The secret life of Martin Luther King Jr is explored in Sam Pollard’s doc, “MLK/FBI.” Seen through the lens of an FBI adamant at destroying King’s credibility back in 1963, we learn of the various ways Hoover’s hoodlums managed to infiltrate King’s inner circle and spy on his personal life, sneakily recording hundreds of hours of personal encounters with his mistresses in hotel rooms.
Read more‘White Lie': Girl Fakes Cancer For Social Media Attention in Prescient Drama [Capsule]
A female undergrad student fakes cancer to nab as much money and fame as she can. This small Canadian indie is not just about deception, but about the fear of being on the wrong side of the moral compass.
Read more‘Herself’: Irish-Produced Indie Is A Saccharine-inducing Female Empowerment Melodrama [Capsule]
Clare Dunne stars in “Herself” as Sandra Kelly, a determined woman who decides to build her own home in this Dublin-set drama. Dunne co-wrote the screenplay with director Phyllida Lloyd (‘Mamma Mia!’). The result is the kind of saccharine-inducing female empowerment tale that may even give hardcore feminists severe allergies.
Read more‘Wonder Woman 1984’ Clangs and Crashes [Review]
Here’s the thing about ”Wonder Woman 1984,” it starts off like gangbusters only to whimper out into CGI overkill in its final hour. That’s the sad truth about director Patty Jenkins’ ambitious 2 1/2 hour sequel – it damn-near pummels you to submission by the time its climax is over with. Until then, this sequel to the 2017 mega-hit “Wonder Woman,” for the most part, works.
Read more‘Pieces Of A Woman’: Vanessa Kirby is Mesmerizing in Ambitious Netflix Drama [Review]
For 128 minutes, Vanessa Kirby has you hooked to her every move in Kornel Mundruczo’s “Pieces of a Woman.” As Martha, a high-powered executive who loses her child during a harrowing home birth, Kirby mesmerizes by showcasing the human frailty and devastation that happens when tragedy comes knocking at her door. Her acting tour-de-force reminded me of Gena Rowlands’ masterful work in John Cassavetes’ 1974 classic, “Woman Under the Influence.”
Read more‘Shadow in the Cloud’: Chloe Grace Moretz Fights Off Sexists, Gremlins and Nazis [Review]
Beautifully shot by Director Roseanne Liang and DP Kit Fraser, “Shadow in the Cloud” means to entertain us despite its outrageous script. It revels in its loony blend of genres by never taking itself so seriously.
Read more“News of the World”: A Very Hanks-ian, and Melancholic Western [Capsule]
Paul Greengrass’ “News of the World” (12.25.20), a cautionary western told via conventional, albeit semi-successful, terms, has Tom Hanks hamming up the screen in the form of another Capra-esque character.
Read more‘Promising Young Woman’: A Feminist Revenge Fantasy For the Holidays [Capsule]
“Promising Young Woman” is arriving in theaters on Christmas Day via Focus Features. This is a gamble since we don’t even know how many theaters will be open nationwide by then, but, don’t fret my friends, a digital release is also in the books on that very same day. The film, which I saw this past January at the Sundance Film Festival, has a 74 on Metacritic and a 92% on Rotten Tomatoes. No, it’s not the second coming of cinema, as some have over-excitingly pointed out, but it is a delightfully slick B-movie with an effective performance from Carey Mulligan.
Read more‘The Dissident’: Jamal Khashoggi Exposé Edited Like A Geo-Trotting Thriller [Capsule]
The story of slain Washington Post reporter Jamal Khashoggi was erratically reported by the media back in 2018, so much so that one does wonder what fresh new territory Oscar-winning director Bryan Fogel (“Icarus”) could possibly tackle in his Khashoggi doc, “The Dissident.”
Read more‘Soul': Pixar's 23rd Feature is an Existential Jazz Tale [Review]
A good chunk of Pixar and director Pete Docter’s “Soul” is set in the serene nirvana called The Great Before. The surreal nature of this afterworld, with its soft, glowing edges and inviting colors, is populated by Don Hertzfeldt-esque stick figures who go by the name of Counselors, omnipotent God-like beings reminiscent of Hertzfeldt’s minimalist style and the friendly UFO’s in Spielberg’s “Artificial Intelligence.”
Read more‘Tenet’: Christopher Nolan’s Latest Epic is Ambitious, Fascinating, But Incomprehensible [Review]
This is a re-posting of my 08.26.20 review of Christopher Nolan’s “Tenet” as it is now available on home video via Blu-Ray, DVD, and rental streaming. I have seen the film three times now, each viewing a little better than the next, but I still contend that this is the weakest film of Nolan’s career.
Read moreGeorge Clooney’s ‘Midnight Sky’ Orbits Into an Unwatchable Space Opera [Review]
Based on Lily Brooks-Dalton’s novel “Good Morning, Midnight”, George Clooney teams up with Netflix for the sci-fi drama “The Midnight Sky” (Netflix, 12.25.20) in which he also stars. In it, Clooney plays scientist Augustine, who races to stop a group of astronauts, led by Felicity Jones’ Sully, from returning to a post-apocalyptic planet Earth.
Read more“How Can You Mend A Broken Heart?”: Infectiously Entertaining Doc Tackles Rise and Fall of The Bee Gees [Review]
It wasn’t easy being a Disco star back at the peak of the dance mania, just ask Ther Bee Gees who are the subject of a wildly entertaining documentary courtesy of director Frank Marshall. Titled “How Can You Mend A Broken Heart?“ this compulsively watchable treatise on the Brothers Gibb was set to premiere at the since-canceled Telluride Film Festival during the first week of September, alas, it has now settled for a streaming exclusive on HBO and HBO Max.
Read moreGarrett Bradley’s ‘Time’ is Filled With Biased Contradictions [Review]
You may have noticed the rave reviews being thrown at Garrett Bradley’s “Time.” I say, don’t pay attention to them; it is very difficult to sympathize with any of the subjects in this documentary, aside from the children.
Read more‘Let Them All Talk': Soderbergh's Shoestring Budgeted HBO Max Experiment is Playfully Acerbic [Review]
Steven Soderbergh is a legend of independent filmmaking. His latest, the HBO Max comedy, “Let Them All Talk,” (12.10.20) was shot in just two weeks and was largely improvised by its cast. The film stars Meryl Streep, Dianne Wiest, and Candice Bergen, who play longtime friends reuniting on an ocean liner.
Read more‘The Prom': Ryan Murphy Fans Rejoice, While the Rest of Us Shriek in Horror [Review]
Based on the 2018 Broadway musical and directed by unabashed showman Ryan Murphy, “The Prom” starts off strongly, with a kind of self-aware mockery of itself, as we are introduced to a quartet of washed-up NYC musical theater actors: Dee Dee, an aging legendary actress (Meryl Streep); Barry, a goofy sideman (James Corden); Trent, a pretentious Juilliard grad bartender (Andrew Rannells); and Angie, a 20-year “Chicago” chorus girl (Nicole Kidman).
Read more‘Black Bear': Aubrey Plaza Plays Games in Mindbending Meta-Thriller [Capsule]
Aubrey Plaza fans rejoice, the indie actress gives one of the best performances of her career in Lawrence Michael Levine’s “Black Bear.”
Read more‘Ammonite': Frigid Erotica in the Midst of Foggy Ocean Vistas [Review]
In 1840s England, acclaimed fossil hunter Mary Anning (Kate Winslet) meets Charlotte (Saoirse Ronan) a young woman suffering from Melancholia (oldspeak for depression) and sent by her husband to convalesce by the sea alongside the famous palaeontologist. The friendship is frosty at first, we soon come to realize it’s not just Charlotte who is depressed, but her new strolling buddy as well — a loner with no interest in conversing with the people around her, including her mother (Gemma Jones) who happens to work with her at the fossil shop she manages. Charlotte soon develops a high fever, Mary starts to care for her bed-stricken roomate, and as Charlotte’s spirits improve, so do Mary’s, to the point where lust comes into the equation.
Read more‘Hillbilly Elegy': Ron Howard Adapts's Dull Adaptation of Southern-Set Memoir [Review]
J.D. Vance’s bestselling memoir, “Hillbilly Elegy” is adapted to rigorous Oscar-bait effect by Oscar-nominee Vanessa Taylor (“The Shape of Water”). The result is the kind of big studio crowd-pleaser that used to be the norm in the ‘90s, but is now mocked by our meta generation.
Read more‘Happiest Season': Blissfully Melancholic Queer Rom-Com is Easy to Digest [Capsule]
Clea DuVall’s “Happiest Season” can be viewed as a radical holiday movie, in that it uses, hell mimics, the innumerable heterosexual Christmas movie cliches that came before it, but forges them through the lenses of a queer perspective. Yes, it’s the token emblem of your average holiday romantic comedy, but it’s the unadorned authentic touch brought forth by DuVall (“The Intervention”) that turns “Happiest Season” into a slightly likable affair.
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