Showing posts with label Mark Jordan Photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mark Jordan Photography. Show all posts

Saturday

REVIEW: 2016 Obama's America - Now You Know Him

Dinesh D'Souza's "2016, Obama's America"


2016 Obama's America is advertised as a "gripping visual journey into the heart of the world’s most powerful office." The purpose? To expose the political pilgrimage of Obama's past, while building a logical, systemic case for how a second term might see a foundational reconstruction of America. In short, writer/director, Dinesh D'Souza, examines the question, were Obama to win a second term, where will American be in 2016?
Barack Hussein Obama, President Obama's father, is the focus of his autobiography, published in 1995.

For me, and the packed theater of viewers, the plausible potential of Obama's vision is unnerving. Even if only a scant portion of D'Souza's conjectures came to fruition, America is headed for a precipitous and most certain decline. According to Obama's design, however, the 2016 economic atrophy would be heralded as a victory. But for millions of unsuspecting Americans, they would no longer recognize America as home.

The film is based solely on Obama's autobiography, Dreams From My Father. It's "A Story of Race and Inheritance." It begins in a 2008 America where an American populace, restless and yearning for a charismatic leader, discovers a progressive who promises solutions to the economic pandemoniums and struggles of war.

Not surprisingly, America's responds affirmatively to the enchantment of Hope and Change, neglecting the blaring reality that the figure before them is expansively unknown. He's the a blank slate upon which every race and creed transfers their idiosyncratic interpretations of what the quintessential leader, and the country he leads, could accomplish.

Though America knew nothing of Obama's past, or his formative years and the mentors that shaped his worldview, nor the driving force behind his ambitious and swift rise to power, America tossed the dice and elected a man they knew little about - a man who had little to no experience. And though his passage from childhood to power was widely published, affording anyone the means to discover the true nature of the man, America did not look - yet they did look unfavorably upon those who did.

The dominant media? They went AWOL. Reporters, journalists and anchors alike, all were loathe to pose even the most perfunctory questions. Softball became the national sport when it came looking into Obama's past. Even Tom Brokaw and Charlie Rose mused over the reality that they and the country really did not know who Obama was, implying a regretful complicity in Obama's election. It was possibly the single most unexamined ascendency of a political figure in modern times.
Dinesh D'Souza: Outside the White House
Regardless, the unscrutinized properties of Obama's rise to power was not so much the focus of the film but rather what America should have known about Obama before they elected him. How? Through his autobiography. Obama laid it all out there for any curious mind to read. It was Obama's very words that thread the story about who he was and what he intended. D'Souza infers that had only a modicum of intellectual curiosity been exercised, Obama may not have been our president today.

D'Souza takes us on fast paced exposé across four continents, unearthing answers to Obama’s past. The fundamental question leading D'Souza's expedition is: "Where will America be in 2016?" Along the way Obama's precise words are extracted from the pages of his autobiography and woven together to reveal a persuasive narrative that answers the many questions Americans have about Obama's obscure past and furtive agenda.
Traveling through Jakarta, Indonesia
On location in India
As the story unfolds, we discover that though America's dream of Hope and Change was envisioned as an untied, mobilized, collective force, predicated upon the belief of promoting a better America, Obama's vision was actually a comprehensive personal pursuit steeped in anti-colonial roots. It is these underpinnings that compel Obama to legislate a world of reparations to amend the wrongs of imperialistic days gone by. 

D'Souza extrapolates intentionality not only from Obama's very own words, but from interviews by officials and experts throughout the world. While some are compelling, others feel a tad of a stretch. Nonetheless, the point is made, which cannot be denied, President Obama has much to answer for, of which he is reluctant to answer. This alone arouses a revelatory climate, if not an national eyebrow. 
Daniel Pipes: Expert on the Middle East
Alice Dewey: Friend and mentor of Ann Dunham
At this point it might be relevant to note that Obama's autobiography is not entitled "Dreams OF My Father," but rather, "Dreams FROM My Father." The distinction is significant. Obama's blueprints are not personal aspirations of his father from which he formulated his agenda, but rather his identity and the paradigms formulated on his own from what he understood about his absentee dad. 

Regardless of the contrast, D'Souza proposes, the same anti-colonialist heart and fervency that possessed Obama's father, became the son. Obama's epiphany came to him while kneeling at his father's grave. It is at this somber, touchstone moment that Obama realizes the long sought purpose for his life, and pledges to carry out the "Dreams From His Father." This is not D'Souza's sentiment but Obama's.
A reenactment of young Obama at his father's grave in Kenya, experiencing an epiphany of purpose.
My movie reviews, being lite, precludes me from investigating the profound depths with which D'Souza delves to tell his intriguing story. While some will buy into it completely, others will repudiate every scintilla. The film strains credulity at times by tossing in every imaginable connection and suspicion. Regardless, my take is somewhere in between, but firmly on the side of reliable.

There is truth here, and in ample doses, but I am uncomfortable drawing any ironclad conclusions. It's enough for me that a Svengali is mismanaging our country. It may also be D'Souza's objective to include the proverbial kitchen sink as a strategic device, establishing convincingly to diehard partisans that there's more to his novel/movie than political spin and hyperbole.  

Quibbling aside, what does interest me is that the many detractors of 2016 appear to be so inadequately equipped to undermine D'Souza's conjectures. Nearly every person I've debated thus far has yet to actually see the movie. For me, it's the Knock-Michael-Moore-Syndrom but in reverse. Though my fellow conservative buds were quick to denounce his Fahrenheit 9/11, I could not cite a soul who saw it.
Philip Ochieng: Lifelong friend of Barack Obama Sr. being interviewed in Nairobi, Kenya
Rationally, the best way to justify one's opposition, on any topic, is to genuinely know what one is talking about. This does not seem to be the case when it comes to 2016 mockers. Instead of substantive, rational discourse, I read ill-informed, nasty caterwauling. This alone makes one consider that something of substance must be at the substratum of D'Souza's intricate narrative. 

Compounding the matter even more are those who have seen the film but whose criticisms not only border on contumely, but defy the principles of logic. For instance, one critic faults D'Souza for suggesting Obama does not believe in American exceptionalism. His proof? He cites instances were Obama expresses that he does in fact articulate words to the contrary. However, D'Souza does not assert that Obama has never stated he's a skeptic of American exceptionalism but rather that his actions, not his words, demonstrate his actual conviction. The contrast is material.

Dinesh D'Souza: Interviewing George Obama in Nairobi, Kenya 
2016 is packed with thought provoking connections but the scene most poignant for me is the interchange between D'Souza and Obama's half brother, George Obama. Regardless of his older, eminently more powerful brother, relegating him to abject poverty, George is nonchalant about it all, and even tries to offer an excuse or two for his big brother. This man is comfortable in his own skin, is smart, and has no axe to grind. 

Nevertheless, there is paramount difference between the brothers. While our president is invested in anti-colonial theology and purpose, George, on the other hand, believes that the only way for third world countries to climb out of an abyss is to allow white cultures to intercede. D'Souza gives us the impression that it is for this stark difference that President Obama is in no hurry to rush to George's aid (it was D'Souza himself who funded medical care for George). For Obama, George is a sell out to white imperialists, the antitheses to everything Obama represents. 

It's hard to argue. And so is much of what D'Souza has to share. Regardless of whether you're on the left or right, D'Souza has something to say and he does so masterfully. The friends that attended the showing with me all remarked it felt as if we just sat down and the documentary was over! Not to mention disturbing, frightening, a punch to the gut, etc. The film gave us what it promised, a "gripping visual journey into the heart of the world’s most powerful office."

"Now you know him."
5 Lens Review 
Just in case you're facing financial challenges and it would be difficult to get out to see  2016 Obama's America I've enclosed the movie above (and the link, just in case you cannot view it here). Let me know your thoughts.

Mark
©Googtoon - Life • Popular Culture • Politics • Entertainment • Public Figures

Disclose.tv - 2016



Friday

REVIEW: The Bourne Legacy - Photos & Trailer

Movie Review Lite - a few personal observations and photos you've not seen anywhere else before:
The Bourne Legacy: "There Was Never Just One. The Chinese poster I adapted to English.
Based on Robert Ludlum's novels, The Bourne Legacy is centered on a new covert operative, Arron Cross. Carrying the baton for Matt Damon is is the phlegmatic yet highly engaging Jeremy Renner (see The Hurt LockerThe AvengersMission Impossible 4 - Ghost Protocol).
The Bourne Legacy - The New Uber-spy supplanting Jason Bourne 
From the opening scenes to the final chapter, The Bourne Legacy is charged with energy, intrigue and substantive doses of biogenetic engineering. Echoing from the past, I was transported the moment the buoyant silhouette of what I mistakenly assumed was Jason Bourne flashed upon the screen. The ambiguity was intentional and ever so effective - it pulled me in from the start. No spoilers here, but it was a masterful stoke to launch Arron Cross and the highly successful Bourne franchise.

Jeremy Renner rises from the icy depths and begins the next generation of "Bourne" agents.
The Bourne Legacy (as with the all Bourn films) began with the premise that with the world's demand for better weapons and soldiers, multitudes of secret governments and quasi-government programs have been incubated to accommodate those needs but whose billion dollar coffers enjoy scant oversight. It doesn't take much of a stretch to project a plausible storyline where good intentions meet power-hungry bureaucrats culminating in lethal consequences. You think far fetched? Director Tony Gilroy doesn't think so, and makes a plausible case.
A House Warming Gift from Friends...
I'll grant you, I'm not all that convinced about the surreptitiousness of it all, but one such organization, The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), does perform comparable research for the U.S. Department of Defense. They are in business of developing the sort of cloaked programs that are on a parallel with Bourne’s world - now entrusted to Cross. We're not talking merely about high-tech weaponry and robotic prostheses, but extraordinary advancements in neuroscience.

The Bourne Legacy - Jeremy Renner taking aim.
The aim of this neuroscience, as it relates to advancing defense, is to design a stronger warrior. When perfected, such research will reduce battlefield stress, hasten learning, improve analytic capabilities and engender trust. All the characteristics which now exemplify Arron Cross. All except possible the latter, which is a good thing or we would have never been given the opportunity to see Cross in action. And what gripping action it is!
Some people just don't like it when you share secrets. 

How exactly all this science and commotion play-out is what makes The Bourne Legacy such an exciting ride. However, as much as I enjoyed the intrigue, the writers (Tony Gilroy and Dan Gilroy) did not make it all that clear what certain disaster would befall such covert programs should the general public become aware of the glitches they are so violently desperate to conceal.
Are we Americans so naive that we cannot tolerate imperfections in something as necessary as developing better weaponry? Are we so politically gullible that we'd jump to conclusions and vilify the elected officials ostensibly in charge? Oh, now that I've actually expressed my incredulity, I can see at what the Gilroy's were getting. My bad.
Jeremy Renner and Rachel Weisz make for good chemistry - in more ways than one...
As to the the characters, I was excited to see a few actors return: Joan Allen, Albert Finney, Scott Glenn and David Strathairn, though I am lamenting the loss of hotty Julia Stiles. The film's cast includes the addition of one of my favorite actors, Edward Norton. Other newcomers to the franchise are Oscar Isaac, Rachel Weisz, Stacy Keach and Midnight in Paris's Corey Stoll.
Arron Cross dropping-in unannounced. 
An additional newcomer for me, Louis Ozawa Changchien, though having no speaking part, was spectacular in his role as LARX #3 (no worries, I will not divulge his significance). I am hoping to see more of him in future Bourne films, and appreciate Gilroy's direction of leaving the possibility in play.

Just a couple of my favorite lines:
  • Jason Borne was just the tip of the iceberg.
  • He's Treadstone without the inconsistency.
  • You were given a Ferrari and your people treated it like a lawnmower.
  • You need to start to consider the magnitude of what we're facing if this movies sideways on us.
The Bourne Legacy -  A Few of My Favorite Characters Return Plus a Couple More
So for all my excitement and praise, why 4.5 stars and not a solid 5? I really cannot say, that is without spoiling the ending. Suffice it to say, my slight disappointment was a combination of not wanting the thrills to end and that it did so too abruptly for my tastes.

Sure, we arrived at a good pace, but while we were catching our breath for the next set of twists and turns to come, it was over. My wife and I looked at each other and blurted, "What?" It was as if we quickly understood where we were going and enjoyed the journey, but were expecting something more afterward - an aspect we did not foresee and was to be our reward for our foresight. But none was to come.
A motorcycle ride she will never forget - nor will we.

Yes, I know the plot was left open for the sequels to come, but had The Bourne Legacy given us that something extra beyond the obvious, I think it would have catapulted us into greater heights and crafted an even more fulfilling conclusion. That not being the case, The Bourne Legacy is still a must see on my list and is no slouch at 4.5 Lenses.
4.5 Lens Review

I've attached a few more photos below...

Mark
©Photosical - the photographic and personal observations of Orange County Photographer, Mark Jordan Photography

Nothing like a nice hike through the frozen tundra to get your blood circulating. 
Coworker going postal or is he?
Is it any wonder why America has not signed the Kyoto Protocol?
Doesn't appear others are all that concerned about curtailing "global warming"...
Now here's a camera angle you don't see every day. 
Getting to know each other - trust can be a challenge.
"Hmm, I don't think I'm the first genetically enhanced spy to sleep in this bed..."
The Bourne Legacy - There Was Never Just One 
Mark
©Googtoon - Life • Popular Culture • Politics • Entertainment • Public Figures

Saturday

The Dark Knight Rises - Review & Photos


The Dark Knight Rises - Christopher Nolan's Third Installment of The Batman Series

The Dark Knight Rises, which opened in the USA July 20, will not only be one of the biggest American superhero blockbusters for 2012, but will be the most profitable of the Batman franchises. Christopher Nolan returns for a third time around to direct the film. Nolan co-wrote the screenplay with his brother Jonathan Nolan and the story with David S. Goyer.

The Dark Knight Rises is the third installment in the film series, the sequel to Batman Begins (2005) and The Dark Knight (2008), all directed and deftly crafted by Nolan. One of Mark Jordan Photography's favorite directors is Nolan, whose last film, Inception, left no doubt the genius of the man.

The focus for me is not whether The Dark Knight Rises is an extraordinary cinematic achievement, and not even if it is deserving of Academy Award consideration - the question that occupies my mind is how many Oscars The Dark Knight Rises will amass. It's that good folks. No, it's extraordinary.
The Dark Knight Rises - 5 Lenses
Regardless of my immediate take, the greater question for Batman fans is whether Nolan was successful in giving them something to cheer about or will they walk away feeling abandoned. Fortunately, Nolan took to heart the closing of the curtain on their much beloved trilogy and set about to leave a legacy that not only he will be proud, but triumphed on every level.

Though I knew The Dark Knight Rises takes place after the portentous conclusion of The Dark Knight, what I was surprised to learn was that it's a whopping eight years later. As you know, much can happen in that span, especially so when it comes to the gathering of dark forces. And when it comes to Batman villains all pale in comparison - the most diabolical miscreant yet.   

I also discovered that regardless of Nolan's phenomenal successes with his first two Batman films, he was skeptical about taking the helm for a third time. Eventually Nolan agreed to the project but only after his brother, Jonathan, and David Goyer, developed a great story. Nolan's primary concern was to end the series on the proverbial high note

Adding to a thoroughly satisfying conclusion is Nolan's gracious departure of leaving the light on for whoever opts to fill his colossal shoes for subsequent Dark Knights.  No spoilers here - I want you to be an delighted as I was with closing sequences. Though is it difficult for me to envision any successor to take Nolan's place, I recall feeling the same regarding the James Bond franchise - then along came Martin Campbell with Daniel Craig. Thought Campbell gave way to Marc Foster, Campbell's Craig remains, breathing new life into the Bond series. 

Time will tell if Rush Limbaugh's jest about "Bane" being linked to Romney will have any legs.
Regardless of The Dark Knight Rises being slated to complete of the Batman series, fans should be comforted in knowing that it cannot be too long before they will once again see the DC Comics character BatmanBatman is much too fertile a franchise for Hollywood to allow it to remain fallow for long. The franchise will be around plenty long enough to see Alfred being played by a then aging Christian Bale... 

Speaking of Bale, he returns for another go at his greatly anticipated role along with Michael CaineGary Oldman, and Morgan Freeman, all from Batman Begins and The Dark Knight. There are also a few new faces, not least of which is Tom Hardy, which I must repeat is the most despicable villain yet, Bane (as in "a person who ruins and spoils" sort of bane...), and Anne Hathaway whose role as Selina Kyle is played exquisitely.

I must be candid and confess that when I first learned of Hathaway playing the sleek and satiny feline, I couldn't see it. I had imagined a dozen other vixens who would more than amply fill the bill - but Hathaway? In fact, she wasn't anywhere on my radar. I could not have been more wrong. Gratefully, Nolan did not consult with me. 

Though there are performances galore to rave about, none shine more brightly than Hathaway. For me, Hathaway is the catalyst that gives The Dark Knight its rise! Hathaway's achievement was all the more gratifying when considering the dive your reputation has taken, with one bomb after another. Hathaway's Selina Kyle will surely catapult her career.  
The Dark Knight Rises - Escaping felons with weapons. 
The Dark Knight Rises  - Bane taking control. 
Were I to quibble, I'd have to say that I was a tad put off by the diction quality between Batman and Bane. I strained to make out the battling of the synthesized voice-boxes and looked to others to clue me in, only to see shrugging shoulders. Regardless of not always understanding every word uttered by Band I very much enjoyed the Darth Vader-like tonal quality, making out just enough to get us through. 

I'm also not certain what audiences will discern regarding the political leanings of Nolan's direction. It's apparent to me that Nolan falls in line with my libertarian view of the world, giving credence to the superior grist of the rule of law and the conservative values therein.  Clearly, Nolan is no fan of the Occupy Wall Street gang and exposes their hypocrisy in a way that advocates of moral authority could never accomplish. However for all the excitement and thrills that The Dark Knight provides, my sense is that political message will be lost, and that possibly only One Percent will take home the underlying thread to which Nolan addresses.

At to the particulars, the filming of The Dark Knight Rises takes quite the sequitious route, with locations all over the map. Starting off  high above the globe with an outrageously exciting hijack of a CIA plane, The Dark Knight Rises in Los Angeles, New York, New Jersey, Pittsburg (for an equally disturbing Steelers game you'll never forget), London, Nottingham, Glasgow, and Jodhpur, of all places. Oh, I almost forgot, Gotham!

Batman fans will be elated with the cinema photography. Nolan shunned the ubiquitous clamor for all things 3D and has once again chosen to employ the IMAX camera (not all but a great portion of it). Thankfully, Nolan feels that same and you and I, who detest the obnoxious gimmickery of 3D, while demanding exceptional cinematic quality - there's no better camera than the IMAX to make the best use the visuals created by Nolan and his team. I was awestruck. 
The Dark Knight Rises - a face we'll see in upcoming sequels...
The Dark Knight Rises  - No way out of Gotham 
The Dark Knight Rises  - This means war!
The Dark Knight Rises  - Moral authority to the rescue. 
The Dark Knight Rises  - old friends unite again. 
The Dark Knight Rises  - a thief makes her exit.
The Dark Knight Rises - riding mean upon a Bat machine. 
The Dark Knight Rises - fiery, explosive and rewarding. 
The Dark Knight Rises  - the battle rages on.
The Dark Knight Rises - joining forces? 
The Dark Knight Rises  - the ultimate in Aerobatics!

The Dark Knight Rises - running as it his life depended on it - it did.
The Dark Knight Rises  - Hathaway is the catalyst that gives The Dark Knight its rise!
The Dark Knight Rises - High Flying action you have not seen anywhere before.
The Dark Knight Rises - With the mothballs removed from his cape, Batman surveys Gotham. 
I have been a Batman fan for as many years as they've been showing up on TV and film. Some have been exceptional while most have been marginal, at best. However, The Dark Knight Rises has elevated the Batman series to new heights, not only contending for the best Batman story every told, but a remarkable piece of film making all around - Academy Award bound for sure.

©Googtoon - Life • Popular Culture • Politics • Entertainment • Public Figures