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Cinema Rat - Sifting through the Garbage to bring you the GOOD STUFF

Cinema Rat - February 2009

Ghost Town (2009)

Starring: Ricky Gervais, Greg Kinnear, Tea Leoni, Aasif Mandvi
Director: David Koepp
Screenplay: David Koepp and John Kamps

Running Time: 102 minutes


Ricky Gervais hasn’t taken too many risks trying to launch his Hollywood career after an exceptional rise to the upper echelons of British comedy.
A couple of cameos in A Night At The Museum and Stardust were nice little earners, as well as a way to get yourself acquainted with doing things Hollywood-style.
However, Ghost Town won't do his status in Tinseltown any favours. There are many problems with the movie, not the least being Gervais yet again playing the same character he always seems to play. It lends itself to leaving no petrol in the tank, and you can almost say his lines for him, such is the predictability of it all.
Gervais plays Bertram Pincus, a dentist who leads a mean, lonely and boring existence who dies on the operating table for 10 minutes undergoing what is a supposed routine operation. When he comes back to life he finds he is the conduit by which all the world's ghosts try and resolve their problems that were left hanging when they suddenly died. While the premise sounds great, the execution is awful.
A mediocre script and miscasting seem to be the main culprits – I mean, who really believes a beautiful-looking Tea Leoni is going to fall for a slightly pot-bellied, obnoxious, average-looking guy like Gervais? Greg Kinnear as Leoni's recently departed philandering husband does the best he can, but overall the film is a mess. A couple of gags come off, but a little more work on the cast and script could have done wonders for what must have seemed like a great idea at the time.

2.5 stars
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Gran Torino (2009)

Starring: Clint Eastwood,
Director: Clint Eastwood, Christopher Carley, Bee Vang, Ahney Her
Screenplay: Nick Schenk

Running Time: 116 minutes


Reading the premise of Clint Eastwood’s latest outing my first thoughts were “Don’t do it Clint!”
Here's a guy whose early career got box-holed into the vigilante, tainted avenger role, only for his later years to gain some much-deserved credibility - not only as a versatile actor, but as a double Academy award-winning director.
So when reading that Eastwood plays an avenging, racist, disgruntled ex-Korean War Vet whose neighbourhood has been taken over by "Gooks" and other miscreants, I thought, "uh-uh, no way! You're pushing 80 Clint – it's not believable."
However, I needn't have worried. Eastwood the director is far too smart to let Eastwood the actor fall into clichés, and so my fear of a Hollywood legend falling flat on his face was allayed.
Eastwood does play the character as described, but there are more facets to Walt Kowalski than similar fair offered up by a Dirty Harry Callaghan or the Man With No Name from the Sergio Leone spaghetti westerns. I should have known better after he took a detour with such characterization as William Munny in Unforgiven.
Pic is the story of how a grumpy old man puts the a local Korean teenager on the straight and narrow after the latter tries to steal Walt's Gran Torino at the behest of the local ethnic gang. What follows is a story of redemption, but with a kick at the close that lends it to being more realistic, instead of the contrived ending that most probably expected and Eastwood and his backers must have been tempted to do.
Where the story is let down is the acting ability for debutant Bee Vang who plays the teenager in question. Vang delivers his lines in a sometimes clunky and clumsy manner. However, he can be forgiven as it's his first outing, and we can only hope for better things to come.
An Eastwood classic? No, but not a bomb either.

3.5 stars out of 5
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