The Travers Take

August 2009 Archives

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At The Movies With Peter Travers: "Taking Woodstock" and "World's Greatest Dad"

August 27, 2009 6:12 PM

This weekend At the Movies, Rolling Stone's film critic Peter Travers celebrates the 40th anniversary of a certain legendary music festival by tripping back to 1969 with Taking Woodstock. The film has all the ingredients needed for a great film: an Oscar-winning director in Ang Lee, top-notch actors like Emile Hirsch and Liev Schreiber and a world-famous, generation-spanning event at its epicenter. Unfortunately, the film never actually makes it to Woodstock, opting to tell the story of how the festival made its way to Yasgur's Farm in upstate New York instead the story of the fest itself.

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Off the Cuff With Peter Travers: Rob Zombie

August 27, 2009 1:29 PM

In the latest episode of Peter Travers' chat show Off the Cuff, Halloween 2 director Rob Zombie swings by the office to discuss chick flicks (Zombie calls He's Not That Into You "excruciating"), how blogs have diminished the role of the movie critic and the possibility of Zombie making a feature-length version of his Grind House trailer, Were-Women of the SS.

"Quentin is saying that Inglourious Basterds is the end-all, be-all of Nazi films, so he either beat me to the punch, or it's the return of the Nazi film," Zombie says of the project. "So if that's a big smash, Nazis are the new black. They're back. And ours is one step more because they're werewolf Nazis."

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Quentin Tarantino Wins the Box Office War with "Basterds", but Who's Your Favorite Tarantino Character Ever?

August 24, 2009 11:19 AM

Photo: © The Weinstein Company

So Quentin Tarantino scores his biggest opening weekend ($37.6 million) with Inglourious Basterds and the media gives Brad Pitt all the credit for bringing the babes into Quentin's violent world. How come Pitt couldn’t even bring a mouse into theaters showing The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford? Damn you, Hollywood! Don’t even give us a minute to think that maybe, just maybe, audiences lined up for IB because they thought QT was onto something with his World War II fantasia. Anyway, let Tarantino enjoy his day as “The Man With the Big Sombrero” (a song used in the film). If the box-office dips precipitously next week, the media basterds will surely blame QT not golden boy Brad. What's really irritating is that Pitt's role is far from front and center. IG belongs evil heart and soul to Austrian actor Christoph Waltz as the alluring Nazi monster Hans Landa. Right now, the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor is in Waltz’s pocket. The character is one of QT’s most inspired creations. Maybe the most inspired. Which brings me to today’s topic. If not Hans Landa, who do you think is the most memorable character Tarantino has ever created? Here are my nominees:

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At The Movies With Peter Travers: "Inglourious Basterds," "My One And Only" and "Post Grad"

August 20, 2009 5:59 PM

For those who love the cinema, this weekend presents possibly the most anticipated film of 2009: Quentin Tarantino's Inglourious Basterds, or as Peter Travers calls it, QT's How I Won the War. A revenge film with dozens of subplots, the plot boils down to this: Brad Pitt stars as Lt. Aldo Raine, a backwoods hick from Tennessee that demands that each of his Jewish-American soldiers give him 100 Nazi scalps while under serving under "Aldo the Apache." It's all revisionist history, from a fiery film premiere that brings the upper crust of the Nazi regime—including Adolf Hitler—to the recruitment of a British film critic/soldier named Archie Hicox, sensationally played by actor Michael Fassbiner. This is Tarantino's vision of World War II, and it's a breath of fresh air.

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At The Movies With Peter Travers: "District 9" and "The Time Traveler's Wife"

August 13, 2009 5:21 PM

Peter Travers has had a bad week. Not only did he pay his own hard-earned money to see the deplorable G.I. Joe last week, millions around the world also spent a fraction of their paychecks seeing G.I. Joe, thereby ensuring that Travers will eventually have to stomach watching G.I. Joe 2.

But let's not get too far ahead of ourselves, since there's a new film in theaters this weekend that rewards us all for enduring the Transformers 2s of the Hollywood world, and this new film is called District 9. Produced by Lord of the Rings' Peter Jackson and written and directed by South African first-timer Neill Blomkamp, the pair only needed $30 million to make the must-see sci-fi film of the summer. And yes, that includes Star Trek.

Read Peter Travers' full review of District 9.

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"G.I. Joe" Scores Dough, But Can You Name One Megabudget Sci-fi Movie This Summer That Is Actually Good?

August 10, 2009 10:49 AM

Photo: Paramount Pictures
The craptacular G.I. Joe hit paydirt on opening weekend — $56 million here at home, another $44 million from the rest of the world. With Transformers 2 inching toward $400 million, we have proof positive that the creative locus of Hollywood now resides within the Hasbro toy company. Funeral services for plot and characterization will be announced shortly. G.I. Joe also marks the end of summer for action blockbusters that cost north of $100 and feature special effects in starring roles. As an experiment, let's look at the budget-busting toy movies that opened this summer and see if there's even one that actually achieves excellence and bears repeat viewings. I know what I'd pick for Best (hint: pointy ears) and Worst (hint: Michael Bay). But you go first. Here's the list:

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At the Movies With Peter Travers: "G.I. Joe"

August 7, 2009 4:34 PM

This morning, while most of you were still sleeping, Peter Travers did something very adventurous for this week's At The Movies: He went to his local movie theater, plunked down $10 and change and went to see a matinee screening of G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra because Paramount Pictures wouldn't let film critics get a sneak peek. After 120 action-packed minutes, Travers emerged from with some good news: G.I. Joe is not worse than the decade's most abominable film, Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen. However, that doesn't mean by any stretch that G.I. Joe is a good film, it's "big, loud and galactically stupid," according to Travers. It's just better than Transformers 2, but still worse than everything else in theaters now.

Read Travers' review of G.I. Joe here.

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Remembering John Hughes: A Teenager At Heart

August 6, 2009 6:09 PM

John Hughes hadn't written and directed a movie in years. But his death of a heart attack today on a visit to Manhattan pulled me up short. Hughes was 59, but his unique talent was for writing about the teenager in all of us, the one we don't leave behind no matter how old we get. Hughes never talked down his characters.

"The extraordinary doesn't interest me," he said. "I'm interested in the person you don't expect to have a story." Judd Apatow and Wes Anderson are just two of the filmmakers who credit the Hughes influence on their work. And so, referencing the first movie he directed, I'd like to light 16 candles in honor of indelible John Hughes movie moments. You are welcome to share yours:

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Damn You Hollywood!

August 5, 2009 12:25 PM

When Hollywood does something that pisses us off, we will react! Our new segment Damn You Hollywood! kicks off with Peter Travers taking aim at Paramount, the studio that gave us the abysmal Transformers 2. Now they've decided no critics can see GI Joe in advance. Does Peter care? Nope. He'll be checking out the first regular performance of the film Friday morning and will have a complete report. Stay tuned.


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"Funny People" Hits No. 1 at the Box Office, but Is It Judd Apatow's Best Movie or His Self-Indulgent Worst?

August 3, 2009 9:17 AM

Photo: Tracy Bennett
I have to ask. Is it possible for Funny People to hit the box office sweet spot of No. 1 with a $23.4 million weekend take and still be a fizzle? The New York Times' headline this morning declares: "Funny People Disappoints at Box Office." Huh? What? The tone of the article suggests that filmmaker Judd Apatow spent too much dough ($75 miilion) to make a serious comedy that might disappoint fans of Apatow's The 40 Year-Old Virgin and Knocked Up (both costing about $30 million). And what was Apatow thinking by casting his megastar friend Adam Sandler in a movie about a comedian battling a potentially terminal disease. If I'm reading right, Apatow and Sandler have let down audiences by trying to grow as filmmakers. WTF? That kind of message precisely pinpoints what's wrong with how movies are perceived in our current culture. By box-office standards, Transformers 2 is a triumph and Hurt Locker is an arty gnat that deserves squashing.

(Check out photos of the Stars in Judd Apatow’s Universe.)

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