Showing posts with label Olyphant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Olyphant. Show all posts

Sunday, 2 November 2014

This Is Where I Leave You (2014)

(SPOILER ALERT: DO NOT READ THIS POST IF YOU DON'T WANT TO KNOW WHETHER ONLY THOSE IN MID-LIFE SUFFER MID-LIFE CRISES?)

[After reading this bust, you may be wondering how such a star-packed piece could turn out the way it does? Let's face it, they should all have known better. The fact the the screenplay was written by the author of the book on which the movie is based, may prove to be significant. Consider this a warning.]

This Is Where I Leave You (2014) is an American comedy-drama film directed by Shawn Levy, starring Jason Bateman, Tina Fey, Adam Driver, Rose Byrne, Corey Stoll, Kathryn Hahn, Connie Britton, Timothy Olyphant, Dax Shepard, and Jane Fonda.

In the end, separated 40-something, unemployed radio producer, father-to-be, Jason Bateman is talked into abandoning his even-keeled life, to date, and into joining in with the mid-life crises being experienced by his friends and family.

Coerced, along with his two brothers and sister, by their mother, Jane Fonda, into a traditional seven day period of contemplative mourning for their deceased father, confined within the family home, Bateman initially attempts to conceal the recent breakup of his marriage and loss of job, after catching his boorish, blank-shooting, shock-jock boss, Dax Shepard, in bed with his wife, excusing her absence from the wake on concocted health grounds.

Under constant needling from his sister, Tina Fey, whose own marriage has hit the buffers due to the regret she feels for abandoning her true love, Timothy Olyphant, the son of a family friend and neighbour, after he sustained a brain injury as the result of a past car accident that Fey was involved in, Bateman reveals all.

His separation is thrown into doubt, however, when his wife shows up unexpectedly, with the news that she is pregnant by him, prompting wife of his older brother and ex-girlfriend, Kathryn Hahn, to throw herself at Bateman in the hope that he, too, can get her pregnant, something his brother, Corey Stoll, has so far failed to do, despite Hahn enduring prolonged fertility treatments.

Persuaded by Fey that the way to get over his wife's infidelity, so that they can get back together, is for Bateman to be briefly unfaithful with local girl Rose Byrne, who he keeps running into and who still has a crush on him, no sooner has Bateman done the deed, than he has to rush to his wife's side, after she develops a complication with the pregnancy.

Despite realising, after Shepard shows up at his wife's hospital bed with the sole intention of handing her back to him, that he is going to have to have some sort of relationship with his wife, for the sake of their baby, Bateman nevertheless wants his romance with Byrne to be more than a one-time thing.

Suddenly overcome with jealously and frustration on discovering his, still not pregnant wife being consoled by Bateman, Stoll chases his brother out of the house and proceeds to pummel him, in front of a growing crowd of onlookers, until Fonda distracts everyone's attention by engaging in a prolonged lesbian kiss with their neighbour, Olyphant's mother, her secret lover.

In the aftermath of their mother's stunning revelation, Bateman resolves the brothers' long-standing dispute over the future of their father's sporting goods store, by persuading Stoll to take on their younger brother, recovered addict and reformed drug grower, Adam Driver, whose wayward promiscuity has just lost him the financial safety net he had found in older woman, Connie Britton, his therapist.

With his sister resigned to rejoining her husband, despite her continuing feelings for Olyphant, after assuring Byrne that he intends to continue their fledgling relationship, once he has sorted out the mess of his own, Bateman steals Driver's two-seater sports car, left to him by Britton, and heads north to Maine, an emblematic destination he had often contemplated, but never before had the nerve to seek.


Oy vey, this family likes to talk! The whole movie is basically exposition, peppered with one-liners, of decidedly variable quality, mostly referring to Fonda's recent extreme breast enhancement, her embarrassing candour over her married sex-life, and their evangelical rabbi's erection-related childhood nickname.

I never got a good enough look at the deceased to be sure of the gene pool the siblings issued from. But it wouldn't have surprised me if the father had turned out to be Larry David. They talk, and talk, and talk, and talk. And then they all talk some more.

They talked so much, in fact, that by the time Bateman got to deliver his climactic speech, the part of my brain that processes language had switched off. Very fortunately, the person he was delivering the speech to, thought it so good, that she handily summarised it, immediately after he stopped talking, for me and all the other people in the audience, who had similarly tuned out. Phew! And then he started talking, again. Argh!

Unless your idea of a good time is attending a Therapy Addicts Anonymous meeting, this is where you should probably leave this movie.

Source(s):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/This_Is_Where_I_Leave_You

Wednesday, 17 March 2010

A Perfect Getaway (2009)

(SPOILER ALERT: DO NOT READ THIS POST IF YOU DON'T WANT TO KNOW WHO THE KILLERS ARE)

[This is the posting that prompted me to create Plot Busters. Someone posted that they nodded off during the performace, and didn't understand the movie. The advice that they received was to look it up on Wikipedia. They deleted their question before I had time to post a Plot Buster.]

A Perfect Getaway (2009) is an American psychological thriller film written and directed by David Twohy, starring Chris Hemsworth, Milla Jovovich, Kiele Sanchez, Timothy Olyphant, Steve Zahn and Marley Shelton. The film was shot in Puerto Rico and Hawaii, and its plot contain so many twists, turns and blind alleys, that it would defeat even the cleverest of champion maze solving lab rats.

(The plot summary available on Wikipedia is of very little help in unraveling the story, as it appears to have been written by somebody who themselves fell asleep at some point during the performance.)

The Steve Zahn and Milla Jovovich characters are the killers.

Although the movie begins by portraying them as a mild-mannered and happy newlywed couple enjoying a hiking honeymoon in the wilds of Hawaii, they are eventually revealed to be a pair of psychopaths who are trying to make a career for themselves by murdering other couples whose identities they assume.

On their way by jeep to a particularly remote and beautiful beach the couple run into another pair of, seemingly less clean cut, hikers, played by Hemsworth and Shelton, who Zahn and Jovovich don't offer a lift to, despite the fact that they are on their way to the same beach.

Further along the trail Zahn and Jovovich meet a second couple of more experienced hikers, played by Olyphant and Sanchez, who they decide to team up with on their journey.

However, the widom of this decision soon comes into question when the group discovers a distressed young woman who has heard frightening news of a brutal slaying of yet another honeymooning couple on a nearby island, their teeth having been removed as part of the murder, ...

because Olyphant has been recounting his time as a member of the special forces involved in the invasion of Iraq, and Sanchez has demonstrated considerable skill with a knife by butchering a goat that Olyphant killed for everyones' supper.

Calm is temporarily restored within the group as the local police arrest the apparently sinister pair, whom Zahn and Jovovich had failed to give a lift in their jeep to earlier, after a collection of teeth is found in Hemsworth possession.

However, the truth of the situation is revealed, and blind panic restored, when the Sanchez character accidentally discovers camcorder footage of Zahn and Jovovich rehearing their new identities, those of their most recent victims.

All of Olyphant's military training, and Sanchez's butchering skills come into play in their ensuing battle for survival with Zahn and Jovovich, in which Olyphant only manages (somewhat improbably) to escape death from a bullet to the head by virtue of the metal plate that was put there following a previous encounter with a granade during his time in service.

In the end Olyphant and Sanchez prevail, but only after she pulls him out of the line of fire of a sniper, one of a number of police who have gotten involved in the chase, who luckily ends up killing Zahn insteed.

The movie closes with Olyphant proposing marriage to Sanchez, as they are airlifted from the scene. Perhaps not surprisingly, they both agree to forgo the pleasures of a honeymoon.

It is a testament to the skill of Twohy as a writer and a director that he manages to pull off this slight of hand, without leaving the audience feeling cheated by unforeseeable plot twists.

The clues are all there it you can manage to spot them. It's just that they've been so cleverly mashed up that he is able to play on an audience's expectations, so that the plot twists, when they do occur, are genuinely surprising.

But, as you found out, take your eyes off the action for even a moment, and you'll be lost.

Sources:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Perfect_Getaway
http://movies.nytimes.com/2009/08/07/movies/07perfect.html
http://outlawvern.com/2010/01/13/a-perfect-getaway/
http://www.cinemademerde.com/Perfect_Getaway.shtml

And that's how we Plot Bust.