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Friday, June 29, 2018
Thursday, June 28, 2018
'Sicario: Day Of The Soldado' (2018) Movie Review
Denis Villeneuve’s 2015 drug war thriller
Sicario is a crushing masterclass in tension, sparse
landscapes full of violence, and grim realism. The follow-up, Sicario: Day of the Soldado, while filling a certain niche, feels very much
like a facsimile. Gritty and low-down and dirty, it watches like one of those
should-have-been DTV titles that magically gets a theatrical run because of
name recognition. Think London Has Fallen or pretty much anything
with Gerard Butler these days and you’re in the ball park. This comes with
positives, but also drawbacks.
Wednesday, June 27, 2018
This 'Mandy' Trailer Has Nicolas Cage Fighting An Evil Cult, Is Everything I've Ever Wanted In A Movie
If Panos Cosmatos’ Nic-Cage-starring cult thriller Mandy wasn’t already at the top of your 2018 must-see list, it should be now. And if it’s not after watching this trailer, I can’t even imagine why you’re here reading this website, because this is 100% what we’re all about. Damn, just damn.
Tuesday, June 26, 2018
This Trailer For 'The Predator' Is Better Than The Others
As psyched as I am for a Shane Black-directed, Shane Black/Fred Dekker-written take on The Predator, thus far, the trailers haven’t exactly lit me on fire. That is, until now. This latest trailer is badass. It practically sweats Black’s trademark machismo and looks like exactly the movie I hope it is.
Wednesday, June 20, 2018
'Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom' (2018) Movie Review
Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom—or as I like to think of it, Jurassic Park 4: Part 2—is a bizarre proposition. A mess of rampaging dinosaurs, too-convenient storytelling, and an utter absence of emotional stakes, the film offers a few entertaining moments. But overflowing with sheer nonsense, insufferable characters, and a shocking lack of thrills, it’s insanely boring for long, long stretches, something a movie ostensibly about dinosaurs eating people should absolutely not be. I can forgive almost anything in the pursuit of watching giant prehistoric reptiles chow down on flat, terrified characters, but I sure as hell can’t cotton to dull and drab.
'Creed 2' Trailer Punches Michael B. Jordan In The Face
I’m a sucker for a good boxing movie. Or any fighting movie, really. But especially the Sweet Science. There’s something to be said for the poetry of brutal movement, triumph of the spirit, grand metaphors for the human condition, and all that jazz. And I loved Creed, so of course I’m excited for Creed 2 (or Creed II if you will), which now has a brand spanking new trailer.
Monday, June 18, 2018
SIFF 2018: 'Susu' (2018) Movie Review
With Yixi Sun’s Susu, gothic British horror gets filtered through a Chinese lens. Two young students, Qi’an (Ziton Wu) and Aimo (Lun Zhu), living in the U.K. wind up in the middle of a dark, tangled mystery when they take a job digging into the archives of Susu (Junjie Mao), a long-dead Kunqu Opera star. Which, of course, are located in a massive, ancient country manner overseen by a family of weirdos with all manner of secrets and skeletons hidden away in various closets.
Friday, June 15, 2018
'Believer' (2018) Movie Review
Johnnie To has carried the Hong Kong action banner like few others and 2012’s Drug War stands as one of his greatest achievements, which says something, because the man has churned out some all-timers. Sure, that was only a few years ago, but that didn’t stop South Korean director Lee Hae-young (The Silenced) from remaking it as Believer. He puts more of a thriller spin on the proceedings rather than turning in a straight-up action ride, allowing the film to stand on its own, both for better and worse.
Wednesday, June 13, 2018
Kim Jee-Woon's 'Jin-Roh: The Wolf Brigade' Delivers A Tense, Creepy Teaser
I’ve admittedly never watched Jin-Roh: The Wolf Brigade, the dystopian anime sci-fi based on a popular manga. But I will watch the ever-loving-crap out of any film Kim Jee-woon makes, and that includes his upcoming live-action remake of Jin-Roh. It doesn’t actually reveal much, but a new teaser trailer certainly sets the mood, and I’m way, way in.
Tuesday, June 12, 2018
Top 12 Films Of SIFF 2018
So, another Seattle International Film Festival is in the
books. As usual, I watched a crap-load of movies over the past six weeks—SIFF
is nothing if not a marathon. My total topped 60 this year, which isn’t even
half of the features. (On the final night, I encountered someone on their 123rd
movie.) Overall, it was the strongest field in a few years; I routinely found
myself pleasantly surprised by movies I didn’t expect. With that in mind, here
are my favorites of SIFF 2018, in no particular order.
Monday, June 11, 2018
SIFF 2018: 'Chedeng & Apple' (2017) Movie Review
A bittersweet, blackly comic riff on Thelma and
Louise, with a flourish of Bring Me the Head of Alfredo
Garcia thrown in for good measure, Chedeng &
Apple is part road trip comedy, part lesbian romance, part off-kilter
voyage of self-reclamation. After all, one title character spends most of the
movie toting a Louis Vuitton bag holding the severed head of her abusive
husband. Sounds like a hoot, right?
Friday, June 8, 2018
Blumhouse's 'Halloween' Trailer Makes You Believe In The Boogey Man
Well damn. I didn’t realize how excited I was, or really
that I was excited at all, for Blumhouse’s new Halloween
movie until the other day when they released a handful of teasers for the first
trailer. (I know, I know, trailers for trailers, it’s silly, all that.) But
when the music kicked in, I got chills. Well, the full trailer is here. Again,
chills.
Thursday, June 7, 2018
'Hotel Artemis' (2018) Movie Review
Hotel Artemis isn’t a movie I ever need
to think of again. But as a slice of pulpy sci-fi action, buoyed by a strong
performance from Jodie Foster and a great surrounding cast, writer/director
Drew Pearce (Mission: Impossible—Rogue Nation, Iron Man 3) delivers a fun little R-rated trifle.
Wednesday, June 6, 2018
SIFF 2018: 'Bodied' (2017) Movie Review
-Blue Scholars, “No Rest for the Weary”
Joseph Kahn’s Bodied follows Adam (Calum
Worthy, American Vandal), a nerdy white college student.
Fully entrenched in the PC world of academia, he’s writing his thesis on the
use of the granddaddy of all racial slurs in the world of underground rap
battles. Immersing himself in this world, he, along with his mentor Behn Grymm
(Jackie Long), discovers a penchant for sick rhymes and ill burns that outrages
everyone around him and throws his coddled, carefully manicured life into
chaos.
SIFF 2018: 'American Animals' (2018) Movie Review
American Animals is a movie that has an
admittedly cool hook—it tells a true story, but along with the dramatization,
director Bart Layton (The Imposter) splices in interviews
with the real people involved. But like many films with a cool hook, it’s too
in love with its own coolness, to the point of distraction. And while it tries
to do something different, it’s so hyper-stylized—I counted at least six
slow-motion montages set to conspicuously recognizable pop songs—that the
stylistics cease to have any substantial impact and it’s not nearly as edgy as
it wants to be or thinks it is.
Tuesday, June 5, 2018
'Hereditary' (2018) Movie Review
The less I say about Hereditary, the
better, so I’ll try to keep this brief. What’s important is that this stands as
one of the best horror movies in years. It moves in unexpected ways, overflows
with bonkers great performances, and builds to a genre crescendo that rips out
your still-beating heart and shows it to you. Writer/director Ari Aster crafts
a creepy, cryptic, moody horror tone poem about coping with grief and loss and
family that rattles and shakes in deep, profound ways.
Monday, June 4, 2018
SIFF 2018: 'Hearts Beat Loud (2018) Capsule Review
Sundance fave Hearts Beat Loud shows
maybe the best on-screen father-daughter relationship I’ve ever seen. Sam
(Kiersey Clemons) is the driven, focused one, about to start a pre-med program.
Her father, Frank (Nick Offerman), is the head-in-the-clouds dreamer unable to
relinquish a fading musical ambition and desire to start a band with his
daughter.
'Suspiria' Trailer: Dakota Johnson Dances Into Darkness
Susupiria is arguably horror legend Dario Argento’s greatest work. So, of course there were grumblings from the faithful
when a remake was announced. That’s just what happens in these situations. What
we’ve seen thus far looks creepy and witchy and weird, and early reactions to
footage have been overwhelmingly positive. But that’s all second hand and
hearsay, at least until now. Amazon dropped the first trailer for Luca
Guadagnino’s Suspiria and it looks pretty rad.
Friday, June 1, 2018
SIFF 2018: 'The Long Dumb Road' (2018) Movie Review
Road trip movies are hard. They’ve been done so much, it’s a
struggle to find anything new; they rely on a series of vignettes, so it’s
difficult to maintain many carrying themes and through lines; and if the people
on said road trip don’t have chemistry, your movie is in trouble. Most known
for indie dramas, writer/director Hannah Fidell (6 Years)
dives headlong into mismatched buddy road comedy with The Long Dumb Road. It falls into some of these pitfalls at the same time as it
skirts others, and while the results are often uneven, it’s also a raucous good
time.