Thursday, June 30, 2016

'Independence Day: Resurgence' doubles down on action but story fails unneeded sequel.

Twenty years ago, director Roland Emmerich put out a little world ending movie known as Independence Day. The lead for this movie was Will Smith, who at that time had the fame of classic television series The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air and had one big budget film, Bad Boys. Independence Day was Will Smith's coming out party for Hollywood to see him as a bankable star, especially in the summer. Along with Jeff Goldblum and Bill Pullman, the world was saved from alien invaders and science fiction films officially made a comeback in Hollywood.

Rumors of a sequel was long discussed for years, languishing in developmental hell and becoming forgotten while the script went through rewrite after rewrite. After a long process, it became unknown if this movie would even happen. This year, Emmerich was finally able to release his long-awaited sequel on the world.


Twenty years after the War of 1996, we find the world united more than ever and finally at peace. The remains of the alien technology has been reverse engineered and used to protect the world on global scale. The veterans of the war include now Earth Space Defense Director David Levinson (Jeff Goldblum),Judd Hirsch as his proud papa, former president Whitmore (Bill Pullman), who seems to be broken and half-crazy in the aftermath of the war, and Brent Spiner as the nutty professor who snaps out of an unexplained 20-year coma at the right time in the film. Vivica A. Fox even makes a return (who's so unimportant that if this was a Star Trek film, she could have been wearing a red shirt). A distress call (that took twenty years to find out by the way) sent into deep space has brought the aliens major fleet back to Earth for vengeance.

I'll put this out there first: the movie was not the same without Will Smith. Since Smith is too savvy (and too rich) these days to be seen near this sequel, the first third of the movie is a roll call of the old and new faces - there's the stoic and unmemorable Jesse Usher as the heroic second-generation flyboy of Smith's dead Captain Hiller; Liam Hemsworth as a cocky space pilot that tries to channel Tom Cruise from Top Gun...and fails at it miserably; Maika Monroe plays his love interest as the now adult daughter of Whitmore. I could really only care about the female Whitmore because it seemed she had more to do as far as the new cast and seemed more passionate in her scenes, trying to make her character more three-dimensional.

I went to see this movie in IMAX 3D so I will vouch for the spot on special effects but overall, there is nothing completely impressive about Resurgence. It's a complete popcorn flick but even popcorn flicks have to be decent. I have never felt less invested in the survival of the human race. Landmarks are destroyed as always, which is basically Emmerich's signature in his films. It turns out they want more than to just wipe us out this time. They want to get their slimy tentacles on something else. Why? What? Who? How? Insurgence does make some sense but is just not that enjoyable. I'm not completely against the film but I feel like it could have been better given the time it was taken to work on the sequel. There is a serious lack of wit and charm in this film that was missing from the original. The best idea of wit is Liam Hemsworth taking a leak on an alien spaceship while giving them the finger. In a sense, that's exactly what Independence Day: Resurgence did for those smart people that said a sequel was not necessary, needed, or wanted.

Monday, June 27, 2016

Comedic chemistry helps overcome a dull script in 'Central Intelligence'

Hey, everyone! I know I've been gone for a while but things have been crazy in my life! New job, new member of my family, and just trying to get my life more in order. But I'm sure you all might not want to hear about that! While I've been busy, the movies I've seen has been piling up so I think it's time for me to return with some new reviews!

I figured a comedy is the best way to start, starring two of the hardest workers in Hollywood right now.


The story of Central Intelligence starts in a high school in 1996, Calvin Joyner (Kevin Hart) is the popular kid in school: the all-american high school athlete and dating the popular girl. Meanwhile, Robbie Weirdicht (Dwayne Johnson) is the overweight kid with no friends. After a nude Robbie is embarrassed by a couple of bullies during the last high school pep rally, Calvin saved him by giving him his Letterman jacket. Twenty years later, Calvin is an accountant and married to his high school sweetheart and he never heard from Robbie Weirdicht until a friend request from Bob Stone, who turns out to be an bigger, built Robbie, reunites high school hero with high school loser.

While at school, Calvin was on top of the world and Robbie was at the bottom of the social totem pole. Years later, Calvin is unsatisfied with where his life has gone; he was passed over for a promotion that was given to his former assistant while his wife, Maggie (Danielle Nicolet), is a partner at her law firm and very happy. With their 20 year high school reunion approaching, Calvin is not planning on attending but Bob forces Calvin to change his mind once Bob reveals he not only works for the CIA, but hunted by the agency as well.

Now, the plot is not that strong at all. I'll put that out there right now. It's very thin, where the threads do not cohere. It switches from a slow build to full on action on a moment's notice while still making time for Hart to be hilariously clumsy and Dwayne sticking to his usual fist-to-face action while still trying to stay in character as the 90's loving CIA agent. The chemistry between Johnson and Hart definitely carried the film and chemistry is something that needs to be apparent in a buddy comedy like this Hart and Johnson played off of each other, hilariously helping their characters develop during the 107 minutes of movie time and helping them overcome their personal fears. Again, if you have seen one buddy comedy, you have probably seen them all. Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson has mostly stuck with action over the past few years and brought some dry humor along with him. This film really showed that he can be as entertaining in an action-comedy movie. Whether or not his comedy chops will be expanded upon in an R-rated comedy with the upcoming Baywatch movie remains to be seen.

Overall, this film directed by Rawson Marshall Thurber (We're the Millers) was a breezy, undemanding summer comedy flick that is coming in at the right time and you can watch over and over again...on cable television on repeat. It's not a terrible, God-awful movie but it's in the middle ground as far as being a decent film.

I have other movies to review so everyone stay tuned!