Top Rated Films
Johnson Thomas's Film Reviews
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The spectacle of BFG’s world is imaginative enough but the story doesn’t really grow on you and the build-up is entirely botched. While this is not a bad movie by a lesser director’s standards, it just does not live up to the standards set by Steven Spielberg (during his heyday) himself.
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The sight gags are funny enough, the writing though is pretty much pedestrian and the exaggerations are obviously not intended to be mean or hurtful to either sex.
So just take it in like it is (mindless entertainer)…if you care! -
The atmosphere here is suggestively creepy. Dark frames, dim flickering lights, sudden switch on and offs, striking sounds delivered suddenly, shadowed faces and faces shrouded in darkness and the general lame tricks that shore up the genres myriad affectations. They are all so obvious and predetermined that you can’t help but feel cheated by the déjà vu surrounding the experience.
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So there’s really not much take home here other than a few stray moments of elastic levity. It certainly appears from the lack of surprises here, that this franchise has outlived its fly-by date!
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In terms of visual effects this film is quite impressive but as a crusty, involving adventure, it falls short!
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The problem with the film is that its intent is far more academic than cinematic. So the involvement of the audience is largely cerebral (and that too only if you are a history buff) rather than emotional. At the end of this experience you are likely to feel more beleaguered than entertained.
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‘Resurgence’ is surely attempting to do a ‘Jurassic World’ for the franchise but this Roland Emmerich helmed sequel appears to have delayed it’s coming by a good ten years. The current generation has already seen countless repeat and reprise efforts from contemporary spectacle specialists so this one doesn’t quite have the blistering genre redefining power that the original did. The irreverence involved in the monument trashing on display here makes it all seem quite ridiculous, fanciful and tends towards tedium. To the extent that even a short 120 minute runtime begins to feel a little long in the tooth!
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It’s the premeditated glossed out treatment that really hurts here. Director Thea Sharrock’s helming is not a smoothly coordinated one. The lack of grittiness and honesty in the telling is also a drawback.
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The plot is totally outlandish. Quite unbelievable really but then what would you expect in a scenario where turtles are ninjas and go about defending the city and it’s people with a speed and alacrity uncommon to their genre type. So the implausibility in such shows of valor is a given. It’s the lack of wit that is hard to overlook. The sci-fi action is sumptuous but not out of the ordinary. Everything seems like it’s been done before.
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The film, though CGI-driven, has little that’s above ordinary or exciting for that matter. Sacha Baron Cohen as Time tries his best to liven up things but it’s never enough. The effects are woebegone and look pretty much classless.