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Dunkirk/Darkest Hour

 In 2017 within six months two films were released that told different viewpoints of the same larger story.  In the late spring of 1940 several months into World War II, Europe was reacting slowly and ineffectively to Germany's unexpected blitzkrieg tactics.  The German forces had taken over most of France and driven the French troops, along with about 400,000 British troops, who were trying to help defend France, onto the beaches of Dunkirk in Northeastern France, which is 38 nautical miles across the English channel.  The British felt an urgent need to rescue their forces both for their safety and because these troops might be the only hope of keeping Germany from invading Great Britain.   Two top English directors made films exploring this crisis during the same period.  Christopher Nolan made Dunkirk, which told the story from the perspective of the soldiers, sailors, and pilots.  Joe Wright made Darkest Hour in which newly instated Prime Mini...

Bullet Train

  In 1998 a film was released starring Mark Wahlberg and Lou Diamond Phillips called The Big Hit.  The Big Hit is an action comedy about a group of hitmen who kidnap a young woman and hide her in a house in the suburbs. It's the kind of film best watched with a group if you are in the mood for something offbeat.  Diamond Phillips has a ball playing a manipulative sleeze and Wahlberg plays the straight man who is a terrific killer but whose personal life is a mess (due in large part to having two girlfriends).  The stunts are so outrageous at one pointed I commented that they were breaking so many laws of physics they should be cited.  It is pretty violent and vulgar but I had a good time with it. My reason for bringing up The Big Hit is Bullet Train reminded me of it, with a touch of Guy Ritchie's British action comedies like Snatch and The Man From Uncle thrown in .  In the summer of 2022 I took my kids to see several movies including Doctor Strange and th...

Marvel Sixth Batch

Spoilers for the films below as well as for the old Spider Man and Amazing Spider Man films. Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings (2021) Marvel's first Asian inspired film, directed by Destin Daniel Creston, has some incredible imagery clearly inspired by Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon and the films surrounding it.  The film uses ancient lore and old family rivalries in its epic tale of Shang-Chi who teams with his aunt Ying Nan and his sister Xu Xialing, to battle his father Xu Wenwu who is being tricked to try to resurrect his mother, Ying Li.  The film leads Shang-Chi, who is accompanied by his best friend Katy from San Francisco to Macau to Ta Lo which is in a separate dimension.   The opening sequence in which Xu Wenwu, who has been established as greedy man in possession of the ten rings which grant supernatural powers meets Ying Li in Ta Lo and they battle is probably the highlight due to the playful nature.  Interestingly Xu Wenwu had let go of his ...

No Time to Die Part II

Back at Mi6, Bond protects Madeleine, looking uncomfortable, claiming he doesn't know her and then drives straight to her house in northern Norway.     Bond's approach at Madeleine's home mirrors several shots from Safin's from the opening (overhead, a  from the right showing the gun out but Bond is walking much faster than Safin who has a limp, and a shot from behind him as he comes up to the lake in front of the house but the music, different season (it looks like early fall whereas the opening was winter) tells us that this is going to be different.   The scene inside the house is one of the best in the film and is helped by my favorite cue.  Zimmer's "Home" goes from the warmer theme outside to more suspenseful inside.  Bond has his gun out, probably because he is not sure if he can trust her or what he will find there.  Madeleine appears, challenging Bond to trust her, by referencing the gun.  Bond uncomfortably puts it awa...

No Time to Die Part I

This is a long one so I broke it into two parts to make it more digestible.  Spoilers for all things Bond below:  No Time to Die faced so many roadblocks from original conception to release that it feels it was willed into existence, despite having a clear setup from the end of Spectre.  At the end of that film Bond captured Blofeld but opted not to execute him.  Bond left the secret service to try to start a life with Madeleine Swann, the daughter of Mr. White, Bond's onetime nemesis who had worked for Spectre.  In Spectre Madeline told a story of a man who entered their house which left a thread to be explored. Daniel Craig made a comment to an interviewer right after finishing the long shoot for Spectre, on which he broke his leg, that right at that moment he would rather slash his wrists than play Bond again.  I read the entire interview (as opposed to just the headline) and in context he was speaking about how tired he was in the moment and was clearly...

Rocky Movies Part II

My discussion on the Rocky films, continued.  Spoilers below:                                                                                       Rocky V  (1990) Rocky V has a reputation as the nadir of the series.  Stallone has said that it is because he created a story that is too depressing and Rocky movies are supposed to be inspiring.  The producers have said that the film was scripted for Rocky to die at the end until an 11th hour change which gives the film a mixed tone.  I will admit I have a soft spot for it because after all the showiness of Rocky IV it tried to go back to focus on the characters and develop the relationship between Rocky and his son, which had not been don until this point....