Friday, January 26, 2007

Blood Diamond Review - A Must See


Blood Diamonds is one movie that really opened my eyes. A sobering, very real look at civil unrest in Western Africa, an area that has not gained the media expose it’s due. This movie shines a spotlight on the plight of the African people who are forced to live their lives amidst a very brutal civil war. The value of human life is clearly lost in the race for power and money, as throughout the movie men and women are brutally gunned down without much reason.

Blood Diamond follows the story of a South African mercenary involved in the diamond trade as he attempts to retrieve a rare pink diamond hidden by a local fisherman within a militia stronghold in Sierra Leone. Leonardo DiCaprio is fantastic, flanked by the buxom Jennifer Connelly and Dijmon Hounsou. The script is phenomenal and the visuals memorable. It was shocking to me to actually watch as young boys were transformed into killers by military rebels running what amounted to a heavily armed Boy Scout troop. To see human lives treated with such cold disregard, gave me that gut check on how precious life really is. I keep seeing those young boys clenching their eyelids closed as they pull the trigger ... the recoil of the gun causing shots to fly in all directions, and splattering the lives of so many all over the ground. Shocking ...

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

The Pursuit of Happyness Review - Excellent


Fantastic! What more can one say about Wil Smith. Here is a young man that we've watched grow and mature into a superstar. Many remember Wil as half of the duo that brought hip hop music to mainstream america. We then marveled as he pioneered his way into the homes of millions through the Fresh Prince of Bel-Air TV show. Fans of the show watched as Wil began to develop serious acting chops, which led to his start on the silver screen, first as an action hero and more recently, with movies like this, into a Hollywood A-Lister.


In the Pursuit of Happyness, Will plays Chris Gardner, a father forced to reinvent himself in the job market in order to support his young son and provide a better life for both of them. This movie follows his journey through tough times as the homeless Chris participates in a non-paid internship with the improbable goal of winning a single positon at a prestigious stock brokerage firm amoung 60 other interns. The movie is well written and Wil Smith is brilliant. His young son Jaden is equally impressive. A great movie for parents and their children with a strong message. Highly recommended.


Stomp the Yard Review - Decent Entertainment


This isn't "Step Up" or "Save the Last Dance", this is a serious look at urban "battles" which have moved to the college campus to influence Black Greek-Letter Organization step shows. Stepping is derived from traditional African dance. Part tradition, part miltary boot camp, black greek stepshows have long been a staple on college campuses. Each organization has signature universal moves which appear in "Stomp the Yard" as a salute to the "Divine Nine". These organizations provided an opportunity for african americans enrolled in universities at the turn of the century to gather together in an organized venue when most organizations refused african american membership.

Stomp the Yard is part "School Daze", part "The Program". Like many movies of its kind it follows an unoriginal format set to a new wrinkle. In this case stepping, rather than college football or track. I found it to be worth the price of admission. In "Stomp the Yard", we follow the story of a young man from Los Angeles with a checkered past who arrives on a college campus in Atlanta Georgia. In order to attract the attention of a female, he joins a fraternity and begins to understand the true meaning of brotherhood ... to replace the sibling he recently lost. Formulaic, yes ... entertainment, yes. I would definitely advise people to see this one.

Sunday, January 14, 2007

Apocalypto Review - Don't waste your money


You know how there are some movies that just should not be made? Unfortunately, Apocalypto by Mel Gibson happens to fall into that category. Apocalypto is billed as the story of the Mayan empire at the time of the Spaniards arrival in the new world. It is filmed in the native language of the Mayan people (translation: I have to read in order to keep up) and is supposed to be an epic story of a tribe of native peoples who face extermination by the more powerful ruling Mayan tribe.

In reality, Apocalypto is a very nauseatingly boring slice of native life that the audience is forced to endure without any real plot line or story to follow. There's lots of violence, genocide, and nakedness ... much of it less than gratuitous. Our story opens in a native jungle village as we follow native life - the hunt, celebrations, and native impotence. Mayan warriors come to town to enslave the villagers who are captured and tied to bamboo rods in preparation for the long walk to the Mayan city (the walk seems to take forever). Once there they're sold into slavery and sentenced to death. One escapes and gets back to the village to save his family. Oh and at the end of the movie the Spaniards arrive. End of story, waste of my money. I did not feel any connection with the main characters or find any type of interesting plotline to peak my interest. In the end, I felt like a voyeur, spying on these people for a couple of days.