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Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Rhino: Ukrainian Godfather’ on VOD, A Thrilling Crime Drama with the Best Extended “Oner” Shot in Years

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Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Rhino: Ukrainian Godfather’ on VOD, A Thrilling Crime Drama with the Best Extended “Oner” Shot in Years

Although many individuals woke as much as the worldwide significance of Ukraine upon Russia’s 2022 invasion, the nation has a historical past far predating when the Western world collectively woke as much as the nation’s significance. A few of that’s on show in Oleh Sentsov’s Rhino: Ukrainian Godfather, a gangster story from the nation’s turbulent Nineteen Nineties. However essentially the most thrilling a part of that historical past within the movie shouldn’t be political, however private, as exemplified in a single breathtaking shot.

The Gist: Vova begins the movie as a younger youngster in Ukraine bullied for his obvious sensitivity, as seen by traipsing amongst sunflowers within the opening scene. However when pushed right into a nook, he reveals himself as a brutal fighter who can fend off assailants with a stick. In a single gorgeous take that by no means leaves the household dwelling areas, we watch him progress from boy to man. Particularly after he loses his brother to conflict, Vova bulks as much as change into the person of the home.

Derisively nicknamed Rhino by the mobsters who want his enforcement experience, Vova (Serhii Filimonov) will get let off the leash in ‘90s Ukraine. In a city filled with open criminality the place organized crime guidelines the roost, his band of employed enforcers wreaks violent mayhem at his behest wherever they go. He laments the best way his soiled deeds harden him and estrange him from his internal conscience. Vova’s automobile confessionals with a confidante reveal he has a honest soul and a powerful sense of his personal existence and objective, even when it’s largely expressed by way of brutality. Issues actually escalate when his household will get within the crosshairs of his enemies as he disappears right into a self-loathing vortex of carnage and carnality.

What Motion pictures Will It Remind You Of?: Consider gangster classics like GoodFellas with much more grime, grit, and gore.

Rhino: Ukrainian Godfather
Picture: YouTube

Efficiency Price Watching: Serhii Filimonov, in what seems to be his first and up to now solely appearing credit score, completely instructions the display as Vova. It’s the imposing presence of his determine, positive, that remembers the best way Matthias Schoenaerts would possibly loom massive in a body. However there’s one thing extra to this gorgeous debut flip, maybe considerably pulled from his real-life contradictions. Filimonov displays a bone-deep sense of his character, each bodily and psychologically. The film is rooted in his means to tug off the violence and the vulnerability alike, and he nails it at both finish of the spectrum.

Memorable Dialogue: “You additionally suppose solely youngsters could be merciless, and then you definately develop up and see the adults are worse than the children,” Vova laments from the motive force’s seat. “And then you definately don’t even discover while you change into an grownup and that you simply change into dangerous your self.” It’s a style of the deep knowledge Vova can drop seemingly out of skinny air.

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Intercourse and Pores and skin: There’s one pretty graphic, if temporary, lovemaking scene with Rhino pounding a bare-breasted mistress. However the pores and skin and intercourse abound in a bathhouse orgy scene filled with lascivious habits by Rhino and his gang.

Our Take: Any dialogue of Rhino has to incorporate its centerpiece “oner” shot, a powerful work of artistry unmatched by something I’ve seen in years. This single take alone is well worth the value of admission. In an period of flashy one-take pictures meant to attract consideration to its personal athleticism, what director Oleh Sentsov pulls off with cinematographer Bogumil Godfrejow is an ideal marriage of story and magnificence. The prolonged nature of the take doesn’t even blare its personal deserves at first, but it slowly picks up momentum because the digital camera floats round Vova’s childhood dwelling with out chopping. It quickly turns into evident that the digital camera is capturing huge expanses and ellipses of time relatively than only a strictly linear development. It’s solely about eight minutes lengthy, however it seems like a complete lifetime will go … as a result of it does.

The children develop up. They break the principles. They present their love. In a single poignant second, Vova’s brother Lyosha says farewell from the window as he goes to conflict, after which a fast pan across the room reveals the household crying over his physique in a casket. That is how time works. It seems to unfold repeatedly however is collapsing earlier than our very eyes. We can not discover tectonic plates shifting in our life till we blink and alter has out of the blue occurred. And the house is the locus of all of it, containing the reminiscence of all who go by way of it like a central mind.

That’s to not say that the remainder of the film isn’t good. Rhino is a really strong gangster film anchored within the fascinating, unconventional battle of its protagonist. However how, precisely, can you may have an entire hour-and-a-half of a film after such a showstopping shot? It’s inconceivable not to consider the brash bravura all all through. Possibly a lot in order that it papers over a few of how the movie runs out of fuel within the third act…

Our Name: STREAM IT! Rhino brings the style items and options one shot so breathtakingly good that you simply might need to face up and clap. These eight minutes is perhaps the perfect — or no less than the boldest and most progressive — you see for a very good whereas. But it surely’s additionally price watching the remainder of the film, too.

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Marshall Shaffer is a New York-based freelance movie journalist. Along with Decider, his work has additionally appeared on Slashfilm, Slant, The Playlist and plenty of different shops. Some day quickly, everybody will notice how proper he’s about Spring Breakers.

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Movie Reviews

Better Man (2024) – Movie Review

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Better Man (2024) – Movie Review

Better Man, 2024.

Directed by Michael Gracey.
Starring Robbie Williams, Jonno Davies, Steve Pemberton, Damon Herriman, Raechelle Banno, Alison Steadman, Kate Mulvany, Frazer Hadfield, Tom Budge, Anthony Hayes, Jake Simmance, Jesse Hyde, Liam Head, Chase Vollenweider, Rose Flanagan, Jack Sherran, Karina Banno, Asmara Feik, Leo Harvey-Elledge, Elyssia Koulouris, Frazer Hadfield, Chris Gun, Ben Hall, Kaela Daffara, and Chase Vollenweider.

SYNOPSIS:

Follow Robbie Williams’ journey from childhood, to being the youngest member of chart-topping boyband Take That, through to his unparalleled achievements as a record-breaking solo artist – all the while confronting the challenges that stratospheric fame and success can bring.

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During a conversation exploring the possibility of a biopic, British popstar Robbie Williams told well-regarded musical director Michael Gracey that he saw himself as a monkey performing for others. That became the window into telling the story of this singer/songwriter with Better Man, a film that, as the title implies, also shows that Robbie Williams is self-aware of his flaws, mistakes, and shortcomings without being afraid to put them front and center. Yes, rather than go through the arduous casting process, Michael Gracey ran with that comment literally, making the creative choice to have the pop star played by a CGI monkey (voiced by Jonno Davies, with Robbie Williams lending his vocals.)

It’s a smart move to roll a short clip of subject and filmmaker conversing before the film starts proper, not just because other parts of the world might not be familiar with Robbie Williamss music (consistently accidentally reading it as a biopic about musician Robin Williams if you’re anything like me), but also since this is such a bold concept for a biopic that it’s helpful to get an idea of what this man looks like and the personality he puts out there before it’s all monkey business.

Going one step further, this turns out to not fall into the trappings of a flailing gimmick but ties into themes of pressures of the music industry, fame causing stunted behavior, family drama, and an unflinching portrayal of self that doesn’t smooth over any rough edges. Better Man is an invigorating biopic; a shot of adrenaline to the most overplayed, clichéd genre. After this, no one should be allowed to make biopics (at least ones about musicians) unless they have an equally creative angle or some compelling X factor behind it. Simply put, this film puts most recent offerings from the genre to shame, especially the ones that get trotted out at the end of every year as familiar awards bait.

Even though the life trajectory and story beats aren’t anything new to anyone who has ever seen a biopic about a musician before, it gets to be told with boundless imagination, typically coming from several dazzling musical sequences. Not only are they dynamic in presentation (whether it be jubilantly unfolding across the streets of London or something more melancholy regarding fatherly abandonment), but they are sometimes highwire concepts themselves; Better Man has one of the most thrilling, fantastically clever, visually stunning, and exciting takes on battling one’s demons.

The characters (including Robbie’s family, friends, lover, hell, and even Oasis) don’t interact or react to Robbie Williams as a monkey. It’s a visual treat for us (this film would fall apart without the astonishingly expressive technical wizardry from Weta, who already have proven themselves as outstanding in this field when it comes to the recent Planet of the Apes movies) but another personal, self-deprecating, honest interpretation of how Robbie saw himself during these life stages. Initially, this feels like it will end up as a missed opportunity for further creativity or humor. One of the more surprising elements here is that the filmmakers (with Michael Gracey co-writing alongside Oliver Cole and Simon Gleeson) are playing this material straight and not going for laughs. That confidence pays off, allowing a maximalist, melodramatic side to come out with sincere, absorbing emotional heft.

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That story follows a standard rise and fall structure, with Robbie Williams finding inspiration from his initially supportive singing father (Steve Pemberton), exhibiting a relatable drive to make his grandmother (Alison Steadman proud, getting his start in boy band Take That before his insecurities and worsening substance abuse and egocentric behavior gets him kicked out, stumbling into a rocky relationship with Nicole Appleton (Raechelle Banno), and then not only finding the courage to put some meaningful lyrics out into the world through a successful solo career but managing the anxieties that come with performing in front of humongous crowds while constantly struggling with drug addiction. 

Some of those aspects feel glossed over and aren’t as explored as they possibly could have been (the film is already 135 minutes, but some of it is given a broad strokes treatment), but it’s affecting anyway due to the creativity, artistry, musical numbers, and blunt honesty enhancing those character dynamics. Better Man is a biopic that starts with a confessional about being a narcissist and having a punchable face and ends up somewhere beautifully moving that perfectly captures the essence of that title. There is also a healthy dose of Frank Sinatra here, given that he was a major source of inspiration for Robbie Williams, so let’s say he and Michael Gracey did this biopic their way, and the result is something no one should want any other way.

Flickering Myth Rating – Film: ★ ★ ★ ★ / Movie: ★ ★ ★ ★

Robert Kojder is a member of the Chicago Film Critics Association and the Critics Choice Association. He is also the Flickering Myth Reviews Editor. Check here for new reviews, follow my Twitter or Letterboxd, or email me at MetalGearSolid719@gmail.com

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=embed/playlist

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Movie Review | 'Nosferatu'

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Movie Review | 'Nosferatu'

Robert Eggers’s take on the 1922 F.W. Murnau film “Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror” has long been a passion project for the director, in various stages of development since he broke out with 2015’s “The Witch.” Now that the film has finally made its way to screens, Eggers has the opportunity to shine. And like any of his films, “Nosferatu” has mood and style to spare.

Eggers’s movies always have great attention to detail, but sometimes the style can outweigh the story and “Nosferatu” is no different. “The Witch” was about setting a moody atmosphere and “The Northman” was about showing off the muscularity in his filmmaking and in between he made arguably his best movie, “The Lighthouse,” which is a bizarre, fever dream kind of experience.

In the first frames of “Nosferatu,” Ellen (Lily-Rose Depp) emerges from the shadows with tears running down her face. She is calling out to something, but nothing is there. What is making her body move in such unpleasant ways? Who is the mysterious voice calling out to her? From the shadows emerges a silhouette of Count Orlok (Bill Skarsgård), who is haunting Ellen.



Years later, Ellen is in a relationship with Thomas (Nicholas Hoult, who is having a busy year between “Nosferatu,” “Juror #2” and “The Order”). Thomas is heading to Transylvania to meet with Count Orlock, foreshadowing a great deal of dread in the movie. Back home,  Ellen is not doing well, constantly haunted by the looming presence of Count Orlock, who will not let her know peace.

Not only does Count Orlock hang over Ellen’s life, but his existence hangs over the entire movie. Eggers effectively uses the character sparingly, shooting him in shadows and only revealing his face every so often. It’s best to go into the movie surprised by the design, because Eggers certainly doesn’t settle for recreating the well-established imagery from the original film. Skarsgård, who is becoming a horror film regular, is nowhere to be found in his performance, completely disappearing behind the character.

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Depp delivers the strongest performance of her young career, as she is required to run the gauntlet of emotional and physical pain. Her suffering helps bring some emotion to the movie, which can occasionally feel cold and distant in service of emphasizing the film’s craft. Individual moments of dread feel palpable, but the movie goes through plodding stretches (including with superfluous characters played by Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Emma Corrin; Eggers regular Willem Dafoe also plays a role), where the emotionality of Depp’s performance and the grim appearance of Skarsgård become sorely missed.

Even when the movie is choppy, it’s hard to not get lost in the impeccability of the craft. Egger and cinematographer Jarin Blaschke partially use natural lighting to establish the mood, while production designer Craig Lathrop transports viewers to 1838 Germany. Getting lost in the world of “Nosferatu” isn’t hard — though sometimes being moved by it as a whole is a tough task.

“Nosferatu” is currently playing in theaters.

Matt Passantino is a contributor to CITY.






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‘Max’ movie review: A fiery Sudeep drives this high-octane action thriller

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‘Max’ movie review: A fiery Sudeep drives this high-octane action thriller

Sudeep in ‘Max’.
| Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

Inspector Arjun Mahakshay a.k.a Max takes charge unofficially a day before his suspension ends. A huge blunder inside the station puts Max against powerful men, who come for his life. As he is faced with the improbable task of saving his colleagues and coming out unscathed from the problem, the daring cop pauses to prepare a cup of tea.

Director Vijay Kartikeyaa’s debut project is driven by a protagonist who keeps you guessing about his next move. Even if Max aims to provide unhinged ‘masala’ entertainment, the movie’s leading man isn’t a one-note character. Since the events unfold during one night, and he has limited time to cross a series of hurdles, Max puts his sharp brain to quick use. And once he enters the risky zone of facing the criminals head-on, he unleashes the beast inside him.

Max (Kannada)

Director: Vijay Kartikeyaa

Cast: Sudeep, Varalaxmi Sarathkumar, Ilavarasu, Uggram Manju

Runtime: 132 minutes

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Storyline: A day before reporting for duty after a two-month suspension, inspector Arjun Mahakshay faces an unexpected situation. Can he save the day?

Max is a celebration of Sudeep, who oozes style in his aggressive portrayal of an all-conquering officer. If you saw him as a subdued yet classy cop carrying a deep pain within him in Vikrant Rona (2022), Sudeep cuts loose in Max to cater to his fans, who were hungry for ‘mass’ moments involving their favourite star.

The one-man show is great fun to watch to an extent. Director Vijay scripts an old-school world where the hero emerges as the ultimate saviour of distressed people. However, as a whole, Max leaves you wanting more as you expect the protagonist to face the heat of a mighty antagonist.

Sunil, essaying the main villain, is undone by a toothless character. Varalaxmi Sarathkumar’s character of a cop with a negative shade shows promise early on but gets fizzled out eventually as she fails to make any difference to the plot. Right from the beginning, it’s apparent that both the characters are bracing for an inevitable onslaught from Max.  

It’s also quite shocking how Max has an almost incompetent team. When they aren’t blindly following the instructions from Max, the junior-level officers are scared and clueless. Ilavarasu, playing an experienced officer, delivers a measured performance. The rest of the cast, including Uggram Manju, Samyuktha Hornad, Sukrutha Wagale and Vijay Chendur, are too loud in their respective portrayals.

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One can’t blame the actors as their characters are designed to artificially amp up the tension. With a highly dramatic plot in hand, the director’s decision to showcase stronger emotions than what’s necessary dents the film.

ALSO READ:‘UI’ movie review: Upendra’s political commentary is a one-of-a-kind experience despite its flaws

The core idea of Max might remind you of Lokesh Kanagaraj’s Kaithi (2019). With so much happening in a short span of time, it’s tough to emotionally invest in the proceedings. On the other hand, Max’s racy screenplay keeps you curious about the events on screen. A superb fusion of Chethan D Souza’s action choreography and Ajaneesh Lokanath’s ensures an adrenaline-pumping experience.

Max is a star vehicle with admirable experiments from the makers. With Vikrant Rona and Max, Sudeep has deviated from traditional commercial films. The big stars of Kannada cinema are seeking change, and that’s a good sign.

Max is currently running in theatres.

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