Slideshow Blu-Ray Movies

วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 1 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2553

Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief

           Trouble-prone Percy Jackson is having problems in high school - but that's the least of his challenges. It's the 21st century, but the gods of Mount Olympus seem to have walked out of the pages of Percy's Greek mythology texts and into his life. Percy has learned that his real father is Poseidon, god of the sea, which means Percy is a demigod - half human, half god. At the same time, the powerful gods on Olympus are feuding, which could launch a war enveloping our entire planet.

           Now, Percy must prepare for the adventure of a lifetime, and the stakes couldn't be higher.

           With ominous storm clouds brewing over Earth and his own life now in peril, Percy travels to a special enclave called Camp Half Blood, where he trains to harness his newly discovered powers and prevent a devastating war among the gods. There, Percy meets two fellow demigods - the warrior Annabeth, who is searching for her mother, the goddess Athena; and his friend and protector, Grover, who is actually a brave but untested satyr.

           Grover and Annabeth then join Percy on an incredible transcontinental odyssey that takes them six hundred stories above New York City (the portal to Mount Olympus) and to the iconic Hollywood sign, under which burn the fires of the Underworld. At journey's end rests the fate of the world - and the life of Percy's mother Sally, whom Percy must rescue from the depths of Hell itself.

           Percy Jackson: Half human. Half god. All hero! --© Fox 2000

วันพุธที่ 30 มิถุนายน พ.ศ. 2553

The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo

          
          'The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo': Deep, dark myster
 
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, March 19, 2010 


          It's the rare 2 1/2 -hour film that doesn't make you look at your watch once. "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo" is such a film.
          It isn't so much the pacing. Based on the first in a series of three popular mystery novels by Stieg Larsson, the Swedish thriller moves briskly but not so fast that you'd miss something if you took your eyes off the screen for a second. Rather, like a good book, the plot is so engrossing, the characters so rich and complex, the mood of gloom mixed with glimmers of hope so all-encompassing that the thought of its actually ending never occurs to you. That's true even as the fog gradually lifts and the movie approaches its sick, but deeply satisfying, conclusion.


          At its simplest, "Tattoo" is the story of a 40-year-old missing-person investigation. Wealthy businessman Henrik Vanger (Sven-Bertil Taube) hires investigative journalist Mikael Blomkvist (Michael Nyqvist) to do what the police couldn't: find out what happened to Vanger's favorite niece, Harriet (Ewa Froeling), who disappeared off the family's island compound in 1966 and is presumed to have been murdered. The prime suspects? Only all 30 members of the Vanger clan, who had gathered for an annual meeting. The motive? Vanger's inheritance, which, in the absence of a direct heir, would have gone to Harriet. The only way on or off the island, by the way, is a bridge, which, due to a traffic accident, had been closed on the day of the 16-year-old girl's disappearance. In this sense, the setup is almost quaint. It's a classic "locked-room" mystery of the sort made famous by John Dickson Carr, Agatha Christie and other masters of vintage detective fiction. The unraveling, however, could not be more modern.


          No sooner does Mikael start to poke around, unearthing an old Bible of Harriet's containing a list of names and what look like phone numbers, than he is joined by Lisbeth Salander (Noomi Rapace), the tattooed girl of the title. On probation for unnamed crimes, she's a multiply pierced computer hacker who works as a private investigator in Stockholm and has stumbled across Mikael's investigation only by accident, having previously investigated him. (Mikael himself is in a wee bit of a jam, having just been convicted of libel. The only reason he takes Vanger's assignment is that he has six months to kill before he begins serving his sentence.)

          Soon Mikael and Lisbeth are partners, in romance as well as sleuthing. They make an unlikely pair, on both counts. He's pushing 50 and used to digging up dirt the old-school way, with a shovel if necessary. She's 24 and never without her most versatile tool, a laptop. Much of the film's most critical detective work involves Internet searches, photo-editing software, scanners and webcams. It's a high-tech twist to the shoe-leather approach to PI work, and for once it really works. So many movies today use computers as a modern deus ex machina, capable of solving crimes with a single keystroke. In this one, anyone with a laptop can believe it.

          For fans of the thriller genre, it's also one heck of a lot of fun.

          Not that "fun" is the key word here, by any means. As directed by Niels Arden Oplev, "Tattoo" is far more interested in shadows than in sunshine. One subplot concerns Lisbeth's parole office (Peter Andersson), a vicious creep who sexually assaults her. And, as it turns out, there are a lot of bad apples in the Vanger family tree, which has more than its share of Nazis.

          But it's exactly that tonal chiaroscuro -- the stark contrast between the story's light and dark elements, good and evil, beauty and ugliness -- that makes "Tattoo" so compelling. Like Lisbeth's dragon tattoo, which takes up most of her back and a good part of her leg, the movie is both terribly scary and gorgeous.

           *** Unrated. At area theaters. Contains obscenity, violence, grisly crime scene photos, nudity, sex, rape and smoking, all in large quantities. In Swedish with English subtitles. 152 minutes.