Multiplex Madness
Better Man
⭐️⭐️⭐️
Genre: Drama, Comedy, Musical
Director: Michael Gracey
Starring: Robbie Williams, Jonno Davies, Steve Pemberton, Damon Herriman, Raechelle Banno, Alison Steadman, Kate Mulvany
A biopic where APES EVOLVE FROM MEN?!?!?!?!?
2024 was the year for unconventional musician biopics, probably. I didn't get that memo, but here we are. Look, the Lego one I get, because it works as a playful metaphor for lifelong, outside-the-box creativity. I'm not sure I understand why Robbie Williams wants his biopic to be about a CGI ape, unless he just wants to blow out the budget for the sake of eccentricity. Thematically, maybe he's saying he's "a dancing monkey," I think? The closest they come to actually justifying it in the movie itself is when a character calls him "a fucking animal," otherwise we're just asked to roll with it. To be fair, it's pretty funny to just make your lead a chimpanzee for no other reason than "because we can," so what really can I judge about it?
Anyway, Better Man is a biopic about Robbie Williams, where Robbie Williams plays himself as a CGI primate. I don't know shit about Robbie Williams, I probably heard the "nahnahnahnaaaaaaah" song before (whatever the fuck it's called), but, other than that, I have little context for who this wanker is. The film feels like it's intended to be a metaphorical relation of the whirlwind of fame through the lense of drugs and depression, told halfway through a fever dream. In that respect, the movie is a success, even though its successes are minimal and at war with its eccentricity for the movie's heart. But considering how much a disaster the movie is in danger of being at any given moment, the fact that it does anything with success is pretty impressive. The film's style does relate an old hat tale of a troubled celebrity drowning sorrows with substance and sex, and without its florishes there would be very little about this movie to comment on. I guess I should commend the film for finding a slick way to dress it up.
⭐️⭐️
Genre: Drama, Crime, Action
Director: Christian Gudeghast
Starring: Gerard Butler, O'Shea Jackson Jr., Evin Ahmed, Salvatore Esposito, Meadow Williams, Swen Temmel
I've never seen Den of Thieves. Is it any good? Because this one wasn't. Gerard Butler and O'Shea Jackson Jr. are back as their popular characters of...um...the guys from Den of Thieves. This time instead of being wherever they were in the first one and doing whatever they were doing, they're now in France doing a heist for diamonds. Jackson's character is okay with Butler being a cop and joining their caper because reasons. There are probably some dynamics I'm missing from the first film, but I'm not too interested in seeing what they were because I was pretty bored throughout this movie and am not keen to repeat that experience. The thing about heist movies is that they take forever to get to an actual event, and in the meantime they try to keep you hooked with charisma. Den of Thieves 2 substitutes charisma with it's own grizzled, self-serious melodrama and expects the same result. It just feels like a brick wall of machismo grunting, which is probably what Gerard Butler does best, so at least he knows what his range is. To be fair, the heist sequence is the highlight of the movie. It's slick, clever, and has good tension. The rest of the movie anchors it down, so I'm not sure I can recommend it based on that alone. Den of Thieves fans might like it, though.
⭐️⭐️
Genre: Drama
Director: Gia Coppola
Starring: Pamela Anderson, Jamie Lee Curtis, Billie Lourd, Dave Bautista, Brenda Song, Kiernan Shipka
I'm trying to think about whether or not I've ever actually seen anything starring Pamela Anderson. Obviously I know who she is, because I hit puberty in the 90s, but I don't think I've ever sat down and watched anything with her in it. I've seen the occasional episode of Baywatch, but that was mostly because my dad would stop on it every once in a while. I saw enough of it to know that despite the female forms on display, it wasn't really my cup of tea. Looking down her filmography list, it looks like my only context for her entire career was a small role in Scary Movie 3 and a few episodes of the Spike TV animated series Stripperella, which I watched hoping for a good laugh, but, like the rest of their animated comedy line-up, it was trash. I also saw her in King of the Hill and Saturday Night Live, probably. So, I'm more familiar with Pamela Anderson the "image" and not Pamela Anderson the actress. If The Last Showgirl's argument sunk in correctly, I probably wasn't the only one. It always seemed to me like Anderson was someone who wasn't really taken seriously, but people paid attention to because of the size of her bust, and she disappeared because she got older and younger boobs were thrust into the spotlight. It's a really shitty thing for a person to go through, and The Last Showgirl is here to hammer that message home. I wish it had done so better.
Anderson plays a woman in her fifties who still performs as a member of a Las Vegas Berlesque act called La Razzle Dazzle, only to struggle to move on when she hears it's closing down. Also, she has a strained relationship with her daughter because she spent so much time being a showgirl and not enough being a mom, maybe. Anderson is pretty well cast here, though I'm less likely to give her awards hype for this performance, but I'm going to admit that I'm not in love with her role mostly because I'm not in love with the screenplay. It's cool that Anderson got a late-stage art film role that turned some heads. And the "Former sex symbol struggles with generational shift leaving her behind" story seems personal for her, I just wish they had made it less monotonous. The movie is less a substantive look as its theme and more of a story of a self-centered woman in her fifties having a nervous breakdown. The character's thoughts and feelings are probably very justifiable, but there is little in the story that explores them in an open way. She glows about her glamor, admires beauty, but usually when reality comes knocking, she often avoids it. That last aspect of the story needs to be explored more, because when it pops up, it doesn't go anywhere. There's a scene halfway through the film where one of her fellow dancers, played by Kiernan Shipka, visits her in the middle of a personal crisis and Anderson's character turns her away because she's too absorbed in her own crisis. It feels like, as presented, this should be an important point in the story's emotional core, but it's kind of brushed off as the film continues. Little things like this often present themselves in the story, but the film deflates them as it reverts back to its primary point: the unfair treatment of women as they age. I agree that treatment sucks, but I also think a film should be a more rounded package than this.
Movies Still Playing At My Theater
Babygirl ⭐️⭐️⭐️
A Complete Unknown ⭐️⭐️⭐️
The Count of Monte Cristo ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
The Damned ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Gladiator II ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Homestead ⭐️
Moana 2 ⭐️⭐️
Mufasa: The Lion King ⭐️⭐️1/2
Nosferatu ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Sonic the Hedgehog 3 ⭐️⭐️1/2
Wicked Part I ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
New To Physical
Saturday Night ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
We Live in Time ⭐️⭐️1/2
Coming Soon!