Review: Charlie Wilson’s War, Juno and more …

by Dan on January 30, 2008

in Cinema, Culture and Reviews

Charlie Wilson's War poster

The Soviet Union invaded Afgh­anistan on Christ­mas Day in 1979. They remained in the coun­try, bru­tally sup­press­ing the local res­ist­ance, until they were forced to leave in 1989: almost ten years of occu­pa­tion that des­troyed one coun­try and ruined another. One side of the story was told in the recent film The Kite Run­ner: in it we saw a vibrant and cos­mo­pol­itan cul­ture bombed back to the stone age by the Sovi­ets and their equally one-eyed Taliban replacements.

For peacen­iks like myself, the Soviet aggres­sion was an incon­veni­ent fact, dif­fi­cult to acknow­ledge dur­ing our efforts to pre­vent nuc­lear anni­hil­a­tion at the hands of war-mongerers like Ron­ald Reagan. While we were march­ing for peace and dis­arm­a­ment, play­boy Con­gress­man Charlie Wilson (Tom Hanks) was secretly fund­ing the Mujahideen insur­gents to the tune of hun­dreds of mil­lions of dol­lars, provid­ing them with the weapons that would bring down the Russians.

With the help of a reneg­ade CIA-man (won­der­ful Philip Sey­mour Hoff­man), a Texan social­ite (Julia Roberts), an Israeli spy (Ken Stott) and Pres­id­ent Zia, dic­tator of Pakistan (Om Puri), Wilson per­suaded, cajoled, threatened and coerced Con­gress to pay for all this — without them even know­ing what it was for. Aaron Sor­kin’s script is razor-sharp, often very funny, and does a great job of not spelling out all the les­sons we should be learn­ing. Charlie Wilson’s War may have brought about the end of the Cold War but it also opened up Afgh­anistan to the bru­tal fun­da­ment­al­ism of the Taliban, increased the influ­ence of the Saudis in the region and indir­ectly led to the Iraqi poo-fight we are in now. As Wilson says, it’s all about the endgame.

Juno poster

How strange it is that two of my favour­ite films of the past twelve months should be about coming-to-terms with an unwanted preg­nancy. Knocked Up, last year, was a broad com­edy with a good heart and this year Jason Reitman’s Juno is even bet­ter: full of unex­pec­ted sub­tlety and nuance from a great cast work­ing with a tre­mend­ous script from gif­ted new­comer Diablo Cody.

Like last year’s Hard Candy, Ellen Page plays a pre­co­cious teen­ager only this time she is not a hom­icidal revenge maniac. At only 16, she finds her­self preg­nant to the unlikely Paulie Bleeker (Super­bads Michael Cera) and takes it upon her­self to find appro­pri­ate par­ents for the little sea mon­key grow­ing inside her. The rich couple who sign on (Jen­nifer Garner and Jason Bate­man) look per­fect, but looks can be deceiv­ing. Juno is an easy film to love and I can see people going back to it again and again.

Cloverfield poster

If a film has a good heart you can for­give its flaws, but what to do when it has no heart at all? Clover­field is a modern-day retell­ing of a clas­sic Hol­ly­wood mon­ster movie and once again New York gets a ter­rible pound­ing. A group of self-absorbed yup­pies are caught in the carnage and try to escape but man­age to film the entire thing on their cam­corder. Yeah right. Tech­nic­ally admir­able, Clover­field clev­erly main­tains the home video con­ceit but shaky-cam motion sick­ness got to me in the end.

Meet the Spartans poster

Meet the Spartans is all flaw and no redeem­ing fea­ture: another miss and miss spoof of last year’s hits. Soft tar­gets include “Ugly Betty”, “Amer­ican Idol”, Paris Hilton (yawn) and 300. The Spartans were gay, appar­ently. And not in a good way.

The Jane Austen Book Club poster

The Jane Aus­ten Book Club is a well-intentioned adapt­a­tion of the pop­u­lar novel about a group of women (and one dude) who meet once a month to talk about their favour­ite author. Writer and dir­ector Robin Swicord has assembled a fine ensemble cast includ­ing Maria Bello, Kathy Baker, Amy Bren­neman and Jimmy Smits but too often they are rep­res­ent­at­ives of people rather than people them­selves and the film is un-persusasive. Actu­ally, that’s not entirely true: the tent­at­ive rela­tion­ship between Bello’s inde­pend­ent hound breeder and Hugh Dancy’s shy IT guru works nicely (for the most part).

Prin­ted in Wellington’s Cap­ital Times on Wed­nes­day 30 Janu­ary, 2008.

Notes on screen­ing con­di­tions: Charlie Wilson’s War screened at a Read­ing Cinemas print check, 9am last Tues­day morn­ing (thanks, Hadyn), sit­ting in the comfy Gold Lounge chairs; Juno screened on Sunday after­noon in Pent­house 1 (the ori­ginal). It’s nice to see the Pent­house finally repla­cing the seats in Cinema 1 but per­haps they could think about repla­cing the sound sys­tem with some­thing that wasn’t salvaged from a tran­sistor radio. Meet the Spartans was seen at a busy Sat­urday mat­inée at Read­ings where the brain-dead teen­agers around me hooted at every stu­pid, lame, joke. Clover­field was in Read­ings digital cinema (Cinema 5) and looked sen­sa­tional. Digital really is the future and it can’t come soon enough. I shud­der to think how ill I might have felt if I’d seen Clover­field from a wobbly, scratchy print. The Jane Aus­ten Book Club was the second part of a Pent­house double-feature on Sunday, this time in Cinema 3 (the new one) which is splendid.

{ 3 trackbacks }

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