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‘Snowpiercer’ Review

SNOWPIERCER (9 out of 10) Directed by Joon-ho Bong; written by Joon-ho Bong and Kelly Masterson; based on the graphic novel, “Le Transperceneige by Jacques Lob, Benjamin Legrand and Jean-Marc Rochette; starring Chris Evans, Kang-ho Song, Tilda Swinton, Jamie Bell, and John Hurt; rated R for violence, language and drug use; on DVD, Blu-Ray and VOD: 126 minutes.

 

We were blessed with a great summer movie season that included such awesome films as “Days of Future Past”, “Guardians of the Galaxy”, “Dawn of the Planet of the Apes” and “Captain America: The Winter Soldier” (it was a tentpole, so I’m counting it). “Edge of Tomorrow” was also a great film that more people should have seen but didn’t, but “Snowpiercer” stands out as the sleeper hit that almost no one got around to watching in theaters. This could be due to the fact that it had pretty horrible (read: ZERO) marketing and that it only had a limited release, which is a shame because it could have been one of the biggest hits of the year. It is definitely one of my favorites, and would probably have taken the top spot had it not been for its contrived ending that knocked it down a few pegs.

In mankind’s attempt to finally quash the threat of global warming, the governments of the world have joined together to disperse a cooling chemical, CW-7, in the atmosphere that succeeds just a little too well, ushering in a new ice age, causing the death of nearly every man, woman and child, The remaining survivors band together on the Snowpiercer, a train that travels a planet-spanning track and protects those within from the deadly elements outside. The rich and powerful have clustered together to live a life of luxury in the front cars of the train while the poor are forced to live in squalor in the back. A rebellion is started by Curtis Everett (Chris Evans) and his second-in-command, Edgar (Jamie Bell), in an attempt to force their way to the front of the train and overthrow their corrupt masters who have made their lives a living hell. They quickly capture the ruthless Mason (Tilda Swinton) and force her to help in their endeavors, but their prospects of success rapidly diminish as they lose more fighters the closer they get to the engine that powers the train. Curtis eventually faces the mythical Wilford who created Snowpiercer and is given an impossible choice that could destroy everything he has fought so hard to accomplish.

It’s hard to express just how great this movie is, as nearly everything fits together so perfectly that it’s nearly flawless in its presentation. We’ve seen dystopian futures countless times, but the way it is presented here is both horrific and endlessly fascinating. What’s unique is that there is absolutely no escape from the predicament the characters are stuck in. Sure Katniss probably would have been found and killed had she escaped and ran from her district in “The Hunger Games”, but there was always that chance she could survive. Not here. As proven very clearly in the opening minutes of the movie, humans can not survive the outside elements so the thought of escape is immediately quashed. The grimy and horrible conditions of squalor are perfectly represented here via set design and costumes, and it doesn’t take much suspension of disbelief to buy in to the fact that these people were born and grew up in this hellhole.

As the rebellion makes its way forward into the nicer parts of the train, though, each cabin car is its own, unique world in which they discover animals, fish and even a school where children are brainwashed into hero-worship of Wilford who is not only their savior, but also lord and god.

Each set piece is important and tells a story, which makes the Snowpiercer itself almost as important a character as the people who reside within.

Of course, even the best setting will fall flat if the actors aren’t up to the challenge presented to them, but everyone succeeds here magnificently. Chris Evans has grown and matured as an actor and easily holds his own against seasoned vets like John Hurt and Tilda Swinton. If anyone ever worried that Evans couldn’t carry a film and “Winter Soldier” didn’t convince, then this is the movie that will make you a believer. Tilda Swinton chews up her scenes as the main bad guy, and Jamie Bell has definitely grown up into a mature actor who I didn’t even recognize at first as compared to his early days in “Billy Elliot” and other movies. A surprise appearance by an actor in a role I won’t spoil due to its relevance to the plot had nearly the same impact as Kevin Spacey in “Se7en.”

My only problem takes place in the last fifteen minutes or so when it feels the need to stop and casually spoon-feed exposition to the audience. Not only does this totally break the tempo and theme, it also almost completely steals a scene from a movie that came out over a decade ago that has been endlessly parodied and made fun of since. It was annoying and derivative, and made it nearly impossible to take seriously. To be fair, it ends on a high note, but the writers should have found a better way to “explain” everything that was going on.

Aside from that, though, this is a must-see film that I can’t recommend enough. It has all the trappings of a great summer film (action, special effects, great storytelling), and it’s a shame that so few people had the chance to see it while it was in theaters. Thankfully, it’s out on DVD, Blu-ray and VOD now, and you can pick it up for pretty cheap. So if you haven’t experienced it yet, now is the time to do so.

Seriously, quit reading this and go buy it. You’re missing out on one of the best movies of the year!

The Wizeguy: Crazy Train

Snowpiercer is one of the bext movies I’ve seen this summer (maybe of the year) and I can’t get it out of my mind.

Yes, there’s class angst, the reluctant hero, wise counselor, loyal followers, evil overlord with minions, all set in a symbolic context and all more complex than what’s on the face of things. But scene after scene I’d think about how it embraces the American sensibility of movie tropes while morphing seamlessly into this other less Western feel through the storytelling devices or visual cues or pacing of the dialogue.

A few thoughts (Spoilers ahead):

Did you pick up on all the various economic theories, theologies and philosophies? The ones I noticed were Objectivism by Ayn Rand (right down to the great man and the train.)

NeoLiberalism (I just heard a story about the history of neo liberalism and it made me think of it.)

There are also various religious themes. The most powerful to me was the self sacrifice of Gilliam. Very ‘Eat my body” and Christ-like. That sacrifice signified the Curtis of before with the Curtis of the revolution.

The other religions I don’t know as much, but is caste and station in life Hindu? One other thing I thought about was Kronol. Time?

Remember the movement the child was making in the end. I believe that Tilda Swinton made the same movements, yet she would not have been small enough to be in that place (and too old) but it was a way to show that she was part of the machine. Also as I watched this movie I though about where I was on this Earth (train) as we go around the Sun once a year. I know that because I’m in America I’m near the front. Do I go back to the back and try and make other’s lives better? Yes. But I also don’t go forward to upset the train because my livelihood depend on “the engine” (the economic engine) If you do throw a shoe at someone in protest they hurt you. Also, some of us are the guards in the middle or like the guy who makes the protein bars. We are creating “content” for others to consume so they don’t storm the train. Just focus on creating good content, and you will be fine.

What sacrifices am I willing to make to change things? To “give the leaders a piece of my mind.” And when I do they say, ‘Well what would you do differently? It’s not as easy as it looks.’ On one hand they have set up the system a certain way, but how they enforce the system also says something about how they want to live. Let the people kill and eat each other or reset the balance in other ways.

It’s noted how the rich don’t have to balance because they got there first (how?) but the “freeloaders” have to do all the balancing, and the balancing is done with the lives of their children or themselves. Never the rich.

To take out the rich and force them to make sacrifices (like forcing Swinton to eat the protein bar) is part of how things need to change, but the rich will not willingly do this. They don’t want to think that other people are part of the whole, but they are, they need them to keep the machine going, otherwise their own young would have to do the work. Instead they teach their young that the people the back are dirty and belong there so it’s not as if they could and should do any sacrifice for the ones in the back.

This film is an amazing allegorical journey punctuated by finely tuned action sequences and carried by outstanding performances. At first you want to fight with the simplistic and far-fetched premise. But soon you’re invested in the characters, and then you’re completely invested in the underlying message of the film. This is not a film about climate change, nor is it a straight science-fiction action film. This film is about purposeful and directed societal inequality deconstructing the definition of human dignity in the face of limited resources, In that sense, it’s has DNA from some of the dystopian science fiction films of the 70s, notably “Soylent Green”, running through it, but the message is very appropriate and has a very pointed place in today’s environment of ever-widening disparities in wealth and enfranchisement. This thing gets it done on several levels, and we love it when movies do that. Watch it.

-Dagobot



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Weekend Movie Previews: Say Hi To Your Motherboard For Me 6/27/14

Weekend Movie Previews: Say Hi To Your Motherboard For Me 6/27/14

Wow, every day for the rest of the year is now getting shorter and shorter. Winter depression is already setting in. No way better to mark that sad, sad occurrence than the release of a new Transformers movie. Early box office forecasts for it are huge. I blame Generation X.

This BSR! Weekend Movie Previews is for the weekend of June 27, 2014. Per usual, before we get started, a quick disclaimer. All of the film information presented here, including the plot summary, has been pulled from the Opening This Week page of IMDb (http://www.imdb.com/nowplaying/). I have not seen any of these movies at the time of this writing.

Join us this week as we preview “Transformers: Age of Extinction”, “Begin Again”, “Snowpiercer”, and more.

 

Transformers: Age of Extinction (2014)


PG-13 Action | Adventure | Sci-Fi

Director: Michael Bay

Stars: Mark Wahlberg, Nicola Peltz, Jack Reynor, Stanley Tucci

Summary: An automobile mechanic and his daughter make a discovery that brings down the Autobots and Decepticons – and a paranoid government official – on them.

Thoughts: I seriously don’t think I am going to see this anytime in the next week. I liked the first one well enough, but each new installment since then has grown increasingly tone deaf and structurally coarse. Not to mention just the overall aesthetic. Don’t get me wrong – I think Michael Bay is probably the most technically gifted filmmaker we have working currently, but his story sense and character sensibility is for s**t. Having said that, this Russian language trailer makes it seem 10 times more interesting than the English trailers that we have been repeatedly bludgeoned over the head with the last couple of months.

 

Begin Again (2013) – [Limited]


R 104 min   –   Comedy | Drama | Music | Romance

Director: John Carney

Stars: Keira Knightley, Mark Ruffalo, Adam Levine, Hailee Steinfeld

Summary: A chance encounter between a disgraced music-business executive and a young singer-songwriter new to Manhattan turns into a promising collaboration between the two talents.

Thoughts: I was about to totally pass by this movie until it said it was by the director of “Once”, which is probably one of the best small films made in the last 10 years, easily. Now I kinda am interested in seeing this. If I can get past Keira Knightly’s unmovable forehead and the presence of Adam Levine. Everyone else in the cast looks great, especially the Incredible Hulk.

 

Snowpiercer (2013) – [Limited]


R 126 min   –   Action | Drama | Sci-Fi

Director: Joon-ho Bong

Stars: Chris Evans, Jamie Bell, Tilda Swinton, Ed Harris

Summary: In a future where a failed global-warming experiment kills off all life on the planet except for a lucky few that boarded the Snowpiercer, a train that travels around the globe, where a class system evolves.

Thoughts: Ok, before I start on this one, quick confession. I have seen this already (and it is really, really good), but I am going to write the rest of this as if I haven’t (it is seriously good, don’t miss it). What?  Hahahah! A movie about a giant train with the last remnants of civilization surviving on it? Does it Star Sandra Bullock and Keanu Reeves? (Actually , Chris Evans and he is really great in it.) I am going to wait for it to show up endlessly on TNT to watch it. (I didn’t, and you shouldn’t either. See it now.) Rocket Trains. How lame. (Not at all.)

 

They Came Together (2014) – [Limited]


R 83 min   –   Comedy

Director: David Wain

Stars: Paul Rudd, Amy Poehler, Bill Hader, Cobie Smulders

Summary: When Joel and Molly meet, it’s hate at first sight: his big Corporate Candy Company threatens to shut down her quirky indie shop. Plus, Joel is hung up on his sexy ex. But amazingly, they fall in love, until they break up about two thirds of the way through, and Molly starts dating her accountant. But then right at the end…well you’ll just have to see. (Hint: Joel makes a big speech and they get back together.)

Thoughts: I want to give David Wain all of the movie money. Just give him the money and let him make whatever he wants. “Wet Hot American Summer 2”? Here you go, Mr Wain. “The Next 10”? Yep, can’t wait. “Ant Man”? Absolutley, we should’ve thought of you to begin with. “Wainy Days – the Sci-Fi Musical Spectacular”? Genius, go for it. Just everything. The world would be a much better place.

 

Whitey: United States of America v. James J. Bulger (2014) – [Limited]


R 120 min   –   Documentary | Biography | Crime

Director: Joe Berlinger

Stars: Stephen Rakes, James ‘Whitey’ Bulger, Tommy Donahue, David Boeri

Summary: Number 2 on America’s Most Wanted list after Osama Bin Laden, James ‘Whitey’ Bulger terrorized the city of Boston for years without ever being charged with so much as a misdemeanor. Bulger was a monster, murdering over a dozen known victims, but did the FBI and local law enforcement give his reign of terror over South Boston a free pass?

Thoughts: Joe Berlinger is just flat out solid as a filmmaker and documentarian. This film looks intense and aggravating at the same time, but in a good way.

 

The Internet’s Own Boy: The Story of Aaron Swartz (2014) – [Limited]


105 min   –   Documentary | Biography | Crime | News

Director: Brian Knappenberger

Stars: Aaron Swartz, Tim Berners-Lee, Cory Doctorow, Peter Eckersley

Summary: The story of programming prodigy and information activist Aaron Swartz, who took his own life at the age of 26.

Thoughts: I kinda followed along with interest the reports and blogs and stuff when Aaron passed away. All very sad. I think though, and I will probably ruffle some feathers, that as sad as the loss of Aaron was for a lot of people, the story is really less about him and his lost promise, though that this is certainly tragic, it is more about the broad prosecutorial zeal that our government has undertaken over the last several decades. I understand the importance of creating a martyr in a cause, but I hope that the big issues don’t get lost in the struggle.

 

Yves Saint Laurent (2014) – [Limited]


R 106 min   –   Biography | Drama

Director: Jalil Lespert

Stars: Pierre Niney, Guillaume Gallienne, Charlotte Le Bon, Laura Smet

Summary: A look at the life of French designer Yves Saint Laurent from the beginning of his career in 1958 when he met his lover and business partner, Pierre Berge.

Thoughts: I am not very familiar with the fashion world, but do know that Yves Saint Laurent is someone of distinction there. The movie itself looks well appointed, and everyone very fashionable.

 

Now, it’s your turn – if you have seen any of these movies, let us know your thoughts in the comments.