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Gerard-Butler

Gerard Butler looks to ‘Slide’ home

Gerard Butler is just one of those guys right now.  It seems that Hollywood is giving him every possible opportunity it can to make him into a star.  While he ate up roles in movies like Guy Ritchie’s underrated RockNRolla and the just released revenge-thriller Law Abiding Citizen, he also made headlines for doing The Ugly Truth with Katherine Heigl and perhaps doing the nasty with Jennifer Aniston.  His movies haven’t really been hits though (see Gamer) since the effects-laden extravaganza 300, for which Butler has apparently been given too much credit for it’s success.  Nevertheless, Gerard continues to have films in the pipeline, the latest seems to be a project called Slide.  He describes it to Film School Rejects:

“There’s a few different projects that we’ve been working on, but there’s one in particular – it’s a movie called Slide about a former baseball player who goes back to try and patch things up with his child and estranged wife and ends up coaching the kid’s baseball team,” Butler said. “He becomes the subject of fascination and longer by every bored house wife in the town. And it’s him trying to survive that while trying to patch things up with his kid. I think we’re going to have Gabriele Muccino direct the movie. Hopefully. We’re in talks with him, and he’s very much up for directing it so we’ll what happens there.”

This sounds like an intriguing enough project.  It seems to have hints of TV’s “Eastbound & Down”.  Muccino has been hit/miss so far at the box office with Seven Pounds flopping but The Pursuit of Happyness hitting a home run.  Both of those films starred the biggest box office star on the planet in Will Smith. While I like Butler, he’s no Smith, so the success of Slide, if it happens, is far from a given.  This news drops on the eve of the World Series (who you with, Phils or Yanks?), so the timing is at least apropos.  What are your thoughts on Butler and Slide?  Hit us one time.  BAM!!

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LAW ABIDING CITIZEN

‘Law Abiding Citizen’ Review

Director F. Gary Gray, with all of his mustered machismo brutality and combustible set pieces, is back and he has the judicial system in his sights with Law Abiding Citizen. Swooping flyover shots of the William Penn bronze statue sitting atop Philadelphia’s City Hall are filmed with a seemingly discerning eye while judges and prosecutors alike are depicted as flamboyantly assertive and dishonest.

This is an oppressive film, with its industrial color palette, clanging shackles and flood of legal terminology. If you could smell a film, Law Abiding Citizen would smell like a musty wrought-iron fence. But wait until the slimy politicians and self-preserving district attorneys start roaming the halls of steel-caged thugs who aren’t any more animalistic and unlawful than the prosecutors who put them there. As they speak, you can even see their corruptness and indecency through the cold, wintry air – that is until they receive a new inmate, Clyde Shelton.

Clyde (Gerard Butler) is a father and a husband who is the victim of a random break-in, which brings about the death of his wife and daughter at the hands of two brutes. The prosecutor in this case, Nick Rice (Jamie Foxx), in an effort to guarantee a conviction, makes a deal with one of the two murderers who is now a cooperating witness and will testify in court against the other. So we have two murderers – one gets the death penalty, one gets off in three years.

The police escort Clyde Shelton (Gerard Butler) to a squad car, just a minor step in Clyde's grand scheme.

The police escort Clyde Shelton (Gerard Butler) to a squad car, just a minor step in Clyde's grand scheme.

Outside the courthouse, in front of a sea of photographers, Nick shakes the witness’ hand in the view of a sheepish and bewildered Clyde, who has just witnessed the injustice of the legal system first-hand. The fact that Nick was unwilling to go to court and get a conviction for both men because of insubstantial evidence, despite it being the absolute truth, makes it all the more difficult for Clyde to swallow. Fast-forwarding ten years, the film quickly becomes an amoral revenge-kick before switching gears completely (to its credit) into a somewhat rational undressing of the American judicial system through the mind games of the now imprisoned, yet still mystifyingly dangerous, Clyde Shelton. “I’ll bring the whole system down on your head”, he says to the wide-eyed and frustrated Nick, “it’s gonna be biblical.”

The fundamental problem with “Citizen” is that it’s a film that wants to toe the morality line and do it under the guise of a slick package, but it simply doesn’t have what it takes under the hood. Our two protagonists are given bland, lifeless dialogue to just throw back-and-forth while the filmmaking is far too routine to overcome the lack of viable substance and certainty. Compounding matters are the surprisingly flat and underwhelming performances of not only the supporting cast but also the two main stars.

Cell phones are actually really dangerous in this movie. They can be used to make deals with criminals and apparently be rigged to...you know.

Cell phones are actually really dangerous in this movie. They can be used to make deals with criminals and apparently be rigged to...you know.

Gerard Butler (300, The Ugly Truth) is just plainly miscast here as an unbelievable portrait of a grieving father/husband-turned-vigilante. He’s too rough and prickly with his lisp and toned-physique – the fact that I never bought him as this “wounded soul” could not be compensated for by button-down shirts and raincoats, much to the filmmakers’ surprise. Jamie Foxx, on the other hand, looks like he needed a warm cup of coffee to the face. Supporting players and familiar faces like Colm Meaney and Bruce McGill are almost too ideal for their roles while female counterparts like Leslie Bibb (Iron Man) as an understudy lawyer to the district attorney and Viola Davis (Doubt) as the no-nonsense Mayor are hopelessly derivative.

I do appreciate what the film is trying to do here, but it’s often too non-committal, meandering and preposterous. When Clyde’s secret, or rather how he does what he does, is revealed, it’s both a letdown and a shot to the film’s already crumbling credibility. When it’s over, we get the feeling that Clyde’s goal could have been obtained through simpler means and spared us the lecture.

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gamer31

‘Gamer’ Preview

Written by “The Film Nest” writer, Rob R. (Raging Rob in the Comments section).

Late summer is usually a dumping ground for the movies deemed unworthy to stand next to the bigger blockbusters. Movies like Gamer are released at the end of summer by the studios to try and squeeze a few more dollars out of rabid summer movie fans. Gamer is the latest film in the vein of The Running Man, The Condemned and Death Race. All of these films revolve around wrongly imprisoned men, fighting for their lives in a game show watched by millions. Gamer looks to follow this basic plot pretty well.

Gamer, which has went through several title revisions (first “Game” then “Citizen Game”), is set in a futuristic world where mind control is now possible. Mind control apparently lends itself very well to gaming because the online game, “Slayers” is a phenomenon, (think “American Idol” with guns). “Slayers” is the creation of  genius Ken Castle, (the great Michael C. Hall – TV’s “Dexter”) in which death row inmates are controlled by at-home players in a fight to the death, against others from around the world. If any of the death row inmates can achieve 30 wins they are given their freedom. Gerard Butler (300) stars as Kable, the games most popular warrior who also holds the most victories in “Slayers” history (27). Butler’s character is being controlled by Simon, a gamer who has become a star in his own right because of his ability to win. Kable has been kidnapped and taken from his wife and daughter. Against his will, he is forced to fight in the deadly game in hopes of one day winning his freedom, and in the process bringing an end to Castle’s twisted blood sport.

Cool guys don't look at explosions.

Cool guys don't look at explosions.

Gamer is written and directed by the team of Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor, the same guys behind both Crank films. As the box office performance of their last film, Crank 2: High Voltage was very poor, I don’t think we will be seeing any further Crank movies, unless they are of the direct to video variety.  Gamer has a cast that includes: Alison Lohman (Drag Me To Hell), Kyra Sedgwick (TV’s “The Closer”), John Leguizamo (Ice Age:Dawn of the Dinosaurs), and rapper turned actor Chris ‘Ludacris’ Bridges (aka “Mr. Phat Rabbit” – do your homework!).

While Gamer boasts a unique mix of actors, I’m not sure that the film will find  financial or critical success. The directing team of Neveldine/Taylor really need this film to do well, as I fear if it doesn’t succeed their chances of getting in the director’s chair behind bigger projects may soon disappear. As for action fans, I’m sure this will have just what they want to see in their summer movies. The film’s trailer features dozens of explosions and firefights which are sure to please fans of this genre. The trailer also features the Marilyn Manson cover of “Sweet Dreams” and I’m sure that the rest of the soundtrack is filled with many similar rock tracks to accompany the destruction on screen.

"THIS...IS...SPARTA!!" Oops, wrong movie.

"THIS...IS...SPARTA!!" Oops, wrong movie.

For me, this looks very “been there, seen that.” Hopefully, there is a little more under the surface to save this from the rehashed plot and straight-to-video vibe Gamer is giving me.

You can play Gamer on theater screens starting September 4th.

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