Wednesday 5 June 2013

Now You See Me movie Release Date May 31, 2013


Release Date: May 31, 2013 
Studio: Summit Entertainment (Lionsgate) 
Director: Louis Leterrier 
Screenwriter: Boaz Yakin, Edward Ricourt, Josh Appelbaum, Andre Nemec, Ed Solomon 
Starring: Jesse Eisenberg, Isla Fisher, Morgan Freeman, Woody Harrelson, Mark Ruffalo, Michael Caine, Common, Dave Franco 
Genre: Crime, Thriller 
MPAA Rating: PG-13 (for language, some action and sexual content) 
Official Website: NowYouSeeMemovie.com | Facebook 

Plot Summary
"Now You See Me" pits an elite FBI squad in a game of cat and mouse against "The Four Horsemen," a super-team of the world's greatest illusionists. "The Four Horsemen" pull off a series of daring heists against corrupt business leaders during their performances, showering the stolen profits on their audiences while staying one step ahead of the law. 

Cast

Jesse Eisenberg as J. Daniel Atlas
Mark Ruffalo as Dylan Rhodes
Woody Harrelson as Merritt McKinney
Isla Fisher as Henley Reeves
Dave Franco as Jack Wilder
Mélanie Laurent as Alma Dray
Morgan Freeman as Thaddeus Bradley
Michael Caine as Arthur Tressler
Jessica Lindsey as Hermia
Caitriona Balfe as Jasmine Trassler
Michael Kelly as Agent Fuller 
Common as Evans
Stephanie Honore as Atlas Groupie
David Warshofsky as Cowan
Laura Cayouette as Hypnotized Woman

Directed by Louis Leterrier

Story
Four magicians from different walks of life with different skill sets--J. Daniel Atlas, Merritt McKinney, Henley Reeves and Jack Wilder--are brought together as the Four Horsemen to stage elaborate magic shows together. For their first big show in Las Vegas, they send an audience member to a bank vault in Paris, stealing all its contents and distributing it to the audience. This gets the attention of both the FBI and Interpol in the forms of agents Dylan Rhodes (Mark Ruffalo) and Alma Dray (Mélanie Laurent) who work with a magic debunker named Thaddeus Bradley (Morgan Freeman) to put a stop to the Horsemen's robberies.

Analysis
"Now You See Me" isn't the first movie of the year involving magic, although it is the one that treats the craft far more reverentially than movies like "Oz The Great and Powerful" and "The Incredible Burt Wonderstone," which is definitely a plus for what ends up being a twisty crime-thriller that doesn't feel like your typical summer movie fare. 

After introducing each of the magicians that would make up the Four Horsemen, we're right into their big show in Vegas where they seemingly rob a bank vault and are immediately arrested afterwards at which time they first encounter Mark Ruffalo's FBI agent Dylan Rhodes, a tough by-the-books G-man who doesn't believe in the magic they're selling. 

What might be surprising to some is how much of the movie's focus is then transferred to Ruffalo's character and his attempt to stop the Horsemen, which is fine since Ruffalo is very good in this role. But those going into the movie thinking they're watching a movie about magician thieves may start wondering where the stars of the movie are at times, since they're gone for large chunks of the movie. Because of this, we never spend enough time learning much about their characters or relations off-stage and we don't really get a sense of their personalities when not performing. On stage, Eisenberg shows off a lot more confidence than we've seen from him in the past, while Harrelson and Franco add a lighter and more humorous touch to their magic and Fisher gives her character just the right amount of sass and sex appeal – her solo escape in the beginning is better than anything she does with the group though. Other than the intro, their magic shows and a couple of chases, we don't really see the actual Horsemen that much, which means we leave the movie not really knowing much about them.

Instead, we learn more about their benefactor Arthur Tressler, played by Michael Caine, and the man trying to debunk their magic to help the FBI, Thaddeus Bradley (Morgan Freeman). Few will need to be reminded what fine actors they are and their few scenes together are worth the price of admission even though it adds to the talkie nature of the film. As such, more time is spent building the relationship between Ruffalo and Laurent's characters, which is fine, except that a movie about FBI agents chasing after magicians is not nearly as interesting as the magicians themselves.

Visually, the film has a great sense of style with enough moments where you're not sure if they're doing tricks for real or enhancing them with CG, although there isn't a ton of action in the movie, mostly a couple chase sequences and a cool magic-enhanced fight between Ruffalo and Franco. It's a surprisingly subdued film from a director whose specialty has been doing big action set pieces, but it's nice to have a movie where the action isn't too over the top as well.

Things do start to come together at the end as things are explained, although there's one too many twists thrown in and at least one of them that might not feel justified, especially if you were to go back and rewatch the movie from the beginning and try to assemble the pieces. As with many movies that try to be clever, there's essentially too many ideas at play and whenever it starts to deal with "The Eye," a legendary group of magicians that the Horsemen are trying to join, the story starts to go off the rails and loses any sense of reality.

Abandon movie details



Starring
Katie Holmes as Katie Burke
Benjamin Bratt as Detective Wade Handler
Zooey Deschanel
Melanie Lynskey
Gabriel Mann
Gabrielle Union
Fred Ward
Charlie Hunnam as Embry Langan
Will McCormack

Summary
"Dawson's Creek" seems to have placed a curse on its four leads. After a successful turn in the "Texan" film "Varsity Blues," James Van Der Beek's 'Rules of Attraction' slid poorly into twelfth place in the box office this past weekend. Joshua Jackson hasn't made a memorable film since "Mighty Ducks 3" and I'm still reeling from Michelle William's turn in "Dick". Katie Holmes may have bared herself in "The Gift" (giving any males the joy they'd been craving since seeing her promos for Creek), but Holmes has been going downhill since that supernatural thriller. Her newest, "Abandon," keeps her in line with her fellow Creek-ers; the movie is mindless and is set for the quick trip to home video.

Story
Catherine Burke (Katie Holmes) is on her way to a cushy job, as she is a senior at an elite college, hard at work on her thesis and has great friends (Zooey Deschanel and Gabriel Mann) that she can always rely on.

Detective Wade Handler (Benjamin Bratt), a recovering alcoholic, is thrown a case involving the disappearance of Catherine's ex-boyfriend Embry Langan (Charlie Hunnam). Embry was the campus rich-boy hothead, who staged bizarre theatrical productions because he could. He vanished two years prior to the start of the film and his whereabouts are still unknown, until Catherine begins seeing him around campus. Catherine goes to Wade for help, but is Embry really stalking her or is the stress of school just taking its toll?

Critique
"Abandon's" premise isn't a horrible one, but the execution is dull and extremely tedious. During the many flashback sequences to Embry and Catherine's "happy days", all I could think about was watching a cell phone commercial (as they were rolling in the green grass, laughing and ice skating on the pond). Oscar- winning writer Stephen Gaghan (for "Traffic") takes over directorial duties and does a tidy job. He steals a page from Soderbergh's book; all the scenes set in the library are lit in a dense blue shade, just like the Washington scenes in "Traffic". One scene, in which Holmes and her friends lie in a bed with a green strobe light blinking, looked like it belonged in another film because of the superior filmmaking techniques employed. The film loses its scary guise about halfway and from then on, there's absolutely no tension.

The script is where the problem lies. It's not original and there is nothing that invites the audience to like Catherine. She is a humdrum heroine that doesn't merit any involvement from the audience. There was some unintentional laughter during the film's finale because of the immense number of clichés that are piled upon the last thirty minutes. The ending twist that can be seen a mile away, but the audience seemed to get a kick out of the last shot of the film. The movie is also about twenty minutes too long (one too many flashbacks). The most appealing character in the film is Embry and he's hardly in it.

The acting is nothing special, but the pairing of Bratt and Holmes is odd. Holmes still looks like she is in high school and Bratt looks a shade over thirty, which makes for a strange on-screen coupling. Katie Holmes can hold her own and carries the movie well, but the material isn't much different than her TV show making her character not much of a departure from Joey Potter. Benjamin Bratt still isn't sure how to play a leading man; his charm is totally lost in his downtrodden Handler character.

Charlie Hunnam, who shined in last year's short-lived show "Undelcared," throws in a stock performance, sporting an American accent instead of his native British. He isn't given many well-written scenes and looks like he's just there to pick up a paycheck. The supporting cast is impressive enough, but the source material isn't strong enough to create any kind of full characters.

I recommend "Abandon" only if you aren't able to get your Katie Holmes fix on the WB because this movie offers nothing more than a boring, rehash of her "grown-up" Dawson's Creek character.

Tuesday 4 June 2013

Mickey Virus

Mickey Virus

Release Date :Jul 5, 2013

Director :Saurabh Varma

Genre :Comedy, Thriller

Language :Hindi

Cast & Crew
Manish Paul, Elli Avram, Varun Badola, Manish Choud >> moreMickey is a carefree ace hacker who’s brash but brilliant at his work. All’s well until Mickey’s life spins out of controls when he meets Kamayani. What does Kamayani’s presence in Mickey’s life mean? Manish Paul of Tees Maar Khan stars in this comic thriller, directed by Saurabh Verma. `Mickey Virus` also stars Elli Avram the daughter of the famous Swedish actress, Maria Granlund and the popular TV actor Vatun Badola in prominent roles.