Category: movies

  • Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them Movie Review

    Fantastic Beasts and Where To Find Them Movie Review | Hola Darla
    Yesterday, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them premiered in my country. As usual, Afief and I went to the premier. We got quite nice seats, and since we went to the earliest show at 11.30 am, there were no noisy school kids. Very nice!

    In case you didn’t know, this movie is based on the Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, a (fictional) school textbook used in the Care for Magical Creatures class in Hogwarts. The book is more like an encyclopedia of magical creatures with their information, such as where to find them (hence the title) and how to take care of them. The book was (fictitiously) written by Newt Scamander. The movie storyline is about Newt Scamander’s journey around the world, researching for the book.

    The story opens with Newt arriving in New York in 1926. He carries a briefcase with him, which contains quite a lot of magical creatures. He meets a male no-maj (ugh what a dreadful word!) named Jacob Kowalski in an incident when a niffler escaped from his briefcase and ran into a bank. Before Newt can obliviate Jacob, he escaped carrying his briefcase. Turns out, their briefcases were accidently switched. When Jacob arrives at home, he notices that there’s something strange with the briefcase and opens it, releasing several of the magical creatures. Meanwhile, Newt is captured and taken by an agent of MACUSA (Magical Congress of the USA), Porpentina “Tina” Goldstein. After realising that the briefcase was switched, Newt and Tina go to Jacob’s apartment but they are too late. Jacob has fainted, his apartment blown apart, and the briefcase has been left opened. Newt and Tina, accompanied by Jacob and Queenie (Tina’s sister), have to find all the escaped beasts while also deal with the growing darkness engulfing New York.

    After the Pottermore-hype a few years back, I felt that JK Rowling was milking money from Harry Potter franchise until the very last drop. Then news came out that Fantastic Beasts was going to be adapted into a movie and I thought “How do you make a movie based on an encyclopedia?” and how greedy JK Rowling had become these past years. Well, let’s just say that I owe Ms Rowling a million apology, because Fantastic Beasts hands down blew my mind!

    Even though the story was set in the past, I feel that it is very refreshing. Along the years, we followed Harry Potter’s growing up from a pre-teen into a young adult. We basically grow up with him. We identified with him. But we’re adults now and Harry will always be 17 (or 36 if we count the epilogue; early 40s if we count The Cursed Child). Fantastic Beasts shows us the wizarding world, though old, from a whole new perspective that we haven’t seen before: the adult world. Here we see adult wizards and witches in their working world: working as aurors, working behind the desk, making coffees, etc. Gone is the teenage world with hormones and angst; it is replaced with the world of adults with responsibilities. Also, the original story also adds up a point. With Harry Potter series, we already knew the stories from the novels, so we compared the films and the books. Fantastic Beasts has an original story, thus it is quite unpredictable. Although I like spoilers, I still think it’s fun to watch unpredictable movies. I didn’t know anything about it before watching besides that Newt Scamander is researching for his book, that he goes to the USA, and that his briefcase starts a disturbance to the wizarding community there. I didn’t know what evil would appear as the ‘bad guy’ in this movie. I left the theater with a smile on my face because I realised how wrong I was to expect less than spectacular.

    In conclusion, it’s a very good movie. It has the witty jokes the Harry Potter series offered, it has interesting female characters (the President is a POC female!), and it shows the other side of the wizarding world we’ve never seen before. I can’t wait for the rest of the series (there’ll be four more films).

    Have you seen Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them? Do you like it? Tell me!

    Second image via.

    Dara | Bloglovin’ | Instagram | Twitter | Facebook

  • German Cinema 2016

    German Cinema 2016 | Hola Darla
    For the past couple of years, German Cinema has been one of our most anticipated annual festivals. We first found out about the festival in 2013 when we ‘accidently’ stumbled across it when we were buying tickets for a movie in Blitzmegaplex Paris Van Java. We completely missed the festival in 2014, but last year we managed to see 6 out of the 9 movies they screened. This year, German Cinema 2016 brought 9 more movies for us to watch, free of charge. I watched 6 of them and Afief watched 7.

    Just like last year, the festival was also held for 3 days in Ciwalk XXI. The ticket box was opened about an hour before each film started. It gets more and more crowded each year. I think it might be good if they found another venue for next year; with bigger theater and more seats, perhaps?
    German Cinema 2016 in Bandung | Hola Darla
    Afief and Dara going to see German Cinema 2016 in Bandung | Hola Darla
    The six movies I watched were:

    But among them, my favourites are Victoria and Lenalove.

    Victoria (2015) tells a story about a young Spanish woman who has just come to Berlin three months ago. She works a low paying job and barely speaks German. She meets a bunch of guys outside a club. They seem nice and one of them flirts heavily with her and she decides to hang out with them before she has to work the following morning. What starts as a fun early morning ends with  a gunfight and blood.
    Lenalove is a story of broken friendship, bullying, social media, and how adults’ problem affects their children. Lena and Nicole are neighbours and used to be BFFs. Now Nicole hangs out with Stella, a typical teenaged bully, and Lena finds a new friend, Noah, through her social media. Lena confides in Noah about a lot of personal things, not realising who Noah really is.

    This festival kind of makes me wish there were more countries willing to create this kind of festival. There are a few film festivals currently being held by CGV, namely the Koreans and Japanese ones, but they are merely festivals held by CGV and not directly supported by the countries’ government.

    Dara | Bloglovin’ | Instagram | Twitter | Facebook

  • Let’s Talk About Suicide Squad

    Suicide Squad Movie Review | Hola Darla
    Let me tell you this up front, I’m not a fan of DC. I think Man Of Steel is a huge snooze fest and I actually fell asleep during the most important part of Dawn Of Justice (ya know… the part which Batman versus Superman actually happens). So I wasn’t too interested in all the hype regarding Suicide Squad. I thought it would be another snooze fest and a waste of money; I even joked to my husband that I needed to take a nap and had a cup of coffee before we went to the movie so I wouldn’t fall asleep.

    And boy was I really wrong. The movie was kind of fun. Kind of. And the musics are hella good.

    Being the non-DC-fan that I am, there are a lot of things that I still don’t understand, like who this Katana woman is and why she joins the squad. The story is not quite clear for non-fans like me. I read from an article that there are a lot of deleted scenes that will be available on the DVDs/Blue Ray releases, so I guess I just need to wait for it then? Talking about marketing strategies… *rolling my eyes*

    Anyway, I’m fairly concerned about the depiction of Harley and Joker’s abusive relationship. Why do people like it? I feel so uncomfortable watching Harley jumps into a pool of chemical waste just because Joker tells her to. It can send a bad message to young people, can’t it?

    All in all, I’d give Suicide Squad 3.5 out of 5 stars for the musics, the improved jokes, and Harley Quinn. Margot Robbie is a queen and seeing her in this movie has given me an encouragement to go the gym because she is my #bodygoals :p

    Image from.

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  • Deadpool is Not for Kids!

    Deadpool is not for kids! | Hola Darla
    There’s been an uproar here in my country regarding the release of Deadpool movie. Some parents (and by ‘some’ I mean lots of them) demand that the government ban Deadpool because it’s “not suitable for children”. They claim that their children are “curious” and want to watch the movie because “all their friends have watched it”, therefore the government should ban it because well parenting is so super hard especially if your underage children whine to be allowed to watch an R-rated movie.

    It’s an R-rated movie, of course it’s not suitable for children. A friend of mine pointed out that asking the government to ban Deadpool because of such reason is like asking the government to shut down universities because the subjects taught there are too hard for children.

    This is so super ridiculous.

    I admit that I myself have never read any Deadpool comics, but by a quick research on the internet, I could get a lot of information about him, i.e. he’s not a superhero, he’s an antihero; he’s basically an arsehole with a foul mouth. Totally not for kids.

    Your kids are your responsibilities. I repeat: YOUR KIDS ARE YOUR RESPONSIBILITIES. Please be a good parent and take them to watch Zootopia instead.

    Deadpool image from.

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  • In The Heart Of The Sea

    In The Heart Of The Sea Movie Review | Hola Darla
    In The Heart Of The Sea hasn’t been released yet in the US, so I’ll try to avoid giving spoilers as much as I can (though I believe that most of you have already known the story as it’s a real event on which Moby Dick was based).

    In The Heart Of The Sea tells a based-upon-true-events story about the crew of the ill-fated whaling ship, Essex. Having found out that the sea where they usually go to hunt for whales is already fished out, Captain Pollard and his crew begin a dangerous journey to the Pacific Ocean to find more whales. However, their ship is wrecked by a gigantic sperm whale and they have to survive, adrift in the middle of the open sea with only three small boats and limited food supply.

    Honestly, I haven’t read Moby Dick (or any classic novels, really) and after discovering that this survival story was real, my mind was blown. I board a ferry ship every year to go to Lampung for Eid and I’ve been wondering “What if the ship sinks?” since I was a small kid. Watching this movie gave me the chill and goosebumps, but then I remember it’s only a narrow strait that I cross every year. There’s a very small chance that I would have to be stranded at sea, but the movie is still scary anyway.

    My fear set aside, there’s nothing much to say about In The Heart Of The Sea. It’s really nothing special, aside of a band of casts of handsome bearded dudes (Ben Wishaw!). This is that kind of movies you watch and forget. I’d give it two out of five stars.

    Image from.

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