Showing posts with label SETH ROGEN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SETH ROGEN. Show all posts

Saturday, May 10, 2014

MOVIE REVIEW: "BAD NEIGHBOURS" (2014)

bad neighbour poster
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“BAD NEIGHBOURS” PRESS REVIEW

Do you take stock of your neighbours?

I certainly do, for want of peace and quiet.

Selfish neighbours who indulge in deafening merrymaking can drive anybody nuts.

Rogen and Byrne play this young married couple called Mac and Kelly Radner.

They are basking in the warmth of family bliss, playing proud parents to a cute baby.

Everything seems picture perfect, until a fraternity of weirdo guys move in next door bringing along the parties.

Everybody knows it’s great to be young and yes, the president Teddy (Zac Efron) swears-to-God he will reduce the din of their late night parties.

Yet he is unable to keep up with his promise of bringing the noise down as the night wears on.

Instead the situation gotten worse.

Mac has no alternative but to enlist the cops – and whosh, that’s where everything turns topsy-turvy.

The blossoming neighbourly friendship is now damaged, with both sides savagely declaring war on each other.

 This is the crux of the story, the battles of two disgruntled neighbours.

“Bad Neighbours” could have been another raunchy comedy offering sex, drugs, profanity and swear words in the style of The Hangover and Bridesmaids.

However, director Nicholas Stoller delves one step deeper.

Laugh all you can, but there is a lesson about growing up to be learned here.

For  fans of the shirtless almost-naked Zac Efron, it can be just another pure slapstick.

For the older viewers, there is a rite of passage taking-you-down-memory lane, reliving college days and learning now what’s like to be a responsible father or mother.

It is as silly-as-you-can-get, yet entertaining and uproarious in some scenes.

Check it out!

RATING: 3 out of 5

LOCAL DISTRIBUTOR:  UIP MALAYSIA (United International Pictures)


Sunday, November 20, 2011

“50/50″ MOVIE REVIEW. This BUDDY TALE is about a divine FRIENDSHIP.


“50/50″ PRESS PREVIEW

Once in a while you'd get a THEATRICAL GEM about FRIENDSHIP.

“50/50″ is one such feature. This is the inference I draw from the Film:

Friendship is succinctly heartwarming.  More so, it’s a divine blessing that enriches our soul.

A staunch buddy is one whom we can let our hair down and be ourselves – no pretensions. We can wail and wallow in our sorrows without being accused of being self-piteous.

True friends allow you to unload your emotional and spiritual baggage, to let these flow unashamedly, and you don’t need to hold anything back.

Friends form the nicest people, to share a laughter and a tear.

Friends will rally around – when your entire world is threatening to fall apart.

Friends make us feel loved, respected and that we are not alone in this chaotic globe.

Now, what’s “50/50 all about?

It is a movie inspired by a true story about friendship, love, surviving a crisis and finding humor in unlikely places.

JOSEPH GORDON-LEVITT and SETH ROGEN star as best friends whose lives are changed by a cancer diagnosis in this new comedy directed by JONATHAN LEVINE from a script by WILL REISER.

Writer WILL REISER had cancer before, it is a story largely based on his own experience with this deadly disease, reminding us that with friendship and love, no matter what bizarre turns we take, these are the greatest healers.

 ”50/50″ is everything  a smart, witty, entertaining crowd pleaser should be.

We are taken on a comedic journey to embrace the true meaning of life and friendship, and to uncover human and humorous touches in dire situations that we’ve often taken for granted.

It is a grim reminder that it’s great to be alive and that we should treasure the hours, the minutes and the person right in front of us. Right.

NO SPOILERS here, it’s a helluva great film.

In “50/50″, every actor does a beautiful job to color this dismal world.

GO WATCH IT for friendship sake.


Thursday, January 27, 2011

“THE GREEN HORNET” 2011 Movie Review. More BUZZ than STINGS in this COMEDIC MAYHEM.

“THE GREEN HORNET” PRESS PREVIEW

By golly …

It’s our JAY CHOU, Asian pop superstar starring in the Hollywood remake of “THE GREEN HORNET”.

Make no bones about it, but JAY Sir had been widely reported to have that teeny grasp of the English language.

Despite this obvious fact, he has beaten many notable actors on track to win the coveted role of KATO, once helmed by the late Kung Fu God BRUCE LEE.

KATO is the dream role that every Chinese action actor would want to lay hands on.

Whatever been said about JAY CHOU learning his lines phonetically, then he has more or less compensated for this flaw by “electrifying” the screen with his charm and wit.

He’s a bankable ASIAN A-lister.

STEPHEN CHOW, well-known Hong Kong actor/ producer was originally roped in to direct and play KATO, but opted out due to confounding “creative differences”.

It surely would have been interesting to see how STEPHEN CHOW renders this movie in his brand of comedic style that we love.

That is, if he had chosen to direct.

Alas, it was never meant to be.

Now, the story:

BRITT REID (SETH ROGEN) is a dead pan and laid-back party animal who lives a life of waste. When his father suddenly dies from a deadly bee sting (or perhaps, he has been murdered?), the family’s media empire becomes infested with ruthless heroin smugglers.

BRITT decides to form a collaborative alliance with KATO (JAY CHOU) his father’s trusted mechanic.

Together they spring to action to combat the bad guys by masquerading as villians. The most sinister of the baddies is the crime boss CHUDNOFSKY (CHRISTOPHER WALTZ), a Russian mobster who is uniting the criminal families of Los Angeles under his command.

This is the one his father was trying to expose.

It is KATO, his enthusiastic sidekick, who has the brawn and the brains and is a much better fighter.

He even develops a car outfitted with several gadgets and weapons, which they knighted as “The Black Beauty”.

The KATO character is a jack-of-all-trades genius, who combines awesome martial-arts skills with mechanical wizardry.

The pulse of the film is the relationship between the partner-protagonists. ROGEN and CHOU display a great chemistry together.

The casting of the JAY CHOU as KATO was initially, one of unease.

The American film makers were accused in the blogosphere of bypassing Asian-American hopefuls in a brazen attempt to capture the Asian markets.

The film’s producer, NEAL H. MORITZ told the press that he was concerned about JAY CHOU’s lack of fluency in English. At first.

By the time filming began, he had concluded that JAY CHOU’s struggles with the language made his character KATO more endearing.

For sure, SETH ROGEN looks sheepish in his black mask and costume.

And CAMERON DIAZ is just a “filler” for the movie, in a role of a shared lust object for our heroes to drool at.

You wouldn’t nullify GREEN HORNET as a total heart-stomping action thriller. Not when you have a comedian like SETH ROGEN.

More buzz than stings? Perhaps.

THE GREEN HORNET is a blockbuster that borders on part humor, part drama and was shot conventionally, then transferred to 3D.

This movie delivers about what you’d expect:

plenty of fights, car chases, explosions, shootouts and neat visual effects a la JAMES BOND.

Plus a first-rate 3D post rendering.

The humor is a hilarious fun-and-miss, more often than not.

Whilst in the West, everybody is debating whether SETH ROGEN should have played the lead, elsewhere in ASIA, all eyes are resting on JAY CHOU.

As KATO, JAY has displayed that he has the grit and mettle to play a superhero.

He’s superb.

With everything in place, the most serious challenge THE GREEN HORNET faces now is to recoup its $130 million budget, a sizable chunk of which resulted from a late decision to rework Kato-Vision in 3-D.

Can this goal be achieved?

Only time will tell with your help.

Go watch it for JAY CHOU’s sake.

At least he promises to take us on a fun-fun ride.

“GREEN HORNET” PRESS CONFERENCE in SINGAPORE

24th January, 2011 at St. Regis Hotel