Tag Archives: Noah Taylor

Edge of Tomorrow review

Director: Doug Liman

Starring: Tom Cruise, Emily Blunt, Bill Paxton, Brendan Gleeson, Jonas Armstrong, Noah Taylor, Charlotte Riley, Tony Way, Kick Gurry, Franz Drameh

Edge of Tomorrow looked genuinely dim in prospect; it unites two filmmakers in dire need of a win. Firstly its star Tom Cruise who enjoyed muted success with the recent Oblivion, Knight and Day and Jack Reacher but flopped with Rock of Ages. We may have to reach back to Valkyrie, maybe even Last Samurai or Minority Report for a non-franchise, satisfying Cruise lead. The other is director Doug Liman; the Swingers/Bourne Identity man since Jumper and Fair Game proved either a critical or financial pleaser. The outside view doesn’t get any better when you consider that the plot once you consider that the plot screams of great unoriginality.

Cowardly major William Cage (Cruise) poses as the media face of the futuristic military’s attempts to reclaim Europe after it’s infestation by aliens known as mimics. After refusing his combat services, Cage is detained by General Brigham (Gleeson) and awakes in the thick of the front line infantry. He’s swiftly deployed into a supposed surprise attack on French land but hordes of the enemy are waiting for the soldiers. Cage is killed within minutes but returns to the army camp he was in twenty-four hours ago and is forced to fight the battle again. The only person who understands Cage’s condition is veteran and propaganda icon Rita Vrataski (Blunt) as the same thing once happened to her.

The unoriginality is a genuine problem, Groundhog Day, Source Code and Starship Troopers all coming to mind, but a refreshing sting comes from Christopher McQuarrie’s work on the screenplay, finally giving us a reason to be excited for Mission: Impossible 5. As the story expands, what initially seemed like throwaway lines (“Battle is the great redeemer,”) are given context and quickly seem both profound and appropriate to the narrative.

The story is hugely playful with its time travelling concept prompting gags and drama in equal measure. Cage is forced to reiterate his predicament to Vrataski who’s meeting him for the first time each day even though he knows her better than anyone while there’s great comical property in the soldier’s failed attempts at infiltration.

Stylistically, Doug Liman’s directing is taking a very different approach to the generic action treatment we expected. It’s got the punch of Bourne, the jumps of Aliens and occasionally bringing to mind the likes of Saving Private Ryan. Even with these in mind, the film’s greatest inspiration is obviously video games – the whole concept of replaying a battle until victory is gained, each time picking up more knowledge and memorising tactics in order to win, is evidently spawned from the various shooter games around.

Thankfully Cruise’s role as Cage is given genuine room for development as he grows from a rat-faced PR into the action hero we know him as. He doesn’t fully convey the likely torment of dying every day but is still the best he’s been in ages. Blunt, a relative newcomer to a full on action role (she doesn’t quite get into the thick of the action in Looper or The Adjustment Bureau, is brilliantly cast as the ultimate warrior type that would ordinarily go to a male such as Cruise and therefore cleverly reversing the blockbuster norm.

Across the rest of the cast, Bill Paxton is extremely pleasing as Cage’s devilish Sergeant Farell and Noah Taylor’s Dr is fine but the rest of the supporting players are a frustrating group of caricatures. One of the generation’s great actors, Brendan Gleeson, is thoroughly wasted in a standard sinister general role while Cage’s reject regiment J Squad seem to only exist in order to string together the weak finale.

McQuarrie’s shine on the script does wane in the film’s final act. Edge of Tomorrow is clearly suffering World War Z’s syndrome of a last-minute rewritten ending that reluctantly walks away from the rest of the narrative. The final act completely contradicts the science introduced beforehand; I don’t for one minute believe that alien blood can allow time travel but I can should the logic be consistent, which it is for the first ninety minutes or so.

The problematic ending does cast a shadow over the film but this is one of the year’s unexpected delights. The leading trio of Cruise, Paxton and Blunt are superb while Liman and McQuarrie do an excellent job of fully embracing the war film aspect, shooing away the worries of unoriginality. It’s hugely smart (never once going the way you expect), funny (occasionally taking a dark comic glee in it’s brutality) but crucially it’s genuinely thrilling.

8/10

“What I am about to tell you sounds crazy. But you have to listen to me. Your very lives depend on it. You see, this isn’t the first time we’ve had this conversation.”

Doug Liman talks Edge of Tomorrow and Zack Snyder teases the new Batmobile!

In a summer of huge releases, one picture with a great possibility of getting washed away in the busy summer; mega-releases such as X-Men: Days of Future Past, The Amazing Spider-Man 2, Dawn of the Planet of the Apes and Transformers: Age of Extinction are likely to dominate proceedings. Despite boasting the presence of three time Oscar nominee Tom Cruise (Mission: Impossible, Top Gun, Oblivion, Minority Report, Rain Man, Jerry Maguire, Born on the Fourth of July), Edge of Tomorrow hasn’t topped any of this year’s box office. Director Doug Liman (The Bourne Identity, Jumper) has opened up to Total Film in order to up the profile of his upcoming sci-fi. “The world has seen every single movie Tom Cruise has ever done, so to come up with a character he hasn’t played before. He’s like a total coward in this movie! The number of times he squeals in the movie out of fear…Tom does an amazing squeal.” Edge of Tomorrow also stars Emily Blunt, Bil Paxton, Lara Pulver, Noah Taylor and Brendan Gleeson.

Writer\director Zack Snyder (Watchmen, Man of Steel, Dawn of the Dead, 300) has ticked off the first few boxes for making a Batman movie, which his upcoming, and untitled, Batman vs Superman essentially is. A fantastic writer, David Goyer (The Dark Knight) and an ensemble cast have been added but we’re yet to hear of anything related to an essential part of Batman’s life: The Batmobile. However, Snyder’s recent Twitter tease confirms its place in the film. The Batmobile has endured numerous iconic screen depictions such as the sped-up red/black machine of 1966, Tim Burton’s sleek beast from 1989 and Chris Nolan’s bulky, militaristic vision, nicknamed “The Tumbler”, from 2005. Anyway, the car has been a part of Batman almost as long has the character’s been around so any version is welcomed with eager eyes. Batman vs Superman will star Ben Affleck, Henry Cavill, Amy Adams, Jesse Eisenberg, Gal Gadot, Jeremy Irons, Holly Hunter, Ray Fisher, Tao Okamoto, Callan Mulvey, Diane Lane and Laurence Fishburne.

Batman vs. Superman – April 19th 2016

Edge of Tomorrow – May 30th

New posters for The Double, Foxx and Stone to make Martin Luther King and Michael Bay plans Telemark thriller

You may have read any of my previous blogs about The Double and so know a bit about this film. Richard Ayoade (the brilliantly comedic star of The IT Crowd and director of the 2011 hit Submarine) directs this film which has some major faces of Hollywood in it; Jesse Eisenberg (Now You See Me, The Social Network, 30 Minutes or Less), Mia Wasikowska (Alice in Wonderland, Stoker, The Kids Are All Right), Chris O’Dowd (Friends With Kids, Frequently Asked Questions About Time Travel, Bridesmaids), Wallace Shawn (Toy Story, The Princess Bride), Paddy Considine (The Bourne Ultimatum, Cinderella Man), Noah Taylor (Vanilla Sky, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory), Yasmin Paige (Ballet Shoes) and Craig Roberts (Submarine, Jane Eyre) are all set to star!

The story sees Eisenberg’s character Simon as he looses his grasp on his life when his doppleganger (Eisenberg again) turns up and starts stealing everything and everyone he loves. Both Eisenberg and Wasikowska feature in these new character posters from Empire which you can enjoy be clicking next to cycle through.

Jamie Foxx (Oscar winner for Ray as well as being loved for Collateral, Django Unchained and Law Abiding Citizen) recently starred as the President in the recent action thriller White House Down. After that, he’s got a voice credit in the upcoming comedy animation Rio 2 (April 4th 2014) before he’s off to terrify Marvel fans as Electro in The Amazing Spiderman 2 (April 18th 2014) and then give us something to smile about in comedy Annie (December 19th 2014). His next potential role is in a Martin Luther King biopic though.

Oliver Stone (3 time Oscar winner of Platoon, JFK, Any Given Sunday and Wall Street fame) is set to direct the production which Paul Greengrass and Lee Daniels were linked to before. Dreamworks, who got the rights back in 2009, are going to produce the project. Screenwriter Kario Salem will be rewriting a draft script originally written by Ronald Harwood (known for smash hits like The Pianist and The Diving Bell and the Butterfly and the successful Quartet and Australia).

We move on to Michael Bay, director of the Transformers trilogy, Armageddon, Pearl Harbour and many others, and his possible next project called Sabotage: A Genius Scientist, His Band of Young Commandos and the Mission to Kill Hitler’s Super Bomb. It’s nothing to do with Arnold Schwarzenegger, Sam Worthington, Olivia Williams and Terrence Howard’s crime thriller of name Sabotage but it tells a story similar to Anthony Mann’s 1965 thriller The Heroes of Telemark (however based upon the yet unreleased novel by Neal Bascomb) and sees a team of heroes going into 1940s Germany and destroying Hitler’s secret weapon.

The Double – October 12th at the London Film Festival

Martin Luther King – 2016?

Sabotage: A Genius Scientist, His Band of Young Commandos and the Mission to Kill Hitler’s Super Bomb – 2016 or 2017?

Richard Ayoade directs Jesse Eisenberg in The Double trailer

Sorry that today’s post isn’t massively long but, after beginning on my next feature The Autumn 2013 TV Preview with Doctor Who 50th Anniversary and 8th series, Cumberbatch and Freeman returning for Sherlock series 3, The Big Bang Theory season 7, How I Met Your Mother 8, Freddie Highmore in Bates Motel, Karl Urban in Almost Human, Joss Whedon’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D, The Michael J Fox Show, Game of Thrones 4 and many more, I realised that that project may need a but more time than I had today.

Even though nobody can pronounce his name, the London born Richard Ayoade is an undeniable, BAFTA nominated, acting, writing and directing talent. He’ll be known best, for some, for acting alongside Chris O’Dowd in comedy series The IT Crowd and Ben Stiller, Vince Vaughn and Jonah Hill sc-fi comedy The Watch as well as directing the successful British teen rom-com Submarine with Paddy Considine. His first follow-up to Submarine is The Double.

Here’s the film’s trailer. The comedy stars Oscar nominated actor Jesse Eisenberg (The Social Network, Now You See Me, Zombieland) playing Simon who’s happy life takes a horrific turn when his doppleganger, James (Eisenberg again), turns up. Mia Wasikowska (Stoker, Alice in Wonderland), Wallace Shawn (Toy Story, The Princess Bride), James Fox (Sherlock Holmes, Patriot Games) and Submarine star Noah Taylor and Yasmin Paige.

It’s certainly going to be a bit more grim and less whimsical than Submarine, despite IMDB clearly listing it as a comedy. Hopefully this’ll confirm Ayoade as one of the most promising British triple threats (writer, director, actor) of the moment.

The Double is on now at the Toronto Film Festival, Canada, and will be commercially available soon

The Tuorhoth Autumn 2013 preview will be available here on Tuorhoth Movies later this week.