- Details
-
Last Updated: Tuesday, 12 November 2013 06:21
-
Written by Lupe Haas
SCRE4M returns to the formula that made the first Scream work but the new cast doesn't bring anything fresh to the fourth installment.
Ten years after the third (rate) Scream sequel, SCRE4M reunites the original writer Kevin Williamson and director Wes Craven with the veteran victims Courteney Cox, David Arquette, and Neve Campbell. Sidney Prescott returns to Woodsboro after ten years as a successful novelist and Ghostface begins his killing spree. Gale Weathers (Cox) is now married to Dewey (Arquette) who is no longer Deputy but Sheriff of the town. The new cast includes Emma Roberts as Sidney's cousin and her circle of high school friends (Hayden Panetierre, Rory Culkin).
The story, courtesy of Kevin Williamson ("The Vampire Diaries", "Dawson's Creek"), plays out much like the first Scream but the rules have changed to reflect and comment on the rise of social media and the spawning of new kind of horror films influenced by Saw.
The new kids on the block do not have the same energy as the original teens played by Jamie Kennedy, Rose McGowan, Matthew Lillard, and Skeet Ulrich. Emma Robert's character is rather bland and boring. Hayden Panetierre plays an obnoxious know-it-all teen but she does have some of the funnier lines in the movie early one. Rory Culkin doesn't have much energy and seems to be calling in the performance. And the" OC's" Adam Brody doesn't have enough to do in the film which renders him rather useless. It feels like characters were added just to increase the body count. The only standout from the new group is Erik Knudsen, a blogger filming live for his website. Too bad Anna Paquin and Kristen Bell aren't in the film long enough to enjoy them. At least Courteney Cox, Neve Campbell, and David Arquette gave the film a bit of nostalga.
After fifteen years and four sequels, you would think the Scream franchise would also update with a diverse cast. Yes, its a small town but SCRE4M after all is fictional. Funnyman and "Law & Order's" Anthony Anderson gives the film some color as the token black guy.
As in the first Scream, the story serves as a commentary of pop culture especially the social media craze which gets worked into the motives for the kills -- more kills, more hits on You Tube. It's obvious the screenwriter Kevin Williamson has no love for the new technology and with good reason. The characters also expound on their dislike of remakes of classic films like Halloween and slasher films yet they subscribe to the Saw formula of lots of gore and blood.
The end sequence certainly proved climactic and had the best line in the film from Sidney Prescott.
The fourth installment of Scream certainly improved over the last two messy sequels but it feels like a retread of the same formula except with updated references and more blood splatter. Despite that, the film is good fun.
- Details
-
Last Updated: Tuesday, 12 November 2013 06:19
-
Written by Lupe Haas
Wes Bentley (American Beauty, Ghost Rider), Dougray Scott (Mission Impossible, Ever After), and Rodrigo Santoro (300, Che) star in the very dramatic war drama There Be Dragons directed by acclaimed director Roland Joffe (The Mission, The Killing Fields).
In 2002 Pope John Paul II canonized a priest by the name of Josemaria Escriva. Dubbed “the saint of the ordinary” Escriva started an organization known as Opus Dei (Latin for “Work of God”). Starting with just three men and enduring through the Spanish Civil War when priests were shot on sight, membership now consists of over 90,000 members worldwide. Escriva’s vision was that every man and women in their ordinary tasks of life are capable of representing Christ’s love to one another. The mission of Opus Dei is to help ordinary people turn their work and daily activities into opportunities for growing closer to God, serving others and improving society.
The revolutionary idea of Opus Dei came in a time of civil unrest, when a war was being fought not over land or property but over ideals. Fascism and Communism was challenging the status quo ripping families apart and setting brother against brother. In the middle of all this was a young priest speaking of faith, love and serving others.
To bring this story to us, Roland Joffe (The Mission) has combined historical events with a fictional tale to illustrate the scope of this man’s monumental deeds. In There Be Dragons, Dougray Scott plays a writer named Robert who comes to Spain to do research for his book on the famed priest. When he discovers that his estranged father came from the same small village as Josemaria, Robert seeks out his father, played by Wes Bentley, to get more information about Escriva as a young man. His father Manolo, who fought in the Civil War, never shared his memories of that time, but suddenly he’s willing to talk. In revealing how he and Josemaria chose different paths, Manolo is not only able to unburden himself of a guilty past, but reconnect with his son as well.
Set against the backdrop of the Spanish Civil War There Be Dragons follows the lives of these two childhood friends. Manolo, who is acting as a fascist spy infiltrating the communist party and Josemaria, a priest driven underground by hatred against the church. Also involved in this story is a charismatic communist leader named Oriol, played by Rodrigo Santoro. Manolo is smitten with a beautiful freedom fighter, but Iidiko (Olga Kurylenko) is enamored with Oriol. Manolo’s jealousy over the charismatic Oriol has him making some very poor decisions. On top of that is his hatred of the Communist Party. Their organization efforts lead to his father’s death and the destruction of their family’s business. Manolo is a angry young man. On the other side of the coin is Josemaria who spends his life serving God, holding mass and taking confession in secret while caring for the poor. Two boys from the same small village could not have turned out any more different.
When the film about Josemaria Escriva was first begun it was intended as a bio-pic, but when Roland Joffe came aboard he really wanted to show the magnitude and the scope of what Escriva was up against. There was such a backlash against the Catholic church that priests were being murdered and churches were being destroyed. Yet out of this, one man following the voice of God begins a simple straightforward mission that has thrived and lasted longer than the heyday of Fascism and Communism both. Charlie Cox, who portrays Josemaria Escriva plays him as a man full of love and compassion. He is fierce in his conviction, but he struggles with his anger over what is going on and the injustices taking place. By giving his anger to God and devoting himself to prayer he is able to lead by example inspiring a core group of men and women who spread his message all over the world.
Josemaria’s accomplishments are very inspiring and Roland Joffe has provided a dramatic stage to share this man’s story. His life is presented in a straight forward matter and the religious aspects are underplayed. Wes Bentley has the undaunting task of playing Manolo as both a young man and as an aged father alone with his bitter memories. But I believe that Charlie Cox has the toughest job. How do you portray a young man who grows up to be a saint? Luckily Charlie Cox got to view a lot of footage showing Escriva speaking in front of a crowd. He was known to be warm, funny and very much a man of the people. In that, Charlie Cox got it right.
Melanie Wilson
Visit her blog at LAMelbox.blogspot.com