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‘Angels & Demons’ movie review

angels-and-demons-movie-posterMy rating of Angels and Demons: C- (Disappointing)
Cast: Tom Hanks, Ewan McGregor, Stellan Skarsgard, Jew
Directed by: Ron Howard
Studio: Sony Picture

Boston Globe movie critic Wesley Morris in his review of Angels & Demons asks a question (referring to the earlier movie The Da Vinci Code) – “Asking whether the new movie is better than the first is natural if moot. Would you prefer to drown in a swimming pool or an ocean?” I would like to answer that question before proceeding with my review. You see, The Da Vinci Code is like being stranded in the middle of an ocean because your ship has sunk, with various species of sharks circling around you taking small bites every now and then before you die either due to blood loss or sheer boredom. Angels & Demons is like drowning in the deep-end of the pool in swimming class, with lifeguards around you who try to resuscitate you but fail.

sangam-cinema
See how excited they are about showing a movie...in *English*

Having endured medieval torture (aka The Da Vinci Code movie), I was in no mood to spend money on watching Angels & Demons in PVR. Surprisingly though, no PVR branch (or any other multiplex chain) is playing this movie! When I came to know that Sangam Cinema in Sector 12, R K Puram was going to play this (but not PVR), I couldn’t resist. Despite staying in RKP I have never been to that place. It’s mostly because Sangam is the kind of theatre which usually plays C-grade Bollywood flicks with names like ख़ूनी दरिंदा भयानक मौत.

South Park season 13 episode Margaritaville - Stan Marsh looks on while government agents try to determine bailouts using a headless chicken
The High Priests of Sangam Cinema determine that Angels and Demons is a Bollywood flick while Stan Marsh of South Park, Colorado watches on.

I knew that there’s an impasse currently between Bollywood flick distributors and multiplex owners, which is why there have been no new Hindi movie releases lately. Whatever new Bolly flick releases have happened were shown in single screen theatres such as Sangam. Apparently A&D was so bizarre (and crappy) that the High Priests of Sangam Cinema – using a headless chicken – determined that it was essentially a Bollywood masala movie and should be shown in their theatre. Except that the masala turns out to be elaichi instead of red chili.

angles-and-demonsWith much trepidation I trudged down today to that place. ‘Trepidation’ is that feeling you get when you walk up to the ticket counter, only to find that slab of the counter is buried under inch-thick dust. As if nobody had been to this part of town before. The lone ticket counter guy was positively sweating while handling this huge influx of people coming to his theatre (or maybe it was just the ceiling fan, which was rotating at the rate of one revolution per century). You feel even more trepidation when that ticket counter guy tells you that you’ve got a ticket for Angles & Demons. Is this some new story I’ve never heard of, where Robert Langdon will unearth sinister coincidences between Golden Angles and churches around the world – using nothing other than his knowledge, an intellectual arm-candy (whom he will inevitably bed in the climax), and the hands of his Mickey Mouse watch? Or would Father Lamont hack n’ slash a Pazuzu to pieces armed with nothing but a protractor and the Holy Bible? There was only one way to find out – and that was to watch the movie.

Anyway, I bought my ticket and walked into the premises. The hall is pretty big actually; if only they’d do something about moth-eaten chairs and musty smells. Adjusting your seat sounds like riding a bicycle which hasn’t been oiled for a few decades. When you go to a multiplex, you get bored by the advertisements they keep on airing before the show starts. After going to Sangam, you’ll wish fervently that PVR keeps whoring itself out for more ads. I mean, you do get bored when they shows ads, but when they don’t show anything at all you get really bored. And irritated, at that guy two rows back who’s playing bhajans from his cellphone at full volume.

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Watch the theatrical trailer for Angels & Demons here

The show started after a few messages on screen from the manger of the theatre on not eating foodstuff offered by strangers etc. The movie, thankfully, wasn’t ANGLES & Demons. The story is set in a different timeline from the Dan Brown novels on which this movie is (supposed to be) based. Here, the incidents of A&D take place after those in The Da Vinci Code movie. Then we cut to CERN where Big Scientists are creating antimatter. It’s the first indication that the novel’s plot has been taken, castrated and then brutally hacked to pieces. I won’t keep going into what has been changed from the book, since every big and small detail has been changed.

Scenes from Ron Howard’s ‘Angels and Demons’ mystery-thriller
‘Bio-entanglement’ at CERN

‘Bio-entanglement’ physicist Vittoria Vetra is there from this point itself; played by Ayelet Zurer who tries ineffectively to put on an Italian accent. Antimatter is created and trapped in a canister. So far so good. The assassin has been replaced by a spectacle-wearing mercenary who then gains access after killing a scientist, and runs away with the canister. In the book this fact is discovered much later. Oh, and the guy killed is not Vittoria’s dad – in the movie.

Angels & Demons - Rome Photocall
The guy who’s destroyed this movie

Pause for a moment here. We all make fun of Dan Brown for writing incredibly silly plots, but can Ron Howard please explain to me how the assassin is going to fucking exit fucking CERN with a fucking antimatter canister when the theft is discovered by Vittoria within minutes of the murder? Sure, it’s very womanly to swoon when you see a dead body, but I presume you’ll still call security to lock-down the premises. Right? Right?! Try imagining a thief trying to get a canister of antimatter past security at CERN…is this what the assassin would say?!

Angels and Demons canister of antimatter
"Honestly guys, I don't understand why you're freaking out. So what if it's got scary warnings and shit. It's *just* a lava lamp."

At this point Robert Langdon is brought into the picture – by the Vatican itself. The character of Maximilian Kohler is done away with. This bit is again odd. A Vatican Police officer gets in touch with Robert Langdon while he’s doing laps in the swimming pool at Harvard. The officer hands him a printout of the Illuminati ambigram – and tells Langdon that it’s an Illuminati ambigram. In the book, Langdon had a reason to get involved since Kohler didn’t know what he was facing. In this alternate bastard universe where events are happening after the events of Da Vinci Code, why would the Vatican, who already know what the Illuminati is get in touch with a person who so thoroughly beat their philosophy to pulp? All of this is mentioned by the police officer, and the reason he gives is Langdon’s ‘erudition’. The kind of logic used in this hack job of a script to move from scene A to scene B is worse than the ‘logic’ porn movies use to go from ‘not boning’ to ‘boning’.

Tom Hanks' facial expression in Angels and Demons
This scene is only visible in IMAX theatres such as Sangam. It shows *why* Tom Hanks has that idiotic expression on his face all the time. It's because he suffers from constipation caused by a giant satellite dish sticking out of his butt.

It seems that churches around the world have raised money by selling raffle tickets to buy a Lockheed Martin X-33 from CERN, which seems to be the only logical explanation as to why Tom Hanks is able to show up in Rome soon after in the timeline. Vittoria is also present but again, let’s think about this for a second. In the novel, she and her father were the only ones who worked on the antimatter project, so she had to be brought to the Vatican. In the movie she’s simply the person who discovered who was murdered. With so many more senior scientists at call, CERN had to send the bio-entanglement physicist, didn’t they? (Of course, the real reason is that you need a cute chick whom Langdon can keep explaining history in parenthetical inserts during dialogue.) At this point, I gave up. I was going to stop analysing and switch into the Michael Bay mode of watching movies.

Japan premiere for Angels & Demons
Look, there’s that trademarked SillyExpression ™ even during promotional tours!

The movie picks up pace over here…and it’s really good. I completely understand that a book needs to be adapted to a screenplay for a movie to work. The writers got this bit right – from the point all the characters are in Rome. This middle act is a) brilliant b) fast-paced. You as a viewer will forgive the filmmakers for all the changes that they make. One of the biggest complaints about The Da Vinci Code movie was that it was excruciatingly slow. Seems that the studio listened and made changes this time. To those who’ve read the novel it will feel like your watching T-20 match highlights – but even then it’s good enough to enjoy for you and non-book readers both. They did a fine job of handling the balance between history lectures and action. I won’t spoil the best bits of the movie by giving anything away.

Scenes from Ron Howard’s ‘Angels and Demons’ mystery-thriller
Thou shalt tell historical explanations only to chicks

The visuals in the movie are stunning. Quite possibly because the filmmakers weren’t given full freedom to shoot in the places they wanted, CGI panoramic fly-bys are littered all across the movie. Once again, the difference between this movie and its predecessor shows in th fact that this one focuses more on the action on screen rather than pottering about showing architecture. There are many (un?)intentionally funny scenes in which lighten up the mood every now and then – I’ll leave you to discover them on your own since the jokes are quite subtle. (Or maybe it’s just me who thinks those scenes were intended to be jokes.)

sony-gun
Typical product placement in Angels & Demons

Product placements in the movie can get irritating when there’s only one brand being talked about – which was Sony in this case as the movie was financed by Sony Pictures. I mean, if you want to do product placement then you should try to achieve the standards set by Michael Bay in The Island, which had product placements from Cisco , MSN Search, Calvin Klein, Xbox, Puma, Reebok, Miller Light, NBC, NFL, Budweiser, Michelob, Apple, Aquafina, General Motors, DaimlerChrysler, Mack, Coca-Cola, Speedo, TAG Heuer, Amtrak, Ben & Jerry’s, and Nokia – and that’s just barely scratching the surface. Instead, the viewer is subject to blink-and-you-miss-it shots of Sony products every few minutes in the movie. Ron Howard thinks it’s very clever when he surreptitiously shows products, but it isn’t. Despite the astonishing number of product placements in The Island, nothing feels in-your-face like it does in A&D.

Dan Brown novels are interesting – not because they are factually accurate – but because he knows goddamn well how to write a gripping story. It’s the final act in Dan Brown novels where everything comes to a conclusion which are so exciting that you tend to forgive him for all the sins he commits in making factual errors. What Ron Howard did in this movie is to take that exciting finale and turn it into either extremely boring or extremely silly. The assassin in the movie is a wuss who doesn’t fight with Langdon when dropping the last cardinal in a fountain. (Unlike the book, the cardinal survives and eventually becomes the Pope.) Then, the fight scenes at Castel Sant’Angelo has been completely rewritten. Langdon and Vetra turn up there with a whole SWAT team. The SWAT team leaves because they find it difficult to move around that place because of the huge satellite dish sticking out of Tom Hanks’ ass. Mr Hanks then discovers a secret passage which leads him to the place where the assassin is. Assassin receives an instant message on his Sony Vaio laptop that MOAR MUNNEH has been transferred to his Isle of Man account. When he sees that he comes out of his hiding place. Ayelet Zurer points her cellphone at him; Mr G(r)ay – that’s the assassin’s name in this movie – points a motherfucking gun at her and tells how silly pointing a cellphone is in a stand-off.

Sony gun in action
Typical scene from Angels & Demons. Notice any, uh, company names? This shot was taken from the stand-off between Mr Gay and Vittoria Vetra.

After she’s threatened, she throws the phone away the assassin delivers a classic “…or else” line and walks away. “Ooh, I’m scared“. He said “…or else!” That’s what Ron Howard thinks hardcore is. Anyway, the assassin winks and just walks away. It doesn’t occur to Langdon or Vittoria to pick up the phone and call the cops who’re milling about in the lower floors. Mr Gay rappels down the building (no cop notices) and makes his getaway…except that he doesn’t since his employer has double crossed him. He dies in a ball of flame when his car explodes.

Scenes from Ron Howard’s ‘Angels and Demons’ mystery-thriller
“Say ‘uncle’ or else…you’ll have to eat this”
(Thank goodness they didn’t exploit this scene to use a ‘Sony’ ambigram as an Illuminati ‘brand’)

Langdon and Vetra then run down the secret passage connecting Sant’Angelo to the Vatican office. Here, the role of Maximilian Kohler is rolled into the that of the head of Swiss Guard. The duo reaches in time to tell that camerlengo Patrick McKenna (played by Ewan McGregor) is in danger; Swiss Guards then bust the door down and shoot their boss. In the novel, the conclave to elect a new Pope is evacuated at this point, but not in this movie. For some lame reason, they all decide to rush to the tomb of Saint Peter…which in the movie is a place protected by an electronic keypad access system. Unlike the book, the battery of the antimatter canister can be replaced…but it isn’t because “it’s cold here in the tomb [cue foggy breath] and cold makes batteries run faster [cue foggy breath]”.

Sony NH-AA-B4E battery
"Goddammit, I knew I should have bought Sony NH-AA-B4K batteries instead of NH-AA-B4E - those batteries _run slower_"

So our padre camerlengo decides to do all the running – and runs away with the canister. He reaches a helicopter, yanks the pilot away and lifts off (Langdon not in tow). The Force is very strong in the camerlengo – he coaxes, cajoles and whispers sweet nothings into the helicopter’s soul-ears. That’s the only logical explanation as to why the helicopter keeps flying straight up and away from the Vatican with the ticking bomb, even after he jumps off with a parachute.

The movie reaches new heights of retardedness not even achieved in the novel when the conclave starts discussing about how to elect the camerlengo through election by acclamation. The book got it wrong because this method of election was deprecated in 1996. The movie got it even more terribly wrong because election by acclamation is supposed to be done by spontaneous chanting of a priest’s name, not by whisper-politics behind closed doors – especially since in the movie they hadn’t even seen the ‘miracle’ with their own eyes. A few more things happen – including one scene where security footage from Sony cameras is played back on a Sony computer – from which we get to know that the camerlengo is a sonyson-of-a-bitch who’s orchestrated this whole charade. A new Pope is elected, who hands gives Robert Langdon a secret-Galileo-book-of-which-only-one-copy-exists (the one Vatican has been trying to hide for ages) for keeps. Speeches are given about how Robert Langdon and the Church can be friends. Rainbows and unicorns start sprouting up from every corner of the room and the world lives happily ever after.

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Science vs Religion

Bottom Line

Angels & Demons is, in the end, a $150 million exercise by Sony Pictures executives to appease the Vatican and ensure their souls don’t go to Hell. It’s as if they believe the first movie flopped because they angered God rather than shitty screenplay and direction. Throughout the movie, Ron Howard keeps sucking up to the Vatican. The middle act in the movie is brilliant – and should be made a textbook case on how books should be adapted to movies. The final act should also be made a textbook case – on how books should not be adapted to movies. It could potentially have been a great movie – but the final act destroys the all the fun in watching this movie.

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‘Valkyrie’ movie review – Winged Boredom

Valkyrie movie poster
Don't. Watch. This. Shite.

Valkrie (2008) [Yahoo! Movies page]
My rating of Valkyrie (on the Yahoo! Movies rating scale): D+
Cast: Tom Cruise, Bill Nighy, Nobody Else Worth Bothering About
Director: Bryan ‘Superman Returns. Again.’ Singer
Distributed by: MGM

I didn’t watch Valkyrie when it was released in the theatres, primarily due to how silly Tom Cruise looked with that eye patch. I thought the director was just trying to portray Tom Cruise as a wannabe Jack Sparrow rebel, but it turns out that the decision to make him wear an eye patch was for ‘historical accuracy’ reasons. Valkyrie is one of those movies that you never watch in theatre paying for exorbitant popcorn, but catch on television or DVD when it comes out. And I hope that by the end of this review I’ll convince you not to watch this movie even then. There is absolutely no part of the movie which redeems the whole thing and makes you want to forgive and forget.

The movie starts off with the first few minutes in German, switching to English for the sake of audience sanity. Starts off slowly building the story but you’re ready to forgive the film-makers at that point. After all this is such a historically important event. “That touch of gravitas is surely needed”, you say, “for a movie discussing a serious topic. After all, the movie is based on the true story of Operation Valkyrie and the July 20 assassination plot during World War II.” We’re given excruciating details on how von Stauffenberg (Cruise’s character) loses his eye and thus becomes a hotshot officer in the German army. Huh? Excuse me? Anyway, then come the tea parties conspiracy meets where a bunch of disgruntled politicos, army officers and lawnmowers plot to overthrow Hitler. Ah, that brings us to Hitler, who’s been turned into a prop in a movie where he has a major role. The acting of the Hitler Guy is worthy of Hayden Christensen’s level, who has widely been acknowledged as the “closest thing humanity has got to an android actor“.

Valkyrie - Rome Premiere

Moving on, countless meetings are held and it is decided that Stauffenberg will place a briefcase bomb with a powerful explosive near Hitler in a meeting of various army commanders. On successful assassination Operation Valkyrie will commence in which Stauffenberg use his position as The Big Guy in the reserve army to take over Berlin and all regional headquarters. Sounds like swell plan. Except that it isn’t. At the last moment the Hitler meeting is shifted from his concrete bunker (would have compounded blast effect) to a wooden hut. Stauffenberg places the bomb anyway, right beneath Hitler’s crotch. (Hitler, apparently, is quite used to army minions keeping briefcases close to his crotch.) Stauffenberg then hotfoots it away from the bunker. An inside accomplice in BSNL communications division then disconnects all lines to and from Hitler’s bunker (‘the Wolf’s Lair’).

At this point you’re around halfway through the movie. You’re excited that the clear logic has been laid for the actions to follow. “Now there’s a coup at hand, surely this will be exciting?”, you believe. Sadly for you, the Gods have decided to mock you cruelly for daring to watch this movie. There’s a hiccup in the takeover plan when a conspirator poops in his pants and decides not to enact Operation Valkyrie until he gets a certified letter from the morgue proclaiming Hitler’s death. Thankfully Stauffenberg – always omniscient and close to a telephone – reinvigorates the conspirator to carry out the plan (and buy some adult diapers).

From that point onwards the movie is officially dead. Nothing happens other than an assortment of people – mostly our dashing Stauffenberg – making phone calls from one part of Germany to another. Hark, he doesn’t even chop off anyone’s head who disagrees with while saying “Avast, matey!” (it would have gone nicely with the eye-patch theme). I mean, seriously Hollywood. You expect us to cling on to the edge of our seats over people making phone calls? What do you think the element of suspense is – whether or not the lines gets connected? Well, actually it does seem that’s exactly what they thought – because the only ‘conflict’ that happens is when messages start coming from Hitler’s bunker too and the communications department gets confused over whose calls / messages to let through – (supposedly) Hitler’s or Stauffenberg’s. That’s it. There’s a whole bloody coup taking place for chrissake! I half expected Michael Bay to jump out from a corner of the screen and say, “Boo! Gotcha!”, revealing that all of this was a grandiose and over-budgeted advertisement for AT&T.

As you’ve guessed it this bit – and the major bit at that – was mind-numbingly boring. The movie plods with the impish devotion of a toddler trying to stick his wet finger down your ear. I didn’t exactly pay attention but a lot of phone calls were exchanged, telegrams sent etc. Maybe Stauffenberg called his mistress and she hung up on him, or maybe he called one of those teleshopping lines. I don’t really care. The gist basically was that as the day wore on rumours started making the rounds that Hitler was very much alive (with his testicles still attached) and working up a royal fury as to what the eff was going on around him. Cruise keeps on insisting that Hitler would have died, continuing with his phone calls.

This goes on for a while when a general or something his group had imprisoned storms in and informs that the Fuhrer is very much alive. Everyone in the room at this point pisses in their pants and stand in a queue to await the punishment. They’re presented the manly choice of a revolver to end it themselves. Some joker must have asked whether he’d get his one phone call. It’s not shown, although I’m fairly certain it will be there in the Director’s Cut Blu-Ray 5th Anniversary Collector’s Edition when Hollywood feels like ripping us off next year. What ensues on-screen is pure rage where the conspirator’s execution is ordered. In an un-Nazi like manner they aren’t tortured in gas chambers but taken to the backyard and shot.

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Valkyrie movie trailer. Wear dark polarized glasses which don’t let any light through when watching this.

Unsurprisingly, critics have praised the movie, necessitated by the fact that they’re batty old fruits (or was it fruity old bats, or old fruit bats?) – just like the movie they’re reviewing. Valkyrie is undoubtedly quite historically accurate (speaking as someone who’s seen Discovery Channel’s documentary on this assassination attempt); as a movie though, it is an utter failure. Valkyrie has an astonishing resemblance to those poorly acted out ‘history mystery movies’ starring Johnathan Rhys-Meyers that Fox History & Entertainment (previously known as The History Channel) shows. The only reason why Valkyrie escapes getting rock-bottom rating on my scale is because (surprising as it may seem) there are movies worse than this which are out there. Waiting, for unsuspecting viewers.

Bottom Line: Get the largest piece of rock you can. Smash Valkyrie DVD to pieces. Or change the channel, as per your case.