Beetlejuice Beetlejuice

Directed by: Tim Burton

Written by: Alfred Gough & Miles Millar

Lydia Deetz (Winona Ryder) now hosting her own “psychic” TV show,  finds herself returning home, with her boyfriend Rory (Justin Theroux), to Winter River for a family funeral. This returns Lydia, stepmother Delia (Catherine O’Hara) and Lydia’s daughter Astrid (Jenna Ortega), with who she has a strained relationship, to the family home and all of its memories. No memory stronger than Beetlegeuse (Michael Keaton). It’s tough for Astrid, but when she meets a local boy, Jeremy (Arthur Conti), things look up. But when Astrid’s relationship takes a turn, Lydia’s only hope is to once more call on Beetlegeuse. A call that brings mayhem, led my Beetlegeuse’s wife, Delores (Monica Bellucci), who is seeking revenge. Can Lydia use Beetlegeuse to save the day? Or will she live to regret it?

Beetlejuice is another in a growing list of films that, for me, didn’t need a sequel. But her we are and The Juice is back. And, while it’s nothing great, it was enjoyable fun over its 104 minutes run time.

Tim Burton is at the helm and this is very Burton, dark, funny and a little off the rails. The story is all over the place, with random plot points disappearing as quickly as they appear. But that said it rattles along, hardly takes a breath and is fun and funny as it goes.

The underworld is well imagined, the Soul Train is a particul favourite. But plenty of other fun in scenes of endless bureaucracy, characters with “humourous deaths” and its own underworld investigator in Willem Dafoe’s, Wolf Jackson. And to top it all a big song and dance finale!

Was the world crying out for a Beetlejuice sequel? I’m not sure. But, while the story is a bit of a mess, Tim Burton injects it with plenty of comically dark fun that never takes a breath. Keaton is clearly having a blast back in the black and white suite. And no film has ever suffered from having a big song and dance ending! A classic it isn’t, but I enjoyed it nonetheless.

Blink Twice

Written & directed by: Zoë Kravitz

Written by: E.T. Feigenbaum

Frida (Naomi Ackie) and her flat mate Jess (Alia Shawkat) are working as waitresses at a charity event, hosted by Spencer King(Channing Tatum), a disgraced former CEO. When the women slip there way into the party, they find their way into Spencer’s group. The group includes his therapist, Rich (Kyle MacLachlan), who’s helping him deal with his mistakes, a selection of attractive women, including Sarah (Adria Arjona), and a group of Spencer’s friends and associates. As the night ends, the women are invited with the group to Spencer’s island. It’s idyllic and beautiful, food and champagne on tap. But Jess’s unease grows and she feels something is not right. When Frida discovers the reality of what is happening, it turns from idyllic Island into a fight for survival.

I enjoyed this tense, intriguing, thriller. It’s a strong directorial debut from Zoë Kravitzbthat feels very Jordan Peele in a good way. The plot is intriguing, keeping you guessing and ratcheting up the unease from the first minute. The reveal is slow and concealed well enough that the reality of what is happening is surprising and disturbing.

The film is nicely layered as it asks questions about abuse, abuse of power, control and forgiveness. As well as what  people are prepared to forgive for the right reward.

There’s solid performances throughout, Tatum believable in a more sinister role. Naomi Ackie is excellent and well supported by Alia Shawkat and Adria Arjonaz.  There’s also nice performances from Geena Davis, Christian Slater. Haley Joel Osment and Simon Rex.

The story, at 102 minutes, zips along and has a nice Jordan Peele, David Lynch, disturbing reality under the shiny surface feel. It also injects some laugh out loud moments along the way.

Blink Twice is a strong directorial debut from Zoë Kravitz. A smart, intriguing and layered thriller. It builds a sense of unease from the start helped by a good set of subtle performances. And its reveal of its dark secret is well done. An entertaining thriller, don’t blink and miss it.

Alien: Romulus

Written & Directed by: Fede Álvarez

Written by: Rodo Sayagues

When Rain(Cailee Spaeny), who works on a mining planet with her brother Andy (David Jonsson), a synthetic human, are denied a visa to leave the planet, she’s encouraged by her friends led by Tyler(Archie Renaux), to join them to visit a deserted space station orbiting above the planet. On it, cryo chambers, that will give them what they need, to escape the planet and start a new life far away. But when they reach the station, cryo pods are not the only thing onboard. And rather than escape, they find themselves battling for their lives when the true reason for the desertion of the station becomes clear

The latest in the Alien franchise goes back to basics, with a grungy, retro futurist, space horror. It also goes back to the 80’s with not only its look, feel, practical effects and long dark tunnels. But also its story telling, an action thriller, short on dialogue, big on action set pieces and  jump scares.

The small and relatively unknown cast are perfect for the story. Especially the central pair of Cailee Spaeny and David Jonsson. Spaeny is an excellent action hero, nicely picking up the mantel from Sigourney Weavers, Ripley. Jonsson’s loyal humanoid works well alongside her in both his loyal and reprogrammed forms.

It’s not perfect, all of its leaning into the original means it relies perhaps a little to much on the story and beats of the original film. And it does suffer the classic problem of not quite knowing when to stop, with just yet one more hurdle to jump for our heroine. But ita stretched ending gets away with it because of what has gone before But these are small gripes in what is otherwise, an entertaining, riveting space horror adventure.

Alien: Romulus is a very entertaining addition to the franchise. Its 80’s inspiration works great, with a grungy broken sci-fi look alongside its stripped back storytelling which gives a heart pumping horror adventure. And while it may not be hugely original, it is an entertaining, tense, watchable sci-fi adventure.

Trap

Written and directed by: M. Night Shyamalan

Riley (Ariel Donoghue) is excited because her dad, Cooper (Josh Hartnett), has got her tickets to a special gig by Lady Raven (Saleka Night Shyamalan). As they take there seats it becomes clear to Cooper that all is not what it seems and he’s right. The show is a front for an F.B.I sting operation, headed by profiler Dr Grant (Hayley Mills), to capture a serial killer, The Butcher. That’s a problem for Cooper, and he needs to find a way for them both to get out while avoiding any questions by the law enforcement that’s blocked every exit.

In a recent interview M. Night Shyamalan discussed the premise of Trap. Taking the well trodden killer manhunt film and telling it from the view of the hunted, rather than the hunter.

What this premise gives us is half a good film. Taking the view of the killer, hunted, trapped and desperately searching for an out. But as the story progresses it becomes a problem, as increasingly contrived escape options become open to him and the story becomes more predictable and clunky. The concert itself is really well created, from Riley’s ecstatic reaction, to the convincing nature of Lady Raven’s performance. Although she does seem to have a fan base more interested in the concourse than the concert!

There are some fine performances. Hartnett does a great job in the central role as a caring father, with a very dark side. Ariel Donoghue is thoroughly convincing as an excited girl at a dream concert. Saleka Night Shyamalan works as Lady Raven and a final act turn from Alison Pill is the best part of an overly stretched finale. Although Hayley Mills feels out of place and providing the occasional exposition heavy, clunky, Walkie Talkie voice over.

Trap is an interesting twist on the manhunt film, told from the view of the hunted. It has a couple of convincing central performances. But, as it goes on it falters and the story becomes more unbelievable, with a finale that never seems to end! A promising premise that becomes clunky, predictable and doesn’t deliver on early promise.

It Ends with Us

Directed by: Justin Baldoni

Written by: Christy Hall based on Colleen Hoover novel

Lily Bloom (Blake Lively) is trying to process the death of her father, who she loved, but also witnessed his violence towards her mother (Amy Morton). When she meets Ryle (Justin Baldoni) a doctor, smart and caring. Soon they fall into a relationship, but when she bumps into a childhood friend, Atlas (Brandon Sklenar), she finds that the cycle of violence she witnessed growing up, may now be a part of her life again.

To be upfront I found this and intriguing watch. But I also appreciate it’s walking a tightrope in dealing with a disturbing issue, in the rather glossy way it chooses too.

On the plus side,  It felt a layered and nuanced look at the disturbing complexity of this vile crime. For a long time, it tries to leave you unbalanced and unsure of what is going on, even if the signs are always there, with a forboding and threatening current never far from the surface. Lively carries much of the film and gives a strong performance, with subtlety, never seemingly the victim until it’s too late. But ehile Baldoni becomes increasingly menacing, he and Sklenar, as the men in Lily’s life, are perhaps too obvious and predictable.

And that is were the films main criticism lies, that, for the complexity of its difficult theme, the story is too predictable, the characters story arcs too obvious. The feeling I had leaving the cinema was that perhaps it was all too neat and tidy, its glossy glamour jarring against the darkness of its main storyline, that’s not to say money is a protection from domestic violence, but in this setting it runs the risk of making the characters too glossy to be real. And the story line wrapped in a too convenient bow.

I found this intriguing and compelling with Blake Lively giving a strong performance. But it was also too clean, tidy and a bit predictable, in a way that perhaps fails to do justice to its tough themes. Now while that didn’t stop me being engaged and fully bought into Lily’s story. I do get why it hasn’t worked for everyone.

Deadpool & Wolverine

Written & Directed by: Shawn Levy

Written by: Rhett Reese, Paul Wernick, Zeb Wells & Ryan Reynolds

Deadpool (Ryan Reynolds) has been told, by the TVAs Mr Paradox (Matthew Macfadyen) his world is going to be destroyed after the death of its anchor being, Wolverine (Hugh Jackman), via Paradox’s Time Ripper machine. But this being a world of multiverses Deadpool figures he can find himself a Wolverine to step in and save his timeline. However, the only one he can find is the worst version. The job is made harder when Paradox casts them into the void, a Mad Max looking, cameo heavy  world full of the lost “Fox” universe, which is under the control of Cassandra Nova(Emma Corrin). The boys need to escape the void, destroy the Time Ripper and save Deadpool’s world.

The first Deadpool outing under Marvel is a bit of a mixed bag. Overall it’s fun, it retains the things you want. Self referential humour, comedically bloody fight scenes with entertaining ways to kill and maim and its “adult” language and great soundtrack. But it also suffers in a way its predecessors hadn’t with the weight of the MCU dropped on it. It has to juggle not only its own story history, but also has to add other MCU properties. For someone like me, who knows the MCU  but not in detail, I sometimes get taken out of the story by the feeling of there are links I should know but don’t. Because of it the storytelling then feels a bit slow.

But there is still plenty to enjoy. Reynolds and Jackman have fun, with plenty of humour and occasional bits of heart. There are gratuitous cameos. Chris Evans, Channing Tatum, Jennifer Garner, Wesley Snipes to name a few. McFadyen hams it up as Paradox and Emma Corrin enjoys it as Cassandra.

Overall as a bit of Marvel entertainment, even with the reservations, it is what it should be, fun.

It’s probably the Deadpool I enjoyed the least and can feel slow. But that said, there is plenty to enjoy. Reynolds and Jackman are great together. The humour and gratuitous comic book action is there as is a great soundtrack. It’s not perfect, but still fun.

Twisters

Directed by: Lee Isaac Chung

Written by: Joseph Kosinski & Mark L. Smith

Kate Carter (Daisy Edgar-Jones) is a brilliant scientist who thinks she may have found a way to tame tornado’s. But when the experiment goes tragically wrong, she runs away from her passion. When 5 years later an old friend, Javi( Anthony Ramos) invites her to help in a new experiment she reluctantly returns to storm chasing. Here is where she meets YouTube sensation tornado wrangler,  Tyler Owens (Glen Powell), a cocky adrenaline junky. But Kate realises that she has much more in common with Owens and soon they team up, using their expertise and skills to try and stop a massive twister wreaking havoc.

I didn’t have great expectations for Twisters. But it’s a fun, action filled, blockbuster disaster movie. It’s loud, fast moving and full of action set pieces. And much better than I’d expected

It’s not all big wind action though and Daisy Edgar Jones’s does a great job of providing a character to care for as she tries to deal with trauma and guilt. There’s also a fun chemistry with Powell’s Tyler. The classic action movie wise guy, who we, unsurprisingly, discover has greater depths. It does occasionally stretch the story by looking at profiteering on disaster and the impact of climate change, but only at the very surface.

Twisters knows what it’s there to do and that’s to deliver roller coaster levels of up and down action. And it doesn’t try to do too much else. It’s full on from the start and, as buildings, cars and people are sucked up into the vortex and come crashing down again, you feel very much at the center of it. And the story rarely takes a breath as it whizzes through its 2 hour runtime.

Twisters is a good old fashioned summer blockbuster. It’s action packed, fast moving fun with effects that take you to the center of the action. Daisy Edgar Jones gives us a character to care about and there’s a good chemistry with Glenn Powell. If you’re looking for your summer action blockbuster fix, this should do the trick.

Fly Me to the Moon

Directed by Greg Berlanti

Written by Rose Gilroy, Bill Kirstein, Keenan Flynn

It’s the height of the space race as NASA’s Apollo program races the Soviet Union to the moon. But the American people are losing interest. The answer, NASA needs marketing. So when shady government agent Moe Berkus (Woody Harrelson), makes ad exec Kelly Jones (Scarlett Johansson) an offer she, literally, cannot turndown, she heads to Florida. Where she must up the programmes popularity, help generate funds and win over programme director Cole Davis (Channing Tatum), who does not need marketing in the way of delivering the most complex challenge in human history. All while Berkus demands she delivers the guarantee of the perfect moon footage!

This is hard film to call. The Apollo missions are an incredible piece of human ingenuity and this celebrates that, while also having a bit of fun. But you have to tread carefully with the subject matter and a missed step can be easily made. And this is where Fly Me to the Moon stumbles.

It gets lots right. Tatum and Scarlett Johansson are enjoyable screen presences and there’s a great chemistry between them. Harrelson blends fun and sinister in the way he does. Ray Romano, Jim Rash and Anna Garcia all offer good support.

It also looks and sounds great, the recreation of the time, place and excitement of the Apollo are pitch perfect.

But there is, for me, a big missed step. It’s not the idea of the conspiracy but rather the use of the tragedy of Apollo 1 as a half baked plot point. It’s felt very unnecessary in what is , basically, a light hearted caper. And it lost me at that stage. Which was a real pity, all the fun that had worked earlier then began to grate. Which was a real pity.

Fly Me to the Moon was, for its first half, really enjoyable. But then, for me made a misstep, that made all the fun things begin to grate. Which was a pity, because up to then it had lots to enjoy. Great chemistry between its leads, it looked great and was fun. If, what was a misstep for me doesn’t bother you, you’ll enjoy this. But it spoiled it for me.

Maxxxine

Written and directed by Ti West.

Maxine Minx (Mia Goth) has made her name as an adult film star, but is now trying to break into mainstream film after landing a role in Elizabeth Bender’s (Elizabeth Debicki) horror film. But in 1985 L.A. there is also a killer on the loose, the Night Stalker. Maxine’s hopes for movie stardom are put at risk, both by her past in the form of a visit from private detective, John Labat (Kevin Bacon) and when The Night Stalker’s crimes hit close to home attracting the attention of Detectives Williams (Michelle Monaghan) and Torres (Bobby Cannavale). What will she do to save her dreams?

This is the third in the X trilogy of films. I’ve not seen the first two, but that didn’t matter and didn’t stop me having fun with this enjoyable horror thriller. Thanks in no small part to its smart opening 5 minutes that tells you everything you need to know.

There’s excellent performances all around. Mia Goth’s titular Maxine is a super portrayal of a determined driven wannabe star, with a dark past.  Bacon’s sleezy P.I., Cannavale’s misguided policeman and Elizabeth Debecki’s over powering director all add to the story, but there isn’t a poor performance from any involved.

The story telling barrels along delivering  three parts intriguing thriller, and a great fun overblown high camp horror finale! Offering a good balance between thriller, horror and dark comedy.

The look and soundtrack captures 1985 perfectly, with its seedy, dark world for the story to play out in. And there’s lots of nice use of the film set and gore at the right level, with plenty ot whince inducing moments to enjoy.

Maxxxine is three parts intriguing thriller with an overblown camp horror finale. Its great cast is led by Mia Goth’s portrayal of Maxine and comes with a fantastic 80’s feel and soundtrack.  Its well paced, well told and balance’s its horror and intrigue with a sense of fun no more than in its nuts finale. All adding up to an enjoyable 104 minutes.

Kinds of Kindness

Written and directed by Yorgos Lanthimos

Written by Efthimis Filippou

Yorgos Lanthimos teams up again with Emma Stone and Willem Dafoe with this anthology film. It is made up of three separate stories each starring Stone and Jesse Plemmons and to varying degrees Defoe, Margaret Qualley, Hong Chau and Mamoudou Athie. The stories are unrelated, although each look at the human condition, the need to please, be wanted, be loved. The first focusses on Plemmons’s Robert, who will go to any lengths to please his boss Raymond (Defoe). The second finds Plemmons playing a cop, Daniel, whose wife is missing, however, when she returns, all is not what it seems and finally Stone and Plemmons are Emily and Andrew, members of a cult, tasked with finding their version of “The One” a woman with the ability to bring life back to the dead. Each told in a surreal, absurdly dark version of reality.

There is no doubt Lanthimos’s approach to film making is not to everyone’s tastes. He is experimental, uses cinema as an art to tell his stories and has a liking for the bizarre. But he treads a fine line between  imaginative story telling and style over substance. And Kinds of Kindness struggles to balance the two.

The film is definitely not going to work for some and didn’t all work for me. On the positives note, the stories all intrigued. The first and third the easiest to follow, they are stories of an eagerness to please and go beyond ones own levels of acceptable behaviour. The second story is more absurd and had a less clear message, if one at all!

But, it is much too long at around 2hr 45m. This is a big ask for this level of weirdness.  And then there is a question about how much substance it really has and whether it is just style and self indulgence over substance and some will certainly see it that way.

Kinds of Kindness will not be for everyone. I enjoyed it for the most part and the cast are hugely watchable. However, it is overly long and at times is style over substance. If you don’t like weird, give it a miss. Even if you do, strap in and proceed with caution!

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