I never watched Dora the Explorer, never had any kids into the show, but Dora and the Lost City of Gold looked cute, so I thought I’d give it a chance. The movie starts out with the little 6-year-old Dora of the TV show, being raised in the jungle by her parents, but quickly jumps ahead 10 years to a teenage Dora getting ready to move to the city for the first time in her life. Dora is completely unprepared for the city, and the city is unprepared for her. Her one-time sidekick, cousin Diego, has lived in the city all these years and is initially embarrassed by Dora’s naivety and complete lack of social skills. When Dora and some classmates are kidnapped to a South American jungle by treasure hunters, after the fabled Incan City of Gold which Dora’s parents have been hunting for years, their adventure really starts. Isabela Moner is cute as a button and portrays Dora with infectious good cheer, and her exuberance permeates through the tv, but I wasn’t buying it all. This is a family film that is definitely geared towards the youngsters, and has a few too many cliches for the older crowd to enjoy. ★★
Luce is a good kid, a senior in high school, on track towards a seemingly bright and successful future. Adopted as a child from war-torn Eritrea, he was raised well and never has given any reason for anyone to doubt him. Yet he is surrounded by circumstantial evidence that he has a darker side. A class assignment has him write an essay from the point of view of an historical figure, and his pick is a revolutionary who called for violence to end colonialism. He does the paper so well that it negatively grabs his teacher’s attention. Luce was in the vicinity when a classmate was sexually assaulted. He had illegal fireworks in his lockers, but claims they were someone else’s, as he and his friends all share lockers. The only person that doubts Luce is that teacher, but whether she’s right, or she has a vendetta against him, isn’t apparent to the viewer. This is one of those “thrillers” where all the suspense is created by the unknown. There is an obvious racial angle, with Luce being black and raised in a white household in an upper-middle class neighborhood, but it is so much more too. Luce is smart, smart enough to realize he is hampered by both expectations to succeed by some, and by others, expectations to fail. Tremendous, multi-layered film with a fantastic ensemble cast. ★★★★
Official Secrets reminded me of another recent historical film, The Report. Like that picture, this one focuses heavy on the facts of a moment that many people may not be terribly aware, and frankly by itself, though important, may not be all that riveting as viewing material, but which features strong actors to try make it work. The Report succeeded for the most part, Official Secrets does not. This one follows a woman in the intelligence community in the UK, Katharine Gun (Keira Knightley), who leaks a memo to the press that the USA has been gathering intel on UN diplomats, in a bid to perhaps blackmail them into voting to legitimize an invasion of Iraq, despite intel that Saddam Hussein in fact has no WMD’s. The second half of the film, where she is busted and brought to trial for being a whistleblower, is boring as hell. I almost made it to the end of the movie, but finally gave up. There’s some good, recognizable actors in this one, but the script is as dry as a desert. ★½
The Farewell is just one of those quiet, beautiful movies that make you feel good. Awkwafina, who burst onto the scene the last couple years in comedic roles in Oceans 8 and Crazy Rich Asians, takes on a more serious part as Billi. Raised in the USA since the age of 6, she returns with her parents to their native China, ostensibly for the wedding of Billi’s cousin, but really to visit her Nai Nai (grandmother), who has terminal lung cancer. In Chinese tradition, none of the family is giving Nai Nai the news of her impending death, forecasted just months away, and she thinks she is just fighting a bad cold. Raised “in the west,” Billi doesn’t understand this tradition and thinks Nai Nai should know the severity of her condition, but she is cowed by all the rest of her family, including her parents. As the wedding approaches, Billi has to come to terms with the differences in cultures from which she was born versus where she was raised. Despite sounding very somber (and it is at times), the film has moments of levity that prevent it from becoming a dirge, such as the time when the family has to rush to the hospital to intercept Nai Nai’s recent test results before she can read it herself. It’s a lovely film and a fantastic role for Awkwafina, nabbing her a Golden Globe. ★★★★
Followed up a film predominately in Chinese with one completely in it, but Long Day’s Journey Into Night is much less linear. Our main character is a man in search of a lost love, and the film starts with a trip through his memories. There’s no clear path through them either. He remembers his girl, his deceased father and surviving mother, and his friend who had been murdered. The memories are disjointed, out of order, and like our own memories, probably not exactly accurate. In fact the same actors play a couple different characters, intentionally I think, to mimic the infallibility of human memory. The director (Gan Bi) uses running water to great effect to signify the flowing of time; water drips everywhere in these memories, from faucets, from rivers, from the sky. The second half of the film is what everyone brings up when they talk about this movie. There is a single, hour-long cut in real time (and shown in 3D no less) following our main character through a dream of his. He’s fallen asleep in a movie theater, and the hour is one long continuous shot of his journey through his dream. And he’s not just sitting in a room. The camera follows him as he walks through a mine, then a nearly abandoned town. There are some truly astounding sequences, including when he takes flight over the town. How the camera pulled all this off is astonishing. It reminded me of other famous long shots where a lot was going on, like the hallway fight scene in Oldboy, the street-side pan of Godard’s Weekend, and the battle at the hospital in Children of Men. Those were all amazing, but this one will amaze you. (And it’s a good, thought-provoking movie too.) ★★★★
I’m a little torn on Judy, starring Renee Zellweger. I was wanting a true biopic about Judy Garland, but instead the film focuses on her final year of life, with a few flashbacks to her early career working for Louis B Mayer at MGM, as she prepared for The Wizard of Oz. In 1968 or 69, Garland is broke and in debt. No one in the USA wants to hire her, what with her reputation for not showing up on time and being hard to work with. With no prospects and the very real possibility of losing her kids to her ex-husband, she signs on for a series of shows in London, where she is still very popular. With most of the film looking at her as an aging, bankrupt star, struggling with addiction, it is a very good picture, just not what I expected. Zellweger gives it her all, and there are moments when the camera is in just the right spot that you forget that it isn’t Garland herself in front of you. It does a great job of showing Judy as a woman who loved to please the crowd, often to the detriment of her own health, but also a person with very real demons that, in the end, she wasn’t able to shake. ★★★
Some books just don’t translate well on screen. By all accounts, The Goldfinch is a fantastic read, but the movie, while it has a few nice moments, never realizes its grand expectations. After a short, cryptic narration, the film becomes a flashback when Theo was a young teenager. He’s one of a few survivors after a terrorist has blown up an art museum in New York. His mother is killed, and with no other family (his deadbeat Dad has disappeared), he goes to live with a classmate’s family. He is treated kindly, and just as he starts to feel at ease, his Dad shows up and takes him off to live in Nevada, where the only saving grace is an immigrant friend he makes, Boris. Theo’s time with his alcoholic, abusive father is awful, until finally Theo runs away and makes his way to New York alone. The title comes from a piece of art, once thought destroyed in the bombing, which Theo has secretly kept it in hiding all these years. Unfortunately the end of the film is very weird, doesn’t fit at all with the rest of the picture. The movie features good acting by Ansel Elgort in the lead, supported by Nicole Kidman, Sarah Paulson, Jeffrey Wright, and Luke Wilson, but good actors can’t save the subpar script. I stuck through the film hoping all the pieces would come together in the end, but they never add up to anything grand.
BrightBurn is a low budget sci-fi horror film with some big names behind it. It is about a husband and wife, Kyle and Tori (David Denman, Roy from The Office fame, and Elizabeth Banks), who want a baby but have been unable to conceive. Their prayers seem to be answered when an alien spacecraft crashes outside their rural farm, housing a baby, Superman-style. They raise Brandon as their own, and 11 years later, he seems to be a normal boy. However, when the buried spaceship comes alive, it brings out a sinister side of Brandon, and also seems to awaken his superpowers. Let’s just say, he’s not a good guy. Brandon gives in to his anger too easily and starts killing. It’s a decent horror flick, though it does fall into the trap of many low budget such films and really ratchets up the gore in the latter third of the flick. The film is produced by James Gunn of Guardians of the Galaxy fame, and takes place in the same world as one of his early pre-fame pictures, 2010’s Super.
Ever wonder where the term “Stockholm syndrome” came from? The film Stockholm answers your question. As it states in the opening credits, this movie is based on an absurd but true story. Lars Nystrom is a not-very-bright crook when he walks into a bank one day, not to rob it, but to use the hostages as leverage to free his buddy from jail. The cops do just that, but soon become wise that Lars’ bark is a lot worse than his bite, and that he has no intention to hurt those with him. Ethan Hawke plays an over-the-top robber, with a fine supporting cast including Noomi Rapace as Bianca, one of the hostages. That duo make the film, because as a picture, it is just average. It is worth watching for those acting chops though. In my opinion, Hawke has really upped his game these last few years; it’s getting to the point where I will watch anything with him.
Speaking of watching anything with him. Joaquin Phoenix is very picky about what he’s in, and they aren’t always good films, but his performances are always spot on. Joker is his latest. An origin story of how one of the greatest comic villains came to be, Phoenix plays a man, Arthur, and his descent into madness (which isn’t a long trip). We’ve seen it done before, like Jack Nicholson’s version in 1989’s Batman, but the Joker isn’t falling into a vat of acid this time. In fact, this is one of the most believable ways it could happen. Arthur is a man who the system has let down. Suffering from mental health problems due to abuse as a child, unable to get his meds or therapy due to cuts to social programs by the city, and plagued by a disorder in which he laughs uncontrollably when he’s nervous, Arthur certainly feels like the world is out to get him. When he finally snaps, it seems like that was the only outcome you could expect. I loved the film. It isn’t related to the current DC Universe films and stands by itself, but I hope a sequel gets made to see Phoenix’s Joker go up against the Bat. 

How about a set of classic films from 50’s, including a couple melodramas from the great Douglas Sirk, and some westerns? Up first is Sirk’s Written on the Wind. This one is about an oil tycoon’s family and the people that circle them. In particular focus is Kyle (Robert Stack, in an Oscar nominated role), the rich playboy son. His freewheeling lifestyle is only slightly tempered by his life-long friend Mitch (Rock Hudson). Their friendship is tested when they fall in love with the same girl, Lucy (Lauren Bacall). Lucy marries Kyle, making Mitch more embittered that Kyle always gets his way. Turning the screws is the femme fatale role, Kyle’s little sister Marylee (Dorothy Malone, who did win her Oscar), who’s always had a crush on Mitch, and she refuses to let him be anyone else’s beau, even hinting to Kyle that Mitch and Lucy are having an affair. For awhile, Kyle changes his ways and plays the straight and narrow for his love of Lucy, but when he learns from a doctor that he may not be able to father children, he goes back to drinking, and through his sickness, Marylee is able to weasel her way in between them all. I loved the movie, it features some really great acting by some of the greats of this era, and the music is fantastic too, with Marylee’s sultry little devil-music popping when she slinks into view. I read that Sirk’s films weren’t highly thought of in their time but have come to be very well regarded (and copied) since. How could this film ever not be loved?!
All That Heaven Allows is a beautifully done film, and the inspiration for
I watched Shane because of its reputation as one of the finest westerns ever made. Perhaps I watched a different version, because I just didn’t get it; it seemed rather ho-hum to me. The eponymous Shane is a drifter who finds himself in a valley in Wyoming where there is a conflict going on between the homesteaders and the cattle ranchers. The homesteaders are there legally and trying to run small farms, but the cattle ranchers, led by the nefarious Ryker, are bullying them off the land. Joe and his wife and son give Shane a place to stay for a couple days in exchange for work around the farm, and Shane likes them enough to join in their fight against the ranchers. It all comes to a head when one of the homesteaders is killed by a gunslinger hired by the cattlemen, leading to a battle between Shane and the rest of them. I don’t see the appeal of this movie at all, and honestly it was so full of tropes and stereotypes that I could not get into it. Not to mention, one of the main characters is little Joey, and we all know how I feel about child actors. And little Joey is one of the worst, showing off his dumb stares and wooden acting for all to see. Every close up of his wide-eyed glances made me cringe. Maybe it was great in 1953, but it hasn’t stood the test of time.
I saw the 2007 remake of 3:10 to Yuma, starring Russell Crowe and Christian Bale, years ago, and liked it very much, but I’d never seen the original until now. Going up against Hollywood Code in its day, this one has a happier ending. Directed by Delmer Daves, it is about the leader of a band of outlaws, Ben Wade (Glenn Ford) who is captured in a small town in the Arizona territory. The local marshal knows that can’t keep him there, because Wade’s group of thugs will easily overwhelm the small village, so he recruits local cattle rancher Dan Evans (Van Heflin) to secret Wade to neighboring Contention City, where they can put Wade on the next train to Yuma. Dan is a simple guy but he’s great with a gun, and while he initially doesn’t want to get involved, he is lured by a substantial cash reward which can help his struggling family. Daves does an excellent job laying out this picture. The first 30 minutes lay the groundwork for what kind of men the actors are, followed by 30-40 minutes of slowly building suspense as Dan waits for the train to take his charge away, and finally the heartpounding climax as he leads Ben through the town, trying to avoid getting himself killed. More than anything this movie looks at the psyche of men. Dan has a strong moral compass, but even he is tempted to let Ben go when Ben offers more and more money to do so. Ben himself is morally ambiguous; he’ll shoot his own man without blinking an eye, but he still holds to his own code of honor.
Forty Guns, from Samuel Fuller in 1957, is a rip-roaring good time. Made at a time when he had already established clout as a director and was independently making films with less studio influence, it is a very different kind of western. For one, it features a strong female character as one of the co-leads. Jessica Drummond (Barbara Stanwyck) runs an area in the Arizona territory with a posse of 40 men. She’s involved in some shady business but is otherwise a tough but fair ruler of her “kingdom.” However, her brother Brockie is a thug, killing and trashing the town. She has a soft spot for him because she birthed him (losing their mother at the time) and raised him, so she’s turned a blind eye to his misdeeds. Their little section of earth is shaken up when US Marshal and former gunfighter lawman Griff Bonnell (Barry Sullivan) comes to town with his two brothers, there with a warrant to arrest one of Jessica’s gang. Jessica sees in a Griff a man as tough as her, and the two immediately fall in love. A film full of gun fights and intrigue, double crosses, love, and death, this movie has it all. The word play is downright shocking for 1957; there is so much innuendo and double entendre that you wonder how Fuller got it past the sensors (Jessica reaches for Griff’s gun, saying she’s interested in “his trademark,” but he warns her that it might go off in her face). Very enjoyable film, and very different from the westerns you are used to seeing.
Watched
Magnet of Doom was Melville’s first picture in color, released in 1963. It follows a man named Michel who is broke, and picks up an ad to be a traveling secretary for banker Ferchaux. Ferchaux’s bank has failed and he is under investigation for shady business practices; as such, he is looking to skip town. On a time crunch, he hires Michel right away, and the two immediately board a plane for New York. Ferchaux is looking to gather as much cash from various spots as fast as he can, before settling in a non-extradition country. During their road trip from NY to New Orleans, Michel grows bolder in his dealings with Ferchaux, flexing his muscle as the crutch he knows he is, especially once Ferchaux’s brother and business partner is found dead in France. For me, I thought the movie was kind of weak. It features great storytelling but not a great story, if that makes sense. Jean-Paul Belmondo is just going through the motions on this one, and he isn’t as great as some of the other stellar films he’s been showcased in. Very average.
Le Deuxieme Souffle (Second Wind) came out in 1966, and Melville went back to black and white, to great affect, as it gives it a more raw feel, and the camera work is gritty too. This one features a big cast with lots of moving parts, so you’ve got to pay attention. The gist is a career criminal (Gu) escapes from prison, but before he can go into hiding, he needs a big cash score to set him and his sister up for life. Unfortunately for him, he is being tailed by one of the best investigators Melville ever concocted up. Blot is a cop who knows what people are going to say before they say it, and he is right on Gu’s footsteps, just waiting for a mistake. Gu picks up a job to rob a security van hauling valuable platinum, and all goes according to plan, until the old adage of “no honor among thieves” pops up. Double crosses and gun fights fill out the denouement of this intense flick. This picture doesn’t get as much attention as some of Melville’s other stuff, but it’s a great film.
Le Samourai is another good one. Jef Costello (the great Alain Delon) is an assassin, a modern day samurai, whose life necessitates him being a loner. The film opens with him taking down his latest contract, in a busy night club no less. He knows there are going to be witnesses, but he has a lock tight alibi already in place, and the lead investigator, despite his gut instincts, is unable to pin the murder on him. The attention of the police though make Jef’s employers nervous, and they want to take him out too before they can lead the police back to them. Hunted by both the fuzz and his former employers, Jef is on his to try to kill the people who want him dead. It is a quietly tense and compelling film, and one that has some great scenes that are hard to forget. One of Delon’s best (the movie was written with him in mind), and one of the rare pictures to hold a perfect 100% on Rotten Tomatoes.
Ending on another great one. Le Cercle Rouge (The Red Circle) is a crime heist drama starring Alain Delon again, this time as a cool and collected man just out of jail. Before getting out, Corey is told about a potential job by a corrupt guard, but it sounds like a high risk/high reward opportunity. Thankfully Corey gets some help. That very day, Vogel escapes police custody and flees on foot, finally jumping in a waiting car’s trunk to get away. The car, of course, belongs to Corey, and the two team up for a detailed and thrilling jewel heist. Aided by a corrupt cop who has been off the force due to his alcoholism, the trio rob a high end jewelry store in mesmerizing fashion. Being known criminals and not wanting to give themselves away to the multitude of cameras around the store, the robbery is done in near complete silence with no dialogue, in real time, for a solid 30 minutes. It is about as gripping an act as you will find. The ending of the film is no less explosive, with the determined police officer who’s been hunting Vogel finally catching up to them. Great picture. 




About 20 minutes into Freaks, and feeling completely confused about what I was watching, I paused it and googled the movie. I was hoping for just a snippit of what was going on, and thankfully, the first page I clicked on, an article on the Verge website, was titled, “Freaks is a thrilling science fiction film worth knowing nothing about – Avoid spoilers and embrace the mystery.” So I did, and man was it worth it. The premise (that is set up in those first 20 minutes) is a little girl named Chloe who has never left the house. Her dad keeps her in the house with stories that the outside world is full of people who would kill her. At the same time, she seems to have some kind of special powers, able to get people to do things for her (like her neighbor’s daughter bringing her an ice cream cone) and one night, even summoning the neighbor to her room. One day, she’s had enough with being cooped up, and leaves the house. Enough said. Now go watch it.
The Sound of Silence stars Peter Sarsgaard as Peter, and man obsessed with sound. For years, he’s been doing research about harmonic resonance and its affect on people. In his spare time, he goes around the city, tuning forks in hand, and maps out the natural resonances of various spots in the city. His day job involves going to people’s houses to create a more “harmonic” place, and his work is successful. People call him when they are having trouble sleeping, fighting their spouses a lot, or have any strife in the home. Peter comes in, finds the natural resonance of the space, what item (usually electrical) gives off a different or competing hum, and replaces it, and his clients are always satisfied. Until Ellen (Rashida Jones). She’s not sleeping at night, and Peter replaces a toaster in her apartment, but her sleep doesn’t get any better. Peter is nonplussed, and tries to solve her problem, against the backdrop of Peter fighting to have his research legitimized in scientific circles. As a (former) musician, I’ve long been aware of the hum that electrical and mechanical devices give off – anyone with an ear can sit in a quiet room and listen for the various sounds always around us – but I’ve never gone so far as to try to see what musical note each item is giving off. Honestly that part of the film makes a lot of sense, because in western music, what we perceive as dissonance definitely causes angst and an uneasy feeling. Songwriters use this to great affect! It’s a good intellectual idea, and the movie breaks down the ideas into terms that non-musicians can get, but as a film, it’s not all that engaging.
Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker is a sometimes frustrating, but ultimately satisfying conclusion to the “Skywalker saga.” If you believe Disney, this is the finale of the story arc that started with Luke, Leia, and Han back in 1977. I won’t give any spoilers on the story; suffice it to say, that if you are a die-hard Star Wars fan (which I am), and if hated The Last Jedi because you thought it “didn’t fit the Star Wars mold” (an opinion I do not agree with, I liked The Last Jedi), then you probably will like Rise of Skywalker very much. For me, it was just OK. Not great, certainly not terrible, but just OK. A whole lot happens, and the team behind it do their damnedest to wrap up all the loose plot elements in a tidy little bow. I enjoyed it, even if parts are awfully far-fetched (even for a space saga!), but I just can’t shake the feeling that, now that it is all over, if it wouldn’t have been better to just leave the Skywalker clan alone after Return of the Jedi back in 1983. Nothing will ever top those first three films, both because they are nearly perfect as they sit, and because of the whole nostalgia of them. I’ve really liked parts of every Stars Wars film that has come since (even Solo), but nothing will touch those films that I grew up with. So by all means, go and see Rise of Skywalker (I’m sure everyone else will, it will make a ton of money for Disney), but don’t hope to relive the magic that can only come to a 10 year old kid when Luke and his friends took down the evil Empire.
The Aeronauts has a very strong cast who, unfortunately, can’t save a very average film. Eddie Redmayne and Felicity Jones, come together again after The Theory of Everything a few years ago, play a pair of people on a mission to climb higher in the atmosphere than any human before. Amelia is the crowd-pleaser who drums up the funds, and James Glaisher is a scientist intent to get high enough to measure the atmosphere, in an attempt to find ways to predict the weather (to which his fellows in the scientific community scoff). Aboard a hot air balloon, the two take off one afternoon and face a storm, the cold, and low oxygen on their adventure. There are some thrilling moments along the way, but some parts are very boring. It is semi-based on a true story. Glaisher did indeed climb high and was one an early meteorologist, but he went up in the balloon with his male partner, which Hollywood switched to a woman for creative license.
Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, the latest from Quentin Tarantino (of whom I am not a fan, sue me), is mostly just a homage to classic American films of the 50s and 60s. That’s fine I guess, but how is that a movie? There’s a plot (which takes forever to develop), but there is an awful lot of filler in the 2-and-a-half-hour running time. The movie mostly follows a has-been actor named Rick Dalton (Leonardo DiCaprio) and his long-time stunt double Cliff (Brad Pitt). Dalton was once a big TV star in the 50s, but his film career has not gone as well, and he’s depressed about it, falling to alcoholism. When not working, the two hang out at Dalton’s posh house, neighbors to up-and-coming director Roman Polanski and his girl Sharon Tate. Yes, that is where this film is finally going. Cliff just sort of hangs out when he isn’t needed, which is often since Dalton isn’t needed much either, and driving around Hollywood one day, Cliff stumbles upon the Charles Manson entourage. In normal Tarantino fashion, he changes up the actual history for his own, new version of events, and the ending of this one is far too outlandish. I’m convinced critics just give him a pass no matter what he puts out. 