Movie Reviews
‘She-Hulk: Attorney at Law’: The MCU Takes on the Sitcom
Among the many working gags of Disney+’s new Marvel collection She-Hulk: Lawyer At Regulation is that its title character — a.okay.a. Jennifer Walters, cousin to Mark Ruffalo’s Hulk, who turns into massive and inexperienced after their blood unintentionally intermingles in a automobile accident — hates her personal nickname.
“It’s so dumb!” she complains. “I can’t even exist with out being a by-product of the Hulk.”
The comic-book model of She-Hulk has not often needed to fear about this. Regardless of the inexperienced pores and skin and superstrength, she has occupied a comparatively distinctive house inside the Marvel universe. She is a Hulk who retains her personal character even when powered up(*). She is a lawyer whose specialty is circumstances involving different superheroes. The place most of her friends are inclined to deal with their heroic identities as crucial evils they’d slightly do with out, she loves being the stronger, extra assured, and extra glamorous She-Hulk, and resents having to often flip again to regular. And most significantly, she has largely been written as a comedy-forward character in what’s lengthy been a really darkish and angst-ridden medium, breaking the fourth wall to deal with her readers and acknowledge that she’s in a comic book ebook years and years earlier than Deadpool made that his gimmick.
(*) Periodically, some author will get too cute and make her simply as savage and dumb as her cousin. It’s by no means a good suggestion, and she or he finally reverts to her clever, wise-cracking self.
Although She-Hulk: Lawyer at Regulation begins as Jennifer (performed by Orphan Black Emmy winner Tatiana Maslany) is simply beginning to Hulk out in public, the collection needs to carve out the same house for itself inside the MCU. It’s a half-hour comedy — not a commentary on sitcoms, just like the early episodes of WandaVision, however the true deal, making an attempt to be Ally McBeal with occasional combat scenes, or a tamer Fleabag(*), excess of it needs to be the subsequent Falcon and the Winter Soldier. And like She-Hulk comics so usually have — notably the runs by Dan Slott and John Byrne that present a lot of inspiration for this present’s head author Jessica Gao (Rick and Morty) and chief director Kat Coiro (Girls5Eva) — it needs to remark early and sometimes on simply how bizarre it have to be to dwell in a world crammed with superheroes.
(*) It’s nonetheless raunchier than the principally sexless MCU, although, together with Jennifer’s obsession with whether or not Captain America was a virgin.
The outcomes are combined however principally optimistic, although Lawyer at Regulation has a tougher time distinguishing itself in dwell motion than its heroine has on the web page, largely due to the distinction between the MCU in 2022 and Marvel Comics within the mid-to-late Eighties, when She-Hulk first began to get foolish.
The present takes most of its premise from Slott’s mid-2000s run, the place Jennifer was employed by a agency opening up a brand new superhuman regulation division, with one catch: To Jennifer’s dismay, the pinnacle of the agency was solely interested by using her petite human self, not her swole emerald alter ego. As a result of the TV present’s Jennifer is new to punching by way of partitions and such, Gao and firm flip this dynamic, in order that she is mortified at any time when anybody — together with her new boss — expresses a choice for her jade giantess model over plain ol’ Jen.
It’s a personality arc higher suited to an origin story — and one more likely to conclude with this Jennifer additionally recognizing that being She-Hulk is one thing to have fun — however Lawyer at Regulation loses some inherent enjoyable within the shift. Simply as difficult is that though the MCU has been round for 14 years, it’s nonetheless drastically much less populated with superheroes, supervillains, and simply plain weirdness than a comic-book universe the place dozens of various titles have been printed each month for many years on finish. The Slott comedian received to play with an infinite toy field, from well-known characters like Spider-Man (who sued J. Jonah Jameson for defamation of character) to obscure ones like reformed robotic the Superior Android and time-traveling Western hero Two-Gun Child. There’s simply not practically as a lot of that for the present to work with (and a few of the massive weapons like Spidey are off-limits for contractual causes), so it has to lean on an prolonged Ruffalo look within the premiere, and produce Benedict Wong’s sorcerer supreme Wong in for a number of episodes. And there are a handful of latest super-types launched within the early installments, notably Jameela Jamil as Titania, a superpowered influencer who very a lot dislikes our heroine. (The Good Place alum seems solely briefly within the episodes despatched to critics.)
However the largest impediment is that the MCU is already a lot jokier than Marvel’s comics had been when the Byrne and Slott runs occurred, so the distinction isn’t practically as robust. Benedict Wong has mainly been giving a comic book reduction efficiency in each look after the primary Dr. Unusual movie, so whereas he suits in properly right here, it additionally doesn’t really feel that shocking. (There’s extra of a distinction with Tim Roth, reprising his function as Emil Blonsky, a.okay.a. the Abomination, from 2008’s The Unimaginable Hulk, and Roth’s facility with goofiness serves the present properly right here. However what number of MCU followers have robust reminiscences of that film?) A lot of the humor — like Jennifer’s father (Mark Linn-Baker from Excellent Strangers) making the most of her new skills to get heavy lifting executed round the home — is softer than what you discover within the extra overtly ridiculous MCU movies like Thor: Ragnarok or Guardians of the Galaxy. It takes till the fourth episode — which includes a terrific visitor efficiency by Patty Guggenheim as a drunken sufferer of magic gone awry, in addition to a subplot about Jennifer exploring relationship apps in each of her identities — earlier than the present begins feeling persistently humorous.
On the identical time, Lawyer at Regulation is actually sharp in spinning jokes out of the sexism Jennifer has to take care of whether or not she’s tall or small. When Ruffalo’s Bruce Banner explains that his Hulk triggers are anger and concern, Jennifer shrugs and says, “That’s, like, the baseline of any lady present.” Maslany received loads of expertise on Orphan Black taking part in completely different variations of the identical character and navigating some broad comedy territory. She’s superb right here, even when the CGI used to show her into She-Hulk simply makes her appear like an inexpensive cartoon character at any time when she’s sharing the body with a flesh-and-blood actor(*).
(*) It’s a pitfall of getting a live-action character who’s in Hulk kind a lot of the time, whereas Ruffalo, Edward Norton, and Eric Bana have all principally appeared as Banner of their movies, with solely intermittent appearances of the massive, inarticulate man. Ruffalo is in Good Hulk mode right here, and he seems extra convincing than Maslany does, however the digital results group little question has pre-existing materials from the manufacturing of Avengers: Endgame, slightly than having to start out from scratch like they do with Maslany.
When Wong is about to show up for the primary time, Jennifer admits she’s apprehensive that She-Hulk: Lawyer at Regulation could also be prone to turning into “a type of Cameo of the Week reveals,” and asks us to “Simply bear in mind whose present this really is.” This may be robust with any venture in a closely interconnected fictional universe just like the MCU, the place every venture exists on some stage to arrange the subsequent one, and the subsequent one, and the subsequent one. Ideally, a present billed as Marvel’s first out-and-out comedy can be notably funnier than, say, Hawkeye. However the self-aware sensibility and Maslany’s efficiency assist each She-Hulk and the collection named for her carve their very own place inside the giant and formulaic MCU equipment.
She-Hulk: Lawyer at Regulation premieres Aug. 18 on Disney+, with episodes releasing weekly. I’ve seen the primary 4 of 9 episodes.
Movie Reviews
Review: The best film of 2024 hits Bay Area theaters this week
Some films only need to be seen once to fully grasp the intentions and purpose of the filmmaker. “Nickel Boys,” RaMell Ross’ evocative adaptation of Colson Whitehead’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, is not one of those films.
The film, which opens Jan. 3 in Bay Area theaters, is like a prism, constantly revealing a new and different angle as it proceeds.
Ross’ novel approach tells Whitehead’s tale, based on true events, about two young Black men stuck in a wretched juvenile Florida reformatory school, the site of relentless and sometimes fatal abuse. What makes it a unique film about being Black in America is that it’s told from both teens’ perspective, literally changing its POV as the story evolves. It is revelatory to behold. It’s also initially off-putting and takes some getting used to since it goes against the grain of conventional narratives. The result is something far more soulful, truthful, tragic and joyous than what we would “see” in a linear fashion.
The daring approach (cinematographer Jomo Fray deserves a lot of credit for helping pull this off) creates a stirring string of inter-connected impressionistic coming-of-age sequences, all of which get edited with grace and fluidity by Nicholas Monsour. Each scene grants access to the mostly Jim Crow-era world seen from the eyes of Ellwood (Ethan Herisse) and Turner (Brandon Wilson) as each bear witness to brutal injustices and multi-storied racism.
One of the most indelible scenes features Ellwood staring at a truck with a KKK-ready cross in its bed. But Ross balances those with moments of sheer beauty – the look of unconditional love from a grandmother (Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor), an unexpected friendship that buds, blossoms and then goes on to haunt one of boys forever.
Ross’ film, like Whitehead’s novel, refuses to serve as a one-note cinematic treatise on Black trauma. One of the key narrative threads centers on the adult Ellwood (Daveed Diggs) who is forced to confront a wraith-like fallout from the past when numerous boys’ bodies get dug up the Nickel Academy grounds. (The real-life Floridan Dozier School for Boys served as the basis for the film and novel.)
Ross spares no anguish when depicting the young victims of the academy, but he also refuses to define them solely by their trauma. To that point, Ross also refrains from graphically depicting the horrible acts committed, so they don’t overwhelm his story.
He and production designer Nora Mendis further heighten what it’s like for Ellwood and Turner growing up during that volatile period through various visual cues (a collection of memorabilia magnetized to grandma Hattie’s refrigerator is rife with more defining detail and context). Ross uses visual metaphors – including alligators – to that purpose, adding another layer of symbolism you might want to explore in more viewings.
Ross’ storytelling approach does present a formidable challenge to actors: All in the cast must be willing to use the most of their limited in-front-of-the-camera screen time since we don’t see directly into Ellwood’s face until the perspective switches to Turner. Both Wilson and Herisse make the reveal of their faces seem like a natural conclusion, while Diggs conveys through body language the turmoil of what his character is undergoing. But it is Ellis-Taylor’s big-hearted performance as a grandmother with enormous reservoirs of love and compassion that deepens the soul of this beautiful groundbreaking work of art, an achievement that we’ll be talking about and referencing in years to come.
Contact Randy Myers at soitsrandy@gmail.com
‘NICKEL BOYS’
4 stars out of 4
Rated: PG-13 (violence)
Cast: Ethan Herisse, Brandon Wilson, Daveed Diggs, Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor
Director: RaMell Ross
Running time: 2 hours, 20 minutes
When & where: Opens Jan. 3 in Bay Area theaters
Originally Published:
Movie Reviews
Movie Review – Mufasa: The Lion King
Like many critics, I despised the 2019 CGI version of “The Lion King.” The new animation was ugly and the rehashing of the story from the 1994 classic without many changes made the whole thing seem unnecessary. But unlike many critics, I’m not ready to throw prequel “Mufasa: The Lion King” away just because of the sins of its predecessor. I’m not saying that it’s not still inextricably tied to the 2019 film, especially with its still-terrible CGI animation, but the story and characters can do some roaming on their own that makes for a breath of fresh air.
The film opens with Simba (Donald Glover) and Nala (Beyoncé Knowles-Carter) going away on some adult lion business and leaving their cub Kiara (Blue Ivy Carter) in the care of comic relief meerkat Timon (Billy Eichner) and warthog Pumbaa (Seth Rogen). A storm is approaching, Kiara is scared, and Timon and Pumbaa’s danger-fraught stories aren’t helping. Wizened mandril Rafiki (John Kani), an old friend of the family, steps in and tells Kiara a story about her grandfather Mufasa’s bravery so that she won’t just be soothed, she’ll be inspired to be brave herself going forward. The framing device isn’t a bad idea in and of itself, and Kiara is important to the future of this world with the Circle of Life and all that, but Timon and Pumbaa are nothing but grating here. Their tired, lowbrow schtick gets the movie off to such a bad start and causes so many unwelcome interruptions that frankly I can understand why some people think they’re a deal-breaker for the entire film.
Fortunately, things pick up once the movie commits to the story of Mufasa (voiced as a cub by Braelyn and Brielle Rankins). A flood took him away from his parents (Anika Noni Rose and Keith David – because of course it took two of the greatest voices in the world to sire a character that would eventually have the all-time great voice of James Earl Jones) and he was rescued by Taka (Theo Somolu), an unblemished prince from a faraway pride who is quick to consider him a brother. King Obasi (Lennie James) allows Mufasa to live with the pride on the condition that he mostly live with the lionesses, led by Queen Eshe (Thandiwe Newton). This is supposed to be humiliation, but while Taka grows up learning rotten lessons from his jerk father, Mufasa picks up useful practical skills. He’s even able to protect Taka and Eshe from the son of evil lion Kiros (Mads Mikkelsen), who sets his sights on wiping out the entire pride, sending Taka and Mufasa fleeing toward a sanctuary called Milele.
Along the way, Mufasa (now Aaron Pierre) and Taka (now Kelvin Harrison Jr.) make friends with Rafiki, as well as fellow lion Sarabi (Tiffany Boone) and her guide-bird Zazu (Preston Nyman), and they form an unlikely pack. Both Taka and Mufasa develop feelings for Sarabi, but Mufasa is bound by his honor to defer to Taka. Sarabi falls for Mufasa anyway, and Taka considers it a betrayal. The team has to not only worry about making it to Milele with Kiros in pursuit, but dissention between two lions that were, for all intents and purposes, brothers.
Yes, it’s easy to see where the story is going when you consider that certain characters have to end up in certain places by the time “The Lion King” rolls around. Yes, the animation still isn’t great, but it’s only obnoxiously bad in close-ups, which admittedly the film does far too often. And yes, the songs by Lin-Manuel Miranda (which sometimes invoke “Moana” more than the actual “Moana” sequel from a few weeks back) aren’t as memorable as the Elton John songs from 1994. But sorry, no, none of that ruins the movie for me. I still found myself invested in these characters, Timon and Pumbaa aside. I see enough effort and passion here that I’m willing to give “Mufasa: The Lion King” a very shaky recommendation.
Grade: B-
“Mufasa: The Lion King” is rated PG for action/violence, peril and some thematic elements. Its running time is 118 minutes.
Contact Bob Garver at rrg251@nyu.edu.
Movie Reviews
'Babygirl' Review: Nicole Kidman Comes to a Place of Magic in Halina Reijn's Smart Erotic Dramedy
Babygirl is What We Need in a Vanilla Cinematic Landscape
In recent years, there has been a lack of sexuality in film. I’m not talking about romantic sex, but straight-up fucking. Frankly, movies have been a bit conservative. With film snobs or Gen-Z viewers on Twitter going, “Why do movies need sex scenes?” and the industry adhering to that, cinema has been feeling so radically vanilla. Sex is so much more than shock value in movies. Sex is meant to emphasize connection and pleasure, and why it’s so important to human stimulation, but nobody wants to have that conversation. Babygirl is a perfect personification of that and feels so radical and fresh to witness a movie that allows its lead to experience this pleasure, affair be damned, and not villainize her for it. Also, it’s a ton of fucking fun, dude!
Kidman and Co. Dominate the Screen
Nicole fucking Kidman, man. She’s one of the hardest-working actresses in the industry today, and her performance is something that you’d never even expect from an actress of her caliber. It’s not even the raw sexual fervor because we’ve seen it with Eyes Wide Shut. However, portraying a character with such a high level of class and authority, and swiftly exhibiting a submissive sexual position, such as getting on all fours and licking milk off a bowl or standing in the corner like a school child being punished, without portraying it as humiliation, is a delicate balance that, frankly, no other actress can achieve. The Aussie icon you see in every AMC ad (except for this one, for some reason!) stars in about five or six projects a year and keeps proving her talent. There’s a reason why she’s being touted for Best Actress during the current award season; this is her one-woman show.
The film’s excellent supporting cast also bolsters Kidman’s performance. Harris Dickinson truly understands the assignment as Samuel, the equivalent of a manic pixie fuckboi who can read people easily, but one you can’t seem to figure out yourself. He has this type of seductive magnetism that allows Romy to figure out her freak shit without ever teetering their dynamic toward romance because that’s truly not what this movie is.
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