Posts Tagged ‘Adventure’
Thursday, September 17th, 2009
By Jared M. Gordon 
Star Trek – 2009 – dir. JJ Abrams
Before I went to see J. J. Abrams’ version of the classic franchise, I was treated to dark whispers and quiet warnings such as, “If you’re a big-time Trekkie, you’re not going to like it.”
Being a moderate-time Trekkie, as opposed to a big-time one, I hotly anticipated the release through two years of promotional posters, mysterious trailers, and vague, origin-story allusions. I have to confess that along with Pixar’s Up, Star Trek is likely one of the best movies of the year. It’s not just a good sci-fi movie. It’s a good movie.
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Tags: Action, Adventure, boldly go, Bones, classic, dedstiny, Drama, exploration, Fantasy, feelings, franchise, Kirk, leader, logic, Nero, Oscar, rebelious, sandwiches, Sarek, Sci-Fi, Scott, space, Spok, theme, Thriller, Trekkie, trepidation
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Thursday, July 2nd, 2009
By Peggy Nelson 
Easy Rider – 1969 – dir. Dennis Hopper
Easy Rider (dir. Dennis Hopper, 1969), like it’s lesser-known sibling, Two-Lane Blacktop (1971), poses the question, where are you going when all the roads are mapped? In their constant motion, Wyatt/Captain America (Peter Fonda) and Billy (Dennis Hopper) are seeking unmapped territory, but the only unmapped territory is within. By refusing to settle in one place, by being nomads, they are refusing the predetermined categories of social role and occupation.
Freedom has been synonymous with freedom of the open road since before this country was founded: freedom to wander around in space, to break free of the boundaries of town, city, job, habits, and self, and simply go, to wander in space and see what and who you might find. The hippies in Easy Rider are icons now, and were icons then. But they’re on a journey much older than hippies – the Beats, too, had their road, the hobos theirs, the frontiersmen and pioneers their roads, stolen from and grafted on top of the Native Americans’ trajectories in space.
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Tags: 60s, acid trip, Action, Adventure, brothel, California, Captain America, Dennis Hopper, desert, Drama, freedom, helmet, hip, hippies, hitchhiker, icon, Jack Nicholson, LSD, Mardi Gras, mime colony, motorcycle, New Orleans, nomad, Peter Fonda, road, utopia
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Tuesday, May 19th, 2009
By Melvin Cartagena 
The Wild Bunch – 1969 – dir. Sam Peckinpah
It doesn’t matter that the credits state that it’s a screenplay written by Sam Peckinpah and Walon Green, a fiction developed from a story by Walon Green and Roy N. Sickner. It doesn’t matter that Pike Bishop’s (William Holden’s) command to his men in the robbery that opens the film is “If they move, kill ‘em.” And that this is followed by DIRECTED BY SAM PECKINPAH, simultaneously a bold statement and a way to defuse Pike’s order. It doesn’t matter that the fight sequences are entirely subjective in their staging and editing, we want to believe that there were once guys like these running around loose. We want to believe that these weary, battle-scarred men are the cowboys that made the west wild, as their name implies. They are not above shooting civilians (as they do, when we see the parade marchers mowed down in the crossfire between the Bunch and Harrigan’s bounty hunters), but they’d rather not. They stand by each other against the world, and in their circumscribed universe (which is shrinking with the paving over of the west) that is the loftiest ideal they can hope for. It’s this commitment to each other that drives Pike and company to forsake their retirement score and engage in a suicidal shootout with Mapache’s men after Mapache slits Angel’s throat.
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Tags: Action, Adventure, Billy the Kid, bounty hunter, Cable Hogue, capitalism, civilization, conmen, cowboys, crime, Drama, Edmond O'Brien, empire, Ernest Borgnine, greed, guns, hanging, history, jail, law, legend, losers, Manifest Destiny, mayhem, Mexico, myth, parade, Pat Garrett, propectors, ranchers, retirement, Robert Ryan, Roy Sickner, Sam Peckinpah, subjectivity, swindlers, torture, train, Walon Green, Western, Wild West, William Holden, winners, yellow journalism
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Tuesday, March 10th, 2009
By Jared M. Gordon 
The Mummy – 1999 – dir. Stephen Sommers
Whether it’s action, romance, or angry, angry beetles, Stephen Sommers’s 1999 hit The Mummy has what you’re looking for. Marketed as a next-generation’s Indiana Jones, The Mummy succeeds as a film by delivering exactly what it promises – and a little bit more.
With an ensemble cast including Brendan Fraser, pre-Oscar Rachel Weisz, John Hannah, and Arnold Vosloo, there are enough contrasting, zany characters for any “Which character are you” Internet quiz. But what keeps The Mummy from being just another visual-effects-laden Hollywood song and dance?
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Tags: Action, Adventure, afterlife, Arnold Vosloo, beetles, Brendan Fraser, Chips Ahoy, code, Comedy, cookies, desert, dominoes, Drama, Egypt, Evie Carnahan, hieroglyphics, Horror, Imhotep, Indiana Jones, Jaws, Jerry Goldsmith, John Hannah, Kevin J. O'Connor, Lawrence of Arabia, map, Maurice Jarre, mummy, Museum of Antiquities, Oded Fehr, Pharaoh's Curse, pyramids, Quentin Tarantino, Rachel Weisz, Reagan, religion, Rick O'Connell, sand, Stephen Sommers
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Monday, January 12th, 2009
By: Victoria Large 
Repo Man – 1983 – dir. Alex Cox
I don’t remember how I first heard of Repo Man, only that its reputation preceded it. As a teenager I actually picked up a used cassette of the film’s famous punk rock soundtrack at my local record store long before I was able to hunt down a copy of the movie itself, which for me only heightened its grungy cult flick allure. (For you youngsters, this was back when there were audiocassette tapes. And record stores. And suburban video stores with unpredictable inventories.) When I did finally see Repo Man, it lived up to my expectations simply by defying them. “…[T]he only real response to it is the perception of brilliance or the belief that it’s an utter piece of garbage,” writes Film Threat’s Brad Laidman. That’s pretty much the textbook definition of a cult classic.
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Tags: 80s, Action, Adventure, Alex Cox, beer, Brad Laidman, cars, Chevy Malibu, conformity, consumerism, cult classic, cynicism, Dan O'Bannon, Dick Rude, dissatisfaction, Drama, economic downturn, Emilio Estevez, family values, Fox Harris, generics, Harry Dean Stanton, James Merendino, lobotomy, Los Angeles, neutron bomb, no-name brand, Olivia Barash, plate o' shrimp, punk, punk rock, repossession, Richard Kelly, Ronald Reagan, Sci-Fi, social criticism, space ship, suburban, sushi, Sy Richardson, televangelism, Tracey Walter, transcendence, trunk, urban decay, urban wasteland, youth
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