Welcome to Week Twenty-Three of “Monday at the Movies,” a
grab bag of movies I hadn’t reviewed yet.
The Mummy (1999) – As with last week’s entries, The Mummy was a movie very dear to me as a child, and I think I’m sensing a pattern here. Like the Indiana Jones movies, The Mummy is a period adventure piece mixing action, humor, the supernatural, and 1930s clothing. In fact, the film could very easily be read as an Indy flick starring Brendan Fraser as a mercenary hired to lead Rachel Weisz to a hidden Egyptian city where an ancient evil mummy (Arnold Vosloo) is about to be resurrected. The film is fast-paced, very exciting, and entertaining at every turn. As with The Rocketeer, there’s something to enjoy in each scene, with director Stephen Sommers effectively never wasting a scene; when the plot isn’t advancing, the characters are interacting in fun ways. While the chemistry between Fraser and Weisz isn’t entirely tangible – a kind of throwback, perhaps, to the early horror trope of the protagonists falling in love – John Hannah’s role as Weisz’s besotted treasure-seeking brother remains one of my favorite supporting roles in recent movies. The screenplay, though, is surprisingly strong, flirting with the monster movie trope while giving it a modern sense of humor and weaving in a compelling take on the plagues of Egypt (making this film the unlikely love-child of Indiana Jones and Cecil B. DeMille’s The Ten Commandments). The procedural format of a chain of victims and the accompanying plagues helps the film continue to advance and gather a sense of purpose while our characters band together to fight the mummy. More than a decade later, The Mummy is still terrifically fun.
The Mummy (1999) – As with last week’s entries, The Mummy was a movie very dear to me as a child, and I think I’m sensing a pattern here. Like the Indiana Jones movies, The Mummy is a period adventure piece mixing action, humor, the supernatural, and 1930s clothing. In fact, the film could very easily be read as an Indy flick starring Brendan Fraser as a mercenary hired to lead Rachel Weisz to a hidden Egyptian city where an ancient evil mummy (Arnold Vosloo) is about to be resurrected. The film is fast-paced, very exciting, and entertaining at every turn. As with The Rocketeer, there’s something to enjoy in each scene, with director Stephen Sommers effectively never wasting a scene; when the plot isn’t advancing, the characters are interacting in fun ways. While the chemistry between Fraser and Weisz isn’t entirely tangible – a kind of throwback, perhaps, to the early horror trope of the protagonists falling in love – John Hannah’s role as Weisz’s besotted treasure-seeking brother remains one of my favorite supporting roles in recent movies. The screenplay, though, is surprisingly strong, flirting with the monster movie trope while giving it a modern sense of humor and weaving in a compelling take on the plagues of Egypt (making this film the unlikely love-child of Indiana Jones and Cecil B. DeMille’s The Ten Commandments). The procedural format of a chain of victims and the accompanying plagues helps the film continue to advance and gather a sense of purpose while our characters band together to fight the mummy. More than a decade later, The Mummy is still terrifically fun.
Sin City (2005,
Extended Cut) – With recent news indicating that the sequel is finally on, Sin City has been on my rewatch list for
a while. The story and the content aren’t
for everyone, to be sure; the film is violent and extremely dark, its depiction
of women problematic at best, and the dialogue corny in places due to Miller’s hardboiled
sensibility. But what holds the
attention more is the unique visual look, which has spawned a bevy of
impersonators (I contend that Zack Snyder wouldn’t have a career without
Rodriguez’s inspiration, particularly on Watchmen). The version under review today is the “Recut,
Extended, Unrated” version where director Robert Rodriguez added in ten minutes
of direct “translation” of Frank Miller’s comics source material but divides
the interweaving narratives into their own short films (about forty minutes
each). The only story that suffers from
being divided is “The Customer is Always Right,” which stars Josh Hartnett as a
hitman-for-hire; the clip’s link to the end of another segment makes its ending
stand not-quite-alone. Mickey Rourke
leads “The Hard Goodbye,” in which he plays the hulk Marv on a quest for
revenge. In “The Big Fat Kill,” Clive
Owen aims to protect the women of Old Town from the mob. And, in what would be my favorite segment
were Jessica Alba a stronger actress, Bruce Willis seeks out Alba after
learning that her former attacker “That Yellow Bastard” is eager for a second
attempt. All three leads are fantastic,
delivering the noirish narration with appropriate gravel and world-weariness
(it says something that the voiceover isn’t distracting), while the supporting
cast (too many A-listers to name) rounds out the film into an enjoyable
experience which benefits from directorial expansion.
TRON: Legacy (2010) –
TRON: Legacy is one of several rare
breeds: a sequel better than the
original, a film that gets better each time I watch it, a film where the soundtrack
is a character in its own right... you get the idea. I have mixed feelings about the original – it
hasn’t aged well, the story is a little thin, and not very much happens in
between plot points – but I recognize its innovative nature and applaud the
sequel for pushing the industry in the same ways as the original. The look of the film is striking, resulting
in another rare film where it looks just as good with the sound turned off; do that
at your own peril, however, because you’ll be missing out on Daft Punk’s
soundtrack, which was one of the best of 2010.
But the story is intriguing as well, kind of a Matrix done right what with its use of a “digital frontier” and what
separates user from program; here, Jeff Bridges (in full Dude mode) reprises his role as Kevin
Flynn, discoverer of “The Grid,” as well as portraying the evil program CLU (via
CGI rejuvenation). Garrett Hedlund is Bridges’s
son Sam who enters The Grid looking for his father, while Olivia Wilde is
charming as a naïve program hungry to learn about the real world. The characters are more compelling than
reviewers gave them credit, especially the elder Bridges, whose paternal
compassion is a perfect companion for Father’s Day yesterday (always reminds me
of my father, at least). I’m admittedly
a Disney shill, but the more I watch TRON:
Legacy (or listen to the soundtrack), I always find something new to like.
Be sure to tune in Wednesday for The Cinema King’s review of
The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel. For now, though, that does it for this week’s
edition of “Monday at the Movies.” We’ll see you here next week!
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