Movie Reviews
‘Hot Take: The Depp/Heard Trial’ Review: A He Said/She Said Schlock ‘Rashomon’ That’s Really an All-Too-Standard TV-Movie
“Scorching Take: The Depp/Heard Trial” sounds just like the tawdriest of TV-movies, with any vestige of disgrace left on the cutting-room flooring. It positively is that, but it’s value noting that this actual type factor has been round for many years. It simply didn’t used to come back off the meeting line fairly so rapidly. Within the ’70s, ’80s, and ’90s, the panorama was plagued by made-for-TV motion pictures that jumped on tabloid-ready tales — The Jacksons! Jim Jones! The Menendez brothers! The Beverly Hills madam! The rape of Richard Beck! — and squeezed out no matter juice was left in them. “Scorching Take” isn’t a lot completely different. It feeds on our collective need, which is outwardly limitless, to see adequate-but-not-never-good-enough actors performing out the notorious scenes we’ve learn or heard about, bringing these squalid episodes to life. Besides that the entire downside with this manner is that the dramatized model not often finally ends up wanting half as actual as what was in our imaginations.
The title of “Scorching Take: The Depp/Heard Trial” makes the film sound loopier than it’s. You could suppose you’re about to see a complete staged model of the trial we principally simply noticed, as if watching Mark Hapka and Megan Davis, who play Johnny Depp and Amber Heard, seated on the witness stand reciting the tidbits of testimony that someway grew to become memes earlier than they have been out of Depp and Heard’s mouths would someway present a frisson of revelation that watching the unique trial didn’t.
However no. “Scorching Take” makes use of the trial as a sort of framing gadget — and sure, it does preserve returning to the courtroom personas (Johnny’s Kentucky-meets-the-Actors Studio stentorian gravity and self-involved Zen stammering; Amber’s company control-freak guardedness) that all of us grew to like a lot. But the movie will then reduce to a flashback triggered by the snippet of testimony in query. The guts of the film is its episodic portrayal of the Depp/Heard romance-gone-crash-and-burn, a cleaning soap opera on dangerous medication and even worse recall.
In the event you suppose you’re going to get some model — or a minimum of an interpretation — of “what truly occurred,” you’re out of luck. As a substitute of selecting sides, the film, cued to Johnny and Amber’s contradictory testimony, dramatizes her model of the story…after which his…then hers…then his… “Scorching Take” is like “E! True Hollywood Story: The Depp/Heard Trial” acted out on a budget — a he mentioned/she mentioned schlock “Rashomon” with the contrasting variations of what occurred overlapping one another, in order that by the tip we hardly know which means is up. However we’ve gotten to see most of our pet moments come rotely alive.
Right here’s Johnny and Amber as they meet, all lovey-dovey, on the set of “The Rum Diaries,” sharing the purple wine he drinks prefer it was the blood of Dracula. Right here’s Johnny charming Amber along with his Brando impersonation, bedazzling her along with his decorative masculine charisma, as he’s woken up by her adoring gaze. Right here they’re already moving into little tiffs about issues just like the film roles Amber is taking (he calls them “demeaning”). Right here, proper after their marriage ceremony, in the midst of her bachelorette occasion, is a significant combat, as a result of Johnny doesn’t like that Amber and her girlfriends are doing medication (coming from the drinker he’s, that’s fairly a high-handed piece of hypocrisy) and he says that she lied to him in regards to the intercourse scene she did with Eddie Redmayne. (The best way the movie portrays it, Johnny is so jealous that he experiences even intercourse scenes as in the event that they have been betrayals.)
Extra severely, right here’s Johnny, in a re-enactment of Amber’s testimony, changing into bodily abusive after she makes a joke on the expense of his Wino Without end tattoo. And right here, in a re-enactment of Johnny’s testimony, is the much more tender, fully unabusive encounter about that tattoo that he described. Right here’s Amber on the purple carpet with scars on her arm (however are they actual?), and right here, because the 85-minute film veers into its climactic house stretch, is severed-fingertip-gate and poop-gate.
In the event you acquired hooked on the trial and watched the entire goddamn factor (true confession: I did), you inevitably, over time, developed a psychological profile of every individual, which led you to resolve who was mendacity about what, and to give you an interpretation of the place you thought the trial deserved to land, when it comes to authorized justice. However actually, the trial was a warped lens that every one of us peered via, attempting to soak up the total image of Depp and Heard’s clearly poisonous relationship. (This tended to end in such pinpoint gems of trenchant evaluation as, “They have been each fucked up.”) “Scorching Take” is sort of a second warped lens slapped on prime of the primary one. It doesn’t make clear; it literalizes but blurs.
How are the actors? As Depp, Mark Hapka appears to be like the half (form of, from sure angles, generally), however probably not, as a result of how might anybody? Hapka can be a little bit too impartial within the courtroom episodes — the true Johnny leaned into these theatrical low tones — however he captures, within the romantic scenes, how Johnny was a romantic about every little thing, however solely on his personal (unromantic) dominating phrases. Megan Davis does a convincing impersonation of Heard, however to the extent that the trial caught Heard in duplicitous statements, like her insistence that she’d fulfilled her pledge to make a $3.5 million donation to the ACLU, the movie doesn’t actually permit Davis to indicate you ways that aspect of Amber labored.
The actual (dangerous) joke of “Scorching Take” isn’t that it’s the scuzziest TV-movie ever made or something like that. Fairly the opposite: As ripped-from-the-headlines exploitation sleaze goes, it’s pretty commonplace. However it does one mildly progressive factor. It takes the social-media circus that surrounded the Depp/Heard trial and works it proper into the film. It retains intercutting staged variations of postings from a pro-Amber YouTube pundit, a Johnny Depp teen-girl stan, and the varied different DIY commentators and satirists who turned the trial into not only a riveting piece of actuality theater however probably the most telling Warholian sideshow of the twenty first century. Its ruling ethos was, “Everybody who has an opinion of the Depp/Heard trial shall be well-known for 15 milliseconds.” That’s a complete lot of power-to-the-people tabloid suggestions, and whilst “Scorching Take” acknowledges it, it makes this film only one extra drop in an ocean of noise.
Movie Reviews
‘Better Man’ movie review: Robbie Williams is a chimp. (Just go with it.)
Robbie Williams talks Golden Globe-nominated film ‘Better Man’
Robbie Williams and wife Ayda Field tell USA TODAY’s Ralphie Aversa what it feels like to be at the Golden Globes.
Music biopics are too often predictable, formulaic and, let’s face it, dull. One way to liven them up, however, is to venture way outside the box and make the central subject an anthropomorphic animal. And while an alligator Freddie Mercury in “Bohemian Rhapsody” or a sloth Bob Dylan in “A Complete Unknown” might have been bridges too far, a chimpanzee Robbie Williams defies logic and somehow works in “Better Man.”
Director Michael Gracey’s admirably eccentric biopic/jukebox musical (★★★ out of four; rated R; in select theaters now, nationwide Friday) still boasts the signature tropes of its ilk and the career-tanking vices of many a “Behind the Music” episode. Yet the fact that the ultra-cheeky Williams is inexplicably presented as a bawdy CG ape man (given cool moves and voice via performance capture by Jonno Davies) matches the fantastical nature of the British pop star’s bananas rise-and-fall-and-rise-again tale.
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The movie also has a lot in common with Gracey’s most famous effort, “The Greatest Showman,” featuring well-crafted, effervescent musical numbers doing what they can to make up for oversentimentality and an unfocused narrative.
Narrated by Williams himself, “Better Man” chronicles his life starting as a little simian dude playing soccer in the streets with his mates – and failing to impress his peers. Like his father Peter (Steve Pemberton), Robbie wants to be somebody and slowly he begins to embrace a charismatic, wild-child personality that wins him a spot in the boy band Take That. His brazen and outrageous personality wins over some like pop-star girlfriend Nicole Appleton (Raechelle Banno) – and his many fans – but irks many others, from his bandmates and manager (Damon Herriman) to members of Oasis.
The middle of the movie is where “Better Man” finds its groove. Robbie sings “Rock DJ” and his group pogo-sticks through London’s busy Regent Street in the film’s most spectacular sequence. And as the insecure Robbie goes down a bad path, he’s forced to literally fight the conflicting parts of his pop-star persona. Drugs and being a selfish jerk threaten everything, of course, and seeing a chimp go through the out-of-control partying instead of a normal dude is a bit different. The family drama peppered through the film leans too earnest, leading to an ending that pours on the schmaltz way too hard. Brash simian Robbie is a lot more fun to watch than soppy simian Robbie.
No one’s ever going to play a primate like the brilliant Andy Serkis in his “Planet of the Apes” films. Davies does a good job at moving in such a way that’s human but also a little bit wild, which adds to the hyperrealism of a proudly oddball movie. It doesn’t completely explain why exactly Williams is a chimp in the biopic – he’s said he feels “less evolved” than others, and Nicole calls Robbie an “animal” during a fight – but it makes that bizarre choice a little less head-scratching.
Interestingly, the best part of “Better Man” is Williams. He sings the songs throughout the movie – including nifty new tune “Forbidden Road” – and his fabulous narration hilariously slings jabs and adds an emotional gravitas to his screen counterpart’s struggles. When the film goes most over the top, Williams’ commentary keeps it grounded.
“Better Man” isn’t perfect – as a straightforward effort, it doesn’t hold a candle to, say, “A Complete Unknown.” But it’s never boring, either. And the film is easily the most idiosyncratic of its kind, at least until that inevitable Barry Manilow biopic featuring a yeti.
Movie Reviews
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Movie Reviews
The Forge Movie Review (with Spoilers)
If you are looking for a good movie to watch during these cold winter days, I suggest The Forge.
Before providing an explanation for my recommendation I must warn that this review does contain spoilers. Therefore, do not read the rest of this article if you intend to watch the film.
The Forge
A Brief Summary
Under the direction of Alex Kendrick, The Forge is a faith-based movie emphasizing the importance of discipleship. Actors such as Priscilla Shirer, Cameron Arnett, and Aspen Kennedy bring this theme to life with a passion for God that exudes beyond a typical acting role.
Their passion manifests through the story of Isaiah Wright, a young adult struggling to find direction in life. He focuses on playing video games, hanging out with friends and not handling his responsibilities.
His mother scolds him for his lackadaisical habits but a transformation does not occur until he meets Joshua Moore. Joshua Moore, the owner of Moore Fitness gym, offers Isaiah a job.
Little does Isaiah know, this opportunity will not only change his financial status but help him draw closer to God. God uses Joshua Moore as a mentor who gives Isaiah professional and personal advice to help him mature.
Over a short period of time, Isaiah decides to stop resisting God and accept Jesus as his Lord and Savior. After hearing the news, Mr. Moore disciples Isaiah and invites him into fellowship with other Christian men.
This maturation helps Isaiah apologize for past mistakes, forgive his father and become a courageous young professional.
The Forge concludes with Mr. Moore issuing a challenge to his forge (and viewers) to make disciples for Jesus Christ.
Relatable to the African American Community
Brokenness & Fatherlessness
Along with a compelling message to go make disciples for Christ, The Forge also highlights themes relatable to the African American Community.
One theme was Isaiah’s brokenness due to the absence of his father. This may seem like a negative depiction of black families because some media platforms associate fatherlessness with African Americans.
However, I see this as a positive since it confronts the realities that many young adults of various ethnic backgrounds face.
Pain Drawing People Closer to God
Another theme Christians in the Black community can relate too is painful situations drawing them closer to God. For Isaiah, pain occurs through fatherlessness and the inability to find direction for his life.
But after surrendering his life to God, Isaiah transforms into a new creation.
For Mr. Moore, tragedy happens through a car accident resulting in his son’s death. Mr. Moore is so distraught, his marriage almost ends. Thankfully, yielding his anger to God helps him become a dynamic mentor for other men.
Ownership & Excellence in Business
One way Mr. Moore serves as a dynamic mentor is by discipling his employee Joshua. Mr. Moore has the freedom to share his faith with Joshua since he owns Moore Fitness Gym.
This same freedom appears as Joshua’s mom prays with her employees and friends at Cynthia’s (her hair salon).
In addition to a gym and hair salon, the film features a black owned coffee shop.
Seeing positive representations of African Americans in business through this film is encouraging for two reasons.
First, this positive representation shows all Christian’s how we can use employment to glorify God regardless of our job title. Second, this film shows there is a strong sense of work ethic, unity, teamwork and business savvy in black families.
Hopefully, this inspires more Christians to start black owned family businesses that will make a lasting impact in their communities.
The Impact of Discipleship
One way to make a lasting impact in any community is by investing in people. Mr. Moore this by establishing the forge and discipling countless men who then disciple others.
Through these personal investments, men not only grow spiritually, but in every aspect of their lives. They also gain a health support system that allows them to function in community the way God intends.
Imagine what our churches, families and society will look like if more men accept the responsibility of discipleship.
3 Things You Might Have Overlooked
The Power of Prayer
The displays of discipleship prevalent in this film could not be possible without prayer. Isaiah’s mom asks her forge to pray for him on a few occasions.
Prayer is also evident during Isaiah’s conversion experience as well as Mr. and Mrs. Moore’s daily affairs. These examples prove we can not draw closer to God or help others in their relationship with the Lord without prayer.
This is why Paul uses scriptures like 1 Timothy 2:8 to illustrate the importance of prayer.
An Excellent Use of Scripture
Along with illustrating the importance of prayer, The Forge does an excellent job of using scripture in its proper context. This is seen as Mr. Moore quotes or references the following scriptures to make key points
- Matthew 28:19.
- Luke 9:23.
- Galatians 5:13-14.
This factor stands out to me because I have seen other films use scripture and biblical principles out of context.
Being contextually accurate with scripture is essential because someone who does not fully understand a scripture may be susceptible to false teachings. God will hold filmmakers who intentionally misuse scripture accountable for making others stumble.
A Reminder About Sin
Thankfully, instead of making me stumble, The Forge offers a helpful reminder about sin. Sin is not just acts like using drugs, embezzling money, or committing adultery which are typical in many films.
Instead, The Forge reminds viewers that holding grudges, selfish ambitions, and not consulting God in every decision are also sins. I appreciate this reminder because it’s easy for believers to think they are in right standing with God if they do not commit sins others find unjustifiable.
However, God also takes offense when we act in ways that suggest he is not the Lord of our lives. We must strive to live by Luke 9:23 daily in order to be sincere disciples for Christ.
How do you feel about The Forge? I’d love to hear your thoughts. Your comments and feedback are greatly appreciated!
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