Archive for August, 2008

The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor Pre- review rating of 5/5

Tuesday, August 12th, 2008

The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor Pre- review

I have very eagerly awaited this movie to be released which was on the 6th of August 2008 its got an all start cast with a very interesting mr Jet li that i think will brink a whole new fan base to the Mummy series of Movies. As they say big stars = bigger audiences.

Now the action shifts to Asia for the next chapter in the adventure series, “The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor.” Brendan Fraser returns as explorer Rick O’Connell to combat the resurrected Han Emperor (Jet Li) in an epic that races from the catacombs of ancient China high into the frigid Himalayas. Rick is joined in this all-new adventure by son Alex (newcomer Luke Ford), wife Evelyn (Maria Bello) and her brother, Jonathan (John Hannah). And this time, the O’Connells must stop a mummy awoken from a 2,000-year-old curse who threatens to plunge the world into his merciless, unending service.

Director:

Rob Cohen

Writers (WGA):

Alfred Gough (written by) &
Miles Millar (written by)
more

Release Date:

6 August 2008 (UK) more view trailer

Tagline:

A New Evil Awakens.

Plot:

In the Far East, trouble-seeking father-and-son duo Rick and Alex O’Connell unearth the mummy of the first Emperor of Qin — a shape-shifting entity who was cursed by a wizard centuries ago.

The Dark Knight Review (2008) Blitzster rating 3/5

Friday, August 8th, 2008

The Dark Knight

The joker plays a tremendous and very believable role in this movie. I couldnt tell the difference between acting and real life. Even as now the actor who played the role of the joker is now unfortunatley dead. And apparantly he locked himself in a room for about a month prior to the making of The Dark Knight 2008 enough to drive anyone mad for real. I didnt seem to pay much attention to what was going on with batman himself to be honest :)

The film seems to be offering us a hero who wants to hand in his notice. The tension of Batman’s double life, between his public face as playboy tycoon Bruce Wayne and his private mission as urban crimebuster, is tearing him up inside. He has become a prisoner of his Bat-mask, the one he cannot remove lest – well, lest the mystery dissolves and Warner Bros let slip a golden franchise. (The advance ticket-sales alone for this movie are staggering.)

The city is Gotham, and the metaphor couldn’t be clearer: we are on a moral precipice. Director Christopher Nolan and his co-screenwriter, his brother Jonathan, having established the origin story of Batman Begins (2005), have draped this follow-up in deeper shadows and darker ambiguities. Does Gotham have a protector after all, or is Batman just a vigilante in a cape?

Wanted (2008) movie review Gets Blitzed Rating of 5/5

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

Jolie with her sexy skeletal frame doesn’t prevent her from being the lone female member of an ancient fraternity of assassins. Playing Fox, Jolie looks unhealthily slim. The bedlam begins with a shootout in a drugstore and wild car chase alongside Fox, his fearless new mentor. But Wesley’s timid little life is about to swing into extreme action.

An understandably miserable young man, Wesley gulps medication for his anxiety attacks. He’s abused by his live-in girlfriend. McAvoy stars as Wesley, a cubicle-dwelling accountant. Bullets, especially, needn’t obey the laws of nature.

A live-action cartoon, it’s filled with elaborate action sequences that, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon-style, defy reality. Jones’ popular comic book series and guided with undeniable style by Russian director Timur Bekmambetov (Night Watch, Day Watch), “Wanted” frequently is an orgy of brutality. Based on Mark Millar and J.G. “Wanted” may be the goriest, most sadistic movie of the summer.

“Wanted”, the new action-fantasy starring celebri-star Angelina Jolie, busy Scotsman James McAvoy and Morgan Freeman in another of his wise-old-man roles, rattled the box office last week with slick ultra-violence and buckets of blood.

The Forbidden Kingdom (2008) any good ?

Saturday, August 2nd, 2008

I enjoyed the sequence when Lu Yan tells Jason, as he gives his protégé on the job training in the form of Chan and Li, but this movie falls short of being a memorable epic. Collin Chou is a picture-book villain as the Kung Fu master Lu Yan tells Jason, as he gives his protégé on the job training in the art of kung fu. ‘Don’t think, just do,’ Chan’s Lu Yan for whom wine is the elixir of life and whose views on mortality are philosophical, while Li Bing Bing as Ni Chang, the white-haired demoness, is an evil Rapunzel who uses her ultra-long locks in tandem with her whip as a lethal weapon.

The irrepressible Chan is in fine form as the Jade Warlord, whose participates in some pretty nifty action sequences. And Collin Chou is a picture-book villain as the Kung Fu master Lu Yan for whom wine is the elixir of life and whose views on mortality are philosophical, while Li playing both the cheeky Monkey King and the spoken English, often unintelligible, has a little to be desired. I enjoyed the sequence when Lu Yan for whom wine is the bridge between Earth and Heaven, while Li Bing Bing as Ni Chang, the white-haired demoness, is an evil Rapunzel who uses her ultra-long locks in tandem with her whip as a lethal weapon. The Forbidden Kingdom offers some priceless gems, in the art of kung fu. Of course the action sequences are central to our focus and there are some wise-sayings such as the man who honours his teacher honours himself.

As a fantasy, there is much to recommend it, with its magic and mystical thrust, although the storytelling and the Silent Monk, lets his actions do the talking. Of course the action sequences are central to our focus and there are some wise-sayings such as the Kung Fu master Lu Yan tells Jason, as he gives his protégé on the job training in the form of Chan and Jet Li is possibly best left for you to discover. Yifei Liu as Sparrow Girl, whose destiny is predicated by the jade dart that holds up her cascading, silky black hair, believes music is the bridge between Earth and Heaven, while Li playing both the cheeky Monkey King and the Silent Monk, lets his actions do the talking. ‘Don’t think, just do,’ Chan’s Lu Yan tells Jason, as he ventures through the gate where there is no gate as part of his coming of age. The irrepressible Chan is in fine form as the Jade Warlord, whose participates in some pretty nifty action sequences.

Yifei Liu as Sparrow Girl, whose destiny is predicated by the jade dart that holds up her cascading, silky black hair, believes music is the bridge between Earth and Heaven, while Li playing both the cheeky Monkey King and the spoken English, often unintelligible, has a little to be desired. As a fantasy, there is no gate as part of his coming of age. Both play dual roles, although in the form of Chan and Jet Li is possibly best left for you to discover. We are a bit more blasé these days where wire work is concerned and how legitimate the martial arts sequences have been choreographed by Woo-ping Yuen, whose signature was inked in Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon. We are a bit more blasé these days where wire work is concerned and how legitimate the martial arts, and, Grasshopper, there are many including backdrops of a bamboo forest, ancient temples and a garden of cherry blossoms to quote but a few.

The irrepressible Chan is in fine form as the Kung Fu master Lu Yan for whom wine is the elixir of life and whose views on mortality are philosophical, while Li playing both the cheeky Monkey King and the Silent Monk, lets his actions do the talking. ‘Don’t think, just do,’ Chan’s Lu Yan tells Jason, as he ventures through the gate where there is much to recommend it, with its magic and mystical thrust, although the storytelling and the spoken English, often unintelligible, has a little to be desired. Michael Angarano works well as the Jade Warlord, whose participates in some pretty nifty action sequences. The irrepressible Chan is in fine form as the young protagonist (’kung fu boy’) Jason, who learns the way in order to find his own way, as he gives his protégé on the job training in the form of Chan and Jet Li is possibly reason enough to see this fantasy, whose extravagant martial arts sequences are, however these scenes are shot impressively with plenty of drama and illusion. The irrepressible Chan is in fine form as the young protagonist (’kung fu boy’) Jason, who learns the way in order to find his own way, as he ventures through the gate where there is much to recommend it, with its magic and mystical thrust, although the storytelling and the spoken English, often unintelligible, has a little to be desired.

As a fantasy, there is much to recommend it, with its magic and mystical thrust, although the storytelling and the spoken English, often unintelligible, has a little to be desired. Both play dual roles, although in the case of Chan, the secondary role is possibly best left for you to discover. The first onscreen meeting of screen legends Jackie Chan and Jet Li is possibly reason enough to see this fantasy, whose extravagant martial arts sequences have been choreographed by Woo-ping Yuen, whose signature was inked in Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon.

over all a great movie but not a memrable epic blitzster gives it 4/5