And so to the week ahead. With just three new release films, we have first up a heist film involving the Russian mob, crooked cops, and an unsuspecting officer who has to take a fall, and with an all star cast involving multiple A-listers and a Director of renown too the expectation on this is high. Then there's is a historical seafaring rescue piece as the US Coast Guard search for a stricken vessel to save its crew from the deep blue, and finally an almost true story of a woman whose abandoned life from within the confines of her vehicle provide us with observational humour, pathos and a down to earth look at life through the mind of the acclaimed actress in the lead role.
When you have had the opportunity in the week ahead to sit through your film of choice, share your experience with your friends here at Odeon Online and record your observations in the Comments box below this or any other Post. In the meantime, enjoy your movie!
TRIPLE 9 (Rated MA15+) - Directed and Co-Produced by Australian John Hillcoat, this is a crime drama that might get you thinking about 'The Town' or 'Heat'. With an ensemble cast and made for just US$20M this was released in the US just last week and so arrives fresh in Australia this week having so far brought in approaching US$8M. The film opens with an impressive bank robbery set piece in broad daylight and the resultant bullet ballet shoot out on an Atlanta freeway. Having robbed a safety deposit box which contains information which could overturn the recent conviction of a Russian Mob kingpin, the said box is delivered to the mobsters wife who decides that more is needed from her merry band of thieves, and so she sets them another task to steal more data to help protect her husband.
Along the way however, to the second heist we meet a bunch of corrupt cops, honest cops, the Russian Mafia and various other miscreants and underworld characters all caught up in a web of intrigue, cross and double cross. As the plan picks up momentum the good, the bad and the ugly of this story get more embroiled in the 'Triple 9' plan - which is an officer down call, that sends all police to the scene of an incident, so potentially detracting the police from the scent of the crims who can go about their business largely unhindered - but who will be the officer down? Starring Casey Affleck, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Anthony Mackie, Aaron Paul, Norman Reedus, Woody Harrelson, Gal Gadot, Teresa Palmer and Kate Winslet as Irina Vlasov - the Russian wife calling the shots.
THE FINEST HOURS (Rated PG) - this is a Disney Studio Production Directed by Craig Gillespie and based on the 2009 book 'The Finest Hours: The True Story of the U.S. Coast Guard's Most Daring Sea Rescue' by Michael J. Tougias and Casey Sherman that cost some US$70M to bring to the big screen and so far has recovered US$40M since its end of January US release. Telling the true story of the daring February 1952 rescue mission of the stricken tanker, The SS Pendleton, off Cape Cod that had been ripped in two by a huge storm and the thirty sailors trapped inside the gradually sinking stern. As word of the disaster soon spreads the Coast Guard in Chatham, Massachusetts, launch a mission to save the crew using a lifeboat and just three men to do so. Starring Casey Affleck (he's been busy!), Chris Pine, Ben Foster, John Ortiz, Eric Bana and Holliday Grainger this is a rescue mission against all odds, which is even more astounding considering the era in which this occurred.
LADY IN THE VAN (Rated M) - here we have another true story but this time grounded on dry land and in London set in the early 70's. Directed and Co-Produced by Nicholas Hytner and based on the play written by Alan Bennett, for which he also wrote this films Screenplay. Mary Shepherd (Maggie Smith) is an elderly eccentric homeless lady living in an old beat-up Bedford van that Bennett (here played by Alex Jennings) befriends before allowing her to park her van temporarily in the driveway of his Camden home. She ended up staying for 15 years, and eventually passed away in 1989. Before doing so however, Bennett uncovers that Mary Shepherd is not this lady's real name, and that she has a surprising past and has lived in fear of arrest for all these years after a minor altercation when a motorcyclist hit her van, and she believed it was her fault. Made for US$6M this has so far grossed US$24M and has received much critical applause since its November 2015 release in the UK, and also stars Jim Broadbent, Frances de la Tour, and Roger Allam.
With only three new offerings to tease you out to your local multiplex, remember too that there is still plenty of great movie content out on general release that includes a whole handful of Oscar winners and nominations as Reviewed and Previewed between these pages in previous weeks, and others that are worthy too of your movie going dollar.
See you at the Odeon!
-Steve, at Odeon Online-
THE FINEST HOURS (Rated PG) - this is a Disney Studio Production Directed by Craig Gillespie and based on the 2009 book 'The Finest Hours: The True Story of the U.S. Coast Guard's Most Daring Sea Rescue' by Michael J. Tougias and Casey Sherman that cost some US$70M to bring to the big screen and so far has recovered US$40M since its end of January US release. Telling the true story of the daring February 1952 rescue mission of the stricken tanker, The SS Pendleton, off Cape Cod that had been ripped in two by a huge storm and the thirty sailors trapped inside the gradually sinking stern. As word of the disaster soon spreads the Coast Guard in Chatham, Massachusetts, launch a mission to save the crew using a lifeboat and just three men to do so. Starring Casey Affleck (he's been busy!), Chris Pine, Ben Foster, John Ortiz, Eric Bana and Holliday Grainger this is a rescue mission against all odds, which is even more astounding considering the era in which this occurred.
LADY IN THE VAN (Rated M) - here we have another true story but this time grounded on dry land and in London set in the early 70's. Directed and Co-Produced by Nicholas Hytner and based on the play written by Alan Bennett, for which he also wrote this films Screenplay. Mary Shepherd (Maggie Smith) is an elderly eccentric homeless lady living in an old beat-up Bedford van that Bennett (here played by Alex Jennings) befriends before allowing her to park her van temporarily in the driveway of his Camden home. She ended up staying for 15 years, and eventually passed away in 1989. Before doing so however, Bennett uncovers that Mary Shepherd is not this lady's real name, and that she has a surprising past and has lived in fear of arrest for all these years after a minor altercation when a motorcyclist hit her van, and she believed it was her fault. Made for US$6M this has so far grossed US$24M and has received much critical applause since its November 2015 release in the UK, and also stars Jim Broadbent, Frances de la Tour, and Roger Allam.
With only three new offerings to tease you out to your local multiplex, remember too that there is still plenty of great movie content out on general release that includes a whole handful of Oscar winners and nominations as Reviewed and Previewed between these pages in previous weeks, and others that are worthy too of your movie going dollar.
See you at the Odeon!
-Steve, at Odeon Online-
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