Monday, 23 June 2014

Oculus released on April 3, 2014

OCULUS

Ten years ago, tragedy struck the Russell family, leaving the lives of teenage siblings Tim and Kaylie forever changed when Tim was convicted of the brutal murder of their parents. Now in his 20s, Tim is newly released from protective custody and only wants to move on with his life; but Kaylie, still haunted by that fateful night, is convinced her parents' deaths were caused by something else altogether: a malevolent supernatural force unleashed through the Lasser Glass, an antique mirror in their childhood home. Determined to prove Tim's innocence, Kaylie tracks down the mirror, only to learn similar deaths have befallen previous owners over the past century. With the mysterious entity now back in their hands, Tim and Kaylie soon find their hold on reality shattered by terrifying hallucinations, and realize, too late, that their childhood nightmare is beginning again...
Initial release: April 3, 2014 (Los Angeles)
Director: Mike Flanagan
Running time: 105 minutes
Screenplay: Jeff Howard, Mike Flanagan
Producers: Trevor Macy, Marc D. Evans

A woman tries to exonerate her brother, who was convicted of murder, by proving that the crime was committed by a supernatural phenomenon.

Director: Mike Flanagan
Writers: Mike Flanagan (screenplay), Jeff Howard (screenplay), 2 more credits »
Stars: Karen Gillan, Brenton Thwaites, Katee Sackhoff | See full cast and crew »


Oculus is a 2013 American psychological horror film directed by Mike Flanagan.The movie had its world premiere on September 8, 2013, at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival, and received a wide theatrical release on April 11, 2014.The film stars Karen Gillan as a young woman who is convinced that an antique mirror is responsible for the death and misfortune her family has suffered. The film is based upon an earlier short film by Flanagan, Oculus: Chapter 3 - The Man with the Plan.



Directed by Mike Flanagan
Produced by Marc D. Evans
Trevor Macy
Written by Mike Flanagan
Jeff Howard
Based on Oculus: Chapter 3 - The Man with the Plan 
by Mike Flanagan
Starring Karen Gillan
Brenton Thwaites
Rory Cochrane
Katee Sackhoff
Music by The Newton Brothers
Cinematography Michael Fimognari
Edited by Mike Flanagan
Production
  company Blumhouse Productions
WWE Studios
Intrepid Pictures
Distributed by Relativity Media
Release date(s)
September 8, 2013 (TIFF)
April 11, 2014 (United States)
Running time 103 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $5 million
Box office $34,036,164


A woman tries to exonerate her brother, who was convicted of murder, by proving that the crime was committed by a supernatural phenomenon.

Despite first-hand speculation, Oculus isn't your average scary movie although its genre is definitely standard horror. Oculus is a reflexive act on the form of horror without the overweight of an allegory, which has always been the magic screwdriver behind the Pop mechanism. The film starts as a sequel, from a film you haven't seen but certainly from an archetypal pound of the haunted object subgenre: here, some distant relative to some killer in a mirror, or any aggravating Poe's cheerfulness. By straightforwardly cutting to the second episode of this arc, it eases the mind, and also it makes a difficult promise to keep, that it is innovative enough not to bother with a classical origin story ; in a way that you won't suffer the code but only enjoy the entertainment coming from the archetype, only the Dark Knight without Batman Begins if you like.

The narrative strength is this, Oculus starts from the sequel intercalated in the prequel. You could call it flashbacks but why use these flashbacks since you already know what happened in the past through the premise ? In fact, it does better than flashbacks. Both of these story lines will fuel each other until they become one overpowered engine. What could be Oculus's downfall becomes its grace when it chooses to integrate both story lines at once, until they mix so deep that they echo their brutal respective end. Fatality will ensue.

Is the mirror actually doing something ? Even with its nasty resumé of demonic doings, it seems only to act with people complicit (it dehydrates, people forget to eat, which is the main job of a good reflection in a way). Take narcissism for instance: is it a narcissic reflection acting on you or are you acting narcissic? That's another hard promise from the movie. You will see monsters, corpses and ghosts the mirror have ended up possessing, but everything could just be a matter of perception. Only the being acts, not the objects. Maybe a haunted object is able to invade your mind when you're in relation with it, but it's powerless on its own. It needs you. A doll would have been a powerless object on that matter, but a mirror ? In it there's only a reflection, your act, the desired landscape you put in front of him. Only this time it's a pretentious one, as the tag-line blare : 'you see what it wants you to see.' The Mike Flanagan and Jeff Howard script never make it sound Kubrickian or allegoric because it's an entertainment business. So it's very quick at telling, without suspending its rhythm over equally deserving points : is the father a serial killer ? Are the kids really making a propaganda to unguilt the fact they killed their father after he killed their mother ? Is it just a family of wackos ? Cold as the eye of a murderer, it keeps advancing to its inevitable purpose.

Mike Flanagan had made a short film I haven't seen, called 'Oculus 3', back in 2006, where he created that plot, of someone trying to prove there's a supernatural force in the mirror, and that it is responsible for killings. Time serves writing well, as it does with maturity. The plot certainly gained a lot of ease over its conceptualism, to fully deliver its most primitive and brutal potential. The design of the Oculus narrative, which seem effortless, is as elusive to create as it is truly brilliant to watch.

In truth, I think it would be close to impossible to come up with this writing without an instinct beyond technique. It comes deep from an unexplainable spark of genius. Take a pen and a white page, you will be closer to write Conjuring 2 than any Oculus film. It will be lightyears of rewrite and reflexivity in front of you before that.

No one asked Oculus to be that good, I suppose not even the Insidious and Paranormal Activity producers behind Oculus. It just needed to be a house and a mirror with ghosts, a-la James Wan from recent memory (who does his job extremely well). That's where Oculus hits. How come ? How come it is that good ? On a personal perspective, I left the theater still shackled to the Oculus like a prisoner to his steel chair. Was I hallucinating or have I really left the theater ? Added to the puzzlement of past and present, the doubts over whether events actually happen in the story triggered a reaction of perplexity over my own sensations minutes after the credits rolled. Was it the film, or was it me ? The film certainly needed its audience to create that sensation.

At the end of all things, Oculus is a meta-horror-movie that doesn't feel meta, letting you deal with its maleficious architecture. And by being meta on horror, it ends up being meta about cinema itself.






Frozen released on November 19, 2013

Frozen

Fearless optimist Anna sets off on an epic journey-teaming up with rugged mountain man Kristoff and his loyal reindeer Sven-to find her sister Elsa, whose icy powers have trapped the kingdom of Arendelle in eternal winter. Encountering Everest-like conditions, mystical trolls and a hilarious snowman named Olaf, Anna and Kristoff battle the elements in a race to save the kingdom.
Initial release: November 19, 2013 (Hollywood)
Directors: Chris Buck, Jennifer Lee
Running time: 108 minutes
Initial DVD release: March 18, 2014 (USA)
Awards: Academy Award for Best Animated Feature Film, Golden Globe Award for Best Animated Feature Film, BAFTA Award for Best Animated Film, Broadcast Film Critics Association Award for Best Animated Feature, Blimp Award for Favorite Animated Movie, PGA Producer of the Year Award in Animated Theatrical Motion Pictures


Fearless optimist Anna teams up with Kristoff in an epic journey, encountering Everest-like conditions, and a hilarious snowman named Olaf in a race to find Anna's sister Elsa, whose icy powers have trapped the kingdom in eternal winter.

Directors: Chris Buck, Jennifer Lee
Writers: Jennifer Lee (screenplay), Hans Christian Andersen (inspired by the story "The Snow Queen" by), 4 more credits »
Stars: Kristen Bell, Idina Menzel, Jonathan Groff | See full cast and crew »




Frozen is a 2013 American 3D computer-animated musical fantasy-comedy film produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios and released by Walt Disney Pictures. It is the 53rd animated feature in the Walt Disney Animated Classics series. Inspired by Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tale The Snow Queen, the film tells the story of a fearless princess who sets off on an epic journey alongside a rugged mountain man, his loyal pet reindeer, and a hapless snowman to find her estranged sister, whose icy powers have inadvertently trapped the kingdom in eternal winter.

Frozen underwent several story treatments for years, before being commissioned in 2011, with a screenplay written by Jennifer Lee, and both Chris Buck and Lee serving as directors. It features the voices of Kristen Bell, Idina Menzel, Jonathan Groff, Josh Gad, and Santino Fontana. Christophe Beck, who had worked on Disney's award-winning short Paperman, was hired to compose the film's orchestral score, while husband-and-wife songwriting team Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez penned the songs.

Frozen premiered at the El Capitan Theatre on November 19, 2013, and went into general theatrical release on November 27. It was met with strongly positive reviews; some film critics considered it to be the best Disney animated musical since the studio's renaissance era. The film was also a commercial success; accumulating over $1.2 billion in worldwide box office revenue, more than $400 million of which was earned in the United States and Canada. It ranks as the highest-grossing animated film of all time, the fifth highest-grossing film of all time, the highest-grossing film of 2013, and the highest-grossing film in Japan. Frozen won two Academy Awards for Best Animated Feature and Best Original Song ("Let It Go"), the Golden Globe Award for Best Animated Feature Film, the BAFTA Award for Best Animated Film, five Annie Awards (including Best Animated Feature),[11] and two Critics' Choice Awards for Best Animated Feature and Best Original Song ("Let It Go").



Directed by
Chris Buck
Jennifer Lee
Produced by Peter Del Vecho
Screenplay by Jennifer Lee
Story by
Chris Buck
Jennifer Lee
Shane Morris
Based on The Snow Queen 
by Hans Christian Andersen
Starring
Kristen Bell
Idina Menzel
Jonathan Groff
Josh Gad
Santino Fontana
Music by Christophe Beck
Edited by Jeff Draheim
Production
  company
Walt Disney Pictures
Walt Disney Animation Studios
Distributed by Walt Disney Studios
Motion Pictures
Release date(s)
November 19, 2013 (El Capitan Theatre)
November 27, 2013 (United States)
Running time 102 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $150 million
Box office $1,259,103,000


Anna, a fearless optimist, sets off on an epic journey - teaming up with rugged mountain man Kristoff and his loyal reindeer Sven - to find her sister Elsa, whose icy powers have trapped the kingdom of Arendelle in eternal winter. Encountering Everest-like conditions, mystical trolls and a hilarious snowman named Olaf, Anna and Kristoff battle the elements in a race to save the kingdom. From the outside Anna's sister, Elsa looks poised, regal and reserved, but in reality, she lives in fear as she wrestles with a mighty secret-she was born with the power to create ice and snow. It's a beautiful ability, but also extremely dangerous. Haunted by the moment her magic nearly killed her younger sister Anna, Elsa has isolated herself, spending every waking minute trying to suppress her growing powers. Her mounting emotions trigger the magic, accidentally setting off an eternal winter that she can't stop. She fears she's becoming a monster and that no one, not even her sister, can help her.



Disney went back to its roots with this Princess movie, which most will enjoy, however I see it differently. If you are a die-hard Disney/Pixar movie fan, I don't think you will like this movie as much as the classic Disney/Pixar princess movies. I believe the humor in this movie abandoned the traditional styles used in Disney/Pixar movies. While most youngsters will like the non- subtle, more obvious form of humor in this movie (see character Olaf), die-hard fans might not agree with it. This is, for the most part, an enjoyable movie. But I do feel Disney could have put more work into the subtext, making it a deeper, more enjoyable film.