Showing posts with label Thriller mystery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thriller mystery. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 1, 2015

The Mourning




IMDb
20 years after going MIA in Desert Storm, Aaron returns home under mysterious conditions, not having aged since his disappearance, and must reestablish relationships with loved ones before an imminent return to an ambiguous other-worldly existence.



SliceofSciFi
This week on Slice of SciFi, Summer chats with some of the creative team behind The Mourning, a supernatural thriller about the sudden return home of a man who was declared MIA and presumed killed during Desert Storm, and the mystery surrounding where he’s been for 20 years and why he hasn’t aged a day since then. The story revolves around the people who loved him the most, and how they deal with their emotions about his disappearance and the unresolved issues his reappearance triggers.
Director and co-writer Marc Clebanoff, co-writer and lead actor Michael Walton, Dominique Swain and Brooke Lewis talk about how the story came about, the choices and directions of some of the story elements that were used, about what it was like to film in a small Michigan town rather than try to get the same look and feel around Los Angeles, and more.
Stay tuned, because we’ll have a special review episode with Tim Callender and Jill Heller joining Summer to discuss the film in a far more incisive manner

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Friday, June 12, 2015

Corridor of Mirrors

Christopher Lee he Died today 93 he did Many great films This was his First in 1948


IMDb
A man falls in love with a beautiful young woman and begins to suspect that he may have also loved her in a previous life.





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Tuesday, May 5, 2015

The Livingston Gardener



IMDb
  • In order to close the case files on over a dozen disappearances, a persistent detective, a bereaved senator, and a skeptical prison warden agree to the request of a convicted serial killer - Jim Gardener - granting him a live television interview in exchange for the locations of his remaining victims. But when Gardener faces off against newsman Pierce Lawrence, he reveals that many of the girls he abducted are still alive, in captivity. Gardener uses this information to manipulate Pierce, as well as the warden, the senator, and the detective - setting in motion a sinister plan that will leave them all scrambling for the upper hand.




Offiicial Site

The Livingston Gardener

In order to close the case files on over a dozen disappearances, a persistent detective, a bereaved senator, and a skeptical prison warden agree to the request of convicted serial killer, Jim Gardener, granting him a live television interview in exchange for the location of his remaining victims. Facing off against newsman Pierce Lawrence — the investigative journalist that helped bring him to justice — Gardener uses the interview to set into motion a sinister plan that no one sees coming.

Full Movie on Xmovie8

Saturday, May 2, 2015

Private Number



IMDb
  • A series of cryptic phone messages and visions haunt a writer while he struggles to finish a novel. As they increase in intensity, he loses his grip on reality, eventually obsessing over an old mystery that will lead to horrific revelations about both him and his loyal wife.
    Written by Aeden Babish




SYNOPSIS:
A writer struggling to finish his latest novel is harassed by a number of mysterious phone calls. As the calls get more and more frequent (and more intense) he begins to lose his grip on reality. Who is behind the phone calls and what do they have to do with his past?
REVIEW:
I thought that Private Number sounded like it had potential to be pretty awesome and for the most part it was. I thought that it was well-written, original, and I enjoyed trying to figure out just what was going on before the filmmakers gave us all the answers toward the end (I can honestly say that I was able to do so about halfway into it so I felt pretty smart by the time the end credits started to roll). Even though it has a couple of minor flaws I still thought that it was an interesting movie and I dug it. While it is not really what I would consider a horror film (it is more of a suspense/thriller with some mystery thrown into the mix for good measure) I am still glad that I checked it out and overall I was impressed by it.
Private-Number-movie-2014-LazRael-Lison-(3)
One of the main reasons I really liked it was due to the fact that I could totally relate to Michael (Hal Ozsan), the main character. The poor guy is trying his damndest to finish a novel but he is having a hell of a time doing so thanks to a number of everyday distractions (such as having to do the dishes and being forced to have dinner with family friends ) that keep getting in the way. Of course the phone calls that he starts getting don’t help matters and he becomes so obsessed with them that it becomes nearly impossible for him to get any writing done. I have been in the exact same boat while working on some novels and screenplays and know exactly what he is going through (but thankfully I have never gotten a series of bizarre phone calls like he does) as he attempts to power through the novel despite everything going on around him. I thought that this was a nice touch I think that anyone who has attempted to write something that they weren’t really particularly into will definitely be able to relate and sympathize with the character as a result.
Private-Number-movie-2014-LazRael-Lison-(4)
I also liked the overall premise and thought that the phone calls that he gets were genuinely creepy. While the calls themselves merely consist of different people asking him “Remember me?” there was something about them that gave me the wiggins. Things only go from bad to worse after the calls start as Michael soon starts seeing dead people around him and his personality starts to dramatically change as he gets a lot more angry and violent as the movie progresses. I don’t want to give anything away but the phone calls and the things he sees are connected to a series of murders and part of the fun of the movie is trying to figure out what all these things have to do with each other (and Michael). As I said earlier I was able to figure everything out before everything is revealed but I still had a blast with it regardless, and I think that a lot of viewers will as well (especially the ones that enjoy a good mystery).
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I thought that the twist toward the end was pretty cool too. Most people will most likely see it coming but I thought that it was pretty original and well done. I thought that it was an interesting idea and unlike some twists that I have seen in some other movies it works and doesn’t seem forced. Even though some people may not like it I personally thought that it was an excellent idea and I dug it. I don’t want to spoil anything but let’s just say that it’s different and I applaud writer/director LazRael Lison for having the balls to go this route with it. He takes a gamble by throwing in this twist but I think that it pays off.
Private-Number-movie-2014-LazRael-Lison-(5)Private-Number-movie-2014-LazRael-Lison-(2)
I thought that Private Number was a pretty decent film overall. It isn’t without its issues (some of the acting is just mediocre and to be honest I didn’t really care for the ending as it had felt a little rushed to me) but there are a lot of things to like about it. I thought that it was an entertaining little movie and I genuinely enjoyed the time I spent watching it. Check it out if you run across it, hopefully you will like it as much as I did.

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Sunday, February 15, 2015

Blackhat




RogerEbert


Michael Mann is an action filmmaker even when his characters are standing still. His movies contemplate themselves: they are simultaneously about what's happening and what it means. They're sensitive to the intellectual and emotional undercurrents swirling around the characters, whether they're running, driving, punching and shooting, or just brooding in close-up while electronic music shimmers and drones.
All of which makes him an oddly ideal director for "Blackhat," a solemn, grandiose, often ludicrous thriller in which "Thor" star Chris Hemsworth plays a buffcomputer hacker helping a joint team of FBI and Chinese intelligence agents chase cyberterrorists through Chicago, Los Angeles, Hong Kong, and Jakarta. Slick and sometimes goofy as it is, "Blackhat" is an odd, fascinating movie: a high-tech action thriller about the human condition. I can think of no better current illustration of the notion that, to quote this site's founder, it's not what a movie is about, it's how it's about it.
"Blackhat" is far from a perfect movie, mind you. Its rock-solid confidence in technical details isn't matched by similarly exacting attention to plot mechanics. Key roles are miscast or underwritten. Hemsworth's character, Nicholas Hathaway—a keyboard wizard furloughed from prison to help catch cyberterrorists who are stealing fortunes and wrecking nuclear plants—is implausibility Exhibit "A." "Blackhat" contrives a biography to justify this genius autodidact who reads Michel Foucault after lights-out, delivers mirrored epigrams in a Noo Yawk accent ("I did the time; time isn't doing me"), has Thor's chest and abs (push-ups, baby!), and can fight and shoot like John Wick and navigate irradiated nuclear plants in a hazmat suit. Despite Hemsworth's magnetism, Hathaway remains more a checklist of awesome than a credible person. The same is true, to a lesser extent, of his partners in justice, a racially and internationally diverse bunch. Their ranks include the sensitive/fearsome brother-sister duo of Chen Dawai (Leehom Wang) and Lien Chen (Wei Tang) and FBI agents Henry Pollack (John Ortiz), Mark Jessup (Holt McCallany) and Carol Barrett (Viola Davis). More so than in most Mann pictures—and this is saying a lot—these characters are more often lit and posed than explored. 
Sometimes this feels like the right approach. The film spares us the usual "partners hate each other at first, then learn to work together" cliche by establishing that Hathaway and Chen were college roommates who love and respect each other; their embrace after reconnecting is shorthand that lets us instantly accept their Crockett-and-Tubbs-styled two-brained hive mind. The semi-obligatory love story between Hathaway and Lien is a  Wong-Kar Wai oasis amid the snooping and chasing, all sexy smiles and furtive embraces. Leehom Wang's elegance is intoxicating: he glides across the screen like a dancer, necktie rippling. 
Other times, though, you'll wish "Blackhat" had given every character another minute or two of attention, to make them pop like the crooks and cops in "Heat" and "Collateral." If you buythem anyhow, it's because the actors have committed to the movie's hallucinatory intensity while still projecting eccentric, personal qualities (Davis is a standout; her side-eye could be registered as a weapon), and because this is a rare thriller that creates a worldview to go with its world. 
You could call this movie "Michael Mann's Greatest Hits" and mean it as a slam or a compliment, depending on your feelings about the director—but all the hits have been remixed and rethought. As written by Mann and Morgan Davis Foehl, photographed by Stuart Dryburgh("The Piano," "Ameila"), and cut by a team of editors, "Blackhat" has enough fighting, shooting and brooding to satisfy fans of "Collateral" and "Heat," plus a bumper crop of trademark Mann images: daytime and nighttime skylines, existentially empty roads, cops and criminals posed against post-industrial landscapes, soul-mates having deep conversations in restaurants, reflections in rear-view mirrors and picture windows, brazenly off-center closeups, bespoke suits and designer sunglasses. These Mann-erisms feel newly poignant because they're celebrating light, space, architecture and flesh, even as the movie's heroes obsess over virtual conspiracies, and keep an eye peeled for coldblooded killers dispatched by hidden masters. 
The world of ones and zeros that the "The Matrix" showed us 15 years ago is no longer fanciful. "Blackhat" is mainly about what happens when the real world is annexed by the virtual: what it does to geography and relationships; how it signal-jams our species' sense of time as a series of self-contained moments, and substitutes an existence that can feel like an endless, intrusive buzz. When "Blackhat" goes silent—as when the camera settles on lovers' hands in post-coital closeup, or when the newly furloughed Hathaway pauses on airport tarmac and savors the open space—it's powerful, because you've been given a gift rarely bestowed in the world beyond the movie theater: a moment's peace.
The movie is a sound and light show, first and foremost, but it's also a sneaky eulogy for a dying way of living and seeing: rage, rage against the dying of the real! The filmmaking prods you to contemplate the physicality, the tangibility, of what's onscreen—to think about actions as actions, people as people, things as things. Sunlight and streetlamps are searingly bright, gunshots are deafening, landscapes and skylines awesomely vast. When men grapple in a cramped diner and someone's head smashes against a table, or when Hathaway repeatedly slams the flat end of an axe-head against a metal screen, or when bullets rip through a cargo container or a screwdriver plunges into a man's neck, you flinch, not just because the sound effects are loud and the camerawork tactically "messy," but because these primordial actions are contrasted against the electronic violence carried out by unseen cyber-criminals. The bad guys don't directly assault existing facilities, organizations and institutions; they undermine or confuse them until they implode, bringing in gunmen only when absolutely necessary.
The film's prologue is the best example of virtual treachery causing actual mayhem. It's a gem of wordless exposition that finds a visual/metaphorical way to explain how hackers slip past electronic firewalls and spread a malware virus into nuclear plant's computer system, shutting off cooling fans and causing core rods to overheat. You don't have to know much about computers to understand what's happening. You can figure it out by watching CGI images of pulsing dots swimming through fiber-optic cables and circuit boards (in point-of-view shots that evoke a Stalker Cam in a horror film or the shark in "Jaws"), then spreading and multiplying like cancer cells. 
There are more such moments connecting the virtual and "real," like the scene where Hathaway intuits that somebody's spying on him and a colleague in a restaurant, then gets up from the table and wanders through the service area (in a long, unbroken handheld shot) until he locates the surveillance camera control board that's feeding images off-site. The movie's climax is a time-machine trip, catapulting us from the 21st century to maybe the 18th. It's intimate, emotional, vicious: flesh is punctured, blood spilled. As Davis' character puts it: "Is that tangible enough for you?"

  • Summary: Set within the world of global cybercrime, Blackhat follows a furloughed convict (Chris Hemsworth) and his American and Chinese partners as they hunt a high-level cybercrime network from Chicago to Los Angeles to Hong Kong to Jakarta.

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