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Review: Pom Wonderful Presents: The Greatest Movie Ever Sold
Reviews
Day Watch
Anything but predictable
By
CHRIS BRAIOTTA
|
June 6, 2007
DAY WATCH
3.0
Stars
VIDEO: Watch the trailer for
Day Watch
.
Like its predecessor, Timur Bekmambetov’s
Day Watch
is a muddled fantasy epic. But unlike
Night Watch
, this one nudges the magical antics aside to make way for a superhuman police procedural. The story’s built around a treaty that maintains a stalemate between the supernatural forces of Light and Dark. This mystical cold war is threatening to thaw and restore life to Moscow, but then an agent of Light, Anton (Konstantin Khabensky), gets framed for the murder of a Dark officer. Incantational slap fights ensue, but Bekmambetov is more interested in building a Terry Gilliam–infused bureaucratic thriller where twilit
éminences grises
wage war via search warrant. The film doesn’t always make sense, but it’s witty, and anything but predictable. And its allegiance to European cinema-by-inference nurtures mystery and awe in a genre where both are rarer than they ought to be.
Related
:
Russian rot
,
Eternal returns
,
Movies from outer space
,
More
Russian rot
Night Watch is a completely synthetic yet thoroughly original movie.
Eternal returns
When film festivals are programmed as extensions of life, not merely celebrations of cinema, commerce, or hype, everybody wins.
Movies from outer space
Our new-found DVD-ness and cable-TV luxury notwithstanding, movies have always been a public medium, a spatial experience we share in the theater and a topical experience we share in the culture at large.
Wanted
Leveraging the graphic novel by Mark Millar and J.G. Jones, the film manages one juicy nugget of inspiration with its bland protagonist.
Coolidge compliments Quays
If you don't know the films of the Quay Brothers, you don't know animation.
Creative compost
It's a vision of feral characters wandering a world jerry-rigged from recycled scraps of a collapsed plastic mass-produced disposable civilization.
Dirty politics
The last resort of the true patriot is a fart joke.
Smoke screens
What does it say about America that marijuana movies are a hot genre right now, perhaps hotter even than in the heyday of Cheech Marin and Tommy Chong’s 1978 Up in Smoke ?
The Pythons' Gonzo Gospel
The scene is familiar: the vast blue sky, the expanses of sand, and, atop a distant hill, Jesus delivers the Sermon on the Mount to a rapt throng. But on the fringes of the crowd, His listeners behave like rowdies at a rock concert, yelling at one another and brawling until no one can hear the Savior's words. What's that He said? Blessed are the cheesemakers?
Pass the subversion
Brazilian filmmaker Jorge Furtado has pursued the same preoccupations through his entire 25-year career, beginning with his arch, masterfully constructed and jolting shorts.
Lite at the end of the tunnel?
If you had enough of the end of the world with 2012 , you might be relieved when it comes to 2010.
Less
Topics
:
Reviews
,
Terry Gilliam
,
Timur Bekmambetov
,
Konstantin Khabensky
|
More
ARTICLES BY CHRIS BRAIOTTA
MAY YOU AND PORTLANDIA BE VERY HAPPY TOGETHER!
| February 15, 2012
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THE HIPSTER HARRY POTTER
| September 21, 2011
The inside flap of Wildwood — the new young-adult fantasy novel by Decemberist Colin Meloy — claims that the book is for ages nine and up.
WELCOME HOME ROSCOE JENKINS
| February 06, 2008
“I wonder how this can possibly end?” Wait, sorry, I meant, “When will this possibly end?”
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| January 23, 2008
The dance sequences suffer for the lack of gloss, but it’s a fair trade because tiny bursts of drama erupt whenever the plot looks the other way.
PREGNANT PAUSE
| December 12, 2007
Jason Reitman’s film makes the most of a few great ideas.
See all articles by:
CHRIS BRAIOTTA
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