Search This Blog
Sunday, November 12, 2017
April Sokol's Reviews of Murder on the Orient Express & Daddy's Home 2
Another weekend, another double feature at the local theater! First I was off to see Murder on the Orient Express followed by Daddy's Home 2.
Murder on the Orient Express, my review:
Directed by Kenneth Branagh
starring: Kenneth Branagh, Johnny Depp, Michelle Pfeiffer, Judi Dench, Justin Gad, Daisy Ridley, Penelope Cruz and Willem Dafoe
Murder on the Orient Express is a straight forward retelling of the Agatha Christie classic. Branagh takes the reins both in front of and behind the camera as he both stars and directs. Murder on the Orient Express clocks in at 1 hour and 54 minutes. That was at least 20 minutes too long. I found myself checking my clock several times as this murder mystery lumbered on toward it's conclusion.
There are some great things to see here. Branagh seems to be incapable of putting in a bad performance. His portrayal here of the titular Poirot is the best use of facial hair since the 1st Hunger Games movie. Poirot is the world famous detective who lands squarely in the middle of a who dun it on the world's most posh passenger train.
The cast is all putting in solid work here. Michelle Pfeiffer is a national treasure and I remain her biggest fan. However, the movie as a whole left me....wanting more. There is not one specific thing, other than maybe needing a trim time wise, that I can point to as a reason to not enjoy this. However, I also can't really point to any real reason to go out of your way to make time for this either.
There is nothing new here. No Earth shattering performances. No breath taking scenery. As much as I wanted to fall in love...I just never managed it. I would skip this one in theaters and wait for the rental. A very “meh” 2 out of 5 stars is my rating, I'm afraid.
Trying to dust off my disappointment..I head into Daddy's Home 2. Full disclosure here...I did not see the 1st Daddy's Home movie but I wanted to give this one a try anyway.
Daddy's Home 2, my review:
Directed by Sean Anders
Starring: Mark Wahlberg, Will Farrell, Mel Gibson, John Lithgow, Linda Cardellini, Alessandra Ambrosio and John Cena
Daddy's Home 2 picks up the continuing story of a blended family consisting of biological Dad Dusty (Wahlberg) and stepdad Brad (Farrell) and Mom Sara (Cardellini). It's time for the holidays and that means they're respective Dads are coming to town to visit. We have a super simple, extremely affectionate Don (Lithgow) playing Brad's Dad and brass, unapologetic, absentee Dad to Dusty, Kurt (Gibson) thrown into the mix. Kurt is inexplicably dismayed by the healthy coparenting that is happening to his grandchildren and decides to try to make things far more toxic by attempting to break the relationship between Dusty and Brad. Setting aside the incredibly toxic masculinity, we find that the straight man/physical comedy combo of Wahlberg and Farrell really seem to work here. Wahlberg's Dusty has a familiar every man feeling to him. And even this self professed Farrell hater found herself laughing along with Brad's antics.
This is a fun, competent flick that doesn't take itself too seriously at all. I enjoyed it FAR more than I expected I would. Daddy's Home 2 clocks in at a pretty enjoyable 1 hour and 40 minutes. I give it a solid 3 out of 5 stars.
Sunday, November 5, 2017
MOVIE REVIEW: THOR: RAGNAROK
Imprisoned on the other side of the universe, the mighty Thor finds himself in a deadly gladiatorial contest that pits him against the Hulk, his former ally and fellow Avenger. Thor's quest for survival leads him in a race against time to prevent the all-powerful Hela from destroying his home world and the Asgardian civilization.
Director: Taika Waititi
Cast: Chris Hemsworth, Tom Hiddleston, Mark Ruffalo, Cate Blanchett, Jeff Goldblum
Release Date: Nov 03, 2017
Genres: Action/Adventure, Sci-Fi/Fantasy
Rated R for language throughout and some sexuality/nudity
Review:
Thor: Ragnarok is a much needed infusion of originality in the Marvel cinematic juggernaut. Most the Marvel movies are enjoyable but tend to lean towards formulaic plots outside of some rare exceptions. Thor: Ragnarock is a solid step outside of the tried and true Marvel formula delivering a huge dose of wacky fun. Taika Waititi delivers a film brimming with fun from start to finish. It’s a Technicolor fever dream that feels like a thoroughly enjoyable acid trip. Stripping away the self serious tone of most comic book movies and going for a more comedic tone pay huge dividends. Chris Hemsworth has always been a strong comedic actor and this slant plays well for him. As a result, Hemsworth is free to deliver his best “Mimbo” interpretation of Thor. The supporting cast embraces the lighter tone and everyone seems to be having a ball. Tom Hiddleston keeps Loki interesting while lightening him up a bit. Mark Ruffalo and Tessa Thompson are great counter balance to Hemsworth’s Thor with both doing strong work. Cate Blanchett gleefully vamps it up as primary villain this go around. If there’s a bit of a negative about Blanchett’s character it’s that she’s not given much to do except wait for Thor to come back to Asgard so they can get to the final battle. It’s a real shame because she’s really impressive in her screentime, it would have really made the film even better had she’d been given something more substantial to do. It’s a minor quibble for the film which really is one of most fun superhero films of the year.
A-
April Sokol's Reviews of Thor: Ragnarok & A Bad Moms Christmas
Hello readers!
This weekend was a big movie deal. Two big hit movies in the making both opened and so without further ado, to the theater I went.
First up was Thor: Ragnarok.
Thor: Ragnarok is the latest installment in the immensely popular Marvel Universe.
Directed by Taika Waititi
Run time is 2hr 10 min
Starring: Chris Hemsworth, Tom Hiddleston, Mark Ruffalo, Cate Blanchett, Tessa Thompson. Karl Urban, Idris Elba and Anthony Hopkins
Thor Ragnarok is the seventeenth offering in the Marvel Universe. So the players are well known and broken in. While a lot of familiar faces abound (super quick fan girl shoutout to the adorable Matt Damon cameo) Thor Ragnarok introduces some new faces to the Marvel world. First and most impressive is the stunning Cate Blanchett. Cate chews her way through every second of screen time she's given. Gorgeous, powerful and absolutely deadly, Hela is just 100% joy to watch. I can feel all of next year's Hela Halloween costumes springing to life as I type this. We're also introduced to Valkyrie, a member of an all female warrior squad played to perfection by Tessa Thompson. I'm glad to see that someone seems to have gotten the memo that we are loving these strong woman characters. That high that so many women felt after Wonder Woman is going to be back after this.
Mark Ruffalo is back doing his thing as Bruce Banner/The Hulk. He's always so solid I hope people aren't taking him for granted. We finally get more of Idris Elba as Heimdall. Unfortunately he is STILL absolutely wasted in this role. The PG 13 rating felt correct as there was comic book violence but certainly nothing to genuinely frighten the little members of the audience.
Thor Ragnarok feels quite a bit referential to Guardians of the Galaxy for me. Same level of laughter. Funny quirky characters portrayed on a stunning canvas. Queue the fight scene with iconic 70s rock song and it's almost too on the nose....but I found that I still enjoyed the ride. This isn't new ground for Mavel. This is what a fast ball right down the middle of their fanbase feels like.
My rating: 4 out of 5 stars.
And the answer to the question I always have at Marvel movies....2...there are 2 in credit scenes. You're welcome.
Next I moved down the hall to the highly anticipated (by me) A Bad Moms Christmas
Directed by: Jon Lucas and Scott Moore
Starring: Mila Kunis, Kristen Bell, Kathryn Hahn, Christine Baranski, Susan Sarandon, Cheryl Hines, Jay Hernandez and Peter Gallagher
Running time of 1hr 44 min. It is Rated R for crude sexual content and language throughout, and some drug use
My review:
Ok America. It's time. We can't seem to agree on much of anything as a country anymore. But I think we need to come together as 1 nation and appreciate the sheer brilliance that is Chrstine Baranski. Has she ever been anything less than flawless...ever? I think not. However much she is making, it's certainly not enough. Can we make this a thing?
We pick up shortly after our last adventure with the suburban Moms as Christmas is upon them. Of course they're all over worked, over stressed, under appreciated and exhausted....aren't we all? Every single Mom in America is going to find something familiar in these women. Lots of laughs and another chance for a really beautiful friend tribe to shine here. The biggest take away for me is how these women are so very true to life. These are my friends and family. This is actually how we talk when we get together. I do not know a single parent who actually deep down believes that they're not screwing it all up in some way. It's nice to be reminded of our shared humanity.
If you loved the first Bad Moms movie, you'll almost certainly enjoy this as well. This is a wonderful case of a bunch of actors really seeming to enjoy their work. You will smile. You will laugh. And you will want to have drinks with your best friends ASAP when the credits roll.
Bonus points to those who stay through the credits to realize that Peter Gallagher is actually the best dancer of the whole bunch. Who knew?! I give A Bad Moms Christmas a solid 4 out of 5 stars.
Cindy Prascik's Reviews of Geostorm & Thor: Ragnarok
Dearest Blog: Yesterday I ended my week's vacation at Marquee Cinemas with a double-bill of Geostorm (finally) and Thor: Ragnarok.
Spoiler level here will be mild, nothing you wouldn't know from the trailers or a quick check of the IMDB cast listings.
First on the docket: a delayed screening of Geostorm.
When a satellite controlling extreme weather events is sabotaged, it's up to its prickly creator to make nice and go fix it.
Dear reader(s): Having missed two weekends at the cinema (!!!), I'm a little late to the Geostorm party, so I won't be the first to inform you the movie features a stupidly implausible plot, inane dialogue, and second-rate performances. What I may be the first to tell you is that I haven't had as much fun at the cinema in months. Indeed, Geostorm is the only picture in recent memory to render me totally oblivious to the outside world for a couple hours.
There's no denying Geostorm is a pretty bad movie by almost any quality barometer; it's Sharknado-level idiocy on a big-screen budget. Meathead extraordinaire Gerard Butler is the ideal hero for such a film, delivering a performance on par with "shepherd number two" in the third-grade Christmas pageant. Jim Sturgess and Abbie Cornish are even more laughable, and you really have to wonder how Ed Harris and Andy Garcia got talked into this. (My guess is blackmail. It's the only thing that makes sense.) The story plays out in predictably silly fashion, with painfully obvious "twists" and every cartoonish character behaving exactly as you'd expect. The good news is all that isn't really bad news because Geostorm knows exactly what it is, and thus couldn't be any more enjoyable. Throw in some solid disaster effects and a timely (if cheesy) message, and you've got a hilariously terrible outing that may well be the best time I've had at the movies in 2017.
Geostorm clocks in at 109 minutes and is rated PG13 for "destruction, action, and violence."
Geostorm is the best bad movie I've seen in a good long while. Of a possible nine Weasleys, I am exercising great restraint in awarding Geostorm only seven.
Fangirl points: Ohmygosh you guys, Robert Sheehan is in this movie!!
Next on my agenda: Thor: Ragnarok.
And you thought Loki was the bad sibling.
My usual Marvel disclaimer: For the most part I don't think Marvel movies are anything special; rather, they're enjoyed and quickly forgotten. The notable exception is Captain America: The Winter Soldier, which stands alone in its greatness, but, as series go, the Thor movies are always my Marvel faves. Ragnarok gives me no reason to change either of those opinions: Marvel movies are still nothing special, but the Thor series remains my favorite.
Getting the bad news out of the way first: Thor: Ragnarok feels about twelve hours long. I wouldn't say I was bored, but...well...for some of it I wouldn't exactly say I wasn't, either. The battle scenes didn't seem as repetitive or overlong as most Marvel movies (lookin' squarely at YOU, Avengers!), but, my god, it felt like I was sitting there forever. Luckily, that's about the only really bad thing I have to say about the film. Ragnarok isn't a funny superhero movie; it's a straight-up comedy about a superhero, fully self-aware. No shoe-horning in a Tony Stark wisecrack every 20 minutes, Ragnarok is organically hilarious. Trippy 70s effects, a bit reminiscent of Doctor Strange, are particularly well-suited to this outing, giving it the feel of an old-school arcade game. Chris Hemsworth (sadly shirtless only once) isn't just a perfectly-sculpted hero, he's legitimately funny, with great comic timing and terrific expressions. The supporting cast is filled with names that, on their own, are enough to draw me to any picture: Idris Elba, Tom Hiddleston, Benedict Cumberbatch, Karl Urban, Cate Blanchett...and--OH!--this is Cate as you haven't seen her before! Hiddleston's Loki remains the best thing about any Thor movie, but it's Cate's Hela who steals the show here, and whose pics you'll be Googling for your new phone wallpaper as soon as the credits roll (or was that just me?). Triple bonus points for carrying Led Zeppelin's Immigrant Song from the trailer into the film itself--not just once, but twice!--a musical move so inspired as to be almost Edgar-Wrightish in its perfection.
Thor: Ragnarok runs 130 minutes and is rated PG13 for "intense sequences of sci-fi violence and action and brief suggestive material."
Thor: Ragnarok is another fun outing in Marvel's best series. Of a possible nine Weasleys, Thor: Ragnarok gets eight.
Fangirl points: Hey, Bruce Banner, you're lookin' mighty fine in that Duran Duran shirt!
Until next time...
Sunday, October 29, 2017
MOVIE REVIEW: SUBURBICON
Suburbicon is a peaceful,
idyllic, suburban community with affordable homes and manicured lawns -- the
perfect place to raise a family, and in the summer of 1959, the Lodge family is
doing just that. But the tranquil surface masks a disturbing reality, as
husband and father Gardner Lodge must navigate the town's dark
underbelly of betrayal, deceit and violence.
Release Date: Oct 27, 2017
Cast: Matt Damon, Julianne Moore, Oscar Isaac, Glenn Fleshler, Michael Cohen
Rated R for violence, language and some sexuality
Runtime: 1 hr. 44 min.
Genres: Crime, Drama, Mystery
Review:
Suburbicon is an odd hodgepodge
of a film from director George Clooney.
It’s a film that has multiple things going on but they never mesh into a
coherent story thread. The film’s script
was a reworked from the Coen’s brother’s original draft and the film does seem
to be at war with itself for the better part of its runtime. On one hand you have the Matt Damon lead
murder mystery which feels very much like a Coen’s creation with its high body
count and black comedy seeping from its veins.
On the other hand there’s a thoroughly uncooked subplot about a black
family dealing with increasingly hostile neighbors. The entire subplot feels incredibly
underdeveloped even though I think it’s a well intentioned effort to give the
film some added weight and depth. The
issue is that the characters on display are never developed with barely a few
lines of dialogue thrown their way. Both
these plots don’t really mesh well as the tone changes abruptly in a moments
notice. Oscar Issac is the most
interesting thing in the whole film but sadly he comes and goes way too
soon. Suburbicon feels like it should be
a much better film than it actually is.
Sadly, it just never jells into an enjoyable whole.
C+
Monday, October 23, 2017
April Sokol's Reviews of Only the Brave & Geostorm
***Note from Daniel – “Here’s a quick introduction to our newest
reviewer joining Cindy Prascik and yours truly”***
Hello fellow movie lovers. My name is April. I am a wife and
mother of 3 boys. I have loved everything about the movie going experience ever
since my parents took me to see ET. I find that I'm pretty easily entertained
so my reviews will always reflect that.
My favorite movie ever made is 1995's Heat. I am highly
opinionated on all things, but especially when it comes to movies. I'm thankful
for a place to share my thoughts with others. I hope you enjoy the ramblings of
my over caffeinated, sleep deprived mind.
Only the Brave is the true story of the Granite Mountain Hot Shots. The first municipal hot shot team ever assembled.
Directed by Joseph Kosinski
Starring Josh Brolin, Miles Davis, Jennifer Connelly and Jeff
Bridges
My review:
Only the Brave is a straightforward, unflinching look at some of the bravest among us: firefighters. But these aren't your average community volunteer firemen. This is the Navy Seals of fire fighting. These men are dropped into the biggest, nastiest fires with only an axe and shovel.
Only the Brave is a straightforward, unflinching look at some of the bravest among us: firefighters. But these aren't your average community volunteer firemen. This is the Navy Seals of fire fighting. These men are dropped into the biggest, nastiest fires with only an axe and shovel.
There is quite a lot to love about this movie. I feel
compelled to mention that I am not a fan of Brolin or Connelly and have at the
very most a love/hate relationship with the work of Teller. So I was incredibly
surprised by how deeply I fell in love with this story.
The first act sets the stage. Teller's Brendan McDonough is a young out of control guy freshly out of jail. He's got a million reasons to finally get his act together if only someone will give him a chance. McDonough is given that chance by the grizzled, wise Eric Marsh (Brolin). There is plenty of heart and humor to be found in his new community. Now we're off to the races. The entire second act of the movie is one beautiful shot after another. The cast does an amazing job of portraying men and women who come together as family in the harshest of situations. Nothing is prettied up. The strain put on the spouses, the distance with their children. It's all there to draw you into this world that so very few people actually live and experience.
The first act sets the stage. Teller's Brendan McDonough is a young out of control guy freshly out of jail. He's got a million reasons to finally get his act together if only someone will give him a chance. McDonough is given that chance by the grizzled, wise Eric Marsh (Brolin). There is plenty of heart and humor to be found in his new community. Now we're off to the races. The entire second act of the movie is one beautiful shot after another. The cast does an amazing job of portraying men and women who come together as family in the harshest of situations. Nothing is prettied up. The strain put on the spouses, the distance with their children. It's all there to draw you into this world that so very few people actually live and experience.
You can feel that this will end with a big fire. So when it
finally comes it's not a surprise. But still hugely effective. For those of us
who were not familiar with this true story, it was a nail biting bit of cinema.
Overall I am more than willing and able to overlook the small
issues I had with the tropes that were included in the script. Only the Brave
has a run time of 143 minutes and it rated PG 13 for thematic content and brief
sexual references. I enjoyed almost every minute.
A very solid 4 out of 5 stars
is my rating. Only the Brave is the best thing currently playing at my local
cinemaplex by leaps and bounds.
Geostorm is this year's natural disaster spectacle of a
movie. The system put into place to protect Earth from natural disasters has
malfunctioned and it's a race to fix the problem before all of Earth is
destroyed.
Directed by Dean Devlin
Starring Gerard Butler, Jim Sturgess and Abbie Cornish
Before I begin I feel like I should make a confession.
Armageddon is one of my all time favorite movies. Yes. I said it. I love the
cheesy dialogue and completely unrealistic plot because it's FUN. Geostorm
brought Armageddon to mind more than once during my viewing.
The plot is straightforward. Gerard Butler plays Jake Lawson,
the hot head developer of the Dutch Boy Program. A system of satellites that
are designed to neutralize any and all natural disasters before they happen.
It's not a stretch to see Lawson struggling to maintain his vision's integrity
when faced with politicians who want to control Dutch Boy. None of this is
groundbreaking cinema. The hero has a bad attitude. The government is shady and
shifty. There are plenty of estranged relationships. Lots of familiar movie
cliches are thrown at the viewer in quick succession.
But if you can suspend reality for the 1hr49min run time
there is some good stuff in here. The special effects, both on Earth and on
board the Dutch Boy itself are fun. There are huge typhoons, massive
sandstorms, eruptions, tornadoes...all of the good stuff! The big reveal of the
bad guy is not exactly shocking. The dialogue is silly. The science is
nonsensical. But despite all of that, I found myself smiling through the whole
thing. Special points given for Cornish's portrayal of a Secret Service agent
who is pretty badass.
Geostorm is rated PG 13 for destruction, action and violence.
My viewing had plenty of smaller children who all seemed to be having just as
much fun as I was. There is absolutely nothing award worthy to be found here.
But if you're looking for a few hours of popcorn eating entertainment, this is
what you're looking for. I give Geostorm a rating of 2 ½ out of 5 stars.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)