Wednesday, April 9, 2014

TOP TEN LIST

Adil McDonald's top ten list of favorite movies!! How many have you seen?

10. Her
9. Django Unchained
8. The Wolf Of Wall Street
7. White House Down
6. 12 Years A Slave
5. American Hustle
4. Oldboy
3. Captain Phillips
2. Captain America: The Winter Soldier
1. Prisoners

Review of Raid 2 by Spencer Bernstein


The Raid 2: Berandal Will Kick Your A*s
Gareth Evans's brutal 148-minute martial arts masterpiece is not for the faint of heart.



Often we go to the movies to feel something. Whether it’s to laugh, to be scared, or to be moved to tears. I recently saw The Raid 2: Berandal, and watching it, I felt exhilarated. It’s rare that an action movie has that effect in a time when CGI robots and blurry, explosion-wrought fight scenes seem to permeate the genre. But The Raid 2 doesn’t need star power, giant monsters, or a budget equaling the GDP of a small nation because it has some of the most visceral, intense fight sequences ever put to film. Bones were crunched, blood was spilled, and I loved every savagely  and gleefully violent second of it.

For the uninitiated, The Raid 2: Berandal is the sequel to the highly acclaimed Indonesian martial-arts film The Raid: Redemption. Filmed on a budget less than the cost-per-minute of Transformers 3, its bare-bones plot and vicious action sequences cemented its standing as one of the best action movies of the last decade. Expectations were set high for Welsh triple-threat writer/director/editor Gareth Evans, and the film he has followed up with has delivered on every level.

Where the first “Raid” confined itself to a single apartment building, Berandal ups the ante in every way imaginable, telling an ambitious city-spanning crime story reminiscent of The Departed and The Godfather. Taking place just hours after the first "Raid", The Raid 2 kicks off with Rama (Iko Uwais) returning from the events of Redemption to find he must go undercover to protect his wife and newborn child. Rama is sent to infiltrate a major crime family on the verge of an all-out gang war in order to uncover corrupt police officers.

While the story is a major step up from Redemption, the action scenes are still the main attraction, and they do not disappoint. Evans and co. have managed to achieve crystal-clear, vibrant action sequences that ooze creativity and style. It’s a gorgeously filmed movie, and when Uwais gets down to business, it’s almost poetic. The ever-mobile camerawork and long tracking shots keeps the lightning-fast pace at fever pitch, yet I was never at a loss for what was going on. Evans uses lovingly crafted, picturesque wide shots of his fighters, letting the choreography shine through instead of obscuring it with quick-cuts and blurs. The camera’s ethereal, floating quality is made even more impressive by the lack of CGI, as there are several shots that are bound to elicit a “how did they do that?” And yes, it is violent. Gloriously so. A pair of assassins credited only as “Hammer Girl” and “Baseball Bat Man” make an appearance halfway through the film that is memorable, to say the least.

The Raid 2 is not a nice movie. It won’t slow down for you to catch your breath. When it first screened at the Sundance Film Festival, somebody fainted in the middle of the movie. Don’t see it with your grandma. But from a ferocious one-on-one showdown in a stark white kitchen to a brutal mud-soaked prison riot to a car chase through busy Jakarta streets, Berandal is a masterclass in action filmmaking. If that sounds like your thing, and I know it is mine, then grab a couple friends and experience it for yourself. X

Script!

Here is a script written by the great Robert Frank and Eliot Hawkins:


Donovan (stands up and takes down his big black bag. After removing two 45lbs dumbells, he begins to replace the bag when a sudden wave of turbulance causes him to drop the bag)
Mikael: Ah comrade, I see you struggling with bag. Your are lucky to be sitting next to the Mikael “stop grabbing my stuff and please sit down” Patrovski. (Mikael begins to stand up and grab the bag.)
Donovan: Nah, playa, Imma make dis bag ma bitch.
(Donovan begins to take the bag out of Mikael’s hand.)
Mikael: Comrade, be the bigger man here, and let me prove I am bigger man. (Mikael pulls harder at the bag)
Donovan: Mikael, stop grabbing my stuff and sit down!
Mikael: Ah, you catch on fast for american. I understand your hesitation. Many ruskies these days have let American culture corrupt their minds and bodies, but I assure you, I am purebred Russian. One time, I harass Russian species of endangered bear with my bear, pun intended, hands and my 2000 kilo mercedes, and tree bear slammed into, while cubs watched.
Donovan: Damn, that’s cold! Man, I use to roll with this group of homies. One time, we was straight up bustin into this playa’s crib, when out of nowhere, a vase begins to fall...I caught it.
Mikael: In Soviet Russia, vase does not fall on you, you fall on vase. So, one time, I fall on vase.
Donovan: Man are you playin? One time I jumped. In the air!
Mikael: Are you serious? Is this? Are you this all you did? One time, periodically throughout my entire life, I keep eyes closed for eight to ten hours per evening.
Donovan: (His reaction is running one direction, through the entire plane toward the cockpit, then comes running from the back of the plane. Then JUMPS into Mikael’s face, high fiving passengers along the way.) AAAAAAhhhhhh! The square root of one squared times ago, I was being vaccinated for several different STD’s I had at the time and my Uncle, who constantly confused me about my sexual orientation, was giving me a shot. It hurt. Did I cry? Yes. Did I embarrass myself? Yes. Do I stay up at night reading Dr. Phil novels to help me cope with the emotional stress caused by this situation? Nah I don’t do dat.
Mikael: Yeah, but I like, really harassed this bear, so...call it even?
Donovan: Aight man, dat sounds good. Hey miss? (to flight attendant) I’d like two chamomile teas for my friend here, and me.
A bit of humor from our fearless leader Chris Onesti...


Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Wes Anderson / Centered

Thanks Thomas Donovan for sharing this interesting look at one of the many things that make Wes Anderson's style so unique!



Wes Anderson // Centered from kogonada on Vimeo.

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Falcon Films First Post!!


Welcome to the Falcon Films Blog!! Over the next few months we will be posting short films, reviews of movies, top ten lists, and all sorts of random things related to film!!

Today we did a "VINE" assignment. The theme was SPRING BREAK. Some people kind of ignored this theme. Anyway, here is the first one that got made!