Showing posts with label isaiah whitlock jr. Show all posts
Showing posts with label isaiah whitlock jr. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 02, 2020

Da 5 Bloods


***In Memory of Chadwick Boseman (1976-2020) Rest in Power***


Directed by Spike Lee and screenplay by Lee, Kevin Willmott, Danny Bilson, and Paul De Meo from a story by Bilson and De Meo, Da 5 Bloods is the story of four Vietnam War veterans who return to the country to find the remains of their fallen leader as well as treasure they buried during the war. The film is an adventure-action story of sorts where a group of men return to Vietnam as they reflect on their time in the war as well as what was gained and wasn’t gained in their service as well as deal with demons from the past. Starring Delroy Lindo, Jonathan Majors, Clarke Peters, Norm Lewis, Isaiah Whitlock Jr., Melanie Thierry, Johnny Tri Nguyen, Paul Walter Hauser, Jasper Paakkonen, Jean Reno, and Chadwick Boseman as Norman Earl “Stormin’ Norman” Holloway. Da 5 Bloods is a gripping and evocative film from Spike Lee.

The film is the story of four men who served in the Vietnam War as they return to the country to retrieve the remains of their fallen leader as well as gold they had buried many years ago in the hopes of regaining it. It is a film with a simple premise as these four men who fought in the war as they are aware of the dark history of what African-American soldiers had endured as they hope to use the gold for something bigger than themselves. Yet, they return to Vietnam as older men who saw a country that has changed into something different but the past still looms in them. The film’s screenplay by Spike Lee, Danny Bilson, Paul De Meo, and Kevin Willmott does follow a traditional narrative yet it does have elements of flashbacks and insight about the war and the many different perspectives from those who were involved as well as how the world saw it. At the center of the story are these four men in Paul (Delroy Lindo), Otis (Clarke Peters), Eddie (Norm Lewis), and Melvin (Isiah Whitlock Jr.) who return to Vietnam hoping to get the gold this time for themselves and whoever they felt need it.

Joining the four men is Paul’s son David (Jonathan Majors) who is concerned about his father’s state of mind since Paul suffers from PTSD as well as spouting rhetoric that his fellow Bloods don’t follow as they’re also disturbed by the fact that he wears a MAGA cap. Otis’ return to Vietnam is more personal as it relates to a former lover he has in Tien (Le Y Lan) who gives Otis connections on where the gold is with the aid of a French smuggler in Desroche (Jean Reno) who wants a cut of the gold as an offer to get it out of Vietnam. The second act is about the journey to the jungle with the aid of a guide named Vinh (Johnny Tri Nguyen) who stays behind at a rendezvous point once they finish their journey. Yet, things become complicated as it relates to Paul but also for Otis, Eddie, and Melvin as they’re aware that they’re getting older as the trip back would be even more difficult. Even as they meet a landmine clearing organization group who have put themselves in trouble leading to all sorts of chaos relating to Paul’s paranoia.

Spike Lee’s direction does bear element of style in not just its visuals but also in the way he presents modern-day Vietnam as well as Vietnam in the past. Shot on location in Ho Chi Minh City as well as locations in Bangkok and Chiang Mai, Lee does present a world that has changed yet there is still some lingering resentment from the Vietnamese over the war such as a scene where a young man on a boat tries to sell some fruit only to upset Paul leading some harsh racial words and such. Even as Lee showcases that there are those who are trying to be respectful yet Paul is someone on the verge of going apeshit due to his PTSD as well as some harboring secrets he is carrying. Lee’s compositions are straightforward but also with some stylish compositions where he does use a lot of wide shots to not just establish the locations but also to get a scope of where the characters are at as the jungle itself is a character in the film as it is unforgiving and intense. Especially as there’s areas involving landmines where the people at LAMB come into play despite the fact that David had met them earlier.

Lee’s usage of close-ups and medium shots also play into the drama and exchanges between characters as much of the scenes in present-day Vietnam is shot on digital while the flashback scenes involving Stormin’ Norman is shot on 16mm film stock with a different aspect ratio that allows Lee to bring an air of realism as well as distinctive look of those times. Lee also uses stock footage and such about the Vietnam War including pictures of those who had fallen including African-American soldiers as it relates to the racial inequality that these men endured. Lee also doesn’t shy away from using film references where both Apocalypse Now and Treasure of the Sierra Madre are referenced as it does play into the story. Notably as things do intensify in its third act as it play into this showdown between Da Bloods and these Vietnamese gunmen over the gold the former had found though it the gold also has this history of why it played a part in the war in the first place. Even as it forces these four old veterans to deal with other forces as it all play into the fallacy of greed. Overall, Lee crafts a riveting and intoxicating film about four former Vietnam veterans returning to the country to find gold and the remains of their fallen leader.

Cinematographer Newton Thomas Siegel does brilliant work with the film’s cinematography with its emphasis on low-key lighting for some scenes set at night along with the usage of filters for the nighttime scenes in the jungle along with the stylish usage of grainy 16mm film stock for the flashback scenes. Editor Adam Gough does excellent work with the editing as it does have some stylish cuts while maintaining unique rhythms to play into the emotions as well as letting shots linger on for nearly a minute to play into the drama. Production designer Wynn Thomas, with set decorator Jeanette Scott plus art directors Truong Trung Dao, Anusorn “Sorn” Musicabutr, and Jeremy Woolsey, does amazing work with the look of a club where the Da Bloods go to upon their arrival in Ho Chi Minh City as well as a hotel the four men plus David stay where they meet the people from LAMB. Costume designer Donna Berwick does terrific work with the costumes as it is largely straightforward to play into the personality of the characters as well as the design of the uniforms the soldiers wore back in the 60s.

Special effects supervisor Herbert Blank and visual effects supervisor Richard Baker do fantastic work with some of the film’s action scenes as well as a few visual effects involving the flashbacks without the need to de-age the actors with the exception of a picture for the film’s ending. Sound editor Philip Stockton does superb work with the sound as it plays into the atmosphere of the jungles as well as the sounds of gunfire and explosions that occur in some of the action scenes. The film’s music by Terence Blanchard is incredible for its orchestral based score filled with heavy string arrangements that play into the action and drama as well as low-key somber pieces for the emotional moments of the film while music supervisor Rochelle Claerbaut creates a soundtrack that largely features the music of Marvin Gaye including six songs from his 1971 album What’s Going On as the soundtrack also feature a famed classical piece from Richard Wagner and music by Curtis Mayfield, Freda Payne, the Spinners, and the Chamber Brothers.

The casting by Kim Coleman is wonderful as it feature some notable small roles from Veronica Ngo as the Vietcong radio broadcaster Hanoi Hannah, Sandy Huong Pham as Tien’s daughter Michon, Nguyen Ngoc Lam as a leader of a gang of gunmen wanting the gold, Le Y Tien as Otis’ former Vietnamese girlfriend Tien, Jasper Paakkonen as a member of LAMB in Seppo, and Paul Walter Hauser as an American member of LAMB in Simon. Jean Reno is superb as the slimy smuggler Desroche as a Frenchman who offers to help Da Bloods in getting the gold out with a price only to make things worse during its third act. Melanie Thierry is fantastic as Hedy Bouvier as a LAMB leader whom David meets as she is a woman who uses her own wealth to clear landmines and wants to do something good for the world. Johnny Tri Nguyen is excellent as the Vietnamese guide Vinh who helps Da Blood go through the country and into the jungle while also having to deal with the gunmen as he would prove his worth to the team. Jonathan Major is brilliant as Paul’s son David as a man who joins the Da Bloods in the journey as he is concerned for his father’s PTSD as well as doing what he can to help everyone else as he would have a near-death encounter with a landmine.

Chadwick Boseman is amazing as “Stormin’” Norman Earl Holloway as the leader of Da Bloods who was a warrior as he would get the men to try and do the right thing despite being killed in battle as he would also appear in a vision during a dramatically-intense moment in the film. Norm Lewis is incredible as Eddie as a car salesman who helps fund the whole thing to find Norman’s body while he copes with his own issues as he also laments over the journey involving the gold. Isiah Whitlock Jr. is remarkable as Melvin as the one former soldier who is trying get everyone on check while also trying to do what is right as he is kind of the conscience of the group. Clarke Peters is marvelous as Otis as a soldier who is close to everyone as well as David’s godfather where he is concerned for Paul but is also forced to defend himself as it relates to his relationship with Tien. Finally, there’s Delroy Lindo in a phenomenal as Paul as a war veteran with PTSD and lots of emotional baggage while wearing a MAGA hat as he spouts racial rhetoric that makes everyone uncomfortable as Lindo provides that air of anguish and torment into his character as a man that is lost in his guilt.

Da 5 Bloods is a spectacular film from Spike Lee. Featuring a phenomenal ensemble cast, sprawling visuals, a compelling story of greed, guilt, and loss, Terence Blanchard’s soaring music score, and strong commentary about African-Americans’ role in the Vietnam War. It is definitely a film that isn’t just this reflective war movie but also a film that explores four men dealing with loss and wanting to bring some good to the world despite the complications they endure with the world. In the end, Da 5 Bloods is a sensational film from Spike Lee.

Spike Lee Films: (She’s Gotta Have It) – (School Daze) – Do the Right Thing - Mo' Better Blues - Jungle Fever - (Malcolm X) – Crooklyn - (Clockers) – (Girl 6) – (Get on the Bus) – 4 Little Girls - (He Got Game) – John Leguizamo's Freak - Summer of Sam - (The Original Kings of Comedy) – (Bamboozled) – (A Huey P. Newton Story) – 25th Hour - (Jim Brown: All-American) – (She Hate Me) – (Inside Man) – (When the Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts) – (Miracle at St. Anna) – (Kobe Doin’ Work) – (Passing Strange) – (If God is Willing and Da Creek Don’t Rise) – (Red Hook Summer) – Bad 25 - Mike Tyson: The Undisputed Truth - (Oldboy (2013 film)) – (Da Blood of Jesus) – (Chiraq) – Michael Jackson's Journey from Motown to Off the Wall - BlackKklansman - (American Utopia)

© thevoid99 2020

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Cedar Rapids



Directed by Miguel Arteta and written by Phil Johnston, Cedar Rapids is the story of a naïve insurance salesman who becomes a last-minute replacement to attend a regional conference to win a prestigious prize. At the conference, he befriends a wild bunch of insurance agents where they reveal about the dark world of the insurance business. Starring Ed Helms, John C. Reilly, Anne Heche, Isaiah Whitlock Jr., Alia Shawkat, Kurtwood Smith, Stephen Root, and Sigourney Weaver. Cedar Rapids is a heartwarming yet very funny comedy from Miguel Arteta.

Tim Lippe (Ed Helms) is an insurance agent from a small town who holds an idealism about taking care of his customers and earning their trust. While he’s also having an affair with his former schoolteacher Macy Vanderhei (Sigourney Weaver), Tim lives a comfortable yet sheltered life. When a fellow agent named Roger Lemke (Thomas Lennon) had suddenly died, Tim’s boss Bill Krogstad needs Tim to go to Cedar Rapids, Iowa for a regional conference to make presentation for ASMI president Orrin Helgesson (Kurtwood Smith) in hopes for another award for the company. Tim goes to Cedar Rapids where he shares a room with the kind African-American agent Ronald Wilkes (Isaiah Whitlock Jr.) and the more brash Dean Ziegler (John C. Reilly) whom Krogstad wants Tim to stay away from.

Tim also meets Joan Ostrowski-Fox (Anne Heche) as he learns about the rough-and-tumble world of the insurance game. While getting to know Ronald, Dean, and Joan, Tim also befriends a young prostitute named Bree (Alia Shawkat) as he and Joan win a scavenger hunt as they would join Ronald and Dean for drinks and partying. Yet, the party gets a little out of control with Tim after sleeping with the already-married Joan as Tim finds himself trouble with Orrin as he is set to make a big presentation for the Four Diamonds award. Joan would reveal some dark secrets to Tim about Lemke and how he won the awards as Tim refuses to believe what Joan says.

With Dean giving him some advice, Tim would do something to win over Orrin where he realizes what he had done. After going to a rowdy party with Bree, Tim learns what Krogstad is going to do forcing Tim to make some big moves with the help from his new friends.

The film is a comedy about a small town insurance agent whose idealism is tested when he becomes a last-minute replacement for another agent at a very prestigious regional conference. There, he would explore some of the dark secrets of the insurance game along with some people who share his ideals despite their much looser personalities. The film is a coming-of-age story of sorts of a how a young man who learns about what to do in the insurance game though he is someone that just wants to do good for those in his small town and make sure they can trust him. Phil Johnston’s screenplay does play to a bit of formula but its big success is in fleshing out the characters as well as developing them. Notably the Tim Lippe character as it’s his story that is told with some bawdy humor but also some intriguing insight into the world of the insurance business.

Miguel Arteta’s direction is superb as a lot of the presentation is straightforward yet engaging. From the way he shoots a lot of the interiors of the hotel early on to the way he presents some of the film’s humorous moments. The latter of which is done with a lot of improvisation as well as getting the actors set for the frame. The way the actors are directed in their approach to the frame as well as giving them relaxed and lively performance is among one of Arteta’s strengths as a filmmaker. He’s not afraid to put them in uncomfortable situations or tense moments while finding some way to make sure the humor comes off naturally. Overall, Arteta creates a very solid and witty film about a man coming of age in the insurance business world.

Cinematographer Chuy Chavez does a nice job with the film‘s very colorful cinematography that is filled with stylish lighting set-ups for many of the film‘s interior settings while utilizing more naturalistic shots for the film‘s day and nighttime exterior settings where a lot of it is shot in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Editor Erick Kassick does a very good job with the editing by utilizing some rhythmic cuts for some of the film‘s humorous moments including a wonderful montage scene late in the film. Production designer Doug J. Meerdink, along with set decorator Jeanette Scott and art director Rob Simons, does a brilliant job with the look of the hotel suite interiors to complement the new world that Tim Lippe steps in.

Costume designer Hope Hanafin does terrific work with the costumes from the suits the men wear to the more stylish business suit that Joan wears. Sound editor Andrew DeCristofaro does a fine job with the sound work to play up a few key scenes such as a talent contest where Tim steals the show as well as the raucous party scene where Tim parties with Bree. The film’s score by Christophe Beck is excellent for its very playful and melodic-driven score led by jazzy piano riffs and soothing string arrangements to emphasize the film‘s light-hearted humor. Music supervisor Margaret Yen provides a very fun score that is a mixture of folk, indie rock, classic rock, and pop music to play up the world that Tim Lippe ventures into.

The casting by Joanna Colbert, Richard Mento, and Meredith Tucker is incredible for the ensemble that is created as it includes Thomas Lennon as Tim‘s fellow agent Roger Lemke, Mike O‘Malley as the smug top agent Mike Pyle, and Rob Coddroy as a mean guy Tim meets at a party. Alia Shawkat is terrific as young hooker Bree who befriends Tim as she calls him “Butterscotch”. Kurtwood Smith is excellent as ASMI president Orrin Helgesson who claims to be about everything the contest is about only for Tim to discover something devious about him. Stephen Root is superb as Tim’s greedy boss Bill Krogstad who becomes desperate to win the Two Diamonds award while finding some way to make sure Tim succeeds in his mission. Sigourney Weaver is wonderful as Tim’s older girlfriend Macy whom he adores and always go to her for advice as Weaver brings a great maternal instinct to the character while still being very sexy.

Isaiah Whitlock Jr. is great as the film’s straight-man Ronald Wilkes as he shows Tim the ropes about the conference while proving that he can loosen up and be threatening in his own way. Anne Heche is amazing as the very fun Joan Ostrowski-Fox who helps Tim deal with his new surroundings while revealing some secrets about the ASMI conference as it’s Heche giving out one of her best performances of her career. John C. Reilly is phenomenal as Dean Ziegler as Reilly brings a lot of energy to his character that might be a brash blow-hard but there’s also a lot of heart to his character who does care for clients and friends. Finally, there’s Ed Helms in a winning performance as the naïve Tim Lippe where Helms brings a wide-eyed innocence and enthusiasm to his character. Even as Helms gets a chance to be funny while proving to be a solid dramatic actor as it proves that there’s more to Helms than being the crazed partier in the Hangover movies.

Cedar Rapids is a fun and enjoyable comedy from Miguel Arteta. Featuring dynamic performances from Ed Helms, John C. Reilly, Anne Heche, and Isaiah Whitlock Jr., it’s a film that is very smart as well as providing enough amusing and compelling moments to keep its audience entertained. Notably as it’s comedy that doesn’t try to rely on cheap gags in order to create characters and situations audiences can relate to. In the end, Cedar Rapids is a fantastic film from Miguel Arteta.

Miguel Arteta Films: (Star Maps) - (Chuck & Buck) - (The Good Girl) - (Youth in Revolt) - Beatriz at Dinner

© thevoid99 2012