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An average movie

Posted : 13 years, 1 month ago on 18 March 2011 12:58

When I first heard of this movie, I thought it sounded really amazing. As a result, I was really eager to check it out and I had some rather high expectations towards the damned thing. Well, to be honest, I thought the whole thing turned out to be actually rather disappointing. I mean, sure, it was entertaining enough but the story was nothing really original. Basically, it was your typical conspiracy based thriller but there was still some good stuff. First of all, I thought it was well done. Indeed, I liked the way it was directed and it was rather well written, especially the newspaper work which seemed very realistic and exciting (it reminded me of ‘All the president's men’, by far the best movie in this genre). Then, the cast was very good and they all gave some solid good performances. Two things bothered me though. One small thing was that Robin Wright had a very thankless role. To make things worse, her romance with Russell Crowe was rather unnecessary and it didn't add much to the story. The other major thing that really bothered me and actually pretty much ruined the movie was the end. I won't spoil it but there was this very lame twist at the end and even though it was supposed to be clever, it was really annoying and it actually shattered the whole story. Anyway, to conclude, even though it never really fulfilled its great potential, I guess this movie is still worth a look, especially if you like the genre. 



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State of Play review

Posted : 13 years, 2 months ago on 28 February 2011 01:41

!!SPOILER!!
The way the reporters were so worried about getting the right scoop and finding everything out in the face of a 13 billion dollar assassination conspiracy rather than their own and their information source's survival really undermined my enjoyment of this film. I kept thinking: you really need to make sure lots of other ppl know what you found and that the assassins know it too or else if they are really pros ur dead.


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State of Play

Posted : 14 years, 1 month ago on 8 April 2010 11:38

Cal McAffrey is a DC reporter looking to get the next big story, which may just come at the expense of his good friend and college roommate Congressman Stephen Collins. Collins, whose assistant seems to have had an accident on the subway. The problem is that it may not have been an accident, but a cover up for one of the biggest military related companies in the country. The problem for Collins continues to mount when he is linked to his assistant in an affair. Cal goes on a manhunt to prove that his friend is being framed, but that may not be the only truth that he will find along the way.

State of play starts off right away with a major beginning, so that people can see the type of film it will be. The movie starts off with a brutal murder, which starts the conspiracy off straight away. The suspense and the story keep building, for the next two hours. The story may get a little confusing in the middle, because of all the leads that Cal gets throughout the film. Cal explains every one though close to the end. It isn’t really all that confusing, it just throws many confusing characters at you, and it expects you to pick them up with little explanation. It all does come to make sense, which is a really good thing.

The entire cast seems to feed off the script which has some of the best dialogue for a journalistic themed film. It uses journalistic language, and that is awesome. If you aren’t aware beforehand how journalism and the following of leads works, then this film will teach you that. It is a fascinating thing to see done, and seems like it would fun to pursue leads. The movie makes it look like a thrill, and that is a good thing. It makes the job look exciting and it shows the highlights of what a journalist can find themselves doing on a day to day basis.

As far as cast goes, it doesn’t seem like their could have been a better cast for a film of this nature then the one that was hired. As far as acting experience goes, these were all veteran actors looking to put their craft to work, and show what real acting is. Lead by Oscar winner Russell Crowe as Cal, a man who is deep into what he does for a living, and won’t stop until he has the real story, and not a bunch of gossip. Cal will look at every lead, and talk to them a bunch of times before he will run a story.

Ben Affleck, whose work never really impressed me to date, seemed to take it up a notch for this film and it ended being a solid performance. Affleck was able to show a vulnerable politician, at the worst time in his life. A man whose wife doesn’t really want anything to do with him anywhere, whose new love interest has been brutally murdered, and whose career seems to be heading down the drain just as quickly as his love life. Ben is able to express the feelings of Collins, without letting it become a cheese filled role. A good performance for a man whose career seemed to be taking a new turn in the form of directing. If Ben is able to tackle more roles like this one then maybe he still does have a chance to be a good strong lead actor.

Rachel McAdams was decent as well. She started off really slow, but her performance seemed to grow as the film went on. She seemed to be hesitant at first, but then the role seemed to grow on her, when she seemed to become comfortable with all the other actors around her. In the end she did end up having a really good turn. She hasn’t really had an overly amazing performance yet in her career, with the exception of The Lucky Ones which came out in 2009. She has always gotten support though from me as she is Canadian, and it is good to wish actors from your home country well. She has tried on occasion to be a good actress, acting in such films like The Notebook and Red Eye. Neither of which were overly impressive, but she had a good turn in both of those films.

State of Play from the trailers looked like an impressive film, and it was. Not for a moment does this film let you down. If you have seen the trailers and have been waiting for a long while for this one then it will be exactly what you think it will be. Keep in mind, that it does follow some of the clichéd aspects that this genre has carried for many years. But this is the best journalistically themed film since All the Presidents Men. A very impressive look at the politics of today, and how quickly a scandal can get out of control and ruin your life.

A well acted film. Great job from the entire cast, specifically Ben Affleck and Rachel McAdams who needed to turn in major performance in order to salvage careers that have been filled with blips. Kudos to Crowe for shining once again in a film that he is hired to lead. Crowe always seems to impress, and that is why he is one of the premiere actors in Hollywood. Awesome.


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The pursuit of truth.

Posted : 14 years, 5 months ago on 23 November 2009 08:54

''You're just seeking the truth. You're a truth seeker. You can't help it, that is just who you are.''

A team of investigative reporters work alongside a police detective to try to solve the murder of a congressman's mistress.

Russell Crowe: Cal McAffrey

Many investigative thrillers focus on detectives digging around for the answers, but State of Play chooses to center around a complex story focused on by a newspaper. Cut a long story short, the forces and pressures motivating a reporter are not altogether the same as a lawful detective, which makes for a much more unique plot with characters an audience can view as more like themselves. A detective must identify a suspect, or catch a murderer is doing their job; a journalist who puts the pieces together himself in the pursuit of truth, is a hero on an entirely new level.

Oscar winner(2000, Gladiator)Russell Crowe stars in one of his certainly unique roles; partaking as a seasoned investigative reporter named Cal McAffrey. Crowe somehow more easily portrays Americans than any Australian or British actor working in Hollywood and he brings a light-hearted spirit to his serious role. His character finds himself in a dangerous place when his personal friendships with a congressman and his wife (Ben Affleck, Robin Wright Penn) come at odds with his job when news breaks that the congressman was having an affair with a girl who recently died in a DC subway accident. McAffrey first tries to protect his friend, but when he sees trends leading to conspiracy, his professional instincts take hold of his obssesive nature.

Cameron Lynne: Well, I happen to like miss Della Frye... and yes, I did send her down there to winkle something out of you. She's hungry, she's cheap and she churns up copy every hour.
Cal McAffrey: Yeah, I now... I'm overfed, I'm too expensive and I take way too long.

State of Play brags a diverse but star laden cast. Crowe is the dependable star vehicle, Ben Affleck the sometimes under-rated acting talent, and Rachel McAdams makes a triumphant return to the screen as a young journalist/blogger who assists Crowe. Also appearing in the film are (Oscar Winner 2006 The Queen)Helen Mirren as the editor, Jeff Daniels as fellow politician to Affleck and even Jason Bateman makes a cameo. All of them are talented and have proved so in many different genres, but never have they been together to make a thrilling puzzle of politics and journalism.

It's also the first experiment in the genre for the director, Kevin Macdonald (The Last King of Scotland) Macdonald keeps this film slick and exciting, generally refusing to use a tripod but not distracting us with shaky camera-work either. He mixes lots of close detail shots with scene setters that tell the story at a provocative angle. There are numerous albeit typical thriller movie conventions used; but he makes it his own; He's a director certainly worth keeping an eye on.

Credit must also go to an incredibly well-assembled writing team. Although based on a BBC mini-series of the same name, State of Play boasts Michael Clayton creator and penner of the Bourne series Tony Gilroy for the drama and action, Shattered Glass creator Billy Ray for the journalism expertise and Matthew Michael Carnahan (Lions for Lambs, The Kindgom) for the political/military end. It's amazing to see how that all plays together so nicely with so many reputable writers. Some of the twists might be more on the extreme side, but it's mostly convincing and exciting the whole way through.

State of Play hooks you and keeps you guessing. It tries to keep the characters intimate and worth caring about while also making sure the story picks up velocity. Subplots occasionally get in the way (McAffrey's personal connection to Wright Penn's character among them) but you become pretty easily invested in what's going on and are frightened when what seemed like a nice mystery suddenly gets serious. This is a thriller that is smart and quick and never blows itself out of proportion. It holds its ground and it does so with much talent.

Lastly, the film questions the necessary extent of hard edged reporting, but also revels in its necessity. Watergate is alluded to as a building where a couple key companies are located. The connection is purposeful; we're supposed to see the scandal as a fictional modern recreation of Watergate in terms of how it's reported and uncovered. While films in the vein of All the King's Men praised the work of journalists, Play is too stubborn to give them full attention and glory, bringing into the discussion the idea of selling papers and not waiting too long to get all the facts or how the Internet/blog-sphere twists the news in various ways; for sales and profits disregarding the truth if necessary. It might not be at the front of your mind while enjoying State of Play, but it sets it above the many over baked detective thrillers out there any day.

Stephen Collins: I thought you didn't call them yet?
Cal McAffrey: I lied.




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Mainstream Thriller-Making at its Best

Posted : 14 years, 7 months ago on 23 September 2009 05:09

"You're just seeking the truth. You're a truth seeker. You can't help it, that is just who you are. You're such a hypocrite. You're not interested in me. You come in here, it's all about you and you getting your story. I trusted you. You're my friend! You were supposed to be my friend anyway."


By and large, remakes are superfluous. At face value, a Hollywood remake of the BBC mini-series State of Play is extremely superfluous. The intricate plot of the mini-series was weighted perfectly over six gripping hours of television, and its theme (centring on the corruptibility of people in power) was all tied to its Westminster setting. So why shift the scene to Washington, D.C. and adapt it for the big screen? The answer relates to Hollywood's compulsion to remake every good story in its own image (and to get maximum profits from minimal effort). But in this case there's further justification for a remake - since 2003, the state of play has changed in relation to newspaper journalism, and this is pushed to the centre of the frame in 2009's State of Play. In adapting the BBC mini-series for the big screen, the filmmakers have achieved something remarkable: they've condensed the meaty intrigue and thrills within six hours of material into two snappy hours, and still produced a coherent and engrossing film. A study of political power plays, calamitous sexual impulses and the twilight of printed journalism, State of Play is riveting, sublimely acted and smart - it's mainstream Hollywood thriller-making at its best.


The plot primarily concerns the seemingly accidental death of Sonia Baker (Thayer); the research assistant and secret lover of rising Congressman Stephen Collins (Affleck). The night preceding Sonia's death, a petty thief and a pizza deliveryman are shot dead in an alley. Hardened journalist Cal McAffrey (Crowe), who works for a deteriorating Washington newspaper, suspects these apparently unrelated deaths are part of a conspiracy waiting to be uncovered. Sharing a personal history with Stephen Collins and his wife Anne (Penn), he becomes conflicted over the type of story he wants to tell. Cal teams up with political blogger Della Frye (McAdams) and begins uprooting clues that implicate a murky corporate web of cover-ups, insiders, informants and assassins.


Despite a labyrinthine, multifaceted storyline, State of Play is rarely confusing and continuously engaging. It contains an intriguing plotline bursting with twists - and because it's so intriguing, a viewer will be on the edge of their seat awaiting the next big reveal. It's confident and masterful storytelling, handled by a team of excellent screenwriters: Tony Gilroy (Michael Clayton), Billy Ray (Shattered Glass) and Matthew Michael Carnahan (The Kingdom), each of whom draws on the thematic interests that fuelled the best of their previous movies (corporate abuse of power, journalistic ethics and Iraq-war-era government, respectively). Uncredited work on the script was also carried out by Peter Morgan of Frost/Nixon fame. State of Play is vehemently plot-driven, with conversations typically used for exposition rather than character development. However, thanks to both the acting and the screenwriting, virtually every character is given a satisfying degree of depth and dimension. Dialogue is crackling, sharp and at times utterly spellbinding.


Director Kevin Macdonald (The Last King of Scotland) competently orchestrates the movie, and is particularly adept at generating tension. Contributions across the board are sound, from Rodrigo Prieto's gripping, muted cinematography to Justine Wright's crisp editing and Alex Heffes' pulse-pounding score. There's no question that State of Play at times feels abridged, with an inability to capture the true density of the original BBC series (then again, what two-hour movie could?). Some of the intricacies and subplots are missing, but surprisingly little has been lost that actually mars the narrative structure, and the story unfolds with brilliant, riveting urgency. It doesn't shy away from the occasional bit of Hollywood hokiness, but by no means is the story transformed into a brain-dead product for the action market. Its target is mature adults - the ADD-inflicted teenage crowd are advised to stay clear.


State of Play is a thriller about conspiracy, murder and politics, but it also shines as a statement on the ostensibly inevitable demise of print media in favour of online blogs and cable news that post every story (or some version of it) the moment it happens. Some would argue that a very important brand of journalism is dying along with newspapers - Cal McAffrey is a genuine, old-fashioned reporter who takes days to write an article, thoroughly examines both sides of the story, refuses to rely on sensationalism and hearsay, and prefers to be right rather than first. This causes him to have a slightly antagonistic relationship with his editor (Mirren) who admires Cal's morals but knows the paper has to make money or perish (with all other considerations secondary). State of Play is an old-fashioned sort of thriller - solid, patient and thoughtful - so it's hardly surprising that it finds heroics in Cal's dogged brand of journalism. There's a definite elegiac quality to this film; particularly accentuated by an end credits montage that lovingly lingers on the process of newspapers being printed.


The acting is magnificent right down the line. Crowe works exceedingly well in the role of Cal McAffrey (it's difficult to imagine Brad Pitt in the part, who was originally cast), and the actor submits his finest work in years. But the biggest surprise is Ben Affleck, who offers his best work to date. It's a nuanced, wistful performance that proves the actor still has some skill left in him (though it's difficult to accept Crowe and Affleck as college roommates). Rachel McAdams holds her own with Crowe in every scene (a real accomplishment), and plays Della Frye as callow but not cynical. Wisely, the relationship between Della and Cal is not a romantic one. Helen Mirren is marvellous as the newspaper's editor (a role originally played by Billy Nighy). She chews the scenery without ever going over-the-top. Jason Bateman deserves a massive kudos for his brief but pivotal role as the scumbag who becomes the linchpin to the entire case. Robin Wright Penn is her usual brilliant self as Anne Collins, while Jeff Daniels the Harry Lennix add their immeasurable professionalism to a couple of important peripheral characters.


All things considered, State of Play is a rare, top-notch thriller that cares about story and characters rather than high-octane action or sex. There are downsides to the overall endeavour (the film feels underdone and truncated, the final twist is clichéd, and the reveal of corporate skulduggery seems far too easy), but in an environment where dumb thrillers outperform the smart thrills by wide margins, we must be thankful to witness a thriller of this standard entering the multiplexes...even if it is a remake.

8.5/10



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