This Rotten Week: Predicting Battleship, The Dictator And More Reviews Which Rotten movie will have the highest final Tomatometer score?
kyle
2012/05/13 15:13:07
Battleship
Here comes a movie in the “Hollywood is officially out of ideas”
category. I can’t have been the only person out there who thought a
studio putting out a flick based on a board game, that basically just
involved plotted points on a coordinate grid, was a total joke. Like
complete prank time. Battleship wasn’t even a cool game. It was a time
killer with barely a modicum of strategy. But anytime you can spin a
premise based on fourth grade math into a big budget film you have to do
it right? If you’re Peter Berg you do, I guess.
**
**Quick sidenote: if Hollywood does insist on making kid’s games into movies, I’ve got some ideas for them in this old piece. Enjoy.
Thankfully Berg (Hancock-40%, The Kingdom-51%) appears to
have left out dialogue like “E5 is a hit,” instead opting for the
battleships to fight an unknown alien presence out in the ocean
somewhere. Judging from the trailer, that’s just about all that
happens. Oh and Taylor Kitsch and Alexander Skarsgard are good looking.
In fact, Berg presents a Navy fleet more like a modeling agency than a
nautical military threat. In addition to Kitsch and Skarsgard we’ve
got Rihanna, Brooklyn Decker and even Liam Neeson if you like ‘em a
little older. Where do I sign up for that tour of duty?
There’s no bigger Friday Night Lights fan than this guy, so I
want Berg’s career trajectory to continue with artistic, thoughtful
pieces like that movie and show. Unfortunately, except for Tim Riggins
getting involved, Battleship is a long way from Dillon, Texas.
With a bunch of reviews already in (enough that this one won’t count on
the Rotten Resume) critics are split down the middle with even the
positive reviews almost apologizing for liking it. The score won’t
stray too far from the middle, but I see it dipping a little more. The
Rotten Watch for Battleship is 43%.
The Dictator
Urban British faux-hoodlum who rocks gold chains and FUBU while
interviewing dudes like Gore Vidal and Newt Gingrich? Check. Naive,
hairy and incredibly anti-semitic Kazahkstani journalist on a quest to
understand these great United States by offending everyone in it? Check.
Flamboyantly homosexual fashion guru with a penchant for using humans
as chairs and making out with guys in front of bloodthirsty, homophobic
dudes from Arkansas? You betcha. And now a Gaddafi-like tyrant on the
loose in New York City? Why not?
Say what you want about Sacha Baron Cohen, but dude is committed. Like
crazy, over-the-top, possibly teetering on the edge of insanity
committed. And I love it. Whether is was Ali G, Borat, Bruno or now
Admiral General Aladeen there isn’t another entertainer out there who’s
put himself more in harm’s way than Cohen (except the guys from Jackass.)
But unlike those MTV bad boys, Cohen’s risks aren’t entirely physical
(which he seems to do an amazing amount of) but also in the court of
public opinion. I get the sense Cohen would just assume have everyone
hate his guts if it got his work some publicity. He’s all about the
buzz. And I love it.
His latest, The Dictator takes him out of the mockumentary style
and into more of a studio film. This probably reduces his risk of
bodily harm quite a bit, but Cohen still maintains his edge appearing in
character at every public event, including the Oscars. Larry Charles,
who also directed Bruno (67%) and Borat (91%) is at the
helm again and critics are trending more than positive. Again, a bunch
of reviews are already in so we won’t count this on the resume either,
but critics like what they see. The Tomatometer score’s at 75%. I see
it dipping a bit over the next week, but not by too much. I doubt Cohen
cares one way or the other. The Rotten Watch for The Dictator is 69%.
What to Expect When You’re Expecting
Want to know what to expect when you’ve got a child on the way? Save
your hard-earned money and don’t buy the book. Take it from a guy who
knows. I’ll outline the nine months chronologically in clear, concise
terms everyone can understand. Here we go: excitement, nagging fear,
violent moodswings, kegels, Haagen-Dazs, waddling, swollen ankles,
constant urination, kicking, heavy breathing, a thing called a birth
ball, NASCAR driving to the hospital, moaning, screaming, blood, crying,
baby, joy, never sleeping again. See? I just saved everyone a couple
of bucks on Amazon. You’re welcome.
Because this seems to be movies-based-on-anything-we-can-find week at
the theaters, this flick’s premise draws directly from a book about
birth. Not a memoir or work of fiction mind you, but an actual guide
for pregnant women. I get the sense we’re not too far away from an
entire movie franchise based on those Idiot’s Guide to...” books. Wish I was kidding about this.
Rather than run through which actors and actresses are in this flick,
I’ll just list who isn’t: Rosario Dawson and Jim Carrey. Everyone else
in Hollywood has a part. Kirk Jones (Everybody’s Fine-46%, Nanny McPhee-76%)
directs the ensemble cast in one big cliche about pregnancy and
parenthood. (sort of like my from-experience list at the top). I can’t
imagine critics loving this movie even if there are a few laughs here
and there. These big, star-studded pieces rarely resonate critically
and I don’t expect this movie to be any different. The Rotten Watch for
What to Expect When You’re Expecting is 35%.
Here comes a movie in the “Hollywood is officially out of ideas”
category. I can’t have been the only person out there who thought a
studio putting out a flick based on a board game, that basically just
involved plotted points on a coordinate grid, was a total joke. Like
complete prank time. Battleship wasn’t even a cool game. It was a time
killer with barely a modicum of strategy. But anytime you can spin a
premise based on fourth grade math into a big budget film you have to do
it right? If you’re Peter Berg you do, I guess.
**
**Quick sidenote: if Hollywood does insist on making kid’s games into movies, I’ve got some ideas for them in this old piece. Enjoy.
Thankfully Berg (Hancock-40%, The Kingdom-51%) appears to
have left out dialogue like “E5 is a hit,” instead opting for the
battleships to fight an unknown alien presence out in the ocean
somewhere. Judging from the trailer, that’s just about all that
happens. Oh and Taylor Kitsch and Alexander Skarsgard are good looking.
In fact, Berg presents a Navy fleet more like a modeling agency than a
nautical military threat. In addition to Kitsch and Skarsgard we’ve
got Rihanna, Brooklyn Decker and even Liam Neeson if you like ‘em a
little older. Where do I sign up for that tour of duty?
There’s no bigger Friday Night Lights fan than this guy, so I
want Berg’s career trajectory to continue with artistic, thoughtful
pieces like that movie and show. Unfortunately, except for Tim Riggins
getting involved, Battleship is a long way from Dillon, Texas.
With a bunch of reviews already in (enough that this one won’t count on
the Rotten Resume) critics are split down the middle with even the
positive reviews almost apologizing for liking it. The score won’t
stray too far from the middle, but I see it dipping a little more. The
Rotten Watch for Battleship is 43%.
The Dictator
Urban British faux-hoodlum who rocks gold chains and FUBU while
interviewing dudes like Gore Vidal and Newt Gingrich? Check. Naive,
hairy and incredibly anti-semitic Kazahkstani journalist on a quest to
understand these great United States by offending everyone in it? Check.
Flamboyantly homosexual fashion guru with a penchant for using humans
as chairs and making out with guys in front of bloodthirsty, homophobic
dudes from Arkansas? You betcha. And now a Gaddafi-like tyrant on the
loose in New York City? Why not?
Say what you want about Sacha Baron Cohen, but dude is committed. Like
crazy, over-the-top, possibly teetering on the edge of insanity
committed. And I love it. Whether is was Ali G, Borat, Bruno or now
Admiral General Aladeen there isn’t another entertainer out there who’s
put himself more in harm’s way than Cohen (except the guys from Jackass.)
But unlike those MTV bad boys, Cohen’s risks aren’t entirely physical
(which he seems to do an amazing amount of) but also in the court of
public opinion. I get the sense Cohen would just assume have everyone
hate his guts if it got his work some publicity. He’s all about the
buzz. And I love it.
His latest, The Dictator takes him out of the mockumentary style
and into more of a studio film. This probably reduces his risk of
bodily harm quite a bit, but Cohen still maintains his edge appearing in
character at every public event, including the Oscars. Larry Charles,
who also directed Bruno (67%) and Borat (91%) is at the
helm again and critics are trending more than positive. Again, a bunch
of reviews are already in so we won’t count this on the resume either,
but critics like what they see. The Tomatometer score’s at 75%. I see
it dipping a bit over the next week, but not by too much. I doubt Cohen
cares one way or the other. The Rotten Watch for The Dictator is 69%.
What to Expect When You’re Expecting
Want to know what to expect when you’ve got a child on the way? Save
your hard-earned money and don’t buy the book. Take it from a guy who
knows. I’ll outline the nine months chronologically in clear, concise
terms everyone can understand. Here we go: excitement, nagging fear,
violent moodswings, kegels, Haagen-Dazs, waddling, swollen ankles,
constant urination, kicking, heavy breathing, a thing called a birth
ball, NASCAR driving to the hospital, moaning, screaming, blood, crying,
baby, joy, never sleeping again. See? I just saved everyone a couple
of bucks on Amazon. You’re welcome.
Because this seems to be movies-based-on-anything-we-can-find week at
the theaters, this flick’s premise draws directly from a book about
birth. Not a memoir or work of fiction mind you, but an actual guide
for pregnant women. I get the sense we’re not too far away from an
entire movie franchise based on those Idiot’s Guide to...” books. Wish I was kidding about this.
Rather than run through which actors and actresses are in this flick,
I’ll just list who isn’t: Rosario Dawson and Jim Carrey. Everyone else
in Hollywood has a part. Kirk Jones (Everybody’s Fine-46%, Nanny McPhee-76%)
directs the ensemble cast in one big cliche about pregnancy and
parenthood. (sort of like my from-experience list at the top). I can’t
imagine critics loving this movie even if there are a few laughs here
and there. These big, star-studded pieces rarely resonate critically
and I don’t expect this movie to be any different. The Rotten Watch for
What to Expect When You’re Expecting is 35%.
Sort By
- Vitalani 2012/05/14 05:49:16BattleshipI thought battleship was actually pretty decent and I love Sacha Baron Cohen.... And the other one looks good... The book was.reply















