Movie Reviews
‘Irish Wish’ Review: Lindsay Lohan Stars in a Synthetic Magical Rom-Com Trifle, but Her Chemistry With Ed Speleers Is No Blarney
When two stars have “chemistry,” we tend to think of it as basic animal magnetism. And maybe that’s the essence of it. Yet when a romantic movie works, even a synthetic magical rom-com trifle like “Irish Wish,” what draws us into the chemistry isn’t simply the actors’ sexy connection. It’s that the two characters have chemistry, and that each actor has it with the audience. (In that way, screen chemistry is a bit of a threesome.) That’s the connection Lindsay Lohan and Ed Speleers have in “Irish Wish. The movie is as frothy as the foam on a pint of Guinness, as formulaic as the last disposable Netflix rom-com. Yet these two make you believe that they belong together, and not every romantic comedy does that.
“Irish Wish” takes place in a version of the real world flecked with fairy-tale fantasy. But before we even arrive at the mystical part, the first sign that the movie’s feet aren’t quite on the ground arrives in the opening scene, when Paul (Alexander Vlahos), a tall, dark, and handsome popular novelist, is greeted like a movie star, posing for paparazzi in front of a red-carpet event that turns out to be…a book reading. (His latest tome is called “Two Irish Hearts.”) If you want to know how ticky-tacky “Irish Wish” is, Lohan’s Maddie, who is Paul’s editor, walks into the event and runs into her two friends, Emma (Elizabeth Tan) and Heather (Ayesha Curry), and then picks up a copy of the book from a stack of them and says, “Heather, great job on the cover art!” “You like it?” says Heather. “It’s stunning!” says Maddie. The film seems to have no idea that an editor at a publishing house would already have been working on the cover directly with the designer.
Maddie, whose editing is the secret weapon that’s made Paul’s book so good, is also secretly in love with him (or so she thinks). But just when she’s sure he’s getting ready to declare his feelings for her, he says something quite different. Flash-forward one minute, he’s engaged to marry Emma, and everyone is flying out to the Irish countryside for the wedding, in which Maddie is set to be a bridesmaid.
At the airport, she and James, played by the aforementioned Ed Speleers, meet cute at the baggage carousel, where each of them thinks the same suitcase is theirs. One playfully hostile bus ride later, she arrives at Paul’s palatial family estate, a villa that could rival Saltburn. That’s the first sign that Paul isn’t worthy of Maddie; the second sign is how quietly smarmy he is. But during a walk in the countryside, Maddie makes a wish upon a rock, saying that she wishes she could marry Paul. And that’s when a fairy godmother in a headscarf appears. It is Saint Brigid, the patroness saint of Ireland — and, in this movie, granter of wishes! Only her wish fulfillments tend to come with a catch. Maddie, in an instant, learns that she is about to marry Paul. But it’s not quite the love connection she was expecting.
James, that fellow she met, is a globe-trotting nature photographer — such a loner that he doesn’t even have a home — who has been hired to photograph the wedding. The two hop into his vintage red Triumph to pay a visit to the Cliffs of Moher, where he’s supposed to snap some pre-wedding photos of her. Instead, they get stranded in the emerald countryside (courtesy of a rainstorm and fallen tree blocking the only road). It’s here we see that Lohan hasn’t lost her ability to light up a scene; she has a seasoned radiance. And Speleers, who looks like a sandpaper-rough JFK with a sprinkle of Dominic West, is the most charismatic British actor I’ve seen in quite a while. There’s a squinty Bondian cockiness about him. He and Lohan do a jig together at a pub, but it’s their dance of chivalry and brusqueness that takes wing.
The premise of “Irish Wish” is that Maddie is now about to marry Paul, even though she wasn’t meant to marry him. The movie is so literal-minded that the way this plays out is: She’s in an alternate universe where she barely knows the fellow she’s marrying — and that’s the problem. He has no idea that she idolizes James Joyce and loves to dance; she has no idea that he plans to go on having her basically ghost-write his books. But have no fear, Saint Brigid will keep the two of them apart — by throwing all sorts of delays into the ability of Maddie’s mother (Jane Seymour) to make the trip from Des Moines to West Ireland. And Maddie will soon be wishing for nothing so much as to have her wish undone. As a rom-com, “Irish Wish” is more than willing to kiss the Blarney Stone. Yet the chemistry of Lohan and Speleers makes it watchable enough to get by.
Movie Reviews
1985 Movie Reviews – Bad Medicine, King Solomon’s Mines, and One Magic Christmas | The Nerdy
Welcome to an exciting year-long project here at The Nerdy. 1985 was an exciting year for films giving us a lot of films that would go on to be beloved favorites and cult classics. It was also the start to a major shift in cultural and societal norms, and some of those still reverberate to this day.
We’re going to pick and choose which movies we hit, but right now the list stands at nearly four dozen.
Yes, we’re insane, but 1985 was that great of a year for film.
The articles will come out – in most cases – on the same day the films hit theaters in 1985 so that it is their true 40th anniversary. All films are also watched again for the purposes of these reviews and are not being done from memory. In some cases, it truly will be the first time we’ve seen them.
This time around, it’s Nov. 22, 1985, and we’re off to see Bad Medicine, King Solomon’s Mines, and One Magic Christmas.
Bad Medicine
Steve Guttenberg really was having a moment in the 1980s. Sadly, this film was part of that moment.
Jeffrey Marx (Guttenberg), comes from a medical family, but he has been able to get into a medical school due to low scores. His father finally sets up to go to a school in Central America. Once there he makes a few new friends, and eventually discovers not only does he actually like medicine, but he’s good at it.
This film had a few ingredients to be fun, but it lost it’s way with too many sub-plots. We didn’t need the owner of the school (Alan Arkin) lusting after Liz (Julie Hagerty). It added absolutely nothing to the overall story, and only served to slow the pace of the film down in several spots.
There may have been a decent film hiding in here, just no one knew how to get to the meat of it, apparently.
King Solomon’s Mines
Kids love Indiana Jones, so lets make our own!
Jesse Huston (Sharon Stone) wants to find her father, and hires Allan Quatermain (Richard Chamberlain) to help her. Her father had been looking for the fabled King Solomon’s Mines, so naturally they end up on the path to looking for them as well, running into every obstacle imaginable along the way.
Lets make no mistake, this is not a good movie. It is an out-and-out ripoff of everything that made Indiana Jones cool and successful. But despite it not being good, Chamberlain is so blasted charming as Quatermain that it’s hard not to root for the film a bit.
What kept tearing me out of the film was the stunts. Realistically, you know Indiana Jones should be dead about 20 times a movie, but the stunts were so good that you could believe he survived it. And it’s just not the same here. The scene where Quatermain gets dragged behind the train hitting all of the boards of the track was just too far to even be believable for a moment, and that really pulled me out of the film.
I give them points for trying, but they just never quite make it over the line.
One Magic Christmas
Hey kids! Christmas is coming! Who’s ready to get depressed?
Christmas angel Gideon (Harry Dean Stanton) gets assigned to help Ginnie Grainger (Mary Steenburgen) find the Christmas spirit… and so what if she watches her husband get killed along the way and she believes at one point both her kids are dead the same day?
Merry Christmas, everyone!
The film is unflinchingly sad for the majority of its runtime, making it difficult to fathom how it was made. In the end, Ginnie does get her Christmas spirit as Santa rewinds time so that her husband never dies. Of course, he doesn’t remove her memory of watching him get shot and him dying in front of her, but, you know, it was the 80s, who cared about trauma?
Just a bleak film that is baffling how it got made.
1985 Movie Reviews will return on Nov. 29, 2025, with Rocky IV and Santa Claus: The Movie.
Movie Reviews
Sisu: Road to Revenge
The lethal and tenacious Aatami Korpi returns in this sequel to 2022’s Sisu. Like its predecessor, Sisu: Road to Revenge offers up nonstop, gory hyper-violence as the old soldier shoots and stabs his way through the Soviet Union’s Red Army to avenge his family’s murder. Paired with all the bloodshed is a handful of f-words and some drinking, as well.
Movie Reviews
Movie Review: “Sisu: Road to Revenge” takes a Wrong Turn or Three

I am an audience of one at a late afternoon “preview” matinee of “Sisu 2,” aka “Sisu: Road to Revenge,” the sequel to the savage sleeper hit by Finnish carnage Jalmari Helander.
Do the locals know something I don’t? Or are the good folks in “The Last Capital of the Confederacy” showing their red ball cap displeasure at a movie about mowing down Russians by staying home?
I’m guessing it’s the fact that Screen Gems’ marketing didn’t spend enough to move the needle even a centimeter that dampened enthusiasm, as nobody knows about it.
That’s no big deal, because this sequel is inferior in pretty much every way to the original “Sisu,” which came out of nowhere back in 2023 and which takes its title from a Finnish word that more of less means unfettered rage. It’s not on a par with Helander’s “Rare Exports” Santa-horror splatter film either. He’s due for a misstep. Here it is.
“Road to Revenge” brings back our non-speaking, unstoppable and unkillable Finnish commando Korpi (Jorma Tommila), this time out to haul the pieces to his house across the Russian border after the end of World War II.
When your anti-hero is “unstoppable” and “unkillable,” that lowers the stakes. A lot.
Throw in feeble pacing and thus no urgency to its story of driving, shooting, stabbing and missle-launching his way through legions of belligerant Russians, fresh from their triumph in “The Great Patriotic War,” and you’ve got a thriller whose only creative bits are random moments of Russian-mutilating and murdering.
Remember, the vodka/borscht-folk and their dictator sided with the Nazis at the beginning of WWII, only to F-around and find out you can never trust a Nazi. And the Russians further earned their history’s bad-guys status by invading Finland at the start of the war, and paying dearly for their miscalculation, at least for a time.
The Soviet Russians annexed Finnish territory at war’s end, and that’s where Korpi lived. So he’s got his passport and his battered, oversized military truck and he’s aiming to move the logs of his old homestead, where his family was slaughtered, to a new location across the new border.
Ivan doesn’t want him to get away with it.
The stages of his quest are broken into superfluous “chapters” like “Old Enemies,” “Motor Mayhem:” and “Incoming.” The dialogue, almost all of it by a Russian tormentor (Stephen Lang) who commanded the troops who failed to finish off the Finn in the first film, is every bit as pointless.
“Unleash Hell,” like they haven’t already. “Keep your eyes open,” the most worthless command cliche of them all. And “Look at me,” served up as if he isn’t looking at you.
Duels against armored commandos on motorcycles (!?), airborne fighter bombers and the like ensue. Our hero takes another licking and keeps on ticking. The Russians? Let the body count commence, Comrades!
I laughed at a few of the more audacious butcherings, but that was early on. The narrative settles into a slog in the middle acts and no pull-out-the-stops train ride finale could drag it out of the mud.
Rating: R, graphic violence, pretty much start to finish, profanity
Cast: Jorma Tommila, Richard Brake and Stephen Lang.
Credits: Scripted and directed by Jalmari Helander. A Screen Gems release.
Running time: 1:29
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