Category Archives: Film reviews

Echo Valley Review


When it comes to relationships between parents and their children there is a sense of comfort and empathy surrounding that bond. There is also that time when a parent chooses to push themselves to the limit to protect their children. Directed by Michael Pearce, Echo Valley is a film with a rough dynamic that feels real and vigorously carries the weaving component of detrimental stress. It takes place in a vast landscape that is on a farm setting. Livelihood is a bucolic aspect of this scene, but then that gets interrupted by turmoil between a mother and a daughter. Kate (Julianne Moore) is the mother and Claire (Sydney Sweeney) is the daughter. A dynamic of hardship that rattles love to a level that is one of a heartache. 

Kate lives her life on a farm where she trains horses. Her daughter Claire is coming back for a visit and she is notorious for drugs and lots of other mischievous behavior. Kate has always bailed Claire out of her problems, but this one gets very out of hand. There is a life-threatening accident involving drugs, betrayal and debt which puts Claire in trouble and Kate along with her.  Kate does not have to involve herself, but she chooses to protect her daughter.

The writing and continuity of lies creates an unsettling atmosphere. Claire’s error is one that boils the screen with the anxiety it provokes. This is because one dangerous man comes around to settle for Claire’s mistakes. His name is Jackson, played by Domhnall Gleeson. He is a manipulator and not a good person—a dealer that lies and tries to turn the table by putting Claire’s mess onto Kate to clean up. Despite it all being Claire’s bad choices, Kate chooses to take much of it into her own hands. Motherly dedication is one that is brutally portrayed and captivating. Moore digs deep here to play a mother that will not be messed with.

Echo Valley carries uniqueness that displays how a trail of lies can also have its gains for good and bad intentions. Kate uses it for “good” and Jackie uses it for “bad.” However, it all comes down to the choices of Kate as well. The farm setting poses the threat of their livelihood being at risk and the chance of Claire falling into despair. The screenplay is written with depth that keeps mingling the anxiety to the core of Echo Valley. I keptdesperately wanting Kate to be the good mother and Claire to find a way to get her act together. The directing of Pearce creates these two sides to make its audience feel the hardship of their relationship carried to immersive heights in Echo Valley.

Moore and Sweeney bring the mother and daughter duo of love and sacrifice to an artistic level of achievement. The film has its moments of trying too hard to become dramatic with an abusive context. I will say some of it kept its pacing, but at the same time, the light can come sooner in many incidents.  I told myself in these moments that it always gets worse before it gets better. Regardless, there is light, but there is also patience and repetition to be cultivated before “light” can shine brighter for resolution in Echo Valley. Three out of four stars.

 

 

How to Train Your Dragon Review


This is one of the most inspiring and breathtaking remakes I have seen. I felt like I was flying with the CGI dragons in How to Train Your Dragon. This film is a fairytale adventure that really soars. Written and directed by Dean DeBlois whose style is magnificent and exhilarating as the story explores a portrait of wonders. Since I worked in cinemas during the first releases of many animated films, this remake made me feel like the storyline had evolved with a true sense of understanding. The story connects to audiences of all ages with messages beyond the love portrayed in the human/dragon relationship. DeBlois keeps the hope and positive vibes alive in How to Train Your Dragon.

The film is set on the Isle of Berk, a place for Vikings where their enemies and primary threat are dragons. The Chief is Stoick (Gerard Butler). His son is Hiccup (Mason Themes). Stoick depends on his people to kill dragons because they often find themselves in battles with them over research and lands. Hiccup, however, does not want to kill dragons, but insteadwants to learn how to fly and train them. With his father against this idea, the opportunity for new connections begins. Hiccup takes up mentorship from Gobber (Nick Frost). Gobber tries to get Hiccup in the mindset of a dragon killer. Instead, Hiccup learns his own techniques. Soon, he forms a friendship with a dragon he names Toothless. Moving forward, he trains Toothless and realizes that dragons can do good deeds. Hiccup ends up having a gift in his ability to tame dragons. Once he figures this out, he soars with Toothless on many adventures, one of which involves falling in love with Astrid (Nico Parker). The other adventure is trying to convince his father that he can train dragons and that they should not always be labeled the enemy. While featuring many obstacles Hiccup faces, How to Train Your Dragon is a two-sided adventure that keeps buildingmomentum as it encounters enchanting light.

The war between Vikings and dragons is the point of conflict that boils in the film and keeps igniting new beginnings. The story told in this version is still quite amazing. Although I love the animated versions, this remake blew me out of the water, especially in the scene where Hiccup flies with Toothless. The bonding moments in unexpected territory makes for a magical connection. The sense of continuity is uniquely brilliant. This film is a dazzling work-of-art which demonstrates that fairytales have realistic value. Will Hiccup and Toothless prove their point to Hiccup’s father? Will Hiccup get his wish? Are there more dangerous dragons? The possibilities and wonders will open the doors to exciting answers. Three-and-a-half out of four stars for How to Train Your Dragon.

Dangerous Animals Review


This is a thriller that takes place on a boat and is all about killing for pleasure. A presentation that comes along with killing for sport. The context around this has its captivating moments, and then the ones that are for shock and awe. Dangerous Animals is in the genre of shocker films that I found to have presence in and around of the suspense itself. What came to my mind was Jaws meets Psycho in that it is a big boat with a killer onboard who throws his victims to the sharks. 

Directed by Sean Byrne, Dangerous Animals introduces the audience to a boat captain named Bruce (Jai Courtney). At the top of the film, he takes a couple on a shark-dive expedition. Later, he blinds them and kidnaps one of them, only to havethem realize that he plans to kill them by hovering them over sharks. Bruce finds enjoyment in seeing and videotaping feedinghis victims to sharks.

The next victim is the main character, Zephyr (Hassie Harrison). She wakes up to go on a surfing expedition, but then Bruce captures her. Once she is on the boat, she finds herself below with another victim named Heather (Ella Newton). Heather was brought onboard the boat before Zephyr and the writing is on the wall for a death scenario for both the victims. Dangerous Animals has that momentum to make the audience feel the sense of predictability, but the many suspenseful moments to escape create the opposite effect. From my point-of-view I asked how can they escape when they are out at sea with treacherous sharks and in front of a killer that is very dangerous?

Going forward the film builds momentum with a man named Moses (Josh Heuston), as he is suspicious about Zephyr’s disappearance and begins searching for her.  Zephyr continuously fights for safety against Bruce, yet he keeps overcoming her chances to escape. Dangerous Animals is a boxing match of moving parts that puts adrenaline to the test. Bruce is anxious to find a good chance to throw Zephyr to the sharks for his enjoyment. The tactics of brutality do not see eye-to-eye, but the dog match to survive knows how to thrive here.

The shock and value are within the shallows. The victimshovering over the water creates the deepest point of terror inknowing that any sudden movement is a leap of death. When that happens, the concept that came to my mind was how stillness means safety. Especially when there is that thought of dying brutally at the mouths of sharks.

Dangerous Animals knows how to scare. It also knows how to maintain its dignity. The continuity feels interactive. The many failed escapes and failed moments of shark attacks are what makes for new doors of terror to evolve. The only question is, how can one depart the boat? Silly in moments and definitely scary in many, it can border on being repetitive. At the same time, it still maintains a sense of creepiness in the ocean. Two-and-a-half out of four stars.