Thursday, December 31, 2015

Top 20 Worst, Underwhelming, and Mediocre Films of 2015

PSYCHOPATH’S TOP 20 WORST AND UNDERWHELMING FILMS OF 2015

1.     Fantastic Four (WORST!)
2.     Point Break
3.     Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Road Chip
4.     Hitman: Agent 47
5.     The Transporter: Refueled
6.     Seventh Son
7.     Fifty Shades of Grey
8.     Taken 3
9.     Victor Frankenstein
10.  Run All Night
11.  Hot Tub Time Machine 2
12.  Terminator: Genisys
13.  San Andreas
14.  Pixels
15.  Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse
16.  Pan
17.  Daddy's Home
18.  Home
19.  Jupiter Ascending
20.  Freaks of Nature
Runner-Ups: The Divergent Series: Insurgent, No Escape, Vacation, The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials 



Top 20 Best Films of 2015

PSYCHOPATH’S TOP 20 BEST FILMS OF 2015

1.     Mad Max: Fury Road
2.     Inside Out
3.     Star Wars: The Force Awakens
4.     Spotlight
5.     The Martian
6.     Ant-Man
7.     Avengers: Age of Ultron
8.     When Marnie Was There
9.     Batkid Begins
10.  Me and Earl and the Dying Girl
11.  Ex-Machina
12.  Trumbo
13.  Dope
14.  It Follows
15.  What We Do in the Shadows
16.  The Hateful Eight
17.  Furious 7
18.  Dragonball Z: Resurrection F
19.  Mission: Impossible: Rogue Nation
20.  The Gift
Honorable Mentions: Straight Outta Compton, The Hunger Games: Mockingjay: Part 2, Creed, The Good Dinosaur, Bridge of Spies, Steve Jobs, Sicario, Black Mass, Crimson Peak, The Walk, Spy, Trainwreck, Shaun the Sheep, The End of the Tour, Paddington, The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water, Jurassic World, Cinderella, Ghost in the Shell: The New Movie, Everest, Sisters, Kingsman: The Secret Service, The Man from U.N.C.L.E., The Peanuts Movie, Concussion, Joy, Hotel Transylvania 2, Goosebumps, In the Heart of the Sea, The Night Before, Ricki and the Flash, Krampus, Monkey Kingdom, McFarland, USA, Magic Mike XXL, Southpaw, We Are Your Friends, Unfriended, Spectre, American Ultra, Minions, Tomorrowland, Pitch Perfect 2, The Visit, Ted 2, Entourage, The Age of Adaline, Chappie, Focus, True Story, The Revenant (Released widely in 2016)



Point Break review

POINT BREAK:
THE ONLY POINT THIS REMAKE BREAKS IS THE POINT OF ITS EXISTENCE!
By Nico Beland
Movie Review: * out of 4
WARNER BROS. PICTURES
A psychotically insane athletic heist is rising in Point Break

            In the tradition of pointless remakes that Hollywood keeps crapping out from The Haunting and Clash of the Titans to Arthur and Total Recall, you’d think they couldn’t get any more desperate with their remakes. Well, you’d be wrong, they decided to “Re-Imagine” one of the early films directed by Kathryn Bigelow who would later go on to receive critical and commercial success with The Hurt Locker and Zero Dark Thirty, her 1991 action thriller that originally starred Keanu Reeves, Patrick Swayze, and Gary Busey, Point Break which, while it was a hit when it first came out in theaters, the reviews were mixed and it’s a movie that a lot of people forget about, so we have a remake of an early 90s movie that isn’t a timeless classic, now Clash of the Titans and Total Recall, I can understand remaking those because they’re very iconic movies that a lot of people remember, this isn’t.
            I don’t mean the original Point Break is a bad movie, it’s a good movie, but I don’t think the film screams “Remake this Classic For A New Generation!” If anything I’m surprised Hollywood hasn’t done a remake of James Cameron’s Titanic yet (But in a way, we did get two remakes outside of Hollywood…I’ll just leave it at that!). But I was curious to see how the finished product turned out, and I was very surprised.
Oh, not that it’s a good movie, on the contrary, it’s a spectacular failure of both a remake and a standalone film. The plot and character development take a far back seat on that plane the athletes were riding in, and decide just to show off some radical and tubular stunts with wooden characters and character development almost being non-existent.
Whenever I review I remake or any re-imagining for that matter, I do my best not to focus entirely on comparing it to the original film it was based on, I usually try to balance both original comparisons and how it holds up on its own. This is one of those times where looking at the remake on its own accomplished nothing aside from a few neat stunts, the characters were developed so badly I didn’t care who was going to live and who was going to die in the end, in fact after the movie ended I forgot the characters instantly and that’s not a good sign, even movies like Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen or Fantastic Four (2015) I at least remembered the characters, I didn’t even bother getting attached to these characters because the main character’s back story is extremely rushed and edited horribly and none of the characters really express how they’re feeling, they’re not characters, they’re half-ass plot devices to get the movie going, and perhaps after I describe the plot you might see where I’m coming from.
            The film stars Luke Bracey (Monte Carlo, G.I. Joe: Retaliation, The November Man) as former extreme motocross star and surfer turned extreme athlete, Johnny Utah (Keanu Reeves’ character from the original movie) who becomes an FBI agent shortly after the death of his best friend (Without developing him or showing a funeral, literally he dies in the first ten minutes of the movie and it’s completely brushed over, almost like a Disney movie!). He learns about a skyscraper heist where these mysterious bank robbing extreme-sports criminal athletes led by surfer, Bodhi (Édgar Ramírez-The Bourne Ultimatum, Carlos, Zero Dark Thirty) parachute down their escape and another heist where they skydive out of a plane and unload dollar bills in mid-air over Mexico and suddenly disappear.
            Utah agrees to go undercover as a criminal athlete to collect information on the criminals to eventually bring them to justice. And then the film transitions to extremely repetitive stunts without developing the rest of the characters.
            Overall, the original Point Break, while it’s not the greatest crime thriller of all time, it was at least a well put together movie and the characters were developed well, and it starred well-known actors. This however makes the original look like The Hurt Locker, I don’t think Keanu Reeves is technically a good actor, but he had some decent parts in Bill and Ted, Speed, and The Matrix, however the characters in the remake made me pray for his hokey acting, because at least that’s SOMETHING, I pretty much got nothing out of these new characters, I didn’t care who they were, were they going to die, and if they accomplish their heist, because the writers clearly didn’t care about developing them and instead decided to watch some sports on TV, it’s basically a stunt show with a film budget.

            Hopefully Kathryn Bigelow will learn from this and not allow any more remakes of her films ESPECIALLY Hurt Locker and Zero Dark Thirty. If you just want to see some extreme stunts, you might like it fine, but if you want a smart story, decent characters, and an overall well put together movie, rent the original.