MaltaToday previous editions

MT 17 August 2014

Issue link: https://maltatoday.uberflip.com/i/364850

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 34 of 51

THIS WEEK Embassy Cinemas Valletta Tel. 21 227436, 21 245818 Planes: Fire & Rescue (U) 10:00 (3D), 12:10 (3D), 14:20 (3D), 16:30 (3D), 18:45 (2D), 21:00 (2D) Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (12A) 10:30, 14:30, 18:00, 20:50 Guardians of the Galaxy (12A) 10:00 (2D), 13:00 (2D), 15:45 (2D), 18:35 (3D), 21:15 (3D) Hercules (12A) 10:15, 13:45, 16:15, 18:30, 20:50 Mrs. Brown's Boys D'Movie (12A) 16:00, 18:15, 20:50 Step Up 5 All In (PG) 10:20, 13:30, 16:10, 18:45, 21:15 Eden Cinemas St Julian's Tel. 23 710400 Hercules (12A) 14:20, 16:30, 18:50, 21:05, 23:15 The Purge: Anarchy (15) 14:10, 16:25, 18:40, 20:55, 23:15 22 Jump Street (15) 14:05, 16:25, 18:45, 21:00, 23:20 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (12A) 14:30, 18:10, 20:50, 23:30 Begin Again (12A) 14:20, 16:30, 18:45, 21:10, 23:25 Planes: Fire & Rescue 3D (U) 14:15, 16:20, 18:45, 20:55, 23:00 Step Up 5: All In 3D (PG) 14:00, 16:25, 18:50, 21:15, 23:40 The House of Magic (U) 14:05, 18:50 The Fault in Our Stars (12A) 16:10, 20:50, 23:25 Maleficent (PG) 14:15, 16:30, 18:35, 20:45, 22:55 The Lunch Box (Hindi) (PG) 14:10, 16:25, 18:40, 21:05, 23:15 Transformers: Age of Extinction (12A) 14:20, 17:55, 21:15 Guardians of the Galaxy 3D (12A) 14:30, 18:20, 21:10, 23:45 How to Train Your Dragon 2 (U) 14:05, 16:20, 18:35, 20:45, 23:00 Empire Cinemas Bugibba Tel. 21 581787, 21 581909 Planes: Fire and Rescue (U) 11:00, 13:35, 15:30, 17:45, 20:45 Step Up All In 3D (PG) 11:05, 13:35, 16:00, 18:25, 20:55 Guardians of the Galaxy 3D (12A) 10:55, 13:30, 16:00, 18:30, 21:00 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (12A) 10:50, 13:30, 18:20 Hercules (12A) 16:10, 21:00 ONE is told that they should not judge books (or films) by their cover, but it's hard to not do so with Guardians of the Galaxy, the latest horse from the Disney-owned Marvel blockbuster stable. It's a name that tells one just about everything they need to know, familiarity with the source mate- rial be damned - it evokes images of stalwart Guardians and, well, the Galaxy, with perhaps (surely) plenty of ray guns, people in multi-coloured face paint cavorting as aliens and zipping around in spaceships. And, guess what? Guardians of the Gal- axy is exactly that, a space adventure cut straight from pulp cloth, if with a good lick of modern special effects paint. The plot should be fairly familiar to viewers familiar with the last fifty or so years of science fiction. Fol- lowing the death of his mother by Hollywood disease, eight-year-old Peter Quill is promptly abducted by a group of alien mercenaries. Brought up as one of their own, Quill (Chris Pratt) grows into the self-described "Star-Lord," a swaggering space rogue in the Han Solo mould. During a scavenging trip on a ru- ined planet, Quill finds an orb con- taining an Infinity Stone, an artefact of great power wanted by major play- ers in the universe. Cue Quill's team- ing up with a quartet of misfits in order to stop the Stone from falling into the wrong hands of the malevo- lent Ronan the Accuser (Lee Pace), who wants to use its power to destroy a planet for vaguely religious reasons, as one does when in possession of such artefacts of great power. Directed by Troma veteran James Gunn, Guardians of the Galaxy moves at a breezy, if not restless, pace, zooming between locations ranging from spaceships to space prison to futuristic planets to even, at one point, a hive of scum and villainy set inside a gigantic skull. None of these places will surprise consumers of Star Wars and its myriad spin offs, not to mention TV shows such as Joss Whedon's Firefly or videogames such as the Mass Effect series, but all involve imaginative production design and vivid colour palettes far removed from the grays and browns so dominant in the rest of the Mar- vel Cinematic Universe (for movies based on comic books, the Marvel films are some of the most visually dour pieces of cinema around). Less vibrant is the cast, if with a few exceptions. While Chris Pratt effort- lessly ups the charm as what's essen- tially Parks and Recreation's Andy Dwyer playing Han Solo, the same cannot be said for at least some of his companions, namely green-skinned assassin Gamora (Zoe Saldana with a face caked under far too many inches of makeup to effectively emote) and the charmingly named Drax the De- stroyer (wrestler Dave Bautista, who while being a kind of meat miracle simply can't act, with or without makeup). The members actually forming the heart of the team are not human at all, and are composed of pixels, not flesh and blood - namely anthropomorphic raccoon Rocket and ambulant tree Groot. Voiced by Bradley Cooper's American Hustle drawl, Rocket growls and snarks his way through the proceedings while hinting at a core of genuine tragedy, while the animators behind Groot deserve a special Academy solely for their creating the most soulful, expressive eyes in cinematic history. Seriously, those peepers speak vol- umes, and the rest of the ambulant tree's not too badly animated either. On the far worse end of the per- formance spectrum are the villains of the piece - Lee Pace's Ronan gets very little to do beyond glowering and wearing a cape (he's best com- pared with Christopher Eccleston's appearance as the equally forgettable Malekith in Thor: The Dark World, another hooded villain with plans for artefact-based planetary destruc- tion), while Doctor Who's Karen Gil- lan is rendered nigh unrecognisable and given even less to do as his assist- ant of sorts, a bald, blue-skinned lady dubbed Nebula. It all makes one wonder why Mar- vel Studios even bother with actors in the first place. Surely, computer generated animation costs as much, if not less than the caking of actors under layers of face paint and rub- ber prosthetics in this day and age? Someone more in touch with the economics of Hollywood do let me know, seriously. Then again, as mentioned earlier, it all simply zooms by. One can hardly appreciate the scenery, never-mind gauge the effectiveness of the per- formances or bother making too much sense of the plot (who are the "Nova Corps" and why does Glenn Close's "Nova Prime" also want the Stone? Should one genuinely care?). Thankfully, Gunn retains a light touch throughout, even if one sus- pects Marvel's producers kept a very close eye on proceedings, what with his being the director of such clas- sics as Toxic Avenger and Tromeo & Juliet, not to mention severely un- derrated pitch-black superhero satire Super. As such, while the film's tone is jokey and plenty of amusing wise is cracked, there's a nagging feel- ing that it could have been far more mischievous - even if during the ob- ligatory shot of our heroes making their way towards the final battle in slow motion, Gamora fails to stifle a yawn while Rocket gets to scratch his crotch (a delightful thought - in an animation farm somewhere, someone got paid to animate a rac- coon pawing itself in the name of a multi-million dollar Hollywood blockbuster). It's been repeatedly said that Marvel has taken a "great risk" with Guard- ians of the Galaxy, what with unfa- miliar characters being anathema in this risk-averse world. But really, that factoid aside there's not much risk in Guardians of the Galaxy. It's pretty much like any other space adventure one can think of, with the near exact same plot beats, character moments and overall moral about friendship and the like. Sure, the soundtrack might come not from John Williams but a selection of 70s pop greats, but the directorial spirit is pure George Lucas. Then again, doesn't Marvel owner Disney also count Star Wars among its possessions? maltatoday, SUNDAY, 17 AUGUST 2014 35 FILM IN CINEMAS TODAY By Aidan Celeste Guardian of tradition THIS WEEK ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ A STAR IS BORN ★ ★ ★ ★ STAR WARS ★ ★ ★ STAR BALLS ★ ★ STAR CRASH ★ STAR DUST What a bunch of A-Holes: The so-called Guardians of the Galaxy head off to fight a threat or another (not pictured: yawning, crotch scratching) GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY ★ ★ ★

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of MaltaToday previous editions - MT 17 August 2014