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Face/Off starring Nicolas Cage and John Travolta

Posted on September 11, 2010 Written by ripitup

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Face Off starring Nicolas Cage and John Travolta
Face Off starring Nicolas Cage and John Travolta. Co-starring Joan Allen, Dominique Swain and Gina Gershon. Featuring James Denton.

Castor Troy (Nicolas Cage) is the worst kind of criminal: he is smart, vicious, dangerous, he has great resources and he is a total psycho. The man who is closest to catching him is Agent Sean Archer (John Travolta). In attempt to kill Archer, however, Castor accidentally kills Sean’s little son. This results a determined quest on Sean’s part. He eventually catches him. Sean’s doctor wife Eve (Joan Allen) is more than relieved, as she won’t have to be feeling alone and deal with their rebellious teenage daughter Jamie (Dominique Swain) on her own. But one last assignment won’t give Sean the time to catch up with his family and finally find peace:

Castor isn’t dead, but is in a coma. His brother Pollux (Alessandro Nivola) is in a maximum security, top-secret prison and unfortunately he is the only person who knows the place of the bomb they placed in the city: So despite how impossible and difficult it seems, Sean has to agree on an advanced but reversible surgery, which will allow him to “be” Castor: the doctors remove Castor’s and Sean’s faces and implant Castor’s face on Sean. This top secret mission is known only by his doctor, and 2 colleagues.

As much as he hates looking like his son’s killer, Sean (now played by Nicolas Cage) goes to the prison to pretend to be Castor. He gets the info he needs, but he gets a big shock: Castor has woken up and he is more than willing to be Sean for a while, to use his resources. So he gets the surgery, and then kills everyone who knows about the mission. So know, Castor (now played by John Travolta) gets to be with Sean’s wife. As impossible as it might seem, now Sean’s only way out is to break out of the prison, pretend to be Castor to those who don’t know Sean is indeed Castor and he also has try to persuade his wife that he might look like their son’s killer but he is in fact her husband…

Face/Off is a really decent and glorious action film. And once you suspend your disbelief to believe that the technology that allows facial implants/replacements to exist the way it does in the movie, you are in one hell of a ride. It is also fun to have a movie where John Travolta and Nicolas Cage play both of the lead characters for a certain period of the movie and both get to show their acting chops as a villain and the ultimate good guy. It is directed by John Woo (Mission Impossible 2, Broken Arrow), who just knows how to make an action film look good. Written by Mike Werb and Michael Colleary.

It is that over-the-top, full-of-explosions/chases/gun fights action film that keeps you glued to your seat for more than 2 hours. And it is not about how it will end (you know how it will end); but watching how the movie will get there. It helps that the supporting cast is great well. Castor’s girlfriend is played by Gina Gershon. And in a very small role, there is James Denton (Mike Delfino of Desperate Housewives). Intellectual? No. Mind-bending? No. Fun as hell? Oh, yeah.! See it . It never gets old or boring. Yes, I have seen it more than twice.

Other Nicolas Cage Movies and Posts

Lord of War starring Nicolas Cage, Ethan Hawke and Jared Leto

Nicolas Cage Trivia

Moonstruck starring Nicolas Cage and Cher

The Sorcerer’s Apprentice starring Nicholas Cage, Monica Belluci, Jay Baruchel, Teresa Palmer

City of Angels starring Meg Ryan and Nicolas Cage

Knowing starring Nicolas Cage

Other John Travolta Posts and Movies

Pulp Fiction

6 Movies with Brilliant Casts feat. Hairspray starring John Travolta

From Paris with Love starring Jonathan Rhys Meyers and John Travolta

Basic starring John Travolta and Samuel L. Jackson

Phenomenon starring John Travolta, Robert Duvall and Kyra Sedgwick

Favorite Actors to Play Villains feat. Nicolas Cage, John Travolta and more

Actor Musicians and Musician Actors: Feat. John Travolta and Bruce Willis

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Filed Under: Movies and Actors Tagged With: action, Alessandro Nivola, dominique swain, Face Off, face off movie, face/off, gina gershon, James Denton, joan allen, John Travolta, john travolta movies, john woo, movies, Nicholas Cage, nicholas cage movies, nicolas cage, nicolas cage movies, sci fi, thriller

Inception starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Joseoh Gordon-Levitt, Ellen Page, Marion Cottilard, Ken Watanabe and Tom Hardy

Posted on July 29, 2010 Written by ripitup

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Inception poster
Inception stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Ellen Page, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Ken Watanabe, Cillian Murphy, Marion Cotillard and Tom Hardy. Written and directed by Batman Begins, The Dark Knight and Memento director Christopher Nolan. Image via: filmofilia.com

Dom Cobb (Leonardo DiCaprio) has a highly unusual career: he extracts information (secrets) from people’s dreams when they are asleep, by joining in on the dream. He works with a team and his most frequent member is Arthur (Joseph Gordon-Levitt).

Though his assignments are exciting, Cobb is far from being happy because his job isn’t exactly legal, and he is declared a criminal in the States, where his two little children live. He is also starting to lose his unique ability or at least getting a huge blow with the constant interruptions from Mal (Marion Cottilard), with who he seems to have a very complicated past with.

Cobb finally seems to have a shot at seeing his children, however, when he makes a very risky agreement with the powerful businessman Saito (Ken Watanabe). This time, the mission is not to extract information but to plant a thought in someone’s head, and make him think that this was his idea all along. Their “subject” is Robert Fischer Jr. (Cillian Murphy), the son of Saito’s biggest competitor. Now that Robert Sr. is dying, Jr. will be left to rule the business and it is best for Saito if he lets his father’s business fall apart.

Cobb puts another team together for the mission. Along with Arthur, he recruits Ariadne (Ellen Page) –a young and very successful architect who can design the dream world they need, Eames (Tom Hardy) –a great thief and forger and Yusuf (Dileep Rao), a chemist who will provide them with the most powerful drugs to help intensify the dream stage.

But the mission is very dangerous and complex and Dom just might not have been honest with everyone. And Robert Fischer Jr. just might not be as an easy target as they initially thought…

Now, obviously this is not a movie where any plot summary can do justice. It is a brilliant movie with an awesome script, stunning visuals and a great cast. And the best part is, you don’t really need to be a science fiction fan to enjoy this film. I am not, for instance. You just need to have an interest in mind-benders and well, a little fantasy. Sure, there are people who didn’t like the film but I have a feeling they are not in the majority since the movie just got to number 3 on IMDB’s top 250 movies list, voted by over 88.000 people. And it is currently number 1 at the box office. Now, don’t let the 9.2 rating scare you. I know it scared me. I thought I would find a vastly overrated movie.

And while I’d not quite say it is the best third film ever made, it is certainly much more impressive, original and clever than most films that made it to that list, which is formed by movie-goers themselves. I also didn’t know what to expect as I didn’t exactly have a great time at Batman The Dark Knight (Batman movie co- written and directed by Christopher Nolan) and I do find it a bit too long and indeed overrated (don’t hate me, my idea of a good comic book character is Iron Man as he is not that “dark” and “serious”) and I definitely believe writer/director Christopher Nolan comes up with much better stuff when it is coming from his own imagination. While I am not a Dark Knight fan, I really love Memento, another Christopher Nolan film that is also on the top 250 list and I am pretty sure by this time you have either heard about or seen Memento.

I am not sure if I like Inception as much as Memento, but I definitely enjoyed the ride. I wasn’t all that engaged in the first 10 minutes of the movie but then the movie picked up pace and never really slowed down. But it is not all action and it is not all fantasy. And Nolan has made marvelous observations about the dream state and what we remember afterwards or how our dreams are structured. There is a chance you will end up having different interpretation of the movie, even with your friends. The emotions Cobb goes through are very humane and you can’t help but empathize with his pain. But I found all the actors to be perfect for their roles. And among with all the mind-bending, paradoxes and complexities that seem to threaten even sanity, the movie does have some really good one-liners to put a smile on your face. But of course they light the mood up for about a split second.

As with the different interpretations, this writer seems to have collected the most popular ones and presented them with their strengths and weaknesses. If you have seen the movie, I suggest you take a look at that review and compare notes.  But while that writer has his interpretation, and I have mine. My initial reaction to the film was in line with interpretation number 5 and I do want to believe in 6. But I mostly enjoyed reading number 3.

And obviously I’d love any comments here too. While I didn’t include spoilers in the summary, I do welcome them in the comments.

8.8 on IMDB. I think anywhere between 8-9 suits this movie fine. Brilliant. A little dark for my taste, but I just can’t resist it.

Note: Michael Caine has a small role as Miles, Cobb’s father. And both Michael Caine and Cillian Muprhy appear in both Batman Begins and The Dark Knight.

Favorite Scenes:

Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s fighting scene at the hotel, without the gravity.

The fall of the van to the water, synchronized with the dream levels.

Pretty much any chasing scene, as they are glorious.

The dreams falling apart.

Anything we find about Mal…

OK, I have a lot more. Please share yours.

[pro-player width=’530′ height=’253′ type=’video’]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S3XzUYd6nrU&feature=PlayList&p=7FD12EDD62CA1846&index=0&playnext=1[/pro-player]

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Filed Under: Movies and Actors Tagged With: action, Batman, batman begins, batman the dark knight, Christopher Nolan, Cillian Murphy, Dileep Rao, Ellen Page, imdb top 250, inception, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Ken Watanabe, leonardo dicaprio, Marion Cottilard, memento, mystery, sci fi, thriller, Tom Hardy

“V” 2009 starring Elizabeth Mitchell, Charles Mesure, Morris Chestnut, Joel Gretsch & Scott Wolf

Posted on June 7, 2010 Written by ripitup

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V 2009 starring Elizabeth Mitchell, Morris Chestnut, Joel Gretsch, Logan Huffman, Lourdes Benedicto, Laura Vandervoort, Morena Baccarin, Scott Wolf
V 2009 starring Elizabeth Mitchell, Morris Chestnut, Joel Gretsch, Logan Huffman, Lourdes Benedicto, Laura Vandervoort, Morena Baccarin, Scott Wolf. Image from: http://img42.imageshack.us/

 

Pilot, Characters & Concept

V is for visitors.

New Yorkers feel an earthquake. If only it were that simple. A giant spaceship has parked above their city. Their leader is Anna (Morena Baccarin). She addresses the nation and assures them that they need some stuff from the earth and in exchange, they are willing to share their technology and help improve people’s lives. They look like humans. They seem friendly. Many think they are the coolest and they are in deed as friendly and peaceful as they claim to be.

Protestors have other ideas. They are pretty sure the “V”s are up to something and it can’t be good.

FBI agent Erica Evans (Elizabeth Mitchell) is living with her 17-year-old son Tyler (Logan Huffman)

Ryan (Morris Chestnut)- a successful stockbroker, about to ask his live-in girlfriend, psychotherapist Val (Lourdes Benedicto) to marry him.

Jack  (Joel Gretsch) is a priest who marvels at how many people turned up at his church after the visitors arrived. However when it comes to visitors, he’s a lot more skeptical than his much older colleague.

Chad Decker (Scott Wolf) is a news anchor who wasn’t all that popular until he manages to charm Anna and scores an exclusive interview on the mothership.

The problem is, the protestors have been right along. Vs aren’t friendly. They have a deadly ulterior motive and only a small number of people are aware of it. These people are led by Georgie (David Richmond-Peck). He is trying to persuade Ryan to come back to fight for the cause. Now that Ryan is about to start a family, he is not all that willing. But who will fight for the humans when most are just charmed by the Vs and practically worshipping the ground they walk on?

Erica soon finds out Vs have invaded their lives long before the ships have arrived. She sees the malice, but she is having a hard time trying to persuade her son to stay away from the Vs. He is already infatuated with a beautiful visitor girl named Lisa (Lauren Vandervoort)…

The show got me hooked from the first episode. The characters are all interesting. They all have personal motives, no matter what side they are on. The characters never know who to trust, which exciting and surprising plot twist you will encounter.

It is always complicated. The effects are good, the actors are marvelous at their roles. More importantly, shades of grey exist all over the show. Just like there are Vs among humans with hidden agendas and identities, there are traitors among Vs who want to save themselves and others from Anna’s grip. There is the resistance among Vs, among humans, the alliance Erica, Jack, Ryan and Georgie form. There is Tyler who’s growing apart from her mom and there is Chad Decker (Scott Wolf). He is a nice guy but he is loving all the benefits Anna has provided his career too much. And let’s not forget the political turmoil the aliens have created all over the world…

There is a mini-series of the same name in 1983. I can’t comment how similar or different the two Vs are as I haven’t seen the old one. But take it from someone who loves her suspense, thrillers but is not that much into sci-fi or aliens, this show just rocks. It is a sci-fi show that even non sci-fi lovers can enjoy. Don’t miss out on this treat of a show. 7.7 over on IMDB. 10/10 from me.

UPDATED on March 9, 2011

I wrote the V review in the middle of first season. Now the second season aired the 9th episode of season 2 (Devil in a Blue Dress) yesterday and I am more hooked than ever.

The writing is still great, and the relationship between characters just got more complicated. Anna’s weaknesses as well as advantages are increasing. We still don’t know Hobbes’ (Charles Mesure) back story, and Anna has a very determined rival (Jane Badler) on her ship.

Some of the season 2’s characters aren’t in the show, but obviously Anna, her right-hand Marcus, Joshua, daughter Lisa and all our leading human rebels are intact. I have run out of addictive shows, except for V. So, 1,5 seasons later, I just wanted to say, I am still hooked and I am still giving the show a 10/10.

Fun Notes:

* Elizabeth Mitchell is no stranger to Lost fans as she appeared in over 50 episodes of the show.

* You might remember Scott Wolf from Party of Five, a tv show from the 90s. Scott played one of the 5 siblings who were left to take care of each other when their parents die. Oldest sibling was played by Matthew Fox a.k.a Jack, as Lost fans know him.

Also on Elizabeth Mitchell and Charles Mesure

Trivia for V’s Elizabeth Mitchell (Erica Evans) and Charles Mesure (Kyle Hobbes)

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Filed Under: TV shows Tagged With: charles mesure, David Richmond-Peck, drama, Elizabeth Mitchell, erica evans, jane badler, Joel Gretsch, kyle hobbes, Laura Vandervoort, Logan Huffman, Lourdes Benedicto, Morena Baccarin, Morris Chestnut, sci fi, Scott Wolf, thriller, V, v 2009, v reimagined, v tv series

The Butterfly Effect starring Ashton Kutcher and Amy Smart

Posted on May 14, 2010 Written by ripitup

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KThe Butterfly Effect starring Ashton Kutcher and Amy Smart
The Butterfly Effect starring Ashton Kutcher and Amy Smart. Image from:http://img291.imageshack.us/i/butterflyeffectze6.jpg/

Evan is having a troubled childhood. His father is in a mental institution, his friends Kayleigh and Tommy have an abusive father (Eric Stoltz) at home. Tommy is growing increasingly dangerous and aggressive. Moreover, Evan is having serious blackouts where he can’t remember what happened, what he was doing and why. A psychiatrist suggests he keeps a diary as it might help him remember.

As they grow up and Kayleigh and Evan develop feelings for each other and this gets Tommy even more out of control. One day, along with their other friend Lenny, they take a dynamite they find in Kayleigh & Tommy’s father’s house and decide to pull a prank. The prank results in a tragedy that Evan can’t remember. Evan’s mother (Melora Walters) eventually decides to take Evan and move away. Evan promises to come back for Kayleigh.

Years later, Evan (Ashton Kutcher) is a successful psychology major and getting along marvelously with his gothic roommate (Ethan Suplee). Moreover he hasn’t had a blackout in years. But one coincidence gets him to think about what happened all those years ago and he tracks Kayleigh (Amy Smart) down. This ends in another disaster, which Evan will do anything to prevent. After all, he has found a way to go back in time and change things. But every time he changes one thing to help matters, things end up horribly for at least one of them…

This is one complicated, weird and interesting movie. Even though it has some funny moments, it is mostly depressing and dark. But it is also very exciting and thought- provoking. I saw it for the second time last night (the first time was years ago when it hit the theaters) and I realized I wasn’t as hooked as I was before. But it’s because this time I knew each twist and turn. Still, it was interesting to go through the story again.

You can argue a lot of plot holes but I suggest you don’t look for them. Because this movie has sci- fi elements, looking  for extreme logic and reality will be pointless. Stay away from this movie at all costs if you want something light and uplifting.  But if you want something different, this is what you have been looking for.

Rated 7.8 on IMDB, voted by nearly 100.000 people. I’ll give it a solid 8. It will probably remain as the darkest and most original thing Ashton Kutcher will ever be a part of. I wish he finds more projects like these and less romantic comedies. As much I enjoy good romcoms, they are dime a dozen. The Butterfly Effect? Not so much. Written and directed by Eric Bress and J. Mackye Gruber. Grown-up Lenny is played by Elden Henson and Tommy by William Lee Scott.

More on Ashton Kutcher

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3 Happy Celebrity Couples: Javier Bardem, Penelope Cruz, Gwyneth Paltrow, Chris Martin, Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher

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Filed Under: Movies and Actors Tagged With: Amy Smart, Ashton Kutcher, Elden Henson, Eric Bress, Eric Stoltz, J. Mackye Gruber, Melora Walters, sci fi, The Butterfly Effect, thriller, William Lee Scott

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