Multiplex Madness
Masters of the Universe
⭐️⭐️1/2
Genre: Fantasy, Adventure, Action
Director: Travis Knight
Starring: Nicholas Galitzine, Jared Leto, Camila Mendes, Idris Elba, Alison Brie, James Purefoy, Morena Baccarin, Jóhannes Haucur Jóhannesson, Kristen Wiig
I was born in the 80's, and while that particular event came after the initial craze of He-Man and the Masters of the Universe, I still had enough exposure to it to be fond of it. This isn't the first He-Man movie, the original being a Canon Films production starring Dolph Lundgren and Frank Langella in 1987. I think kids were hoping to see something more lavish than what was seen in that film, which transported He-Man and friends to California where they ran around with Valley Girl Courtney Cox. Fans of big, bold fantasy would prefer leaning into big, bold fantasy. And while 2026's new He-Man movie isn't perfect, it certainly does that.
Still, it does repeat the 1987 film's biggest mistake by transporting He-Man to the regular world. Luckily, that's only about twenty minutes of the movie and it's used as a plot device to make He-Man's alter ego of Adam a "lost prince." Adam is whisked away from his home world of Eternia by the mighty Sorceress protector of the kingdom when the evil warlord Skeletor attacks Castle Greyskull. Fifteen years later, he is retrieved by childhood friend Teela, who returns him to Eternia where he must embrace his destiny as his world's ultimate hero, He-Man.
Fifteen years ago, this exact movie would have probably made a killing. Nostalgia for 80's kids was at a peak, resulting in feature films of Transformers and G.I. Joe. That has died down a lot in the years since and I don't think the demand is really the same. Not even Transformers movies are pulling in the same numbers that they used to, but most of those movies were bad and people were just conditioned to avoid them, I guess. It's possible that a good He-Man movie would find an audience. This particular He-Man movie feels like it's destined to find cult appreciation on home media rather than do gangbusters at the box office. To be frank, they made a movie that looks and feels like that John Carter movie that Disney made, which was a movie that nobody saw but eventually found an underground appreciation.
Speaking as someone with an appreciation for the franchise, I can be both a witness for the prosecution and the defense of this movie. This movie is pretty flawed, but it's also pretty fun. These ideas contrast but they are not mutually exclusive. The movie knows that it's difficult to take He-Man lore seriously so it never tries. It never finds the Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves magic sauce in its own cheekiness, but it does hit full throttle in being Saturday Morning Cartoon power fantasy. I kinda love that for this movie, because it's nothing if it doesn't take full delight in seeing He-Man do his He-Man thing. He's a character who is a mixture of Conan the Barbarian and Superman and the movie is constantly finding excuses for him to flex as both. In action spectacle, the movie is wild.
Characterization becomes tricky because the movie also wants to wink at the audience and acknowledge that all of this is dumb, and they do so at the cost of making some of our heroes more inept than they should be. Some of the comedy only works if Adam is an absolute idiot, so his personality tends to shift whether the movie wants him to be serious or to be funny. And if we were to take his character journey in the movie seriously, the truth is that he doesn't really have one. The movie presents itself as being one of those stories of a boy who doesn't know how to fight becoming the most powerful warrior of all time but the thing is that he isn't some masterful warrior, he just becomes too powerful to lose to anybody, even if he doesn't know how to fight. It becomes a basic self-insert fantasy of "me vs. the world and I'm winning" story that isn't really about anything.
But it's fun. And the movie is colorful enough that kids might have a good time with it should parents choose to give them their first He-Man exposure. Just be warned that the movie doesn't resist the urge to make innuendo jokes at the expense of the character "Fisto." Hell, they even manage to squeeze one out for RamHead that took me completely by surprise. It's a movie that doesn't seem to know if kids will like it more than adults, so they're covering their bases.
⭐️⭐️⭐️
Genre: Drama, Comedy
Director: John Carney
Starring: Paul Rudd, Nick Jonas, Peter McDonald, Marcella Plunkett, Havana Rose Liu, Jack Reynor
Paul Rudd plays a wedding singer who spends an evening bonding with former boy band member Nick Jonas only to find months later that Jonas has turned a song that Rudd wrote into a hit. Rudd then goes on a tear to try and get the recognition he feels he deserves despite the fact that he has no proof of it. Pop culture hits are often attributed to a singular voice. Power Ballad is an energetic ode to the unsung contributors who help create, inspire, and are often thrown out in the trash because they aren't the marketing face. Paul Rudd does pretty well as the man whose passions don't exactly pan out, while Nick Jonas is solid as the more successful counterpart who starts out relatable enough but becomes more of a douche with the more success that comes. I do feel that latter aspect sometimes gets lost in the narrative, because the movie sometimes seems laser focused on Rudd's POV that it feels like it's ignoring Jonas's. Aspects of Jonas's life that change over the course of the film sometimes get skimmed over and the movie might have been stronger if it did have more focus on shifts in his personality. The movie isn't even very long, clocking in at an hour-and-a-half, so this isn't a time issue. The movie just elects to drop it.
Another issue I was feeling was that of deja vu. Something about this movie seemed very familiar as I was watching it. Then it hit me that the movie is arguably just ten percent of the movie Coco ballooned out to a ninety minute dramedy, right down to the fact that the song changes its entire meaning when heard in the original context. That story is more powerful than the one seen here, but Power Ballad is a fun alternative that has less meat on its bones.
⭐️
Genre: Comedy, Horror
Director: Michael Tiddes
Starring: Marlon Wayans, Shawn Wayans, Anna Ferris, Regina Hall
Scary Movie is a franchise that probably could have been great if it were done well. The unfortunate fact is that it was never done all that well. I remember being very disappointed in the original movie when it was released, but in retrospect, it's probably because doing a parody of a movie like Scream was a bad idea because you're doing a parody of a parody, and as an audience member I just didn't see a point. But I also wonder about being fifteen when it came out, still too young for the R-rating but somehow I felt like I was watching something I was too old to find funny. That's some weird backwards effect the movie had on me. Still, they kept making them. I kept watching them. Couldn't tell you why, but I remember being fine with 2 and 3, which might have been from low expectations, and thinking 4 was boring. Never saw the fifth one, and by all accounts, I didn't miss anything. I also didn't see the Haunted House movies, which was Marlon Wayans doing a found footage parody in Scary Movie style and was also directed by Michael Tiddes, who helmed this sixth film in the Scary Movie franchise. During the hype for this movie, there was a talk of how the Wayans were basically locked out of the franchise after the second movie by Harvey Weinstein, and this film is their big reclamation of it. It's always shitty to hear stories like that and it's good that there is a semi-happy outcome for them. The outcome would have been preferable if the movie they made to reclaim it wasn't far worse than the movies made after they left.*
*Still haven't seen the fifth one and I'm not going to fact check myself, so I'm going to just assume I'm right.
The film brings back all of the parody characters introduced in thr first film, led by Anna Ferris as Cindy Cambpell, who has been given a Jamie Lee Curtis in Halloween 2018 makeover. Regina Hall is also back as bestie Brenda Meeks, while Marlon Wayans, Shawn Wayans, Cheri Oteri, Dave Sheridan, and Lochlyn Munro reprise their roles from the original after two decades. Together, they navigate another nonsense plot of parody milkshake, primarily following the story of Scream 2022, while adding in elements of Get Out, Sinners, Terrifier, Longlegs, Smile, The Substance, and more. The movie's story is baffling to follow, which is par for the course on this franchise, which often feels like they're making parodies on the fly based on what movie they watched the night before. This has always been a vice for Scary Movie because they seem to think their movie doesn't need to have a plot to be funny. It's true, I guess, but I always look to Airplane! or The Naked Gun and find that, despite their outrageousness, they do tell a story that you can follow. They're simple stories, and nobody really comes for them, but I personally think it makes a difference. But the comedic stylings are also differing, too. I've always said that the difference between Zucker/Abrahams/Zucker spoof movies and the types of spoofs that launched with Scary Movie is that the classic ZAZ movies were performed in deadpan, and the actors existed in utterly ridiculous surroundings that they took completely seriously, while Scary Movie is a series of comedians playing the comedy up and going full ham. That tradition continues with this one, which is even hammier than usual.
But the movie is a comedy, so let's talk about the laughs. The movie feels like it's going for "equal opportunity offender" status, but the problem is that it doesn't seem to know what audience sees movies like that. It will mock the propaganda of right wing media outlets one minute and then do the exact same tired "anti-woke" jabs that such outlets do that it was making fun of earlier. It's not exactly centrist mocking in all directions, it's just showing a bunch of weak "offensive" gags at the wall and seeing if someone hates something enough to laugh at a really stupid joke about it. I think what they think they're doing is playing up to Gen Xers who lament the fact that certain words from their teenage lingo are now considered slurs, but all this does is make the movie feel like it was made by a bunch of old people who are mad about the fact that they're considered old now and decide to take it out on the generation gap. It feels more sad than funny. It's pretty embarrassing to watch.
I'll give the movie props for some minor points of amusement. I was usually mellow with the movie whenever Marlon Wayans was onscreen. While his material isn't great, his stoner character is still kind of a likeable doofus. And there's a pretty fun animated sequence where he gets trapped in KPop Demon Hunters and makes it with all three of them. That was probably my favorite part of the movie, other than a mid-credit sequence where he plays Orlock in a parody of Nosferatu. Teyana Taylor has a pretty decent cameo at the beginning of the movie in a parody of Scream VI, but it also sets the movie up for one of its bigger fails later on after Ghostface mocks her for losing the Oscar this year. I'm assuming that this scene was filmed after the majority of the movie, because this line appears later on:
"Quit trying to win an Oscar. It's a horror movie. It'll never happen. Ask Demi Moore."
To this I say ask Amy Madigan. I mean, fuck, she was the one Teyana Taylor lost the Oscar to, and you made a joke about her losing the Oscar in this fucking movie.
It's this type of inconsistency that makes Scary Movie more frustrating to watch than it should be. Horror is easy to make fun of, which is one of the reasons it's so fun to watch, so the fact that Scary Movie misses the target as often as it does makes it look like it's batting zero at T-ball. I wish there was a really good Scary Movie that I could love. It sucks that they insist on making movies like this instead. The first note I wrote about this movie was a singular word and I honestly almost just scrapped any type of review and just used that to express my feelings on this movie. "Garbage."
Movies Still Playing At My Theater
Backrooms ⭐️⭐️
The Breadwinner ⭐️⭐️
Michael ⭐️⭐️
Obsession ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Pressure ⭐️⭐️1/2
The Sheep Detectives ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
New To Digital
Hokum ⭐️⭐️⭐️
In the Grey ⭐️⭐️
New To Physical
Hoppers ⭐️⭐️⭐️
Protector ⭐️
Coming Soon!





























