Category: Film Review

  • Film Review – Mothers’ Instinct

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    “Mothers’ Instinct” is a remake of a 2018 French film from director Olivier Masset-Depasse, which was an adaptation of a 2012 novel by author Barabra Abel. Screenwriter Sarah Conradt is tasked with reviving the material for an American remake, and helming duties are handed to Benoit Delhomme. The respected cinematographer (“The Theory of Everything,” “The Scent of Green Papaya”) makes his directorial debut with “Mothers’ Instinct,” facing a creative challenge with familiar material to some, trying to refresh a story that’s largely dependent on maintaining a level of surprise. There’s a lot going on in the feature, which carries the mood of melodrama but slowly turns into something else, and Delhomme has game actresses in Jessica Chastain and Anne Hathaway, who bring a fine level of itchiness to the movie. The talent brings the endeavor to life, maintaining an appealing atmosphere of disturbing behavior as the story goes to strange places, but not always with confidence. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Shadow Land

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    For a tale of presidential paranoia and troublemaking, “Shadow Land” is surprisingly small in scale. It plays like a pandemic production, using only the basics in setting and casting to support what’s meant to be a mystery of some sort. Perhaps the screenplay by Ian Corson was something impressive at one point, building a puzzle involving American leadership, a psychologist, and a journalist who all work to define a vague threat hanging around a vacation home. Director James Bamford (“Air Force One Down”) doesn’t have the budget or the time to make a feature of note. He goes generic instead, visibly struggling to manufacture some form of suspense while editorial efforts try to shorten what appears to be a lengthier examination of trouble for all the characters. “Shadow Land” isn’t drearily acted, but it doesn’t piece together as tightly as it could, creating confusion where thrills were originally intended. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Summer Camp

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    There have been many pictures in recent years detailing the ways of senior citizens looking to reconnect with their youthful days, with slapstick comedy and the bonds of friendship driving these endeavors. And Diane Keaton has starred in most of them. The actress returns to the ways of being wacky with “Summer Camp,” which shouldn’t be confused with “Poms,” “Book Club,” or “Mack & Rita,” but it’s mostly the same type of movie. What’s different here is the setting, following three seventysomething women to a camp reunion where they confront their ages, friendships, and themselves as they try to enjoy a return to the stomping grounds of their teenage years. Written and directed by Castille Landon, “Summer Camp” is meant to be warm and silly, but it’s mostly wearying, offering an incredibly limited imagination for humor, while its sense of characterization is wholly bizarre at times. Perhaps it’s meant to delight a single demographic, but somehow it’s not fun for anyone. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

     

  • Film Review – Young Woman and the Sea

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    Last year, there was “Nyad,” which examined long-distance swimmer Diana Nyad and her efforts to cross the Straits of Florida, beginning in 2010. “Young Woman and the Sea” shares the story of Gertrude Ederle, who, in 1926, sets her sights on swimming across the English Channel. These are similar investigations of domestic and physical hardships, with “Nyad” trying to manage an abrasive personality. “Young Woman and the Sea” is a Disney production, and it aims for more of an inspirational tale of endurance, following Gertrude’s challenges as she attempts to achieve something few believe a female can accomplish, or should. The picture is an old-fashioned offering of audience-pleasing filmmaking, with director Joachim Ronning (“Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales,” “Maleficent: Mistress of Evil”) and screenwriter Jeff Nathanson (“Rush Hour 2,” 2019’s “The Lion King”) going for big feels with the endeavor, attempting to merge the details of Gertrude’s swim with a broadly cinematic underdog story. And they’ve created quite a charming, exciting movie. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Jim Henson: Idea Man

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    Jim Henson passed away 34 years ago, leaving behind a legacy of creative accomplishments almost impossible to believe. He was an innovator, filled with imagination and drive to realize his creative vision, using his skills in the art of puppetry to generate vivid characters and living worlds. The loss of Henson was tragic on many levels, and while his spirit hasn’t diminished, director Ron Howard sets out to craft a reminder of the man’s towering achievements. “Jim Henson: Idea Man” is a documentary exploring the life and times of the subject, with the production working with a plethora of footage and interviews to manufacture an intimate appreciation of Henson’s universe and his human qualities. Longtime fans are treated to a victory lap-style understanding of greatness, but Howard is also attentive to newcomers, going through the years to identify the growth of inspiration and reinforce the special sensitivity and ambition that defined Henson’s career. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – In a Violent Nature

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    If one squints hard enough, there’s kinda, sorta a “Friday the 13th” sequel happening in “In a Violent Nature.” Writer/director Chris Nash (who contributed to 2014’s “ABCs of Death 2”) certainly isn’t pursuing a fan film with the project, which follows, quite simply, a masked killer made of unstoppable magic looking to seek revenge on a collection of young people who’ve dared to spoil the lasting memory of his mother. Sounds pretty Jason Voorhees-y, but Nash hopes to put his own stamp on slasher cinema with the picture, which isn’t a slam-bang offering of suspense, but something very stripped down and hostile…when it wants to be. “In a Violent Nature” is not for the impatient, as Nash presents a slow-burn study of a Movie Maniac’s menace, delivering a feature that takes its time with nearly everything it offers. It’s almost a test of endurance during travel sequences, with the helmer looking to subvert the subgenre and also deliver hugely with acts of barbarity. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Backspot

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    Going against the tone set by “Bring It On” and its various imitators, director D.W. Waterson looks to bring intensity back to the cheerleading movie. “Backspot” is a Canadian production examining the pressures facing young women as they deal with physical challenges, mental breaks, and the brutality of competition. It focuses on the journey of an athlete fighting to balance her need to impress and the slow erosion of her emotional health, receiving a special shot to prove herself in the big times of high school cheerleading. “Backspot” doesn’t ignore the demands of the sport and the toughness of its coaches, with Waterson attempting to put viewers into the pressure cooker environment, exploring how such intensity wears down the spirit of the main character. It’s an intimate offering of drama, with screenwriter Joanne Sarazen (“Tammy’s Always Dying”) successfully getting close to personalities and difficulties, making for an interesting sit. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Dead Don’t Hurt

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    As he slowly backs away from an acting career, Viggo Mortensen has found his way behind the camera. In 2020, there was his work on “Falling,” a tough but meaningful examination of relationships put under the weight of dementia. For “The Dead Don’t Talk,” Mortensen pursues a western, also scripting this story of a partnership between decent people as it goes through trials of trust, separation, and comfort. This isn’t an Eastwood-ian take on revenge, though aggression does play a part in the tale, with Mortensen much more interested in the development of characters as they deal with the joys and misery of life, especially during a time of national unrest. “The Dead Don’t Hurt” is atmospheric and attentive to emotional expression, lacking a brisk pace. The reward for such patience is another deeply felt picture from Mortensen, who delivers a film of grace and personality, offering a few genre kicks between long stretches of behavioral examination. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Young Wife

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    The director of “Selah and the Spade,” Tayarisha Poe returns with “The Young Wife,” a tale of the future that explores concerns of today. It’s a smaller feature, working with a limited ensemble and a single location, with Poe trying to offer an artful understanding of life’s decisions as she follows the anxiety rising inside a woman about to embark on her wedding day, feeling all the pressures as she deals with various demands. The screenplay (also credited to Poe) often resembles a theater piece, staying close to these characters and their peculiar ways, while the central celebration triggers many issues to be addressed, often in intimate ways. “The Young Wife” strives to carry a memorable visual approach to best disrupt the staginess of it all, and Poe, working with a talented cast, achieves some understanding of doubt, which acts as an anchor during a day of celebration and reunion. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Ezra (2024)

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    “Ezra” is the fifth directorial outing for actor Tony Goldwyn, but his first helming job in 14 years (his last was 2010’s “Conviction”). It’s been an erratic career behind-the-camera for Goldwyn, who favors character-based dramas, gifting him room to explore situations of emotional stress and confrontation, and there’s always space for actors, with one of their own calling the shots, making time to massage performances. “Ezra” checks all the boxes on a Goldwyn film, and it remains another frustrating misfire for him. It’s a study of a father going to extremes to deal with his career and his autistic son, with screenwriter Tony Spiridakis using his own parental experiences to inform the turbulent feelings in the work. The picture means well enough, but it doesn’t connect as an examination of relationships, and the writing has a very blunt take on the main character’s sense of authority when handling extremely sensitive family issues. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Atlas (2024)

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    As the world buzzes over the rapid development of AI, “Atlas” tries to turn the computer future into action cinema, eschewing scientific analysis for a more blockbuster take on the relationship between people and machines. Moving past his years as a Dwayne Johnson director, Brad Peyton (“Rampage,” “San Andreas,” and “Journey 2: The Mysterious Island”) hopes to bring a little thunder to Jennifer Lopez’s career, overseeing a large-scale endeavor that employs a large amount of visual effects and a screenplay (by Leo Sardarian and Aron Eli Coleite) that’s very derivative of other sci-fi adventures. “Atlas” details the story of a woman’s battle to maintain her very human-ness around a futureworld of artificial intelligence, tasked with stopping a powerful enemy, and Payton aims to go big with the work. However, it’s the quieter moments between the characters that tend to work the best, away from the noisiness of the effort and its bizarrely optimistic portrayal of AI support. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Hit Man

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    Richard Linklater has always been a quality filmmaker. He’s made a few duds over the last 30 years (including an ill-conceived “Bad News Bears” remake), but he’s always invested in the work, trying to find his way through characters and stories, enjoying creative challenges while celebrating with his influences. Collaborating on a screenplay with actor Glen Powell, Linklater delivers one of his finest movies with “Hit Man,” going comedic and noir-ish with the project, which examines a perfectly average person getting lost in his role as an undercover cop, enjoying the break from his usual habits and personality. Powell is gifted a juicy role with the feature, allowed to show off more range than usual, and Linklater clearly delights in playing with tone and dark humor. It’s a mostly tight, exceptionally acted endeavor with enough turns of plot and personality to remain engrossing. “Hit Man” is something special from Linklater, adding a gem to his already impressive oeuvre. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Darkness of Man

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    We don’t see much of Jean-Claude Van Damme these days, making his appearance in “Darkness of Man” something to celebrate. And he tries to stretch with the part, portraying a haggard man of the law looking to atone for past sins through the protection of a teenage boy, caught between Russian and Korean gangsters in Los Angeles. Van Damme provides a grizzled take on a dying spirit, playing up the character’s detective noir design, and he's often the best part of a weak film. Co-writer/director James Cullen Bressack (who’s been churning out forgettable features for the last decade) makes a pass at creating a level of Hell for the main character, but the B-movie-ness of the endeavor can’t be contained. “Darkness of Man” is stuck with cliched writing and flat visuals, going through the motions, unable to find the depths of gravitas Van Damme imagines himself reaching at times. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Garfield Movie

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    “Garfield” has been a fixture of pop culture for nearly five decades, with the lazy cat’s antics delighting generations of fans. He’s conquered the world of comic strips and television entertainment, but his big screen endeavors, while profitable, haven’t been creatively thrilling. “The Garfield Movie” is a fully CG-animated affair after his last two efforts, 2004’s “Garfield: The Movie” and 2006’s “Garfield: A Tail of Two Kitties,” strived to bring the cartoon creation into the world of live-action. The return to a pure animated realm for the character is welcome, with director Mark Dindal (“Chicken Little,” “The Emperor’s New Groove”) overseeing a brightly colored and highly slapstick experience for Garfield and his misadventures. “The Garfield Movie” wrestles with family film formula, but it’s visually appealing and backed by charming turns from most of the voice cast, who work to give the feature some personality missing from previous cinematic adventures. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Sight (2024)

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    “Sight” is billed as the “incredible true story” of Dr. Ming Wang, with the Nashville-based man selling himself as a leader in the field of eye care. The production aims to make a hero out of Wang, with co-writer/director Andrew Hyatt (“The Blind,” “Paul, Apostle of Christ”) telling the story of the subject’s difficult upbringing in China, and his eventual struggles in America, working his way into medical dominance with a focus on helping the blind to see. The essentials of Wang’s journey are fascinating, as it certainly appears he’s lived through so much, remaining true to his integrity and quest to help others. Hyatt isn’t particularly committed to raw experiences and finely tuned dramatic escalation, going the usual faith-based cinema route with harsh melodrama and tedious speechifying. “Sight” (which was shot three years ago) has a real tale about perseverance to offer, but Hyatt’s in the hagiography business here. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Strangers: Chapter 1

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    16 years ago, “The Strangers” became a summer hit, finding its place as a creepy chiller among the blockbusters, acquiring a surprisingly vocal fanbase. Industry hiccups prevented an immediate sequel, with one finally materializing in 2018’s “The Strangers: Prey at Night.” The sequel wasn’t nearly as popular as the original (despite being an arguably stronger film), but it made money, and that’s the primary motivation for horror producers. The brand name is back, with “The Strangers: Chapter 1” the first of three new stories in a one-note world, with the masked trio returning to kill more hapless victims in the slowest of ways. The first endeavor is basically a remake of the 2008 picture, with director Renny Harlin (who hasn’t been an effective helmer in decades) in charge of getting the franchise back up and running, offering no noticeable imagination, pace, and performances while doing so. If this is all “Chapter 1” can offer, it’s going to be a long year with the trilogy. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga

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    2015’s “Mad Max: Fury Road” was long in the making and delivered the goods, successfully reviving the “Mad Max” series with an epic depiction of Wasteland war and survival challenges. Director George Miller couldn’t win all of his storytelling battles, but the sequel was a major filmmaking achievement, generating a glorious level of chaos while remaining intimate, to a certain degree, with character motivations. Instead of moving forward with the franchise, following Max to the next adventure, Miller (and co-writer Nick Lathouris) goes the prequel route, turning his attention to Furiosa, originally portrayed by Charlize Theron. Now played by Anya Taylor-Joy and Alyla Browne, the character takes control of “Furiosa,” which has Miller pumping the brakes on the series, electing to explore a multi-chapter study of a life corrupted and a world finding new order in the midst of mayhem. One doesn’t necessarily need this understanding of Furiosa, but the helmer brings the goods with outstanding action sequences and marvelous performances. It’s a literary-style take on the universe of “Mad Max,” watching Miller work on world-building and power plays. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Thelma the Unicorn

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    After scoring a few early hits with 2004’s “Napoleon Dynamite” and 2006’s “Nacho Libre,” writer/director Jared Hess landed on some hard times, struggling to match the financial success and pop culture ubiquity of his initial efforts. It’s been eight years since his last feature, “Masterminds,” and he’s now making a comeback in the realm of animation, joining co-director Lynn Wang on “Thelma the Unicorn,” which is an adaptation of a popular Aaron Blabey (“The Bad Guys”) children’s book. The elastic ways of cartoon antics plays to Hess’s strengths, and he’s clearly under orders to oversee a “Sing”-like study of animal dreams in the world of musical performance. “Thelma the Unicorn” is familiar all around, but it presents its intended audience with a colorful study of identity and friendship, also delivering a soundtrack filled with lively tunes to carry the picture’s thin premise. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – IF

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    “IF” is being marketed as a lighthearted family film, and one with a giant purple monster, soft and huggable as can be, at the center of its promotional efforts. The creature is in the feature, but ways of joyousness and silliness doesn’t have as big a role in the production as anticipated. Writer/director John Krasinski certainly isn’t at fault for the selling of “IF,” but he’s definitely in charge of the picture’s very uneven tone, caught up in a strange desire to make a heartwarming study of lost childhood imagination, burying it under layers of cloying screenwriting. Krasinski’s heart seems to be in the right place, but his execution misses the mark, stuck trying to marry a movie about the exploits of colorful imaginary friends and their occasional goofball antics with a story concerning a 12-year-old girl’s anxiety over losing her father to heart surgery after already watching her mother succumb to cancer. It’s hard to understand what Krasinski is going for with this endeavor. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Back to Black

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    Musician bio-pics have always been around, but when 2018’s “Bohemian Rhapsody” went on to make nearly a billion dollars at the box office, they became a priority for producers looking to serve audiences hungry to revisit the sonic highs and dramatic lows of the subjects. With the saga of Amy Winehouse, there just isn’t much in the way of happiness when dealing with a self-destructive woman who shared her vocal gifts with the world, ending up dead at 27 years of age, unable to conquer her many addictions. “Back to Black” offers parts of the Winehouse story, with the estate-approved endeavor looking to provide a much softer comprehension of mental illness and a more distinct portrait of predatory influences. Screenwriter Matt Greenhalgh (a vet of musical movies, previously scripting “Control” and “Nowhere Boy”) doesn’t have it easy with “Back to Black,” which feels too sanitized to really comprehend Winehouse’s journey. However, the hits do flow in the picture, and perhaps that’s all the fanbase wants from this underwhelming effort. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com