Tag Archives: jon m. chu

REVIEW: Meatheaded ‘G.I. Joe: Retaliation’ Should Be Titled ‘Regurgitation’

Offering a more straight-faced brand of idiocy than its cheerfully dumb 2009 predecessor, G.I. Joe: Retaliation might well have been titled G.I. Joe: Regurgitation , advertising big guns, visual effects and that other line of Hasbro toys with the same joyless, chew-everything-up-and-spit-it-out efficiency. Largely devoid of personality, apart from a few nifty action flourishes courtesy of helmer Jon M. Chu , Paramount’s late-March blockbuster, pushed back from a 2012 release (ostensibly to allow for a 3D conversion), may have trouble matching G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra ’s $302 million worldwide gross. But with no shortage of merchandising and other cross-promotional opportunities, it should still score significant attention from targeted male viewers. Appreciably rougher and grittier in feel than the Stephen Sommers-directed The Rise of Cobra , Retaliation  makes any number of ham-fisted bids for topical relevance, and naturally almost every one of them represents an affront to good taste. Among other things, the film is a sort of accidental comedy about nuclear warfare, as much of the silly plot concerns a global summit where the hope of mass disarmament soon gives way to the threat of mass annihilation. Elsewhere, the script (by Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick) finds our trusty Joes raiding a North Korean compound shortly before they head to Islamabad, where they wind up framed for the assassination of Pakistan’s president. All this geopolitical mayhem is being orchestrated by the U.S. commander-in-chief (Jonathan Pryce) — or rather, the dastardly doppelganger who’s impersonating him with the aid of super-sophisticated “nanomite” technology (because latex is just a little too Mission: Impossible ). The president’s stand-in is a high-ranking member of Cobra, a secret network of megalomaniacs bent on wiping out the G.I. Joes once and for all, and in the early going, they come perilously close. Tatum Channing’s Screen Time Is Brief Probably aware that no one in the audience could possibly care about any sense of continuity with The Rise of Cobra  and its eminently forgettable characters, the filmmakers have opted to retain just a few key players this time around. In what feels like an odd miscalculation given the actor’s recent popularity, Channing Tatum’s Duke is around for only about 10 minutes to pass the baton to a fresh G.I. Joe unit led by the physically imposing Roadblock ( Dwayne Johnson ) and rounded out by Flint (D.J. Cotrona) and Lady Jaye (Adrianne Palicki), both of whom evince far less charisma than the military-grade weapons provided them by Gen. Joe Colton ( Bruce Willis , phoning it in). Actor To Watch: Byung-hyun Lee Providing a bit more interest is the Joes’ ninja faction, chiefly Snake Eyes (Ray Park), whose inexpressive mask stands in marked contrast to the piercing gaze of his longtime nemesis, white-clad swordfighter Storm Shadow ( Korean star Byung-hyun Lee ). Along with newcomer Jinx (Elodie Yung), these returning characters figure prominently into the picture’s finest moment, a fight scene in the Himalayas that employs wirework and stereoscopy to highly vertiginous effect. The visual grace of this sequence is no surprise coming from Chu, who demonstrated a real flair for staging in the two Step Up  pics he directed. But as in those movies, sustaining a narrative or transcending a patchy script seem beyond his abilities. One of the least savory aspects of the franchise is the unseemly pleasure it takes in the wholesale destruction of foreign cities, which goes hand-in-hand with its jingoistic portrait of American military might. Audiences who thrilled to the sight of Paris under biochemical attack in Cobra  will be pleased to watch London endure an even more horrific fate here, although the sequence is tossed off in quick, almost ho-hum fashion, with no time to dwell on anything so exquisitely crass as the spectacle of the Eiffel Tower collapsing. Meatheaded and derivative as it is, G.I. Joe: Retaliation  is hardly the nadir, as hollow corporate products go; certainly it’s nowhere near as aggressively off-putting as the Transformers  movies, the other action-figure adaptations in the Hasbro universe. The dialogue has improved markedly since the earlier outing, and the lensing and editing, while hardly models of coherence, just about manage to avoid excessive jumpiness. Andrew Menzies’ production design, with sets standing in for everything from a Tokyo skyscraper to a Nepalese monastery, proves resourceful within the confines of a largely New Orleans-shot production. With the exceptions of the often mesmerizing Lee and the ever-reliable Johnson, the performances are merely serviceable. Follow Movieline on  Twitter .

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REVIEW: Meatheaded ‘G.I. Joe: Retaliation’ Should Be Titled ‘Regurgitation’

Step Up 4 Trailer: Fighting Evil Developers With Flash Mobs

Here’s a last bit of breezy entertainment as you head into the weekend: The first trailer for Miami-set dance sequel Step Up 4 , AKA Step Up: Revolution , in which a new pair of star-crossed lovers leads their crew into syncopated battle against prejudice rival gangs foreclosure evil land developers. This series has wound a long, glossy path since the days of Channing Tatum b-boying in the parking lot, but hey: It’s a new Step Up movie! As long as that Moose kid and Madd Chadd show up, I’m good to go. Of course, Jon M. Chu has moved on from the Step Up films to helm the G.I. Joe sequel (Chu directed the second and third installments of the series, making the franchise a hit) but he remains a producer with music video veteran Scott Speer in the director’s chair . (Speer previously directed the “Duet” episode of Chu’s online dance series The LXD , which inspires some faith in his eye for movement and storytelling.) My biggest hangup about Step Up 4 , however, isn’t that the two new leads, Kathryn McCormick and Ryan Guzman, are unknown — following in Step Up tradition — or that the trailer is almost too-slick looking, or that dancers on pogo legs don’t really do much for me. It’s that flash mobs are so tired already; once Justin Timberlake used them to woo Mila Kunis last year and Howie Mandel hosted a reality TV show about real people springing grandiose flash mob-gestures upon their estranged loved ones, I was kind of done with them. Also: What is Peter Gallagher doing in this movie playing the evil real estate developer who will threaten to dash the community’s dreams before being defeated by the power of dance?? He was in Center Stage 1 AND 2! YOU’RE ONLY ALLOWED TO BE IN ONE DANCE FRANCHISE, OTHERWISE THE UNIVERSE IMPLODES!!! Verdict: Seems like a missed opportunity to open Step Up 4 in 4-D, but I’ll give it a whirl anyway because yes, I am a sucker for these movies. Step Up: Revolution Against Peter Gallagher opens in theaters July 27.

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Step Up 4 Trailer: Fighting Evil Developers With Flash Mobs

Justin Bieber, Werner Herzog to Finally Square Off for an Award

The fifth annual Cinema Eye Honors for Nonfiction Filmmaking will be handed out next month in New York City, with such inveterate documentarians as Errol Morris ( Tabloid ), Steve James ( The Interrupters ) and Kevin Macdonald ( Life in a Day ) facing off against the upstart likes of Alma Har’el ( Bombay Beach ), Tristan Patterson ( Dragonslayer ) and Clio Barnard ( The Arbor ). But look no further than the Audience Choice Award nominees for the most dynamic, high-stakes clash between old and new.

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Justin Bieber, Werner Herzog to Finally Square Off for an Award

Pixar Releases Yet Another Image of Brave’s Archer Princess Merida

You may have seen the trailer and stills for Pixar’s first fairy tale Brave but that doesn’t mean that you know anything more about the film than when it was first announced. A new image of Princess Merida (voiced by Kelly Macdonald) doesn’t do much to clear that mystery up… but it is gorgeous. Check it out ahead.

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Pixar Releases Yet Another Image of Brave’s Archer Princess Merida

Watch William Shatner Interview Fellow Star Trek Captains for Documentary Captains

Jon M. Chu Promises Gritty G.I. Joe 2 and No 3-D Conversion

As soon as Paramount selected Jon M. Chu ( Step Up 2 the Streets, Step Up 3D, Justin Bieber: Never Say Never ) to direct their upcoming G.I. Joe sequel, the filmmaker faced the uphill battle of changing the perception that he was just a dance movie guy. But in a new interview, the helmer goes long on his love for the property, explains his vision for the sequel, corrects Rachel Nichols’ Tweet that certain characters might not return, and vehemently swears that he’d rather make a 2-D film than convert to 3-D in post.

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Jon M. Chu Promises Gritty G.I. Joe 2 and No 3-D Conversion

Jon M. Chu on Shirtless Bieber, Shawty Mane, and the Difficulties of Never Say Never

Having proved his facility bringing pop entertainment to a young, plugged-in audience with successes both theatrical ( Step Up 2 & 3 ) and digital ( The LXD ), 31-year-old director Jon M. Chu was in many ways the perfect choice to helm a biopic of YouTube sensation-turned-pop phenom Justin Bieber. The resulting film, Never Say Never , is a generation-defining concert doc filled with rare peeks into the life of the 16-year-old performer. It’s also got slo-mo hair tosses and shirtless scenes. Bieber Nation, prepare thyself.

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Jon M. Chu on Shirtless Bieber, Shawty Mane, and the Difficulties of Never Say Never

Never Say Never: 9 Reasons It’s OK to Admit You Have Bieber Fever

It’s time to face facts: Justin Bieber is the future. You may have resisted his viral ascent to YouTube glory, or rebuffed those confection-like hit singles as they attempted to infect your brain, but this week, as his biopic-rockumentary Never Say Never hits screens nationwide — yes, documenting all 16 drama-filled years of this pop icon’s life — we will all fall prey to the epidemic of adorbs. Here’s why you should just sit back and succumb to the Bieber Fever.

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Never Say Never: 9 Reasons It’s OK to Admit You Have Bieber Fever