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Always Packed for Adventure!

It's the destination and the journey.

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Movie Review- Chappie

Did the trailer for Chappie look appealing? Nope.

Did we go ahead and see it anyways? Yup. 

SPOILERS AHEAD

PLOT - In the not-too-distant future, the violence in Johannesburg has escalated and a robotic police force is replacing human officers. This is working fairly well to combat the crime rates, until a series of events propelled by human egos, upsets the delicate balance between humans and machines.

Deon (Dev Patel) is the head engineer working on the current droids used in the police force. He has two problems. The first, is his after-work experimentations that have let him to discover a way to make droids sentient. When he tells his boss, Michelle ( Sigourney Weaver) about his discovery, she shoots down his idea. He cannot drop it and he sneaks a damaged droid out of the office compound, so that he can experiment at home. His second problem, is his coworker, Vincent ( Hugh Jackman). Vincent is jealous of Deon's success and wants his own creation to replace the police droids that Deon has created. Vincent will stop at nothing to see Deon destroyed.

Deon's problems escalate, when he is kidnapped by a band of criminals who are hoping to use the engineer to help them disable the robotic police force. What they don't bargain for, is becoming part of Deon's experiment, when Deon reprograms the stolen droid and Chappie (voiced by Sharlto Copley) comes to life. Deon must protect the child-like Chappie from the criminals and stop the criminals from carrying out their plans.

LIKE - There was very little that I liked about this film, except for it made me laugh. It's destined to be a cult classic and it falls into the "It's so bad, that it's almost good" category. From a production value stand-point, the film and effects look good. In particular, the droids are very well done and believable. 

DISLIKE - Where to start? This movie is a mess. The story isn't terrible per se, but the dialogue and characters are so ridiculous that they wreck anything that might have been good. The best-worst part are the gang of criminals, especially Ninja and Yolandi (the names of the characters and the real-life rappers who play them), who look like extras in Biff Tannen's crew from Back to the Future: Part Two. 

One of my favorite parts was towards the end of the film, when Yolandi is suddenly wearing a professionally made shirt that says "Chappie." They live in an abandoned factory and they are consumed with making a large sum of money in a few days or face being killed, yet she has managed to get this shirt made. Like most of the movie, this is nonsense. At least there is a moment when the ridiculousness of the name "Chappie" is addressed. It's a truly terrible name.

I must mention that this is the only Sharlto Copley film, where his accent hasn't driven me nuts. I thought it was strange that they only decided to subtitle one of the villains, when they were all equally tough to understand. 

The film takes itself seriously until the last quarter, where there is an all-out bloodbath that is led by Vincent, who is finally able to get his revenge. At this point in the film, they have lost control of the droid police force and Vincent has been given permission to use his creation to fix the problem. This is a big deal, yet no bosses are giving any oversight to Vincent. He is alone and allowed to go on a rampage. This makes zero sense.

RECOMMEND - No, no, no. Not even as a rental. Well, maybe as a rental, if you have plenty of liquor. This is clearly a summer-release type of film and the reason that it didn't get released in the summer, is because it's terrible.

tags: Chappie, Chappie Movie Review, Why is the Robot Named Chappie, Yolandi and Ninja in Chappie, Back to the Future Part Two Biff's Style, Looks Like Extras in BTTF Part Two, Droids in Chappie, Sentient Droids, High Jackman as Vincent in Chappie, Sigourney Weaver as Michelle in Chappie, Dev Patel as Deon in Chappie, Movies Set in Johannesburg, Man Vs Machine, Sharlto Copleys Accent, Sharlto Copley as Chappie, So Bad that It's Good, Chappie as a Cult Film, Bad Dialogue in Chappie, Biff Tannen, Why Does Yolanda Wear a Chappie Tee-Shirt, Villains in Chappie, Worst Movie 2015 Chappie
categories: Watch
Thursday 03.12.15
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

Movie Review - Maleficent

Sleeping Beauty is my favorite classic Disney film and I love Angelina Jolie, so I was very excited to see this new take on the story. I was left feeling 50/50 about the film. There are some aspects of it that I loved, but a lot missed the mark.

First, the good...the overall story was solid. I liked the duality of Maleficent and having her be an anti-hero. There have been so many stories with the gimmick of telling the villains side of the tale, yet this may be the best of them. The writers gave Maleficent clear and compelling motivation. I bought into the story. I loved how they explained the raven and the dragon, it was very clever. Angelina Jolie was fantastic in the role, as was Isobelle Molloy and Ella Purnell, who played the younger Maleficents. I loved the Lana Del Rey rendition of "Once Upon a Dream". It was creepy and haunting.

The bad....the film has two entirely conflicting tones. Half of the time it was a goofy comedy clearly aimed at young children and the other half was dark and violent. Who was the target audience for this film? I certainly wouldn't take a young child to see it and as an adult, I was bored during the comedy parts.

Personally, I would have killed the comedy. The three fairy godmothers were just awful. They weren't funny at all and they never seemed to establish a connection with Aurora. She was quite happy to ditch them on her sixteenth birthday. 

I didn't like Maleficent's land with it's pixies and Fraggle Rock rejects. I'm not generally a fan of fantasy, so I might be a bit biased. I understand the point of having her world in the story, but I would have imagined it very differently. It didn't work for me at all.

Elle Fanning was fine playing Aurora. However, Aurora is such an overly innocent character that it's grating. They needed to give her depth.

The casting of Sharlto Copley as King Stefan. Ugh. I just can't take Copley seriously. It doesn't matter the role, his accent and melodramatic acting sends me into giggle fits. I kind of liked having King Stefen turn into Sarah Winchester as he was going mad, but Copley was terribly miscast in the role. Speaking of accents, it didn't matter so much since everyone had a totally different accent in this film. I guess in a fantasy realm, consistency doesn't matter? 

Jolie's terrible make-up job. It didn't look like defined cheek-bones, it looked like make-up smeared on her face to create the illusion. I felt like I was looking at a theater performer close-up after the show. Her costume was great, hair was fabulous...make-up = fail. 

Okay, I take it back, I can't rate this 50/50. I definitely disliked it more than I liked it, but it's worth seeing if you're a fan of Jolie or Sleeping Beauty. 

 

tags: Sleeping Beauty, Maleficent, Maleficent Review, Angelina Jolie as Maleficent, Isobelle Molloy as Maleficent, Who is the Target Audience for Maleficent, Maleficent for kids or adults?, Elle Fanning as Aurora, Lana Del Rey Once Upon a Dream, Sharlto Copley as King Stefan, Angelia Jolie Maleficent Makeup, Sarah Winchester, Reimagining of Sleeping Beauty Maleficent, Malificent Anti-Hero, Fraggle Rock Rejects, Sharlto Copleys Accent, Ella Purnell Maleficent
categories: Watch
Friday 06.06.14
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

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