Sunday, December 24, 2023

Cinema Playground Journal 2023: Week 51 (My Cinema Playground)

Multiplex Madness


Anyone But You
⭐1/2
Genre:  Comedy, Romance
Director:  Will Gluck
Starring:  Sydney Sweeney, Glen Powell, Alexandra Shipp, GaTa, Hadley Robinson, Michelle Hurd, Dermot Melroney, Darren Barnett, Rachel Griffiths


Hot people deal with hot people problems in this dumbfuck of a romcom where Glen Powell and Sydney Sweeney play two people who had a date that went sour and are then forced to spend a week in Australia for a wedding which their mutual passive aggression threatens to derail.  They then decide to fake a romance to attempt to not ruin the big day while also inspire jealousy in former lovers.  Of course, their resent turns into passion the deeper they get into it, because that's what these movies do.  It's a little bit Ticket to Paradise, except younger, firmer, and with more nudity.  It's also a lot dumber.  Ticket to Paradise wasn't a smart movie to begin with, but it at least felt figured out.  Anyone But You feels like a pitch hammered out in an hour, without much desire to tweak it as it went.  The idea could have potential, sure, but the movie is constantly pushing itself forward with beats and scenarios that lack the logic they need to be a plot point.  The reason Powell and Sweeney hate each other is stupid.  The reason they have to pretend to be in love with each other is nonsense.  A lot of the comedic setpieces of the film are logistical nightmares that were more concerned with the idea of a comedic image than actually making it make sense in the moment.  It leads up to one of the worst "guy chases down girl" endings I've ever seen in a romcom, where the movie goes full dumpster fire in a romantic gesture that is neither romantic nor practical.  Powell and Sweeney are charismatic enough to carry a raunchy romcom like this.  If the script, plotting, and gag work didn't suck half as much as they do, this movie would probably be charming.  But couples looking for a sexy romance will get to see the duo hot for each other and take their clothes off, so it does fulfill its service.


Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom
⭐⭐
Genre:  Superhero, Action, Adventure
Director:  James Wan
Starring:  Jason Momoa, Patrick Wilson, Amber Heard, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, Randall Park, Dolph Lundgren, Temuera Morrison, Martin Short, Nicole Kidman, John Rhys-Davies


It's the last gasp of DC's current cinematic universe incarnation, before getting retinkered with James Gunn's Superman:  Legacy in 2025.  DC has struggled with getting people to care about this year's slate of films because they never seemed to matter, though I still contend Shazam and Blue Beetle were worth watching and The Flash had its moments.  Then there is Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom, which takes cues from Thor:  The Dark World and puts our punk rock hero and has him team up with his antagonistic brother on a globetrotting journey to take down a bigger threat.  If nothing else, I admire James Wan's determination to make the Aquaman movies into hammy pulp adventure porn.  Where the line is that crosses into overkill is unknown, because subtlety isn't what he does.  I enjoyed the first Aquaman movie, in spite of its worst tendencies, mostly because I found its enthusiasm for itself infectious.  Lost Kingdom has the same enthusiasm, though it seems to have doubled down on it so hard that it becomes self-indulgent.  It's kind of a Transformers:  Revenge of the Fallen situation, but not quite as rambunctiously obnoxious about it.  Lost Kingdom is more of what the first movie is, but with bolder setpieces and broader comedy, the former being spectacular and the latter being inconsistent.  Yahya Abdul-Mateen II owns every second of his screentime as Black Manta, and Wan knows how to use him, making Manta one of the best villains in a superhero flick this year.  Jason Momoa and Patrick Wilson are mostly confined to being a comedic duo when they aren't punching people, and the movie's sense of humor is probably a bit more animated than most might like.  The much-maligned Amber Heard is also back in spite of rumors that she had been fully dropped from the film, but the movie keeps her at arm's length even when it feels like she should be important to a scene.  I presume this was done because the filmmakers have no idea whether or not the audience wanted them to keep her or not and they didn't want to risk any blowback, but it just muddies the waters in the narrative, causing the movie's flow to suffer.  It's a rousing display of spectacle, but everything else it goes for just goes numb.


The Iron Claw
⭐⭐⭐
Genre:  Drama, Sports
Director:  Sean Durkin
Starring:  Zac Efron, Holt McCallany, Jeremy Allen White, Harris Dickinson, Maura Tierney, Lily James, Stanley Simons


Zac Efron is headlining a movie with Oscar buzz behind it.  This is the world we live in now.

The Iron Claw is a biopic dedicated to the careers of the Von Erich family of professional wrestlers, seeing them rise to stardom and how tragedy overtook the family in part due to the pressures of their driven father.  It's an interesting story with horrible consequences, though as someone who has limited knowledge of wrestling (though I do know who Ric Flair is), it feels like the story is scrunched down and setting the pacing askew.  The movie is very casual sports drama for the first half, then it just pummels the awful fates of these men in an overstuffed second half, which gives the impression that all of these events happened in close proximity when they were in fact years apart.  One of the Von Erich brothers was even cut out of the movie entirely, because the filmmakers thought it would have been too much tragedy for one movie.  My criticism of that is that it almost implies that his suffering is less important than the suffering of the rest of his family and is somewhat disrespectful.  Regardless, the movie is a good watch for sports fans and people who like their movies with heavy, relentless drama.  Zac Efron, who has gone from jacked hunk to full blown beefcake for this, gives what is probably the performance of his career.  He's in a tricky position, because he is playing a character who subdues his emotions due to his upbringing and spends most of the film with people emoting at him instead.  When the script actually lets him loose, he impresses.  Maura Tierney also deserves a shout-out for making the most of limited screentime.


Migration
⭐⭐1/2
Genre:  Comedy, Adventure
Director:  Benjamin Renner
Starring:  Kumall Nanjiani, Elizabeth Banks, Awkwafina, Keegan-Michael Key, David Mitchell, Carol Kane, Casper Jennings, Tresi Gazal, Danny DeVito


Illumination's second time at bat this year is their spin on a family road trip comedy, only with ducks.  Migration tells tale of a family of mallards who migrate for the first time in their lives.  Shenanigans ensue.  It's a more properly cooked narrative than their first movie this year, The Super Mario Bros. Movie, but is also a less interesting experience.  The series of vignettes that the group embark never feel strong enough to engross, though they're simple enough to entertain wee ones.  I did enjoy how the filmmakers seemed to take inspiration from horror movies for their setpieces, such as Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Midsommar, and even the "To Serve Man" Twilight Zone episode, but, ultimately, I found the film too light to be fulfilling.  I don't think the movie should have been more complicated, it's a kids' movie after all, but if it pushed its creativity a bit further than it did, this movie could have been something special.


Poor Things
⭐⭐⭐⭐
Genre:  Comedy, Science Fiction
Director:  Yorgos Lanthimos
Starring:  Emma Stone, Willem Dafoe, Mark Ruffalo, Ramy Youseff, Christopher Abbott, Jerrod Carmichael


Yorgos Lanthimos is back after his success with his previous feature, the critical and audience favorite that also happened to be called The Favourite, this time putting his unique comedy chops behind a version of a Frankenstein tale.  Poor Things is about a scientist who finds the body of a pregnant woman who committed suicide, only to reanimate her by transplanting the brain of her unborn child into her.  The newfound infant in a woman's body experiences life at a rapid pace, learning as she goes through her unique life outlook.  To lay my cards on the table, I wasn't a huge fan of The Favourite.  That wasn't due to the lack of effort by everyone involved (Olivia Colman deserved that Oscar and I will fight anyone who disagrees), but rather I found that I didn't find the movie's tone and story to live harmoniously together.  I did not have that problem with Poor Things.  Poor Things is a circus freak show and Lanthimos's flamboyant idiosyncratic approach suits it wonderfully.  It's an innocent, but odd, view of the world through the eyes of an innocent, but odd, character, showing us how she sees life, death, money, love, and so, so, so much sex (because once you discover what down there is for, it's hard to stop).  Interestingly, it is also the story of a woman who is being guided by men in a male-dominated world, which leads her with questions about why life is the way it is and why she must conform to these rules, because they're contradictory and don't make sense.  She never receives an explanation that she is satisfied with (but then again, have any of us?), though there is a touching story about a woman learning to be a woman at the heart of it.

Netflix & Chill

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Rebel Moon:  Part One - A Child of Fire
⭐⭐1/2
Streaming On:  Netflix
Genre:  Science Fiction
Director:  Zack Snyder
Starring:  Sofia Boutella, Djimon Hounsou, Ed Skrein, Michiel Huisman, Doona Bae, Ray Fisher, Charlie Hunnam, Anthony Hopkins


I'm not going to lie, I was not looking forward to watching this movie.  I almost didn't, but I had the time, it was there, and I do like to put a streaming option on these posts, so Rebel Moon it is.  I'm not a huge fan of Zack Snyder, dating back to when I was underwhelmed by his otherwise praised Dawn of the Dead remake, followed by a similar experience with 300, and most recently with his previous Netflix production, the unreasonably boring Army of the Dead.  Despite my lackluster response to all of those movies, Snyder's worst vices all take shape when he's left unchecked, with free-reign projects like the disastrous Sucker Punch and that brutal four-hour Justice League movie that desperately needed an editor.  This two-part Rebel Moon movie had all the signs that it was going to be one of those.  And it is.  Surprisingly, it's also one of Snyder's better movies, too.  I'm as shocked as you are.

Rebel Moon evidently started out as a Zack Snyder's pitch to Lucasfilm for his own Star Wars movie, where he used the universe to tell a sci-fi take on Seven Samurai.  Neveryoumind that a sci-fi version of Seven Samurai already exists, and it's called Battle Beyond the Stars (it's a cheap Roger Corman production, but it's still a sci-fi Seven Samurai).  One can see why Snyder's instincts of bringing Seven Samurai to the Star Was universe sound firm, as Star Wars had its inspiration in another Akira Kurosawa samurai classic, The Hidden Fortress, and regardless of the setting used (from the old west to a colony of ants), Seven Samurai is a really strong template for a movie.  This first Rebel Moon movie starts off very well, allowing the "farming colony being bullied by outsiders" story to play out by letting the drama do the work.  It starts to crumble upon itself when the hunt for protectors to fend off those who prey upon the weak storyline.  The movie starts to get weighted down by exposition and Snyder starts to indulge in his trademark of using setpieces and designs that he thinks looks cool that don't really serve a logical purpose or service the film.  Credit where credit is due, while this first film doesn't conclude its large narrative, it works better as a singular film than I expected it to (but I also expected Snyder to just cut one long movie in half and call it good, so my expectations were in the dirt).  It actually finds a reasonable cut-off point that works as a cliffhanger but also concludes the "gathering of heroes" portion of the movie, while also ending with a large action sequence that is pretty entertaining.  I am actually interested in watching Part Two, which is more interest than I had in watching Part One before it came out.

Movies Still Playing At My Theater
The Boy and the Heron ⭐⭐⭐1/2
Godzilla Minus One ⭐⭐⭐1/2
The Hunger Games:  The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (no)
Napoleon ⭐⭐1/2
Saltburn ⭐⭐⭐
Wish ⭐⭐1/2
Wonka ⭐⭐⭐

New To Digital
Dream Scenario ⭐⭐⭐
The Hunger Games:  The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (no)
Silent Night ⭐⭐⭐
Thanksgiving ⭐⭐1/2

New To Physical

Coming Soon!

Monday, December 18, 2023

Cinema Playground Journal 2023: Week 50 (My Cinema Playground)

Multiplex Madness


Wonka
⭐⭐⭐
Genre:  Fantasy, Musical, Comedy
Director:  Paul King
Starring:  Timothy Chalamet, Calah Lane, Keegan-Michael Key, Paterson Joseph, Matt Lucas, Matthew Baynton, Sally Hawkins, Rowan Atkinson, Jim Carter, Natasha Rothwell, Tom Davis, Olivia Colman, Hugh Grant


I've never been a huge Willy Wonka fan.  As a child I found the original movie unpleasant and never saw the need to revisit it.  As an adult, I found Tim Burton's remake was even more unpleasant and have even less of a desire to revisit it.  I just associate this franchise with sitting is solemn silence and wishing I were dead.  Now there's a prequel.  Hooray?

In the surprise of the century, it actually isn't unpleasant.

Paul King, director of the beloved Paddington movies, brings us this story of a young Willy Wonka selling his chocolate on the streets and dealing with retaliation from the city's chocolate shop kingpins.  The film has that huggable comfort vibe that made King's Paddington movies so enchanting, though with a bit more flamboyance, in line with what one might expect from a Willy Wonka movie.  It succeeds in giving the Wonka franchise a whimsy that just seemed ugly in previous works.  It's a fun and cute movie, if a bit overtly goofy in places (likely intentionally so).  I admit, I didn't quite care for Hugh Grant's Oompa Loompa, but I've never liked Oompa Loompas in general because I've always thought they'd murder me in my sleep, and this movie did nothing to make that fear subside.  The musical numbers are also a mixed bag.  Some songs are good, some songs are meh, all are rather forgettable.  It's not the best family movie of the year, but it does successfully entertain a family for a night.

Art Attack


Maestro
⭐⭐⭐1/2
Genre:  Drama
Director:  Bradley Cooper
Starring:  Bradley Cooper, Carey Mulligan


Bradley Cooper finally graces us with a sophomore effort after his remake of A Star is Born, and it's another one that has built some Oscar momentum for itself.  Cooper stars as famed composer Leonard Bernstein, probably best known to film fans for his work on West Side Story and On the Waterfront.  Maestro tells a life story of Bernstein largely through his relationship with his wife Felicia, played by Carey Mulligan (who is a seasoned actress from Academy Award winning films like Promising Young Woman, but will always be Sally Sparrow from her one episode of Doctor Who to me), largely relating a complicated love between a woman and a man who has love affairs with other men on the side.  Cooper goes bold with his style on the movie (he loves to play with transitional editing), which sometimes threatens to overwhelm the narrative of the film, but he lucks out in Leonard and Felicia's love affair being an intriguing dynamic.  He is also very detailed with the film, portraying eras very true to form, both in reality and hyperreality.  One thing he loves to do is switch up the cinematography and acting styles, so they ring true to the eras they are set in.  The end result is an engaging film that thrives on the heart at its center.  Netflix subscribers may want to check this one out when it hits streaming next week.

Netflix & Chill


The Sacrifice Game
⭐⭐
Streaming On:  Shudder
Genre:  Horror
Director:  Jenn Wexler
Starring:  Mena Massoud, Olivia Scott Welch, Gus Kenworthy, Madison Baines, Derek Johns, Laurent Pitre, ChloĆ« Levine, Georgia Acken


It's The Holdovers meets The Devil's Rejects in a Shudder holiday offering which sees a pair of students and their teacher who are left over at a boarding school over the holidays terrorized by a satanic cult hoping to conjure a demon.  That's only half the story, which has a few surprises in store during its narrative, a lot of which are really fun.  The issue that The Sacrifice Game runs into is that it dicks around.  The movie is a pretty bland offering of villains giving hammy "I am bad guy, hear me roar" speeches for over half the its runtime before deciding to save itself by twisting its premise on its head, which offers some inspiration in its "idiots who claim to be Satan's disciples accidentally getting what they want" idea.  The few narrative hiccups left over from its shaky first half anchor it down, but it's not uninteresting.  Horror fans will probably want to check it out for a pretty excellent performance by a young actress named Georgia Acken, who plays a student named Clara in the film.  She spends most of it with a Christina Ricci/Jenna Ortega/Wednesday Addams style straight face, but when the movie decides to let her shine, she comes in guns blazing.  She's also given a little dance, which is either the most unnerving thing in the movie or the funniest, but kudos to her for just jumping into that rhythm the way that she did.

Movies Still Playing At My Theater
Dream Scenario ⭐⭐⭐
Eileen ⭐⭐⭐1/2
Godzilla Minus One ⭐⭐⭐1/2
The Hunger Games:  The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (no)
Napoleon ⭐⭐1/2
The Oath ⭐1/2
Oppenheimer ⭐⭐⭐
Saltburn ⭐⭐⭐
Silent Night ⭐⭐⭐
Thanksgiving ⭐⭐1/2
Wish ⭐⭐1/2

New To Digital
Priscilla ⭐⭐⭐

New To Physical
The Creator ⭐⭐⭐1/2
Dumb Money ⭐⭐⭐
Pinocchio ⭐⭐⭐1/2

Coming Soon!

Monday, December 11, 2023

Cinema Playground Journal 2023: Week 49 (My Cinema Playground)

Multiplex Madness


The Boy and the Heron
⭐⭐⭐1/2
Genre:  Fantasy
Director:  Hayao Miyazaki
Starring:  Varies depending on subbed or dubbed


Beloved Animation titan Hayao Miyazaki is back with a brand-new Alice in Wonderland tale, this one featuring a young boy who follows a strange Heron (with a man's head inside his beak) into a fantasy world to save his pregnant stepmother.  Miyazaki is one of those talents whose name in the credits is good enough to tell a certain audience that this is one of the must-see movies of the year, so putting my thoughts to paper is meaningless, because everyone who is seeing it is already rushing to see it.  I'm also not as inclined to hyper praise Miyazaki, as I find his movies artful and beautiful, but they make me sleepy.  I'm not sure if you should take that as a knock against it, it's just that they're just soft and comfortable.  The Boy and the Heron is another one, though per usual it's a trademark story that's equally weird and lovely.  I'll leave it to Miyazaki fans to praise this one, because I don't really have the level of enthusiasm to recommend a Miyazaki movie to people who watch Miyazaki movies.  That's best left to people who have watched way more Miyazaki movies than I have.  It is really good, though.  If you're only a casual viewer, like myself, it's worth a watch.


Eileen
⭐⭐⭐1/2
Genre:  Thriller, Drama
Director:  William Oldroyd
Starring:  Thomasin McKenzie, Anne Hathaway, Shea Whigham


I don't make a habit out of tearing down to prop up, but while watching Eileen I couldn't help but compare it to another queer-coded dramatic thriller with added sexual tension from a few weeks ago, Saltburn.  Saltburn is the one more likely to get attention, because it's an audacious movie that is tailored specifically to that audience that likes their movies to be twisty, weirdly stimulating, and feature a little bit of dong.  Saltburn was a good movie, but it didn't play as well with me because it never felt like it was unfolding.  It would telegraph itself, never subtly (in fact it would be screaming at you), then just hammer away without an actual flow to it until it gets to its ending, which wasn't nearly as surprising as it seemed to think it was.  I admired its swing, but it didn't hit the ball home.

Enter Eileen, which is a queer-coded dramatic thriller with added sexual tension that cracks the bat.

Some are likely to dismiss it in favor of Saltburn, because its attitude and style is less bold, but on the other hand, Eileen doesn't feel like it's compensating for its lack of rhythm.  Eileen just lets its story play.  It starts with a slight social anxiety that builds up into a sexual tension between its two lead actresses, then it rattles the cage by metamorphosing its tension into a completely different tension during its climax.  The play-out is an ingenious magic trick.  The film follows Thomasin McKenzie as a young clerk for a boy's prison, who is also socially isolated woman who cares for her alcoholic father while lusting for a physical relationship.  She then meets the facility's new psychologist, Anne Hathaway, who she begins to admire to the point of fawning over.  The pair's relationship ultimately collides in an unexpected way, which is probably best to keep mum about to not hurt the experience.  But the movie is quite the examination of a isolated woman's hopeful fantasies of longing, as we see the majority of the film play out through McKenzie's eyes, with the added flavor of little fantasies of what she feels in the moment.  It also occurs to me that it also makes her something of an unreliable narrator, because I do find myself pondering of how much of the little moments of her romance with Hathaway were just something that played out in her head or a detail that she blew up through her heavy infatuation.  There is an element of both absolute certainty and anxiety-fueled uncertainty that most romantic tension feeds on, only dialed to 11 and creating a thick atmosphere of what Hathaway's intentions really are.  And when Hathaway does walk at a crossways with McKenzie, it's not to the path you'd expect it to.  Or even another path you'd expect it to, as manipulation is kept to a minimum with this movie.  Everything except McKenzie's mind is pretty straightforward.  It's just a matter of weeding out what is fact and what is emotion.

My one main criticism holding me ever-so-slightly back with this movie is that while I did love how the climax they went for was executed, it does feel on the slight side.  I understand why the movie felt this was the ending it needed to go for, as well as the movie's desire to not make everything clean.  That being said, the ambiguity and lack of closure on certain elements does make the film more frustrating than it should be when it ends.  I felt hungrier for something more weightier, whereas instead the film finds a journey's end and just floats away.  It's not enough for me to reconsider calling this one of the best movies of the year, though it does sink the film lower that it probably could have been if it really nailed an ending to remember.


The Oath
⭐1/2
Genre:  Faith, Adventure, Romance
Director:  Darin Scott
Starring:  Darin Scott, Billy Zane, Nora Dale


A lot of movies these days open with a small message from people who worked on them thanking the audience for supporting theaters and hoping they enjoy the movie.  The Oath starts with the director and star bragging about how good his movie is.  That's when you know this movie is going to suck.

The Oath is a movie made by people with promising technical skill who are trying to turn the script and resources of a direct to video Scorpion King sequel into the Braveheart of religious romances.  The attempt being made is to turn a Mormon tale into an epic period drama, telling the story of Mironi, who is being hunted by ruthless king Billy Zane, marries a woman from Zane's harem, and in turn teaches her "the oath" of his religion.  You can see the passion on camera in this movie.  I have no doubt the people who made it were trying their damnedest (except maybe Billy Zane, who is doing the same paycheck performance that he's been doing in a lot of movies of this ilk).  That makes it a more admirable attempt than a few religious movies I've seen this year, because like Journey to Bethlehem or Jesus Revolution (which are probably the two religious movies to watch in 2023 if you're going to watch any), it's a movie that feels like it's celebrating its faith instead of pandering to a pre-sold audience with some bullshit.  And kudos for being a Mormon movie.  Not sure I've seen many of those.  I saw a western centered on Joseph Smith once, and that was about it.  The Oath taxes itself, though.  It doesn't have the money to be the movie that it thinks it is, and even if it did, the thick melodrama of it all would likely be a deathwound.  Writer/Director/Producer/Star Darin Scott has gone full Kenneth Branagh in control freak mode and is so elbow deep in his own artistry that he's not seeing the hammy misfire that he's creating.  Sometimes one's personal certainty can keep you blind to what l's quality and what's insufferable.

Art Attack


Fallen Leaves
⭐⭐⭐
Genre:  Drama
Director:  Aki KaurismƤki
Starring:  Alma Pƶysti, Jussi Vatanen


This Finnish romance can be best described as an ode to the unlucky lonelyheart, telling the story of two middle-aged people who work slight remedial jobs, indulge in their own vices, but long for just a hopeful connection as they meet and profess a desire to maybe get closer.  But there are hurdles.  Some are personal, and some are just bad luck.  It's not a traditional romance of wooing and sexiness, as our leads are a pair who have long since settled into solitude and present themselves cautiously, often resulting in awkward silence, but with hopeful glances of optimism.  The movie can feel bluntly real, but is also dryly funny at times, so there is a light sense of spunk to its dramatic sincerity.  I think the movie leaned a bit into tropes in some areas, but it's a solid drama for those looking for a good foreign import.

Movies Still Playing At My Theater
Dream Scenario ⭐⭐⭐
Godzilla Minus One ⭐⭐⭐1/2
The Hunger Games:  The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (no)
The Marvels ⭐⭐1/2
Napoleon ⭐⭐1/2
Oppenheimer ⭐⭐⭐
Saltburn ⭐⭐⭐
Silent Night ⭐⭐⭐
Thanksgiving ⭐⭐1/2
Wish ⭐⭐1/2

New To Digital

New To Physical

Coming Soon!

Monday, December 4, 2023

Cinema Playground Journal 2023: Week 48 (My Cinema Playground)

Multiplex Madness


Dream Scenario
⭐⭐⭐
Genre:  Comedy, Fantasy
Director:  Kristoffer Borgli
Starring:  Nicolas Cage, Julianne Nicholson


Off-beat comedy sees Nicolas Cage play a mundane college professor who suddenly becomes a figure that appears in people's dreams around the world, becoming an accidental celebrity overnight and buckles under his sudden fame.  Dream Scenario ponders quite a bit through its premise, like subliminal influences and the fragile and often erratic nature of fame.  Cage's character is not someone who really aspires to be seen, though he does appreciate acknowledgment.  At first, he thinks it's a bit of a treat, but like a lot of things that are constantly in the spotlight, things tend to go sour.  It's not explicitly stated in the film, but his demeanor in the dreams changes depending on his mental state.  When he's ignorant of it, he does nothing in the dreams.  When he's intimate with his wife, he starts hearing of more sexual encounters.  When he starts growing irritated, he becomes hostile in them.  How the public perceives him shifts depends on how he handles himself, but for someone so unprepared for attention, things grow out of hand.  The film becomes a commentary on the scrutiny that comes with celebrity, when everything someone does is followed so closely that just something as simple as normal human emotion can be seen as an extreme that must be judged.  The movie gives the audience a surprising amount to chew on, though my one issue being that it's probably not memorable enough to keep these ideas in my head.  But in the moment, it was interesting to think about.


Godzilla Minus One
⭐⭐⭐1/2
Genre:  Thriller, Science Fiction, Disaster
Director:  Takashi Yamazaki
Starring:  Ryunosuki Kamaki, Minami Hamabe, Yuki Yamada, Munetaka Aoki, Hidetaka Yoshioka, Sakura Ando, Kuranosuke Sasaki


(Godzilla is my favorite movie franchise, so this is going to be longer than my normal entries, which I try to normally keep tight and concise, but I have opinions and you have to listen to every single one of them)

It's like the people who made Godzilla Minus One heard some nerd make the oft repeated sentiment that nobody sees a Godzilla movie for the human characters, and they decided to respond "Challenge accepted."

Considering this is yet another Godzilla origins tale that comes seven years after we got the last one with Shin Godzilla, which came two years after the one before that with Godzilla 2014, Godzilla Minus One can feel a bit superfluous in concept.  The movie actually has a interesting little history to it how it came to being.  Minus One was directed by Takashi Yamazaki, who, back in 2007, he directed the sequel Always:  Sunset on Third Street 2.  The film opened with a pretty great, if limited, dream sequence that was made mostly with CGI, featuring the cast in a Godzilla rampage.  The sequence was so well received that Yamazaki had been in-demand to helm a new Godzilla movie for a while now, and, apparently, he had even been asked to do it, but turned it down because he didn't feel Japan's CGI industry was up to the task yet.  He felt more encouraged to develop his own Godzilla film after seeing the effects work in Shin Godzilla, which looked photorealistic during its best moments.  He hammered out the screenplay for the film during a lengthy development process during lockdown in the Covid pandemic.

The resulting film that seems like the Godzilla fanbase has been waiting fifteen years for takes the franchise back to its World War II roots, which is welcome, because while Godzilla's relevance to generations since has evolved (from Captain Planet pollution fighter to angry souls of fallem military), his original themes always suited him best.  This film even takes things a step further, setting the film in the 1940's instead of the 50's, where the original Godzilla film was set.  This also makes the movie the only real period piece of the Godzilla franchise, unless one counts the time travel sequence in 1991's Godzilla vs. King Ghidorah.  The film centers on a disgraced kamikaze pilot who fled the line of duty in a doomed mission at the end of the war.  While contemplating his own self-preservation while his colleagues all died for the mission, he finds himself in a face-to-face encounter with a giant lizard, that also kills the soldiers around him while he chooses to save his own life.  Returning home, he tries to rebuild his life with an accidental family that he creates along the way with fellow refugees.  Several years later, the lizard he encountered, now mutated and much larger from the nuclear tests in the Bikini Atoll, appears in Japan and wrecks havoc.  Now with friends and family to protect, he finds that he has something to fight for and maybe something to die for.

Character pieces are not the Godzilla franchise's strong point.  Like most disaster movies, the franchise is more plot-driven than not, as it's hard to be character-driven when your characters can't really do much to influence the actions of something much bigger than they are (and when it does, it's usually through a silly plot device, like the Orca machine from 2019's King of the Monsters).  Minus One's characters are the focal point of this particular film, as it's more interested in telling a story about regret and loss than the story of a giant lizard stepping on people.  This approach ties in so well with the original themes of Godzilla, as we start out with characters who are at their lowest point, having to cope with living in actual ruins.  The film turns into a thematic metaphor for the rebuilding:  as Tokyo rebuilds itself, we see our protagonist rebuild his own life, creating something lovely with a woman who lost her family in the air raids and a baby who likewise lost her parents, becoming a family of three unrelated people who love and depend on each other.  This is a beautiful addendum to the war-horror themes of the franchise, showcasing the way life can emerge victorious like a flower blooming out of a world covered in ash.  This story is the most intimate storyline in the franchise's history and may even bring a few tears out of its audience.

On the Godzilla side of things, while the CGI creature chaos doesn't reach the best moments of Shin Godzilla, it also doesn't reach Shin's worst moments of "Okay, look, we had a time crunch" either.  The movie's effects work is steady and consistent, and it does look stylish and engrossing even if it rarely looks entirely realistic.  Godzilla spends most of his time in the water, only coming to shore for a prologue opening and his centerpiece Ginza attack.  Other than that, we spend a lot of time in boats chasing the creature down and coming up with ways to kill him, kinda like Jaws but with Godzilla.  The sea-faring stuff is fun, throwing in some some of the more entertaining elements from 1955's Godzilla Raids Again to hit those high-notes of man vs. monster action.

There is a caveat to this, and while it isn't movie-breaking, it does make the film feel less than it probably could be.  While the film's focus on human characters and compelling drama is to be commended, Godzilla does come off as an incidental nuisance rather than something that needs to be in the movie.  Plotwise, Godzilla is used as something left over from the war that is haunting our protagonist, and he is primarily a device to tear down his built life to propel him into being the soldier that he never had the courage to be, while also driving him to have the internal conflict of dying in war to save his family versus fleeing war to continue to be with his family.  Godzilla could be replaced in this movie with probably a half-dozen other plot devices and the film wouldn't be much different.  The movie even seems like it was written in case erasing Godzilla from it entirely would be necessary for whatever reason, as the creature seems to hold little relevance to anybody else (even when he's destroying the city) than our main character.  There are moments in the film where he relates the trauma of his past to other people, often casually mentioning a fire-breathing dinosaur and moving on, with supporting cast giving very little reaction to it when they really should be responding with "Wait, hold on, back it up.  I'm sorry that happened to you, but what's this noise about a monster?"  Godzilla still works in the narrative because his traditional echos-of-war themes keep him just relevant enough, but that's through the legwork of other movies in this franchise, particularly the original, and not this one in general.

But that almost feels like a trivial thing to be troubled about when faced with a monster movie that is this good.  Godzilla Minus One is easily the best film of Godzilla's resurgence since 2014 (Shin Godzilla fans might throw a tantrum about that, but Minus One is a better laid out movie from top to bottom).  Hell, it's easily the best Godzilla movie in twenty-five years.  Some might even claim it's the best since the original and it would be hard to argue with.  I'd even say it's not outside probability that some might prefer it to the original, though my argument in the original's favor is that it's a more completely balanced movie with all of its elements in place while Minus One is a great movie that is missing just a couple of them to make it function a little less efficiently.  But whatever side of the spectrum a Godzilla fan may fall on, there is really no going wrong with either.


The Shift
Genre:  Science Fiction, Faith
Director:  Brock Heasley
Starring:  Kristoffer Polsha, Niel McDonough, Elizabeth Tabish, Rose Reid, John Billingsley, Paras Patel, Jordon Alexandra, Sean Astin


Multiverses are hot lately, what with Everything Everywhere All at Once winning Best Picture, the MCU deep diving into it, and this year's Across the Spider-Verse making a one-movie art gallery out of the concept.  Now faith filmmaking wants in on the action.

Oh, I feel so blessed.

The Shift revolves around some dude who has been "shifted" out of his dimension to an authoritarian dimension ruled by Neil McDonough, who I guess is supposed to be the Devil.  Anyway, Devil McDonough recruits this guy in every dimension for...reasons.  What he needs this dude for is unclear, but this guy turns him down and gets trapped in an alternate reality, trying to find a way to get back home.  It's like Sliders if they were flung through the multiverse by the Devil for shits and giggles, prayed for a portal to other dimensions, and preached the word of God in every universe they visit.  I'll give this movie credit for one thing, it's a rare religious movie that shows faith and science working harmoniously instead of being polar opposites at war with each other.  The movie works itself earnestly to try and make something out of itself too.  It just doesn't.  It's a cluttered mess of the movie that wants to deliver a message of one's faith being tested that's bloated by an overly complicated premise that it doesn't even try to do justice to because it's gaslighting its religious audience.  On top of that, the themes of faith are undercut because of its complicated storyline.  What the movie ambitions is to be a modern day spin on a trials of faith tale, where one goes through hardship and finds his own faith to be the guiding light in his darkest hour, using sci-fi to achieve means to an end, without finding a way to make the sci-fi and fantasy actually mesh together rather than be just two separate things happening simultaneously.  I almost consider giving this movie extra credit for its effort, especially as it doesn't get as condescending and intolerant as a faith/genre mesh can be (see:  Nefarious), but the the unfortunate truth is that while it's a non-vindictive bad movie, it doesn't save it from being a bad movie.


Silent Night
⭐⭐⭐
Genre:  Action
Director:  John Woo
Starring:  Joel Kinnaman, Scott Mescudi, Harold Torres, Catalina Sandino Moreno


John Woo returns to Hollywood after all these years to make sure his last American film wasn't Paycheck starring Ben Affleck (or that terrible pilot for a Lost in Space series he made for the CW) with a rather simplistic revenge flick with a pantomime twist.  Joel Kinnaman, who may or may not have been one of the non-Peter Weller RoboCops at one point in his career, plays a father who loses his son to gang violence at Christmas, as well as his vocal chords.  He then preps for the next year to retaliate the following holiday.  Thrills, chills, and bloodspills ensue.  The film is made mostly without dialogue, like No One Will Save You, though less inspired with its execution.  Sometimes it will stretch to make the format work, and sometimes it will use dialogue for light exposition, but not directly.  Otherwise, it's a pretty well oiled machine of an action flick with Woo's sweet cinematic flair.  It's probably not going to go down as a holiday themed action classic like Die Hard or Lethal Weapon, but as a work of stylized violence, there are admirable attributes to it that make it worth taking a look at its craft.  Woo has always been an action movie technician, some movies just display that better than others.  This one is nothing but that, so we might as well take it in.

Netflix & Chill


Candy Cane Lane
⭐1/2
Streaming On:  Prime
Genre:  Comedy, Fantasy
Director:  Reginuld Hudlin
Starring:  Eddie Murphy, Tracee Ellis Ross, Jillian Bell, David Alan Grier


I appreciate a good attempt to think outside the box.  I also appreciate grinding it out into something that works, giving the audience something that they didn't know that they would enjoy.  At first glance, Candy Cane Lane feels like it could be a fun idea, as it's a weird occult-style holiday comedy starring Eddie Murphy.  But given it's high concept premise and onscreen talent, I just expected this movie to be more...well, I expected it to be something.  But it isn't, really.  The film doesn't really play with its premise and as a comedy it really isn't very funny.  The film has Murphy desperate to win a neighborhood Christmas decoration contest, so he buys some knockout decorations from a pop-up shop ran by elf/witch Jillian Bell.  His ornaments then come to life and he must collect a series of golden rings from them to prevent being turned into a little glass figurine.  It's silly, but there could be wacky hijinks if the movie was done correctly.  But the hijinks are never wacky enough, nor do they ever become interesting.  It's a dull plod of a movie that can't ever work up the energy to see potential in itself.  And there is probably potential to be mined if it dug deep down.  There's a quirky urban soul gospel tone to the movie that is interesting, but while it gives the movie a flavor, it's not exactly a spice.  The movie also introduces a group of glass figurine people who are animated like they're straight out of a stop-motion Christmas special.  They could be fun additions, and they're certainly big enough personalities, but nothing they do is ever funny or entertaining enough to warrant giving them screen time (even though they're arguably the most interesting thing in the movie).  It's that experience that defines Candy Cane Lane, where there are ideas that could be embellished upon ignored for a general flat mundaneness.  It's a movie equivalent of someone who puts on a holiday cheer face but is secretly dead inside because they just want Christmas to be over.


Family Switch
⭐1/2
Streaming On:  Netflix
Genre:  Comedy, Fantasy
Director:  McG
Starring:  Jennifer Garner, Ed Helms, Emma Myers, Brady Noon, Rita Moreno 


Recently, Netflix made the announcement that they were scaling back their original content, claiming to want to focus more on quality instead of quantity.  I can't get the idea out of my head that they came to this conclusion after watching Family Switch, which feels like a movie that had a script quickly skimmed and just stamped "Good Enough" and thrown into production.

The film is Freaky Friday, except........no, that's it.  It's just Freaky Friday.  There's the added bonus that there is a father and brother thrown in as an aside to the mother/daughter body swap comedy, but the idea is exactly the same.  The "Ungrateful kid"/"You don't get me, mom and dad" personality traits leading to living a day in someone else's shoes has already been done, ad nauseam.  Hell, Jennifer Garner's even done a body change comedy before, and this movie even references it by name (as well as 17 Again, starring the late Matthew Perry).  Credit where credit is due, if this movie has one thing in its favor, it would be its cast.  Everyone is putting in some A+ work playing their dual roles (again, Garner has done one of these before, so she gets it).  The movie's scripting and craftwork keeps pulling the rug out from under them and preventing them from really delivering something charming.  Even if this movie is unoriginal, these actors seem like they could deliver a movie that is ten times funnier than this, but their timing is being slanted by the way the movie is put together by Terminator:  Salvation director McG.  If I were to guess, I think McG is pulling them back intentionally, because it feels like he wants this movie to just have the tone of a goofy holiday diversion for parents to tolerate while the kids laugh at the dog walking on hind legs or Jennifer Garner belching and farting in the middle of a business meeting.  I don't think he wants this movie to venture too far outside that tone, which is a shame.  Every once in a while, the cast manages to elevate a lackluster gag with a surprisingly expert delivery and actually manage to make me bark a laugh in the middle of all the defeated sighs.  If only they were able to play this movie at their full capacity, maybe something could be made of it.

Movies Still Playing At My Theater
The Hunger Games:  The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (no)
The Marvels ⭐⭐1/2
Napoleon ⭐⭐1/2
Next Goal Wins ⭐⭐1/2
Priscilla ⭐⭐⭐
Saltburn ⭐⭐⭐
Thanksgiving ⭐⭐1/2
Wish ⭐⭐1/2

New To Digital
The Holdovers ⭐⭐⭐

New To Physical

Coming Soon!