Monday, January 19, 2026

Cinema Playground Journal 2026: Week 3 (My Cinema Playground)

Multiplex Madness


28 Years Later...:  The Bone Temple
⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Genre:  Horror
Director:  Nia DaCosta
Starring:  Ralph Fiennes, Jack O'Connell, Alfie Williams, Erin Kellyman, Chi Lewis-Parry


I called the previous 28 Years Later the equivalent of reading a boring YA novel and I absolutely still think that.  That movie is all exposition and meandering with minor thematic resonance at its destination that definitely was not worth the journey.  I wasn't really looking forward to a sequel but here we are.  I didn't know I needed a buddy stoner movie between Ralph Fiennes and a zombie in my life but now it's here and I dig it.

The movie sees our child protagonist from the previous film taken captive by a group of Satanists who wander the landscape and mutilate people.  Meanwhile, Ralph Fiennes gets experimental with an alpha infected man, who responds positively to his sedatives.  The movie doesn't always feel like a natural progression from the previous film, which is its weakest aspect.  The protagonist from the previous film is severly underplayed here, becoming a passive hitchhiker who just keeps his head down.  I felt my interest in the 28 Years Later storyline spiked when Fiennes enters the picture, so I was happy to see the second film focused more heavily on him.  That might make the movie less appealing to some of the fans of the previous film.  For my money, it makes up ground for just how weird and insane it is.  This movie is pure macabre extravagance from minute one and never lets up, from an apocalyptic Harley Quinn wannabe doing a Teletubbies dance to its climax where Fiennes puts on a one-man death metal show.  And if you think I'm exaggerating, you clearly haven't seen the movie.  This movie is a blast and it probably renewed my interest in this franchise.  I don't know if anything that follows this will be able to live up to its insanity but I'm willing to see what they have up their sleeve.


All You Need Is Kill
⭐️⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Science Fiction, Action
Director:  Kenichiro Akimoto
Starring:  Not Tom Cruise nor Emily Blunt


I don't always see the anime movies that come to my theater because most of them are spin-offs of TV shows that I've never seen and I would be completely lost if I even tried to follow them.  All You Need Is Kill caught my attention because I recognized the title, which was a Japanese novel and manga series that inspired one of Tom Cruise's best movies, Edge of Tomorrow.  I was curious what a Japanese adaptation might be, though it seems that the Cruise movie was actually a straighter adaptation than this movie.  All You Need Is Kill refocuses the narrative on Rita (who was Emily Blunt's character in Edge), and the film takes place on the first day of an alien invasion rather than deep into one.  Rita finds her day repeating over and over again as she dies from the deadly alien attack repeatedly, hoping to try and use the time loop to stop the invasion.  I think this movie would have benefited if it tried to be a prequel to the original story, showing how Rita became "Full Metal Bitch," but that's not what this is.  This is just a reimagining of the entire concept utilizing a supporting character as a main.  Still, the movie is an entertaining time loop story, though the most interesting aspects were already used in prior versions of this story.  If you like Edge of Tomorrow, you might find this to be an interesting curiosity.


Charlie the Wonderdog
⭐️
Genre:  Comedy, Superhero, Adventure
Director:  Shea Wageman
Starring:  Owen Wilson


A dog gets kidnapped by aliens and gets superpowers in this family film equivalent of watching absolutely nothing.  Everything you expect this movie to do is accounted for but it doesn't even have the decency to do it in an appealing way.  The movie is so dull and lacking personality, only opting to hit the most basic needs of a children's movie.  It's a movie that actively chooses not to tell a story, believing that "see dog fly" is sufficient.  What the movie doesn't realize is that children are likely to opt in favor of similarly premised movies like Bolt or Dogman instead because those movies actually leave an impression on them.  This movie will just make them stare blankly at it because it's in front of them.


Dead Man's Wire
⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Genre:  Thriller
Director:  Gus Van Sant
Starring:  Bill Skarsgård, Dacre Montgomery, Cary Elwes, Myha'la, Colman Domingo, Al Pacino


A movie starring two of my favorite current working actors, Colman Domingo and Bill Skarsgård?  Don't mind if I do!

This thriller, based on a true story, sees Skarsgård as a man who was screwed over by a mortgage company, who then decides to retaliate by taking the son of the company president hostage.  The details of the situation can feel absurd at times, with the intricate trap details that force the cops to comply with his demands, but, sure enough, most of this actually happened and the movie has the footage to prove it.  This movie is mostly pretty tight, though the film does slow its pace down when it's reduced to Skarsgård and former Power Ranger Dacre Montgomery sitting in a room with awkward tension, which is most of the movie.  The ace in the hole is Skarsgård, though.  I love watching Skarsgård in anything because you never know what performance you're going to get but, whatever it is, you know it's going to be good.  This is no different, playing a man who is at the end of his rope who has an irrational form of rationality.  That Skarsgård can take the insane to the edge of near-sanity but not quite committing to crossing that threshold is a testament to his talent.  The movie is fun to watch because he's fun to watch.  The movie is tense because of how stressed he is, and you never know where that stress will take him.  The whole thing rides on his shoulders and he takes that weight and runs with it.


Night Patrol
⭐️1/2
Genre:  Horror
Director:  Ryan Prows
Starring:  Jermaine Fowler, Justin Long, Freddie Gibbs, R.J. Cyler, YG, Nicki Micheaux, Flying Lotus, CM Punk, Dermot Mulroney


In case you were wondering what Sinners would look like if it sucked, here comes Night Patrol, a brand new take on the Black experience and racial tension underlined by vampires doing vampire shit.  One can't fault Night Patrol for not trying.  What can be faulted to it is that its metaphors have gotten so over-stimulated that they suffer erectile dysfunction and just can't satisfy.  The film hits the streets of Los Angeles, focusing on the infamous street gangs of the Bloods and the Crips, though the real enemy is the L.A.P.D., who are actually vampires out to prey upon every Black person in the city, in a not-so-subtle allegory for police power abuse, racial discrimination, and excessive force.  There's an idea in this movie that I like but the film itself just can't execute.  Its script is conceptually anemic, clearly working with some sort of lore but acting as if the logic its using should be obvious to any asshole.  Its self-explanatory elements can only go so far, as it comes off as undeveloped characters running through a whirlwind of bullshit.  The movie swiftly becomes a swift barrage of passive exposition delivered during chaos, meanwhile Justin Long is running around as a newly turned vampire searching for blood to drink like a college stoner on an all-night fraternity beer run.  It all comes to a close with a climax involving a Green Lantern ring and a glowing spear that hums like a lightsaber.  That might read like I'm exaggerating but that's literally what happens.  I'll give the movie props for having an idea and trying to deliver it with swagger, but the movie is unpolished and its script is unfinished.  I was kinda hoping this movie would be something.  I guess that's my fault for having optimism.


No Other Choice
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Comedy
Director:  Park Chan-wook
Starring:  Lee Byung-hun, Son Ye-jin, Park Hee-soon, Lee Sung-min, Yeom Hye-ran, Cha Seung-wan


South Korea's submission for the International Oscar award is a black comedy about how much the rat race sucks.  I didn't need this movie to tell me this but I am very happy that it did so in such an inspired and entertaining way.  Lee Byung-hung stars as an out-of-work manager for a paper company who starts to find his comfortable life unraveling.  Desperate to fill a top management position, he creates a hit list of his competition and sets out to assassinate each one.  It's a very entertaining premise that gets more unhinged as it goes, enhanced by some powerful satire.  Metaphorically, the movie showcases the cut-throat nature of shrinking job security in an industry that has little value for you as an individual.  One gets their hands dirty to get on top, and maybe there was cruelty in one's actions, but it's easy to wave that off when you're reaping the rewards.  This is very relevant and resonate messaging, packaged in a uniquely entertaining, unpredictable, and thought-provoking film.  No Other Choice is the type of treat I was looking for all of last year and just couldn't find.  Some assholes were trying to tell me that the movie I was looking for was One Battle After Another but I'm pretty sure they were trying to get me to look the other way so they could smash my head with a potted plant.


Sheepdog
⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Drama
Director:  Steven Greyhm
Starring:  Steven Greyhm, Vondie Curtis-Hall


Sheepdog is apparently a passion project for writer/director/star Steven Greyhm, who stuck with trying to sell the film for thirteen years.  Now with the film finally on screens, one can only assume that the reason it took so long to make was because other people have already made this movie, complete with the crisis hotline number at the end.  Did we need another?  Arguably, the message is an important one, but when you have a movie like My Dead Friend Zoe releasing not even a year ago, doing its inspired spin on the mental health message and its powerful gut-punch of an ending, it's hard to look at a movie like this utilizing its well-worn cliches and go "Yeah, this movie needs to be made."

Greyhm plays the main character, a veteran who lives with stress, trauma, and guilt on his shoulders, being forced by court order to seek therapy.  Meanwhile, his ex-wife's estranged father, also a troubled veteran, comes to town and the duo strike a friendship.  All of this and a lot of melodrama.  Greyhm isn't content with the soldier backstory for his character.  He needs even more fucked up shit to happen to him, which includes a bonus backstory that the movie tries to play coy with but is pretty easy to figure out from the context clues available.  Then when the movie drops the bomb that it thinks it's being foxy about, it's so overdone that it's almost accidentally funny.  It's an objectively bad scene that is pinned as the emotional crux of a mediocre movie.

I don't know much about Steven Greyhm.  From my admittedly little research, it seems he is a career actor who has no actual military background.  I'm not sure why this subject matter is important to him but I'm going to trust that it is for good reason.  All I know about Greyhm is that he looks like the bastard child of Mark Wahlberg and Elden Henson, has no screen presence, and has a really weird beard.  What I do appreciate about Greyhm is that he worked actual therapeutic work into his movie.  That's the best part of it, really.  But these details are not exactly drama, especially if the personal details of his trauma are falling flat.  Sheepdog isn't exactly a bad movie.  It might actually be serviceable to the audience it was made for.  What weighs it down is that it's a stilted movie made by artists who think they have something important to say when in reality their work is just a trite regurgitation of themes that other movies have done better.  Greyhm never justifies why this movie should exist in addition to the ones that already address the concepts he wants to address except that he just wanted to put a bunch of tropes in a blender and drink the milkshake.  That's a disservice to the message you're trying to send.


Signing Tony Raymond
⭐️1/2
Genre:  Comedy, Sports
Director:  Glen Owen
Starring:  Michael Mosley, Mira Sorvino, Rob Morgan, Marshawn Lynch, Brian Bosworth, Champ Bailey, Charles Esten


Someone saw the movie Air and thought to themselves "This movie ain't vanilla enough," then decided to rock the sports world with their own patented and admittedly impressive level of blandness.  Signing Tony Raymond's most notable aspect is that I keep almost accidentally calling it "Singing Tony Randall," which probably would have been a better movie, to be honest.  The film centers on a Louisiana University football coach who has been sent to recruit a promising high school player to their team, only to find other coaches who are willing to play dirty and a lot of rednecks who are willing to hustle him.  The film stars Michael Mosley, who is pretty much just playing Dollar Store Zachary Levi, which is weird because Levi isn't above doing movies like this.  He kinda fumbles around with a daffy grin on his face in situations that grow increasingly absurd, with so much good-hearted white trash that you might as well rebrand this movie as Joe Dirt 3.  The weirdest thing about this movie is that they take some huge swings at "big lol" moments that are just slight goofy lines that might induce a smirk but they are so underlined that you can tell the movie thinks they are hysterical.  The movie is too unsure of what its tone is to actually be funny.  Some people are playing it like its a humorous drama, while others are full-blown Looney Tunes.  There's no naturality to this movie, as it has more than a few moments where it doesn't feel like the anybody is seeking the obvious solution to any problem the characters are having.  This movie is like a circus clown.  I can tell just wants to make me smile but it makes me queasy for some odd reason.

Throughout most of this movie I went back and forth undecided on whether this was a bad movie or just an uninspired movie.  My final thought was that it wears its lack of inspiration so shamelessly that it almost seems proud of it, and that just rubs me the wrong way.  If the movie has one virtue that makes me want to lay off, it's that it does seem to be made with a good heart.  It wears it on its sleeve sometimes but it doesn't counter the many things it does carelessly.

Netflix & Chill


Killer Whale
⭐️
Streaming On:  VOD
Genre:  Horror
Director:  Jo-Anne Brechin
Starring:  Virginia Gardner, Mel Jarnson, Mitchell Hope


I didn't have to watch this movie.  I chose to watch this movie.  I paid money to rent this movie.  January is the month for shit horror movies and none of the ones I've seen so far were adequately trashy enough.  I wanted to watch this movie because it looked so stupid.  It did not disappoint.

I don't suppose anybody remembers a movie from 1977 called Orca, which was Dino De Laurentiis's big stab at the post-Jaws creature feature.  The movie featured an Orca that was hunting whaler Richard Harris for killing its mate.  Orca is a bad movie but it's certainly an interesting specimen in its era of monster movie because it feels like it's trying to be an emotional epic adventure and not just a cash grab.  Suffice it to say, Orca wasn't Jaws.  And Killer Whale isn't Orca, which probably says everything I need to about Killer Whale.  If I were to say more about what kind of movie Killer Whale is, I'd say if Orca is a post-Jaws creature feature, Killer Whale is a post-The Shallows creature feature.  By that, I mean to say it's basically The Shallows again, but with an Orca instead of a shark.  I'd call Killer Whale a low rent copy of The Shallows but The Shallows was just a copy of The Reef with big studio money and ridiculous setpieces, so fuck The Shallows.

The familiar premise sees two gal pals on vacation only to be trapped on a rock off the coast, hunted by an angry Orca that is upset at being in captivity for years.  Like the afore mentioned Orca horror movie from the 70's, this Orca also is vengeful because apparently its calf was either stolen or died or something.  The movie keeps it vague what exactly happened, but the fact that it treats it as some sort of conspiracy is really funny because there is no payoff to it.  In fact, a lot of the setup in this movie is over-the-top.  There is a superfluous backstory to Virginia Gardner's character who had a boyfriend who saved her from a bank robbery and died at the scene.  The entire sequence is staged in a goofy way because his heroics are dangerous and stupid, making him come off as an impulsive idiot, only to have him save the day out of dumb luck and mowed down in the parking lot with a truck during the tender aftermath.  It's so jarring and sudden that it inspires laughter when the movie is trying to be emotional.  The movie then jumps to a year later, where Gardner still has baggage from this irrelevance but just wants to have a good time with her rambunctious friend, bad shit happens, then they just gotta survive somehow.

Come to think of it, the plotting in this movie has a lot in common with another Virginia Gardner movie from a few years ago called Fall.  That movie didn't center on Gardner, who had the role of the wild, horny, social media influencer bestie who was obviously going to die because they wouldn't kill the main character.  This time she switches roles.  At least that means she's moving up in her career, right?

As for whether or not this is an entertaining bad movie, it can be at times but it's often just not worth a rental fee.  The movie mostly feels like an excuse to get Gardner and Jarnson down on their hands and knees so they can thrust their bikini butts at the camera, so if you like bikini butts, you'll get bikini butts.  To be honest, I was hoping for more goofy Orca action.  There is a lengthy period where the movie is nothing but Gardner and Jarnson on a rock sorting out emotional issues and the Orca just disappears from the movie.  If they were interesting issues, it would be one thing, but they're two-dimensional characters in a one-dimensional movie.  I did get some good laughs at an open moment of revealed betrayal that sours their relationship.  It genuinely is shocking but not because of story reasons, rather because it serves so little purpose to the movie and kind of makes the already funny opening even funnier.  The Orca action we do get is blurry with quick cuts of bad CGI, and it's not just limited to our antagonist beastie either.  The rear projection in this movie is a sight to behold because it's not just that the actors are composited badly on top of a poorly rendered CGI backdrop, it's that they tried to fake the distance to the mainland by making the backdrop look fuzzy and they also made the fake water that's supposedly in their immediate surroundings equally fuzzy too, so most of the movie is made up of crystal clear shots of the actresses on top of blurry water.  Gardner and Jarnson are so clearly acting in a vacuum that it feels like they could have shot most of their scenes in a parking lot.

I went into Killer Whale wanting to watch a bad movie and I got what I paid for.  I wish it were one to be enthusiastic about but many bad movies are bad just because they're not anything.  Killer Whale is a movie that could have been a wacky good time but wound up lacking the necessary entertainment value for a delightful shitshow.  Too bad.

Movies Still Playing At My Theater
Anaconda ⭐️⭐️
Avatar:  Fire and Ash ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Hamnet ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
The Housemaid ⭐️⭐️1/2
I Was a Stranger ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Is This Thing On? ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Marty Supreme ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Primate ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Zootopia 2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️

New To Digital
Dust Bunny ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Rental Family ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Song Sung Blue ⭐️⭐️1/2

Coming Soon!

Monday, January 12, 2026

Cinema Playground Journal 2026: Week 2 (My Cinema Playground)

Multiplex Madness


Father Mother Sister Brother
⭐️⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Drama
Director:  Jim Jarmusch
Starring:  Tom Waits, Adam Driver, Mayim Bialik, Charlotte Rampling, Cate Blanchett, Vicky Krieps, Indya Moore, Luka Sabbat


This film is a trio of short films told through awkward family interactions.  I don't know why I saw this movie.  I just recently experienced all I needed of this at Christmas.  The first two feature adult children visiting their parents, which are depicted as strained circumstances for one reason or another.  Either way, the kids clearly don't want to be there and are only doing so out of courtesy.  The third switches things up, showcasing a younger pair of siblings living in the aftermath of the recent death of both of their parents.  The sudden change is jarring, though likely deliberate.  It feels like a dramatic presentation to hammer at the idea of cherishing your family while you have them because you don't know when they'll be gone.  It's a warm idea, although quite slight for an arthouse drama.  I prefer movies like this to have a meatier, more engaging idea at their core, but this is certainly a movie that was made with love.


Greenland:  Migration
⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Disaster
Director:  Ric Roman Waugh
Starring:  Gerard Butler, Morena Baccarin, Roman Griffin Davis


If you watched any movies at all during the Covid theater shutdown of 2020, you might remember Greenland being one of the better ones available.  It was a generic looking disaster movie that wasn't so bad when you sat down and watched it.  I don't know if we were in a state of mind that said "any movie is good movie" at the time, but I was one of those who did find the movie an exceptional diversion.  If nothing else, it gave everyone a Gerard Butler disaster movie that wasn't Geostorm, and that's a good thing.  I'm kind of surprised it got a sequel.  I'm not sure how popular Greenland is as a movie.  Its success is hard to gage because of the time it released and because it was primarily a VOD movie.  Those VOD sales must have been pretty great for a second one to happen.

The second one picks up years after the first, and the Greenland bunker that houses survivors from the catastrophic devastation of the first movie has been compromised.  Gerard Butler and his family then trek through Europe to find a rumored safe spot that is supposedly thriving.  The movie is very Land Before Time, walking through a desolate landscape to find "the Great Valley," and it's ending is pretty much just War for the Planet of the Apes.  But the original wasn't peak originality either.  While I didn't rewatch it to see if it holds up, I do remember it being equally shameless with its trope-chasing.  I think the difference between the two might be that we were running from an easily understood event in the first film, while this sequel has the characters stumbling into barely understood scenarios that are lacking context.  I think the attempt at a story here is that the film is about simple people who are barely glimpsing other survivors in the middle of their own survivor story but the result feels very flakey and non-committal.  Most supporting characters come and go with very little to say or do, and the movie will take them away in a moment that it implies is emotionally devastating but it's always for characters that we have no real attachment to.  The movie wants to feel weighty but it doesn't have the heart to achieve it.  But if you love the original Greenland, there is some base appeal in this continuation of that film's characters if you're interested in seeing if they made it or not, but it doesn't hit the same.  And distanced from the trying period that the original Greenland released in, it probably was never going to.


I Was a Stranger
⭐️⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Drama
Director:  Brandt Anderson
Starring:  Yasmine Al Massri, Yahya Mahayni, Omar Sy, Ziad Bakri, Constantine Markoulakis, Jason Beghe, Ayman Samman, Massa Daoud


Okay, fine.  I'll throw Angel Studios a bone and say that, by their standards, this movie is actually pretty good.  It's not a perfect film, by any means, but if they're starting to acquire more movies like this (or Sketch and Truth & Treason, for that matter) over the garbage they normally shovel, then there might be some promise in their future.  I Was a Stranger incorporates a nonlinear narrative of short films centering on different protagonists who are separate from each other who finds their paths intersecting at crucial moments, helping refugees escape a war torn Syria.  The plotting is not wildly imaginative, the last movie to utilize this format more effectively was the horror film Weapons, but the movie utilizes it in as a more heart-grabbing human spirit portrayal that is very targeting of Angel's favored audience.  The movie is shameless in its pandering to that audience at times, as its melodrama is thick, ripe, and rank.  I personally wasn't emotionally engaged because of how try-hard the movie can be, but the film's harrowing moments are quite effective.  Overall, the movie is a celebration of empathy, which is something that I think the people at Angel seem to think all of their films are, they're just very one-dimensional about it.  I Was a Stranger is two-dimensional in its portrayal, so it's not quite at a nuanced level but it shows improvement for the distributor that bought it.  That's pending whether or not they can actually see what makes this film different than their normal fare.


Is This Thing On?
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Drama, Comedy
Director:  Bradley Cooper
Starring:  Will Arnett, Laura Dern, Andra Day, Bradley Cooper


Bradley Cooper is back, reminding us that he's a director now, even if we tend to forget it.  That's kind of odd because he hasn't really missed thusfar.  All three of his movies have been varying levels of great.  Is This Thing On? is my favorite, likely because I'm a depressed middle-aged man also.  The film sees Will Arnett divorcing wife Laura Dern, choosing to vent his sorrows in a humorous way as a stand-up comedian.  To be fair, all the best stand-ups do this because jokes are just funnier if there is a truth underneath them (or you can be Jeff Dunham and just use puppets instead of jokes).  The best thing about this movie is that it understands this.  The movie is a very engaging look at how one deflects stress and trauma with humor.  Will Arnett's dry delivery really enhances the experience, because he can deliver his dialogue in a hilarious way that includes undertones that he's trying to process just what is happening to him.  Laura Dern is also a standout as his frustrated wife who is has an attachment to him but just can't anymore.  This is also the first movie that Cooper has made that he didn't star in as the lead, though he does appear as an eccentric supporting character.  I think he thinks it's the juicier role but it's actually a little forgettable.  But don't tell him that because he might steal back the lead role from people like Will Arnett in the future and the films would be the poorer for it.  Arnett and Cooper craft a drama that is both frustrating and humorous at the same time, and their combined strengths make it a must-see.


Primate
⭐️⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Horror
Director:  Johannes Roberts
Starring:  Johnny Sequoyah, Jessica Alexander, Troy Kotsur, Victoria Wyant, Gia Hunter, Benjamin Cheng


Oh no.  Amy the Gorilla from Congo got Cujo'd and decided to do a Rise of the Planet of the Apes.  47 Meters Down helmer Johannes Roberts returns to creature features with this goofball about a pet chimp who contracts rabies and terrorizes the teenage daughters of his adopted family, who are partying with friends for the weekend.  It's a movie that looked aggressively stupid in marketing but was getting positive buzz online, which took me by surprise because I was pretty certain this movie was going to be nothing.  Turns out the movie has value.  Primate is stupid but stupidly entertaining.  The central friend group is well developed, the main set is enclosed but expansive, and violent setpieces are suspenseful and extravagant.  It's a fun horror movie, which is all one can reasonably ask of it.  If I were to point out a flaw in its design, it's that we don't really get any time with Ben the chimp to see his dynamic and relationships with people before he contracts rabies.  It feels like there is an element of tragedy to this movie that it is not taking advantage of, because the idea of the whole movie is essentially the ending to Old Yeller.  I don't think the movie is out to wrench hearts though, so it opts to keep Ben an emotionally distant antagonist so that when he meets his fate we don't feel upset about it.  It's mildly disappointing that the movie didn't think it could be satisfying as a thriller and emotionally engaging at the same time but there's also very little wrong with the movie as is.

Movies Still Playing At My Theater
Anaconda ⭐️⭐️
Avatar:  Fire and Ash ⭐️⭐️⭐️
The Housemaid ⭐️⭐️1/2
Marty Supreme ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
The Plague ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Song Sung Blue ⭐️⭐️1/2
We Bury the Dead ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Wicked:  For Good ⭐️⭐️1/2
Zootopia 2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️

New To Digital
Not Without Hope ⭐️⭐️1/2
Predator:  Badlands ⭐️⭐️⭐️

New To Physical
Afterburn ⭐️⭐️1/2
Shelby Oaks ⭐️1/2
Tron:  Ares ⭐️⭐️

Coming Soon!

Monday, January 5, 2026

Cinema Playground Journal 2026: Week 1 (My Cinema Playground)

Multiplex Madness


The Dutchman
⭐️1/2
Genre:  Thriller
Director:  Andre Gaines
Starring:  André Holland, Kate Mara, Zazie Beetz, Stephen McKinley Henderson, Aldis Hodge


The Dutchman is loosely based on the Dutchman play from 1964, and by "loosely based" I mean that it recontextualizes it in a meta narrative where the play exists but the events of reality start to mirror it.  The purpose of this seems to be a statement on how people see themselves in art, and the framing device tries to project the play's portrayal of Caucasian power over the Black community as something that never became irrelevant.  If there's one thing I'll give this movie, it's that it took a huge artistic swing.  Unfortunately, it turns the narrative into a baffling mess littered with nonsense.  What should be a story of a white woman exercising her societal power over a Black man is turned into something that is handling too much surrealism to take a tangible form.  And even still, the film is written too clumsily to pull its ambitions off.  The screenplay wants the audience to know for certain that it's a metaphor through constantly reminding you of its themes by saying them out loud.  It also tells the audience that it still doesn't trust them to understand it with needless bookends explaining how themes work.  This movie is a dull pain in the ass to watch.  I really wish I saw the movie the filmmakers thought they were making instead.


The Plague
⭐️⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Drama, Thriller
Director:  Charlie Polinger
Starring:  Everett Blunck, Kayo Martin, Kenny Rasmussen, Joel Edgerton


Interesting psychological drama sees a boy struggling with social acceptance at water polo camp, where another outcast boy sits on the outskirts of the group and said to have "the plague."  The film is a rather unsubtle portrayal of the psychology of social groups and outsiders in one's youth, especially the effect of rejection on one's psyche.  It challenges the limiting societal "answer" of "being yourself," as the film steamrolls down a self-destructive path for its characters because scenarios are always in the extreme.  The movie doesn't have a counter-moral, as its message is more or less "Life's a bitch and fuck everyone else."  The movie can feel incomplete because of that, but it knows exactly what it's saying.  It also doesn't care if it gives the viewer closure or not.  It screams its message then walks away.


We Bury the Dead
⭐️⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Drama, Thriller, Horror
Director:  Zak Hilditch
Starring:  Daisy Ridley, Mark Coles Smith, Brenton Thwaits


This more subtle take on the zombie apocalypse subgenre has the U.S. testing an experimental weapon off the coast of Austrailia, which accidentally wipes a decent chunk of the Aussie population out with it.  Volunteers are called in to haul corpses off, including Daisy Ridley, whose husband was within the blast radius.  Making the job somewhat more complicated is that several of the deceased are reviving, wondering around as empty shells of themselves.  Nobody knows why this happens, though it's enough to make Ridley sneak through the outback and search for her husband, wanting to see if he was one of the revived people or not.  It's a quieter, more dramatic take on the zombie movie.  The zombies in this movie aren't even necessarily a threat, they just exist.  The core of the story lies in closure, the desire to know instead of living in uncertainty, which is the most existential take on a zombie flick in quite some time.  The film's uniqueness is sometimes at odds with it leaning into tropes of its subgenre, even if they do prove to be thematically relevant.  When the film is fully breathing as its own entity is when it shines brightest.  Daisy Ridley is really good here, playing her character with the quiet persistence of needing to see the inevitable with her own two eyes in order to answer a vague question rattling in her head.  She enhances the film's grief themes quite well.  She's a minor gem in this bleak and sad little movie.

Movies Still Playing At My Theater
Anaconda ⭐️⭐️
Avatar:  Fire and Ash ⭐️⭐️⭐️
The Housemaid ⭐️⭐️1/2
Marty Supreme ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Song Sung Blue ⭐️⭐️1/2
Wicked:  For Good ⭐️⭐️1/2
Zootopia 2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️

New To Digital
Wicked:  For Good ⭐️⭐️1/2

New To Physical

Coming Soon!

Sunday, January 4, 2026

Cinema Playground Journal 2025 Archive

2025:  Week 1 (The Count of Monte Cristo, The Damned)
2025:  Week 2 (Better Man, Den of Thieves:  Pantera, The Last Showgirl)
2025:  Week 3 (The Brutalist, One of Them Days, Wolf Man)
2025:  Week 4 (Brave the Dark, Flight Risk, Inheritance, Nickel Boys, Presence, Sing Sing, Star Trek:  Section 31, Black Box Diaries, Flow)
2025:  Week 5 (Companion, Dog Man, Love Me, The Seed of the Sacred Fig, Valiant One, September 5, Maria, The Six Triple Eight)
2025:  Week 6 (Bring Them Down, Heart Eyes, I'm Still Here, Love Hurts, Wallace & Gromit:  Vengeance Most Fowl) 
2025:  Week 7 (Captain America:  Brave New World, Paddington in Peru, Oscar Nominated Short Films, The Girl with the Needle)
2025:  Week 8 (Emilia Perez, The Monkey, The Unbreakable Boy, No Other Land, Memoir of a Snail, Sugarcane)
2025:  Week 9 (Ex-Husbands, Last Breath, My Dead Friend Zoe, Riff Raff)
2025:  Week 10 (In the Lost Lands, Mickey 17, Queen of the Ring, Rule Breakers, The Rule of Jenny Pen, Seven Veils)
2025:  Week 11 (Black Bag, The Day the Earth Blew Up, Novocaine, Opus, The Electric State, Last Take:  Rust and the Story of Halyna)
2025:  Week 12 (The Alto Knights, Ash, Locked, Magazine Dreams, Snow White)
2025:  Week 13 (Audrey's Children, Day of Reckoning, Death of a Unicorn, The Penguin Lessons, A Working Man, The Woman in the Yard)
2025:  Week 14 (The Friend, Hell of a Summer, The Luckiest Man in America, A Minecraft Movie)
2025:  Week 15 (The Amateur, Drop, Warfare)
2025:  Week 16 (Sinners, Sneaks, The Ugly Stepsister, The Wedding Banquet, The Ballad of Wallis Island, Bob Trevino Likes It)
2025:  Week 17 (The Accountant 2, The Legend of Ochi, On Swift Horses, Until Dawn)
2025:  Week 18 (Bonjour Tristesse, Raising the Bar:  The Alma Richards Story, Rosario, The Surfer, Thunderbolts)
2025:  Week 19 (Clown in a Cornfield, Fight or Flight, Juliette & Romeo, Shadow Force)
2025:  Week 20 (Final Destination:  Bloodlines, Hurry Up Tomorrow, The Ruse, Things Like This)
2025:  Week 21 (Friendship, The Last Rodeo, Lilo & Stitch, Mission:  Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part 2, Fear Street:  Prom Queen)
2025:  Week 22 (Bring Her Back, Karate Kid:  Legends, Jane Austen Wrecked My Life, Tornado)
2025:  Week 23 (Ballerina, Dangerous Animals, The Phoenician Scheme, The Ritual, Predator:  Killer of Killers)
2025:  Week 24 (How to Train Your Dragon, The Life of Chuck, Materialists, The Unholy Trinity)
2025:  Week 25 (28 Years Later..., Bride Hard, Elio)
2025:  Week 26 (F1, Hot Milk, M3GAN 2.0)
2025:  Week 27 (Jurassic World:  Rebirth, Dora and the Search for Sol Dorado, Heads of State, Long Distance)
2025:  Week 28 (Abraham's Boys, Superman)
2025:  Week 29 (Eddington, I Know What You Did Last Summer, Smurfs)
2025:  Week 30 (The Fantastic 4:  First Steps; The Home; House on Eden; Oh, Hi!; Sorry, Baby; Happy Gilmore 2)
2025:  Week 31 (The Bad Guys 2, The Naked Gun, She Rides Shotgun, Together, War of the Worlds)
2025:  Week 32 (Freakier Friday, My Mother's Wedding, Sketch, Strange Harvest, Weapons)
2025:  Week 33 (Americana, East of Wall, Jimmy and Stiggs, Nobody 2, Went Up the Hill, Witchboard, Night Always Comes)
2025:  Week 34 (Eden, Honey Don't!, Ne Zha 2, Primitive War, Relay, Eenie Meanie)
2025:  Week 35 (Caught Stealing, The Roses, The Short Game, The Toxic Avenger, The Thursday Murder Club)
2025:  Week 36 (The Conjuring:  Last Rites, Lurker, Splitsville, The Threesome, Tinã, Twinless)
2025:  Week 37 (The Baltimorons, Downton Abbey:  The Grand Finale, The Long Walk, Spinal Tap II:  The End Continues, Traumatika)
2025: Week 38 (Afterburn, A Big Bold Beautiful Journey, Him, The History of Sound, The Senior, Xeno, Waltzing with Brando)
2025:  Week 39 (Dead of Winter, Eleanor the Great, Gabby's Dollhouse:  The Movie, The Lost Bus, One Battle After Another, The Strangers:  Chapter 2)
2025:  Week 40 (Anemone, Bone Lake, Coyotes, Good Boy, The Smashing Machine, V/H/S/Halloween)
2025:  Week 41 (Kiss of the Spider Woman, Roofman, Soul on Fire, Tron:  Ares, The Woman in Cabin 10)
2025:  Week 42 (After the Hunt, Black Phone 2, Good Fortune, Pets on a Train, Truth & Treason, Urchin)
2025:  Week 43 (Blue Moon, Frankenstein, Last Days, Regretting You, Shelby Oaks, Springsteen:  Deliver Me from Nowhere)
2025:  Week 44 (Anniversary, Bugonia, Stitch Head, Violent Ends)
2025:  Week 45 (Christy, Die My Love, Grand Prix of Europe, Little Amélie or the Character of Rain, Long Shadows, Lost & Found in Cleveland, Nuremberg, Predator:  Badlands, Sarah's Oil, Unexpected Christmas)
2025:  Week 46 (The Carpenter's Son, Keeper, King Ivory, Muzzle:  City of Wolves, Now You See Mee:  Now You Don't, The Running Man)
2025:  Week 47 (Rental Family, Sisu:  Road to Revenge, Wicked:  For Good, Sentimental Value, Deathstalker)
2025:  Week 48 (Eternity, The Thing with Feathers, Wake Up Dead Man, Zootopia 2)
2025:  Week 49 (100 Nights of Hero, Fackham Hall, Five Nights at Freddy's 2, Hamnet)
2025:  Week 50 (Dust Bunny; Ella McCay; Not Without Hope; Silent Night, Deadly Night; Influencers)
2025:  Week 51 (Avatar:  Fire and Ash, The Housemaid, The SpongeBob Movie:  The Search for SquarePants, Demon Squad:  Tooth and Claw)
2015:  Week 52 (Anaconda, Marty Supreme, Song Sung Blue)

Monday, December 29, 2025

Cinema Playground Journal 2025: Week 52 (My Cinema Playground)

Multiplex Madness


Anaconda
⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Comedy, Horror
Director:  Tom Gormican
Starring:  Jack Black, Paul Rudd, Thandiwee Newton, Steve Zahn, Daniela Melchoir, Selton Mello


Personally, I'm one who is going to give a movie a lot of slack to be what it wants to be.  But there are also times where I just have to smile and nod and back away slowly.  Anaconda is one of those times.  I guess, if you're going to do a meta parody movie about a specific monster movie that's officially a part of that same series, Anaconda is probably the best series to do it with.  The title has has enough recognizable brand recognition to stand out but is not exactly sacred ground.  Even that movie's biggest fans probably don't care that a sequel/reboot like this exists.  And Anaconda as a series went straight to video/television pretty damn fast, even crossing over with the similarly fated Lake Placid series.  Regardless of whether or not you understand why this movie exists, almost anything is a step in the right direction by comparison.

So Jack Black and Paul Rudd enter the equation, seeking to do a comedy version of Wes Craven's New Nightmare, a meta sequel that takes place in "the real world" where the previous films are just movies, only to have the thing in the movies happen in real life.  Honestly, Will Ferrell tried this meta approach with the Bewitched movie back in 2005 and it didn't work, but sure, let's do it again, I guess.  In this film, Rudd is an out of work actor who gets his out-of-work-director best friend Jack Black on board with the idea of rebooting the Anaconda franchise as an indie project.  They gather a group of inept friends and head to Brazil to film it on location, only to find there are actual giant Anacondas living in the rainforest.  Also, gold heists, love story (kind of), mocking the filmmaking process, and a lot of filler stuff that steers focus away from the whole Anaconda thing.  You would think that a comedy sequel to Anaconda would be a monster movie parody, which this new Anaconda isn't really.  It's a parody of low budget filmmaking that has a snake that eats people as an annoyance.  It's strange how incidental the snake is in this movie.  There are like five stories wrapping around each other here and the snake isn't part of any of them.  It just pops up and scares everyone every once in a while.  It almost feels like the movie was written as something else and had to staple an IP on it when it went through greenlight approval.  The result is a comedic Anaconda reboot that seemingly has little interest in being about an Anaconda.

Is the movie funny?  It's not unfunny.  Parts of it are amusing, but most of the movie is spent waiting for a sudden burst of inspiration to make it worthwhile.  Inspiration never comes, and it's never clear why this particular movie was made out of all the directions they could have taken.  They could have leaned into a monster movie parody or a filmmaking comedy.  They try to meet in the middle and when the movie favors one, it winds up detracting from the other.  The best thing that can be said for that is that they didn't drag a better franchise through the mud in doing this.  The first Anaconda is an okay movie.  I don't have many strong words to say in its favor or against it, but it made for a fun RiffTrax Live show (which we'll likely never see again, thank you, Sony).  I know I've seen the second one, which I barely remember, and the third, which I remember slightly more and hate myself for it.  There's an argument that can be made that this is the best Anaconda movie, which wasn't hard to do.  Unfortunately, it's in a package where it seems the only reason for the movie's existence is based on the idea that they could use a certain lyric from "Baby Got Back" in its trailer and hoping people will see it based on that alone.  I kinda wish they made a fun movie to go with it.


Marty Supreme
⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Genre:  Drama, Sports
Director:  Josh Safdie
Starring:  Timothée Chalamet, Odessa A'zion, Gwyneth Paltrow, Kevin O'Leary, Tyler Okonma, Abel Farrera, Fran Drescher


Ping Pong is such a weird thing to be a narcissistic knob about.  Nevertheless, that's what Timothée Chalamet chooses to do in Marty Supreme, a competitive Table Tennis player who feels as if he is destined for greatness, willing to lie, cheat, and steal to make his dreams come true.  Just writing that sentence makes me laugh, though the movie has a very serious face on.  Somehow, that's even funnier.  The movie is mostly a street drama about something that sounds absurd, though its underlining theme is about that inner idea that you are meant to be one of the greatest people who ever lived and trying to live it down when it doesn't happen.  Marty is a scumbag.  He lies constantly and is always trying to put one over on everyone around him, trying to bend reality to his will.  The majority of the movie sees him manipulating others so he can have a half-assed attempt to become on top of the world (in his head).  The movie does struggle with forms of monotony at times when it's just a constant stream of chattering chaos centered on Chalamet, though it does arrive at a satisfactory destination. It makes me forgive that the movie sometimes feels like it's running on a hamster wheel.


Song Sung Blue
⭐️⭐️1/2
Genre:  Drama, Musical
Director:  Craig Brewer
Starring:  Hugh Jackman, Kate Hudson, Michael Imperiolli, Ella Anderson, Mustafa Shakir, Fisher Stevens, Jim Belushi


It's bad enough that musical biopics dominate the award season scene the way they do, now we have to put up with tribute band biopics too.  Song Sung Blue is the love story between tribute singers Mike and Clair Sardina, who put together a Neil Diamond "experience" nostalgia act called Lightning and Thunder.  Mike even has a little lightning bolt on his tooth, making me kinda wish he would shine it off and yell "kaCHOW!" every time he smiles.  I'm sure the movie has well meaning intentions of being about small people dreaming of glamor but it's a faulty hook when a film's idea of artistic integrity is taking someone else's music and making it your own.  It's just not a very inspiring idea for an inspirational drama.  That might be one of the reasons why it leans into a hard curveball halfway through, where the movie reminds us that these aren't celebrities but rather normal people dealing with reality.  The movie is more melancholy than it lets on in the trailers but that also becomes its most interesting aspect.  It becomes troublesome when it compounds melodramatics with a bunch of bullshit that soaks the movie's true story with nonsense, making it harder to embrace.  The film's third act tries to give more dramatic oomph to Mike Sardina's fate with a big setpiece and just flounders it by overplaying their hand by manipulating the audience.  Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson are both good in the movie.  The movie is more Hudson's than Jackman's, as she actually has a dramatic arc in the movie while Jackman mostly dresses in sparkly clothing and sings, which are the two things he does best other than pretending to be an angry Canadian with claws.  The duo do help make the movie sparkle when it's a bit murky.

Movies Still Playing At My Theater
Avatar:  Fire and Ash ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Ella McCay ⭐️⭐️
The Housemaid ⭐️⭐️1/2
Wicked:  For Good ⭐️⭐️1/2
Zootopia 2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️

New To Digital
100 Nights of Hero ⭐️⭐️
Fackham Hall ⭐️⭐️1/2
Nuremberg ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Sentimental Value ⭐️⭐️⭐️

New To Physical
Black Phone 2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Bugonia ⭐️⭐️⭐️

Coming Soon!

Monday, December 22, 2025

Cinema Playground Journal 2025: Week 51 (My Cinema Playground)

Multiplex Madness


Avatar:  Fire and Ash
⭐️⭐️⭐️
Genre:  Science Fiction, Adventure, Fantasy
Director:  James Cameron's
Starring:  Sam Worthington, Zoe Saldaña, Sigourney Weaver, Stephen Lang, Oona Chaplin, Kate Winslet, Cliff Curtis, Joel David Moore, CCH Pounder, Giovanni Ribisi, David Thewlis, Britain Dalton, Jack Champion, Trinity Jo-Li Bliss


Hey, look!  It's Avatar!  And chances are you already know if you're into it or not, so anything I say can only reinforce what opinion you already have.  My experience with Avatar has always leaned positive, so the Negative Nancies will just scoff and mutter the same things they've been muttering for sixteen years.  I've never heard a fully convincing case against the franchise, personally, but you go where your heart tells you.  I think the movies are fine.  Fire and Ash is another one, and Avatar fans will eat it up while the non-fans will henpeck at it continuously even though it never seems to phase it.  Success always brings resentment from those who look in from the outside.  We saw the same thing with James Cameron's previous phenomenon, Titanic.  Franchises like Star Wars, the MCU, Lord of the Rings, and others also aren't free from it.  Hell, I have some foul words to say about The Hunger Games and Pirates of the Caribbean, so who am I to judge?

The latest in James Cameron's CGI blue cat people saga continues where the previous film left off, which sees Jake Sully, Neytiri, and their children living with the aqua Na'vi clans.  The resurrected and newly Avatar'd Miles Quaritch still hunts Jake down and seeks to reunite with his son Spider, forming an alliance with a hostile clan of fire Na'vi.  The status quo becomes challenged when Spider adapts to Pandora's air, making him valuable to the human colonizers of Earth.  Avatar's visual stimulus does what it has always reliably done.  If you thought the story was running thin by the end of the first movie, the third won't change your mind.  In fact, the movie probably has the least story of the three, as it seemingly mistakes setpiece events for character journey.  The movie has very little character-driven ideas, it's just three-and-a-half hours of stuff happening.  This makes the movie the one that is the least likely to sweep a viewer into it, as it doesn't really engage heart and emotion as strongly as the previous films, focusing more on spectacle than ever before.  I think this is partially the film suffering from being "part two" in a two-part narrative, as The Way of Water did most of the character work so Fire and Ash could house most of the action.  Movies like The Matrix Revolutions, Pirates of the Caribbean:  At World's End, and Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 have similar problems.  The movie is a long road for so little of a journey.  It's the longest Avatar movies, and as much excitement as is on display, it sure feels it.

All of this being taken into account, Fire and Ash is a reliable next step for those who are fully invested in the Avatar ride.  The first Avatar is the best overall experience.  The second had the best visuals.  What's left for the third movie?  The best villain is what I'd hand it.  Oona Chaplin is phenomenal as Varang, the sizzling fire Na'vi femme fatale who is basically just Nega-Neytiri.  The movie just doesn't have enough of her and it doesn't really conclude her role in the story in a fully meaningful way.  Maybe they want to do more with her in a future movie, but they'd also be fools not to.  Otherwise, the film's final action scene is mostly a stunner.  I say mostly because it has a few melodramatic hiccups and a couple of loose ends that one assumes are going to come back in the next movie.  That kind of sums up the Fire and Ash experience:  It sells what we expect it to in a worn-out package.  Does Avatar still have life in it?  Maybe.  I'll be willing to say that I haven't disliked any of them so far, so I'd watch another.  I'd be more excited about it if it were a little shorter, though.


The Housemaid
⭐️⭐️1/2
Genre:  Thriller
Director:  Paul Feig
Starring:  Sidney Sweeney, Amanda Seyfried, Brandon Sklenar, Michele Morrone, Elizabeth Perkins


I read the Freida McFadden novel of The Housemaid a while back, before I even knew that a movie was in production.  It was on sale and I had time to kill, and it seemed like "who cares" pulp reading, so I breezed through it.  It was trashy, smutty, and dumb but, I'll admit, I had a doofus good time with it.  Then I found out they turned it into a Sidney Sweeney movie and thought "Yeah, that sounds about right."  If you're going to turn a trashy, smutty, and dumb but crowdpleasing book into a trashy, smutty, and dumb but crowdpleasing movie, Sweeney is probably the perfect star for crappy, but joyous, mediocrity.  Fans of the book will probably really enjoy this, as it's pretty much a beat-for-beat adaptation, with minor additions and omissions to make the story more visual.  That story being that of a recently hired housemaid for a wealthy family who grows more uncomfortable with the lady of the house, who shows signs of schizophrenia.  Faults of the film production mostly come straight from the book, which is a little daft in its presentation and its central twist is always plainly obvious, with the only question being how its resolved.  The movie certainly leans into the melodrama, but if anyone is making it work, it's Amanda Seyfried, who is relishing the opportunity to go full ham.  For Sweeney, it's more of a showcase for her breasts than herself, as she's constantly in outfits that squeeze her chest and the movie never misses an opportunity to show her caress herself in the nude.  But for that built-in female audience that likes to support heightened but soft thrillers with nothing particularly challenging about them (and all have boyfriends who just want to see Sydney Sweeney's boobs), the film is a easy recommend and an entertaining watch.


The SpongeBob Movie:  Search for SquarePants
⭐️⭐️1/2
Genre:  Comedy, Adventure, Fantasy
Director:  Derek Drymon
Starring:  Tom Kenny, Mark Hamill, Clancy Brown, Rodger Bumpass, Bill Fagerbacke, Regina Hall


SpongeBob SquarePants debuted when I was growing out of Nickelodeon, but it definitely seemed like the type of show I would have watched back in the day.  I only saw a handful of episodes from the first season, other than odds and ends that I have watched while babysitting.  I just missed my ride on this hype train and now I'm sitting down to watch the...we'll, I don't really know how many SpongeBob movies there are and I don't care enough to find out.  This is just the first one I've ever watched.

So, SpongeBob.  He lives in a pineapple under the sea (SPONGEBOB SQUAREPANTS).  Absorbent and yellow and porous is he (SPONGBOB SQUAREPANTS).  SpongeBob wakes up one morning wanting to feel like a big brave boy or something, so he goes off on an adventure to win his manhood.  He is taken in by the mythical ghost ship the Flying Dutchman, and the head pirate plans to use SpongeBob's naivete to free him of his ghostly prison.  That's the basics.  The movie is more jokes than story, so prepare for a barrage of funny business hurled at you, with the ratio of hit/miss being more even than I think the creators realize.  Luckily the quota of humor for comedy is so far surpassed that there might just be enough here for constant chuckles.  But when the movie dries out, it gets tedious.  Granted, I haven't seen the other SpongeBob movies, though I wonder just how many feature length stories the character is capable of.  After all, he and his friends are specifically designed for ten minute segments.  The conclusion I came to was that the film I was watching was basically a modern day version of the type of films the Three Stooges movies made in the 60's:  a plot that is only existent to set up extended schtick, and whether or not the bits wear out their welcome depends on your fondness for the characters on screen.  I enjoy those Stooges movies because I enjoy the Stooges.  SpongeBob is a little trickier because I have exposure to the characters but not the exposure that most past my generation have.  I find SpongeBob amusing, though I think I'm going to need a heartier journey for him to go on for me to fully be on board for ninety minutes.  To that end, I'm going to let SpongeBob do his thing.  SpongeBob fans are here for it, and that's a good thing.

Netflix & Chill


Demon Squad:  Tooth and Claw
⭐️⭐️1/2
Streaming On:  NOWHERE!  Watched it on blu-ray, baby!
Genre:  Horror, Mystery, Fantasy, Comedy
Director:  Thomas Smith
Starring:  Khristian Fulmer, Erin Lilley, Victoria Antonelli


I achieved a Bucket List Goal this week:  I've been credited in an actual movie!  Not, like, a studio movie or anything.  Or as far as indie productions go, this is probably on the lower tier.  But I assume most reading this are MSTies, so it probably means something that I was one of the people who pitched in to help make Demon Squad 2 a reality!  My response to the reader is either "You're welcome" or "Sorry, not sorry."  Pick one.

Of course, the elephant in the room is that Tooth and Claw wasn't their first choice for a sequel, as their first idea was a campaign for a haunted house movie called Deadwatch.  That campaign didn't reach its goal as the project was too expensive, so they came back with a more cost-effective story for Tooth and Claw, which could be made for the money they knew they could get based on the failed fundraiser.  The story sees P.I. (read:  Paranormal Investegstor) Nick Moon and his sidekick Daisy looking into maulings that have been happening across the city, which they theorize might be the activity of a werewolf.  Along the way they deal with dirty politicians who are hiding the paranormal underworld and a faux psychic who tries to expose it.  The noir parallels that were infused into the previous film have been numbed, sadly.  Tooth and Claw is more like a procedural episode of a P.I. TV series, which itself has its own perks.  I liked the vibes of the first movie a little more, because it really had that element of shooting for the moon with almost no money.  I also can't get out my head that first impression of the original, when I saw the puppets and masks, only to see Lilah walk into the scene with her little Carmen Sandiego Halloween costume and thinking "This is the most adorable movie I've ever seen."  Tooth and Claw still has that low-fi charm to it.  The werewolf costume itself is deliciously cheesy, looking both detailed and lifeless (and all sequence of it trotting down a hallway is just asking to be played against the Benny Hill theme).  The world itself is still looks like it's filmed at personal homes and what few locations it can hide from passers-by.  Peeks into the outside world has limited believability, as characters outside of Nick Moon's circle feel like they exist in a vacuum, which is especially true of the news team on television, which has the vibe of a High School AV club.

All of this is what makes Demon Squad so huggable, though.  This is a production that has less money that Sam Raimi's Evil Dead or Kevin Smith's Clerks, around the same ballpark as the original Paranormal Activity.  Hell, both Demon Squad movies put together cost less that it takes to make an episode of MST3K (both then and now).  Yet, it hits the streets and tries to make something out of scraps.  I love that so much.  Tooth and Claw still has that scrappy underdog aura to it, underlined by a snappy snark that what they're doing is probably stupid but they love doing it.  I imagine this film's particular brand of humor was given a bit of zest by veteran MST3K writer Devon Coleman, who aided with the screenplay.  Some of the humor hits higher than what we saw in the first movie, including a line that made me chuckle heartily where an obviously J.D. Vance inspired Deputy Mayor refutes the idea of demons and monsters because "It's un-Christian."  Other than that, the movie is still a scaled back presentation of gonzo ideas, my favorite new addition being the "Boo-Bombs" which explode and a monster pops out.  It's a concept that feels like it's inspired by the Pokéballs from the Pokémon franchise but the movie never addresses any inspiration.  They should keep it that way.  It's best not to get sued.  They just call them "hamster balls with egg timers glued on them," which I'm assuming is a meta line that references how the little props were made.

Returning castmembers include Khristian Fulmer and Erin Lilley as our headliners Nick and Daisy, and also Amir Zandi as the "in on it" detective Bert.  Bert's role is beefed up from the last film, now a love interest for Daisy, and gets to give her inspirational speeches and all that jazz.  The main newcomer is Victoria Antonelli as fake psychic Chari Divine, and she steals every scene she's in, with her absurdly thick New Jersey accent when she's in full grifter mode or just the playful third wheel to Nick and Daisy.  She even christens the dynamic duo with the name "The Demon Squad," canonizing what was a last minute title change to the first movie (produced under "Full Moon Inc." and briefly switched to "Night Hunters") in universe.  Divine is fabulous and she needs her own spin-off movie, as the Demon Squad Cinematic Universe comes into focus.

Not to get too petty, but to compare where my Kickstarter money went to versus where the Kickstarter money Chris Stuckman used to make Shelby Oaks went to, I'm more than pleased and can happily say I made the right investment.  I'm sure Stuckmann used his money where necessary and made the movie he wanted to make, but if I had pumped money into that, all I would have said while leaving the theater would have been "oof."  Demon Squad:  Tooth and Claw is a movie that is what it is and is something that I genuinely enjoy, and not a movie that I'm making excuses to myself about to justify forking over money for its creation.  I had a good idea of what it was going to look like and I wanted it to exist.  Demon Squad 2 is destined to be exactly like Demon Squad 1, hidden away on Tubi and stumbled upon by people who have no clue what it is and probably won't address it on its own level, will watch five minutes and just get angry that they watched that much of it.  Those are just the breaks.  But it's meant to mean something to the people who made it and the few people who pick up on its frequency and say "I get it."  That, to me, feels even more personal.  That's the type of movie I'm proud to have my name on.

Also, if Thomas Smith is reading this, I want to know when I can expect royalty checks from this.

Movies Still Playing At My Theater
Dust Bunny ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
Ella McCay ⭐️⭐️
Eternity ⭐️⭐️1/2
Predator:  Badlands ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Wicked:  For Good ⭐️⭐️1/2
Zootopia 2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️

New To Digital
King Ivory ⭐️1/2
The Running Man ⭐️⭐️1/2
Sisu:  Road to Revenge ⭐️⭐️⭐️

New To Physical
Black Phone 2 ⭐️⭐️⭐️

Coming Soon!