Surprisingly subtle as it builds up, the piece explodes into an orchestral tour - de-force with spectacular action music for brass and strings, a first -
rate piece of film music.
Not exact matches
For «Mission: Impossible,» director Brian De Palma (an odd choice, considering all the gory
films in his mostly R -
rated filmography, most famously «The Untouchables») also has three elaborate action set -
pieces — a suspenseful caper set at a posh party, an intense break - in at CIA headquarters in Langley, Va., and a ridiculous but nonetheless thrilling chase on top
of a bullet train that is speeding from London to Paris.
Extras include a six - minute behind - the - scenes featurette whose highlight is star Wilson suiting up for a pre-production supersonic flight; seven deleted or extended scenes — among them odd alternate opening and closing title sequences — with optional commentary from director Moore and editor Paul Martin Smith — these trims carry a viewer discretion warning, for they would've threatened the
film's PG - 13
rating; a fantastic, largely CGI pre-visualization (with, again, optional Moore / Smith commentary)
of the virtuoso ejection set
piece that at times gives Final Fantasy a run for its money; the teaser trailer for Spielberg's upcoming Minority Report; and two engrossing full - length commentaries, one by Moore and Smith, the other producer John Davis and executive producer Wyck Godfrey.
Directed by Andy Muschietti (Mama), from a script by Chase Palmer, Gary Dauberman and Cary Fukunaga (True Detective: Season One — the good season) the
film is based on King's 1986 novel which became a highly
rated ABC miniseries in 1990 and featured Tim Curry as the nasty
piece of business known as Pennywise.
While we all patiently wait for Todd McFarlane «s R -
Rated Spawn flick to debut, we have another
piece of news to bring you today regarding where the
film is...
One
of the big
pieces of news out
of this year's SXSW
film festival was the announcement
of a new aggregate movie review and
ratings site, meant to answer many
of the issues people have with Rotten Tomatoes.
Rating: Hoopla Factor: A single speech made by the pitiful «heroine»
of this
piece near the end
of the
film can't make up for almost three full feature - length
films worth
of moping and passivity.
He hopes that this further perversion
of the
film — «defanged and desexualized,» as he calls it — will stand as a new art
piece, «even more perverse than the original, transferring innocence into a new, joyous, G -
rated obscenity.»