Movie Reviews
‘Amsterdam’ review: Worst movie of the year makes Oscar winners look like amateurs
The brand new film “Amsterdam” has been shrouded in secrecy for months. We now know why — it’s unwatchable.
A number of occasions throughout Wednesday evening’s press screening of David O. Russell’s colossal clunker, I thought of strolling out. One main critic acquired up from his chair after 45 minutes, by no means to return. Meet the luckiest man on the planet!
However, no, I stayed for the drama that was as befuddling emotionally because it was astoundingly tedious and unattainable to comply with. That’s weird, as a result of the movie, on paper, seems to be a recipe for greatness.
Zero stars. Operating time: 134 minutes. Rated R (transient violence and bloody photos). In theaters Oct. 7.
Its director and author, Russell (“Silver Linings Playbook,” “The Fighter,” “American Hustle”), is a usually expert storyteller. And he assembled a formidable roster of A-list stars: Christian Bale, Margot Robbie, John David Washington, Rami Malek, Robert De Niro, Chris Rock, Anya Taylor-Pleasure . . . Taylor Swift! The intriguing plot issues a should-be fascinating, little-known piece of American historical past a couple of foiled coup to overthrow the federal government and set up a fascist dictator. Neat.
“Amsterdam” has each benefit conceivable. Doesn’t matter. It’s the worst film of the yr thus far, and I’ll bow all the way down to no matter comes alongside and tops it.
The floperoo begins in 1933 New York Metropolis, the place Burt (Bale), a World Warfare I vet, works as a physician serving to to restore troopers injured in battle. His finest pal from the 369th Infantry Regiment, Harold (Washington), is a lawyer, and each are summoned, film-noir fashion, by Liz (Swift, who may have a tough time shaking this one off) to offer her useless politician father a graphic post-mortem. (Zoe Saldana has a thankless position as a nurse fidgeting with intestines.) Liz needs to unravel his mysterious dying.
Then Burt and Harold are caught up in a distinct homicide investigation, and we’re whisked again to 1918 France, the place a weirdo nurse named Valerie (Margot Robbie), who collects bullets and shrapnel, is aiding the boys of their restoration. The trio grow to be mates and jet off to Amsterdam; Valerie and Harold begin canoodling, and everyone dances and makes imprecise work.
All of the whereas, we catch onto Russell’s worrisome directorial id disaster. In making a multidecade story of battlefields, historical past and prosthetics, he’s channeling Robert Zemeckis. Badly. And in enlisting a Self-importance Truthful Oscars social gathering of celebrities to play dry eccentrics in a washed-out colour scheme, he’s making an attempt to be Wes Anderson. Badly, once more. Its annoying smugness is extremely paying homage to Adam McKay’s “The Large Quick” and “Vice.”
Every part Russell is so admired for is lacking. The place is the indie coronary heart of “Playbook”? The rawness of “The Fighter”? The sensuality and enjoyable of “American Hustle”? Beats me. The one high quality to be present in “Amsterdam” is ineptitude.
The story isn’t any simpler to trace after we return to the Thirties and meet CIA and MI-5 brokers (Michael Shannon and Mike Myers), who’ve entrance jobs as glass-eye salesmen and a ardour for taxidermy birds, or after the rich Vozes arrive, performed by Malek and Taylor-Pleasure, who’re unusual, highly effective, sinister and boring.
De Niro is later launched as a normal who Burt needs to offer a speech at his upcoming gala for veterans in Manhattan, whereas different forces want him to assist stand up towards the US authorities.
Rock performs one other vet named Milton who often makes lofty admonishments towards racism in his regular stand-up cadence. All people on the display tells jokes; no person within the theater laughs at them. We’re too busy making an attempt to determine what the hell is occurring.
Suffice it to say, probably the most highly effective Swiffer on the planet couldn’t clear up this mess — nor can Swift, who is just not an actress.
Lots of the actors she seems with, however, are often wonderful however come off like amateurs right here. Bale yuks it up, whereas Washington recedes. Malek and Taylor-Pleasure can’t resist their habit to behaving like Martians, and Robbie provides us Harley Quinn-lite. De Niro isn’t terrible — merely current.
Actually, there’s nothing the forged might do with the hack-job script Russell has written and the shapeless tone he immediately prefers. All people speaks detachedly, as if they’re studying off of cue playing cards. The blanket noncommittal perspective should have been an instruction. “Blander! Blander!” Russell screamed.
It’s been seven years for the reason that director’s final film, “Pleasure.” Right here’s hoping that when the subsequent one comes alongside, he rediscovers pleasure, and humor, and stress, and construction, and character growth, and dialogue and . . .
Movie Reviews
Moana 2 movie review: Disney’s sequel is visually breathtaking but fails to recreate the magic of first part
The makers have made Moana 2 a visual spectacle but failed to add depth to the emotions of the characters as the film is marred by the unidimensional and predictable storyline
read more
Star cast (Voiceovers): Auliʻi Cravalho, Dwayne Johnson, Khaleesi Lambert-Tsuda, Rose Matafeo, David Fane, Hualālai Chung, Awhimai Fraser, and Gerald Ramsey
Directors: David Derrick Jr., Jason Hand, Dana Ledoux Miller
Well, the first part of Moana was like a breath of fresh air for me, and I still cherish it as one of my favourites thanks to its emotional depth and other amazing elements. After a gap of eight years, the second part of our beloved is set to hit the screens, and while the expectations are sky-high, with a heavy heart, I have to admit that it fails to recreate the magic of the first part.
Talking about the plot, _
Moana 2 s_tarts after 3 years from where the first part concluded. Our beloved wayfinder Moana is hunting for more islands like her own Motunui, where people reside. Amid this, she gets an unexpected call from her ancestors, who inform her about the cursed island of Motufetu, which is deserted by the power-hungry god Nalo.
As the world is disconnected due to Motufetu being submerged in the ocean, Moana along with her small group of unique and weird people is on a mission to find Motufetu, which will reconnect all the people. On the journey, she also finds her old friend Maui, who claims himself to be a demi-god. Well, will they be able to save the island and beat god Nalo? For that, you have to watch Moana 2 on the big screen.
Honestly, the makers have made Moana 2 a visual spectacle but failed to add depth to the emotions of the characters and are marred by the unidimensional and predictable storyline. While the sequel is ahead of its predecessor in terms of VFX but lacks the magic of the first part.
The film doesn’t have any high points or wow moments as the challenges faced by the limited and prominent characters don’t emerge as an engrossing experience. Despite these problems, I still feel Moana 2 will be a delightful experience for kids between 10-12 years, who will love the cheerfulness and larger-than-life portrayals.
On the whole, Moana 2 is not a bad film but nowhere close to its prequel.
Moana 2 is releasing on 29th November
Rating: 2.5 (out of 5 stars)
Movie Reviews
'Wicked Part One' is a movie you should go see right now
I saw the stage play several years ago in Chicago and was lukewarm about the show. So, I was not excited about going to the screening. Wow, was I pleasantly surprised. The movie is very different from the stage play. If you are not a fan of the stage play, you owe it to yourself to try the movie.
“Wicked” is the story of Glinda, the good witch of the North, telling the troubled story of Elphaba’s life to the people of Munchkin land. Elphaba, the Wicked Witch of the West, is rejected most of her life because of her green skin. At Shiz University, she forms an unlikely friendship with a beautiful young woman named Galinda, another student who is filled with an undaunted desire to be popular. Following an encounter with the Wizard of Oz, their relationship soon reaches a crossroad as their lives begin to take different paths.
Academy Award nominee Cynthia Erivo stars as Elphaba. Ariana Grande costars as Glinda/Galinda. Academy Award nominee Jeff Goldblum is the Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Academy Award winner Michelle Yeoh is Madame Morrible. Jonathan Bailey is Fiyero, the love interest. Ethan Slater is Boq. Marissa Bode is Elphaba’s sister Nessa. Idina Menzel and Kristen Chenoweth, the original Elphaba and Glinda in the 2003 stage play hit have cameo roles in “Wicked” the movie as Wiz-O-Mania super stars.
The performances of Erivo, Grande and Bailey are outstanding. Both have gorgeous voices that is a joy to listen to even though I thought the music was beautiful but there wasn’t an outstanding song.
Jon M. Chu directed. He also directed one of my favorite movies, “Crazy Rich Asians.” Winnie Holzman and Dana Fox wrote the screenplay based on the book “Wicked” by Gregory Maguire that was based on the L. Frank Baum classic book, “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.” The movie was so much more detailed than the stage play and the story made more sense.
The Choreography by Christopher Scott was reminiscent of the Busby Berkeley movies of the 1930s.
Cinematographer Alice Brooks does a phenomenal job of emphasizing the beauty of the choreography, the sets and the costumes.
Paul Tazewell’s costumes are colorful, beautiful and add so much to the beauty of the movie.
I expect that “Wicked, Part One” will be nominated for all sorts of Academy Awards, Critics Choice Awards, and Golden Globes. It is a beautiful entertaining film for the whole family.
“Wicked Part One” rated PG is now showing in Edwardsville, Alton, Granite City, Jerseyville and Carlinville. I give it 5 stars. The sequel, “Wicked Part Two,” is scheduled for release on November 21, 2025.
Movie Reviews
Maria movie review & film summary (2024) | Roger Ebert
Even if he doesn’t exactly go there in his cinema, Pablo Larraín often obliquely flirts with horror. The hints were there in the fanatical nature of the titular “Tony Manero” character, a dancer unnervingly obsessed with John Travolta in “Saturday Night Fever.” And they were all the more obvious in his gorgeous political satire “El Conde”—one of 2023’s boldest cinematic outings that imagined Pinochet as a 250-year-old vampire. To the careful eye, the director’s genre exploits elevated much of his ingenious, gradually heartbreaking psychodramas “Jackie” and “Spencer,” too, his pair of otherworldly films on the troubled lives of legendary 20th century women.
Now with “Maria,” about the final days of the iconic American-Greek soprano Maria Callas, Larraín turns his “historic women” movies into a near-perfect trilogy, giving us a stunning conclusion to his series. Upon seeing “Maria” for the first time months ago at the Telluride Film Festival (and revisiting it several times thereafter), this critic pondered what made “Maria” not only the gentlest, but the best of the three. And the answer was perhaps always obvious—as an opera connoisseur, Larraín is proudly (and often, sentimentally) protective of one of the artform’s most groundbreaking singers throughout “Maria,” a feature that was prominent neither in “Jackie,” nor “Spencer.”
It’s not that the psycho-dramatic dreads we feel in those former two films aren’t a part of “Maria.” For everyone who’s ever feared losing a big part of what defines them, and for everyone who’s opened their hearts to something they love so widely and unrestrictedly, only to see various forms of cruelty sneak in, this generous and beautiful picture ought to be a gut-punch. But you can often sense that Larraín, among the most intuitive filmmakers working today, almost wants to shield Callas from the harmful grip of those cruelties. While her end is inevitable in the film—Callas died in 1977 at the young age of 53—you will be disarmed, even moved to tears, experiencing Larraín’s care for her in “Maria,” which is essentially a compassionate ghost story on the beloved things we lose, as they continue to deteriorate and slip through our fingers against our will.
In a queenly performance of poise and mystique, Angelina Jolie plays Callas with an ethereal presence, grasping the intense grief of the once-in-a-generation singer who’s been losing her voice. In the beginning, Jolie—through Ed Lachman’s glorious, high-contrast black-and-white lensing—looks straight at the camera, as her defiant Callas sings “Ave Maria” from Verdi’s Otello, perhaps both as a little prayer to her past, and as a reckoning with her present. The voice we hear (both in this scene, and in the several arias we’d get to hear later on) belongs to Callas for sure. (At least for the most past, as Larraín reportedly has mixed in drips of Jolie’s voice in there, too.) But that doesn’t mean Jolie isn’t doing her own singing—she is, as evidenced in the way that she stretches her facial muscles and engages her entire body in the process. But she is subtle in those signifiers, as one has to be while embodying Callas. The famed soprano was effortless in navigating her range and hitting some impossibly high notes—music simply and silkily poured out of her, an artistic flair stylishly internalized and portrayed by Jolie.
A perceptive performer who can sometimes be a tad cold-to-the-touch, Jolie gives her career-best performance as she steers Callas’s ups and downs during the singer’s final days, almost all of it empathetically imagined by Larraín and screenwriter Steven Knight. She floats around her grand Paris apartment, an elegant and expansive space of gothic hues that envelopes Callas in a cocoon of claustrophobia. (Production Designer Guy Hendrix Dyas miraculously marries realism with wistfulness in his work.) She seeks the acceptance of her devoted staff, particularly Bruna (Alba Rohrwacher) and Ferruccio (Pierfrancesco Favino), who bring much warmth and humor into the movie. She turns inward and has conversations with her own self when on a cocktail of medications—chiefly, Mandrax, inventively personified by Kodi Smit-McPhee. Elsewhere, she fends off nosy press and entitled fans. Meanwhile, she remembers both the glamor and the pain that she felt through a thunderous, rewarding, and sometimes heartbreaking past, one that eventually launched her into a rocky romance with the Greek-Argentine tycoon Aristotle Onassis (the terrific Turkish actor Haluk Bilginer). And she does all that sporting Massimo Cantini Parrini’s breathtaking costumes, both exact replicas of her known pieces, and custom designs made for the movie.
In honoring her journey, Larraín contrasts the film’s Paris scenes of gorgeous colors and locales with Maria’s black-and-white remembrances—not only trying to get to know La Callas but also hoping to infuse anyone who might be watching with the kind of affection he clearly feels for the diva. Dare to open your heart to his quest, and you might just feel that tenderness in a deep sense, even if you aren’t an opera connoisseur. And that’s perhaps the grandest miracle of this film—like Callas herself aimed to do, “Maria” brings opera to the masses, not as a gimmick or high-minded endeavor, but as an act of generosity and understanding that art belongs to everyone who wants to appreciate it. In that, as Larraín purposely and studiously braids in arias into his narrative—full songs for the most part, and not frustratingly chopped up snippets—and gives you a taste of everything from Bellini to Puccini to Donizetti, you’ll feel like you’ve had a full musical meal, with a hunger for a second helping.
Will you get to know Callas by the end of “Maria”? Or will she remain as a complete mystery? Rest assured that’s hardly the point of Larraín’s cinematic ode. The reward is the beautiful and heart-swelling two hours you’ll have the privilege of spending with La Callas, alongside a director who wants nothing more than to share his immense love for her.
In theaters now, on Netflix December 11th.
-
Science1 week ago
Trump nominates Dr. Oz to head Medicare and Medicaid and help take on 'illness industrial complex'
-
Technology1 week ago
Inside Elon Musk’s messy breakup with OpenAI
-
Health5 days ago
Holiday gatherings can lead to stress eating: Try these 5 tips to control it
-
Health3 days ago
CheekyMD Offers Needle-Free GLP-1s | Woman's World
-
Science2 days ago
Despite warnings from bird flu experts, it's business as usual in California dairy country
-
Technology1 day ago
Lost access? Here’s how to reclaim your Facebook account
-
Sports1 week ago
Behind Comcast's big TV deal: a bleak picture for once mighty cable industry
-
Science1 week ago
Alameda County child believed to be latest case of bird flu; source unknown