dinsdag 29 december 2020

Top 20: Favorite Movies of 2020

It’s an obvious statement, but 2020 was the weirdest year. And it also affected the movie business. I think I only went to the movie theater twice this year. The rest of the new films I saw on demand or on a streaming service. But despite it all, 2020 did give us some gems. And as always it was really hard to form a good top 20. It’s based on Dutch release dates, so you might see some movies on this list that are originally from 2019, but came out in 2020 in The Netherlands. And if you miss some movies, it’s possible that it won’t be released here until 2021 or I just haven’t seen it. Since I don’t get to see EVERY film made in 2020. Blood, sweat and tears, but here are the 20 best films of 2020, according to me.
 
20. I’m Thinking of Ending Things
A young woman is on her way to the parents of her brand new, rather boring boyfriend. And all the time she hears a little voice in her head that says: I’m thinking of Ending Things. An end to what? The relationship, her life, his life? Charlie Kaufman, best known for his scripts for “Being John Malkovich” and “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind”, based his third film as a director for the first time on the story of another. But it still is a typical Kaufman film. Incomprehensible, melancholic and heartbreakingly sad. Definitely the strangest movie on the list, yet so beautiful and hard ignore.
 
19. Swallow
Not particularly subtle, but smart. That’s how this feature film debut gives its own twist to the rare eating disorder pica. Haley Bennet feels completely at home in this film, which has a great match in colors. Everything is right: from the pastel-colored villa with beautiful furniture to the costumes and make-up of Bennet. Behind this dreamlike life lurks a huge nightmare. It gets crazier and crazier: Hunter first starts eating ice cubes, then a pebble and a marble. Hunter must and will swallow it. Even if it endangers her and her unborn baby’s health. “Swallow” is extremely difficult to watch, probably hard to stomach for those not used to this kind of film. But it’s an amazing and original film. Tip: do not eat while watching this film.
 
18. A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood
In the US, every kid grew up with Fred Rogers (1928-2003), because of his TV show “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood”, in which he talked about social issues with children in an extremely calm and friendly manner. He did this for over thirty years. This film portrait, based on an article in Esquire, follows a journalist wo was initially skeptical about Rogers’ impeccable image, but became increasingly impressed by him. The other American sweetheart, Tom Hanks, is perfectly cast as Rogers and convincingly brings him to life. The film is inevitably sentimental, but also original and nuanced. It will probably impress you more if you grew up with Fred Rogers, but it’s still a beautiful movie with a message. Or like movie critic Scott Mantz once said: this is the movie version of a hug.
 
17.
Richard Jewell
True story about security guard Richard Jewell, who during the Olympic Games in Atlanta discovers a backpack with a bomb in it. Because of his actions, it only caused one death instead of hundreds. He is a hero for exactly three days. After that, he is considered a potential suspect. After which the media and the FBI will turn his life upside down. It’s a bizarre story with an anti-hero in the leading role. And Sam Rockwell as the absolute highlight of the film.
 
16. Tenet
The first blockbuster in this Covid19 period and it was exactly the right film at the right time: a two and a half hour adrenaline rush, custom made for the biggest screen of all. With “Tenet”, Christopher Nolan presents his own version of a Bond film: with spy entanglements, exotic locations, fast flying, boating and vehicles, but also with a serious undertone and complicated time travel dispute. The script is very complex, which make a second viewing necessary. The characters are just pawns in an equally fascinating puzzle. If you thought “Inception” was complicated, think again.
 
15. The Half of It
Bookworm Ellie is hired by soccer player Paul to write a love letter for Aster, the prettiest girl in the class. She does this with verve, but there is one problem. Ellie herself is in love with Aster. On paper, this is the umpteenth production from Netflix, starring young adults in love. But by focusing on friendship instead of the usual average romance, director Alice Wu manages to lift her second feature film far above average. Hopefully we will get to see lead actress Leah Lewis more in the future. I really loved this movie more than I expected to.
 
14. The Devil All the Time
The American writer Donald Ray Pollock must have suffered a great deal of religious frustration in the past: his debut novel “The Devil All the Time” is full of perverse preachers, Bible-quoting brutes and other religious madmen. In this ambitious film with an impressive cast, Pollock himself, performs as a storyteller. Place of action is the area around Knockemstiff, Ohio, where the traumatized orphan Arvin Russell tries to stay on the right path. A grotesque, sullen but also fascinating portion of Southern Gothic.
 
13. Bad Education
True story: in 2004, the Roslyn High School newspaper in New York unveiled a major corruption scandal within its own school. In this subdued film, Hugh Jackman impressively plays the role of Frank Tassone, the amiable superintendent of the school district who is confronted with the embezzlement of hundreds of thousands of dollars by one of his closest employees. Screenwriter Mike Makowsky witnesses the scandal as a student up close and turned it into a fascinating modern tragedy about greed. Hugh Jackman and Allison Janney are both superb in their roles.
 
12. Uncut Gems
New York jeweler Howard Ratner lives his life in top gear. He has a family, prestige, and a running business, but is always looking for a new deal or the next chance. Without giving the viewer a second’s rest, the directing brothers Safdie drag their main character from crucial encounter to crucial encounter. And in Adam Sandler they found their ideal protagonist. Always fucked up, frantic and exuberant. But where he irritates you in a lot of his films, he now manages to move you. Sandler’s best performance to date and definitely Oscar-worthy.
 
11. Never Rarely Sometimes Always
The seventeen-year-old Autumn is pregnant, unwanted. She wants to have an abortion, but that is only allowed in her home state of Pennsylvania with permission of her parents. Because she doesn’t want to inform them, she travels to New York with her niece. The rules there are more lenient. This subdued social drama, is a subtle feminist statement that at times is very moving. The leading actresses are fantastic, although their characters remain very passive and therefor somewhat distant. It’s a realistic and raw film, that really made a big impression on me.
 
10.The Gentlemen
We follow American expat Mickey Pearson, who built a profitable marijuana empire in London. When the story goes that he wants to leave the business, Mickey has to deal with conspiracies, intrigue, bribery and blackmail in an attempt to take everything away from him. If you’re a fan of Guy Ritchie’s previous films “Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels” and “Snatch”, this is definitely your cup of tea as well. Fun characters and strong performances, especially by Charlie Hunnam and Hugh Grant.
 
9. David Attenborough: A Life on Our Planet
Biologist David Attenborough, world-famous maker of dozens of nature documentaries and now 94 years old, looks back on his life in this impressive film essay. The conclusion is harsh: in recent decades the wilderness has been systematically destroyed and CO2 emission have increased in an extreme way, causing the planet to face a catastrophe. But it is not yet too late, according to Attenborough. If we radically change our way of life, starting with our diet and agriculture, we can still save ourselves. This documentary was frightening, because of the scary reality it pictures us. But also inspiring and a good lesson for all of us.
 
8. Da 5 Bloods
More than forty years after they fought there, four black Vietnam War veterans go in search of the corpse of their fallen comrade, as well as the chest full of gold they lost after a helicopter crash. In the successor to “BlackKklansman”, director Spike Lee mixes different genres (war, satire, psychological drama), but above all he zooms in on the underexposed role of African-American soldiers in Vietnam. Razor shark and unforgettable. In short: vintage Spike Lee.
 
7. Hors Normes
French director duo Olivier Nakache and Eric Toledano, best know for “Intouchables”, specialize in feelgood films with more serious themes. “Hors Normes” (international title: The Specials) is no exception. We follow Bruno, who runs a shelter for several autistic children, and his good friend Malek, who trains underprivileged young adults to become supervisors of those children. Bruno is Orthodox Jewish, Malek Muslim. In terms of plot, this truthful drama has little to do with it, but the despite-all-optimistic tone is particularly contagious, and it is played beautifully by both professional and non-professional actors.
 
6. The Lighthouse
New England, 1890. Lighthouse keepers Thomas and Ephraim will have to spend a month together in an abandoned lighthouse on a remote island. It will be an incomparable battle of wills, in which fever dreams and reality merge into one another. Director Robert Eggers, who wrote the scenario together with his brother Max, chose to film in black and white and wrote the roles of Thomas and Ephraim with Willem Dafoe and Robert Pattinson in mind. “The Lighthouse” is loud and baroque in tone and very oppressive and uncanny. Not for everyone, but for the more advanced movie viewer.
 
5. Dark Waters
This movie really surprised me and I never expected to have it this high up on my list before I started watching it. But this film left a big impression and left me speechless as well. It’s a true story about attorney Robert Bilott, who fights against chemical giant DuPont, where substances known to be bad for people and the environment were used for decades. Director of this subdued but impressive film is Todd Haynes, who, after a series of beautiful stylized melodramas (“Far From Heaven”, “Carol”, “Wonderstruck”), for the first time – and with success – ventures into a highly political film.  
 
4. The Invisible Man
This horror/ thriller movie proved what I always claim about the genre: it’s what you don’t see that scares you the most. And here it is very literal, because he is invisible. You are constantly focused on what is going on around Cecilia, watching if you can ‘see’ him. It has only a few jump scares, but all effective and anything but cheap. And Elisabeth Moss proves once again that she is one of the finest actresses of the moment.
 
3. Little Women
Another film adaptation of Louise May Alcott’s world-famous book, nevertheless manages to give an entirely unique twist to the well-known story about an impoverished bourgeois family at the time of the American Civil War. Aspirant writer Jo (Saoirse Ronan), one of the four sisters in the family, is still central, but director Greta Gerwig shows striking understanding for the ambitious Amy (Florence Pugh), who was invariably the ‘bad sister’ in previous versions. I already loved the 1994 version with Winona Ryder, but this is my favorite.
 
2. 1917
War thriller “1917” gives the impression of being filmed in one continuous shot. Experienced viewers will often wonder how cinematographer Roger Deakins pulled it off. The stunning technique, however, does not get in the way of the drama, but contributes to a rare and oppressive tension. Director Sam Mendes based the plot, about two British soldiers being sent on a life-threatening mission in the northern French trenches, on the experiences of his grandfather, and knows how to bring chaos and tragedy on the Great War breathtakingly close.  
 
1. Jojo Rabbit
The corny absurdism of the New Zealand director Taika Waititi worked very well in movies like “What We Do in the Shadows” and “Thor: Ragnarok”, and yet again, in a more heavy theme with the World War II as a background, he managed it again. Jojo is a young boy in Hitler’s army and he finds out his mother is hiding a Jewish girl in their home. It’s a brilliant satire. Waititi himself plays Hitler, who is also Jojo’s imaginary friend. “Jojo Rabbit” is, without any doubt, my favorite of the year.

Honorable Mentions: Enola Holmes, Happiest Season, Mank, 21 Bridges, Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga, Emma., The Hunt, Escape from Pretoria, Sonic the Hedgehog, The Trial of the Chicago 7, Kiss the Ground

Movie Review - Mank

Director:
David Fincher
Genre: Drama
Runtime: 131 minutes
Year: 2020
Starring: Gary Oldman, Amanda Seyfried, Lily Collins, Charles Dance, Tuppence Middleton, Leven Rambin, Tom Burke, Tom Pelphrey, Arliss Howard, Toby Leonard Moore, Joseph Cross, Jamie McShane, Elvy, Sam Throughton, Natalie Denise Sperl, Ferdinand Kingsley, Adam Shapiro

Description: 1930s Hollywood is reeveluated through the eyes of scathing social critic and alcoholic screenwriter herman J, Mankiewicz (Gary Oldman) as he races to finish the screenplay of Citizen Kane.

Review: Screenwriter Herman Mankiewicz, Mank for short, is approached by Orson Welles to work on a film script. Through flashbacks his route to the making of this script will be explained.
I know director David Fincher mainly from his darker work, like “Se7en”, “Zodiac”, “Gone Girl” and his profound series “Mindhunter”. So when I saw his name connected to this film, I was intrigued. And yes, with Gary Oldman in the lead, it quickly got my attention. “Mank” is an ode to film from the late 30s, early 40s. With “Citizen Kane” as the legendary battleship of his catgory. This is a film that cinephiles with a penchant for old Hollywood will enjoy.
“Mank” was shot in that style: completely black and white, with methods of lighting and sound that make you feel like you’re in classic Hollywood. Fincher makes the choice here to e very stylistic, which I didn’t expect him to be. And he did this very well. Gary Oldman plays the charismatic Mank, intellectual chatterbox and professional drunk, and he does this sublime. Amanda Seyfried, who I have never been a big fan of, plays her best role so far. And Charles Dance is always great in whatever he does. But it’s Oldman’s movie and nobody will be able to drink enough to come across as credibly drunk as Oldman does here soberly. And at the same time eh finds the balance between pedanticism and sympathy.  
The script is well put together, but doesn’t have much to do. “Mank” is a bit too long to my taste. The many flashbacks add to how Mank wrote the script for “Citizen Kane”, because that’s what this is all about, and why he made certain script choices. The film certainly isn’t boring, but it won’t appeal to everyone. The cinephiles among us will love it. For the rest: this is a stylistic biographical film you may or may not like. It suits me just fine!

Rating: 3,5 / 5

10s Movie Review - Texas Chainsaw

Director:
John Luessenhop
Genre: Horror/ Thriller
Runtime: 90 minutes
Year: 2013
Starring: Alexandra Daddario, Dan Yeager, Trey Songz, Scott Eastwood, Tania Raymonde, Shaun Sipos, Keram Maliki-Sánchez, James MacDonald, Thom Barry, Paul Rae, Richard Riehle, Bill Moseley, Gunnar Hansen

Description: A young woman (Alexandra Daddario) travels to Texas to collect her inheritance; little does she know that an encounter with a chainsaw-wielding killer is part of the reward.

Review: “Texas Chainsaw” is a horror slasher about the murderous Sawyer family. Years ago, after a gruesome massacre, their house was burned to the ground by angry neighbors. Including all the members of the family, if was thought. Decades later and many miles away Heather finds out tha her parents are not her biological parents, but her adoptive parents. She inherited a piece of Texas land from her grandmother whom she never knew. With her boyfriend and some other friends, she takes the car for a long drive, with the final destination: the gigantic house of Heather’s grandmother. Heather’s grandmother and her biological parents seem t have had a strange connection with the infamous Leatherface in the past and let him hide in the this house.

Carl Mazzocone, president of the Twisted Pictures, has always been a big fan of “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre” and Leatherface is one of his favorite horror villains. He believes that the perfect boogie man should be authentic and realistic. When the original was released, the film was told to be based on a true story. Many people still thought ans still think that the story really happened. Serial killer Ed Gein was taken as a cource of inspiration for Leatherface, so somewhere it’s true. Mazzocone felt that more could be done with the story and asked writer/ director John Luessenhop to join his project.

Unfortunately they did not succeed in reaching their goals. This sequel doesn’t feel authentic or realistic at all. The film starts right away with a big mistake. Heather is a girl in her early 20s, but she should be in her late 30s. after all, she was found as a baby after the murder in 1974. It also seems as if the makers couldn’t make a choice as to what kind of film it should be. The first part of the film is set in 1974m and starts just before the original ends. The atmosphere feels good for a horror mvie, nothing wrong with that. If an original story had been made it would have been fine. But no, it was decided to go to the present with a goup of teenagers entering an abandoned house. I think we’ve all seen this before. Then it becomes a complete mess and instead of a fun popcorn horror slasher, the film becomes laughable. There is one scene, where Heather is trying to get away from Leatherface and ends up at a carnival. In her eyes, the best option to get away from him, is to grab onto one of the gondolas on a Ferris wheel. Only for it to go around, with Leatherface just waiting for her at the end. There are always dumb people in these movies, but this is next level.

There are small references to the original, but that’s for pure nostalgia reasons. But overall, “Texas Chainsaw” is a sequel nobody really needed.

Rating: 1,5 / 5 

00s Movie Review - The Reader

Director:
Stephen Daldry
Genre: Drama/ Romance
Runtime: 124 minutes
Year: 2008
Starring: Kate Winslet, Ralph Fiennes, David Kross, Susanne Lothar, Alissa Wilms, Florian Bartholomäi, Friederike Becht, Matthias Habich

Description: Post-WWII Germany: Nearly a decade after his affair with an older woman came to a mysterious end, law student Michael Berg (David Kross) re-encounters his former lover (Kate Winslet) as she defends herself in a war-crime trial.

Review: It is 1958. The fifteen-year-old student Michael Berg meets a mysterious middle-aged woman who works as a conductor for the city streetcar. There is something behind this Hanna Schmitz’s grump looks: although she refuses to talk about herself, she likes to listen to Goethe and Doris Lessing. Michael presents the passages to her. Perversity is lurking, but a bizarre form of love emerges from Hanna’s sexual advances. But then suddenly she’s gone. Eight years later, Michael, now a law student, suddenly hears that Hanna is on trial because of her past as a camp executioner for the Nazis.
Although it remains uncomfortable to see the darkest page of the Second World War reduced to emotional films about lost memories and stranded loves, a moral breakthrough sounds from the revival of the Holocaust film in the 2000s. Earlies in 2008, there was “The Boy in the Striped Pajamas”, after the acclaimed children’s novel with the same title, mainly taught a young generation what the horrors of the Holocaust were. In “The Reader”, the adaptation of Bernard Schlink’s bestseller, Stephen Daldry focuses on a more mature audience with a theme that has remained untouched in Hollywood until 2008: the collective guilt of Germans and a second generation struggling with their parents’ crime.  
The topical but also somewhat transparent themes that Schlink cited in his novel led to a renewed riot about the issue of German guilt. The film, on the other hand, does nothing more than just briefly touching the subject. Heavily set court scenes. What would you have done? It doesn’t really focus on it and ultimately the story has nothing to do with the moral core of Hanna Schmitz’s crimes.
In “The Reader”, the question of crime, punishment and penance also fades because the chosen plot lines mainly want to show insight into the aftermath of a scheming love. Kate Winslet won an Academy Award for her role, when there were better contenders that year. And this is definitely not one of her best performances. The film wants you to sympathize with Hanna’s character. But you simply never do.
To me it remains annoying that Hollywood thinks it can best capture the most horrible and reprehensible crimes with sentiment and beauty.

Rating: 2,5/ 5

vrijdag 25 december 2020

Netflix Friday - Volume 35

Some Netflix film tips for the weekend! And there is something for everyone, since I picked a movie for all the different genres.
 
Action: The Equalizer (2014)
A man (Denzel Washington) believes he has put his mysterious past behind him and has dedicated himself to beginning a new, quiet life, before he meets a young girl (Chlöe Grace Moretz) under the control of ultra-violent Russian gangsters and can’t stand idly by.
 
Drama: Revolutionary Road (2008)
A young couple (Leonardo DiCaprio, Kate Winslet) living in a Connecticut suburb suring the mid- 1950s struggle to come to terms with their personal problems while trying to raise their two children.
 
Comedy: Office Christmas Party (2016)
When Clay’s (T.J. Miller) uptight CEO sister (Jennifer Aniston) threatens to shut down his branch, the branch manager (Jason Bateman) throws an epic Christmas party in order to land a big client and save the day, but the party gets way out of hand…
 
Animation:
Rise of the Guardians (2012)
When the evil spirit Pitch (Jude Law) launches an assault on Earth, the Immortal Guardians team up to protect the innocence of children all around the world.
 
Romance: The Holiday (2006)
Two women (Cameron Diaz, Kate Winslet) troubled with guy-problems swap homes in each other’s countries, where they each meet a local guy and fall in love.
 
Horror: Dawn of the Dead (2006)
Survivors of a worldwide plague that is producing aggressive, flesh-eating zombies, take refuge in a mega Midwestern shopping mall.
 
Science Fiction: Inception (2010)
A thief (Leonardo DiCaprio) who steals corporate secrets through the use of dram-sharing technology is given the inverse task of planting an idea into the mind of a C.E.O.
 
Crime: Black Mass (2015)
The true story of Whitey Bulger (Johnny Depp), the brother of a state senator (Benedict Cumberbatch) and the most infamous violent criminal in the history of South Boston, who became an FBI informant to take down a Mafia family invading his turf.
 
Thriller: Zodiac (2007)
In the late 1960s/ early 1970s, a San Francisco cartoonist (Jake Gyllenhaal) becomes an amateur detective obsessed with tracking down the Zodiac Killer, an unidentified individual who terrorizes Northern California with a killing spree.
 
Documentary
: Evil Genius (2018)
The extraordinary story of the “pizza bomber heist” and the FBI’s investigation into a bizarre collection of suspects.
 
Family: The Christmas Chronicles (2018)
The story of sister and brother, Kate and Teddy Pierce, whose Christmas Eve plans to catch Santa Claus on camera turns into an unexpected journey that most kids could only dream about.

donderdag 24 december 2020

Movie Review - Tenet

Director:
Christopher Nolan
Genre: Action/ Science Fiction
Runtime: 150 minutes
Year: 2020
Starring: John David Washington, Robert Pattinson, Elizabeth Debicki, Clémence Poésy, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Kenneth Branagh, Michael Caine

Description: Armed with only one word, Tenet, and fighting for the survival of the wntire world, a Protagonist (John David Washington) journeys through a twilight world of international espionage on a mission that will unfold in something beyond real time.

Review: That Christopher Nolan would one day make a film about time travel was of course a matter of time (no pun intended). When early in “Tenet” a simple clock is turned back an hour, it seems like a conscious wink from the always time juggling filmmaker. But you can also see it as an indication that the time travel rules used will be a bit more complex than turning back the clock. The general gimmick is presented relatively quickly: a reversed experience of time. Since Nolan’s oeuvre can be summarized as an intellectual puzzle of macho subjects, we should not be surprised that this concept is explained by a means of a pistol: as a shot, bullets are not fired, but go back into the firearm. But this technology also appears to be applicable to people, with all its complications.
Now Christopher Nolan is far from being the first to use such a narrative element. Tenet are consistently in reverse mode. In their own experience they do everything normal, but anyone who moves forward in time sees them walking backwards and hears them talking backwards (lost me yet?).
“Tenet” is in everything a pure Nolan film: a grand action spectacle about well-dressed men who deal with serious matters, seasoned with bombastic music and well-crafted stunts, wrapped up in a complex puzzle. But while Nolan still managed to put all these elements perfectly to his hand in “Inception”, this time he may have overplayed his hand a little. This way, the difficulty has been increased to such an extent that after a while t becomes difficult to connect al the plot points. The time travel aspect would suffice for a complex narrative, but “Tenet” has been set up as a spy thriller full of shadowy players and double agendas, which doesn’t exactly make it easier to understand. A war between the present and the future? Such ambition compels admiration, but it’s likely that the viewers gradually loses sight of exactly what’s at stake.  
The film becomes a lot easier to watch when the spy plot is released slightly and is used more on the time travel elements. The it turns out that the complexity is not much greater than that of a time travel movie “Déjà Vu”. Although Nolan makes sure that the viewers will have to keep puzzling until the end.
The film has some amazing scenes, like a car chase scene or a fight scene between two people who experience each time in a different way.
You might say that Nolan was over-ambitious and over-complicated this film. For me, the complexity of the film is reason enough to rewatch “Tenet” someday, because I really want to fully understand this film. It’s a beautiful looking movie, with a formula that is starting to show some cracks, but even a Nolan film that isn’t perfect, is still worth watching.

Rating: 4 / 5

10s Movie Review - Cats

Director:
Tom Hooper
Genre: Musical
Runtime: 110 minutes
Year: 2019
Starring: James Corden, Judi Dench, Jason Derulo, Idris Elba, Jennifer Hudson, Ian McKellen, Francesca Hayward, Taylor Swift, Rebel Wilson, Robbie Fairchild, Ray Winstone

Description: A tribe of cats called the Jellicles must decide yearly which one will ascend to the Heaviside Layer and come back to a new Jellicle life.

I WATCHED THIS MOVIE FOR MY 2020 MOVIE CHALLENGE.
WEEK 52: A MUSICAL

Review: Some movies are better left unseen. And I was warned, I read only bad reviews for “Cats”, but I was curious to how bad it could really be. They sure were exaggerating, right? Well, no.
In 2012, film and theater maker Tom Hooper revolutionized the musical film world with his raw adaptation of “Lés Miserables”.  His approach, in which he let the actors sing live on set and only later added the instrumentation, wasn’t to everyone’s liking, but it was daring. I liked it. It even gave Anne Hathaway an Oscar.
This time, Hooper decided to tackle another classic. In his version of “Cats” we yet again witness are teary eyed soloist during the most famous song of the musical. With Jennifer Hudson’s rendition of “Memory” you have the only highlight of this musical adaptation by Andrew Lloyd Webber. The song passes by twice and the kick-off and reprise re forged together by and endless line of music videos that take advantage of Lloyd Webber’s beautiful music.
Hooper has a different take on this musical than with “Lés Miserables”. This time no approach to reality, but a thin plot about a bunch of street cats trying to choose one of them for a new cat life during a restless London night. The chosen one of a group that calls itself the Jellicles is not so easy to identify. Especially the bad guy Macavity seems to throw a spanner in the works by kidnapping potential candidates. The timid Grizabella feels unseen and Jennyanydots is just a little too confident. Then there is newcomer Victoria who is not yet officially part of the group and can try to have a new life with the Jellicles.
Hooper has taken special digital techniques to shape his cats (and even mice and cockroaches). The first trailer already came with a lot of criticism. And I understand why. The special effect look terrible, the cats look to much like humans. They even have hands instead of paws. And their ears seem to have been given a life of their own. The constantly move. It’s more like something out of a nightmare, then an enchanting musical which it is supposed to be. And because these cats look so much like people, the oversized setpieces make no sense. They are supposed to be the size of our domestic cats, so everything in their environment is blown up. But now it’s just hairy people dancing around large furniture. And the overuse of cat references and cat puns doesn’t really help either.
And why did they torture great actors like Judi Dench, Ian McKellen and Idris Elba with this? “Cats” is one of the worst movies I have seen in the past few years. It’s pure torment. Never see it, even if you’re curious.

Rating: 0,5 / 5

Movie Review - Never Rarely Sometimes Always

Director:
Eliza Hittman  
Genre: Drama
Runtime: 84 minutes
Year: 2020
Starring: Sidney Flanigan, Talia Ryder, Théodore Pellerin

Description: A pair of teenage girls (Sidney Flanigan, Talia Ryder) in rural Pennsylvania travel to New York City to seek out medical help after an unintended pregnancy.

Review: In a conservative town in Pennsylvania, Autumn fins out she is pregnant. The teenage girl is having a hard time, with a father who show more love for the dog than for his daughter, who he thinks is just a grumpy child. Her classmates and peers usually treat her unkindly and give her disdainful looks. She knows nothing as certain as not wanting to become a mother. But she is insecure as how she should manage it. The only one who helps her unconditionally is her friend and niece Skylar. But how much can the two teenage girls do?
How little the system can do and how restrictive the American system can be for those on the wrong side of limitless possibilities is nowhere more obvious than at Autumns local abortion clinic. The suspicion that she is pregnant is confirmed by the attending physician with a pregnancy test from the supermarket, after which she is shown a video tape in which a white man lists the harmful effects of an abortion. At home, however, they are not allowed to know anything about the pregnancy and soon the possibilities seem exhausted within the limits of the law.
Autumn and Skylar flee to liberal New York, where an abortion can be discussed and the questions asked are more humane. But here too the system and Autumn turn out to be like water and fire and the somewhat less introverted Skylar has to use all her unconditional love to prevent the personal drama from becoming a dramatic disaster. The girls undergo the days largely in silence, every new day with new problems. It’s only a few days, with only a few problems, but they seem endless and insurmountable.
“Never Rarely Sometimes Always” manages to merge these two themes, the big imposed system and the small personal suffering, in a poignant way. Absolute climax and low point is the scene from which the film derives its title. A shot that seems to last for minutes in which a visibly broken Autumn disrupts the preconceptions of a system. A well-meaning care worker has to ask her a number of prescribed questions, instructing her to reduve any sexual trauma to an answer on a four-point scale: never, rarely, sometimes, always.
Add to this the fact that the dup in the leading role is taking the first step in the film world and the impersonal fluorescent light in which the underground subway stations an above-ground abortion clinic bathe and the film becomes an indictment of the system. A system from which you can’t win, but where you can only do your best to limit your loss, no matter what you want and where you come from.
It's a raw, realistic and impressive film. Probably a movie that will be overlooked, so if you have the change to see it, do!

Rating: 4 / 5

00s Movie Review - Hostel

Director:
Eli Roth
Genre: Horror
Runtime: 95 minutes
Year: 2005
Starring: Jay Hernandez, Derek Richardson, Eythor Gudjonsson, Barbara Nedeljakova, Jan Vlasák, Jana Kaderabkova, Jennifer Lim, Lubomir Bukovy, Jana Havlickova, Rick Hoffman
 
Description: Three backpackers head to a Slovak city that promises to meet their hedonistic expectations, with no idea of the hell that awaits them.

Review: Two American students, Paxton and Josh, are on vacation in Europe where they travel by train to different countries. They are looking for sex, drugs and booze, culture they have never heard of. They meet Oli, from Iceland, who will tag along with the,. While they are partying in Amsterdam, they aren’t able to get back in their hostel. A stranger offers them to stay with him. He tells the friends about a hostel in Bratislava, Slovakia. According to him, the hostel is full of the most beautiful women who are only interested in tourists. Paxton, Josh and Oli decide to go to Slovakia and see it for themselves. And it is true. But it’s all a bit too good to be true, because hell awaits them.
Eli Roth made his directorial debut with “Cabin Fever” in 2002. A story about a group a young people who fall prey to a flesh-eating virus. It was a gory film, with lots of blood. “Hostel” falls in the same category. It’s not a very scary horror movie, it’s mainly about the gore and gruesome images. And for people with a weak stomach, it’s probably hard to watch.
The acting isn’t spectacular, although Jay Hernandez (the only more well-known name) does a solid job. “Hostel” is a film that horror films will enjoy. And because it’s not a very long movie, it’s perfect for a horror movie night.

Rating: 3/ 5

zondag 20 december 2020

TV Show Review - The Mandalorian (Season 2)

Season:
2
Genre: Science Fiction/ Adventure/ Action
Number of episodes: 8
Year: 2020
Starring: Pedro Pascal, Carl Weathers, Gina Carano, Giancarlo Esposito, Katee Sackhoff, Temuera Morrison, Ming-Na Wen, Rosario Dawson, Bill Burr

Description: The travels of a lone bounty hunter in the outer reaches of the galaxy, far from the authority of the New Republic.

Review: Bounty Hunter Din Djarin is determined to deliver The Child to the mythical Jedi. Meanwhile, the supporters of the fallen Empire, led by Moff Gideon, are right behind him.
“Star Wars” is one of those franchises whose name has long been synonymous with major theatrical releases, but since 2019 it has also taken a step towards streaming services, with the first live-action series: “The Mandalorian”. And it is the crown jewel of Disney +.
There have been many animated series, but “The Mandalorian” is an original concept. Led by showrunner Jon Favreau. The first season turned out to be a hit with “Star Wars” fans all over the world, including myself. And it was one of the best, if not the best, series of that year. And with season 2 having its finale, it probably also is of 2020.
At the start of this season, we follow Mando and each episode contains a separate plot. But as the season continues, it becomes a more connected story that works towards a goal. The fate of The Child turns out to be more important to the “Star Wars” universe than expected.
In the first season, Mando was mostly the protector of The Child. He simply did his job. He is still the protector, but the two have formed a bond. This gives the bounty hunter even more character development. Despite the fact that we only seen him in a handful of scenes without a helmet, Pedro Pascal provides him with a lot of personality by making good use of his voice and body language. Pascal is yet again a strong asset in the series.
Season 2 contains a lot of references to the original trilogy, but also the prequels, the sequels and the animated series. This is not just for fan service, although most of it feels like it. But I don’t care, because it’s been done so well and it makes a lot of purists happy.
I think, season 2 of “The Mandalorian” gave us what we were hoping for with the last “Star Wars” movie. This movie was a big disappointment for a lot of people, including myself. And the second season of “The Mandalorian” is anything but a disappointment.
Once again, Jon Favreau and his directors take u to the crucibles of the “Star Wars” universe. “The Mandalorian” remains a series that will only appeal to “Star Wars” fans. The second season is bigger, better and more exciting. And I didn’t believe that was possible.