Showing posts with label Jennifer Jason Leigh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jennifer Jason Leigh. Show all posts
Thursday, February 26, 2026
Crime 101
With a February release date, one is skeptical of films like this. Big Hollywood names starring in a heist thriller - either this didn't test well with audiences or the studio thought they had a dud on their hands. I'm not sure. What I do know is it's rare to have a film this good come out at this time of year. When I saw the trailer for Crime 101 I thought it was the trailer for Heat 2, which is apparently coming. This is not it, but it could be. Drive, Dragged Across Concrete, The Dark Knight, Hell or High Water, Emily the Criminal, and The Accountant, are all examples of contemporary crime dramas, and they are all excellent. Add Crime 101 to this list. Chris Hemsworth plays a calculating jewel thief. Mark Ruffalo plays the cop who is trying to catch him. Mark Ruffalo seems to be born to play detectives (Zodiac, Task) with his Columbo-bed-head of locs. If there ever were to be a Columbo reboot, this man is a shoo-in. Then there Barry Keoghan who plays a competing thief. Nick Nolte plays the big bad guy boss. I was happy to see Payman Maadi from the Iranian film, A Separation. Jennifer Jason Leigh shows up for two glorious minutes - she is delightful. And finally there is Halle Berry. To those folks who hand out little statues to actors at the end of the year during award season, please don't forget Halle Berry for her role here - she was fantastic. I loved this film from the opening upside-down shot. The pounding soundtrack will keep your pulse up. The characters and dialogue are are well crafted and fully formed. This is a banger. Lose your getaway car at the movie theatre parking lot and go see this on the big screen. If that's too risky, then plan your next video heist at Movies 'N Stuff when available.
Thursday, September 18, 2025
Night Always Comes
If you look around most cities across North America, you will see the disparity of the growing economic divide compounded by the opioid crisis in the form of tent cities. Drug-addicted and broke - a sea of broken and desperate people. Petty crime and violence are always just at an arm's length away. Welcome to the world of Night Always Comes. John Cassavetes might be the godfather of grunge, but directors like Andrea Arnold (Fish Tank, American Honey, Bird), Sean Baker (Anora, The Florida Project, Red Rocket), and the Safdie brothers (Goodtime, Uncut Gems) have brought slumming-it to the next level. Night Always Comes ranks up there with this lot - maybe the bottom of the top, but the top nonetheless. What's it all about? Vanessa Kirby plays Lynette, a woman who is trying to purchase her rental home for herself and her brother who has Down's Syndrome (played by Zack Gottsagen (The Peanut Butter Falcon) who really does have Down's Syndrome). The clock is ticking for Lynette, she only has less than 24 hours to gather the money for the down payment otherwise their house, their home, is going to another bidder. Lynette's mother Doreen lives with them (played by Jennifer Jason Leigh). Doreen is the opposite of helpful. So the race to get money is on, everything on the line, and Lynette will do unsavory things to get it. Night Always Comes has an Uncut Gems/Anora manic energy about it and I was glued to it. We are living in dark times and this film reflects that. Catch it now streaming on Netflix.
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