Sunday, September 23, 2018

"A Simple Favor" and The Week in Reviews

I am back!  Hope you missed me.  I have been in moving hell for the last month and even the movies couldn't save me.  But now I am back in the saddle, or should I say, theatre seat and ready to save you from seeing some bad movies.

But this week, it's all mostly good...

[I review "A Simple Favor" as well as DVDs "Hereditary" and "Tag."  The Book of the Week is "Small Space Organizing" by Kathryn Bechen where I share my own personal story of downsizing and how I ended up making this big move. I also bring you up-to-date with "My 1001 Movies I Must See Before I Die Project" with "Spring in a Small Town."]




A Simple Favor


Nerdy Mommy vlogger Stephanie Smothers (Ann Kendrick) forms an unlikely friendship with sophisticated tell-it-like-it-is Emily (Blake Lively) and then Emily mysteriously disappears.

You couldn't really tell from the trailer whether this was a comedy or a "Gone Girl" kind of thriller. Well, turns out it's actually both.

This is an original take on the missing person story and, through one of the plot twists, pays homage to "Diabolique," the 1955 French film.  And in case you didn't get it, perky French music plays throughout. The film is also a satire on motherhood and a love letter to strong women.

Stephanie is a widow living in Connecticut with her young son, Miles (Joshua Satine), a first grader.  She is also a stay-at-home Mom who tries to be the perfect Mom.  She volunteers for everything at Miles' school much to the chagrin of the other Moms and Dads.  She also has a vlog where she pitches food and tips to other Moms.  Her son is friends with Nicky (Ian Ho), another first grader, whose Mom is the beautiful and elusive Emily, and one day Stephanie and Emily meet at school. Nicky begs Emily to let him invite Miles over for a play date. Emily is a working Mom, married to the handsome Sean (Henry Golding), and she is clearly not on the Perfect Mommy track but reluctantly agrees and Stephanie and Emily bond over strong martinis at Emily's opulent home with sophisticated French music playing in the background.  Emily is one of those women who is brutally honest and doesn't allow any BS.  Stephanie on the other hand is insecure and an overachiever who constantly apologizes for herself.  She is also clearly in awe of Emily who unlike Stephanie never apologizes for herself and in fact tells Stephanie to never say she is sorry for anything.

One day Emily asks Stephanie for "a simple favor," to pick up Nicky from school which she happily does, but then one day turns into two days and it becomes clear to Stephanie that Emily is missing.  Stephanie adds the mystery of Emily's disappearance to her vlog and also joins forces with Emily's husband, Sean.  But it's not long before Emily's body is found in a lake in Michigan.  What was she doing in Michigan?  And it's not long before Stephanie and Sean get it on.  Where the heck is that going to go?  And it's not long before Nicky says he has seen his Mom and she told him to say hello to Stephanie.  And then Stephanie gets a call from Emily.  Huh?

It didn't take me long to figure out one of the main plot twists but then it just got twistier and twistier.  And did I say it's also very funny?

And it's no wonder there is humor because the film is directed by Paul Feig who is also responsible for those funny Melissa McCarthy movies "Spy," "The Heat," and "Bridesmaids."  Adapted for the screen by Jessica Sharzer from Darcey Bell's novel, the humor is unexpected because this is a thriller.  And the humor also deflects from the fact that the plot goes way over the top at the end but you don't care because you've had such a great time watching Kendrick, Lively and Golding go through their paces.

I have never been a big Anna Kendrick fan.  I always found her to be kind of twitchy, her singing voice very nasal and she had too many annoying mannerisms.  But she is very good here and just perfect for the twitchy, overachieving Stephanie who becomes an amateur detective to solve the mystery of Emily's disappearance.  And Blake Lively is well-named.  She is indeed particularly lively here and I have to say she is one beautiful woman and a good actress. And Henry Golding is hot off his success in "Crazy Rich Asians."  Hard to believe this guy had never acted a day in his life and was discovered while being a presenter on a British travel TV show.  All three form an impressive acting ensemble.

Rosy the Reviewer says...think "Gone Girl," but with a sense of humor.



***Some Movies You Might Have Missed***
(And Some You Will Be Glad You Did)!




On DVD

Hereditary (2018)


After the family matriarch passes away, dark family secrets come to light.

And for this one you couldn't tell from the trailer if it was a horror film or something else.  It's kind of something else, but not in a good way.

Toni Colette rose to fame in "Muriel's Wedding," a bit of froth that gave a larger girl some real heft.  Then she lost a bunch of weight and went on to a career playing varied parts including recurring roles on the TV series "Wanderlust" and "Unbelievable."  She seems to specialize now in warm caring roles such as the one she played in the quirky but touching "Please Stand By."  But here she does a 180, playing the hysterical mother of a teenage son and a thirteen-year-old girl.

Ellen Taper Leigh dies at 78.  The film begins with her obituary and funeral and it becomes apparent that Ellen wasn't an easy woman and that she cast quite a shadow over her family.  Toni plays her daughter, Anne, who doesn't quite know how to grieve for her mother because of their complicated relationship.  Anne is married to Steve (Gabriel Byrne) and has a teenage son, Peter (Alex Wolff), and daughter, Charlie (Millie Shapiro).  She also has kind of a creepy job.  She is an artist who designs miniature dolls and dollhouses and appears to recreate her own family's life with them.

Peter is your typical teenage boy, obsessed with girls, sex, drinking and pot.  Charlie, on the other hand is, how shall I say this?  She is not only allergic to nuts and has this habit of clicking her tongue on the top of her mouth but she is also - creepy.   Let's just say I don't think it's normal to cut off the head of a dead bird and put it in your pocket.  Get what I mean?

Anyway, it takes about an hour of loud, ominous music before anything much happens but then Peter is forced to take Charlie to a party with him where he smokes pot.  She eats some cake that must have had nuts in it while Peter is up in a bedroom smoking pot and when Charlie complains that she can't breathe Peter rushes her out to the car and presumably to the hospital and then something truly gruesome happens.

Anne meets Joan (Ann Dowd, playing a much nicer person than she does in "A Handmaid's Tale") who has lost a child.  She is into seances to stay in touch with her dead son and impresses Anne when she contacts him.  She tells Anne she needs to hold a seance with her family and gives her the incantation.

So now we are off and running.

Turns out our matriarch Ellen not only cast a big shadow over her family she was up to some witchy shenanigans.

Written and directed by Ari Aster, this film is not so much a horror film as a really, really strange movie inhabited by really, really strange people.  Gabriel Byrne doesn't really have much to do except get immolated, the little girl is dispatched with early on, which was a good thing because she gave me the creeps, and, Toni, can I give you some advice?  Stick to the caring friend or girlfriend roles where you can do what you do best which is show your warmth.  You don't do hysterical that well. In this film, she runs around throughout the film shrieking and crying and begging her husband to listen to her. It's not a pretty sight. But the story really centers around Peter and Wolff does a good job. I just wish the movie had been better.

The film was shot in digital which I absolutely hate.  Films in digital look like old TV soap operas.  And speaking of soap operas, this was a sort of one if you liked "Dark Shadows."

Rosy the Reviewer says...Toni, I like you better when you do that warmth thing you do.  Get back to that.





Tag (2018)


A group of guys spend the month of May playing tag and go to great lengths to avoid being "It."  Oh, and did I mention that this is based on a true story and real life adult guys actually did this?

There is nothing I dislike more than comedies with all male casts unless it's comedies with all male casts that aren't funny.   But I am here to report that this film is actually kind of fun and kind of funny.

Hoagie (Ed Helms), Sable (Hannibal Buress), Bob (John Hamm), Chilli (Jake Johnson) and Jerry (Jeremy Renner) are all childhood friends who have kept in touch for 30 years by playing a game of tag every May.

"We don't stop playing because we grow old.  We grow old because we stop playing."

Okay. And they all go to great lengths to tag each other, hence the humor this film is going for.  For example, Hoagie, who is a veterinarian, gets a job as a janitor at Bob's company just so he could sneak up on Bob and tag him. But it's Jerry who has reigned supreme as the only member of the group who has never been tagged. He has had an uncanny ability to avoid every situation where he could be tagged.  But now he's getting married and he wants to retire from the game.

"He's the best who ever played and now he wants to retire with a perfect record."

Oh, no he doesn't. The four decide that they have to tag Jerry just once and what better place to tag him than at his wedding? I mean, he can't exactly run out of his own wedding, can he?  Well, we will see about that.

And actually there are some women in the film. The guys are followed around by Rebecca (Annabelle Wallis), a reporter from the Wall Street Journal, who has been looking for a story to spark her career and when she hears about this group of guys who play tag every year together, she knows she has a story.  And then there's Anna (Isla Fisher), Hoagie's wife, who is almost more into the game than the guys.

It's all dumb fun and games as the four (plus Anna) band together to break Jerry's perfect record. 

Based on a Wall Street Journal article by Russell Adams called "It Takes Planning, Caution to Avoid Being It," adapted for the screen by Rob McKittrick and Mark Steilen and directed by Jeff Tomsic, the film is a bit of fluff but also makes a possibly unintentional statement about male friendships.  Yes, these guys have stuck together every year for their game of tag, but how much meaningful time did they actually spend with each other outside of the game?  Mmmm.

If you stay for the credits you will see the real guys (ten of them, not five) who played this game together for 23 years.

Rosy the Reviewer says...if you need an escape, this is a dumb but fun little romp that won't do you any harm unless there was something important you were supposed to do.






***My 1001 Movies I Must See Before I Die Project***


126 to go!

Have YOU seen this classic film?





Spring in a Small Town (1948)


A bored and lonely housewife is swept off her feet when her childhood sweetheart comes to visit.

Narrated by Zhou Yuwen (Wei Wei), the wife, we quickly learn that she is unhappy in her marriage to Dai Liyan (Yu Shi).  They hardly speak each day and he is suffering from an ailment, though Zhou thinks it's all in his head.

"I don't have the courage to die and he lacks the courage to live."

Downer.

Liyan hangs out in his garden and broods.  His little sister (Hongmei Zhang) lives with them and her exuberance and charm is in direct contrast to Liyan's dour personality and Yuwen's depression.

The film takes place in postwar China after it had been brought to its knees by the Japanese and Liyan feels like a failure since the war.

Into this sadness comes Zhang Zhichen (Wei Li), a friend of Liyan's who also turns out to have been Yuwen's neighbor and first love.  Zhichen didn't know she had married Liyan.  Zhichen is a doctor and tends to his friend, Liyan, but he also looks yearningly at Yuwen and vice versa. In fact there are lots and lots of longing looks and many regrets and not much else.  Yuwen confesses that she has never loved Liyan and always been in love with Zhichen and things become even more complicated when Liyan tries to fix Zhichen up with Little Sister.

But when Liyan figures out what is going on and overdoses himself on his medicine, there is a moment when Zhichen and Yuwen think that perhaps letting him die would leave things open for them but feelings change and they realize that they can't let him die.

Directed by Mu Fei, a Chinese director from the pre-Communist era, this is a poignant story of a marriage and unrequited love that was declared by the Hong Kong Film Critics Society as the greatest Chinese film ever made and it still holds up today because there are some human feelings and experiences that transcend time and place.

Why it's a Must See: "This masterpiece of Chinese cinema has only recently received the worldwide recognition it deserves, influencing Wong Kar-Wai's In the Mood for Love (2001) and occasioning a respectful remake (2002).  [This film] stands among cinema's finest, richest, and most moving melodramas."
---"1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die"

Rosy the Reviewer says... a mesmerizing tale that did remind me of "In the Mood for Love." Sadly the only place I could find the film was on Amazon Prime and the film quality was poor which didn't make for a particularly satisfying film experience.
(b & w, in Chinese with English subtitles)





***Book of the Week***




Small Space Organizing: A Room-By-Room Guide to Maximizing Your Space by Kathryn Bechen (2012)



Who said, "We don't all get to live in large homes?"  I just did.

Why am I reviewing this book? Well, you may or may not know this and you may or may not have missed this blog, but I have been in moving hell for the last six weeks and that's why I didn't publish anything last week and why I am publishing late this week.

We have just moved 1000 miles away from where we had lived for 14 years.  

We have moved back to where we had lived for 30 years before that move 14 years ago and where we raised our family.  When we moved 14 years ago, our kids were grown with lives of their own and there were no grandchildren. We were also 14 years younger.  But now we are older and there are grandchildren.  We wanted to downsize and be closer to family to make it easier on everyone, so now here we are, down from a 2300 square foot nine room house to a less than 1500 square foot town home with five rooms and a kitchen that is about the size of a closet.

Speaking of kitchens, I have this strange pattern of remodeling a kitchen and then moving.  I did that 14 years ago and I did it again this year.  Since we need to remodel our kitchen in our new home, I'm worried what will happen after that!

So how did I find myself here, in a smaller house trying to get ideas on how to organize a small space?

Well, here's my story.

A couple of years ago I confessed to my son that my life hadn't turned out the way I had wanted it to, mostly regretting that I had moved away from my family.  I was really fishing for my son to say "Come live here," but that didn't happen.  Our daughter lives across country so I fished a bit more and said something like, "Well, what if I moved closer to your sister?"  He didn't take the bait but what he did say was that I needed to move into town (we lived in the suburbs where we couldn't walk to anything) so I could walk to a Starbucks.  He seemed to think that all of the friends I needed to make were hanging out at the Starbucks.  But that remark did make me think that part of my troubles were caused by the fact that I couldn't walk to anything so when I went back home I announced to Hubby that we needed to move into town.  So we started looking but it became painfully clear that moving into town was out of our price range and we didn't see anything we really liked anyway. 

So then I said, OK, we will stay here but I need a new kitchen.  So a new kitchen it was (I documented that painful experience in "My New Kitchen, or How I Survived a Kitchen Remodel...").

Did that solve the problem?  No.  There I was in my new kitchen and I wasn't happy.  I missed my family and my old friends so I told Hubby I wanted to move back "home" where we had lived for 30 years and where we had history.

Did I mention that Hubby was amazingly understanding?  He did sigh a lot, though.

But moving back "home" was not an easy thing.  Moving itself is a horror story but trying to go back to a place where we thought we could never return because of the high home prices is its own horror story but we did it.

And that's how we ended up in a smaller place.

So that brings you up to date and we will finally get to the review of this book.

Bechen has put together a nice little book to help anyone who needs to downsize.  There are chapters on the art of downsizing and even on how to live in just one room.  Fortunately, I haven't had to go there yet!  Bechen addresses how to decide if your rooms are functioning at their best with chapters on making the most of your foyer, how to organize your kitchen, dealing with small bathrooms, crafts and hobby equipment, laundry rooms, beverage bars, storage and more all while not giving up on style. 

Rosy the Reviewer says...a small book to help you deal with small spaces.


Thanks for reading!


See you next Friday 

for

"The Wife"

and

 The Week in Reviews
(What to See or Read and What to Avoid)

and the latest on

"My 1001 Movies I Must See Before 


I Die Project." 






If you enjoyed this post, feel free to copy and paste or click on the share buttons to share it on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest and LinkedIn, email it to your friends and LIKE me on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/rosythereviewer

Check your local library for DVDs and books mentioned.

Next time you are wondering whether or not to watch a particular film, check out my reviews on IMDB (The International Movie Database). 


Go to IMDB.com, find the movie you are interested in.  Scroll down below the synopsis and the listings for the director, writer and main stars to where it says "Reviews" and click on "Critics" - If I have reviewed that film, you will find Rosy the Reviewer alphabetically on the list.


Friday, September 7, 2018

"Searching" and The Week in Reviews

[I review the thriller "Searching" as well as DVDs "Show Dogs" and "2:22."  I also bring you up-to-date with "My 1001 Movies I Must See Before I Die Project" with "The Docks of New York."]



Searching


After a young girl goes missing, her father uses social media and the Internet to find her.

And not only does the father use social media and the Internet, so does this film.  In fact, this film is brilliant and original and totally of the moment in its exclusive use of technology to tell the story.  From FaceTime to texting to YouTube, the audience is privy to the private world of this father and daughter as his search for her plays out solely on the computer screen in real time.  

Exposition is always difficult to deal with in films without narration or someone telling the story, but here, through pictures and videos on a computer, as well as emails and texts, we learn about Pam (Sara Sohn) and David's (Jon Cho) early marriage and the birth of their daughter, Margot (Michelle La);we see each of Margot's milestones as she grew; Pam teaching Margot to play the piano and then we learn that Pam had cancer and died.  In only a few minutes we are brought up to date.  

Margot is now a teenager and she and David are on their own living in San Jose, California, the technology capital of the world, a fitting location for this film, and both father and daughter are dealing with the loss of Pam in their own way. Now it's the present day, an ordinary day, with David FaceTiming Margot reminding her that she didn't take out the garbage again. Margot tells him she is pulling an all-nighter with her biology study group. But when David wakes up the next morning, he discovers that Margot had called him three times during the night, but he had slept through the calls and, through the course of the day, he slowly realizes that Margot had not come home last night and that she is missing.

Thus begins a harrowing and literal search on David's part.  

He joins forces with Detective Rosemary Vick (Debra Messing) and the two try to find Margot with the search unfolding via the Internet, videos, emails, texts and Facebook.  We see how David is able to get into Margot's laptop, checks her Facebook account and contacts her friends. 

All of this plays out with a sense of growing urgency as David discovers some disturbing information about Margot's life.  He realizes he didn't know his daughter at all.  After a couple of red herrings, we eventually discover what happened to Margot.

After seeing Jon Cho's performance in this taut thriller, it's hard to believe he was ever one half of that silly but funny duo in the Harold and Kumar comedies.  There are moments of over-acting but in general he pulls it off.  Debra Messing seemed stiff to me but it's good to see her in a dramatic role but it's Michelle La in her feature film debut who is certainly a young actress to watch.

Written by Aneesh Chaganty and Sev Ohanian and directed by Chaganty, I also couldn't help but feel good seeing yet another film about an Asian family on the heels of "Crazy Rich Asians."  We need more mainstream films like this to be commonplace and represent our world's diversity. 

And of course, this film makes a strong statement about what a huge role technology now plays in all of our lives, and though we can easily communicate with each other on our phones and sitting at our computers and have what seem like intimate encounters with people, living behind our computer screens may actually be isolating us from each other.

Rosy the Reviewer says...this is a fast-paced and original thriller not to be missed.



***Some Movies You Might Have Missed***
(And Some You Will Be Glad You Did)!


On DVD




Show Dogs (2018)


Max, a Rottweiler police dog, goes undercover at a dog show to find some bad guys.

I actually thought I would really like this film.  I mean, I love dogs (these are real dogs in the movie, not animated ones) and talking dogs are funny, right? And people obsessed with showing dogs can also be funny, right?  Remember Christopher Guest's "Best in Show?" Well, sadly this is no "Best in Show."

Max (voice of Chris "Ludacris" Bridges) works for the NYPD and suspects that the dog show is a front for animal smuggling. A cuddly little panda has already gone missing so Max goes undercover at the dog show as a show dog to try to collar (sorry) the bad guys.

"How hard can dog shows be?" Max asks.

Well, Max, you will soon find out as you are made show dog ready.  Ready to have your butt waxed, Max?  The plan here is that Max will be gussied up so much that he will win the show thus becoming "The Most Valuable Dog in the World," which in turn will entice the kidnappers to kidnap him and then Max will get the bad guys.  However, Max's love interest, Daisy (voice of Jordin Sparks), wins instead so now Max needs to change course and protect her from the bad guys.

Speaking of getting Max show dog ready, there was a controversy surrounding the film when it was released when some parents complained that the movie somehow promoted unwanted touching which would be bad for the kiddies, so some scenes were cut after release. Not sure if I saw the uncut version but there certainly was a lot of licking of you know whats which I would think would also upset those sensitive parents.

Max is dogged (sorry) by Frank (Will Arnett), an FBI agent, who has an uneasy relationship with Max.  Max also joins forces with Phillippe (voice of Stanley Tucci), a world weary papillon who has won the dog show so many times he is jaded.  RuPaul also gets to promote himself as Persephone, a dog who gets to "sashay away (you have to be a fan of "RuPaul's Drag Race" to get that reference)."  In fact, it's an all-star cast of voices with all kinds of doggie references and homage paid to the films "Lady and the Tramp" and "Turner and Hooch."

Written by Max Botkin and Marc Hyman and directed by Raja Gosnell, whose earlier directorial claims to fame were "Scooby Doo" and "Beverly Hills Chihuahua," this is a live action cartoon where real live dogs run around - never seen so many dogs without leashes in my life - and talk to each other.  It's all pretty dumb. Not even sure who this film was really aimed at because I don't think little kids would get it.

Where "Best in Show" spoofed the handlers and their obsessive behavior, this film spoofs show dogs: If show dogs could talk, what would they say?

Rosy the Reviewer says...yes, I love dogs and talking dogs are funny, but overall this was kind of a mess.




2:22 (2017)


A man is haunted by ominous events that repeat themselves every day at exactly 2:22.

I fall for it every time - a trailer that looks really exciting only for me to find out the trailer has all the best bits of the film and the movie never gets any better than that. But I am such a sucker.
I see that tantalizing trailer, it looks really good so I add it to my Netflix queue and then find myself on a Saturday night watching a film that was practically indecipherable with Hubby sound asleep next to me with his mouth agape.  That's my punishment for being stupid.  I do this over and over again and never learn.  Sort of like this film which is a sort of "Ground Hog Day" for time travelers.  Or I think that's what it's about.

But never again.  As God is my witness, I will never add a film to my Netflix queue based on a trailer again!

But what's done is done, so let's get to my review so I can save you from my fate.

Dylan Branson (Michiel Huisman) is an air traffic controller who notices many patterns in life.  He also has a certain arrogance about having the power of life and death in his hands as an air traffic controller.  However, one day he screws up and almost causes a midair collision at exactly 2:22.  He is understandably freaked out by that and understandably suspended from his job.  Later, he meets Sarah (Teresa Palmer) at a ballet performance and their connection is immediate. They discover that Sarah was on one of those flights that almost crashed.


"I almost killed you."


"No, you saved me."


Awww. They also discover they have the exact same birth dates.  OK, this seems interesting. Two beautiful people falling in love with some strange stuff going on. Where is this going?  


Then we discover that their birthdays also strangely coincide with a double murder at Grand Central Station some years before and that's when I discovered where this film was going.  It went right off the cliff! 

Naturally a romance ensues between these two and we learn more about each of the two characters. Then Dylan starts noticing strange patterns repeating themselves and that damn 2:22 showing up all over the place.  The movie becomes a sort of "Groundhog Day" for time travel and space hopping and reincarnation?  Not sure.  I gave up after the first hour.

I think I was drawn to this film because of Michiel Huisman who I first noticed in "The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society. "  He is one handsome dude but even that can't save this film which is murky to say the least.


Rosy the Reviewer says...I hereby vow to never again order a DVD from Netflix based on the trailer alone. You have my word on that.  In the meantime, you can skip this film.




***My 1001 Movie I Must See Before I Die Project***


127 to go!

Have YOU seen this classic film?





The Docks of New York (1928)


When a stoker on a big ship saves a woman from suicide his life changes.

Rough and tumble stoker (those are the guys who stoked the fires on the big freighters back when they needed stoking), Bill Roberts (George Bancroft), has shore leave and is not above getting into a bit of trouble. He is described by another worker as "the most even tempered guy I ever met - always sore." But when he sees a woman jump over a dock railing into the water, he rushes to save her.  Mae (Betty Compson) is a bleach bottle blonde and world weary dance hall girl, and after he saves her life, I guess she decides suicide wasn't such a good idea after all.  The two head to a bar where they make the spur-of-the-moment decision to get married, a euphemism back in the day so that Bill can have sex with Mae.  Bill is a bit of a cad but falls hard for her, and though the love story is not without the usual boy gets girl, boy leaves girl, boy sees the error of his ways and returns to girl, it's an original take on that old cliche mostly because the actors are convincing and interesting.

Directed by Josef von Sternberg, the black and white cinematography by Harold Rosson (he also shot "The Wizard of Oz") is beautiful and evocative of the fog-shrouded docks, the set design by Hans Dreier, who later did "Sunset Boulevard," is expressionistic and the two love birds are raw and sexy.  Movies were actually quite risque in the early days of filmmaking with prostitutes, sex, drugs, one-night stands, etc. something that the Hays Code put a stop to in 1930.  After that even married people slept in twin beds!

For a silent film, this movie holds up quite well reminding me once again what movies are all about.  Little dialogue is needed to tell a story.  Moving pictures are worth a thousand words.

Why it's a Must See: "...[This] is a film of consummate economy and refinement.  The plot is minimal and the characters few, leaving more room for the film's maximal elaboration of atmosphere and gesture...The restraint and care of the performances...maintain a constant rippling well of speculation over the main characters' inner thoughts and feelings.  Sternberg...created several of the cinema's most moving testaments to the power of love..."
---"1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die"

Rosy the Reviewer says...a film from the silent era that holds up surprisingly well today.




Thanks for reading!



See you soon.


I will be taking a short break for one of life's great stresses - moving!

Will be back in a week or two!

In the meantime, check out some of my popular and archived posts over on the sidebar. 




If you enjoyed this post, feel free to copy and paste or click on the share buttons to share it on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest and LinkedIn, email it to your friends and LIKE me on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/rosythereviewer

Check your local library for DVDs and books mentioned.

Next time you are wondering whether or not to watch a particular film, check out my reviews on IMDB (The International Movie Database). 


Go to IMDB.com, find the movie you are interested in.  Scroll down below the synopsis and the listings for the director, writer and main stars to where it says "Reviews" and click on "Critics" - If I have reviewed that film, you will find Rosy the Reviewer alphabetically on the list.


Friday, August 31, 2018

"The Happytime Murders" and The Week in Reviews

[I review "The Happytime Murders" as well as DVDs "Permanent" and "Please Stand By."  The Book of the Week is "Captive: A Mother's Crusade to Save Her Daughter from a Terrifying Cult" by Catherine Oxenburg.  I also bring you up-to-date with "My 1001 Movies I Must See Before I Die Project" with "Once Upon a Time in the West."]




The Happytime Murders


When the puppet cast of a popular 80's TV show start getting murdered one by one, an ex-cop turned detective takes on the case.  He's also a puppet.

I judge a comedy on whether I laugh or not and in spite of myself I did actually laugh out loud a couple of times.  I say in spite of myself because my first choice of comedy is not necessarily one where puppets spout the F-bomb and have sex. What did make me laugh at times were the pop culture references, the "gruesome" puppet crime scenes (lots of stuffing!) and the film noir tropes that are woven into the film.

Melissa McCarthy as human detective Connie Edwards actually plays second fiddle to a puppet, Detective Phil Phillips (voice of Bill Barretta).  Edwards and Phillips were partners on the LAPD until Phil froze during a hostage standoff with a puppet bad guy and missed his shot, shooting an innocent bystander by mistake. He was accused of not being able to shoot another puppet thus making it impossible for any other puppets to become police officers.  Since then he has become a hard-boiled detective.

He is approached by sex pot puppet, Sandra (voice of Dorien Davies), who wants Phil to find out who is blackmailing her.  As he works on the case, puppets from a popular 80's TV show, "The Happytime Gang," one of which is Phil's brother, start getting killed off and Phil teams back up with his old partner, Connie, and the two try to track down the killer.

The film makes use of film noir tropes - hard boiled detective, mysterious curvy femme fatale needing a detective's help, deadpan voice-over narration, sleazy underworld and lots of smoking.  The film is also a marvel of puppetry and if you stay for the outtakes at the end, you get a feel for just what goes into creating a believable world peopled by puppets.

Phil plies his trade in a world where puppets are second-class citizens, giving the film a chance to make some timely comments about racial discrimination though it certainly could have gone further with that.  And that is what is ultimately wrong with this film.  It just doesn't have much to say.


McCarthy doesn't have much to do here either except swear at Phil but Maya Rudolph, as Phil's human secretary, is always a fun addition to a film. But what was Elizabeth Banks doing in this film? Not much as it turns out.


Written by Todd Berger and directed by Jim Henson's son Brian, don't think you are going to see Elmo or any cuddly puppets here. This is more "Avenue Q" than "Sesame Street." These are foul-mouthed puppets who drink, smoke, do drugs and have sex ejaculating Silly String all over the place, so this is decidedly not a film for the kids.

Rosy the Reviewer says...you can skip this one unless your idea of fun is puppets having swearing and having sex.





***Some Movies You Might Have Missed***
(And Some You Will Be Glad You Did!)

On DVD



Permanent (2017)



Thirteen-year-old Aurelie (Kira McLean) is having trouble fitting in a school and it doesn't help when she gets a bad permanent.

This is a comedy about teen angst and... hair.  

It's 1982. Aurelie is a young awkward who is starting at a new school and feels ugly.  When she complains to her mother, Jeanne (Patricia Arquette) that she wants to be beautiful, her mother, being the practical type, tells her that "Beautiful is a lot of work." But Aurelie thinks that having lovely soft ringlets would change her life.  She begs her mom and dad, Jim (Rainn Wilson), to get her a permanent but money is tight so instead of taking her to a salon they take her to a beauty school where her permanent turns into a huge head of curls that looks more like Barbra Streisand in "A Star is Born," than Shirley Temple.

So now she has to go to a new school with this huge head of hair which doesn't help her popularity any and she is mercilessly bullied. She makes friends with Lydia (Nena Daniels), who appears to be the only black student in the school but it's an uneasy friendship because Lydia doesn't trust anyone. She has hair issues, too, it turns out but what the film tries to do with that comes too little too late.

Aurelie's Mom and Dad are not much help either. They have their own problems. Jim used to be a flight steward for Air Force One in D.C. but has left that job and moved the family to a small town so he can go back to school.  He is unhappy to learn that part of his requirement for graduation is that he spend a certain amount of time in the pool and must show that he can swim and dive.  This is not a good thing for Jim because he wears a toupee.

Jeanne is a waitress at a Kentucky Fried Chicken type restaurant and is sexually frustrated mostly because Jim doesn't want to mess up his carefully arranged "hair."  She is obsessed with sea mammals and is happy to discover one night sounds of dolphins mating coming from the house next door.  She strikes up a friendship with the old guy next door who also turns out to be a family counselor.

When I was young getting a permanent was a rite of passage for little girls except in my case, unlike Aurelie, I wasn't the one who wanted a permanent.  It was my mother.  She thought my hair was too straight, which I guess wasn't considered a good thing in the 1950's.  That's what Shirley Temple did to us back then.  Our mothers wanted us to look like her.  But like Aurelie and many young girls, I was obsessed with my hair too, trying to make myself look like the models in "Seventeen Magazine."  Remember when the magazines would publish pictures of how to set your hair to look like the models?  I would try that, sleep on those hard plastic curlers and wake up looking more like Phyllis Diller than Twiggy.

McLean is a sweet presence in the film but, though it's mostly about her, she strangely plays second fiddle to the antics of Arquette and Wilson.

According to this movie, school is a hell hole and families are very very strange which could be true for most of us.  Sometimes you watch movies and wonder how and why a particular movie got made.  This is one of those.  Written and directed by Colette Burson, this is a very quirky indie film about very quirky people but also could be how school, families and life look to thirteen-year-old girls.  Maybe the point of this film was to make us all feel grateful that our families are not this strange. Or maybe the film was just about hair.

Rosy the Reviewer says...I didn't really like this movie or get the point, but I will give it props for not being predictable.





Please Stand By (2017)


Wendy (Dakota Fanning), a young autistic woman, runs away from her group home to L.A. to submit her manuscript for a "Star Trek" writing competition.

Yet another quirky indie film, but this one I really liked.

Autism takes on many forms and exists on a long spectrum.  Wendy's takes the form of not being able to deal with loud noises or frustrations which in turn cause her to have tantrums. Autistic people may not be what we associate with "socially normal," but their inner lives are usually rich and focused.  In Wendy's case, she is focused "Star Trek" and is writing a script with "Star Trek" characters. She lives in a group home in San Francisco and works at Cinnabon.  She has a caregiver, Scottie (Toni Collette), who reminds Wendy of her schedule each day and what she needs to remember to keep her life calm. "Please stand by" is the phrase Scottie uses when Wendy starts to lose it. Wendy really wants to live with her sister, Audrey (Alice Eve), who has a new baby but Audrey is still afraid of Wendy's rages, especially since she has a new baby, and doesn't trust that Wendy can cope living in the outside world.

Wendy is working on a 500 page script for a "Star Trek" movie and discovers that Paramount Studios is conducting a contest for the best "Star Trek" script with a prize of $100,000.  Wendy sees this as a way to leave the group home and live with her sister but the script has to reach L.A. by a certain time and mailing it won't get it there on time so she heads for L.A.  When Scottie and Audrey discover Wendy missing they are in hot pursuit.

Meanwhile, Wendy has the usual fish-out-of-water adventures that you would expect from a person who has been sheltered from the world.  She gets kicked off a bus in the middle of nowhere when her little dog, Pete, is discovered, something I don't think would really ever happen but we need to give Wendy some things to overcome.  She encounters a woman and a baby at a deserted gas station and she offers Wendy a ride but when Wendy gets back from the restroom she discovers they have stolen her money.  But later through the kindness of strangers, one of whom was Rose, an elderly lady played by a particularly lovely Marla Gibbs (good to see her again!), Wendy makes her way to L.A. 

Written by Martin Golamco (based on his play) and directed by Ben Lewin, this movie is a little gem. And you don't have to be a "Star Trek" fan to enjoy it.  Dakoka Fanning is very believable without going overboard as the autistic Wendy.  Toni Colette is also believable as her caregiver.  She has a warmth about her and comes across as someone who really cares.

There is a great scene when runaway Wendy is spotted by some L.A. cops and Officer Frank (Patton Oswalt) just happens to also be a "Star Trek" fan and speaks Klingon (as many "Star Trek" fans do, I guess) and is able to calm Wendy down thus highlighting what a good symbol "Star Trek" was for this film, especially Spock with his half human, half alien persona and his difficulty dealing with emotions.


I discovered this film through watching some trailers of other films and I don't usually recommend that method because often the trailer is the best thing about a movie. You have to kiss a lot of film frogs doing that but sometimes you get a Prince of a film like this.

Rosy the Reviewer says...as I said, a little gem of a film.




***My 1001 Movies I Must See Before I Die Project***



128 to go!

Have YOU seen this classic film?





Once Upon a Time in the West (1968)


A mysterious man with a harmonica, a notorious desperado, a ruthless assassin and a beautiful woman all add up to an amazing horse opera.

It's all about the money as, Morton (Gabriele Ferzetti), a ruthless railroad tycoon who looks eerily like "The Phantom of the Opera," employs bad guys to kill the settlers so he can expand his railroad.  At the same time Charles Bronson is the harmonica carrying "no name" character who has his own mission: revenge. As the film progresses we discover the meaning of the harmonica and why he wants revenge. Jill (Claudia Cardinale), a prostitute with a heart of gold, has arrived in town to meet her new husband, Brett McBain (Frank Wolff) and his family.  They met when Brett was in New Orleans.  She arrives only to discover that Brett and his children have been cold-bloodedly killed by Frank (Henry Fonda), the assassin employed by Morton.  However, Jill's arrival is something Morton didn't count on.  Now he has to try to figure out how to get the land from Jill. 

Henry Fonda is uncharacteristically the bad guy here, which was kind of fun. He is so bad he shoots little kids.  He is also sexy in a rough sort of way when he manhandles Jill.  I wasn't really sure what Jason Robards was supposed to be doing but he was ruggedly handsome as Cheyenne and that was good enough for me.  This was an early feature film for him after success on Broadway.

All of the bad guys get to make grand entrances with dramatic music and there are long camera shots with everyone looking guilty or shifty or scared. It all felt very Tarantino before Tarantino.

However, this film is almost three hours long and I don't think any film should be that long unless it's "Gone With the Wind," but I have to say it kept me going.  It's a big arty over-the-top western that feels operatic.  I've never seen so many close-ups in my life.  I mean CLOSE UP.  So close you can see the actors' pores.

I am usually not a big fan of westerns.  I think I overdosed on them in the fifties and sixties when westerns ruled TV - "Bonanza," "Have Gun Will Travel," "Gunsmoke."  My Dad was a huge western fan, probably because he wanted to be a cowboy himself, so we watched a LOT of westerns. I think another reason I don't like westerns is that it's mostly about men and it's a man's world, a place I don't really like to hang. But I have to say that I can understand how this film was a groundbreaking western when it came out so if I am going to like a western, it's this kind of western.  Director Sergio Leone pulls out all of the stops to make a very entertaining film with lots going on, great music, beautiful cinematography and sex!  I've never seen Henry Fonda so sexy!

Why it's a Must See: "With striking widescreen compositions and epic running time, this is truly a Western that wins points for both length and width."
---"1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die"

Rosy the Reviewer says...if I am going to like a western, it's this kind of western.




***The Book of the Week***




Captive: A Mother's Crusade to Save Her Daughter from a Terrifying Cult by Catherine Oxenberg (2018)



Actress Catherine Oxenberg (remember "Dynasty" and all of those 80's shoulder pads?) tries to save her daughter, India, from the clutches of the cult NXIVM.

You have probably heard all about this.  It was all over the news and Oxenberg was pivotal in exposing the group.  But here Oxenberg also shares the personal side of this story and how both she and her daughter got involved with Nxivm.  In fact it was Catherine's idea and no doubt there is quite a bit of guilt on Catherine's part about that.  

Oxenberg, who is the daughter of Princess Elizabeth of Yugoslavia and once played a princess herself ("The Royal Romance of Charles and Diana") as well as Amanda Carrington on "Dynasty," is an admitted self help junkie, having tried everything from rolfing to Tony Robbins training to the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi (you know, the guy the Beatles were into for a time). 

In 2011, Catherine heard about a leadership seminar for a new organization called NXIVM run by a mysterious leader, Keith Raniere, also known as Vanguard, whose followers touted that he had an IQ of 240 and held the key to a better world. Her twenty-year-old daughter, India, was starting a new company and Catherine thought this might help her.  She also saw their doing this together as a mother/daughter exercise. But it wasn't long before Catherine started to question the organization and their techniques.  Unfortunately, as she pulled away, India was pulled deeper and deeper into it.

Despite Catherine’s best efforts, India was drawn deeper into the cult, eventually joining a secret, elite “sorority” of women members who were ordered to maintain a very low calorie diet (Raniere liked skinny women), recruit other women as “slaves,” and were branded, like cattle, with their leader’s initials.

To save her daughter, Catherine went on a crusade to expose Nxivm, Keith Raniere and just what was going on in the group. Despite having signed a nondisclosure agreement, something all members had to do, Oxemburg takes the reader inside the cult.  She worked tirelessly to get her daughter out and her efforts, along with others, resulted in Raniere's arrest for sex traffiking and other charges.


It's a captivating story but also a frustrating one. Oxenberg describes herself early on as having problems with many of the group's tenets and at the same time she was speaking up at meetings and workshops, challenging the status quo and worrying about her daughter, SHE KEPT GOING TO THE MEETINGS!

Rosy the Reviewer says...if like me, you are intrigued with the whole notion of cults and how they operate, this is a compelling look inside.



Thanks for reading!



See you next Friday 

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"Searching"


and


 The Week in Reviews
(What to See or Read and What to Avoid)

and the latest on


"My 1001 Movies I Must See Before 
 

I Die Project." 






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Go to IMDB.com, find the movie you are interested in.  Scroll down below the synopsis and the listings for the director, writer and main stars to where it says "Reviews" and click on "Critics" - If I have reviewed that film, you will find Rosy the Reviewer alphabetically on the list.