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The Weekend Warrior 10/16/20: SYNCHRONIC, FRENCH EXIT, TRIAL OF THE CHICAGO 7, LOVE AND MONSTERS, HONEST THIEF, THE KID DETECTIVE and More!
After the last couple weeks, I really need a break, which is why Iâm writing most of this in transit to Columbus, Ohio to see my mother, sister and all (or some) of the friends that I made during my sabbatical to the city seven years ago for cancer treatment.
On, and look... Variety wrote about the movie theater chains and NATO lobbying Governor Cuomo to reopen movie theaters, showing that thereâs been no proof of any cases leading back to movie theaters. (And more from The Hollywood ReporterâŠ) New York leads and the world follows? More like ED leads and the world follows. Been saying this shit for months now and putting up with all sorts of needless abuse for it.
This weekâs âFeatured Flickâ is actually a movie coming to theaters on October 23, but since Iâm not sure Iâm writing a column next week, Iâm gonna review it this week! Cool? Â The movie is SYNCHRONIC (Well Go USA), and itâs the follow-up to Aaron Moorehead and Justin Bensonâs amazing sci-fi film The Endless from a few years back. This ome stars Anthony Mackie and Jamie Dornan as parademics in New Orleans who have been coming across a series of bodies that have died in gruesome ways, all connected by a designer drug they were all taking.
Iâll just say right from the start that I loved almost everything about this movie from the amazing performances by Mackie and Dornan to the entire look and tone of the movie, which shows the duo taking huge steps forward as filmmakers, particularly Benson as a screenwriter. Unfortunately, Iâm not sure what I can say about the movie and its plot without spoiling otherâs enjoyment. I will say that it involves a designer drug and time travel and Mackieâs character has something odd about his brain that makes him better suited to figure out what is happening to the victims than others might be. Also, Dornanâs character Dennis has family issues, particularly with his daughter Brianna (Ally Ioannides), who disappears mysteriously, but itâs so nice seeing Katie Aselton as Dennisâ wife, as well as in another movie out this week.
Iâll also say that people who watch this movie will inevitably make comparisons to the work of Alex Garland and maybe even the more-versed ones might see a little of David Cronenbergâs Videodrome in the filmâs trippy nature. The thing is that the movie is super-smart, and itâs obvious that Moorehead and Benson must have done a lot of research to make every aspect of it feel authentic. Itâs just amazing what this duo can do with a small fraction of the money that Christopher Nolan had to make Tenet, and yet, they can create a complex and unique premise thatâs actually easy to understand. Things like the camerawork, the music and sound design all add to the amazing tone and the mood that the duo have created.
I also think itâs Mackieâs best role and performance in many years, maybe even going back to The Hurt Locker, so as a long-time fan, Iâm glad he connected with Moorehead/Benson to show that heâs more than capable of leading a movie like this.
Again, Synchronic will be in movie theaters and drive-ins NEXT Friday, October 23, but I want to give you an advance heads up, because Synchronic is likely to be the most original sci-fi or genre film you see this year. If you canât get to the drive-in and donât feel comfortable going to a movie theater, then Iâm sure it will be on digital soon enough, but you definitely shouldnât miss it!
Next up is Aaron Sorkinâs THE TRIAL OF THE CHICAGO SEVEN, streaming on Netflix starting Friday and the movie I was most looking forward to seeing this week. I was such a huge fan of Brett Morgenâs Chicago 10 documentary, which opened Sundance in 2007, especially with how he recreated the court trials using animation and a talented roster of voice actors including Hank Azaria, Mark Ruffalo and Geoffrey Wright. Sorkin has just as an impressive list of actors for his version, including Mark Rylance, Eddie Redmayne, Sacha Baron Cohen, Frank Langella, Joseph Gordon-Levitt and many more.
If you donât know about the protests outside the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago â you see, back in those days, the Democrats were the bad guys⊠how times have changed!! Those protests led to a number of arrests but a few years later, the federal government charged a number of individuals with inciting the riot. The accused include Black Panther leader Bobby Seale, played by Yahya Abdul-Mateen II from Aquaman and Watchmen, Abbie Hoffman (Cohen), FBI agent Tom Hayden (Eddie Redmayne), Jerry Rubin (Jeremy Strong), David Dellinger (John Carroll Lynch) and two more. The six white guys are defended by Mark Rylanceâs William Kunstler, who faces the tough Judge Hoffman (Langella) who is not putting up with any guff from these young revolutionaries.
All of the characters are quickly introduced with a quick-cut opening montage with actual newsreel footage, but then weâre quickly moved to a meeting to the Attorney General (Keaton) with the trialâs prosecutor (Gordon-Levitt). From there, weâre right into the trial about 16 minutes into the movie, although Sorkin frequently cuts back to the actual day of the Chicago protest to recreate what happened as testimony is given. Probably the part that will have the most impact and resonance is the way Seale was mistreated compared to the others, getting so riled up at the judge that the judge orders him chained and gagged. The trial would end up taking place for almost 7 months even though the results were eventually overturned.
This really is perfect material for Sorkin, and maybe if I hadnât seen Chicago 10 first, I would have been a lot more fascinated by the trial sequences, though Morgen did an equally great job working from the transcripts. Basically, what happened happened. Where Sorkinâs screenplay and film excels is showing whatâs going on outside the courtroom, whether itâs the recreations or just conversations taking place between the plaintiffs. Â As might be expected from Sorkin, the screenplay is great with lots of fast talking, making for a movie that moves at a kinetic pace for its two hours.
If I had to pick a few of the best performances, Iâd probably focus on Cohenâs Abbie Hoffman, which is more than just an accent, he and Strongâs Rubin bantering back and forth like a seasoned Vaudeville act; Rylanceâs Kunstler is spot-on, and Langella is just great as the crusty judge, the filmâs only true antagonist. I also appreciated John Carroll Lynch and in fact, all the performances, although I felt that with so many characters, Sorkin wasnât able to give Bobby Seale the time his story truly needed. Still, I would be shocked if this isnât considered a SAG Ensemble frontrunner.
Ultimately, The Trial of the Chicago 7 is a fine recreation of a certain moment in history that still feels relevant and timely fifty years later, even if itâs so heavy at times you either need to focus or, like me, watch it on Netflix in two sittings. I still liked Steve McQueenâs movie Mangrove that takes place in a similar era and also culminates in a trial just a little bit better.
Before we get to the rest of this weekâs new movies, I have one last review from the New York Film Festival, and itâs the closing night film, FRENCH EXIT, from director Azazel Jacobs and writer Patrick Dewitt, who has adapted his own book. The film stars Michelle Pfeiffer as Frances Price, a Manhattan widow from wealth who discovers she has no more money, just as her son Malcolm (Lucas Hedges with longer hair than usual) has decided to marry his girlfriend Susan (Imogen Poots) though he hasnât told his mother that yet. With no other options, Francis takes her son on a ship to live in Paris for a while at the home of one Mme. Renard (Valarie Mahaffey), an elderly woman who is a genuine fan of Francis and welcomes them as her guests.
This is one of those ensemble character dramedies that I wouldnât even be able to begin to tell you why you should see it unless you miss seeing Pfeiffer in a semi-decent performance, but one that doesnât do much as the film itself is so boring and insufferably pretentious most of the time Iâm not sure I can even recommend it for that.
Jacobs and Dewitt previous made the movie Teri maybe ten years ago, and I was never really a fan, so Iâm not sure why I thought that Dewitt adapting his own book would bear better results.  Once Frances and Malcolm get to Paris, thereâs just an influx of odd characters who show up, some who have more impact than others. I liked seeing Danielle Macdonald as a psychic medium the duo meet on the ship across the Atlantic who Malcolm bonks. Sheâs brought back when Frances wants her to conduct a sĂ©ance to communicate with her late husband who she thinks is now inhabiting an omni-present cat. Like everything else, the relationship between Malcolm and Susan and how thatâs affected by her meeting a new guy just never goes anywhere.
For the most part, the whole thing is just dull and uninteresting, and so pretentious it never really leads to anything even remotely memorable. I have no idea why the New York Film Festival would decide to close with this one. (Although the 58th NYFF is over, some of the movies will hit its Virtual Cinema soon, so keep an eye out! For instance, this Friday, FilmLinc begins a Pietro Marcello retrospective as well as showing his latest film Martin Eden in FilmLIncâs Virtual Cinema.)
Liam Neeson stars in Mark Williamsâ HONEST THIEF (Open Road), a crime-thriller in which he plays Tom Carter, the uncaught robber behind 12 bank robberies who decides to settle down with Kate (Greyâs Anatomy) Walshâs Annie Wilkins, who he meets while renting a storage space to hide all the money heâs stolen. After a year of things getting serious with Annie, Tom decides to retire so he calls the FBI and says heâs ready to give back the 9 million, but two crooked FBI agents (one played by Jai Courtenay, the other by Anthony Ramos) decide theyâre going to take the money instead. Their plan to steal the money Tomâs trying to return leads to a number of deaths, including putting Annie in the hospital. When that happens, Tom has had enough, and honestly, thereâs no one better at getting revenge than Neeson. (Did we mention that Carter is ex-Marine? I mean, of course he is!)
Many will go into Honest Thief expecting the typical Neeson action revenge flick ala Taken or maybe one of his high-concept thrillers, but Honest Thief isnât nearly that exciting. It starts out fairly slow and dry with no real crime or action elements, although Williams does throw them in from time to time. The whole thing is pretty dry, and itâs a good 54 minutes before we get to the revenge aspect of the story and thatâs after a lot of bad decisions being made across the board. Anyone who is still wondering how Jai Courtney has a career wonât be changing that decision by his turn as the villain, and itâs a lot odd when the movie tries to make a sympathetic character out of his partner, played by Ramos.
Regardless, any elements that make Honest Thief unique from other Neeson action movies are quickly tossed aside for the same usual cliches, and the action scenes arenât even that great. While Honest Thief may not be an awful or unwatchable movie, itâs probably not the action movie you might be expecting from Neeson â more like a bargain basement The Fugitive with one plot decision that almost kills the whole movie.
Delayed a number of times and now dumped to PVOD (with minimal theatrical) is Paramountâs LOVE AND MONSTERS, which is written by the prolific Bryan Duffield (The Babysitter, Spontaneous), directed by Michael Matthews and produced by Shawn Levyâs 21 Laps Entertainment. In the movie, Dylan OâBrien plays Joel Dawson, a young man surviving the apocalypse with a small community after the governmentâs plot to blast a couple asteroids heading to earth backfires. Instead, it creates giant, carnivorous monsters out of the earthâs animals who eliminate 95% of the earthâs human population. (We learn all of this through a Zombieland-like animated prequel getting us up to speed.) Â Before the earth fell into disarray, Joel was in love with Jessica Henwickâs Aimee, but they were separated by the fateful events. Seven years later, theyâre reconnected via radio and Joel has sworn to travel the 85 miles across the creature-covered wasteland to reunite with her. Hence, the title âLove and Monsters.â Get it?
I actually didnât hate this movie, although itâs not really a family film or one meant for young kids, because itâs PG-13 for a reason, including mild violence i.e. people being chomped by monsters, and some sexuality. Dylan OâBrien does a decent job carrying it, but it relies just as much on the other people he meets, particularly Michael Rookerâs Clyde and his young ward Minnow, played by Ariana Greenblatt, the latter who is such a scene-stealer that itâs disappointing theyâre only in the movie for a small chunk. Theyâre probably the funniest part of the movie.
I like giant monsters and these ones are certainly ⊠interesting. They seem to have been toned down a bit maybe to be more kid-friendly, more like the kid-friend Godzilla than the terror weâve seen in recent incarnations. There are also a number of great action set-pieces, and some good post-Apocalyptic ideas we havenât seen, especially when Duffieldâs dark sense of humor is able to come out and keep things fun.
Still, Love and Monsters is not a kidsâ movie, and thereâs something about it that might make people wish the filmmaker just went full-on R, because going further towards PG would have made even the best parts quite painful to get through. As it is, Love and Monsters is a suitably fine boy and his dog adventure â oh, did I mention the dog? â that would make a perfectly fine streaming movie.
Weâll get back to some of the other theatrical releases in a bit, but I wanted to get to two movies that were pleasant surprises, maybe because I went into them with absolutely zero expectations.
I wasnât really sure what to think about Cooper Raiffâs SH#!%HOUSE (IFC Films) at first, maybe because itâs title is a little off-putting and not really particularly representative of what the movie is. Raiff himself plays Alex Malmquist, a fairly new arrival at his college but already missing home and his mother (Amy Landecker) and not really adjusting to the crazy college lifestyle as exemplified by his roommate Sam (Logan Miller). After a party at a frat called âShithouseâ (hence the title), Alex meets and connects with his dormâs R.A. Maggie (Dylan Gelula) and the two spend the night bonding and hanging out.
Obviously, someone at IFC Films loves these platonic indie two-handers about people meeting and hanging out over the course of a night, because Shithouse is the second such movie after Olympic Dreams earlier in the year. They also must know that Iâm a sucker for these kinds of semi-rom-coms, because just like with that other movie, I totally ate up everything Raiff was trying to do and say with his movie. The chemistry between the two leads is undeniable, and maybe it wonât be a surprise that Gelula also appeared in Raiffâs previous movie.
As with any relationship, things do come to an end, and this one crashes and burns in a very sad way for Alex the very next day. Maggie starts to pretend she doesnât even know him, and she ignores his incessant texts saying how much he enjoyed their night together. Boy, I have been there back in my reckless and romantic days of youth.
At first, I wasnât that into Raiff as an actor â remember what Iâve said about filmmakers casting themselves? â but Alex definitely grew on me. Gelula is absolutely amazing, and frankly, I can see someone âdiscoveringâ her in ten years and becoming a new Parker Posey, Kate Lynn Sheil or other similar indie ingenue.
The combination of the two is what makes Shithouse such a special experience, since their situations are quite relatable and Raiff does a great job with the characterization in his writing to make this quite enjoyable to see how things will resolve themselves.
I also wasnât quite prepared for how much Iâd enjoy Steve Byrneâs THE OPENING ACT (RLJEfilms), maybe because I was unfamiliar with Byrne, and as usual, I didnât read the description of the movie before sitting down to watch it. If I did, I would have known that Byrne is a stand-up comic and presumably this movie is somewhat based on situations that have happened to him. It stars Jimmy O. Yang from Crazy Rich Asians (a great comic in his own right) as Willy Chu, a young comic who has always dreamed of making it in stand-up but instead, has been stuck trying to get slots at an open mic night, while holding down a day job working at an insurance company. One day, his friend (Ken Jeong) sets him up for an MC gig in Pennsylvania at the Improv where his idol Billy G (Cedric the Entertainer) will be performing, so Willy quits his job to pursue his dream.
Much of Byrneâs movie deals with Billyâs âadventureâ in Pennsylvania with the clubâs womanizing featured act (played by SNLâs Alex Moffatt) and trying to face the struggles of stand-up in hopes of getting to the next level. There have been better movies about the subject, like Mike Birbigliaâs Sleepwalk with You, but Byrneâs film is a nice addition, particularly because Yang plays such a likeable, benevolent character you want to see him do well even after he crashes and bombs on a Saturday night and is at risk of losing the Improv gig.
Itâs obvious that Byrne pulled in a lot of favors from friends to get such a great cast of comics â even getting Whitney Cumming to make a cameo â but the likes of Bill Burr actually take on key roles, like Willyâs boss in that case. Moffatt is particularly hilarious expanding on some of his outrageous SNL characters to play a stand-up who actually does help Willy, even as he puts him in pretty awful situations. Cedric also gives another fantastic performance as Willyâs idol who gives him the cold shoulder at first but eventually comes around and offers him the mentoring that Willy needs.
The Opening Act isnât anything particularly revelatory, but it is thoroughly entertaining, and a nice little indie that I hope people will discover for themselves, especially those who like (or perform) stand-up.
Edward James Olmos directs THE DEVIL HAS A NAME (Momentum Releasing) starring the great Oscar-nominated David Strathairn as almond farmer Fred Stern, who has been running his orchard for three decades with trusty second Santiago, played by Olmos himself. Things are going well until they notice that some of the trees are rotting. It turns out theyâre being poisoned by the water thatâs been sullied by crude oil run-off from the nearby Shore Oil rigs. Around the same time, an opportunist named Alex Gardner, played by Haley Joel Osment, offers Fred a very low-ball offer to buy the farm, though Fred suspects something is up, and sure enough, Shore Oil is responsible.
Another movie I didnât know what to expect other than a few cursory elements is this movie âbased on a true storyâ movie about the little farmer taking on âThe Man.â In this case, Shore Oil is represented by Kate Bosworthâs Gigi Cutler, a tough exec. at the corporation who thinks their lawyers (one of them played by Katie Aselton!) can crush this local troublemaker. When Sternâs lawyer (Martin Sheen) sues the oil company for 2 billion, they need to start taking things seriously, bringing in a tough âfixerâ played by Pablo Schreiber.
Iâm not sure where to begin with this movie that certainly has noble intentions in telling this story but suffers from quite a few issues, mostly coming from the script. I was a little concerned once I knew the premise, because I was not a huge fan of Todd Haynesâ Dark Water from last year, although I did enjoy the Krasinski-Damon-Van Sant ecological venture, Promised Land. This one falls somewhere in between, and probably its biggest issue is that it tries to create some humor out of the erratic behavior of the characters played by Bosworth and Schreiber; both performances are so off-the-rails at times it regularly takes you out of Fredâs story. (Osment is also pretty crazy but at least he fits better into his role.) Strathairn is great and well-cast, and Olmos is equally good, and I imagine that itâs partially because many of their scenes are together, allowing Olmos to direct with his acting. Aselton and Sheen are also decent, especially in the courtroom scenes.
Oh, and did I mention that Alfred Molina plays the Big Boss, who is interrogating Cutler as a needless framing device? Yeah, thereâs a lot of characters, and when you hold this up against something like The Trial of Chicago 7, itâs just obvious that the film has too many elements for any filmmaker to be able to juggle at once.
Because of this, The Devil Has A Name is an erratic real-life dramedy thatâs too all over the place in terms of tone, it ends up shooting itself in the foot by trying (and failing) to be funny despite the serious subject matter.
Next up is 2 HEARTS (Silver Lion Films/ Freestyle Releasing), another movie based on a true story from the Hool Brothers, who I really wasnât very familiar with. I assumed this was going to be a faith-based movie, and maybe in some ways it is, but not really. It essentially tells two stories set in different time periods that you assume will somehow be connected. Ooh, boy.
First, thereâs Jacob Elordi of Euphoria and The Kissing Booth â neither of which Iâve seen, mind you â who plays Chris Gregory, a college kid who connects in a meet-cute way with Tiera Skovbyeâs Sam. Before we get too far into their story, we cut back to what looks like Cuba in the â50s and 60s, and meet Jorge Bolivar (Adan Canto), the son of an alcohol magnate, a soccer player who suffers a serious lung issue that puts him in the hospital. Years later, Jorge is travelling to Miami when he meets Radha Mitchellâs Leslie working as a flight attendant.
Both guys are pretty suave smooth-talking pick-up artists, and the movie spends almost an hour cutting between two very corny and cheesy romance stories that really donât offer much in terms of story. Instead, it keeps following Chris and Samâs life as they have kids, taking forever to get to the connection between the stories. I was getting pretty bored of the movie, but I felt like I had to stick it out to see what happens.
When you call a movie â2 Hearts,â you kind of expect it to be about a heart transplant of some kind, right? But no, itâs actually about a dual lung transplant that Jorge receives. Want to take a wild guess who the donor is? Â I certainly donât want to spoil what happens, but for a movie that spends a good hour setting up the relationships between the two men and their pretty blondes with ups and downs that makes it seem like a Nicholas Sparks movie, it really throws a spanner into the fairy tale with all the melodrama thatâs to come. Itâs such a whiplash in terms of tone it pretty much destroys any chance of one enjoying the movie for what it is. It also loses a lot without Elordi, since the actors who play his family arenât very good at all.
I had to actually look up the story to see how much if it was true, only to learn that Jorge was based on Jorge Bacardi who actually received a double lung transplant from one Christopher Gregory, inspiring him to create the Gabriel House of Care. The problem is that the time periods get so messed up by setting one story decades in the past. Using the same actors to play the people over that time with pretty shabby make-up just makes things that much more confusing. The big problem is that it spends so much time avoiding the actual plot and point of making the movie that by the time it gets to it, you just donât care about the characters anymore.
The whole thing is very by the books and predictable, but ultimately, itâs hard to believe any of it, despite it being based on a true story. If you go into this movie expecting love and romance and all that kind of mushy stuff from the title, youâre likely to be disappointed when the movie finally gets to its point. (In other words, it could have used some giant monsters.)
Hereâs another movie that I didnât really know what to expect going in and that probably should have helped me enjoy it more⊠if it was anything resembling a good movie. Picked up at the Toronto Film Festival where it premiered last month, Evan Morganâs THE KID DETECTIVE (Sony) stars Adam Brody as Abe Appelbaum, the âkid detectiveâ of the titles, who as a child was one of those super-smart kids who have the deductive powers to help the people in his community, but as a 32-year-old, he just isnât taken as seriously any more. When a high school girl named Caroline (Sophie NĂ©lisse) comes to Abe to find out who murdered her boyfriend, Abe finally realizes that he has his first grown-up case, though heâs still obsessed with the disappearance of the mayorâs daughter (and his kid receptionist) Gracie many years earlier.
Iâm sure thereâs gonna be people out there who watch and appreciate The Kid Detective for what it is, a wry and slightly clever noir pastiche pseudo-comedy, but anyone who has seen Rian Johnsonâs first film Brick or the underrated Mystery Team (starring Donald Glover very early in his career) might feel that this doesnât live up to either. Besides the fact that Brody really hasnât developed much personality as an actor, the film rolls along with a fairly flat, deadpan tone that just never gets remotely exciting. The humor is subdued and yet it feels like everyone is constantly trying too hard, particularly Morgan, while at the same time not really taking any chances. This is a movie that could have been edgier but instead, it milks its flimsy high-concept premise as long as possible before giving up.
Like Love and Monsters, Sony is releasing The Kid Detective into theaters on Friday, and hopefully parents will check that rating before assuming itâs a kid flick. Although there isnât so much bad language or anything that wouldnât warrant a PG⊠other than the fact that itâs not particularly funny or even entertaining and kids will be super-bored.
I canât believe thereâs still more! Amazonâs âWelcome to the Blumhouseâ anthology series continues this week with two more movies in the series of eight, which you can now watch on Prime Video:
Easily my favorite of the four movies Iâve seen is Zu Quirkeâs NOCTURNE (Amazon), which follows a pair of twins, Julie (Sidney Sweeney) and Vivian (Madison Iseman), who are both competitive concert pianists at the Lindberg Academy, although Vivian is clearly the better, as sheâs heading off to Julliard while Julian is taking a gap year.
Before we meet them, we see a young violist jumping off the balcony to her death for some reason, and we learn that she was the finalist to play a concerto, so now that slot is open and both Julie and her sister desperately want it.
Nocturne is certainly more like the horror movies we expect from Blumhouse, which is both good and bad. The good is that it is indeed quite scary as Quirkeâs team uses really eerie lighting effects and other things to create suspense. But thereâs also an artiness to what Quirke does that elevates Nocturne above the normal high-concept horror-thriller.
Quirke, who also wrote the film, delivers all the characterization you expect from a good horror film so that you really care about the characters, and sheâs put together such a fine cast, particularly Sweeney who has to run a gamut of emotions as Julie. I also like Rodney To as Julieâs tough instructor Wilkins
Again, I wonât say too much more about the actual plot, although if you can imagine a Faustian bargain and how that plays out for those around Julie, you can probably understand why a super-fan of The Omen might dig what Quirke did in this environment.
The fourth movie in the âWelcome to the Blumouseâ series is EVIL EYE (Amazon), from Indo-American filmmakers Elan and Rajeev Dassani, a relatively innocuous thriller based around the relationship between Pallavi (Sunita Mani from last weekâs Save Yourselves! and GLOW) and her mother Usha, played by Sarita Choudhury. Â Pallavi is in her late 20s and single and her mother keeps wanting to get her set-up with a nice man, as a good Indian mother is wont to do. Â When Pallavi meets Sandeep (Omar Maskati), things are going well since he has money and her mother thinks her daughter has hit the jackpot, until she realizes that Sandeep has a dark secret.
Hereâs another thriller where itâs really tough to talk about the plot, because obviously the filmmakers want the story to unfold in the specific way it was written. Apparently, this one was once an Audible story, and the first thing I noticed was how amazing Sunita Mani looks from her fairly glammed down roles in other things. I think sheâs just wearing make-up and has her styled different but Iâm not sure I would have known it was the same actor in Save Yourselves! Because I had to do a double take.
The problem with Evil Eye, and itâs been a problem with some of the other âWelcome to the Blumhouseâ movies, is that it isnât necessarily what Iâd consider horror. It really plays a lot more like a romantic drama, other than the fact that Pallaviâs mother has visions and believes in astrology enough to send her daughter trinkets to protect her from the âevil eye.â In fact, the movie just gets weirder and weirder, as it starts introducing supernatural elements, and without giving the big plot twist away, it does expect one to believe in reincarnation.
I wish I could have liked this more, but it really seems like it would be better suited for a show like âThe Outer Limitsâ or âThe Twilight Zone,â since the premise is stretched so think for about 30 minutes longer than necessary. Â I think the filmmakers did perfectly fine with what they had to work with â the two main actresses are just fab â but I think Iâd need to see some of their other work to see if the issues I had were just cause the story isnât that interesting or by their limitations in making it.
(And I promise that I do have a feature on all the filmmakers from the first four âWelcome to the Blumhouseâ series coming over at Below the Line, but itâs been a pretty tough piece to write.)
I reviewed Alex Gibneyâs new doc Totally Under Control (Neon/Participant), co-directed with Ophelia Harutyunyan and Suzanne Hillinger, in last weekâs column but itâs now available to watch On Demand and then it will be on Hulu starting next Tuesday, October 20. Obviously, everyone wanted to get this out there and make sure people see it before they get too in-deep with the election.
I also reviewed David Byrneâs American Utopia (HBO), directed by Spike Lee, a few weeks back, but it will be on HBO and presumably HBO Max on Sunday night. Not as big an event as Disney+âs Hamilton but still worth watching, especially if youâre a fan of Byrne or his band the Talking Heads, because it actually acts as a nice counterpoint bookend to the late Jonathan Demmeâs fantastic Stop Making Sense, one of the best concert documentaries ever made, or at least top 5. Iâm bummed I missed Byrneâs show on Broadway, and it doesnât sound like Broadway will be coming back anytime soon so I guess this HBO documentation is the best any of us can wish for.
Of the movies I didnât have time to watch this week, the two that Iâm hoping to still get to are two docs: Inna Blockhinaâs SHE IS THE OCEAN (Blue Fox Entertainment) and Rick Kornâs HARRY CHAPIN: WHEN IN DOUBT, DO SOMETHING (Greenwich). She Is the Ocean explores the lives of nine women who all have a passion for the ocean. The Harry Chapin doc may be more self-explanatory, and I wish I was a bigger fan of Chapin, the famed singer/songwriter/activist, because maybe I would have watched this movie earlier. (But seriously, look at how many movies came out this week, when I was hoping it would be âslowerâ!) Also, Iâm a little bit interested in the K-Pop doc #BlackPinkLightUpTheSky that will air on Netflix, just because, I dunno, I like adorable, young Asian women, so sue me?
Premiering on Disney+ this Friday is Justin Baldoniâs CLOUDS, starring Fin Argus as musician Zach Sobiech, who has only months to live when his cancer starts spreading, but he follows his dream to make an album and becomes a viral music phenomenon. Iâm not sure if this is a true story but it certainly sounds a lot like a faith-based film called I Still Believe that hit theaters just before they all shut down due to the pandemic. Coincidence? I think not.
Also this week, the 32nd ANNUAL NEWFEST LGBTQ FILM FESTIVAL begins on Friday, running through October 27 with opening night being the well-regarded Ammonite, starring Kate Winslet and Saoirse Ronan, but it will be done as a drive-in, so Iâm out. Over in Los Angeles, the AFI FEST starts on Thursday and runs through October 22, and thatâs also showing a lot of cool festival/awards films that I havenât had a chance to watch yet like The Father, Iâm Your Woman and more. I missed my chance to get press accreditation, so yeah, I guess Iâll be waiting on that.
And then we get to all the movies that I didnât have time to see or didnât receive a screener, so here we go. This weekâs unfortunate dumping ground:
Lupin III: The First (GKIDS) (This anime film is being released as a Fathom event on Oct. 18 â dubbed, and Oct. 21 â subtitled)
Belly of the Beast (Iâve actually heard good things about Erika Cohnâs doc about illegal sterilizations being conducted in a womanâs prison.)
Donât Look Back (Gravitas Ventures)
Rom Boys: 40 Years of Rad (101 Films)
The Antidote (Cinetic/Brand New Story)
Monochrome: The Chromism (Tempest)
J.R âBobâ Dobbs and the Church of the Subgenius (Uncorkâd)
Monster Force Zero (WildEye Releasing)
Ghabe (GVN Releasing)
The Accidental President (Intervention)
In Case of Emergency (Kino Lorber)
Iâm not sure how much of a column Iâm gonna write next week since I wonât have nearly as much time to watch movies or write about them in the coming week, while Iâm in Colmbus. There are a couple high profile movies I hope to get to, so weâll see what happens.
By the way, if you read this weekâs column and have bothered to read this far down, feel free to drop me some thoughts at Edward dot Douglas at Gmail dot Com or drop me a note or tweet on Twitter. I love hearing from readers ⊠honest!
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