"Of all the arts, movies are the most powerful aid to empathy, and good ones make us better people."
-- Roger Ebert, The Great Movies

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Australia


  • Title:  Australia
  • Director:  Baz Luhrmann
  • Date:  2008
  • Studio:  20th Century Fox
  • Genre:  Romance, Historical, Drama
  • Cast:  Nicole Kidman, Hugh Jackman, David Wenham, Brandon Walters
  • Format:  Color, Widescreen
  • DVD Format:  R1, NTSC
"That strange woman, she fire Mr. Fletcher....  He can't hurt Momma no more. ...  From that day on, we call her, 'Mrs. Boss'.  -- Nullah, narrating

"We can't let them win." -- Lady Ashley
"We won't." -- Drover

"Sarah, I'm as good as Black [Aboriginal Australian] to that lot up there.  Now I don't mix with dingos or duchesses.  They keep out of my way and I keep out of theirs.  That's the way it is." -- Drover
"Just because it is, doesn't mean it should be." -- Lady Sarah Ashley
"But that's the way it is."  -- Drover

Australia is a grand sweeping epic.  It has elements of an American Western, strangely enough (the first act involves a cattle drive) but the second act is where the film really shines.  Australia is beautifully filmed and the land itself  is often the star of the picture.  The cast look fantastic too, especially Hugh Jackman (at his sexy best as the rough Outback drover, Drover) and Nicole Kidman (who looks incredible, whether she's wearing traditional English clothes, or something more suited to Australia's climate).  David Wenham, as Mr. Fletcher, is playing a real s.o.b. -- and relishing it.  And newcomer, Brandon Walters, is incredible as Nullah - the half Aboriginal / half white child, who narrates much of the story.

Australia begins with a brief introduction narrated by Nullah, who's spear fishing with his Grandfather, "King George", the magician.  A man (who we'll later discover is Maitland Ashley) is killed.  Then the film transitions to England, and Lady Ashley.  A pampered young aristocrat (played by Kidman), she's annoyed her husband has yet to sell 'that ranch in Australia'.  Convinced her husband is fooling around in more ways than one, she boards a plane and heads for Australia.  Just prior to landing, she receives a telegram that she's to meet Drover (Hugh Jackman) who will take her to Faraway Downs, their ranch.

But all is not well in Darwin when she arrives.  It's a rough town, war is on the horizon, and a cattle baron named King Carney has bought up all the land in Northern Australia, except the Ashleys' Faraway Downs.  Yet the price he offers her is far below what it's worth.  Lady Ashley meets with Drover, who takes her to the ranch.  When they finally arrive, she finds her husband's been murdered.  She also discovers her husband's most trusted cattle-hand, Fletcher, has been beating the native women and children who live on the ranch, stealing cows and driving them across the river to Carney's land, and that he's also responsible for her husband's death; most of which she can't prove to the law.  To her credit, Lady Ashley fires Fletcher.  She then gets Drover to agree to drive 1500 head of cattle to Darwin to sell to the Army.  Needing at least seven people for the cattle drive, they assemble a motley crew and head off.

The drive is an adventure, and Australia itself shines in untamed glory. Fletcher uses under-hand tactics against the drive, such as spooking the cattle with fire towards a cliff.  But despite the challenges, Drover and Sarah make it to Darwin.  There, Carney has just gotten the Army representative to sign a contract, as Sarah and Drover arrive with the cattle.  However, the contract isn't valid until the cows are loaded onto a ship, and Sarah and Drover manage to get them on the ship first.  Sarah wins her contract.

Sarah invites Drover to the ball to celebrate, but he refuses, stating he isn't one of  the upper crust of  people.  Sarah nearly sells Faraway Downs, but Drover arrives at the ball, cleaned up and in a suit.  The two dance together and decide to make a go of it, taking the half-Arboriginal/half-white child, Nullah, into their unofficial  custody.

Nullah narrates much of the story, and Sarah comes to love the child, especially as she can't have children of her own.  Drover also loves the child, as his first wife was Black (or Arboriginal) but she died of untreated TB.  Drover, Nullah, and Sarah are happy for a time, enjoying the "wet" season, and Sarah even understands that Drover will be off droving during "the dry" season.  Soon however, the trio's happiness is shattered.

Fletcher kills King Carney, making it look like an accident.  Nullah wishes to go walkabout with his grandfather.  Drover, understanding the custom, wants him to go, but Sarah disagrees, thinking the child's too young.  When Nullah disappears, Drover thinks he's gone with his grandfather anyway, but Sarah thinks something is wrong.  Nullah and his grandfather are arrested by the local police at Fletcher's insistance -- Nullah to be sent to the Mission School for assimilation, and King George to be tried for the deaths of Maitland and King Carney.

Sarah goes off to Darwin to try to get Nullah back.  Drover is off working in the Outback and has no idea what's going on.  The Japanese attack Pearl Harbor, then Darwin, hitting the mission island first, then the small army town itself.  Sarah's right in the middle of things.  Drover arrives too, but he's too late.  He's told Sarah died in the communications tent.  Drover is completely bereft.  However, a young priest finds him and asks for help getting to the mission island to recover any children they can.  Drover, not knowing that Nullah was sent to the island, and having nothing to lose, agrees to help the priest, as does Drover's close friend and brother-in-law Muggery.

They get to the island and rescue Nullah and some of the other children.  Muggery is killed by Japanese soldier as they make their escape in a boat.  Meanwhile, Sarah is helping with the evacuation of Darwin, unaware that she's been reported dead or even that Drover is in town.

Drover's ship sails through the fog and smoke back to Darwin.  The children land.  Sarah hears the children's singing, refuses to get on the convoy truck and runs to find the ship pulling in.  She's reunited with Nullah and Drover.

As a last act of mischief  Fletcher fires a rifle at Nullah.  He hits the child, but Nullah's grandfather kills him with a thrown spear.  Nullah recovers and he, Sarah, and Drover return to Faraway Downs.  Later, Sarah allows him to go walkabout with his grandfather.

This is an excellent movie.  It's beautifully filmed, both the wild scenery and the people.  The story is a bit typical romantic plot, but the child Nullah, lifts the story out of  romantic drama cliche'.  The cast is excellent. I highly recommend seeing it!

Recommendation:  See it!
Rating:  4 out of 5 Stars
Next Film:  The Avengers

Sunday, May 12, 2013

Batman The Dark Knight Returns Part 2 (Spoilers)


  • Title:   Batman The Dark Knight Returns Part 2
  • Director:  Jay Olivia
  • Voice Director:  Andrea Romano
  • Date:  2013
  • Studio:  Warner Brothers Animation
  • Genre:  Animation, Action, Drama
  • Cast:  Peter Weller, Ariel Winter, Michael Emerson, David Seltz, Mark Valley, Robin Atkin Downes, Maurice LaMarche, Michael McKean, Conan O'Brien, Rob Paulsen, Frank Welker, Tara Strong
  • Format:  Windscreen, Color Animation
  • DVD Format:  R1, NTSC
"Look, either shut it down, or one of these days someone with authority is going to tell me to come stop you.  And when that happens..." -- Clark
"When that happens may the best man win." - Bruce

"Come on, finish me.... Doesn't matter, I win, I made you lose control ... and they'll kill you for it." -- Joker

"Tonight, I am going to maintain order in Gotham City, you're going to help me!  But not with these [guns]!  These are loud and clumsy!  These are the weapons of cowards!  Our weapons are precise and quiet!  In time, I will teach them to you.  But for tonight, you will rely on your brains and your fists.  Tonight we are the law!  Tonight I am the law!"  -- Batman

Frank Miller's The Dark Knight Returns is a classic graphic novel that's been in print since it's original publication in 1986.  It's excellent, and truly raised the bar for graphic story-telling and changed comics forever.  It's the first graphic novel I ever read and one I occasionally re-read.  I'm very glad Warner's allowed two movies to be made from this big and complicated graphic novel.  I was worried though that Warners would "wimp out" with the more controversial aspects of the story.  I'm happy to report they did not.  The political aspects of the storyline are here in full.  Hazzah!

Whereas the first part (film) focuses on Bruce putting the Batsuit on again and Two Face and the Mutant gang Leader as villains, the second part focuses almost exclusively on The Joker as primary villain, though there is still a lot going on.  Even more than Part 1, television newscasts are used as a narration device in Part 2.  

In Part 2, the remainder of  the Mutant Gang has split into various groups.  The Sons of Batman, with their blue face paint, declare Batman as their leader, and attempt to save Gotham City from other criminals - violently.  The Nixons, with their tall blonde female leader, "Bruno", rob and steal without remorse.  Bruno has red swastikas painted on her breasts.  Batman sets up a sting to catch her, and succeeds.  Superman arrives in Gotham and saves a blind man who's fallen into a subway track in the path of an on-coming train.  But the reason he's there is to encourage Bruce to hang-up the cape again.  However, the majority of  the film concerns Joker.

Jim Gordon retires.  The new police commissioner, Ellen Yindel, as her first act as Comissioner, issues a warrant for Batman's arrest.  When Clark and Bruce talk, Clark has a bald eagle on his arm, and Bruce pets Clark's white dog -- which is a great image!

Joker is in an asylum, being treated by Dr. Wolper.  He manipulates Wolper to get him a pass and an interview on the Dave Endocrine Show.  Wolper does this, and soon Joker is free.   He kills Wolper with a coffee cup during the show's taping, as well as Endocrine and his audience with his deadly Joker gas.  Batman and Robin (Carrie) had gone to the show's taping to try to stop Joker, but Yindel's police attack Batman.  The police spend so much time trying to catch Batman that they fail to stop Joker.

After escaping the chaos at the television studio, Joker finds Selina Kyle, and uses hallucinogenic lipstick to control her mind, as well as one of her girls.  The girl gets a Congressman to declare the country should declare open war on the Soviets before falling to his death (while wrapped in an American flag). 

The president announces on TV that American troops are battling Soviet troops in the South American Island country of "Corto Maltese".  As in the graphic novel, the president looks like Reagan, and he's voiced in the animated film to sound like Ronald Reagan, including his "folksy wisdom".  He announces a war by saying, "Now those Soviets would like to see us turn tail and run, but we've got to protect our interests, I mean, stand up for freedom and the good people of Corto Maltese.  So don't fret... we've got God on our side."  This political conflict forms the backdrop of the entire film.  News is blacked out "due to severe weather".  

Batman finds out about the connection to Kyle Escorts.  He finds Selina, dressed like Wonder Woman, and tied-up.  She tells him about Joker and the mind-control lipstick.  Batman is too late to save the Congressman.

Batman also finds out Joker's next target is the local amusement park, which is just opening.  Batman and Joker fight in the house of mirrors, where Joker shoots Batman in the shoulder.  Joker escapes into the tunnel of  love, and he and Batman fight again.  Joker knifes Batman across the stomach and stabs him several times.  Batman beats Joker, who finally collapses against a wall.  Joker taunts Batman, then breaks his own neck.  Batman passes out.  Later, Batman awakes.  He places incindiaries on Joker's body and disappears, as Yindel's police troops close in.  Joker's body burns and the entire tunnel blows up.

Carrie rescues Batman and takes him to the Cave where Alfred does surgery.

Reagan announces from an "undisclosed location" via television special report, American troops won in Corto Maltese, but the Soviets are "poor sports" as a missile's been sent towards the Island nation.  Superman deflects the missile and it blows up over Gotham City.  Superman is irradiated, crash lands, and kills everything he touches -- flowers, trees, grass, etc.

Gotham is blacked out and everyone panics.  Bruce realizes it was an EMP blast.  Batman and Robin ride on horseback into Gotham.  Batman rallies the Sons of Batman, and later citizens and even formal members of the Mutant Gang into keeping order in the city.  Meanwhile, Jim Gordon, organizes people in his own neighborhood to put out fires.

The country is buried under a cloud of smoke and ash.  In Gotham, there is no sun, but electricity is slowly coming back on.  Gotham is the only city not torn apart by crime, rioting and looting.

The president (still Reagan) enforces martial law, and sends a recovering Superman after Batman.  Batman works with Carrie, Oliver Queen (formerly the Green Arrow), and Alfred on a plan.  He fights Superman in Crime Alley, distracting him until Queen can fire a Kryptonite arrow at Superman.  The arrow doesn't kill Superman outright, but weakens him.  Batman somewhat defeats Superman, but then he falls victim to a heart attack.  Superman, Diana (once but no longer Wonder Woman), Selina, and Jim Gordon attend the funeral.  At the end, Carrie, heavily veiled, is the last to stand by Bruce Wayne's grave.

Wayne Manor has burned to the ground, after Alfred, following Bruce's instructions, hit the self-destruct.  Alfred escapes the house but dies of a massive stroke.

There's a cut to the sound of a heart monitor.  Then, Oliver Queen begins to instruct the Sons of  Batman in cleaning up the Bat Cave.  Bruce arrives and states he will instruct the Sons of Batman (as well as former Mutants and other citizens who joined him the first night after the missile fell).  They are now Bruce's army.

I liked Part 1 slightly better; Part 2 seems like more of a slug-fest.  However, kudos to Bruce Timm, Andrea Romano, Warner Brothers Animation, and DC Premiere for not shying away from the darker and more political aspects of  Frank Miller's classic book.  The second half of Part 2 works really well.  In the first half,  Batman's final confrontation with Joker seems almost anti-climatic.  However, though the film is dark and violent, it is also really good -- with an adult story, and incredible animation that evokes the art of Miller's classic.  Recommended.

Recommendation:  See it!  (Though not for young children)
Rating: 4 of 5 Stars
Next Film:  The Third Man