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BLACK BAG

March 12, 2025 By Leave a Comment

BLACK BAG

BLACK BAG is a scathingly brilliant take on truth, lies, and the sanctity of marriage, and the perfect vehicle for Cate Blanchett and Michael Fassbender. A good marriage that is, such as the one enjoyed by George Woodhouse (Fassbender) and Kathryn St. Jean (Blanchett), British spies with the highest security clearance They are the perfect… Read More »

Tagged With: Britain, lie detector, lies, marriage, McGuffin, mordant humor, polygraph, spies, spy sattelite, truth

BORDERLANDS

August 11, 2024 By Leave a Comment

BORDERLANDS

There are some sins that are simply unforgivable, and wasting Cate Blanchett is one of them. Yet, that is precisely what BORDERLANDS, based on the video game, has done. This sub-par fantasy/sci-fi adventure features lackluster effects, static action sequences, and a rambling plot that manages to be both moribund and irksome at the same time. … Read More »

Tagged With: ancient alien technology, bounty hunter, explosives, overwhelming lethargy, post-apocalypse, uni-wheeled robot, video game

NIGHTMARE ALLEY

December 15, 2021 By Leave a Comment

NIGHTMARE ALLEY

Flames are never far from Stanton Carlisle (Bradley Cooper), starting with those lapping near, but not too near, his heels as he exits the house that he’s just set alight over the body he’s deposited beneath the floorboards. In Guillermo del Toro’s oneiric vision of William Lindsay Gresham’s 1946 novel, NIGHTMARE ALLEY. Notice, too, the… Read More »

Tagged With: based on a novel, carnival, con artist, mentalist, metaphor, mind reader

WHERE’D YOU GO, BERNADETTE

August 21, 2019 By Leave a Comment

WHERE’D YOU GO, BERNADETTE

Based on the novel by Maria Semple, WHERE’D YOU GO  BERNADETTE is a tale of artistic vision quashed by its run-ins with the crasser elements of reality, and the consequences of living the resulting inauthentic life with Cate Blanchett perfection as Bernadette, the eccentric anti-social wife of a Seattle Microsoft bigwig. Her skirmishes with her… Read More »

Tagged With: antarctic, architecture, artistic block, book to screen, mother-daughter, mudslide, Seattle

HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON: THE HIDDEN WORLD

February 24, 2019 By Leave a Comment

HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON: THE HIDDEN WORLD

Ah, the timeless tale of a boy and his dragon.  As recounted in HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON I and II, it was magical. Even more magical is that the final part of the trilogy, HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON: THE HIDDEN WORLD is the equal of the first two without being a repeat of either installment.

Tagged With: book to screen, flaming sword, hobgobbler, Light Fury, Night Fury, sequel. dragons

OCEAN’S 8

June 9, 2018 By Leave a Comment

OCEAN’S 8

So maybe you have a film franchise that is running out of steam.  Maybe one of the stars wants out. Maybe his character was killed off to accommodate that. Maybe an actress has an idea for reviving that franchise with some panache and a dash of ovarian power.  You can’t help thinking that one of… Read More »

Tagged With: caper, ex-boyfriend, ex-con, fashion, heist, Met Gala, parole, sequel

TRUTH

October 25, 2015 By Leave a Comment

TRUTH

James Vanderbilt’s TRUTH is a careful, disturbing dissection of the triumph of style over substance, flash over facts, insinuated itself, and then took over, television news. Based on the book Truth and Duty: The Press, the President, and the Privilege of Power by Mary Mapes, it examines that moment in history when the eponymous truth… Read More »

Tagged With: based on a true story, book to screen, Dan Rather, George W. Bush, investigative journalism, journalism, Mary Mapes, media, supersript, Texas Air National Guard, typewriter

THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES

January 4, 2015 By Leave a Comment

THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES

And so it is our last visit to Middle Earth, and a bittersweet one it is.  Peter Jackson’s finale to his pair of trilogies is a triumph of spectacle and humanity, notwithstanding that the human beings of the piece are not the main characters. It’s only flaw, and that is a relative one, is that… Read More »

Tagged With: books to film, cinema, fantasy, film, Ian McKellan, J.R.R. Tolkein, Martin Freeman, Peter Jackson, review, sequel

PONYO (GAKE NO UE NO PONYO)

October 21, 2014 By Leave a Comment

Hayao Miyasaki’s PONYO is a sweet-natured flight of fantasy that lacks any real sense of conflict or danger. It makes up for it, at least for the younger set, with a delightfully absurd internal logic that is perfectly keyed into the way small children see the world. All things are possible, including a little girl… Read More »

ROBIN HOOD

October 21, 2014 By Leave a Comment

Those hoping for a whiz-bang re-telling of the legend of merry men stealing from the rich and giving to the poor will be sorely disappointed with Ridley Scott’s ROBIN HOOD. This is an origins tale, one that starts slowly and, despite anxious and insistent hand-held camera work to give the illusion of drama, never rises… Read More »

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