*Anon*’s Film Reviews
103 Films have been rated or reviewed by *Anon*.
Box, The (2009)
Plot driven scifi suspense drama which needs to be taken on its own terms. Well produced and well acted. Something of a throwback to the 1970\'s and with plenty of the weirdness and excess typical of that time. I didn\'t think that it was too long.
Guns of Navarone, The (1961)
Every scene a mini dramatic production: perfect lighting; perfect choreography. some of the acting a little stilted by today\'s standards. Lots of spectacular special effects, although not of the CGI variety. Has aged remarkably well.
Contagion (2011)
Surprisingly good for a formulaic Hollywood movie. Attention to detail, some good acting and the steady hand of Steven Soderbergh at the helm redeem a so–so script.
Da Vinci Code, The (2006)
Pure Hollywood movie; somewhat overproduced, lightweight and with no surprises. Constant full orchestral score gets a bit much. Overall OK but undemanding film; Raiders of the Lost Ark is better. I didn\'t think so much of the Dan Brown novel either
Point Blank (2010)
Quality French thriller. Simple, effective and time–tested script––check. Edge–of–the–seat suspense––check. Top quality acting––check. Cinematography with typically French attention to detail and quality––check. All round, it\'s a class act.
Tower Heist (2011)
Mediocre script and lack of good direction. Talented cast capable of more, especially Eddie Murphy. A curates\' egg; good in parts. Maybe they ought to have shot their script writer.
Corporation, The (2003)
The directors give a thorough and reasoned diagnosis of the corporate \"personality\" using the standard clinical tests. Sociopathic?–– definitely ; Psychotic?–– arguably. Oh dear.
Intervista (1987)
A film about film, the artform which brings our dreams to life. Not a masterpiece, but magic is in the air. A wonderful, restorative and life affirming movie. You could do much worse than to give this one a couple of hours of your life
Jacob's Ladder (1990)
Above average psycho–thriller with a sting in the tail. Good and well scripted screenplay. The hint of cinematic cliche is there, but still a quality piece. - Blu-Ray $29.95
Down by Law (1988)
quirky comedy has three misfit convicts sharing a cell in a seedy New Orleans jail and escaping together. Plenty of local colour––especially for a black & white movie. Tom Waits sings over the opening and closing credits as well as acting in the movie.