Now playing in Pattaya
Savages: US, Crime/ Drama/ Thriller – I found this a most unpleasant
experience in almost every way possible, even including the music. Two pot
growers face off against a Mexican drug cartel that kidnapped their shared
girlfriend. The merciless head of the Mexican Baja Cartel, and her enforcer,
underestimate the unbreakable bond of the three friends, who wage a seemingly
unwinnable war against the cartel, thus starting a series of increasingly
vicious ploys and maneuvers in a high stakes, savage battle of wills.
Directed by Oliver Stone and starring Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Taylor Kitsch, and
Blake Lively. Most of the secondary acting is well-done – particularly Benicio
Del Toro, who gives a performance of such terrifying viciousness that he is
unwatchable. But the three main characters give banal pot-headed performances,
most often speaking boring dialogue that grates on the nerves and never gives us
any reason to care what happens to them.
It’s a vicious, vacuous, bloody story told like an adolescent out to gleefully
shock by publicly splashing around in pools of blood – yes, I mean the revered
Oliver Stone. Nobody needs this trash. Rated R in the US for strong brutal and
grisly violence, some graphic sexuality, nudity, drug use, and language
throughout; 18+ here. Mixed or average reviews. In 2D (English) at Pattaya Beach
only.
Dredd 3D: US/ UK/ India, Action/ Sci-Fi – This film portrays the future
America as an irradiated waste land. On its East Coast, running from Boston to
Washington DC, lies a vast, violent metropolis where criminals rule the chaotic
streets. The only force of order lies with the urban cops called “Judges” who
possess the combined powers of judge, jury, and instant executioner. Known and
feared throughout the city, Dredd is the ultimate Judge, challenged with ridding
the city of its latest scourge – a dangerous drug known as “Slo-Mo” which causes
users to experience reality at a fraction of its normal speed.
“Judge Joe Dredd” is amongst the UK’s best known home-grown comic book
characters; his comic strip in the British science fiction anthology 2000 AD
is the magazine’s longest running, having been featured there since its second
issue in 1977. He’s become for England the icon for a certain type of Fascist
“law-and-order” philosophy. Rated R in the US for strong bloody violence,
language, drug use, and some sexual content; 18+ in Thailand. Mixed or average
reviews. Shown in 3D (English) and 2D (English) at Pattaya Beach; 3D (English)
at Major; and 2D (Thai-dubbed) at Big C.
But what path have we taken? The creators of this movie were determined to do
their best to make violence beautiful, using slow motion techniques to transform
the sight of bullets ripping into flesh and the splattering of blood on people’s
faces into images of beauty.
Max Poolman, Special Effects Supervisor: “The blood becomes with the correct
lighting on it these beautiful red streaks of ribbons flying through the air and
it doesn’t look gory at all—it’s really pretty.”
Vincent E. Toto, Lead Stereographer: “Because everything’s in 3D, you get this
extreme depth of the blood coming at you, and you can see it trailing along, and
you can see it bouncing off things and creating blood splatters that you would
never ever see in regular speed photography.”
These people are sick. They should be locked away.
I appreciate the different crafts that go into making a movie, and am overjoyed
when done really well. So I loved the art direction and scene design here, which
I thought extraordinary. I truly enjoyed the experiments in slow-motion
photography; there were some really exceptionally beautiful sequences. But not
the ripping apart of human bodies; not the splattering of blood. Those, I regret
to say, should be censored.
Bait 3D: Australia, Action/ Horror/ Thriller – It’s your average “trapped
in a supermarket with a shark” movie . . . wait, what? Ah, yes, a group of
people get trapped in a supermarket after a tsunami hits the coast of
Queensland, Australia, and soon find out that they have more to worry about than
being in a flooded grocery store — there’s a 12 foot shark that’s been washed
into the basement, and it’s hungry. Rated R in the US for bloody violence, some
grisly images, and language; 18+ here. Mixed or average reviews (Rotten
Tomatoes) – “a shark tale that’s poorly executed yet charmingly absurd.” Shown
in 2D (English) at Pattaya Beach and Major. Not playing at Big C.
Resident Evil 5: Retribution: Germany/ Canada, Action/ Horror/ Sci-Fi/
Thriller – Pattaya cinemas are again saturated with this film this week, and
it’s the most popular movie in Thailand. Having now seen it (in 2D) I can tell
you that the settings are superb, and the visuals in general at the cutting edge
of filmmaking. Other than that, it’s basically just action, with a minimum of
story and character. If you enjoyed the previous films, especially Resident
Evil 4, you should enjoy this, and the next one yet to come, as they are
simply more of the same. Only with ever-better graphics.
Silly and empty-headed it is indeed, and you will shake your head in disbelief
at what you’re asked to swallow. Actually, these are training films, to get you
to believe more and more impossible things before breakfast. By the end of this
film you will be able to believe oh, maybe 37 impossible things with no problem.
I don’t know exactly why the violence in this film – like the X-ray visions of
bones breaking and hearts exploding – doesn’t bother me the way the violence in
Dredd and Savages does, but maybe it’s because here it’s so over
the top that it’s distanced somehow, while in the other two films the violence
is up close and personal, and terribly convincing.
So it’s purely up to you whether this film is for you, or not. You’ve been
warned. Rated R in the US for sequences of strong violence throughout. Generally
unfavorable reviews. Shown in 3D (English) and 2D (English) at Pattaya Beach; 2D
(English) at Major; 3D (Thai-dubbed) and 2D (Thai-dubbed) at Big C.
Chapter of Jan Dara: Thai, Drama/ Erotic – Based on the most
controversial novel in all of Thai literature (written in 1966), Jan Dara tells
the story of a young man as he moves into adulthood from a miserable childhood.
His mother died while giving birth to him, causing his father to hate him
deeply. When he was 13 he was kicked out of his house, accused of a rape he did
not commit. And it goes on and on in the same vein as he fights his demons
amidst an environment of obsession with sex.
It certainly has immense quantities of sex – whether that is an advancement for
Thai films must be left to your judgment. Despite all the professed idealism of
the director in fighting hypocrisy and prudery, I found that a great deal of the
sex was done with the actors looking awkward, as though uncomfortable and
ashamed of what they were doing. Especially the scene of three couples having
sex with Jan Dara sketching them, where the staging and action was very awkward
and self-conscious.
And the story itself I found very distasteful, with several utterly worthless
and unredeemable characters, and others incredibly weak. And, oh dear, to think
this is just the first film in a planned two-part franchise. Rated 18+ in
Thailand and an extraordinarily explicit film for this country. A 2D film, with
English subtitles at Pattaya Beach and Major, Thai only at Big C.