#i thought i was immune to a lot of wedding stress by virtue of being aro and having family that's mostly chill about it
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One thing they don't tell you about planning a wedding when you have no money and one of you is very sick is that it will be fraught in ways you never could have imagined.
#i thought i was immune to a lot of wedding stress by virtue of being aro and having family that's mostly chill about it#because like. i don't think this is the most important day of my life or whatever a lot of wedding industry people try to sell#but like it's still a day that's going to be important to me and someone i love even if that love is platonic#and i am realizing that i am. very much not immune to wishing we could do things differently or even more conventionally#because some things like engagement photoshoots or doing proper catering tastings and etc are like. fun and cute#and i would like to get to do some of the fun and cute things along with all the stressful logistics things#i don't know. i'm excited to see friends and i think we can probably pull this off#but i am feeling really down about the whole thing all of a sudden in a way i really was not expecting and that's hard
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RAPHAEL, AVATAR OF BLUSHING HUMILITY (TO COUNTER PRIDE)
(ao3 vers.)
The third eldest (after Cain and before Uriel)
Looks like a playboy but is actually really really shy around girls (looks can be deceiving!)
Is the type who blushes when you compliment him. He lives up to his name after all.
Doesnât like it when the attention is on him, and can only concentrate on his work when he is alone. Heâs self-conscious like that.
His name means âIt is God who has healedâ. And again, lives up to his name since he acts as the main healer/doctor in Heaven. To accommodate with the modern times, he updates his medical knowledge every 10 years by studying medicine in the human world. Is a hard worker but knows his limits unlike a certain archangel (cough Michael).
He is also the protector of weddings and conjugal love so he often answers prayers from married couples. Raphael really values the sanctity of marriage and does his best to make married couples last. Due to this, he gets saddened, and sometimes even cries when a marriage united by God had been broken.
Has very high empathy and cries at the littlest things. The literal definition of a soft boi.
Suffers the brunt of Urielâs antics due to the closeness of their lines of work from each other. If he complains heâs tired, 70% of the time, (post-snap)Uriel is the reason for his stress.
The remaining 30% is Gabrielâs doing.
Combined together and itâs Raphaelâs living nightmare.
Really tries his best to contain the sexual deviant that is the Avatar of Chastity. (ironic)
Such attempts consist of him driving the said deviant away from the cherubs, Luke and Azrael. (Must protect the children!)
âŠand giving him the death stare when Uriel attempts to open his mouth in front of Michael when the latter asks for âsuggestionsâ. (grandpa is tired already and doesnât need the additional stress).
âDonât have sex. Because you will get pregnant and DIE.âÂ
If he doesnât do damage control, no one will. Michael is too busy, Cain is too doting and Seraphiel justâŠgave up. Azrael is only a few hundred years old. What if he learns from his brothersâ bad examples?
The disappointed and unappreciated(?) single mom of the group.
Likes brewing tea. Often brews tea to go with Lukeâs sweets.
Is good friends with Simeon. Also not good with human technology outside of medicine like his friend(though not as bad as Simeon).
Keeps a stash of lollipops for his little patients and often gives some to Azrael after the young boyâs angel-of-death training with Michael. Since Azrael wouldnât accept them without reason, he usually makes an excuse that the Avatar of Patience needs âa checkup every time after trainingâ. He knows how harshly Azrael treats himself sometimes so he liked to at least cheer him up a little by giving him his favourite sweets.
A bit of a health nut, but since he has child patients, he often makes his concocted medicines a lot more palatable for their taste buds. He often mixes his herbs and concoctions in snacks and desserts to get children to drink their medication.
He also realised this is the best way for Seraphiel to finally eat the vegetables he hates so much. Of course, he does so without the Avatar of Temperanceâs knowing.
The unofficial baker for the Virtues. Likes teaching Luke how to bake in his free time.
If you want to see something adorable, tell him âGreat job!â or âI really appreciate you.â
Expect a human tomato with teary eyes, and overall just a sputtering mess.
Self-deprecation.exe
Rather than his angel form, he likes using his human form more. Heâs especially fond of wearing labcoats. He thinks the clothes in the Celestial Realm are too flashy for him.
As long as you donât pay attention to him, heâs easily one of the most powerful angels in Heaven. But due to his shyness, heâs usually content with standing by in the sidelines.
Is probably an otaku. Seraphiel briefly saw him holding out a weird looking glowing wand while chanting âRoo Rye-chin is bayâ in his office once. Raphael avoided him for 3 days straight after the incident.
His mint green hair gets disheveled while working so he started tying it up. Azrael also gifted him with some hair pins to keep the hair out of the way and he liked it so much that he started growing his hair longer so he can use it everyday.
Had some beef with Asmodeus back in the day but they seem to have a neutral relationship now.
âŠRaphael has no idea why he always gets entangled with lascivious personalities either.
Illnesses do not always have to be physical. Raphael also pacifies those with troubled minds. If you pray to him when you have some mental ailments, or even anxieties, he would always offer an ear to listen. Oftentimes, he couldnât help but absorb your negative energy, which he usually expresses through crying. Even so, if he knows listening to your prayers would ease even a bit of your pain, he will always be willing to help you.
Also the patron angel for the blind. These days, he couldnât heal the blind while on incognito unlike the old days, so he instead helps researchers or doctors sometimes when treating blind or partially blind patients. He also does this in other fields of medicine. If he discovers a way to treat an illness and along with it, gains Michaelâs approval to interfere with the humans, he will do so by offering information, or sometimes, he appears in researcherâs or doctorâs thoughts or dreams so they could take credit for the information themselves. If a medical discovery was discovered in serendipity, 90% of the time, it was due to Raphaelâs interference.
He doesnât have any preferences for food. He would be happy to eat anything as long as itâs healthy and filling.
Often goes foraging in the human world as an excuse to find rare herbs and plants he can use in his medicine.
His medical knowledge (especially potion making) often attracts the attention of witches. Since he has almost zero social skills especially  in dealing with the opposite sex, he uses Michael as a shield so he wouldnât deal with them.
Michaelâs office is a fortress in itself. Once you promise to help him out with his work, good luck getting out alive. (He doesnât mind though. Itâs a lot better than dealing with girls).
Probably bumped into Levi a few times when going to Ruri-themed events.
He tests the medicine he makes on himself before using it on his patients. Due to this, he is resistant, and even immune to some poisons.
If he coops himself up in his clinic for more than a week, heâs most likely in quarantine from whatever deadly side effect his experiment-of-the-month brought upon.
He has little regard for his own well-being, and often prioritises other people over himself. Despite his timidity and shyness, he is quite daring, perhaps even careless if the other party involved is himself.
#obey me oc#obey me angels#obey me headcanons#shall we date obey me#obey me#obey me shall we date#bbwritesforom
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Summer 2020âČs Movies - My Top Ten Favourite Films (Part 2)
10. Â BODY CAM â in the face of the current pandemic, viral outbreak cinema has become worryingly prescient lately, but as COVID led to civil unrest there were a couple of films in this summer that REALLY seemed to me to put their finger on the pulse of another particularly shitty zeitgeist. Â Admittedly this one highlights a problem thatâs been around for a good while, but it came along at just the right time to gain particularly strong resonance, filtering its message into the most reliable form of allegorical social commentary â horror. Â The vengeful ghost trope has become pretty familiar over the past decade or so, but by marrying it with the corrupt cop thriller veteran horror screenwriter Nicholas McCarthy (The Pact) has given it a nice fresh spin, and the end result was, for me, a real winner. Â Mary J. Blige plays troubled LAPD cop Renee Lomito-Smith, back on the beat after an extended hiatus following a particularly harrowing incident, just as fellow officers from her own precinct begin to die violent deaths under mysterious circumstances, and the only clues are weird, haunting camera footage that only Renee and her new partner, rookie Danny Holledge (Paper Towns and Death Noteâs Natt Wolff), manage to see before it inexplicable wipes itself. Â Something supernatural is stalking the City of Angels at night, and itâs got a serious grudge against local cops as the increasingly disturbing investigation slowly brings an act of horrific police brutality to light, until Renee no longer knows who in her department she can trust. Â This is one of the most insidious scare-fests Iâve enjoyed so far this year, sophomore director Malik Vitthal (Imperial Dreams) weaving an effective atmosphere of pregnant dread and wire-taut suspense while delivering some impressively hair-raising shocks (the stunning minimart sequence is the filmâs undeniable highlight), while the ghostly threat is cleverly thought-out and skilfully brought to âlifeâ. Â Blige delivers another top-drawer performance, giving Renee a winning combination of wounded fragility and steely resolve that makes for a particularly compelling hero, while Wolff invests Danny with skittish uncertainty and vulnerability in one of his strongest performances to date, and Dexter star David Zayas brings interesting moral complexity to the role of their put-upon superior, Sergeant Kesper. Â In these times of heightened social awareness, when the policeâs star has become particularly tarnished as unnecessary force, racial profiling and cover-ups have become major hot-button topics, the power and relevance of this particular slice of horror cinema cannot be denied.
9.  BLOOD QUANTUM â it certainly has been a great year for horror, and for most of the summer this was the genre leader, a compellingly fresh take on the zombie outbreak genre with a killer hook.  Canadian writer-director Jeff Barnaby (Rhymes for Young Ghouls) has always clung close to his Native American roots, and he brings strong social relevance to the intriguing early 80s Canadian setting as a really nasty zombie virus wreaks havoc in the Red Crow Indian Reservation and its neighbouring town.  It soon becomes clear, however, that members of the local tribe are immune to the infection, a revelation with far-reaching consequences as the outbreak rages unchecked and society begins to crumble.  Barnaby pulls off some impressive world-building and creates a compellingly grungy post-apocalyptic vibe as the story progresses, while the zombies themselves are a visceral, scuzzy bunch, and thereâs plenty of cracking set-pieces and suitably full-blooded kills to keep the gore-hounds happy, while the horror has real intelligence behind it, the script posing interesting questions and delivering some uncomfortable answers.  The characters, meanwhile, are a well-drawn, complex bunch, no black-and-white saviours among them, any one of them capable of some pretty inhuman horrors when the chips are down, and the cast, an interesting mix of seasoned talent and unknowns, all excel in their roles â Michale Greyeyes (Fear the Walking Dead) and Forrest Goodluck (The Revenant) are the closest things the film has to real heroes, the former a fallible everyman as Traylor, the small-town sheriff whoâs just trying to do right by his family, the latter unsure of himself as his son, put-upon teenage father-to-be Joseph; meanwhile, Olivia Scriven is tough but vulnerable as his pregnant white girlfriend Charlie, Stonehorse Lone Goeman is a grizzled badass as tough-as-nails tribal elder Gisigu, and Kiowa Gordon (probably best known for playing a werewolf in the Twilight movies) really goes to the dark side as Josephâs delinquent half-brother Lysol, while thereâs a memorably subtle turn from Dead Manâs Gary Farmer as unpredictable loner Moon.  This is definitely one of the yearâs darkest films â by and large playing the horror straight, it tightens the screws as the situation grows steadily worse, and almost makes a virtue of wallowing in its hopeless tone â but thereâs a fatalistic charm to all the bleakness, even in the downbeat yet tentatively hopeful climax, while itâs hard to deny the ruthless efficiency of the violence on display. This certainly isnât a horror movie for everyone, but those with a strong stomach and relatively hard heart will find much to enjoy here.  Jeff Barnaby is definitely gonna be one to watch in the future ⊠Â
8.  PALM SPRINGS â the summerâs comedy highlight kind of snuck in under the radar, becoming something of an on-demand secret weapon with all the cinemas closed, and it definitely deserves its swiftly growing cult status.  You certainly canât possibly believe itâs the feature debut of director Max Barbakow, who shows the kind of sharp-witted, steady-handed control of his craft thatâs usually the province of far more experienced talents ⊠then again, much of the credit must surely go to seasoned TV comedy writer Andy Siara (Lodge 49), for whom this has been a real labour of love heâs been tending since his film student days.  Certainly all that care, nurture and attention to detail is up there on the screen, the exceptional script singing its irresistible siren song from the start and providing fertile ground for its promising new director to spread his own creative wings.  The premise may be instantly familiar â playing like a latter-day Saturday Night Live take on Groundhog Day (Siara admits it was a major influence), it follows the misadventures of Sarah (How I Met Your Motherâs Cristin Miliota), the black sheep maid of honour at her sweet little sister Talaâs (Riverdaleâs Camila Mendes) wedding to seemingly perfect hunk Abe (Supergirlâs Superman, Tyler Hoechlin), as she finds herself repeating the same high-stress day over and over again after being trapped in a mysterious cosmic time-loop along with slacker misanthrope Nyles (Brooklyn Nine Nine megastar Andy Samberg), whoâs been stuck in this same situation for MUCH longer â but in Barbakow and Siaraâs hands it feels fresh and intriguing, and goes in some surprising new directions before the well-worn central premise can outstay its welcome.  It certainly doesnât hurt that the cast are uniformly excellent â Miliota is certainly the pounding emotional heart of the film, effortlessly lovable as she flounders against her lot, then learns to accept the unique possibilities it presents, before finally resolving to find a way out, while Samberg has rarely been THIS GOOD, truly endearing in his sardonic apathy as it becomes clear heâs been stuck like this for CENTURIES, and they make an enjoyably fiery couple with snipey chemistry to burn; meanwhile thereâs top-notch support from Mendes and Hoechlin, The OCâs Peter Gallagher as Sarah and Talaâs straight-laced father, the ever-reliable Dale Dickey, a thoroughly adorable turn from Jena Freidman and, most notably, a full-blooded scene-stealing performance from the mighty J.K. Simmonds as Roy, Nylesâ nemesis, who he inadvertently trapped in the loop before Sarah and is, understandably, none too happy about it.  This really is an absolute laugh-riot, todayâs more post-modern sense of humour allowing the central pair (and their occasional enemy) to indulge in even more extreme consequence-free craziness than Bill Murray ever got away with back in the day, but like all the best comedies thereâs also a strong emotional foundation under the humour, leading us to really care about these people and what happens to them, while the story throws moments of true heartfelt power at us, particularly in the deeply cathartic climax.  Ultimately this was one of the summerâs biggest surprises, a solid gold gem that I canât recommend enough.
7.  THE LAST DAYS OF AMERICAN CRIME â the summerâs other heavyweight Zeitgeist fondler is a deeply satirical chunk of speculative dystopian sci-fi clearly intended as a cinematic indictment of Trumpâs broken America, but it became far more potent and prescient in these ⊠ahem ⊠troubled times.  Adapted by screenwriter Karl Gadjusek (Oblivion, Stranger Things, The Kingâs Man) from the graphic novel by Rick Remender and Greg Tocchini for underrated schlock-action cinema director Olivier Megaton (Transporter 3, Colombiana, the last two Taken films), this Netflix original feature seemed like a fun way to kill a cinema-deprived Saturday night in the middle of the Lockdown, but ultimately proved to have a lot more substance than expected.  Itâs powered by an intriguing premise â in a nearly lawless 2024, the US government is one week away from implementing a nationwide synaptic blocker signal called the API (American Peace Initiative) which will prevent the public from being able to commit any kind of crime â and focuses on a strikingly colourful bunch of outlaw antiheroes with an audacious agenda â prodigious Detroit bank robber Bricke (Ădgar RamirĂ©z) is enlisted by Kevin Cash (Funny Games and Hannibalâs Michael Carmen Pitt), a wayward scion of local crime family the Dumois, and his hacker fiancĂ©e Shelby Dupree (Material Girlâs Anna Brewster) to pull off whatâs destined to be the last great crime in American history, a daring raid on the night of the signal to steal over a billion dollars from the Motor Cityâs âmoney factoryâ and then escape across the border into Canada.  From this deceptively simple premise a sprawling action epic was born, carried along by a razor sharp, twisty script and Megatonâs typically hyperbolic, showy auteur directing style and significant skill at crafting thrillingly explosive set-pieces, while the cast consistently deliver quality performances.  RamirĂ©z has long been one of those actors I really love to watch, a gruff, quietly intense alpha male whose subtle understatement hides deep reserves of emotional intensity, while Dupree takes a character who could have been a thinly-drawn femme fetale and invests her with strong personal drive and steely resolve, and thereâs strong support from Neil Blomkampf regulars Sharlto Copley and Brandon Auret as, respectively, emasculated beat cop Sawyer and brutal Mob enforcer Lonnie French, as well as a nearly unrecognisable Patrick Bergin as local kingpin (and Kevinâs father) Rossi Dumois; the film is roundly stolen, however, by Pitt, a phenomenal actor Iâve always thought we just donât see enough of, here portraying a spectacularly sleazy, unpredictable force of nature who clearly has his own dark agenda, but whom we ultimately canât help rooting for even as he stabs us in the back.  This is a cracking film, a dark and dangerous thriller of rare style and compulsive verve that I happily consider to be Megatonâs best film to date BY FAR â needless to say it was a major hit for Netflix when it dropped, clearly resonating with its audience given whatâs STILL going on in the real world, and while it may have been roundly panned in reviews I think, like some of the platformâs other more glossy Original hits (Bright springs to mind), itâs destined for a major critical reappraisal and inevitable cult status before too long âŠ
6.  HAMILTON â arriving just as Black Lives Matter reached fever-pitch levels, this feature presentation of the runaway Broadway musical smash-hit could not have been better timed.  Shot over three nights during the showâs 2016 run with the original cast and cut together with specially created âsetup shotsâ, itâs an immersive experience that at once puts you right in amongst the audience (at times almost a character themselves, never seen but DEFINITELY heard) but also lets you experience the action up close.  And what action â itâs an incredible show, a thoroughly fascinating piece of work that reads like something very staid and proper on paper (an all-encompassing biographical account of the life and times of American Founding Father Alexander Hamilton) but, in execution, becomes something very different and EXTREMELY vital.  The execution certainly couldnât be further from the usual period biopic fare this kind of historical subject matter usually gets (although in the face of recent top-notch revisionist takes like Marie Antoinette, The Great and Tesla itâs not SO surprising), while the cast is not at all what youâd expect â with very few notable exceptions the cast is almost entirely people of colour, despite the fact that the real life individuals theyâre playing were all very white indeed.  That said, every single one of them is an absolute revelation â the showâs writer-composer Lin-Manuel Miranda (already riding high on the success of In the Heights) carries the central role of Hamilton with effortless charm and raw star power, Leslie Odom Jr. (Smash, Murder On the Orient Express) is duplicitously complex as his constant nemesis Aaron Burr, Christopher Jackson (In the Heights, Moana, Bull) oozes integrity and nobility as his mentor and friend George Washington, Phillipa Soo is sweet and classy as his wife Eliza while RenĂ©e Elise Goldsberry (The Immortal Life of Henrietta Jacks, Altered Carbon) is fiery and statuesque as her sister Angelica Schuyler (the one who got away), and Jonathan Groff (Mindhunter) consistently steals every scene heâs in as fiendish yet childish fan favourite King George III; ultimately, however, the show (and the film) belongs to veritable powerhouse Daveed Diggs (Blindspotting, TVâs Snowpiercer) in a spectacular duel role, starting subtly but gaining scene-stealing momentum as French Revolutionary Gilbert du Motier, the Marquis de Lafayette, before EXPLODING onto the stage in the second half as indomitable eventual American President Thomas Jefferson.  Not having seen the stage show, I was taken completely by surprise by this, revelling in its revisionist genius and offbeat, quirky hip-hop charm, spellbound by the skilful ease with which is takes the sometimes quite dull historical fact and skews it into something consistently entertaining and absorbing, transported by the catchy earworm musical numbers and thoroughly tickled by the delightfully cheeky sense of humour strung throughout (at least when I wasnât having my heart broken by moments of raw dramatic power). Altogether itâs a pretty unique cinematic experience I wish I could have actually gotten to see on the big screen, and one Iâve consistently recommended to all my friends, even the ones who donât usually like musicals.  As far as Iâm concerned it doesnât need a proper Les MisĂ©rables style screen adaptation â this is about as perfect a presentation as the show could possibly hope for.
5.  SPUTNIK â the summerâs horror highlight (despite SERIOUSLY tough competition) is a guaranteed sleeper hit that I almost totally missed, stumbling across the trailer one day on YouTube and being completely bowled over by its potential, prompting me to hunt it down by any means necessary.  The feature debut of Russian director Egor Abramenko, this first contact sci-fi chiller is about as far from E.T. as itâs possible to get, sharing some of the same DNA as Carpenterâs The Thing but proudly carving its own path with consummate skill and definitely signalling great things to come from its brand new helmer and relative unknown screenwriters Oleg Malovichko and Andrei Zolotarev.  Oksana Akinshina (probably best known in the West for her powerful climactic cameo in The Bourne Supremacy) is the beating heart of the film as neurophysiologist Tatyana Yuryevna Klimova, brought in to aid in the investigation in the Russian wilderness circa 1983 after an orbital research mission goes horribly wrong.  One of the cosmonauts dies horribly, while the other, Konstantin (The Duelistâs Pyotr Fyodorov) seems unharmed, but it quickly becomes clear that heâs now playing host to something decidedly extraterrestrial and potentially terrifying, and as Tatyana becomes more deeply embroiled in her assignment she comes to realise that her superiors, particularly mysterious Red Army project leader Colonel Semiradov (The PyraMMMidâs Fyodor Bondarchuk), have far darker plans for Konstantin and his new âfriendâ than she could ever imagine.  This is about as dark, intense and nightmarish as this particular sub-genre gets, a magnificently icky body horror that slowly builds its tension as weâre gradually exposed to the various truths and the awful gravity of the situation slowly reveals itself, punctuated by skilfully executed shocks and some particularly horrifying moments when the evils inflicted by the humans in charge prove to be far worse than anything the alien can do, while the ridiculously talented writers have a field day pulling the rug out from under us again and again, never going for the obvious twist and keeping us guessing right to the devastating ending, while the beautifully crafted digital creature effects are nothing short of astonishing and thoroughly creepy.  Akinshina dominates the film with her unbridled grace, vulnerability and integrity, the relationship that develops between Tatyana and Konstantin (Fyodorov delivering a beautifully understated turn belying deep inner turmoil) feeling realistically earned as it goes from tentatively wary to ultimately, tragically bittersweet, while Bondarchuk invests the Colonel with a subtly nuanced air of tarnished authority and restrained brutality that makes him one of my top screen villains for the year.  Guaranteed to go down as one of 2020âs great sleeper hits, I canât speak of this film highly enough â itâs a genuine revelation, an instant classic for whom Iâll sing its praises for the remainder of the year and beyond, and I wish utmost success to all the creative talents involved in the future.  The Invisible Man still rules the roost in the yearâs horror stakes, but this runs a VERY close second âŠ
4.  GREYHOUND â when the cinemas closed back in March, the fate of many of the major summer blockbusters weâd been looking forward to was thrown into terrible doubt. Some were pushed back to more amenable dates in the autumn or winter, others knocked back a whole year to fill summer slots for 2021, but more than a few simply dropped off the radar entirely with the terrible words âpostponed until further noticeâ stamped on them, and I lamented them all, this one in particular.  It hung in there longer than some, stubbornly holding onto its June release slot for as long as possible, but eventually it gave up the ghost too ⊠but thanks to Apple TV+, not for long, ultimately releasing less than a month later than intended.  Thankfully the final film was worth the fuss, a taut World War II suspense thriller thatâs all killer, no filler â set during the infamous Battle of the Atlantic, it portrays the constant life-or-death struggle faced by the Allied warships assigned to escort the transport convoys as they crossed the ocean, defending their charges from German U-boats.  Adapted from C.S. Foresterâs famous 1955 novel The Good Shepherd by Tom Hanks and directed by Aaron Schneider (Get Low), the narrative focuses on the crew of the escort leader, American destroyer USS Fletcher, codenamed Greyhound, and in particular its captain, Commander Ernest Krause (Hanks), a career sailor serving his first command.  As they cross âthe Pitâ, the most dangerous mid stretch of the journey where they spend days without air-cover, they find themselves shadowed by âthe Wolf Packâ, a particularly cunning group of German subs that begin to pick away at the convoyâs stragglers.  Faced with daunting odds, a dwindling supply of vital depth-charges and a ruthless, persistent enemy, Krause must make hard choices to bring his ships home safe ⊠jumping into the thick of the action within the first ten minutes and maintaining that tension for the remainder of its trim 90-minute run, this is screen suspense par excellence, a sleek textbook example of how to craft a compelling big screen knuckle-whitener with zero fat and maximum reward, delivering a series of desperate naval scraps packed with hide-and-seek intensity, heart-in-mouth near-misses and fist-in-air cathartic payoffs by the bucket-load.  Hanks is subtly magnificent, the calm centre of the narrative storm as a supposed newcomer to this battle arena who could have been BORN for it, bringing to mind the similarly unflappable turn he delivered in Captain Phillips and certainly not suffering by comparison; by and large heâs the focus point, but other crew members do make strong (if sometimes quite brief) impressions, particularly Stephen Graham as Krauseâs reliably seasoned XO, Lt. Commander Charlie Cole, The Magnificent Sevenâs Manuel Garcia-Rulfo and Just Mercyâs Rob Morgan, while Elisabeth Shue does a lot with a very small part in brief flashbacks as Krauseâs fiancĂ©e Evelyn.  Relentless, powerful, exhilarating and thoroughly unforgettable, this was one of the true action highlights of the summer, and one hell of a war flick.  Iâm so glad it made the cut for the season âŠ
3.  PROJECT POWER â with Marvel and DC pushing their tent-pole titles back into late autumn in the face of COVID, the usual superhero antics weâve come to expect over the main blockbuster season were pretty thin on the ground, leading us to find our geeky fan thrills elsewhere.  Unfortunately, pickings were frustratingly slim â Korean comic book actioner Gundala was entertaining but workmanlike, while Thor AU-take Mortal was underwhelming despite strong direction from Troll Hunterâs AndrĂ© Ăvredal, and Iâve already made my feelings clear on the frustration of The New Mutants â thank the Gods, then, for Netflix, once again riding to the rescue with this enjoyably offbeat super-thriller, which takes an intriguing central premise and really runs with it.  New designer drug Power has hit the streets of New Orleans, able to give anyone who takes it a superpower for five minutes ⊠the only problem is, until you try it, you wonât know what your own unique talent is â for some, it could mean five minutes of invisibility, or insane levels of super-strength, but other powers can be potentially lethal, the really unlucky buggers just blowing up on the spot.  Robin (The Hate U Giveâs Dominique Fishback) is a teenage Power-pusher with dreams of becoming a rap star, dealing the pills so she can help her diabetic mum; Frank Shaver (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) is one of her customers, an NOPD detective who uses his power of near invulnerability to even the playing field when powered crims cause a disturbance.  Their lives are turned upside down when Art (Jamie Foxx) arrives in town â heâs a seriously badass ex-soldier determined to hunt down the source of Power by any means necessary, and heâs not above tearing the Big Easy apart to do it.  This is a fun, gleefully infectious  rollercoaster that doesnât take itself too seriously, revelling in the anarchic potential of its premise and crafting some suitably OTT effects-driven chaos brought to pleasingly visceral fruition by its skilfully inventive director, Ariel Schulman (Catfish, Nerve, Viral), while Mattson Tomlin (the screenwriter of next yearâs incendiary DCEU headline act The Batman) takes his script in some very interesting directions and poses some fascinating questions about what Powerâs TRULY capable of.  Gordon-Levitt and Fishback are both brilliant, the latter particularly impressing in whatâs sure to be a major breakthrough role for her, and the friendship their characters share is pretty adorable, while Foxx really is a force to be reckoned with, pretty chill even when heâs in deep shit but fully capable of turning into a bona fide killing machine at the flip of a switch, and thereâs strong support from Westworldâs Rodrigo Santoro as Biggie, Powerâs delightfully oily kingpin, Courtney B. Vance as Frankâs by-the-book superior, Captain Crane, Amy Landecker as Gardner, the morally bankrupt CIA spook responsible for the drugâs production, and Machine Gun Kelly as Newt, a Power dealer whose explosive pyrotechnic âgiftâ really isnât all itâs cracked up to be.  Exciting, inventive, frequently amusing and infectiously likeable, this was some of the most uncomplicated âcinematicâ fun I had this summer.  Not bad for something which Iâm sure was originally destined to become one of the seasonâs B-list features âŠ
2.  THE OLD GUARD â Netflixâs undisputable TOP OFFERING of the summer came damn close to bagging the whole season, and I canât help thinking that even if some of the stiffer competition had still been present it may well have still finished this high. Gina Prince-Blythewood (Love & Basketball, the Secret Life of Bees) directs comics legend Greg Ruckaâs adaptation of his own popular title with uncanny skill and laser-focused visual flair considering thereâs nothing on her previous CV to suggest sheâd be THIS good at mounting a stomping good ultraviolent action thriller, ushering in this thoroughly engrossing tale of four ancient, invulnerable immortal warriors â Andy AKA Andromache of Scythia (Charlize Theron), Booker AKA Sebastian de Livre (Matthias Schoenaerts), Joe AKA Yusuf Al-Kaysani (Wolfâs Marwan Kenzari) and Nicky AKA Niccolo di Ginova (Trustâs Luca Marinelli) â whoâve been around forever, hiring out their services as mercenaries for righteous causes while jealously guarding their identities for fear of horrific experimentation and exploitation should their true natures ever be discovered.  Their anonymity is threatened, however, when theyâre uncovered by former CIA operative James Copley (Chiwetel Ejiofor), working for the decidedly dodgy pharmaceutical conglomerate run by sociopathic billionaire Steven Merrick (Harry Melling, formerly Dudley in the Harry Potter movies), who want to capture these immortals so they can patent whatever it is that makes them keep on ticking ⊠just as a fifth immortal, US Marine Nile Freeman (If Beale Street Could Talkâs KiKi Layne), awakens after being âkilledâ on deployment in Afghanistan.  The supporting players are excellent, particularly Ejiofor, smart and driven but ultimately principled and deeply conflicted about what heâs doing, even if he does have the best of intentions, and Melling, the kind of loathsome, reptilian scumbag you just love to hate, but the film REALLY DOES belong to the Old Guard themselves â Schoenaerts is a master brooder, spot-on casting as the groupâs relative newcomer, only immortal since the Napoleonic Wars but clearly one seriously old soul whoâs already VERY tired of the lifestyle, while Joe and Nicky (who met on opposing sides of the Crusades) are simply ADORABLE, an unapologetically matter-of-fact gay couple who are sweet, sassy and incredibly kind, the absolute emotional heart of the film; itâs the ladies, however, that are most memorable here.  Layne is exceptional, investing Nile with a steely intensity that puts her in good stead as her new existence threatens to overwhelm her and MORE THAN qualified to bust heads alongside her elders ⊠but itâs ancient Greek warrior Andy who steals the film, Theron building on the astounding work she did in Atomic Blonde to prove, once and for all, that thereâs no woman on Earth who looks better kicking arse than her (as Booker puts it, âthat woman has forgotten more ways to kill than entire armies will ever learnâ); in her hands, Andy truly is a goddess of death, tough as tungsten alloy and unflappable even in the face of hell itself, but underneath it all she hides a heart as big as any of her friendsâ. Theyâre an impossibly lovable bunch and you feel you could follow them on another TEN adventures like this one, which is just as well, because Prince-Blythewood and Rucka certainly put them through their paces here â the drama is high (but frequently laced with a gentle, knowing sense of humour, particularly whenever Joe and Nicky are onscreen), as are the stakes, and the frequent action sequences are top-notch, executed with rare skill and bone-crunching zest, but also ALWAYS in service to the story. Altogether this is an astounding film, a genuine victory for its makers and, it seems, for Netflix themselves â itâs become one of the platformâs biggest hits to date, earning well-deserved critical acclaim and great respect and genuine geek love from the fanbase at large. After this, a sequel is not only inevitable, itâs ESSENTIAL âŠ
1.  TENET â granted, the streaming platforms (particularly Netflix and Amazon) certainly did save our cinematic summer, but Iâm still IMMEASURABLY glad that the seasonâs ultimate top-spot winner was one I got to experience on THE BIG SCREEN.  You gotta hand it to Christopher Nolan, he sure hung in there, stubbornly determined that his latest cinematic masterpiece WOULD be released in cinemas in the summer (albeit ultimately landing JUST inside the line in the final week of August), and it was worth all the fuss because, for me, this was THE PERFECT MOVIE for me to get return to cinemas with.  I mean, okay, in the end it WASNâT the FIRST new movie I saw after the reopening, that honour went to Unhinged, but THIS was my first real Saturday night out big screen EXPERIENCE since March.  Needless to say, Nolan didnât disappoint this time any more than he has on any of his consistently spectacular previous releases, delivering another twisted, mind-boggling headfuck of a full-blooded experiential sensory overload that comes perilously close to toppling his long-standing auteur-peak, Inception (itself second only by fractions to The Dark Knight as far as Iâm concerned). To say much at all about the plot would give away major spoilers â personally Iâd recommend just going in as cold as possible, indeed you really should just stop reading this right now and just GO SEE IT.  Still with us?  Okay ⊠the VERY abridged version is that itâs about a secret war being waged between the present and the future by people capable of âinvertingâ time in substances, objects, people, whatever, into which the Protagonist (BlacKkKlansmanâs John David Washington), an unnamed CIA agent, has been dispatched in order to prevent a potential coming apocalypse. Washington is once again on top form, crafting a robust and compelling morally complex heroic lead whoâs just as comfortable negotiating the minefields of black market intrigue as he is breaking into places or dispatching heavies, Kenneth Branagh delivers one of his most interesting and memorable performances in years as brutal Russian oligarch Andrei Sator, a genuinely nasty piece of work who may be the yearâs very best screen villain, Elizabeth Debicki (The Night Manager, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, Widows) brings strength, poise and wounded integrity to the role of Satorâs estranged wife, Kat, and Aaron Taylor-Johnson gets to use his own accent for once as tough-as-nails British Intelligence officer Ives, while there are brief but consistently notable supporting turns and cameos from Martin Donovan, Yesterdayâs HImesh Patel, Dirk Gentlyâs Fiona Dourif and, of course, Nolanâs good luck charm, Michael Caine.  The castâs biggest surprise, however, is Robert Pattinson, truly a revelation in what has to be, HANDS DOWN, his best role to date, Neil, the Protagonistâs mysterious handler â heâs by turns cheeky, slick, duplicitous and thoroughly badass, delivering an enjoyably multi-layered, chameleonic performance which proves what Iâve long maintained, that the former Twilight star is actually a fucking amazing actor, and on the basis of this, even without that amazing new teaser trailer making the rounds, I think the debate about whether or not heâs the right choice for the new Batman is now academic.  As weâve come to expect from Nolan, this is a TRUE tour-de-force experience, a visual masterpiece and an endlessly engrossing head-scratcher, Nolanâs screenplay bringing in some seriously big ideas and throwing us some major narrative knots and loopholes, constantly wrong-footing the viewer while also setting up truly revelatory payoffs from seemingly low-key, unimportant beginnings â this is a film you need to be awake and attentive for or you could miss something pretty vital.  The action sequences are, as ever, second to none, some of the yearâs very best set-pieces coming thick and fast and executed with some of the most accomplished skill in the business, while Nolan-regular cinematographer Hoyte van Hoytema (Interstellar and Dunkirk, as well as the heady likes of Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, SPECTRE and Ad Astra) once again shows heâs one of the best camera-wizards in the business today by delivering some truly mesmerising visuals.  Notably, Nolanâs other regular collaborator, composer Hans Zimmer, is absent here (although he has good reason, currently working on his dream project, the fast-approaching screen adaptation of Dune), but Ludwig Göransson (best known for his regular collaborations with Ryan Coogler on the likes of Fruitvale Station, Creed and Black Panther, as well as truly awesome work on The Mandalorian) makes for a fine replacement, crafting an intriguingly internalised, post-modern musical landscape that thrums and pulses in time with the story and emotions of the characters rather than the action itself. Interestingly itâs on the subject of sound that some of the filmâs rare detractions have been levelled, and I can see some of the points â the soundtrack mix is an all-encompassing thing, and there are times when the dialogue can be overwhelmed, but in Nolanâs defence as a film this is a heady, immersive experience, something you really need to concentrate on, so these potential flaws are easily forgiven.  As a piece of filmmaking art, this is another flawless wonder from one of the true masters of the craft working in cinema today, but itâs art with palpable substance, a rewarding whole that really HAS TO BE experienced on the big screen.  So put your snobbery at post-lockdown restrictions aside for the moment and get yourself down to your nearest cinema so you can experience it for yourself.  You wonât be disappointed.  Right now, this is my movie of the year, and with only one possible exception, I really donât see that changing âŠ
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