Popcorn Perspectives with Danny Minton – Week of December 2, 2024

Popcorn Perspectives with Danny Minton

Week of December 2, 2024

Nightbitch

Rated R for language and some sexuality

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 66%

In Theaters

Based on the novel by Rachael Yoder, Amy Adams plays a stay at home mother who has put her professional life as an artist on hold while she raises her infant son.  With her life full of regrets and her relationship with her husband (Scoot McNairy) strained to the limits, her world takes a surreal turn when she begins to discover that she might be turning into a dog, hunting at night with a pack of neighborhood canines.  You can tell that this strange little tale, which just happened to land a megastar in the leading role, was meant to draw attention to a very specific group of young women: stay at home moms who hate being stay at home moms, either some, or all of the time.  While the nightmarish pseudo-shapeshifting adds for a much needed comedic refocussing, the crux of the film centers around the mental illness parenting can cause, and some very unhealthy ways of dealing with it.  While the very subject matter is not enjoyable in the least, Amy Adams overcomes that with a roaring performance that makes the film at least a watchable and teachable event.  I don’t particularly like her character, and I felt as much empathy for the husband as I did the wife, but I can also appreciate its merits and its message.  So while the acting is great, the story could have used some work if they had any intention of widening its audience, which might not be what the filmmakers wanted at all.  In fact, it seems quite the opposite.  C+

Flow

Rated PG for peril and thematic elements

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 97%

In Theaters

This Latvian-made animated film, which won the Cannes Un Certain Regard Award, tells the story of a cat who finds itself facing a flood at the end of the world which threatens its existence if it doesn’t make daring moves to somehow stay alive.  In order to survive, it is forced to make friends with an unlikely group of animals, including a dog, a lemur, a capybara and a secretary bird, all struggling to literally keep their head above water.  As land begins to disappear and they find themselves trapped in a row boat, they go on a beautiful but deadly journey, seeing a world that seems to have lost its humans long ago and which is now evolving into a new and strange planet.  All told without the use of animals talking amongst one another, the film uses natural animal actions, for the most part, for communication and action.  While there are some moments that feel more like a Miyazaki film, the overall story arch comes across as original and unique, always keeping you on your toes and never projecting its next move.  With beautiful animation and spectacular sound design, this experience becomes one heck of little movie that could land Oscar nominations for both animation and best foreign film, since it has been submitted as the Latvian qualifier for Best International Feature.  A-

Popcorn Perspectives with Danny Minton – Week of November 18, 2024

Popcorn Perspectives with Danny Minton

Week of November 18, 2024

Gladiator II

Rated R for Strong Bloody Violence

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 75%

In Theaters

For years we have been promised a sequel to one of the great modern classics: 2000’s Gladiator.  As you may recall, Gladiator ended with a brutal fight to the death between its hero Maximus (Russell Crowe) and the evil emperor Commodus (Joaquin Phoenix), leaving Lucilla (Connie Nelson) and her son Lucius safe, for a bit.  In the time since that ending, evil emperors have come into power and the need to hide Lucius brought him to an African kingdom to live out his life in relative safety.  But when the Romans, led by a new and somewhat honorable general (Pedro Pascal) come to invade that African Kingdom, adult Lucius (Paul Mescal) is captured upon their defeat and brought as a slave to Rome.  That’s when a power-hungry slave-trader named Macrinus (Denzel Washington) purchases Lucius and puts him into the Gladiatorial games.  But Lucius, being the rightful heir to the throne, wants nothing but revenge and retribution for crimes both old and new.  Let me first say that I am a major Gladiator fan.  So much so that I have a son named Maximus.  So I was eager to see what director Ridley Scott had planned for this sequel that was more than 20 years in the making.  Story wise, I was okay with the plot and the revelations.  The screenplay is complex and fits in nicely with what came before it.  I also really loved the multiple actions sequences including the war in the beginning, the apes, rhino and eventually the huge set piece where they filled the Colosseum with water to reenact ship battles.  I’m pretty sure they couldn’t have had live sharks in those battles, but if you’ve been to the Colosseum, you would know that this was something that they did from time to time and the visuals here are stunning.  Unfortunately, this film has some serious problems, mainly in that it is overly-stuffed and clunky.  Just as in Scott’s last epic, Napoleon, the film feels like a four adventure shoved into two-and-a-half.  So rather than fluidity between beats, you get chunk after chunk thrown against each other, more like a video game than a movie.  This was not only distracting as you are trying to enjoy the journey, but it also takes vital focus off of important relationships and developments.  And because of this, it also removes the emotional weight it might have had.  There were several moments in the first Gladiator that had me in tears and then really rooting for the hero.  This one had none of that.  Maximus had a solid reason for vengeance, but here Lucius does not.  I feel as if they had a monumental story to tell, but just couldn’t find the proper way to tell it.  By the end, they manage to get it all out, but not in a way that equals the legacy left by the first.  B-

Popcorn Perspectives with Danny Minton – Week of November 11, 2024

Popcorn Perspectives with Danny Minton

Week of November 11, 2024

Heretic

Rated R for some bloody violence

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 92%

In Theaters

Two young Mormon missionaries (Sophie Thatcher and Chloe East) make a stop at the home of an older gentleman (Hugh Grant) in the hopes of converting him to Mormonism.  Things start out innocent enough as they begin to have a riveting discussion about religion, but as the conversation moves forward, they become aware that they are not safe, and in fact snared, with no way of getting out a message to the outside world.  Nicely enough, he tries to convince them that their faith, and all faiths for that matter, are wrong, and that he can introduce them to the only faith that is real.  From the trailer, you are more than fully aware that this is a horror film and one that looks extremely creepy.  What you are not aware of is how intellectually challenging the movie is.  Much of this is due to Hugh Grant really getting into the role and while doing so, turning in one the best performances of his career.  He is wickedly funny and while maybe I should have been frightened, I found myself instead completely engaged.  But if this were a one-sided equation, the frights wouldn’t be that effective.  So thankfully the girls provide for thrilling game of chess, with their lives on the line.  They know they are in danger, but they are convinced that there is a way out of the mouse trap.  Definitely not for everyone, the film could be a tough watch for those who are weak in their own faith, and some might feel very much caught in the puzzle, along with the girls.  But for me, this is a true thinking-person’s horror film that is more exhilarating than scary.  A-

Anora

Rated R for graphic nudity, drug use, pervasive language and strong sexual content

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 97%

In Theaters

If you follow the website Goldderby.com, which tracks the awards odds for films, this project tops the lists as the favorite to win this year’s Oscars for best picture and best actress.  The story follows an exotic dancer and escort (Mikey Madison) who finds herself becoming friends with a young and very rich kid (Mark Eydelshteyn), who happens to be the son of a Russian billionaire.  While he is paying for his plentiful amount of time with her, the two begin to hit it off, and in an impulse, they decide to marry in a Vegas chapel.  But when his handlers, and subsequently his parents, discover the marriage, they step in to try to end it.  I don’t want to give off spoilers here, so if that makes you nervous, you should quit reading.  But after seeing the trailer, and throughout the first act of the movie, I was convinced that there would be some extreme violence occurring, given the perception of Russian mafia presence.  So I was completely surprised that this film never treads those waters, but instead delivers one hell of an ambitious dark comedy with huge laughs, although accomplished in an authentic manner.  Since I didn’t know a soul in the film, it comes across as real.  Maybe not documentary real – but genuine nonetheless.  Winning this year’s prestigious Palme d’Or at the Cannes film festival, this film is an audacious and thrilling tale, for the right audience.  Pay strict attention to the rating here.  If this one does win the Oscar, you probably won’t want to throw a family Oscar party as it is one of the most sexually adventurous films in recent memory.  But once again, writer/director Sean Baker churns out a remarkable piece of filmmaking that solidifies his reputation in Hollywood.  A

Popcorn Perspectives with Danny Minton – Week of October 28, 2024

Popcorn Perspectives with Danny Minton

Week of October 28, 2024

Emilia Pérez

Rated R for some violent content, sexual material and language

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 85%

In Select Theaters Now and Streaming on Netflix on November 13

From the brilliant mind of French auteur Jacques Audiard (A Prophet) comes this audacious musical which follows a young defense attorney in Mexico City (Zoe Saldana) whose success catches the attention of a cartel leader (Karla Sofia Gascon) who wishes to hire her to help him fake his death so that so that he can leave the criminal world and live his most authentic life.  But that loss comes with baggage in the form of his wife he must leave behind (Selena Gomez).  There’s a lot more to the story than this and if you don’t try to find out more, you will appreciate it, as you want to be surprised here.  The film is absolutely bonkers, but in a good way.  The true storyline is crazy yet extremely creative and it is pulled off with precision from an amazing international production team.  Because the musical numbers are largely in Spanish, it won’t be one most of us will leave the theater humming, but they are still effective and the choreography is both fascinating and fantastic.  With so many of these elements of this film working so well, the glue that makes it all stick are the amazing performances by its leading ladies.  At Cannes this year, they gave the best actress award to not one actress, but to the ensemble.  This has never happened before, but it is telling for how powerful these women are together.  The actresses work as one to weave a phenomenal tale where you never know what will happen next and frankly, you don’t try to guess because you are so intrigued by the journey.  It is scary, moving, weird, emotional, sad, and uplifting, putting you in so many different moods in so many different moments.  Will some folks find it to be a little too much for them?  Of course they will.  Especially considering today’s political climate and the vitriol being spewed by a large segment of the population.  But it doesn’t make this film any less important, and it will be that much more impactful when awards are being discussed about what could become a very controversial film.  But for now, I must just recommend that you go into it as empty as you can and take your open mind with you.  It will thank you later.  A

Popcorn Perspectives with Danny Minton – Week of October 7, 2024

Popcorn Perspectives with Danny Minton

Week of October 7, 2024

The Apprentice

Rated R for sexual assault, language, drug use, sexual content, and some graphic nudity

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 79%

In Theaters

Perhaps the most controversial film of the year is this biopic that explores the early years of Donald Trump and how his real estate career started.  Trump, played here by Sebastian Stan (Captain America: The Winter Soldier) begins as a slum lord, but he aspires to build grand hotels in the hopes of becoming rich.  But he is in a lot of hot water due to not renting his current properties to African Americans.  For “The Apprentice” part, in comes attorney Roy Cohn, played here by Jeremy Strong (Succession), who takes young Trump under his wings to teach him how to be successful, even if he must cheat to do so.  Especially if he must cheat to do so.  While the narrative focuses mainly on Trump’s exploits (which are mostly very-well documented), it tries to make it all relevant to this key relationship in Trump’s life.  The movie starts out showing a young and impressionable man without a moral compass who needs a mentor, only to find his path through another man who has succeeded without a moral compass, thusly creating an even worse monster.  For most who watch this film, the revelations will come as no surprise, as almost nothing he does on screen is worse than what he has publicly said or done in the last decade.  The most unsettling scene shows Trump violently raping his then wife, Ivana (Maria Bakalova), which came from a story in her autobiography, only to be dismissed as a misunderstanding by her later. It needs to be said that this film, while heavily researched with an intention of laying out what could have happened, is still a work of fiction.  But with the factual events serving as its base, it is a fascinating look behind the curtain of how Trump could have become Trump.  It is also a great showcase for its main cast as Stan, Strong and Bakalova all turn in strong and thoughtful performances that aren’t merely impersonations, but rather realistic personifications of these infamous individuals.  The film will obviously be very polarizing, as it does not paint the former president in a positive light.  But as a very large percentage of Americans, and the world, already dismiss the man as a vile and horrific human being, this project’s true goal, and success, is to serve as more of a villain origin story.  A-

Joker: Folie a Deux

Rated R for language throughout, brief full nudity, some sexuality and some strong violence

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 33%

In Theaters

Taking place after the events of Todd Phillips’s 2019 Joker film, Arthur Fleck (Joaquin Phoenix) is in prison for the multiple murders he committed.  While there, he chums up with a new lady friend named Harley Quinn (Lady Gaga) in a choir class meant to rehabilitate prisoners through music.  As their relationship intensifies, Flick is going through his murder trial, which turns into more of a circus than a hearing.  And all of this is done with musical numbers interlaced throughout.  Since this review is coming out the week after opening, it is likely that most of you have heard that it this film is quite the stinker.  It was a bad sign that that they screened it for the majority of press on the day before it opened, hoping that most of us would miss our publication deadlines.  But honestly, after seeing it, I’m surprised they screened it at all.  Phoenix, who won the Oscar for Joker, is much like his former character, so I can’t complain much about the acting.  What I can complain about is the misuse of the actors.  There are some powerhouse players here, with Phoenix, Lady Gaga, Brandon Gleeson, Catherine Keener and Steve Coogan, all of whom make the most of the script – but the script is torture.  This is a two-and-a-half-hour-long court drama that doesn’t care that the audience will most likely hate it.  It almost dares the audience to watch it.  I’m not sure if Phillips was purposefully trying to give Warner Brothers a bomb or if this was just a misfire.  But it feels like the disaster is intentional.  I also hated the first film due to how dangerous I thought it could be if watched by the wrong audience, due to its destructive and violent nature.  I hated this one for very different reasons.  The film is boring, and the musical numbers are atrocious.  It’s like they tried to emulate Chicago but just couldn’t find a way to make it work.  Like maybe it was a great idea when they were all drunk or high, but sobriety should have corrected the miscalculation.  Any way you look at it, the film is a dumpster fire and will be the butt of many jokes for years to come.  And with it hot on the heels of another major awful theatrical entry, Megalopolis, it should be a fun race to watch for the Golden Raspberry Awards, celebrating the worst of the year’s cinema.  F

Popcorn Perspectives with Danny Minton – Week of September 30, 2024

Popcorn Perspectives with Danny Minton

Week of September 30, 2024

Monster Summer 

Rated PG-13 for some violence and terror

In Theaters

Just in time for Halloween comes this creepy teen thriller about a teenage budding reporter (Mason Thames of The Black Phone) in a small New England town who tries to investigate the weird behavior of some of the kids in the area after they experience an exposure to a supernatural force.  When he becomes friends with a retired cop (Mel Gibson), the two team up to try to uncover what is happening in their town.  When I was a kid, there were tons of these kinds of original younger-skewing scary movies, like Something Wicked This Way Comes and Escape to Witch Mountain.  Watching them now won’t exactly make the hair stand up on your arms, but when you’re a kid, you are scared to death.  Recently we’ve had some decent fare like Goosebumps, and some not some decent examples, such as last year’s Haunted Mansion.  I have to admire when someone takes an original story like this and goes for it.  The story might be geared for kids, but it at least it delivers some light scares from some decent actors and fresh young talent.  And while it might be a B movie, it doesn’t feel like it at all.  Gibson’s presence definitely gives the film some credibility (and watchability) and he doesn’t simply phone in his role here as you would expect.  Even Kevin James and Lorraine Bracco try to breathe life into parts that could have been played by anyone.  In the end, you get a decent enough family-friendly horror film with zero bad language and nothing that should give the kids lasting nightmares. It’s nothing special, but not horrible either.  B- 

Popcorn Perspectives with Danny Minton – Week of September 23, 2024

Popcorn Perspectives with Danny Minton

Week of September 23, 2024

The Wild Robot

Rated PG for thematic elements and action/peril

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 98%

In Theaters

From writer/director Chris Sanders and executive producer Dean DeBlois (the team behind Lilo & Stitch and How to Train Your Dragon), comes this unique and creative story about a robot that finds itself stuck in a remote forest island after its shipping container crashes ashore.  Using her processing ability to learn to communicate with the local animals, she still finds herself to be more of a threat than a friend.  But when she discovers a lone goose egg, the gosling imprints on her as her mother, giving her a new objective to teach the baby to eat, swim and fly in time for his species’ annual migration.  There is so much to love about this film, but first and foremost is the amazing story, full of surprises and wonderment.  The tale is a surreal journey full of love, tears, and laughter, much of it being on the darker side, which should have most audiences rolling.  And while the story is sweet – it’s not too sweet.  It manages to show its heart while not shying away from the destructive properties of both nature and mankind.  The animation itself is like moving art and a far cry from modern animated fare.  It reminded me of a much more advanced version of 2008’s Bolt, which gave us an animated aesthetic rarely seen in today’s features.  However they created this look, it was a real joy to take in.  There’s honestly so much to love about this film and I hope it finds a way to connect to audiences. A

Rebel Ridge

Rated TV-MA

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 96%

Streaming on Netflix

A young man (Aaron Pierre) is traveling through small-town America when a pair of local cops step on his rights and steal his money, which was meant to bail out his cousin who was arrested for a minor marijuana possession charge.  All he wants is his money back so he can bail out his cousin, but the corrupt police chief (played by Don Johnson) won’t budge and threatens his life if he proceeds to try to get his way.  Little do they know that the young man is a military hand-to-hand combat specialist with the skills to win against the corrupt officers.  This film has crappy little B movie written all over it, as the elements are all there to deliver a predictable and uninteresting action flick.  But you quickly get the sense that that is not the case, mostly due to the fantastic performance by Pierre, which turns out to be unexpectedly refreshing.  The script is also surprisingly intelligent as it goes deep into the police department’s scam, leaving few plot holes as to its basis in reality.  The film comes off feeling authentic, like it is exposing a system rather than exploiting an audience’s opinions on systemic racism amongst law enforcement.  I went in thinking I would be bored and walked away impressed.  B+

Popcorn Perspectives with Danny Minton – Week of September 9, 2024

Popcorn Perspectives with Danny Minton

Week of September 9, 2024

Speak No Evil

Rated R for some strong violence, language, some sexual content and brief drug use

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 86% at time of writing

In Theaters

This remake of the Danish film by the same name finds two young families becoming friendly while they are vacationing in Tuscany and promising to meet up again sometime in the near future.  Getting an invite at just the right time, the American family living in London decides to visit the other family’s rural country home.  Once there, things appear odd and explanations for the oddity don’t make a lot of sense, but the American couple try not to be rude house guests and keep their unhappiness with the “vacation” as hidden as possible.  But as the awkwardness becomes unsustainable, the visitors begin to learn that they are not welcome to leave.  Personally, I wasn’t even aware of the original until I heard a couple talking about it in the theater before the film.  Apparently, it has quite the following and is considered by many to be a modern horror masterpiece.  I’m actually kind of glad I didn’t see that one (yet) because I walked out of the theater very happy and many in the theater were very much the opposite.  As a person who makes vacation friends, the plot immediately captured my imagination and I found the story to be extremely relatable.  While the I found the American wife (Mackenzie Davis) to be a little annoying, I went along with it assuming that was the point, which it was.  I felt horrible for the husband (Scoot McNairy), feeling empathy for how weak he was and how helpless he felt as a husband and a houseguest.  What stirs things up is how good James McAvoy is as the host.  You immediately get a scary sense of chaos out of him, and you know from the start that something bad is destined to happen.  His wife (Aisling Franciosi) also makes for a terrific villain as she is so convincingly calm and friendly on the outside, that you can hardly tell that a demon lies within.  This dynamic plays out so nicely and you can’t help but get goosebumps as the film moves into the dangerous third act.  I do wish that the film hadn’t laid out so much information in the trailer, as there were some key sequences I was already aware of, and I had too good of an idea about the plot before seeing it unfold.  But there were still surprises to be had and I consider this to be one of the scarier movies I’ve seen in the last decade.  A-

Popcorn Perspectives with Danny Minton – Week of September 2, 2024

Popcorn Perspectives with Danny Minton

Week of September 2, 2024

Beetlejuice Beetlejuice

Rated PG-13 for macabre and bloody images, brief drug use, some suggestive material, strong language and violent content

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 81%

In Theaters

It has been over 35 years since the original Beetlejuice introduced himself to us, although that movie was so iconic that it has never really left us, and even recently resurged with an impressive Broadway musical version.  So now young Lydia (Wynona Rider) is a mother with a dead husband and a daughter of her own (Jenna Ortega) who is not overly fond of her or her new fiancé (Justin Theroux).  When a dismembered body in the afterlife comes back together in the form of a stapled-up beauty (Monica Belluci) and starts killing ghosts, her former husband Beetlejuice (Michael Keaton) desperately begins to try to reach back out to Lydia to attempt to force her to help him figure out a way to stop his wife from seeking her revenge against him.  As you can tell from this loose plot description, there is a lot going on here and not much of it is fully realized.  What works is the nostalgia for the first film and how good Michael Keaton is as the chaotic demon.  Also interesting is Catherine O’Hara as the dimwit mother in law and her antics.  Unfortunately, a lot of the film feels like half-way thought out antics that just never come to life.  And much of the payoff you are just waiting for simply doesn’t happen.  The daughter’s boyfriend fizzles.  Beetlejuice’s wife fizzles.  By the end, much of the subplots just disappear into thin air.  The characters are fun, as are the actors playing them, but I wish they put as much effort into storytelling here as they did production.  That being said, the production is solidly creative, both on Earth and in the Afterlife.  I also loved Danny Elfman’s score, especially since he hasn’t been very active as of late.  But honestly, Tim Burton seems to be a little off here.  Like he’s basically saying “you want another Beetlejuice?  I’ll give you another Beetlejuice,” as he opens his notebook and throws out a bunch of ideas with no bearing.  I have to admit, I wasn’t a huge fan of the original as I thought it was too short and didn’t have enough meat on the bone.  So I guess I got a little more of the same here.  C+

Popcorn Perspectives with Danny Minton – Week of August 19, 2024

Popcorn Perspectives by Danny Minton

Week of August 19, 2024

Blink Twice

Rated R for sexual assault, language throughout, drug use, some sexual references and strong violent content

Rotten Tomatoes Score: 79%

In Theaters

Making her directorial debut is Zoe Kravitz with this twisted thriller about a poor waitress (Naomi Ackie) who decides to follow a reclusive billionaire (Channing Tatum) to his private island home, where no cell phones are allowed and an eclectic group of men and women are along for the ride.  Upon arriving, it seems like pure paradise with a beautiful locale, great food and wine, and even some seemingly harmless recreational drugs.  But then clues start to surface that all is not right with the situation.  I wasn’t quite sure what to think about this one from the trailer.  It definitely looks like it might have a violent spin and that things might be a little messed up.  But I would have never guessed the reality of the story, which makes it very interesting and uncomfortable.  I would say fun, but it is so disturbing that that would be a poor description of the events of this film.  From the very beginning, the movie feels like a Jordan Peele adventure, where the movie isn’t actually about what the story is about.  And there are many clues that this is the case.  I can imagine a number of different explanations for the symbolism, and I really hope this is the best explanation.  The cast here is solid, especially amongst the men, with Channing Tatum, Christian Slater, Simon Rex, Kyle McLachlan and Haley Joel Osment.  The females are less well known, but Ackie is really good as the heroine on the hunt to figure things out and Geena Davis turns in a surprising performance as one of the billionaire’s assistants.  I’m sure the plot twist will get out pretty quickly, and when it does, I wonder who the audience will be.  It really doesn’t make for a good date movie and I don’t see a lot guys going to see it by themselves either, just for fear of looking and feeling creepy.  Just from its very nature, it might not have much of a box office, but then I can see it getting views once it hits streaming.  But that doesn’t mean it’s not a good film.  It’s just incredibly deranged and will make any viewer feel rather unbearable at moments.  B