Saturday 13 July 2013

pacific rim movie Review



Release Date: July 11, 2013 (10 p.m.; 3D/2D theaters and IMAX) 
Studio: Warner Bros. Pictures
Director: Guillermo del Toro
Screenwriter: Travis Beacham, Guillermo del Toro
Starring: Charlie Hunnam, Idris Elba, Rinko Kikuchi, Charlie Day, Ron Perlman, Robert Kazinsky, Max Martini, Clifton Collins, Jr., Burn Gorman, Larry Joe Campbell, Brad William Henke, Diego Klattenhoff
Genre: Action, Sci-Fi
MPAA Rating: PG-13 (for sequences of intense sci-fi action and violence throughout, and brief language)
Review: 9.5/10 rating | 6.5/10 rating | 8.5/10 rating
DVD Review: Not Available
DVD: Not Available
Movie Poster: One-Sheet 2 | One-Sheet 1 | Poster | Comic-Con Poster

Plot Summary: When legions of monstrous creatures, known as Kaiju, started rising from the sea, a war began that would take millions of lives and consume humanity's resources for years on end. To combat the giant Kaiju, a special type of weapon was devised: massive robots, called Jaegers, which are controlled simultaneously by two pilots whose minds are locked in a neural bridge. But even the Jaegers are proving nearly defenseless in the face of the relentless Kaiju. On the verge of defeat, the forces defending mankind have no choice but to turn to two unlikely heroes—a washed up former pilot (Charlie Hunnam) and an untested trainee (Rinko Kikuchi)—who are teamed to drive a legendary but seemingly obsolete Jaeger from the past. Together, they stand as mankind’s last hope against the mounting apocalypse. 

Cast:
Charlie Hunnam as Raleigh Becket
Idris Elba as Stacker Pentecost
Rinko Kikuchi as Mako Mori
Robert Kazinsky as Chuck Hansen
Max Martini as Herc Hansen
Charlie Day as Dr. Newton Geizler
Burn Gorman as Dr. Hermann Gottlieb
Clifton Collins, Jr. as Tendo Choi
Ron Perlman as Hannibal Chau
Ellen McLain as voice of the Jaeger AI
Robert Maillet as Lt. Aleksis Kaidanovsky
Heather Doerksen as Lt. Sasha Kaidanovsky
Diego Klattenhoff as Yancy Beckett

Review:
Who doesn't like giant robots? That is the deep, philosophical question at the heart of Guillermo del Toro's "Pacific Rim." If the answer is yes, then it is definitely the movie for you. If you need a little bit more …

Years ago, giant monsters (Kaiju) started to arise from an interdimensional portal in the depths of the Pacific Ocean to ravage human cities. When traditional armies proved unequal to the task, the governments of the world combined to build equally giant robots (Jaegers) designed to give the people of the world the choice between having their cities destroyed by giant monsters or giant robots.

The main point of this thing is to get giant robots fighting giant monsters as often and violently as possible and that is where all the effort in the making of it has gone. And gone to good effect. By his own admission, Del Toro is only good at making two things, scary monster movies and action monster movies and "Pacific Rim" is clearly one of the latter not just in outlook but in execution with a quality level reminiscent of "Hellboy II" and "Blade II," and a similar mix of world-building and action.

As quickly as the Jaeger program is built up, it is just as summarily shut down so that we can have our self-described "rock star Jaeger pilots" quickly reduced to has-beens forced to scrounge parts where they can or work construction on the "Life Wall" humanity's survivors intend to hide behind.

That way, we can have our rock star heroes be the underdogs big budget action films tend to require, focusing on two underdogs in particular—Raleigh Beckett (Charlie Hunnam), once one of the program's best and brightest until his brother was killed before his eyes, and Mako Mori (Rinko Kikuchi), a Jaeger expert with reasons of her own for wanting to fight monsters. Because it takes two pilots working in tandem to handle such a machine, the pilots must share their thoughts and minds, potentially even their personalities, completely. It's an intriguing notion, one opening up all kinds of possibilities for character interaction and conflict.

And one almost completely ignored, barring its ability to allow backstory exposition, in favor of far more clichéd meanderings that have wandered over from a repeat of "Top Gun." There are those who call cliché's battle-tested storytelling devices, and fair enough, but at a certain point they just become repetitive and if you've ever seen another action movie before, there is nothing new or interesting about the people who live in the "Pacific Rim" universe Del Toro has so meticulously created. And that's the ones who actually get to speak - most of the robot pilots are defined entirely by their look and the country they come from.

It's abundantly clear what everyone is most interested in are the robots and the robot fighting. The colorful battles and fantastic visuals courtesy of cinematographer Guillermo Navarro and the wizards at Industrial Light & Magic are excellent, though they might give you epilepsy, particularly the fight in a downtown Asian metropolis.

But for all the sturm und drang, the robots can only remain on screen for so long and when the people show up the lack of depth or humanity drags "Pacific Rim" way down. It's particularly disappointing from a director like Del Toro who has frequently shown a preference for developing well-rounded, often surprising characters to inhabit his intricately-detailed worlds.

But not this time. This time it's all about the giant engines of destruction pounding on each other – like the recent torture porn craze of horror films expanded to city level scale – covered over by elements pulled from dozens of other movies. It's enjoyable enough on a visceral level—Del Toro is too skilled a craftsman for it to be otherwise—but underneath all the destruction, there's very little to "Pacific Rim" at all.

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