Movies

🎬 The Review β€” 21 Jump Street (2012)

Let’s get something straight: nobody asked for a movie remake of a forgotten 80s cop TV show starring Channing Tatum β€” a man previously best known for having cheekbones you could slice cheese on β€” and Jonah Hill. Nobody saw it coming. Nobody thought it would work. And yet here we are, over a decade later, and 21 Jump Street remains one of the funniest films of the 21st century. How is it even real?

The plot, if you can call it that with a straight face: two spectacularly incompetent cops β€” Schmidt (Hill), a nervous wreck with a heart of gold and the coordination of a labrador puppy, and Jenko (Tatum), a beautiful idiot who coasted through life on his jawline β€” are sent undercover to a high school to bust a drug ring. What follows is a masterclass in everything going wrong in exactly the right way.

The genius of the film is that it’s completely self-aware without being smug about it. It knows it’s a dumb premise. It says so, loudly, through Ice Cube’s perpetually furious captain who is also somehow a comedic treasure. And then it absolutely commits to that dumb premise and executes it with more craft and timing than most “serious” films manage. The gag where they accidentally swap their cover identities and Jenko β€” the thick one β€” ends up in AP Chemistry while Schmidt has to navigate the social hellscape of popularity? Chef’s kiss.

But here’s the thing that catches you off guard: there’s genuine heart in this movie. The friendship between Schmidt and Jenko β€” the nerd and the jock who somehow find each other across the great divide of high school trauma β€” is actually sweet. You root for them. You shouldn’t, given that they are catastrophically bad at their jobs and cause an almost criminal amount of property damage, but you do.

Channing Tatum, it turns out, is extraordinarily funny. This was the film that unlocked something. Jonah Hill gives it everything he has. Together they have the kind of chemistry that can’t be manufactured, directed, or written β€” it either exists or it doesn’t, and here it blazes.

A movie this stupid has no business being this good. And yet.

Score: 9/10 β€” Dumb, loud, chaotic, and secretly kind of brilliant. Much like high school itself.

Books

Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus

It’s 1960s California, and Elizabeth Zott β€” chemist, genius, and owner of the world’s most withering stare β€” has just been handed a cooking show. Not because she asked for one. Not because she wanted one. But because the universe, much like a bad lab partner, rarely cares about your carefully laid plans.

Lessons in Chemistry is the kind of book that makes you want to stand up and applaud in a room full of strangers. Bonnie Garmus arrived with her debut novel, flipped the table, and walked away without apologising. Good for her. Good for all of us.

Elizabeth Zott is not your average protagonist. She doesn’t doubt herself when she probably should, she doesn’t smile when she doesn’t mean it, and she absolutely refuses to dumb down a beurre blanc for anyone. In a decade that spent considerable effort telling women to sit down and look pretty, Elizabeth responds by explaining the Maillard reaction on live television β€” and somehow, accidentally, starting a feminist revolution. As you do.

The cast around her is just as delightful. There’s Calvin Evans, a rower with a big heart and excellent bone structure, whose love story with Elizabeth is one of the warmest, least clichΓ©d romances you’ll read. There’s Harriet, the neighbour who has quietly figured out more about life than most people ever will. And then there’s Six-Thirty β€” the dog β€” who is, without any irony whatsoever, one of the best-written characters in the book. Yes, the dog. Roll with it.

Garmus writes with a dry, precise wit that feels like someone handed a scalpel to a stand-up comedian. The comedy never undercuts the emotional weight β€” and there is emotional weight here, real and earned β€” but it keeps the whole thing from ever tipping into worthy, finger-wagging territory. The book is angry about things worth being angry about, and it makes its point by being irresistibly fun to read.

If this book were a chemical compound, it would be something wildly stable on the outside and absolutely combustible when you look closer. It bonds you to its characters in the first fifty pages and refuses to let go. Side effects include: furious nodding, suspicious eye moisture, and an uncontrollable urge to push it into the hands of everyone you know.

Score: 10/10 β€” Rare, radiant, and completely non-negotiable.

Movies

The Grand Budapest Hotel

Directed by: Wes Anderson
Starring: Ralph Fiennes, F. Murray Abraham, Mathieu Amalric, Adrien Brody, Jeff Goldblum, Willem Dafoe, Jude Law, Bill Murray, Edward Norton, Saoirse Ronan, Tilda Swinton and more.

The movie presents adventures of Gustave H, famous concierge from the Grand Budapest Hotel, and Zero Moustafa, the lobby boy who will shortly become his best friend.

The Grand Budapest Hotel

The movie is great. There is a lot of action, humour and plot twists. From murder accusation, through escape from prison to chase scene that begins in a monastery located in high mountains, I laughed loudly watching another absurd action.

Also, great acting performance, everybody did an amazing job, but Ralph Fiennes was incredible in his role of Gustave H.

One of my best movies ever.

My rate: 10/10

Movies

The Man from U.N.C.L.E

Directed by: Β Guy Ritchie
Starring: Henry Cavill,Β Armie Hammer, Alicia Vikander, Hugh Grant and more.
Β 
In the early 60s, CIA and KGB join their forces to stop a mysterious organization from making a nuclear bomb.

The movie is amazing. It has everything that good movie should have: a lot of humour, great dialogues, and sudden plot twists.
I heard that it is more like a “Bond” movie, that recent Bonds, and I totally agree!
One of the best movies I have recently seen.

My rate: 9/10
Movies

Captain America: The First Avenger

Directed by: Joe Johnston
Starring: Chris Evans, Tommy Lee Jones, Hugo Weaving, Hayley Atwell, Sebastian Stan, Dominic Cooper, Richard Armitage, Stanley Tucci, Samuel L. Jackson and more

The origin story of Captain America in Marvel Cinematic Universe. Steve Rogers is determined to join the army during World War II. However, due to his feeble posture, he keeps being rejected by the military. When he gets an offer to join the secret project that will allow him to participate in the War, he does not hesitate to join.

captain

I did not watch this movie as soon as it was screened, but much later. So firstly I watched a bunch of other movies from MCU and then decided to go back and watch the missing one.
Comparing it to other MCU movies, I could see that it was one of the weakest movies of their production. A lot of flaws made this movie boring.
I feel like this movie had a lot of potentials, but failed to deliver. Still, I do not regret watching it.

My rate: 6/10

Books

β€œThe secret of Chimneys” by Agatha Christie

Publish date: 1925
Genre: Crime story

Anthony Cade agrees to help his friend James McGrath. In order to do that he goes to London to deliver the draft of memoir to the publisher, and to return letters to the woman who wrote them. On the first night in London, the letters have been stolen by hotel waiter and memoir has been picked up by the fraud.

Agaha Christie - Chimneys

The plot thickens at a fast pace, as dead bodies start to appear. With the addition of a bit of romance, crime investigation and politics, you get a Β great book.

This is the first book that introduces Superintendent Battle to the audience, however, he is not the main character.

I liked this book. A lot of action, plot twists, likable characters made that it was a pleasure to read.

My rate: 7/10

Movies

Lord of War

Directed by: Andrew Niccol

Starring: Nicolas Cage, Ethan Hawke, Jared Leto and more

The movie tells a story of arms dealer Yuri Orlov, his rise and fall.

It is an amazing movie. The fact that is based on true stories, made me shiver.

The story-telling is perfect. Acting performance and realization are top notch.

Interesting fact: the guns they used were real, because they were much cheaper than using the fakes.Β I knew about it before watching the movie, and the scene in which hundreds of weapons are pilled on in the room made a huge impression on me.

Kudos to Andrew Niccol for making such an impressive movie.

My rate: 9/10

Movies

My neighbor Totoro

Directed by: Hayao Miyazaki

Starring (voices): Dakota Fanning, Elle Fanning, Tim Daly, Pat Carroll, Frank Welker and more

Two girls move to the countryside to leave closer to her mother, who is in hospital. After arrival, they find a hidden world of forest spirits, who live nearby. Soon they become friends and have a lot of adventures.

Beautiful story and animation. The main characters are very realistic. You can actually see the kids playing around, their emotions and motivations.
The movie left me with a smile on my face, singing around Totoro-Totoro for a couple of days.

This is one of the best movies I have ever seen.

My rate: 10/10

 

Movies

The Great Wall

Directed by: Yimou Zhang

Starring: Matt Damon, Tian Jing, Willem Dafoe, Pedro Pascal and more

Two companions travel to China to find the Black Powder. Once they are captured by the army stationed in the Great Wall, they find out about monsters from behind the Wall. The army is constantly trying to protect the human race from those monsters.

The movie really entertained me.Β  There was a lot of action, the characters were well presented. Great acting performance. Great special effects.
Overall really good movie.

I can recommend it without a doubt.

My rate: 7/10

 

 

Books

β€œTruthwitch” by Susan Dennard

Publish date: 05/01/2016

Genre: Fantasy

Safiya is a Truthwitch, Iseult is a Threadwitch and they are both best friends who want to live a free life. They are drawn into an intrigue to maintain a truce, and because of that, they must run away. They have a couple of allies, such us Prince Merik, his aunt Evrane Nihar or Leopold fon Cartorra, who help them with the escape. They are chased by Bloodwitch and the Empress of another country: Marstok.

I liked this book. It was nicely written, however at the beginning it was a little bit hard to dig in. After a while, everything becomes more clear. Slowly I could get to know the characters and history of the created world. Once everything was clear, it was a pleasure to read it.

A lot of adventures described in this book made me not want to stop reading.
I will be happy to read the next book in the series.

My rate: 7/10