This looks like it could maybe be funny? Comedies like can fall flat on their faces, but to tell you the truth, I'm so excited about the fact that Outlander's Sam Heughan is in it, that I'm almost guaranteed to see this even if it sucks.
Mr. Rogers Documentary 'Wont You Be My Neighbor' Coming This Summer
This documentary about Fred Rogers was a huge hit at Sundance this year, and not long after it was announced that Tom Hanks will be playing him in a biopic (daring the Academy not to nominate him yet again I suppose, for his late career streak since Captain Phillips), but since this is from Morgan Neville, who directed 20 Feet From Stardom (which everyone should really see), I'm more curious about this one. The release date is scheduled for June 8th, but you'll have to keep an eye out for it, since docs usually get limited releases only.
Benicio Del Toro Returns in 'Sicario: Day of the Soldado'
2015's Sicario was only a good film, in my opinion, due to Benicio Del Toro's electrifying supporting performance, and the movie should have always been about him (it's criminal that he missed an Oscar nomination that year). So there's every chance this sequel improves on the original, since it has the same writer, although it now has a different director and cinematographer (Denis Villeneuve and the great Roger Deakins may have added quite a bit to the first film's success too). We'll see. Day of the Soldado comes out June 29th.
Final 'Avengers' Trailer Promises Lots of Action, Possible Deaths
The rumors about the new Avengers movie is that Captain America for sure may meet his end, as well as some of the other regulars, like Tony Stark or Hawkeye, etc. Actor's contracts are up, which has a lot to do with it, but there's actually one more movie to come, which was filmed at the same time, so maybe nobody goes out in this particular one. I'm not a huge fan of the Avengers series (although I am starting to like some of the newer Marvel standalones, like Thor: Ragnarok, Spider-Man and Black Panther), but this is the best trailer I've seen for it so far. The movie was moved up to April 27th, away from direct competition with Deadpool 2, and it looks set to make ALL the money, based on the reaction so far.
'Love, Simon' Scores With Critics
I almost missed the boat on this movie, having just become aware of it recently, but it's coming out tomorrow and it's actually getting quite good reviews, currently sitting at 88% on Rotten Tomatoes. Directed by Greg Berlanti, who's most known now for his media empire and as co-creator of the CW superhero shows (and others, like Riverdale, etc.), this movie is rather groundbreaking, in that it's a teen comedy from a major studio in the John Hughes vein, but about a gay teenager (Nick Robinson) looking for love of his own. I may have to check this one out.
Jude Law is Young Dumbledore in 'Fantastic Beasts' Sequel
I must have read somewhere that Jude Law was going to be Dumbledore, but I'd forgotten, because him showing up in this trailer was a surprise to me. The first Fantastic Beasts movie had some good moments but was pretty mediocre overall. I don't think it helps that Eddie Redmayne's Newt Scamander isn't exactly a dynamic or exciting hero to root for. But that whole cast is back again this time for The Crimes of Grindelwald, which was promised by Johnny Depp's brief appearance in the other movie. I still think the series could benefit from protagonists that are more appealing (Jude Law is actually a step in the right direction there), but I'm sure the movie will be passable enough. I am curious though, Is David Yates ever going to stop directing these movies?
Benedict Cumberbatch is the New 'Grinch'
Ugh. I do not like Illumination Studios' movies. This looks like some kind of updated version of The Grinch I guess, with all the stores and clothes and stuff, but I really just don't like any of the movies this studio puts out. Maybe if you're a fan of Despicable Me or Sing you'll look forward to this but not me.
Winnie the Pooh Returns in Teaser for 'Christopher Robin'
If this is the beginning of a live action/CG Winnie the Pooh franchise, I'm not sure why they chose to call this Christopher Robin. Why not just Winnie the Pooh? I guess it's a good imitation by voice actor Jim Cummings of the iconic Sterling Holloway Pooh voice though. I wonder if it's also an attempt to cash in on the appeal of the Paddington movies.
Emily Blunt Takes on an Iconic Role in 'Mary Poppins Returns'
Hmm. What do you guys think of this teaser? On the one hand, you'd think it'd be impossible for someone to take over a role that Julie Andrews made famous, especially in what's supposed to be an actual, canonical sequel, but on the other (and I hate to say this)...are there millions of kids who have very likely never even seen the 1964 classic Disney musical? Probably not. I dressed up for Halloween as Mary Poppins one year and every kid who saw me thought I was supposed to be Nanny McPhee (if they even had a guess). I do think Emily Blunt appears to be trying to imitate Dame Julie's voice in this split second that we see of her. I think I'd need to see a little more footage before having an opinion on this one.
'The Shape of Water' is the big winner on Oscar night
'The Shape of Water' Wins Best Picture at the Oscars
'The Shape of Water' is the big winner on Oscar night
Well! The PGA/DGA stat held up this year! I got it wrong, but I'm very happy that it wasn't Three Billboards at least. The Shape of Water won four awards (Picture, Director, Score and Production Design) and is a lovely movie (and I DID give it the highest % odds to win, remember), so I guess 19/24 for me this year isn't too bad. It was a fairly subdued ceremony compared to last year, with Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway given a chance for a do-over to present Best Picture (correctly), and pulling it off this time. Jordan Peele made history in winning Best Original Screenplay for Get Out, and Frances McDormand gave the speech of the night when she called for all the female Oscar nominees to stand up and endorsed an "inclusion rider" for future projects, which is awesome. There were a lot of tributes to the #metoo movement, but some of that stuff rings a false note when you award people like Kobe Bryant with Oscars (really, Academy??). Jimmy Kimmel did his thing, and I still think he's one of the most comfortable Oscar hosts I've ever seen on that stage. Funny, topical, not too mean or nice. As an insider with pretty much everybody in Hollywood, he really could be the go to Oscar host for as long as they want him, kind of like Bob Hope was in the 50's and 60's.
2018 ACADEMY AWARD WINNERS:
- BEST MAKEUP AND HAIRSTYLING: Darkest Hour
- BEST COSTUME DESIGN: Phantom Thread
- BEST DOCUMENTARY: Icarus
- BEST SOUND EDITING: Dunkirk
- BEST SOUND MIXING: Dunkirk
- BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN: The Shape of Water
- BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM: A Fantastic Woman
- BEST ANIMATED SHORT: Dear Basketball
- BEST ANIMATED FEATURE: Coco
- BEST VISUAL EFFECTS: Blade Runner 2049
- BEST FILM EDITING: Dunkirk
- BEST DOCUMENTARY SHORT: Heaven is a Traffic Jam on the 405
- BEST LIVE ACTION SHORT: The Silent Child
- BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: Call Me By Your Name
- BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: Get Out
- BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY: Blade Runner 2049
- BEST ORIGINAL SCORE: The Shape of Water
- BEST ORIGINAL SONG: “Remember Me” Coco
- BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR: Sam Rockwell, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
- BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Allison Janney, I, Tonya
- BEST ACTOR: Gary Oldman, Darkest Hour
- BEST ACTRESS: Frances McDormand, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
- BEST DIRECTOR: Guillermo del Toro, The Shape of Water
- BEST PICTURE: The Shape of Water
Other moments I liked: seeing Roger Deakins finally win an Oscar for cinematography after 13 nominations, and 89-year-old James Ivory win Adapted Screenplay after never winning an Oscar for his much loved Merchant-Ivory films like A Room With a View, Howards End and The Remains of the Day. There were ultimately very few surprised this year overall, which explains how I didn't do all that badly in my predictions (if I had only gone with my instinct for Blade Runner in Visual Effects and Dear Basketball in the short category- could have been 21/24).
Two time winner Frances McDormand gave the night's most raucous acceptance speech
'Get Out' Wins Best Picture and Director at the Independent Spirit Awards
Oooh! A good omen, perhaps? For four years running, the Indie Spirit award winner for Best Feature has also won Best Picture the next day at the Oscars. I'm in luck if it happens again this year. Funny, you wouldn't think that a movie that made $175 million at the box office would qualify as an independent film, but thank to the Spirits budget rules, it does. They also gave Lady Bird a prize here in screenplay, but I still think the film may get nothing tomorrow. Or maybe we'll see some sort of crazy four way split, with Lady Bird wining screenplay, Three Billboards the acting prizes, Guillermo del Toro for directing and then Get Out for Picture? Could a movie win Best Picture and nothing else? The last time it happened was 1932, with Grand Hotel. Maybe it's time for a crazy record to be broken.
2018 INDEPENDENT SPIRIT AWARD WINNERS:
- BEST FEATURE: Get Out
- BEST DIRECTOR: Jordan Peele – Get Out
- BEST FEMALE LEAD: Frances McDormand – Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
- BEST MALE LEAD: Timothee Chalamet – Call Me By Your Name
- BEST SUPPORTING FEMALE: Allison Janney – I, Tonya
- BEST SUPPORTING MALE: Sam Rockwell – Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
- BEST SCREENPLAY: Lady Bird
- BEST FIRST SCREENPLAY: The Big Sick
- BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY: Call Me By Your Name
- BEST EDITING: I, Tonya
- BEST INTERNATIONAL FILM: A Fantastic Woman
- BEST DOCUMENTARY: Faces Places
- BEST FIRST FEATURE: Ingrid Goes West
- JOHN CASSAVETES AWARD: Life and Nothing More
- ROBERT ALTMAN AWARD: Mudbound
Lightning Round Reviews, Part 4: Yet Still More of 2017
That's right, I'm still not quite finished with last year, but I promise that Part 5 is definitely going to be the final wrap-up. This happens when many of the films you want to see don't become available until the first few months of the following year. For now, here's the next batch of what I've finally caught up with:
DAWSON CITY: FROZEN TIME * * *
The past brought back to life
A fascinating film that tracks the history of a place called Dawson City, where a treasure trove of silent film reels were discovered underground in the late 1970’s, to be restored and preserved for the collection of long lost films. Filmmaker Bill Morrison traces the history of the tiny Canadian city located in the Yukon, which has seen the ups and downs of its construction and reconstruction ever since hordes of prospectors filed in in the early days of the Klondike gold rush, and he documents that history through photographs, newspaper articles and film reels, many from the discovered collection. The movie is a near silent film itself, with a haunting score that accompanies the history lesson playing out over the images through onscreen text. It’s a parallel history of not just the city, but of film and America itself, and a must watch for movie lovers in particular.
IT * * 1/2
Pennywise the dancing clown is back
A new version of It tackles the Stephen King novel while moving the period setting from the 1950’s to the 1980’s in order to cash in on the Stranger Things-inspired nostalgia fest (one of the kids, Finn Wolfhard, actually is from Stranger Things). The result is only okay. Director Andy Muschietti helms his second feature (his first, Mama, was superior) and does manage to create some decent suspense in fits and starts. I also imagine this Pennywise, played by Bill Skarsgard, is a far more terrifying entity than Tim Curry’s hilariously over the top version from the 1990 TV miniseries, but the kids are one note stereotypes and the updated time period adds nothing to the story but throwaway references to Michael Jackson’s Pepsi commercial and New Kids on the Block. Actually it probably would have benefited from remaining in the 50’s, upping the creepy, old-fashioned horror and plausibility of the small town setting. I did like the screen presence of one of the child actors, Sophia Lillis, who happens to be a dead ringer for a young Amy Adams, but the cliches and silliness of the climactic battle with Pennywise wear the movie down.
FACES PLACES * * * 1/2
A joyful trip through France and memory
Legendary filmmaker Agnes Varda teams up with French photographer JR for an unconventional documentary that sees them roaming the French countryside, surprising people in villages, farms and factories to persuade them to have their pictures taken and posted as massive prints on the sides of buildings, walls, etc. It’s a sweet, whimsical adventure that shows the still flourishing mind and creativity of the 88-year-old Varda, who remains every bit as interested in the lives of ordinary human beings as she ever was in her long filmmaking career. Most of the film is spontaneous and natural, as she prefers an approach that allows for improvised interaction, but every once in a while you see the emotional heart that makes its way in to create a poignant, cinematic moment. A lovely, soulful cap on a lifetime of imagination.
JUSTICE LEAGUE * *
The new Justice League is kind of a bust
A silly, simple, brightened up, under two hour entry in the normally depressing DCEU, that’s pretty forgettable yet not as painful as the previous Zack Snyder helmed films in this franchise. That may be because he didn’t quite finish this one, as Joss Whedon was called in to do extensive reshoots and rewrites. The result is a kind of a mess, yet due to the forcibly lightened tone and extremely simple Saturday morning cartoon plot (there’s a villain invading Earth who needs to collect three world destroying boxes, it’s up to the team to stop him), unlike the dreadful Batman v. Superman, it’s not confusing, depressing or slow. Does this make it better? I guess? Certainly more watchable. Batman, Wonder Woman, The Flash, Aquaman and Cyborg team up to bring Superman back to life and stop the bad guy, in that order, and they do. That’s about it. Lots of jokes (something never before seen in these movies), two bad visual effects battles (although not nearly as long or oppressive as anything in Man of Steel, BvS or Suicide Squad, thank goodness), and the odd return of the iconic Danny Elfman Batman score from the Tim Burton movies, and the John Williams Superman theme from the Chris Reeve films. It’s a movie that wants really badly for you to like it, but the most I can say about this one is that I didn’t feel assaulted by it. It’s behind Wonder Woman in terms of quality for the DC movies, but boy is that a low bar. My guess is not high enough for a sequel.
DARKEST HOUR * * * 1/2
Gary Oldman's Winston is a force to be reckoned with
Gary Oldman delivers a towering performance in Joe Wright’s Winston Churchill biopic, which, in an amazing coincidence of timing, happens to end seemingly hours before Dunkirk starts, thus serving as the perfect vehicle for a back to back double feature, if you were so inclined. Wright has directed period dramas before, but this time it's kind of a one man show, depicting Winston Churchill at the moment of his being made prime minister in 1940, when it seemed Europe was falling left and right and it looked ever likelier that Great Britain was to be next. In fact, had it not been for the man in charge, had it been any other man in that position, it may well have done so. Most of Churchill’s cabinet was in favor of capitulating to Hitler to negotiate for peace, while Churchill alternately defied his own party and agonized over how to buy his country time. Wright understands that this film belongs entirely to Oldman, who dominates the screen in a transformative, electric, entirely convincing performance. Oldman has always been capable of subtlety and underplaying when necessary, yet he can also be over the top and grandstanding when he feels like it. His Churchill is an irascible character who frightens or confounds everyone around him, yet is never too big for the film itself, which Wright directs with energy and verve. Taking place in the dark, smoke filled halls of Parliament and underground war room meetings, this is a political drama that unfolds with tension and suspense, thanks to Wright’s focus and snappy pacing, its meticulous crafting, literate script and one unforgettable star turn at its center. It’s a highly entertaining look at a terrifying moment in British (and world) history.
PHANTOM THREAD * * * 1/2
That's one way to tame an insufferable man
A delightfully twisted love story that slowly pulls you into its hypnotizing atmosphere before throwing you for a loop at the end and making you second guess everything you saw. Paul Thomas Anderson has created one of his most fully realized films, with every luscious detail of 1950’s fashion designer Reynolds Woodcock’s obsessive and painstaking creative process fleshed out in full, as well as the kinks and desires of his personal life, seen through the eyes of his latest paramour and muse, Alma (played by newcomer Vicki Krieps). Despite a lack of screen presence in Krieps (which is tough when you’re playing against the great Daniel Day-Lewis), the relationship between them develops in idiosyncratic and eventually unexpected ways, ultimately thrilling once you realize what kind of well-suited match this really is. This is a film that invents a universe all its own and casts a spell on its audience. Should you choose to surrender yourself to its particular enchantment, you will be richly rewarded.