Year of Release: 2019
Director: David F. Sandberg
Screenplay: Henry Gayden, from a story by Henry Gayden and Darren Lemke, based on a character created by Bill Parker and C. C. Beck for DC Comics
Starring: Zachary Levi, Mark Strong, Asher Angel, Jack Dylan Grazer, Djimon Hounsou
Running Time: 130 minutes
Genre: Fantasy, action adventure, comedy, superhero
In present day Philadelphia, 14 year old foster kid Billy Batson (Angel) runs into trouble with the law while searching for his birth mother. He is placed in a group foster home, run by kindly Victor (Cooper Andrews) and Rosa Vasquez (Marta Milans). Billy reluctantly befriends nerdy superhero fan Freddy (Grazer), although he is wary about getting close to anyone. One day, while on the subway, Billy is transported to a strange temple run bay an ancient wizard named Shazam (Hounsou), who has been searching for one truly good person who is "pure of heart" and who can become his champion and defeat the powerful Seven Deadly Sins. When Billy says the name "Shazam" he is transformed into an adult superhero (Levi).
This is an enjoyable superhero film, which comes across at times as a superpowered remake of Big (1988), which is referenced in one scene. It adopts a lighter, more comedic, tone than most of the other recent movies based on DC Comics. However it is darker and more gritty than it initially appears, and has surprising emotional heft at times. There is a lot of fun in the scenes where Billy is testing out his new superpowers, and the story is enjoyable and satisfying. The performances are good, and the child actors really work well together, with Asher Angel and Jack Dylan Grazer being particularly good. Zachary Levi is fun and charismatic as Billy's superhero form, and Mark Storng makes a suitably menacing villain. Djimon Hounsou provides the appropriate gravitas as the ancient mystic.
With a running time of over two hours, the film does feel stretched, and the climax does fall into the almost inevitable trap of superhero films of feeling like an extended special effects showreel. It also has the problem of being a superhero origin story and having to hit the prerequisite beats to establish the characters, their powers and their world. Another thing that I liked about the film was that, while it is set in the shared DC Comics Universe, and there are references to the other characters, the film is pretty much self-contained. You don't need to have seen any other films in order to enjoy this.
Just a note: There are two post credit sequences. One in the middle of the credits and one at the very end.
Jack Dylan Grazer and Zachary Levi in Shazam!
Showing posts with label Jack Dylan Grazer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jack Dylan Grazer. Show all posts
Tuesday, 23 April 2019
Shazam!
Labels:
action adventure,
Asher Angel,
comedy,
David F. Sandberg,
Djimon Hounsou,
fantasy,
Jack Dylan Grazer,
Mark Strong,
movies,
reviews,
Shazam!,
superhero,
Zachary Levi
Saturday, 9 September 2017
It
Year of Release: 2017
Director: Andy Muschietti
Screenplay: Chase Palmer, Carey Fukunaga and Gary Dauberman; based on the novel It by Stephen King
Starring: Jaeden Lieberher, Jeremy Ray Taylor, Sophia Lillis, Finn Wolfhard, Wyatt Oleff, Chosen Jacobs, Jack Dylan Grazer, Bill Skarsgard
Running Time: 135 minutes
Genre: Horror
This is an adaptation of the 1986 novel by Stephen King. Set in 1989 (as opposed to the novel's 1958 setting) in the small town of Derry, Maine, which has been terrorised by a spate of mysterious disappearances of children. Seven young outcasts, who call themselves "The Loser's Club" decide to put a stop to it: Bill Denbrough (Lieberher) has a bad stutter and his younger brother, Georgie, is among the missing; Ben Hanscom (Taylor) is picked on because he is overweight; Beverley Marsh (Lillis) is abused by her father and is the subject of cruel rumours; Richie Tozier (Wolfhard) is the group clown, often getting in trouble due to his loud mouth and foul language; Stan Uris (Oleff) is picked on because he is Jewish; Mike Hanlon (Jacobs) is subjected to racist bullying; and Eddie Kaspbrak (Grazer) has become a hypochondriac due to his over-protective mother. They discover that the culprit is Pennywise the Dancing Clown (Skarsgard), who is in reality an evil, shapeshifting entity which feeds on fear, particularly children's fear.
Previously adapted as a two part TV miniseries in 1990 which was re-edited into a feature film; It is one of Stephen King's best known books. The film lacks the richness of the book, but is an effective horror film, although, like many horror films, it relies too much on sudden jump scares and CGI trickery, and there is less of the idea that was depicted so well in the book, of It mining the deepest subconscious fears of it's victims. It is well acted, and the film really shines in the quieter character moments.
Clowing around: Bill Skarsgard is It
Director: Andy Muschietti
Screenplay: Chase Palmer, Carey Fukunaga and Gary Dauberman; based on the novel It by Stephen King
Starring: Jaeden Lieberher, Jeremy Ray Taylor, Sophia Lillis, Finn Wolfhard, Wyatt Oleff, Chosen Jacobs, Jack Dylan Grazer, Bill Skarsgard
Running Time: 135 minutes
Genre: Horror
This is an adaptation of the 1986 novel by Stephen King. Set in 1989 (as opposed to the novel's 1958 setting) in the small town of Derry, Maine, which has been terrorised by a spate of mysterious disappearances of children. Seven young outcasts, who call themselves "The Loser's Club" decide to put a stop to it: Bill Denbrough (Lieberher) has a bad stutter and his younger brother, Georgie, is among the missing; Ben Hanscom (Taylor) is picked on because he is overweight; Beverley Marsh (Lillis) is abused by her father and is the subject of cruel rumours; Richie Tozier (Wolfhard) is the group clown, often getting in trouble due to his loud mouth and foul language; Stan Uris (Oleff) is picked on because he is Jewish; Mike Hanlon (Jacobs) is subjected to racist bullying; and Eddie Kaspbrak (Grazer) has become a hypochondriac due to his over-protective mother. They discover that the culprit is Pennywise the Dancing Clown (Skarsgard), who is in reality an evil, shapeshifting entity which feeds on fear, particularly children's fear.
Previously adapted as a two part TV miniseries in 1990 which was re-edited into a feature film; It is one of Stephen King's best known books. The film lacks the richness of the book, but is an effective horror film, although, like many horror films, it relies too much on sudden jump scares and CGI trickery, and there is less of the idea that was depicted so well in the book, of It mining the deepest subconscious fears of it's victims. It is well acted, and the film really shines in the quieter character moments.
Clowing around: Bill Skarsgard is It
Labels:
Andy Muschietti,
Bill Skarsgard,
Chosen Jacobs,
Finn Wolfhard,
horror,
It,
Jack Dylan Grazer,
jaeden Lieberher,
Jeremy Ray Taylor,
movies,
reviews,
Sophia Lillis,
Stephen King,
Wyatt Oleff
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