Thursday, May 30, 2024

Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga


Welcome to the best action movie you will see this year. If you are already a fan of George Miller's Mad Max universe, I'm sure you will be delighted (I am and I was). This is the story of Furiosa, a child stolen from her mother and idyllic post apocalyptic community and raised by overlords Dr. Dementus (Chris Hemsworth) and then Immortan Joe. This is a long, stretched-out (2.5 hours) revenge film and it's packed with modified supercharged eighteen-wheelers, Roman chariot motorcycles, skull-helmet wearing bike riders, who engage in epic warfare all while charging down the Fury Road at top speed. It's a dust, gasoline, and bullet ballet of nonstop action and violence and I enjoyed every minute of it. It's ludicrous and at times outright laughable but this is the mad world Miller has created for us and I'm still in love with it ever since hockey-masked Lord Humungus breathed into his 1981 microphone, "Just walk away," ("The Road Warrior.") Anya Taylor-Joy plays grownup Furiosa and Miss Taylor-Joy is a delight: She proverbially kicks ass. Catch "Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga" on the biggest, loudest screen possible - in theatres now. 


Wednesday, May 29, 2024

The Movie Man

This is a documentary about Keith Stata, a man who built his own multiplex theatre in the bush of Northern Ontario, one theatre at a time. He currently has five screens and something like forty plus cats he houses and looks after. Keith Stata is a man who loves movies, so it wasn't hard for me to relate to him, understand his passion and feel a deep sense of melancholy as he has time-travelled from 1975 to now. The documentary focuses on Keith's movie palace, The Highlands Cinema, located in Kinmount, Ontario. There is not a lot left in Kinmount - even the gas station has dried up. When movie theatres have been closing their doors for the last few decades, Highlands has kept going. Then the pandemic hit. "The Movie Man" largely focuses on its two year closer and its triumphant resurgence. Keith Stata is a workaholic and he is The Highlands Cinema. At 75 years of age, time is catching up to Keith. Maintaining a five theatre multiplex, 45 cats, a dog, a museum, staff, etc. - it's almost incomprehensible how he manages it all. And at 75! I plan on making a pilgrimage next month to see The Highlands Cinema in person. Catch this fascinating documentary in theatres now.  

Tuesday, May 28, 2024

We Need to Talk About Kevin

Well maybe I need to talk about, "We Need to Talk About Kevin." I have just got around to watching this film from 2011. I knew the subject matter was disturbing. Perhaps this is why I avoided it for so long? I can't really say. Some things just keep going to the bottom of the pile. Perhaps I was too busy raising my own kids to stop and watch a film which is about the struggles of Eva (Tilda Swinton - who gives a knockout performance). Eva is dealing with a child, Kevin, who is a sociopath. Kevin as a baby won't stop crying. There is a scene where Eva, with her baby stroller, stands beside a man with a jackhammer who is chipping away at the concrete road. The deafening noise drowns out Kevin's cries and for a moment, Eva has some peace - it rang true and heartbreaking. As Kevin grows into the monster played by Ezra Miller, we feel Eva's pain and frustration in every frame, especially when her goofy husband (the brilliant John C. Reilly) seems rather oblivious to Kevin's cruel nature. The film is a portrait of a monster who starts as a monster and the powerlessness of a mother unable to change the course of evil. I found it gripping, harrowing, and sad. It's an excellent film. Catch it on streaming services or go rent it from your local video store. In Ottawa, that would be Movies 'N' Stuff. 

Le Trou (The Hole)

Recommend by Peter Thompson from Movies 'N' Stuff, Ottawa's #1 video store! This was his first Criterion closet pick (His Video here). I confess, I had never watched it until just recently based on his recommendation - when Peter says a movie is good, you should listen! So, what's it all about? It's a French film from 1960 and four men are planning an escape and a fifth man joins their crowded cell. "The Great Escape" is one of my favourite films of all time. I'm a sucker for prison escape films. "The Shawshank Redemption," and "Escape from Alcatraz" float high in my film list. Stallone's "Lock Up" is far underrated if you ask me. As is Ray Liotta's "No Escape." Like I said, I love these films. Add "Le Trou" to the pile. It holds your attention because you get to witness the gritty details of digging, like you were there with these men - it feels real. Considering this came out in 1960, the realism depicted feels like it was ahead of it's time and still feels fresh 54 years later. Catch of one the best prison escape films streaming on the Criterion channel or go rent it from Movie 'N' Stuff here in Ottawa.  

Tuesday, May 21, 2024

Challengers

This was not what I was expecting. I thought I was going to be served (let the tennis puns begin) a dumb teen romance movie that was cutesy and by the numbers, LOVE-15. It was not. What was fired over the net was more akin to "Saltburn" than "10 Things I Hate About You." This was sexy, arty, but without the pretention. With a pounding electronic score by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross and dazzling visuals, this movie will get your pulse up. What's it all about? A love triangle between double players Art Donaldson (Mike Faist) and Patrick Zweig (Josh O'Connor) who become rivals over tennis star Tashi (Zendaya). The story is told back and forth, switching from present to past; this editing choice seems intentional. Everything here is a rally, a back and forth, a fight. The tension is as taut as the net strung across the court, both sexual and for the outcome of the match at hand. This is the "Tombstone" of tennis. There hasn't been a lot of good films to watch in the theatres recently. This is a match to catch. It's an ace down the center line.