Overlong ‘Bourne Legacy’ features dazzling chases, convoluted plot
Fans of the first three Bourne movies will want to see this fourth franchise installment, The Bourne Legacy, which–as the title implies–is a kind of homage. Those who have never seen the previous films (The Bourne Identity, The Bourne Supremacy, The Bourne Ultimatum) will definitely want to see those movies before seeing Legacy. Otherwise, the complex plot, which references the previous films, will be confusing to the point of exasperation. I did see and greatly enjoy the previous Bournes, but was dizzied at what the heck was going on in this new take. No doubt this is the end of the franchise.
Replacing Jason Bourne as the central character, without a “new” Jason Bourne, is the daunting task here. Instead of Matt Damon in the lead, we have a kind of Bourne wannabe, since Cross has been trained and chemically programmed by the same nefarious, CIA connected government agency that previously shafted Jason five directions. To supposedly make matters clearer, which made matters even more muddled to me, there are constant references to Jason Bourne along with flashing his 8 x 10 Matt Damon photo a half dozen times throughout the story. Hopefully, Damon received payment for his product placement.
A planned, tragic incident at the government’s secret spy lab triggers a chase involving both Cross and chemist Shearing (Weisz), with CIA operatives in pursuit. It all has to do with Shearing helping Cross deal with his (CIA) drug dependency. I won’t spoil the plot with specifics. By the way, the on location filming in Manila is spot on and worth the reported hassle filming in that extremely crowded downtown locale. Much of Legacy’s best action bits were shot there, with the motorcycle chase finale the most breathtaking of them all. Forgive my hedging, but the early on sequences of wolves attacking Cross as well as the drone firing missiles at our hero are impressive too. Kudos to editor John Gilroy and composer James Newton Howard for heightening the suspense and action. It is a shame similar accolades cannot be given to the film’s dialogue and plot. ——————–
At least the trailer is brief: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jSzy9qQ3mDE
Finale of Christopher Nolan’s Batman trilogy rises, dazzlingly
Forget about Batman himself appearing just yet. That comes even later in the story. It is worth the wait.
The third of Nolan’s Batman trilogy, The Dark Knight Rises is once again laced with grimness, despair, and a heinous villain. Although 2008’s The Dark Knight features an Oscar winning turn by Heath Ledger as the most memorably psychotic of all Batman villains, The Joker, Tom Hardy’s vicious Bane comes in a strong second. As all good DC and Marvel geeks (like yours truly) know, a superhero is only as good as the super villain. This makes or breaks the central conflict. Bane looks like a WWE wrestler with a Hannibal Lector mask attached to his face as a breathing mechanism. As such, he breathes–deeply, a la Darth Vader. And his voice sounds like Sean Connery’s. James Bond never, ever broke guys’ necks, at least not like Bane does. Add to the mix another Batman nemesis, Catwoman aka Selina Kyle, here played less sympathetically than in previous movies and TV episodes, by Anne Hathaway. Hathaway enhances the role physically and emotionally. Her real life dancing skills have segued into gymnastic moves that make her lady burglar sequences credible. Backward flips out a window might have been accomplished by a double, but why–when Hathaway is capable.
Once Batman finally gets back to action, with the audience’s dander by that time primed to the max, the film explodes in scene after dazzling scene of air to street attacks and counter attacks. Highlights include Batman’s newly designed airplane, The Bat, which can hover in mid-air or fly at supersonic speed. It is impressive that so many battle scenes occur in broad daylight, which means the digital effects must be flawless. They are indeed. There is an awesome, yes that adjective is overused–but not here, sequence during a jam packed football game at a huge stadium. It is not the Red Sea parting, but close. ——————–
Enjoy the trailer of this trilogy conclusion: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g8evyE9TuYk
It’s six times superhero in marvel-ously mounted ‘The Avengers’
Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson), Director of the international peace keeping agency S.H.I.E.L.D., is forced to recruit each hero into a special task force to fight earth’s annihilation using the Tesseract, an untested energy source that will open a portal to Chitauri forces guided by Thor’s demented half-brother, the exiled Loki (Tom Hiddleston). Loki immediately invades S.H.I.E.L.D.’s headquarters and kidnaps, using mind control, several of its key scientists, including super archer Hawkeye/Agent Clint Barton.
Even though Act 3’s spectacular invasion sequence in downtown NYC brings to the mind’s eye reminiscent images from Transformers movies, the key missing from those giant toy robot movies is The Avengers, the most bizarre, flashy, and patriotically driven heroes ever conceived. When the tardy Hulk finally joins the foray (there is good reason he is late), the hellish bashing really explodes. Sorry, bad guys.Don’t even tell me to wait another year or so for the next Avengers escapade. I might start turning green.
The action-laden Avengers trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eOrNdBpGMv8
Disturbing documentary ‘Bully‘ will anger, inspire
In Lee Hirsch’s straight forward, compelling Bully, there is a school principal who actually dismisses bullying in her middle school by giving the parents of a continually harassed student the tired boys will be boys line–which is a non-solution. Then the principal is audacious enough to pull out pictures of her grandkids to share. This occurs during a parent conference requested by the mom and dad of a young boy who has been called names, punched, and once nearly crushed under a seat on a school bus by fellow students. (Much of this is seen in the film, caught on tape via hidden camera on the bus.)
We also see and hear the loving parents of these five kids, and the terrible stress that has befallen them over the years. Sometimes they do not make the right decisions, like the scene of one mother chiding her bullied child, “Why do you put up with this?!” New Stooges movie loaded with nyuks, nose tweaks, bone-head hilarity
As for the “nothing to do” element, regarding today’s kids through the 20 and 30-somethings who possibly and incredibly have never seen or heard of the team, this feature film with actors playing the originals is another matter. Their historical reference points are the Jackass Movie (and TV shows), Jim Carrey, and Sacha Baron Cohen. Carrey even resembles Moe in Dumb and Dumber. Over the top physical comedy is definitely what The Three Stooges are all about as well. But will younger audiences take to them in clone form? I think they will, and big time. Speaking from an elder’s vantage point, the new Stooges movie is frequently hilarious. In fact, an imitation Three Stooges flick cannot possibly get any funnier than The Three Stooges: The Movie. GRADE on an A-F Scale: B+
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Check out this featurette/trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Po0DMXCHk8







