Welcome To The Cinematic Adventure!

This is the movie related blog by Iain Boulton. You may know him as the partner in crime to Byron "Afro Film Viewer" Pitt on Cinematic Dramatic.

The following blog posts are his occasional movie musings, thoughts, reviews and odd points of view from someone involved in various cinematic aspects with movies.

Friday, 16 December 2011

Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance has a new trailer....

Hi folks,

Early word of Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance is not kind but another trailer has come out. Take a look at the flaming Nic Cage madness here.

It's looks more exciting that the first one. The shot that's kinda sold me on seeing it at lest though is this.

SHOOT IT AGAIN! MY SOUL IS STILL DANCING!!!
Yep. Business as usual for Mr Cage. 2012 looks like another year of silliness from you.

Tuesday, 6 December 2011

I'm gonna be THE KING OF FIGHTERS on Boxing Day - please don't try this at home,,,

Hi kids,

Need something special on Boxing Day? There's Kill List and it's a mindf**k of a British genre film but that might disturb Grandad.

I know, you need this!

Yes, it's true. It's damn true. THE KING OF FIGHTERS comes out on DVD / Blu-Ray in the UK on Boxing Day.

Pity it's a pile a shit - if you fancy a laugh, Ray Park proves why he shouldn't be speaking in front of camera with big shaggy coats, lovely hats and a skate board.

There's a lesbian scene....but I can't think of anything more substantial to this grand crap-tacular. Before you ask, yes I do owe this but at least it has some rewatchability for the sheer terrible plot line and Last Airbender race changing with Sean Faris being a young asian boy before becoming American actor. Worth drinking and sniggering at - and I don't even play King of Fighters.

Least it's not Bangkok Andrenaline.

Saturday, 18 June 2011

Cinematic Dramatic 3x09 - Listen NOW!

The latest episode of Cinematic Dramatic, from Geek Planet Online, is now available to download.
Click the Cinematic Dramatic logo to listen to the new episode

Pirates of The Carribean: On Stranger Tides (2D / 3D we don't care) and The Hangover Part 2 get reviewed in this episode!

Friday, 20 May 2011

Cinematic Dramatic 3x08 - Listen Now!

The latest episode of Cinematic Dramatic, from Geek Planet Online, is now available to download.
Click the Cinematic Dramatic logo to listen to the new episode

Thor, Hanna and Attack The Block get reviewed by myself and Byron Pitt. Plus in What We've Watched, we talk about classic Sydney Lumet with 12 Angry Men, oddball Scharwzenegger in Last Action Hero. Plus some of the latest cinema releases like Priest 3D, 13 Assassins and Summer Wars.

Saturday, 16 April 2011

Quick Movie Reviews Go!


Hey all. Sorry I’ve haven’t posted for a while, I’ve mostly been helping Kitacon run another kick-ass anime convention up in Birmingham and also been covering Kapow for Geek Planet Online. But that doesn’t mean I haven’t watched some films recently. Here is some brief nuggets of Genre-Giant wisdom.

Director: Carlos Saldanha
Stars: Jessie Eisenberg, Anne Hathaway, Jamie Foxx, George Lopez

Domestic bird put in a place he can’t handle. Yep, it’s the good old fashion fish out water storyline. Just with birds and set in Rio. Despite some lovely looking animation and solid voice work from Eisenberg, Hathaway and even Flight of The Concords Jermaine Clement, Rio is just lazy with a formula we’ve seen in countless films; animated or not.  Talented the vocal cast is at singing, the musical touches don’t help it fly from its stale generic birdcage either.

Director: Tim Hill
Stars: Russell Brand, James Marsden, Hugh Laurie, David Hasselhoff

The moment when James Marsden is revealed as the first human Easter Bunny, the words that came out of my mouth were “seriously?”  This hybrid animated live action fest is a weird creature indeed. Easter Bunny to be, E.B (Brand), doesn’t want to be Easter Bunny and goes to Hollywood to become a famous drummer. Jobless James Marsden accidentally runs him over and hilarity begins. Er, kinda of. Hop is marginally better than Rio simply because Marsden move into comedic roles like Sex Drive, Death At A Funeral Remake, and Enchanted to name a few has been entertaining to see so watching prattle about again for 90 minutes isn’t a bad thing.  Oh yeah and that Russell Brand meta moment where actor and animated character meet might have been an attempt to blow the kids tiny mind when in fact it’s just weird. That word perfectly sums up what I think of Hop.

Director: Werner Herzog

This is my first encounter of a Herzog documentary so I wasn’t exactly sure what to expect. His subject for Cave of Forgotten Dreams is the recently discovered centuries old artwork in The Chauvet Caves in southern France. Armed with 3D cameras, he succeeds in showing off these fascinating drawings and on the other hand, completely alienates me with his barking mad metaphors. Those with Herzog experience will be happy, newcomers might get a little confused at the 3D albino crocodile bobbing in front of your eyes.

Director: David Gordon Green
Stars: Danny McBride, James Franco, Natalie Portman, Zooey Deschannel

On paper, it sounds like it could have been a laugh. However, when that proposed idea is taking a mystical fantasy quest and putting a swear word in every spout of dialogue, I’m not pleased. There are some genuine chuckles in this farce but again it’s all about being crude with the humour. It’s all about the sex jokes, the fart jokes, people swearing over and over again thinking it’s always funny.  It might be from the same talent as Pineapple Express, but Pineapple Express was an Apatow clan film. Tells you something, doesn’t it? You want a fantasy quest film with actual humour; check out The Princess Bride instead. This will infuriate many.

I did also check out Scre4m (or Scream 4) (which briefly I'll say here that I liked it...a lot) and will get a full in-depth review posted up soon.

Now if you excuse me, I have to go see Winnie The Pooh! That honey junkie fiend

Monday, 28 March 2011

Can you smell The Rock going Faster?


Director: George Tillman Jr.
Stars: Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, Billy Bob Thornton, Oliver Jackson-Cohen

It was only a matter of time before Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson decided to return to the action fold. Don’t get me wrong, I think it’s creditable for someone who started out as a wrestler looking to stretch his acting skills a little. Southland Tales, Be Cool to name a few plus those silly kid films, Dwayne’s been using that great charisma and presence in different ways.

But everyone just wants to see him kick ass. He’s back for Wrestlemania in April so it’s about damn time he returned to layeth the smacketh down. And with April nearly here, you’ve got two barrel loads of his action skills. First up is Faster.

Though to call Faster an action film is an outright lie. It’s more of a revenge thriller with a perpetual sense of continuous movement.

From the first moment you see Johnson’s Driver pacing about angrily in his jail cell, you get that theme of always going forward in the revenge tale. Within moments, he gets out of jail and just starts jogging down desert roads to find a car and a swish looking snub revolver. Then Driver goes to layeth the smacketh down on those who’ve wronged him and killed his brother in the process years ago.

While Driver goes off on this vengeful rampage, there’s a Cop (Billy Bob Thornton) trying to follow the murderous crime spree and also a Killer (Jackson-Cohen) a multi-millionaire who has decided to excel himself at bumping people off. They start tracking Driver’s movements and eventually like all good revenge films, their paths will cross.

Now while I don’t mind an array of colourful and OTT characters in this sort of B-movie fluff, the fact that these are three very different characters makes it a bit of an oddity. You have Johnson who is supposed to be the real driving force of the movie, the wronged man committing acts of horrific violence against those who wrong him and seemingly satisfied he’s walking the dark path. Thorton is a ex-junkie cop who’s days near to retirement and trying to provide for his family. And Jackson-Cohen seems to be emitting a mid-life crisis for a billionaire who’s done everything and wants to satisfy his ticks before marrying his beautiful girlfriend. The balance of characters is just weird here in this triangle.

There is this theme of redemption and forgiveness that runs throughout and that’s fine here. But I still think the mixture of these three characters is a little too much.

I personally would have liked to see things just kept focused on Johnson and it would have been a great dark revenge thriller. Johnson has the presence and his small amount of dialogue lets him convey emotion more visually in his facial reactions and he’s still the best of the WWE bunch to ever grace the big screen. It’s a nice role to get him back into the genre we all know he belongs in.

While I’ve got no issue with Thornton’s presence, only to add some sort of gravitas to a usually cardboard character, and while I know that Jackson-Cohen’s British hitman might grate some people, Faster would have worked so much better focused on one character. Driver, it’s actual main character.

Faster is visually pleasing and it has its entertaining (even though predictable) moments but when the main character has to play third fiddle to the other characters, it seems a bit diluted in the end and the revenge tale becomes somewhat like a weird urban dream.

Well, on the plus side, it isn’t named Faster: Action Revenge Film like Dwayne’s next production.

Friday, 25 March 2011

Archipelago - The Middle Class activity of watching paint dry...sort of....


Director: Joanna Hogg
Stars: Tom Hiddlestone, Kate Fay, Amy Lloyd

I’m going to come out and say it right now, I don’t know who out there would enjoy Archipelago. I don’t know anyone close who I could recommend it too and when people at work have asked me about it, I put on a brave smile and say it’s “interesting.”

Only during two scenes does Archipelago becomes “interesting” but when the majority of the film you’re put as a standing observer to the breakdown of this middle class family and their issues, you don’t really feel engaged in the film.

And I’m not trying to say that Archipelago is bollocks because it isn’t and I know that people out there have had different reactions to it. A friend of mine is quite to say that film is subjective and everyone’s viewing experience is different.

We differ here already. Byron Pitt can’t stop thinking about it. I’m trying to recall what actually happened.

This is a very very very slow film and is designed for viewers who have patience with their cinematic screenings. I am perfectly fine with slow burning films providing that there is something to be engaged with. 

For me, I just don’t get it with Archipelago.  There are interesting themes of class between the social interactions of Tom Hiddlestone’s Edward character with the hired chef Rose (played by Amy Lloyd ) and Edward’s family turning their nose up at the simple request of asking a hired hand to eat with them. There’s also difficult family dynamics of broken communication and the eventual realization that the words unsaid and actions unseen speak more than the simple conversation over dinner.

Now if this is your thing, Archipelago is something to reap in. Byron Pitt has found elements to draw out and think about. My trouble is that the slow pace, the unlikeability of nearly every character and the fact that not much seems to go on is the nail in the coffin to me. I would have been open to the film more if I felt more connected to the characters and the scenario. 

But however simplistic and beautifully minimalistic Joanna Hogg has presented this film, I simply cannot connect. only during two heated conversations during a family trip to a deserted restaurant and at their holiday home debating the future of one of the members of the family does Archipelago become interesting. Perhaps if it was staged for the theatre it might have been a more rewarding viewing and its themes more accessible to take in and evaluate.

However, when it’s nearly two hours long and very isolated to its own devices, I rather be somewhere else than dealing with this troubled and miscommunicated family.