Average rating: 7.25
My Blueberry Nights (2007) - "After a painful breakup, a young woman leaves New York and drifts across America, forming fleeting connections with wounded strangers while searching for a way to heal her heart and rediscover herself. The question isn't 'Where is she going?' but 'How does a person become open to love again after being hurt?'"
length: 1h, 35m | source: my DVD | directed by Wong Kar-wai | why I watched: I'm working through the director's films
IMDb: 6.6/10 | Rotten Tomatoes: 45% / 61% Audience | my IMDb: 8/10 | MPAA: PG-13
tone & texture: melancholic, lush & romantic
notable quote: "'You know, I didn't even think you'd still be here.'
'Why'd you come?'
'I guess I just wanted to see if I could remember what it felt like."
my notes: gorgeous, charming, contemplative. It falls somewhere between Romantic Drama and Philosophical Exploration/Indie, despite the well-known cast. Norah Jones, in her cinematic debut, blew me away as Elizabeth. She really does seem to be a natural actress. I also particularly enjoyed Jude Law (Jeremy) and David Strathairn (Arnie).
themes: transformation, loss, love
overall: highly recommended
RED 2 (2013) - "Former CIA black-ops agent Frank Moses and his old partner, Marvin Boggs, are caught in the grip of retirement—but that soon changes when a powerful Cold War weapon known as Nightshade resurfaces decades after its disappearance. With assassins hot on their trail, Frank and his team set out to find the one scientist who can unravel the mystery of Nightshade and help them save themselves—and the world."
length: 1h, 56m | source: my DVD | directed by Dean Parisot | why I watched: I've seen it before, but have not reviewed it
IMDb: 6.6/10 | Rotten Tomatoes: 44% / 63% Audience | my IMDb: 6/10 | MPAA: PG-13
tone & texture: playful, hyper-glossy action
notable quote: "'She has talents you and I will never have.'
'What talents?'
'People like her.'
'If she lives, this'll be good for your relationship. You're right.'
'And if there's one thing I know, it's women and covert ops.'
'That's two things.'
'No, grasshopper. It is not.'"
my notes: kiss of death for an action movie: it's boring, and I didn't really care how it turned out. I think that Catherine Zeta-Jones killed this one for me, as she did for Ocean's Twelve (2004, reviewed here); her characters are all surface, no substance.
I love the interplay between Bruce Willis and Mary-Louise Parker, and even more I love that between Willis and John Malkovich; their grumpy, reluctant affection is completely adorable. And I understand that this film, even more than the original, is about the effects of aging on one's abilities and perceptions. And I really dig Lee Byung-hun. But....
themes: loyalty
overall: weakly recommended
War {Rogue Assassin} (2007) - "John Crawford spends years chasing Rogue, the assassin responsible for murdering his partner Tom Lone and Lone's family. The hunt drags Crawford deep into obsession, hollowing out his marriage and turning every criminal operation into personal theater. Rogue resurfaces in San Francisco and engineers escalating warfare between Chinese Triads and Japanese Yakuza syndicates, exploiting greed, pride, and ritual loyalty to destabilize both empires. As bodies accumulate and alliances fracture, Crawford closes in on the assassin while unknowingly circling the collapse of his own moral identity. Every confrontation tightens around concealed guilt, damaged masculinity, and the unbearable weight of unfinished grief."
length: 1h, 43m | source: my DVD | directed by Philip G. Atwell | why I watched: I've seen it many times, but never reviewed it
IMDb: 6.2/10 | Rotten Tomatoes: 14% / 51% Audience | my IMDb: 7/10 | MPAA: R
tone & texture: gritty, hyper-glossy action
notable quote: "Pain can be a weapon, if you so choose."
my notes: it's not the best film Jet Li or Jason Statham has ever made, but it's for sure the best of the five they've done together (also including the first 3 'Expendables' and The One, {2001, reviewed here}). And there's a moment (49:55) that makes the entire thing worthwhile, where the exquisitely controlled, precise, and withholding Rogue, watching through a window as a woman plays with her child, lets loose the emotions. It is startling and beautiful, perfectly lit and shot and acted.
themes: revenge, identity, loss
overall: recommended
The Major {Mayor} (2013) - "On a cold winter’s day Sergey Sobolev, a major at the local police office, is driving to the hospital where his wife is about to give birth to their child. High from happiness, he’s driving too fast and runs down a boy on a passage walk, who dies. Now the major has only two options: go to prison or conceal the crime. Sobolev decides to compromise with his conscience and calls on a colleague to help him out. But the case turns out to be messy and when Sobolev finally changes his mind and tries to make up for his deed, it might already be too late."
length: 1h, 39m | source: my DVD | directed by Yuriy Bykov | why I watched: I found a listing a catalog of movies, and it caught my eye
IMDb: 7.2/10 | Rotten Tomatoes: NA% / 70% Audience | my IMDb: 8/10 | MPAA: not rated
tone & texture: bleak, grit & grain
notable quote: "Stop sniveling."
my notes: this is the most grim movie I've ever seen. I couldn't watch it all in one sitting, but had to keep stopping it to clear my head.
themes: moral ambiguity
overall: recommended only to someone who is fully prepared for dark.
[the title quotation is from RED 2]












