Monday, July 20, 2020

THE HUNT (2020)

The Hunt would be a more or less disposable thriller but for one single performance, on which the film rests almost entirely.

Even though the film has come with more than its share of overcontroversy, it doesn't do much to earn that weight. Like the otherwise forgettable Seth Rogen/Evan Goldberg comedy The Interview, it wouldn't likely be associated with any serious political movement if not for the ridiculous rightwing campaign against it. Just like The Interview, The Hunt's real-life political context is far more significant than any message it has to offer. The themes about the divide between left and right in the Trump-era U.S. are about as complex as a JibJab video. The idea that any right- or left-winger would feel seen enough to be offended by this film--a "Most Dangerous Game" story about a group of cartoonishly reactionary working-class conservatives who are kidnapped and hunted by a band of elite liberals--is preposterous. The cynical and very easy message is that both these sides are stupid and we are all better than them. All too relatable in the social media world.

Twelve people awaken in a nature preserve and discover they're being hunted as prey. It doesn't take long to discover that the prey share a conservative ideology, ranging from the cosmopolitan to the conspiracy theorist. The early scenes, in which the hunted scramble to orient themselves and strategize to escape, are punctuated by some fun if facile moments that poke fun at the partisan presumptions of the conservative victims and their complacently liberal hunters. I was surprised to find that the credited writers were Nick Cuse and Damon Lindelof, both writers on HBO's Watchmen, a show that effectively balanced an action/suspense plot with real significant social commentary. The Hunt feels like a very sloppy first draft of that.



And then, in walks Betty Gilpin, and the clouds open. We assume at first that she's going to be the headstrong Final Woman who outsmarts everyone, which is sorta what she is, but there's more to the character than that, and most of it is in Gilpin's performance. This might have been a simplistic hero role in the hands of a less talented actor, but Gilpin's choices make the character--a participant of mysterious origin named Crystal--into a human person rather than a satirical target. She appears stoic and wooden at first, but look more closely and you'll see how she subtly portrays someone who's always thinking two or three moves ahead, and who's reluctant to let anyone from either side see her next move. It's the sort of performance that will make you want to watch the movie again to see what she's been doing all along.

Mostly because of Gilpin, the last two-thirds of the movie are significantly better than the setup. The supporting performances--I won't reveal the cast because the reveals are part of the fun--are amiably silly even if the writing fails them much of the time. Some of the easy punchlines do land, some are real groaners. The main villain, not revealed until the 3rd act, is played by an Oscar-winning actor who doesn't often appear in movies like this. At first we think, ho ho, what a surprise cameo. But then this person stays in the movie and goes on to show why they're there.

The moral of the story, I suppose, is to not judge a book by its cover: an easy message that Cuse and Lindelof flout by making all the characters except Gilpin's into caricatures who are book-covers all the way down. The other message, less obvious but no less ham-fisted, has to do with self-fulfilling assumptions: that the more we presume about our political opponents, the more likely they are to fulfill our judgments. It's the excuse that alt-righters make all the time: "Hey, the more you call me a racist, the more I'm gonna be a racist." The hunted--and later, we learn, the hunters--lean so far into the stereotype that they become it: the deplorables become deplorable. It's not a particularly astute observation, and so the movie isn't being as powerful as it thinks when it gives us a heroine who dares to be her own person. It falls completely upon Gilpin to bring any complexity to the role. But boy, does she do it.

*** out of ****

Thursday, February 20, 2020

The 100 Worst Movies of the '10s, #63: SOLO: A STAR WARS STORY (2018)

63. SOLO: A STAR WARS STORY (2018)



Hot on the heels of Rian Johnson's The Last Jedi, which was the best Star Wars film since the original trilogy and may have been better than a couple of those, comes Solo, the most cynical and mainstream-friendly to come out of the Disney era, and the worst movie to boast the Star Wars title. There were many disagreements among the creative team as to what direction it should take; Phil Lord and Chris Miller, who made The Lego Movie and would go on to produce the dynamic Into the Spider-Verse, were fired from the film because producer Kathleen Kennedy thought their cut was unconventional.

Maybe their version would have worked, maybe it wouldn't have, but at least it would have taken the time-tested series somewhere. Instead, we have Ron Howard's version, which--unlike its title character in the Kessel Run--takes the road much, much more traveled by, and plops us essentially where we started. There is no insight into Han Solo as a person, which is not to say that he's a particularly complex character to begin with. We learn nothing about him that we didn't get from the previous entries. Alden Ehrenreich is the correct actor to play the role, but so what? There's nothing much for him to do except be as cocky and self-assured as Harrison Ford. The same goes for Donald Glover, who's a proper heir to Billy Dee Williams as the young Lando Calrissian, but aside from some plot details as to how Han and Lando met--pretty much all of which have been told to us in the series--his emulation is fairly empty.

The early scenes show promise, and the film's first third concerns an exciting heist plot that might have made for a fun thriller if writers Lawrence and Jonathan Kasdan had more up their sleeves. When Han hooks up with Chewie and some rebel thieves (Woody Harrelson, Thandie Newton, a creature voiced by Jon Favreau), the team plans to steal a freight of fuel. When the heist goes belly-up, Han finds himself at the behest of the sinister mob kingpin Dryden Vos (Paul Bettany), and on the hook for one big job, for which he will need a very fast ship. Perhaps one that can make the Kessel Run in less than 12 parsecs (one of the movie's cleverer moves is that it explains that faux pas from the first film).

Technically, all the bells and whistles are there, but it's no fun. The plot careens from reference to reference so that it can end up bridging into the Star Wars universe as we know it, but unlike Rogue One, which ended just as the first one began with a clear purpose and place, Solo feels like pure fan service for fan service's sake. The women are given precious little to do: Emilia Clarke, who was burning cities to the ground on Game of Thrones, has been inexplicably tamed here, and Phoebe Waller-Bridge, creator of Fleabag, fails to elevate the very poorly written role of a "feminist" droid enlisted by Han. If Waller-Bridge had been allowed to contribute to the script, the character may have been a lot sharper. Or at least there would have been a lot more droid side-eyes.

The Top 100 Movies of the '10s, #72: I, TONYA (2017)

73. THE LITTLE HOURS (2017)
72. I, TONYA (2017)



I, Tonya is the biopic that Tonya Harding deserves. It's a complex story, fitting her neither into the villain role in Nancy Kerrigan's fairy tale that the media concocted in 1994, nor into the victim role that she might project onto herself. She is both. And neither.

Margot Robbie, far too versatile to have been shoehorned into Suicide Squad, plays Tonya from her mid-teens into her thirties, with a loud and sharp dignity and a quieter deviousness. Sebastian Stan endows her on-and-off boyfriend-and-husband, Jeff Gillooly, at once with a dangerous hair-trigger and with an immature innocence. They are two kids thrust into marriage and into professional sports without much of an idea of how to handle either.

The victory in Craig Gillespie's handling of this story is that he dares to tell it all, from the horrific to the ridiculous. A lesser director would fall prey to this very true story's unwillingness to settle into a conventional tone. Moments of silly comedy lead into moments of shocking abuse, because after all, that's how it happened.

The movie is funny, and then it's horrifying. Light moments of goofy comedy--like the hilarious sequence of the knee-bashing itself by Sean Eckhardt (Paul Walter Hauser), which plays as if Ernest P. Worrell starred in Ocean's Eleven--give way to dark moments of terror. The tonal shifts are smoothed by occasional cuts to present-day narration by both Tonya and Jeff, which assure us that not only are both alive today, but they are thankfully separate from each other.

Allison Janney won a deserved Oscar for playing Tonya's chainsmoking and abrasive mother, though any of the three leads would have been deserving. The movie doesn't ask us so much to believe Tonya's story as to sympathize with her perseverance. She trained from near-infancy to fit a mold that had rejected her, and made the Olympics anyway, and might have left untarnished if not for her alleged attack. Without being naive, Gillespie finds what's admirable in that.

Thursday, January 9, 2020

The 100 Worst Movies of the '10s, #64: BRIGHTBURN (2019)

80. CABIN FEVER (2016)
79. THE AWAKENING (2011)
78. THE PYRAMID (2014)
77. LEFT BEHIND (2014)
76. PARANOIA (2013)
75. SAVING CHRISTMAS (2014)
74. A HAUNTED HOUSE (2013)
73. THE APPARITION (2012)
72. JONAH HEX (2010)
71. SCRE4M (2011)
70. THE DARKEST HOUR (2011)
69. SAW 3D (2010)
68. COP OUT (2010)
67. VACATION (2015)
66. THE DARK TOWER (2017)
65. THE GALLOWS (2015)
64. BRIGHTBURN (2019)



While we're on the topic of nasty supervillain movies, here's another that begins with an interesting premise but succumbs to its lowest-common-denominator instinct. Brightburn ought to have been a knockout of a twist on the comic book legend: a spacecraft lands in a Smallville-like town and births an alien child with superpowers, but instead of a Man of Steel, we get an adolescent maniac who inflicts his pubescent hormonal mood swings on the world. If the movie were more interested in exploring the complexities of that idea and less interested in shoving blood and guts into our faces, it might have been something.

Tori (Elizabeth Banks) and Kyle (David Denman) discover their new son Brandon (Jackson Dunn) in the same way Ma and Pa Kent discover Clark: a spacecraft lands in their backyard with a child inside, and they decide to raise him on their own.  Fast forward about 12 years and Brandon is hitting puberty, and coincidentally beginning to discover his powers.

The parallel between the body change of puberty and the discovery of a superpower is far from a novel one; the X-Men and Spider-Man, as well as Superman himself, have trod this ground many times. The new ground that Brightburn tries to go for is to make Brandon's transition as disgusting and toxic as possible. He torments the classmate he has a crush on, as well as her family; he brutally punishes a family friend who tries to rein him in; and finally he takes his aggression out on his parents.

There's a real movie here, but director David Yarovesky and writers Brian and Mark Gunn aren't equipped to explore it. The sub-plot about Brandon's "claiming" of a young classmate, which starts as an innocent crush and escalates into horrific incel revenge, might have been an honest depiction of toxic masculinity, if the movie weren't mostly concerned with portraying graphic torture for gory amusement. Eyes are pierced, heads are smashed, one poor fellow's jaw is ripped clean off for us all to enjoy.

The writers' brother, James Gunn, produced the film, and it feels like the work of someone who has seen his better work and not quite understood how to emulate it. Having come up making Troma films, Gunn of course has an appreciation for the disgusting, as is evidenced by his first mainstream film as director, Slither, which was slimy and icky and lots of fun. But no matter how icky, James Gunn's films have always been grounded in real humanity. Look at his own superhero satire Super, which supposed a vigilante played by Rainn Wilson who attacked petty criminals with a hammer. That movie had lots of skulls being split open, but never let us forget that it was about real people.

The Top 100 Movies of the '10s, #74: FIRST REFORMED (2017)

75. COSMOPOLIS (2012)
74. FIRST REFORMED (2017)



If the planet survives the existential threat of climate change, First Reformed will be the movie that people look to if they want to capture the muted dread of some combined with the total complacency of others that defines this era.

You would think it was directed by a millennial, or someone who fears having to live with the effects of climate change for more than the last half of their life. But the director is septuagenarian Paul Schrader, who's no stranger to quiet tension. First Reformed concerns a group of people who must continue on with their daily lives, even knowing the end is coming, and what happens when one of them won't take it anymore.

Ernst Toller (Ethan Hawke) is the pastor of a small upstate New York Protestant church that has a claim to fame as a stop on the Underground Railroad, but is mainly eclipsed by a nearby megachurch that--for the most part--pays to keep it open as a historical curio. Mary (Amanda Seyfried), a pregnant parishioner visits him, concerned about her husband Michael (Philip Ettinger), who's reluctant to bring new life into a world that he believes is dying. Michael is an environmentalist who's been radicalized, and she is concerned he will do something drastic.

Toller is the complement to Michael: he is also facing his own mortality--he has symptoms of stomach cancer--but is facing his impending death quietly and passively. Confronted with a parishioner who refuses to take his mortality lying down, Toller's entire worldview is thrown into chaos. The usual answers he gives his parishioners lose their meaning. He discovers something about the megachurch, run by the slick Rev. Jeffers (Cedric Antonio Kyles, a.k.a. the Entertainer, who plays Jeffers as 20% holy man, 40% showman, and 40% hustler) that he'd rather unsee.

The ending is infuriating because there is no closure to Toller's conundrum. It ends with a scream of pain followed by a gesture of love which is insufficient to save the planet but, Schrader hints, it may be all we have in the face of apathy and destruction.

Wednesday, January 1, 2020

The 100 Worst Movies of the '10s, #81: SUICIDE SQUAD (2016)

82. ATLAS SHRUGGED: PART I (2011)
81. SUICIDE SQUAD (2016)



DC movies seem to want us to like them so, so badly. While Kevin Feige and the Marvel crew seem to be able to spin out some decently entertaining narratives out of nowhere--even the lesser ones like Doctor Strange have a lot going for them--Geoff Johns and DC are obviously trying very hard to make something that fits the public's desire. Suicide Squad was reportedly overhauled pretty heavily in post-production because the studio determined that what audiences wanted was an irreverent but overall pleasant antihero story like Guardians of the Galaxy.

Apparently what director David Ayer, the writer of Training Day and director of End of Watch, delivered to them was too abrasive, so they lightened it up, and boy, does it show. Suicide Squad seems to have been made entirely out of chaff. Its story is perfunctory, its characters forgettable, and its centerpiece--the romance between the Joker (Jared Leto) and Harley Quinn (Margot Robbie)--is barely even addressed.

Ayer reportedly directed Leto to method-act during filming, which led to his essentially being a jerk to all the other actors. This is already a pretty silly and unproductive way to get a performance, but it's made all the more pointless when we realize that Leto is barely in the movie and in some cases shares no screen time with his castmates. The only actor who doubles significantly with Leto is Robbie, and even she has to spend most of the movie without him.

The premise is interesting, even if Ayer doesn't do much with it. Government official Amanda Waller (Viola Davis, who I hope took home a lot of money for this role) assembles a Justice League of her own, but one of villains instead of heroes. Why villains? For one thing, it's better to have the worst people working for you, I suppose. For another, since they're already incarcerated, they can be easily controlled. In addition to Harley Quinn, the crew includes Deadshot (Will Smith), Diablo (Jay Hernandez), Killer Croc (Adewale Akinnouye-Agbaje), Slipknot (Adam Beach), Captain Boomerang (Jai Courtney), and Katana (Karen Fukuhara). The team is soon dispatched to stop an evil Enchantress (Cara Delevingne) from bringing about the apocalypse.

The pieces are in place for a fun adventure--and might still be, if James Gunn's inauspiciously-named sequel The Suicide Squad is up to par--but nothing comes together. The plot and characters are overpopulated and no fun. The only actor who registers is Robbie, who delivers a knockout performance as Harley, endowing a difficult character--how do you play someone whose primary characteristic is being controlled by another person?--with agency and power despite the lazy writing.

The Top 100 Movies of the '10s, #76: SORRY TO BOTHER YOU (2018)

90. JOHN DIES AT THE END (2013)
89. BRIDESMAIDS (2011)
88. THE WITCH (2015)
87. HOW TO SURVIVE A PLAGUE (2012)
86. THE TREE OF LIFE (2011)
85. THE BABADOOK (2014)
84. REAL STEEL (2011)
83. MUDBOUND (2018)
82. STAN & OLLIE (2018)
81. STOKER (2013)
80. ROOM 237 (2012)
79. UPGRADE (2018)
78. MIDSOMMAR (2019)
77. FENCES (2016)
76. SORRY TO BOTHER YOU (2018)



With Sorry to Bother You, Boots Riley cements his place as a unique new voice in cinema. His style combines the community-building atmosphere of Spike Lee with the absurdist imagery of Terry Gilliam at his height, with a satirical allegory that dares to actually satirize. So much of what passes for satire nowadays is afraid to truly bite. Riley does not play nice with any of his characters, especially his hero.

It takes place in a skewed but very recognizable America, in which Cassius Green (Lakeith Stanfield) must eke out a living as a telemarketer, a job at which he's not very good. When a co-worker (Danny Glover) advises him to use his "white voice," his sales immediately skyrocket. Soon he finds himself climbing the corporate ladder, but he can't get very far up before he starts to disregard the people he left below him. His girlfriend Detroit (Tessa Thompson) is an artist and activist who's protesting the very company he works for.

Riley perfectly captures the desperation in working-class America that leads to isolation: Cassius needs a job to make a living, even if it goes against what he stands for. The "white voice" is a particularly ingenious invention in itself: it implies not only speaking in a "white" accent, but carrying a sort of feigned confidence and casualness, as if this white voice has a lot less to worry about than its non-white owner. The brilliant move was to dub Stanfield with a white actor rather than have him affect a voice; the happy lilt in David Cross's voice is appropriately jarring and hilariously unfitting (Patton Oswalt and Steve Buscemi provide co-workers' white voices).

Though its aim is broad, Sorry to Bother You surprisingly remains sharp in attacking its targets. Riley also hits at self-help gurus and capitalist ubermensches in his portrayal of Steve Lift (Armie Hammer), a combination of Tony Robbins and Elon Musk who has found a way to market slavery as empowerment in his "WorryFree" movement. Just what Lift is up to is something I won't reveal here, but let me profess that the movie set me up to expect the most ridiculous outcome, and it still outdid itself.

In the end, though the movie is decidedly a comedy, the message is uncompromisingly bleak, and though Cassius is its everyman hero, he's also the target as the cog in the capitalist wheel. I was a little disappointed in Riley's decision to include a mid-credits scene that adds a somewhat conventional conclusion. The correct final shot is the one directly before the credits begin, and it's a doozy.

The 100 Worst Movies of the '10s, #83: SWISS ARMY MAN (2016)

95. THE GIRL ON THE TRAIN (2016)
94. TRUTH OR DARE? (2018)
93. MORTDECAI (2015)
92. MAGIC IN THE MOONLIGHT (2014)
91. ANNABELLE (2014)
90. LIVE BY NIGHT (2017)
89. SAFE HAVEN (2013)
88. PAUL BLART: MALL COP 2 (2015)
87. DARK CRIMES (2016)
86. THE HUNGER GAMES (2012)
85. ONLY GOD FORGIVES (2013)
84. GROWN UPS 2 (2013)
83. SWISS ARMY MAN (2016)



Yes, I know, a lot of people are very fond of this movie. I'm not.

I get how the very funny premise buys it a little bit of understanding. A man named Hank (Paul Dano), stranded on a desert island, is about to kill himself. Then at the last second, he sees someone floating to shore. Hank figures this to be the sign that he should try to survive, even though the man on shore (Daniel Radcliffe) is very much dead.

I wish the movie had stuck with its first conceit in the use of Radcliffe as the dead body, named "Manny" by his living companion. Hank finds all sorts of uses for the titular Swiss Army Man: he uses him to crack open coconuts, he stores fresh water in his stomach, he uses his farts to propel the two of them like a jetski through water.

But then directors Dan Kwan and Daniel Scheinert abandon the most interesting aspect of their movie and focus on the triter relationship between Hank and his imaginary friend. I suppose there's a place for such a friendship, a sort of parody of Tom Hanks's "Wilson!" buddy in Cast Away, but the directors seem dead set on taking a novel, silly idea to hackneyed, boring places.

Give credit to Radcliffe for committing to this very strange role, and to Dano for earnestly playing his very not-strange one. When the movie finally reveals its game in the last act, it feels less like pulling the rug out from under itself than it does throwing a wet blanket over itself. The significance of Mary Elizabeth Winstead's character (who turns up in flashbacks throughout) is a groaner, and casts a shadow over the Hank character, making him seem not only pathetic but predatory. Matt Zoller Seitz, writing for rogerebert.com, quipped that "One thing you definitely can't say about Swiss Army Man is 'Oh, not that again.'" I'll say it: not another movie where a dangerous lunatic's fantasies are portrayed as cute and twee. Not that again.