugh at this terrible joke but all that came out of my mouth was sadness.

Finally, the film drags itself out to the point the whole joke of it has run its course very early on.  While it was cool to see Johnny Depp show up and play the French Canadian version of Inspector Clouseau, his character quickly starts to wear thin as all his scenes go way too long and all the humor that was in them starts to get repetitive and boring.  In fact, the whole story starts to feel this way as it very quickly starts to drag out its thin premise and pushes the boundaries of making it into a feature length feature.  Honestly, this probably could have work better and a hell of a lot smoother if it was a short film.
I'm assuming Smith got Depp for the film with promises of acting through make-up...
that's fucking catnip to Depp.

And I won?t bother getting into how disappointing the ending was?
And I won't get into the fact that somehow Haley Joel Osment still has a baby's face
when he's all grown up.

Tusk had a lot of potential thanks to an incredibly epic performance from Michael Parks and a strange and very wacky premise.  However, the film overstayed its welcome by stretching its limited premise too far and too many of the other performances are either annoying or aren?t under control within the film?s editing.  In the end, the film actually comes off worse than the film it is clearly trying to lampoon and isn?t a very good start to Kevin Smith?s Canadian Trilogy or True North Trilogy...or whatever it is being called. 

So...so the goal with Justin Long was to make him Norm McDonald's impression of Burt Reynolds?

Into the Woods

***DISCLAIMER*** The following review is entirely my opinion. If you comment (which I encourage you to do) be respectful. If you don't agree with my opinion, that's fine. To each their own. These reviews are not meant to be statements of facts or endorsements, I am just sharing my opinions and my perspective when watching the film and is not meant to reflect how these films should be viewed. Finally, the reviews are given on a scale of 0-5. 0, of course, being unwatchable. 1, being terrible. 2, being not great. 3, being okay. 4, being great and 5, being epic! And if you enjoy these reviews feel free to share them and follow the blog or follow me on Twitter (@RevRonster) for links to my reviews and the occasional live-Tweet session of the movie I'm watching! Pretty sure there's a porn parody of this called Onto the Wood.




Into the Woods ? 3 out of 5

Musicals are not really my thing. While I will admit that Les Mis?rables is ridiculously moving and The Book of Mormon might be the most brilliant piece I?ve ever set my eyes and ears upon, I don?t really seek out any other forms of musicals unless they are a Disney film, written by the geniuses behind Orgazmo and South Park, or contain Muppets. Since Into the Woods is a Disney film, I have to say that I was interested in this one, even though I was completely unfamiliar with the stage version?also, seeing Johnny Depp as a pimp wolf didn?t hurt my desire to watch this either.

Like all films he's in, there was no make-up artists for Depp.  He just showed up to
set already wearing this and taken from his private collections.


The joke is on Jack and the baker's wife.  That's
actually the golden kidney stone passed by the giant.
A witch (who may or may not be wicked) long ago placed a curse on her neighbor?s home and it has caused the son, a baker (James Corden), and his wife (Emily Blunt) to be unable to have a child. The witch (Meryl Streep) has offered to lift the curse if they can collect a few items for her; items like a cape as red as blood, a cow as white as milk, slippers pure as gold and hair as yellow as corn. Quickly the duo break for the woods to collect the items but, as they make their move, fate seems to play along and Red Riding Hood (Lilla Crawford) and her red cape make their way to Grannie?s house?as long as the Wolf (Johnny Depp) doesn?t get in the way, Cinderella (Anna Kendrick) is out to defy her Stepmother and sisters and make it to the ball and meet her prince (Chris Pine), and Jack (Daniel Huttlestone) is sent by his mother to sell their cow. Soon all their paths cross and it seems the curse will be lifted and everyone will have their happy ending?until the infamous beans that Jack sells the cow for work their magic and then all hell will break loose in the kingdom.

"Cinderella's hair isn't blond!  Stick to the source material."
That's my impression of the fanboys complaining on the internet.


Chris Pine's natural pheromones often cause open flames
to flare.  He's dangerously attractive, people.
Overall, I thought Into the Woods was okay. The performances are fun, the music is fantastically performed, the settings all look amazing and really helped create a whimsical atmosphere but, for the most part, the film did kinda bore me. Maybe the two hour running length is the cause but after a certain point, I found that I just could no longer stay immersed in the story. Maybe that?s because at one point, the film felt like it suddenly started all over again.

James Corden kinda looks like a chubby Star-Lord in the film...that's not
meant to be an insult.  I wish I looked like Star-Lord in pretty much any way,
even a chubby way.


The Earth got an erection again.
When the film begins, I was quickly diving into its events and was having fun with the songs, comedy, and the characters. However, at a certain point, the logical ending arrives and the movie feels like it should end but, in reality, it was really just the beginning of the final act; an act that involves the actions of all the main characters coming home to roost and causing mayhem, destruction and death. At this point, another point of conflict is created and the characters have to come together?while they are coming apart at the seams?and try and bring peace to their land. This is all find and dandy and contains some more of those lighthearted and brilliantly performed songs but, by this point, the film feels like it is firing up its sequel and the whole ordeal starts to feel tedious and I found myself getting very bored.

Dammit, Streep.  Stop being so likable and talented.


I've been there, Red...and I've also used the excuse
that they are "for Granny."
That?s the real killer of this film for me. The performances are fun?there isn?t a single player I didn?t care for?, the songs are enjoyable, and the film has some very moving and amusing moments. However, I just ended up getting very bored with it. It?s still very well made and I enjoyed the first half but there is no way I could ever sit through it again because of its second half and the film definitely didn?t interest me in seeing a stage production of it either. While mostly decent and fun, Into the Woods just dragged too badly in the second half for me really to get into it any more than a single-shot viewing.