Showing posts with label Jessica Chastain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jessica Chastain. Show all posts

Sunday, February 23, 2014

Mama

 My Rating:
IMDb Users:
 Mama
(2013) on IMDb

(2013)
Genre: Horror
Director: Andrés Muschietti
Writers: Andrés Muschietti, Barbara Muschietti, Neil Cross
Producers: J. Miles Dale, Guillermo del Toro, Ingrid Fernández de Castro, Cristina Lera Gracia, Barbara Muschietti

Synopsis: Guillermo del Toro presents Mama, a supernatural horror that tells the haunting tale of two little girls who disappeared into the woods the day that their mother was murdered. When they are rescued years later and begin a new life, they find that someone or something still wants to come tuck them in at night. The day their father killed their mother, sisters Victoria and Lilly vanished near their suburban neighborhood. For five long years, their Uncle Lucas (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) and his girlfriend, Annabel (Jessica Chastain), have been madly searching for them. But when, incredibly, the kids are found alive in a decrepit cabin, the couple wonders if the girls are the only guests they have welcomed into their home. -- (Written by Universal Pictures)

Cast:
  • Jessica Chastain

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Zero Dark Thirty

 My Rating:
IMDb Users:
Zero Dark Thirty (2012) on IMDb

(2012)
Genre: Drama/Thriller/History
Director: Kathryn Bigelow
Writer: Mark Boal
Producers: Kathryn Bigelow, Mark Boal, Matthew Budman, Megan Ellison, Jonathan Leven, Tabrez Noorani, Pravesh Sahni, Ted Schipper, Greg Shapiro, David Ticotin, Colin Wilson

   
Nominee

Synopsis: For a decade, an elite team of intelligence and military operatives, working in secret across the globe, devoted themselves to a single goal: to find and eliminate Osama bin Laden. Zero Dark Thirty reunites the Oscar winning team of director-producer Kathryn Bigelow and writer-producer Mark Boal (The Hurt Locker) for the story of history's greatest manhunt for the world's most dangerous man. -- (Written by Columbia Pictures)
Cast:
  • Jessica Chastain
  • Joel Edgerton
  • Chris Pratt
  • Jason Clarke
  • Jennifer Ehle

Friday, February 22, 2013

Lawless

My Rating:
IMDb Users:
Lawless (2012) on IMDb

(2012)
Genre: Western/Drama
Director: John Hillcoat
Writers: Nick Cave, Matt Bondurant
Producers: John Allen, Robert Ogden Barnum, Michael Benaroya, Jason Blum, Matthew Budman, Megan Ellison, Cassian Elwes, Lucy Fisher, Scott Hanson, James Lejsek, Randy Manis, Laura Rister, Ben Sachs, Ted Schipper, Rachel Shane, Douglas Wick, Dany Wolf, Clayton Young

Synopsis: Lawless is the true story of the infamous Bondurant Brothers: bootlegging siblings who made a run for the American Dream in Prohibition-era Virginia. In this epic gangster tale, inspired by true-life tales of author Matt Bondurant's family in his novel "The Wettest County in the World", the loyalty of three brothers is put to the test against the backdrop of the nation's most notorious crime wave. -- (Written by The Weinstein Company)

Cast:
  • Tom Hardy
  • Shia LaBeouf
  • Guy Pearce
  • Jason Clarke
  • Jessica Chastain
  • Mia Wasikowska
  • Gary Oldman
  • Noah Taylor

Monday, December 19, 2011

Texas Killing Fields

 My Rating:
 IMDb Users:
(2011)
Genre: Thriller/Drama
Director: Ami Canaan Mann
Writer: Don Ferrarone
Producers: Bill Block, A. John A. Bryan Jr., Paul Hanson, Michael Jaffe, Michael Mann, Travis Mann, Michael Ohoven, Ethan Smith, Justin Thomson

Synopsis: Inspired by a true story - A homicide detective in a small Texan town, and his partner track a sadistic serial killer dumping his victims' mutilated bodies in a nearby marsh locals call 'The Killing Fields'. Before long, the killer changes the game and begins hunting the detectives, teasing them with possible clues at the crime scenes while always remaining one step ahead. When familiar local girl Anne goes missing, the detectives find themselves racing against time to catch the killer and save the young girl's life. (Written by IMDb Editors)

Cast:
  • Sam Worthington
  • Jeffrey Dean Morgan
  • Jessica Chastain
  • Chloë Grace Moretz

Thursday, September 22, 2011

The Tree of Life (jhunterfilmreview)

 My Rating:
 IMDb Users:
(2011)
Genre: Drama
Director: Terrence Malick
Writer: Terrence Malick
Producers: Nigel Ashcroft, Ivan Bess, Greg Eliason, Dede Gardner, Nicolas Gonda, Sarah Green, Grant Hill, Susan Kirr, Brad Pitt, Bill Pohlad, Donald Rosenfeld, Paula Mae Schwartz, Steve Schwartz, Sandhya Shardanand

Nominee

Synopsis: The impressionistic story of a Texas family in the 1950s. The film follows the life journey of the eldest son, Jack, through the innocence of childhood to his disillusioned adult years as he tries to reconcile a complicated relationship with his father (Brad Pitt). Jack (played as an adult by Sean Penn) finds himself a lost soul in the modern world, seeking answers to the origins and meaning of life while questioning the existence of faith. (Written by alfiehitchie)

Cast:
  • Brad Pitt
  • Jessica Chastain
  • Sean Penn
  • Hunter McCracken
  • Laramie Eppler
  • Tye Sheridan


jhunterfilmreview: Ok wow. Let me just start out by saying this was a very enjoyable review for me to write. Mainly because researching this film is crucial in understanding its several different meanings, and the in-depth views and interpretations of other viewers. The Tree of Life is the latest motion picture to come from Oscar nominated director, Terrence Malick, known for his other films The Thin Red Line and The New World. This 2011 drama centres around a family with three boys in 1950s Texas. However, the focus is on the relationship between the eldest son Jack, played by Hunter McCracken (in his first role on the big screen) as a young boy, and later Sean Penn (Milk, Mystic River, I Am Sam) as an adult, and his father, Mr O'Brien, Brad Pitt (Fight Club, Se7en, Inglourious Basterds). As expected, Sean Penn and Brad Pitt play their roles superbly, and Hunter McCracken is outstanding as well. Having said that, for me, Jessica Chastain (The Help, Jolene, The Debt) as the mother, was amazing. She is stunning and played her fragile character so well. She was a real joy for me to watch on screen. Although the majority of the film follows the story of this family, an enormous part of it is a series of absolutely incredible and fascinating shots of everything that's beautiful about life…seriously, everything you could think of  - these are not narratively connected, but thematically complementary. For this reason the film has been so heavily compared to Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey. The quoted excerpt below elaborates on this aspect of the film further, so be sure to keep reading. The film also features an extraordinary score, by none other than Alexandre Desplat, known for his work on The King's Speech, A Prophet and Julie & Julia (all which I have previously rated, so check them out). In addition, probably the most sensational aspect of The Tree of Life is the cinematography. The talented DOP responsible for it, is Emmanuel Lubezki, known for his work in films such as Children of Men, Sleepy Hollow and Burn After Reading. He captured just the most insanely beautiful shots of all aspects of life, and it is a jaw-dropping experience for some to watch. Although my review is obviously a positive one, this movie has completely torn its audience in half - half simply love it and appreciate it immensely, and the other half find it exceedingly pretentious and boring. I'll include a few one-liner reviews below to show you what i mean. Also, if you plan on seeing it, be sure to keep in mind that the film is almost two and a half hours in length…so be prepared! I could go on about my love and appreciation for this film forever, but i'll stop here…
I give this film 8 stars.
"The Tone of the film is mesmeric, transcendent, awe-inspiring." -- Paul Byrnes, Sydney Morning Herald.

"Apart from a middle section which reveals moments of clarity and actual emotion, this is a bloated, self-indulgent bore of fine imagery." -- Ben McEachen, Empire Magazine Australasia
"Some people have called the film pretentious, as if having a grand aim in making a film is somehow embarrassing. I was incredibly moved." -- Margaret Pomeranz, At the Movies.

"How do you watch such a film? You've got to lower any defenses you have. You've got to not allow yourself to try to make a sense out of everything you see. You've got to take it all, and let it enter you, just as smoothly as the film enters dinosaurs, cells, planetary evolution, or a simple living room of a troubled family. Make no judgements, consider nothing except the pure experience of being there, wherever the film takes you. Search no explanation, for there was no real rational reason other than intuition for images to be as they are.

Imagine a film about everything, with a remote storyline that talks about every theme, in every possible time of the world.

Imagine a film without a beginning or an ending. Circular meta-narratives, where you can pick up on any spot (i mean any) and you can create whatever inner narrative you want. A sky of images (like the mosaic poster of the film) where you can pick your own choices, and create whatever story you like. Or you can choose to frame the more palpable story visible in the film in whatever fashion you want. Up to you. The challenge is that you have to test the limits of your own imagination to live the film in its full extent. Nothing is predefined. Go wherever you want." -- ruiresende84