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Slumming/'tis the Season: Mesa of Lost Women!

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Every so often, you see a movie that is just, there’s no other way to put it, bad. It’s a wretched non-construct of script, acting, and direction. Every so often, you come across one, though, that calls you to question if that’s not the very point of the film.  I love - that's right: love -  Mesa of Lost Women . It is deliriously bad. And yet, and yet, if you venture into it with the right approach, it can prove to be a challenging work of avant-garde cinema, interrogating plot structure, characters, the passage of time, and interspecies/environmental relationships. Does that sound like a stretch? You bet it does! But look what happens when we take that approach. C’mon down! Let’s start with the opening of two people trudging across a desert with rambling narration that stops when the couple, a man and woman, find safe haven, and resumes when they are surrounded by other characters who may or may not have parts to play in their narrative. When the camera dollies in on one, Pe...

Fantastic Four: First Steps for Marvel’s first family

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Fantastic Four: First Steps ,   Superman ,   Downton Abbey: the Grand Finale . One of these is not like the other two. It took a few decades, but the Fantastic Four have finally found a landing to stick. I don’t fault the Tim Story versions for not being quite what they could have been, but while they both had elements of fun, they were programmatic and often, sluggish affairs. Fortunately, Michael Chiklis and Chris Evans were on hand to relieve the tedium.  Going back further, the Roger Corman version is actually kind of okay for what it is. It was done on the cheap so that Bernd Eichinger could hold onto the film rights. His company eventually produced the Story movies, both of which did okay at the box office. Then came the Josh Trank fiasco in 2015, also released by 20th Century Fox. It did not do so well. It was a troubled production (and you can Google for the details) and four years later, The Walt Disney Company got the rights to the FF once it acquired 20th Centu...

It’s just like starting over: James Gunn’s Superman

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  At this point, I think we best look at James Gunn’s DC Universe’s (DCU, as opposed to the DCEU under Zack  Snyder) fresh start. I was wondering how he was going to take on Kal-el/Clark/Supes and wondered how much of the traditional Gunn irreverence and weirdness would be preserved or would it be one of those properties where we’d see an independent filmmaker have to struggle with what the suits want (think Sam Raimi in   Dr. Strange and the Multiverse of Madness ). I mean, hell, his Suicide Club is a thing of twisted beauty and to be sure, Warners seems less fretful over what a director is going to do than Marvel/Disney. That said, my eyebrow was highly arched when I found out Gunn himself would be directing   Superman . And when one eyebrow got tired, I just moved over to the other one. In a nutshell, I enjoyed the hell out of it. I really, really did and if I felt like Cavill got shortchanged (irrespective of how I feel about the Snyderverse, Cavill struck me as...

A Franchise Ending with Grace and the classiest of fan service: Downton Abbey: the Grand Finale

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Fantastic. Four: First Steps ,   Superman ,   Downton Abbey: the Grand Finale . One of these is not like the other two. The last is, of course, a franchise that has had the good sense and grace to finally call it a day. I’m a fan, but I applaud Julian Fellowes’ wrapping up the saga with a fan-service filled film. Take that, alliteration! To be clear, this last goodbye is very much for the fan base in a way that the previous films were not (and were stronger movies because of it). While Downton Abbey and Downton Abbey: a New Era were continuations of the series, they could very well stand on their own as movies and a newcomer would be no worse for wear. The Grand Finale , however, is replete with callbacks and obscurities that might baffle, if not distract, the casual viewer, but for those of us who have followed the Crawleys and the Granthams this far, it was as close to a hoot as their tale gets and you better believe, I wept like a baby at the end.  There are no big d...

Back from Hiatus

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Hey! I took a vacation, too! (No. No, I did not.) It is increasingly difficult to write about entertainment these days, but I think it’s important to. It’s not a matter of distraction with bread and circuses (we have state-sanctioned media for that); the arts are what can sustain us at the highest and best levels, spiritually. At the very least, a movie, a play, a concert, a TV show can give us a break from the madness of our current  Over the past three weeks, I’ve been laid up (and recovered, thank you) and preoccupied with what precisely I do want to write about (other than politics over at the other place). It’s not as though I haven’t watched anything over the past three weeks. Quite the contrary, I’ve watched a shit-ton of stuff. There’s been an embarrassment of riches; repertory cinema over at the River Oaks and (surprise!) my local Regal theater. The Godfather, Chinatown, Taxi Driver, and more. In the wake of Robert Redford’s passing,   The Sting   and  ...

In memoriam: Robert Redford

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Credit: Mary Evans/Ronald Grant/Everett; Everett; Buena Vista/Everett. Source: ew.com I don’t usually write obits. The last one I did was on another platform for David Bowie because, well, David Bowie. It mingle be difficult for more recent generations to get, but Redford was very much part of the zeitgeist when I was coming up. He wasn’t just a heartthrob matinee idol; he was as much a player in the New Hollywood as, say, Jack Nicholson, Dennis Hopper, and his peers more resolutely known for exploring the harsher dimensions of life in the seventies. By contrast, while Redford was very much a “movie star”, he was an accomplished actor and much of his work centered on the more slippery nature of relationships, bruised loves, and eventually, exploring the ramifications of political decisions in the U.S. I doubt if he’d want to hear his work framed that way, but that’s how his evolution struck me as a kid. And it’s stayed with me since. In some ways, he was almost borderline square until ...