Showing posts with label Olivia Wilde. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Olivia Wilde. Show all posts

Friday, July 29, 2011

Cowboys & Aliens: Review By Gabe167 (Photo-Video)

Cowboys & Aliens
So this movie is about Daniel Craig who wakes up in the middle of no where and has no idea who he is or how he got there, then spaceship arrives in Arizona, 1873, to take over the Earth, starting with the Wild West region. A posse of cowboys are all that stand in their way.
So I really liked the story it was really cool and had a 50/50 chance to be great or bad. The only thing with the story is that the reason the aliens are on Earth is so f*cking stupid if you saw the movie you know what Im talking about. Also i think that the big epic battle at the end went on alittle to long. 
The acting was way better then i thought it was going to be. I knew Daniel Craig and Harrison Ford would be great but I was only scared that Olivia Wilde would be bad because in Tron she really didnt really do it for me she did ok but I really wanted more. In this she does great and I watched Tron today for the first time in along time and and now I know she can act and be a leading ladie.
Now the direction is really great Jon Favreau did better direction in this then both Iron Man movies and yeah it is just out standing.
The Visuals are outstanding the aliens look really good but the only thing is that there is a part in this movie when Daniel Craig has a flash back it show an alien and the sun is shining down on it and it looks really bad. Also the ships look good but the only thing is that somtimes look like a blury fuzz ball.
But overall I loved this movie it was better then Battle LA. So 4.0/5.0 stars for Cowboys & Aliens and yeah I know thats the same overall as Battle LA

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Cowboys & Aliens a clever combo

The reason for Cowboys & Aliens — the justification for it, the appeal of it, the whole point of it — is contained in the title.
Take a cowboy movie, add space aliens. That's a gimmick that could easily have exhausted itself after 20
minutes, but director Jon Favreau, a team of screenwriters and some well-cast actors keep it alive, and the result is a crowd-pleasing summer movie with more wit than most.
The more you know westerns, the more you'll enjoy Cowboys & Aliens. Every western cliché is pumped up and blown out, not only the clichés of story but of character, costume and set design. Sam Rockwell, as a merchant, shows up with the little round spectacles and plastered down hair that you've seen in a hundred movies. Paul Dano as a spoiled drunken brat on a rampage starts shooting up the town, like every obnoxious skinny kid with a gun from a thousand westerns. And the shots of the rickety old town, a few structures in a vast nothingness, are a little more forlorn than usual.
At the center of it all, of course, is a lonesome stranger with a dark past. This time it's Daniel Craig, as stern and unsmiling as Clint Eastwood, who wakes up in the movie's first scene in the middle of nowhere, with an elaborate metal bracelet on his wrist and suffering from amnesia. But he does remember how to fight. When he takes down four creepy guys - they're filthy with long beards and look like something out of western central casting - the audience settles in for a good time.
For the most part, Cowboys & Aliens delivers. Favreau has a subtly satirical sensibility that can suggest absurdity simply through camera placement, as when Craig stands framed in a doorway, like some western God, and then says, "Hello?" - sounding just a little unsure and ridiculous. The script is sprinkled with funny moments for viewers in the know. At one point, an exasperated Rockwell turns on someone and says, "Why don't you sing a song, cook some beans, do something useful!"
But the movie's most inexhaustible source of delight is Harrison Ford as a cranky old entrepreneur in an Indiana Jones hat. It's a given in every Ford movie that he's ticked off about something. The trick is to give him a reason to be so surly. Space aliens taking his son? Alien death rays burning up his cattle? OK, these are good reasons. Ford doesn't exactly play for laughs, and in fact the movie provides him with several dramatic moments that he seems to relish. But Ford knows who he is on screen and what he has come to mean over the decades. He knows exactly where the laughs are, and he nails every one of them.
On the downside, Cowboys & Aliens is not the western answer to Inglourious Basterds. Here, genre isn't exaggerated to jar audiences from their complacency or to discover new truths. The movie combines cowboys with science fiction only for the sake of doing it, for the fun of it. Like the novel Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, you already have the best joke going in. Lacking an overarching purpose or viewpoint, the movie is no better than it happens to be in the moment, and there is a 20-minute stretch, about a quarter of the way in, that drags.
But Cowboys & Aliens gets better as it goes along, and benefits from a director with a solid command of tone. The actors may know they're in a comedy, but the characters certainly don't. That's an important difference that allows us, once the premise's novelty has worn off, to care whether Daniel Craig can rescue a very somber Olivia Wilde from the clutches of an alien space ship, for example. Or to maintain a reasonable interest in the fate of a humanity threatened by gigantic, green, snorting monsters.