Showing posts with label film review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label film review. Show all posts

Monday, 31 December 2012

'LOL' Film Review


‘LOL’ is a coming of age chick flick staring Miley Cyrus as Lola (also known as LOL to her friends.) It follows Lola and her friends in their quest to grow up and find love. Recently heartbroken, when her ex cheated on her, Lola begins to realize that her long time best friend Kyle, played by British actor Douglas Booth, might be the one for her. It shows us the complicated life of teens and the extent they go to in order to pretend they don’t care.

The writer Lisa Azuelos has adapted her 2008 French hit ‘LOL: Laughing out Loud’ for the American viewers and she has kept some of the traditional French features, for example, families openly bathing  in front of each other, adults smoking marijuana and a school trip to Paris. She has also added some more American factors for example texts and status updates pop up on the screen for the now more technical age.
Although sometimes over-acting in her tantrums Miley Cyrus brings her charm and likability to the role and acts out the complicated life well. However she does not have a lot to work with, the script shows teenagers to be sex obsessed and smoking pot constantly; It also shows teenagers to be obsessed with their own problems and although Anne, Lola’s mother (Demi Moore,) and her friends dinner parties give us a break from this, again they only seem to talk about their problems and their sexual wants.




Demi Moore plays a parent trying to be the perfect single mum while in a love triangle with the father of her children (her ex-husband) and Jeremy (Jean-Luc Bilodeau) a police man who gave her a lift home when her heel broke. Moore successfully sheds her usual ‘sexy look’ and becomes a tired looking woman and it is easy to believe that she is a single mum running around after three children.

The cast have believable chemistry especially Cyrus, Ashley Hinshaw ( Emily) and Lina Esco (Janice) they make you believe that they have been best friends for years they interact with each other like real best friends. Demi Moore and Miley Cyrus also have great chemistry and because of their great acting it is easy to believe that they have a complicated mother-daughter relationship. Adam G. Savani is also part of the cast and he plays the loser Wren wanting to have some fun with Emily, he brings a comedic aspect to the plot.


Over all I think LOL is a good film and one that should be watched, it has an amazing cast with buckets of talent.
Please follow me on twitter @elliekay96
Ellie Kay

Sunday, 16 December 2012

Fun Size Film Review


Fun Size is the newest film that is sure to be watched by tweens all across the country. It follows the life of Cleveland High School student Wren (played by Nickelodeon star Victoria Justice) and her best friend April (played by Suburgatory star Jane Levy) as they set out for the best Halloween night of their life, however it soon turns out to be the worst.  Wren’s Halloween plans go a-wall as she is forced to look after her little brother, Albert (played by newcomer Jackson Nicoll,) instead of going to “the hottest guy in school” Halloween party and just when Wren thought it couldn’t get any worse she loses Albert and has to find him before her mum finds out she ever lost him.


Directed by Josh Schwartz it plays out the classic story of a girl who thinks she likes the hot boy but ends up liking the nerd. It is hard to understand why Albert helps the convenience store manager get revenge on his ex-girlfriend and I do not think the script shows Justice’s and Levy’s well known comic skills to the best of their ability. The script is badly written as there is nothing to suggest a relationship going on between Wren and, the ‘hottie’ Aaron Riley (Thomas McDonnell.) It is not clear who this film is aimed as for this film Nickelodeon has left its family friendly PG rating and has made it a 12A, they have hired tween stars such as Victoria Justice but then placed her alongside Chelsea Handler, who is probably unknown to anyone under the age of 18. It contains Fart Jokes and sex references, however its jokes always seem to fall flat, although the randomness of the script did mean it never became boring and the one-liners kept the audience on their toes. From watching the trailer we get the idea that the main plot of the story is Wren and April trying to find Albert, however a big part of the plot goes  to Wrens, recently widowed, mum and her love life; which is barely mentioned in the trailer. The search for Albert always seems to be more important when there is a lull in the teen romance area.




As usual in the tween comedies Wren does not get help from the hottie who she thinks she likes she gets it from two nerds, Roosevelt (Thomas Mann) and Peng (Osric Chau.) As with all tween comedies this film involves funny one-liners, nervous first kisses and a message that social hierarchy doesn’t matter, however anyone in secondary school will tell you this is not true.
Director, Josh Schwartz (OC and Gossip Girls) doesn’t tell the typical Halloween horror story but instead just retells every other tween film that has already been made, and he fails to repeat the winning formula that has been performed so well with his TV shows.
Justice is pleasing to the eye and charming on screen; however she occasionally tends to over act which is common for actors transferring from child stardom to more adult films. Levy plays the social climber character perfectly and seems to help carry the film naturally. Mann seems to portray a slightly more masculine nerd and Chau seems to play a nerd as if he were a natural.

Please follow me on twitter @elliekay96

Ellie Kay

Wednesday, 7 November 2012

Ramona and Beezus Film Review

Ramona and Beezus is the perfect film for all ages. Based around the Ramona series by Beverly Cleary and directed by Elizabeth Allen, it followsthe energetic, imaginative and accident-prone nine year old Ramona Quimby (Joey King) and her overachieving big sister Beezus( Selena Gomez) through their fights and make ups. The plot revolves around Ramona and Beezus’ father (John Corbett) losing his job and the family running into money problems, which may unfortunately relate to many families at this time, however it tries to show the brighter side to this situation. This causes Ramona to try and do everything she can to try and save the family home, which involves her getting into a lot of mischief along the way.

I think Gomez and King appear like perfect sisters; you believe their fights and love their make ups. Newcomer Joey King carries the film perfectly and sellsRamona's particular mix of earnestness and mischievousness flawlessly. You always believe her when she says she's sorry for her latest misadventure, even though you know another one is just around the corner. King manages to turn, in seconds, from infectious grinning to tear- jerking emotion while acting out some of the busy scenes which include- losing a pet, throwing up at school and moving house all squeezed into 104 minutes. In Cleary’s books Beezus is portrayed as image conscious, however Gomez may be too pretty to get this across to the audience well enough and I think Allen lacks the ability to capture the fact that Ramona acts up the way she does (emptying a full tube of toothpaste into the sink) because she is frustrated at being the middle child, she is an underachiever compared to Beezus and feels like she doesn’t get enough attention because of her baby sister Roberta (twins Aila McCubbing and Zanti McCubbing.)



There are also scenes in the film for the older audiences which include Ramona and Beezus’ aunt Bea (Ginnifer Goodwin) flirting on her old flame, Hobart, (Josh Duhamel.) There are also scenes that include Beezus trying to impress her long-term friend, Henry Huggins, (Hutch Dano), which doesn’t go well when she drinks some lemonade with a wasp in it and ends up spitting it all over Henry.
Although I enjoyed the whole film I do think that a film series may have suited the books better to show the different adventures in more detail, but instead screenwriter Laurie Clark and Nick Pustay have picked memorable moments from Cleary’s eight book series and fashioned them into one single film. In my opinion Clark and Pustay have picked moments that show Ramona’s sense of imaginatively seamlessly with the animated daydream sequences which transport the audience into her world and allows all ages to feel like and child again.

I would recommend this film to families and children aged 6-13.

Thank You for reading, follow me on twitter @elliekay96

Ellie X

The Last Song Film Review


The Last Song is the perfect film for teens, starring Disney princess Miley Cyrus and Australian heartthrob Liam Hemsworth it is bound to attract a wide viewing. Based on the novel by Nicholas Sparks, and directed by Julie Anne Robinson, it follows Ronnie Miller (Miley Cyrus) as she and her brother, Jonah Miller (Bobby Coleman), stay at their fathers’ beach house years after their parents’ divorce.  Ronnie is very bitter about their parents’ divorce and blames her dad, Steve (Greg Kinnear), barely able to tolerate her father’s presence she seeks to avoid it by going down to the beach. It is here where she meets Will (Liam Hemsworth), a seemingly normal guy who works in a garage and volunteers at the aquarium, he turns out to be a rich boy who also has family problems of his own.

Cyrus is miles away from her clean Disney image on Hannah Montana, playing an indie bad tempered teenage girl and in my opinion she seems to still think she is playing a girl with a double personality, she is either a pouting stroppy brat or a loving caring daughter and sister, there is no middle emotional bridge. However Cyrus has a charming and energetic screen presence and is more than capable of becoming an adult movie star. Twelve year old Bobby Coleman although relatively new to the industry he does an amazing job at playing the smart young brother, he makes you laugh, smile and cry.  Coleman and Cyrus present a believable brother-sister relationship and make us think that they really do love each other.
 
Kinnear is an amazing addition to the film and although he has a relatively small part at the beginning there is something in his eyes that makes you believe something deeper is going on. For the most part he waiting for Ronnie to finish her sulks and rebellious behaviour and become the caring, loving daughter he knows he can be. He gets a bigger part when he collapses on the beach and we find out he has terminal cancer his performance in the later scenes brings the whole cinema to tears and his amazing soulful performance has a lot to do with his acting through his eyes.





The Last Song is action packed, maybe a little to action packed? Ronnie used to be a world class pianist, but now does not like to play the Piano at all. She was accepted into Julliard, despite not playing since she was seven?  Her and Will, when they are speaking, have to look after turtle eggs and she has to keep her new friend from the town thug. This film, however, is not without Miley’s onscreen singing in which Will answers “Wow, you can sing.” Julie Anne Robinson amazingly manages to prevent Ronnie and Will’s love scenes, which include calving their name into a tree and swimming in the aquarium, from becoming too sickly. Although only having a tiny singing part in the movie she is on the soundtrack more and does an amazing job singing “The Last Song.”

Thank you for reading, please follow me on twitter @elliekay96
Ellie Kay