Four college girls – Brit (Ashley Benson), Candy (Vanessa Hudgens), Cotty (Rachel Korine) and Faith (Selena Gomez) – embark upon the ultimate spring break in Florida – sex, drugs and alcohol, included. However, when they find themselves locked up in jail and rapidly running out of money, they’re bailed out by rapper turned gangster Alien (James Franco) who promises to shower them with riches and make their wildest dreams come true. Continue reading “GFF 2013 Review: Spring Breakers (2013)”
Tag: James Franco
Magazine-Style Poster For Lovelace
Millennium Films have released a brand new magazine-style poster for Lovelace, Latino Review has uncovered.
Directed by filmmaking duo Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman (Howl), Lovelace details the trials and tribulations of real-life porn star Linda Lovelace: a woman lead to suicide by the coercive industry and her abusive husband.
The film, which sports a screenplay from relative newcomer Andy Bellin (Trust) Continue reading “Magazine-Style Poster For Lovelace”
Review: Rise Of The Planet Of The Apes (2011)
An origin story to Franklin J. Schaffner’s Planet Of The Apes, Rise Of The Planet Of The Apes centers on Will Rodman (James Franco). Rodman is a scientist at Gen-Sys, whose attempts to develop a cure for Alzheimer’s Syndrome have led him to experimentation on apes. When baby ape Caesar (Andy Serkis) is accidentally orphaned in one of these trials, Will takes him Continue reading “Review: Rise Of The Planet Of The Apes (2011)”
Review: 127 Hours (2010)
Danny Boyle’s new movie, 127 Hours, sets the director’s frenetic nature and breathtaking use of visual storytelling against an honest, uplifting tale of survival.
127 Hours is based on the true story of the mountain climber Aron Ralston – played by James Franco – who takes a trip to Utah to explore the Blue John canyon.
Ralston parks his car and cycles 17 miles to the canyon, where he bumps into two female mountaineers (Amber Tamblyn and Kate Mara).
After some frivolous activities, Ralston separates from the women and continues to explore, until his arm becomes pinned beneath a falling boulder, trapping him at the bottom of the canyon with nothing more than a bottle of water and a blunt penknife.
The opening act plays furiously, with Boyle intercutting images of city life with the tremendous representation of the Blue John canyon, captured superbly by cinematographers Anthony Dod Mantle and Enrique Chediak.
Franco’s Ralston is introduced as a candid, brutally confident and determined young man who leaves life’s troubles behind to bask in the freedom of the barren outback; a sentiment which enables the audience to empathise with the character from the offset.
The main focus of the film, however, is on Ralston’s initially rational, but increasingly delusional thoughts over the course of the 127 hours he’s stuck at the bottom of the canyon.
Boyle’s intense and crowded use of mise-en-scene, together with the repeated flashbacks and dream sequences, work extremely well in highlighting Ralston’s increasingly damaged mental state, something that’s further stressed by A. R. Rahman’s complimentary score.
The amputation scene, although graphic and matter-of-factly horrific, is smartly done. Boyle, while never hiding anything from the audience, never lingers too long, instead opting to focus on the sheer determination Ralston has to escape certain death and return to his loved ones.
Franco carries the film with an immensely sympathetic, yet restrained performance, one that, to his merit, never slips into the melodramatic and should earn him a well-deserved Academy Award nomination.
127 Hours is, at times, an excruciatingly difficult film to watch. Nevertheless, it is a masterfully vivid, tense, yet oddly exhilarating and uplifting film about one man’s determination and struggle for survival.
Credit must be given to Boyle, who turns a virtually unwatchable premise into an engaging, powerfully honest film to be savoured by the masses.