"Wicked: For Good": The Magic of Feeling Over Thinking
What’s more New York than the Empire State Building and a Broadway show? Having seen Wicked on the big screen, we found ourselves taking in the hit Broadway musical during a Spring Break trip to the Big Apple. Sandwiched between the cinematic release of part one and part two, my family and I discovered the magic of the stage play. Wicked: For Good may be the inferior of the three experiences but it still manages to pull off one trick: a theater full of strangers vibing to the songs and spectacle with the sound of sniffles at the end.
Twelve tide turns since Elphaba (Cynthia Erivo) came into her own and defied gravity, For Good dives further into the world of Oz. It opens showing a yellow brick road that has been laid and the animals who are being used to continue the work. As the freedom fighter, political activist and Wicked Witch of the West, Elphaba, continues to wreak havoc against any plan that the Wizard (Jeff Goldblum) has, Madame Morrible (Michelle Yeoh) has managed to prop Glinda (Arianna Grande) up as the goodwill ambassador for the Wizard. As Elphaba fights for persecuted animals and tries to clue the citizens of Oz to the truth, she lives in the woods to keep her distance from her sister, Nessarose (Marissa Bode), the new Governor of Munchkin Land. In a world where the true good is muffled and the performative good is promoted, it’s a true political slight of hand fit for the times.
It’s the same slight of hand in the movie that writers Stephen Schwartz, Winnie Holzman, and Gregory Maguire want viewers to experience outside of it. The gap in time leaves plot holes that likely would have helped part two be as strong as part one. It’s the journey of seeing Elphaba and Glinda grow in their relationship and power that makes the ending of Wicked so powerful. Here, we have to just go with the jumps in character development. How did Nessa become captor over lover of Boq (Ethan Slater)? Why is Fiyero (Jonathan Bailey) captain of the Wizard’s guards? While the movie does explain Glinda’s desire to be accepted as her reason for sticking around, we don’t quite get an understanding as to why Elphaba would tolerate her bestie continuing to participate in the charade. Regardless, the film isn’t asking you to think. Instead it wants you to feel.
So if you’re willing to roll with it, you can get swept away in the feels of the story. After all, musicals are an outward expression of what we feel through song. The songs and vocals don’t disappoint here. It’s leading ladies have lungs for days. While arguably Wicked holds the more powerful ballads, the songs in Wicked: For Good support the character development and moments that make this musical touching.
The film, like the stage play, rushes the second half of the story. It loops in some of the major plot points of The Wizard of Oz, giving the behind the scenes that we didn’t know while making sure we don’t focus on Dorothy and her companions too much. Ultimately, as the movie made it’s way to it’s final running time, I heard the sound of sniffling in the screening I was in. I saw a grown man crying next to my daughter on one side and a mother holding her young daughter while wiping tears on the other side of me. So plot holes aside, Wicked: For Good is still affective and may still your heart for a clock tick.
Rating: B-
"Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning": A Love Letter to Old School Action Blockbusters
If our lives are the sum of our choices, than Mission Impossible-The Final Reckoning is certainly the sum of its predecessors. After a bland Dead Reckoning, it all leads up to this film. Perhaps a love letter to big action blockbusters and cinema itself, Tom Cruise doesn’t hold back on stunts and action set pieces. In a franchise that’s all about the journey to an end, this entry doesn’t disappoint!
We get put right back into the action after the events of the last film. Ethan Hunt (Tom Cruise) is still wrestling with the loss of Ilsa (Rebecca Ferguson). Luther (Ving Rhames) is somewhere underground building a weapon that will defeat the Entity. Gabriel (Esai Morales), having failed The Entity by losing the cruciform key, is now on the outs but still desires proximity to the digital AI virus. The world is in chaos and on the brink of nuclear destruction. Only with the help of Grace (Hayley Atwell), Benji (Simon Pegg), Paris (Pom Klementieff) and Degas (Greg Tarzan Davis) and a few friends he doesn’t know yet can Ethan try to pull off the impossible.
So that’s it. That’s the race against time. It’s understanding the race to extend time and the lives of billions that becomes heavy after a long exposition of the stakes in the first thirty minutes. The theme of loss and perseverance through obstacles is hammered home as Ethan must once again sacrifice his feelings and perhaps life for the greater good. As soon as you start to think this proselytizing is becoming annoying, the movie is off and the magic sets in. Suddenly the dark themes and pressure laid on Ethan and his team turns into gigantic action set piece after gigantic action set piece that forces you to hold your breath in anxiety laced stunts that you’re enthralled in.
If this is the last hoorah for Tom Cruise in the shoes of Ethan Hunt (although he’s alluded to it not being over) Cruise and co-writer/director Christopher McQuarrie decide to take us on a thrill ride on land, air and under the sea. Major stunts happen in places and ways that take something we’ve seen before but elevate it in unique ways. Cinematographer Fraser Taggart lights his subjects with an old school glow. It’s this nod to Indiana Jones and other old school blockbusters that used a splash of light across the eyes or to highlight the McMuffin in a scene that makes a moment important. It’s Cruise’s desire to entertain audiences by pushing his own body in stunt after stunt that gives a nod to the trailblazers who performed their own stunts in the early days of cinema.
The Final Reckoning feels is a broken mirror that slowly comes together, shard by shard. Occasionally we get glimpses of other shards that haven’t been placed on the board yet, but when has Mission Impossible not done that? It’s the fun of trying to put the pieces together and watching the one in a million chance opportunities work to create the suspense that makes a movie like this worth seeing in theaters! Grounded in a space of reality, I couldn’t help but think at one point, maybe this is what the world on the brink of nuclear extinction would look like.? It may not have all the memorable feats and set pieces of MI past, but it pays off. It’s definitely worth the ticket, popcorn and snacks this Memorial Day weekend.
Rating: B
"Sonic The Hedgehog 3" Review": A Genre Buffet of Family Fun
With it’s third entry into the franchise, Sonic The Hedgehog 3 has it’s footing. It’s full camp. It’s a genre buffet that focuses more on its vignettes than answering plot hole questions. It just might be the most fun you’ll have in theaters with your family this holiday season!
Building on the events of Sonic The Hedgehog 2, the film finds the new Wachowski family with Sonic (Ben Schwartz), Knuckles (Idris Elba) and Tails (Colleen O’Shaughnessey) trying to get away for some R&R with Tom (James Marsden) and Maddie (Tika Sumpter). After a hedgehog named Shadow (Keanu Reeves) is released from his suspended state after fifty years, that peace the family is attempting to get comes to an immediate end. Team Sonic is whisked to Tokyo to try and bring Shadow under control, if at all possible.
Lee Majdoub as Agent Stone and Jim Carrey as Ivo Robotnik in Sonic the Hedgehog 3 from Paramount Pictures and Sega of America, Inc.
The big question is who released Shadow with what looks like Ivo Robotnik (Jim Carrey) tech? It’s quickly revealed that Ivo has been enjoying telenovelas and getting the Thor post Infinity War treatment (big gut). Enter Gerald Robotnik (Jim Carrey), Ivo’s long lost grandfather. From there, it’s off to the races to stop a world ending machine and Jim Carrey having as much fun as he can on screen.
Knuckles (Idris Elba), Sonic (Ben Schwartz) and Tails (Colleen O'Shaughnessey) in Sonic the Hedgehog 3 from Paramount Pictures and Sega of America, Inc.
The film continues to build out the video game world, showcasing character’s skills and power ups. It also noticeably shifts in genre in its dialogue, cinematography and pacing throughout the film. The opening setup is full of action, it moves into a kid friendly horror moment, a musical dance number, comedy and drama. This could seem disjointed at first glance, but for anyone who played the game on Sega, we know that there were different levels with different styles of gameplay and music. It’s this not so subtle change in cinematic genres that confirm the film is self-aware. In fact, there is a joke about making a flash drive work after blowing on it much like we did with game cartridges.
Shadow (Keanu Reeves) in Sonic the Hedgehog 3 from Paramount Pictures and Sega of America, Inc. | © 2024 Par. Pics & SEGA
Jim Carrey said that he came out of retirement for this film because he needed to pay bills. Hopefully he keeps overspending so we’ll see him future films because he’s so much fun to watch as both Ivo and Gerald Robotnik. Each character is fully developed, but they bounce off of each other in comedic fashion as only Carrey can do. Where the first two films were about building family, Keanu Reeves’ Shadow has baggage to deal with in regards to the family he lost. So the franchise keeps revolving around family dynamics while adding more characters to this world.
So make sure you stick around for the post credit scene. This is by no means an Academy Award winning children’s film. It’s fun, nostalgic for those who played the game or watch/ed the shows. It’s a good time at the movies for the family!
Rating: B-
"Inside Out 2" Review: Another Great Probe Into Our Minds!
Inside Out will always be a special film for me because it was the first film I took my daughter to see when she was almost three years old. The Oscar winning film was a great movie that dealt with emotions and how we use them. Nearly ten years later, Riley (Kensington Tallman) is thirteen, my daughter is almost twelve and this movie is so in touch with that thing called puberty it’s scary!
We catch back up with Riley as she is still playing hockey and dominating the rink. She is going to high school next year and her bond with her best friends, Grace (Grace Lu) and Bree (Sumayyah Nuriddin-Green), couldn’t be stronger! Or could it? As the trio goes to camp, Riley learns that they will be going to different schools in the fall which will break up the band. This information, coupled with the onset of puberty, creates new emotions that come to the forefront of her mind.
Joy (Amy Poehler), Sadness (Phyllis Smith), Fear (Bill Hader), Disgust (Mindy Kaling) and Anger (Lewis Black) are still at the helm of the controls of Riley’s mind, but new emotions are introduced that will challenge for the throne: Envy (Ayo Edebiri), Ennui (Adele Exarchopoulos) (think “play it cool” mentality), Embarrassment (Paul Walter Hauser), and, the leader of them all, Anxiety (Maya Hawke). Anxiety proves to be akin to fear in some ways but her role is to predict what could happen to Riley and either stop it, avoid it, react to it or move her towards it if the idea seems good to her.
The old and new emotions have a conflict that sends the old crew on an adventure. Along the way we meet some new characters and concepts like sarcasm being a literal chasm that makes anything nice sound bad and a stream of consciousness being a stream with whatever Riley is thinking in it. Perhaps the funniest new characters are Bloofy (Ron Funches) and Pouchy (James Austin Johnson), a duo similar to a Barney-like character that Riley secretly still likes watching.
Writers Meg LeFauve, Dave Holstein, and Kelsey Mann do a wonderful job of setting this new world up for the viewer inside Riley’s head as they interact with what’s going on outside of her body. It’s easy to follow and it’s the journey that makes this movie another winner! There is something so universal about the pressures of trying to fit in, choosing between making new friends or being loyal to old ones, and not really knowing what’s going on inside. Pixar usually has a way of speaking to adults while entertaining kids and that is on full display here.
Inside Out 2 is a winner because it’s thought provoking in addressing how the coming of age passage can be difficult, awkward and beautiful all at once! It doesn’t sugar coat mental health but delivers a spoonful of sugar with the medicine the doctor ordered to address it with laughs and a few tear jerking moments. Hopefully we don’t have to wait another decade for the next stage of Riley’s life, but this is certainly one to take the family to see in theaters!
Rating: A-
"The Marvels" Review: An Entanglement Of Sorts
The Marvels feels like the crashing of three different Marvel shows. It’s a soup that doesn’t quite gel and yet was an alright meal at the same time. It’s another rung in the ladder of Marvel movies and TV shows that is setting us up for something greater! These days, that seems to be the familiar MO of Marvel but you have to start somewhere.
I watched the Infinity War and End Game battle sequences prepping for the movie based off of what I saw in the trailer. I was way off. As long as you’ve seen WandaVision, Ms. Marvel and Captain Marvel you’re good to go in knowing the characters. If you want to understand the plot just watch Captain Marvel as this film acts as a sequel to it. After taking down the Kree’s overseeing intelligence known as the Supreme Intelligence, Carol Danvers (Brie Larson) aka Captain Marvel, inadvertently created a new enemy in Dar-Been (Zawe Aston). In taking out the Supreme Intelligence she also took out the resources of Dar-Been’s home planet and that is something Dar-Been wants back.
While investigating a strange jump point that hasn’t closed, Monica Rambeau (Teyonah Parris), touches it at just the right time to get her powers entangled with her aunt Carol (whom she hasn’t seen in years) and Jersey City’s Kamala Khan (Iman Vellani) aka Ms. Marvel. It’s a strange, platonic love triangle that works for the emotional beats of the film. Ms. Marvel is obsessed with Captain Marvel as her biggest fan. Captain Rambeau has felt abandoned by her aunt Carol while watching Captain Marvel be everywhere for everyone except her. Captain Marvel has her reasons as to why she wasn’t there for Monica. It’s this gumbo of emotions that helps the movie have a heartbeat. The chemistry of the women is probably what saves the film from itself with a couple of random moments and set pieces.
Kamala Khan’s infusion in the MCU has brought the fun quirky teenage spirit. Credit has to be given to her family ensemble with her mom (Zenobia Shroff), dad (Mohan Kapur), and older brother (Saagar Shaikh) continually responding to situations as if their daughter/sister is not a superhero. That grounding of Kamala helps create emotional moments with her family and Kamala is able to share that love with the often emotionally guarded Captain Marvel. While much of the film is based on the consequences of past decisions, the message of the ability to grow and learn is on display.
My middle school-aged daughter enjoyed the film way more than me. So this is probably a good time for the kiddos at the movies! We both agreed that it felt like episodes of different MCU shows being pieced together. That start/stop approach to the overall film is what pulls it down but the lead performances are earnest and help smooth that over. The Marvels isn’t a memorable film but the mid-credit sequence will have geeks talking for sure!
Rating: C
"Elemental" Review: This isn't Pixar's Best
Animation can be a great storytelling tool! When done well, filmmakers can use the genre to express emotions and show things that can’t be done in live-action. With “Elemental”, the ambiguity of anthropomorphism makes for a confusing story, weird relationships and complex storytelling that should otherwise be simple.
Set in a place called Elemental City, the inhabitants consist of fire, wind, earth and water people. Fire is the one element that is somewhat ostracized due to their ability to destroy most elements. Ember (Leah Lewis) is a second generation fire element of the city. Her father (Ronnie Del Carmen) has worked hard to keep his store, The Fireplace, up and running. His goal is to pass it on to Ember. Ember is stuck between wanting to honor her father’s wishes and wanting to find out what she loves. The frustration of being stuck in the middle produces an uncontrollable fireball that Ember has to release. On one such occasion, she retreats to the basement to blow off steam only to have Wade (Mamoudou Athie) come through a leaky pipe. Wade is a city inspector who can’t let the violations he sees in the basement go. So the rest of the film is about the shenanigans this odd couple gets into as Ember tries to save her dad’s shop from being shut down.
There are clear rules in this world. Fire can boil water, water can replenish Earth, water can also douse a flame, etc. So a romantic relationship between fire and water shouldn’t work. Pixar is usually known for being able to mix social messages with their films but there are a few too many messages going on here. There is a generational understanding issue, a xenophobia issue, a class issue, and frankly, an ethnicity issue. Ember’s parents seem to have an Asian accent and exhibit the traditional values of an Asian family. (This is based on director, Peter Sohn’s, life.) So rather than focusing on the elements being blank canvases without intricate human qualities, dealing with universal problems, this feels like the elements are geared after a certain group of people. This is fine when you make clear lines, but the anthropomorphism makes it hazy. There are too many things that writers John Hoberg, Kat Likkel and Brenda Hsueh are trying to tackle. Children won’t care but adults will scratch their heads.
This does feel like new territory for Pixar as the relationship between Ember and Wade feels like young adults falling in love. It’s hard to know their age, but context clues put this in unchartered territory. Perhaps the best part of the film is the visuals that are served to the audience. In fact, the song “Steal The Show” by Ari Leff and Thomas Newman does just that in a beautiful montage of Ember and Wade seeing each other’s uniqueness against the backdrop of Elemental City. It’s a great number and captures what Pixar does best.
This isn’t Pixar’s best in their catalogue. Outside of the song, this isn’t very memorable and leaves a few more questions than answers. Yet, there are moments of Pixar brilliance. No need to rush out for this one parents.
Rating: C
"Transformers: Rise of The Beasts" Review: More of The Same & A Little New
I didn’t have big expectations going in to Transformers: Rise of The Beasts. I told my kids they could expect loud sound. I went to get snacks during the opening of the film. They ran out of the theater as I was coming back with snacks and said it was too loud. Just like my kids, over the course of the film, I got adjusted to the usual noise and wound up enjoying the experience. Let me explain.
Set in 1994, the film introduces us to Noah Diaz (Anthony Ramos), an army vet who is looking for work while looking after his sick little brother, Kris (Dean Scott Vazquez). When an interview doesn’t work out as he’d hoped for due to some marks on his record, Noah turns to Reek (Tobe Nwigwe) to boost a car. Elsewhere in New York, Elena Wallace (Dominique Fishback) has found an interesting artifact (it’s always something “mysterious” with a Transformer logo that just needs to be touched or turned the right way) that even as an overqualified intern/expert in hieroglyphs and artifacts, she can’t figure out what it is. When the mysterious key starts working unbeknownst to her, it brings Autobots and Decepticons out of hiding, and thus Noah and Elena’s paths cross.
The big baddy this go round is Scourge (Peter Dinklage). Scourge wants the key to bring his planet eating master to dinner on Earth or a dinner of Earth.? Optimus Prime (Peter Cullen) sees it as a way to get off the planet and home. The race is on and thus you have another Transformers movie.
Let’s get back to the noise I mentioned in the beginning. So many of these films have the same cliché beginning, middle and end. An average Joe gets stuck in the middle of an intergalactic feud and fights for the fate of the world. The dialogue and comedic punch lines feel so paint by the numbers you’d be hard pressed to laugh when the music dies down just enough for them to stick the line. That’s where this film fails. Even the heartwarming big bro, little bro relationship between the Diaz brothers feels forced rather than earned. Although, some credit should be given to the young Vazquez as he gives a pep talk to his older brother.
Where the movie succeeds is allowing you to take in the spectacle of it all. Sure, some may say it’s CGI heavy, but it’s great seeing the Maximals take the stage, seeing the jungle of Peru, and the imaginary worlds created. Another win is the ‘90s soundtrack that the film is infused with. If you grew up during the decade and loved hip hop, there is plenty there.
A few noteworthy performances are Anthony Ramos as the lead, Pete Davidson as Mirage, and Tobe Nwigwe as Reek. It’s easy to like Noah and root for him due to Ramos’s portrayal as an every man. Davidson doesn’t go too overboard with the black culture influenced Mirage that was probably written on the page. Thus, Mirage becomes a memorable Autobot. If you know you know when it comes to Tobe Nwigwe. It’s been amazing to watch his career. He’s an amazing creative and to see him go into film is great, but to see him actually create a well rounded bit character speaks to his talent.
Transformers: Rise of The Beasts is a summer, popcorn blockbuster. Nothing more. Nothing less. It’s a good choice for the movies this weekend if you haven’t already seen Spider-man: Across the Spider-verse. Just prepared to witness more of the same and just enough uniqueness to make this an alright installment in the franchise.
Rating: C-
"M3GAN" Review: When Killer Dolls Play It Safe
M3GAN has the potential to be a pop-culture icon. The memes that have come from the trailer alone have been enough to have her ascend to memorable villain status. However, the film itself is a paint by numbers horror movie that, unlike its robotic star, doesn’t have the same amount of life and punch!
After her parents die in an accident, Cady (Violet McGraw) has to live with her aunt Gemma (Allison Williams). It’s quite evident that Gemma hasn’t had too many touch points with children. Her house is a nerdy roboticist’s bachelorette pad, equipped with collectibles and an Alexa-type device that runs the house. To Gemma’s credit, she wants to fight to keep her niece with her instead of Cady going to live with her father’s parents. She wants to fill the void she sees in Cady’s life while simultaneously wanting to please her boss David (Ronny Chieng) in getting a new toy to market.
Gemma figures she can solve both issues with her Model 3 Generative ANdroid aka M3GAN (voiced by Jenna Davis and played by Amie Donald), a prototype of what could be a game changer in toys. A doll that is continuously learning the child it’s paired with and told to protect her sounds like a great idea! Right? Wrong! Let the dangers of a sentient Artificial Intelligence (AI) manifest!
There are so many things going for this film. For starters, the M3GAN doll body and face is horrifically realistic and yet the wig is awful. So this villain has the physical characteristics to be memorable. The film starts with a realistic promo for a Furby-like toy for today’s kids. You can feed it via an app and the physical toy responds. If you over-feed it, it poops. It’s so over the top but grounded in today’s reality, which underscores the films theme of relationships. There is a constant nod to our connection with technology and one another as human beings. The fight between what we pay attention to more, tech or the ones we love is real! The tension created by director Gerard Johnstone between M3GAN and the adults who realize something is wrong is palpable. This is largely due to the cinematography of Peter McCaffrey and Simon Raby (director of photography). The frame hides M3GAN in shadow when needed and puts her on full display at other times.
When the movie leans into its satirical nature and the themes it explores, it’s a blast, but it takes itself too seriously more often than not. It’s as though it knows it comes from a long line of killer doll movies and is afraid to buck the rules or step out of line by making memorable kills or noteworthy dialogue. The best performances come from Williams, McGraw and the physicality of Donald as your standard horror leads. Yet, it’s probably because they are the best developed characters on the page. Chieng’s David is supposed to be the self-centered, berating boss but his lines are vapid and poorly delivered. Everyone else in the film seems to be set pieces to get us from Act 1 to Act 3.
The best moments are probably not meant to be funny, like the cop who says “I’m sorry, I wasn’t supposed to laugh at that” or M3GAN playing “Toy Soldiers”. Each set up for a genuine scary moment is stress inducing until its underwhelming finish. I’m assuming the PG-13 rating kept M3GAN from going for the fences. Instead we get a bunt that should definitely bring viewers in for a streaming platform view at home, but not the home run in theaters! Save your theater money, but definitely grab some popcorn when this hits whatever streaming platform it will land on.
Rating: C
Check out some of the best memes to come from the trailer:
"Black Panther: Wakanda Forever" Review: This Feels Personal
You can hear a pin drop in the first five minutes of Black Panther: Wakanda Forever. It’s intense and doesn’t let go of wrestling with loss, the cycle of violence and how we respond to it all throughout its running time. Even with that, this film is a vibe! It pays tribute, takes you in directions that you expect and does an intentional job of curving your expectations at the right time. This is one of the best MCU (Marvel Cinematic Universe) installments in a while!
The loss of Chadwick Boseman shook the world. It was a death we didn’t expect. He was a talented actor and better human being to all who knew him. He endured in silence, proving his quiet strength and giving us a lot to think about in hindsight. Whether it was not to make fun of a celebrity’s (or anyone for that matter) weight loss because you don’t know what they’re dealing with or his words in interviews, we all had to wrestle with his death. Writer/director Ryan Coogler and the rest of the cast had to do this as well. The original sequel script had to be re-written. It’s in the spaces of deep pain as a reflection of deep love that you can get a focused script like Wakanda Forever. It’s not a perfect script/story, but it’s deeply personal in every frame.
This is a spoiler free review, so I’ll only speak based off of what you can gather from the trailer. The world of Wakanda is familiar yet matured here after the Blip. Her people are dealing with the loss of their leader. Queen Ramonda (Angela Bassett) is mourning as a mother would, with maturity and grace, while keeping the outside world at bay from using vibranium in a way that would harm others. Shuri (Letitia Wright) is going through it! Her grief is manifested in overworking and anger.
In the outside world’s zest to find vibranium, a new underwater nation called Talokan is awoken. With a desire to stay hidden, its’ leader Namor (Tenoch Huerta), will do whatever it takes to make that happen. Even if it means taking down Wakanda to do it. So Wakanda calls on her heroes Nakia (Lupita Nyong’o), Okoye (Danai Gurira), M’Baku (Winston Duke) and new comer Riri Williams (Dominique Thorne).
Ruth Carter’s wardrobe in the film is once again Oscar worthy. Part of the reason the film is a vibe is because of how cool the cast looks throughout the film. Whether they are wearing street clothes or traditional garb, Carter nailed it! The production and art design is incredible grounded in a tangible future. The music from Ludwig Goransson is haunting, inspired and sets the right tone for the film. Listen to the music playing in the lab while Shuri is working. It fits seamlessly to the point you might miss it because so much thought has been put into this world from head to toe.
There is an element of this film that we have to deal with. While the story does a great job of giving us Afro and Latino Futurism visions, the fact remains that the majority of the film is about two brown communities fighting each other. While the Talokan people are blue on land, they’re brown under water. They’re of Mayan origin. So it’s easy to forget this point. At a micro level, two brown nations are willing to go at each other in order to save themselves from colonizers out of fear of colonization. It’s not even guaranteed. It’s strategy for a possibility. Yet, it’s evident that they are two of the strongest nations in this world. There’s an invisible chain at play that just feels a little all too familiar for me.
That said, Black Panther: Wakanda Forever is a serious character drama with super hero action in the background. Their are noteworthy performances from Angela Bassett, Danai Gurira and Letitia Wright as the women take the stage in a way that feels lived in from my black experience! Equal to the performances are the character arcs of the protagonists and antagonist. Just as Killmonger (Michael B. Jordan) was a great idealogical foil to T’Challa, Namor is another villain who could be considered a hero depending on the side of the coin you align with. It’s an entertaining film that will be remembered in the MCU due to the loss of Chadwick Boseman and the universal themes it deals with. There’s only one post credit scene, so you don’t have to wait until the credits finishing rolling this time!
Rating: B+
P.S.
Look for the male extra on the left side of the screen dancing in white in the beginning of the film. Someone should have been watching the dailies to remind him to stay in character! He was having too much fun I guess. If it wasn’t such a serious moment…I would have been laughin’!
"All Quiet On The Western Front" Review: The Horror of War
Franklin D. Roosevelt was right when he said “War is young men dying and old men talking.” All Quiet On The Western Front embodies this throughout its running time. It’s not a war movie, it’s a collateral movie. The violence and silence within it shows the horror that is war.
Director Edward Berger takes the third at bat for the adaptation of Erich Maria Remarque’s book. Berger’s eye for detail and his ensemble’s performances make for a war film that stands out in the genre and annals of cinematic history. The story hasn’t changed. Paul Bäumer (Felix Kammerer) is a seventeen year old who wants to go to war after hearing a speech given at his school. It’s some speech, because war sounds like a way to serve his country, become a man and a hero to him and his friends. They enlist the next day and Paul is quickly thrust into the truth and horrors of war. So are we.
Within a few hours of being out in the field, an attack leaves Paul as the sole survivor amongst his friends and scarred for life. It’s the little details along the way that make this so heart wrenching. He should have known something was up when he received a uniform that belonged to someone else. Once he’s in it, there is the collection of dog tags. The soldiers not only have to fight and fear for their lives, but they also have to face death. They literally have to look at bodies of fallen friends who had a name, family and friends and collect identification from their corpse. It’s cruel. It’s traumatizing. We have to witness it along with Paul.
A tale tale heart moment comes later when Paul kills an enemy in the trenches and has to listen to him die slowly because he can’t get out of the trench. He watches him take his last breaths and suffers mentally knowing how much pain he is in. The shift from kill or be killed to empathy is executed in a heartbreaking moment as he tries to save him and apologizes for what he’s done. This results in him finding a photo of his wife and child. This is what the film repetitively nails home. There is nothing fun, beautiful or fantastical about war.
If there’s a film that should help us think twice about war, especially in these times, it’s this one. The collateral of war is not just on the battle field but it hits the soldiers family back home and especially the soldiers themselves.
Rating: A
"The Woman King" Review: This Should Not Be Missed!
There’s no doubt that The Woman King will be a cultural experience for many this weekend. The telling of one of the most feared and revered female warriors on the big screen is something to behold. While some of the action feels “Disney-fied”, the message in this film is undeniably powerful and should not be missed!
The film revolves around the West African nation of Dahomey in the early 1800s. Known for their fierce, all-female warriors called the Agojie, we’re thrust amidst an ongoing Game of Thrones amongst African Kingdoms. Nanisca (Viola Davis) leads these incredible warriors and after a recent battle, realizes she needs new, stronger soldiers to fight off the rival Oyo empire. The Agojie are all that stand in the way of the Oyo and King Ghezo (John Boyega) has full faith in them.
Nanisca leans on her right hand, Amenza (Sheila Atim). It’s evident that they have been through good and bad times together. Amenza holds Nanisca’s orders, secrets and trust as a chosen sister. Izogie (Lashana Lynch) trains the new crop of prospective Agojie. She’s an aggressive fighter with ambition to be more who gives tough love and mentoring to the hopeful. One amongst them is Nawi (Thuso Mbedu). Nawi is an untraditional young woman who has turned every suitor away with her attitude. For her, the Agojie is her way out of a life of subjectivity.
With war as a vehicle of urgency, in the backdrop of the setting is also the Atlantic slave trade. It’s a part of the movie that is naturally highlighted as a theme of both physical and mental slavery shows itself throughout the film. Writers Dana Stevens and Maria Bello shine light on the various tribes and nations involved in the atrocity and in a minor way, the impact that we can assume it had on the African people. Trauma is dealt with in a way that is both heartbreaking and triumphant! As each member of the Agojie carry the weight of their own trauma, how they overcome is perhaps the most powerful message in the film.
Gina Prince-Bythewood (Beyond The Lights) may not be a house hold name to many, because she directs a feature film so infrequently. However, when she does get behind the camera, it’s always worth watching. Her ability to capture human relationships is always refreshing. Viola Davis gives a masterful performance as always. The lean she does at the climax of the film takes you through so many emotions without her saying a word. Lashana Lynch will likely have Oscar buzz surrounding her performance as she gives Izogie a hard exterior with a soft core to create a complex but lovable character.
The celebration in song and dance throughout the film is moving. You can feel the joy and pain at times in the tribal dancing. The action in this film is a little underwhelming at times. To be all female warriors, you would expect serious bloodshed. Even if that couldn’t be shown due to the rating, the problem is that the camera doesn’t allow you to see the fight choreography in full. Mid-shots are used rather than wides. So the action feels stifled at times, which is sad because it would be nice to see all of the hard work these amazing actresses put in on full display. To see women tough and brutal is not something we get often from film. Perhaps some will say we got a lot here, but this did feel like it was under the watchful eye of someone to keep it PG-13.
Whatever the case may be, the message in this film and the portrayals by the cast is worth seeing! Grab some friends and go this weekend! This was like church for the crowd I screened the film with. They talked to the screen and audibly showed they related to the message. That’s the power of film!
Rating: B+
"Prey" Review: A Prequel On Par With The Original
In a world of streaming, Prey is one of those films that will be released directly on Hulu, but is worthy of the big screen! The beautiful landscape, scale of humans versus animals or Predator, and entertaining story would have been worth the summer blockbuster theater check-in. This film is on par with the original Predator in terms of entertainment and story! It’s worth the watch this weekend!
Naru (Amber Midthunder) is a young Comanche who wants to hunt like the men in her tribe, but isn’t given the same respect because she is a woman. Her older brother, Taabe (Dakota Beavers), recognizes her potential but also knows Naru has to earn her stripes. She’s an excellent tracker, knows natural medicine, and can throw an axe like the rest of the boys. Her opportunity comes in the form of a hunt for a big cat. Her much larger test however, comes from the sky and no one else seems to notice. In fact, she’s the only one to pick up on the signs of a much larger, dangerous being in their midst.
As with any of these movies, it takes a while before the Predator is revealed fully and that’s when the fun begins. The kills and weapons in Prey are creative and awesome for franchise fans! This particular predator has so many different weapons in its arsenal that we get to see used in creative ways. Similarly, because of the time period (late 1700s), our weapons are primitive in comparison. Yes, our weapons are always primitive in comparison to a Predator’s but this showdown calls for a primal fist to cuffs. It’s the stripped back, crude nature of this story that touches our basic needs and thus makes the movie a suspenseful and thrilling watch. Amber Midthunder is the heart of the film and a protagonist underdog we can get behind!
The battle of wits is what all Predator films come down to, but the camera work and editing are elements that make this exciting to watch as well. Director, Dan Trachtenberg (10 Cloverfield Lane) uses matching shots of wounds being cleaned and the fight for survival amongst predator and prey of all walks of life weave together a story that is understood through montage. Low angles show the scale of the Predator (Dane DiLiegro is a former basketball player) 6’9” frame towers over its competition. Aerial shots of high grass fields show the speed in which this Predator can move on its prey!
Perhaps an interesting point in this film is how the Predator only goes after what it deems as a threat or real competition. Similarly, Hulu should not be afraid to take on the competition in the box office if it has a movie like this on its hands! This likely would have done well by word of mouth. Instead, to take a line from the film, they said “This is as far as you go. No more. This is it.” Hopefully, the overwhelming response from fans will change their mind in the future!
Rating: B+
Jurassic World Dominon Review: Fans Will Love It! Anyone Else Should Wait For Streaming.
Let’s cut straight to the point on this. Jurassic World Dominion is great for fans of the franchise and may be disjointed and unbelievable to anyone else. If you are looking for fan service, it’s rich with it. Otherwise, this may be a good streaming pick later.
First, with a word like dominion in the title, you would think that dinosaurs are assorting their dominance in the world. Semantics don’t matter as the species just live among us in this film. Credit goes to screenwriters Emily Carmichael and Colin Trevorrow for creating a world that feels lived in and thought out. What if dinosaurs really lived among us? What would a black market for dinosaurs look like? What would the PETA equivalent look like in this world? They’ve thought of it all, accept how to tell a cohesive story.
The film has a Steve Jobs-like CEO, Lewis Dodgson (Campbell Scott), as its villain. Dodgson was a minor character from the original film and was a corporate rival of the park’s creators. He’s now is the head of a massive company called Biosyn. It’s the type of tech company that is heavily guarded and you have to have an invite to get on campus. He’s bioengineered locusts that eat the crops of the world, in order to control the world’s food supply.
This is where the gang loosely comes together. Owen Grady (Chris Pratt) and Claire Dearing (Bryce Dallas Howard) are looking after Maisie Lockwood (Isabella Sermon), a teenager who Fallen Kingdom revealed to be a clone of a deceased scientist. She holds the key to stopping the disaster and everyone wants a piece of her…kind of literally. We get a globe trotting race to stop impending disaster and the re-introduction of fan favorites Sam Neill, Laura Dern, and Jeff Goldblum. How they all link up is where you have to suspend disbelief. It’s that kind of a film where you really need to just, not think. “It’s a film about dinosaurs!” I hear you yelling at me. I get that, but that doesn’t mean that we have to accept characters being in one location in one scene and appearing in a distant location in the immediate following scene with no context as to how they got there unless they were The Flash.
This film introduces the always interesting Mamoudou Athie as Ramsay and DeWanda Wise as Kayla. Kayla is a black pilot who smuggles whatever for the right price. She provides a source of keep it real comedy that is needed for some of the unrealistic moments in the film. Sermon is the heart of the film as she wars with is she real or not. Jeff Goldblum is his charming, old man swagged out self as Ian Malcolm. His humor is much welcomed as well.
There is a major gripe I’ve had with big beasts/monster movies in cinematic history and that is the fact that, since King Kong (1933), we’ve seen how a white character can bring a beast under control with a touch. This is a film where white characters lift their hand and stare down a dinosaur to make it back down. It happens multiple times throughout this film and this imagery is worrisome because seeing yourself on the big screen is important. King Kong, Godzilla, Frankenstein (before it tosses the girl into the lake), any Potter film and more beasts are always under this spell. Shot sizes and cinematography matters. There is a subconscious message that, against impossible odds, white characters can tame a beast. Hollywood needs to stop planting this in its viewers’ minds or at least spread the wealth in these preposterous situations and reflections of power. Let a little girl from Nepal stare down the next dinosaur!
Off of my soap box, it would definitely be of use to revisit Fallen Kingdom, Jurassic Park, and maybe even Jurassic World for this to catch easter eggs. For fans of the franchise, this is likely to be a good time. If you’re not a huge fan, save your money this weekend, or go see Top Gun: Maverick again!
Rating: C-
Top Gun: Maverick Review- Definition of A Must See!
This is why we go to the movies! It’s a cliche phrase that may be tossed around on some movie trailers or posters, but it’s not cliche when it’s true. Top Gun: Maverick is why we go to the movies! We want to be entertained, yes, but we also want emotional storytelling that tells us something about ourselves and the world around us. We want the thrill of suspense, to root for characters, to be in awe of cinematography, and to share the collective experience of unity in watching a film with strangers.This movie gives you that and more!
We catch up with Captain Pete ‘Maverick’ Mitchell (Tom Cruise) in present day. He’s a captain when he should be an admiral. The navy looks at him as a problem, but judging by the leather jacket he dawned over 30 years ago that’s now full of patches, he’s likely done more good than bad in his service. He’s still pushing the limits as he tests an expensive aircraft for the US Pacific Fleet. This film’s premise is simple and something we’ve seen before, but in the hands of a team of skilled writers (Ehren Kruger, Eric Warren Singer, Christopher McQuarrie) it somehow feels original.
Maverick is the best of the best and thus is called in to train the best of the best in the next generation of Top Gun pilots. There is a dangerous mission that anyone in their right mind would call a suicide mission. For the sake of space, the new recruits go by the call signs Phoenix (Monica Barbaro), Bob (Lewis Pullman), Payback (Jay Ellis), Fanboy (Danny Ramirez), and Hangman (Glen Powell). Perhaps the most important recruit is Lt. Bradley ‘Rooster’ Bradshaw (Miles Teller); he’s Goose’s (Maverick’s former wingman) son and there’s obvious history between Rooster and Maverick.
Here’s where the film soars. Exposition, history, and where relationships stand is told as needed and without belaboring the point. The audience can fill in the gaps, but the cast carries the weight of decisions made throughout the years in their performance. The theme of time and the facets of young vs. old, wisdom vs. fearlessness, and new birth vs. extinction are analyzed here. There’s a dual message happening on screen and off screen. On one hand, we see Maverick as he tries to whip the young recruits into shape. On the other, we see an aged Tom Cruise, one of the last of the Hollywood stars who would bring audiences out simply by name. The film is a summer blockbuster by definition and the cinematography of Claudio Miranda frames these characters in a larger than life way that harkens back to the days of Hollywood stars. Even the end credits seem to tip its hat to the era of movie stars who were inaccessible due to a lack of cell phones and social media, and therefore were giants in the public eye. There’s an intimacy and love from the cast and crew that went into making this movie that is both seen on the screen and felt as you watch it.
The nostalgic call backs and cameos help create that loving feeling. Minus one seen, they all work perfectly and don’t detract from the film but add to it. This sequel is a thousand times better than its Regan era, military propaganda predecessor, but there’s beauty in the way the two are linked decades apart. There’s beauty in seeing the aging of its characters physically across the films. There’s beauty in seeing a more mature, thoughtful film with a solid story and multiple things at stake.
This is a must see film. See it on the largest screen you can with the best sound system in theaters. I haven’t clapped, yelled in excitement, and cried with an audience in a theater in a long time! You feel like you’re in the cockpit with these pilots, there’s little to no fat in the story and each beat is earned in beautiful ways. You’re still reading? Get your keys, order your ticket and get to the theater!
Rating: A
"Senior Year" Review: What the kids call Cringe!
There have been plenty of child stuck in an adult’s body movies. I could name a few good ones: Big, 13 Going On 30, Little. They’re always a little over the top, you have to go with the premise, but it hits the right notes in the end. Senior Year is not one of these films. It may follow the cookie cut examples of others, but its sweet messages are buried under so many cringeworthy moments.
Rebel Wilson is Stephanie, a coma patient who has recently woken up after a cheerleading stunt went horribly wrong twenty years prior. For her, she is still a 17 year old in the middle of senior year mentally, but life has gone on. Her friends have grown up and Martha (Mary Holland) and Seth (Sam Richardson) are now the principal and librarian of her old high school. Her ex-boyfriend Blaine (Justin Hartley) has married her nemesis, Tiffany (Zoe Chao). The biggest issue for Stephanie is that after coming to the United States from Australia, she was treated as an outcast. So she willed her way into popularity as head cheerleader and was not far from her dream of becoming prom queen. So what else would you want to do in a world where everything is so vastly different? Re-enroll in high school and become prom queen, duh!
This is the premise we are given and have to work off of for the entire movie. This is a small town where a 37 year old can do this. As Stephanie adjusts to the new cultural norms, writers Andrew Knauer, Arthur Pielli, and Brandon Scott Jones throw all of the throwback jokes they can muster. Even the ones that got thrown into the trash. They retrieved those and reinserted them in the script. Brittany Spears, Abercrombie, Von Dutch- anybody or thing early 2000s is at Stephanie’s disposal to talk about. Yet, it’s in her education of current culture and how she maneuvers it that the movie gets right and horribly wrong.
One of the first lessons she learns is that you can’t say gay anymore unless it’s a positively affirming statement. Its statements like these that show the gap in changes in society from the early 2000s to the present, but they aren’t discussed for further analysis. Stephanie’s plan and execution to be popular in high school is adjusted to present day by chasing after followers via social media. Therein lies the film’s emotional pull in sending a message that chasing after followers can be dangerous. However, seeing this from a 37 year old feels vastly wrong. Stephanie encourages the cheerleading squad to be raunchy in their cheers (yes, somehow she gets on the cheerleading team) and throws the party she never got to for teens. An adult pushing sexy dance moves, underage drinking and following your heart to adolescents is terrible when you step back from the movie and look at it.
I watched this movie because I needed something on in the background while doing work. Perhaps that would work for you too. As long as it’s the last thing in your Netflix queue, you can crack into this one.
Rating: D
"The Batman" Review: The Greatest Depiction of The World's Greatest Detective
The Batman is difficult to write about because there are so many things to talk about. Where do you start? Simply put, this may be the greatest depiction of the world’s greatest detective on the big screen!
The film starts in a Gotham City where criminals fear the bat symbol in the sky, but the Gotham Police Department doesn’t quite trust the masked vigilante yet. That’s not entirely true, at least one person does, James Gordon (Jeffrey Wright). So when the mayor is killed by The Riddler (Paul Dano), Batman (Robert Pattinson) gets to visit the scene under skeptical eyes.
This is the crux of this Neo-noir film. Key political figures in Gotham are getting picked off by The Riddler one at a time and Batman has to solve it. Along the way his paths intertwine with Selina Kyle (Zoe Kravitz) aka Catwoman. I’d rather you go into the film as cold as possible so that you can enjoy the movie like I did, but I will talk about key elements here that don’t spoil the plot.
The direction from writer/director Matt Reeves is spectacular. This is the same man that brought us films like Cloverfield, Dawn of The Planet of The Apes, and War of The Planet of The Apes. So every moment and action sequence is well thought out and planned. Reeves partnership with cinematographer, Greig Fraser, paints Gotham in shadows and red. The red hues of dusk and dawn are used throughout the film for exterior shots. Fire burns and bullets also fly to illuminate characters with natural lighting. It sets a tone for this film that is kept throughout.
The ensemble cast at work is amazing in part because of the writing and due to the diligence of the film’s performers. The characters feel lived in and real. They aren’t comic portrayals as we’ve seen in some iterations of Batman movies, but people with histories. While some of the history is told in the film, much of it is in the physicality of the actors. Zoe Kravitz is on one as she plays three roles in this film in my opinion. There’s the girl who works in the club, Selina and Catwoman. Each hat she wears has varying levels of vulnerability. Jeffrey Wright gives a solid, subdued character performance as usual. You may hear people say that Colin Farrell is unrecognizable as Oswald Cobblepot and it’s true. The makeup and prosthetics have a lot to do with that physically, but he brings the trauma that Oz (as he’s called) would have gone through over the years into this character who has a chip on his shoulder with visions of power. Multiple outlets have reported that Paul Dano lost sleep in getting into the Riddler’s mindset and it shows on screen. Not bags under his eyes, but the twisted evil genius is there. His motivation is palpable.
Perhaps the major question you want me to answer is how is Pattinson as Batman. If I answered that, I’d taint the film for you either way. However, this is one of the first times I’ve seen Batman as an authentically feared entity. Criminals are supposed to fear him and they have in prior films but not like this. Here, the score from Michael Giacchino is fantastic being both brooding and haunting. It can play as a horror score at times and western showdown at others. Sound and the lack of it is used to accentuate the mythic status Batman is starting to achieve in this world. Reeves camera pushes into the darkness and looks for the boogie man like it would in a horror film.
The film is written in a style reminiscent of an old gumshoe. Batman narrates at points throughout the movie. As I said in the opening, this may be the greatest depiction of the world’s greatest detective because finally, we see the intelligent, detective side of Batman. We’re led throughout the two hour and fifty five minute run time by screenwriting that gives us what we need to know and keeps us asking what’s coming next. So use the restroom ahead of time and try not to get a large icee. This is absolutely one you don’t want to miss!
Rating: A
"Marry Me" Review: A Dull Film That Leaves Profound Questions
Jennifer Lopez has plenty of good rom-coms under her belt. There’s something about her charm that as far as Jenny has been removed from the block, she still feels like Jenny from the block. Marry Me is not going to be one of the hits that goes in the collection. Perhaps the concept would work with better casting but this formulaic, supposed feel-good romantic film lacks heart and left me asking questions about screenwriting, ageism, and the biases film culture has created.
For context, let’s talk about the film so we can get to the meat and potatoes. Kat Valdez (Jennifer Lopez) is a singer/songwriter superstar. She plans to marry her fiancé Bastian (Columbian music star Maluma) after performing their huge hit, Marry Me. Right before she steps on stage for the big event a scandal strikes with video evidence of Bastian cheating. So what would any rational person do? She goes on stage and decides to marry a random guy in the audience instead.
Enter Charlie (Owen Wilson), standing in the crowd with a “marry me” sign beside his tween-age daughter Lou (Chloe Coleman), a major Kat Stan! Kat makes a split second decision based on sight. Let’s pause here for a second. Glances, physical appearance and how the camera captures it is a part of romantic comedies. The way the camera frames its subject, with help from lights and gels, are a part of the fantasy or romance that we get hooked into in the storytelling. Since the Golden Age of Hollywood, these cinematic techniques have helped us fall in love with stars on screen. So, for nearly 100 years, at least five generations in families, we’ve been taught what is beautiful and how to gaze at a subject by the big screen. So Kat locks eyes with Charlie and makes a big decision. She doesn’t learn until later that he’s a mild-mannered single dad and math teacher (all the things that make him a down to Earth guy). Stay with me.
From there we get a reverse Can’t Buy Me Love set up in which Kat and Charlie proceed with the on stage marriage. They decide to keep the stunt going as Kat’s adoring fans can’t get enough of this fairytale, unbelievable story. Charlie is fine with this new adjustment in his life, but is fervent about continuing life as a teacher and all around drama-free guy. As the two get to know each other, we quickly see how opposites attract. Charlie’s normal and simple life contrasts against Kat’s busy, notorious and calculated life. Charlie has his funny best friend, Parker (Sarah Silverman) and Kat has her funny best friend Melissa (Michelle Buteau) who talk in their ear along the journey. It’s the tried and true set up of a film of this type. Will they end up together? It’s the question we want to know the answer to and this movie blandly tells it.
Wilson is a robot, barely opening his mouth wide enough to get his lines out. Charlie’s body is stiff in most scenes in contrast to Kat’s movement; she’s literally dancing and moving in pretty good song and dance numbers throughout the film. While Lopez gives us charm and age-defying looks, it’s hard to get past the unequal weight of her counterpart bringing the film down. So suddenly, it becomes evident that we’re dealing with a real life global super star on the screen. Kat as a character isn’t a stretch for Lopez because she can identify with the life. This is what pulled me out of the film. Even if we take J Lo’s real age off the table, it’s evident she’s not twenty something. In fact, late thirties could be the least we’ll give her. So why does a woman who isn’t a spring chicken just getting into the music business in this film, making a split second decision to marry a stranger? Why does she not know how to call for transportation? Why does she not know to put the cap on a blender before starting it? For the film it may be cute, but when you think critically it isn’t.
Still with me? So in my head I started thinking, she’s too old for this film from a wisdom perspective. Kat should be smarter than this! However, if she doesn’t have the knowledge and wisdom at this age, why wouldn’t writers John Rogers, Tami Sagher, and Harper Dill do the work to give us Kat’s arrested development backstory? Instead, it’s simplified to the fact that people do these things for her. This was an opportunity to make a mature love story. It’s one in which making impetuous decisions due to trauma or baggage can hit anyone at any age. It would fill in the plot holes, give character development and evolve the genre. Instead, I kept thinking they should have casted Ariana Grande and another young male star for the role because they’re too old to be acting like this. Charlie could still be a math teacher but taking care of his dead brother’s daughter making him even more loveable. Perfect.
Thus, this question of ageism kept pushing its way in my mind. Why did I feel this way? Why am I judging Owen Wilson’s looks, movements and why I felt he was so old visually in comparison to J Lo? Can only young people make silly decisions? Do we look at youth and excuse their lack of wisdom due to age but expect more from older people while overlooking the baggage that we all carry that may stunt their growth in certain areas? These thoughts on a micro level made me think about the macro and how we’ve arrived at this point in cinema.
Marry Me is a below average romantic comedy, but the questions it leaves, in my opinion, are profound. I Want You Back is out this weekend, and in it we get a more grounded film of the same genre with characters who are older but their impetuousness is explained. It’s funnier and the chemistry is there! It’s an example of how we can take what we’ve seen over the past hundred years and show growth in storytelling and what beauty is on screen. A part of beauty is getting older, imperfections, overcoming mistakes, being flawed, and so much more. Hopefully, we can see that in films and redefine what it looks like while not being afraid to make popcorn fun too!
Rating: D+
"Blacklight" Review
If you’ve seen a Liam Neeson action movie since he starred in Taken in 2008, you’ve seen Blacklight. It’s the same old, don’t let the wrinkles fool you, “this agent has forgotten more than you’ve learned kid” type of tale. Truth be told, I love these types of films. Give me my ninety minute running time, some snacks and I’m down for the ride. This, however, is a near two hours of Neeson phoning in his schtick and it’s barely worth a streaming watch.
Travis Block (Neeson) is a government operative who is ready to throw in the towel in search of a life where he can be a better grandpa. He wasn’t the best father to Helen (Yael Stone) and he wasn’t a good husband to her mother. While the chance at redemption is his focus, the recent death of political figure, Sofia Flores (Mel Jarnson), needs his attention. Travis has a best friend/former war buddy/handler of sorts with FBI director Gabriel Robinson (Aidan Quinn). Gabriel is the type of best friend that says he appreciates Travis making something happen only to call him his weapon later in the film. It’s the call me back in to the game that we’ve seen in films like “Fortress”, “Out of Death”, or “Survive the Game” that has been done better.
As the film moves along we’re introduced to Dusty Crane (Taylor John Smith). He’s the young operative that just might blow the “silent hand’s” cover. He must be stopped by Travis, but the closer that Travis gets to Dusty the more things aren’t as they seem. If Travis can’t help, who can? A journalist (Emmy Raver-Lapman) who is willing to tell the truth at all costs, that’s who!
So it goes. Can everyone survive long enough to get the truth out to the world? Sprinkling in some nice chase sequences and fight scenes, writer/director Mark Williams has a bland action film that could be background noise as you do the dishes. This one just isn’t interesting.
Rating: D
"I Want You Back" Review: This Ones A Keeper!
I Want You Back is a great choice for a good laugh on Amazon Prime! It’s a good spirited, romantic comedy that’s just in time for Valentine’s Day weekend. While it is a little long for the conventional film of its kind, the plot development is hysterical enough to keep you engaged from scene to scene. It hits all the right notes of a modern rom-com and dare I say could be a classic!
The film gets straight into the action with a break up between two couples: Emma (Jenny Slate) and Noah (Scott Eastwood), and Anne (Gina Rodriguez) and Peter (Charlie Day). Feeling emotional from their breakup, Emma and Peter retreat to the office building’s stairwell one day to have a good cry and meet each other in their grief. This chance meeting turns into a friendship in which the two lament about their exes and eventually hatch a plan to get them back. Peter will befriend Noah and remind him of the one who got away. Emma will try to seduce Logan (Manny Jacinto), Anne’s new boyfriend, and cause Anne to run back to Peter. At least, that’s the plan!
Slate and Day are laugh-out-loud funny with spitball comedy chemistry! Emma and Peter are fully realized characters on screen. You can almost write in their histories yourself based on the way they move through life, the decisions they make, and their dialogue. Emma suffers from a bit of arrested development (her roommates are young college students because she can’t afford the rent on her own) and she’s a hopeless romantic. Peter has a heart for the elderly but lacks confidence in chasing his dreams. The banter between the two is a game of tennis that is exciting to watch.
Director Jason Orley pays particular attention to the frame within this film. Leading lines point to his characters in the stairwell, sitting at a cafe, standing in a crowd or changing in a changing room. The mise-en-scene (stage design and arrangement of actors) in the film is noteworthy for a comedy in this genre, which isn’t something I would usually say. No, this isn’t high art, but there is care and intention in the frame. So what does it do for the film? It helps with the character and scene development. For instance, in a scene where Emma and Peter hash out their plan, they are sitting in a courtyard in front of a giant building. The building dwarfs them in scope while emphasizing the big plan they’re putting together. In another scene, Anne and Logan face each other in the foreground while Emma stands in between them in the background. The framing of shots mean something in many scenes which is refreshing to see.
Editing doesn’t get enough love in well executed rom-coms. Editor Jonathan Schwartz has as much to do with the comedic timing as Day and Slate. The film gives us what we need to know about a particular moment and cuts to the next event. It’s the choice of cuts- whether jumps, crosscuts, fades or smash cuts- that work to further the film’s laughs. A cut from an emotionally sweet moment during a children’s musical to men spraying champagne in a club is a part of the beautiful, unexpected mashup of thought this film is at times.
In short, I Want You Back fires on all cylinders from top to bottom. At its core, writers Isaac Aptaker and Elizabeth Berger have shaped a story that understands tropes of the past and looks to circumvent them. When it does fall into cliché it earns the moment. The film has a long-running time just under two hours, but the sketches of comedy built-in getting there is worth the ride. This film is a keeper!
Rating: A-
"Hotel Transylvania: Transformania" Review- May The Franchise Rest In Peace
Hotel Transylvania: Transformania puts the nail in the franchise’s coffin and not a single tear was shed. It’s another film that can bring the family together, but it’s not very inspired. The stakes are logical, it builds on prior films, but there’s no special magic here.
The one thing that Drac (Brian Hull) has always held against Jonathan (Andy Samberg) whether seriously or in jest, is the fact that he isn’t a monster. So it would make sense that when Drac is ready to give his famous hotel to Mavis (Selena Gomez), realizing that Jonathan would help run it as well puts Drac on edge. In fact, he gets cold feet and states to Johnathan that he won’t be able to allow them to inherit the hotel due to a real estate clause that calls for the hotel to be monster owned.
What’s a loving, wanting to impress dad, slightly insecure son going to do to ensure the hotel is bequeathed to Mavis and himself? He talks to Van Helsing (Jim Gaffigan) about being turned into a monster. Of course, things don’t go as planned and we get to spend the remaining running time in a search for the cure for the monsters who have become humans and the human who has become a monster.
It’s hard not to like the good-hearted nature of the ensemble. The addition of voice actor Brian Hull, in replacement of Adam Sandler as Drac, is like a cat in the Matrix. You know something is a bit off if you really listen to Drac’s voice, but otherwise it’s a seamless handoff of the character. Overall, this is a slapstick comedy that earns its sympathy chuckles.
If you’re of a certain age, you remember that when movies would go straight to video it usually meant they weren’t very good. We’re living in an age when movies that go to streaming instead of theaters or a simultaneous release have the same meaning. This wasn’t a Toy Story 3 bow that felt like an end of a franchise and was done beautifully. Instead, this was squeezing the franchise for the last bit of blood it had left. May it rest in peace. You can watch this with the kids on Amazon Prime today!
Rating: C-