Showing posts with label Adam McKay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Adam McKay. Show all posts

Monday, December 24, 2018

'Vice'

'Vice' Movie Review
'Vice'
Posted on Dec. 24, 2018 on CWAtlanta.cbslocal.com

Photo courtesy of Annapurna 

Vice (2018) R

We first see the following statement on the screen: ‘The following is a true story. Or as true as it can be given that Dick Cheney is one of the most secretive leaders in history. But we did our best.’

We see a bunch of men gambling on a table and drinking, as one of the men keeps hollering. It appears to be in the 1950s. Next, we are on the road, the car weaving in and out of its lane. The car is not only swerving from side to side, but it’s also speeding. We cut to the car has now been pulled over by a highway patrolman, and we see the patrolman approaching the vehicle. He shines his light into the front seat of the car and taps on the window. The driver, Dick Cheney (Christian Bale) waves at the officer and rolls down the window. A radio is playing, and Cheney is signing along with the radio. The officer asks Dick to exit the car, and Dick takes one more drag on his cigarette and then drunkenly stumbles out of the car, going to his knees as the officer grabs Dick before he can fall to the floor as the scene fades to black.

VIce

Photo courtesy of Annapurna

We hear an alarm going off in the White House. Secret Service officers are telling Cheney to move. As the men race Cheney out of the room, the camera pans to show a TV airing the terrorist attack on the Twin Towers on 9/11. The men push Cheney into a secure room as one of the security detail get word that a plane has just hit the Pentagon. Vice President Cheney from the ‘Presidential Emergency Operations Center’ begins barking orders to the people in the room. As Cheney looks around the room, a bunch of worried staff talk about how many planes are still in the air and how one plane has just crashed in the fields of Pennsylvania. We see National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice (LisaGay Hamilton) on the phone trying to gather information about the attacks. She informs the Vice President that she has the President on line one. He tells the President that the situation is ‘very fluid’ and suggests that he stay in the air aboard Air Force One. He informs the President that he has sequestered top congressmen and Cheney will talk with the President when he knows more. The Vice President hangs up and then talks to Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld over the phone. Rumsfeld asks the Vice President for ‘Rules of Engagement’ to deal with the passenger planes still in the air. Condoleezza Rice suggests getting the President back on the line, and he tells her no. The Vice President tells Rumsfeld that he has the authorization to shoot down any aircraft ‘deemed a threat.’ Rumsfeld asks if this is under ‘Presidential authority’ and the Vice President confirms that it is. A narrator starts talking about what went on in that room that day. While everyone else in the room was feeling fear, confusion, uncertainty, the narrator tells us that Dick Cheney sees something that no one else saw in that room, ‘opportunity.’

This is the start of Vice the remarkable life of Dick Cheney, who went from drunk and working for very little pay to the most powerful man in the world. The problem is what was stated at the beginning of the film, that Cheney is a very secretive man, heck, he and his wife stayed in an undisclosed bunker for six months after 9/11. The problem with a man like Cheney is that you never really know what they are thinking, they hold everything very close to his vest, making it hard for the filmmaker, writer/director Adam McKay, to know exactly what his main character’s motives are, other than to get as much power as he can. So McKay has to make things up and much like his Oscar-winning 2016 film The Big Short, he uses comedy to fill in the gaps. Sometimes it works, as with a running gag that involves Cheney and his health that is fall on the floor funny, but at other times instead of funny, the attempt becomes just strange, making a peculiar film even more offbeat.

The core of this film is the performance of Christian Bale, whose appearance is a chameleon-like transformation. There were times watching this film that I forgot this was the same actor that fills the role of Batman in the ‘Dark Knight’ trilogy. Bale, using unbelievably effective prosthetics and either one of the greats fat suits ever used, or Bale gained all that weight for the role, it’s hard to believe that he isn’t Dick Cheney in real life. Other actors undergo similar transformations, including Tyler Perry (yes, that Tyler Perry) as Colin Powell, Sam Rockwell as President George W. Bush and Steve Carell as Donald Rumsfeld. At the very least, this film will be a Hair and Makeup Oscar nomination, if not a win

It is not just the hair and make-up that make Bale’s performance so exceptional, it’s the actor himself, who probably had to go deep inside himself to try to figure out the complex man that he played in the role. I did find Sam Rockwell’s performance of President Bush a little too cartoony. I mean it seemed, at least on the surface, that Bush was a pretty simple man, but Rockwell goes way over the top in making the President almost buffoon-like. Amy Adams isn’t given a whole lot to work with as Dick’s wife Lynne Cheney, though I did enjoy a scene where she has taken over Dick’s speeches when he suffers a health crisis. Besides Bale, the other performance that stands out is Steve Carell as the power fueled Donal Rumsfeld, who feels he is better than anyone in the room. Carell gives a masterful performance of a man who thought he would go further than he actually did.

At one point, I started to feel that the film drag, as McKay tries to give us the whole life of Cheney instead of solely concentrating on the White House years. McKay spends a lot of time showing us the early years, where a newly married Cheney was drinking too much, spending what little money he made in throw away jobs while getting into fights and arrested for drunk driving. I did find it interesting that Cheney became an assistant of Rumsfeld at the old age of 35 (most of his fellow assistants were in their twenties). It shows the drive and conviction that Cheney had to succeed after given the riot act by his wife to clean up his life or she would leave.

Even though I have some problems with the Vice, it is worth seeing for the performances by Bale and Carell. You may be horrified by the Bush administrations policies at the time and how much power that Cheney had, but you will be amazed by the performances in the film    My Rating: Full Price

My rating system from best to worst: 1). I Would Pay to See it Again 2). Full Price 3). Bargain Matinee 4). Cable 5). You Would Have to Pay Me to See it Again




Wednesday, December 23, 2015

"The Big Short"

My review of "The Big Short" starring Christian Bale, Steve Carell, Ryan Gosling.
"The Big Short"
Posted on Dec. 23, 2015  on CWAtlanta.cbslocal.com


Photo courtesy of Paramount Pictures 

“The Big Short” (2015)

Ever wonder what caused the banking crisis of 2008 to happen? You know the one where major banks collapsed and died, where millions of people lost their homes and their jobs. Why were people given home mortgages that they couldn’t afford to keep even if everything went right? “The Big Short” is a film about the banking crisis that happened in 2008. How a few investors figured out that it was going to happen, and risked their life savings and the goodwill of their customers, betting on the fact that something that was thought as impossible would happen. It’s a film that will make you laugh one moment and make you mad in another, as you shake your head wondering how we allowed the crisis to happen and how almost no one paid for their sins, except the naive customers that thought they could have a part of the American dream.

We meet hedge fund manager Michael Burry (Christopher Nolan) at the start of the film. Burry is a man who is rarely wrong, making millions for his boss and his clients. He is a brilliant but strange man, someone who rarely has shoes on, wears T-shirts to the office and listens to heavy metal as he searches for the next great investment. He is a man who is socially awkward, having lost an eye in a childhood illness, making him feel self-conscious. He is a former doctor who quit his practice when he discovered he could make money crunching numbers, crushing the completion with his astute picks. He discovers that the housing market, considered the backbone of the American economy, is about to collapse upon itself, a market that has very few sure things and way too many mortgages which are certain to fail. Burry figures out a way to bet on the fact that the housing market and the banks that invest in it are about to be in a lot of trouble. It’s a bet that few think is a good idea, and most think will never come into play.

A banking investor, Jared Vennett (Ryan Gosling), who doesn’t have the most sterling reputation, finds out about Burry’s investment idea and brings it to maverick investor Mark Baum (Steve Carell). Baum is a man who is known for his temper and his contempt of the investment system that takes advantage of the small investor for the large investor’s gain. Baum is haunted by a personal tragedy, and it’s that tragedy that makes him work so hard. A third set of investors get wind of Burry’s idea, two young, small-time investors (John Magaro, Finn Wittrock), who see Burry’s investment as a way to play with the big boys. All three investor groups are about to go on a journey that will take America to the brink of financial collapse, but not before a lot of people have made and lost a lot of money.

Director / co-writer Adam McKay has brought us a film that is dark, funny and unconventional in its storytelling. Often the actors break the “fourth-wall” to talk directly to the audience, sometimes commenting on what has just gone down. That use of the breaking the “fourth wall” is used very often to tweak the nose of the filmmaker himself, as characters often tell us that the filmmaker has changed something from what really happened to make it more dramatic for the film. The film uses very funny cameos (I won’t say who or what settings they are placed in) to explain some of the extremely complex financial terms and ideas that are crucial to the film. The film also uses montages with bits of cultural references to put the audience in the mood for the timeline. McKay wants you to have fun watching this film, but he also wants to inform you and make you pissed. He made this film with the hope that the American people will get mad when they find out just what happened and why it did. The film also can be very sobering, with images of people living in cars or whole neighborhoods abandoned by the families who couldn’t afford the houses they had moved into. And McKay uses the film to make you indignant or irate, like a scene where Baum is interviewing two real estate brokers that delight in making money off the naive or the uninformed. The two revel in talking couples into taking mortgages that the two money grabbers know they will never be able to afford.

This is an ensemble film, and it’s filled with some superb performances. Bale is outstanding in portraying a man that I am convinced has Asperger’s syndrome. His close-ups as he struggles to understand a conversation or why someone wouldn’t want to invest with him are brilliant and moving. Brad Pitt is fun as a retired, eccentric broker that decides to take the two young brokers under his wing and help them hit the big time. It’s a restrained performance that Pitt plays to perfection. Gosling, as the brash broker that no one likes, gives a hysterical performance as the guy who has nothing to lose and lets you know it. However, this is Steve Carell’s film, playing his part with an almost hound dog-like determination. Carell lets his character hide his pain inside while he remains angry with the world. The only person that seems to be able to reach him is his wife, played by the always fascinating and brilliant Marisa Tomei. Carell plays his character like he is working at 100 mph, and the rest of us are watching at a normal rate as he speeds from one deal to another. Carell steals the film near the end as his character agonizes over whether to cash his hand in, therefore, making millions and millions of dollars on other people’s loss and pain.

“The Big Short” is a film similar in tone to something like 2013s “The Wolf of Wall Street.” It’s a movie that will make you laugh at some over-the-top situations and make you mad about the injustice of a very corrupt system that no one seems to want to fix, and no one will be prosecuted for the wrongs they committed. It’s a film that entertains while informing you all the while marveling at the incredible performances. It’s a story that needed to be told and seems almost impossible to be real.   My Rating: I Would Pay to See it Again

My movie rating system from Best to Worst:  1). I Would Pay to See it Again  2). Full Price  3). Bargain Matinee  4). Cable  5). You Would Have to Pay Me to See it Again

“The Big Short” Website