Pages

Monday, August 26, 2024

Cinema Playground Journal 2024: Week 34 (My Cinema Playground)

Multiplex Madness


Between the Temples
⭐️⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Comedy, Drama
Director:  Nathan Silver
Starring:  Jason Schwartzman, Carol Kane, Caroline Aaron, Robert Smigel, Madeline Weinstein, Matthew Shear, Dolly de Leon


Oh good, it's a socially awkward comedy about depression that's shot like a documentary.  My...favorite?  To be frank, this type of movie is not my speed, but I'll give Between the Temples credit for its playful comradery between stars Jason Schwartzman and Carol Kane.  Schwartzman plays a Jewish man who is mourning the death of his wife while having a crisis of faith, but bumps into his spirited music teacher from grade school, who confesses to wanting the bat mitzvah that she never had.  The movie owes a lot to Kane's unique personality traits playing off of Schwartzman, making them an entertaining duo even as its tone can get a little black licorice in the tastebuds.  The story is an interesting unroll, that grows complicated in ways that may surprise you.  The film's themes work in its favor, even as the colorful characters are asked to perform some unusual scenes.  It's a commitment, and everyone steps up to the plate.


Blink Twice
⭐️⭐️1/2
Genre:  Mystery, Thriller, Comedy
Director:  Zoë Kravitz
Starring:  Naomi Ackie, Channing Tatum, Christian Slater, Simon Rex, Adria Arjona, Kyle MacLachlan, Haley Joel Osment, Gina Davis, Alia Sawkat


Zoë Kravitz makes her directorial debut on a film that was originally titled "Pussy Island," a title Kravitz claims she preferred but test audiences rejected because they didn't like the word "pussy."  I would counter that Pussy Island is a bad title anyway, for two reasons.  First, because it's so on the nose that the film's mystery thriller elements suffer even more when they're somewhat predictable already.  Second, it's a title that already been used a thousand times, ranging from YouTube compilations of cat videos to what is probably already a long running adult film series that spans fifty volumes.  As to what this Pussy Island is, it actually belongs to Channing Tatum, who whisks away a group of women to his private island where they party all day and do hard drugs in the evening.  However, one of the guests begins to suspect there are weird shenanigans afoot when her memories of the prior nights fail to add up.

What Kravitz is trying to accomplish here feels pretty simple, as Blink Twice feels like her effort at a personal Get Out, one with a #MeToo twist.  The film infuses itself with heavy themes of womanhood, particularly male aggression that come to fruition through emotional and physical abuse, while also exploring tramatic reactions, through repressed submission while also becoming a metaphor of weilding trauma to strengthen one's inner power.  The movie feels personal, and Kravitz clearly has a lot she wants to say.  It does feel like she lets it all out into a cohesive whole, though I look forward to her becoming a more experienced filmmaker creating a film with a more even pace.  The set-up is lengthy and repetitive while its climax is a bit too chaotic for its own good, cramming most of its reveals and metaphors into a massive info dump.  I understand why it's like this, as it's trying to portray trust building up to betrayal, but to the mystery needs to be more fruitful and its wit needs to land harder.  With minor tweaks, Blink Twice probably could have been a knockout debut, but is instead a flawed, yet interesting, look at the talent she has potential for.


The Crow
⭐️1/2
Genre:  Action, Thriller, Superhero
Director:  Rupert Sanders
Starring:  Bill Skarsgård, FKA Twigs, Danny Huston


To be very clear, I am not convinced that there isn't more than one great movie that can be made out of The Crow.  Why it seems so goddamn hard thirty years on is a mystery to me, when the template of the 1994 film is there and clear as day.  Alex Proyas cracked that code, and I refuse to believe it's because he's some filmmaking genius, because he isn't (see:  every movie he has directed that is not The Crow, and yes I'm trash-talking Dark City, go fuck yourself).  Taking a premise of revenge-from-beyond and rooting it in tragic romance feels like it should have elasticity, telling a different gothic thriller driven by love in each tale.  Why does each attempt at this suck ass?  Jason Voorhees comes back from the dead for less, but he meets our low expectations every time.

Based on the 1989 limited comic series, which was in turn adapted into the 1994 classic starring the ill-fated Brandon Lee, The Crow claims to be a remake/readaptation, but it might as well be another sequel because its remake status is just an excuse to call the main character "Eric Draven" again.  Bill Skarsgård plays Eric this time, reimagined as a man in rehab who falls in love with a girl named Shelly (also a borrowed name).  Unbeknownst to Eric, Shelly is on the run from Danny Huston, who plays an immortal bad guy who considers Shelly a loose end to his secret satanic sacrifice schemes.  He sends his minions to kill her, and they kill Eric in the process.  This being a Crow movie, Eric is brought back to life by a crow, as well as some guy who lives in what I'm assuming is purgatory, even though it just looks like an abandoned warehouse lot.  He's not in the original.  I think he's here to feed Eric exposition, but I question why you need him when the 1994 movie rocked the "show, don't tell" approach so hard.  Anyway, I digress.  Eric is brought back to life by a crow, and given near immortality to seek vengeance on those who killed him and the woman he loved.

I hadn't seen the original Crow movie in a good long while.  I wanted to watch it again, but I also wanted this movie to stand on its own merits, so I held off on it.  So I watched this movie with a fuzzy memory of the original, and felt very muted on it.  I swung back and forth between "This isn't that awful" and "God, this sucks."  Then I went home and watched the original again, and with each passing moment recollection of small moments I actually enjoyed from the remake drained from me.  The original Crow is a movie that 90's goths based their entire personality on.  The remake is a movie inspired by the type of emo kids who based their entire personalities on people who loved The Crow but have never actually seen it themselves.  It's a version of the idea less targeted at people who grew up with Tim Burton's Batman and/or flocked to The Matrix on opening weekend and more at people who wrote Twilight fan fiction throughout their teenage years.


The remake of the movie feels like it was made with ambition, possibly hoping to turn the idea into a more grandiose love story.  Unfortunately, the original is a far more romantic movie, even if Eric's lady love Shelly is barely in it.  Her presence is always with Eric in that movie, and you can feel her driving him.  The remake does an extended prologue of Eric and Shelly's relationship, which is very little other than having sex and popping pills.  I'm assuming we're meant to feel her absence once Eric is brought back, but it's more of a relief to just be rid of her and into the vengeance storyline because it was taking too long to get there.  From there, Skarsgård is given a few action highlights, though they fail to really rev the movie up after its slow start.  Danny Huston's role is wasted, as it feels like the movie wants to be grand showdown between two immortals, but it ends with a slight bitchslap fight in the above-mentioned warehouse lot that might be Hell, I don't know or care.  Even the titular Crow barely does anything.  He brings Eric back to life, gives him immortality, then jumps into him and makes him extra immortal because he was too sad to be truly immortal or something.  I'm sure there's a Doctor Who joke I could be making, because the last time I saw a black bird fly into someone, Clara Oswald died.


The Crow remake reeks of a lot of things, from doubling down in the wrong direction to studio tampering.  It wouldn't surprise me if there was an extra half hour of this movie that the studio mandated cut, as it gets choppy in the middle and rushed toward the end, while there are aspects of the film that feel unresolved (what happened to the pianist girl that Danny Huston was Satan grooming?).  I can't see it being a sizable improvement, but it could make the movie more even than it is.  But there is little reason to watch this version outside of morbid curiosity.  The original is just the better experience.  It has better action, a better love story, more heartfelt moments, and just does goth in a way only the 90's could.  The original Crow is a goddamn classic.  This is...better than the fourth movie, I'll say that much.


Strange Darling
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Thriller
Director:  JT Mollner
Starring:  Willa Fitzgerald, Kyle Gallner


One can probably get tired of people telling them that a movie is better when you know virtually nothing about it, but there are cases where that's true, and Strange Darling is one of those cases.  If one likes rough and tumble chase thrillers that hit the ground running and never let up, it's absolutely worth a watch, and is a contender for best movie of the year.

There is very little I am willing to say about the story other than its starting point is a woman in the woods running from a man with a gun, and the narrative spirals from that.  The film is told in a nonlinear form, as we learn how she got to this point and where it goes from there.  The presentation choice struck me as odd early on, because there seemed to be little reason for it.  Usually, nonlinear is utilized in an anthological format (Pulp Fiction) or when there is a very specific storytelling reason (Memento), and Strange Darling came off as more chaotic than not during its early segments.  The movie reveals the method to its madness halfway through, when it snaps into place and everything about the movie begins swirling in your head with a completely different context.  It's possible the movie might lose steam after it's reveal, but it's constantly engaging largely thanks to the commitment of its cast, especially Willa Fitzgerald, who is in evolving distress in what had to be a draining role.  It's a performance that absolutely earns an Oscar, but we'll see if it survives the award season politics bias against genre films (Rebecca Hall deserved a nomination for The Night House and I'll die on this hill).

Aesthetically, the film owes a lot to Texas Chainsaw Massacre, even though it has very little in common with it other than overlap in presentation ingredients.  Strange Darling is distinctly its own beast.  Taut, exciting, and at the same time both simple and unexpected.  Strange Darling is one of the most rewarding sit downs that film fans will see this year.

Movies Still Playing At My Theater
Alien:  Romulus ⭐️⭐️1/2
Borderlands ⭐️⭐️
Cuckoo ⭐️⭐️1/2
Deadpool & Wolverine ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Despicable Me 4 ⭐️⭐️1/2
Inside Out 2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️
It Ends with Us ⭐️⭐️
Longlegs ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
My Penguin Friend ⭐️⭐️
Trap ⭐️⭐️
Twisters ⭐️⭐️

New To Digital
Inside Out 2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Sight ⭐️1/2

Coming Soon!

Monday, August 19, 2024

Cinema Playground Journal 2024: Week 33 (My Cinema Playground)

Multiplex Madness


Alien:  Romulus
⭐️⭐️1/2
Genre:  Horror, Science Fiction
Director:  Fede Álvarez
Starring:  Cailee Spaeny, David Jonnson, Archie Renaux, Isabela Merced, Spike Fearn, Aileen Wu


Hot off of Disney successfully revitalizing the Predator franchise with Prey a few years back, they are seeking to reinvest the audience with the Alien series.  It's probably debatable as to which series had more baggage, as Alien needed to make-up for a largely disapproved trilogy capper, two franchise mashes, and whatever the hell franchise creator Ridley Scott was trying to do with his bizarre creative choices for his prequel films.  But then again, the Predator franchise had The Predator, which is probably the biggest blowhard failure of the entire lot.

Don't Breathe director Fede Álvarez tries not to overthink things, which is probably more often than not the issue a lot of Alien movies run into.  He goes for a back-to-basics approach, trapping people on a spaceship, but also on board are, get this...


There is very little innovation at play, so anybody looking for that will leave without satisfaction.  Álvarez even goes for nostalgia callbacks that will either make you laugh or make you groan.  The bigger positive is that Alien:  Romulus is a stylish and exciting execution of a threadbare story.  Álverez knows how to rev up a movie through its visual flair and craft spellbinding suspense.  The problem that Alien:  Romulus grapples with is that it successfully stimulates itself but only succeeds in utilizing that to run in circles.  There is only so much that the movie is willing to do, and Álvarez treats the movie like more of a franchise reintroduction than a new chapter.  The film only sheds its safety net in its finale, where Álvarez goes full Cronenbergian body horror in probably its most surprising and startling sequence.  But I find myself torn on the whole ordeal, because it feels confined for the majority of its runtime and finally allowed to be itself in its conclusion, while never gelling as a whole.  Romulus may prove to be solid enough to be a shot-in-the-arm for its franchise, but not good enough to be a series highlight.


My Penguin Friend
⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Drama
Director:  David Schurmann
Starring:  Jean Reno, Adrianna Barraza


Based on a true story of man and penguin living together in tranquility, My Penguin Friend features Jean Reno nursing a migrating penguin, who his fishing village names DinDim, back to health.  DinDim returns annually to visit his human friend in the years since.  It's a cute story that tries to coast on cute vibes.  The movie is sweet-natured to the point that it might be possible to contract diabetes from it.  It's one thing to make a movie based on that, but the movie's true life story struggles to adapt to a narrative flow.  The movie attempts a traditional three-act structure, but it collapses onto itself because each act is a visit to the village by DinDim andit accelerates the story to a point where it's skipping logic.  DinDim becomes a viral sensation that is said to "visit every year" after appearing only twice, before a pattern is established.  The third visit has everyone waiting on a beach for him as if his appearance can be predicted down to the minute, which is complete nonsense.  This isn't even mentioning the fact that the little girl who names the penguin doesn't age over the span of three years, which is usually the sign of a movie trying to mask its low budget with schmaltz.  The epic climax has Jean Reno becoming so worried about DinDim that he leads a search party into the sea, rowing around in a fraction of the 5,000 mile span of the Atlantic Ocean where DinDim could possibly be and calling out "DINDIM!" as if the penguin would call back.  In a non-bullshit narrative, this would accomplish absolutely nothing, but somehow they successfully find the penguin, so what do I know?  The movie is successfully cute enough to charm those looking for a new Free Willy type of movie to watch with their kids, but cute only coasts it so far.


Skincare
⭐️⭐️1/2
Genre:  Mystery, Comedy
Director:  Austin Peters
Starring:  Elizabeth Banks, Lewis Pullman, Michaela Jaé Rodreguez, Luis Gerardo Méndez, Nathan Fillion, John Billingsley


Meandering, satirical black comedy sees Elizabeth Banks playing the "queen of skincare," who finds her claim to fame threatened when a competing business opens across the street and her paranoia grows as her workplace is sabotaged in various ways.  The movie is interesting, though the flow of its thriller and mystery elements doesn't have a satisfactory momentum, while its comedy is more a cheeky tonal underlining than anything actually amusing.  Elizabeth Banks is well utilized, both when she's working more subtly or going for something broad.  She's constantly magnetic in this movie.  A more efficient movie might have weilded her as a force to be reckoned with.

Movies Still Playing At My Theater
Borderlands ⭐️⭐️
Cuckoo ⭐️⭐️1/2
Deadpool & Wolverine ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Despicable Me 4 ⭐️⭐️1/2
Inside Out 2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️
It Ends with Us ⭐️⭐️
Longlegs ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Trap ⭐️⭐️
Twisters ⭐️⭐️

New To Digital
Fly Me to the Moon ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Twisters ⭐️⭐️

New To Physical
The Bikeriders ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Furiosa:  A Mad Max Saga ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
IF ⭐️1/2

Coming Soon!

Monday, August 12, 2024

Cinema Playground Journal 2024: Week 32 (My Cinema Playground)

Multiplex Madness


Borderlands
⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Comedy, Science Fiction, Action
Director:  Eli Roth (and Tim Miller)
Starring:  Cate Blanchett, Kevin Hart, Jack Black, Ariana Greenblatt, Jamie Lee Curtis, Edgar Ramírez, Florian Munteanu, Gina Gershon


Based on the hit video game series, Borderlands sees a surprisingly heavy-hitting cast deliver berserker material as they play a group of misfits looking for a mysterious vault in the far reaches of outer space.  All sources point to an assembly of a film that's just as crazy as the Borderlands franchise probably has earned, as rumored issues with the initial print called for reshoots, of which original director Eli Roth was unavailable for (he was already committed to last year's Thanksgiving, which is admittedly a better film than Borderlands).  They then passed the baton to Tim Miller to get the movie across the finish line.  This doesn't necessarily mean the movie is going to be a flat-out disaster, and I'd argue that the movie isn't, but you can definitely tell the movie isn't all there.  Borderlands is choppy and clumsy, hoping to use it's irreverence to weild it's own chaos, which is like trying to stop a wrecking ball with a catcher's mitt.  Any charisma it might have lies with its cast, who deliver the movie's cheeky insanity with the right amount of snark and hamfistedness to make the movie entertaining even when it's failing to convey a plot.  The movie is being dragged through the mud by critics, but I didn't hate it.  If nothing else, the movie being a weird Frankenstein freak of obnoxiousness seems right on point for the series it's adapting.


Cuckoo
⭐️⭐️1/2
Genre:  Horror
Director:  Tilman Singer
Starring:  Hunter Schafer, Dan Stevens, Jan Bluthhardt, Jessica Henwick, Marton Csokas


Cuckoo is hard to sum up in a few sentences, though it's main premise boils down to Hunter Schafer moving into the Alps with her father and step-family only to be followed by a mysterious screaming woman.  That only scratches the surface of a film that's surprisingly lore heavy and cryptic, often bothersome in how unbalanced it is between the two.  Cuckoo wears a mask of intense melodrama as it gets invested in its own mystery boxes.  Payoff is a mixed bag because it's a neat idea in a convoluted presentation.  I almost admire just how kamikaze the movie is with it's horror elements invading it's dramatic presentation, though it feels muted in its impact when it can't seem to find a narrative that isn't at the very least a partial mess.


It Ends with Us
⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Drama, Romance
Director:  Justin Baldoni
Starring:  Blake Lively, Justin Baldoni, Jenny Slate, Hassan Minhaj, Brandon Sklenar, Isabella Ferrer, Alex Neustaedter


The beloved Colleen Hoover novel makes its way to the big screen, with Blake Lively taking the role of a flower shop owner who enters a romance with a neurosurgeon, which grows complicated when she bumps into her first love.  And by complicated, I mean heavy complicated.  Like in an "Oh shit, that's what this story's about?!" plot turn kind of way.  It takes a while for It Ends with Us to express its point, which is admittedly for good reason, because the movie masks its theme in subtle and admittedly clever ways that enhance the theme in question.  I wish I could praise it more because the rest of the movie is like a brick.  The dialogue is hefty and erratic, like the movie is trying to come off as naturalistic but diverges to the point where it's failing to make its sentences make sense.  The main romance of the film is uninteresting, clearly meant to play up for someone whose idea of steamy stems from reruns of Grey's Anatomy.  The secondary flashback romance is a little more nimble and sweeter, but the film focuses on it far less because it's less important.  My mood just felt weighed down by the entire experience, because I tried to like it, and there were indeed moments where I went "Okay, yeah, that was pretty good," but the movie never took hold.  There are small moments of strength to its presentation, though it becomes hard to forgive how bland, passive, and clunky it is for two thirds of its runtime.


The Last Front
⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Drama, War
Director:  Julien Hayet-Kerknawi
Starring:  Iain Glen, Sasha Luss, Joe Anderson, David Calder, Koen De Bouw


Bless this movie's heart, it tries so hard.  Too bad what it's trying to do is replicate a made for TV war drama that your history teacher would show you on VHS for a movie day.  Taking place in Belgium during World War I, Iain Glen plays a farmer whose life is upended when the Germans come to his land and murder his son.  He, his daughter, and his son's pregnant finance then flee with other nearby villagers to escape to the French border.  The dramatic idea is sturdy, but it's yearning for a less hamfisted execution.  The movie has no concept of subtlety.  It's fiercely dramatic to a fault.  It's hard to engage with the movie when it could just allow the acting to do the talking but instead clots it up with intense presentation cholesterol such as swelling music and overtly theatrical staging.  Characterization also suffers, especially with its one-dimensional villains.  One of the ranking Germans has compassionate and understanding dad vibes while the other (who I guess is his son for some reason, which explains the dad vibes) is a dick for the sake of being a dick, getting off on shooting people in the face.  Their dramatic conflict is that they're having a civil disagreement on just how many war crimes they should be committing.  It's laughably poor writing in a movie that doesn't want to be laughed at.  It's a shame.  Iain Glen gives it his all, but the movie doesn't earn his performance.

Movies Still Playing At My Theater
Deadpool & Wolverine ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Despicable Me 4 ⭐️⭐️1/2
Fly Me to the Moon ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Inside Out 2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Longlegs ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Trap ⭐️⭐️
Twisters ⭐️⭐️

New To Digital
Despicable Me 4 ⭐️⭐️1/2

New To Physical
Babes ⭐️⭐️1/2

Coming Soon!

Monday, August 5, 2024

Cinema Playground Journal 2024: Week 31 (My Cinema Playground)

Multiplex Madness


Coup!
⭐️⭐️1/2
Genre:  Comedy, Mystery, Thriller
Director:  Austin Stark, Joseph Schuman
Starring:  Peter Skarsgaard, Billy Magnussen, Sarah Gadon, Skye P. Marshall, Faran Tahir, Kristine Nielson, Fisher Stephens


Interesting, if muddled, film has a wealthy journalist isolating in his mansion with his family during the 1918 influenza epidemic.  He grows increasingly more paranoid at their most recent servant hire, who he believes might be trying to ruin his life.  I can easily imagine someone brainstorming a movie like this during the COVID-19 pandemic, crafting an absurdist suspense dark comedy to help cope with the legthy lockdown periods.  Whether or not Coup! has anything interesting to say about it depends on what you read into it, because it both seems to have politics on the mind but also isn't meaty enough on them to actually follow through on it.  Instead, the movie seems like a clever play on the "snobs vs. slobs" storyline without ever exploring it fully enough to be satisfying.  It's inconsistently engaging, but it has a lively anarchic spirit.  I might have have found the movie more digestible if had had gone full steam ahead, but there's enough effort here to give it a pass.


Harold and the Purple Crayon
⭐️1/2
Genre:  Comedy, Fantasy
Director:  Carlos Saldanha
Starring:  Zachary Levi, Zooey Deschanel, Lil Rel Howery, Jemaine Clement, Tanya Roberts, Alfred Molina


Based on the classic children's book, Harold and the Purple Crayon sees the titular infant grow into adulthood, yet still wearing a onesie and drawing on the walls.  Like a lot of bad movies based on fantasy characters, Harold gets sucked into the real world, and now he and his magic crayon have to deal with real people.  Y'know, it's the Masters of the Universe movie but if He-Man were a man-child.  Probably the worst thing that the Sonic the Hedghog movies did was that it tricked Hollywood back into thinking that audiences always liked movies like this when it's really the exact opposite.  Nobody wants fantastical characters in the real world.  The real world sucks.  It dilutes the fantastical.  What if Harold was an adult man?  What if his animal friends were real people instead of animals?  I don't think anybody who read the Harold books ever asked any of these questions.  And bizarrely enough, the movie feels like it needs to be a superhero fable as well, as Harold gets into a magic crayon duel with a bad guy like Green Lantern squaring off with Sinestro.  I don't know why you would do this with this particular franchise.  It's a scenario of a movie trying to outsmart it's source material and just creating something that blows up in its face.  If any of this is going to work, then it needs more people in it like Tanya Reynolds, who jumps in with earnest enthusiasm for her role as Porcupine, rather than just mugging for the camera with a childish grin like everyone else.  On the brighter side, there are a couple of legitimately good slapstick sequences in the film, which elevates family viewing value, but it's not going to be the optimal choice for families when there is a movie with Minions in it playing at the same theater.

To add insult to injury, the movie opens with an animated sequence of classic Harold that is quaint and cute.  If you have this license, why aren't you making that movie instead of...whatever this is?


Kneecap
⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Genre:  Drama, Comedy
Director:  Rich Peppiatt
Starring:  Naoise Ó Carealláin, Liam Óg Ó Hannaidh, JJ Ó Dochartaigh, Josie Walker, Fionnualla Flaherty, Jessica Reynolds, Adam Best, Simone Kirby, Michael Fassbender


This movie tells the true story of the origin of Irish hip hop group Kneecap, which also stars the actual group members, showing how they rose to fame in their signature style of rapping in their indigenous Irish language when politicians were trying to opress it.  The story has a rousing spirit of refusing to let culture and heritage die even when the world is trying to kill it, and it's told with an offbeat playfulness that keeps its audience entertained.  The members of Kneecap themselves aren't always engaging enough as actors to carry the movie, but their spirit and message works hard to overcome their shortcomings.  The movie could probably be a hard sell in the States, as it requires a love of hip hop, following interchanges between English and Irish on a dime often, and it's very invested in Irish politics, but those who take the plunge will likely be impressed with what the band achieved with this movie.


Peak Season
⭐️⭐️1/2
Genre:  Drama, Comedy, Romance
Director:  Steven Kanter, Henry Loevner
Starring:  Claudia Restrepo, Derrick Joseph DeBlasis, Ben Coleman


Very low budget indie sees engaged couple Max and Amy spending the summer in a resort town in Wyoming.  The trip doesn't goes as planned as Max spends his time continuing to bury himself in his work, while Amy starts to grow a close friendship with a local wilderness guide.  Peak Season clearly has a limited amount of money to work with, but it uses it wisely, telling a story with limited characters in personal situations, usually in wilderness settings where nobody is around.  There is a lovely sense of authenticity to the film, making it feel genuine even when it's a tad too quaint for its own good.  The movie is a contemplative character piece, though it runs head-first into screwball comedy in intervals.  The balancing act never works, at least not in the way it's shooting for.  It's charming in its own way, though it never breaks free from its own modesty.


Trap
⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Thriller
Director:  M. Night Shyamalan
Starring:  Josh Hartnett, Ariel Donoghue, Saleka Shyamalan, Hayley Mills, Allison Pill


Sigh.  Goddammit.  It's another Shyamalan movie.  It feels like we just had one, but then I have to remind myself that was a different Shyamalan.

Shyamalan's latest is more Hitchcockian than his output normally is, which sees Josh Hartnett taking his tween daughter to a pop concert only to discover that the police are closing in on a serial killer at that very concert.  Plot twist:  Hartnett is that very killer!  Now he has to use his wits to escape from the concert with his daughter without getting caught.  Trap is half the most interesting movie Shyamalan has made in years and half the biggest missed opportunity.  Subtlety has never been a strength in Shyamalan movies and he sure as hell seem to be starting now.  Hartnett, in particular, has the opportunity to do a performance with his eyes, but instead is encouraged to do broad facial reactions that kill the mood.  Because of that, the movie's flavor never takes hold, even when suspense setpieces show promise.  And even still, the film's plotting trips up in spurts, leading to four different climaxes that in a row, not even ending on the best one.  I can't blame myself, because I never expect much of anything from Shyamalan movies.  In the case of Trap, I found moments where the movie was willing to engage me on a level that intrigued me, only to break itself after trying too hard to maintain it.  Sorry, movie.  That tells me that it's not me, it's you.

Movies Still Playing At My Theater
Deadpool & Wolverine ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Despicable Me 4 ⭐️⭐️1/2
The Fabulous Four ⭐️⭐️
Fly Me to the Moon ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Inside Out 2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Longlegs ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Twisters ⭐️⭐️

New To Digital
Daddio ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Janet Planet ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Latency ⭐️⭐️
MaXXXine ⭐️⭐️1/2

New To Physical
The First Omen ⭐️⭐️⭐️
I Saw the TV Glow ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
The Zone of Interest ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2

Coming Soon!