Showing posts with label max. Show all posts
Showing posts with label max. Show all posts

Thursday, June 25, 2015

Max movie review

Lassie is a popular icon for hero dogs and no one ever took that title from him. It is also been years since someone followed in her footsteps until Max. Unlike the predecessors, the story of Max is more real life. He is a Marine K-9 unit. The military's been using dogs for sniffing bombs just like the police.
Photo courtesy of Warner Bros.

Why is this story so different from Lassie, Boomer or any dog heroes? The title actor is a dog who can express emotion like any actor. There is also real-life drama that everyone can relate. If the family is hurting from within, they need someone who can remove that hurt from within.

What I like also about Max that it is not always serious. There are some funny moments and there are also action sequences that are not exaggerated. Family dramas like this is rare and the movie is wholesome that is why it is rated General Patronage.

The actor Josh Wiggins who played Justin; Max's new master, has a promising career. He did well in this movie because he relate to his character. He also has three dogs and he has a brother who's in the army.

In closing, the movie has redeeming experiences for each key character. It's all about bridging shattered relationships. For more feel-good movie reviews, follow this blog and like L.E.N.S. blogs on Facebook. Max opens in Philippine cinemas on June 25. Released and distributed by Warner Bros.

Thursday, June 18, 2015

“MAX” LEAD ACTOR JOSH WIGGINS A DOG-LOVER IN REAL LIFE

Check out my review of Max here.

Press release

One of Hollywood’s rising young actors, Josh Wiggins stars in Warner Bros. Pictures' patriotic drama “Max” as the teenaged Justin who reluctantly inherits the precision-trained military dog of his U.S. Marine brother, Kyle.

Justin has issues of his own, including living up to his father’s expectations, and he isn’t interested in taking responsibility for Max, his brother’s troubled dog. However, Max may be Justin’s only chance to discover what really happened to his brother that day on the war front.

That’s where their bond—and their adventure—begins. “They don’t realize it, but they have so much in common. They both feel isolated,” director Boaz Yakin states.

Josh is terrific,” Yakin acknowledges. “He was immediately able to walk in Justin’s shoes. He’s very comfortable with the animals and he’s a very natural, truthful actor with an instinctive sense of what works. He was able to really ground the film.”

Wiggins immediately related to the story. He not only hails from Texas, where the film is set, but has a brother who served in the army, three dogs at home, and a father who trains bomb-sniffing dogs for the Houston Police Department.

The young actor describes Justin as “a rebellious kid. Justin feels like his older brother was the trophy son and he’s overshadowed by him, so he sees himself as the outcast in the family. I think he resents his dad because his dad was a soldier, and that inspired Kyle to go into the Marine Corps. Now that Kyle is gone, Justin blames his father, Ray, in a way.”

Yakin adds, “Justin and Ray have a contentious relationship. He feels the expectations are being placed on him to live up to his father’s and brother’s ideal. He’s trying to figure out his own way and separate himself from their orbit.”

Wiggins agrees. “Justin is so unlike Kyle and so unlike Ray and doesn’t want to be what his dad wants him to be. So they clash in that regard. He wants to make his dad mad so he revolts, but he doesn’t really think about the risks involved.”

Justin is having a hard time handling Max, who is also displaying behavior that speaks to his underlying trauma, such as aggression and hyper-sensitivity to loud noises. Whatever transpired that day in Afghanistan unsettled Max to his core, and no one has been able to connect with him to figure it out or help him work through it…until Justin.

Wiggins says, “To me, Max is symbolic of Justin’s brother, Kyle. He has Kyle’s character traits of honor and loyalty, and he teaches Justin to have honor and to be loyal. The closer Justin gets to Max the closer he feels to Kyle and the better he understands why Kyle wanted to be a Marine, and why he left Justin to serve his country.”

“Max” also stars Lauren Graham (TV’s “Parenthood”) as Justin's mom, Pamela, Oscar nominee Thomas Haden Church (“Sideways”) as his dad, Ray, Robbie Amell (TV's “The Flash”) as Kyle and Jay Hernandez (“Hostel”) as Sgt. Reyes of the Marine K9 unit.

“Max” is distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company.