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Film & TV on DVD - John Doe Film News & Reviews

 
Greetings Film Fiends and welcome to John Doe's Film Blog. 30 years of dedicated celluloid obsession has meant that I have seen a few films. Drawing attention to some of the lesser discussed gems that I love. Cult classics, obscure curios and quality genre pictures. This blogs purpose is to translate some of my passion for these films and with luck, inspire you the reader to go check em out.

The Lookout (2007) - Trailer Included

The Heist of Life


The Lookout Poster
No Australian Release date at the time of writing this review
Writer/Director: Scott Frank
Starring; Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Bruce McGill, Matthew Goode, Isla Fisher, Jeff Daniels, Carla Gugino, Alberta Watson



“Once upon a time, I woke up. I took a shower with soap.”Chris Pratt

Guilt is crippling, guilt is harrowing and guilt dictates our lives, this is a core theme that grips the synapses in this dramatic thriller of emotional riddles.
“Start at the end. Can’t tell as story if you don’t know how it ends.” Lewis


As the film begins we meet Chris Pratt (Joseph Gordon Levitt), a popular kid with athletic abilities and a youthful indestructible confidence. In the drivers seat with his girlfriend and buddies one dark night he decides to turn the headlights off so the gang can admire a swarm of fireflies.

The tragedy that follows is the catalyst for Chris’s tragic condition, rendering him unable to recall the specific events of that evening. A debilitating vagueness as opposed to amnesia cripples his mind and leaves his reality clouded and personality a mysterious.

Limited in his options after intensive therapy Pratt re-enters society in an attempt to assimilate and make sense of his vacant existence. That’s the hook, to share more would spoil the organic twists to come from manipulation and a bank heist.
“My old man used to say to me, probably the only thing we ever really agreed on, was that whoever has the money has the power. You might wanna jot that down in your book. It's something you're gonna need to remember."Gary Sprago


Lookout joseph gordon levitt
The colours of The Lookout



John Doe says:
The central character of Chris may be a merging of Memento’s Lenny and The Machinist’s Trevor Reznik. The similarities end as an involving plot operates in unison with a doomed tone of sombre intrigue to take us on a new exploration into the nature of identity.

A case study in primal human interaction where greed is original sin and the lust for money is the essential tool for survival in modern civilisation. Using dark humour as if it shot from a sniper rifle in the hands of an ambiguous stranger and structured to be pondered while watching, The Lookout occasionally struggles to maintain momentum.

Lookout Scott Frank
Scott Frank Directing his pawns
Writer turned Director Scott Frank (Out of Sight, Get Shorty, Minority Report) makes sure his debut feature does not rely on his controlled, character study screenplay alone. Vying for a distinct look of balanced de-saturated colour cinematography that leaves the sub text of scenes drenched in cinematic atmosphere when beside a more boldly painted background.

If I had to find fault it’s with the pacing around the second act which gets into a haphazard rhythm that isn’t required until the last quarter of the running time. Some people will find the room left for air in the editing as compensation for emptiness, but it is a critical metaphor for Chris’ inner monologue.

Star Joseph Gordon Levitt (3rd Rock from the Sun) follows up the haunting Mysterious Skin and engrossing Brick with another multi dimensional lead that says more through body language than dialogue. Proving himself one of John Doe’s favourite up and comers his performance here is another exercise in minimalist gesture and emotional detachment.

Flaky Jeff Daniels (Arachnophobia, Purple Rose of Cairo, Radio Days, Timescape, Gettysburg, Pleasantville, Gods and Generals, Goodnight and Good-Luck, Squid and the Whale) seldom gets the opportunity to show his range. As Chris’ only real friend the blind man Lewis, he convinces and also injects smiles amongst the foundation of melancholy.

Isla Fisher ( I Heart Huckabees) is a long way from her Paradise Beach or Home and Away days. She looks fantastic but her limited moments onscreen aren’t as honed as the rest of the cast.

Carla Guigno (Sin City, Entourage, Spy Kids) is under used and her scenes seem superfluous to proceedings. As a saucy parole officer she’s easy to believe but her only real purpose is to show Chris trying to act as normal as he possibly can in an attempt to pick her up.

This is another one of those films John Doe picked up on DVD while he was in the U.S due to a lack of an Australian Cinema release. Shameful really, The Lookout may not be a masterpiece but it certainly warrants a screening and was far more engaging than most over polished, more MTV orientated films of similar intent. (John Doe glares in the direction of Butterfly Effect)


Here is the American Trailer for the film.


Here is a preview for The Lookout with interviews from Director and Star

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Comments
7 Comments. [ Add A Comment ]
1. November 30th 2007 @ 01:03. Michaelie Says:
John Doe glares in the direction of Butterfly Effect

Lol.

Sounds intriguing, JD. I like Isla and Joseph Gordon Levitt in the few things I've seen them do - apart from their respective TV shows!

Michaelie
2. November 30th 2007 @ 02:26. Bryn Says:
Pity they under-used Carla.
3. November 30th 2007 @ 07:38. JohnDoe Says:
Hi Michaelie,

Have you seen Mysterious Skin or Brick, with Joseph Gordon levitt? Both are exceptional in their own ways.


Damn that hollow Butterfly Effect
4. November 30th 2007 @ 07:41. JohnDoe Says:
Hi Bryn it's a pity Carla isn't picked up more often for saucy Linda Fiorentino type fare.....thankfully "The Lookout" was so engrossing I didn't find myself missing her presence to much
5. November 30th 2007 @ 07:59. Michaelie Says:
Yes, I have seen him in Brick, not long ago. I loved it, and he was really sensational. The only other film I've seen him in is... you're going to hate this... 10 Things I Hate About You.

Ashton Kucher should stick to dude movies, and whoever wrote and directed The Butterfly Effect should leave chaotic analysis to Pierre Duhem.



Michaelie
6. November 30th 2007 @ 23:09. JohnDoe Says:
Hi Michaelie,

Mysterious Skin is amazing too, delving deep into a mutilated human psyche. if interested you can read my review HERE.

And just for the sake of it, here is a link to my critique of Brick.

To true about that tiny wings theory
7. December 3rd 2007 @ 00:59. Cibbuano Says:
I'll cast a nasty look at butterfly effect, too.

Picked up a bunch of DVDs, eh? Did you take a big list and go buckwild?

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