An all-new Pop Culture Beast is coming!

An all-new Pop Culture Beast is coming!
Pardon our dust!

Pop Culture Beast proudly supports The Trevor Project

Pop Culture Beast proudly supports The Trevor Project
Please consider doing the same.
Showing posts with label Joseph Gordon Levitt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joseph Gordon Levitt. Show all posts

Friday, September 27, 2013

Film Review - Don Jon


When watching those TV spots for Joseph Gordon-Levitt's new film, Don Jon, you forget it has anything to do with pornography like the original trailer suggested.  Those 30 second ads play it off like a typical love story, a romantic comedy about a tough guy playing hard to read and a tough girl playing hard to get.


The film written and directed by Gordon-Levitt does not forget.  At all.  Pornography is front and center the entire running time.  That's not saying it's a porno, just the topic of pornography works as a motif that mirrors the world Gordon-Levitt created for his characters and story.  It's a strong message that one doesn't expect a first time writer-director to convey so eloquently and so entertainingly, but Gordon-Levitt does it as smooth as Don Jon's slick back hair.

Don Jon centers around Jon Martello (Gordon-Levitt), who has been branded the nickname Don Jon by his boys due to his ability to score a chick every weekend.  He's a simple person.  He only cares about a few things in his life: his body, his pad, his ride, his family, his church, his boys, his girls, and...his porn.  Nothing compares to his porn.  That is until he meets Barbara Sugarman (Scarlett Johansson), a beautiful, smart, old fashioned girl who might be the one if they can find a mutual understanding.


Gordon-Levitt commands the screen as Don Jon, a character that we've never seen him embody, and it's refreshing to see him continue to take risks in his acting career even after transcending into the mainstream.  His transformation into this big-headed, East Jersey, Italian American, oozes of machismo, but manages to keep it from becoming a parody of what could have been a one-note character.  Scarlett Johansson is also unrecognizable as Barbara Sugarman, looking more like Jessica Alba or JLo (or maybe its just the accent and incessant gum chewing) and manages to imbue every word in a veil of sexuality.


These aren't your typical characters in a romantic comedy.  Jon has a porn addiction.  Barbara has control issues.  In both cases, both have these expectations of what a relationship should entail and because of these expectations, it is doomed to fail.  Gordon-Levitt rips a page from Erich Fromm's The Art of Loving and dissects everything that goes into relationships, love, and gender roles in a society that has all those defined for us in his first script.  The screenplay works on many levels and never knocks you over the head with its observations and comparisons to society.


The supporting cast consisting of Julianne Moore, Tony Danza, and Brie Larson to just name a few are also great, clocking in some memorable performances with characters that are just as dynamic as the main ones.

But all these great performances aren't just by accident.  One can see that Gordon-Levitt knows how to hone in on those great performances due to understanding the actor's process and the mindset it entails.  He manages to capture those intimate moments that might not even be evident to more established directors.  Even though I would like to see him direct something that he hasn't written, Don Jon is a great launching pad for his directing career.  If Ben Affleck stole Batman from Gordon-Levitt, then maybe Gordon-Levitt can take away some Affleck's directing chops. So far, so good.


Overall, it's a very light-hearted film that has a lot to say.  Hopefully, it will get the recognition it deserves regardless of its taboo subject and not disappear among all the serious fare that have less to say during awards season.  Definitely a must see.

10 of 10 Hail Mary's


RAWR(for more)

Tuesday, May 1, 2007

I have the money I have the power

The Lookout
Writen and Directed By: Scott Frank
Staring: Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Jeff Daniels, Matthew Good, Isla Fisher

IMDB Plot Description: An admired high school hockey player (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) with a bright future foolishly takes a drive in the night with his girl friend and two other friends with his headlights off with devastating results. The former athlete is left with a brain injury that prevents him from remembering many things for extended periods of time. To compensate, he keeps notes in a small notebook to aid him in remembering what he is to do. He also lives with a blind friend (Jeff Daniels) who aids him. Obviously, with the mental incapacitation, he is unable to have meaningful work. Thus he works as a night cleaning man in a bank. It is there he comes under the scrutiny of a gang planning to rob the bank. The leader (Matthew Goode) befriends him and gets him involved with a young woman (Isla Fisher) who further reels him in. After they get close and after reeling him in with his own failures, the bank plan unfolds. Confused but wanting to escape his current existence, he initially goes along with the scheme. After realizing he is being used, he attempts to stop the robbery, which of course immediately goes awry. Bruce McGill and Alberta Watson also co-star as the young man's parents, who still search for the person that was there before the tragic crash.
***

The Lookout is an entertaining crime drama with a stellar performance by Joseph Gordon Levitt. As usual he brings a character to the screen with such believability it proves he is one of the best actors among the young hollywood crowd.

The movie has a couple first time director quirks. A bit of the flash that some directors think is necessary but only turn out over the top (the cross reflection in the window is the most obvious). Overall though, Scott Frank gives us an entertaining 90 minutes. Minor annoyances aside, the bumbling deputy, a villain who belongs in a clint eastwood movie (Bones), The Lookout does deliver quite well. Jeff Daniels is great as a blind friend and roomate. The other actors also turn in decent, if overshadowed, performances. The highlight is JGL. He plays his part with such heartbreaking realism that it's hard to notice anyone else. He owns this movie.

I've enjoyed the work of Scott Frank in the past and am looking forward to what's coming up from him in the future.

If you get the chance to see The Lookout, please do. It's worth the 10 bucks ticket price.


Friday 5/4 releases:

Lucky You
Spider Man 3
The Flying Scotsman
The Treatment
Waitress
Civic Duty
Away From Her


RAWR(for more)

Monday, March 12, 2007

The Path of the Beam






It has been annouced that JJ Abrams has optioned the rights to the greatest fantasy series ever: "The Dark Tower" by Stephen King. This could mean us Dark Tower geeks will get the movie event of our lives ala "Lord of the Rings".



It's a touchy subject tough adaptaion to be sure. 7 books packed full of dimension crossing, magic, guns, sex, demons, wizards, gunslingers, and a journey to the Tower that does not have aperfect hollywood ending. It will be a difficult job, and we probably won't see it for a while. More difficult still? Casting this monster. We all have our wishes and desires as to who should play the central characters of. So here is my cast wishes for the core of the Dark Tower movies:



Roland's Ka Tet









Eddie Dean

Joseph Gordon Levitt



















Detta Walker/Odetta Holmes/Susannah Dean

Rosario Dawson



















Jake Chambers

Cameron Bright









and finally...the big enchilada. Roland, the Last Gunslinger. Roland, Son of Steven.


Roland Deschain

The Gunslinger

Sean Bean



This is just the main cast. There are so many other people to cast in this film. It's exciting to know we're getting something be it TV or Film and that JJ Abrams, a great talent, is involved.

What are your thoughts?
Ka is a wheel, Thankee Sai.













RAWR(for more)