Showing posts with label Super. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Super. Show all posts

2011/06/18

Movie Review: Super 8 (2011)

Super 8 takes a winning formula and replicates it to a successful degree, but very little originality finds its way into the film. Comparisons to other movies are almost unavoidable, and though Steven Spielberg's canon will certainly be included, such derivation works against the overall entertainment value of director J.J. Abrams' efforts. The child actors are spectacular and their youthful exuberance keeps the excitement and adventure going even when the plot can't quite catch up. It's a shame that the rest of the film, especially the monster, doesn't provide an equal level of vivacity. In fact, the weakest link is the appearance of the alien menace that is slowly revealed with the adage "less is more;" but this tactic actually hinders the audiences' ability to perceive their own terrifying vision due to an uncanny resemblance to a rather famous creature from Abrams' previous productions. Perhaps the intentionally nostalgia-fueled premise will overcome much of the film's shortcomings with general audiences, but discerning critics are likely to brush aside the veil and see the heavy repetition just below the surface.

In a small town in Ohio, young Joe Lamb (Joel Courtney) attempts to move on with his life after his mother, Elizabeth, dies in a steel mill accident. With his deputy father (Kyle Chandler) becoming increasingly more distant, Joe fills his time by helping his best friend Charles (Riley Griffiths) create a Super 8 movie for a film festival. When a military train derails and releases an otherworldly force onto the unsuspecting town, Joe and his friends embark on the adventure of a lifetime to uncover the shocking truth surrounding the catastrophic incident.

Super 8 would probably be a lot of fun for anyone who has never seen a Steven Spielberg movie. Unfortunately for Abrams, who desperately wants to be the next Spielberg, just about everyone has witnessed the moviemaking magic of Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Raiders of the Lost Ark, Saving Private Ryan Schindler's List and more. However, Abrams chooses many other films to copy: like Jaws, the monster is revealed very slowly; like Jurassic Park, the creature prefers to torture its prey from inside vehicles that it rolls across the street; and like War of the Worlds, the relationship between a single father and child is distant, strained and rife with misunderstanding. Borrowing from other films, Super 8 also resembles The Goonies, The Iron Giant, and most upsettingly, Cloverfield. The entire project is painfully and obviously derivative.

As with countless films, the military assumes the role of the villain, the mysterious monstrosity is misjudged by the multitude, and the group of kids is entirely too brave, adventurous and lucky. One of the only clever factors involves the use of the movie-within-a-movie gimmick, which by itself isn't unique. Here, the student film is intentionally bad, providing plenty of humor. It also mimics the way the whole movie is designed: Charlie adds a wife for the detective in his movie to help the audience care for the lead character - similarly, Alice becomes a love interest for Joe, (plus the attention to the relationship with his detached father); Alice is asked to cry on cue for extra emotional drama - when she watches footage of Joe's mother, she cries genuinely; and when Charlie demands they shoot scenes with the train wreck in the background for production value, it parallels the incredible amount of destruction, explosions and use of computer animation for the alien colossus employed generously throughout.


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2011/06/17

Eric Clapton - Crossroads Guitar Festival 2010 (2 DVD - Super Jewel Case)

Eric Clapton - Crossroads Guitar Festival 2010 (2 DVD - Super Jewel Case)Over the summer of 2010, Eric Clapton gathered a veritable Who's Who of the world's most talented guitar players at the third Crossroads Guitar Festival, an 11-hour celebration of the six string that attracted a sold-out crowd of more than 27,000 music fans to Chicago's Toyota Park. All profits from this daylong display of guitar virtuosity benefited The Crossroads Centre in Antigua, a treatment and education facility Clapton founded to help people suffering from chemical dependency. Available in either DVD or Blu-Ray formats, the show includes more than four hours of music, interviews, and behind-the-scenes footage from this star-studded concert, including performances by Clapton, ZZ Top, Steve Winwood, Jeff Beck, Vince Gill, Buddy Guy, John Mayer, Derek Trucks, B.B. King, and Bill Murray, who served as the concert's master of ceremonies. "The Crossroads Festival is the realization of a dream for me, to gather a group of amazingly talented musicians to perform on one stage," Clapton said. "The Crossroads performers are all musicians I admire and respect." It's no surprise a festival named for a Robert Johnson song would include a heavy dose of the blues and Crossroads Guitar Festival 2010 does not disappoint with remarkable performances by Robert Cray, Hubert Sumlin (Howlin' Wolf's guitarist), Jimmie Vaughan, Sonny Landreth, Gary Clark Jr., Keb' Mo', and Buddy Guy, plus B.B. King who led an all-star jam of his classic "The Thrill Is Gone." The rock contingent was well represented by ZZ Top, Jeff Beck, the John Mayer Trio, Doyle Bramhall II, the Derek Trucks & Susan Tedeschi Band, Warren Haynes, and Steve Winwood, who teamed with Clapton for several performances including an epic cover of Jimi Hendrix's "Voodoo Chile." Other styles find a home here too, with "Blackwaterside" by Scottish singer-songwriter Bert Jansch, an accomplished acoustic player; "One More Last Chance" and an amazing take on Clapton's "Lay Down Sally" by country picker Vince Gill who is accompani

Price: $29.99


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