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Evil Dead Rise | Reelviews Movie Reviews

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Evil Dead Rise | Reelviews Movie Reviews

Evil Lifeless Rise, the fifth big-screen outing for Sam
Raimi’s Deadites (in addition they had a three-season run on cable TV) tries to reply
the query of whether or not The Evil Lifeless are sturdy sufficient on their very own proper to
interact the viewer with out the dominating presence of Bruce Campbell’s Ash. This
represents the primary time an installment within the sequence has bypassed Ash altogether
(though his look in Fede Alvaraz’s 2013 remake was restricted to a
post-credits cameo). The jury continues to be out as a result of, although there’s a shotgun
and a chainsaw, the brand new characters aren’t fairly capable of fill the Campbell-sized
gap within the screenplay’s material. As was the case with the reincarnation, an Evil
Lifeless
film most likely wants its human star greater than the opposite manner round. At
any fee, Lee Cronin’s Evil Lifeless Rise tackle the Deadite universe is
higher than Alvarez’s however stays significantly beneath that of Sam Raimi, who
helmed the unique trilogy (The Evil Lifeless, Evil Lifeless II: Lifeless by Daybreak, and Military of Darkness).

Though the film opens in a cabin by the lake, the
majority of the story transpires inside a dilapidated Los Angeles tenement
constructing that’s about to be torn down. One of many items is occupied by the
cheerfully chaotic fatherless household of Bridget (Gabrielle Echols), Danny (Morgan
Davies), Kassie (Nell Fisher), and their mother, Ellie (Alyssa Sutherland). Into
this combine comes Beth (Lily Sullivan), Ellie’s ne’er-do-well sister, who’s residence
from touring the world as a band’s audio technician with a stain on her soul
and a child in her stomach. When an earthquake hits, a hidden vault is revealed
deep underneath the parking storage. Embracing the inherent horror film stupidity
anticipated in an Evil Lifeless film, Danny climbs all the way down to see what’s what and
discovers the Necronomicon and a sequence of previous data. After all, he feels
compelled to open the E book of the Lifeless and play the data. This unleashes a
demon and Ellie turns into the primary unlucky sufferer.

Maybe acknowledging that the overtly campy/comedic tone of Evil
Lifeless II
and Military of Darkness may not work with out Campbell’s
presence, Cronin (like Alvarez) opts for a extra severe Evil Lifeless in
line with Raimi’s unique. Evil Lifeless Rise accommodates loads of darkish humor
and the portions of blood and over-the-top gore are as ridiculous as they
have been within the first movie, however the film opts for one thing nearer to
simple horror than the horror/comedy pastiche that Raimi adopted for
the ultimate two installments of his trilogy (which was carried over to “Ash vs.
Evil Lifeless”).

For essentially the most half, Evil Lifeless Rise follows the system
Raimi established within the Eighties for Deadite movies. That signifies that, by the ultimate
scenes, everybody has been totally doused in blood, the hero/heroine is in
full possession of a series noticed, and a lot of the supporting characters are lifeless.
The physique depend isn’t excessive for a horror movie with this a lot violence however that’s
primarily as a result of the setting limits the potential variety of victims. So,
as a substitute of worrying about amount, Cronin opts for high quality. And
even the Ash-replacement finally ends up getting sliced and diced (similar to Ash, who
misplaced an arm when it grew to become inconvenient).

Maybe one purpose why Evil Lifeless Rise lacks the full-throttle
vitality of Raimi’s contributions will be attributed to how the horror style has advanced
since 1987 (when Evil Lifeless II was launched). Issues that have been distinctive
when Raimi put them on display have since been copied, re-copied, and refined. The
early Evil Lifeless films have been many issues, however few folks would name them “generic.”
However, there’s a well-known high quality about facets of Evil Lifeless Rise.
Though it’s all the time ugly and typically darkly humorous, it’s by no means
particularly scary. Critical horror films within the 2020s discover their niches by going
in demented instructions both when it comes to taboo-challenging narratives or by
utilizing spooky digital camera placement and set design. Evil Lifeless Rise presents neither.
Followers of the sequence ought to, for essentially the most half, be content material with the consequence
(though the absence of Ash creates an unfillable void). Youthful viewers or
these new to the style could marvel what’s particular about this movie. The reply:
nothing. That is one more victory for nostalgia over originality.


Evil Lifeless Rise (United States/New Zealand, 2023)





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Movie Reviews

Movie Review: 'Moana 2' – Catholic Review

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Movie Review: 'Moana 2' – Catholic Review

NEW YORK (OSV News) – The high-spirited Oceanaian princess who gave her name to a 2016 animated feature returns for further adventures in “Moana 2” (Disney).

Like its predecessor, the new arrival is free of the kind of content that usually restricts the appropriate audience for a film. But it also follows the original in incorporating notions at variance with a Judeo-Christian worldview, making it a doubtful choice for youngsters.

This time out, skilled navigator Moana (voice of Auli‘i Cravalho) aims to journey from her home island of Motunui to a long-lost, legendary isle called Motufetu. The rediscovery of Motufetu, we’re told, would enable all the inhabitants of the region to conquer the distances separating their various homelands and come together in unity.

Moana is once again aided on her quest by much-tattooed, shape-shifting demigod Maui (voice of Dwayne Johnson). Given that the crew she’s assembled for her expedition includes Pua, an affectionate but timorous pig, and Heihei, a twitchy, perpetually bewildered chicken, Moana may need all the help she can get.

Moana’s trio of human fellow travelers have their limitations as well. Thus Kele (voice of David Fane) is a gruff farmer prone to seasickness, Loto (voice of Rose Matafeo) is a hyper-creative but easily distracted ship designer while historian Moni (voice of Hualalai Chung), although highly knowledgeable about local lore, is also a naive fanboy for whom the thought of meeting his idol Maui is overwhelming.

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Directed by co-writer Dana Ledoux Miller, Jason Hand and David G. Derrick Jr., this lively and eye-pleasing musical is family-friendly in most respects — some material that might frighten the youngest viewers notwithstanding. Yet Miller and Jared Bush’s screenplay is full of the same concepts derived from indigenous mythology that were prominent in the previous movie.

Moana, for instance, can communicate with the sea, which is here anthropomorphized sufficiently to give her the occasional high-five. And Moana’s deceased maternal grandmother, Tala (voice of Rachel House), is among the revered ancestors who appear to the now young-adult heroine, having taken on the post-mortem shape of a manta ray.

The parents of impressionable kids may be concerned by the degree to which these ideas depart from revealed truth. As for older teens, they’ll likely be proof against this aspect of the proceedings, especially if they’ve been well catechized.

The film contains potentially scary scenes of action and peril, nonscriptural religious ideas and practices as well as a few childish gross-out visuals. The OSV News classification is A-II — adults and adolescents. The Motion Picture Association rating is PG — parental guidance suggested. Some material may not be suitable for children.

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Rhythm Of Dammam Review: An Exceptionally Evocative, Visually Arresting Film

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Rhythm Of Dammam Review: An Exceptionally Evocative, Visually Arresting Film

New Delhi:

The Siddis, a community unrepresented in Indian cinema, is under the spotlight in Rhythm of Dammam, an exceptionally evocative, visually arresting film written and directed by Kerala-born, New York-based Jayan Cherian.

The film premiered this week at the 55th International Film Festival of India in Goa. It is now headed to the International Competition line-up of the upcoming 29th International Film Festival of Kerala.

Rhythm of Dammam – the title alludes to a musical tradition germane to the Siddi way of life – shines a light on the plight of the marginalised Afro-Indian tribe that languishes at the bottom of India’s social hierarchy.

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In 2013, Cherian’s debut feature, Papilio Buddha, probed systemic and physical violence perpetrated against Dalits, women and the environment. Three years later, he made Ka Bodyscapes, a film about three rebellious millennials who defy notions of gender and sexuality perpetuated to a change-averse society.

Rhythm of Dammam isn’t quite as subversive but, like the filmmaker’s previous films, is political to the core. Using relatively muted means, it examines the marginalization of the Siddis who have suffered centuries of oppression.

Cherian’s script, which draws liberally from his extensive documentation of the lives of the forest dwellers, alludes tangentially yet unambiguously to the obliteration of the endangered minority’s history, culture and language.

Rhythm of Dammam, lit and lensed by Sabin Uralikandy, has the tone and texture of a documentary. However, the seeds of an ethnographic film embedded in the film are grafted upon a full-blown fictional structure for the purpose of elucidation. The strategy works wonderfully well.

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The film’s protagonist, a 12-year-old Siddi boy, Jayaram (Chinmaya Siddi), struggles to come to terms with the demise of his grandfather Rama Bantu Siddi (Parashuram Siddi). His anguish, bewilderment and fears are aggravated by the ways in which the adults around him react to the death and its aftermath.

His alcoholic, debt-ridden father Bhaskara (Prashant Siddi, widely known to Kannada movie fans), bickers endlessly with his younger brother Ganapathi (Nagaraj Siddi). The two men have their eyes on what the deceased man is believed to have bequeathed to them.

Their home and the land on which it stands are in danger of being seized by the upper-caste landlord to whom Bhaskara owes a few thousand rupees. He hopes to avert the eventuality with the inherited money. But the box Bhaskara digs out of a corner of the house contains trinkets of little material worth.

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To Jayaram, however, the heirloom, no matter how worthless, become a ready, if unsettling, conduit to the hoary roots of his brutally exploited tribe who were brought to India as slaves by Portuguese and Arab traders and thereafter left to deal with continuing subjugation and persecution over many centuries.

The principal actors in Rhythm of Dammam, set in Yellapur in the Uttara Kannada district of Karnataka, where a large percentage of Hindu Siddis are concentrated, are all non-actors from the community. The actors cast as non-tribals, all tertiary characters – the landlord, a doctor, or an instructor in a tribal boys’ hostel – are (or look like) real people.

Cherian sets the actors free to improvise their performances, songs and dances. Many extended shots with a static camera provide naturalistic, unmediated frames to create a tangible context for the sufferings of the Siddis even as Jayaram’s visions of his forebears transport the boy, and the audience, to a surreal, often disturbing, zone.

The assimilation of the Siddis we see in the film is complete, so, ironically, is their alienation from mainstream India. They speak a creole of Konkani, which is the language of their religious chants. Their gods and rituals are Hindu. But their spirit – embodied in the white-robed figure of the grandfather Jayaram sees and touches in his dreams/nightmares – is driven by a yearning for an identity.

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Politics makes its emphatic way into Rhythm of Dammam. The songs and dances of the Siddis, performed to the accompaniment of the dual-headed cylinder drums called dammam, which also gives their principal musical tradition its name.

The dances are studiedly unchoreographed. The actors work themselves up into a frenzy and create their own moves once they get into the swing of the music. It is marked by a distinctly Afro accent.

Haunted by what his grandpa is trying to tell him, Jayaram turns febrile, teeters on the edge of delirium, and is branded a problem child in need of healing. A fretful mother, an aunt possessed by Goddess Yellamma, a community shaman and a doctor who prescribes psychiatric treatment suggest ways to help the boy tide over his problem.

Jayaram’s fragile state of mind reflects the reality of a community that dangles between a past they have all but forgotten and a present that they would rather put behind them.

A young man raps angrily, bemoaning the community’s loss of the soul, language and identity. The languages Jayaram speaks serve to denote how far removed the Siddis of India are from their Bantu roots.

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In Jayaram’s school, the medium of instruction is Kannada. The teacher, a non-Siddi, makes the students recite a patriotic pledge before testing the students’ knowledge of the world’s seven continents. Jayaram is lost in thought.

The teacher ridicules him. He asks: Where do you live, Jayaram? Please, the boy replies. That is the name of his village. Jayaram’s ancestry, straddling two continents, is shrouded in a dense haze. For him, the assertion of specificity of location stems from a desire to belong.

When Jayaram is admitted to a hostel, the mass prayer there, rendered in Sanskrit, is overtly religious. Every step that he moves away from his moorings is indicative of the blows that his ancestors have faced.

Amid the politics that Rhythm of Dammam espouses, Cherian sprinkles the narrative with pure magic seen through the pristine eyes of a pre-teen boy. The tender, poetic imagery suggests a despairing search for stability amid a frightening absence of certitude.

Rhythm of Dammam trains its empathetic spotlight on the troubles of one community. But not only does the film give voice to the voiceless, it also speaks to all those who find themselves painted into a corner by history.

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Hitting all the right notes, Rhythm of Dammam laments the undermining of a civilisational tapestry that thrives on diversity.


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Moana 2 | Reelviews Movie Reviews

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Moana 2 | Reelviews Movie Reviews

Back in the 1990s, as Disney’s second golden age of animated
movies surged, the company entered the sequel business, churning out follow-ups
to their popular titles. For the most part, these represented inferior products
and Disney knew it, but the goal was to expand branding rather than create art.
Although featuring the original voice actors, even the best were characterized
by shallow stories, cut-rate animation, and lackluster songs. Instead of going
the theatrical distribution route, Disney opted for direct-to-video releases –
a decision that created a lucrative revenue stream for more than a decade. In
some ways, Moana 2 feels like a throwback to those ‘90s sequels – a movie
that was made more to capitalize on the popularity of a character than because
there was a compelling new story to tell. Moana 2 features top-notch
animation and songs that are better than passable but the plot feels like a regurgitation
of elements from the first movie combined with bits and pieces of other Disney
animated projects from across the years.

Moana 2 began life as a planned Disney+ series taking
the character on new adventures. Upon seeing footage from the series, Disney
CEO Bob Iger thought it was “too good” for direct-to-streaming and had the production
team rework the series into a movie. Although the result feels reasonably
self-contained, an unevenness in pacing and some narrative hiccups are evidence
of the late-innings metamorphosis. The result will likely please the legions of
Moana fans and is easily digestible for accompanying parents even if Moana
2
falls short of being the next Disney classic.

The story transpires three years after the original (even if
Moana’s little sister, Simea, seems only a little older). Moana, now a revered wayfinder,
has been taking long trips away from home in the company of her pet rooster,
Heihei, and pig, Pua, seeking to find other tribes of humans. She learns that
the storm god Nalo has cast a curse that prevents diverse groups of people from
contacting each other. In order to reverse the curse, she must find the mystical
island of Motufetu and raise it from the ocean depths. To this end, she builds
a bigger canoe and recruits a crew of three: warrior Moni (Hualalai Chung),
engineer and craftswoman Loto (Rose Matafeo), and grumpy farmer Keke (David
Fane). As she sets out, the demigod Maui (Dwayne Johnson), who is separately on
his own quest to find Motufetu, is captured by one of Nalo’s allies, Matangi (Awhimai
Fraser), possibly to be used as bait to lure Moana.

Moana 2 features surprisingly little in the way of
conflict – the climax, which is sufficiently suspenseful, is more of a
human-versus-nature battle – and the main villain, Nalo, appears sparingly. It seems
that the filmmakers may have visions of making him a Thanos-style “Big Bad” who
remains in the background (at least for now). This ongoing-adventure approach
makes more sense for a TV series than in a movie, although a box office win for
Moana 2 would guarantee the greenlighting of more sequels. Visually, the
movie pops although there are no noticeable advances from the first film
(perhaps because this form of animation has reached full maturity). Although
the first half of the story is light on action, things ramp up during the final
45 minutes.

One of the biggest disappointments in Moana 2 is the
lack of direct interaction between Moana and Maui. Once they are co-located,
the camaraderie from the first film re-ignites but it takes nearly an hour
before the two share the screen. For kids wanting to see the characters resume
their banter, that’s an awfully long time to wait.

With Lin-Manuel Miranda having stepped away from songwriting
duties to work on Mufasa, Abigail Barlow & Emily Bear came on board
to collaborate with composers Mark Mancina and Opetaia Foa’i. Although the
movie’s songs are a step up from generic, they lack the dynamism evident in
Miranda’s contributions to Moana. Moana’s new anthem, “Beyond,” echoes “How
Far I’ll Go” without reaching the same emotional heights. Likewise, while Maui’s
“Can I Get a Chee Hoo?” is fun and energetic, it’s not “You’re Welcome.” An
argument can be made that the musical highlight of Moana 2 is “We Know
the Way” – a reprise of the Miranda-penned song from the first film.

Overall, Moana 2 does enough to fit the bill of solid
family entertainment. It accomplishes the most important thing for any sequel: reunite
the original characters with each other and the audience. Its high points lack
the amplitude of its predecessor’s pinnacles but it avoids craters. Rather than
taking any sort of bold step forward, Moana 2 is more of the same.
Although that can be seen as a positive, it feels a little disappointing that this
is the best Disney was able to craft after an eight-year wait.

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Moana 2 (United States, 2024)

Director: David Derrick Jr., Jason Hand, Dana Ledoux Miller

Cast:
Auli’I Cravalho, Dwayne Johnson, Hualalai Chung, Rose Matafeo, David Fane, Awhimai Fraser, Khaleesi Lambert-Tsuda, Temeura Morrison, Nicole Scherzinger

Screenplay: Jared Bush, Dana Ledoux Miller

Cinematography:

Music: Mark Mancina, Opetaia Foa’i

U.S. Distributor: Walt Disney Pictures

Run Time: 1:40
U.S. Release Date: 2024-11-27
MPAA Rating: “PG”

Genre: Animated

Subtitles: none
Theatrical Aspect Ratio: 2.00:1




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