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THE MINISTRY OF UNGENTLEMANLY WARFARE (2024) review

April 24, 2024

 

written by: Paul Tamasy, Eric Johnson, Arash Amel & Guy Ritchie
produced by: Jerry Bruckheimer, Guy Ritchie, Chad Oman, Ivan Atkinson & John Friedberg
directed by: Guy Ritchie
rated: R (for strong violence throughout and some language)
runtime: 120 min.
U.S. release date: April 19, 2024

 

Knowing that producer Jerry Bruckheimer is involved in a movie revolving around the Raid on Santorini, which took place in 1944 on April 24th (settle down – I’m not a history buff, I had to Wikipedia it), and that Guy Ritchie directs it, doesn’t quite instill confidence that this will be an accurate depiction of the events that transpired. The fact that “The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare” is an action spy comedy, instead of a tense nail-biter about a historical event you’ve probably never heard of, should foretell what’s to come. You will get what you expect here, and, most likely, curiosity about the actual events increases will be piqued. You’ll likely also wonder why this movie is littered with smirks and nonplussed quick-kill shots. Read more…

CIVIL WAR (2024) review

April 19, 2024

 

written by: Alex Garland
produced by: Gregory Goodman, Andrew Macdonald, Allon Reich
directed by: Alex Garland
rated: R (for strong violent content, bloody/disturbing images, and language throughout)
runtime: 109 min.
U.S. release date: April 12, 2024 (wide)

 

“Three hundred? Three hundred buys you a sandwich. We got ham or cheese.”

 

To crib from a popular internet meme with the kids these days, one doesn’t simply release a film titled “Civil War” in an election year where those two words have been cavalierly tossed about without expecting it to gin up some controversy. Have art and commerce become so intertwined that a very good filmmaker like Alex Garland actually wanted to make a movie that thought the more commercial route was in attempting to appeal to everyone? Not to say his past work wasn’t totally uncommercial, but he’s had no issue doing the divisive thing in the past. Read more…

SASQUATCH SUNSET (2024) review

April 19, 2024

 

written by: David Zellner
produced by: Lars Knudsen, Tyler Campellone, Nathan Zellner, David Zellner, George Rush, Jesse Eisenberg & David Harrari
directed by: Nathan Zellner and David Zellner
rated: R (for some sexual content, full nudity and bloody images)
runtime: 89 min.
U.S. release date: April 12, 2024 (limited) & April 19, 2024 (wide)

 

“Sasquatch Sunset” is a film that was probably more fun for the actors to make than it was for viewers to watch. But then again, that depends on the viewer. After all, there’s an audience for everything, and if you’re into a lot of sasquatch grunting and groaning, along with fornicating and defecating, well, this is for you. Read more…

HARD MILES (2024) review

April 19, 2024

 

written by: R.J. Daniel Hanna and Christian Sander
produced by:
directed by: R.J. Daniel Hanna
rated: PG-13 (for strong language, thematic content, suggestive references and some teen drinking)
runtime: 108 min.
U.S. release date: April 19, 2024

 

After working the festival circuit, “Hard Miles”, an American cycling drama based on a true story, is getting a theatrical release. It’s an inspiring story that most viewers will be unaware of, which is why some of the best sports movies are made. It’s also why some of the best sports movies aren’t about the sport, which is why they resonate with any viewer. Read more…

DEEP SKY (2023) review

April 17, 2024

 

written by: Nathaniel Kahn
produced by: Nathaniel Kahn and Bonnie Hlinomaz
directed by: Nathaniel Kahn
rated: not rated
runtime: 40 min.
U.S. release date: October 20, 2023 & April 19, 2024

 

“Deep Sky” is a documentary short made for people like me. I’m interested in space and in awe of NASA geek brains, but it’s all quite confounding for my limited bandwidth. When it comes to what’s going on in outer space, millions of miles and thousands of years away, I rely on documentaries to enlighten my perception of space and beyond. That’s not to say that Nathaniel Kahn hasn’t made a documentary for viewers well-versed in the origin and activity of NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope, they’ll also appreciate this. Shot for IMAX screens, “Deep Sky” is indeed for everyone. However, one would benefit from knowing very little about this enormous telescope, and you, this short itself, would benefit from something that eludes all of us: time. Read more…

THE BEAST (2024) review

April 16, 2024

 

written by: Bertrand Bonello
produced by: Bertrand Bonello, Guillaume Bréaud and Benjamin Charbit
directed by: Bertrand Bonello
rated: not rated
runtime: 145 min.
U.S. release date: April 12, 2024

 

I had to watch “The Beast” (“La Bete”) a couple of times before I landed on my overall thoughts on it. That’s not at all a slight against the latest from French writer/director Bertrand Botello, but simply a testament to the density of this strange sweeping sci-fi epic. It could also be considered a horror and/or thriller tale, but Botello isn’t necessarily concerned with genres here. He’s offering three (possibly four) tales set in different time periods, in which the two leads are playing variations of the same characters as one of them desires and searches for a love connection. However, such a quest winds up with similar results, and perhaps that’s the titular beast that looms eventually (and inevitably) rears its head each time. Within each story, there’s this sense, this fear, that you can’t stop what’s coming. Read more…

LA CHIMERA (2023) review

April 4, 2024

 

written by: Alice Rohrwacher
produced by: Carlo Cresto Dina
directed by: Alice Rohrwacher
rated: not rated
runtime: 133 min.
U.S. release date: December 8, 2023 (limited), March 29, 2024 and April 5, 2024

 

“La Chimera” starts with the main character sleeping on a train making its way around the Florentine countryside. We see images from his dream, from a time when he was with a woman in the sun along a shoreline. When the train’s ticket collector awakens Arthur, he is asked if he was dreaming and is told, “Sorry, you’ll never know how it ends now.” As the film unfolds, one wonders if that line lingers for Arthur as much as it does for us. Read more…

GODZILLA X KONG: THE NEW EMPIRE (2024) review

April 1, 2024

 

written by: Terry Rossio, Simon Barrett and Jeremy Slater
produced by: Thomas Tull, Jon Jashni, Brian Rogers, Mary Parent, Alex Garcia & Eric McLeod
directed by: Adam Wingard
rated: PG-13 (for creature violence and action)
runtime: 115 min.
U.S. release date: March 29, 2024

 

Since 2021’s “Godzilla vs. Kong” from director Adam Wingard, there has been a series called “Monarch” on AppleTV+ that delved into the history of the titular clandestine organization that has studied kaiju creatures in this new MonsterVerse that started back in 2014 with “Godzilla”. Warner Brothers, Toho, Legendary Pictures, and Wingard return for massive scale chaos and epic smackdown action with “Godzilla X Kong: The New Empire”, continuing to expand upon the cartoon fun and CGI talents from the last movie. This one has the appropriate tone to make it easily digestible entertainment for the right audience. That would be viewers mainly interested in monster mayhem. Read more…

ROAD HOUSE (2024) review

March 23, 2024

 

written by: screenplay by Anthony Bagarozzi & Charles Mondry; story by Bagarozzi & Mondry, and R. Lance Hill
produced by: Joel Silver
directed by: Doug Liman
rated: R (for violence throughout, pervasive language, and some nudity)
runtime: 124 min.
U.S. release date: March 21, 2024 (exclusively on Amazon Prime)

 

“Nobody wins a fight.”

 

What is it about Patrick Swayze’s filmography that makes remaking any of his starring vehicles a dead-end proposition? Die-hard fans of the actor, myself included, will tell you that it’s because Swayze had a certain ineffable quality that no actor since has possessed—though I have argued that Channing Tatum has come the closest to being his heir apparent. Though he fronted some of the most macho films in history, Swayze embraced his vulnerable and feminine qualities in a way most male actors are terrified to emulate. His training as a dancer made him a dynamic film presence, one who could always draw your attention no matter what else was happening around him. Read more…

GHOSTBUSTERS: FROZEN EMPIRE (2024) review

March 23, 2024

 

written by: Gil Kenan and Jason Reitman
produced by: Ivan Reitman, Jason Reitman & Jason Blumenfeld
directed by: Gil Kenan
rated: PG-13 (for supernatural action/violence, language, and suggestive references)
runtime: 115 min.
U.S. release date: March 22, 2024

 

There’s quite a bit going on in “Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire”, the latest entry in a franchise that hasn’t had a good sequel since Ivan Reitman’s 1984 comedy classic. Granted, a clever reimagining in 2016 was quite funny, but I guess too many viewers (fans?) got in an uproar over an all-female Ghostbusters quartet. Co-written by Jason Reitman (who wrote and directed the last sequel, 2021’s “Ghostbusters: Afterlife”) and Gil Kenan (“Monster House”), this movie, like the last one, wants us to forget about that arguable flop. It is similar to what every recent legacyquel has been doing: relying on nostalgia, a crop of new characters mixed with the old, and regurgitating familiar plotlines from past entries. Some moments here feel exciting and new, but it’s all inevitably weighed down by the sheer number of characters and an attempt at providing way too much. Read more…