Category: Best Visual/Special Effects

Alien³ (1992)

There is a bit of this Alien sequel that is set up to be a rehash of the previous two movies. Sigourney Weaver’s escape pod, which of course contains at least one alien, crash-lands onto a new locale. The rest of the heroes from Aliens are dead on arrival, so it again resets so that Sigourney is the only one who has knowledge and experience with the aliens and the evil Company’s desires to weaponize them. What makes this different is that the ship had landed on an all-male maximum-security prison colony and foundry. No more mothering instincts coming out in this version, instead Weaver has to fight off gang rapes and work twice as hard to prove she knows what she’s doing.  Scifi  Horror

Oscar Nomination: Best Effects, Visual Effects

Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings (2021)

After watching about a dozen superhero films in the early 2000s, I called it quits. The oversaturation was too much and the stories weren’t that distinctive to waste my time on them. Every so often I’ll check out an origin story hoping to see something different and I almost always continue to be disappointed. Being a Kim’s Convenience fan, I was interested to see Simu Liu in an American blockbuster film. Watching the film, I was also excited to see Tony Leung and Michelle Yeoh are also in the film. Having a typical convoluted superhero plot, Leung was a bad guy many eons ago, stopped being a bad guy when he fell in love with Fala Chen, became a bad guy again when his wife is murdered, and kidnaps Liu and his sister Meng’er Zhang in a misguided attempt to save his wife. There’s plenty of action and an incredible amount of CGI and it’s way too long. Maybe I would have liked it better if there weren’t already dozens of films similar to it. I’m sure there will be a sequel, but that film is destined to be more entwined with the other hundreds of Marvel films, television series, and whatnot that I haven’t seen, my experience here wouldn’t make me want to slog through another.

Oscar Nomination: Best Achievement in Visual Effects

The Bridges at Toko-Ri (1954)

William Holden is a Naval Reserve officer who has been called back into duty during the Korean War. After one mission where he was forced to ditch into the sea, he is called again to take on an even more dangerous mission attacking a group of Korean bridges. Grace Kelly is underutilized as his worried and disapproving wife. It’s a pretty average war film with not surprisingly, only a sparingly amount of Kelly. It also features an ever-hammy Mickey Rooney as a naval aviator who often crosses Holden’s path.   War

Oscar Win: Best Effects, Special Effects

Oscar Nomination: Best Film Editing

Innerspace (1987)

The concept behind this is rather clever. Dennis Quaid is a disgraced Navy pilot who signs up for an experimental miniaturization project. Due to some mishaps, he and his pod are injected into Martin Short. Unfortunately there is way too much plot devoted to rival organizations trying to steal the miniaturizing technology. Those bits and the chase scenes that ensue are really drawn out and slow. Otherwise, the interactions between Quaid and Short are fun and even manage to wrangle in some of Short’s generally annoying antics. I’m somewhat meh with Meg Ryan’s role as the girlfriend, but the effects are quite good even more than thirty years later.  SciFi

Oscar Win: Best Effects, Visual Effects

Cleopatra (1963)

It’s no surprise that this brought on the end of the Golden Age of Hollywood. Everything about it is overblown: the sets, the cast, the costumes, the run-time, everything. With two parts split between Cleopatra’s relationships with Julius Caesar and Mark Antony, the story just goes on and on. Edited down to an hour or two shorter and it might have held my attention better. Elizabeth Taylor is truly a beautiful woman, but she was terribly miscast in the role of Cleopatra. She lacks gravitas, cunningness, and sexiness. There’s at least the feeling of building an alliance between Taylor and Rex Harrison’s Caesar; the relationship between Richard Burton’s Mark Antony is lackluster. There must have been some love flames between them in production, but they are not seen on screen. Obviously there was no expense sparred in the visuals. Cleopatra’s arrival in Rome is a live-action version of Aladdin’s Prince Ali scene. Despite that money spent in costumes (there is one ridiculous scene where without hesitation Taylor changes between three different outfits and Burton between two), many of Taylor’s look like the same exact style just in an array of candy colors. But I did love the sets. They are lavish and beautiful, truly sights to behold. There are so many little details to be seen: wigs, clothing racks, and umpteen baths. It’s also great to see the various cast in smaller roles: Hume Cronyn, Roddy McDowell, Martin Landau and even Carroll O’Connor as a Senator.  Best Picture Nomination

Oscar Wins: Best Cinematography, Color; Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Color; Best Costume Design, Color; Best Effects, Special Visual Effects

Oscar Nominations: Best Picture; Best Actor in a Leading Role; Best Sound; Best Film Editing; Best Music, Score – Substantially Original

Prometheus (2012)

An odd prequel to the Alien series, this film has the cool aesthetic of those films but doesn’t quite feel as if it fits narratively with the others. Noomi Rapace and Logan Marshall-Green are an archeologist couple who discover a star map that they believe will lead them to humanity’s predecessors. Soon they and a motley group of scientists and other crew members are on a ship to the far corners of the universe. Anyone who has seen any of the other films knows this is a bad idea. Noomi is given the main job of having her ass kicked and kicking ass in return and Michael Fassbender plays a convincing android trying his best to pass as human. There’s a whole lot in the movie that makes no sense and bits that are left unfinished that it’s not even worth delving very far into.  SciFi

Oscar Nomination: Best Achievement in Visual Effects

Free Guy (2021)

I really was on the fence about watching this from the moment I was aware of its existence. Ryan Reynolds is an NPC in what is essentially Grand Theft Auto Online. The first part of the movie has a fun time establishing the game’s world and Ryan’s place in it. Then the narrative is pulled out of the game and we’re subjected to inane real-life characters and a nonsensical storyline and a barrage of every IP Disney owns and I forgot that there was any good parts in anything ever.

Oscar Nomination: Best Achievement in Visual Effects

Dragonslayer (1981)

Peter MacNichol is a sorcerer’s apprentice on a mission to murder a dragon that otherwise feasts on young virgins. It’s not quite as engrossing as other 1980s fantasy films, such as Willow or Ladyhawke, but it still provides a level of entertainment. Some of the special effects are a bit dated, but there are also some highlights especially when they hint at the dragon’s size instead of showing it directly. I did have to spend quite a bit of time trying to figure out what the rules are with regards to virgin sacrifice: do the males of the village refrain from having sex with any female of a certain age? do the test whether or not a girl is a virgin before they sacrifice her? do the virgins for some reason taste better to the dragon and can it actually tell the difference?  Fantasy

Oscar Nominations: Best Effects, Visual Effects; Best Music, Original Score

Predator (1987)

This is a relatively successful blending of slasher and action film where you pretty much get what you expect. Arnold Schwarzenegger leads a team of steroided-out vigilantes ostensibly out to recover a downed helicopter in a Central American jungle. Unbeknownst to them, there is more than guerilla fighters for them to contend with. Carl Weathers is intriguingly cast as the pencil pushing bureaucrat who knows more than he lets on. Of course, he’s also super buff and overwhelmingly armed, so he fits right in with the rest. The special effects involving the Predator are a bit dated, but they are still effective particularly when showing his shape in the trees.   SciFi

Oscar Nomination: Best Effects, Visual Effects

Real Steel (2011)

Fitting in well with the fighting films I’ve been watching, Real Steel is a cross between the Rocky and Transformers series, imagining 2020 as a year where robots have replaced humans in the sport of boxing. If only that were the biggest concern of 2020. Hugh Jackman is a former human boxer and wannabe robot champion owner who reunites with his estranged son after the son’s mom dies. Are orphaned children foisted on estranged parents in real life as often as they are in movies? The movie is super predictable. The son is of course a precocious wannabe owner himself and there’s a shoehorned love interest played by Evangeline Lilly. The only surprise was that I kept expecting a turn where the son wasn’t even his as Jackman was taken aback multiple times when he was told the kid was older than he expected.

Oscar Nomination: Best Achievement in Visual Effects

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