REVIEW: Ghostbusters (2016)

Photo: Sony Pictures Releasing

Photo: Sony Pictures Releasing

Chris Luckett

If there was ever a movie this year that seemed destined to fail, it was Ghostbusters. Long before the reboot’s dissenters became an online horde, spewing vitriol and misogyny, the long and the short is that director Paul Feig was attempting to remake what is unequivocally considered to be one of the strongest comedies ever filmed.

No property or piece of art is so sacred that it’s above reinterpretation, though, as long as the execution is strong enough to support to new angle. (West Side Story, Gnomeo & Juliet, and 1996’s Romeo + Juliet are all far cries from what Shakespeare envisioned, but each still works due to that factor.)

The fact that four women would play the busting quartet was never going to be what killed a Ghostbusters remake — particularly when they were four incredibly funny women. The key would always be whether Feig could make the movie enough of his own creation. Mostly, he does. It’s only whenever the reboot feels forced to tip its hat in homage to the original that it loses its own voice. Continue reading

Poltergeist to Poltergeist: Which to Watch?

Photo: MGM/United Artists

Photo: MGM/United Artists

Chris Luckett

There are four major releases coming out on DVD and Blu-Ray this week, and despite the fact that one of them is the highest-grossing movie of 2015 not featuring dinosaurs, the most talked-about movie seems to be Poltergeist, the remake of the classic 1982 horror film about a suburban house built on a cemetery.

While social media is by no means an accurate barometer all the time, I’ve been finding most people who’ve seen the original are curious about the remake, and most who’ve seen the remake haven’t seen the original. The former is understandable, as remakes are a dime a dozen these days. The latter is disappointing, because the original film deserves to be seen before, if not instead of, the limp 2015 re-tread.

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REVIEW: RoboCop (2014)

Photo: Columbia Pictures

Photo: Columbia Pictures

Chris Luckett

The 1980s are popular again at the movies, especially when it comes to remakes. (This weekend alone, three of the four new wide releases are remakes of ‘80s movies.) After having exhausted the catalogue of ‘80s horror movies to remake a few years ago, studios have been shifting the focus to remaking ‘80s action movies, like Clash of the Titans or Red Dawn. Now comes RoboCop, a remake that manages to be close to the original’s quality while not being afraid to deviate from its origins.

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REVIEW: The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (2013)

Photo: Twentieth Century Fox

Photo: Twentieth Century Fox

Chris Luckett

1947’s The Secret Life of Walter Mitty was designed as nothing more than a showcase for Danny Kaye’s comedic talents, with the boring protagonist constantly daydreaming extended sequences wherein Kaye could play various wacky characters. Ben Stiller’s remake improves on the original by making Mitty’s actual story more interesting and rewarding, but the movie is still hindered by toothlessness and predictability. Continue reading

REVIEW: Carrie (2013)

Photo: Sony Pictures Releasing

Photo: Sony Pictures Releasing

Chris Luckett

As blasphemous as it is to say, 1976’s Carrie is not a great movie. Most of the acting is either wooden or exaggerated, its symbolism is overtly obvious, and it takes a long time for much of significance to happen. The one thing it does fantastically, though — so well, in fact, that many call Carrie a masterpiece — is deliver an emotional payoff. Continue reading

REVIEW: The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (2011)

Photo: Sony Pictures Releasing

Photo: Sony Pictures Releasing

Chris Luckett

Is it possible to review 2011’s The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo without comparing it to the novel or the previous film of the same title? Is it possible to judge this adaptation solely on its own merits, if one has managed to avoid hearing the plot already, reading the book, or seeing the original movie? I’m sure it is. One thing I was less sure about, waiting for the lights in the theatre to dim, was whether I could do so, after falling in love with Stieg Larsson’s book in 2009 and falling even deeper with 2010’s movie adaptation. Continue reading