Category: Reviews

  • ‘Venom: Let There Be Carnage’ Is the Best Date Night Movie of the Year

    ‘Venom: Let There Be Carnage’ Is the Best Date Night Movie of the Year

    Tom Hardy in 'Venom: Let There Be Carnage'
    Tom Hardy in ‘Venom: Let There Be Carnage’

    Early on in ‘Venom: Let There Be Carnage’ alien symbiote Venom (Tom Hardy) laments to his partner Eddie Brock (also Hardy), “I’m sorry I can’t mend a broken heart. Emotional pain lasts longer,” cementing its commitment to building on the queer themes from 2018’s ‘Venom’.

    In the previous film, directed by Ruben Fleischer, investigative journalist Eddie Brock thwarts a deadly experiment by unhinged scientist Carlton Drake (Riz Ahmed), while becoming entangled with the titular symbiote and losing his fiancé Anne (Michelle Williams). In a post-credits sequence, we’re introduced to serial killer Cletus Kasady (Woody Harrelson), whose one request is to tell his story to Brock.

    The latest entry in the franchise, in which Hardy not only plays the dual roles of Venom and Brock, but he also produced and has a story by credit, picks up right where we left off. Brock is still a bit of a loser, living in a beat up apartment in San Francisco’s Tenderloin neighborhood. Only now he’s forged a deep relationship with his symbiote Venom. They squabble like any couple – and even have a pair of chickens as pets, because you simply cannot separate Sonny and Cher.

    Towards the end of the first film, Venom must use Anne’s body to get back to Brock, culminating in the film’s wonderfully pansexual erotic kiss. Building on this complicated relationship, ‘Let There Be Carnage’ finds Anne on the brink of marrying her new boyfriend Dan (Reid Scott). The dynamics at play between all four characters prove to be the beating heart of the film as they all navigate their feelings for one another.

    Woody Harrelson as Cletus Kasady in 'Venom: Let There Be Carnage'
    Woody Harrelson as Cletus Kasady in ‘Venom: Let There Be Carnage’

    But, this is still a comic book action film! Finally visiting Cletus in prison, Venom uses his super alien intellect to help Eddie make a break in Cletus’ case, sending him directly to death row. In a flashback at the start of the film, we learn that Cletus was a troubled kid, whose only love Frances Barrison aka Shriek (Naomie Harris) was violently removed from him. Everything he’s done since is to try to find her again. Harris and Harrleson have such chemistry in their scenes together, even just as they share passionate glances. They make you believe they are all they have in the world, a latter-day Bonnie and Clyde.

    After receiving a cryptic postcard from Cletus, a guilt-ridden Eddie visits him on death row. As Cletus insults Eddie, Venom’s protective nature takes over and in the ensuing fight Cletus bites them. Thus, Carnage is born – a symbiote birthed from violence, who grafts on to a heartbroken serial killer. You know things are going to get messy messy messy.

    Carnage
    Carnage

    The action set pieces are a bit muddled and hazy, like most films that rely heavily on CGI. That said, it is fun to watch Carnage wreak havoc everywhere he goes, growing into a larger and larger phalanx of red flesh after each bout of destruction. At first Harrleson’s Cletus effortlessly accepts the chaos, but as it becomes clear that what Carnage wants is at odds with his relationship with Shriek, the actor imbues the killer with impassioned sorrow and rage.

    The one action sequence that truly worked also leans into the film’s strongest asset: Hardy’s bonkers take on Venom and Eddie’s tempestuous relationship. After yet another petty quarrel, Venom has had enough and asks Eddie to leave their apartment, throwing his stuff out the window like a clichéd beleaguered wife would a cheating husband’s. It’s on the nose fan service, but it works, much like the previous film’s iconic lobster scene, because of Hardy’s absolute commitment to the bit and the emotional weight with which he performs these two characters.

    A later scene in which a now-free Venom finds solace and support at an EDM concert, only to end up wishing Eddie could be there with him got me right in the feels. Venom and Eddie are a perfect match. The film allows us to witness the growing pains of them realizing their love, and that’s just beautiful.

    Director Andy Serkis and Tom Hardy on the set of 'Venom: Let There Be Carnage'
    Director Andy Serkis and Tom Hardy on the set of ‘Venom: Let There Be Carnage’

    Director Andy Serkis also finds time to flesh out supporting characters from the first film. Mrs. Chen (Peggy Lu), whose bodega Eddie and Venom frequent, has several wonderful scenes, including a particularly tender post-breakup moment with Venom. Anne’s new boyfriend, now fiancé, Dan no longer feels like a stock character. Given time to breathe, their relationship now feels real, their love as pronounced as Eddie and Venom’s. Lastly, Detective Mulligan (an always stellar Stephen Graham, in an exquisitely terrible wig) serves as a bridge between the two storylines.

    At its core, ‘Venom: Let There Be Carnage’ is a film about the power of relationships, of finding strength in deep connections, and the dangers of misalignment. Expertly fusing comedy, romance, action, and violence, Serkis and Hardy have crafted a perfectly thrilling, thoroughly queer comic book extravaganza. Best date night movie of the year, hands down.

    4.5 stars out of 5.

    Venom: Let There Be Carnage‘ opens nationwide on October 1.

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  • ‘The Suicide Squad’ review: grisly, funny, & one of Gunn’s best

    ‘The Suicide Squad’ review: grisly, funny, & one of Gunn’s best

    (L to R) Margot Robbie, Daniela Melchior, Idris Elba, Sylvester Stallone, and David Dastmalchian in 'The Suicide Squad'
    (L to R) Margot Robbie, Daniela Melchior, Idris Elba, Sylvester Stallone, and David Dastmalchian in ‘The Suicide Squad’

    The Suicide Squad’ begins with our introduction to Savant (Michael Rooker), a criminal behind bars, with a talent for geometry and a mean streak when it comes to birds. He’s given the set-up for the story; he’s going to go on a black ops-type mission with a team of fellow convicts, and in return, ten years will get knocked off his prison sentence. This is explained to him by one Amanda Waller (Viola Davis), who also informs him that if he tries to escape, or ditch the operation, or double-cross her in any way, she’ll detonate the tiny bomb in his head.

    So if you never saw the 2016 ‘Suicide Squad,’ you’re pretty much caught up at this point – Waller uses incarcerated super villains for spy missions, and she’s not really concerned if they make it back alive. If you did see the previous film, you’ll recognize some returning faces, like military liaison Rick Flag (Joel Kinnaman), Captain Boomerang (Jai Courtney), and the inimitable Harley Quinn (Margot Robbie), who says she’s back in the joint for “road rage… in a bank.” Savant and the rest of Task Force X are off to the (fictional) South American island nation of Corto Maltese to destroy a science lab called Jötunheim.

    James Gunn wrote and directed this latest entry in the DCEU, and he brings his own impressive stamp to the movie. I think it’s fair to say that Gunn’s ‘The Suicide Squad’ is closer to his films ‘Slither’ and ‘Super’ than it is to either of his Guardians of the Galaxy outings. Given the R-rating in play, it probably won’t be surprising to learn that this is a particularly grisly comic-book movie with more than a few risqué (if now downright dirty) jokes. But it is surprising how much emotion Gunn brings into this story.

    Being that this takes place in a comic-book world, the characters personalities are as extreme as their powers. Idris Elba’s Bloodshot is a violent mercenary who thinks the best parenting advice he can give his recently-arrested daughter is to make sure she has a lookout the next time she steals something. John Cena’s Peacemaker is a jingoistic meathead who will happily kill (among other things) to make peace. Margot Robbie’s Harley Quinn is… well, you’d have to have been living in a cave for the past few years not to know who she is. And King Shark (voiced by Sylvester Stallone) is simply the bestest boy.

    As expected, some of these characters don’t get along, and the rivalry between Bloodshot and Peacemaker is particularly well served by Elba’s tired sighs and Cena’s gung-ho cluelessness. But some of the other characters ground the movie with unexpected empathy. Daniela Melchior’s Ratcatcher at first seems like she’s in over her head, but she’s the first to show she’s willing to reach out to others in the group, and Melchior makes us believe it. And David Dastmalchian’s Polka-Dot Man is… I’ll put it this way; Polka-Dot Man is a terrible comic book character. He’s down there with Crazy Quilt, Clock King, and Condiment King in the DC Villains Hall of Lame. But between Gunn’s script and Dastmalchian’s pathos, Polka-Dot Man becomes a tragic figure (albeit a crazy one). At the same time, Gunn and Margot Robbie show us the continuing evolution of Harley Quinn, showing us that she’s learned from (some of) her mistakes, but she’s willing to make entirely new ones, too.

    Team movies can be tough, especially when team members have superpowers. But the movie doesn’t get bogged down in origin stories; at most, Davis’ Waller might give a rote description of someone’s role on the team, but not much more than that. She gives us the sense we’ll learn about what someone can do when we need to, and in that, she’s doing what Gunn does as a director. And it works. That lets him deftly balance the various character arcs, and make sure that they’re all relevant to the main story at hand. And you’d never think this movie is 132 minutes long; Gunn capitalizes on the abundance of characters to keep the story moving around, but never so much that we lose track of the overall plot. Henry Braham’s cinematography helps give us a sense of place, both in his long shots of pitched battles and giant monsters, or the mobile camera work in a nightclub and on rooftops.

    Ultimately, this is a great example of a director being given the freedom to bring their own style to a big-budget production. The cast is clearly having a good time making this movie, and that energy is infectious. I, for one, would watch another mission from this crew if Gunn is in charge again.

    4.5 stars out of 5.

    ‘The Suicide Squad’ is now in theaters and on HBO Max.

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  • ‘Black Widow’ Review: Marvel Makes a Great Spy Thriller

    ‘Black Widow’ Review: Marvel Makes a Great Spy Thriller

    Scarlett Johansson as Natasha Romanov in 'Black Widow'
    Scarlett Johansson as Natasha Romanov in ‘Black Widow’

    It’s a shame we didn’t get this ‘Black Widow‘ movie a few years ago, because it’s hard to imagine that Marvel Studios wouldn’t have found a different path for Scarlett Johansson‘s Natasha Romanov in ‘Avengers: Endgame.’ This is a satisfying spy movie set in the larger MCU, and although the baton is definitely passed, we’re definitely going to miss the Black Widow that makes a final appearance in this movie.

    The story starts off in Ohio in 1995, with a young Natasha and Yelena under the care of their parents, Melina (Rachel Weisz) and Alexei (David Harbour). If you’ve seen ‘The Americans’ or ‘Little Nikita,’ you have a pretty good idea what’s going on; the family is a cover for a Russian espionage operation that’s coming to a climax. Natasha and her “family” make a narrow escape from S.H.I.E.L.D. agents, and then it’s off to Cuba for a reunion with the man behind the mission, Dreykov (Ray Winstone), before heading back to Mother Russia. But young Natasha is having none of it; she and Yelena want to stay in the states, but they get pulled apart, drugged, and shipped off to the infamous Red Room to become tools of the state.

    Years later, we see Natasha on the run, after the events of ‘Captain America: Civil War.’ She’s almost captured by Thunderbolt Ross (William Hurt), with this moment serving to give us a guide as to when this movie is happening in the MCU timeline. Meanwhile, in Morocco, Yelena (Florence Pugh) is targeting a fellow agent, but when Yelena is sprayed by a mysterious red dust, she seems to suddenly realize she’s been under some sort of mind control. The rest of her team promptly turns on her, before another narrow escape – it seems these run in the family.

    Natasha finds Yelena hiding in her own Budapest safe house, the two “sisters” team up to find out what’s controlling the minds of the other agents in the Widow program. To find that out, they’ll end up needing the help of both of their “parents,” and the stage is set for what turns out to be a pretty effective spy thriller.

    It must be said that Florence Hugh almost completely steals the whole movie; her Yelena manages to push Natasha’s buttons in a way no one else in the MCU has before, and her specific comments about Natasha’s fighting poses are pitch perfect. Hugh and Johansson have a breezy chemistry together, letting us see two women that work together effectively while still bringing up old family grudges.

    While we’re talking about family, Harbour and Weisz give us former parental figures that still have real affection for their ersatz daughters, showing very real regret at what would later happen to the two girls. As with any family, there is teasing and sniping that’s hinting at decades of emotion, and all four of these actors sell it well. Weisz shows us a Melina that is trying (and failing) to convince herself that her patriotism justifies her actions. Bombastic Alexei may seem to be gleefully reliving his past glories, but Harbour lets us see that Alexei is also hiding his own regret and loss.

    Director Cate Shortland has put together a pretty impressive effort here; she impresses with the action set pieces, while showing us a family that is trying to heal old wounds. We’ve waited a long time for a solo story for Natasha, and Shortland’s movie delivers an emotional arc for Nat that hits all the right emotional notes, while fitting within the greater MCU storyline. We know what’s coming for Black Widow, but that doesn’t take away from the resonance here.

    There’s not much to say about the Taskmaster character that won’t quickly dip into spoiler territory, except that the stunt coordinators have done a great job showing us someone that can mimic the fighting styles of other characters, such as Hawkeye and Captain America, and even Black Widow herself. My only complaint here is that Ray Winstone seems a bit underused, and that the mind control plot isn’t that engaging. Although compared to an Infinity Gauntlet, what would be?

    In the end, this is one of the better entries in the MCU franchise, and worth seeing on the big screen.

    4.5 stars.
    ‘Black Widow’ is in theaters and on Disney+.

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  • ‘Port Authority’ Movie Review

    ‘Port Authority’ Movie Review

    Port Authority opens with Paul (Fionn Whitehead) with a suitcase, walking through the titular New York bus terminal, calling someone that doesn’t pick up the phone. No one walking through the station has seen the woman pictured on the phone, either. Paul’s on his own.

    Paul briefly steps outside the station and catches the eye of Wye (Leyna Bloom), who is hanging out with her rag-tag group of dancing friends. But Paul is still too shocked to be on his own, and having nowhere else to go, he tries to sleep on a subway train. Harassed then attacked by a couple of homophobic jerks, Paul is rescued by Lee (McCaul Lombardi) who sets him up with a bed in a shelter and offers him work.

    So starts the story of Paul coming to New York and eventually finding a family of sorts. The bad news is that the film is more focused on Paul and his emotional journey, rather than Wye, who is frankly much more interesting.

    Make no mistake, this first feature from writer-director Danielle Lessovitz is a beautiful film, and features a terrific performance from Leyna Bloom as Wye, the trans woman that Paul falls for. As a trans woman herself, Bloom brings a grounded honesty to Wye that made it easy to see why Paul would find her attractive. But although Whitehead gives us glimpses that Paul has anger-based self-control issues, we never really get a sense of what Wye sees in him.

    The New York as shot by cinematographer Jomo Fray is alternately dreamlike and forbidding, depending on who Paul is spending time with. The New York of Lee and his scammy moving crew is sharply off-putting and cold; you feel like you want to head away from wherever Lee was as soon as possible. The New York of Wye and her kiki ballroom crowd is just a sharp, but it’s warmer, almost seductively inviting.

    Since this is mostly Paul’s story, we see him bounce between the two worlds. On the one hand Lee and his “moving” crew that are so homophobic that the portrayal borders on satire, but that’s how Paul makes money.

    He’s a young man on the margins that no one seems to want, and so it’s easy to understand the appeal of Lee’s offer of both work, friendship, and even hints of a real future. On the other hand, the straight, white Paul has inserted himself into a gay ballroom scene populated almost exclusively by Black and Latinx dancers. But we never really understand why Paul is so drawn to this scene.

    Lombardi’s Lee hits just the right combination of charm and danger. He’s very reassuring to Paul, and it’s easy to understand why Lee is able to get his crew to work for him.
    But Lombardi also carries just enough menace for the viewer to really fear what Lee is capable of. In fact, it becomes pretty clear that Lee is even capable of murder, but he’s the kind of guy that, if pressed, would smile and reassuringly tell you that some questions you really don’t want answered.

    The biggest frustration with this story isn’t just that it’s about Paul, although that is definitely a problem. At this point, the story of a bro-dude learning about gay culture isn’t a novelty anymore. No, the biggest issue is that Paul is just underdeveloped as a character.
    We never really learn why he’s interested in the ballroom scene to begin with, and we really never understand what Wye sees in him. As portrayed by Whitehead, Paul isn’t bad looking, but there’s not much to him past that.

    That’s not to say that the movie doesn’t have some good things to offer; unlike ‘The Crying Game,’ when Paul finds out that Wye is a trans woman, that moment isn’t the defining turn of the story. In fact, he gets over it fairly quickly. And Wye draws boundaries with him that a lesser movie would shy away from.

    Lessovitz is fairly smart about teaching Paul about the challenges (and even dangers) that he unknowingly brings into Wye’s life. But those could have worked just as well if the film was entirely about Wye, and her own conflict in being torn between Paul and her safer ballroom scene. In focusing on Paul, we spend too much time on a very familiar story, instead of the far more intriguing Wye.

    Three out of five stars. Port Authority is now in theaters and available on demand.

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  • ‘The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It’ review

    ‘The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It’ review

    The latest film focusing on paranormal investigations of Ed & Lorraine Warren is the third film in The Conjuring series (focusing on the Warrens) but the eighth film in the “Conjuring Universe.” If that’s confusing, well, so is the latest film.

    The movies set in this shared universe all boast they are based on true stories, primarily from the files of the Warrens. Full disclosure, I’ve always thought that the Warrens’ stories are mostly bunk. But in the hands of the right filmmakers, that bunk can be pretty entertaining. The first two ‘Conjuring’ films, both directed by James Wan, are pretty effective horror thrillers, as was ‘Anabelle: Creation,’ directed by David F. Sanberg.

    This latest chapter is a pale shadow of those earlier films, however. Vera Farmiga and David F. Sanberg return as Lorraine and Ed Warren, and their familiarity with these characters really anchors the film. When one or both of the Warrens are on screen, the film works, but the rest of the scenes fall flat without them.

    This particular case finds the Warrens documenting the possession of a young boy named David, so that they can presumably send their proof to the Vatican and have a formal exorcism performed on him. But when David suddenly stands on the table, bent backwards like a professional contortionist, Ed Warren tells the priest that’s present that they need to do an emergency exorcism immediately. The priest doesn’t think this is safe, so of course, there are unexpected complications. David’s older sister Debbie is there with her boyfriend Arne, who invites the demon inside himself instead of staying in David. All of the commotion gives Ed a heart attack, during with he sees the demon make the jump to Arne. (See, this is why you leave the exorcisms to the professionals, kids.)

    Ed then wakes up in the hospital and tells Lorraine that Arne is now possessed. Which is probably why Arne stabs his landlord to death (while listing to that damned, devilish rock and roll). Arne’s locked up by the police, and indicted for murder, but the Warrens have a defense for him; he was possessed. The rest of the movie involves the Warrens trying to lift the curse that enabled the demon to possess David and then Arne, leading them to investigate a local cult and consult with a local former priest. And we can tell they’re on the right track, because Ed gets cursed and almost kills Lorraine.

    Directed by Michael Chaves, this latest Conjuring film is more of an occult detective procedural than anything else. It certainly isn’t all that scary, unfortunately. Like in any proper procedural, we see our detectives (the Warrens) discover clues, make connections to other crimes, and find that some sources may not be completely honest. But that’s not what were here for, unfortunately. And even if we were, it’s never really clear why David’s family was targeted in the first place. There are some moderately effective set pieces here and there; a scene in the jail infirmary comes to mind, as does Lorraine’s psychic exploration of a killing in the forest. But that latter example gets goofy as the scene extends, and none of these elements add up to an engaging whole.

    As I mentioned before, Farmiga and Wilson give far better performances than this script really deserves. And I have to give a nod to Leah Butler’s costume work. The puffy sleeves and ruffled necks on Lorraine’s blouses are perfect for the period, never crossing the line into satire of the era’s excesses.

    The biggest frustration is that the movie is trying to be scary, without really succeeding. If the better movies in this franchise carry real dread, then this one struggles to even achieve unease. I won’t say that it’s boring; it moves along just fine, but you’re never really worried about the characters’ survival. And that’s not because history tells you what happens; Apollo 13 keeps you on the edge of your seat, even though you know what happens to Lovell and his crew.

    Prior to quarantine, I’d have called this the kind of movie you could wait for on home video. But since this is also on HBO Max, you don’t even have to wait. No matter where you see it, bring a friend; this is the kind of movie where you’ll snicker about how silly it is, but that’s still a pretty good time.

    2.5 out of 5 stars.

  • ‘F9’ Review: Fast, Wild, and Worth Waiting for on the Big Screen

    ‘F9’ Review: Fast, Wild, and Worth Waiting for on the Big Screen

    Michelle Rodriguez and Vin Diesel in ‘F9’

    It’s hard to look at the 20-year-old ‘The Fast & the Furious’ and see the beginnings of a blockbuster franchise, but here we are. And if the series has moved past illegal street races and into heist and spy movie territory, that’s all for the better. As this rogue’s gallery of street racers has become an unstoppable team of vehicle-based super agents, the movies in the franchise have increasingly raised the stakes for our heroes, physics and reality be damned. And you know what? It’s worked, including the latest chapter ‘F9.’

    Where do you go after taking on a tank, a cargo plane, and a submarine? I won’t spoil anything here (although you’ll get some hints from the trailer), but it’s pretty impressive how director and co-writer Justin Lin takes the series to new heights while acknowledging the increasingly insane action sequences our heroes find themselves in.

    Our story starts off with a flashback to Dom’s past, as he’s part of his father’s pit crew at what will be turn out to be the senior Toretto’s final race. We’re also introduced to Jakob, Dom’s younger brother. It’s hard to imagine that Dom, always preaching to us about family, has never, even mentioned his brother, but that’s far from the least-believable element in this movie. (To be clear, I’m not complaining about over-the-top elements, but you’ll need to go further than “willing suspension” and actively lock up your disbelief and throw away the key.)

    We soon return to the present to see Dom (Vin Diesel) and Letty (Michelle Rodriguez) living a bucolic life off the grid with young Brian, Dom’s adorable young son who (of course) is being taught how to fix engines by Dad. Do the Torettos miss all the extreme driving? Of course they do, but Dom claims to have left that in the past. But as an unknown SUV pulls up, Dom & Letty pull out some fairly heavy-duty weaponry and send Brian off to hide; clearly they fear the past hasn’t left them.

    Their visitors turn out to be more of the old crew – Tej (Chris “Ludacris” Bridges), Roman (Tyrese Gibson), and Ramsey (Nathalie Emmanuel), who are welcomed with open arms. The visitors have come with news that the man that brought them into the spy game, Mr. Nobody (Kurt Russell) has sent them a cryptic S.O.S. message. The message contains coordinates and evidence that an old nemesis, Cypher (Charlize Theron) is involved. Although initially hesitant, Dom joins the rest of the crew on a trip to Central America to find out what happened to Mr. Nobody.

    Now that we have buy-in from Dom, the plot can get really get started. The crew’s discovery of mysterious tech leads to gunfights and a wild chase scene through the jungle, which then sets the stage for Jakob Toretto (John Cena) to make an appearance. It’s not a joyful reunion for the Toretto brothers. Jakob, almost as skilled a driver as Dom, is now a rogue secret agent, and makes off with that MacGuffin, leaving the rest of the crew dumbfounded. And now Mia (Jordana Brewster) is involved since, as she reminds Dom, Jakob is her brother too.

    The plot then goes into classic James Bond territory; it turns out Jakob is working for Otto (Thue Ersted Rasmussen) the billionaire son of the head of an unnamed state, who plans to use the MacGuffin tech to take over the world. The plot jumps through a few hoops to show us some familiar faces past entries in the franchise, including Lucas Black, Helen Mirren, Shad “Lil’ Bow Wow” Moss, and most notably, Sung Kang as Han. The news of Sung Kang’s return broke a long time ago, but like the sudden discovery of brother Jakob, the story of Han’s reappearance is far from the most unbelievable part of the movie.

    As in other long-running franchises, it can be tricky to give all the returning characters enough screen time to satisfy, but Lin manages to give everyone more than simply one moment to shine. In fact, one of the smartest moves he makes is to use the characters almost as a sort of Greek chorus, to comment on the very tropes he’s using in the movie. In one hilarious (and frankly mind-blowing) Gibson’s Roman questions the crew’s repeated survival, almost as if Lin was cribbing from Tom Stoppard’s ‘Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead.’ We also get another character saying “if this was a movie, this is the moment when…” and I’ll be damned if it doesn’t work. But there are also some moments that give some characters a little more depth. The brief meditation on parenthood from Letty and Mia doesn’t feel forced too forced, mainly because Letty basically admits she’d rather be tearing it up instead of hiding out. And in one of the more inspired choices, we discover that Ramsey doesn’t drive, so obviously she has to get behind the wheel.

    Rest assured, that if you came for the spectacle, you won’t be disappointed, and it’s amazing that the filmmakers are still coming up with new things to do with vehicles. This franchise has always made sure to make the cars into co-stars, and on his third outing in this series as cinematographer, Stephen F. Windon, is still using bright and vibrant colors and lighting to make the cars pop, and his framing really gives us a sense of the layout of each location. A trio of editors, Greg D’Auria, Dylan Highsmith, and Kelly Matsumoto, deftly follow multiple characters through each set piece and allow us to see the stakes for each individual without losing sight of the whole or getting confused as to who is doing what. There is one particular shot of Cena looking through iron bars that comes off a bit campy, though.

    As much as this movie is a spy story, Lin keeps us invested in the relationship between Dom and Jakob. Flashbacks to Dom’s past will pop up throughout the film, and Lin uses them fairly effectively to support an arc in the brothers’ relationship as the movie progresses. This is absolutely an action movie, but Lin’s past outings in the franchise gives him a familiarity with the characters that helps this movie be a bit more than a just smash-em-up car movie. I may have some minor grumbles about some of Lin’s decisions (especially one of the final shots), but F9 turns out to be one of the better entries in the entire series. There’s also a great mid-credits scene.

    For what it’s worth, I’m glad to have seen this on a big screen, although I’ll admit I love every entry in this franchise. I’m glad this one was held until it was safe (or safer) to go to a theater. If you’re open to it, there’s an infectious sense of fun that permeates this movie, and you’ll really feel it if you’re seeing it with other fans at the same time.

    4 out of 5 stars

    ‘F9’ will be in U.S. theaters on June 25th.

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  • ‘What Men Want’ Review: Taraji Deserves Better

    ‘What Men Want’ Review: Taraji Deserves Better

    Paramount

    In 2000’s “What Women Want” it might have been snarkily revolutionary, if way late even then, to suggest that members of the so-called “fairer sex” are complex, fierce and formidable. But 20 years and a gender-swapped premise later, “What Men Want” advances a depressing argument that guys are with few exceptions as competitive, sexist and simple-minded as they always were — but now, women are evidently changing to become more like them. Taraji P. Henson’s fearlessly committed performance almost rescues this story of a desperately ambitious woman gifted with the ability to hear men’s innermost impulses, but director Adam Shankman’s predilection for the broadest and dumbest possible execution of any given idea undercuts any comedic bite, genuine insight or emotional resonance the film potentially had.

    Henson (“Hidden Figures”) plays Alison “Ali” Davis, an Atlanta sports agent growing increasingly tired of white, male colleagues getting praised and promoted while her own accomplishments are repeatedly undermined and disregarded. But while cutting loose at her friend’s bachelorette party, Ali drinks some funky tea given to her by a fortune teller named Sister (Erykah Badu) and ends up hitting her head, gaining the ability to hear her male colleagues’ thoughts. But after being promised the opportunity to make partner if she signs Jamal Barry (Shane Paul McGhie), the next basketball superstar, Ali discloses these newfound abilities to her long-suffering assistant Brandon (Josh Brener) and hatches a plan to outwit her competitors.

    Unfortunately, Jamal’s future is being carefully controlled by his unpredictable father Joe “Dolla” (Tracy Morgan), whose thoughts reveal an unchecked id but little for Ali in the way of insights on how to win his confidence. But when Joe admits that he’s put off by Ali’s workaholic independence, she unwittingly enlists a recent one-night stand, Will (Aldis Hodge), and his six-year-old son Ben (Auston Jon Moore) to pretend to be her family in the hopes of scoring Jamal’s highly-coveted contract.

    Paramount

    Even before the first male thought is revealed on screen by writers Tina Gordon (“ATL,” “Drumline”) and Peter Huyck and Alex Gregory (shared alumni of “Veep,” “Frasier” and “The Larry Sanders Show”), the prospect of what little there is to be learned from that inner monologue feels like a joke whose punchline we already know. Consequently, the only revelations that Ali discovers are that (a) her colleagues are keeping her out of the loop, and (b) when she muscles her way back in, they know better how to strategize, coddle and outmaneuver fragile egos, both male and female, than she does. Though the panorama of perspectives that she soon becomes aware of occasionally includes an amusing non sequitur or unexpected earwig, most of those voices are effectively confirming not just what she already knows about her bullying, sexist colleagues, but what we (the audience) do as well.

    What eventually becomes more of a priority to those screenwriters and Shankman as director is both empowering Ali and reminding her that in the boy’s club she desperately wants to be a part of, it’s  better to be a woman who is not beholden to their expectations. But this unfortunately requires the character to shuffle through some painful rom-com cliches where Henson has to battle her way through some embarrassing, not especially funny scenarios, and eventually Ali learns life lessons at the expense of people she cares about the most. Thankfully, and in spite of the schizophrenic pendulum-swing of the main character’s behavior, the supporting cast strikes a comfortable equilibrium between the story’s sillier and more serious elements: Wendi McLendon-Covey (“The Goldbergs”), Phoebe Robinson (“I Love Dick”) and Tamala Jones (“Castle”) play Ali’s chorus of hilarious, exasperated BFFs, while Max Greenfield (“New Girl”), and Richard Roundtree (“Shaft”), as a work colleague and Ali’s father, respectively, supply some real talk about men (or at least themselves) that doesn’t require mind-reading.

    Though Hodge plays a charming, convincingly saintly alternative to most of the rest of the men in Ali’s life, and Brener’s Brandon provides her with a suitably anxious sounding board-slash-Jiminy Cricket to fret over each new morally dubious gambit, the movie’s secret weapon is Badu, who defies its worn-out conventions and embraces the ethereal (and ridiculous) extremes of its premise. But even built on the sad continuing reality of disproportionate opportunities and pay between men and women (much less women of color), Henson’s flailing, frustrated character exposes few new truths about her male counterparts, and the movie as a whole says a lot less about gender disparities or the business world than it thinks. Ultimately, “What Men Want” showcases the kind of mainstream, multiracial comedies that audiences seem to want, but as a vehicle for a talented, hard-working performer like Henson to lead, it’s less than she deserves.

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  • ‘Alita: Battle Angel’ is an Unexpected Blast

    ‘Alita: Battle Angel’ is an Unexpected Blast

    Twentieth Century Fox

    Alita: Battle Angel” first went into development by James Cameron in 2000, and Robert Rodriguez signed on to direct his script in 2016, but the themes of their adaptation of Yukito Kishiro’s 1990 manga of the same name could not feel timelier. A story of the redeeming power of compassion and positivity, Rodriguez’ film follows a young woman with more power than she realizes entering a complicated world unafraid and undeterred to fight for what she believes in. But it’s also a smart, rousing adventure that resonates unlike almost anything else being made right now, utilizing incredible technology to enhance amazing performances, and most of all, eclectic, compelling and sympathetic characters who embody imagination and inspire hope.

    Rosa Salazar (“Bird Box”) plays Alita, a cyborg “core” recovered by Dr. Dyson Ido (Christoph Waltz) from a great scrapyard where the floating city of Zalem disposes its trash. Rebuilt using a robot body intended for Ido’s late daughter, Alita awakens with no memory of her previous life, but an indefatigable appetite to explore Iron City, the cobbled-together community of poor and disenfranchised individuals upon whose backs Zalem thrives in the sky above them. Meeting Hugo (Keean Johnson, TV’s “Nashville”), a scrounger and street hustler, Alita quickly discovers Iron City’s hidden charms, but despite Dyson’s warnings, she soon also learns about its many dangers — including cyborgs like Grewishka (Jackie Earle Haley) who slaughter humans and robots alike for body parts, and mechanic masterminds like Vector (Mahershala Ali) who buy their spoils.

    Twentieth Century Fox.

    Inspired to become a protector of the innocent, Alita signs up to be a Hunter Warrior — a bounty hunter fighting against deadly predators and thieves. Facing a series of increasingly dangerous opponents, Alita soon begins to realize that she was quite literally built for conflict, and is more than capable of defending herself – first in the streets, and soon enough, on the Motorball track (imagine a hyper-violent, “Rollerball”-seque blood sport). But as Vector’s minions attempt to apprehend her by any means necessary, Alita’s memories (and sense of true purpose) come flooding back, trapping her between a past she cannot remember, a present where her very existence risks the lives of friends and family, and a future that she realizes must be liberated from Zalem and the mysterious puppetmasters who keep Iron City’s people dependent on its impossible dream.

    Amidst the film’s tremendous wealth of sci-fi mythology (which among other details involves cybernetic beings, floating cities and a centuries-old Martian war), “Alita” features a perhaps unplanned but strongly relevant political allegory about young people and the power they wield. The title character arrives in Iron City (a dystopic world full of people who have succumbed to cynicism, selfishness and desperation) unacquainted with those qualities in others, an interested only in life’s endless possibilities. But when she is challenged, Alita demonstrates that she quite literally possesses the ability to defeat almost any opponent, partially by virtue of internalized training, but most importantly by knowing the difference between right and wrong, committing herself to a cause that’s just, and retaining a sense of optimism that others will join the fight alongside her.

    On screen, that’s inspiring to the characters in her orbit — first Dr. Ido, who lets go of his own grief and fear when he sees Alita’s strength and independence, and later, to Hugo, who repents his life as a scavenger in a caste system that she eventually shows him is destructive and all-consuming. But what becomes most affecting, first on a visceral level and then later, an intellectual one, is the way in which the character is undiminished in her curiosity and her belief in basic goodness, even after she learns that evil is an inevitability. It feels like the last decade of filmmaking has been detailed and dedicated in its depiction and recreation of real-life evil but there is something undeniably powerful about a movie that dares to suggest the antidote is hope.

    Twentieth Century Fox.

    What’s more remarkable about that feat, however, is how streamlined and economical Cameron and Laeta Kalogridis’ script is in communicating that theme while accomplishing some of the most sophisticated and yet digestible world building I’ve seen since “Avatar.” Cameron’s particular gift is for conceptualization — creating a universe you’ll believe on a molecular level. The story that accompanies it reflects and reduces Kishiro’s source material to its most important elements, and he finds characterizations and motivations that keep the wheels in motion even when they seem like they’re grinding to a halt for some absolutely dazzling set pieces. Every fight scene, and every opponent serves a greater thematic idea, and drives the story forward, while also managing to be staged and choreographed beautifully.

    Like with “Sin City,” Rodriguez’ many talents seem to find a healthier impact when they’re balanced by the efforts of collaborators. (If some films seem to be driven by too many cooks, his often suffer from too few.) Cameron’s work on this project, which started almost two decades ago, is baked into every frame, but working with the likes of cinematographer Bill Pope (the “Matrix” trilogy), editor Stephen Rivkin (“Avatar”) and composer Tom Holkenborg (“Mad Max Fury Road”) seems to free Rodriguez from his normal multitasking in all of those roles and allow him to best serve each moment and the story as a whole. He’s always been a scrappy, imaginative director, but the combination of this film’s obviously-amplified budget in comparison to his homegrown projects and the constraints imposed by Fox to bring it all together showcases really how capable he is at creating something truly compelling and immersive.

    Although the film reaches a satisfying conclusion, it’s clearly set up for at least one sequel, and given its cost (and Fox’s impending sale to Disney) that open ending is punctuated by a much bigger question mark than when Cameron and Rodriguez embarked on this journey three years ago. But even if Cameron’s instincts for anticipating what audiences want are no longer quite as sharp as they once were, his ability to find the right people to tell his story the best way possible remain fully undiminished. Ambitious and earnest and unafraid to fail, “Alita: Battle Angel” is the kind of swing for the fences you wish happened more often, because it reminds us of the value of taking chances; it’s entertainment that not only has the ability to truly empower audiences, but give them something to believe in.

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  • ‘The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part’ Is a Joyful Jumble

    ‘The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part’ Is a Joyful Jumble

    Warner Bros.

    Five years ago, the notion of a movie about Legos seemed ridiculous, but after $500 million in box office receipts and two successful spin-offs, “The Lego Movie 2” is a highly- and understandably-anticipated event sequel. Phil Lord and Chris Miller, returning as co-screenwriters and producers, hand the reigns of this unlikely but irresistible franchise off to “Trolls” director Mike Mitchell for a story that builds (no pun intended) on the foundation of the first in terms of its thematic complexity, while expanding its eclectic landscape with the energy and abandon of an eight-year-old building a playset out of random bricks recovered from the forgotten corners of her toy box. Though not quite as effective as the first film (due in small part to a less clear idea, but also to the growing abundance of Lego-themed movies) “Lego Movie 2” exudes a certain sort of overpowering, sensory-overload charm to muscle its way into audiences’ hearts even if afterward their minds may remain a bit discombobulated by the experience.

    Picking up right where the previous movie ended, Bricksburg has been overrun by destructive, childlike Duplo blocks, turning the city into a post-apocalyptic wasteland. Despite this, Emmet (Chris Pratt) retains his unrelentingly optimistic outlook on life, to the growing consternation of his jaded “special best friend” Lucy (Elizabeth Banks). But when General Mayhem (Stephanie Beatriz) attacks the newly branded “Apocalypseburg” and captures Lucy, Batman (Will Arnett) and all of Emmet’s closest friends, he embarks on a dangerous journey to the Systar System to rescue them from a matrimonial ceremony for Queen Watevra Wa-Nabi (Tiffany Haddish).

    Warner Bros.

    En route to Systar, Emmet encounters Rex Dangervest (also Pratt), a roguish, multitalented adventurer who agrees to help the wholesome hero save his friends. After hearing Rex’s sad story of abandonment and loneliness, Emmet soon finds himself conflicted about what to do — especially after discovering that his friends have been seemingly brainwashed by Watevra. But as Rex teaches him some new skills — not just to build Legos, but how to break them — Emmet must decide whether to embrace his new mentor’s tough, unforgiving outlook on life as his likeliest means for survival agains an impending “Amompocalypse,” or if he wants to stay the same the sweet, lovable construction worker who once believed that being special means staying true to yourself.

    If the first “Lego Movie” was a thinly-veiled tribute to, and treatise on, creativity, “Lego Movie 2” feels in many ways like a manifestation of its inspirational message: screenwriters Phil Lord, Christopher Miller, Matthew Fogel and Raphael Bob-Waksberg tell a story that is literally born from the clashing imaginations of the two “real” children (played by Jason Sand and Brooklynn Prince) who have inherited their Dad’s (Will Ferrell) expansive toy collection. Unfortunately, that also means that its twists and turns, like those invented by kids with more enthusiasm than story sense, are often busy and sometimes overly convoluted, even if there are lots of fun diversions and digressions. At the same time, the film’s pop culture references — from “Mad Max Fury Road” to “Aquaman” — feel suitably organic for a pair of kids who undoubtedly have spent the intervening years between the first and second films consuming Hollywood’s biggest movies.

    Warner Bros.

    Some of the movie’s in-jokes work beautifully — especially those involving Rex Dangervest, a possible alternate-dimension version of Emmet who is a composite of Pratt’s characters from “Guardians of the Galaxy,” “Jurassic World,” “The Magnificent Seven,” and the persistent rumors that he was slated to play Indiana Jones at one point. But in expanding the universe and yet holding onto the idea that what Emmett and his friends are doing springs from the minds of the human characters, “Lego 2” eventually makes some leaps into “Toy Story” realms of fanciful impossibility that kind of derail the overall premise of the franchise (or at least invite more scrutiny than it needs).

    And yet, like Lord and Miller did with its predecessor, director Mitchell harnesses the limitless possibilities of a landscape that can be built, razed and rebuilt in the image of its creators for a dazzling visual and conceptual odyssey, though in this case to make an argument for cooperation, collaboration and mutual respect between disparate perspectives, both in the Lego and human worlds. Where the Lego characters continue to wrestle with their own identities, and with each other’s, the human kids do the same, trying to find an accord between an older brother’s evolving maturity, and a younger sister’s budding creativity. On screen, the end result is something discordant but joyful, unwieldy and frequently exhilarating, offering beautiful messages for kids about getting along with one another, and learning to respect different points of view. But ultimately, “The Lego Movie 2” feels like those lessons were imparted without quite being heeded by the filmmakers themselves, which may explain why the movie feels more like an exciting jumble of really intriguing parts than a unified, impactful whole.

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  • ‘Glass’ Review: Not Worth the Wait

    ‘Glass’ Review: Not Worth the Wait

    Universal/Disney

    There is a good film to be made about superheroes existing in the “real” world, and the phenomenon, or perhaps disorder, where ordinary people believe they possess extraordinary abilities. “Glass” is not that film, despite how seriously writer-director M. Night Shyamalan takes both of those ideas, and as always, himself. An overlong, underdeveloped mash-up (or more charitably, payoff) of his brilliant “Unbreakable” and the pulpy “Split,” Shyamalan tries to examine, and rekindle, the magic and intrigue of comic books in the pre-Marvel Cinematic Universe era. But he spends so much time discussing, deconstructing and still somehow indulging their now-boilerplate storytelling conventions that the end result is a movie that feels even less tethered to reality than the ones that it so snobbishly looks down upon.

    Bruce Willis plays David Dunn, a Philadelphia security expert-turned-vigilante in search of Kevin Wendell Crumb (James McAvoy), a serial killer suffering from multiple personality disorder. David’s superhuman abilities soon bring the two men together, but before he can fully defeat Crumb’s monstrous alter ego, The Beast, they’re both apprehended by local police and thrown into an institution for the criminally insane. Once there, David is unwittingly reunited with Elijah Price (Samuel L. Jackson), the homicidal comic book aficionado who sparked his heroic self-discovery decades ago, and all three are offered the opportunity to confront what psychologist Dr. Ellie Staple (Sarah Paulson) believes are delusional beliefs in their own preternatural talents.

    Universal/Disney

    David, Kevin and Elijah begin the difficult process of explaining to Staple how they’re capable of accomplishing such extraordinary feats, and they soon find themselves questioning if what they’ve done is all a matter of serendipity and circumstance. But after Elijah becomes convinced that The Beast is not only a bona fide super human, but somehow the key to all three of them unlocking their full potential, he puts into motion a string of events that threatens the safety of thousands of innocent people and once again forces David to step in and try and prevent his plan from becoming a deadly reality.

    After 20 years of mainstream moviemaking and an approach to storytelling that feels defiantly unchanged in the face of numerous failures (both critical and commercial), it’s clear that Shyamalan believes there’s nothing you can show that cannot be over-explained. The technique worked in “Unbreakable” because it was both providing context for Elijah’s processing of the world — that is, via the visual and narrative mythmaking of comic books — and skillfully foreshadowing revelations that it seems only fair to acknowledge were not the “twists” for which the filmmaker became reductively known. But Shyamalan’s instinct to acknowledge tropes as he’s using them hasn’t aged well, and in “Glass,” he actively undermines the dramatic weight of what should be a moment of self-actualization and culmination of purpose for these three characters. I’m not sure I’ve ever seen a film more determined to talk itself out of embracing what it is, and all of the things that make it special.

    But worse than that, the film is just thoughtlessly conceived, poorly paced and badly constructed. Approximately 90 percent of its running time takes place in the institution where Staple has detained her three would-be Supers, including a protracted breakout sequence and an overlong showdown between David and The Beast that never gains momentum or feels remotely exciting. (The fact that both of them are “just” strong means that when they finally face each other, they mostly push the other one around against a van.) And for a movie obsessed with the real-world implications, and consequences, of individuals acting upon the belief that they possess super powers, procedurally almost nothing feels believable, from the supervision and “treatment” they receive at Staple’s facility to the basic reactions and motivations of both our heroes and the authorities trying to come to terms with their behavior.

    Universal/Disney

    Although I’m not convinced he’s actually in all of the scenes in which his character performs feats of heroism (that poncho covers his face pretty well), Willis moderately rouses from his usual paycheck slumber for the director who gave him some of his biggest hits, and breathes some life into David as he patrols the city and dispenses justice. McAvoy’s ability to shuffle between Kevin’s many personalities remains the remarkable feat of acting that it was in “Split,” but Shyamalan offers almost too many opportunities for him to showcase that talent — it becomes less an expression of internal turmoil than an impressive party trick. Jackson, meanwhile, reconnects with the intense, intimidating calm that made Elijah such an unsettling character in “Unbreakable,” and seems to be having the most fun of the three as he returns to this world.

    Paulson is saddled with what I’m sure seemed like a meaty role on the page, but it proves thankless; she literally spends the entire film trying to convince the characters (and the audience) that there’s nothing special or exceptional about anything that they’re doing, or watching. Unfortunately, she succeeds. Shyamalan also intriguingly brings back not only Anya-Taylor Joy’s Casey from “Split,” but Spencer Treat Clark’s Joseph Dunn from “Unbreakable,” but as witnesses, confidantes and eventually participants in this story, they’re never given enough to do, and their reasons for becoming involved end up feeling overstated and yet largely unjustified.

    From “The Sixth Sense” to “The Village” (yeah, I know), Shyamalan enjoyed an uninterrupted string of hits that took conventions audiences didn’t realize had become part of their movie-watching DNA and somehow delivered the exact kinds of thrills that he seemed to be deconstructing. “Unbreakable,” released at a time before comic book adaptations were an integral part of our moviegoing diet (and daresay, the pop culture firmament), was the film of his that seemed most deserving of a sequel, or some sort of continuation. But “Glass” arrives too late for its own good, both in terms of his career evolution (or lack theerof) and the genre he still seems to think is not taken seriously enough.

    Ultimately, not only does Shyamalan seem to have forgotten what made its two predecessors work so well, but he fails to realize that it’s his lack of imagination, not audiences’, that keeps them from believing in superheroes. All of which is why for better or worse, “Glass” delivers a follow-up that effectively delivers everything that we should have expected, but also proves that the ideas that kept us intrigued for the last 19 years have long since been conclusively and satisfyingly explored.

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