Sunday, 17 November 2024

Movie Review: Mrs. Harris Goes To Paris (2022)


Genre: Dramedy  
Director: Anthony Fabian  
Starring: Lesley Manville, Isabelle Huppert, Lambert Wilson, Alba Baptista, Lucas Bravo  
Running Time: 115 minutes  

Synopsis: In London of 1957, middle-aged cleaning lady Ada Harris (Lesley Manville) finally comes to terms with the wartime death of her husband. After spotting an expensive Dior gown in a client's wardrobe, Ada saves every penny and travels to Paris, intent on buying a haute couture dress for herself. Her planned one-day quest extends into a whirlwind week, as she gets involved with House of Dior staff members including the stern directress Mme Colbert (Isabelle Huppert), thoughtful accountant André Fauvel (Lucas Bravo), and unhappy model Natasha (Alba Baptista). Ada also attracts the attention of widower Marquis de Chassagne (Lambert Wilson).

What Works Well: The adaptation of Paul Gallico's 1958 novel is a winsome collection of good intentions traversing cultural and class divides. Definitely sweet and fluffy but without stepping over sentimentality limits, the narrative explores later-in-life opportunities for romance, unlikely friendships, the role and meaning of expensive fashion, and the economic and sometimes exploitive realities behind glitzy facades. Impressively, Mrs. Harris' adventure even encompasses the business imperative to evolve. Lesley Manville's central performance stems from subtle yet pragmatic steeliness, while the pleasing aesthetics of late-1950s London and Paris neighbourhoods add visual appeal.

What Does Not Work As Well: Some sequences surrender to Dior advertorials, while the running time unnecessarily drags towards the two hour mark.

Key Quote:
Mme Colbert: A Dior dress is designed to astonish. How would you do that, Mrs. Harris?



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Saturday, 16 November 2024

Movie Review: Crimes Of The Heart (1986)


Genre: Dramedy  
Director: Bruce Beresford  
Starring: Diane Keaton, Sissy Spacek, Jessica Lange, Tess Harper, Sam Shepard  
Running Time: 105 minutes  

Synopsis: In the small town of Hazlehurst, Mississippi, the three Magrath sisters reunite. The insecure Lenny (Diane Keaton) never married and still exhibits immature behaviour. The brash Meg (Jessica Lange) moved her life to Hollywood in pursuit of a singing career. And youngest Babe (Sissy Spacek) may suffer from mental health issues and has just shot her husband. The siblings reminisce about their mother, who committed suicide when they were young, and grapple with their snooty cousin Chick (Tess Harper). Meanwhile, a young lawyer crafts Babe's defence strategy and Meg considers reigniting a romance with the now-married Doc (Sam Shepard).

What Works Well: The attempt to tackle the insidious and often poorly understood impacts of mental health issues is laudable, and Sissy Spacek's performance touches delicate heights of comic fragility. 

What Does Not Work As Well: Writer Beth Henley adapts her own play and struggles to find cinematic notes, resulting in a fairly colossal waste of a dream cast. The dialogue is weighed down by theatricality, and neither Diane Keaton (almost ridiculous in her mannerisms) nor Jessica Lange (carrying a singular jaded attitude throughout, mostly focused on lighting cigarettes) ever find their footing. With the forced acting close to the surface and the attempted funny moments registering high cringe readings, director Bruce Beresford's customary efficiency generates neither empathy nor momentum.

Key Quote:
Chick, shouting: I've just about had my fill of you...trashy McGraths! And your trashy ways!



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Movie Review: Jack Reacher: Never Go Back (2016)


Genre: Action Thriller  
Director: Edward Zwick  
Starring: Tom Cruise, Cobie Smulders, Danika Yarosh, Patrick Heusinger  
Running Time: 118 minutes  

Synopsis: Nomadic retired Military Police Major Jack Reacher (Tom Cruise) busts a human trafficking ring, then establishes a telephone relationship with his successor Major Susan Turner (Cobie Smulders), who is then suddenly arrested. Reacher suspects she is being silenced for uncovering a weapons smuggling conspiracy in Afghanistan, and helps her escape. They are pursued by a contracted assassin (Patrick Heusinger), and Reacher's efforts to prove Susan's innocence are complicated by teenager Samantha (Danika Yarosh), who may be his daughter.

What Works Well: The quieter and better moments feature Reacher reflecting on whether Samantha could possibly be his daughter, her quick thinking and resourcefulness fueling his suspicions. Reacher also finds a good sparring partner in Susan, who combines professionalism with a refusal to bow to misplaced notions of male superiority.

What Does Not Work As Well: This checklist-driven sequel fails to find a spark. Lacking wit and originality, the action scenes are inserted at numbingly predictable intervals, and executed with mechanical familiarity. The plot is listless, with Reacher and Turner always successfully leaping to the next correct conclusion and destination dispute a scarcity of facts and resources. The enemy-from-within is supposed to be a large and dangerous corporation, but Reacher's only notable on-the-ground rival is a stock hissing villain with no name, supported by an endless army of interchangeable goons.

Key Quote:
Turner: Some folks still wonder why you left.
Reacher: Let's just say I woke up one morning and the uniform didn't fit.



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Monday, 11 November 2024

Movie Review: Ordinary Angels (2024)


Genre: Drama  
Director: Jon Gunn  
Starring: Hilary Swank, Alan Ritchson, Nancy Travis  
Running Time: 118 minutes  

Synopsis: The setting is Louisville, Kentucky, in the 1990s. Sharon (Hilary Swank) is a middle-aged hard-drinking hairdresser, and through the media she learns about roofer Ed (Alan Ritchson), who is struggling to raise his two daughters after the death of his wife. His five year-old younger daughter Ashley suffers from a rare disease and needs a liver transplant, and the medical bills are mounting. Sharon decides to help, starting with a modest fundraising campaign, but her own demons threaten to get in the way.

What Works Well: Based on actual events (with some embellishments), this is an uplifting drama about one woman reaching out, and a community rallying to support a family in need. The story carries the inherent emotions of profound loss, struggle against a rare disease, and a crushing financial burden, but the characters propel the narrative. Hilary Swank finds all the human corners beneath Sharon's brassy exterior as she embraces a cause as an alterative to drowning her failures in alcohol, and Alan Ritchson brings stoic pride to the decent working man reluctant to accept outside help. The faith elements are present but subtle.

What Does Not Work As Well: The sentimentality dial is occasionally turned to eleven, and the climax piles on the (sometimes literal) obstacles on the way to the pre-ordained ending.

Key Quote:
Sharon: I'm good at plenty of things. Taking no for an answer ain't one of 'em.


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Sunday, 10 November 2024

Movie Review: Rebel Ridge (2024)


Genre: Drama Thriller  
Director: Jeremy Saulnier  
Starring: Aaron Pierre, Don Johnson, AnnaSophia Robb, James Cromwell  
Running Time: 131 minutes  

Synopsis: While biking to the small town of Shelby Springs to pay the bail money for his jailed cousin Mike, Terry Richmond (Aaron Pierre) tangles with local police officers who wrongly confiscate his money as proceeds of crime. He appeals with no success at City Hall, but finds an ally in junior clerk Summer (AnnaSophia Robb), who hints at a culture of judicial corruption involving the local judge (James Cromwell). Terry confronts police chief Sandy Burnne (Don Johnson), and when Mike's fate is compromised and Summer is targeted, Terry's feud with Sandy intensifies.

What Works Well: This is a slow-burning yet sustained drama, always hinting at the potential for violence but impressively seeking cerebral off-ramps. The protagonist Terry is forced to innovate in the face of hostility, and Aaron Pierre's physical dominance is an intriguing contrast with his character's preference for words and negotiations. He is matched by Don Johnson as a police chief leading a local force tinged by racism and tainted by hide-in-plain-sight fraud within a middle-of-nowhere setting. The action scenes, when they arrive, focus on the clumsiness of aggression rather than stylized violence.

What Does Not Work As Well: The running time is 20 minutes too long, and some sloppy scripting leaves behind plenty of questions. Terry's connections to a Chinese restaurant remain murky, the police corruption details get tied up in an incomprehensible knot, and a key covert character is lost in the shuffle. The climactic showdown unleashes sudden interventions and is more confused than effective.

Key Quote:
Summer: Was that your plan?
Terry: I ran out of plan.






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Movie Review: Palm Springs (2020)


Genre: Romantic Comedy  
Director: Max Barbakow  
Starring: Andy Samberg, Cristin Milioti, J.K. Simmons, Peter Gallagher  
Running Time: 90 minutes  

Synopsis: In Palm Springs, Nyles (Andy Samberg) is stuck in a daily time loop, forced to re-live the wedding of Abe and Tala. Nyles' relationship with his girlfriend Misty (the bridesmaid) is rocky, and in one of the loops he romances Sarah (Cristin Milioti), the bride's troubled sister. A mishap traps Sarah with Nyles in the loop, and they start spending every similar day together. Love eventually blossoms, but complications include vengeful wedding guest Roy (J.K. Simmons), who has a good reason to hunt down Nyles.

What Works Well: Riffing on the Groundhog Day theme with extra doses of surrender (from Nyles) and resistance (from Sarah), this romantic comedy offers an audacious edge in underlining love's capacity to emerge anytime - even if it's always the same time. The wedding context offers plenty of targets, including an already-in-trouble bride and groom, but director Max Barbakow and writer Andy Siara maintain focus on the central couple. Andy Samberg and Cristin Milioti embrace their characters' imperfections with sharp dialogue about life's oddities, and the serenely mysterious desert surroundings animate the fantasy elements.

What Does Not Work As Well: Despite the determined search for originality, the rom-com trap of contriving inflated emotions as an artificial obstacle still prevails. A desire to explore metaphysical time loop explanations (and solutions) is ultimately half-hearted.

Key Quote:
Sarah: But what is this? When is this?
Nyles: Yeah, 'bout that. So, this is today. Today is yesterday. And tomorrow is also today.






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Friday, 8 November 2024

Movie Review: Mr. Mom (1983)


Also Known As: Mr. Mum  
Genre: Comedy  
Director: Stan Dragoti  
Starring: Michael Keaton, Teri Garr, Martin Mull, Ann Jillian  
Running Time: 91 minutes  

Synopsis: In Detroit, automotive engineer Jack Butler (Michael Keaton) is laid off. His wife Caroline (Teri Garr) leaves behind her stay-at-home life and enters the workforce at an advertising firm, leaving Jack to care for their three kids. He faces a steep learning curve getting to grips with running the household, and attract the lustful attention of neighbour Joan (Ann Jillian). Meanwhile Caroline excels at her job, but also becomes the romantic target of her boss Ron (Martin Mull).

What Works Well: With Michael Keaton and Teri Garr carrying the easy harmony of established couplehood, the John Hughes script gives equal opportunities for mom and dad to discover the hazards on other side of front yard fence. Comedy is the primary objective, and enough jokes and funny sequences find their target to maintain a steady stream of fun, with vacuum cleaner "Jaws" a highlight. But the semi-serious commentary about Jack finding pride in housework registers, as does Caroline's journey through the thrills and dangers of the corporate world.

What Does Not Work As Well: For an engineer, Jack sure does stupid well, managing to wreck a supermarket and a house with mindless effort. Some of the failed humour attempts are from the bottom slapstick drawer, while the visual style does not stray far from television movie-of-the-week fare.

Key Quote:
Caroline (to her kids): Look guys, take it easy on daddy. Remember, he's a rookie.



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Movie Review: Back To Black (2024)


Genre: Musical Biography  
Director: Sam Taylor-Johnson  
Starring: Marisa Abela, Jack O'Connell, Eddie Marsan, Lesley Manville  
Running Time: 122 minutes  

Synopsis: In London, teenager Amy Winehouse (Marisa Abela) comes from a modest working class family and is blessed with a throwback singing voice. She has a close relationship with her grandmother Cynthia (Lesley Manville), while her taxi driver father Mitch (Eddie Marsan) fancies himself a crooner. Amy is more into jazz and writes emotional songs inspired by her addictions to men, booze, weed, and bulimia. On the cusp of success, Amy takes a break from music and falls into a turbulent relationship with bad boy Blake (Jack O'Connell), providing the inspiration to write songs for her next album, Back To Black

What Works Well: This impressionistic portrait of a troubled artist succeeds in capturing the fountain of artistry at the intersection of talent, passion, environment, and character. Writer Matt Greenhalgh and director Sam Taylor-Johnson maintain an intense focus on Amy, allowing her to own her success as an uncompromising anachronistic revivalist of jazz music and 1960s glamour, and just as fully embrace all the fault lines of her tragedy: attraction to bad boys, substance abuse, and a wicked temper. With the musical highlights seamlessly weaving through the narrative, Marisa Abela does her own singing and embodies Amy in a hauntingly honest performance punctuated by searing line deliveries. The recreation of early 2000s London fashions adds organic texture.

What Does Not Work As Well: Some of the jumps in time and place are uncoordinated, leaving a few side characters (including Amy's mother and a roommate) stranded. The running time is slightly padded, but the origins of Amy's demonic addictions deserved more attention. 

Key Quote:
Amy: I need to live, my songs.


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Movie Review: Still Of The Night (1982)


Genre: Suspense Thriller  
Director: Robert Benton  
Starring: Meryl Streep, Roy Scheider, Jessica Tandy  
Running Time: 93 minutes  

Synopsis: In Manhattan, psychiatrist Dr. Sam Rice (Roy Scheider) investigates the murder of his long-term client George Bynum (Josef Sommer), an art auction house manager. Sam is intrigued by George's alluring mistress and co-worker Brooke Reynolds (Meryl Streep), who appears distraught but may also be hiding a secret. Sam consults with his mother Grace (Jessica Tandy), also a therapist, and recalls conversations from his sessions with George. He starts to fall in love with Brooke, but also becomes a murder target.

What Works Well: Director and co-writer Robert Benton crafts a passable homage to Alfred Hitchcock, packed with references to classics like Vertigo (a falling death), The Birds (an attack by a bird, and co-starring Jessica Tandy), North By Northwest (a critical auction scene), Spellbound (an elaborate dream sequence), and Rear Window (a voyeuristic view into a neighbouring building). Meryl Streep wraps fragility within mystery as an alluring icy blonde, feeding Sam's doubts on whether Brooke should be embraced or avoided. Scenes of suspense mix with plot revelations to maintain momentum within a brisk running time.

What Does Not Work As Well: The continuous Hitchcock references threaten an outbreak of unintended satire, and the resolution, once revealed, is constipated and less than satisfying. Jessica Tandy is underused, and the 17 year age difference between Scheider and Streep erodes chemistry from their jagged romance. 

Key Quote:
Grace: We're probably dealing with a woman who on the surface seems childlike and innocent, but underneath is capable of extreme violence.



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Movie Review: Showgirls (1995)


Genre: Erotic Drama  
Director: Paul Verhoeven  
Starring: Elizabeth Berkley, Kyle MacLachlan, Gina Gershon, Robert Davi 
Running Time: 131 minutes  

Synopsis: Ambitious Nomi Malone (Elizabeth Berkley) hitchhikes into Las Vegas seeking a dancing career. She befriends seamstress Molly (Gina Ravera) and bouncer/dancer James (Glenn Plummer), but only lands a job at the strip club operated by the exploitive Al (Robert Davi). Nomi's fortunes change when she meets Cristal Connors (Gina Gershon), the star of the glitzy topless show at the Stardust casino. Nomi entrances Cristal's boyfriend Zack (Kyle MacLachlen) with a frenzied lap dance, and after landing a spot as a chorus girl on the show, sets her sights higher. 

What Works Well: This hypnotic train-wreck view of backstage shenanigans matches Vegas itself for extremes of crass in-your-face scuzziness. The Joe Eszterhas script is soaked in the sewage stink of sex-obsessed characters carrying the worst combination of ambition and desperation. Breathless pacing energizes the neon, glamour, and swank, while the town's back-alleys host a net-zero game of winners stepping on losers to achieve a pathetic illusion of success.

What Does Not Work As Well: Elizabeth Berkley stumbles in attempting a huge step from television's Saved By The Bell to carrying a major movie production. She receives little help from Eszterhas' cringey dialogue and director Paul Verhoeven, who is on the prowl for the next lurid shot. The excessive nudity is mind numbing, the sex scenes resemble animalistic coupling, and the choreography replaces dancing with aggressive versions of angular foreplay.

Key Quote:
Cristal: There's always someone younger and hungrier coming down the stairs after you.






All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.