Genre: Crime/Comics/Thriller
Director: Frank Miller and Robert Rodriguez
Starring: Jessica Alba, Rosario Dawson, Elijah
Wood, Bruce Willis, Benicio Del Toro, Michael Clarke Duncan,
Carla Gugino, Josh Hartnett, Michael Madsen, Jaime King, Brittany
Murphy, Clive Owen, Mickey Rourke, Nick Stahl, Marley Shelton,
Powers Booth and Rutger Hauer
RunTime: -
Released By: BVI
Rating: R21 (Strong Violence)
Opening
Day: 14 July 2005
Synopsis
:
The central
story follows Marv, a tougher-than-nails street-fighter who
has always played it his way. When Marv takes home a Goddess-like
beauty named Goldie, only to have her wind up dead in his
bed -- he scours the city to avenge the loss of the only drop
of love his heart has ever known.
Then there’s
the tale of Dwight, a private investigator perpetually trying
to leave trouble behind, even though it won’t quit chasing
after him. After a cop is killed in Old Town, Dwight will
stop at nothing to protect his friends among the ladies of
the night.
Finally,
there’s the yarn of John Hartigan – the last honest
cop in Sin City. With just one ticking hour left to his career,
he’s going out with a bang as he makes a final bid to
save an 11 year-old girl from the sadistic son of a Senator
. . . with unexpected results.
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Movie
Review:
"Walk down the back alley of Sin City and you can
find anything".
Watching
Sin City is like a murderous eroticism: its equivalent to
a beautiful woman kissing you on the neck while she knifes
you in the gut. Stunning on the surface and below, is an instant
classic: a rare treat for an art form constantly at the fury
of the mainstream. It's a roaring head-thumping ride oozing
with style and flair, stunning in its boldness and vision
like a cartridge of dynamite cinema that shoots at you from
a shotgun.
Acclaiming the success of this macabre cinematic visual, Robert
Rodriguez, known for his previous works like, Desperado, Once
Upon a Time in Mexico and Spy Kids, directed three main segments
of the movie to the novels: "The Hard Goodbye",
"The Big Fat Kill", "That Yellow Bastard"
and a small insert short-story "The Customer is Always
Right" with some of Hollywood's top actors headlining
each one.
"The
Hard Goodbye"
The story of Marv (Mickey Rourke, in a return to greatness),
a lovable tough guy who is on a one-man mission to avenge
the murder of his lady, Goldie (Jaime King), because she was
the only one who seemed to really care for him even with his
oddities. Also costars Carla Gugino (the most prominently
nude character in the film, god bless her) as Marv's parole
officer Lucille, Elijah Wood as the merciless and creepy Kevin,
and Rutger Haur as Cardinal Roark. Btw, check out Miller himself
playing the priest who get the blink and you’ll miss
the uber cool head blown scene.
“He
never screams. Even after the dog has its fill and his guts
are hanging out, he never screams.”
"The
Big Fat Kill"
Told by Dwight (Clive Owen doing a good American accent),
a down on his luck alcoholic who gets caught up in a war between
the the ganglord-ess of hookers in "Oldtown", led
by Gail (Rosario Dawson) and the cops. Confrontation between
Jackie Boy (Benicio Del Toro who is absolutely brilliant here)
and Becky (Alexis Bledel using her good girl act to pull of
this role perfectly) catalyst a turf war, tightening the truce
that they hold dearly.
“She
doesn't quite chop his head off. She makes a Pez dispenser
out of him.”
"That
Yellow Bastard"
The third and final old-timer detective story. It tells the
tale of an old cop named Hartigan (Bruce Willis) who takes
on a powerful senator's son, Junior (Nick Stahl; Terminator
3) who kidnaps, tortures and kills young girls. Hartigan finally
tracks down Junior to an old warehouse/pier where he's about
to torture his latest victim, Nancy, but fortunately, he saves
her despite his ex-partner's (Madsen) protest that caused
him inprisonment. A few years later, Hartigan manages to track
down an older Nancy (Alba; Fantasic Four) and indeed she has
as she now works as a stripper at a seedy nightclub with Junior
hot on their trail to get back “the one that got away”.
“When
it comes to consoling 19-year-old girls, I'm about as expert
as a palsy patient performing brain surgery with a pipe wrench.”
The latest comic book to film adaptation with a mixture of
high expectations and dread, Sin City would be the first comic
book film to straight up adapat it's source and to do it in
such a way that nearly every shot was to match a panel from
the comic book. It had never been done and there were mutliple
factors that could've made this movie suck. Who knew how Miller's
dialogue would sound coming out of real people? Who knew if
all of the color scheme stuff would feel right? How would
it play to non-comic book readers? So many questions. The
simple answer is: It worked. Just about every single part
of it worked.
The
film itself is masterfully directed by Miller and Rodriguez,
collaborating their talents into a dynamic partnership rumbles
with creative fusion puppeteering this remarkable collision
of art and entertainment. They really had done this film right.
Everything from the score to various camera angles is just
beautiful. The special fx looked great and realistically graphic
comic like. It's pacing is perfect, it's got great acting
and directing, it's funny, it's action packed and twistedly
violent (in a good way). Faithfully adapted from MiIler's
macabre graphic novels and translated onto the screen with
striking verve and innovation, the grisly retro-world at the
centre of this film's universe is dark and rank a seedy, corrupt
and crime stricken coalition of the darkest chambers of the
human psyche.
In
this seething comic book world of immorality and decay heinous
crimes are the dialogue of the streets and violence is the
language. There are few clear-cut heroes or villains in Sin
City - collective justice offers no trophies for good deeds
and no direct punishment for evil. The narrative weaving through
this ballistic environment, which was mostly lifted directly
from Miller's graphic novels, is chopped into three distinct
chunks, intersecting only in brief peripheral detail. Each
story is fitted with razor sharp dialogue in the style of
a noir P.I. fable, with long descriptive voice overs and red
herrings connecting many of the story's junctions.
In
terms of characters, where do i begin? The performances are
almost all across the board excellant. Elijah Wood and Devin
Aoki have no dialogue but are magnificent in their silent
but deadly roles. Clive Owen, Rosario Dawson, Nick Stahl,
Carla Gugino, Michael Clarke Duncan, Benico Del Toro, Alexis
Bledel, and Jaime King are all exquesite and do some of their
finest work ever. Mickey Rourke is amazing. Rourke hasn't
been a movie or a role this good in over a decade or so and
hopefully this will give him more opportunities in the future.
Bruce Willis is pretty good but he didn't blow me away. It's
not a overpowering role nor is it one of his best, but I do
think that's it was alot better than the stuff he has done
lately. Jessica Alba merely doesn't suck and did a decent
enough job.
What
else can I say? Sin City is a masterpiece of pulp fiction,
and even those who frown on the over the top violence will
admit that it is a visual experience unlike any other. By
far, the most awesome, disturbing, action packed head smack
of a movie ever made, turbo charged comic book ‘film
noir’ that’s spewing black fumes and leaking gallons
of blood, perfect for those looking for an extreme dark adrenaline
overload. Go ahead. Walk down the back alley of Sin City.
You’ll find everything there.
Movie
Rating:
Review
by Lokman BS
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