Haywire
I’ve been following Gina Carano’s career for a while. I am a huge mixed martial arts (MMA) fan and Carano was the face of women’s MMA. However, her face met “Cyborg steroid” Santos.
Luckily, Steven Soderbergh saw one of her fights and decided to write a movie around her. This isn’t the first time he has developed a film around a strong female personality. He directed the critically successful The Girlfriend Experience starring Sasha Grey.
Soderbergh intelligently keeps the emoting to a minimum and focuses on the hard-hitting fight scenes. With Carano’s ability there is no need for quick cuts and wild punches. Each fight is a chess match of violence that can be told by long static shots.
Haywire is a slick violent film that may turn off people with its depiction of a woman getting the snot beat out of her. Carano gives as good as she gets but you’ve never seen a woman get coffee thrown in her eyes then her face smooshed on a table.
The plot is secondary to showcasing Carano’s skills. I just watched the film and I’m not totally sure what happened. Something about money, double crosses and Antonio Banderas in a suave beard. The most important thing is that Carano is believable as the betrayed security contractor who beats up Michael Fassbender, Channing Tatum and Ewan McGregor. By staying true to traditional fighting and the laws of gravity the fights are brutal beauties.
The scenes are believable because of Carano’s fighting history and ability to choreograph her own stunts. it is nice to watch a movie where people don’t get hit in the face 70 times (no bruises) or block crow bar shots with their forearms (no breaks).
I never once questioned Carano’s victories. She is a force of nature that would put Angelina Jolie and Zoe Saldana in a single headlock. I’m not sold on her acting but I do think she will be a solid action star. Hopefully, this film will launch Carano’s career and spark some interest in MMA.
Quick fact: The had to digitally lower Carano’s voice in postproduction.
Additionally, If you haven’t watched the amazing MMA film Warrior yet check it out now.
2012 Oscar Predictions
Hello all. Mark here.
If it were up to me Warrior, The Guard and Take Shelter would win all of the awards. If there were any awards left I’d give them to Like Crazy, The Trip, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, Attack the Block and 50/50. However, that only happens in Hof land. So, I am going to do my best to predict the nominations. This year there are obvious choices and several dark horses. This is going to be fun! Comment and let me know what you think.
Best Picture
The Artist and The Descendants won Golden Globes. Hugo is about the preservation of film. The Help provides a plethora of emotions and stories. Now I have to pick one more film to be on the list. It comes down to Dragon Tattoo, Midnight in Paris, Moneyball, War Horse, Tree of Life and Bridesmaids. I will go with Midnight in Paris because people love a good Woody Allen movie. I’m thinking there might be ten nominations though. PLEASE NOMINATE WARRIOR!!!
Best Actor
Clooney, Pitt, Fassbender and Dujardin will get nominations. Clooney underplays beautifully, Pitt channels Redford, Fassbender bares it all and Dujardin charms. The other two noms are not so easy to figure out. I’d vote for Michael Shannon (Take Shelter) Gary Oldman (Tinker Tailor Solider Spy) Joel Edgerton (Warrior), Ewan McGregor (Beginners) Ryan Gosling (Drive) and Brendan Gleeson (The Guard). I hope Michael Shannon gets the last nomination. He is popular with the independent movie critics. However, he has other competition with Demian Bichir (A Better Life), Leo Dicaprio (J. Edgar) and Ryan Gosling (Ides of March) The academy likes to throw in a curve ball every once in a while so I’m going to go out on a limb (and be wrong) and add Michael Shannon to the list.
George Clooney – The Descendants
Brad Pitt – Moneyball
Jean Dujardin – The Artist
Michael Fassbender – Shame
Michael Shannon – Take Shelter
Best Actress
Streep, Davis and Williams are locks for nominations. The other two picks are where it gets interesting. I’m thinking Glenn Close will get one of the nominations because she plays a woman who disguises herself as a man. These kind of roles are Oscar bait (Boy’s Don’t Cry). The fifth is a battle between Rooney Mara (Dragon Tattoo) and Tilda Swinton (We Need to Talk About Kevin). The problem is that these three actresses could easily knock each other out.
I’d love to see Charlize Theron (Young Adult) get a nomination. She plays much more than an angry pretty lady. Her performance has more layers than seventeen onions.
Meryl Streep – The Iron Lady
Michelle Williams – My Week with Marilyn
Viola Davis – The Help
Glen Close – Albert Nobbs
Tilda Swinton – We Need to Talk About Kevin
Dark horse – Rooney Mara..People love her performance which she mimicked from Noomi Rapace. Mara said she never watched the originals but I have a hard time believing that.
Best Supporting Actor – Warrior should have three nominations (Hardy, Grillo, Nolte). I’m going out on a limb and saying Nick Nolte will grab a nod (1 in 3 ain’t bad). Plummer, Brooks and Hill are locks. The final vote comes down to Kenneth Branagh and Max Von Sydow. I gotta go with the Branagh (people love him). It would be neat for Patton Oswalt to get a nod for Young Adult but Hill has the market cornered on sidekicks
Nick Nolte – Warrior
Christopher Plummer – Beginners
Albert Brooks – Drive
Jonah Hill – Moneyball
Kenneth Branagh – My Week With Marilyn
Best Supporting Actress – Bejo, McCarthy, Spencer and Chastain are locks. The only thing that could knock out Chastain is that she starred in so many good movies this year (Tree of Life, Take Shelter, The Debt, Texas Killing Fields). Her votes could be split. The final nomination will most likely go to The Descendant’s Woodley. She gives a solid performance that was well above her years in maturity and could have been über clichéd.
Berenice Bejo – The Artist
Melissa McCarthy – Bridesmaids
Jessica Chastain – The Help
Octavia Spencer – The Help
Shailene Woodley – The Descendants
Payne, Scorsese, Hazanavcius and Allen are locks. I really hope Tree of Life gets a best picture nomination. However, I don’t think it will if there are five. (10 yes). So, Malick will pick up a nod for director. I also want Refn to get a nod for Drive….The movie is too bloody and unpredictable though.
Best Director
Alexander Payne – The Descendants
Martin Scorsese – Hugo
Michel Hazanavcius – The Artist
Terrence Mallick – Tree of Life
Woody Allen – Midnight in Paris
There are many movies that could make the cut: Margin Call, Take Shelter, Young Adult, Tree of Life, Dragon Tattoo, Drive, War Horse, A Better Life. However, I’m sticking with the ten below. I would love to see Beginners nominated but 50/50 has a better chance.
Best Original Screenplay
1. Woody Allen, Midnight in Paris
2. Michel Hazanavicius, The Artist
3. Kristen Wiig & Annie Mumulo, Bridesmaids
4. Will Reiser, 50/50
5. Tom McCarthy and Joe Tibani, Win Win
Best Adapted Screenplay
1. Nat Faxon, Alexander Payne & Jim Rash, The Descendants
2. Aaron Sorkin & Steven Zaillian, Moneyball
3. John Logan, Hugo
4. Tate Taylor, The Help
5. Bridget O’Connor & Peter Straughan, Tinker, Tailor, Soldier Spy
War Horse
This movie was the perfect way to end 2011. The short story is we (Mark and I) thought we could have a fun, ironic time watching New Year’s Eve on NYE….buuuuut we ended up leaving (at the very beginning) and going to watch War Horse instead.
Best. Decision. Ever.
War Horse is a visual treat. I really don’t know how you could dislike this film. Set in WWI, Spielberg masterfully balances multiple stories that show us the brutal realities of war and the story of a remarkable horse named Joey. Originally a book (1982) that was adapted into a play in 2007, War Horse captured the imaginations of American producers and directors and was brought to life while the animation for Spielberg’s Tin Tin was being finished.
I hate giving away too much about a movie in the reivew…if you want spoilers, I suggest YouTube. Instead, I’ll give you five reasons to go see (and fall in love with) War Horse:
1. The cast. This movie is filled with great actors, established (Benedict Cumberbatch, Tom Hiddleston, Peter Mullan, Niels Arestrup) and new comers (Jeremy Irvine, ) all had solid performances.
2. Joey. Right from the beginning you are hooked. This horse is something special; teacher, companion, friend, fighter, War Horse. Also- you like horses, who doesn’t? Deep down, you can’t fight that you love movies about horses.
3. The scene with the English and German solidier. Humorous, heartbreaking, historical. By far, our favorite scene in the whole movie.
4. A little French girl captures your heart. I mean you’d have to be heartless not to love the mini hurdles she sets up as a demonstration for Joey.
5. The Great War. Soooo maybe I am kind of obsessed with Downton Abbey right now, and this happens to fall in the same period of time, but nonetheless this is a sight to see. This was was brutal in Europe and I’m a sucker for a story that can bring hope in the misdst of so much tragedy.
Fun Facts
- Jeremy Irvine (who plays Albert Narracott) has been known for his theater work but this was his first film.
- This was Celene Buckens (who played Emilie) first role ever.
- Fourteen horses were used to play Joey but the main ‘actor’ horse, Finder, also played Seabiscuit in the film by the same name.
- Specially designed mud was used to make the battle scenes look authentically filthy.
- Michael Morpurgo, the original author of War Horse, had a cameo in the film. He was standing next to David Thewlis in the auction at the beginning of the movie.
- Hey PETA! —> Representatives of the American Humane Society were on set at all times to ensure the health and safety of all animals involved, and the Society awarded the film an “outstanding” rating for the care that was taken of all the animals during the production.
Contraband
I love movies that can be summed up in one word. Contraband is “serviceable.” It is a blue-collar heist film that breezes along and is forgotten quickly. You walk out of theater satisfied yet not impressed. The most memorable thing about the film is the odd poster.
The movie centers around Wahlberg doing one last heist because his brother-in-law got in trouble with local drug dealer played by an odd accented Giovanni Ribisi. Wahlberg leaves behind his wife (Kate Beckinsale) and teams up with a rag-tag crew in order to smuggle counterfeit money from Panama.
The movie has no high-tech gadgets or death-defying stunts. The job is surprisingly straight forward until it becomes convoluted with poor choices, twists and double crosses. New Orleans provides a suitably gritty city that matches the strange hand-held style that director Baltasar Kormakur infuses into the film. Coincidentely, Kormakur starred in the Icelandic original called Reykjavic-Rotterdam.
The biggest problem with the film is the expository dialogue. In the opening scene every character has their history explained through dialogue that you only hear in movies. An example is when Wahlberg is talking to his best friend Ben Foster.
“He is my best friend and was my best man. But, he was so drunk he doesn’t remember the reception. Good thing he is sober now.”
After you learn this a random guy walks up to the two and declares:
“You two were the best smugglers until you quit. How did you get that Ferrari into the states?”
Sidenote: Do smugglers declare their retirement? Is it common knowledge?
There is a lot of this dialogue. Later you see that Foster is in AA. Let the viewer find out by seeing rather than hearing. I understand the necessity of character but it shouldn’t feel lazy due to forced dialogue.
Ben Foster drives a sweet Ford F150 Raptor though. Everytime the truck was on screen I was instantly more attentive.
Rent Contraband, Watch Contraband, Use expository dialogue for the rest of the day.
John’s Horror Corner: The Hazing (2004)
MY CALL: This Night of the Demons rip-off is one of the best direct-to-DVD horror flicks I’ve seen! The actors do surprisingly well, the scenarios are fun and the effects are decent. This gets an “A+” as far as straight-to-DVD horror goes. IF YOU LIKE THIS, WATCH: Night of the Demons (1988), Night of the Demons 2 (1994), and the recent remake Night of the Demons (2009), but maybe you should skip Night of the Demons 3 (1997). Also, while demon free, Sorority Row (2009) has all the 80s campiness of these demon flicks but with an updated cast and a trucker-looking Carrie Fisher. ALTERNATE TITLE: Also released as Dead Scared, a much worse title.
The Hazing was everything that most theatrical horror releases SHOULD be nowadays—yet this movie somehow was overlooked as a solid Halloween release in 2004. What beat this movie out of a major release slot? Was it Seed of Chucky?!!? An “amusing” movie without a doubt, but far inferior to this little-known gem. It’s just upsetting.
Now I must admit: this is a “silly” horror movie. Think the Night of the Demons series (part 2, in particular), and make it a little yet MORE silly, sort of like Nightmare on Elm Street 4: Dream Warriors. But this movie is much more similar to the former, taking place in “Hack House”, a name strangely similar to the “Hell House”, “Hill House”, and “Hull House” of various other nearly identically-premised films. But you know what? I don’t care that it’s a serially violated and re-packaged premise because this time it paid off in full!

“Whoa, look, an evil-looking book”
“We should read from it!”
So a bunch of college kids are doing a scavenger hunt on Halloween. They end up at Hack House and decide to have some fun. Then weird things start happening as an evil force possesses them, one by one, using them as malevolent marionettes. The flick features cheap seductions, humorous kills, good one-liners, and the most memorable oral sex scene ever. As simple as it sounds, this movie was solid-gold awesome.

Gearing up to combat evil.
Most importantly, while this is a low budget flick, this went unnoticed after the first 20 minutes. The effects were tactfully simple but truly no less entertaining for it. The film quality, music and sound effects were in league with theatrical horror films (the ones that SHOULD actually be theatrical releases). The frequent humor was delivered with surprisingly good timing by little known, but unexpectedly good actors. Oh, and the pace of action was strong after the much slower character-developing start of the movie which, still, was rather entertaining. I enjoyed the characters a lot. Parry Shen is nerdily charming, B-horror scream queen Tiffany Shepis holds her own, Brad Dourif is creepy without make-up, and then there was Nectar Rose. This chick stole every scene!
A final note: nothing in this movie is scary, and if you jump it was due to unexpectedness and not actual fright. This is for those who love the style of horror of the movies referenced in this review. This was made to elicit laughs rather than screams.
Bad Movie Tuesday: Straw Dogs
I know why the Straw Dogs remake failed critically and financially. This film forgets about the journey and focuses only on the destination. The characters, plot and screenplay do not matter. They are all a device for good-looking people to violate other good-looking people.
I’m not going to get into the remake but I will show you two pictures that summarize the main characters.
You know exactly what will happen after looking at these pictures.
The original Straw Dogs incited rage, discussion and more rage 1971. The film starred Dustin Hoffman as a mathematician moving to Cornwall with his English wife. Hoffman wants to be the money-maker and his wife to be in the kitchen and bedroom. The only way she would agree is if he does all the male tasks. A culture clash occurs, their house is attacked, cats are strung up in closets and Hoffman puts on his Under Armour and protects his house. The film opened to mass protest and director Sam Peckinpah was blasted for the debasement of women. This film provided an important discussion and opened the same year as Dirty Harry and Clockwork Orange.
The violence was ugly. However, in the new film it is inevitable. When violence becomes predictable it loses the impact. However, people who remake films don’t understand this. They are remaking the films to be flashy junk where characters are secondary and violence is glorified.
This may seem like an odd example but I wanted to share a story. Forrest Griffin the former light heavyweight champion of the UFC wrote a ridiculous book in which he explains man etiquette (I bought it when a Borders bookstore was closing). In the book he talks how he and his meathead friends roughed up a seemingly timid nerd on the Georgia Tech campus. However, something surprising happened. No matter what they did the guy would not stop attacking them. He was a 150 pound wild man screaming “You will have to kill me!”
The situation became ugly as no matter how far they threw him he would not give up. He never stopped attacking them. They had to run into their car and drive away while a bloodied weakling chased them away.
This situation was a turning point in Griffin’s life. It proved that even the smallest man can become primal if pushed far enough. The situation was ugly, sad and unnecessary.
The original Straw Dogs was not pretty. It was a powder keg waiting to explode. The world was changing and men and womens roles were reversing. The material was timely and worthy to be explored. Peckinpah knew the time was right to push buttons.
New York Times writer Terrence Rafferty sums the button pushing well when he said:
“It was Sam Peckinpah’s nature to want to show his audience what it didn’t want to see, to make it feel what it didn’t think it could feel. When you watch his “Straw Dogs,” you come out knowing more about yourself. Or perhaps less. All you can tell for sure is that it hurts.”
Have you heard anything about the remade Straw Dogs? The film was directed by a famous film critic and stars Oscar nominated thespians, heart throbs, super heroes and television stars. A movie about rape, murder, violence, sex and manliness has been forgotten quickly.
The reason is that there are no surprises. I’d compare it to the unnecessary shot for shot remake of Psycho. You are watching ugly for no reason. If I hadn’t been writing I would have fallen asleep. My self-defense mechanism for bad remakes is sleep. The new Texas Chainsaw, Nightmare on Elm Street and Jason films had me snoring by the 30 minute mark.
The 1974 Texas Chainsaw didn’t make me fall asleep. Much like the 1971 Straw Dogs Chainsaw was edgy, dangerous and cheap. I watched it with five of my friends over ten years ago. We were a bunch of punk kids who terrorized our town (in fun ways) and always had something to say. After the film we all walked quietly to our cars. None of us said a word or thought the terror was awesome. It beat us down. We were all disturbed at the journey we had just taken. I guarantee we all checked our houses for chainsawing behemoths that night before we tried to sleep.
I’m not saying that the original Texas is a good film. I will never watch it again. However, it was effective and shut up five cocky teenagers who thought they were tough. The reason this film is still brought up in discussion is because it hurts. A tiny film had a big impact with audiences around the world.
Audience were not kind to the new Straw Dogs. The film made only $10.3 million. This is not a new trend with remakes.
The remake of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo is underperforming at the box office. The studio was predicting huge numbers but instead were left debating if they should make the sequels (they are). One of the reasons I think it has underperformed is because the marketing stressed sex and violence. The tagline was “the feel bad movie of Christmas.” Sex and violence can only get you so far. If the two mattered than Showgirls would have been the biggest film ever. TGWTDT should have marketed the strong female lead and its unique Swedish look. The movie is good but the marketing may have kept viewers away.
Don’t watch the new Straw Dogs. The film is unnecessary. Watch the original instead. At the very least it will provide a discussion.
We did a horror movie remake and the eight finalists were films that improved upon their originals. the violence of Evil Dead 2 and The Thing are great because you are invested in the characters and care what happens to them.
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Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark
John already wrote an earth shattering review for this film but I’ve decided to put my two cents in due to an interesting text message exchange.
Mark – “The creatures from Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark are jerks.”
John – “They sure as sh** are. But, in this economy you just do what you have to do to feed your tribe of diminutive monster fairies.”
The reason to watch this film is for the diminutive monster fairies. They are creative looking little buggers who have a neat mythology. The reason the creatures are so cool is because Guillermo Del Toro (Hellboy 1 & 2) produced and wrote this film. Del Toro’s creature effects and attention to production design are reliably stellar and the angry monsters look beautiful.
The biggest problem is this film should have been part of a spooky double-header. The premise is stretched so thin the film lags to the finish line instead of sprinting. Afraid of the Dark could have been a lean mean thrill machine instead it feels like a decent flick with too much fat. However, this remake of a TV movie tries to expand a cool story and create a neat world of monsters and mythologies. In a world of remakes you need to appreciate the people who create new creatures.
If you haven’t watched Devil or Insidious you should check them out. They are inexpensive experiments in horror. Both films succeed and look beautiful.
Trailer Talk: Red Tails
By Sweet Sugar
Man, I really hope this movie doesn’t suck.
The website and trailers say the movie was “inspired” by true events, which is scary to veterans who hold the Tuskegee Airmen in incredibly high self-esteem. I hope it doesn’t do to the Tuskegee Airmen what Michael Bay did to the Navy and the Doolittle Raid in Pearl Harbor.
The Tuskegee Airmen are some of the greatest men ever to set foot on this earth, and there’s no need to fictionalize any part of their story for the sake of an action movie. This story deserves a production on the level of Saving Private Ryan or Band of Brothers.
However, I agree that a big studio movie is long overdue. There was the Golden Globe-nominated PBS video “The Tuskegee Airmen”in 1995 starring Lawrence Fishburne that did an admirable job trying to correctly capture the historical context and obstacles they overcame.
The Red Tails trailer did give me chills, the aerial action sequences look great thanks to LucasFilm, and the casting looks solid. We could have gone without Cuba Gooding Jr. I think the studio snuck Cuba in there to try and atone for the stinker Men of Honor (2000) with Robert De Niro, which nobody watched. And the scenes with the racist Army general look painfully formulaic.
Overall, hopefully it will get people to learn more about American history. I can’t wait to see the RottenTomatoes.com results.
If you watch the movie and want to learn more about African American contributions in WWII, check out the massive logistical effort known as the Red Ball Express.
John’s Horror Corner: Witchcraft (1988), and only witchcraft could compel me to watch this movie again.
MY CALL: Only witchcraft could compel me to watch this movie again. This isn’t bad 80s horror. It’s just plain bad. [D] WHAT TO WATCH INSTEAD: Witch movies have a terrible tendency to suck. But there are a few gems out there. For children there’s the Roald Dahl adaptation The Witches (1990) or Hocus Pocus (1993), the young crowd should appreciate The Craft (1996), and the more mature will enjoy The Witches of Eastwick (1987). If you want something fun, decent and campy with that 80s feel, then you want The Kiss (1988) or Warlock (1989) and Warlock: Armageddon (1993).
After enduring this “classic” I was overcome with the urge to flee, as if such future movie experiences were avoidable as a result of previous insufferable misjudgments. This film was wowingly poor. Not unimpressive, nor mediocre, but just POOR. While I have a special place in my heart for most circa-1980’s horror series part ones, this little piece of Hell scarred me with boredom. So, here’s why you should take this to heart and NOT EVER WATCH THIS…
When you think of a 1980’s horror films what pops in your head first? Gore? Cheap scares provoked by sudden scene changes and loud sound effects? Gratuitous nudity? You’ll find none of these things here. Not only did this movie suffer a complete lack of even remotely eerie scenes, the producers didn’t even have the common decency to force some fledgling actress bare her scantily clad body. No kids are doing drugs or having premarital sex either—so, by common law of horror, no one deserves to die in this movie! (And almost no one does.)
The greatest gore effect involves two robed figures hovering over what could only be described as roadkill in a birdbath. The figures chant some incomprehensible syllables while kneading mashed organs in their hands and then <<GASP>> putting it in their mouths. This scene made me tremble no more than when I eat a poorly prepared meatloaf. The other effects, if we’re elevating them to such a descriptor, were limited to sketchy visions through a mirror that were probably meant to feel like a spooky oracle.
I suppose I could address the plot. Scene One: some people are killed. All the rest of the scenes, those people were somehow reincarnated into a mother and son (though lovers in scene one) who are obsessed with the son’s new child. Why? Well, clearly that child is a reincarnation of their unborn child when they were burnt at the stake. Oh, and this is the “child of the devil” as well. Far from compelling stuff.
So we have a lame plot festooned with poor attempts at effects, a total absence of scares, some unexplained motives, no nudity (for those of you who care), and an unsatisfying ending. Though, to the ending’s credit, it was no more disappointing than the rest of the movie.
I truly yearn for the day that we get a horror-for-the-sake-of-horror witchcraft movie that doesn’t suck. Season of the Witch (2011) was a semi-action, genre-crossover disappointment. The Blair Witch Project (1999) really wasn’t a witch movie. I really like Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2 (2000)—but it was a “haunting movie,” really no different from a typical “house movie” (aka haunted house movie; see Haunter). The closest thing to what I’m looking for has been The Skeleton Key (2005)… but that relied on one big incantation to drive the plot. I liked it, but it didn’t feel like a witchcraft movie. I’m also not counting séance-based movies like Lo (2009).
Come on, Hollywood. This is something that has not been overdone (not well anyway). Is it really so hard to throw together a good witch story without giving it a charming Harry Potter British spin or Disney make-over? Or do I just have to sit back and watch as the Witchcraft series pelts out a dozen T’n’A-driven sequels? Really, folks! I checked online. There is a “part 13” for God’s sake! Witchcraft 13: Blood of the Chosen (2008). I am proud that I have not seen any of these 12 sequels!
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy is a sly espionage film told with style, mood and anxiety. Tinker is a game of chess made up of world-class chess players.
This film should be a lesson on how to make an intelligent thriller. The lighting is fantastic, the script is intriguing and Gary Oldman is a gangster with glasses. I love that one of the world’s best spies needs glasses. He can see everything but needs help doing it.
The film focuses on Gary Oldman hunting down a traitor who is giving information to the Russians. The problem is finding out which master spy has flipped sides. That is like Muhammad Ali trying to find a traitor by boxing Rocky Marciano, Larry Holmes, Mike Tyson and Joe Frazier. Ali is the best but it is going to hurt.
These spies are not going to box but there will be a lot of mental and verbal sparring. They will look for chinks in the armor and the smallest of clues. I loved every second of it. I can’t wait to see it again now that I’ve absorbed the initial experience.
Have fun watching Oldman hunt.
Tinker Tailor also has three of my favorite actors playing key roles. Benedict Cumberbatch (Sherlock, War Horse), Mark Strong (Kick-Ass) and Tom Hardy (Warrior).


























