10/26/2012

"Some times we would like the stork to come"

Title: The Babymakers
Year: 2012
Genre: Adventure, Comedy
Director: Jay Chandrasekhar
Writer: Peter Gaulke, Gerry Swallow
Runtime: 95min
Cast: Paul Schneider, Olivia Munn, Michael Yurchak, Wood Harris, Kevin Heffernan, Nat Faxon, Jay Chandrasekhar
Produc.: Duck Attack Films, Alliance Films, Automatik Entertainment, IM Global

In The Babymakers, Tommy (Paul Schneider) and Audrey Macklin (Olivia Munn) are a young couple, who on the date of their anniversary, decide that they want to be parents. Something that will have its drawbacks.
First scene. Tommy and Audrey sleep in their bedroom with the door open, when they hear the baby mourn. Audrey, still half asleep, tells Tommy that it is his turn, and he, not in better conditions, gets up, closes it and returns to bed. The neighbor´s baby is again only, the neighbors problem.
Tommy returns to his resting, and meanwhile, Audrey remains anxious and thoughtful.
Second scene. They are both in a restaurant, where they have gone to celebrate their three years together. For Audrey, tonight is doubly significant. Smiling, she expresses her husband that she is ready for the next step. Tommy agrees, but then we find out that they do not speak about the same thing. She refers to motherhood, and he, to try new alternatives in bed.
With this introduction, two things are accomplish. It reveals, creatively, of the emptiness that Audrey is feeling, at the lack of kids. To then, trample the good work, with an out of place Tommy and very unromantic. It makes us wonder, how someone would choose an evening like that, to talk about something so intimate, with so little delidacy.
Not long ago, I had the opportunity to watch Maybe Baby (2000). A british film that touched exactly the same issue. In it abounded a sober humor that, although composed by spicy jokes, always tried to prioritize the concerns of Sam (Joely Richardson) and Lucy Bell (Hugh Laurie), the main characters. One could laugh, but never forgot that they suffered.
Unfortunately, Jay Chandrasekhar takes the wrong way, him yes, forgetting of the real problems of Tommy and Audrey. Have they evolved properly, they would have been crucial for constructing a good movie. On the contrary, the director chooses the silliness, creating improbable situations, that only help one to go losing interest, with the passage of the minutes.
At first, both films start from the need of medical examinations, and which give identical results: Lucy and Audrey are in perfect conditions, while Sam and Tommy are those who are failing. The british director keeps us clinging to the marital conflict, while his american counterpart prefers to be funny.
Without going into excesive details, we discover that today´s Tommy is not, reproductively speaking, the same as before. That one, still single and who would become a sperm donor, to get some money and pay for an engagement ring. At the same time, those pre marital donations had been from the good ones, and Tommy now, wants them back. From the moment that he locates the last beneficiary couple, is that the film is no longer, properly counted.
Tommy meets the lucky ones. Two homosexuals, too happy with their purchase as to give him a refund. One of them, however, ends up being more flexible, but in exchange that Tommy makes him happy. By the way, his partner does not have to know.
A joke like this might even be passable, if anything Tommy had said no from the beginning. As instead he consults it with his best friend Wade (Kevin Heffernan), it stops being funny and becomes stupid.
By the end, what abounds more that nothing is the silliness, with Tommy and his unintelligent comrades, Wade and Zigzag (Nat Faxon), planning a robbery at a sperm bank. For that, they engage contact with Ron Jon, an Indian mobster, played by the director himself, and whose contribution in front of the cameras, perhaps for the better, could have been avoided.
If anyone remained unconvinced about whether it's worth to see it, just to say that during the robbery, Wade slips in semen, in a scene that is a mess, I believe, should be enough to know the answer.

My rating: 3/10


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10/18/2012

"Now the customers have fins"

Title: Bait
Year: 2012
Genre: Action, Horror, Thriller
Director: Kimble Rendall
Writer: John Kim and Russell Mulcahy (written by) and Shayne Armstrong, Duncan Kennedy, Shane Krause and Justin Monjo (additional writing)
Runtime: 91min
Cast: Xavier Samuel, Sharni Vinson, Julian McMahon, Phoebe Tonkin, Cariba Heine, Alice Parkinson, Lincoln Lewis, Alex Russell, Dan Wyllie, Richard Brancatisano, Joel Amos Byrnes, Ashton Chen, Adrian Pang
Produc.: Bait Productions, Screen Australia, Media Development Authority (MDA), Pictures in Paradise, Blackmagic Design Films, Blackmagic Design, Story Bridge Films
Budget.: AUD 30 million approx.

In Bait, after a tsunami, several people get trapped in a supermarket. The survivors must find a way out, without being eaten by white sharks, that have been brought by the current.
The morning after a bachelor party, Josh (Xavier Samuel), who is a lifeguard, fails to save his girlfriend's brother in a shark attack. That day he loses them both, as Tina (Sharni Vinson) takes it up with him.
Six months later, Josh arrives at his work in a supermarket, in a day that will be full of surprises. Suddenly, two masked men have broken into the place, immediately executing a woman. Something that is not much, compared to what is to come. Moments later, a giant tsunami sweeps away, beach and city, flooding the supermarket.
Survivors in there are to help one another out of the water, to safe places. The lucky ones have been Tina and Steven (Qi Yuwu), her new boyfriend; Jaimie (Phoebe Tonkin) and Todd (Martin Sacks), his police father; Collins (Damien Garvey), Josh and Naomi (Alice Parkinson), local employees; and Doyle (Julian McMahon) and Kirby (Dan Wyllie), the assailants.
Nor has the parking lot had better luck. Because Ryan (Alex Russell), Jaimie's boyfriend, has been trapped in his wagon, like young Heather (Cariba Heine) and Kyle (Lincoln Lewis), a little couple caught in their own car. The only thing left, in both scenarios, is that they realize they are not longer alone. The tsunami has brought two twelve-foot sharks.
I do not know if it was due to little inteligence, lack of interest in the argument, or total ignorance, concerning human psychology, but none of the characters is going to show to be too much nervous about what happens. They almost drowned and now they could be eaten alive, and yet, are unable to shiver, mourn or cry of fear. I am not saying the three had to ocurr, but at least one. With behaviors that do not fit with the situation and regrettable interpretations in itself, it makes it difficult for one to empathize with them. Instead, some survivors find the time to be heroes, or to bring up repressed feelings. Even Steven, turns out to be an asian with such ridiculous survival ideas, that amazes the others would listen.
Living a similar situation we have Heather and Kyle, who in their car look like tucked in a aquarium, with an interesting 360º panoramic view. At first they hear noises or think they can see movements in the water. Once they discover what the threat is, instead of panicking, they prefer to argue over stupidities. The animal rams against them a couple of times, being these the only moments when Heather and Kyle yell. Moreover, it is easy to realize that their characters have been written to make us laugh, something that does not suit with the film.
Lets now continue with the most prominent characters. Because here, the sharks do not get behind. I will forever be in doubt, whether it waser be in doubt, whether it will due to budgetary problems, or to the unwillingness of the FX team and the disinterest of its director. Either way, I believe to have distinguished, both animatronics and digital sharks, and in the second case, they have not gone farther than the most basic and elemental 3D design, insufficient to convey the drama.
I can, however, stand out, that at least some effort was put into the attacks. The death of Mr. Jessup, with the animal leaping from the water and tearing him half body, should be considered of the best. Once the shark dives back, it can be seen in detail what the man has been reduced to below the hip. Only exposed flesh, dripping blood and guts, is what we have now, instead of his legs.
In short, the movie is not good and has many more flaws than attributes. The only reason not to leave it before the end, I think would be the curiosity of seeing the great whites attack, or the humor (though misplaced) of Kyle and Heather.

My rating: 2/10


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10/03/2012

"A road that didn´t take just one day"

Title: Into the West  
Year: 2005  
Genre: Western, Adventure, Drama, History 
Format: Miniseries 
Director: Robert Dornhelm, Simon Wincer, Sergio Mimicca-Gezzan, Michael W. Watkins and Timothy Van Patten 
Writer: William Mastrosimone, Cyrus Nowrasteh, Craig Storper and Kirk Ellis 
Runtime: 552min 
Cast: Matthiew Settle, Skeet Ulrich, Michael Spears, Tonantzin Carmelo, George Leach, Zahn McClarnon, Simon R. Baker, Sean Blakemore, Josh Brolin, Garey Busey, Will Patton, Francesco Quinn, Geno Silva, Alan Tudyk, Beau Bridges, Jessica Capshaw, Emily Holmes, Robert Maloney, Keri Russell, Jay Tavare, Nathaniel Arcand, Sean Astin, Irene Bedard, Gil Birmingham, Tyler Christopher, Balthazar Getty, Daniel Gillies, Graham Greene, Christian Kane, Russell Means, Matthiew Modine, Tyler Posey, John Terry, Sheila Tousey, Rachael Lee Cook, Annabella Piugattuk, Tom Berenger, Wes Studi
Budget: $50 million approx. 

In Into the West, through two families, one white and the other of native americans, we are told the process by which the white man would eventually end up taking over the entire territory of the United States. 
Steven Spielberg serves as executive producer in this six-part miniseries, which runs from 1820 to 1890. It shows the endless fight between these two races, held during the conquest of the west, and the final fall of the indians. 
Jacob Wheeler (Matthiew Settle) is a young wheelwright, who early in the century lives and works in the fictional Wheelerton, Virginia, with his family. One day, a mountaineer speaks wonders of the western frontier, and Jacob decides to leave home and go to see it. He is accompanied, on this trip, by his brother Nathan (Alan Tudyk). 
In another setting we have the Lakotas, whose elderly medicine man, Growling Bear (Gordon Tootoosis), has had a disturbing vision. He has been informed of what will happen if things follow the current course. Very soon there will come a day when there are no more buffalos on the prairies. 
To something so controversial, Soaring Eagle (Gerald Auger), his apprentice, manages to convince the tribe to ignore this prophecy. Meanwhile, the small White Feather (Chevez Ezaneh) intends to investigate this on his own. Shortly before his death, Growling Bear gives him a necklace that symbolizes the Lakota medicine wheel. This will pass from generation to generation, in every episode. 
Going back to Jacob, our character manages to find legendary explorer Jedediah Smith (Josh Brolin), where fiction (Jacob) and reality (Smith) are combined. After even confronting together with death, they separate. Jacob ends up taking part in an auction, where for sale there is an indian girl. He, like the other bidders, gives higher figures every time, not hesitating to clarify his aim of freeing the captive, and that amuses anyone. Jacob is challenged to a duel and comes out victorious, then him and the indian Thunder Heart Woman (Tonantzin Carmelo) take the way to the Lakotas. Already in the tribe, Jacob hopes to make her his wife, finding no opposition. Jacob and her get married, and a few years later, they are the happy parents of Abraham High Wolf, Jacob Jr. High Cloud and Margaret Light Shines. 
Each chapter provides an opportunity to care and learn about the historical background of the United States, while one is entertained by spectacularly recreated battle scenes, between indians and white men. Also, there´s the various sub plots, which are always uniting, one another, it´s characters. With the advance of the narrative, the first protagonists, whites or lakotas, cease to be the ones to be directly affected by the circumstances, becoming the new generations, the ones living the new changes. 
Thanks to an extremely carefully writing, has been that the times that this miniseries granted to every detail were correct. From the arrival to California and Oregon, conducted by Jedediah Smith and his group of riders (1826), until such moments as the invention of the telegraph (1844), the election of Lincoln (1860) or the patenting of the barbed wire ( 1874). 
However, beyond the anecdotal of any significant date, it should be clear what is the central, intended purpose. Here, it is seek, more than anything, that we see and understand, how exactly would be that the white man would classify as "his", this territory, which in fact had already got an owner. Luckily, it is not made the mistake of showing all whites as bad people, something that would have been unfair and untrue. The miniseries works a lot with the nuances, showing those whose desire was clearly to conquer, and those who had only wanted peace. It also explains the various reasons that would prevent the indians from defeating this cruel enemy. 
Into the West is, in my opinion, the most entertaining of the history courses. The kind that one would never want, to reach its end. 

My rating: 9/10


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9/20/2012

"Been one of us has it´s price"

Title: Undocumented
Year: 2010
Genre: Horror
Director: Chris Peckover
Writer: Chris Peckover, Joe Peterson
Runtime: 96min
Cast: Scott Mechlowicz, Alona Tal, Yancey Arias, Greg Serano, Kevin Weisman, Peter Stormare
Produc.: Sheperd Glen Productions
Budget: $1.400.000 million approx.

In Undocumented, a team of documentary students joins a group of mexicans, with the intention of registering their illegal crossing over into the United States.
Travis (Scott Mechlowicz) is the director; Davie (Greg Serano), the cameraman; Jim (Kevin Weisman), the soundguy; and Liz (Alona Tal), the producer. These four friends have decided to follow from very close, an attempt of emigration. It is clear that for them, the end justifies the means.
Shortly before departing, the team meets Alberto (Yancey Arias), one of those interested in leaving. With the introductions being made, Alberto talks to the camera. This man, who is about to break the law, smiles as he tells his story, happy for the opportunity that is oppening to him tomorrow. His story is summarized as a great desire for giving a better quality of life to his wife and daughter.
Before we appreciate what is that awaits them both, filmmakers as mexicans, this complex socio – political issue will have quickly been raised to us. This, probably very difficult to understand, if one has not been born in one of these two northern countries.
During the interview, at no time Alberto appears to be conceited, and instead, his joy is sincere. With this, what I mean to say is that this individual probably never wanted to get to this point, if could been avoided. His situation, however, would eventually end up forcing him to have to resort to such measures. Whether or not, justifiably, that's another thing. I, of course, just expose it, aware that it is much easier to say it from the outside, when not being in one of the two sides.
The film crew then follows the steps of these illegals. With them, they first go through an underground tunnel. Then they get into a truck, from where before they had been flashed the lights. Once they are all up is when the risks are increased, until luck abandons them.
Undocumented takes to the extreme, and to the last and most unthinkable consequences, the rejection of the intruder. The usual, in a case of this nature, would be that one ended up meeting with the border patrol. In this case, that would be even laughable. Instead of law abiding sane people, what they come across with is a band of hooded patriots, who take their offense too much seriously. Their leader is the dreaded Z (Peter Stormare), a sadist for whom the unallowed crossing means they deserve to be punished.
When filmmakers and mexicans are imprisoned, the situation for the Spanish speakers is the worst, because they might end up being tortured in the style of Hostel (2006). But for the students team, Z has already booked other plans. Since they are filmmakers, of them filming his atrocities to the letter, depends whether or not he finishes with them. But what is clear to all is that with these hooded men you do not play. The thing is that Z has already got in his facilities a collection of illegals, who are trapped in inhumane conditions.
There are two scenes in the film that stand out for their cruelty. In one, we see how Z grants the freedom to Selina (Lorel Medina), Alberto´s daughter, and who should immediately leave her parents and run away, if she wants to save herself. Z tells the girl which way she has to follow, but aware that the fear will eventually play a trick on her. Later, in a failed attempt of escape, the youngsters get to see how the kid had ended tangled in the barbed wire that surrounded the area. A really raw and daunting picture, and more for Alberto.
In another scene, Alberto is sitting before a displayed American flag and has to answer correctly to questions of American history. For every answer that he does not knows, his wife will be severely punished. The scene itself seeks to generate pain, although it does, again, reference to political matters.
In the end, Undocumented is an entertaining horror film, which takes this social problem of always, and tries to imagine what it would be like if there were more extreme reprimands.

My rating: 7/10


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9/06/2012

"A place with waiters and trayless waiters"

Title: Chef´s Special
Year: 2008
Genre: Comedy, Romance
Director: Nacho G. Velilla
Writer: Oriol Capel, David S. Olivas, Antonio Sánchez, Nacho G. Velilla
Runtime: 111min
Cast: Javier Cámara, Lola Dueñas, Benjamín Vicuña, Fernando Tejera, Alejandra Lorenzo, Junio Valverde
Produc.: Ensueño Films, Antena 3 Televisión, Canguro Produzioni Internazionali Cinematografiche
Budget: € 400 million approx.

In Chef's Special, Maxi (Javier Cámara) is an excellent chef, of homosexual inclination, whose work in his restaurant is disrupted when he has to take care of his two children, recently motherless. At the same time, he and his waitress Alex (Lola Dueñas) meet his new apartment neighbor, Horacio (Benjamín Vicuña), for whom they both feel attracted.
Maxi owns "The Xantarella" a Madrid restaurant, located in the district of Chueca. For him, his greatest aspiration has always been to show off to the critics, so he can be able to consolidate himself, earning a Michelin star. Since this is a comedy, it is precisely that one of the first funny situations happens when Ramiro (Fernando Tejera), in charge of the desserts, confuses a representative of tires with a critic.
Also that day, Alex shows up in the kitchen, cursing all men, dripping tears and drinking alcohol, frustrated with her last relationship.
This is how, in a few minutes, the director has presented the type of character that would be necessary, so that later, we can laught out loud.
Soon after, two situations occur that lead the poor Maxi to feel he is into trouble. On the one hand, the mother of his children (with whom things were already over long ago, and who now had a terminal illness), dies, leaving him Alba (Alejandra Lorenzo), a girl, and Edu (Junio ​​Valverde), a teenager. For Maxi, none of this was in his plans and he is terrified, not knowing what to do.
As if this were not enough, a new neighbor, former argentinian footballer Horacio moves into his building, resulting in Alex´s immediate crush on him, and that her behavior becomes stunned, not aware that such a handsome young man actually plays for the other team.
Chef's Special is a comedy that takes advantage of the mysteries of the search for love (be it, of whatever type), but above all and most of all, using the always controversial issue of discrimination. The jokes, though somewhat heavy, never fall into vulgarity. What the film clearly gives to understand, is that any homosexual willing to enjoy it, should be, with the film, able to laugh at oneself.
It is a proposal that has managed to combine very good humor, with the transmission of values, knowing Nacho G. Velilla quite well, when it was time to joke, and when, the time of delivering a good message of acceptance, in a society that is exclusive.
Also, it is granted some space to the matter of the single parent family, which neither encourages nor punishes. We are simply described the meaning of having to live in such circumstances. In this case, where we have, on the one hand, a man who, for the first time must exercise that role without even beeing sure of wanting it. And on the other hand, with two kids, who at the recent death of their mother, must get used to living with someone with whom until then, they had never had any connection.

My rating: 7/10


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8/29/2012

"Building the horror, piece by piece"

Title: The cabin in the woods
Year: 2012
Genre: Horror, Thriller
Director: Drew Goddard
Writer: Joss Whedon, Drew Goddard
Runtime: 95min
Cast: Kristen Connolly, Chris Hemsworth, Anna Hutchison, Fran Kranz, Jesse Williams, Richard Jenkins, Bradley Whitford, Brian White
Produc.: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), Mutant Enemy, United Artist
Budget: $30 million approx.

In The cabin in the woods, five friends who gather for a weekend, end up finding much more than the typical dangers of the dark woods.
The audiences were asking out loud, to be listened to. Were asking to stop making so many remakes and sequels, fed up of always seeing the same story. But the thing is that in Hollywood, box office successes are intended to be exploited till the end. Studios prefer to hire people willing to negotiate a good contract, to resume an idea, already, more than squeezed, and to say no to more rewarding projects, though less lucrative.
The audiences were claiming, given the lack of originality. And just as The Avengers (2012) would come to save us from the invasion, Joss Whedon itself (who adapted Stan Lee) would come to give us a break, in this other gender.
Co-written by him and Drew Goddard, and directed by Goddard, its release had been scheduled for February 5, 2010. However, given MGM´s intention of converting it to 3D, plus its subsequent announcement of being in bankruptcy, the wait would last. Finally, both Whedon and Goddard would oppose to the conversion and after serious financial problems, the distribution of the film would be sold to the Lions Gates Entertainment Corporation, for reaching the theatres on April 13, 2012.
Regarding Whedon, he would give a brief definition of what horror films meant to him, and of that, in which, according to him, they had ended up becoming. He would also say which was the goal been chased by him and his co-writer, and that he would partly describe as: "...an attempt to revitalize the genre ...", etc., etc.
I got to read a lot of reviews that highlighted how good it was the result, in addition to, how twisted. A friend told me, via Facebook, that beyond its originality and above all, the fuss was due to its so much postponed premiere. He also told to me to see it anyway, but beeing patient, because at first, it was going to seem silly.
I ended up realizing that, certainly, it was not for such a fuss.
Dana (Kristen Connolly), Curt (Chris Hemsworth), Jules (Anna Hutchison), Marty (Fran Kranz) and Holden (Jesse Williams) are the typical characters, unmistakable in any horror movie, concerning youth and isolated cabins. Can be recalled, for example, the classic The evil dead (1981) or Cabin Fever (2009).
Furthermore, Sitterson (Richard Jenkins) and Hadley (Bradley Whitford) are two technicians from a company, whose job is to simultaneously handle several scenarios, by which are constantly wreaking havoc in different parts of the world and in different ways.
What comes up next in the cabin, is a summation of clichés, that although may be boring, it is understood that it does not pursues the same goals we already know. There is in fact, a twist.
We have the romantic young couple (Curt and Jules), which has the ridiculous idea of having sex in the woods, instead of in a bed, as rational people. They end up getting in trouble, as it is evident. Or we have the group´s clown (Marty), who, being on his own, at the moment of his attack, manages to save himself.
Such situations are unleashed when the kids have the bright idea of going down the basement (formerly opened by Sitterson), were they should never have walked in. Down there, Dana takes a book with latin texts, and although Marty warns her, afraid, she reads a spell that awakens the zombies.
Once we have seen a bit of struggle, blood and death, one would want such patience to have its reward, but the movie twists are not anywhere near the remarkable and surprising that, as a spectator, one was expecting.
I do have to say, however, that what has occured to Whedon is that so much suffering was due to theoretically necessary procedures and for the sake of most of us. Something that later, it is made clear.
We can not deny that it is something new. Except that, once the first big surprise has been revealed, and when three of the kids have already died, the film relies on showing us a massacre, with monsters sweeping against the sadistic responsibles of the project, in what seems, was a punishment. Thus, it has gone from the originality to the easy joke.
It plays a lot with the, obviously fictional concept, of that we were young fools, always inclined to open the doors of fear (ie to get into where we are not called), and where, according to Sitterson, that has to be paid. That is actually an excuse to justify himself.
Already, when much of the argument has been revealed and the intrigue has given way to the hunting, is that the film begins to lose its charm, only sustained by the final appearance of the head of the company.
But in short, is this, ultimately, a great movie? I sincerely, doubt it. More, I tend to think that, with its script they have been able to tell a different story, exploiting the most common codes in a way never seen before. Although, with a conclusion that was for me, too far fetched. I doubt that to be enough as to say this is the best in horror movies of this year. It is, indeed, entertaining, different and to pass the time.

My rating: 6/10


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8/25/2012

"Disturbing the new neighbor, in God´s name"

Title: Henry Poole is here
Year:  2008
Genre: Comedy, Drama
Director:  Mark Pellington
Writer: Albert Torres
Runtime: 99min
Cast: Luke Wilson, Radha Mitchell, Adriana Barraza, Morgan Lily, Rachel Seiferth, George Lopez, Cheryl Hines, Richard Benjamin
Produc.: Overture Films, Lakeshore Entertainment, Camelot Pictures

In Henry Poole is here, Henry (Luke Wilson) is a deeply depressed man, who refuses to believe that on his house´s back wall, may have appeard the image of Christ.
In his depression, Henry just wants to pay for the purchase of his new property and to be left alone to suffer. The first thing we know is that something bad is happening to him, but it is not until later, that we find out what it is.
One day, Henry is inside his house, when suddenly, looking out a window he recognizes Esperanza (Adriana Barraza), a neighbor of his. For some reason she is in his garden, facing his patio´s back wall. Immediately, Henry goes out to find her, moment in which he realizes that the woman has crossed to the next door´s yard. Us, who have earlier seen her cross herself, now see how she talks exalted, on the phone.
Henry then approaches the wall between the gardens and in a very quiet tone, asks Esperanza what was she doing behind his house. To respond, the woman invites him to accompany her, to what, moments later, we have them both peering into a wall, where there is a stain.
Esperanza looks at this stain with the same awe of someone who had just found oil. Meanwhile, Henry is sure to be only seeing dirt. Esperanza is a very religious woman and Henry instead, a complete atheist. For her, what is before their eyes is the face of Jesus and a true miracle, but for Henry it is nothing.
So far, both views are perfectly respectables. However, the situation will get complicated, when Esperanza crosses the line.
Henry, who had been wanting to be left alone, begins to be bothered by his neighbor. Esperanza, determined to make him understand that what is on his wall is a sign from God, again and again, insists on showing up. First, she goes back to his house with Father Salazar (George Lopez), and then goes back again, sereval times, with different neighbors. All of them in need of the help of the Almighty.
At the same time, Henry meets young Patience (Rachel Seiferth), cashier of a supermaket that he frequents, and Dawn Stupek (Radha Mitchell) and her daughter Millie (Morgan Lily), from whom he is now next door´s neighbor. All three will be important elements, that make the story move forward.
One night, Millie crosses to Henry´s patio and touches the stain. In no time she has regained her speech, inasmuch as she had not said a word since her father´s abandonment. By the way, who had encouraged her to go touch the wall, and knowing that Henry would not like that? Esperanza Martinez. Now, at this point, it seems as if the world was conspiring against him.
As if this were not enough, Patience also goes to touch the wall, to which suddenly, the girl claims to have miraculously recovered her good eyesight and to no longer need glasses. For poor Henry this is the last straw, and he tries for everyone to understand that these "miracles" are nothing more than pure coincidence. Fortunate events, which have had to coincidentally happen, right when both had just touched the wall.
A whole community of believers end up turning his backyard into a kind of sacred site and filling the wall with offerings. Regardless of this being a private property, they all take the opportunity, without anyone even considering, that one's freedom ends where another's begins. This is to say that if Henry wanted, he could perfectly report them to the police.
The film reaches a point, where Esperanza insists Henry on that he touches Jesus face himself, to get rid of his depression. Henry then, rejects this possibility, still refusing to believe her. But now with greater difficulty, since it is clear that he does that, more for fear of the unknown, than anything else. These so-called "miracles" that he has witness, have begun to increasingly make it harder for him to maintain an skepticism that, anyway, he refuses to drop.
Henry Poole is here does not begin in a bad way. First, Henry meets Dawn and Millie, and later appears the religious matter. Here, the film has already got a main character with a good conflict, and whose only negative thing would be all that sentimental side with his Stupek neighbors, that might get us a little bit bored.
However, what we have in the end, is nothing more than a great advertising movie of the Christian religion, and where the director tells us that finding faith is how we could free ourselves of all our suffering, and also Henry, of his. With characters trying to give us the reasons why, according to them, it is good and necessary to believe in something. When the right thing would have been to show the idea of ​​religion as just a possible alternative, for us to decide if to choose.
Here no one wants us to think about it and choose the way we like, but rather, we are inclined to the way of faith. It is a message that, to a large degree could offend many people.

My rating: 3/10


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