“The Great Gatsby.” Directed by Baz Luhrmann. Starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Tobey Maguire, Carey Mulligan, Joel Edgerton, and Isla Fisher. Our review: “With the sound off, Baz Luhrmann’s ‘The Great Gatsby’ surely looks as
radiant and extraordinary as some of the most dazzling movies ever
committed to celluloid, but with the sound up and the experience on full
volume, the movie is mostly a cacophony of style, excess and noise that
makes you want to turn it all down a notch…or three…” Metacritic: 55 Rotten Tomatoes: 46% The Playlist: C+
foundations built and enhanced by future generations that you wish it also didn’t
bend over backwards to present gags about nudist beaches and threesomes, not to
mention repeated plays of Wade’s [Robinson’s] kids-centric motivational song.” MC: 50 RT: 39% PL: C+
with skill, will and brains; it’s also another demonstration that
Wheatley is, to use an all-too-appropriate phrase, going places.” MC: 66 RT: 82% PL: A
“Aftershock.” Directed by Nicolas Lopez. Starring Eli Roth, Andrea Osvart, Ariel Levy, and Nicolas Martinez Zemborain. Slow to pick up any speed and sporting lots of violent (albeit imaginative) deaths, this disaster film never strays too far from the formula fence. MC: 40 RT: 39%
serves simultaneously as a gripping mystery, a moving record of a family
and a fascinating investigation into the nature of truth, memory, and
the documentary form itself.” MC: 91 RT: 93% PL: A-
“No One Lives.” Directed by Ryuhei Kitamura. Starring Luke Evans, Adelaide Clemens, Lee Tergesen, and Derek Magyar. Our review: “Almost coming off like an academic blueprint of what a serial killer
movie should look like, rather than anything with a distinct voice or
authorial hand, ‘No One Lives’ shocks by virtue of being completely
uninteresting.” MC: 26 RT: 14% PL: D
David, Michael Pare, and John Heard. Our review: “To say this sort of thing is unfortunately topical is a cowardly way
of saying that there’s never, ever been a good time for this sort of picture
with this type of moral outlook. But the age of being offended by this sort of
thing might also be long gone: the only question on viewers’ minds during the
film’s violent climax is how exactly Boll was able to get so much shoddy
footage on location.” MC: 24 RT: 20% PL: D-
“Java Heat.” Directed by Conor Allyn. Starring Kellan Lutz, Ario Bayu, and Mickey Rourke.
The Indonesia-set shoot-em-up is a study in panache, with a retro
styling that hearkens past action gems. Also, Bayu is fairly strong;
Lutz is… well, not. But perhaps most intriguing is the fact that
Rourke’s ambiguous accent requires occasional subtitling. MC: 36 RT: 0%
provided most of the film’s music) playing over the final credits, we
left ‘Venus and Serena’ inspired to get out in the sun and get
moving. And call our siblings.” MC: 66 RT: 80% PL: B
Our review: “‘Sponsor’ has a wonderful, sly
point to make about how most ad slogans work because they flatter the
listener…But most of the time…the project seems compromised by a
meager budget
and limited scale.” MC: 36 RT: 10% PL: C