Sunday, August 28, 2016

Hell or High Water




       ‘Hell or High Water’ is the type of film I crave when I go to the movies.  It seems easy to just categorize this film as a western crime drama, but that does it a disservice.  This is a low key, under-the-radar type of film, but has some of the most mature and powerful performances that I have seen in awhile.  It is a movie about two brothers that are bank robbers in west Texas pursued by the law containing all the clichés that you would think would apply, but it goes deeper than that.  It is truly a portrait of poverty in west Texas without becoming preachy and it is also a character study of right and wrong without being judgmental.  A difficult task ,but writer Taylor Sheridan (Sicario) does an incredible if not subtle job in fleshing out this portrait of the modern American West.

Ben Foster and Chris Pine play Tanner and Toby Howard.  Two brothers on a bank robbery spree to raise money to save their recently deceased mother’s house from foreclosure.  While Ben Foster isn’t a household name yet, his performances (Lone Survivor) have continued to impress me over the years and this one is no exception. Tanner has been in and out of jail his whole life and he understands more than most that no one ever truly gets away with anything, yet he loves his brother (despite all the name calling) and will do whatever it takes to help him.  Chris Pine is the true standout of this film for me.  This is by far his most mature role to date and I would even call it an Oscar level performance.  Pine has been in the spotlight in recent years in Hollywood blockbusters, most notably for Star Trek and the upcoming Wonder Woman, but his low key portrayal of Toby Tanner hits the mark perfectly.  He is the ‘good’ brother, but one thing the film explores is how bad people can do good things and good people can do unforgivable things.  Pine keeps his performance subtle and morally ambiguous, which makes it so powerful.

Jeff Bridges has redefined his career by playing grizzled, salt of the earth, country boys in his later years (True Grit).  He plays the Texas Ranger, Marcus Hamilton, who is on the verge of retirement with all the gusto one would expect, but there is more to him than that.  We wince at his racial insensitivity to his Mexican\Indian partner Alberto, but despite the audience and Alberto’s distaste, you can sense the love and respect between the two, albeit strained at times. Marcus is of a bygone era, but panicking at the idea of retirement and becoming irrelevant.

As the brothers rob the fictional Midland Banks across Texas as a sort of Robin Hoodesque journey to try and pay off the bank loan from the very predatory bank that gave the loan they knew their mother wouldn’t be able to pay back you develop some sympathy for the brothers.  However, even though there is sympathy you know and feel what they are doing is wrong and leading them both down a path they won’t be able to come back from. We shake our heads at their decisions, but the constant backdrop of billboards for revers mortgages and predatory debt relief pits our sympathy against our moral code.  That’s where I think the film’s strength lies; it evokes sympathy without giving absolution.  One of the most poignant moments was when Rangers Marcus and Alberto were talking about how the Comanche lands were taken over by the Europeans.  Marcus wondered how Alberto wasn’t more bitter than he was.  Alberto calmly explained that at one time Marcus’s ancestors in Europe were taken over by someone who forced them to assimilate and now the poor in Texas are being taken over and driven out by Corporations  like the Midland Bank.  “It’s just the way of things” Alberto explains. 

Tanner and Toby are the protagonists whom we grow to love, but we know they don’t deserve to get away with what they are doing.  Ranger Marcus is a dogged lawman who is doing what is right, but is he doing it for the right reasons?  I hope I don’t spoil the film by saying that the ending does not leave the story wrapped up in a nice comfortable bow.  In fact, the lack of feeling satisfied or any sense of resolution is another one of the film’s strengths.  The Director, David MacKenzie, is an Englishman and I am amazed at how he nailed not only the look and feel of West Texas, but its’ cadence as well.  The poverty and mundane existence was captured so perfectly that it almost seemed foreign and exotic even to an American such as myself. 

In an era of big budget and big production, this film will come and go quietly, but I left the theatre feeling I had just witnessed three Oscar worthy performances.  If you are a fan of acting and character study, then I can think of no better film than this in recent years of actors performing at the top of their craft.  It is a slow paced film, but it kept me engaged and riveted throughout.  I’m always leery when I see trailers that emphasize how much the critics love this film as that always seems desperate to me, but in this case the adulation is justified.  Just a fantastic film.

I give this film **** stars




Sunday, August 14, 2016

Sausage Party


        ‘Sausage Party’ is by far one of the crudest, loudest, and most offensive movies I think I have ever seen and I have to say I thoroughly enjoyed it.  Usually, when you have films that go for the mega shock value there is not much in way of depth or plot.  ‘Sausage Party’ embraces it’s juvenile humor, but at the same time gives us some impressive thought fodder on religious and political perspectives in the world today.  Disguised as a Pixar family friendly film (I hope some naive parents don’t accidentally take their kids to this), the stoner minds of Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg not only push the limits of good taste, but fly right past it without even waving.  This is a total deconstruction of Pixar animation’s penchant for anthropomorphizing everything on the planet from toys to animals.  I was going to give a warning to stay away if you are easily offended, but I think that ‘Sausage Party’ is such a fascinating and original film study, you should go even if you are offended (being offended now and then is good for you).

The story starts in the idyllic Shopwell supermarket, where at the beginning of each day all of the items of food prepare for the day with a rousing song (right up there with the best of any songs I’ve heard in a Pixar movie) in hopes they will be chosen by one of the Gods with the Carts and taken to the Great Beyond where they will find paradise.  Our heroes are a sausage hotdog named Frank (Seth Rogen) and beautiful hot dog bun named Brenda (Kristen Wigg), who long for the day when they will be chosen and they can finally leave their packages and be together (the innuendo has already started).  Since the big Fourth of July sale is coming up, they have no doubts they will soon be chosen by the Gods.  Everything seems fine and glorious until a returned jar of Honey Mustard (Danny MacBride), with a crazed look in his eyes and voice, tries to convince everyone what truly awaits them in the Great Beyond: Unimaginable horrors.  He is ignored as a crazed vagrant, but something rings true in his rants.

Frank tries not to let this unnerve him as he is focused solely on being with Brenda in the Great Beyond.  After finally being chosen, Frank and Brenda see the horrors of existence right in the Shopwell supermarket after a great shopping cart collision leaves several of their brethren maimed and discarded to the pits of a bottomless trash can.  The burst flour bag gives the entire scene an eerie and surprisingly moving recollection of 9/11.  It’s funny, but a very uncomfortable laugh at the same time as we realize this isn’t just a warm and fuzzy movie. Most of the foodstuffs are recovered and continue their journey to the Great Beyond, unknowing of what hideous consumption horrors await them when they reach their destination.  Frank and Brenda are cast off to the side as their bags were broken and they are no longer fresh. Frank is suddenly awakened to questioning truths he has accepted his whole life and seeks to traverse the supermarket to meet with the Immortals (or ‘non-perishable items’ as we would call them) in order to ask them about the truth of what lies beyond. Ethnic jokes and stereotypes abound as Frank traverses the different aisles containing every type of food from around the world.  If you appreciate that this is equal opportunity stereotyping, then the jokes can be quite clever at times with some sharp political lampoons.

There are many things to be offended by in this film, but also things that I very much appreciated.  While it had a secular message, it also preached respecting other’s beliefs as they hold them as strongly as a secularist holds their belief.  The theme that everyone deserves respect for their belief system, I felt overrode its’ secular underpinnings.  Hidden (and sometimes not even hidden) amongst the juvenile sexual innuendo and pot humor was a clever and thoughtful examination of existence and how we perceive it.   Despite its’ heart though, the humor comes first and I kept muttering “Oh, they did not just say that” to myself.  Or even better, when I saw a wind up to a joke I thought they wouldn’t have the courage to do, they did have the courage and went even beyond what I was bracing myself for.

I feel odd giving this film a lot of stars given how crude the humor was, but I always respect originality and, as I stated earlier, this isn’t a one trick movie.  There are many layers and levels in which to appreciate it.  Leave the kids at home and go have a guilty pleasure.  Funny, crude, moving, thoughful, over-the-top, all of this applies here. You’ll be surprised how much you talk about it afterwards… or maybe just an uncomfortable silence in the car ride home.  One or the other.

I give this film *** stars


Saturday, August 6, 2016

Suicide Squad



        I so wanted to like the “Suicide Squad’, DC’s attempt to shake up a superhero genre they haven’t mastered yet.  DC films are already much darker than Marvel’s, so I’m not sure how introducing a little known (to the general public at least) ragtag group of anti-heroes is going to be a game changer or make the DC universe any darker.  What the Warner Bros execs were hoping is to replicate the magic of Marvel’s ‘Guardians of the Galaxy’ and they don’t even come close.  They even thought putting in a cool retro soundtrack would cover a shoddy story and it wouldn’t be noticed.  That right there is the problem DC is having.  They are trying to copy Marvel’s success formula, from the shared universe to even types of movie storyline arcs.  They aren’t being original and are coming up with pale replicated product that is obviously being made by people who don’t truly understand the superhero genre.

This film is such a hot mess, I don’t even know where to start.  Maybe the good?  So, I love the concept of ‘The Suicide Squad’ even if I never liked the comic.  Similar to Lee Marvin’s ‘The Dirty Dozen’, but with superheroes.  The Government, represented by U.S. Intelligence agent Amanda Waller (Viola Davis in top form), fears they are defenseless in a world where people like Superman exist.  She proposes taking the meta-humans they currently have in prison and forcing them to work on behalf of the government in exchange for clemency.  The catch is that the missions are so dangerous it will almost assuredly mean their deaths. Waller recruits Special Forces soldier Rick Flagg (Joel Kinnaman) as the Unit commander. Waller uses various means of control over each, but the traditional ‘explosive-injected-into-the-neck’ is the most immediate.  The film spends the first 40 minutes reviewing each person’s history and profile arriving at us caring or investing in none of them.  Investment in characters has to be the basis or no movie will work.

Actually, I enjoyed Will Smith as Deadshot, but at the end of the day it is Will Smith being Will Smith. Nothing wrong with that (Robert Downey Jr made Ironman a household name doing that), but the character is nothing without him.  Of course, all the buzz is about Margot Robbie as Harley Quinn and Jared Leto as the Joker.  Not only did this seem to be a case of overacting for both of them, it seemed artificial and forced.  I hate comparing performances, but the Joker has set a high standard in previous films incarnations with Jack Nicholson and Heath Ledger (he even won an Oscar for his portrayal).  This isn’t even in the same class. I would compare this closer to Jim Carrey’s performance as the Riddler in ‘Batman Forever’; exaggerated and cartoony.  All the rest; Diablo, Killer Croc, and Captain Boomerang were generic and uninteresting.  Everyone had a hard luck story, but again it seemed so forced and wedged in, I rolled my eyes more than sympathized.  

The villainess is a nigh-omnipotent ancient being named The Enchantress (played oddly by Victoria Secret’s model Cara Delevingne) who resurrects her nigh-omnipotent brother (not sure if they ever mentioned his name) to do something…take over the world? Destroy the world?  That part of the plan is never spelled out clearly.  They build one of those machines that makes a hole above the city where everything starts sucking towards it.  Again, not sure what that is supposed to accomplish.  The decision is made to send the Suicide Squad in which really didn’t make any sense either because they had no plan other than just introduce them all and send them in to stop whatever was going on.  Since you need fight scenes, they fight weird cannon fodder mystical creatures created just for the express purpose to have fights.  They seem tough, but very few people get hurt while the creatures blow up constantly.

This film was so riddled with plot holes my head spun.  It never tried to be its’ own film rather just try to exploit other movie’s successes.  I guess my biggest issue is that the Suicide Squad was assembled to be a force to take on the likes of Superman, but none of them really had any powers that were formidable.  Harley Quinn basically walked around with a baseball bat saying and doing crazy things.  How did she even survive the first fight?  Captain Boomerang basically just had…metal boomerangs (Superman must be quaking in his cape)???  The Joker was barely in this despite what the previews would have you believe, so I’m not sure why there were so many stories about Jared Leto’s off camera method acting techniques or why he would take it so far with such limited screen time.  

‘Suicide Squad’ is probably the biggest misstep in an already shaky start to the DC universe franchise Warner Bros is trying to create.  I think they should start with trying to stop be Marvel and find their own voice and style.  I will say I have bias as I was always a Marvel fan growing up, but I really do want DC to succeed.  There is room enough for both Marvel and DC.  The difference is that Marvel movies are made by people who understand what makes super hero special in the hearts of the audience whereas the DC execs don’t understand the magic of super heroes and are just trying to use someone else’s formula for success.

I give this film ** stars