Movie Reviews
Fast X | Reelviews Movie Reviews
Despite boasting a healthy 141-minute running time, Fast
X is not a complete movie. It has a beginning and a middle but no end. Assured
that audiences will return like lemmings for future installments of the Fast/Furious
series, the filmmakers seemingly felt no compunction about concluding Fast X
with a series of cliffhangers, keeping the fates of most of the characters in
doubt. Although this probably won’t bother die-hard fans of the franchise, it’s
a gamble where more casual viewers are concerned.
Fast X brings little that’s new to a series that has
been repeating itself since it went hyperkinetic with installment #4. It’s all
action all the time. Yet, for an action sequence to work, something has to be
at stake, otherwise it’s just sound and fury signifying nothing. In Fast X,
there’s plenty of noise and CGI (some of it on the dodgy, cheap-looking side)
and things crashing and blowing up, but there’s never a sense that it means
anything. No danger. No peril. It’s all loud, visually expressive, and BORING.
And that’s the core problem. It claims to have characters but that’s a lie. It
claims to have a storyline but that’s a fallacy. There’s nothing here. The Emperor
has new clothes. It’s a big, hollow vat of steaming excess.
Fast X is like a flashy party guest who’s initially a
lot of fun but stays too long. By the end, they have become tiresome. At this
point, there’s not much difference between a Fast/Furious movie and a Transformers
movie. Both are soulless entities that exist solely to milk the box office. It
astounds me that audiences haven’t yet tired of this shtick. It has been
evident since Paul Walker’s untimely death that whatever human element the
series had has evaporated, leaving behind…nothing. Still, viewers know all
this and, although the box office takings for these films are down more than 50%
from the heights reached by the best of the franchise (Furious Seven),
this movie is still expected to claim in the $60-70M range (domestic) during
its debut weekend.
Fast X opens with a retcon of the climax of Fast Five, inserting a few new characters into repurposed footage from the
original film. (This also allows for a Paul Walker cameo without having to
resort to any sort of cinematic chicanery.) Turns out that Fast Five’s
bad guy, Hernan Reyes (Joaquim de Almedia), had a devoted son named Dante
(Jason Momoa) who is injured in the car chase that results in his father’s
death. His time for revenge has now come and, in keeping with his clearly
impaired mental state, he is determined to inflict maximum pain on Dominic Toretto
(Vin Diesel) before killing him. This involves framing Dom and his cohorts for
a terrorist attack in Rome, then setting them up one-by-one for slaughter. Dom’s
wife, Letty (Michelle Rodriguez), is captured and sent to a Black Ops center
for interrogation/torture. His son, left in the care of his sister, Mia
(Jordana Brewster), and brother, Jakob (John Cena), barely escapes a home raid.
A quartet of his friends – Roman (Tyrese Gibson), Tej (Chris ‘Ludcaris’ Bridges),
Ramsey (Nathalie Emmanuel), and Han (Sung Kang) – find themselves set adrift in
London with their bank accounts drained. Like a flamboyant maestro, Dante keeps
pushing buttons, leading to a very typical Fast/Furious climax that
comes without any kind of resolution. Along the way, new and familiar faces
make appearances, including (but not limited to) Helen Mirren, Jason Statham,
Charlize Theron, Rita Moreno, and Brie Larson. None have screen time to match
the credibility they bring to the proceedings.
Although a majority of Fast X creates an aura of
sensory overstimulation that quickly loses its impact and turns sleep-inducing,
there are a few bright points. Depending on your point-of-view, it’s either
amusing or embarrassing to watch four Oscar winners skate through paper-thin
roles with minimal screen time. Jason Statham proves that he has more charisma
than the entire Fast/Furious gang combined. And Jason Momoa’s explosion
of excess proves that he gets how utterly, stupefyingly ridiculous the
proceedings are. Instead of frothing at the mouth, he preens and struts and has
a great time doing it. That might not be worth a recommendation but it’s at
least worth an extra half-star, pushing Fast X out of the garbage end of
2023 feature roster and into the range of bland mediocrity.
This is one of those reviews where I feel like throwing up my
hands and saying “Why bother?” With these movies, people no longer expect a
good film; they just want to see over-the-top action scenes and catch up with
familiar characters, even if those characters are just going through the
motions. Rumor has it that Fast X is intended to be the first volume of
a three-part story designed to bring the franchise to an end. That’s plenty of
time for these old dogs (star Vin Diesel, director Louis Leterrier,
co-screenwriter Justin Lin) to learn new tricks but, judging by how close the
movies are coming to self-parody, I’m not holding my breath.
Fast X (United States, 2023)
Cast:
Vin Diesel, Alan Ritchson, Brie Larson, Charlize Theron, Sung Kang, John Cena, Nathalie Emmanuel, Chris ‘Ludacris’ Bridges, Tyrese Gibson, Jordana Brewster, Jason Momoa, Michelle Rodriguez, Jason Statham
Screenplay: Dan Mazeau & Justin Lin
Cinematography: Stephen F. Windon
Music: Brian Tyler
U.S. Distributor: Universal Pictures
Movie Reviews
Andy Greskoviak’s ‘BLACK FRIDAY’ (2021) – Movie Review – PopHorror
Work-related horror often brings some of the best ambiance to the genre, as co-workers being trapped in a confined space ratchets up the internal clock and limits the options of the survivors. Such is the case in Black Friday, a horror comedy named after the newly formed “holiday.” As we get ready to sit down with our families and plan our shopping sprees, let’s line up to talk about the ups and downs of this film.
The characters in Black Friday are heavily stereotyped and modeled after longtime retail workers, so that anybody who works in that field will be immediately endeared to the self-deprecation and in-jokes that come with it. While archetypes like the unfeeling boss, the new deer-in-headlights, and the creepy older fraternizer are a little too ham-fisted, each of the actors have some nice moments and dry delivery that makes the comedy pop.
The toy store is well designed and well lit, so that the ambiance is not only set up for character isolation but also has a warm holiday feel and nostalgic props strewn about. This movie feels like a bit of Clerks mixed with Mayhem and The Fog. The comedy overtakes the horror in a bit of an unbalance, but when the movie chooses practical effects over CGI, the designs are gruesome and intricate.
When Black Friday leans into the heart and realism inside of its relationships, it really shines. This may be the kind of movie to click on after the turkey and pie start to kick in.
It’s available (as of this writing) on Freevee and Amazon Prime.
Movie Reviews
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.
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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Movie Reviews
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Hitting all the right notes, Rhythm of Dammam laments the undermining of a civilisational tapestry that thrives on diversity.
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