Saving Mr. Banks trailer

poppins

The trailer for the upcoming film Saving Mr. Banks (December 2013) recently came out.  The film chronicles the making of the classic film Mary Poppins, centering around the legendary clashing of personalities between the author of the Mary Poppins books, P. L. Travers (Emma Thompson), and the media titan creative overlord Walt Disney (Tom Hanks).  It’s interesting to see a portrayal of Walt Disney as a character.  Given that he lent his name to his company that went on to become the world’s largest media conglomerate, his image is still tightly controlled by a business with deep pockets, so I’m interested to see what sort of character he’ll be.  Of course, in biopics, real personalities are always simplified and exaggerated; they’re turned into characters for the purposes of a story, after all.  It looks like they’ll of course be very gracious to the famous personalities involved.  Overall, it definitely looks like something I’ll be interested in seeing, even if what I’ve heard about the true stories weren’t quite so poetic.  Here it is:

Masquerade (2012)

masquerade

Link: Masquerade

Summary: After a king is poisoned, a double is secretly put in his place to keep chaos from erupting.  But the double has his own ideas about how to run the kingdom.

Thoughts: Because it’s a period drama, I at first thought the film might be similar to Kurosawa’s Kagemusha, but it was much more lighthearted and focused on the character’s noble intentions, making it more like the 1993 American film Dave, involving a double standing in for an American president.  A funny film, but the story’s villains were a little too obviously villainous for the main character’s noble words and decisions to really seem all that astounding; it’s not as if he were making some controversial political or religious statement or something, like Gandhi or Saint Thomas More.  Instead, he made very safe moral judgments that all modern audiences should agree with (unless something is being lost in translation).  So I wasn’t overly impressed with the main character’s moral decisions; they were just too easy.  While some of the potty humor (as in, humor literally involving a potty) was a bit much for me, some of the humor was quite good, and provided a good balance for the film’s more serious moments.  The film also featured a beautiful music score.

Side Effects (2013)

sideeffects

Link: Side Effects

Summary: After taking new anti-depressants, a woman murders her husband, leaving her therapist to wonder if the murder was just a side effect of her new drugs as it seems to be, or if he’s missing something more sinister at play.

Thoughts: The story began a bit slowly, but got really interesting when therapist began unraveling clues that didn’t add up and seemed to imply that something more sinister was going on.  Unfortunately the solution to the mystery was rather simple and stupid, a bit of a let down after an interesting build up, leaving it a rather standard film.

Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters (2013)

hanselandgretel

Link: Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters

Summary: Hansel and Gretel are grown and make a living hunting witches.  And their latest case is a big one, as the witches are capturing children to use them in a new formula that promises to make them immortal.

Thoughts: A fun popcorn movie.  The story was pretty weak and predictable, the humor was yawn-inducing, but this is a film that’s all about the action.  The violence was a bit over-the-top, with blood spurting and splashing and gushing all over, but it was all very cartoony, not horror-film-grisly.  I enjoyed the look and feel of the film, a sort of old German fairy tale look with a modern American attitude.

The Magic Flute (2006)

magicflute

Link: The Magic Flute

Summary: Mozart’s famous opera as a film.

Thoughts: This famous opera of Mozart features some of Mozart’s best music, melodic and fantastical, even though it accompanies Shikaneder’s lame boring story (if the guy was alive today, there’s no way he’d make it as a fantasy writer, and if it weren’t for Mozart’s music in this opera, he’d be mostly forgotten).  It was interesting to hear the lyrics in English, which made the story easier to follow.

Unfortunately, the fantastical story seems to make even less sense in whatever strange World War I setting the director was going for, and the end result is just bizzarre.  The film is complete with wacky visuals, including a marching orchestra playing the overture on a battlefield, a closeup of a singer’s mouth to make it look as if the tanks in the background are being created by her voice, floating giant woman lips in green fields to which Papageno sings, and sandbags of the trench walls singing an English version of the second act’s “Der, Welcher Wandelt Diese Strasse”.  But, as strange as it all may sound, this is better than most visual stage interpretations of this wild opera, especially any version that features Papageno in a feather costume, because that’s just disturbing (for which I blame hack-librettist Emanuel Shikaneder, who obviously wrote Papageno’s role so that he had an excuse to dress up in feathers).

Overall, this was a very weird film.  But really Mozart’s genius score makes everything OK.

The BoxTrolls teaser trailer

boxtrolls

Huh, I didn’t even know Laika was making a film called The BoxTrolls set for release in 2014, but the teaser was recently released.  Aside from the rather blatant celebration of the modern non-procreative-sexual-indulgence-and-its-consequences-on-family-units-are-great mindset that Hollywood loves trying to get everyone to feel good about, the animation and character design look fantastic.  Still, after the films Coraline and ParaNorman, both of which also had great trailers and wonderful animation but not so impressive storylines, I’m not sure I’ll see this one in theaters.  Here’s the teaser trailer: