Saturday, September 24, 2011

Moneyball ****

A business case study masquerading as a sports story, "Moneyball" uses the conventions of baseball movies to construct a drama as interesting as it is emotionally satisfying. A baseball movie like no other baseball movie, "Moneyball" tells the true story of Oakland A's manager Billy Beane's endeavor to put together a baseball team with little money by using a quantitative analysis of the characteristic performance of players who would fit together, rather than paying big bucks for all-around stars. Brad Pitt as Beane turns in a characteristically workmanlike portrayal that is pitch perfect. Jonah Hill as the number cruncher Peter Brand, a Yale graduate in economics who came up with the analysis, is just as good and believable portraying the walking, talking baseball computer and encyclopedia that Brand was. It may sound like a marketing cliche, but you definitely do not have to be a baseball fan to enjoy this well-made movie.




Sunday, September 18, 2011

Drive ****

"Drive," a Los Angeles-set film noir starring Ryan Gosling and directed by cult favorite Nicolas Winding Refn ("Bronson," "Pusher," "Valhalla Rising"), is all about style. There is a spareness, an economy, an unhurried pace that allows actors long silences that nevertheless communicate, a dreamlike use of slow motion and lyricism that is operatic in its concentration of emotion that is the mark of a true master. It's no wonder that Refn won the Best Director prize at Cannes this year for this film.

Gosling plays a movie stunt driver and mechanic who moonlights as a getaway driver. All cool control, his competence is all we know about him. Then he meets a neighbor (Carey Mulligan) who has a young son, and he starts to show some signs of feelings. Then the violence of his moonlighting world and her past change everything. The violence that comes is brutal and shocking, but his cool command continues.

"Drive" is an unsettling film, but beautiful in its way, and full of sharply drawn characters from the underbelly of L.A.

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Contagion ****

With considerable economy despite a large number of characters and story lines, director Steven Soderberg masterfully tells the story of a high-mortality world-wide flu epidemic in "Contagion." Starting with Day 2 of the outbreak, the film follows a visitor to Hong Kong who turns out to be patient zero in the outbreak. Soon ever-widening effects involve her family, the CDC, the World Health Organization (WHO), Homeland Security, Internet rumor-mongers, and authorities and first responders at all levels. Taut at 106 minutes, and grippingly suspenseful, carefully-chosen characters played by truly stellar actors represent very personal and relateable stories, sometimes for the briefest of periods. The main story lines follow patient zero (Gwyneth Paltrow) and her husband (Matt Damon); CDC head (Laurence Fishburn), field investigator (Kate Winslet), and vaccine researcher (Jennifer Ehle); a WHO investigator (Marion Cotillard); and a health and alternative medicine blogger (Jude Law). It's a reality-based story with real science underpinnings, not another cinematic Armageddon, which, in the end, only adds to the drama.

Monday, September 5, 2011

The Debt ***

A tense and intense but unusual suspense thriller set in two time periods, "The Debt" jumps back from 1997 Israel to a mission in 1966 when three Mossad agents, now older and widely respected, were sent to East Germany to capture a notorious Nazi war criminal. There is clearly something about the adulation they have lived with that doesn't sit right, and a shocking event forces the older Rachel Singer, masterfully played by Helen Mirren, to remember the events in East Berlin as they closed in on their target. The remarkable Jessica Chastain ("The Tree of Life") plays the young Rachel, working with the leader Stephan (Marton Csokas) and David (Sam Worthington). The raw dynamics of the trio affects their work and their lives forever, and the older Rachel must undertake to set things right. Beautifully realized in both time periods, and provocative in its implications, this movie is both a well-crafted work of art and an incitement to debate. It's the kind of serious movie many want, but seldom find.