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‘Ticket to Paradise’ Review: Julia Roberts and George Clooney Reunite in a Frothy, Flawed Rom-Com

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‘Ticket to Paradise’ Review: Julia Roberts and George Clooney Reunite in a Frothy, Flawed Rom-Com

It’s a foolhardy plan to craft a movie virtually totally across the onscreen chemistry between two film stars and hope for the perfect. However when these stars are George Clooney and Julia Roberts, the combustive energy of their pairing will go a long-ish approach. Thinly scripted rom-com Ticket to Paradise puffs its approach by 104 minutes totally on the vapors of its lead actors gassing round collectively, albeit with an help from spectacular Australian surroundings standing in for Bali.

It’s the primary time the actors have been paired on display since dreary hostage drama Cash Monster (2016), and it’s their first correct comedy collectively since they made these first two extremely gratifying Ocean’s motion pictures with Steven Soderbergh on the helm again within the aughts. In truth, it’s the primary time shortly both of them have executed something substantial in any respect for the large display (Roberts’ final starring theatrical function was Ben Is Again in 2018; Clooney’s was in The Midnight Sky in 2020), so it’s straightforward to really feel beneficiant and welcome them again, particularly given how a lot enjoyable they’re to be round. From the standpoint of millennials or Gen Z children, they’re like a seldom-met aunt and uncle, tossing little barbed zingers at one another earlier than they get drunk, do goofy dances to early Nineteen Nineties bangers and make out.

Ticket to Paradise

The Backside Line

A comfortingly mediocre throwback.

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Launch date: Friday, Oct. 21 (Common Footage)
Forged: George Clooney, Julia Roberts, Kaitlyn Dever, Billie Lourd, Maxime Bouttier, Lucas Bravo, Genevieve Lemon, Cintya Dharmayanti, Agung Pinda
Director: Ol Parker
Screenwriters: Ol Parker, Daniel Pipski


Rated PG-13,
1 hour 44 minutes

That’s actually just about the plot of this film. Roberts and Clooney are solid as Georgia and David, a pair who have been married 25 years in the past, had a daughter named Lily (Kaitlyn Dever) after which cut up up after 5 years. So supposedly poisonous is their antipathy to at least one one other that they’ll’t even be in the identical zip code on the identical time.

And but the script (by the movie’s director Ol Parker and co-writer Daniel Pipski) contrives to seat them subsequent to one another at a collection of occasions, like a mischievous deus ex machina with little creativeness however magical command over seating placements. First, it’s at Lily’s commencement from college in Chicago, the place they compete over who loves Lily extra. Then, it’s on a airplane to Bali after they’ve been invited to attend Lily’s marriage ceremony, the younger lady having fallen in love with Bali-native Gede (Maxime Bouttier), a seaweed farmer.

As soon as David and Georgia land in Bali, the script can’t cease plugging how lovely the panorama is. Which is form of bizarre as a result of, as talked about earlier, the entire Bali a part of the film was filmed in Queensland, Australia due to points with COVID and likewise Oz’s extraordinarily enticing tax breaks, the movie’s press notes unabashedly reveal. There’s a wierd, doth-protest-too-much high quality to all this incessant Bali-boosting, maybe as a result of the filmmakers is perhaps fearful there might be backlash to the truth that the mother and father of the bride don’t need their daughter to marry a Balinese man — irrespective of how “extremely good-looking” a man he’s dwelling within the “essentially the most lovely place on this planet,” as Georgia complains to her pilot boyfriend Paul (Lucas Bravo) on the cellphone.

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Georgia and David say they don’t need Lily to make a nasty life selection on the identical age they have been once they obtained married. However the movie additionally retains stressing how rich and profitable the 2 are provided that they’ll afford first-class airline seats and a swanky resort, and so forth. It’s as if the movie needs to enjoy all of the markers of white privilege and American hegemony however then faux that none of that stuff actually issues to the principle characters; they simply need what’s finest for his or her daughter. (Additionally, does anybody on the planet personal as many jumpsuits and playsuits as we see Roberts’ Georgia sporting all through in her cruise capsule assortment?)

That is precisely the form of self-delusion about earnings inequality and post-colonialism that was skewered so cruelly and successfully in TV’s The White Lotus not too long ago, amongst many different like-minded entertainments. However Ticket to Paradise performs Georgia and David’s efforts to sabotage Lily’s marriage ceremony so she’ll name it off prefer it’s some frothy screwball comedy plot from the Nineteen Forties. Besides Parker (finest recognized for writing The Greatest Unique Marigold Lodge and directing Mamma Mia! Right here We Go Once more) isn’t any Howard Hawks or Preston Sturges, and the dialogue right here is all mumbling and grunting in comparison with the bickering lovers’ backchat in classics like His Woman Friday or My Man Godfrey.

Whereas the supporting solid contains some very watchable performers like Dever (wasted right here), Bouttier and Bravo, and some extra seasoned comedian professionals (Genevieve Lemon, all the time a delight), their characters are barely developed any greater than the various Balinese secondary gamers and extras, who’re little greater than often speaking set ornament. In an eye-roll-inducing second, the movie even trots out that hoary outdated gag whereby somebody talks for a lot of seconds in a language aside from English solely to have a second character “translate” the speech right into a one- or two-word declaration.  (“She says, ‘comfortable to satisfy you.’”) No matter might be subsequent? Maybe a little bit of bed room farce round males sporting a lady’s trousers? Yup, there’s a few of that too.

Maybe the movie’s by-the-numbers predictability might be a assist and never a hindrance, particularly for an older demographic that’s simply merely thrilled to see Roberts smiling whereas she tries to damage one other marriage ceremony, Clooney twinkling his eyes and cocking his head quizzically like he’s been doing since ER. They each do these issues so properly, and who minds a little bit nostalgic wallow on occasion, particularly with actors like these two, getting old as gracefully as a pair of migratory birds?

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Full credit

Launch date: Friday, Oct. 21 (Common Footage)
Forged: George Clooney, Julia Roberts, Kaitlyn Dever, Billie Lourd, Maxime Bouttier, Lucas Bravo, Genevieve Lemon, Cintya Dharmayanti, Agung Pinda
Manufacturing corporations: Common Footage, Working Title, Smokehouse, Pink Om
Director: Ol Parker
Screenwriters: Ol Parker, Daniel Pipski
Producers: Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Sarah Harvey, Deborah Balderstone
Govt producers: George Clooney, Grant Heslov, Julia Roberts, Lisa Gillan, Marisa Yeres Gill, Amelia Granger, Sarah-Jane Robinson, Sam Thompson, Jennifer Cornwell
Director of pictures: Ole Birkeland
Manufacturing designer: Owen Paterson
Costume designer: Lizzy Gardiner
Editor: Peter Lambert
Sound designer:
Music: Lorne Balfe
Music supervisor: Sarah Bridge
Casting: Nikki Barrett

Rated PG-13,
1 hour 44 minutes

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Movie Reviews

Film Review | Power Play Stationing

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Film Review | Power Play Stationing

On the index of possible spoil alert sins one could make about the erotic thriller Babygirl, perhaps the least objectionable is that which most people already know: The film belongs to the very rare species of film literally ending with the big “O.” Nicole Kidman’s final orgasmic aria of ecstasy caps off a film which dares to tell a morally slippery tale. But for all the high points and gray zones of writer-director Halina Reijn’s intriguing film, the least ambiguous moment arrives at its climax. So to speak.

The central premise is a maze-like anatomy of an affair, between Kidman’s Romy Mathis, a fierce but also mid-life conflicted 50-year-old CEO of a robotics company, and a sly, handsome twenty-something intern Samuel (Harris Dickinson, who will appear at the Virtuosos Tribute at this year’s Santa Barbara International Film Festival). Sparks fly, and mutually pursued seduction ensues behind closed doors and away from the prying eyes of her family (and husband, played by Antonio Banderas).

From the outset, though, it’s apparent that nefarious sexual exploits, though those do liberally spice up the film’s real estate, are not the primary subject. It’s more a film steeped with power-play gamesmanship, emotional extortion, and assorted manipulations of class and hierarchical structures. Samuel teases a thinly veiled challenge to her early on, “I think you like to be told what to do.” She feigns shock, but soon acquiesces, and what transpires on their trail of deceptions and shifting romantic-sexual relationship includes a twist in which he demands her submission in exchange for him not sabotaging her career trajectory.

Kidman, who gives another powerful performance in Babygirl, is no stranger to roles involving frank sexuality and complications thereof. She has excelled in such fragile and vulnerable situations, especially boldly in Gus Van Sant’s brilliant To Die For (also a May/October brand dalliance story), and Stanley Kubrick’s carnally acknowledged Eyes Wide Shut. Ironically or not, she finds herself in the most tensely abusive sex play as the wife of Alexander Skarsgård in TVs Big Little Lies.

Compared to those examples, Babygirl works a disarmingly easygoing line. For all of his presumed sadistic power playing, Dickinson — who turns in a nuanced performance in an inherently complex role — is often confused and sometimes be mused in the course of his actions or schemes. In an early tryst encounter, his domination play seems improvised and peppered with self-effacing giggles, while in a later, potentially creepier hotel scene, his will to wield power morphs into his state of vulnerable, almost child-like reliance on her good graces. The oscillating power play dynamics get further complicated.

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Complications and genre schematics also play into the film’s very identity, in fresh ways. Dutch director (and actress) Reijn has dealt with erotically edgy material in the past, especially with her 2019 film Instinct. But, despite its echoes and shades of Fifty Shades of Gray and 9½ Weeks, Babygirl cleverly tweaks the standard “erotic thriller” format — with its dangerous passions and calculated upward arc of body heating — into unexpected places. At times, the thriller form itself softens around the edges, and we become more aware of the gender/workplace power structures at the heart of the film’s message.

But, message-wise, Reijn is not ham-fisted or didactic in her treatment of the subject. There is always room for caressing and redirecting the impulse, in the bedroom, boardroom, and cinematic storyboarding.

See trailer here.

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A Real Pain (2024) – Movie Review

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A Real Pain (2024) – Movie Review

A Real Pain, 2024.

Written and Directed by Jesse Eisenberg.
Starring Jesse Eisenberg, Kieran Culkin, Will Sharpe, Jennifer Grey, Kurt Egyiawan, Ellora Torchia, Liza Sadovy, and Daniel Oreskes.

SYNOPSIS:

Mismatched cousins David and Benji reunite for a tour through Poland to honor their beloved grandmother. The adventure takes a turn when the pair’s old tensions resurface against the backdrop of their family history.

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At one point on the Holocaust tour in Poland, Benji (a devastatingly complex Kieran Culkin) loses his cool and freaks out. To be fair, he does this multiple times in writer/director/star Jesse Eisenberg’s achingly effective but sharply funny A Real Pain (marking his return to Sundance following up his debut feature When You Finish Saving the World), portraying a somewhat contradictory individual, tormented and lost following the death of his Jewish grandmother, seemingly the only adult who was able to successfully ground him. Part of the magic trick here is that Kieran Culkin is fully raw, vulnerable, authentic, and hilarious throughout every bit of his unexpected, brash, and sometimes uncalled-for behavior. 

Traveling with his close cousin from New York to Poland to reconnect and pay respects to their grandma, Jesse Eisenberg’s David is also unsure what to expect, repeatedly calling Benji on the way to the airport as if disaster is going to strike if he doesn’t check up on him often. They also share polar opposite personalities, with David being, well, the socially awkward and nervous Jesse Eisenberg moviegoers are familiar with, whereas Benji is a directionless stoner (he has also arranged for some marijuana to be delivered to him at the hotel they will be staying at in Warsaw) who needs this trip as a form of therapy. As a married father, David takes time out of his busy life to be there for his cousin and provide support.

Being present is a huge theme in A Real Pain, but considering these cousins are also taking up a Holocaust tour before ending their vacationing week by visiting their grandmother’s home (where she lived in Poland before experiencing 1,000 incidents of luck to avoid concentration camps and flee the country), it’s also about suffering and the different baggage people bring to these situations. One minute, Benji is playful and encourages the rest of the group to pose alongside some memorials of soldiers, pretending to be medics or fighting alongside the resistance. In the next scene, he could be irritable riding first class on a train expressing that such privileged treatment feels distant from the reality of what his grandmother and others lived through.

Grouped up with a non-Jewish but friendly, well-meaning tour guide named James (Will Sharpe), Benji also points out that the nonstop barrage of facts, especially when visiting a historic cemetery, also feels cold and counterproductive to the experience. This shouldn’t be about statistics, but something that can be felt. In that same vein, David and Benji must also have difficult conversations about the past and what the latter will do in the present (there’s one revealed that, while sensitively handled, also feels like something this story doesn’t even need.) However, the actors do have charming chemistry whenever they are alone and reminiscing about the good times, which is unsurprisingly dynamite when things turn serious. 

A Real Pain is historically and culturally emotional as it is personally involving, with Jesse Eisenberg noticeably evolving as a filmmaker. Here, he is confident and comfortable taking brief moments with cinematographer Michał Dymek to linger on statues, murals, and architecture or anything that might deliver a vicarious feeling that we are alongside these characters on this tour. There’s a beautiful, soft scene where buildings and landmarks are rattled off, each with a shot of what exists there now. It’s enough to make one wish the film delved even deeper into the historical context and the tour itself.

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Naturally, this also elicits curiosity about what they will find when the cousins inevitably visit their grandmother’s former home. Whatever it is, we hope Benji finds healing and that the struggles would then he and David’s relationship will also feel repaired (it’s that typical notion of feeling lost when a relative no longer has time to be carefree and hang out constantly since they now have a family.) Without giving it away, David certainly tries resulting in a painfully funny, cathartic sensation. A Real Pain is a multilayered look at generational trauma with poignant and hilarious complex chemistry from its leads.

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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‘How to Make Millions Before Grandma Dies’ Review: Thai Oscar Entry Is a Disarmingly Sentimental Tear-Jerker

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‘How to Make Millions Before Grandma Dies’ Review: Thai Oscar Entry Is a Disarmingly Sentimental Tear-Jerker

It takes only a few strategic bars of tinkly piano score to suggest that the protagonist of How to Make Millions Before Grandma Dies (Lahn Mah) might trade his cynical motivation for selfless devotion before the end credits roll. But the unapologetic sentimentality doesn’t make this bittersweet comedy-drama any less touching or insightful in its observation of spiky family interactions when end-of-life issues and questions of inheritance cause sparks. Thailand’s submission for the international Oscar is the country’s first entry to make it onto the 15-title shortlist.

The debut feature from television and documentary director Pat Boonnitipat was a blockbuster in its domestic release, crossing borders to find similar success elsewhere in Southeast Asia and grossing an estimated $73.8 million worldwide. It’s easy to see why. Viral social media exposure that sprang from Manila theater staff handing out tissues prior to each screening and audience members posting videos of themselves in floods of tears on the way out no doubt helped.

How to Make Millions Before Grandma Dies

The Bottom Line

A sweet crowd-pleaser.

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Release date: Friday, Sept. 13
Cast: Putthipong Assaratanakul, Usha Seamkhum, Sanya Kunakorn, Sarinrat Thomas, Pongsatorn Jongwilas, Tontawan Tantivejakul, Duangporn Oapirat, Himawara Tajiri, Wattana Subpakit
Director: Pat Boonnitipat
Screenwriters: Thodsapon Thiptinnakorn, Pat Boonnitipat

2 hours 6 minutes

But what’s perhaps more significant is the perceptiveness and affection with which the screenplay by Thodsapon Thiptinnakorn and Boonnitipat captures a family dynamic that’s complicated and imperfect but grounded in a loving sense of intergenerational duty, even if concerns of personal benefit can get in the way. In the story, that dynamic is very specifically Asian, but the basic plot mechanics are sufficiently universal to resonate anywhere.

The theme of death is established with a welcome lightness of touch in an opening scene set on the day of the Qingming Festival, when families of Chinese origin visit the graves of their ancestors to clean the sites, scatter flowers and make ritual offerings of food and incense. The religious holiday matters most to Mengju (Usha Seamkhum), the crotchety grandmother of the title, fondly addressed as Amah by her family. She’s bossy and frequently critical of them, mostly with good reason.

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Her eldest son Kiang (Sanya Kunakorn) is a financial trader whose wife and daughter chime in via video call, prompting Amah to point out that they never visit her. Her youngest son Soei (Pongsatorn Jongwilas) is a deadbeat with a gambling habit. The middle child is careworn supermarket worker Sew (Sarinrat Thomas), the most dutifully attentive of Mengju’s three children. However, the fact that Sew’s son M (Putthipong Assaratanakul, aka “Billkin”) has dropped out of college with the pipe dream of making money as a videogame streamer seems to reflect badly on Amah’s daughter.

When the old woman expresses her wish to be put to rest in a grand burial plot, the awkward responses suggest that none of her family will be volunteering to foot the substantial bill. While still at the cemetery, Mengju has a fall and is taken to hospital, where an examination reveals that she has stage 4 stomach cancer. The family decides to keep the grim news from her.

Meanwhile, M studies his savvy younger cousin Mui (Tontawan Tantivejakul) as she cares for their wealthy paternal grandfather in the final months of his life and then inherits most of his estate when the old man dies. Mui swiftly sells his house and moves into a modern high-rise apartment, where she sidelines as a sexy nurse on OnlyFans. She advises M to insinuate himself as Amah’s primary carer and get into pole position in her will, telling him he’ll stop noticing the “old person smell” after a while.

M starts turning up unannounced at his grandmother’s house in one of Bangkok’s Chinatown districts, where she makes a humble living selling congee at a local street market. Mengju is immediately suspicious of his motives, proving resistant when he tries to ingratiate himself with her, which prompts M to break the news of her cancer diagnosis.

Mengju accepts the prognosis with stoical calm and drops her objections when M moves in to take care of her, accompanying her at 5 a.m. each day to her congee stand. Even so, she’s an irascible woman who’s set in her ways and determinedly self-reliant, which makes her prickly during the next weekly family gathering, when even Kiang’s wife Pinn (Duangporn Oapirat) and daughter Rainbow (Himawara Tajiri) make a rare appearance.

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It soon becomes apparent that almost everyone hopes to inherit Amah’s house, especially as her condition worsens and chemotherapy fails to produce results. Hard-working Sew (Thomas is the standout of the supporting cast) is the only one who cares for her mother altruistically. She’s more pragmatic than self-pitying when she observes, “Sons inherit money, daughters inherit cancer.”

The patriarchal imbalance and the tendency in traditional Asian families to favor sons — who carry on the family name — over daughters play out effectively both in developments with Mengju’s estate and in the grandmother’s own history.

In one lovely sequence, M takes her to visit her well-heeled older brother (Wattana Subpakit) and his family in their palatial home. It’s a cozy reunion, enlivened by the elderly siblings doing karaoke, until Mengju asks him for money to buy her funeral plot. She reveals to M that despite caring for her parents in their dotage, they left their entire estate to her brother, partly because of their low esteem for the husband they had chosen for Mengju in an arranged marriage.

The heartfelt movie is ill-served by an international title that suggests broad comedy — the original Thai title, Lahn Mah, means “Grandma’s Grandchild,” which comes much closer to capturing the story’s emotional center.

Even if Jaithep Raroengjai’s score leans into the sentiment, M’s growing fondness for Amah — and vice versa — is conveyed with a depth of feeling that steers it clear of the trap of formulaic schmaltz. Their bond slowly supplants his earlier opportunism. And surprising developments in the final act build to an affecting conclusion in which the sadness is mitigated by unexpected rewards.

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Strong ensemble acting makes the family a believable unit, their differences notwithstanding. But it’s the evolving rapport between M and Amah that makes the film so captivating, played with humor and sensitivity by Assaratanakul — also a successful T-pop singer and Gucci brand ambassador, drabbed down in sloppy slacker gear for this role — and delightful newcomer Seamkhum, a natural in her first feature. The 78-year-old actress was signed to a modeling agency after being spotted on video in a dance contest for seniors and has been seen primarily in commercials.

In addition to eliciting solid work from his cast, the director imbues the movie with a vivid sense of place, working with DP Boonyanuch Kraithong to mark dividing lines of wealth in various Bangkok neighborhoods, notably the historic, traditionally Thai Chinese Talat Phlu community where Mengju lives.

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