Movie Reviews
Review: Willie Mays swings away on HBO Max, and Cartoon Saloon’s fifth feature lands on Netflix
‘Say Hey, Willie Mays!’
4 years after Jackie Robinson broke main league baseball’s pernicious coloration barrier by taking the sphere with the Brooklyn Dodgers, Willie Mays joined the rival New York Giants and was instantly acknowledged as one of many sport’s greatest gamers. Mays continues to be thought-about an all-timer — maybe one in every of MLB’s prime 10, ever — however as director Nelson George’s documentary “Say Hey, Willie Mays!” notes, his narrative wasn’t as dramatic as Robinson’s or Hank Aaron’s or different all-star Black gamers who challenged norms and paid a social price for it. Mays confronted racist invective all through his profession as he racked up numbers that put him in the identical rarified realm as Aaron, Babe Ruth, Ted Williams and different legends. However in comparison with his Black friends, the Mays story was — outwardly, at the least — easier, all a few universally beloved outfielder taking part in with infectious pleasure.
“Say Hey, Willie Mays!” isn’t a corrective to that story, essentially. Mays actually did play exuberantly and didn’t publicly stick his neck out in the way in which Aaron and others did when it got here to civil rights. (Contained in the clubhouse, it was a unique story.) However this doc is a welcome reminder of how Mays’ very presence in American well-liked tradition was a game-changer, on condition that solely probably the most virulent of racists might deny his superiority to just about everybody on the sphere. It’s additionally a present to listen to from Mays himself, nonetheless kicking at 91. He has lengthy deserved a complete bio-doc like this one. It’s one thing baseball followers will probably be watching lengthy after the good man is gone.
“Say Hey, Willie Mays!’”TV-14, for grownup content material and language. 1 hour, 38 minutes. Obtainable on HBO Max
‘My Father’s Dragon’
The Irish studio Cartoon Saloon has had a exceptional streak of Oscar success, with every of its first 4 motion pictures — “The Secret of Kells,” “Track of the Sea,” “The Breadwinner” and “Wolfwalkers” — all scoring animated function nominations. Its fifth function, “My Father’s Dragon,” is predicated on Ruth Stiles Gannett’s beloved 1948 kids’s novel and combines the colourful, geometrical designs of the e-book’s authentic illustrations (by the writer’s stepmother, Ruth Chrisman Gannett) with the studio’s personal kaleidoscopic strategy to 2-D animation. The result’s one thing visually dazzling and emotionally resonant, although more likely to attraction primarily to children and style buffs.
Jacob Tremblay voices Elmer, the one son of a struggling small-business proprietor who has simply moved each of them to the unfriendly large metropolis. When the stress of dwelling in poverty turns into an excessive amount of, Elmer runs away, and thru a string of circumstances finds himself stranded on Wild Island, which is populated by fierce speaking animals and one imprisoned dragon, named Boris (Gaten Matarazzo). Elmer cuts Boris free, solely to study the dragon was load-bearing — chained by a manipulative gorilla (Ian McShane) to maintain the island from sinking.
The boy and the beast have a collection of adventures on Wild Island, befriending different animals whereas making an attempt to determine a technique to let Boris be free with out hurting the land’s different inhabitants. It’s all very fanciful in a reasonably simplistic method — aimed primarily at children below 10. However dad and mom ought to nonetheless connect with Elmer’s issues, which actually all comes right down to him studying what it’s wish to be a grown-up: making powerful choices and hoping family and friends will probably be understanding.
“My Father’s Dragon.”PG, for some peril. 1 hour, 39 minutes. Obtainable on Netflix; additionally taking part in theatrically, Bay Theatre, Pacific Palisades
‘Bar Battle!’
In writer-director Jim Mahoney’s raucous comedy “Bar Battle!,” Melissa Fumero and Luka Jones play Nina and Allen, a Los Angeles couple whose amicable separation will get thrown into turmoil after they each present up to hang around with mates at their favourite hipster bar on the identical night time. The workers likes the previous couple, so that they give you a plan. Nina and Allen will play a collection of foolish video games — like blindfolded darts, drunken tricycle racing and “human bowling” — to find out who will get 86ed from the bar.
That is Mahoney’s directorial debut, though he beforehand wrote, produced and starred within the equally themed horror-comedy “Gatlopp,” during which a bunch of mates type by way of their current private {and professional} setbacks by, sure, taking part in a sport. As with that movie, “Bar Battle!” by no means makes its lead characters’ issues particularly compelling. (They’re simply going by way of routine relationship and profession drama.) But as soon as once more, Mahoney’s large gimmick proves helpful, protecting the motion shifting whereas giving the actors quite a bit to do apart from simply ingesting and speaking.
Mahoney works properly together with his gifted forged of comedian actors — together with Rachel Bloom and Julian Gant because the ex-couple’s bickering greatest mates, and Shontae Saldana and Hope Lauren as likable bartenders. He has a knack too for creating distinctive and different characters who mesh properly collectively in snappily written and staged scenes. “Bar Battle!” is so low-stakes and small-scale that at instances it feels extra like a TV sitcom pilot than a movie. However this may be a pilot worthy of a pickup.
“Bar Battle!”Not rated. 1 hour, 24 minutes. Obtainable on AMC+ and VOD; additionally taking part in theatrically, Laemmle Glendale
‘Paradise Metropolis’
Ever because the announcement that Bruce Willis could be retiring from appearing because of a medical situation that makes it troublesome for him to course of language, it’s been more durable to benefit from the dozens of flicks he’s appeared in over the previous couple of years. However, longtime Willis followers will undoubtedly be intrigued by the Hawaiian-set motion film “Paradise Metropolis,” during which he performs a grizzled bounty hunter named Ian Swan reverse his previous “Pulp Fiction” castmate John Travolta, who performs a shady wheeler-dealer named Buck. And the excellent news right here is that not like a number of their current bait-and-switch automobiles — the place the fellows on the poster are solely in a scene or two — each Willis and Travolta do get a good quantity of screen-time, individually and collectively.
The unhealthy information is that whereas Travolta has some entertaining scenery-chewing moments, Willis stays as flat as he’s been in practically the entire movies he’s made since his well being began to say no. The sight of him does encourage some pangs of nostalgia; but it surely’s not sufficient so as to add depth to what’s in the end a reasonably generic shoot-em-up, primarily about Swan’s son (Blake Jenner) working with a neighborhood cop (Praya Lundberg) and his dad’s roguish ex-partner (Stephen Dorff) to resolve Buck’s malfeasance. That is TV-cop-show-level stuff, shot in a few of Hawaii’s least scenic areas. The celebrities can’t reserve it.
‘“Paradise Metropolis.’”R, for violence and language. 1 hour, 32 minutes. Obtainable on VOD; additionally taking part in theatrically, Laemmle Noho 7, North Hollywood
‘Mandrake’
Northern Irish folk-horror merges with the grim European police procedural style in “Mandrake,” a pitch-dark story of witchcraft and homicide from director Lynne Davison and screenwriter Matt Harvey. Deirdre Mullins performs Cathy Madden, a parole officer assigned to examine on “Bloody” Mary (Derbhle Crotty), a hermit convicted of murdering her husband and suspected of much more nefarious occult exercise. Earlier than lengthy, Mary is dragging Cathy into her earthy rituals — maybe as a result of the officer herself is a lonely lady, more and more distant from her ex-husband and younger son. Davison and Harvey sprinkle robust jolts of terror right into a story that’s in any other case intentionally ambiguous, counting on deep-seated dread and maternal anxiousness to ratchet up the stress even when not a lot else is occurring. The consequence is a reasonably cerebral style hybrid that also connects on a intestine degree.
“Mandrake.” Not rated. 1 hour, 25 minutes. Obtainable on Shudder
‘Capturing the Killer Nurse’
A companion piece to Netflix’s current film “The Good Nurse,” the documentary “Capturing the Killer Nurse” tells the identical story through direct-to-camera testimonials from the true folks concerned, supplemented by dramatic reenactments and a few audio and pictures from the unique case recordsdata. Whereas “The Good Nurse” examines the bigger social and private issues that allowed serial killer Charles Cullen to homicide dozens of sufferers in a number of hospitals — steadily arousing suspicions with out getting arrested — Tim Travers Hawkins’ doc is extra standard true-crime fare, laying out the info in medical element. Anybody gripped by “The Good Nurse” gained’t be shocked to study that the movie adopted what really occurred fairly carefully. However whether or not dramatized or introduced as journalism, it stays stunning to listen to how the issue of Cullen saved getting handed from one establishment to a different.
“Capturing the Killer Nurse.” TV-14 for language and mature themes. 1 hour, 34 minutes. Obtainable on Netflix
Additionally on VOD
“All Jacked Up and Filled with Worms” is a psychedelic horror movie focusing on viewers keen to take the identical sort of journey because the film’s characters: an assortment of younger weirdos who discover the bounds of their consciousness and their our bodies by ingesting hallucinogenic earthworms. Author-director Alex Phillips and his forged aren’t telling a narrative a lot as staging a succession of surreal sketches, every veering wildly between the sensual and the disturbing. Obtainable on Screambox and VOD
Obtainable now on DVD and Blu-ray
“The Energy of the Canine” joins the Criterion Assortment in a spiffy-looking version that provides interviews and conversations with the forged and crew. Certainly one of final 12 months’s greatest movies, writer-director Jane Campion’s adaptation of Thomas Savage’s 1967 novel is a sly, poetic neo-western, that includes a career-peak efficiency from Benedict Cumberbatch as a swaggering Nineteen Twenties Montana rancher whose inflexible concepts about energy and individualism make life depressing for his light brother (Jesse Plemons), his brother’s skittish new spouse (Kirsten Dunst) and the spouse’s studious teenage son (Kodi Smit-McPhee). Criterion
Movie Reviews
Appudo Ippudo Eppudo Telugu Movie Review, Nikhil Siddharth
Movie Name : Appudo Ippudo Eppudo
Release Date : November 08, 2024
123telugu.com Rating : 2.25/5
Starring : Nikhil Siddharth, Divyansha Kaushik, Satya, Rukmini Vasanth, Ajay and others
Director : Sudheer Varma
Producers : Narasimha Chary Chennoju, Narasababu, B.V.S.N. Prasad
Music Director: Karthik
Cinematographer: Richard Prasad
Editor : Navin Nooli
Related Links : Trailer
Appudo Ippudo Eppudo is Nikhil’s new film, which has been in the making for a long time. The romantic drama, directed by Sudheer Varma, was finally released today. Let’s see how it is.
Story :
Rishi(Nikhil Siddhartha) is a race car driver in London. One fine day, he meets Tara(Rukmini Vasanth) his girlfriend Tara and rekindles his love affair. Right when the time comes to take his relationship to the next level, yet another ex-girlfriend of Rishi, Tulasi(Divyansha Kaushik) makes her entry and changes things upside down. Not only does Tulasi disturb Rishi’s love life but brings in a crime angle related to a mafia don. Who is this mafia don? Did Rishi win Tara’s love? What is Tulasi’s actual identity? To know all this, watch the film on the big screen.
Plus Points :
The entire film is based in London and looks rich. The film’s second half is decent and has been narrated on an engaging note. But the lead-up to all this is very boring. More on this later. Nikhil plays a lover boy in the film and looks sharp. His image and personality suit such characters and gives his best in the film.
Rukmini Vasanth makes her Telugu debut with this film and she looks beautiful. Though there was nothing much to do for her, Rukmini made her presence felt. But it is Divyansha Kaushik who surprises us with her act. Not only does she look gorgeous, she gets a meaty role and is the most sensible and upfront character in the film. The twists that she brings in the film are quite good.
Viva Harsha is there throughout the film and ably supports Nikhil. Comedian Satya and Sudarshan narrate the film and their track is quite good. A few romantic moments featuring Rukmini Vasanth and Nikhil are good. The confusion-comedy related to Viva Harsh and John Vijay was handled well. Ajay is decent in his negative role.
Minus Points :
One of the biggest drawbacks of the film is the outdated storyline. Such stories have been narrated in so many films to date and there is nothing new that the film showcases. Also, the narration is outdated and that is seen in the first half of the film. Despite just loving it for two hours, it feels lengthy
Sudheer Varma is known to make such crime stories in the best way possible but it is quite surprising to see how he chooses a simple subject and narrates it in a very outdated manner. Right from the love track to the crime angle, the film has so many issues.
There is no freshness and a crazy actress like Rukmini Vasanth looks clueless in the film. The main villain played by John Vijay is nothing sort of a joker in the film and fails to create a basic impact. Whenever he appears on screens, it’s a cringe-fest for the audience. The first half, romance, twists, everything is dull. Things make sense only in the last ten minutes but by then things are way too late.
Technical Aspects :
The production values of the film are top-notch. The city of London is showcased in a very good manner with a crisp camerawork. The editing could have been a lot better in the second half. The lyrics are okay and the production design is cool. The writing is very bad and not one aspect of the film makes an impact.
Coming to the director Sudheer Varma, he has disappointed us once again. It is quite surprising to see such a good talent make films like these. There is absolutely nothing going its way for this film and the so-called Sudheer Varma mark is missing. He narrates the film in a very outdated manner and this gives the audience a very dull approach to the film.
Verdict :
On the whole, Appudo Ippudo Eppudo is as confusing as its heading. The film has good names but the narration is outdated and boring, Nikhil saves the day with his sincere performance but the rest is ordinary making this film a below-par watch this weekend.
123telugu.com Rating: 2.25/5
Reviewed by 123telugu Team
Movie Reviews
‘The Best Christmas Pageant Ever’ Review: Judy Greer in an Uneven Holiday Flick with an Ecclesiastical Spin
In Dallas Jenkins’ The Best Christmas Pageant Ever, a group of kids wreak daily havoc on Emmanuel, a small town somewhere in America. The Herdmans, according to the narrator (Lauren Graham) of this uneven tale, are “the worst kids in the history of the world” — a title earned by Ralph (Mason D. Nelligan), Leroy (Ewan Wood), Claude (Matthew Lamb), Ollie (Essek Moore), Gladys (Kynlee Heiman) and Imogen (Beatrice Schneider) through a host of shenanigans ranging from personally offensive to downright harmful.
A nifty montage at the beginning of the holiday feature shows the Herdmans bullying kids and adults with impunity; taking the Lord’s name in vain; smoking cigars; stealing from local businesses and even setting fire to a dilapidated shed. Because of their repugnant behavior, residents of the community hardly believed the Herdmans were “real,” says the narrator. “No one knew why they were that way.” And it appears that few people — including, at times, includes the filmmakers — sincerely want to find out.
The Best Christmas Pageant Ever
The Bottom Line Shortchanges its own lovable underdogs.
Release date: Friday, Nov. 8
Cast: Judy Greer, Pete Holmes, Molly Belle Wright, Lauren Graham, Beatrice Schneider, Mason D. Nelligan, Ewan Wood, Matthew Lamb, Essek Moore, Kynlee Heiman
Director: Dallas Jenkins
Screenwriter: Ryan Swanson, Platte Clark, Darian McDaniel, based on the novel by Barbara Robinson
Rated PG,
1 hour 39 minutes
Based on the 1972 children’s book by Barbara Robinson, The Best Christmas Pageant Ever is a classic American tale that foregrounds the noncommercial meaning of the holiday. Working from a screenplay by Ryan Swanson, Platte Clark and Darian McDaniel, Jenkins (who is best known for The Chosen, a historical drama about the life of Jesus) crafts a tale that moves unsteadily between poignancy and a kind of emotional sterility.
The movie comes alive when it’s sketching the town’s petty grievances, or the relationship between the protagonist, Beth (Molly Belle Wright, playing a younger version of Graham’s narrator), and her mother, Grace (Judy Greer). But it lacks the same dynamism when it turns its attention to the Herdmans, who seem increasingly like ciphers for the film’s ecclesiastical themes.
The action kicks off when Mrs. Armstrong (Mariam Bernstein), the director of Emmanuel’s annual Christmas pageant, gets injured and is forced to hand over supervision of this year’s show to Grace, whom the other church moms don’t respect. The film doesn’t detail the dynamics between all the women, but a few moments recall scenes the fish-out-of-water scenes involving Rachel McAdams’ Barbara among the PTA moms in Kelly Fremon Craig’s Judy Blume adaptation, Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret. Like Barbara, Grace wants to prove to this judgmental cadre that she can be relied upon to maintain this storied tradition. Her relationship with her daughter likewise echoes Barbara and Margaret’s, as another assured representation of an uplifting mother-daughter bond.
There’s a lot of pressure on this year’s pageant, which is the town’s 75th and doubles as a critical fundraising event, so Grace panics when the Herdmans bully their way into the main roles. How can she get these notoriously unruly children to comply? She initially brainstorms with her husband Bob (Pete Holmes) and Beth, but the trio don’t have to scheme for very long. It turns out the story of Jesus is more than enough. The Herdmans, whose parents always seem to be at work, have never been to church. When the six kids reluctantly come to Sunday school, lured by the promise of free food, they soon find themselves enamored by the story of Mary, Joseph and Baby Jesus.
And why wouldn’t they be? As the Herdmans engage with the Biblical narrative, they identify similarities between themselves and the Holy Family. Scenes of the young crew checking out books at the library and poring over each word as they see themselves in the pages remind of the grip stories have on young minds, how they can open entire worlds for readers.
Imogen, especially, becomes empowered by Mary’s tale. The young girl, who secretly wants to be considered delicate and pretty like popular girl Alice (Lorelei Olivia Mote), comes to realize that resilience is its own kind of beauty. Schneider’s performance as the unruly preteen, whose rough edges mask a softer and more sincere side, makes it easier to buy Imogen’s transformation. But it also highlights a nagging sense of incompleteness when it comes to the Herdmans’ story. The Best Christmas Pageant Ever never quite lands its most poignant moments because Imogen and her siblings remain stubbornly at a distance.
While Jenkins offers glimpses of these kids’ lives throughout The Best Christmas Pageant Ever, more sustained attention — more backstory on the parents’ absence, or more insight into the daily routines of the Herdmans — would have positively complicated the film. It could have underscored how much of the townspeople’s disdain of this clan stems from classism, and how rejection of difference contradicts the tenets they profess to believe in. Most of all, however, focusing on the Herdmans would have helped land more forcefully Jenkins’ lessons about how the true meaning of Christmas is shaped by community.
Full credits
Distributor: Lionsgate
Production companies: Kingdom Story Company, FletChet Entertainment, Lionsgate, Media Capital Technologies
Cast: Judy Greer, Pete Holmes, Molly Belle Wright, Lauren Graham, Beatrice Schneider, Mason D. Nelligan, Ewan Wood, Matthew Lamb, Essek Moore, Kynlee Heiman
Director: Dallas Jenkins
Screenwriters: Ryan Swanson, Platte Clark, Darian McDaniel, Barbara Robinson (based on the novel by)
Producers: Kevin Downes, Joe Erwin, Andrew Erwin, Darin McDaniel, Chet Thomas, Daryl Lefever
Executive producers: Dallas Jenkins, Jennifer Booth, Tony Young, Christopher Woodrow, K. Blaine Johnston
Director of photography: C. Kim Miles
Production designer: Jean A. Carriere
Costume designer: Maria Livingstone
Editor: John Quinn
Music: Matthew S. Nelson, Dan Hasletine
Casting directors: Jill Anthony Thomas, Anthony J. Kraus
Rated PG,
1 hour 39 minutes
Movie Reviews
Meet Me Next Christmas Movie Review: A charming addition to the holiday lineup
Review: Meet Me Next Christmas is a cozy holiday rom-com that embraces the genre’s classic tropes while adding a splash of musical charm. As part of the holiday season lineup on streaming platforms, it has the feel of a traditional Christmas rom-com but with a few twists that make it a light, enjoyable watch. Christina Milian stars as Layla, a driven woman whose holiday tradition of attending a Pentatonix Christmas show takes on new meaning when her recent breakup leaves her yearning for a Christmas miracle to find her true love.
The film follows Layla’s frantic quest through New York City as she attempts to secure last-minute tickets to the sold-out concert, hoping to meet her “soulmate.” With the help of a spirited concierge, Layla navigates an array of comedic challenges, all designed to test her resolve and holiday spirit. The narrative is built around standard rom-com archetypes, with exaggerated characters and outlandish plot points that bend to create a magical love story.
Milian’s portrayal of Layla is spirited, bringing warmth to the character as she juggles career, heartbreak, and romance. Although her character is well within the holiday-movie mold—a successful professional who finds herself on a romantic adventure—Milian’s performance injects an energy that makes her easy to root for. Layla’s journey also features humorous mishaps, spontaneous dance numbers, and near-misses that are easy to see coming, making the movie feel delightfully predictable.
One of the film’s unique touches is the inclusion of Pentatonix, the popular a cappella group known for their holiday music. They make a few cameo appearances, adding comedic moments and playing up their celebrity status, which adds a playful element to the storyline. Unfortunately, their role is minimal, and the movie doesn’t fully utilize their musical talents or potential impact on the plot. Had Pentatonix been more integrated into Layla’s story, their presence might have felt more meaningful.
Despite these missed opportunities, Meet Me Next Christmas is a charming addition to the holiday lineup. Its familiar formula, mixed with lighthearted musical elements, delivers the warm, feel-good experience that fans of Christmas rom-coms expect. It may not break new ground, but it’s an easy, heartwarming watch for anyone looking to get into the holiday spirit—perfect for a cozy evening with hot cocoa and holiday lights.
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