Thursday, December 22, 2016

Hell or High Water - Love Letter to a Throwback


When you think of seventies cinema, there are certain films that help define the era by their sheer rebelliousness - Badlands, Mean Streets, Dog Day Afternoon, Thunderbolt and Lightfoot, The Last Picture Show - films where authority was not only distrusted, but where the law was a gray area you punched through when you'd been pushed too far by those in control. It was an amazing era, and those fond of it often wonder if films of that stripe would ever come again.

Make no mistake, Hell or High Water is one of the best American films of the year, and if you missed it in theaters, it’s on home video now, so do not let this amazing slice of adult awesomeness slip through your fingers. If there’s any justice, it’s a Best Picture nominee, hands down. 

Set in modern-day Texas, Hell or High Water grows out of the dust of the Western outlaw genre. Two brothers, Tanner (Ben Foster) and Toby (Chris Pine) are starting up a string of low-rent bank robberies across small towns in west Texas. They don’t seem to know what the hell they’re doing. All they know is that they need to raise enough money to keep the bank from foreclosing on the family ranch – and while these two are breaking the law, the real villains in Hell or High Water are the banks. Banks who offer to “help” struggling farmers with a reverse mortgage, knowing they’ll never be able to get square, cross-hairs set the entire time on getting their land – period.

Focusing purely on smaller, untraceable bills, the brothers’ activity soon draws the attention of the Texas Rangers, led by Marcus Hamilton (Jeff Bridges). Bridges is on the cusp of retirement, and where lesser men would avoid being drawn in, Bridges' measured, irascible curiosity can’t leave anything alone, especially a very specific, modest crime wave that seems to be following a careful recipe. Bridges and his partner (Gil Birmingham) have a great dynamic, where annoyance and fondness have blurred into a begrudging co-dependence. 

Ben Foster’s long been a live-wire supporting actor doing amazing work in film and TV, from Six Feet Under, 3:10 to Yuma, Thirty Days of Night to The Messenger. He’s an electric, uncontained presence, and he nabs a role here that really lets him step forward in a terrific character dynamic with the always reliable Pine. These are two fantastic actors who play a complex sibling relationship. They’re at opposite ends of a moral spectrum, but when push comes to shove, they’ll each draw cards from the others’ deck as the situation demands.

Directed by David Mackenzie and written by Taylor Sheridan (Sicario), Hell or High Water has the same fondness for character, realism and dialogue that would make Elmore Leonard proud. Indeed, if you’re at all a Leonard fan, Hell or High Water is bound to have roped your attention by now. The tone and sense of place evokes films like Lone Star and No Country for Old Men. In this new west, outlaws still brandish iron, but as much of modern America has come to learn, when the adversaries are financial institutions, patience and planning are likely to trump good aim every time. Very highly recommended. 

Tuesday, December 20, 2016

Blast from the Past: Rogue One: A Star Wars Story

 
SPOILER-WARNING: DO NOT PROCEED until you’ve actually seen Rogue One... 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
Any doubts that Disney could find an audience for stand-alone Star Wars films that don’t directly involve Luke Skywalker and the Jedi Knights were obliterated in a massive box office blast crater this weekend, as Rogue One: A Star Wars Story took in a massive $155 million in domestic sales.
 
Now I wear my heart on my sleeve – lifelong Star Wars fan, and my expectations here were super high. Rogue One has wildly surpassed them. In many ways, this is the first Star Wars movie aimed squarely at grown-ups. We’ve all heard the pitch – this is the story of how the Rebel Alliance got ahold of the plans to the Death Star that R2-D2’s carrying in the original film. And while we know where things are going, that in no way lessens the suspense of how we get there. Godzilla director Gareth Edwards has directed a simply phenomenal, thrill-packed entry to the Star Wars franchise, that easily ranks among the series’ best. That’s right – it’s as entertaining and gripping as The Empire Strikes Back or The Force Awakens. Rogue One is a war movie, a sci-fi Guns of Navarone or Where Eagles Dare. There’s not a lot of cute in the picture, and the stakes are high. The one child is glimpsed in the film’s prologue, heroine Jyn Erso, seen as a young girl, when agents of the Empire come to take away her father (Mads Mikkelsen), the scientist necessary to complete construction of the Death Star. 
 
Jyn Grows up to be a headstrong insurgent, played by Felicity Jones. Jones is in nearly every scene, and she does a great job of carrying the film and making Jyn a compelling character. Alongside Force Awakens’ Rey (Daisy Ridley), Lucasfilm is going out of their way to provide young moviegoers with strong female role models who drive the action, and aren’t just along for the ride. The Rebel Alliance figures out who Jyn is, and sees her value as a means to get to her father. The Rebels (lead by Diego Luna’s Cassian Andor) are a murkier group here, who aren’t above taking extreme measures to serve the greater good. Jyn and Cassian are part of a Dirty Dozen band of warriors who are all terrific characters. Donnie Yen is a real standout as a blind follower of the Force from the Zatoichi school, whose cheerful serenity doesn’t impede his ability to knock the tar out of a squad of Stormtroopers. Destined for classic character status, reprogrammed Imperial droid K-2SO (motion-captured and voiced by Alan Tudyk) is outright phenomenal. Towering and intimidating, he’s like a cynical, uncensored C-3PO, and is 100% convincing and captivating.
 
Let’s talk Imperials: As the military project manager responsible for the Death Star’s completion, Ben Mendelsohn is an exceptional bad guy, desperate to be appreciated by those he answers to, including a couple of major players from Star Wars’ inception. We’re talking about events on the Death Star, so we all figured there’d have to be some kind of glimpse of Grand Moff Tarkin, despite the fact that actor Peter Cushing died in 1994. I was expecting a brief cameo, at best – so nothing prepared me for Tarkin appearing as a pretty major supporting character! While it’s bound to generate controversy, the combination of digital effects and the work of actor Guy Henry is flabbergasting. I’ve heard some wags take issue with the character’s rendering, but I strongly disagree – Tarkin’s a favorite, and Henry’s diction and delivery – the facial expressions, his insidious contempt – all eerily evoked Cushing incredibly well. I felt positively gleeful every time he appeared onscreen. Say what you will, it’s an amazing achievement.
 
Then there’s Vader. James Earl Jones is still very much alive, and to have Darth Vader back in a new Star Wars film is…is exhilerating! I don’t want to give too much away, but if you were expecting Vader to just glower through a scene or two making fists, think again. Vader is very much an active antagonist, and we see him join the fray like we simply never have before – and it’s chilling. 
 
There are plenty of surprises throughout Rogue One that are guaranteed to delight fans, but like The Force Awakens, the new characters are engaging and welcome additions. Wen Jiang, and Riz Ahmed round out the rebel squad, and Forest Whitaker is sensational as legendary insurgent Saw Gerrera. He’s been fighting the Empire all his life, and it’s taken its toll, like a crazy cross between Eli Wallach and Richard Roundtree. Special shout-out to Mads Mikkelsen as Jyn’s father. Mikkelsen has seemed sleepy and detached sometimes to me, but not here. I found him complicated and sympathetic and it’s some of his best work. I really liked him here. 
 
Yes, there’s a lot of digital work going on in Rogue One, but I found it all done with great skill, and always, always in service to the script. Chris Weitz and Tony Gilroy have combined their talents to deliver some top-notch storytelling. Things people have sometimes carped on from the original Star Wars now have a deliberate purpose. That weakness in the Death Star? It’s there for a reason, and that somehow makes it that much more incredibly cool. Parents of younger children might want to think twice with Rogue One, as this is a War Movie, and there’s way more shooting and loss than they might be used to in the less combat-driven saga installments. There’s also a lot more slowed-down conversation, as characters talk about the stakes and choices at hand. Youngsters may fidget. 
 
But hands down, this is a tremendous Star Wars film. It’s busting at the seams with thrills and action, with awe and ideals, and it screams repeat-viewing like few films I’ve seen lately. It should easily give Force Awakens a run for its money, as the audience I saw it with had plenty of three-generation family attendees. It’s definitely more adult, but it never stops being fun, and Rogue One is simply one of the most entertaining films of the year.
 

Sunday, November 13, 2016

Arrival is Top Shelf Sci-Fi with Brains



Fear of the unknown. The impulse responsible for more of our behaviors - both good and bad - than nearly any other aspect of the human condition. It practically defines us. So when a dozen colossal spaceships appear at various points across the globe with no explanation, how do we react?

Arrival is the anti-Independence Day. It spoils nothing to say that there are no colossal battles or CGI annihilated cities in Arrival. It joins the short list of science fiction films like Close Encounters and Interstellar aimed squarely at adults, that stays smart and uses the tropes of the genre to say more about the nature of mankind, than about the nature of alien life. This will be a pretty short review, as the less you read about Arrival before you see it, the better. Amy Adams is Dr. Louise Banks, a university linguist recruited by the government to try and find a way of communicating with our mysterious visitors, in hopes of cracking the big question - why are they here? 

Written by Eric Heisserer (from a story by Ted Chiang) and directed by the great Denis Villeneuve (Prisoners, Sicario), Arrival is a breath of fresh air on so many levels. Example: there's a lot of tech on display in the military command center beneath the ship, but for once we're not inundated with electronic product placement - there's no jarring close-up screaming "CISCO" or "NOKIA." Arrival also steers away from the trend of CNN-branded faux newscasts with real-life anchor cameos, which always seem to lessen the feeling of realism, rather than increase it. Villeneuve has become such an accomplished filmmaker, I'm frankly giddy knowing he's the guy directing next year's Blade Runner 2049. Are we ever in good hands.

Jeremy Renner and Forest Whitaker are both terrific here, but this is all Amy Adams, who's in nearly every scene and delivers a nuanced, at times heartbreaking performance. It's so refreshing to see a realistic adult female character who's not dependent on men or approval or who's a prisoner of her emotions. I suspect audiences are going to welcome her character and the rich emotional storytelling of Arrival with open arms. Very highly recommended.

Friday, November 11, 2016

In Through the Out Door: Doctor Strange Will See You Now
















It was a hard trick to pull off, but once again, Marvel’s done it. After the nuts and bolts success of Captain America: Civil War, adapting the more mystical and esoteric story of Doctor Strange could have gone wrong and felt tone-deaf any number of ways. You think Thor is psychedelic and astral! But there are two things Marvel Studios boss Kevin Feige always seems to excel at: hammering the story into shape, and casting. And with Doctor Strange, Marvel has delivered one of their most unique and satisfying films yet.

Created by Steve Ditko in 1963, Stephen Strange is a brilliant neurosurgeon who rivals Iron Man’s Tony Stark in the arrogance department. When a devastating car accident turns his surgeon’s hands into mangled pulp, Strange (Benedict Cumberbatch) embarks on a quest to find the rumored healing knowledge that can restore his defining abilities, the spark that lets his narcissistic ego blaze brightly. Without the power (and vanity) of his peerless skills, he has no idea who he really is.

His journey takes him to the Himalayan temple of Kamar-Taj, a remote sanctuary where Strange hopes to find the secrets necessary to restore himself. What he finds there is much, much more. He becomes a pupil of The Ancient One (Tilda Swinton), an ageless Master of the mystic arts from whom Strange learns more about the cosmos – and himself – than he ever dared imagine. Swinton’s casting was pretty controversial. The Ancient One was always Asian in the comics - so whitewashing accusations flew fast and furious. But I have to say, I think it’s an effective choice. If they’d kept the character Asian, I think we’d have another hoary Pai Mei/Master Po stereotype, and Swinton is just superb here, making The Ancient One a being who seems to transcend age, race or gender. It’s a cool choice and it works. Her scenes with Cumberbatch are tremendous, and a sequence where she essentially pulls back the curtain on the universe to Strange, sending his consciousness reeling, is a fantasy tour de force. I saw Doctor Strange in 2-D, and for the first time in ages, I found myself thinking that this just might be a film actually worth seeking out in 3-D.

Massive credit has to go to director Scott Derrickson (Sinister, Deliver Us from Evil), whose horror pedigree brings a real sense of atmospheric “otherness” that gives Doctor Strange a unique flavor that really does make it seem a few degrees from normal within the Marvel Universe. Like Guardians of the Galaxy, it’s fantastic to see that Feige has the confidence and scope to have different tones and styles that make up this massive tapestry. Screenwriter Jon Spaihts (with Derrickson and C. Robert Cargill) has done a fantastic job of keeping Strange clever and full of wit, without ever seeming snarky or aloof. It’s a smart adaptation, but it’s always fun, which isn’t easy to pull off. A sequence where Strange lies dying in an operating theater, while his disembodied spectral self does battle with an ethereal foe is an imaginative, nail-biting crowd-pleaser. Cumberbatch is a perfect embodiment of the character, detached and severe at times, but never insufferable.  As the villainous Kaecilius, Mads Mikkelsen is threatening, but a bit too mellow and low energy. Guardians’ Ronan (Lee Pace) is an erupting volcano in comparison. Rachel McAdams, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Benjamin Bratt and Benedict Wong are all great additions to the cast. Bratt is particularly cool.

I won’t spoil the plot or surprises of Doctor Strange, but fans of the comic are going to find themselves thoroughly satisfied, and audiences hungry for something fresh, smart and engaging are going to have a fantastic time. Like any Marvel saga, stay all the way through the end credits, for more than one bonus scene. I loved Doctor Strange, and my hunch is you'll be looking for a red cape of your own once you've seen it.

Wednesday, October 5, 2016

Sagnificent Seven


Over the last year, we’ve had something of a Western resurgence, easily one of my favorite genres. So I was pretty excited for Antoine Fuqua’s take on the John Sturges classic The Magnificent Seven (1960). A wild west rendering of Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai, the story of powerless villagers hiring gunslingers to defend their town from evil men works well across many environments, even deep space, as in 1980’s Battle Beyond the Stars. As we saw with last years’ The Hateful EightThe Revenant and Bone TomahawkWesterns can still connect with audiences and deliver primal, pulp storytelling, with antagonists facing off against the backdrop of the wild frontier. Sadly, Fuqua’s well-intentioned remake isn’t nearly in the same class as those other films.

 

Denzel Washington takes on the Yul Brynner role (and black garb), while Chris Pratt riffs off of Steve McQueen’s cantankerous ne’er-do-well. Ethen Hawke and Vincent D’Onofrio, round out the mercenary mob, with Martin Sensmeier, Manuel Garcia-Rulfo and Byung-hun Lee providing backup diversity – and that’s really part of the problem with Seven. Fuqua is to be commended for bringing a diverse ethnic sensibility to the film – but the script never does their varied makeup any justice as characters. The character work in Seven is one of its weakest elements. Sensmeier and Lee exude tremendous charisma as Native American and Asian recruits, but other than “The elders say I’m on a different path,” and being good with knives, these two are brooding cyphers. Garcia-Rulfo has the thankless designation of Mexican Outlaw. This is a likable cast, but they’re woefully underserved by the script (Richard Wenk and Nic Pizzolatto).

 

Haley Bennett is the town’s voice who recruits the Seven as protectors, who seems cast mainly due to a resemblance to Jennifer Lawrence. If The Magnificent Seven was more fun, much of the sketchiness here could be forgiven, but unfortunately the film plays out in dreary, overbearing, and all too perfunctory fashion. The death blow is Peter Sarsgaard’s land-grabbing villain, played as a man seemingly driven by heavy-lidded boredom.  He drags himself through scenes with lethargic flippancy, letting all the air of menace escape from the balloon. His character is a yawning misfire.

 

If you want to see a film where the director has boundless enthusiasm for the genre, go back and check out Sam Raimi’s The Quick and the Dead (1995). It’s brisk, faithful to a legion of tropes, and makes even the most hastily glimpsed characters memorably vivid, while always maintaining a sense of fun. It’s one of the countless, more engaging westerns that kept popping up for me while The Magnificent Seven mechanically unspooled. Pale Rider, Django Unchained, Tombstone – and Lawrence Kasdan’s Silverado. I’m betting Antoine Fuqua’s watched Silverado a lot, and you can sense him gamely trying to evoke a similar dynamic contrast between scenic grandeur and bullet-firing mayhem.


But for whatever reasons, this iteration of The Magnificent Seven just doesn’t stay with you. When the considerable gunsmoke finally clears, you’re likely to find that disappointment is what’s left standing.  

Monday, September 12, 2016

Blind Panic: Don't Breathe















Nearly every summer, a sleeper emerges that you've never heard of that seemingly comes out of nowhere and captures audience's attention - usually a horror thriller. As summer gasped out its swan song, this year that distinction went to Don't Breathe.

You probably know the premise - a trio of young thieves plan a home invasion where the victim is blind. An easy score. Except the man in the dark is a Gulf War veteran, for whom blindness has become a superpower. He knows every inch of his hermit-imposed environment, his ears attuned to even the slightest noise. Played by the great Stephen Lang (Avatar), his blind man is a powerful, dangerous presence - a coiled spring. His quiet patience reminds you of Charles Bronson.

Directed by Fede Alvarez, (Evil Dead), Don't Breathe is a really hard movie to talk about without veering off the highway into spoiler territory, which I don't want to do. It's an extremely visceral and effective film, and the premise is stupendous. That first half of the movie is pure gasp-inducing adrenaline. The blind man's house is deep in the abandoned wasteland of derelict Detroit neighborhoods, and the absence of neighbors or passersby creates a foreboding, apocalyptic mood.

The trio of thieves are solid, especially Jane Levy. Dylan Minnette is a little too earnest, his character feeling more like he belongs in a John Hughes movie. But the movie calls for extremely personal, physical work from these two, as well as Daniel Zovatto, the most unrepentant of the three. The house is practically a character unto itself, feeling decrepit and real. Alvarez has a keen sense for what rattles an audience, and this is a great picture to see in the theater. It's claustrophobic and in your face.

The film owes a real debt to Panic Room, as well as the 1967 Audrey Hepburn thriller, Wait Until Dark, directed by the great Terence Young (if you've never seen it, find it). I'll just say that Alvarez makes the audience's sympathies a moving target. When the tables turn, as much as you want the blind man to triumph over his invaders, they're not stock bad guys, especially Levy. In the second half, you'll find there's more than one kitchen sink in play, and I found my allegiances in a fair amount of flux. Maybe I had some issues, but let's keep it spoiler-free.

When they bring the check, you've really got to hand it to Alvarez for delivering a super taut, economical premise with pretty tight lug nuts. Made for about $10 million, its dog-days box office is at $67 million so far. That's why you gotta love a good thriller.

Monday, August 8, 2016

So Long, Summer: 2016 Fall & Winter Movie Preview

A lot of us are doing Back to School shopping, so like it or not, summer is drawing to a close.
Suicide Squad just overcame a critical keel-hauling with box office gold, and it feels like that’s going to pretty much act as the capstone on the summer movie-going season. Latecomers Sausage Party, Pete’s Dragon, Hell or High Water and Hands of Stone could all see some sleeper success, while Ben-Hur is destined for disaster.

So what’s next? Looking ahead to the fall and winter months, I have to say, it doesn’t exactly look like the most awe-inspiring autumn, let alone Christmas. Unquestionably, films are going to surface we didn’t see coming, but as it stands now, there’s less than ten films that look cool enough to lure me into the theater. It’s a surprisingly short list this year.

















The Magnificent Seven  (9/23) – Most remakes are just a cash-grab, but this 21st Century Tombstone from Antoine Fuqua feels like the real McCoy, and seems likely to continue Chris Pratt’s winning streak. Note that these are all different characters than we saw in the Steve McQueen, Yul Brynner classic.














Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children (9/30) – This feels like the return of the real Tim Burton – a surreal tale of misfits and outcasts. It’s sure coming out at the right time of the year.

















Birth of a Nation (10/07) – by all accounts, Nate Parker’s Sundance triumph about slavery in the South is the film of the moment and seems destined to win Best Picture. But it’s still really early and Toronto hasn’t even happened yet. But as of now, Birth is the front-runner.



















The Girl on the Train (10/07) – This Emily Blunt mystery was a massive best-seller and has already been tagged as this years’ Gone Girl. Fall’s a great time for a smart, moody thriller, and Blunt’s been picking ‘em really well.


Doctor Strange (11/04) – I love all the ingredients here. The Marvel Universe, I loved the comic, Cumberbatch is awesome – but that first trailer is a little too Inception lite, and we need a bigger sense of the supernatural forces at play here. Hopefully a stupendous trailer’s just around the corner. Marvel so rarely stumbles, and I want this one to be worthy.



















Arrival (11/11) – Denis Villeneuve’s first sci-fi film before embarking on Blade Runner 2? Count me as interested! Amy Adams and Jeremy Renner. Villeneuve is an astonishing talent, so here’s hoping this doesn’t end up being The Invasion















Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (11/18) – Harry Potter is back in bookstores again, and the winter months have always been very welcoming to J.K. Rowling’s wizarding world. Here’s to new characters and environments agreeing with audiences.















Rogue One: A Star Wars Story (12/16) – Reshoots be damned, this is the Mt. Everest of the holiday season. Disney is banking on December lightning striking twice, and director Gareth Edwards could sure use some love. It’s hard to imagine anything dampening my enthusiasm for this unique Dirty Dozen take on that galaxy far, far away. Plus, two words: Darth Vader.
























Passengers (12/21) – More sci-fi, from John Spaihts' 2007 Black List story, tagged as one of the best unproduced scripts of the year. Jennifer Lawrence and Chris Pratt star as two voyagers on an interstellar colony ship. Hundreds of travelers are in suspended animation for a journey lasting over a century. When Pratt somehow wakes up early, he decides to thaw out a companion, rather than endure a lifetime of solitude. Morten Tyldum (The Imitation Game) directs.

That's about it! I'm sure there will be other standouts yet to emerge, but from where I'm sitting here in August, these are the ones I'm most intrigued by.

Wednesday, August 3, 2016

Suicide Squad Review Wreckage



Well, I’m sure that the phones are ringing off the hook at Warner Bros. today – and pretty much not in a good way.
The reviews for Suicide Squad are about exactly the opposite from what everyone hoped. When a consistent theme of “Not as bad as last years’ Fantastic Four” begins to emerge, you know you’re in trouble.  They’re currently 33% Rotten over on Rotten Tomatoes, and it sounds like they continued the too-dark muddy nature that was a source of so many of the critiques of Batman v Superman. That the first part of the film rocks hard, but then quickly devolves into tame and muddlesome predictability. Everyone consistently praises the cast, especially Margot Robbie as Harley Quinn, in what sounds like a completely star-making turn. But shockingly, Jared Leto’s highly anticipated Joker is evidently barely in the film. Sounding like a lot of bad decisions were made in terms of focus and editing, and that the vibe seems to be that director David Ayer took a good swing, but that studio meddling delivered a hamstrung product that pulls its punches. It will be interesting to see how all this translates into weekend box office. Can they even land first place, or will Jason Bourne continue to dominate? A huge factor is the Olympics, and if audiences decide to stay home and watch those this weekend and skip “Skwad,” it could be a killing blow for the picture. Man, DC just can’t seem to catch a break. Stay tuned.

Monday, August 1, 2016

The Needful Nostalgia of Stranger Things


By now, if you've got Netflix, you've likely already binged your way through all 8 episodes of Stranger Things, one of the few entertainment bright spots of the summer. Released with almost no advance word, the show caught fire instantly and became The must-watch show of the season.
 
In case you've been away, Stranger Things is a delirious fusion of all things Eighties, a frenzied and faithful story of childhood friends in peril that sprays gleeful reference shrapnel invoking the works of Steven Spielberg and Stephen King. E.T., Poltergeist, Stand by Me, Firestarter, The Goonies - you'll get whiplash counting the nods and callbacks. The opening credits echo the font of every King book jacket, backed by a synthesizer score that screams John Carpenter. Even the poster art (from Kyle Lambert) is meant to evoke the legendary style of Drew Struzan, he of the iconic Star Wars and Indiana Jones one-sheets. For anyone who grew up loving eighties movies, Stranger Things is a heady trip back in the time machine. Set in 1983, it looks, smells and feels like a product of that simpler, pre-internet time. Part of the show's appeal has undoubtedly been the interactive fun of connecting the pop cultural dots, and bathing in a warm pool of nostalgia for a genre of film we kind of take for granted now.
 
But Stranger Things isn't just a magic act, and it's definitely not paint-by-numbers. Created and directed by The Duffer Brothers (Matt and Ross), Stranger Things is the story of a lazy town next to a government research lab that's rocked by the disappearance of a small boy under disturbing circumstances - and his friends' determined quest to somehow find him.
 
Just watch that pilot, and if you aren't immediately all kinds of hooked, I'll be surprised. I may even sick a Demogorgon on you. Eighties stalwarts Winona Ryder and Matthew Modine are the most familiar faces, both doing excellent work. As the town Sheriff, David Harbour is a new face to me, but he won't stay unfamiliar long, as he's fantastic here. A damaged, near derelict sleepwalker straight out of Carpenter or Dean Koontz.
 
But it's the young cast of friends that deserve a huge amount of credit for Stranger Things' success. Led by Finn Wolfhard (right?), Noah Schnapp, Gaten Matarazzo, Caleb McLoughlin, Charlie Heaton and Natalia Dyer do an amazing job of creating believable and unforced energy in their roles and keep you rooting for them every step of the way. But it's Millie Bobby Brown as "Eleven," who's going to come out of this thing in a major way. It's a star-making performance and she becomes a galvanizing force for this band of D&D loyalists in a way you won't soon forget.
 
With so much nostalgic hat-tipping, it may be tempting for some to view Stranger Things with a cynical lens. But viewers have embraced this show like a beer on a hot afternoon, and I gotta say I just enjoyed the hell out of my time in Hawkins, Indiana, and I can't wait to see where the Duffer Brothers take us next.

Tuesday, July 26, 2016

Cameron's Abyss on Blu-ray Next Year!


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
While speaking at Comic-Con's 30th Anniversary Aliens panel this weekend, director James Cameron revealed that at long last, his 1989 undersea opus The Abyss will be arriving on Blu-ray next year.
“We’ve done a [new] wet-gate 4K scan of the original negative, and it’s going to look insanely good,” he said. “We’re going to do an authoring pass in the DI for Blu-ray and HDR at the same time.” The Abyss should arrive in 2017, which is great news, as it's been on fans' high-def wishlist since the format arrived.

Saturday, July 23, 2016

Review: Star Trek Beyond Warps to Success

Cancel Red Alert, you can lower your deflector shields - Star Trek Beyond is Fun with a capital F, a winning crowd-pleaser that will easily go down as one of the biggest hits of the summer.
 
After that first trailer, I was among the many fans who were nervous as hell. "So the Fast & Furious  guy is bringing dirt bikes to Star Trek?!" My "dumbing-down-o-meter" was twitching wildly.
 
So it's a pleasant surprise to see that director Justin Lin and screenwriter Simon Pegg (with Doug Jung) have - for the most part - scored a real return to the fundamental dynamics that have kept Trek alive for five decades.

Of the "Nu-Trek" films, this is the first one to take place entirely in deep space, far from Earth, as the Enterprise is more than halfway through its five-year mission. Captain Kirk (the superb Chris Pine) is feeling a little weary, finding life a little "episodic." His early heart-to-heart with Bones (Karl Urban) is reminiscent of a similar confessional vulnerability from Christopher Pike to his doc, way back in The Menagerie (aka The Cage), back where this amazing universe began.

After a visit to an Elysium-esque Starbase, the Enterprise crew must journey into a nebula to answer a distress call (guys, never seen Alien, or taken the Kobayashi Maru test? Come on!), the ship is ruthlessly attacked by Krall (Idris Elba), an aggressive alien out for blood, who nurses a real chip on his shoulder for the Federation.

The setup is really just a means to have the crew abandon ship and be split-up on a hostile alien world. And this is where Justin Lin and Simon Pegg get major props - because while Star Trek Beyond is full of outlandish action sequences, most of it's devoted to character, and to spending time with that core trio we have such affection for. A wounded Spock (Zachary Quinto) and McCoy are marooned together, and these scenes just shine, making the most of that Bickersons relationship between the two that was a hallmark of the original series.















Scotty encounters an alien exile, Jaylah (Kingsman's Sofia Boutella), an independent and fierce outcast who soon becomes a tremendous ally. She's a terrific character and it speaks volumes that she's able to hold her own with Pine, Urban and Quinto on the charisma meter. She's a tremendously engaging and fun addition to the group.

Another breakout star is the Starship Franklin, a castoff from the Enterprise/Captain Archer era. It's a supremely cool ship and its return to service says a lot about there still being plenty of juice left in old relics, if you know what I'm saying.

That's really the operative word here - fun. While it really is a souped-up blockbuster, Star Trek Beyond has tremendous affection for what makes Star Trek Star Trek, and is replete with little asides and deft callbacks that will bring plenty of smiles to fans' faces. It's a tremendously entertaining film and moves at a nice clip, not suffering at all from any 3rd act largesse.

If there's a weak spot in Beyond, it's the villain, Krall. The makeup design of Krall and his minions is pretty awful, and a little too reminiscent of the bumpy-faced alien syndrome that befell Deep Space Nine. He's very difficult to understand, and his motives are too much of a muddle, even by the third act. Also, if you're the kind of fan who bristles at anachronisms, you'd better know that you'll be getting Beastie Boys and Public Enemy writ large here, because demographic equals box office, even in the far reaches of deep space. So brace yourselves and just go with it. As enjoyable as the film is, it's a shame that the plot (and villain) don't connect to some kind of larger metaphoric ideal, as the original series did so well. There's really no Big Idea at play here, which is too bad, as it could have fit in very easily. There's nothing grand being said about the human condition or mankind's place in the cosmos, other than our tenacity.

But audiences are loving this picture, and at the end of the day, this is one of the most joyous depictions of the Kirk/Spock/McCoy dynamic we've seen in ages. Its place as one of the highlights of the summer box office is a good thing, and fans should embrace it, because it's going to go a long way towards keeping Trek alive and well for future iterations. It may be propelled by high octane flash, but it's so great to see a modern audience wildly enjoying what's essentially just a souped-up episode of one the most enjoyable cast of characters of all time. Boldly go.


 



#SDCC - Dark Tower Choo-Choo and Planet Hulk

It's been an exciting Saturday!
 
Without a doubt, the most sought after collectible at Comic-Con today (at least for Steven King fans) was a hardcover book called Charlie the Choo-Choo, a bit of Dark Tower viral promotion from Simon & Schuster. Only 150 copies of the book were handed out - with no barcode, never to be sold in stores, the 19 page "children's book" quickly showed up on eBay for anywhere between $1,600 and $5,000. 

Charlie the Choo-Choo is kind of a dimensional ripple of Blaine the Mono, the sinister bullet train from book 3 of The Dark Tower series, The Waste Lands. 

Simon & Schuster had fictional author "Beryl Evans" there to autograph copies, despite the fact that she was murdered decades ago in another dimension. This is cross-platform marketing at its very best.
 
If like me, you're sobbing at not having nabbed a copy, the fine folks at Entertainment Weekly have hooked us up with the entire book, gallery-style, here.
 
In other news, a very cool reveal came from Marvel Studios, where a display of enormous armor and weapons confirmed that the events of next year's Thor: Ragnarok will indeed integrate in the fan-fave Planet Hulk storyline, with the Big Green One fighting gladiator-style on Planet Sakaar!
 
Also, we learned that Brie Larson will be taking on the role of Captain Marvel..


...and the new Star Trek TV series will be called Star Trek Discovery.
 




Very cool indeed. Look for Thor: Ragnarok November 2017, which as we've seen today, is shaping up to be one helluva year!

#SDCC - Saturday Trailer Trio!



An exciting Saturday, to be sure!
No less than three outstanding looking trailers dropped today to deafening Hall H enthusiasm.

Here you go, one stop shopping -

Justice League

Wonder Woman

Kong: Skull Island


I think these all look great, and the epic scale of Skull Island really has me excited. But that final exchange at the close of Wonder Woman wins the day. Dang, 2017 is already looking deliriously fun!