Monday, March 31, 2025

3 Short Paragraphs (Or Not): Only the Brave

2017, Joseph Kosinski (Oblivion) -- Netflix

I thought I might as well fill in some Kosinski gaps, but not exactly sure why. Other than Oblivion (and probably Tron: Legacy but obviously not enough to generate rewatches), I cannot say his directorial stylings have captured me. Maybe now that he has broken from the mould created by his first two movies (visually impactful scifi), with things such as a Top Gun sequel, and this one, he can return to something I would more enjoy?

Anywayz, I am also not much of a biopic viewer, though I do have a good number in the "the hopper" (my downloads folder) unwatched and neglected. I also am not sure I knew this was a "based on a true story" movie, more thinking it was just going to be an exploration of something in the zeitgeist for the last decade or so -- wild fires and the men who fight them. But no, this is a sensitive, compassionate movie about the Granite Mountain Hotshots, who lost 19 members fighting the wildfire in Yarnell, Arizona in 2013. 

Hotshots are highly trained, front-line Wildland Firefighters. At least that is the term in America. They started as a "handcrew", basically a support team in fighting wildfires, preparing the land ahead of the fire to reduce potential danger. The movie is about their dream to become proper Hotshots, to tear the "trainee" sticker off their vehicle. They are led by Eric Marsh (Josh Brolin, Old Guy) and Jesse Steed (James Badge Dale, World War Z), and the movie depicts the add-on of a few new recruits, including addict Brendan McDonough (Miles Teller, The Gorge) who wants to clean up his act after his ex has his baby. Marsh takes a chance on him.

Much of the movie is about getting to know the guys, which in most movies can be tedious, but Kosinski gives us a no-nonsense setup. There's not a lot of gloss on these "good ol boys", Arizona being a land of cowboys and country music, but they all seem likeable enough, dispensing with the toxic masculinity for the most part. There was something solid about seeing their lives, without the movie taking turns into melodrama for the sake of excitement. 

But peppered into the movie are the fires they fight and the dangers presented. We keep on getting a wee bit of dramatic effect with visions of a bear made of fire rushing out of a massive landscape on fire. I expected it to be just that, a bit of CGI for the sake of metaphor, but it did end up connected to an experience Marsh had, something I imagine every wildfire firefighter experiences -- an animal fleeing the fire, its coat ablaze, into the darkness beyond. Marsh uses this memory to connect with and apologize to Brendan, that they are all fleeing something overwhelming in their lives, but the Hotshots turn around and step into it.

Again, going into the movie, not knowing the historical fact behind it, I was not expecting the deaths. But when the final act started, I saw the signs. It put a cold spot in my gut. I liked these guys, they were succeeding, they were overcoming odds, they all had so much to contribute. And in a flash, pun intended, the next thing we hear is "confirmed; 19". All the protective measures, all the training, all the experience could not protect them from the beast of a fire.

Brendan escapes death, having been put on reduced duty (assigned lookout at a critical point) due to his recovery from a snakebite. But the movie does not end with the deaths, as it also has to deal with him being a survivor when all his friends and mentors are dead, when all their families see him still alive. If the movie ended with so much death, it had to give us a bit of hope & life to close things out.

I was thinking, going into this movie, that I would close out my Kosinski collection, but honestly... not feeling  it. Sure, I enjoyed the movie, but not enough to deal with the dislike I have for the legacy of Top Gun. And nothing stands out for me in his directing that would compel me to watch it, nor the coming F1. Experiment over.

Note: Some really good supporting performances from Jeff Bridges (The Old Man) and Jennifer Connelly (Dark City). 

Thursday, March 27, 2025

KsMIRT: Give the new recruit severance on paradise's shoresy

 KsMIRT = Kent's Month In Reviewing Television, in which I (Kent) review the television series I watched in the past month, which these days is not many. I don't know about you but I'm finding that starting into any new TV series to be daunting prospect. I think smartphones, social media, and video games have utterly decimated our ability to sit patiently, to relax into a passive activity like watching TV or movies. The new media is so build on providing tiny dopamine hits, whether it's in-game rewards or social media rage bait, or the constant promise of something more if you just keep scrolling/clicking/spending. So most of the TV shows I watch are subsequent seasons for things I already know I like, and in most cases, I'm either binge-watching through at a rapid clip, or waiting impatiently for the final episode so I can move onto something else.  

This Month:
The Recruit Season 2 (6 episodes, Netflix)
Shoresy Season 4 (6 Episodes, Crave)
Severance Season 2 (10 Episodes, AppleTV+)
Paradise Season 1 (8 Episodes, Disney+) 

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The What 100: Having survived (barely) his ordeal in Prague, Owen becomes the Agency's fall guy. He's given nothing to do but while away the hours in his, literally, empty office. But when a package is delivered (though not for him) his boredome gets the better of him and he finds a new greymail case that takes him to South Korea, and finds him getting in the usual trouble with, well, everyone. The case finds a Korean intelligence officer effectively blackmailing the CIA into helping him recover his kidnapped wife, perpetrators unknown.

(1 Great) Just as with last season, Noah Centineo is the deserved lead of this show. He has a real capacity for switching between super-competent and fecklessness that this show absolutely requires. His character, Owen, is quick-witted, for sure, and capable of stepping well outside his comfort zone, but the show gives the character side moments to breathe, to take in the events that have happened to him (or are still) and Centineo captures the weight of these moments quite well. Owen is a man with a moral compass working in a field that not only doesn't respect morals but sees them as a hinderance to getting the job done, and we see Owen get ground down over these past two seasons. Why he persists is still unclear. He has something to prove.

(1 Good) I really enjoyed the fact that this season stepped outside of Vancouver and surrounding are for its production and actually ventured into Seoul. Theres a totally different vibe to that city that you can't replicate with, say, using some "little Korea" area in Vancouver as sub-in. But the series is a globe trotting one, and Owen is seen hopping around multiple locations, but none of them have the liveliness and vibrancy of Seoul. Teo Yoo as the greymailer and Young-Ah Kim as the deputy director of the NIS were both excellent and brought the exact measure of wit, charm and intensity that the rest of the show is constantly balancing. 

(1 Bad) The Recruit is not a reinvention of the espionage (or espionage-lite) genre, but it also isn't playing by the standard rules. It is a show that operates at a rapid clip, that jumps between its characters and their various settings with not a lot of segue, and asks the audience to keep up. It's not a complicated show, but it does throw a lot of information at you rapidly, and you need to keep up. Alongside Centineo, it's part of the draw, this propulsiveness. But at the same time, it is a bit taxing to follow all the characters, and how they fit into the larger narrative (but it is a process of discovery as it all fits). It's maybe even more to ask the audience to suspend their disbelieve as it expects you to think Owen is not completely falling apart given all his globetrotting (the jetlag must be insane). But part of the show being so Owen-centric, so focused on his pursuits is the excellent supporting cast wind up being very secondary in interest, and the level of investment in them is pretty small.  

META: 6 Episodes? Only 6 Episodes? A downgrade from last season's 8 episodes. I hadn't realized that it was only going to be a 6-episode season, and by all rights, it seems like it was truncated during production. The finale of the season is so very abrupt, and while it closes out the greymail case at hand it gives us no real closure on Owen or most of his supporting cast. If we were in old school, pre-streamer television, where a season of a series would run 22 episodes, this would have been a very satisfying middle arc, with a third act that gets real personal for Owen and shows us why he's doing what he's doing, and keeps doing what he's doing (and likely has something to do with his father. But no, Netflix's hesitant second season order shows no commitment to the series nor any confidence in its performance.  It took Netflix a month to renew it after the first season dropped and it similarly took it a month to cancel it after this second season. In a post-cancellation letter, show creator Alexei Hawley asked "Is two seasons and a movie a thing?"  I think a big-budget, big-screen version of this might work even better than a series. It was fun while it lasted.

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The What 100: It's summer in Sudbury ("Sudvegas") and the Blueberry Bulldogs are celebrating their perfect season and championship win, maybe a little too hard. The boys who haven't gone home are busy tubing during the day and partying at every Sudbury landmark at night, and won't rest until they get accepted into the not-so-secret secret club Weird Sudbury. But Nat signs them up to be mentors, which curtails their party-hearty lifestyle. Meanwhile Shoresy has called it a career and doesn't know what's next, as Nat tries to convince him to coach, and his attempts at being an on-screen personality for a Bro-Dude sponsored sports show has mixed results. He also get serious about moving his relationship forward with Laura.

(1 Great) One of the subplots of the season was Shoresy's continued wooing of Laura Mohr. That Shoresy started out life as a faceless, crass, shit-talking nuisance on Letterkenny, and has somehow manifested into a viable romantic comedy leading man this season was both wildly unexpected and pretty damn cute. As with the good below, one of his young mentees he also takes under his wing showing him how to show a lady that not only are you interested, but you're willing to put in the effort. It's a great counterpoint to toxic masculinity which says you are owed a woman's affection, and here it's telling a male audience that you have to earn it.

(1 Good) Each episode of Shoresy comes with some exceptional laughs. Keeso is a big fan of repetition as comedy and knows how to employ it.  But the greatest bits of the season came from the Bulldog's mentoring of a quartet of young high-school players graduating to bigger pastures. The elder generation of hockey jocks wrestling with the progressive aspects of the younger generation (such as the fact that they don't fully change in the dressing room or shower so as not to make any one uncomfortable) is a pretty sharp examination of societal norms. If we're seeing things from Shoresy's perspective, everything these kids are saying is absurd, and yet, when the kids explain the reason behind it, there are kernels of sense (like Letterkenny, I appreciate how the show is willing to wrestle with topics rather than decidedly make a stand).

(1 Bad) The show continues to twist me in knots though, as it, much like Letterkenny, toggles between respecting women almost to a level of worship, and objectifying and sexualizing them. The main female cast is almost uniformly adored, but any non-speaking role, any of the girls that the celebrating Bulldogs are picking up night after night, are just slow-motion ogled by the camera. It's a carry-over from Letterkenny that has been even further exacerbated this season with the excuse that the Bulldogs are slutting it up something fierce. Hockey players pull and a lot of these four seasons of Shoresy have "locker-room talk" which is part of the territory, but the show makes a choice to "lads mag" it up with its ogling and it just never sits right.

META: Look, I'm not a jock, never been a jock, and actively disliked the whole jock mindset most of my life. Shoresy is a show about jocks - obviously hockey jocks, to be specific - and yet, as we wade into trade wars and aggressive political stances with our suddenly unfriendly neighbour to the south, perhaps the "slug each other in the face when we're disrespected, and crush each other into the boards for a while, then shake hands and say 'good game' when all is said and done" is maybe more of what we need right now. "Elbows up" as they say. Fight on the rink then leave it on the ice.  The thing about Shoresy that I like is it has a code. Just like Letterkenny before it, there's a code of ethics involved, a sense that, no matter who we are in life, we should be decent people and treat each other with civility if not always respect. We are not islands upon ourselves, we're parts of communities, parts of teams, and we have a responsibility to each other. It's not a bad message, if I'm being honest.

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The What 100: When we last left the crew from Lumin Industries, the innies got out into the real world thanks to hijacking the "Overtime Protocol". The world found out, and Mark, Irving, Hilly and Dylan were heroes (if just for one day), their outing rippling down to the severed floor, now led by Mr. Milchick, with some performative changes. But nobody, not a one, seems happy to be back, and the changes underground seem to only exacerbate the idea that they are imprisoned. 

(1 Great) The first season of Severance was pretty fixated on the world building with a measured hand in developing the characters. The time split between the innie and outie worlds found the innie world to be a surreal Lynchian workplace daymare, while the outside reality could only follow Mark (Adam Scott) for very specific narrative reasons. With the "Overtime Event" exposing the external lives of Irving (John Turturro), Helly (Britt Lower) and Dylan (Zach Cherry), we actually get to deepen our understanding of these characters. Irving's Innie has become utterly disillusioned with all that he once held dear, and his outie has become similarly obsessed with Burt's outie (Christopher Walken, whose shifting between charming softness, simmering danger, and seemingly violent intensity is just masterful). Dylan, for his "good behaviour" (read, betrayal), gets to meet his outie's wife, but in the process becomes even more obsessed with his outie's life than ever. Helly wrestles with her identity as an undercover Eagan, hating her outie, while Helena Eagan becomes obsessed with the liberties Helly has experienced not being known as an Eagan. Mark, on both sides, obsesses over learning that Ms. Casey (Dichen Lachman) is actually his (presumed dead wife) and seeks to re-integrate. Even the exterior worlds, such as they are, of Seth Milchick (Tramell Tillman) and Harmony Cobel (Patricia Arquette) get explored this season, with Milchick's new role proving more and more uncomfortable and Cobel's rebellion against Lumin shedding the smallest glimmer of light on what is actually going on. In this much more character-focused season (where we get a whole episode dedicated to Ms. Casey and another - shot in Newfoundland - that gives us a sliver of insight into Harmony's story) the world building takes a backseat. This is not to say there isn't any, as there is plenty, but it's not as front-and-center as it was in Season 1.  It's a pretty wise move, to further invest us in these characters, rather than just playing with revelations of the setting, and I think it pays off well this season, but will pay off more in the long run.  The side effect of being character focused is it's juggling more story balls. Mark was the center of the world last year, and now he's sharing the spotlight he once held with five others, so the end result is a season that feels less focused because it is... and yet it's all building upon what was established last season. It offers some answers, but not in any way that is satisfying, despite being tremendously enjoyable.

(1 Good) The world of Severance continues to intrigue me. It's clear now that Lumin Industries is a far-reaching, global brand with its hands in many, many pies, but we're offered only a miniscule tidbit of what its business really is. They have, at the very least, a pharma wing (as Helena Eagan tries to explain her Innie's public outburst on utilizing a non-Lumin branded medication...always schilling). We see in the Harmony Cobel-centered episode that Lumin gave birth to many towns, and subsequently destroyed them, leaving hard feelings and addictions in its wake.  It is clear that there's a cult-like aspect to the Eagan family that casts allusions to some Scientology practices (such as how it grooms its children through structure programs) but isn't going for a direct parallel (this religion is as much about capitalism, control and subjugation as it is about worship in a much more direct manner than most real religions are). I love that the world of Severance seems kind of stuck aesthetically in the 1980s and yet everyone has smartphones. This season is less fetishistic of its retro-futurism, and presents its irreverence (such as the goat people) in a clumsier manner than last season, but it's still so very, very stimulating to behold and try to puzzle out. It's this type of reality where you really don't want too many answers, because one answer that's less satisfying than the multitude of possibilities your brain might tease out.

(1 Bad) There really isn't a "bad" this season, except, for me, the return which, after 3 years, didn't quite live up to the explosive promises of the end of season one. I think I like it better this way, because the end of season one felt like a fire had been lit and it could have raged, but the showrunners are content to let it smoulder. They introduce in the first episode new work-mates for Mark (including Alia Shawkat and Bob Balaban) but it's a total fake out and they're gone within the same episode, which is too bad. They were certainly exciting additions for a brief moment.

META: It's been almost 3 years since season 1 and the wait, somehow, didn't feel all that excruciating.  The show, as I described in my review of Season 1, is slow sci-fi, and with that subgenre comes patience. I've waited patiently. I think Kier would be proud.  The reality of Severance is still so...well, if not enticing then curious, and I find it so compellingly bizarre.  The message of the show, the "work-life balance" and the bullshit of corporate "employee first" initiatives is the satire in the background this season. It's nudging metaphorically at the tools that big organizations use to keep their employees placated so they don't revolt, but it's happening nonetheless. Corporations have a mandate to make shareholders money, and not to make employees happy. Throw in organized religion, which is all about control, and often about money, not actually about the people. I love this show. It's been said the creators know where it's going and where it will end. I'm eager (not Eagan) to see.

In my post-season engagement with podcasts and episode breakdowns, I was reminded that there's an aspect of the show that's dealing with emotional pain, and that a major aspect of Lumin and the religion of Kier is about managing or eliminating emotional turmoil. By the final episode we get a glimpse of their master plan, a rudimentary understanding of the "mysterious and important" work that the Macrodata Refinement team on the severed floor is doing, and why Mark is so central to it all. It's not 100% clear, but it is most definitely insidious. Ready for more, but willing to wait.

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**WARNING: SPOILERS FOR PARADISE***

The What 100: The president has been murdered in his home (not the White House though). Secret Service Agent Xavier Collins breaks protocol and waits on calling it in, assessing the situation for himself. This gets him suspended, leaving him to investigate without any official support. 

And, oh yeah, did I mention, the world has ended, and this all takes place inside an engineered safe haven of 25,000 people inside a mountain in Colorado? No, oh. That's part of it.

(1 Great) Episode 7 of the series takes us through the final day inside the White House before the world ended. It builds on so much of what we've seen before in the series, as well as fills in so many of the gaps. James Marsden's President Cal Bradford is a heavy drinking patsy of the elite, placed into power through his mining tycoon father and rich donor pool, but a man who is torn between doing the job he *should* be doing serving the people, and maintaining the favour and goodwill of his allies. In the final hours, both before the disaster that befalls the Earth, and the last days of his life, Cal reconsiders his position, and what is right. There's the moral choice but also the responsibility of being the bearer of bad news, and the fallout that comes with it. It's pretty meaty, if only in subtext. Episode 7 mostly focuses on Sterling K. Brown's Xavier as he negotiates his role keeping the President safe and securing his evacuation while, at the same time, trying to get his family to safety as the infrastructure collapses.  Episode 7 is a very well-thought-out, and very well-executed, a uncomfortably intense end-of-the-world scenario that has layers that keep peeling back until we return to the modern day. 

(1 Good) Billionaires *are* the worst, aren't they. We're going to get a flood of entertainment that will be reinforcing this over the next few years, and we need to keep that pressure on. Billionaires are not superheroes, they are the villains of the piece.  The narrative of this show is unravelling the origins of Paradise and how they tie to the death of the President who was at the helm when the world ended.

(1 Bad) We're dealing with Americans who develop an idyllic small town where the elite and the specifically chosen get to live. It seems both kind of magical and also totally *the worst*. It is an interesting society whose sci-fi sociological aspects are explored primarily in the background (this is not "the bad", in fact it's pretty compelling). It should be a society that need not worry about violence if it's such a carefully chosen community, and yet the president has an pretty sizable security detail, and there seems to be other behind-the-scenes security that seems excessive for a community of merely 25000 people. They don't carry sidearms besides stun guns, and one Secret Service agent laments the fact that she can't hold a proper gun (and later says "Feels good doesn't it?" when she gets one).  But of course there are guns. It's America, there are always lots and lots of guns. And a major plot point in this series revolves around not just a gun, but all the guns, and it seems so ... ugly... when our hero, our chief protagonist, the best of the best guys Xavier runs around waving a gun in someone's face demanding answers.  I wish the show were more inventive and thought of another way to run the same scenario without needing to be militarized up. It is a commentary in and of itself, and it is also commented in the show the fact that this cache of weapons exists at all. I just expected better and expected more out of our heroic characters than to fetishize the almighty gun. Bleh.

META: Toasty told me about this show last week and immediately had me intrigued. To paraphrase what he said "it's a show that starts off thinking it's about one thing, solving a murder, but then reveals it's totally something else". And he's not wrong. The murder of Cal Bradford is such a small, if central element of the series. It negotiates many characters, their back stories, their past lives and present lives, their dynamics with each other, their families, and the impact of their families on who they are today all while pursuing the perpetrator of this murder and exploring this new community coming out of the ashes of the end of the world.  The sky is digital, and it's one of the first things that tells us nothing is as it seems, but hardly the last. It's not a conventional murder mystery. You're not necessarily going to be able to figure out the answer until they reveal it to you, but it doesn't matter because the journey overall, and the world building, is pretty engrossing.  It hints at where a second season could go, and while it doesn't demand such, I would definitely watch, understanding it would be a much different show, particularly in structure.


Tuesday, March 25, 2025

3 Short Paragraphs (Or Not): Knox Goes Away

2023, Michael Keaton (The Merry Gentlemen) -- Amazon

Two movies directed by Keaton, two movies about hitmen. I wonder what's up with that.

Another movie about a hitman diagnosed with memory issues, though John Knox's CJD (Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease) is definitely the worst. By the time he is confirmed to have contracted it, he is in the last few weeks. I said, in my write up of The Killer's Game that it generally has something to do with having consumed "mad cow brain" and articles do say, "only through an injection or consuming infected brain or nervous tissue." But a bit further reading says just the consumption of infected meat can cause. The little detail in the movie of having an opening scene with the two killers, John (Michael Keaton, The Founder) and his partner Muncie (Ray McKinnon, Mayans MC), eating steaks in a shitty diner, was nice.

Memory issues are on my mind of late (until I forget) because dementia is around me. Being of an age where most of my peer group have aging parents, its not surprising their are such things happening, but also being of an age, my brain is no longer storing more than it should. I notice that more and more I am having "those moments" where I lose names of people or things, especially when put on the spot. I just blank out entirely, lose the word, sit still and struggle to put together a trigger for the word, or just plain give up. And let's not get into the "nope, I have no recollection of that..." conversations with Marmy. I am sure its just age, stress, diet, stress but it chills me to the bone when I see these depictions of it.

Two things happen after the diagnosis: he accidentally kills his partner, after having a moment, and his estranged son Miles (James Marsden, Paradise) shows up on his doorstep, covered in blood and panicking. Miles has killed the 30sumthin supremacist who has been sexually assaulting his 16 year old daughter. If anyone knows how to deal with a murder scene, its his father. Knox goes to a close friend and fixer, Xavier Crane (Al Pacino, The Irishman), to build a plan, not just for putting his final affairs in order, but also to remove his son from suspicion forever.

A nice detail that the movie skips the typical hitman / enforcer tropes where its a challenge to get out of the business. Its not like they have a choice, but in other examples, the only way out is death. But Crane presents as a true friend, knowing Knox will not be able to keep on track without help. There isn't a lot of emotion in their relationship, just two criminals saying, "Yep, let's do this." Loyalty. Understanding.

In many ways this is a more thoughtful movie than others of its ilk. Keaton puts a sympathetic hand on Knox but doesn't shy away from exactly how terrible it is to just ... go away. Eventually the disease will not only steal away his memories but also his body's memories on how to function, and he will die. Knox has a lot to do in that short time, in order to clear his son's name, and setup the people he cares for with the money he has made. I still marvel at Keaton compared to how his career started as there is not a hint of funny man here. This is a sobre, focused movie, and while not groundbreaking in any manner (I again repeat, things don't have to be new to be good) it does its job well.

Monday, March 24, 2025

3 Short Paragraphs (Or Not): Spiderhead

2022, Joseph Kosinski (Oblivion) -- Netflix

OK, weird; I think I just side-stepped (my head canon for moving between alternate realities in the multiverse) from a reality where The Gorge was done by Kosinski, which was going to lead to a paragraph about directors working with actors they like. Miles Teller was in Kosinski's Top Gun: Maverick (and his wildfire fighting movie Only the Brave -- ohhh, that's why its in My List)and is in this. Buuut, that's not this reality, so Spiderhead is actually his latest flick. That said, three flicks together does warrant that paragraph buuuut I kind of derailed it.

Anywayz.

The original short story called "Escape From Spiderhead" provides the key focus of this movie -- incarcerated criminals participating in drug trials voluntarily, drugs that elicit great emotional responses, and how the doctor administering the trials is manipulating the people so that the outcomes are favourable to his end goals, no matter the damage it causes to the inmates. Kosinski builds a movie around that premise.

Kosinski likes his architectural imagery. Even with Oblivion being a scifi movie set on an post-apocalyptic Earth, the look and feel of the watch posts that Jack and Vic live in, is spectacular, all curved widescreen smooth plastic and glossy white materials. This is not the post where I indulge in the design aesthetics, but Spiderhead establishes that in the initial fly-over of the facility, its incongruity against the isolated rural landscape. Once we are inside, it continues, all wide range concrete and wood but with pristine white observation rooms. Like Kent, I too enjoy this a lot.

Side-note: I have been doing a lot of rewatching of late as my brain gravitates to consuming known-factors. Enough, in fact, that I feel they warrant a "Rewatch Snippets" post.

Via flashbacks, we get that inmate Jeff (Miles Teller, The Gorge) drove drunk and killed his close friend, the younger brother of his girlfriend. It tortures him, but other than that, he is a stable guy. Abnesti (Chris Hemsworth, Extraction) leads the testing with his complicit assistant Mark (Mark Paguio, Lonesome). They appear to be the only two running the experiments, other than a handful of security/orderlies. Its odd, as it is very clear that there are a good number of violent, sociopathic criminals in there. Abnesti is friendly, confident and more than a little detached from the idea he is doing this to people, despite his affability. Alongside Jeff, we meet Lizzie (Jurnee Smollett, Lovecraft Country), who works the kitchens of the facility as well as being an inmate. Jeff and Lizzie connect.

Abnesti's testing is focused on marketable drugs, drugs the company can sell as legal recreationals. But you can tell by the way that he pushes Jeff that there is a darker motive at play. He also constantly plays a rather sinister card that it is not he that is demanding Jeff do the less than pleasant aspects of the testing, but the nameless faceless council running the facility. But Abnesti is not above manipulating everyone, including Mark, to get the results he wants.

Harkening back to the "Stanford prison experiment", where fake guards were asked to psychologically punish/torture fake prisoners, much of the movie focuses on complicity: Abnesti getting Jeff to perform the tests himself, Abnesti guilting Mark into helping him even when his conscience weighs on him. Through coercion and deception, Jeff does some things he is not proud of. Only when he starts to unravel Abnesti's lies does he start to question what is really going on.

The movie could have been darker, but it didn't want to be a horror / torture-porn movie. Its more a play of personalities, with obviously likeable Abnesti being setup to be truly heinous, while Jeff, initially meek and agreeable is understood to have performed a truly dark deed, but... not one we cannot  have sympathy for. I cannot fault the movie for the performances, but... it was all a bit vanilla? For a movie that was mostly about what Abnesti could convince Jeff to do, it never felt as if anything but the expected would happen.

Friday, March 21, 2025

3 Short Paragraphs (Or Not): The Electric State

2025, The Russo Brothers (Cherry) -- Netflix

I love the artwork of  Simon Stålenhag. A lot of his work gets collected together in art books which pull things together thematically.  If all of his work can be summarized into a single description, it is a merging of mundane landscape, urban, suburban, rural countryside, with distinctly scifi elements. There is often a retro-futuristic feel.

That didn't really describe anything.

OK. Robots, kids, landscapes, big machinery, neon, cyberpunk, ruins, war machines, scifi technology, spaceships, pop culture.

The book for "The Electric State" was a script in the making, scenes of a 1990s run-away and her little yellow, globe-headed robot, walking across an America where something has happened. There is a mixture of giant-robots and war machines, abandoned spaceships (or war ships), all with a 1950s to 80s pop iconography style, as well as people connected to some sort of network via a headset -- they are definitely "jacked in" to something that let's them forget their world. Connecting the imagery are scenes of looming structures on he horizon, something society must depend on, something that has changed it.

While its not a contiguous story, it was just begging to be made into a movie or TV show. And I was just waiting for that to happen.

If anything we got all the imagery right, and the added fun of adding some character to the robots and technology, but what ruined it all for me was the typical Netflix way of homogenising it all into something digestible for the average viewer. And this is coming from me, the guy admittedly more at home with digestive cookies of late.

We start with the background, a retconned history of the world, something seen before, where robots became part of society from early in our technological era. And without even mentioning the separation of AI and automaton robots, we jump right up to the robots demanding rights, which leads to a war between man and machine. Only with the help of Ethan Skate (Musk analog) and his Neurocaster headsets, that allowed people to remote control robots, was the war against machines won. And the "survivors" on the losing side banished to the wilds of the American mid-west, and surrounded by a wall. Neurocasters became the new social media -- an addiction that everyone participated in, separating those that lived inside whatever is inside (utopia?), from those outside in the filthy, messy, breaking down real world. With decades of people having robots do all the messy work for them, I guess we didn't adjust well to going back to doing it ourselves. 

Enter Michelle (Millie Bobby Brown, Damsel), a teenager who lost her family and is doing the typical orphaned teen thing of terrible foster parents, anger, spite and rebellion. Until cartoon robot Cosmo shows up outside and convinces her that he is her long lost brother (Woody Norman, Cobweb), alive and somehow (barely) controlling this robot. And he needs her help. She has to go into the robot Exclusion Zone and find him.

Enter ex-soldier, smuggler Keats (Chris Pratt, The Tomorrow War), who sneaks into the Exclusion Zone to find old, abandoned pop culture items, to be re-sold outside. And his sidekick robot Herman (Anthony Mackie, Elevation). Oh, outside the zone, robots are illegal, so that means a legacy of the war, one Colonel Bradbury (Giancarlo Esposito, Far Cry 6), is sent to hunt down Michelle's rogue robot. The two pairs team up to find her brother.

Much of the movie takes place inside the Zone, where all the weird and wonderful robots live. Each one is a sentient, living person, without any doubt. Even the insane ones that scavenge parts of other robots. They are led by Mr Peanut (Woody Harrelson, The Man from Toronto), who negotiated the treaty with Colonel Bradbury, which ended the war. He only wants to keep his people safe, and that is not helped by the introduction of these human interlopers, who bring some else's agenda into their safe haven.

That someone is Ethan Skate (Stanley Tucci, Julie & Julia) who wants Cosmo / Michelle's brother. Skate's Neurocaster technology has been running down over the years and its continued existence depends on her brother. He will stop at nothing to recover them. He doesn't care who dies. He's more than a little nuts.

But by the time the movie got to the climactic third act, I just didn't care. Yah yeah, robot rebellion, come-uppance, sacrifice, robot smashy-smashy. Yawn. I know I have been clipping off the tail-ends in my recaps of late, losing steam or whatnot, but this is how my own emotional investment in the movie tapered off. Things happened, I no longer cared.

Primarily, it was the human story that failed me. You know me, I am more than happy with well-used tropes, and I am fine with a cliche story as long as it grips me. This didn't. I just didn't enjoy any of the human performances, and found the light-heartedness a bit grating. I kept on comparing it in my mind to Clooney's Tomorrowland, which I still love. But at least in that movie I really liked Clooney's crotchety coot character, and well... I didn't really like any of the humans here. Maybe I will soften to it with rewatches, but that wasn't the point. I was waiting for this movie, and while I am used to disappointment, I am also somewhat tired of tempered acceptance. I need my next "I really liked that!" and I had really hoped this would be it. Maybe I should just buy the coffee table / art book and be more than satisfied with the source.

I am so "meh" about the movie, I didn't even mention that they wasted Ke Huy Quan as Dr. Amherst, despite him being more fun as his own robot "clone" in the form of a jimmied-together 90s PC.

Wednesday, March 19, 2025

Rewatch: Inglorious Basterds

2009, Quentin Tarantino (Kill Bill) -- Netflix

Kent wrote about it in his mega-QT rewatch

I was compelled to rewatch the movie after we (Marmy and me, not Kent and me) semi-binged the British show SAS Rogue Heroes on Amazon. The show is about the formation and deployment of the British 1st Special Air Services (SAS), first in Africa, and then in Italy. The 1st SAS, according to the show, were an infamous group of commandoes tasked with, at first, the destruction of German air bases and equipment, and later as a raiding force ahead of the main forces in Europe. The shows depicts them as reckless, insubordinate and... mad as hatters. It was their distain for authority and normal British warfare style that made them so effective, so much so that Hitler himself learned of them and demanded the Geneva Conventions not apply to them -- they were to be executed on sight, surrender or not.

The "Inglorious Basterds" of the Tarantino movie were an American commando squad made up of Jewish soldiers, and a few German traitors, who were also dropped behind enemy lines to sow chaos and terror among the German forces. Except, and I recall this being a disappointment to me during my first watch, the movie is not really about the actions they perform to gain that reputation. Its about a singular rewrite of history that ends the war, and gets most of them killed.

Tarantino movies are all about conversations, usually across tables, usually about people not fond of each other. There is always at least one scene where someone monologues, in a self-satisfactorily manner, to other people. In my early Tarantino-fan days, it was exactly this that made me love his movies. Dialogue! Words! People with some thoughts between their ears! And the joy of the actor getting into the scene. Col Hans Landa (Christoph Waltz, Spectre) was a horrible person, utterly reprehensible, but this movie put Waltz on the map for English audiences. He was a "joy" to listen to.

But I would almost say that too much of this movie is about these conversations. Maybe my tastes have changed, but I did get the repeat of disappointment that the actual Basterds played such a small part in the movie, and some die far too early before we get to have fun with them. Its almost unfair to them, as long as you ignore that their final mission ends the war and burns down much of the evil with it.

I find myself struggling, almost on the side of being entirely unsatisfied with the movie. I fear my tastes have become more pedestrian, but I am not sure I liked the overall. The individual parts of the movie, the dialogues and the other conversational set pieces are brilliant unto themselves, but the whole is... lacking. The movie is all about the ending, the re-writing of history, a fictional final conflagration that takes down Hitler and all his key leadership, with glorious ultra-violence. The build-up almost seems... incidental. I find much of the movie, and this seems harsh coming from my brain, wasteful and indulgent.

For example, the French basement pub scene. Its a wonderful scene of taught worry and subterfuge. Even when the British spies are caught, there is a lovely tension of, "will they, won't they...." and we wonder who will come out of it all. Well, nobody does. Sure, Bridget von Hammersmark (Dianne Kruger, The Bridge) crawls away with a single leg wound, but then she later dies ignobly at the hands of Landa. And yet the plans, seemingly going awry, carry off as intended. All of Lt Aldo Raine's (Brad Pitt, Fury) men die sacrificial deaths, but he gets away, with Landa, purely so he can disfigure Landa, participating very little in the final acts of the operation. And I am left being not sure why, on many levels.

At a first-experience, a viewing in the cinema, it was a well-executed, beautifully shot, well-spoken Tarantino example. But it didn't hold up to rewatch scrutiny.

Tuesday, March 18, 2025

KsMIRT: Rewatch - Lost Seasons 4-6

As the legend goes, showrunners Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse, after the dire response from Lost fandom to the "Jack's Tattoo" episode, approached ABC and requested a commitment to three more seasons at a reduced 16 episodes per season. They didn't want to spin their storytelling wheels anymore, it was unsustainable.

And so Season 3 ended with the abandonment of the flashback motif, and instead initiated a "flash forward", tricking us for an entire episode into thinking we were watching Jack at his lowest point in the past -- a pill-addicted, fake-bearded mess, jeopardizing his medical career much like his father did, and almost jumping off a bridge before fate intervenes -- only to reveal that it's his lowest point in the future. The episode ends with Jack meeting Kate, history clearly having gone on between these two, and Jack bellowing "WE HAVE TO GO BACK!" as Kate drive away.

It was a stone cold stunner, and Season 4 had to pay it off.  It also had to pay off Charlie's death and his warning "NOT PENNY'S BOAT" (I don't recall if, in his haste, Charlie managed an appropriate, possessive, apostrophe-S on "Pennys" there). And so the fourth season jumps back and forth between events on the island, continuing the previous seasons' adventures, and the future, where we learn systematically that Jack, Kate, Sun, Hurley, Sayid and Claire's baby Aaron were designated the "Oceanic 6" and had concocted a story to say they were the only survivors. Oh, that Aaron is Kate's son.  

In the future, back in the real world, nothing is going well for the Oceanic 6. We see why Jack becames such a mess (blame John Locke), Sun is a single mom and gone to a dark place taking control of her father's enterprises, Kate is on trial for murder, Sayid experiences great tragedy and begins working for Benjamin Linus as his assassin, and Hurley's back in the mental health institute. These sequences are also not told in chronological order, so there is a bit of mental gymnastics required each episode to position it in the timeline. I don't know of many other shows that demand as much effort out of the viewers.

On the island, strangers begin appearing, strangers with secret agendas from a boat off-shore. These include ace pilot Lapidus (Jeff Fahey), archeologist Charlotte (Rebecca Mader), twitchy physicist Daniel (Jeremy Davies), and ghost whisperer Miles (Ken Leung). The promise of rescue seems to finally be at hand, except the newcomers are being really cagey about when exactly the rescue will start. But Locke and Jack are once again divided, with Jack's sole focus being the rescue, while Locke believes they're all meant to be on the island and shouldn't leave. And we learn of Jacob, "the man in charge", although we don't really meet him until season 5.

The events on the island in season four move pretty frantically, which is counterpointed with the more laconic flash-forwards. But the lynchpin of the whole thing is Desmond, who leads the show's apex episode, "the constant", where Desmond's consciousness is flitting back and forth in time. It's Daniel who recognizes what is actually happening, and encourages Desmond to seek him out in the past. It's a really fun, and at its core, a romantic tragedy that explores Desmond's past without ever abandoning the present. It deviates from the "flash forward" construct of Season 4, but it's a signal that the show is no longer beholden to its structures (for better or worse).

Season 4 ends with both the rescue of the Oceanic 6, but also the flash forward showing them preparing to return to the island. The season was cut short due to the writer's strike of the time, and so the first third of season 5 spends much of its time concluding the big arc of season 4, up to, and including Jack, Kate, Sayid, Hurley, Sun and Ben's return to the island, with the flashbacks showing how they all agreed to go back.  Things took a turn for those remaining on the island. When Ben "moved" the island at the end of Season 4, it destabilized the newcomers in time. The island would shudder, the sky turn purple and Locke, Sawyer, Juliette and company would bounce around through the island's past. By the time Locke resolves Ben's error, the remaining passengers of Oceanic 815 find themselves stuck in the mid-70's. Three years later, and Sawyer, Miles, and Juliette have established a life in the Dharma Initiative, one that seems to suit them rather well. This is of course disrupted (ultimately violently) by the return of the Oceanic 6.

Season 5 is the most awkward of all of Lost's seasons. As much as I love time travel, the bouncing around time, its effects and its aftereffects (flash of light, nosebleeds, mental breakdowns) begin to tire after a few episodes, particularly when binge watching... but thankfully they don't last too deeply into the season, and I love that the crew wind up in the Dharma Initiative in its early days. As I noted last time, I could watch a whole series on the early days of the Dharma Initiative and Sawyer (excuse me...Lafours) becoming the head of security and being a pillar of the community. That he becomes one of Dharma's most responsible people shows Sawyer's true potential... and his romance with Juliette is just the greatest. And then Kate and Jack and company return and fuck it all up. To be fair, Jack takes a real back seat in the back-half of the season. He's just kind of riding the wave. Sawyer becomes the lead character for the season, and it's Kate, who has her own agenda and can't freaking sit still that sets off the chain reaction that leads to the show's greatest tragedy.

Where Season 4 was steps away from the magical realism of the previous three seasons, and headlong into sci-fi territory, season 5 starts with time travel, jumps into weird retro-futuristic science adventure, and starts to dip its toe into fantasy as it expands upon the mythology of the show, which is where season 6 exists almost completely. 

The back half of season 5 jumps between the 70's Dharma Initiative and the present day on the island, with John Locke somehow having returned from the dead and exploring some of the islands more ancient, non-Dharma locales with Ben, while Sun and Lapidus seem very confused by their surroundings.

Season 5 falters because it keeps the gang apart for so long. In season 1-3 the survivors of Oceanic 815 would break off into sub-groups and go on their own adventures but they would constantly be crossing paths or returning to home base. Season 4 splits the cast into two groups, one on the island, and one off-island... and in those flash-forwards, they're in a completely different time period from the rest of the cast, which means our fast-forwards are limited to a few characters. As such, some of the survivors are kind of forgotten or put to limited use. The new characters - Lapidus, Miles, Charlotte, Daniel - become part of the core cast, and yet, have a hard time escaping the sense that they are stealing time away from the cast we know and love. This only gets worse as the Ajira Airways flight that returns the Oceanic 6 back to the island also brings a new cast of characters who we never settle into caring about.

As noted, season 6 dives headlong into the mythology of the island, exposing the history of the twin brothers Jacob and the unnamed Man in Black, and also explaining who the Others really are, even giving Richard Alpert a stellar tale stepping the viewer through key moments in his unnaturally long life. Jacob is essentially the island's warden, and he's there to keep the Man in Black from leaving, which is all the Man in Black has ever wanted. But the island is, perhaps metaphorically, perhaps literally, the yin and yag of good and evil, a place where one must keep the other in check. At its heart is a reservoir of light (perhaps the secret of eternal life and/or a lazarus pit) that most men would stop at nothing obtain, and the warden must also be the protector of the island.

As our cast learns about the ways of the Others (Hiroyuki Sanada and John Hawkes are both welcome presences in fairly nominal roles that don't quite work and end tersely) and explore the mythos that they are now entangled in, each episode "flashes sideways" into a whole other reality where Oceanic 815 landed safely in L.A. But it's not just a reality without their crash, it a reality without the island at all, and their lives differ somewhat than those we learned of before (such as Jack having a teenage son).

The flash-sideways, I have to say, aren't very exciting, at least at first, as a lot of time is spent reiterating things we already know about these characters, just with a little twist. We had spent a lot of time off-island in season 4 and 5, and spending more time in a whole other reality that doesn't have the one location all the viewers are enamoured with is less than thrilling. But it's the process of these characters coming to an awakening, as they cross paths with one another, or, in some cases, as Desmond (who has once again mentally travelled through different planes of existence) forcibly awakens them, that it starts to lift the veil.  There's a not insubstantial reward when we start to see old friends and faces whom we thought the show had abandoned, and brings them all together. It tells us their experiences on the island, those intense days together, were the most formative and consequential of their lives, and so they all wound up in this purgatory until they were all ready to reunite and go together.

It was, at the time, a controversial ending. People weren't satisfied with all the mythology mumbo-jumbo that explained (sort of) what the island was, and why the survivors of Oceanic 815 wound up where they did. And many people didn't seem to like that the big wrap up was that everyone was dead and they moved on together. I could poke holes in it all day (Sayid winding up in eternity with Shannon instead of Nadja seems more a punishment than reward, but I digress) but it's hard to escape the emotionality of the reunion.  As for the mythology, I get it...it explains a lot, but it also raises a lot of questions as to why Jacob would orchestrate events the way he did. But much in the same way a believer would have to question god's motives for all the pain and suffering we experience, a Lost fan needs to go through this process with its belief system. You can be a zealot, you can be an agnostic questioner, or you can be an atheistic denier, and they're all fine ways to approach it.

There's many reasons seasons 4-6 are lesser than season 1-3. The puzzle box nature of those first three seasons is so compelling and consumable. It's a constant feed of questions and answers with more questions attached. Seasons 4-6 calm down, raising fewer questions, and taking more time and care with answers...and the answers are more and more often posed as revelations. It also winds up being a little less character-driven and a little more story-driven and world-building. 

My biggest complaint is how wantonly it dispenses with all the other survivors of 815, all the no-names and mixed-up background actor faces. There were 48 survivors of the main cabin, and 12 survivors of the tail section, but by mid-way through season 6 there are about 10 left, and the big reunion features none of the "redshirts" that weren't part of the main cast at some point. No Scott or Steve, no Paolo or Nikki, no Frogurt or Arzst.

For as much as the final three seasons are lesser-than, I still like them quite a bit, and I get a beautiful sense of closure from the finale that brings me to tears (but happy tears, unlike the violently angry tears at the end of season 5...IYKYK). The series opens with Jack's eyelid opening as he lays among the bamboo having survived the crash and been thrown from the plane. It was Vincent the dog who rouses him. In the end, a wounded and dying Jack walks back to the bamboo, lays down, and Vincent (the good boy he is) lays down beside Jack, and we close on Jack's eyelid dropping.  The symmetry is gorgeous and the imagery iconic.

This solidified it, I will be a Lost fan now and forever. I absolutely acknowledge its weaknesses but forever embrace its strength and beauty.

Favourite characters (s4-6):
1) Juliette
2) Sawyer
3) Hurley
4) Desmond
5) Lapidus/Ben (Ben becomes a really enjoyable chaos agent)

Least favourite characters (s4-6)
1) Tina Fey
2) The round faced guy
3) John Hawkes (kinda useless and a waste of John Hawkes)
4) Jack
5) Kate/ Keamy (I mean, I love to hate him)

Favourite Arcs/Stories (S1-3):
Dharma Time
"The Constant"
"Ab Aeterno"
"Across the Sea" 

Sunday, March 16, 2025

KWIF: Companion (+2)

KWIF=Kent's Week in Film.

This Week:
Companion (2025, d. Drew Hancock- rental)
The Poseidon Adventure (1972, d. Ronald Neame - HollywoodSuite)
Juggernaut (1974, d. Richard Lester - Amazonprime)

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Toasty warned me that everything  is a spoiler for Companion. The trailer, the synopsis, the bloody poster. Even saying there is a "spoiler" for Companion is a spoiler. It's kind of impossible to really have a big twist for an audience these days that doesn't give it all away.  Audiences are too story-literate and too savvy, they're going to figure these things out pretty quick.  You can't hang a film on a twist, you've got to have something more going on...and I think Companion never really set out to deceive the audience, well, not in the way you think.  So if you don't want to know anything...stop reading now. Skip past this and head down to The Poseidon Adventure review.

Ready?

There are actually a few twists in Companion, only the first of which I will spoil, because it is the most obvious. We first meet Iris (Sophie Thatcher, Yellowjackets) in the grocery store, she has a meet cute with Josh (Jack Quaid, Star Trek: Lower Decks) and Iris' voice over tells us how much it means to her to fall in love, and also reveals that she's going to kill him by the end of the film. 

this is a spoiler
That's not a spoiler.

We next see Iris waking up in the passenger seat of a self-driving car, Josh beside her, venturing down a long driveway to a modernist forest retreat, the home of Russian businessman Sergey (Rupert Friend). Josh's friend Kat (Megan Suri, Never Have I Ever) is Sergey's mistress, and she has invited him, Iris, and their friend Eli (Harvey Guillén, Blue Beetle) and his boyfriend Patrick (Lukas Gage, Fargo)  for a weekend getaway. Iris is nervous. She doesn't think Josh's friends like her... specifically Kat.

The next morning Iris finds herself alone with Sergey at the lakeside and he propositions her. Next thing we see is Iris in the doorway of the house covered in blood, a knife in her hand, and Josh shuts her down. Yep, Iris is a robot.  Technically a therapy bot ... that you can have sex with. But Iris is unaware that she's a robot until now and it explodes her world.

The twists and tuns here are pretty fun, and thinly allegorical. It's a film that villainizes toxic masculinity and white entitlement for entertainment purposes without really examining its root causes. It's not interested in where this mindset comes from, just that it's awful and needs to go away by violent means if necessary. It also isn't terribly interested in exploring whether the AI's of Companion are sentient or not, and what rights and or freedoms they should have. It's squarely on the side of Iris and she's who we're rooting for. 

The movie tells us who Iris is from very early on. The way Thatcher walks as Iris is very mechanical, very deliberate. There are turns of phrase, like "it's just the way that you're wired", and Josh's pet name for Iris is "Beep-boop".  When they exit the self-driving car, Josh is reminded to thank the car for the drive.  

This isn't M3GAN, or the Terminator or Battlestar Galactica, even. It's a lighthearted romp that plays with the same suspense-horror tropes of "the final girl gets taken to a secluded location and bad things happen" that seems to be a legit subgenre at this point (recent in mind is Blink Twice), as well as the revenge of the abused or manipulated woman (see also Blink Twice). I was also reminded of Fresh, the way it tries to manipulate you into thinking it's a romance, with its opening meet-cute only to give way to its horror tropes  There's no scares to be had. It's not a horror at all, but it is very entertaining, with some stupendous jump cuts that fill in gaps and provide some good gags, and Thatcher is really likeable and easy to root for.  

---

It's New Year's Eve. The cruise liner Poseidon is in its final voyage sailing to Italy? Israel? (It's Athens, but you had to look that up).  It is being decommissioned and is on its way to the scrapyard.  It's been delayed a few days, and the representative of the new owners wants full speed ahead, even though the captain (Leslie Nielson) implores him that the ship needs to take on more ballast. But money is burning and the can be replaced.
As the New Year's countdown begins, reports of an earthquake resulting in a tsunami that will, in short time, quite literally flips the ship...because it couldn't take on more ballast.

The captain will have no time for "I told you so" to the corporate overlord. The flip is sudden and violent. The majority of the ship's population was in the ballroom, and they're now Lionel Ritchie-ing it (he means they're now dancing on the ceiling, except, there's no more dancing). There's a battle of the wills as the "rebel Reverend" Scott (Gene Hackman) and the ship's purser plead to the survivors to follow them. The reverend wishes to move the people to the hull ("God wants brave souls, not quitters"), since it's upside down, that is where rescue will come, while the purser implores the people to stay put and wait for rescue.

In the end only a handful of people follow the reverend.  There's the NYC police detective (Ernest Borgnine) and his new bride, a former sex worker (Stella Stevens). There's the elderly married couple on their first vacation since retiring (Shelly Winters and Jack Albertson). There's the teenager and her boat obsessed younger brother (Pamela Sue Martin and Eric Shea).  There's the Scottish waiter (Roddy McDowall), the hippie folk singer (Carol Lynley), and the lifelong confirmed bachelor (Red Buttons). They make their perilous journey, and not everyone is going to survive.

The Poseidon Adventure is an exceptionally well-made but also exceptionally formulaic film. At the time it probably felt pretty fresh, based of the novel of the same name by Paul Gallico, but the conceit of gathering an ensemble and forging through disaster has become so by-the-book that even one of the first ones still seems pretty derivative.

Constant contention between Hackman and Borgnine creates such manufactured and meaningless drama in the face of crises. The weird obsession teen Martin has with forty-something Hackman is illogical. Lynley's hysterical singer and helpless femme is perhaps my least favourite trope in all of cinema, and Button's is at least 30 years older than her and being a gentleman the whole time, but still he's making a move on her.  And poor Winters is really, really not served well here for all her kindness. Plus, Hackman's self-description of himself as a rebel preacher is ..just...a ridiculous moment among many.

And yet, for all its cliches and corny flaws, The Poseidon Adventure remains a cracking adventure that spins its wheels appropriately for the first act, introducing all the players until the disaster hits and then gets moving and only stops to have those quick little motivational heart-to-hearts that these types of movies have to have to deepen the bond between characters.

It's not fine dining, and it's empty calories in the end, but enjoyable in the consumption.

---

After The Poseidon Adventure I was looking for another '70's disaster flick, and happened across the alluringly-titled Juggernaut. Unintentionally it turned out to be another cruise liner-centric flick.

In this case, a ship, the Britannic, has sailed out to sea, when its owners receive a call from a man identifying themself as "Juggernaut" notifyies them that many barrels of explosives have been placed on board, timed to explode in 24 hours and booby-trapped in various ways. He demands a ransom, a modest sum of 500,000 pounds, in exchange for which he will give them the designs for deactivating the bombs.  As a show of his skill he sets off two of them.

The story takes place between the ship and land. On the ship we meet many of the crew and passengers (including the captain, Omar Sharif, his mistress Shirley Knight, and the ship's social director played by an absolutely delightful Roy Kinnear, just trying to make lemonade out of lemons) and on land the investigative team from Scotland Yard plus the cruise owners (including Anthony Hopkins and Ian Holm) are dealing with the Juggernaut situation, as he keeps calling with further instructions and taunts.

In a surprisingly visual sequence, the navy air drop a bomb disposal unit into the ocean near the ship, led by Richard Harris. The deactivation sequences are tense, because it's clear the bomb maker is as good, if not better at making bombs than these men are at dismantling them.

It is a film that is two parts procedural and one part civilian drama, and different parts work better at different times. The first act is a little too unassuming, as it sets up the pieces it doesn't really do a great job of providing a hook to the people we're spending time with (there's a seasick mother and her two rambunctious kids who probably could have been largely cut ), and as much as I like the romantic intrigue between Sharif and Knight, it never really makes sense amidst the two more intense aspects of the film.

Even the hunt for Juggernaut is at times underwhelming, in no small part due to the modest direction of Richard Lester (Superman II) and the entire lack of a score. It's a very British film, a bit obsessed with procedure and bureaucracy, and not all that concerned with flash.

But the moment the parachuting sequence happens, Juggernaut announces itself as something much more than a Poseidon Adventure knock-off, and though it is a very deliberate film, it's star-studded cast ultimately delivers a pretty compelling, if subdued thriller.

3 Short Paragraphs (Or Not): Companion

2025, Draw Hancock (feature debut; writer Suburgatory) -- download

Let's get this spoiler out of the way -- yes, she's a fuck-bot. Their words, not mine.

This is yet another one of those movies that expects you to have come in cold, not seen the trailers, not even seen the poster, which all reveal she is a bot. Or maybe its just a conceit in these kinds of movies wherein they don't give AF whether you have been exposed to plot spoilers and just make the movie with the familiar plot construction and reveal, as one would expect.

And it was revealed that Kent indeed was going to come into this movie cold, having been told by someone podcast related to view it without ANY exposure not even the above. Still, I wonder how long it will take him to guess what is coming, from the opening scenes.

Anywayz.

It starts with Iris's (Sophie Thatcher, Prospect) recollection of how she met Josh (Jack Quaid, The Boys), their meet-cute, how perfect it was, how much she loves him, and... how she ends up killing him. From the get go, Iris doesn't look quite right, maybe just in comparison sitting next to schlumpy Josh, as they small-talk during the driverless-car trip. She has a precise look: vintage looking mini dress, hair band, distinctive but understated makeup choices. She is also anxious about the weekend away, giving you the sense his friends don't really like her. Since you did she the movie poster and/or the trailer, you might snicker because she doesn't know she's a bot, and his friends might not like the idea of him bringing his fuck-bot to a weekend getaway. But who knows, maybe robot-girlfriends are a thing in this driverless-car near future, and not just mere appliances better left at home, plugged in next to the bedside table.

Anywayz, yes, there is tension at the house they arrive. Patrick (Lukas Gage, Road House) and Eli (Harvey Guillén, Reacher) are just lovely, PDA heavy but warm and accepting. But Kat (Megan Suri, It Lives Inside) and her douchey boyfriend Sergey (Rupert Friend, Canary Black), who owns this remote country lake house, are a little more distant. Kat distinctly doesn't like Iris, and Iris knows it, and we know Kat likely doesn't like a lot of people. But everyone loves Josh. But you get the idea they were college friends, when they were all very different people.

And then Iris kills Sergey. He says that Kat gave him permission to have sex with her, but how is she supposed to respond to that -- remember, we are not supposed to "know" she's a bot yet. He forces himself on her, she knocks him away and he responds by trying to strangle her. But, Iris found a pen knife mysteriously placed in her pocket. Next scene, she is covered in blood and looking very distraught and upset.

"Iris, go to sleep."

Yah she shuts down cuz she's a bot. A fuck-bot that Josh bought, and then jail-broke in order to kill Sergey, who Josh and Kat have conspired to kill, so they can all take his money. Sergey presents as an evil Russian oligarch / gangster type, but really he's just a douche, and Kat is his self-serving mistress. Except the plan doesn't go as... planned, when Iris gets hold of Josh's smart phone with all his controls over her, dials up her own intelligence, and then plots to escape.

I use the term fuck-bot, which is an incredibly contemptible term since everything we see about Iris, and eventually Patrick, is that they can be sentient, but even if these androids were designed to play a comforting companion role in someone's life, that they can have sex says everything about who would usually want one. The movie is not about exploring the morality & psychology of such choices, as its entire tone is dark-comedy, wherein Iris is the heroine, and Josh, a toxic misogynist, is most definitely the villain. I mean, no matter the means, they were plotting to kill someone. Iris plays the part of both patsy and weapon.

The style of the movie follows all the patterns of those thrillers, like Becky, where someone is trapped in the woods, and has to use their wiles, and violence, to get away. I would have preferred if the sub-genre stylings were the window dressing, instead of the bot and AI and technology exploration being so, but sometimes a movie generates the best questions by leaving them to you to ask.

I really liked this one.

Kent is about to publish his post about the movie, so we'll leave it to the Comments to compare.  

Thursday, March 13, 2025

3 Short Paragraphs (Or Not): Love Hurts

2025, Jonathan Eusebio (stunt guy; The Fall Guy) -- download

Spoiler. I am going to forgive the fuck out of this movie. Well, mostly.

When I wrote about Everything Everywhere All at Once, I commented on Key Huy Quan range in playing a couple of different universe's versions of Waymond. I absolutely, unabashedly loved him in that movie, and while I remain unfamiliar with his work after The Goonies (hint: there's not that much), a fan was made. And just like his being in Loki S2 was a little on the nose (another multiverse show; consequentially, I wrote about the aforementioned movie with a notation [MV1] as if I intended on revisiting many other multiverse properties, but never did), his role in American Born Chinese was a little on the nose for Quan's acting experience, as a stereotyped Asian American -- after being the "iconic" Short Round, how could he not be. So, how to follow these up? Some money, I assume, via a middling effort comedy action thriller playing up on his range as well as his (realistically, non-existent) stereotypical connection to Asian martial arts genre.

But still, I really enjoyed him in this. I also feel it should have, could have been, more.

Marvin Gable (Ke Huy Quan, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom) is a real estate agent who believes his own hype -- fully and completely. He treats each client with care, telling them, very sincerely, that he is providing them their forever home. His staff and coworkers love him, as he takes just as much care with them, and his boss Cliff (Sean Astin, The Goonies) truly sees Marvin as not just his greatest earner, but a brother.

Except, Marvin has a brother, a man by the name of "Knuckles" (Daniel Wu, Into the Badlands) and years ago Marvin, who was a very very different man then, was tasked with dealing with a lawyer who betrayed them, one Rose Carlisle (Ariana DeBose, Kraven the Hunter). Except, Marvin was in love with her. She disappeared, and Marvin left his employ with his brother, as feared enforcer, to start a different life.

Except, years later, Rose has returned, and it unleashes a chain of events that unravel Marvin's new successful life, and with tragic consequences, until he has to face his past. 

There is a lot of fun to be had in this violent movie obsessed with Valentine's Day. There are colourful characters, such as poetry quoting killer Raven (Mustafa Shakir, Cowboy Bebop), who catches the eye of Marvin's cynical, depressed assistant Ashley (Lio Tipton, Warm Bodies), and a bond is formed. Except, the movie has stylistic choices that slide the spectrum. Shot in Winnipeg, that provides it a small, low-key gangster culture feel, which worked so well in Nobody (which has thematic connections to this movie as well), but it also wants to slide into a slick, almost nouveau Hong Kong martial arts flick feel, but that doesn't work as well.

Middling. That's my word of late for these decent attempt, not 100% successful, kind of movies.

Of note, if you click the "Winnipeg tag" you only get two movies (well, now three after I click Publish), but if you search Winnipeg, you get many more. And most of them are Hallmarkies. Nothing to be said about it, just wanted to note it.

Monday, March 10, 2025

KWIF: Mickey 17 (+4)

 KWIF=Kent's Week(ish) in Film.

This Week:
Mickey 17 (2025, d. Bong Joon Ho - in theatre)
Bravestarr: The Legend (1988, d. Tom Tataranowicz - YouTube)
Red Rooms (2023, d. Pascal Plante - Crave)
Problemista (2023, d. Julio Torres - Crave)
Wicked Little Letters (2023, d. Thea Sharrock - Crave)

---

Mickey 17 is a satirical sci-fi romp from the fantastic Korean filmmaker Bong Joon Ho. His vision for the film is one that is delightfully odd, replete with director Bong's usual nuanced touches and social commentary, but this is the first of his films that I've seen where he seems like he's wrestling with the construction of the narrative.   

The plot finds Robert Pattinson's Mickey on the run from particularly sadistic loan sharks after his macron business failed, and his only hope of outrunning his fate is to get on board one of the long-distant colonizing space ships (as is noted, the environment of Earth is becoming increasingly uninhabitable and so competition for spots on these ships is fierce). Mickey's got no particular special skills, knowledge, or influence so his only option is to take on the designation of "Expendable". As such, Mickey's physiology, personality and memories are downloaded and should Mickey die in the process of doing his jobs (all jobs which are all but guaranteed to kill him, such as being the guinea pig for catching the virii on their new planet, and for testing vaccines to inoculate against them).

There is a tremendous exposition dump in the first act of the film that would feel interminably long if it weren't so entertaining.  A lesson we've learned from, like, time loop movies, is dying over and over again can make good comedy fodder.  It also squares us up for the politics of the era (not too dissimilar from our own) and that the spaceship Mickey is aboard is led by failed presidential candidate, and definite center of a cult-of-personality, Kenneth Marshall.  As played by Mark Ruffalo, Marshall is like a mix of Trump, Musk and televangelist Jim Bakker (with Toni Collette being his sauce-obsessed, intellectually superior co-conspirator, ala Tammy Faye). Marshall is an absolute clown of a human being, an absurd egocentric who has failed upward with the support a gullible populace. He's uncomfortably comedic, and just as reprehensible. Ruffalo puts on a good show.  

When we first meet Mickey, he's the 17th version. He has fallen in an ice cave and left for dead. But the native potato bugs rescue him.  Being a man made of soup, he just thinks his meat is bad, and the potato bugs rejected him. Returning to the ship, he comes to find that his replacement, Eighteen, has already been made, and the woman who's always by his side, Nasha (Naomi Ackie) is already cozied up with him. Eighteen is a much brasher, no-nonsense version of Mickey, while Seventeen is much more timid and reserved. The two of them, through a series of increasingly odd events, spark a revolution aboard their ship, but first spark outrage being Multiples, an affront against God and all that's good apparently (as a soul can't be shared between two bodies, or so they say).

Following the massive international and award-winning success of Parasite in 2019, Bong Joon Ho got a budgetary upgrade for his follow-up, Mickey 17. The film's price tag at nearly $120 million is well over double his next most expensive film (Okja, for the record) and triple that of Snowpiercer which played like a blockbuster, but was made pretty modestly.  In Mickey 17, it's all up there on the screen, though. The sets are plentiful, and feel all of a whole, creating a world aboard a spaceship that is tangible and lived-in. The alien planet that is the destination is a desolate and frigid place populated by a race of gigantic potato bugs, and, yeah, it's all well-realized too.  Could Director Bong have made this on a slimmer budget? Absolutely, but it wouldn't look nearly as good.

Pattinson and Ackie are great together, and I loved how Pattinson seemingly channelled Joe Pesci from Home Alone for Seventeen but Joe Pesci from Casino for Eighteen.  I enjoyed watching the movie, quite a bit, it is so fun and weird, but I didn't come out loving it as I had hoped. Nothing sticks out as particularly bad, or egregious, but it doesn't quite all gel together smoothly. There's not really a clear message to the picture, as it seems to be working through a multitude of societal critiques.  I think were this a film from the 1980s and I'd just seen it for the first time, I would be just agog, absolutely blown away by it, so maybe I just need to give it a little time. In the end, even if it is more of a lark than another Oscars-worthy movie from Director Bong, it's still an entertaining picture that should be worth a revisit.

---

The 1980's were the golden age of action figures. G.I. Joe, Masters of the Universe, Star Wars, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and Transformers were the top tier "boys toys" lines of the era, bolstered by syndicated cartoon series or big franchise movies.  These major properties still live today not just out of nostalgia, but a rich sense of world building that keeps sparking the imagination of young and old alike.

The pervasiveness of these toy lines was in part due to the loosening of restrictions around advertising to children, and so the accompanying weekly (or daily, in some cases) cartoon became a necessity when launching any new toy line.  It was no guarantee to success, however, and each also-ran toyline has its own unique story to tell (see the excellent pop-culture histories on the Secret Galaxy youtube channel).

Filmation, makers of the fine He-Man and the Masters of the Universe and She-Ra: Princess of Power cartoons wanted to find success with their own ideas, not just producing cartoons based another company's intellectual property. Long story short (again, watch Secret Galaxy's recent retrospective), Filmation brought Bravestarr, a mash up of nearly everything popular in the 80's -- sci-fi, westerns, magic, and superheroes (it only needed dinosaurs) -- to Mattel, and the toy company ran with it... but too fast for Filmation. The plan was for Bravestarr's origin story to debut in theatres in the summer of 1987 along with the toys, followed by the ongoing series in the fall to bolster continued sales of the toys, but Mattel jumped the gun, excited to get the toys on shelves for Christmas 1986...where they died on the vine.

The cartoon series debuted on time, in the fall of '87, but the movie was delayed, and released in 1988 with little to no fanfare, the toy line already languishing on shelves and Mattel having moved on. Filmation as a studio was sunk and Bravestarr: The Legend was all but forgotten (in fact it was only upon watching Secret Galaxy's recent video that I even learned there was a Bravestarr movie).

Did it deserve its fate? The toys have become a bit of a cult classic, certain toys reaching pretty astronomical prices in the nostalgia-laden aftermarket, but unlike the big names of the 80's, there's been no revival for Bravestarr (maybe in part because licensing is a bit of a clusterfudge). But having caught the feature (it's on youtube), I have to say...I would have freaking loved this as a kid, and I quite like it now.

There aren't a lot of toy lines or multimedia properties, even to this day, with a person of colour as the lead, and most lines feature no Indigenous characters at all. Bravestarr is a series built around a futuristic society where a Native American is the titular hero.  "The Legend" is Bravestarr's origin story, and it starts with the history of Bravestarr's people, a civilization of Native Americans with very advanced technology and magics, being assaulted by Stampede, a power-mad invading force that wants to take the civilization's power for its own. I don't know if the allegory of colonial genocide was the intention, or if they just kind of stumbled into it, but it's there. 

Bravestarr's people escape to the stars as the planet is literally destroyed by Stampede's greedy thirst for power (again with the allegory), and only settle again when a new colony on the planet "New Texas" is formed as a result of the "gold rush" like atmosphere for the precious fuel jewel Kerium. But the planet is already besieged by Stampede and his proxy, Tex Hex. So the mayor of New Texas sends for help, which comes in the form of Bravestarr, the newly recruited galactic marshall, joined by J.B. the tough woman judge (and love interest) appointed to the planetary county.  He's there to clean things up, but he fails...at first.

It takes Bravestarr reconnecting with his roots, granting him great powers (strength of the bear, speed of the puma, eyes of the hawk, and ears of the wolf, all very nicely visualized in the show), and joining forces with the indigenous Prairie People of the planet that he is properly able to take on the evil forces New Texas faces.

In total, "The Legend" is an unevenly told story, waffling in and out of exposition, at one point running through a montage of, I presume, all the action figures available to buy. It makes use of the same well-trod 80's mold of good-vs-evil toy cartoons, and of the equally well-trod origin story formulae (that would get a workout for a good long while to come). But at the same time, the combination of influences and genres does make for a unique scenario that is quite enticing, and the animation is, often, quite stellar. Filmation's cartoons of the 80s were always a cut above. They were know to reuse animation to cut costs, but their beautiful background paintings and live-model character references always made their work stand out. Here, it's animation meant for cinematic release, so it's at another level to what we're used to seeing out of the studio's TV output. Anime influences can be felt in the work, and the visualization of Stampede is an homage to the classic Disney moment in Fantasia, "The Night on Bald Mountain".  It's all really a cut above.

The story ebbs and flows, showing signs that the Filmation team isn't fully comfortable working in feature length storytelling, but for the most part it's a satisfying watch (in spite of a frequently grating synthesized orchestra score). What gives me pause is the general conceit of using non-descript Native American culture as backdrop for a sci-fi-superhero-western meant to sell toys, a literal commodification of the culture. It would feel less...icky... if there were more Native Americans directly involved with the whole production. Bravestarr is voiced by a white man (Pat Fraley) for cripes sake! Representation matters, not just for what we seen on screen, but who is telling the stories behind the scenes. From my limited caucasian perspective, it seems like none of Bravestarr is meant as offensive, but it's also not doing the good work either. I would love for a First Nations or Native American creative team to revive this property with authenticity. I can imagine a Sterlin Harjo production would be pretty phenomenal. Maybe it's possible if the Masters of the Universe movie does well next year, creating a surge of toy property movies. 

---

Red Rooms (or Les chambres rouge in its native Quebecois tongue) opens on the face of a attractive woman sleeping. Her surroundings are grey, and she is somewhat bundled up. The colour saturation is almost non-existent, intoning the chill of her surroundings. After waking she bundles up her blanket and makeshift pillow, and determinedly walks down the street. Her full-length wool coat is tailored perfectly, she looks far too beautiful and put together to be unhoused...but we don't know. We next see her entering a building, being scanned, having her possessions checked at security, and once through she finds her destination...a smallish courtroom where she sits in the back of three aisles. 

We learn that a case is just beginning in this courtroom, with the prosecution and defence delivering their opening arguements. The case involves the kidnapping, assault, mutilation of three teenage girls, and the prosecution alerts the jury to the fact that there is video footage of two of the three murders that were filmed and sold on the dark web. It's a grisly story, and as the lawyers deliver their speeches, the camera floats around the courtroom, sometimes fixating on the attorney speaking, or the one who is not, or the accused sitting in a plexiglass box looking bored, or on the woman we met in the opening frame of the film.

This is Kelly-Anne (Juliette Gariepy), she is ostensibly the film's protagonist, but for much of the film she is basically unknowable. Kelly-Anne is, we learn, not homeless, she just camps out each evening nearby the courthouse in order to keep her seat in the small viewers galley.  She is a model, she is also an avid (and successful) online poker player, and she is very web/computer savvy (she hacked her off-the-shelf AI assistant and operates it off a private server). 

Kelly-Anne, we see, fixates on the mother of one of the victims in court, more than she even leers at the accused, and she seems slightly paranoid when the crown's cybersecurity expert looks at her too long. We just never understand why. She is caught by press coming out of the courtroom, but she doesn't seem interested in speaking to them, unlike the other young woman, Clementine (Laurie Babin) who ventured in from Northern Quebec to watch the trial with an unhealthy fixation on the man on trial.

Clementine thinks she's found a kindred spirit in Kelly-Anne, but the model/hacker gives nothing away. She never confirms which side she's on, just that it seems very important to her to be in attendance at the trial.

The score to Red Rooms is exceptionally minimal, to the point that the soundtrack of the film, anytime we're in Kelly-Anne's high-rise apartment, is simply the whistling of the wind as it scrapes the side of the building. The possibilities of what Kelly-Anne's interest in the film are plenty... like, was she an early survivor of the accused, or is she like Clem just obsessed with him, or is she a true crime junkie, or was she an accomplice or somehow involved, or even the murderer. Whenever Gariepy supremely reserved performance threatens to tell on her, she does something else -- sometimes overt, sometimes nuanced -- that completely undermines prior assumptions. Her behaviour gets pretty whackadoo late in the film, and it's not entirely certain if it's performance, and if so, for whom.

Red Rooms quietly made some 2024 top ten lists of critics I follow, and from the capsule reviews I was expecting something more... conventionally thrilling, and was so happy to find that it got my heart racing because this curiosity that is Kelly-Anne is such an unknown quantity.

This is, as I like to say, a deliberately paced film, and definitely not for the impatient. It makes you squirm because of subject matter, and the time it spends contemplating it, and the time spent with these people who are perhaps too interested in it.  It is an unsettling film despite having no overtly grotesque visuals, just the insinuation of them, of knowing they exist, and sometimes hearing vague audio and seeing peoples' reactions to them. If it is a film commenting on anything, it is our society's fascination with murders and murderers, and how often, in the process of examining this fascination, victims and their stories are forgotten.

---

Julio Torres as a comedian, performer, writer, and artist is a very distinct voice. It's not just that he was born and raised in El Salvador, nor that he is a queer performer, although both are very much a part of his presence, whether on stage or screen. No, what makes Torres so distinct is he is an unapologetic weirdo whose sense of humour can best be described as obliquely surreal. His comedy special, My Favourite Shapes, in which he sits in the center of a conveyor belt that enters and exits off stage behind him, and dispenses oddball toys and abstractly shaped objects which he then discusses as he presents them to the audience by way of a projector...well, it's one of the most unique comedy routines I've seen in a long time. It was bizarre, strangely frivolous and yet seemed deeply personal and spoke much to Torres' voice and how he sees the world.  He's also the creator of Los Espookys, the hilarious Spanish language HBO show about Mexican hipsters who put their homegrown special effects makeup to work via a haunting-for-hire enterprise, and as a writer on SNL he wrote one of my all-time favourite sketches, "Wells for boys".

Problemista is Torres' first directorial effort which at once seems both personal and yet distant from connecting to real emotions. It can be a challenge for creators who excel in the surreal to ground their work with the relatable. They are capable in inviting you into their unique point of view, but have a much harder time with helping you understand them.

In Problemista, Torres plays Alejandro, a sensitive young man who finds himself in New York with the desire to work as a toy designer for Hasbro, but instead winds up, through happenstance, being the personal assistant to an artist's widow, Elizabeth, played by Tilda Swinton. What a get for a debut feature.

Alejandro, facing deportation, is left dangling on the end of a thread as Elizabeth yo-yos him around. He's desperate enough to work for this woman who is, at best, unhinged, at worse severely mentally unwell. She is loud and irrational and seems to get her way primarily because people will do what she wants just to get away from her (or get her away from them). She seems to live in another reality and definitely not interested in being part of the polite society we'll talk about in our next film.

Swinton delivers a tour-de-force performance, sweeping into every scene as Elizabeth, sucking all the air out of the room, and then telling everyone around her it's not enough and that they need to give her more. I've worked for a woman like this some time ago.  She was a person who lived in a world that only rotated around them, and considered other people infrequently, if at all, unless they could serve her agenda in some way. Elizabeth is a tad more extreme than this ex-boss of mine, but not by much. People like Elizabeth exist, and I've seen them. They're awful.

Torres' demure performance as Alejandro, complete with an affected shuffle-step walk, and a shrinking inside himself physicality, is one meant to be dominated by Swinton, and pretty much anyone else he encounters.  But unlike The Devil Wears Prada, where an assistant discovers their absolutely horrible boss is human human afterall, there's no such discovery for Alejandro. In fact, he seems to see Elizabeth in a light nobody else does, he seems to understand her and her motivations and her objectives, somehow...and he actually learns from her how to be more confident and assertive. 

It's not a hard film to like, but it's a difficult film to love, because Alejandro's demureness is so easily overshadowed. It's a fine line between playing a shrinking violet character and disappearing as a screen presence. Torres keeps the film, and Alejandro's life just weird enough to remain interesting. I was expecting this to be a much weirder film. The opening moments, taking us through young Alejandro's toy obsessed childhood with his artist/designer mother, is visually very vibrant and odd, but it's fleeting. Torres' New York (probably for budgetary reasons) isn't nearly as surreal. There are only glimmers of Torres' inventiveness, like his toy pitches to Hasbro, his visualization of the rigged system of American immigration, and a decidedly uncomfortable personification of Craigslist. 

I was hoping Torres would explode out of the gate as our next Michel Gondry, but it looks like we're just going to have to be patient.

---

My grandmother - my mom's mom - was a woman of propriety. Things had to be a certain way, like the way a table was set, or a bed was made, or a home was kept. We had to behave and speak a certain way in being part of a polite society. Many subjects were not to be discussed, and most definitely certain words were not to be said. I recall having my filthy mouth washed out with soap once or twice (the lesson being "don't swear around Grandma").

I considered this propriety to be a generational thing, but upon contemplating the message of Wicked Little Letters, it is much more the product of sexism and abuse. It's not generational, it's cultural. The expectation of women as subservient, of taking care of cooking and cleaning and otherwise staying out of the way. In this type of culture, women are barely permitted freedom of thought or expression, they certainly aren't permitted education or agency. There are seemingly more of these cultures around the world today than aren't.

Set in the southern coastal English town of Littlehampton post-World War I, Wicked Little Letters, is the true-ish story of decorum being scandalously broken by way of a series of wicked, nasty, filthy letters delivered to one Miss Edith Swan (Olivia Coleman, Secret Invasion), at this point a spinster still living at home in her mid-50's, still under the thumb of her controlling father (Timothy Spall, Chicken Run).

The most likely culprit is their next door neighbour Rose Gooding (Jessie Buckley, Men), a widow and single mom, and also an Irish immigrant and a real liberated woman, whose no-holds-barred, profane way of speaking bemuse and shock in equal measure. As Rose states, though, she has no reservations about expressing herself, so why would she resort to writing anonymous letters to say what she would already say out loud?

The scandal hits national level, and Rose is an easy scapegoat. The film is very clear about the hypocrisy of this mass propriety, as the men expect women to behave a certain way, to be unsullied by any awareness of lewd or profane words or acts, and yet in closed quarters the men talk this way about such things with jovial frivolity, as "Woman Police Constable" Gladys Moss (Anjana Vasan, We Are Lady Parts) witnesses. She is torn between "knowing her place" as the town's first woman officer, and actually serving justice, when her male counterpart is an idiot and her superior is lazy. ACAB, man.

It's difficult to talk about the film without revealing the writer of the letters, so we'll discuss more some of the subject matter after the Spoilers cut, but just to say that it's not actually a mystery that the film holds close to its chest and it reveals the answer to the audience (but not the characters in story) about the midway point.

Coleman and Buckley are both phenomenal actresses, and they're both excellent here.  I don't think I've ever seen Coleman deliver a bad performance, and she is has a lot to do here, as Edith is torn between the expectations of her from her father, her lapsed friendship with Rose, and the notoriety that she's received as a result of being a victim of the letters. Demeanour shifts are frequent, and Coleman has mastered her control of nuanced facial expressions. I don't know if I've seen Buckley in a role like this before, where she's sort of comic relief, but also an emotional lynchpin. She has a zeal, a liveliness, and an untamed natuer that flies in the face of the stiff-upper-lip/well-I-never crowd that is so delightfully appealing. She is the antidote to the buckled-down, boring existence of Littehampton.

The film utilizes colour-blind casting which is in equal measure admirable and distracting since nothing is ever mentioned about anyone's race or background. I know I was expecting the elder Swan, when ranting about his neighbour Rose, to bring up her Black boyfriend in a derogatory way, but he never does. The film holds squarely in its lane in examining sexism. Even its critique of the police, and their structures winds up rather toothless in the end.  It's a film that says much, and rewardingly, but had the potential to say even more.

[Toastypost]

**SPOILERS**


It's really to no one's surprise when we find out that the writer of the letters to Edith Swan is none other than Edith herself.  The letters seemed to be spurred by befriending Rose, and revealing in her liberation, but then having that friendship quashed by her father. So she, in secrets, begins to liberate herself by way of writing the most foulest things she can think of. That those thoughts are directed at herself is a product of a caged woman loathing her inability to escape the cage, and it's telling that when the letters extend beyond her, that they are directed at the other women of the town, she's admonishing them all for their upholding of the systems that keep them down. It's equally telling that she never writes a letter to the person she fears the most, her father.  Edith's greatest sin is not writing the letters, but letting Rose take the fall. In her admiration (and emulation) of Rose, she also cant escape her patriarchal thinking, that Rose's liberties as a woman are somehow criminal and deserve to be punished and reigned in. Afterall, why should Rose be allowed to curse and cavort so freely when Edith cannot?

It is a bittersweet ending when Edith is found out and sentenced and carted off to jail. She is a victim herself, afterall, and yet, being sent to prison allows her freedom from her father for the first time in her life. The downside is it is still jail, though, and whose to say she won't encounter a whole institution of men (and women) looking to subjugate her just like her Father?

I think back to my Grandmother, and it's distinctly possible she had a father who was somewhat like Edith's father, who demanded a certain discipline and propriety, and that her mother would have upheld such structures in the household [edit. not exactly a true assumption on my part, but generational trauma resonates in expectations and behavioural norms].  I know my Grandmother had husbands who were maybe less forcefully demanding, but expectant of such norms. My Grandmother also worked, she had a number of jobs throughout her life which began out of necessity, having fled an abusive relationship with two small children. Despite marrying again (and again) she retained a definite drive and work ethic, perhaps a desire to stand on her own two feet, to not need to rely upon a man financially. In her own ways, she broke free of the patriarchy despite being unable to let go of its legacy of teachings. She was a remarkable woman who led an impressively active life well into her late 80's before dementia robbed her of her resources, and I miss her.