Reviews

6 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
Not a movie to be merely watched
12 August 2002
Speaking Parts is not a movie to be merely watched; it must be engaged, just as the main characters (Lance, Lisa and Clara) must choose to engage their lives rather than just watch. At first, watching or being watched is all: Lance seems to exist only as others view him. Clara watches and rewatches a video of her dead brother. Lisa watches Lance any way she can--at work, through renting his movies over and over and watching only his scenes, even watching him do his laundry.

"Words aren't everything," says Lisa, but as beautiful as these look-alike protagonists are, it is the non-beautiful ones around them who have power over them--the power of words. Only when Lance shatters his objective perfection by screaming the one word in the movie that comes truly from himself does he become a real person.

Egoyan's mastery shows in his tight control; every scene, every prop, every movement and gesture reinforces his bleak and nearly-silent vision. Although McManus (Lance) has said that he approached working with Egoyan as "an employee," his talent is showcased in his use of expression and body language to portray the powerful/powerless object of desire and fantasy. Striking images abound, as they must in a film about image, about the relationship between object and subject, between viewed and viewer: Lance facedown in a waste of white sheets, wrists crossed over his head as if bound; Lisa reaching out to touch Lance as if revulsed by him; the similarity in looks between the mute-and-powerless (all beautiful brunettes) and the banal-but-powerful (all bland and blond).
15 out of 19 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Brimstone (1998–1999)
Brilliant!
14 August 2001
Brimstone was intelligent, with a good blend of drama and comedy. John Glover and Peter Horton were both excellent, but above all the writing must be praised, not only for the Devil's wonderful lines, but for keeping the integrity of the show. Even though the storyline was supernatural, the logic behind it never faltered. And of course, since it was so good, it was cancelled!
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Lexx (1996–2002)
Blows all other S/F shows away!
8 August 2001
There is no 'Prime Directive.' There are no rubber-faced aliens. The two children in the series so far were anything but cute. The whole look and feel of the series is wildly original, but consistent with its own tenets.

For those who complain about the plots: this is a series you need to watch carefully, or you'll miss seemingly unimportant little bits that turn out to be major elements. The satire is lovely, too--for instance, the jab at Star Wars (A New Hope) in the opening scenes of 'Lafftrak' and the interior of the space shuttle in 'Little Blue Planet.'

I prefer Xenia as Xev, because she makes the character more three-dimensional than Eva. Brian Downey is brilliant as Stan (we may all want to be Xev or Kai, but the fact is that we're really all more like Stan, the hapless Everyman). And Michael McManus does a superb job in *not* making Kai into a Spock-like character.

Lexx combines horror, terror, humor, sex, gore and warmth. Above all, it does what great art should: it asks hard questions about the human condition and never gives easy answers.
9 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Strong and Stirring
2 August 2001
One of those rare cases where the movie actually is better than the book. Brynner's flamboyant and arrogant persona brings fire to his portrayal of Jason, and Woodward's child-woman with a backbone and a will of her own is a worthy foil for him. This is one of my favorite movies.
7 out of 21 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
The Buccaneer (1958)
10/10
It's not history, but it's great fun!
2 August 2001
Sure, the history in this movie was "Hollywoodized"--but it's far from being the only bit of history rewritten for the masses. Lafitte sided with the Americans because he considered himself a Frenchman and therefore hated the British, not because of any sense of patriotism for a nation that had taken over New Orleans only a short time ago; he broke his agreement and returned to smuggling, which caused his sailing to Galveston; he was more of a petty criminal and scoundrel than a hero *or* a swashbuckler. But who cares? This is one movie that's sheer entertainment--and face it, we all wanted Jean to go for the feisty wench rather than the prudish daughter of the governor. Brynner once again rises over mediocre writing to give a fascinating performance.
12 out of 17 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Labyrinth (1986)
10/10
How can you top this?!
27 April 2001
Jim Henson, the master of puppetry. Brian Froud, the rightfully-acclaimed illustrator. Bowie's wonderful songs. Production, costume and makeup design that truly works *with* the themes of the movie. What a team!

This is often cited as a children's film, but I disagree. To me, this is a fantasy movie for all ages. It takes two archetypic myths (the Heroic Quest and the Coming of Age Story) and handles them with depth, sensitivity and humor. Bowie especially is good--threatening and seductive while gradually revealing his deeper emotions.

I first saw this when I was 26 and I *still* love Bowie's costume and hair! That tattered 18th century look is wonderful--and the tight pants are quite a treat. <grin>
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed