Posts Tagged ‘Damon Herriman’
Everything is a Weapon
Mortal Kombat II

Director: Simon McQuoid
Cast: Karl Urban, Martyn Ford, Tati Gabrielle, Jessica MacNamee, Mehcad Brooks, Hiroyuki Sanada, Josh Lawson, Damon Herriman, Ludi Lin, Max Haung, Lewis Tan
Running Time: 1 hour 56 minutes
Film Rating: 6.5 out of 10
Australian director Simon McQuoid returns as director to the sequel of the 2021 film Mortal Kombat with the new film simply titled Mortal Kombat II but this time he employs lots of laughs and sufficient martial arts, blood and gore to make this film entertaining although downright crazy at times.

Thankfully for the casting of New Zealand actor Karl Urban (Thor: Ragnarok, Star Trek: Beyond, Riddick) as the washed up 1990’s martial arts star Johnny Cage complete with black sunglasses and attitude that makes this film enjoyable. Karl Urban, channelling some of his bad ass character from the hit TV show The Boys currently streaming on Amazon Prime, he makes this film believable and hilarious combined with Josh Lawson as the one eyed Kano.

Mortal Kombat II is a combination of Australian humour and dazzling martial arts complete with a mostly Asian cast including Ludi Lin (Aquaman) who reprises his role as Liu Kang and Golden Globe winning Japanese actor Hiroyuki Sanada (Bullet Train) who reappears as the vengeful Scorpion aka Hanzo Hasashi.

Female power is represented in the form of Jessica MacNamee who returns as Sonja Blade and Adeline Rudolph as Kitana complete with killer fans, who lives by the mantra that everything is a weapon.

Jeremy Slater’s screenplay for Mortal Kombat II needed some more context and backstory as the multiple characters in this martial arts action fantasy jump between worlds which distorts an already confusing narrative. Fortunately Slater saves the script with some really funny one-liners uttered by Karl Urban and Josh Lawson in the raw Australian humour which is so hilarious.

Mortal Kombat II is loads of fun and definitely a fun popcorn film but it is not as good as the first film due to a confusing narrative and a plethora of characters that just appear to be cardboard cut outs hoping to inspire fans to dress up as their cosplay alter egos at the next Comic Con.

This fantasy martial arts action film is filled with fascinating visual effects coupled with enough gore to make the fights worthy of bloodlust but then pivots into a surreal scene stealing moment featuring Johnny Cage fighting a group of strange Mad Max like characters in a bid to win them over to the human side of Mortal Kombat. Weird and bizarre.

This sequel will make its production budget back and will be a big hit with gamers and those fans of the first film and the 1995 original. Mortal Kombat II should do well at the box office in the Asian markets and of course in Australia & New Zealand thanks to the antipodean cast.

Mortal Kombat II gets a film rating of 6.5 out of 10 and is big on humour, special effects and action but weak on a comprehensive storyline which makes the characters unbelievable and hollow. Recommended for those that love the niche genre of fantasy martial arts.
Acting as Artifice
Once Upon a Time in Hollywood

Director: Quentin Tarantino
Cast: Leonardo di Caprio, Brad Pitt, Margot Robbie, Emile Hirsch, Bruce Dern, Dakota Fanning, Maya Hawke, Timothy Olyphant, Austin Butler, Damian Lewis, Al Pacino, Kurt Russell, Margaret Qualley, Damon Herriman, Mikey Madison
Running Time: 2 hours and 41 minutes
Film Rating: 8 out of 10
Oscar winner for Best Original Screenplay for Pulp Fiction and Django Unchained, writer and director Quentin Tarantino returns to the big screen with his 9th feature film the brilliantly titled Once Upon a Time in Hollywood starring Oscar winner Leonardo DiCaprio (The Revenant) and Brad Pitt as buddies actor Rick Dalton and his stunt double Cliff Booth in a fictional tale set in Los Angeles in 1969.
1969 was the year that the real life film director Roman Polanski’s pregnant wife Sharon Tate was brutally murdered by the followers of the Charles Manson cult which shocked the American film industry to its rotten core. Charles Manson is played in the film by Australian actor Damon Herriman.
Firstly two disclaimers: this is an extremely long film and secondly it’s really only aimed at serious movie buffs and serves as Tarantino’s ode to the end of Hollywood’s Golden Age before the film making industry got taken over by corporations, sequels, digitization and streaming.

Tarantino artfully pays homage to the act of buying a ticket and going to the cinema in a rather poignant scene when the young actress Sharon Tate superbly played by Oscar nominee Margot Robbie (I, Tonya) actually pays to watch a film she is starring in at a Westwood cinema.
The rest of this marvelously meandering film belongs to the two major stars, DiCaprio who is superb as the washed up TV actor Rick Dalton who is desperately trying to make a Big Screen comeback but lands up starring in a string of Spaghetti Westerns in Rome.
Oscar nominee Brad Pitt (12 Monkeys) is phenomenal as the stunt double past his prime Cliff Booth in one of his best onscreen performances yet especially the gorgeous scene when he takes his shirt off on the roof of Dalton’s Hollywood Hills mansion in the scorching Californian sun to fix the TV aerial.
Booth also inadvertently stumbles across the hippie cult followers of Charles Manson in an abandoned studio lot in Chatsworth, California featuring some great cameos by Dakota Fanning (Ocean’s 8, War of the Worlds) as Squeaky Fromme , Oscar nominee Bruce Dern (Nebraska) as George Spahn and Margaret Qualley (The Nice Guys) as the seductive hippie hitchhiker Pussycat.

Tarantino expertly captures the zeitgeist of Los Angeles in 1969 at the peak of the counter-culture movement with lurid production design by Barbara Ling and costumes by Oscar nominated costume designer Arianne Phillips (Walk the Line, A Single Man, Nocturnal Animals, W. E.).
With some expertly placed cameos including Oscar winner Al Pacino (Scent of a Woman) as hot shot producer Marvin Schwarz and Damian Lewis as real life star Steve McQueen.
Once Upon a Time in Hollywood is slowing moving in the first two acts of the film, while the third act is phenomenal especially the hippie flame throwing sequence.
Tarantino could have quickened the film’s pace in the beginning to actively propel the narrative forward but he is a notorious auteur and not interested in packaging films to please audience expectations.
Unbelievably, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood did get a standing ovation at its glittering film premiere at the 2019 Cannes Film Festival so Tarantino did something right.
This film gets a rating of 8 out of 10 and accurately portrays acting as artifice.
This is not Tarantino’s best work but written and directed in the vein of his crime thriller Jackie Brown, Once Upon a Time In Hollywood is strictly recommended for Tarantino fans and those that enjoyed Pulp Fiction, Django Unchanged and Inglourious Basterds.