Ye gods, I've not posted in ages. I suppose this post ought to be excellent to make up for the lack of me
So, recently I've been to see
A Film About Owls (Legend of the Guarsafhdfasd etc) and
Let Me In.
I enjoyed Owls in a very selfish way. It wasn't a good film, but it did its dirty deeds so wholeheartedly tastefully I couldn't help but like it. The CG was probably the best I've seen as of yet, with some truly astounding shots in it (one involving some marvelous slow motion lightning
which looks as beautiful as it does in real life.)
The 3D use was an interesting cross between average and frankly, the best use I've seen of it yet. Snyder's finally found a use for slowmo thematically. Some scenes worked
really well with the slowmo added in both for drama and to allow you to see what was going on without any of that Avataresque image flicker. The film has my favourite 3D shot in it, and I'm half tempted to recommend a watch just for it, but I shan't.
The acting was above par given the formulaic nature of the bigger plot points, with some nice performances by Geoffrey Rush and Helen Mirren. I think the script needed to be much stronger for the story it was telling - it was interesting enough to keep watching, but not enough to make much of an impact. I liked how thorough the worldbuilding was though, with everything being owl-friendly and claw-usable.
My least favourite thing about the film was the use of music. Whilst the themes themselves were actually pretty good, and certainly suitably epic, its implementation was definitely a little strange. 70% of the climax music was so quiet it had almost no impact - at one point there was no music whatsoever. Whilst I'm all for a thematic use of silence at key points, this was definitely not it. I'm far more for a score that complements the action and the dialogue with a good sound mix, much more akin to an Incredibles-esque Giacchino score; especially for a children's film. Christopher Nolan's recent films have all had very loud and brash climaxes, but from the excellent sound mix, all can intermingle and work perfectly together. This didn't, and it was a much weaker film for it.
I think I'll probably go again for another watch before it's gone to see if I just missed the best bits of the score
Next,
Let Me In.
I really liked the original. It was quiet, understated, beautiful and poignant. This version was none of these, and was a better film for it.
I must admit, I was very much looking forward to this since reading a few preview screening reviews and interviews with the cast and crew. I was pleased that the director made sure that none of the rest watched it so it didn't inform their performance or the final quality of the film. It was adapted from both the screenplay of the original and the book, meaning things could be interpreted differently. I liked Chloe Moretz in Kick-Ass and Kody Smit-McPhee in The Road; both big films and in both they gave particularly mature and interesting performances. I also found out that one of my favourite composers was doing the score. So, to say I went in wanting to like it is a fair assumption. I'm very glad I did.
It's a similar enough film in plotting to the Swedish version, but with what I feel are lots of smarter decisions. Some of the fat has been cut (making it feel faster-paced, but less poignant for it), and it's far more brash. The vampirism is much creepier, making it a far more intense movie.
Moretz and Smit-McPhee were as good as expected: nothing short of exceptional. I also really enjoyed the performance of the bully character, Dylan Minette who did a stellar job at being really bloomin intimidating for a teenager. My favourite actor though was probably Richard Jenkins playing Abby's "Father" - a role that was very subtly redefined in this version but which shone him in a completely different light.
He's also in my favourite scene in the film, one which definitely has my absolute favourite cinematographical moment in film. It's a totally new scene, to do with him "helping" Abby and I really don't want to spoil a single moment of it. Really great stuff, and I would LOVE to know how they did it. Absolute magic.
Finally, the score! I did think the original's was a little bit too quiet and perhaps a little too gentle (which is fine, of course, it's a smaller film - this is an example of the differences between the two). Allow me to fanboy a little over Giacchino's use of everything from a lonely violin to splendidly creepy boy's choir. He does some very adept riffing off a Polish gentleman named Krzysztof Penderecki who's famous for creating music so creepy it was used as-is in the Shining. Going to have to plump for him over the original, I'm afraid.
The original
feels like such a different film. This one's tone is only very slightly to a more horror-friendly western audience, but the shift seems to move mountains in big areas like the exposition, character development and plotting. Some segments had my mind racing after a character played a line slightly differently, or a plot point was put in a different chronological order. Other bits were just deliriously engrossing. Mark (Slayed) can attest to the exact amount of mind-blown-ness I was experiencing after the credits rolled.
You so, so need to watch it. Some of you will think it a shot-for-shot remake, whilst others will think it totally different. I think it's just amazing.
Oh, and it's also Hammer's first film back from the dead. This can only be a good thing.