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‘Corona Papers’ movie review: Priyadarshan’s latest tryst with the thriller genre is an average affair

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‘Corona Papers’ movie review: Priyadarshan’s latest tryst with the thriller genre is an average affair

First look of ‘Corona Papers’

A service revolver, which works lacking, is the start of every thing in Priyadarshan’s Corona Papers. Initially, it will appear to be a minor hiccup within the early days of service for rookie cop Rahul (Shane Nigam). However, quickly we realise that this revolver is the centrepiece of the script, being linked to virtually each different vital prevalence, together with a financial institution theft and some murders.

After the epic failure of Marakkar: Arabikadalinte Simham, Priyadarshan has chosen to do a straight thriller, sans any of the same old frills that one would affiliate together with his motion pictures. Identical to lots of his works in Hindi and Malayalam in recent times, the thought of Corona Papers too is borrowed from one other movie – the 2017 Tamil movie 8 Thottakal, written and directed by Sri Ganesh, who has been given writing credit on this film. The essential premise of the lacking revolver in that film was in flip borrowed from Akira Kurasowa’s Stray Canine.

Corona Papers (Malayalam)

Route: Priyadarshan

Starring: Shane Nigam, Siddique, Sandhya Shetty, Shine Tom Chacko, Gayathrie Shankar, Jean Paul Lal, Hannah Reji Koshy

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Runtime: 155 minutes

Storyline: A younger cop’s revolver goes lacking and causes a cascading impact resulting in occasions that modifications his life

Priyadarshan brings in a couple of beauty modifications to the script, particularly concerning the motivation for the killings, however largely sticks to the unique. Coming shut on the heels of Christopher, which celebrated extra-judicial killings, it was fairly a aid to observe a film which takes not less than a mildly destructive stand on the identical. However, a few of these sequences are weakly written.

From his regular set of actors, solely Siddique stays within the solid, and because the suspended police officer Sankararaman, he will get a pivotal function. Corona Papers banks on a few of these characters, their backgrounds and motivations, to drive the plot alongside. For example, Sankararaman needs to get again on the law enforcement officials who framed him in addition to make some cash to fund his spouse’s therapy, whereas Tony (Jean Paul Lal), needs to make some fast cash earlier than he runs away with Rani (Hannah Reji Koshy), the spouse of his gang chief Pappachan (Shine Tom Chacko). In the meantime, Gracy (Sandhya Shetty), a senior police officer, has a whole lot of masking as much as do.

In the direction of the top, there’s a little bit of philosophising too, with one of many characters, who has a couple of crimes behind him, speaking about how individuals are pressured to do sure acts by their circumstances. Though it does sound correct, particularly when delivered in an emotional voice with a background rating, each crime could be forgivable, by that logic. That little speech additionally evokes a police officer to forgive somebody who put him in a troublesome place via their slightly egocentric actions.

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There may be not a lot of a reveal ready for us on the climax, for the principal gamers concerned are all revealed to us early on. The one anticipation is in how that net is untangled, which is pulled off decently effectively. Regardless of its glitches, together with some horrible dubbing, Corona Papers stays a mean thriller as a result of power of its script.

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Movie Reviews

'Srikanth' movie review: A straight biopic marred by melodrama

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'Srikanth' movie review: A straight biopic marred by melodrama

Directed by Tushar Hiranandani (‘Scam 2003: The Telgi Story’), Srikanth is an adulatory and simplistic biopic of Srikanth Bolla, the first international visually-impaired student at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) who goes on to be the founder of Bollant Industries, a recycled packaging paper company, with prominent investors like former president APJ Abdul Kalam and Ratan Tata. It’s a great premise, one that required a deeper and nuanced study, but the makers decide to go for a derivative telling, laced with scenes which are desperate for claps and hoots.

It’s also told in a numbing linearity. Srikanth’s father, as mentioned earlier, ultimately doesn’t end up burying him after discovering he is blind. Growing up, the boy shows signs of genius. He can orally solve for X, he submits his answer sheet in an exam before everybody else, he can outsmart even those with sight in a chess game. But when Srikanth is denied the Science stream in Higher Secondary, he decides to sue the Indian education system.

After a courtroom scene that can put ‘Damini’ (1993) to shame, Srikanth wins the case. He also gets selected for the Indian blind cricket team but has to abandon his dream of wearing the blue jersey, to follow the bigger dream of studying at MIT. He finds love, comes back to India, meets an investor, starts Bollant, is labelled ‘God’ by the differently abled, becomes a megalomaniac, realises his follies and ultimately finds his way back home.

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AutoMatters & More: Movie review: Thumbs up for The Fall Guy

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AutoMatters & More: Movie review: Thumbs up for The Fall Guy

Returning to the big screen after his starring role in the Barbie movie, Ryan Gosling stars in The Fall Guy — an action-packed tribute to stunt performers in the movies.

Gosling plays the role of Colt Seavers — a stuntman who “gets blown up, shot, crashed, thrown through windows and dropped from the highest of heights, all for our entertainment. And now, fresh off an almost career-ending accident, this working-class hero has to track down a missing movie star, solve a conspiracy and try to win back the love of his life (Emily Blunt starring as Jody Moreno, director of the movie) while still doing his day job. What could possibly go right?”

Ryan Gosling and Emily Blunt

(Universal Pictures)

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The Fall Guy includes the movie industry’s first-ever film credit of Stunt Designer, received by Chris O’Hara, president of Stunts Unlimited, and who is renowned as a Stunt Coordinator and second unit director. The Stunt Designer moniker goes beyond the traditional title of Stunt Coordinator (an official Screen Actors Guild credit that is also recognized by the Directors Guild of America). This credit represents a new benchmark that accurately reflects “the high-level artistic contribution of world-class Stunt Coordinators like O’Hara. These are artists who do more than coordinate the logistics of stunts; they design and create them.”
“Stunt Designers are the creative architects behind fight scenes, high falls, and more, and deserve to be recognized for the creative leadership of their contributions,” said David Leitch, director, blockbuster filmmaker and a former stunt coordinator.

The fall guy on a vehicle-mounted arm.

The fall guy on a vehicle-mounted arm.

(Universal Pictures)

The Fall Guy was originally a TV series from the ‘80s. It “was a reflection of that era, celebrating the cowboy spirit of stunt work,” director David Leitch says. “Back then, stunts were about sheer toughness, fearlessness, and guts. While there were tricks of the trade, these stunts still came with a lot of pain. My journey in the stunt world began during the transition from this old-school era to the modern era where stunt work began embracing new technologies and practices. As I entered the industry, visual effects and special effects were starting to revolutionize the stunt world. Wire rigs, the removal of those wires via VFX and other innovations were transforming the way stunts were performed. While shooting The Matrix, I had the opportunity to witness the cutting edge of technology and the collaborative efforts that were shaping the future of stunts. For me, it was natural to embrace both sides of stunt performing—the old-school toughness and the evolving world of visual effects. So, now, with The Fall Guy, I’m paying tribute to my early career journey as a stunt performer. While we incorporate some nods to the role of visual effects, the film maintains a raw and practical element in every stunt. With this film, we aimed to deliver action that was true to the spirit of the stunt community by incorporating techniques that have become somewhat of a lost art.”

THE FALL GUY, directed by David Leitch

THE FALL GUY, directed by David Leitch

(Universal Pictures)

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The cannon roll was a particularly spectacular stunt featured in The Fall Guy. “Stunt double Logan Holladay broke the Guinness World Record for cannon rolls in a car with eight and a half rolls.”

These days, sequences like the Alma/Colt chase sequence, in which a garbage truck dragged Ryan Gosling on a spinning bin through the streets of Sydney, Australia, included a thrilling scene on the iconic Sydney Harbour Bridge that “would normally be done with blue screen,” but “the team decided to film the scene entirely practically” — old school.

Jan Wagner in the theater lobby.

Jan Wagner in the theater lobby.

(Jan Wagner)

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Another exciting stunt was a jaw-dropping 225-foot car jump, “performed by seasoned driver Logan Holladay in a specially designed vehicle, crafted for practical, in-camera authenticity that could handle such an extreme leap. At the apex of the jump, the truck was close to 80 feet in the air.

Other wild stunts included a boat jump, a high fall from a helicopter, numerous fights, fiery explosions and much, much more. Multiple costume variations were required “to address the complexity of action scenes.” Oh, and be sure to stick around for the credits to see a cameo that you will not want to miss. Thumbs up!

To see a trailer for The Fall Guy and to purchase tickets, visit the official site at: https://www.thefallguymovie.com.

To explore a wide variety of content dating back to 2002, with the most photos and the latest text, visit “AutoMatters & More” at https://automatters.net. Search by title or topic in the Search Bar in the middle of the Home Page, or click on the blue ‘years’ boxes and browse.

Copyright © 2024 by Jan Wagner – AutoMatters & More #838

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Movie Review: THE COFFEE TABLE (LA MESITA DEL COMEDOR) – Assignment X

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Movie Review: THE COFFEE TABLE (LA MESITA DEL COMEDOR) – Assignment X


By ABBIE BERNSTEIN / Staff Writer


Posted: May 10th, 2024 / 12:29 PM

THE COFFEE TABLE (LA MESITA DEL COMEDOR) movie poster | ©2024 Cinephobia Releasing

Rating: Not Rated
Stars: David Pareja, Estefanía de los Santos, Josep Riera, Claudia Riera, Gala Flores, Eduardo Antuña, Cristina Dilla, Itziar Castro
Writers: Caye Casas & Cris Borobia
Director: Caye Casas
Distributor: Cinephobia Releasing
Release Date: April 19, 2024 (theatrical); May 14, 2024 (DVD/digital)

THE COFFEE TABLE (LA MESITA DEL COMEDOR) has been variously described as a horror movie and a black comedy. It doesn’t conform to the conventional notion of either of these genres. Rather, it is one answer to the question of what we get when the framework of a farce is placed around an almost literally unspeakable tragedy.

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THE COFFEE TABLE has a horrific incident (imagine one of the worst things you can think of; this may or may not be worse than that) that propels what would otherwise be a familiar comedy plot. The tension between these two things keeps us riveted.

In the opening moments, we see María (Estefanía de los Santos) in childbirth. It looks extremely painful.

The rest of the film takes place over the course of a single day. María and her husband Jesús (David Pareja) and their baby son Cayetano are at a furniture store. The salesman (Eduardo Antuña) is pushing them to buy a glass-topped coffee table.

Jesús seems to want the coffee table primarily because María hates it. According to him, she has made most of the choices in their relationship, including when to have a baby (they’re middle-aged, but he wasn’t sure) and what to name the child (Jesús thinks Cayetano is a bad name, with a worse namesake).

The salesman guarantees that the coffee table will change Jesús and María’s lives. He’s just doing his spiel, but he turns out to be absolutely right.

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To be clear, THE COFFEE TABLE isn’t a cursed-furniture movie. There’s nothing supernatural of any kind going on here. For that matter, there is no onscreen violence, and relatively little gore. It’s just that it has a confluence of events that most filmmakers wouldn’t dare present.

The actors are all excellent, surprising us within expectations we may have for their characters.

While this is perhaps not the main thrust of THE COFFEE TABLE, director Caye Casas, cowriter Cris Borobia and actor Pareja create a powerfully authentic portrait of severe depression. We feel Jesús’s inability to connect with those around him; he’s barely able to see or hear them through the weight of his pain. While in some movies, this kind of thing can be extraordinarily dull, in THE COFFEE TABLE, it’s mesmerizing, because we compulsively need to know what’s going to happen.

THE COFFEE TABLE should come with some trigger warnings. One is for people who, having experienced severe depression themselves, may find its accurate depiction awakens a sympathetic response that is not easily dismissed when the film ends.

The other trigger warning unfortunately is a massive spoiler. Perhaps the best advice to viewers who are serious about such cautions is that they should avoid THE COFFEE TABLE altogether. For more daring prospective audience members who want to see a well-made film that is certainly unique and never boring, THE COFFEE TABLE is the real deal.

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In Spanish, with English subtitles.

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