Adann Kennn-Alexandar: Movie Reviews July 21
Published 2:16 pm Friday, July 19, 2024
- Adann-Kennn Alexxandar
“Poolman”
(Comedy Mystery: 1 hour, 40 minutes)
Starring: Chris Pine, Annette Bening, Stephen Tobolowsky and Danny DeVito
Director: Chris Pine
Rated: R (Strong language, sexuality and violence)
Movie Review:
“Poolman,” like his main character played by Chris Pine, is in a bizarre movie. While this comedy is a flimsy absurdist comedy, the material was just absurd.
Chris Pine’s feature directorial debut is a tale about Darren Barrenman (Pine). He is a hippie-type man in Los Angeles. He cleans and attends to the welfare of the pool of the local apartment. Also, he believes in holding his local government accountable. When told by city bureaucrat June Del Ray (Dewanda Wise) that the president of the city council (Tobolowsky) is corrupt, Barrenman gathers a team of five people who are determined to prove the councilman is on the take. They began to follow him and track his moves, hoping to catch him taking bribes from a local syndicate.
The setting and some plot elements appear as if they are modern, yet other aspects of this movie appear straight from the 1920s. The juxtaposition is oddly unconvincing. This is mainly because Chris Pine’s character seems like he should be in a mental facility not out walking around causing havoc around his city and stalking politicians.
“Poolman” is just weird throughout. It appears an inebriated afterthought.
Grade: D (He drowns in awful bad writing.)
“Back to Black”
(Biography/Drama/Music: 2 hours, 02 minutes)
Starring: Marisa Abela, Eddie Marsan, Jack O’Connell and Lesley Manville
Director: Sam Taylor-Johnson
Rated: R (Drug use, strong language, sexual content and nudity)
Movie Review:
“Back to Black” is the Amy Winehouse biopic. These types of movies debut several times a year. They chronicle some well-known person’s life in usually a formulaic fashion, showing the highlights, the good and the bad. While Winehouse’s story has a predictable presence, the main star has appeal, and the script allows observers to also see other sides of Winehouse. Regrettably, these facets are not enough to make “Back to Black” a powerhouse comparable to its subject.
Marisa Abela plays Winehouse, a young woman with the ambition to be a singer and songwriter. The chanteuse is soon a sensation topping the music charts everywhere. Even when she achieves her goal, Winehouse still allows her relationship with drugs and alcohol to jeopardize her career.
Audiences know how this movie will end. Winehouse’s story had a tragic ending. Before that closing arrives, this script mainly pinpoints the highs and lows of her life, mainly on the lows.
Yet, “Back to Black” attempts to offer another side of Winehouse by showing her relationship with certain people. First, it chronicles her relationship with her family. The standouts are her father Mitch (Marsan) and the woman who influenced her the most, including her looks, Winehouse’s paternal grandmother Cynthia Levy (the talented Manville). Both were musically inclined and singers.
Second, it shows that Amy’s marriage to Blake Fielder-Civil (O’Connell). They had marital bliss before it all became disastrous. The movie places some blame on Blake for Amy’s addiction to hard drugs.
That leads to Amy’s third relationship. Alcohol and drugs were daily companions. She was drinking mightily long before Blake entered her life. The movie spends a great deal of time exhibiting Amy’s fight against several addictions.
Amy’s moments with her family, especially scenes with her grandmother are touching. These aspects carry the movie when scenes just seem to go from alcohol to drugs, a repetitive process.
Grade: C+ (Interesting, but it fades to black.)
“Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga”
(Action/Adventure: 2 hours, 28 minutes)
Starring: Anya Taylor-Joy, Chris Hemsworth and Tom Burke
Director: George Miller
Rated: R (Sequences of strong violence and grisly images)
Movie Review:
“Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga” is the origin story of Furiosa before she met “Mad” Max Rockatansky. This is another worthwhile action piece, a continuation of this franchise that began with “Mad Max” (1979). It entertains, although it is familiar territory.
“Furiosa” is the latest addition to the franchise features psychotic characters in a post-apocalyptic world. In this place, Furiosa (Taylor-Joy) emerges. She was taken as a child by the Biker Horde led by the warlord Dementus (Hemsworth). Since, Furiosa has wanted to avenge her mother’s murder.
“Furiosa” is a prequel to “Mad Max: Fury Road” (2015). The two movies are very familiar. They are repetitive survival flicks. They are fine entertainment but appears like one is watching the same movie with a different set of talented actors.
Grade: B- (Good although comparable to previous movies in this saga.)
“Sight”
(Biography, Drama: 1 hour, 43 minutes)
Starring: Terry Chen, Greg Kinnear, Fionnula Flanagan
Director: Andrew Hyatt
Rated: PG-13 (Violence and thematic elements)
Movie Review:
“Sight” is an uplifting film about a doctor’s work to restore the sight of children in impoverished areas. When a new medical science he pioneered does not go as planned for patient Kajal (Mia SwamiNathan), Dr. Ming Wang (Chen) loses faith, and does not want to return to her profession. However, the blind orphan Kajal’s determination and beautiful spirit inspire Wang.
Calcutta India, 2006, is where this inspirational story starts. From there, the movie shows several flashbacks where audiences see a young Ming Wang, an impoverished Chinese prodigy. He flees Communist China. He travels to the United States to become a doctor, and he excels in his studies and later becomes a prominent doctor in his field.
The problem is Wang’s young life and what it took to get through medical school is much more interesting than his very astute skills as a doctor in his later life. As the movie bounces back and forth, the two stories interrupt each other.
This movie is an inspiration because despite several hardships Wang manages to stay focused and achieve his goals from childhood to adulthood. Even when his life is depressing as a practicing professional at the height of his career, Wang continues. His determination propels this story.
Grade: B- (Good vision even if short-sighted.)
“I Saw the TV Glow”
(Drama/Horror: 1 hour, 40 minutes)
Starring: Justice Smith, Brigette Lundy-Paine and Ian Foreman
Director: Jane Schoenbrun
Rated: PG-13 (Violent content, some sexual material, thematic elements, language and teen smoking.)
Movie Review:
“I Saw the TV Glow” seems like something one would see on television’s “Stranger Things.” Except, this movie does not have the worldwide appeal of “Stranger Things.” What this movie does have is Justice Smith’s appeal as an actor. He makes his characters invitingly convincing. Too bad, the rest of the photoplay is not as impressive.
Smith plays Owen. He befriends Maddy (Lundy-Paine) when they are both younger. They bond over a young adult show “The Pink Opaque.” That television program seems more real to them than their complicated lives.
A psychological horror drama written and directed by Jane Schoenbrun (“We’re All Going to the World’s Fair,” 2021), this is one of the strangest movies audiences will see this year. One is never given enough to decide what is real. You go with the flow and see what happens. One witnesses the circumstances the characters undergo, some oddly boring events. That is just about it.
Grade: C+ (While thought-provoking, this is why streaming programs are glowing brighter.)
“The Garfield Movie”
(Animation/Adventure/Comedy: 1 hour, 41 minutes)
Starring: Chris Pratt, Samuel L. Jackson, Hannah Waddingham and Nicholas Hoult
Director: Mark Dindal
Rated: PG (Action/peril violence and mild thematic elements.)
Movie Review:
Garfield (Pratt) is still the lasagna-loving, lazy cat of John (Hoult). Why the feline hates Mondays is a mystery considering he does not work and does the same daily actions: sleeping, eating, watching the tele mostly and dominating dog Odie (Harvey Guillén). This has entertained audiences for years.
“The Garfield Movie” gives the fat orange cat something to do. This movie gives you another reason to enjoy Garfield, although it is an average easy to sit through comedy.
This outing Garfield discovers his estranged father Vic, voiced by Samuel L. Jackson. The animosity is large between these two cats, but they will have to put their differences aside. Jinx (Waddingham), an enemy of Vic, returns for revenge, and Garfield and Odie get caught in the middle.
Garfield, the movie is an action-adventure. It supplies laughs and eventually an emotive message about family. It offers good enough entertainment for families looking to beat summer’s heat. The problem is it appears very much like a James Bond movie far removed from a typical Garfield adventure.
Grade: C+ (Entertaining but nominal meow.)