Friday, 25 August 2023

BlackBerry

Official Australian release date: 17/8/23. Viewed: 26/8/23.
Director: Matt Johnson
Actors: Jay Baruchel, Glenn Howerton, Matt Johnson, Cary Elwes
Genre: Drama / Biopic         
Rating: M


‘BlackBerry’ is another mostly-non-fiction cautionary business origin film, along the lines of ‘The Founder’ and ‘The Social Network’, as well as this year’s ‘Air’ and ‘Tetris’. We follow friends Mike (Baruchel), the tech whiz & Doug, the morale-booster (Johnson, also the director) who have formed start-up Research In Motion in Canada in the 90s, focusing on making modems and have a patent for a handheld email device. They come across ruthless businessman Jim (Howerton), who turns their idea into a reality.

The film probably sensationalises a lot of things, but does well to focus on some of the personal drama, especially the balancing act between Mike & Jim. But I would’ve liked to have seen more of the Mike/Doug dynamic and their early-RIM friends/employees doing the development. The acting is good all-round, with Baruchel playing someone different for him, Howerton is a great bastard and Johnson is fun, basically the TJ Miller character form ‘Silicon Valley’. There’s some laughs, but a lot more focus on the progress of the business.

BlackBerry had a good 6 years from 2002–2007, somewhat thanks to Mike becoming more like Jim, as well as hiring slave-driver Charles (Ironside) and the things that Jim has to do to fend off the takeover by Carl (Elwes) and Palm. BlackBerry was ultimately doomed to fail when Android OS became the standard for mobile phones, as well as the marketing behind the iPhone. Big shame for me, as I think I was one of the few in Australia who still owned a BlackBerry in 2010! Well-paced and under 2 hours, with an OK-digital-style score.

Overall: Somewhat bittersweet, but engaging story

Gav's Rating: 3 stars

Monday, 14 August 2023

Oppenheimer

Official Australian release date: 20/7/23. Viewed: 14/8/23.
Director: Christopher Nolan
Actors: Cillian Murphy, Robert Downey Jr, Emily Blunt, Matt Damon
Genre: Drama / Biopic         
Rating: MA


‘Oppenheimer’ sounds like it could be boring – a film about a theoretical physicist in the early 20th century. This could not be further from reality – I’d have to rate this up there with Nolan’s best work, almost better than ‘Inception’ and ‘The Prestige’. Time will tell. Cillian Murphy is excellent as Robert Oppenheimer, who leads America’s “Manhattan Project” during 1942–1945 in the race to develop the atomic bomb before the Nazis and end World War II.

While some creative licence may have been taken at times, the film does well to capture enough of the history, players and importance of the what, why and how. While no other actor outshines Murphy, there’s great support from wife Kitty (Blunt), his post-WWII boss Strauss (Downey Jr), first girlfriend Jean (Pugh), Einstein (Conti), Lawrence (Hartnett), Teller (Safdie), Rabi (Krumholz) and General Groves (Damon). There’s about 30 other familiar faces who pop up, either in Los Alamos or the hearings afterwards. While mostly linear, the time-swaps and black-and-white footage interspersed in the final act add an element of suspense to the post-WWII years.

Even though the run-time is 3 hours, the first hour flies by at breakneck speed, setting the scene, then the detail and problem-solving of the Manhattan Project almost make you forget what’s at stake – before the final act hammers home the moral and emotional toll the bomb had on Oppenheimer. The score is really great and adds plenty to the context – including the lack of score for the bomb test detonation, which has excellent practical special effects. There’s personal drama for Oppenheimer and his colleagues, and the film does well not to turn into a war (or anti-war) film, but stay focused on the scientific achievements. The court-room-type scenes are superbly done. You feel justified, fulfilled and sombre by the end.

Overall: An exceptional film in all respects

Gav's Rating: 4.5 stars