Movie Reviews
MOVIE REVIEWS: “Magazine Dreams” – Valdosta Daily Times
MOVIE REVIEWS: “Magazine Dreams”
Published 12:09 pm Thursday, March 27, 2025
- Adann-Kennn-J. Alexxandar
“Magazine Dreams”
(Drama: 2 hours, 04 minutes)
Starring: Jonathan Majors, Harrison Page and Michael O’Hearn
Director: Elijah Bynum
Rated: R (Violent content, drug use, sexual material/nudity and strong language)
Movie Review:
Say what you want about Jonathan Majors, but he has the best-toned physique of any actor. He fits this role physically because of that. More impressively, he can act. He delivers powerful performances. “Magazine Dreams” gives Majors a chance to shine magnificently, even if one resents his character’s actions here. Majors carries this movie as an optimistic but crazed bodybuilder.
Majors plays Killian Maddox, an amateur bodybuilder whose dream is to one day be featured on magazine covers like his idol, Brad Vanderhorn (a nice turn by pro bodybuilder Michael O’Hearn). His only interaction comes from taking care of his ailing grandfather, William Lattimore (Harrison Page). Maddox has a past that haunts him daily. He suffers from childhood trauma, obsessive-compulsive disorder tendencies regarding violent thoughts, health issues from drug use, and social isolation. Maddox’s ambition for recognition leads him down dangerous paths.
Just when one feels compassion for Killian Maddox, he does something repulsive that makes him a priority case of confinement in a mental facility. He does retain some sympathy as one realizes he has been through multiple traumas in the past via flashback scenes. He also faces issues in the present. Majors is an impeccable actor in these scenes, even when Maddox becomes repugnant and difficult to tolerate.
One of this movie’s best moments has Maddox on a date with Jessie, played well by Haley Bennett. Jessie is a longtime crush of Maddox’s. He purposely goes to her job at a grocery store to see her often. When they finally go on a date, Maddox is anxious yet finally getting the attention he craved. The moment is awkward to the point that Bennett’s distraught portrayal of Jessie in this scene appears actual. The scene creates a nice mood of trepidation.
Killian Maddox’s idol, Brad Vanderhorn, is played by Michael O’Hearn, a fitness model and professional bodybuilder who is a four-time Mr. Universe and has appeared on over 470 magazine covers. This is a nice facet of this photoplay and works to make this authentic to the fitness sport that is portrayed. Maddox searches for perfection, and he believes Vanderhorn has achieved that.
Elijah Bynum’s directorial debut was the 2017 movie “Hot Summer Nights,” starring a youthful Timothée Chalamet. Bynum is also a writer. As such, his problem is he gives characters, primarily the main player, too many tragedies at once. Audiences barely have a chance to get to know his characters before Bynum has them endure continual catastrophes.
Otherwise, Bynum takes his audiences on a mental trek through the dreams of a megalomaniac. Bynum teases with foreshadowing, only to pivot and surprise his viewers. However, Jonathan Majors is the impressive main attraction and makes “Magazine Dreams” worthwhile cinema.
Grade: B (“Magazine Dreams” deserves some attention on magazine covers.)
“The Alto Knights”
(Biography Crime/Drama: 2 hours, 03 minutes)
Starring: Robert De Niro, Debra Messing and Kathrine Narducci
Director: Barry Levinson
Rated: R (Violence and pervasive language)
Movie Review:
Robert De Niro leads this cast, playing two actual notorious leaders of organized crime. While De Niro is incredible, this movie seems an attempt to show his skilled acting ability. Audiences know he is talented. But the crime drama aspects are repetitive tropes that clash with the documentary-esque scenes inserted in between one mob hit after the next.
De Niro plays Frank Costello and Vito Genovese. The two grew up as best friends in New York City. After Genovese returns from overseas, Costello has changed; he is trying to live a legit life with his wife of 38 years, Bobbie (an exquisite Debra Messing). Costello’s influence on government leaders, unions and charity organizations gains him considerable power without any crime syndicate tactics. He is known as a good citizen and for the people. He wants to leave his mob days behind him. Genovese does not like what Costello has become and wants to rub him out. After Genovese’s hitman fails to assassinate Costello, a mafia cold war commences.
Director Barry Levinson (“Rain Man,” 1989) and producers, led by Irwin Winkler (“Rocky,” 1977) along with Winkler’s sons Charles and David, have enough influence and capital to have cast someone opposite of Robert De Niro. The actor’s ability to superbly play two very different people is a diverting part of this period crime drama. His performance usurps attention away from a cyclical story. This is reasonable considering Nicholas Pileggi’s screenplay consists of overused mobster stereotypes interrupted by documentary-style interviews of De Niro playing an older version of Costello.
Grade: C+ (De Niro shines as usual, but this movie is not quite ready for full knighthood.)
“Locked”
(Thriller: 1 hour, 35 minutes)
Starring: Bill Skarsgård, Anthony Hopkins and Ashley Cartwright
Director: David Yarovesky
Rated: R (Strong language, gore, strong violence and drug use)
Movie Review:
“Locked” is an intriguing movie that brings together horror actors Anthony Hopkins (“The Silence of the Lambs,” 1992) and Bill Skarsgård (Pennywise in “It,” 2017). The two have an interesting battle of intellect, all from the setting of a luxury vehicle in this survival thriller.
Eddie Barrish (Skarsgård) is a thief and father to Sarah Barrish (Cartwright). Out of desperation, he attempts to steal a luxury SUV on a Friday. He manages to get into the vehicle but is unable to exit it. Enter William (Hopkins), a wealthy man tired of law enforcement’s inability to stop crimes. William has rigged the vehicle as a large snare for criminals. Eddie took the bait and is now William’s prisoner.
The best of this thriller is Bill Skarsgård and Sir Anthony Hopkins. They trade barbs regarding law and order, the nature of criminals, socioeconomic status versus need, and thoughts on family duties. Director David Yarovesky (“Brightburn,” 2019) should have made this the movie’s focus. Instead, the movie becomes something different ultimately.
This movie has a disturbing aura, although most of “Locked’s” runtime happens inside a very nice vehicle parked in a busy downtown parking lot. It could be a more intense thriller, but the writers did not know just where to settle their screenplay. The movie is an interesting psychological thriller but digresses into being a lesser terror-driven movie at points.
Grade: B- (Get locked in with an escape plan.),
“Snow White”
(Fantasy/Musical: 1 hour, 49 minutes)
Starring: Rachel Zegler, Gal Gadot and Andrew Burnap
Director: Marc Webb
Rated: R (Violence, some peril, thematic elements and brief rude humor.)
Movie Review:
“Snow White” gets a modernized ending in this feminist version of the tale. The actual fairy tale by the Brothers Grimm is a short story that Disney expanded into an animated cartoon in 1937, “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.” This current “Snow White” is a live-action production that expands its story without improving upon the rich source of prior cinematic and literary works.
Snow White (Zegler) becomes the adversary of her stepmother, a vain evil queen (Gadot). With the help of seven dwarfs and a band of merry people led by a charismatic Jonathan (Burnlap), Snow White challenges the queen’s authority, hoping to return the kingdom to prosperity for all citizens.
This version of “Snow White” is easy to watch but its most memorable aspects are the Seven Dwarfs, whose parts are lessened here. They have always been an integral part of this fairy tale, but writer Erin Cressida Wilson’s screenplay makes this an empowerment story rather than an adventurous escape.
Grade: C (Not as endearing as its sources.)
“Ash”
(Science-Fiction/
Starring: Eiza González, Aaron Paul and Iko Uwais
Director: Flying Lotus
Rated: R (Bloody violence, gore and strong language)
Movie Review:
Much of this science-fiction thriller happens in foggy outdoor scenes and dark interior spaces. It also features flashy psychedelic imagery. These aspects conceal bad set designs and a wayward narrative.
Riya (González) is part of a terraforming team on the planet Ash. Riya awakes with unexplained bruises. Even more, she finds others of the crew were viciously murdered. As she searches for answers, she experiences flashbacks of terrifying images she must use to determine what happened.
Voyage of the damned is the fate of this sci-fi story. The movie appears like someone did drugs and then decided to make a movie while under the influence. That may explain the 1960s-like trippy effects style.
González’s performance is engaging, but the story in which she exists is clumsily rendered. This feels more like a Syfy channel movie than the deep intellectual movie it attempts to be.
Grade: D (It is ashy.)
Movie Reviews
Movie Review: Travolta’s “Propeller: One-Way Night Coach” is One for the Ages — All Ages
Back in the good ol’days — the ’90s — John Travolta would love to get off the topic of “Michael,” “Pulp Fiction” or “Get Shorty” in interviews with film journalists like me and regale us with how utterly besotted he had been with his first flying experience, how that drove his passion for piloting and buying planes and airfield-adjacent luxury houses.
He didn’t even seem to mind having to move house when this or that development balked at him flying his Boeing 707 out of there on the way to locations.
Travolta would tell any journalist who asked that he was writing a kid-friendly book, “Propeller: One Way Night Coach,” based on his first flights as a child in old propeller driven airliners — cheap red-eye overnight treks with too many connections for your average jet age traveller to tolerate.
I remember picking up the book when it came out later in the ’90s — at an airport gift shop — and thinking “Well, that’s as cute as I figured.”
And now, decades later and trapped in the B-movie hell of his post “Gotti” career, Travolta’s turned that cute book into the most delightful, fanciful and colorful bon bon of a movie.
“One Way Night Coach” is a child’s fantasy of flight and flying the way it used to be — with pristine, uncrowded, futuristic airports, an early ’60s era of jets and prop planes with over-uniformed stewardesses in white gloves, the days “Back before every Joe Sweatsock could wedge himself behind a lunch tray and jet off to Raleigh-Durham,” as Sideshow Bob memorably sneered on “The Simpsons’.”
It’s a fictionalized account of Travolta’s childhood about an only child (at least two Travolta siblings have bit parts in this movie) of a never-made-it/never-will actress/single-mom (Kelly Eviston-Quinnett) who indulges her aviation-obsessed eight-year-old with a cheap cross-country overnight flight.
Little Jeff (Clark Shotwell) will revel in almost every Idlewild to Pittsburgh to Dayton to Chicago to Kansas City to Denver and Los Angeles minute. He strolls into the cockpit to meet pilots, charms the stewardesses and checks out the sleeping bunks on the TWA Lockheed Super Constellation, loving even the delays if not the Chicken Cordon Bleu he’s offered on legs of the journey that offer a meal.
And as he’s an observant child, he comments (Travolta narrates) on his 50ish mother’s vamping and posing, her choice of cigarettes (Newports) and drinks, the solo traveling men whose attention she pursues and earns.
“I was her best audience,” adult Jeff remembers of the mother who’d read him plays as bedtime stories and delusionally hopes that this trip to Los Angeles might be her “big break” even though she’s pushing 50.
“Hollywood called,” she’d explain about their overnight cheap flight arrangements to ticket agents and crew. “They told me to take the next flight!”
At every turn, Jeff meets or sees kindness — stewardesses who indulge his many questions and bump them up to first class on the mostly-empty planes, a captain who fixes his toy model of a Constellation, a mentally ill flyer who flips out but is calmed by a flight attendant who isn’t overworked and frazzled in jet-powered tin-can jammed with Joe and Jane Sweatsocks who think nothing of traveling in their pajamas.
Normally, I cringe at pictures this reliant on voice-over narration. I recoil from stars who populate their picture with Sandler etc. offspring. But “Propeller” is unfailingly sweet and never cloying.
Sure, it’s fictionalized. But if you’ve followed Travolta’s life and career, a lot of him is in this — his raptoruous engagement with flying, an indulged child who developed a taste for fine food and creature comforts, a mother who was his guiding star as an actor.
I get why there are less adoring reviews than mine floating around “Propeller.” It’s unfailingly sweet. Mom’s man-hunting is seriously dated. This TWA tale is decorated with Gershwin’s majestic “Rhapsody in Blue” — United Airlines’ signature tune. And Travolta’s been around long enough for recent generations to come up and not feel a connection to the “Saturday Night Fever/Get Shorty” star whose career has fallen off and life has been visited by too much tragedy.
But I’d hate to be seated next to anybody who doesn’t appreciate this adorable, pristine and nearly perfect aviation fantasy on any flight, much less an overnight one.
Rating: TV-PG
Cast: Clark Shotwell, Kelly Eviston-Quinnett, Ellen Travolta, Ella Beau Travolta, Olga Hoffmann and John Travolta.
Credits: Scripted and directed by John Travolta, based on his book. An Apple TV+ release.
Running time: 1:01
Movie Reviews
Movie Review: Paul Rudd and Nick Jonas hit the right notes in ‘Power Ballad’
Let’s just say that the wedding band has never occupied the most exalted rung of the ladder in music.
Playing “September” and “Celebration” is often what’s most required. As one member of the Bride and the Groove, the band at the center of John Carney’s new film, puts it: They’re not rock stars. They’re human jukeboxes.
But in “Power Ballad,” a wedding band singer and pop star cross paths. For one night, all of the stratification of the music world falls away. “Power Ballad” starts like a fairy tale.
Since 2007’s “Once,” the Irish writer-director has focused his films on the redemptive capacity of music. Carney, who was once a bassist for the Frames, knows from experience. From “Sing Street” to “Flora and Son,” he has made unabashedly earnest tales where a song, or just picking up an instrument, changes lives.
This can, undoubtedly, lead Carney into sentimental territory. Lucky for him, his chosen subject — music — is more worthy of sentiment than almost anything else. Yet the song doesn’t quite remain the same in “Power Ballad,” a movie that begins with the gentle sweetness Carney is known for, but detours into something more discordant.
Rick (Paul Rudd) is an American musician who gave up on his once-promising rock band’s future to instead live with his wife (Marcella Plunkett) and teenage daughter (a spunky, underused Beth Fallon) in Dublin. His former group was called Octagon, a perfect former band name if there ever were one.
But for years, Rick has fronted the Bride and the Groove. It’s an unromantic day job (or rather a night one) that hasn’t entirely sapped his belief in his own songwriting. During an encore at one wedding, he plays an original tune and is mentally transported to an arena full of swaying fans. When he snaps out of it, he’s staring at an empty dance floor and faces that say: That wasn’t Kool & the Gang.
At another wedding at at a castle, the band is asked to let a friend of the newlyweds sit in. They reluctantly agree, and are surprised to see the very popular boy band veteran, Danny (Nick Jonas), step on stage. He sings Stevie Wonder’s “I Wish,” and it’s great. Though Rick had just dismissed Danny’s music as “manufactured content for young, excitable teens,” he discovers Danny is a genuine musician.
But, later that night, something even more remarkable transpires. Rick bumps into Danny, and the two quickly hit it off. They begin jamming together and sharing songs that need work. They are both so jazzed by their unlikely collaboration that they play into the next morning.
The actual moment of artistic creation, and the craft it requires, is something the movies almost always skip over. But capturing collaborative juices flowing is exactly what Carney excels at. You can feel his joy in it. So it’s fitting that one of the unfinished songs Rick plays for Danny, “How to Write a Song (Without You),” is about creative invention.
It’s here when you wonder where “Power Ballad” is headed. Is this, for Rick, the beginning of a beautiful friendship? Will they turn into the next great songwriting duo, lifting Rick out of weddings and proving to the world that Danny is more than a boy-band pretty face?
That is very possibly the movie Carney might have made a decade ago. But “Power Ballad,” which he co-wrote with Peter McDonald (who also co-stars as a band member), shifts six months ahead in time. Rick is standing in a shopping mall when the familiar lyrics of “How to Write a Song” softly float through the stores. He stands dumbfounded in the gleaming halls of commerce, a befuddlement that slowly turns into outrage the bigger and bigger Danny’s smash hit grows.
“Power Ballad” loses some of its steam in its second half, which follows Rick’s struggle for justice. Making things considerably harder is that he can find no recorded demo of the song. His family and his band don’t even really believe him.
But even as the movie struggles to sustain its opening refrain, Carney’s film is always riffing on ideas of authenticity and aspiration in music. That Jonas is, himself, a former boy band star who has at times gone it alone, lends the movie a direct connection to contemporary music, where tussles over authorship are increasingly common.
Jonas has been good in other films (notably the “Jumanji” movies), but this is his most ambitious and convincing performance to date. It’s a testament to the movie that Danny’s theft isn’t a purely villainous act. He gives the song a bridge and the vocal power to take it to another level. He’s under mounting pressure from his label to deliver a hit. An executive (Jack Reynor) wants “Danny 2.0” but has little faith he can supply it.
But it’s an even more well-tailored role for Rudd. He memorably and very goofily played a bassist in the 2009 comedy “I Love You, Man.” But while he sings well, it’s not his musical chops that lift the performance. It’s more that Rick, a contented family man with unrealized rock-star dreams, gives the exceptionally genial Rudd more notes to play as an actor. Rudd makes for a very likeable everyman out to convince the world he is capable of a beautiful song.
And that’s the abiding belief of Carney’s. No matter all the struggles, the artistic injustices, the corporate hegemony, he still believes that if you make something truly soulful, it will break through. It will claw its way to the surface, and move people. It’s undoubtedly gotten harder since “Once,” this movie seems to admit. The world is against you. But what one person can offer, a ballad or otherwise, still has power. Fairy tale or not, that’s worth believing in.
“Power Ballad,” a Lionsgate release in theaters Friday, is rated R by the Motion Picture Association for “language throughout and some drug use.” Running time: 108 minutes. Three stars out of four.
Movie Reviews
Movie Review: ‘Sacred Heart: His Reign Has No End’ – Catholic Review
NEW YORK (OSV News) – As America’s Catholic bishops prepare to mark the semiquincentennial by consecrating the nation to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, a French docudrama that can aid viewers in understanding the full significance of such an action makes its timely appearance.
A Fathom Entertainment presentation, “Sacred Heart: His Reign Has No End” will have a limited theatrical run June 9-11 and June 14. The version screening on June 10 will be dubbed in Spanish.
Following its initial release in France last fall, the film proved to be phenomenally popular, with ticket sales reaching the half-million mark in a country usually regarded as deeply secular. This unusual development clearly indicates that the movie resonated with audiences in a way that even its creators may not have expected.
Filmmakers Sabrina and Steven J. Gunnell examine the origins, meaning and enduring relevance of devotion to the Sacred Heart. They begin their exploration even before the landmark revelations received in the 1670s by St. Margaret Mary Alacoque, a Burgundian Visitation nun, showing that earlier saints had focused on the subject in medieval times.
Using reenactments, interviews and archival images, the Gunnells also highlight the theological connection between the Sacred Heart and the Eucharist. This is done, in part, by recounting a few of the many Eucharistic miracles granted to the Church over the centuries.
By profiling contemporary devotees of the Sacred Heart, including formerly inactive Catholics, the picture demonstrates the impact the insights given to St. Margaret Mary continue to have on the lives of people around the world. Locations visited range from the gang-infested streets of a Parisian suburb to the once war-torn Central American country of El Salvador.
An excellent and enjoyable catechetical resource, the feature is also both moving and uplifting. It can be recommended for all but the youngest kids.
For theater locations and showtimes, go to: sacredheartfilm.us
Dubbed into English.
The film contains gory images of the Crucifixion. The OSV News classification is A-II — adults and adolescents. Not rated by the Motion Picture Association.
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