Photo: Disney/Universal
From "The Avengers"
to "The Expendables 2," this has been an active -- some might say
overactive -- summer. Now, with our back-to-school list-making, let's
scan the summer's winners and losers:Winners :
- 1. Joss Whedon and "The Avengers": The summer's opening -- and best -- studio tent-pole blockbuster. Now, Whedon will direct the sequel, too.
2. Matthew McConaughey:
The hunky actor got a career infusion with his Oscar-baiting male
stripper in the surprise hit "Magic Mike." Continue to take it off,
Matt! (Add in the underrated "Bernie" and "Killer Joe," too, for a
massive and interesting comeback.)
3. Wes Anderson and "Moonrise Kingdom": Anderson's most successful live-action movie also boosted the careers of Bill Murray and Bruce Willis.
4. Jeremy Renner and "The Bourne Legacy": Renner proved that he could open a movie and make audiences forget Matt Damon as Jason Bourne -- and he also had a piece of "The Avengers" action as "Hawkeye."
5. Tom Hardy and "The Dark Knight Rises": Hardy is the summer's breakout action star with dramatic chops -- see also "Lawless" -- and he rises with the Dark Knight franchise.
6. Seth MacFarlane, Mark Wahlberg, and "Ted": A sleeper hit about a dirty-mouthed stuffed bear and his arrested-development owner drew on "The Family Guy" fan-base and Wahlberg's ability to pull off comedy or action with understated charm.
7. Quvenzhané Wallis and "Beasts of the Southern Wild": The indie Oscar-bait movie has its staunch supporters and cynical detractors, but no one is doubting the eight-year-old star's performance and we're betting on an Oscar nom
[Related: Indie Roundup: 'Robot & Frank']
Losers: - 1. Kristen Stewart: With the unfaithful kiss seen round the world, KStew put a stake in the heart of her participation in the sequel to "Snow White and the Huntsman" and her fairy-tale romance with Robert Pattinson.2. "Battleship": Sunk.
3. "Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter": Not all vampire movies are created equal, and this big-budget fiasco sucked at the box office.
4. "Total Recall": The most forgettable of the big-budget remakes.
5. "Dark Shadows": They were crying into their Count Chocula on this one, but Johnny Depp-Tim Burton collaborations tend to remain undead, and this movie, which had a decent global gross, may have legs beyond 2012.
6. "Savages": Oliver Stone lights up and misfires in this underwhelming adaptation of Don Winslow's terrific novel about the clash between the Mexican Baja Cartel and smug Southern California dope peddlers -- and the death of hippie naiveté. It may be more disappointing because expectations were so high.
end quote from:
http://movies.yahoo.com/blogs/the-reel-breakdown/summer-2012-winners-losers-180816238.html
I agree with most of this except I like "Dark Shadow" which like they said may have legs on DVD because I think it is a cult classic that will never die. It was way too sophisticated for most people to completely get it the first time they saw it. With heavyweights like:
Johnny Depp | ... | ||||||||||||||||||
Michelle Pfeiffer | ... |
Elizabeth Collins Stoddard you have to look deep because of the vast sophistication of both these actors and what they bring to a movie, any movie
Also, I like "Battleship" even though it was a little corny and 1950s like with CGI in how the plot ran. And I wondered about Snow White and the Huntsman.
For some reason as I put this all together Michelle Pfeiffer's picture keeps moving around and I can't seem to control it's position. In the Snow White movie I thought Chris Hemsworth and Charlize Theron were well cast for this movie. And I think Kristen Stewart is a great action star as a woman just like Charlize Theron. But the problem is Charlize Theron sort of Stole the movie with her acting away from everyone else, so if this had a problem it was the witch was just too good an actress the way it was done.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment