Monday, 30 March 2009

29: DUPLICITY

Why I chose it?

To tell you the truth, I travelled all the way to Hammersmith hoping that it was showing The Damned United. Alas, it wasn't. Therefore, I was left with four movies to choose from. Duplicity was picked because I like Clive Owen and I enjoyed Michael Clayton, which was written by the director.

Where?

Hammersmith, 830pm.

Comments?

Duplicity tries hard to bring together a complex plot of mystery and intrigue and almost pulls it off. The final twist in the tale is both clever and predictable and the film is a little clunky in bringing it all together. There's not the same feeling of complete satisfaction when the plot knots are unpicked; not like, say, Ocean's Eleven, which is as good a comparison as any.

The on screen chemistry between Julia Roberts (who, in my opinion, walks funny) and Clive Owen (always good) is not too bad. The banter between the two is enjoyable but is not as "cool" or smooth flowing as others (e.g. Out of Sight). The flashbacks to how their relationship develops is slightly annoying but is reasonably well handled. The one thing I couldn't get a grip on was how this relationship would work or last, given that they don't trust each other one iota. Must be the sex.

Would I pay to see it?

Probably not. It's an enjoyable romp that can be experienced on your TV at home and not necessary for a big screen experience.

Rating?

6 out of 10

Post Movie Quote:

"Not bad for a second choice. Must review cinema times in the future."

Sunday, 15 March 2009

28: WATCHMEN

Why I chose it?

This was one of the comic books that I'd always heard about but had never read. It was the only graphic novel included in a recent listing of post 1930s 100 novels to read. It was a comic that changed the shape of superheroes. The trailer looked awesome. I didn't need too much more convincing.

Where?

Wandsworth, 630pm.

Comments?

In two words: awesome and complex. This is multilayered story telling at its best. Will have to watch it again to catch all the script's intricacies. It is an amazing movie to watch, visually out there with a narrative that jumps in and out, back and forth but still works. The alternative style and storyline will turn a few away, as will the long running time, and some diehard Watchmen fans might be a little peeved about glossed over details, but I enjoyed this immensely - a no holds barred anti-superhero roller coaster ride with violence, language, sex and the most interesting madman since The Joker! I'm talking about Rorschach!


Would I pay to see it?

Hell yes! Especially as some of the plot points passed over me. Not sure I'm too keen to see Dr Manhattan's blue penis again though.

Rating?

9 out of 10

Post Movie Quote:

"I'll be ticking off another of the 100 novels to read before you croak very damn soon."

Thursday, 5 March 2009

Changes

The many demands of life have forced a change to the 100 Free Movie Blog. For some time, I have been contemplating closing it down and moving on. The reason for this was that it was taking some time to maintain, my blog entries falling well behind the number of movies I've watched (I think I am about eight behind at the moment). The Oscar series was a hard slog, that was for sure, and keeping the blog relatively up to date was taking time away from other things, including the novel that I am feverishly working on.

I recently read that blogging, Facebooking, Twittering and all that is all well and good but if it's taking away time from actually doing some novel writing, it should be canned. So that was what I had planned to do.

The thing is, I've loved cataloguing the movies I've watched this year, using my free movie voucher from Cineworld. I loved seeing the finished blogs with the eye catching posters. I loved watching the list on the right hand side (slowly) grow, loved perusing back through the movies I have seen.

During this aforementioned perusal, I happened across the first two movies I saw with my voucher, The Orphanage and [REC]. I noticed that the reviews were quick and to the point. Compare them to The Dark Knight and The Curious Case of Benjamin Button and you can see the difference, how my reviews have grown in size. I had loads to say about those latter movies, but did I have that much more to say then compared to The Orphanage? Maybe a little more, but not five paragraphs more.

So in order to keep the blog alive, I am going to revert back to how I began - short, sharp reviews with lovely large movie posters. That way, I'll be able to keep the blog going without my other writing suffering.

Moving on from that decision, the blog will include two different posts over the next month: a combination of "Catch Up" movies seen long before the Oscars started but not yet included in the 100, and newer releases, of which two I will be seeing this weekend if I meet my writing goals.

So I'm hear to stay, albeit in reduced form, so your comments would be appreciated to beef up the blog. I've also got some news that I have been holding back since late December; news that will no doubt be the death of me.

Keep watching for more soon!