Part of that is owed to the creation of Buzz Lightyear, the cool space ranger voiced by Tim Allen, whose character instantly won over audiences. Almost 30 years later, Pixar has decided to go back to his origins, or at least his inspiration's origins. In-universe, Buzz Lightyear the action figure was modeled after Buzz Lightyear the action hero, the main character of Andy's favorite movie, Lightyear. Pixar's latest film allows us to finally experience that phenomenal blockbuster. I'm happy that Andy loved it so much, but personally, while I quite enjoyed Lightyear, it's hard for me to say it ever touches infinity, let alone goes beyond it.
Saturday, June 18, 2022
Lightyear movie review.
In 1995, Pixar burst onto the scene with Toy Story, their first foray into feature length filmmaking, and the first computer animated film in history. It was a groundbreaking film at the time, that even now has aged remarkably well, and is one of those rare films that is actually improved by the existence of its sequels. When even your fourth entry with a talking spork is a great movie, that's the sign of a truly remarkable franchise.
Saturday, June 11, 2022
Jurassic World: Dominion movie review
My favorite film of all time is Jurassic Park; a stone-cold classic that blended sci-fi fantasy, awestruck wonder, suspense, and horror in a way only Steven Spielberg could. Even he had trouble replicating its success with The Lost World, which went bigger and louder, at the expense of feeling sloppy and bitter. By the time Jurassic Park 3 rolled along, effectively becoming just another monster B-movie, the novelty had worn off considerably. No one's impressed by a dinosaur anymore...
Or so we thought. In 2015, the franchise was revitalized by Jurassic World, director Colin Trevorrow's continuation that recaptured some of the spirit lost between movies, and was an enormous box office hit. It came followed by Fallen Kingdom, which went for darker new avenues, even if it was let down by some stupid lapses in logic. But that movie was clearly a set up to bigger things, which we now see with Dominion, where Trevorrow returns to wrap up both his trilogy, and the original Jurassic mythos. Unfortunately, for what should be a satisfying send-off, what we instead get is a limp finale that doesn't so much roar, as it does whimper off licking its wounds.
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