max-rupert

IMDb member since October 2004
    Lifetime Total
    1+
    IMDb Member
    19 years

Reviews

Burn Out
(1998)

An extraordinary TV experience
Hope, love, and life in a bizarre dying world, is being boldly displayed in a impressing people-study. The film is free of moral drama. The viewer may be offended by the liberal display of personal truths, which in the end will not be morally justified. One defiance. This is European Cinema. Problem and solution are not going to be delivered. This is the true story of two spree killers who shot people from a rooftop. Nevertheless, their act is not being judged. This film is trying to understand the depths of such people. One will wait in vain for the evil laughter of the villain. "Nobody is born evil" is heard throughout Hannes Fretzer's moving, critical film. The path to becoming a spree killer develops in the mind of the audience. An extraordinary TV experience.

Alfie
(2004)

It's fresh, colourful and funny
What's it all about? (opening line from the original-movie 1966)

"Alfie" is a remake of the 1966 British film that made an international star of Michael Caine. It takes a story very much associated with a particular time and place -- London in the swinging '60s -- and successfully transplants it to modern-day New York City. The cockney lothario played by Caine has been turned into a working-class British émigré played by Jude Law, who makes Alfie a bit less cockney and a bit more self-aware.

Alfie's a smooth talking Londoner in New York who does his very best to avoid succumbing to the dreaded 'c' word commitment. Along the way, we're introduced to some of his ladies on the go – Dorie, Julie, Liz and Nikki, to name but a few.

Like the earlier "Alfie," it's the story of a sexually promiscuous man. Alfie (Law), a chauffeur, lives in a small Manhattan apartment and dedicates his life to seducing women. Talking directly into the camera, and preening with a self-satisfaction so complete as to seem a form of innocence, he expounds on clothes, the proper application of cologne and the various rules he employs in his libidinous pursuits. His goal, it seems, is to have sex with as many women as possible but to get close to none of them.

Each one starts off as a fling, but somehow manages to influence Alfie's life. He slowly starts to realize that he is actually alone and that there is more to life than what he has done so far.

Like the earlier "Alfie," the new version could be called a cautionary tale, about a way of life that leads to the existential confusion embodied in the famous catchphrase, "What's it all about?"

Anyone we know in it? Jude Law is fresh and funny as Alfie, with just the right amount of smug attitude. The stunning Sienna Miller is the beautiful but 'damaged' Nikki, and Susan Sarandon sizzles as the sexy older woman, Liz. There's also Marisa Tomei (Julie), Nia Long (Lonette) and Omar Epps plays Alfie's best friend, Marlon.

Would I recommend it? Definitely. Although remakes do not usually come through smelling of roses, this one does. It's fresh, colourful and funny. Jude Law is magnificent, introducing us to a slightly warmer side of Alfie than Michael Caine.

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