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(For SI Blog readers Boopalan, VJ Cool, KD and others)

No, we wouldn’t go so far as trashing V for Vendetta.

A watchable movie with some interesting dialogs, V for Vendetta (a 2006 film based on the eponymous DC Comics series) raised our hopes a few minutes into the movie that it could well be a classic but, alas, it ended up as no such thing.

What is V for Vendetta about?

Is it, as the title suggests, about personal revenge for brutal treatment in a prison? A screed against totalitarianism? Or a sarcastic rant against America and some of its Western European allies like UK over recent acts like rendition, treatment of Muslims, homosexuals, curtailment of civil liberties and the connivance of a conservative, lying media in cahoots with the government?

We’re not certain and we bet y’all that neither are the film’s makers!

The setting is London, a few decades hence. The country has supposedly been turned into a totalitarian Orwellian state with nightly curfews supposedly for the ‘safety of the people.’

When a young woman Evey working for a large TV network (no, not as anchorwoman but rather in a lowly position) dares to break the curfew and heads out one night she’s quickly accosted by the Fingermen, dreaded state security personnel, who try to rape her. But before the assault can be perpetrated she’s rescued by a masked vigilante V. A favor she returns soon enough but in the bargain ends up losing her freedom.

Soon, V is not only killing other key members associated with Adolf Sutler’s government but by hijacking the public broadcast system and delivering a strong anti-government message aims to destroy the edifice of lies and criminality on which the government is based.

After all, V’s belief, as enunciated in the film, is:

People should not be afraid of their governments. Governments should be afraid of their people.

Ha ha, that’s easier said than done. Even in democratic governments, such pious sentiments are mere shibboleths. What then to say of a totalitarian government, which will only gather its firepower in response.

And so the silver blade of V’s knives keep flashing and flying until a fiery finale that seemed more like Diwali firecrackers going off rather than a symbolic moment of grand import and a historic time of deliverance for the oppressed masses.

The action scenes are well executed and the movie is certainly not dull or boring.

Sure, we had a few issues with the movie.

Except as a response to V’s attacks and the curfews, we seldom come face to face with the chilling day-to-day effects of the totalitarian regime in the present but only hear (and see in flashback later) about grave misdeeds in the past.

Orwell conveyed more fear in plain text than V for Vendetta depicts in images.

Second, we did not think the relationship between V and Evey was built on a strong, cohesive foundation.

Third, Hugo Weaving acts with a fair degree of panache as the Guy Fawkes masked vigilante V but, alas, the same cannot be said of his principal co-star.

After having seen a bunch of her movies, we’re now concluding that a Harvard education, a Jewish heritage and smartness don’t guarantee good acting chops.

Of course, we’re referring to Natalie Portman, the undeserving recipient of the Best Actress Oscar this year for her overhyped performance in Black Swan, who plays Evey.

Oh, well, nobody ever said life was fair!

While it’s no classic, V for Vendetta is no T for Time Waste either. Watch it but don’t set your expectations too high.

V for Vendetta is available in DVD at Blockbuster (99-cents a day) or Netflix in the U.S.

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Our first introduction to the Hammer and the superhero who wields the powerful weapon was not a bad deal.

We watched Thor a short while ago and while we certainly didn’t leave the theater in a giddy euphoria, we didn’t feel shortchanged either.

Superhero movies often come with an extra dimension, the extraterrestrial dimension, and Thor doesn’t stray from the formula.

Our eponymous 12-pack blonde hero (Chris Hemsworth) hailing from the distant realm Asgard is banished to Earth and stripped of his Hammer-lifting and Hammer-hurling powers by his father, the King Odin (Anthony Hopkins), as punishment for his reckless attack on the Frost Giants, those ice-covered monsters.

Never mind that the seeds of a conspiracy are being hatched at the same time by Thor’s jealous younger brother Loki (Tom Hiddleston).

Asgard Meets Earth
The presumptive heir’s landing path on Earth is on the same course as a van bearing young astrophysicist researcher Jane (Natalie Portman) in New Mexico.

Before long our 12-pack Asgard immigrant is developing a fondness for coffee and other Earthly delights including Black Swan oops Jane. Continue reading »

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Strange is the world!

People haven’t stopped raving about Natalie Portman’s brilliant performance in Black Swan, a feat that ultimately won her the coveted Oscar for Best Actress.

Now come claims that Natalie did only 5% of the on-screen dancing.

And that claim comes from none other than Sarah Lane, a real-life ballet dancer who was Natalie’s dance double in Black Swan.

If Sarah Lane is speaking the truth, then does Natalie Portman really deserve the Oscar?

After all, what’s Black Swan without the dancing, eh.

We knew there must have been a good reason why we didn’t watch Black Swan. ;)

Or is this contretemps just another tawdry Hollywood tactic to push sales of the Black Swan DVD, which comes out on Tuesday, March 29. As we said at the outset, strange is the world.

Oftentimes, what is, isn’t and what isn’t, is!

Here’s an excerpt from the Wall Street Journal interview with Sarah Lane:

The Wall Street Journal: What exactly was your role in “Black Swan”?

Sarah Lane: Well basically I did all of the dancing. Natalie and I alternated shots. They would do close-up shots with her, just of her face and kind of from her arms up. Then they would do the same shot with me, and then they would do a full body shot from far away, or a close-up of my feet, etc. And then there were a few shots they did that were closer full body shots—and then they digitally put her face on my body.

Related Stories:
Natalie Portman’s ‘Black Swan’ Dance Double Says She Deserves More Credit

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