items tagged with Wolfgang Petersen
Written By: Mike Schulz
Section: Movies
Category: Reviews
2006-07-05 04:28:14
SUPERMAN RETURNS
It takes a while - nearly half an hour - to reach the first truly wonderful scene in Superman Returns. In it, a group of reporters (including Kate Bosworth's Lois Lane) are on an airborne jet's P.R. junket when the electronics suddenly fail, causing the plane to hurtle toward the earth. Thankfully, Superman (Brandon Routh), who has been M.I.A. for the past five years, is there to save the day, which he does by catching the jet and gently guiding it to the middle of a major-league ballpark (during game play, no less). He checks on the passengers, makes a comment (echoing a similar line in Richard Donner's 1978 Superman) about how air flight is "still the safest way to travel," and exits the plane to the deafening cheers of the baseball fans in the stands, and the rousing Americana of it all - baseball and Superman! - produces an extraordinary, joyful rush; you're hard-pressed not to cheer along.
Read More About Superhero Worship: "Superman Returns" And "Poseidon: The IMAX Experience"...
Written By: Mike Schulz
Section: Movies
Category: Reviews
2006-05-17 08:25:35
ART SCHOOL CONFIDENTIAL
I’ve read critics who have described Terry Zwigoff’s Art School Confidential as nihilistic, sour, and mean-spirited. They’re saying it like that’s a bad thing. Working with screenwriter Daniel Clowes – adapting the film from his comic book, and again collaborating with the director who helmed 2001’s Clowes-scripted Ghost World – Zwigoff has, here, fashioned a wonderfully nihilistic, sour, and mean-spirited comedy; it might take easy potshots at the politics and posturings of the art community, but those potshots are funny and clever, and the film’s refusal to sentimentalize any of its characters (even our protagonist) is incredibly refreshing. Still, the movie has been met with much dissatisfaction, if not outright annoyance. Art School Confidential seems, to me, the most thoroughly misunderstood movie of the year.
Read More About Brush With Greatness: "Art School Confidential," "Poseidon," "An American Haunting," "Akeelah & The Bee," "Hoot," And "RV"...
Written By: Mike Schulz
Section: Movies
Category: Reviews
2004-05-19 00:00:00
TROY
About 100 minutes into Troy – director Wolfgang Petersen’s and screenwriter David Benioff’s very loose adaptation of Homer’s The Iliad, which details the events leading up to and during The Trojan War – there’s a battle sequence that gives the audience a true rush.
Read More About "Troy" Plays Like Greek Bedtime Story: Also, "Touching The Void"...
Written By: Mike Schulz
Section: Movies
Category: Reviews
2000-07-12 12:00:00
THE ADVENTURES OF ROCKY & BULLWINKLE
One of the happier surprises of last summer was the release of South Park: Bigger, Longer, & Uncut, a marvelously written musical comedy that transcended its source material and shot off into a madcap animated universe all its own, raising the bar for all future TV-show-turned-feature-film projects. And while it would be great to report that the film version of The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle approached South Park's level of cinematic exuberance, the filmmakers are facing an uphill battle: The animated series this one is based on is already such a whirligig of action, cliffhangers, and verbal and visual puns that raising the ante on it as a movie seems kinda pointless. (Clever and funny though it often is, the South Park TV series has nothing on the brilliance of the original R & B series.)
Read More About Moose And Squalls: "The Adventures Of Rocky & Bullwinkle" And "The Perfect Storm"...
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