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‘She Said’ review: the Harvey Weinstein NYT report movie nobody wants

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‘She Said’ review: the Harvey Weinstein NYT report movie nobody wants

The investigation drama “She Mentioned,” concerning the two New York Occasions reporters who broke the Harvey Weinstein sexual misconduct story in 2017, is a watershed second for journalism motion pictures. 

As a result of it’s a bore.


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Working time: 128 minutes. Rated R (language and descriptions of sexual assault.) In theaters Nov. 18.

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Directed by Maria Schrader, the movie that’s a part of one of the reliably galvanizing genres — newspaper reporters doggedly chasing down a troublesome story — is a disappointing, sleepy metronome with made-for-TV diminutiveness. 

Gone is the gripping scrappiness of “All of the President’s Males” and “Highlight,” or on the fictional facet, the seedy mischief of “His Lady Friday” and “The Paper.” And of their place are rigidly adopted procedures and expensed worldwide flights. 

Sure, guidelines plus gumption is the best way Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey landed their bombshell exposé that exposed the disgraced film producer’s grotesque conduct and jolted the #MeToo motion. Nonetheless, their story, as informed right here, just isn’t compellingly cinematic sufficient to warrant the large display therapy. Neither is it significantly informative. Since we’ve all learn lots about Weinstein, there isn’t a lot new element to soak up. “She Mentioned” is the stuff of memoirs, not motion pictures.

Zoe Kazan, left, and Carey Mulligan star as New York Occasions reporters Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey in “She Mentioned.”
Common Studios

The fruitless movie makes an attempt to mine depth by illuminating Kantor (Zoe Kazan) and Twohey’s (Carey Mulligan) private lives outdoors the Occasions. And it does a mediocre job of that. Each are moms and are pushed to the bounds at dwelling by a hard-to-crack story with probably huge repercussions.

Twohey, firstly, is repeatedly threatened for her reporting on Donald Trump. Kantor, in the meantime, finds her rising and curious daughter asking troublesome questions on what she does. Nonetheless, we by no means actually get to know them past defining traits (Twohey, cool and seasoned; Kantor, keen and open-hearted). Kazan’s efficiency, a minimum of, has some soul. Mulligan is robotic.     

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After getting a tip about Weinstein, the pair quietly meet many nervous sources who labored with the producer and his firm Miramax, had a foul expertise with him and are reluctant and scared to be named — or signed NDAs. The interviews with Ashley Judd (she really seems as herself), Rose McGowan (she doesn’t) don’t ring true. The telephone calls all sound faux and recited. The in-person talks with traumatized former assistants all have extra punch. 

Kantor (Kazan, left) and Twohey (Mulligan) track down former employees of Harvey Weinstein.
Kantor (Kazan, left) and Twohey (Mulligan) monitor down former workers of Harvey Weinstein.
Common Studios

When the film is most intriguing is because it reveals Twohey and Kantor’s divergent techniques to get sources to belief them and open up.

The themes’ traumatic recollections are all related, revealing a sample of conduct by the producer — inviting younger ladies as much as his lodge room, asking for a therapeutic massage after which taking issues aggressively additional. Regardless that the speeches are repetitious, Jennifer Ehle as Laura Madden and Samantha Morton as Zelda Perkins are transferring as their hardened exteriors break down.

Jennifer Ehle plays one of Weinstein's victims.
Jennifer Ehle performs one among Weinstein’s victims.
Common Studios

The British actresses pop towards an ugly movie.

Each scene is in a colorless espresso store, or a nondescript oddly empty restaurant, or a shadowy lodge room, or the sterile newsroom with their editor Rebecca Corbett (Patricia Clarkson) and govt editor Dean Baquet (Andre Braugher). Schrader and cinematographer Natasha Braier shoot these areas in a fashion neither realistically gritty nor stylized. Like a cellphone image with dangerous lighting.

The film is all iPhones and emails, and stone-faced writers saying “off the document” and “on background” time and again. That every one-paperwork-and-no-play actuality is perhaps true, however then why lazily dramatize it?

When Kantor and Twohey lastly have gathered adequate reporting to run the story, and the editor’s mouse cursor hovers over the phrase “publish,” our hearts aren’t beating out of our chests in anticipation. “She Mentioned” peters out — the alternative of what occurred in actual life.

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The filmmakers, it might appear, determined that their subject material was too worthy and necessary to make legitimately thrilling.

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Movie Reviews

Trigger Warning Movie Review: Enjoyable action in this revenge film

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Trigger Warning Movie Review: Enjoyable action in this revenge film

Boom. Crack. Crunch. That’s the nature of Trigger Warning, starring an in-form Jessica Alba as an active-duty Special Forces commando, Parker, who comes to her hometown after her father’s demise. Alba performs throat-slashing, bone-crunching stunts in some supremely well-executed action sequences. In one scene, after saving her male friend, Spider (Tone Bell), she quips, “Sup! Damsel in distress.” There is a lot to like in this action thriller, even though it occasionally suffers from some convenient writing and perhaps has a protagonist who’s almost invincible.

Director: Mouly Surya

Cast: Jessica Alba, Anthony Michael Hall, Mark Webber, Jake Weary, Gabriel Basso

Streamer: Netflix

We first see Alba’s character, Parker, as she is in mid-combat, trying to take down terrorists. Parker, who has an espionage background, suspects that there might be foul play around her father’s death. The truth about it unravels around all the mayhem. The violence is not all about the gun. In an impactful stunt scene, after her rifle is knocked down, she coolly grabs a knife and stabs him in the heart. Soon enough, we understand where she got the knife from, and why there’s some poetic justice being dispensed as she wields it to threaten intruders, slash tyres, and more. For the first half hour, the film maintains an aura of suspense about the protagonist’s personality and motives, but once the cat gets out of the bag, the rest of the film, even if with enterprising stunt scenes, turns into a routine revenge thriller.

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Once perpetrators get identified around the halfway mark, it’s just a matter of scores being settled. It’s here that the convenient writing proves to be a bit of a dampener. We learn early on that Spider is good at cyber-hacking, but later, how this skill comes in handy isn’t exactly a great moment. A bigger issue perhaps is how Parker is invincible. Even when unarmed and handcuffed, no enemy can truly dominate her. This means that when she does slide out of tough spots, it’s not exactly a surprise.

All said, Trigger Warning does have quite a bit going for it. The writing, for instance, ensures that Parker isn’t just fighting a personal battle. Her resistance is also for the greater good of the country, resonating with her values as a soldier. So, even if it’s a film with flaws, Jessica Alba’s stunt dynamism is eye-catching. If you are considering checking this film out, just remember that it’s about a protagonist that shoots first and asks questions later. 

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When movie ratings make absolutely no sense

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When movie ratings make absolutely no sense

We need to talk about the critic reviews for The Acolyte. Critics and audiences have been at war for years.


Audiences usually accuse critics of being either out of touch or biased because they tend to downplay the quality of popular movies and shows. On the other hand, critics have a reputation for assigning ridiculously high scores to content audiences could not care less about.

I usually defend the critics even though I rarely agree with their opinions because audiences have a ridiculously warped perception where this topic is concerned. First of all, audience and critic scores are not quite as divergent as online conversations suggest.

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Check Rotten Tomatoes. You might be surprised to learn that most shows and films have similar audience and critic ratings. Generally speaking, audiences and critics like the same things. Those significant differences people obsess over only emerge in rare instances.

Unfortunately, those are the cases audiences highlight because they concern highly publicized films and shows. But even if those differences were more common than the evidence suggests, you can’t accuse critics of being ‘out of touch with the public’ because they are not paid to be ‘in touch’ with anyone.

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Are some critics biased? Definitely, but they are the minority. That said, the divide between critic and audience scores for The Acolyte is astounding. Right now, the show has a critic rating of 85 percent and an audience score of 14 percent on Rotten Tomatoes. Naturally, some people blame the abysmal audience score on review bombing.

That term refers to a situation where large groups of people assign a negative score to a movie or show without watching it because they want to make a point. You can’t dismiss the review bombing allegations because a rabid section of the Star Wars fanbase continues to express its desire to destroy The Acolyte’s reputation online because of the social and political messages it peddles.

But even if you eliminated the trolls, the show’s audience score would most likely peak at 30 percent. In that regard, I would expect the critic rating to settle in the 60s, showing that critics are not blind to The Acolyte’s weaknesses, but they also appreciate subtle strengths such as the acting and production values.

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An 85 percent rating is pure madness. It says that critics absolutely love a productthat audiences completely despise, and that does not make sense. You expect to see that sort of discrepancy with artsy indie projects that critics typically swoon over, not big-budget shows that are explicitly designed to appeal to mainstream audiences.

Before you argue that Rotten Tomatoes does not accurately reflect the critical response to this show, no one cared about The Acolyte. In fact, viewers initially rejected the show because of the lackluster trailers.

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Remember Episode 3 from a week ago? Diehard Star Wars fans nearly rioted because it supposedly broke Star Wars canon by hinting at Mae and Osha’s immaculate conception. Casual fans like me don’t care about Star Wars canon. We thought the episode was boring.

And critics? They had early access to the episode and praised it as one of the most mind- blowing 35 minutes of Star Wars they had ever seen. Clearly, something is amiss. It is almost like audiences and critics are watching two different shows. I can’t help but wonder whether the online conspiracies are correct and Hollywood critics are only impressed by The Acolyte because of the diverse cast.

If you argued that the presence of minority characters (black female leads, Asian Jedi, lesbian witches, etc) was actively swaying their opinions, I would have a difficult time disputing your claim.

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I agree that art is subjective and some viewers have genuinely enjoyed The Acolyte thus far; however, the drastic difference in audience and critic scores shows that Disney (and Lucasfilm) took a wrong turn somewhere.

katmic200@gmail.com

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Film Review: Ben and Suzanne: A Reunion in Four Parts

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Film Review: Ben and Suzanne: A Reunion in Four Parts

An intriguing romantic relationship but also a series of issues in Ben and Suzanne: A Reunion in Four Parts

Shot in Sri Lanka, “Ben and Suzanne” is a film that unfolds on a number of levels, from a tour guide to the country to the exploration of a rather complicated relationship. It is Shaun Seneviratze’s feature debut and it was shot mostly with local non-actors.

Ben Santhanaraj travels to Sri Lanka in order to reunite with Suzanne Hopper, who works for a local NGO, after a long separation. However, although his plans were to see the country and have a good time with her, she is stuck with work, which comes up at any given time. As time passes, their relationship is being tested by both the fact and a number of other episodes, while the ego and individuality of both seems to place another set of burdens.

Allow me to start with the negative. There are two archetypes of Western people living in Asian countries, or even simply staying for a bit. The one is the ‘savior’ who probably works for a Western NGO and tries to help, considering their effort life-altering for the locals, in a most of the time rather big misconception. The second is the ‘tourist’ who just wants to have a good time inside the usual bubble tourists experience, retaining as many of the tendencies they keep in their country of living, frequently complaining about everything. These two rather annoying archetypes do not represent everyone of course, but are quite prevalent, and they are also exactly the personas of the two protagonists. Suzanne is the ‘savior’ and Ben is the ‘tourist’.

Expectedly, and considering they both consider their wants as above everything, they soon find themselves clashing, with each one, but particularly Ben actually flaunting the aforementioned to each other, in probably one of most entertaining and realistic aspects of the narrative. At the same time, though, and in a yet another annoying aspect of the movie, there is no indication why those two ever got together. They seem to have nothing in common, or ever had for that matter, maybe except from the fact that he likes to make her laugh by clowning and she is quite susceptible to it. Whether that is enough for a relationship does not sound like a question with a positive answer.

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The above essentially makes the whole approach of the movie somewhat naive, particularly because it also includes an outsider’s epidermal view of the country, especially when one compares it with a similar film we watched recently, “Paradise” by Prasanna Vithanage, or any other local films for that matter.

There are, however, a number of things that do work for the film. For starters, the chemistry of the two protagonists is impressive, with Anastasia Olowin as Suzanne and Sathya Sridharan as Ben presenting the fact that they have known each other for some time and that they both have changed quite eloquently. Their rapport is quite entertaining to watch, particularly in the erotic scenes and the moments they have fun with each other. Their fights could have been handled a bit better, but overall, this aspect is one of the best of the movie.

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The same applies to the cinematography, with the 1:1 ratio giving a very appealing retro essence to the movie, and the overall capturing of the country by Molly Scotti is occasionally impressive to watch, despite the focus on realism. Joe Violette’s editing could have been a bit better in the succession of the scenes, but the overall pace is definitely fitting.

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“Ben and Suzanne” has its merits, and the relationship in its center is appealing to watch. However, it frequently feels as a film that was supposed to be shot in the US, just found itself in Sri Lanka without being able to realize the difference or what to do with the fact.

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