Nicolas Cage has played a wide range of characters over the last 40 years, including an ant, a superhero, and, most recently, himself. But the chance to become a gunslinger has largely eluded him all this time, with “The Old Way” gifting the idiosyncratic thespian a chance to play cowboy for a change, with the screenplay by Carl W. Lucas delivering a western tale of revenge, attempting to go deep into the emotional ice of a man who’s spent his life killing others, and doesn’t feel anything about it. “The Old Way” is mostly traditional in plot, arranging a tale of tracking and introspection in the open world, but director Brett Donowho (“Acts of Violence”) is unable to bring much excitement to the endeavor. Bogged down by too much monologuing and underwhelming performances, the feature doesn’t offer genre escapism, dragging along with a tepid take on the weariness of a hardened killer returning to power. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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The Worst Films of 2022
A superspy headache machine, a holiday binge, Madea’s resurrection, Central American history, a Stephen King flameout, sunburned sharksploitation, motherhood horror, action without action, and even more Bruce Willis movies.
These are the Worst Films of 2022.
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The Best Films of 2022
A dragon holding up the world, a meal to die for, a friendship that takes fingers, Princess Diana vs. the Media, baby selling blues, Detective Dark Knight, deep inside the Scumdogs of the Universe, Puss in Boots at death’s door, DIY robot pal, and hey, parents, don’t leave those kids alone.
These are the Best Films of 2022.
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Film Review – A Man Called Otto
“A Man Called Otto” is a remake of a 2015 Swedish picture, “A Man Called Ove,” which was an adaptation of a best-selling 2012 novel by author Fredrik Backman. The material presents a juicy leading role for any actor, and Tom Hanks takes command of the feature, portraying a curmudgeonly man fighting the grieving process while managing the needs of his neighbors. “A Man Called Ove” wasn’t short on crowd-pleasing moments, but the original endeavor managed to find its footing with heavy material, offering an engrossing study of personal connection and pain management. “A Man Called Otto” doesn’t share the same tonal balance, with director Marc Forster (“Christopher Robin,” “Machine Gun Preacher”) fumbling the sincerity of the effort, often too quick to go saccharine with a tale that requires a crustier sense of humanity to fully embrace. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Savage Salvation
Producer Randall Emmett (with partner George Furla) has been working steadily for years to build a filmography of forgettable VOD/streaming entertainment (with titles such as “Out of Death,” “Survive the Game,” and “Force of Nature”), finding ways to entice established actors to participate in bottom shelf entertainment, including multiple Bruce Willis-starring endeavors. He’s dipped his toe in direction, previously helming 2021’s “Midnight in the Switchgrass” (co-starring Willis), and he returns with “Savage Salvation,” which turns to Robert De Niro to help class up the joint, hiring the legendary thespian to deliver some gravitas in a feature that’s often without dramatic shape or momentum. The screenplay (by Adam Taylor Barker and Chris Sivertson) tries to make a statement about the power of God and the death of America, but such ambition is muted by Emmett, who fails to manage subplots, summon suspense, and rethink a last act that turns a dull movie into a terrible one. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Corsage
Vicky Krieps has become a respected actress in recent years, typically associated with pictures containing intense dramatic content, including her breakthrough role in Paul Thomas Anderson’s “Phantom Thread.” She provides quality performances with a special focus on psychological disturbances, and “Corsage” seems tailor-made for her talents. The endeavor examines a year in the life of Empress Elisabeth of Austria, which is filled with isolating experiences and a slow reduction of coping skills, creating a wide-open space for the production to detail such developing unrest inside a royal setting. However, writer/director Marie Kreutzer doesn’t pay much attention to Elisabeth’s actual life, instead using the woman to inspire a study of all the loneliness, frustration, and resentment that develops when a female is treated as nothing more than an ornament. “Corsage” has potent scenes of neglect, and Krieps does a fine job making the storm raging inside Elisabeth feel as real as possible, with Kreutzer occasionally struggling to make a film as interesting as her star. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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UHD 4K Review – The Amityville Horror
When one recalls the cinematic successes of the 1979 film year, different titles come to mind. There's "Alien," "Apocalypse Now," "The Jerk," and even "The Muppet Movie." These were hit features that inspired big crowds at theaters, and many have stood the test of time, becoming classics. And then there's "The Amityville Horror," a tiny indie release with an apparently powerful marketing campaign, managing to topple most of the competition to become the second highest-grossing picture of the year, only bested by the Academy Award-winning "Kramer vs. Kramer." The financial triumph of "The Amityville Horror" is shocking, definitely more so than the endeavor itself, which provides an unusually inert viewing experience, especially for a chiller. For two hours, the effort drags along, offering a mild haunted house tale that's in no hurry to unnerve viewers. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Tropic of Cancer
1972's "Tropic of Cancer" is not a film for viewers who crave airtight storytelling. The production is more about ideas and situations, trying to build a murder mystery out of what feels like random parts at times. However, the endeavor magically remains interesting due to its location, with the production trying to showcase as much of Port-au-Prince, Haiti as possible, and once a killer starts to become a larger presence in the picture, "Tropic of Cancer" perks up, delivering some black-gloved horror for the fanbase, while nightmare realm additions offer something outside the norm, which helps the cause. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – A White Dress for Mariale
1972's "A White Dress for Mariale" offers an Agatha Christie-style set-up for danger, sending a collection of disparate characters to a secluded place to deal with one another and the presence of a murderer coming after them. We've been here before, but director Romano Scavolini tries to bend psychology with the endeavor, which doesn't even get to any point of suspense until the hour mark. It's a long drive to a crisis situation for "A White Dress for Mariale," which doesn't reward the patience required to get through the film, but Scavolini certainly tries to bring style and threatening elements to the effort, offering an interestingly shot feature that's appreciable on a technical level, but not always on a dramatic one. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Nine Guests for a Crime
1977's "Nine Guests for a Crime" is a traditional whodunit, taking inspiration from Agatha Christie books as it arranges deadly games of paranoia and exposure involving a large group of characters stuck on a remote island. The concept is nothing new, and the production doesn't try to jazz up the movie with psychedelic detours or excessive violence. Suspense is present, along with a typically convoluted mystery, but director Ferdinando Baldi looks to create a more sensual mood of sexual gamesmanship with the effort, and he has the natural appeal of the island location. "Nine Guests for a Crime" is a thunderous offering of screen tension, but it works in spurts of hostile relationships and malicious behavior, offering some welcome agitation to help with the murder investigation. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – The Pale Blue Eye
“The Pale Blue Eye” continues writer/director Scott Cooper’s interest in grim tales concerning mysterious monsters of the night. He went genre with 2021’s “Antlers,” and the creative experience must’ve been rewarding, with the helmer back to strange events with his latest endeavor, which is an adaptation of a 2003 Louis Bayard novel. The feature offers a murder mystery to help bring viewers to the story, examining the silent alarm triggered at a military school when one cadet is found murdered in a most gruesome fashion, but there’s more of a character study presented here, with Cooper tracking an unusual partnership at the core of the story while also managing strange discoveries along the way. “The Pale Blue Eye” isn’t a film that’s easily decoded, and Cooper’s permissiveness with some performances is sure to test patience. But there’s a final destination from Bayard worth waiting for, giving Cooper another interesting study of horror as it emerges in many forms. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Matilda the Musical
“Matilda” began life as a book by author Roald Dahl, with his 1988 endeavor becoming a hit with young readers, detailing the life of a neglected child and her experiences with those who want to love her and those who would prefer to forget her. The book has been brought to life through radio programs and audiobooks, and it was previously handed a cinematic adaptation in 1996, with director Danny DeVito a natural choice to summon Dahl’s mischief and madness. Now there’s “Matilda the Musical,” which carries the highly successful British stage musical (with book by Dennis Kelly and music/lyrics by Tim Minchin) to the screen, adding song and dance to Dahl’s original tale. And director Matthew Warchus (“Pride”) is absolutely committed to preserving such theatrical energy, presenting a lively take on the original text, handling the scale of musical theater while preserving delicate emotional connections between characters, crafting a highly entertaining explosion of kid-sized feelings. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – I Wanna Dance with Somebody
In 2012, singer Whitney Houston died in Los Angeles, ending a career that achieved enormous success through unparalleled talent. She was an icon, rattling the entertainment business in ways few could, amassing a global fanbase to secure her legacy after her passing. “I Wanna Dance with Somebody” intends to understand her glory years of success and painful personal struggles, giving Houston the bio-pic treatment, with director Kasi Lemmons (“Harriet”) and screenwriter Anthony McCarten (“Bohemian Rhapsody”) in charge of making sense of it all, from thunderous stage performances to debilitating drug addiction. It’s a lot of life to explore, and “I Wanna Dance with Somebody” just isn’t up to the challenge of organization, delivering what quickly becomes a television movie-style take on Houston’s creative years and crumbling, muting the extremity of her behavior to reignite interest in Whitney Houston, Inc. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Puss in Boots: The Last Wish
2011’s “Puss in Boots” was a spin-off of the “Shrek” series, giving the eponymous cat a chance to enjoy his own big screen adventure while the green ogre franchise still had some life in it, released a year after “Shrek Forever After.” “Puss in Boots” did well at the box office, inspiring a popular television show, but a true sequel took its time to reach viewers, with “Puss in Boots: The Last Wish” finally emerging 11 years after the last chapter. The original movie was fun in spurts, trying to find its footing as a solo run for the feline. “The Last Wish” is a significant creative improvement, delivering dynamic animation and lively voicework, also bravely approaching the topic of death while still delivering wonderful scenes of slapstick. The endeavor pays tribute to its origins, but it really becomes its own thing, with director Joel Crawford (“The Croods: A New Age”) overseeing an exciting and highly amusing effort. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – The Whale
“The Whale” is being promoted as a comeback vehicle for Brendan Fraser, who hasn’t had a significant part in a film for a long time, kicking around B-movies and television for the last five years. In fact, he hasn’t had a role like this since 1998’s “Gods and Monsters,” with director Darren Aronofsky putting his faith in Fraser to help realize the abyssal levels of pain contained within Samuel D. Hunter’s screenplay (adapting his own play). It’s a wild part, with the actor tasked with bringing to life a 600-pound man trying to eat himself to death while confronting his past, dealing with the few outsiders who still remain committed to the man in decidedly different ways. And Fraser’s never been better, easily achieving career-best work in the feature, which asks viewers to remain in a room with someone slowly committing suicide, yet Aronofsky and Hunter shape a largely riveting study of regret and release, rewarding patience with sharp character studies and an authentic understanding of shame. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Women Talking
There’s truth in advertising with “Women Talking,” which does indeed feature women talking for the entire run time, and these characters have plenty to be concerned about. Writer/director Sarah Polley provides an adaptation of author Miriam Toews 2018 book of the same name, which spotlights sudden panic and extended debate with female members of a Mennonite colony when they discover horrors beyond their imagination, forced to make a choice about their future survival. Polley wisely avoids the inherent staginess of the material with a nicely cinematic interpretation, hunting for poetic moments between offerings of gut-rot emotion and anxiety. It’s a tale of awakening and faith, along with self-preservation, and “Women Talking” remains involving as the central situation of alarm is gradually revealed, with incredibly strong performances from the cast creating tension as debates carry on and concerns are finally voiced. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Babylon
It’s a little strange to face a film year where two completely different movies basically cover the same story. In May, there was “Downton Abbey: A New Era,” which included a subplot about silent cinema actors facing a cold reality when “talkies” become all the rage, forcing them to deal with a sudden upheaval in their careers. “Babylon” explores the same space in a more epic manner, losing good manners and buttery melodrama for a messy, 188-minute-long journey into excess. One picture had tasteful encounters between troubled characters, while the other opens with an extended shot of an elephant defecating on its handlers, chased by a shot of a prostitute urinating into the mouth of her obese client. It certainly can’t be said that writer/director Damien Chazelle (“La La Land”) isn’t going for something with “Babylon,” but what that something is isn’t easy to understand. The helmer wants explosions of raucous behavior, trying to encourage overkill as a way to celebrate the Roaring Twenties, but the feature is mostly exhausting, with Chazelle caught up in his ability to summon chaos, leaving little room for compelling drama to take shape. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Joyride
At this point, Olivia Coleman is as dependable an actress as they come these days. She doesn’t give bad performances, usually capable of mining remarkable emotional moments out of any material, doing so with care for her characters, offering viewers a chance to explore complex human beings. Her streak remains unbroken in “Joyride,” but the feature certainly doesn’t make it easy for the star. Scripted by Ailbhe Keogan, the picture offers major swings of tone and behavior, asking the audience to stick with characters experiencing an almost absurd amount of turbulence in their lives. “Joyride” aims to be a dramedy about an unexpected connection between two very different people, and while the journey at the center of the story is understood, confusion comes with interpretation, as director Emer Reynolds generates a chaotic film that doesn’t connect as intended. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Broker
Writer/director Hirokazu Kore-eda is an exceptionally talented filmmaker who’s been on a streak of involving dramas over the last decade, mostly recently on view in 2018’s “Shoplifters” and 2019’s “The Truth,” which offered him a chance to make a French endeavor, changing things up from his usual interests. With “Broker,” Kore-eda is back in South Korea, examining the inner lives and relationships of characters involved in the business of selling babies. This is no horror story, adding to the helmer’s preference for humanist dramas, taking time to understand the mindset of those contributing to such a situation, exploring the complexity of such a choice. There are layers to examine with “Broker,” and wonderful moviemaking to help with the journey, as Kore-eda oversees excellent performances and an approachable level of melancholy with this feature, which remains gripping, even when it deals with simple matters of the heart. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com


















