Weekend Movie Review

There was quite the eclectic mix this weekend!

Bullet Train – After this movie had been pushed back three times from this past April, I was actually really excited to go see this movie! The cast was spectacular, the action sequences were tight and intense, there was a nice mix of comedic elements, and it was just overall pretty badass! Ladybug is back in the game, and his intro mission is to snag a briefcase off of a train heading from Tokyo to Kyoto. Too bad there’s a bunch of other people on board with the same agenda. Everyone seems to know about the bad guy the case is actually for: White Death (my favorite, and hopefully yours now too by this point – Michael Shannon). The lengths that these individuals go through to kill each other are both ridiculous and fun in their own weird way. This will definitely be getting a second viewing from me at some point.

Kimi – I wanted to get in some movies off of HBO Max before that Warner Brothers/Discovery merger makes any more content disappear off the face of the planet forever. Thus, I gravitated towards this compact thriller from Steven Soderbergh. Angela is an at-home employee for the company that brought the world Kimi. Think Alexa, but a lot more people monitoring by actual people instead of an algorithm. Angela is a customer service representative essentially, and while she’s running through her error log she hears a series of recordings that result in a woman being murdered. What makes this thriller even more interesting is that Angela is agoraphobic, and her fears were even more intensified with the pandemic. I like how they were able to incorporate the pandemic into this film without making it solely about the pandemic. This movie was a good time!

The Fallout – Woah. I think every human on earth should watch this heartbreaking film. It opens on Vada and Mia in the school bathroom. These girls have never really spent any time interacting with each other before, but then a horrific event ties them together forever. Another student opens fire in their school, so they crowd in a stall together hoping and praying they’re not the shooters next stop. While the two girls walk away physically unscathed, the rest of the film takes a dive into their psyche and how they are impacted in the aftermath of this event. It’s clear Vada doesn’t know how to process this, so in the meantime she makes new friendships, ends old ones, and tries a BUNCH of new things before she’s finally ableto get a little bit of a handle on things. This movie was a great example of how these terrible things that are happening daily now aren’t just impacting those whose lives are taken, but everyone else, too. Really powerful.

My Dead Dad – Lucas learns that his estranged and recently deceased father left his apartment complex for him to own and run. As he’s desperate to get out of Reno, Lucas makes the journey to LA but is left feeling in limbo as he tries to decide if he wants to rid himself of the place or actually spend time in this place his father called home. What makes the decision harder is how much he’s learning about his father through the tenants. It’s hard for Lucas to reconcile his father’s absence in his own life with how great of a person he was to everyone else. As much as this movie was about Lucas learning about his father, it was also about him learning about himself and what he wants out of life. There’s still a lot up in the air by the end, but the journey is a cathartic one. Surprisingly really enjoyed this quiet drama!

Alone Together – I…have no clue why I rented this. Even though Katie Holmes is a native to my home state, I should have known better than to rent a rom-com that wrote, produced, and directed. She plays June, a food critic looking to get out of New York City for the weekend at an AirBnB a few hours away. Turns out it’s double booked by another guy named Charlie. The two vow to figure it out in the morning, but then the pandemic strikes in earnest. The two are “stranded” out here, but manage to connect, if awkwardly at first. I mean yeah, if you spend that much time with someone you’re bound to have some interest in them by the end of it. I’d say 7 Days did this concept infinitely better, so you should go watch that instead.

Moon Knight Review

In preparation for Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, I figured it’d be wise to be up to speed on all things Marvel. That means I “binge watched” all six episodes of Moon Knight since the finale aired this past week on Disney+. Now, did I know if this show would have any crossover with the latest film? No, but anything is possible.

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The Punisher – Season 1

Sure, I should have maybe tried to finish all of Marvel’s The Punisher before meeting Jon Bernthal, but I didn’t. And besides, Small Engine Repair was still the only thing I was going to talk about with him and it’ll probably be the number one work I reference in conversation so it doesn’t even matter. Anyways, I finally finished the first season of the well-received comic show.

Even though some funny and badass stuff started happening right away in this series, the first two episodes didn’t give me a lot of hope. I found myself drifting and also getting a little lost with all the military talk. What I was able to establish right off the bat was that Frank Castle, aka The Punisher, is a dead man walking. Literally. People all assume he’s dead. Having not watched Daredevil where the Frank Castle character first appeared, I have no clue if that dead status has anything to do with his storyline there. Regardless, he’s keeping a low profile and is done doing his vigilante killings. That is, until a man who calls himself Micro snatches Castle up and takes him to a pretty junky looking basement lair.

Micro is a super computer nerd and needs Castle’s help to take down some bad guys so he can also stop pretending to be dead and get back to his family. His real name is David Lieberman and he used to be an NSA agent who came into possession of a video where an old team Frank was on is seen to be torturing and then killing homeland security agent Dinah Mandani’s former partner. While Frank gets the upper hand quickly and instead tortures Lieberman until he decides to trust him, is also after this secret unit he was a part of. He’s starting to connect that this mission is why his family was killed.

Mandani only wants justice for her partner, and will stop at nothing to do it. Despite everyone thinking Castle is dead, she believes and is eventually proved right, that he is still alive. While she’s angry at him for being a part of the slaying of her partner, she also knows he’s now ready to take the remaining team down. In her quest to find Castle, she starts a relationship with Castle’s old war buddy and longtime friend, Billy Russo. The running gag is that he’s a womanizing pretty boy who’s seemed to come out of war relatively unscathed. He’s got his own contracting company, but Billy’s secrets run deep, and the betrayals he commits are gut-wrenching to a lot of people.

There are several other sub-plots running through this show, but politics are a main bloodline for all the action. Some of the stuff fictionalized in this show I’m sure actually happens in the real world, which is horrible, but our nation’s intelligence agencies will likely do whatever it takes to keep quiet. Regardless of all of that, I really did end up enjoying the first season of The Punisher quite a bit. Jon Bernthal is a machine and I think delivers a pretty solid performance. What I liked most from this show was his teaming up with Lieberman because they have such an opposing dynamic that ends up working out really well in a lot of situations. I’d say if Marvel is your jam, then this is a nice change of pace from the normal offerings, and you’ll still end up satisfied with the story. Check it out all you Disney+ people!

Weekend Movie Review

Well, I suppose this could be counted as a week-long movie review. I had so many films I wanted to get caught up on that I started pretty early in the week. Still plenty to be viewed over the weekend, too. Anyway, here’s a very high level review of what made the cut!

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