Film Friday: A Quantum of Slumdog

2008_11_14_quant.jpg

Someone recently told us they were giving their friends two reviews of films they'd recently seen—their opinion and then the "Torontoist" opinion, where they were ecstatic about any success, but resolutely unforgiving to even the smallest flaw. They were making a point—they liked Burn After Reading—but in a way they're kind of correct. After all, we were absolutely thrilled with Casino Royale, considering it one of the most pleasant surprises of the past few years, until we got to the turgid why-on-earth-did-they-put-this-in final half-hour that basically ruined it for us. Of course, I'm sure they'd claim now that they put in that awful ending so they could set up a direct sequel in the form of Quantum of Solace, but it's more likely they had no idea where to go next with the franchise reboot so they took it in the most obvious direction. And, apparently, that's been a terrible idea, because we've yet to hear more than one positive opinion from anyone (and we've heard a lot of opinions, because it's been out for two weeks in the UK). Possibly more entertaining than the film is Barrett Hooper's review in NOW, where he goes to extreme lengths to fit as many groan-worthy puns as possible.

Another return of a (ahem) beloved cinema icon this week is Jean-Claude Van Damme in JCVD, and in retrospect we don't like his celebrated soliloquy as his arch-rival Steven Segal's in Hard to Kill. Nor do we think that it even managed to be as clever as the (sorely underrated) Last Action Hero. But we still think it's pretty worth seeing, as we said in our review during TIFF.

Not as worth seeing as Slumdog Millionaire, which we (idiotically) did not manage to schedule during TIFF, so we're super glad to see it getting a release (and so quickly, too). Though we've never been in love with the format, this week's combo interview/review of the film in Eye Weekly from Jason Anderson is a really nice look at the film and its path to release.

This week the Royal runs the Eh! U European Film Festival from Sunday (and it's pay-what-you can), doc Died Young Stayed Pretty (though it's been poorly received), and an exclusive engagement of François Girard's Thirty Two Short Films About Glenn Gould. The Bloor offers the New Serbian Film Festival (including showings of Tears For Sale, which we liked at TIFF) across the weekend and the Doc Soup showing of The Order of Myths on Wednesday. Across multiple theatres the Reel Asian Film Festival continues—we've been informed by Todd Brown of Twitchfilm.net that the closing night film, Adrift in Tokyo, is one of his favourite films of this year, so that's easily one of the picks of the week. Other festivals this week include the Reel Awareness Human Rights Film Festival, Rendezvous with Madness Film Festival, and the Voices Forward Film Festival.

And finally, Cinematheque Ontario continues, including free screening Free Films Made Freely: The Experimental Cinema of Paolo Gioli, a six-film short programme, on Wednesday.

Email This Entry


Comments (4) [rss]

Comparing JCVD to Hard to Kill or Last Action Hero is... off-kilter.

While it shares some of the ideas in LAH, it's still quite different. (I agree btw, that it's terribly underrated. I still think it's a great piece of satire.)

I watched JCVD at TIFF and felt it was okay until the soliloquy. It had some funny moments, some "real" moments, and then JCVD poured his heart out. It's rare that anybody can tear away the curtain of celebrity image and make an audience feel as if they're seeing the real person behind the screen. Of all people, Jean-Claude Van Damme would be one of the last you'd expect it from, but he does it excellently.

What makes it is the fact it IS Van Damme, and that he seems to play himself pretty well. If this had been someone like Anthony Hopkins or Robert Deniro, it wouldn't have nearly the emotional weight that it does, because we know they can act and emote.

As you said - worth seeing.

The bit about Hard to Kill is completely a joke... and I just realised the link for that is wrong.

It should be this (I've fixed it in the article, too):

http://ca.youtube.com/watch?v=CM9R2h9ub8Q

Yikes! Last Action Hero is not underrated. Hollywood blockbuster stars attempt indie-style self-parody and fail miserably, paving the way for such unfunny abominations as "Jingle All The Way".

I could see JCVD being overrated, though I'll wait to see it before passing judgement.

I thought the Bond film was great, turn off your brain and enjoy the action.

Post a comment (Comment Policy)

TIP US OFF

Tip us off with news, leads, links; anything at all.
Subscribe to get events, weather, contests, and stories in your email inbox—daily.

EMAIL (required)

About Torontoist

Torontoist is about Toronto and everything that happens in it. It's edited by David Topping and Marc Lostracco, and you should totally advertise on us.

More about Torontoist.

Recent Comments

The Tall Poppy Interview

Follow Torontoist...