Wednesday 30 May 2018

Solo: A Star Wars Story - The scoop and digest

Kathleen Kennedy obviously had a bad feeling about the second in anthology series, as original directors Phil Lord and Chris Miller were famously given the boot.

Enter replacement Ron Howard, who unsurprisingly, extensively re-shot running time.

Alden Ehrenreich - Han Solo
Emilia Clarke - Qi'ra
Woody Harrelson - Tobias Beckett
Joonas Suotamo - Chewbacca
Donald Glover - Lando
Thandie Newton - Val
Paul Bettany - Dryden Vos
Phoebe Waller-Bridge - L3

A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away....

No scrolling title crawl, but text informs that on the shipbuilding planet Corellia, crime syndicates fight for food, resources and much sought after hyperfuel.

Young Han and his lover Qi'ra decide to escape dead-end lifestyle by bribing an Imperial officer with coaxium.

Things don't go according to plan, as Han makes it, but Qu'ra is nicked by passport control.

A determined Han signs up for the Imperial Navy and because loner has no people, geezer adopts the surname of 'Solo'.

Three years later on the muddy battleground of Mimban, Han is enlisted by Tobias Beckett and his band of criminals to help re-imagine the Great Train Robbery on Vandor, which results in Beckett's better half Val committing suicide.

In between this, Han is fed to something nasty, but escapes with 'the beast' - a certain Wookiee called Chewbacca.

Beckett owes Crimson Dawn crime boss Dryden big time and on Kessel, Lando agrees to help steal a consignment of unstable coaxium, in exchange for a healthy share of credits.

Upon delivering fuel to Dryden on his yacht, baddie senses shit isn't the genuine article.

Did somebody give him intel?

Beckett you traitorous bastard.

However, Han is one step ahead of the game and Qi'ra kills Dryden.

She urges him to rescue Chewie from Beckett and now alone, lady pants contacts Dryden's superior Darth Maul.

Holographic projection reacts reasonably well to news of bungled mission and assures they'll meet very soon.

Insidious spin-off is yet to be officially confirmed.

Han kills Beckett and declines the offer from Rebellion founder Enfys to join motley crew.

Han and Chewie track down Lando, with the former winning second game of Sabacc and securing the Falcon.

Remembering what Beckett told him, Han and hairy friend make haste to Tatooine, where a gangster (Jabba), is planning something big.

Hollow

No risk and tension free, premise was largely a galactic bore, and the opportunity to serve up something different is spectacularly missed.

As it's an origins story, we know principal characters are going to survive.

That's fine, but at least make things interesting and not so incredibly predictable.

Harrelson wearing double-crossing trousers?

(Sigh).

Full of lousy one-liners and corny comebacks, script is terrible.

L3 attempting comedy made funny bone cringe and I couldn't wait for hunk of junk to be destroyed.

In terms of action, train heist, Kessel run and giant jellyfish attack vary in quality.

Put it this way, special effects impress more than set pieces.

Cornellia's ruler Lady Proxima is part of opening text, so you'd think water-dwelling centipede's contribution would last for more than two minutes.

Honestly, what's the fucking point?

Performances are a positive.

Bettany makes the most of villainous role, Ehrenreich is decent enough (less the swagger and charm) and Glover, who is red hot at the moment, shined relatively bright.

Refs to saga include Dejarik board game, Han's dice, R2 unit, Cantina, Teräs Käsi and even Rogue One's Scarif.

There's some good in every situation, and leaving door wide open for Darth Maul to walk through in probable sequel is something I'd entertain.

In the meantime, we hope box office flop hasn't doomed Boba Fett.

Sunday 27 May 2018

Famous Paintings - An Exercise in Imitation 1

Here's what happens when things are taken too literally.

On purpose you understand.

Posters

Film

The Fall vs Face of Mae West - Salvador Dali


Maniacts vs The Scream - Edvard Munch


American Gothic (1988) vs American Gothic - Grant Wood


Television

Daredevil Season 2

David with the Head of Goliath (1610) - Caravaggio


Saint Jerome in His Study - Caravaggio


The Last Judgment - Michelangelo


St. Sebastian - Peter Paul Rubens


Just one from American Horror Story (Season 1), but it's a goodie.

Las Meninas - Diego Velázquez


Title sequence of Elfen Lied was clearly inspired by the works of Gustav Klimt.

Check out smashing mash up.


The Kiss and Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer


More variations.




Miscellany

I've suddenly gone Berserk.

The Garden of Earthly Delights (Hell) detail - Hieronymus Bosch


Relativity - M.C. Escher



Whoa.

Don't know what came over me, but I'm okay now.

These next few don't really fit anywhere, but whatever.

As Christoph Waltz pulls a beer in Tarantino's Django Unchained, scantily clad lady appears to be something along the lines of Francisco Goya's Nude Maya.

Even stranger.

House of the Dead
Please note detail of framed object propped up against wall.
It isn't, but it certainly looks like Clothed Maya.
Just WHAT?

Returning to normality with Stanley Kubrick's Barry Lyndon.

Sarah Campbell - Joshua Reynolds


Mrs Hallett (The Morning Walk) - Thomas Gainsborough


Malvern Hall, Warwickshire - John Constable



Marriage à-la-mode: 2. The Tête à Tête - William Hogarth



More cosplay.

Django Unchained vs The Blue Boy - Thomas Gainsborough


The Duchess
Keira Knightley was probably based on more of Gainsborough's genius.

Namely, Georgina, Duchess of Devonshire (left) or Elizabeth Beaufo.


Disney's Frozen and the sickening 2015 live action adaptation of Cinderella both recreate Fragonard's The Swing.



Here's more from The Scream.

Home Alone (Kevin) and Ghostface (Scream series)


Two more.

Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance
Zenobia (Margaret Whiting) reacts badly to her son Rafi dying in Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger.
A Million Ways to Die in the West
You're having a Salvador Dali aren't you?

The Temptation of Saint Anthony (left) or The Elephants


Wedding ceremony in The Rocky Horror Picture Show cleverly makes reference to American Gothic.


Pull away shot in The Equalizer is based on Edward Hopper's Nighthawks.
Same thing in Deep Red.

Scene in Michael Mann's Heat is based on Alex Colville's Pacific.


Hellbound: Hellriaser II
Dr. Channard wanted to know.
Now he knows.
Sgt. Boyle is crucified off-screen in The Silence of the Lambs.
Both thank Francis Bacon.

Figure With Meat
High-Rise smells of M.C. Escher's Relativity.

More clear cut is Inception, as paradoxical architecture is Ascending and Descending

Bates' house was modelled on Edward Hopper's House by the Railroad.

Isle of the Dead recreates one of Arnold Böcklin's paintings of same name.
Fifth version (1886)
While not quite on the money, Weird Science does its level best to replicate Hokusai's The Great Wave of Kanagawa.

Unmissable structure in Metropolis echoes Pieter Brueghel the Elder's Tower of Babel.

Not long before he terrified cinema audiences in 1979 with Alien, The Duellists was Ridley Scott's directorial debut.
Set piece could be based on:

Napoleon on St Helena - Francois-Joseph Sandmann
Or.

Napoleon Bonaparte - Benjamin Robert Haydon
While dreaming up Pale Man in fantasy epic Pan's Labyrinth, Guillermo del Toro certainly had Goya's Saturn Devouring His Son in mind.

Father Merrin entering the MacNeil house in The Exorcist was inspired by René Magritte's The Empire of Lights.

Finally.

The big screen version of The Flintstones was innocent enough and Halle Berry looked ultra sexy in a leopard skin halter neck thing.
Aside from that, Slate and Co. displays a mural smacking of Picasso's Guernica.

Phew.

Until next time.
Copyright © 2012-2024 Nukes and Knives™ All rights reserved.