Author: Alton Williams

  • And Away We Go….

    Above is a clip from Away We Go, sent to me via email by Ben. Took me a while to put it up here.
    But it’s up now. It’s Sam Mendes new one, about a young couple traveling across the United States in search of the perfect place to raise their family.

    Enjoy, and leave a comment.

    © BRWC 2010.

  • Quote of the Week : Jaws (1975)

    “Y’all know me. Know how I earn a livin’. I’ll catch this bird for you, but it ain’t gonna be easy. Bad fish. Not like going down the pond chasin’ bluegills and tommycods. This shark, swallow you whole. Little shakin’, little tenderizin’, an’ down you go. And we gotta do it quick, that’ll bring back your tourists, put all your businesses on a payin’ basis. But it’s not gonna be pleasant. I value my neck a lot more than three thousand bucks, chief. I’ll find him for three, but I’ll catch him, and kill him, for ten. But you’ve gotta make up your minds. If you want to stay alive, then ante up. If you want to play it cheap, be on welfare the whole winter. I don’t want no volunteers, I don’t want no mates, there’s just too many captains on this island. Ten thousand dollars for me by myself. For that you get the head, the tail, the whole damn thing.”

    Robert Shaw with his powerful introductory speech in Steven Speilberg’s finest. One of the most captivating moments in the history of cinema.

    © BRWC 2010.

  • Owain Salvation

    Thought I’d put this up for all to see.
    Owain’s comment on Robert’s review…

    “I feel very differently about Terminator Salvation (ou est the colon?), though I cannot fault the effects work I found the script and the actors and the direction to be generally bland in the extreme.

    Bale’s Connor had no depth, and seemed far removed from the smarmy youth of T2, the slightly edgy rogue from T3, and though – obviously – a large burden is being shouldered by Connor as ‘prophet’ of the resistance, Bale did little more than shout and scowl in a wobbly accent. There was no investment in the character, and it seemed slightly implausible that he couldn’t conceive of the machine’s doing any good (seeing as he saw Arnie as father figure in T2 and 3), so his extreme distrust of Marcus was a bit strange.

    Worthington as Marcus had no charisma, his opening scene with Bonham Carter (who I found to be quite woeful in both her scenes, especially the second!) was such a flat exchange, when it instead should have been a strong grounding for the character and his demons. He played some of the later moments – coming to terms with his fate – rather well, but for the most part had either little to do or was too busy getting upstaged by Yelchin as Kyle Reese, unfortunately Reese had a mute moppet strangling his charisma and a ropey script like an albatross round his neck. Still, the scenes with Marcus and Reese were the film’s strongest.

    The terminators themselves though well realised have however descended into cartoon villainy, with none of the unstoppable menace of before. One terminator that just walks by the hiding Connor even did the cartoon guard double-take, and later Terminators seemed more content to throw people around rather than actually terminate them. The huge skill of T1 and T2, even T3 to some extent, was that you felt that if a Terminator caught its prey there would be no hesitation; the only times a terminator would pause would be if they were using their current catch as bait.

    Elsewhere the score was poor, the supporting cast bland, the script riddled with questionable plot developments and character motivations (the excuse that they’ll solve it in sequels is flimsy at best) and there was no sense of weight to any of the big moments in the film nor was there a climax, instead the film just ended.

    I am not a Terminator obsessive, I think T1 and T2 are both milestone action thrillers, perfectly balancing smart sci-fi with intense chases and a soupcon of dark humour, whilst T3 has its problems it still manages to deliver some effective moments here and there. Of course, as a future war movie Terminator Salvation has to take a different stance to its predecessors and can’t simply be a cat and mouse, but to just throw a load of action at the screen with little regard for characters to invest in and a coherent narrative is pretty bland.”

    © BRWC 2010.

  • Terminator Salvation and ILM (SPOILER)



    First off, sorry for being away for so long, finding Internet at the moment is a struggle.

    Right, Terminator Salvation is a fantastic film. I think everybody involved did a fantastic job, Christian Bale and Bryce Dallas Howard much better as John and Kate than in Nick Stahl and Claire Danes T3. Sam Worthington was also brilliant, like everybody says big things are going to happen for him. Thoroughly exciting and thrilling action scenes, and for the first time since The Terminator, I had that feeling of dread, that the Terminators could not be stopped. All the nods to the previous films were there, even some not mentioned in a lot of reviews that true fans will love, and none were cheesy or felt irrelevant.
    What made the film go from fantastic to amazing was the inclusion of the T-800. Fully kitted out with hair, blood, skin, sweat, bad breath and the face of Arnold Schwarzenegger (on Ronald Kickinger’s body, quite a good match). I am an incredibly huge Arnold fan and to see his face I must applaud ILM. They made him look like he was back in his late 30’s again, and took me right back to when I was 12 and saw the film for the first time. Many people thought the effects couldn’t be done to an acceptable standard, and at one point even McG said things didn’t look too good. However, when I saw him come out of the doors I nearly wet myself with happiness, it was as close to perfect as they could possibly get. If this is what can be done in such a short scene, I can’t wait to see what the new ‘more emotive’ Transformers will look like in a few weeks.
    The CGI FX bar has definitely been raised, I can’t wait to see the stuff that comes out in the next ten years.
    I will be seeing Terminator Salvation again!

    © BRWC 2010.