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Author Topic: Red (2010)
Jonathan Goeldner
Phenomenal Film Handler

Posts: 1360
From: Washington, District of Columbia
Registered: Jun 2008


 - posted 10-18-2010 10:09 AM      Profile for Jonathan Goeldner   Email Jonathan Goeldner   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
Red (Uptown Theatre, 35mm, Dolby Digital):
It was fun to a point, but ultimately it had a lot of problems, the pacing was way off at times, Mary Louis Parker was grating, there wasn't enough Helen Mirren scenes and the story slight. Some of the action scenes were also shoddy. Seeing at the Uptown though is always a blast, the image when sitting on the center first floor seats is really in your face and the sound aptly bombastic. The print for a second day was perfect sans two moments where the prints 'were' pink tinged - ahhh 35mm, how I love thee... [Wink]

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Mark J. Marshall
Film God

Posts: 3188
From: New Castle, DE, USA
Registered: Aug 2002


 - posted 10-22-2010 12:22 PM      Profile for Mark J. Marshall     Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
If you can turn your brain down to low and suspend your disbelief and just watch the fun for fun's sake, and you enjoy watching things blow up, then you'll enjoy this movie.

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Robert John Jeromson
Master Film Handler

Posts: 264
From: Auckland, New Zealand
Registered: Jul 2004


 - posted 10-30-2010 05:38 AM      Profile for Robert John Jeromson   Email Robert John Jeromson   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
Liked it [thumbsup]

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Stu Jamieson
Jedi Master Film Handler

Posts: 524
From: Buccan, Qld, Australia
Registered: Jan 2008


 - posted 10-30-2010 09:49 PM      Profile for Stu Jamieson   Email Stu Jamieson   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
The plot to RED (that's "Retired Extremely Dangerous" for those of you not savvy with faux CIA lingo) is almost entirely inconsequential; something about the Vice President slaughtering some villagers in Guatemala and then assassinating all those involved in the clean-up for the sake of his own political expedience. Whatever. The point is that Bruce Willis is back doing what he did best - kicking ass. As the smallest (in stature terms) of Hollywood's macho gang of three, Willis was the one we ordinary folk could relate to the most. In a world encompassing Conan, Rambo and McLane, the latter is the one we could most easily (sic) aspire to. His return to the action genre is most welcome and puts this film head to head with Sly's earlier The Expendables with which it has much in common, if not in body count'n'guts then in its premise of a bunch of wrinkly killers back in the biz.

The mood is kept light and frivolous with a tongue-infused cheek though thankfully this puts the film more in line with The Long Kiss Goodnight than Willis' own lacklustre Hudson Hawk. The film openly invites the audience to not take any of the proceedings seriously, to just have fun with it, and it mostly succeeds in this charge. It is overall stronger than director Robert Schwenke's previous film, the rather inconsistent The Time Traveller's Wife though it does over-reach just a tad in its final moments.

Backed by a high calibre cast including Helen Mirren, John Malkovich, Brian Cox, Richard Dreyfuss, Morgan Freeman, Karl Urban and Julian McMahon, the film would work better if the stars in the support roles (namely Mirren, Malkovich, Freeman, Dreyfuss and Cox) cameoed their appearances. Naturally, the studio's compelling need to sell its star power quashes such an opportunity to knowingly wink at the audience.

The stand-out performance, however, comes from Mary-Louise Parker who plays her hopeless romantic with a penchant for pulp espionage fiction beautifully. Her comic timing is also spot on and her subtle facial tics betray just as much about her character as her dialogue. It's also great to see a youthful 93yo Ernest Borgnine back on the silver screen - another lost opportunity for an uncredited cameo.

Ridiculous? Yes. Unfeasible? Yes. Full of holes? Yes (and not just bullet ones). Fun? Definitely!

7.5 out of 10.

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David Stambaugh
Film God

Posts: 4021
From: Eugene, Oregon
Registered: Jan 2002


 - posted 11-01-2010 10:58 AM      Profile for David Stambaugh   Author's Homepage   Email David Stambaugh   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
Sunday 10/31 at Regal 15 in Eugene, #1 35mm. Good presentation, no complaints. [thumbsup]

Confirmed: The Regal roller coaster policy is back but since they play it through the preshow system now it's kind of lacking impact compared to how it used to be in 35mm.

I liked the movie, quite a lot actually. The plot is incidental to the onscreen fun. Helen Mirren firing automatic weapons and looking like she means it? I approve. [thumbsup]

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