Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Movie Review: "Revolutionary Road" (2008)

Warning: The following content might contain spoilers!

How do you break free without breaking apart?


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Rated R for language and some sexual
content/nudity.
   Being the Leo and Kate devotee like I am (though I must admit, I wish I could watch a lot more of Kate's movies; too bad I'm too young for that still!), I finally watched Revolutionary Road. If you look at my previous post, "Then and Now: Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet," I mentioned that I have not seen it. Well, that has changed! Now, like I always (or, more accuartely, mostly) do... 

   A MOVIE REVIEW! 

   Of course I'll start off with a "brief" summary that might just possibly turn into a full-blown spoiler alerts page. But for those of you completely bored out of your minds or totally uninterested in this movie, I guess that is a good thing. (Or maybe you're like me, who always reads the last page of a book/reads a full synopsis of a movie online. Seriously. I'm not kidding.) 

   Revolutionary Road is, in short, a marriage-disaster film. Frank and April Wheeler portray the idealistic, impeccable couple of suburban Connecticut in the 1950s. Though they may look so flawless on the outside, their personal lives are anything but pleasant. 


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The perfect couple...right?
   The movie even starts with Frank and April bickering the drive home after a play, a very intense and melancholic scene that shows April dropping her dream of becoming an actress. And even more so, the strain of their relationship is increased when Frank has an affair with his secretary. Disturbingly enough (for me), the married neighbor, Shep, is secretly in love with April. You can see where this is going already--and let me just tell you the path is not pretty.

   There are moments of passionate attachment between April and Frank, but most of the time the only words coming out of their mouths (more specifically, April's) are "I hate you"--indirectly, of course. Though the movie holds a rated-R rating, I personally feel like it was more PG-13 for older teenagers. The only bad thing was the language, and possibly the fights if you are bothered with married couples talking--or should I say yelling?--meanly towards each other. 


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Not every woman with blonde hair
is gold, Leo.
   SPOILER ALERT! Oh, wait. I forgot to mention April's clandestine want for an abortion. Let me point out that there was a moment of happiness when the Wheelers decided to pack up and move to Paris, but before they could do so, April ends up pregnant with their third child. Living with the idea that you have to settle down permanently after having kids was how life rolled in those days. No matter how much April and Frank wanted to break away from that unpublished rule, in the end Frank took the job promotion he was offered before, and they ended up canceling the trip.

   Overall, Revolutionary Road was better than I thought it would be. Though it was a little hard to get through, and the ending disturbed me a little bit, I was surprised neither Leo or Kate were nominated for Best Actor/Actress at the Academy Awards. They were absolutely remarkable, and I'm not just saying that because I love their iconic characters Jack and Rose! The movie was even directed by Kate's now-ex-husband, Sam Mendes. (Does anyone else find that weird? If I was a director and the casting person hired some woman to act with my husband, and they happened to be in a very lovey-dovey movie before, I'd be like "Heck no! Get off my set!" But all is fair in films and business, I guess.) A very thought-provoking, adult-like movie that dealt with a different perspective on young relationships. 

My Recommendation: **** 4/5 Stars for Revolutionary Road (2008) starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Kate Winslet. IMDb rating: 7.4/10  http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0959337/

Watch the Trailer!

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Movie Review: "The Reader" (2008)

Warning: The following content may contain spoilers!

How far would you go to protect a secret?


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Rated R for some scenes of
sexuality/nudity.
   This weekend I decided to delve into Kate Winslet's more perfected roles as former Auschwitz guard Hanna Schmitz, who holds a secret she believes is more shameful than murder. Out of Kate's six Oscar nominations, this one led her to win the Academy Award for Best Actress in 2008. Let's set the scene:

   Post-war Germany, 1958. The movie starts with fifteen-year-old Michael Berg on his way home from school when he becomes sick with scarlet fever, and a woman (Hanna) helps him home. What becomes of the pair after he is better? Despite the beautiful R rating, I'm going to keep this PG-13, thank you very much.

   Anyway, the two start a passionate love affair. There. I said it. Anyway, whenever Michael visits Hanna, he reads to her, hence the title. He comes to love her so much, in fact, he even sells his worshiped stamp collection just so they could spend a couple days together riding bikes in the countryside. (Remember, he has school and Hanna has work.) One day, Hanna gets a job promotion--and when Michael turns sixteen, she disappears without a trace, leaving Michael confuse and heartbroken.

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Hanna and Michael take the day off with a peaceful bike ride.
   Skip forward to 1966. Michael's in law school when he has to attend a trial for his class. To his surprise and horror, Hanna is one of the defendants in the case. She's accused of sending women to their deaths in Auschwitz as a guard, along with six other women. Though she's completely honest, the other women use that to their advantage and point her out as the ringleader of a certain event that involved a burning church and the lives of three hundred women; and in a torturous five seconds, she admits that she was, even though she wasn't, thus receiving a life sentence. Why did she let herself get locked up in jail--for decades? You see, my fellow readers, that is the mystery. Delve into it, feel the power and emotion; I'm not telling you, so get over it.

   It just so happens, though, that heart-torn Michael had an epiphany, something that could have saved Hanna from her loneliness. But because he never shared it in court--take this as a lesson, children--the rest of the movie is about him trying to deal with his growing plate of guilt. He doesn't visit Hanna in jail, even after she tries to re-establish contact with him. The only thing he does is sit back and read a book.

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The Reader by Bernhard Schlink.
   Oh, you thought I just meant read a book? Well, yes, he read it. But he also recorded it--and sent the tapes to Hanna. I guess, in a bitter way, he'll always be her reader.

   My review in one word: Tears. This is a heart-wrenching film of (in another word) guilt, guilt, guilt. As Hanna Schmitz, I could see how Kate Winslet won her first Oscar (though she's always been amazing and inspirational). Also starring Ralph Fiennes (also known as, in one word for the third time, Voldemort) and David Kross (who didn't know any English before making the film), the cast was very well-picked...and German. Did I mention that? How awesome would it be to be crowded by German people? Just awesome, I say.

   All in all, I was very pleased with it. Absolutely phenomenal, and a movie to remember for its many life lessons and historical outlook of Germany.

    *However*: the movie lives up to its R rating--as in, it is NOT for anyone under the age of eighteen. (Fine, a mature sixteen-year-old at the youngest.) 

   My Recommendation: **** 4/5 Stars for The Reader (2008), starring Kate Winslet, Ralph Fiennes. IMDb Rating: 7.6/10 http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0976051/

Watch the Trailer!