Call Me By Your Name

This is the infamous “gay movie” I’d been hearing about months before seeing it. I learned it isn’t a gay movie but rather a movie about how lives cross in time and sometimes we find a spark: gay or not. As a heterosexual male, I enjoyed that aspect of this film very much. After all, there are also hetero relationships in the film and some very beautiful actresses. I’ve concluded this is more about summer relationships gay and straight than it is about revealing what it means to be gay. That may let down some people but there are other films out there that qualify as gay films.

Call Me by Your Name (2017)
R | 2h 12min | Drama, Romance | 24 November 2017 (USA)

In Northern Italy in 1983, seventeen year-old Elio begins a relationship with visiting Oliver, his father’s research assistant, with whom he bonds over his emerging sexuality, their Jewish heritage, and the beguiling Italian landscape.
Director: Luca Guadagnino
Writers: James Ivory (screenplay by), André Aciman (based on the novel by)
Stars: Armie Hammer, Timothée Chalamet, Michael Stuhlbarg

When people have a spark between them, it’s wonderful. We think of two young men as knees and elbows and as awkward creatures less capable of romance. This is film is kind of nice as we are in an open time of acceptance for gays and bisexuals. They just feel it. Why do some begrudge them love they desire? There were a few parts that dragged a bit. Overall though, this is a brave film that shows the value of love’s spark, over the spanse of one Summer, in Italy. I recommend it. Your thoughts are invited in the comments.

9/10

Seven Psychopaths

Ensemble cast of psychopaths? Yep, exactly right! In this gem we have Colin Farrell playing an uninspired script writer who gets involved with some organized crime psychopaths in the writing of his movie.

Seven Psychopaths (2012)
R | 1h 50min | Comedy, Crime | 12 October 2012 (USA)

A struggling screenwriter inadvertently becomes entangled in the Los Angeles criminal underworld after his oddball friends kidnap a gangster’s beloved Shih Tzu.
Director: Martin McDonagh
Writer: Martin McDonagh
Stars: Colin Farrell, Woody Harrelson, Sam Rockwell

We get to experience pure comedy gold in this hitman tale. Juxtaposed against that immorality, we see some of these killers have weak spots for a Shih tzu. In a huge cast, Sam Rockwell is my favorite and arguably the most crazed of all the psychopaths. He enjoys telling the movie ideas all too much to the writer. Colin Farrell is our anchor of sanity but then again, what sane person would hang out with these psychopaths. He has quite a few close calls. The Shih tzu belongs to Woody Harrelson’s character and he is truly side splitting the way he pines over it.

Basically this film is funny but there are many shoot-outs and scenes of full-out violence. It’s a comedy not to be missed. Most of it takes place in the Southern California Desert.

9/10

At time of reviewing this, it was streaming on Amazon Prime.

Leviathan (1989)

Undersea monsters are nothing new to film. The ocean is a lot like outer space as a background in Alien. Here, we aren’t in outer space but rather probing the depths of our own ocean space. A hapless crew works out, snaps towels on each other, and one by one encounter a life form that is growing.

Leviathan (1989)
R | 1h 38min | Adventure, Horror, Mystery | 17 March 1989 (USA)

An American deep-sea mining colony stumbles upon a sunken Soviet vessel hiding a horrific secret.
Director: George P. Cosmatos
Writers: David Webb Peoples (story) (as David Peoples), David Webb Peoples (screenplay) (as David Peoples) | 1 more credit »
Stars: Peter Weller, Richard Crenna, Amanda Pays

An impressive star-studded cast develops a far-reaching sense of fear aboard a deep sea submarine. It feels scientific but soon we start feeling there is something evil on board. The effects aren’t great but good enough to scare. Questions of what this thing could be are raised an different answers are given.

It seems fairly early on that the entire cast may be wiped out. The final scene has the aura of a Die Hard ending. That’s probably because in 1989, most action films were as such. This film is great fun for its time and I highly recommend it. It’s far from perfect but it has all the elements needed for an engaging, entertaining, undersea, sci-fi horror.

8/10

Detroit

Social consciousness should be a genre on IMDB. I hope they’ll adopt it. Yes, this film is a crime/drama/thriller but this is a historical film that definitely should be seen by all people interested in racism and social consciousness. It’s nothing we haven’t seen before, the racist theme I mean. Still, the fact that two police officers killled 2 black men in cold blood and were found innocent in 1967 is a story that needs to be shown and told again and again until this sort of thing ceases to happen.

Detroit (2017)
R | 2h 23min | Crime, Drama, Thriller | 4 August 2017 (USA)

Fact-based drama set during the 1967 Detroit riots in which a group of rogue police officers respond to a complaint with retribution rather than justice on their minds.
Director: Kathryn Bigelow
Writer: Mark Boal
Stars: John Boyega, Anthony Mackie, Algee Smith

Another thing that needs to be noted after watching this movie is the power of directing that is Kathryn Bigelow. She is growing with every film to be a powerful social commentarist of this medium. Her other films include “The Hurt Locker” and “Zero Dark Thirty.” Both are powerful statements about real events and about human nature. I will say the senes are hard to watch and I think many will be truned off by that. I would encourage you to get up and get a glass of water or a snack when it gets too violent. Some scenes my be a little overkill but I respect why Bigelow and made them that way. Overall, an impressive and powerful work from American racial history 7/10

The Lost City of Z

Every child wants to explore and find something, does she not? Who among us hasn’t wandered on purpose into uncharted territory only to have a parent scold and call you back. Charlie Hunman and Robert Pattinson are men doing that, as every kid fantasizes. Hearing of an ancient, lost civilization of people in the Amazon, they are determined to find it.

The Lost City of Z (2016)
PG-13 | 2h 21min | Adventure, Biography, Drama | 21 April 2017 (USA)

A true-life drama, centering on British explorer Col. Percival Fawcett, who disappeared while searching for a mysterious city in the Amazon in the 1920s.
Director: James Gray
Writers: James Gray (written for the screen by), David Grann (based on the book by)
Stars: Charlie Hunnam, Robert Pattinson, Sienna Miller

Against the motherland’s warning, they set out and discover many clues about a civilization that far predates Christianity. As a result, they ambition is fettered because the English don’t seem interested in knowing of something like that. Hunman’s character makes a speech at one point stating “Bigoted Christianity” probably doesn’t want to learn from this older and possibly more successful civilization.

This film has been rightly criticized as being long and at times dull. Still, if you’re looking for a true story that takes on the traditional thought of our civilization, including Christianity, I think you will enjoy it. I know I did.

7/10

At time of publishing, this film was streaming on Amazon Prime.

Beasts of No Nation

This is an acting study of Idris Elba. He plays the commandant with such vigor and hateful passion, he steals the show. The oter boy actors are also excellent. Elba is turning them into killers by the minute in this film and it’s something to behold.

Beasts of No Nation (2015)
Not Rated | 2h 17min | Drama, War | 16 October 2015 (USA)

A drama based on the experiences of Agu, a child soldier fighting in the civil war of an unnamed African country.
Director: Cary Fukunaga (as Cary Joji Fukunaga)
Writers: Cary Fukunaga (written for the screen by), Uzodinma Iweala (based on the novel by)
Stars: Abraham Attah, Emmanuel Affadzi, Ricky Adelayitor

American adolescent children and young men, boys especially, should see this film. I don’t think young men that enlist in the military always have the necessary background knowledge of what it truly means to kill. In Africa, these young men are snatched away from their parents and forced to march with the land military. At that point they use machetes, guns, and whatever they have at their disposal to march and kill then repeat.

This film is hauntingly good yet at the same time repulsive. Elbas’d character shows us what it means to never surrender in this African civil war. If for no other reason, film fans should see this to study the excellent acting Elba does. Because there isn’t much variance in what happens, nor explanation, it lost points but it is still highly recommended. I thoroughly enjoyed this film.

8/10

At time of publishing, this film was streaming on Netflix.

The Sinner

An 8 episode miniseries had better be a good mystery. In this case, you’re sitting through 6 full hours of USA Network mystery/thriller, expecting something big at the end. Jessica Biel is a big pull, she stars in it and co-produced it. But is it worth all the hype?

The Sinner
TV-14 | 1h | Drama, Mystery, Thriller | TV Series (2017)

A young mother tries to find out what’s causing her to have violent tendencies.
Creator: Derek Simonds
Stars: Jessica Biel, Christopher Abbott, Dohn Norwood

This review contains spoilers. This story starts interesting. You have a woman who has never been violent, a mom and wife on a beach who all of a sudden in front of her husband and child proceeds to stab a man sitting on the towel in front of her. She gives no reason other than the fact that she told him to turn down his music. This character is played by Jessica Biel.

The investigator on the case (Bill Pullman) becomes obsessed with the case. He can’t accept she would do such a think without a reason. He goes hot on the case finding clues here and there, getting chided by his colleagues for helping a clear murderer try and figure out what happened. A side story deals with his own demons of a sexual nature and his marriage that is quickly crumbling.

Christopher Abbot plays a similar character to what we usually see from him: the cool New Yorker who can snap at any moment. He adds very little to the suspense or story. By the 6th episode I could see they had nothing to unearth. I was right. This film draws you in under false pretenses and leaves you with a very weak explanation for the crime. It was fun watching because I expected something. At the end there was no worthy explanation and it felt like I’d wasted 2-3 episodes’ time. I would like to see more shows like this but with a plot that justify the initial tension of the crime.

6/10

Sightseers

The early scenes of this film are normal and mundane. You have a simple couple setting out to take a sightseeing romantic vacation. Very son into it, everything goes haywire which makes for some of the best British black comedy. Director Ben Wheatley throws decorum aside and delivers a no-holds-barred project like only he can.

Sightseers (2012)
Not Rated | 1h 28min | Adventure, Comedy, Crime | 10 May 2013 (USA)

Chris wants to show girlfriend Tina his world, but events soon conspire against the couple and their dream caravan holiday takes a very wrong turn.
Director: Ben Wheatley
Writers: Alice Lowe, Steve Oram | 1 more credit »
Stars: Alice Lowe, Kenneth Hadley, Steve Oram

We have a term here in the states for folks like these: white trash. They bring no honor to their kind and lack “class.” This is a couple in that category for sure. We watch them go through their misadventures and there are no limits to what they’ll do. One might kill out of unfounded jealousy while another will burn an enemy down. Let’s be real, this won’t be winning any high-brow awards. Still, there is plenty of hilarious material here from the twisted mind of Ben Wheatley. I for one loved it!

8/10

The Florida Project (2017)

America has really never been a caste-free society. The rich get richer and the poor get the picture. In this film we get a direct camera lens view into what it is like for the poor in a resort town of Florida. More specifically, it’s focused on a mother and daughter trying to survive while living in a daily rate motel.

The Florida Project (2017)
R | 1h 51min | Drama | 10 November 2017 (UK)

Set over one summer, the film follows precocious six-year-old Moonee as she courts mischief and adventure with her ragtag playmates and bonds with her rebellious but caring mother, all while living in the shadows of Disney World.
Director: Sean Baker
Writers: Sean Baker, Chris Bergoch
Stars: Brooklynn Prince, Bria Vinaite, Willem Dafoe

I’ve been a student of the culture of poverty every since I started teaching in an inner city environment. There are all sorts of observed rules you wouldn’t thin of unless you lived in it. For example, the kids in poverty know when the churches and bakeries put out the day old bread and they are there ready to pick it up. There’s nothing shameful about this, it’s survival. In this film we see various ways the poor survive in this environment. It’s often touching, sometimes maddening, and yes entertaining. This is a valuable relic because as it entertains it educates about an unseen part of our society. I can’t get enough reminders of why some people do the things they do to survive in the culture of poverty.

Menashe

Sometimes as a human race we can look to a culture to remind us what it is to be sensitive and human. In this film, we follow a hapless grocery store clerk in Queens who is just trying to see his son after he has been separated from him when his wife died.

Menashe (2017)
PG | 1h 22min | Drama | 28 July 2017 (USA)

Within Brooklyn’s ultra-orthodox Jewish community, a widower battles for custody of his son. A tender drama performed entirely in Yiddish, the film intimately explores the nature of faith and the price of parenthood.
Director: Joshua Z Weinstein
Writers: Alex Lipschultz, Musa Syeed | 1 more credit »
Stars: Menashe Lustig, Yoel Falkowitz, Ruben Niborski

I felt among these characters. It watches really like a documentary but I checked and it’s not. These are actors playing from a script and the emotions they evoke are significant. Whether its through watching the father work in the store or spending quality time with his son, the film shows that even this highly traditional culture holds the same bonds that we do as sacred.

Please note the film is entirely in Yiddish so if subtitles aren’t your thing, you should avoid this one. It made remember how special my kids are and how much I would do if asked to stay with them. The traditions of this Hebrew culture are also addressed which I found very interesting as well. This is a great watch for any human. 9/10