Connect with us

Movie Reviews

‘Conclave’ movie review: You must see this white-knuckle papal thriller

Published

on

‘Conclave’ movie review: You must see this white-knuckle papal thriller
play

Think our presidential election is contentious? Just wait till you see a bunch of catty Catholic cardinals vie to be the next pope in “Conclave.”

Director Edward Berger’s wowing adaptation (★★★★ out of four; rated PG; in theaters Friday) of the 2016 Robert Harris novel is more electric than you’d ever expect a papal potboiler to be. Ralph Fiennes gives a steady and strong performance as the man in the middle of exquisitely watchable religious chaos. Berger improves upon his work on the Oscar-winning “All Quiet on the Western Front” remake, effortlessly weaving together locked-room mystery, courtroom drama, detective tale and political thriller in one searingly tense and timely narrative.

The pope’s unexpected death couldn’t have come at a worse time for Cardinal Lawrence (Fiennes): He’s navigating his own crisis of faith, having previously been denied leave to get right with his beliefs, when he has to honcho the conclave to elect their new leader.

Advertisement

Join our Watch Party! Sign up to receive USA TODAY’s movie and TV recommendations right in your inbox.

Peers and candidates alike pour into the Vatican, to be sequestered and vote for the next pope, but the strange circumstances of the pope’s death, plus tons of friction between cardinals, weigh on the already stressed-out Lawrence.

His progressive friend Bellini (Stanley Tucci) is one of the group’s favorites, though so is the power-hungry and dangerously conservative Tedesco (Sergio Castellitto). The charmingly cunning Tremblay (John Lithgow) throws his considerable political weight around while Adeyemi (Lucian Msamati) vies to become the first African pope. Then there’s Benitez (Carlos Diehz), a cardinal from Kabul that no one even knew existed outside of the deceased guy who appointed him.

Some are cool, others are corrupt, and many have hidden agendas or straight-up secrets. As alliances form and tempers flare, Lawrence becomes the de facto Saint Columbo, investigating potential scandals and assorted underhandedness as the story twists and turns before the white smoke finally wafts in the movie’s pleasantly shocking finale. (Chalk it up to divine intervention if you can see THAT coming.)

Advertisement

Having a bunch of ambitious religious dudes stuck in one place gives “Conclave” a hostile and explosive energy, which contrasts with the wonder and awe of the papal votes unfolding in the Sistine Chapel. (They didn’t film in the actual place but, holy cow, does Berger immerse you in the splendor anyway.)

The atmosphere is boosted by some splendid acting: Fiennes lends a vulnerable and earnest demeanor to the honorable Lawrence, while Tucci’s complexity and Lithgow’s antagonism spark their respective rival cardinals. Isabella Rossellini is also spectacular as Sister Agnes, who at first seems to be Lawrence’s nun Friday, giving him a helpful hand with her problem-solving skills, but she becomes one of the film’s chief sources of emotional warmth and moral richness.

Berger juggles a cast of characters with enough different ideologies and qualities to keep an audience invested in rooting for or against certain cardinals – he even nods to certain aspects of the Catholic Church’s shady real-life reputation to give it more depth. The thriller is both a thought-provoking investigation into real-life themes and human flaws but also an undoubtedly entertaining exercise, one where the simple act of dropping off ballots becomes a crucial aspect of a scintillating, white-knuckle affair.

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Movie Reviews

Director's Cut (2024) – Movie Review

Published

on

Director's Cut (2024) – Movie Review

Director’s Cut, 2024.

Written and Directed by Don Capria
Starring Louis Lombardi, Tyler Ivey, Brandy Ochoa, Haley Cassidy, Greg Poppa, Lucy Hart, Danielle Kotch,  Darren Hickok, Louis Rocky Bacigalupo

SYNOPSIS:

A punk band are tempted into the Pennsylvania woodlands by the promise of a professionally made music video. 

Advertisement

The ‘rocksploitation horror’ sub-genre of slasher movies has a long tradition of teaming guitar squeals alongside inventive gore-flecked set-pieces and stalking creeps.

Trick or Treat from 1986 is one of the best-known of these ‘crank it up to 11’ horrors. Featuring Kiss’s Gene Simmons (and also Ozzy Osbourne as a televangelist preaching on the evils of heavy metal) as a dead rocker summoned back to life by an alienated teen metalhead, the film is an excellent intro to this gnarly style of horror flick.

I mention this as an intro because the excellent punk band starring Director’s Cut pays quite a bit of homage to Trick or Treat and others in the rocking Halloween branch. In more recent years, Green Room (2015) also focused on a punk outfit uncovering grisly killings, and while that is also an excellent addition to the guitar and horror genre, it is more of a crime film than a slasher.

This particular sterling effort while not having access to rock god cameo, does have a similar affinity for operatic blood and guts and a focus on the single-minded drive of music creation. Director’s Cut sees a punk band eager for success brave the unknowns of the wild woods on the promise of a professionally made video.

Unfortunately for the band, the mysterious filmmaker turns out to be something of a sociopath, to say the least. To say the most, would be to tell all about the stock of inventive horrors he has in store for the hopeful punks.

Advertisement

So, after setting up at the lonely location in the woods and meeting with the said filmmaker (the hilariously scary Louis Lombardi) and his assistant Babs (Lucy Hart), the punkers decide to get on with the video. Well, they’ve come this far, they think, and ok, he’s a bit weird, but who gets a video for free?

What follows is a slasher film without the stalking; the band is essentially going into the killer’s lair of their own volition, which makes an interesting twist. There is a lot of (actually pretty good) music around, as each member of the band sets out their musicianship to the ever-seeing Mr Director.

Band leader Jay (Tyler Ivey) is desperate for success and allows that to cloud his judgement. Initially driving away when the director goes too far at one of their initial interviews, Jay is brought back into the fray, not through thoughts of his bandmates’ well-being, but from the potential rewards that a new promo could deliver.

It’s a smart and dark look at how the aspiration of fame and riches can overpower absolutely everything. But there is also plenty of dark humour in the film that horror fans will enjoy. The balance between gruesome kills and character interplay is well judged, and the fact that the acting is good and the band are all likeable brings it up a notch above the average slasher.

There is also a depth to the story often missing in slasher films, as backstories are kept to a minimum and you get the feeling that every character has a tale to tell. This adds weight to a low-budget gem that is a twisted piece of punk metal horror. Add it to your Halloween watch list (witch-list?) and rock out.

Advertisement

Flickering Myth Rating – Film: ★ ★ ★/ Movie: ★ ★ ★ ★

Robert W Monk

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=embed/playlist

 

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Movie Reviews

Movie Review: “Saturday Night” Has Its Moments But Doesn't Quite Live Up To The Legacy That Inspired It – The Independent | News Events Opinion More

Published

on

Movie Review: “Saturday Night” Has Its Moments But Doesn't Quite Live Up To The Legacy That Inspired It – The Independent | News Events Opinion More

MOVIE REVIEW: “SATURDAY NIGHT” (R)

“Saturday Night” is one of those films that I really want to love but try as I might, I simply don’t. A shame because I’m a fan of director Jason Reitman. I count “Thank You For Smoking” as his strongest film and I’m also quite fond of “Juno” and “Young Adult.” Heck, I’m even a big-time supporter of the divisive “Ghostbusters: Afterlife” which, despite a little too much fan service, really hit the sweet spot for me. I wish the same could be said for “Saturday Night.”

The events in “Saturday Night” take place within the chaotic and somewhat tumultuous 90-minute time frame leading up to the very first Saturday Night Live broadcast which occurred five long decades ago. That opener would ultimately pave the way for what is arguably the most influential sketch comedy show of all time. In fact, it’s still on air to this very day. Those on hand for that most historic night on October 11th, 1974, included showrunner Lorne Michaels (Gabriel LaBelle) and SNL players, John Belushi (Matt Wood), Chevy Chase (Cory Michael Smith), Garrett Morris (Lamorne Morris), Gilda Radner (Ella Hunt), Jane Curtain (Kim Matula), Laraine Newman (Emily Fairn), and Dan Aykroyd (Dylan O’Brien.) just to name a precious few.

Saturday Night
Saturday Night

A solid cast here to be sure and by and large, these performers all look the part (especially O’Brien.) Additionally, they do sometimes manage to evoke the spirit of their SNL counterparts but since this movie is structured as a real-time series of events, it often feels like we’re observing shadowy reflections of these performers rather than the performers themselves, particularly where iconic SNL players like John Belushi are concerned.

The very idea of a 90-minute ramp up to the very first 90-minute live SNL broadcast is a clever and creative one but too much of this film feels forced and inauthentic. What’s more, it’s not really as intense as one would hope. It’s clear that director Reitman and his right-hand man, co-writer Gil Kenan, are going for a colorful, high-energy Aaron Sorkin-esque vibe but ultimately, the end result is a mixed bag.

It should also be noted that “Saturday Night” often paints some of its key players in an unflattering and mean-spirited light and while I’m sure there was plenty of bad behavior and conflict going on, the movie might have benefitted from showcasing a little more of a joyful side as well. I recognize that some of this stuff coming across as hyper-real is by design but still, the balance is off. And this goes beyond the smug and assholish depiction of Chase, which if I’m being honest, wasn’t all that surprising given some of the things that have been written and said about the man through the years.

More problematic is the fashion in which legends like Jim Henson are depicted. He’s portrayed as an uptight dork and that felt disingenuous at best (even by comedy standards), particularly after watching the recent documentary, “Jim Henson: Idea Man.” Likewise, Milton Berle comes across as an arrogant gangster type and while this legend was known for being a bit prickly in real life, he was also a beloved personality referred to as Mr. Television. It would have been nice to see a little of that. Still, JK Simmons is pretty damn funny in the role.

For all of its flaws, “Saturday Night” isn’t without its moments and Reitman, Kenan and crew are to be commended for keeping the proceedings brisk and for making sure they kept the run time under 2 hours. That being said, perhaps the biggest compliment I can pay this hit-and-miss tribute to the old school SNL, is that I’d much rather watch it than any full episode of “Saturday Night Live” from the last 5 years and that’s certainly saying something.  

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Movie Reviews

Venom: The Last Dance (Movie Review)

Published

on

Venom: The Last Dance (Movie Review)

Have you ever heard of “Middle Book Syndrome”? For those who haven’t heard of it, this phrase accompanies complaints that the installment had no point: nothing happened, the characters went in circles, and the plot only served to get to the third book. Well, Venom: The Last Dance manages to get this syndrome while being the final film in this trilogy. And that’s not a good start to a review of a character that I love in comic books and other media.

Title: Venom: The Last Dance
Production Company: Columbia Pictures, Marvel Entertainment, Arad Productions, Matt Tolmach Productions, Pascal Pictures, Hutch Parker Entertainment, and Hardy Son & Baker
Distributed by: Sony Pictures Releasing
Directed by: Kelly Marcel
Produced by: Avi Arad, Matt Tolmach, Amy Pascal, Kelly Marcel, Tom Hardy, and Hutch Parker
Written by: Tom Hardy & Kelly Marcel
Starring: Tom Hardy, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Juno Temple, Rhys Ifans, Stephen Graham, Peggy Lu, Clark Backo, and Alanna Ubach
Based on: Venom by Todd MacFarlane & Marvel Comics
Release dates: October 25, 2024
Running time: 109 minutes
Rating: PG

spoilers

From The Void…

Venom: The Last Dance Story Summary – SPOILERS

Click to read Summary

Advertisement
Eddie Brock and the Venom symbiote are drunk in a bar in Mexico, while on the run. With their recent battle with Carnage and the murder of Patrick Mulligan making headlines and an arrest warrant issued out on them, Eddie sets out for New York City to try and clear his name. Unbeknownst to either one of them, a creature known as a Xenophage has begun tracking them. The events catch the eye of Rex Strickland, who oversees Imperium, a government operation at the site of the soon-to-be-decommissioned Area 51 for the capture and study of other symbiotes that have fallen to Earth. Mulligan, revealed to have survived his encounter with Carnage, is captured after being left for dead by another symbiote, who eluded Strickland’s soldiers. He is bonded with one of many contained symbiotes and questioned by Imperium to learn about the symbiotes’ purpose on Earth before Strickland is ordered to bring Venom down.

While attaching themselves onto the side of a plane bound for New York City, Eddie and Venom are attacked by the Xenophage tracking them and are forced to drop from the airplane into a desert field. Venom explains to Eddie that they are being hunted on the orders of Knull, the creator of the symbiotes, who has ordered his Xenophages to search the universe to find the “Codex”, which can be only detected in Venom’s true form, to be freed from his prison the symbiotes trapped him long ago. After being ambushed by Strickland and his team and barely escaping from them and the Xenophage, Eddie eventually comes across a traveling hippie family in the woods, who offer him a ride to Las Vegas. Meanwhile, Mulligan’s new symbiote informs Strickland and his team of Knull’s true intentions and the role of the Codex, which can only be destroyed if one of the hosts in a symbiote dies.

Arriving in Las Vegas, Eddie and Venom run into Mrs. Chen at a casino and Venom shares a dance with her before being ambushed by the Xenophage again. Suddenly, Strickland’s team arrives, captures Venom and incapacitates Eddie. In Area 51, Eddie is interrogated before Venom manages to escape confinement, attracting the Xenophage’s attention to the Codex again and attacking the base. Venom orders the release of the other symbiotes confined in the lab, which bond with new hosts, to fight off the Xenophage. Eddie, Strickland and lead researcher Teddy Payne run into Martin and his family, who have also infiltrated Area 51 in search of aliens. Knull finds the location of the Codex and begins sending multiple Xenophages through portals to attack Venom. Eddie attempts to lure the creatures away to save Martin and his family, who escape through a broken fence on the outside. Realizing that he must separate from his host to destroy the Codex and save the universe, Venom bids Eddie goodbye and separates, merging with the Xenophages and dosing them in acid before a mortally wounded Strickland sets off his grenades, destroying them. Eddie passes out as the base burns.

Eddie wakes up in a hospital and is informed by a federal official that due to his heroic actions with Venom at Area 51, his entire criminal record has been expunged but he may never mention it to anyone. Arriving in New York City, Eddie reminisces on the memories he had with Venom, while watching the Statue of Liberty.

In a mid-credits scene, Knull exclaims that the universe is no longer safe with the death of Venom.

Advertisement

In a post-credit scene, the bartender escapes Area 51 in a panic, while a cockroach appears to be fused with the Venom symbiote.

Venom: The Last Dance

Story Review – Some Vague Spoilers

This is the third time I’ve reviewed a Venom movie, with the first movie being favorable for an origin film, then the follow-up of Venom: Let There Be Carnage saw a slight dip on the Venom side of things, only to be saved by the Carnage side of things. Walking out of Venom: The Last Dance… I felt nothing. All I could think while watching Venom go from Horror/Action film to Comedy was this clip from The Godfather III:

I felt like they just took what should have been one of the most violent, aggressive, action-packed characters in comic books and turned him into a bickering married couple who just wanted to do anything except admit their relationship failed and divorce.

Advertisement

There was a movie at some point, with the vague idea of a story. Adapting the beginning to “The King in Black”, while not my favorite Venom event storyline, is at least something that a movie should be able to do well on the big screen. However, the story just feels like bookends to something else that was shoved into the middle of the film to remind us that Symbiotes are a thing and have something to do with Venom… Who is off to the side bickering with Eddie while they make their way to the B plot while avoiding the A plot as much as possible… Then have a side trip to one of the most out there non-sensical “why the fuck are they doing this” moments in film history.

spoilers

Venom: The Last Dance

Venom: The Last Dance Partners.

  • Tom Hardy as Eddie Brock / Venom:
    Where I once praised Tom Hardy for being the voice of Venom as well as the actor for Eddie, by the time I was halfway through Venom: The Last Dance I was begging for it all to end. What started as “Eddie goes crazy” had become a bickering married couple, and not in a funny way. Eddie spends the majority of the film complaining. Then in the final moments, instead of connecting and feeling sad about Venom, I was almost glad because it meant the movie was almost over… and so did others as people started clapping as if it was the end of the movie.
  • Chiwetel Ejiofor as Rex Strickland:
    Typical Military guy who goes power mad as he just wants to defend the world against the evil aliens who are invading and you can’t change my mind. When he does get that power, it instantly backfires on him and everything goes crazy, leading to a last-minute trust of the aliens and doing one thing to save everyone from the threat in the end. Very trope-style in acting and character.
  • Juno Temple as Dr. Teddy Payne & Clark Backo as Sadie Christmas:
    I sum these two up as “Dr. Inclusion” and “Dr. Diversity”. They are two scientists, one of which has a “dead” arm due to a lightning strike hitting her shoulder (Dr. Payne), and the other who wears a Christmas Tree pin all the time because her last name is Christmas (It’s a joke… GET IT?!). Both of them spend most of their time looking longingly at the captured symbiotes like they want to make out with them and say that the symbiotes are good creatures who are running from something. They do get their wishes of being covered by symbiotes in the last act of the film, with Dr Payne getting to keep her symbiote (who doesn’t have a name, none of them do), while Christmas loses hers in battle. Meh.
  • Stephen Graham as Patrick Mulligan:
    If you don’t remember Mulligan from Venom: Let There Be Carnage, then I don’t blame you. The scientists infect him with one of the symbiotes in order to keep him alive and use his body to communicate with the symbiote. He adds nothing to the plot except to give all the women who want to fuck something that looks like a monster a thing to get wet over.
  • Peggy Lu as Mrs. Chen:
    She’s back in one of the most pointless cameos ever. I’m sure she was included because someone writing this shit loved her, or some idiots online created some theory about how she is the center of the Venom movies. Mrs. Chen shows up to give Eddie a moment to fix himself up, leading to “that dance scene” that killed the film completely.
  • Andy Serkis as Knull:
    Ok, first of all, Serkis as Knull nails the aura of that big bad evil guy who is a threat to the world PERFECTLY. All he does is sit on a throne, covered in symbiote “ropes”, and talk about how he is going to fuck the whole universe over when he gets free and it WORKS. It’s a shame that we will probably not get a follow-up to anything he does and this epic-looking guy is going to be remembered as nothing more than bookends to one of the worst Superhero movies since Steel.

Venom: The Last Dance

It’s Good If You Wanted A Comedy

If you try to look at Venom: The Last Dance in the same way you looked at Venom or Venom: Let There Be Carnage, then you’re going to miss what this film trilogy has become. Instead of the Lethal Protector, you get a man who is annoyed with having to do anything at all and an alien who wants to eat brains all the time and make shitty references that make no sense.

Venom: The Last Dance is a comedy movie, and if you think it’s an action or adventure movie then you have blinders on. That being said, if you view it in the same vein as The Odd Couple, a TV show that maybe 3 people besides me remember, then it is not too bad. Venom’s wisecracks land with a chuckle, and a few actual laughs at times. The sillier moments could be forgiven with this mindset too.

It’s hard to find praise for Venom: The Last Dance as I just feel numb to the movie, almost forgetting about 90% of it as I want to keep my original love and view of Venom and his adventures in New York… And yes, he finally gets to New York, and not once do they mention Spider-Man, not that he would save this shitshow of a movie.

We did get to see a little bit of blood and gore for a PG-rated film, something that this trilogy should never have been rated after Deadpool was a thing. Seeing Venom bite the heads off some villains was a step forward from the first film, but without any blood spurting, it just felt like the effects were forgotten and the edge of the scene was lost. PG rating for Venom should never have been a thing and it is one of the main things that should have been addressed by now.

Advertisement

Venom: The Last Dance

Too Many Symbiotes in the Kitchen

The King in Black is a large and epic storyline that brings in all of Marvel’s roster in order to take down Knull, and with Venom being a forced stand-alone movie trilogy, there is ZERO chance that we will see Venom interact with anyone from the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Hell, they start the movie by ripping Venom out of that specific universe just to make sure that the viewer knows that there is no hope at all for a Spider-Man cameo or anything to happen in these movies.

That being said, using Knull makes Venom: The Last Dance feel like there is still one more film to go, but since his scenes are the opening of the film and then a mid-credits scene, there doesn’t feel like there was a point to having him in Venom: The Last Dance at all, even to create a reason for the Xenophages to hunt Venom down.

Venom: The Last Dance stuffers from ADHD, as in it cannot focus correctly for more than 5 seconds. Venom spends the majority of the film making his way to Las Vegas, which just happens to be near the real focus of the movie: Area 55, a hidden underground version of Area 51 where Dr Inclusion and her assistant Dr Diversity spend a lot of time looking at a returning character from Venom: Let There Be Carnage as he becomes the main character from something that can only be described as one of those Monster Fucker “Romance novels” that fill your local book shop these days. Venom: The Last Dance is an internet degenerate’s wet dream in most ways with these Scientists and their many floating space-goo monsters.

Then there is “that dance scene” aka The Last Dance as mentioned in this movie. When Venom/Eddie makes it to Las Vegas, after knocking out a drunk guy and stealing his suit (Let’s just forget that Venom can MIMIC CLOTHING! aka one of the many abilities that the writers forgot about over THREE FUCKING MOVIES!), he encounters Mrs Chen, the store clerk from the other two films who just happens to have won so much in the Casino that she has the Penthouse Suite, leading to her and Venom dancing to the ABBA song “Dancing Queen”… Well, a remix of it anyway. This scene is the point where my excitement of anything good happening died completely.

Sure, we got the big explosive action-filled final act, but by that time the damage had been done. People were getting bored, so bored that we noticed a bunch of people walking out of the film to go to the bathroom, get more popcorn, or just walk around to do anything but fall asleep in the theater chairs. When the credits started to roll, I had never seen a theater room empty so fast with people complaining about how they wasted time and money on a sub-par film.

Advertisement

Venom: The Last Dance

Venom: The Last Dance… Thank God For That

My wife and I had a discussion about Venom as a trilogy of films now that it has been completed, and the conclusion we came to was that Venom: The Last Dance should have been called something different, then it could have been used to set up Carnage and Knull for the third film. We agreed that Sony blew its load too quickly with Venom: Let There Be Carnage as anything that came afterward would not be able to handle the standard that came from Carnage showing up.

Venom: The Last Dance is not the ending I would have wanted for my favorite comic book character, not at all. Venom should have been going out swinging, taking down a world-ending threat like Knull instead of making a “noble sacrifice” of holding 4 to 5 Xenophages under an acid bath, which sounds more exciting than it looked on screen. The final scene of Eddie looking at the Statue of Liberty should have been the beginning of the real adventure of Venom, not the end of a trilogy that just got even more lost along the way.

Summary

Venom: The Last Dance should have been the big send-off for what should have been the biggest, most kick-ass anti-hero character to ever grace the Superhero genre, instead, we were given a sub-par road trip movie with a bickering married couple combined with a bookended story briefs in order to tease a possible continuation. From the opening moments, you can tell this movie had no direction and no idea what to do to fill 109 minutes… A sad end for one of comic book’s most popular characters.

 

Advertisement

Pros

  • The Xenophages looked cool
  • Some jokes landed with a laugh

Cons

  • That fucking dance scene
  • PG Rating
  • Knull/King in Black story used as bookends
  • No notable Symbiotes
  • The Eddie & Venom bickering wears thin on the nerves
  • The Hippie Family
Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending