The Bruce Willis Film His Die-Hard Fans Overlooked

Bruce Willis has aphasia.

There are many worse horrors in the world at the moment, but that’s still a sentence that should have never been written.

We learned the “Die Hard” star suffers from a disease that impacts his “cognitive abilities” via a social media statement from Willis’ family.

As a result, the 67-year-old is stepping away from his acting career.

 

 
 
 
 
 
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There’s a reason Willis’ retirement trended on social media. People love this New Jersey-born artist.

As a man of a certain generation, being introduced to Willis was almost as important as noticing girls were, well, girls for the first time.

Willis’ stardom crossed generations. Fathers have shown their sons “Die Hard” for decades, boosting the franchise’s unbeatable place in pop culture. How many people still debate whether the 1988 classic is a Christmas movie or not? (spoiler: who cares? It’s a masterpiece either way).

He was also the rare actor who could be the Reagan-era macho hero while swinging any way he damn well pleased. Sure, he was John McClane, but he was also the guy gambling on young directors like Quentin Tarantino and M. Night Shyamalan in hip classics like “Pulp Fiction” and “The Sixth Sense,” respectively.

Willis has more than a handful of roles that one can point to as memorable. He may have been part of the Planet Hollywood ‘80s trifecta of actions heroes (with Sylvester Stallone and Arnold Schwarzenegger), but he was an artist to his bones, always committing that extra step to keep fans guessing.

Think “Beavis and Butt-head Do America” and “Sin City” in between an “Armageddon” or a “Die Hard” sequel.

Another case in point? “16 Blocks.”

In 2006, Willis was a cinematic legend even though he’d barely cracked 50. He had “The Sixth Sense,” “Die Hard,” “Pulp Fiction,” “Unbreakable,” “Tears of the Sun” and many more gut-punch movies behind him.

The man could have coasted. Instead, he threw pebbles in his shoes, gained weight, grew a mustache and played a drunk, lumbering detective.

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“16 Blocks,” directed by the late Richard Donner, was not a box office smash, but like so many other Willis projects, it took on a life of its own over time. 

The film is a solid and underrated work, but, more importantly, it’s a prime example of just why Willis means so much to so many. “16 Blocks” has a basic action premise that could go either way: tortured cop has to get chatty criminal multiple blocks to a grand jury appointment.

The twist?

That criminal is testifying against some very angry cops standing in the way.

What made the movie different was that it took moments to draw on character in between the gunfights. Jack Mosley (Willis) was the exact type of hero we cherished the actor bringing to life. He was the everyman. The loser. The one everyone skipped over. The old Western hero, a man who stood his moral ground against impossible odds and sometimes sure disappointment.

“16 Blocks” is Willis’ last great performance. That’s not to say there are no good ones given after that film. Even among the VOD bizarro world of Willis content, there are some hidden gems. “16 Blocks” marks Willis proving that he’s not just valuable because he can throw a guy through a window or crack a joke.

Willis stumbles and grumbles his way through the Mosley role, selling this shell of a man and his eventual redemption.

RELATED: Why ‘Die Hard’ (Still) Matters

It may not have found an audience in theaters, but it’s worth anyone’s time who is feeling twinge in their gut about the latest Willis news.

This critic is among the many who paid for Willis’ recent and mostly disappointing VOD output over and over again, wondering what was happening. How could the man at one second be making “Death Wish” with Eli Roth and at another seem completely bored and non-present for a few hours on a movie set?

Anyone who has made those purchases worried something terrible had happened to the star, but few wanted to say such a thing out loud.

There’s a reason so many of those Willis VOD movies were made. Sure, it was fun to joke that they were knocked out every other month, but every now and then, there was this glimpse of the “16 Blocks” Willis, the New Jersey artist who showed us it didn’t take biceps or popularity to be a hero: all it took was sheer will with some cynical one-liners thrown in.

America, baby.

Willis still came to life in recent films like “Once Upon a Time in Venice,” “Breach,” “Glass,” “Motherless Brooklyn” and more. Even when he was phoning it in, we now know it was sadly an actor still giving it everything he had to give.

That was Willis from the beginning. It’s one of the reasons he was so special as an artist.

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Read any behind-the-scenes story about “Die Hard,” and it’s clear how integral he was to the creation of that lovably miserable hero. He also helped write his own movies (“Hudson Hawk”), produce them (“Hostage”) and even chatted online with fans to promote a few (“Live Free or Die Hard”).

The point is this: a man, father, husband, actor and artist has a diagnosis no one deserves. However, Bruno is still with us and, even through the bad years (which we now know were likely so much worse for Willis), we stuck by him.

I did at least, screaming the whole way, but always grateful Willis was around. He was a guiding light of sorts, an image of cinematic machismo and coolness one could always look up and forward to … not anymore.

Even the bad movies will soon disappear.

 

 
 
 
 
 
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The outpouring of love for Willis amid his diagnosis is a rare positive moment in a dark media cycle.

Live it up, Bruno. You deserve every drop of happiness left, and you have given the world more than its fair share of cinematic gifts. “16 Blocks” is one of them, and everyone should seek it out.

From 16 Blocks:

“Chuck Berry. He got locked up for armed robbery. He changed. He changed. Barry White, he stole 300 ties…can you picture Barry White, big Barry White stealing 300 ties? He changed. You said…people don’t change. People change.” – Eddie (Mos Def), 16 Blocks

“Eddie…you’re killin’ me.” – Jack (Bruce Willis), 16 Blocks.

Zachary Leeman is the author of the novel “Nigh” and co-host of the “Man of Science, Man of Faith” podcast. He has covered politics and culture for Breitbart, LifeZette and others.

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Oscar Flameout ‘Last Duel’ Is Beholden to Hollywood’s #MeToo Movement

The newest movie to explore the politics of the #MeToo movement is Ridley Scott’s “The Last Duel” and it was snubbed by the Academy for its troubles.

“The Last Duel” is a spectacular work of filmmaking. It continues the tradition of such contemporary Hollywood epics as “Braveheart” and “Gladiator,” with huge set piece moments populated with larger than life characters.

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“The Last Duel” was one of many notable snubs in 2021 alongside “The French Dispatch,” “Mass” and “The Card Counter,” losing to films such as “The Power of the Dog” and “Don’t Look Up.”

Scott is well acquainted with the Academy. He has received four Oscar nominations over his decades-long career for “Thelma and Louise,” “Gladiator,” “Black Hawk Down” and “The Martian.”

“The Last Duel” is a modern epic with grand performances and beautiful production design. It should be a natural fit for the Academy. Its performers were due credit for their work, namely Matt Damon, Adam Driver and Ben Affleck.

Affleck lost a best supporting actor nomination and was instead nominated for a Razzie.

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The omission of “The Last Duel” is curious given that it is in complete alignment with the politics of the moment. It’s a film that is beholden to the politics of the #MeToo era. The heart of the film is a dogma that rejects as corrupt appeals to virtue, ethics and values. Instead, it sees the only valid moral perspective that of the oppressed against their oppressors.

The film arrives in theaters as the #MeToo movement is falling apart.

It was briefly the most powerful political movement in the country. Now Damon and Terry Gilliam have broken with #MeToo extremism, though Damon was forced to apologize after saying that consequences should be in proportion to the severity of the transgression. And Gilliam’s upcoming production of Stephen Sondheim’s “Into the Woods” got canceled.

#MeToo’s fall into irrelevance hasn’t stopped Hollywood from mythologizing the movement’s ideals. Films like “The Assistant,” “Bombshell,” and “Promising Young Woman” are exploring the top-down nature of Hollywood’s abuse problem and even encourage “Death Wish”-style retributive justice against abusive men in the latter case.

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The conceit in“The Last Duel” is that it is told in three segments. Each follows one of the film’s three main characters — Sir Jean, Jacques, and Marguerite — and tells the same events from each perspective.

The story centers on whether Jean’s wife, Marguerite, was raped by his former friend Jacques. It follows the two men arranging a trial by combat that will, in the thinking of the time, determine who is speaking the truth in the eyes of God.

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The first two segments play the same events in a biased fashion. Jean fancies himself a noble knight, and Jacques fancies himself a romantic playboy. Their own narrations of the events downplay their character faults.

Marguerite’s segment, declared by a title card as the truth, reveals both men to be liars, boors and rapists. They’re both cruel, egotistical, and unreceptive men who use her for sex. She isn’t even able to seek legal redress without the aid of her husband, who is mostly just infuriated that Jacques would dare to lust after his wife.

“The Last Duel” is a work of postmodern moral relativism, a contemplation of the nature of power and morality set against the patriarchal society of medieval France. Yet the film’s only consistent message is that power is corrupt and that victims are the only reliable tellers of history.

RELATED: FLASHBACK: Lady Gaga Joins Biden for MeToo Campaign

As Harriet Walter’s character, the mother of Sir Jean and a rape victim herself, says, “There is no right, there is only the power of men.” The movie only works, if you don’t question its conceit. The film amounts to a 150-minute lecture about the evils of men, the Catholic Church and monarchism.

It makes the same mistake as the #MeToo movement, assuming women lack complex motivations or flaws. That such a calculus risks destroying innocent lives is a possibility the film doesn’t bother to entertain.

“The Last Duel” might well be one of the best films of 2021, but it is morally shallow. It holds feminist dogma sacred and obscures truth when it doesn’t deliver the retributive justice the #MeToo movement demands. It is curious why Hollywood wouldn’t be more supportive of it.

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My Anglican priest recently recalled a trip to a monastery where a monk confided in him that he “didn’t like people very much.” My priest joked that he was in the right place.

The most bitter rivalries are often among those who dedicate their lives to public service, kindness, and faith. Religious institutions are among the worst afflicted, with one unnamed Benedictine monk joking that if “you want to see real sin, go to a monastery. There you’ll find backbiting and pride.”

“Man of God” is an English-language Greek film that explores this sad state of these institutional affairs.

It recalls the life of Saint Nektarios of Aegina, an early 20th century Eastern Orthodox Bishop who was falsely slandered multiple times by his own church and forced to serve the final 30 years of his life in poverty and shame.

The film stands quite confidently for itself in spite of its seemingly low budget, digging into the nature of Christian piety in a surprisingly effective way.

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The film begins in 1890. Anastasios Kephalas, later known as Nektarios (Aris Servetalis), is introduced as the kindly and beloved Bishop of Alexandria. He is well regarded by the public and his reputation leaves the jealous hierarchs above him worried that he is seeking advancement.

Nektarios is wrongly discredited as an immoral man, not given a chance to defend himself, and exiled from the church of Alexandria. The Bishops even continued to harass him well after he moved to Athens, mailing negative letters to his employers, while he struggled finding work as a preacher, a teacher, and later a janitor.

The remainder of his life, until his death in 1920, is beset with further cruelty and slander. He would become famous among the general religious public for his writings, but was unable to rise politically within his church due to the bitterness of the men he served.

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He would eventually retire from his job at the school to help personally rebuild Holy Trinity Monastery on the island of Aegina, only to be accused of brainwashing and impregnating his nuns by a disgruntled mother. The church refused to officially recognize his monastery until four years after his death from prostate cancer.

His treatment by the church was bad enough that the Patriarch of Alexandria formally apologized to Nektarios in 1998.

“We beseech Saint Nektarios to forgive both us, unworthy as we are, and our predecessors, our brothers of the Throne of Alexandria, for opposition to the Saint and for all which, due to human weakness or error, our Holy Father, Bishop of Pentapolis, Saint Nektarios, suffered.”

Throughout the film, he’s beaten by police officers, betrayed by the church, screamed at by his secular schoolmaster for his backwards ascetic lifestyle and even criticized by his friends for not fighting back and attempting to profit off of his fame.

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The best strength of “Man of God” and its storytelling comes from Nektarios’ piety. It is what holds the film together and what gives it such a rich and emotional depiction of the Christian life.

Nektarios starts the film as someone who has already found peace within his religion, and that doesn’t change. The crushing weight of poverty, slander, and hatred never break him. He embraces suffering at every turn, rejecting bitterness and embracing the people that hate him with love.

He could have lashed out, fallen into despair, or hated his enemies, but he chose not to.

Like most Christian films, “Man of God” is preachy, overly-reliant on exposition and clearly struggling to overcome its limited budget. Nektorios is the most defined character while most of his opponents are one-dimensional and uncomplicated facades that merely oppose him.

The strength of that central performance, though, makes it work.

The modern world similarly struggles with pride, jealousy, and slander. The lives of the saints, like that of Nectario, remind us to live life with a zeal for forgiveness and thought for others. The willingness of good men to be crushed for our iniquities is inspiring, heartbreaking, and reminds us of what it is supposed to look like to live out the Christian life.

“Man of God” is distributed by Fathom Events and will run theaters for one more screening March 28.

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Too many horror films in the post-“Get Out” era lead with their activism.

Think “Candyman,” “Antebellum” and the recent “Master” as solid examples. Race is front and center in all three, but they lack the nuance, and expert craftsmanship, that Jordan Peele brought to his breakthrough 2017 hit.

It’s easy to dismiss “Fresh,” the Hulu film with feminism baked into its DNA, as another woke horror romp. If you did, you’d be mistaken.

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Yes, the core story is packed with feminist themes. We follow a frustrated singleton named Noa (Daisy Edgar-Jones) exhausted by the dating scene. Thank you, toxic males, like the one she meets as the film opens. He’s alternately evolved and rude, scooping up her leftovers while insisting she pay her fair share.

Can you blame Noa for wanting to ditch dating entirely?

Along comes Steve, and her worldview shifts. Sebastian Stan gives Steve a quiet charisma, along with a sense of humor and that MCU-worthy mug.

Could he be The One … or at the very least Noa’s oasis from the usual shmoes?

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It isn’t to be, alas, as the trailer indicates. It’s darn near impossible to discuss “Fresh” without getting into some spoiler trouble.

Steve has a secret, and it’s one that puts Noa in jeopardy. It’s how she fights back, though, that reveals the battle between the sexes in an invigorating way.

The film arrives with some overtly woke theatrics. Noa’s best galpal is Mollie (Jonica T. Gibbs), a black lesbian brimming with girl-power platitudes. The Noa/Mollie bond still feels real and lived in, and Mollie isn’t just a throwaway character.

That matters.

 

 
 
 
 
 
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Steve has a distinct physical advantage over Noa. It’s something men don’t have to worry about when they enter a new romance.

“What if I get hurt … or can’t defend myself against this person who seems so very nice?”

“Fresh” is so alive, so pulsing with smart horror beats that you’re not focusing on the feminism up front. It’s there, oh yes, but you’re involved in Noa’s predicament as well as other characters you get to know along the way.

That feminist streak lurks in the background, enriching the thrills and occasional gore. Yes, “Fresh” has some ghastly bits, but it’s what the film implies that’s more revolting.

We end up caring so much for Noa that the third act’s activism isn’t an intrusion. It’s welcome.

Screenwriter Lauryn Kahn can’t help but drop a few lines addressing larger cultural issues. Most arrive right on schedule, and even an Alpha Male like Al Bundy might cheer them on.

If you’re gonna pack a lecture, make it land.

Still, “Fresh” isn’t here to wag its finger at you. It’s more restrained than the recent “Take Back the Night,” another feminist horror film that occasionally succumbs to messaging.

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The horror genre routinely invokes larger issues, often with potent results. Look no further than zombie auteur George A. Romero, who wove progressive themes about race, commercialism and more into his “Dead” features.

Even the “Conjuring” franchise works as a love letter to both marriage and God.

“Get Out” made it hip to integrate social awareness into the genre. Had Peele leaned harder into its racially-charged messaging the film wouldn’t have left such an impact.

Peele got the formula just right, but that technique takes finesse. “Antebellum” went 0-2, delivering neither thrills nor effective messaging.

Cave is doing a limited press rollout for the film, and her comments don’t devolve into the kind of virtue signaling most stars deliver these days. Consider recent press push by Zoe Kravitz, framing herself as a victim while starring in the year’s biggest film.

Cave focuses on the performances, delivering the right amount of gore versus what the story suggests and other factors. She’s not auditioning for Hollywood acceptance. She’s digging into the nuts and bolts of her very first feature.

It’s a sign she has a very bright future, and a warning for those eager to use their next film as a cinematic soapbox.

Watch what Peele and Cave do before yelling, “action!”

The post How ‘Fresh’ Avoids That Woke Feminist Trap appeared first on Hollywood in Toto.



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Nicolas Cage Gets Candid About Why National Treasure 3 Never Happened

National Treasure 3 never ended up coming out, and Nicolas Cage explained what that is.

Exclusive: You Are Not My Mother Review With Kate Dolan and Hazel Doupe

Folklore horror movies are a fairly niche subgenre, though they often address universal themes. They exist within a historical and cultural specificity which is often hard to navigate in the generally lower-budget horror genre, but have been very powerful in many instances, and usually tackle pagan beliefs or the horror of cults. The classic '70s movie The Wicker Man tackled the kind of pagan subculture which existed in a very rural and specifically U.K. setting, and more recent examples like Midsommar and The Witch locate the horror in very particular time periods and social groups which lend themselves to folklore.


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Crazy Rich Asians 2 Just Made A Behind-The-Scenes Change

As moviegoers waited for updates on Crazy Rich Asians 2, the sequel made a major behind-the-scenes change before production even starts.

Stephen King's The Shining Is Becoming A Stage Play, And It's Adding A Big Star As Jack Torrance

The theatre adaptation of Stephen King's The Shining just made a fascinating choice.

Rupert Grint Got Offered A Lot Of Sidekicks After Harry Potter. He Nearly Quit Acting And Went Into Selling Ice Cream Instead

Rupert Grint almost quit acting after Harry Potter to become... an ice cream salesman?

Sonic The Hedgehog 2's Ben Schwartz Shows How Dedicated He Is To The Sequel, Thanks To Someone Stealing His Character From A Movie Theater Display

Sonic the Hedgehog 2's Ben Schwartz showed his dedication to the sequel after someone stole his character from a movie theater display.

Godzilla Vs. Kong’s MonsterVerse Sequel Is Officially Happening, And Filming Soon

A new MonsterVerse movie is on the way, and it'll be here soon.

Dwayne Johnson Drops A String Of Great F-Bombs While Discussing His Latest Cheat Meal

Dwayne Johnson shares a look at his latest cheat meal, and the string of F-Bombs he uses is well-warranted indeed.

Zendaya Googling Her Own Net Worth Went Viral On TikTok, And Her Answer Is Delightful

Zendaya googled her net worth, and her reaction was one for the ages.

Chris Hemsworth's Trainer Recalls The Actor Not Wanting To Get Punched In His 'Pretty Face' Ahead Of Hollywood Stardom

Chris Hemsworth's trainer opens up about the actor's desire to protect his face ahead of his Hollywood career.

Will Smith Shares The ‘Biggest Surprise’ About His King Richard Awards Run (And The Critics Are Involved)

Will Smith talks about the surprising, critic-related aspect of his King Richards awards run.

Which Final Destination Kills Have Actually Happened IRL? The Injury Counts Are Gruesome

The Final Destination kills are actually based on injuries that do happen in real life.

Epcot's Guardians Of The Galaxy Roller Coaster Has Revealed A Very Important Detail

Ahead of Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind's opening this summer, one new element of the ride has reportedly been announced.

Windfall Review: Netflix Thriller Digs Into Home Invasions

"Hell is other people," one character famously says in Jean-Paul Sartre's play No Exit, about three people stuck in a room for all eternity. The new Netflix movie Windfall explores an hour and a half of that hell, similarly featuring three very different people emotionally torturing each other with mind games. Except, in Charlie McDowell's tense film, hell is a beautiful Californian estate belonging to two characters held at gunpoint, in a home invasion movie unlike most others.


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WeCrashed Review: Jared Leto and Anne Hathaway Are Incredible in So-So Series

What is it with tech bros (and gals)? Ever since The Social Network garnered acclaim and helped redefine what a great biopic is, there have been a slew of series and movies focused on entrepreneurial sociopaths, usually in the tech world. The Dropout, Inventing Anna, Super Pumped: The Battle for Uber, The Inventor: Out For Blood in Silicon Valley, Startup.com, and both the HBO series Jobs and the movie Steve Jobs have all come out in the past decade, several in the past year. While the real-life characters vary from barely likable and compassionate to absolutely detestable (such as in Inventing Anna), the story remains largely the same.


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If N.W.A. And Acting in Friday Hadn’t Worked Out, Ice Cube Could Have Gone Down A Wildly Different Career Path

Before his career took off with N.W.A. and Friday, Ice Cube's life could have gone down a wildly different path.

Arnold Schwarzenegger’s Son Joseph Baena Pens Sweet Tribute To His Mom For Her Birthday

Joseph Baena celebrated his mother's birthday with a sentimental message.

Batman And Spider-Man Unite! Robert Pattinson And Andrew Garfield Have A Fancy Reunion After Being Friends In Their Early Acting Days

Robert Pattinson and Andrew Garfield were mates before either were superheroes, and they just recently hung out together.

WeCrashed Review: Jared Leto and Anne Hathaway Are Incredible in So-So Series

What is it with tech bros (and gals)? Ever since The Social Network garnered acclaim and helped redefine what a great biopic is, there have been a slew of series and movies focused on entrepreneurial sociopaths, usually in the tech world. The Dropout, Inventing Anna, Super Pumped: The Battle for Uber, The Inventor: Out For Blood in Silicon Valley, Startup.com, and both the HBO series Jobs and the movie Steve Jobs have all come out in the past decade, several in the past year. While the real-life characters vary from barely likable and compassionate to absolutely detestable (such as in Inventing Anna), the story remains largely the same.


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Two Years After Billie Eilish Released No Time To Die, The James Bond Tune Still Has Her Fans Freaking Out

If you thought the fan love around Billie Eilish's No Time To Die tune had died down, wait until you see her perform it in concert.

Universal’s Dracula Monster Movie Renfield’s Updated Cast List Includes Nicolas Cage and Shang-Chi’s Awkwafina

Renfield is on the way, and its cast includes Nicolas Cage, Awkwafina and many more.

Scream 6 Has Taken A Thrilling Step Forward

Scream 6 is officially on the way, and Paramount Pictures has announced a key piece of information concerning it.

After Insensitive Disney World Parade Performance Goes Viral, The Company Releases Statement About What Happened

Disney World has commented after a high school parade performance goes viral for all the wrong reasons.

X Review: Ti West Dissects Horror in This A24 Masterpiece

The new Ti West horror film X may be brimming with body parts, but audiences will be disappointed if that's all they expect to see. While X is undoubtedly entertaining and bonkers fun, with stylized violence and risqué sensuality, it's likely to be loved by film critics more than horror audiences. It's actually an intellectual, provocative piece of art and theory disguised as a throwback horror exploitation film. It's one of the best A24 movies of the past couple of years.


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No Time To Die Editor Tells Story He’s ‘Not Supposed To’ About Catching Daniel Craig In Tears During Screening Of His Final Bond Film

No Time to Die editor Elliott Graham revealed an unheard story about Daniel Craig being in tears after watching a screening of his final Bond film.

Tom Cruise Is Getting A Cannes Tribute 30 Years To The Day After He Presented The Palme d’Or (And Top Gun: Maverick Is Involved)

The Cannes Film Festival is coming up, and Tom Cruise is being honored in a major way that involves Top Gun: Maverick.

Will Smith Has A Great Comment About Those ‘Red, Tight Shorts’ Helping Him Land All Those King Richard Awards Noms, And Shares How It Feels

You'd be amazed what a pair of red shorts did to inspire Will Smith's King Richard performance, as well as how he feels during this whirlwind ride of praise.

Breakfast Club Star Ally Sheedy Still Surprised She's In The Brat Pack, Says Her Students 'Google' Her On The Reg

Former Brat Packer and college professor Ally Sheedy has not forgotten about her acting days in the 1980s and neither has her students!

Blue Bayou About To Shut Down At Disneyland As Part Of Larger Refurb And Guest Shares Photos Of It Looking ‘Depressing’ Before Closing

One of the biggest selling points of Disneyland's best restaurant is gone, for now.

Florence Pugh And Zach Braff Both Killed It On The Red Carpet This Week, But Both Did It Totally Solo

The red carpet saw Florence Pugh and Zach Braff, just not together.

‘The Hater’ Wants to Turn Texas Blue

Writer/director Joey Ally makes no bones about her political leanings via “The Hater.”

The satire finds Ally playing a progressive stalwart eager to turn Texas blue quicker than you can say, “Beto.” She’s the film’s complicated hero, but Ally can’t help but show her ideological cards.

The surprise?

“The Hater” flashes sizable empathy to both the Lone Star State and rock-ribbed conservatives. What’s missing is a biting sense of humor and the ability to transcend Hollywood’s anti-Trump narrative. It may take years, even decades, for that healing to commence. 

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The story opens with Ally’s Dorothy Goodwin losing her job as a campaign writer. She got herself arrested during a protest, accidentally burning an American flag in the process.

She mourns the loss of a great gig but not her actions, which quickly went viral. She’s shrill, angry and the epitome of a progressive scold. Even liberal audiences might struggle to rally behind her at first glance. She’s that Facebook friend that you block to blot out her 24/7 political screeds.

Dorothy decides to start a new chapter in her life by moving back to Texas and reuniting with her estranged grandfather (Bruce Dern). The two have pools of bad blood between them, something Ally’s script conveniently ditches in record time.

Then again, who wouldn’t recoil at Dorothy’s presence? 

RELATED: Here’s the Best Biden Impression. Period

Clutching her vape pen and bile, Dorothy attempts to resurrect her political career when she stumbles upon some shocking news. The lad who once bullied her back in school is now running for office in their Texas hometown.

As a Republican, of course.

She realizes an obscure voting law would secure a Democrat victory if the Republican candidate bowed out during the campaign. So she buries her inner Bernie and runs against him, posing as a new kind of Republican.

She spends more time talking up Climate Change than the Second Amendment.

It’s a tricky premise, no doubt, but Ally makes some positive strides early in the film. Dorothy is no fool, so she massages her rhetoric to make it red-state friendly with a kiss of her hard-boiled activism. The not so hidden message? We can turn Texas blue, fellow Democrats, if we only tweak our messaging.

A pro-choice detour allows “The Hater” to argue abortion is a conservative principle (good luck with that), finding Ally in full lecture mode, albeit briefly.

“The Hater” offers several characters, including an excellent Meredith Hagner as Dorothy’s unexpected chum, who shatter conservative stereotypes. The locals have nothing but love for Dorothy’s flamboyantly gay best friend, for example. Plus, Dern’s crotchety character imbibes Fox News 24/7 but eagerly embraces his granddaughter’s campaign bid.

About that.

Dorothy’s viral video infamy, along with years of far-Left activism, would make her small town run impossible. Everyone knows everyone in her hometown, meaning her political leanings can’t be a secret. It’s one Dwayne Johnson-sized plot hole the film won’t acknowledge.

RELATED: Jon Stewart’s ‘Irresistible’ Flirts with Fair and Balanced Satire

“The Hater” also could use a prickly exchange between Dern and his on-screen granddaughter to help explain their growing bond. Such a scene might do wonders for the greater political divide if handled well enough.

More lost opportunities?

We see too little of Dorothy squaring off against her old nemesis. Their conflict also involves some surprising sympathy on both sides, but that doesn’t add the necessary friction missing elsewhere.

“The Hater” isn’t a progressive screed despite some overt messaging. It’s also a tad dull.

The film’s resolution is far too neat and unrealistic, where a more outrageous finale could have amped up the satirical bite. Still, given indie film’s undeniable leanings, “The Hater” is more balanced than many might expect.

It just needs to be better.

HiT or Miss: “The Hater” offers a few wrinkles to the progressive political template, but there’s not enough laughs or insight to make the satire soar.

The post ‘The Hater’ Wants to Turn Texas Blue appeared first on Hollywood in Toto.



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The Oscars Will Feature A Live Encanto Performance That Apparently Has The Internet Outraged

"We Don't Talk About Bruno" from Encanto isn't Oscar-nominated, but it is being performed at the ceremony, and the internet is upset.

Scream's Courteney Cox Reveals When The Sixth Movie Should Start Filming (And It's Soon)

Weeks after Scream 6 was officially announced, Scream vet Courteney Cox revealed when the movie should start filming.

That Time Anne Hathaway Got Jared Leto To Break Character With Her Imitation Of Lady Gaga's House Of Gucci Accent

Anne Hathaway has discovered Jared Leto's method acting weakness.

Avatar 2's Zoe Saldaña Talks Getting Over-The-Top Emotional After Seeing Footage From The James Cameron Sequel

Zoe Saldaña talked about how emotional she got after seeing footage from Avatar 2.

Deep Water Review: A Tawdry & Brainless Sex Thriller

Ben Affleck fumes as Ana de Armas cavorts in a tawdry thriller that's borderline laughable. Deep Water has a millionaire husband struggling to contain his jealousy in a bizarre open marriage. Based on the novel by Patricia Highsmith, the film is loaded with nudity, kinky romps, and murder. The eye candy does not sustain a failed attempt at psychological machinations.


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No Time To Die’s Ana de Armas Recalls Night Shoots, Shares Badass New Footage Of Training For Paloma

Ana de Armas recalls the night shoots for No Time to Die and shares some kickass new footage of her training for Paloma.

Wait, Was Noah Hawley's Star Trek Movie Going To Star Cate Blanchett?

Apparently Noah Hawley had a lead actress in mind for his Star Trek movie.

A Fire Has Reportedly Started On The Set Of Gal Gadot's New Snow White Movie

Ahead of the live-action Snow White beginning production, there was reportedly a fire on the set of the upcoming Disney movie.

Will Smith Opens Up About Jada’s ‘Entanglement,’ But Says There’s ‘Never’ Been Infidelity In Their Marriage

Will Smith opened up about his and Jada Pinkett Smith's relationship, and how there has "never" been an infidelity "ever."

That Time Tom Cruise Flew A Helicopter To Simon Pegg's House To Show Off Mission: Impossible Footage

Simon Pegg recalled when Tom Cruise once visited his house by helicopter to screen some Mission: Impossible footage… as one does.

Power Of The Dog Director Apologizes After Making ‘Devaluing’ Comment About Venus And Serena Williams

Jane Campion had some "thoughtless" comments about the Williams sisters during the Critics Choice Awards.

How ‘X’ Captures Very Best of ’70s Horror

Modern slasher films often leave an essential element out of the formula.

Sex.

The recent “Texas Chainsaw Massacre” reboot is a prime example. The film’s female leads don’t dress provocatively or shed their clothes. They’re not “getting it on,” either when Leatherface fires up his chainsaw.

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Blame the woke mob or filmmakers trying to avoid the “male gaze.” Horror films aren’t as sexy, or titillating, as they were in the ’70s and ’80s.

“X” is old school in more ways than one.

It’s a slasher film, full stop, with plenty of blood-curdling kills and gore. It’s also obsessed with sex, giving the film a texture missing from recent bloodbaths.

Oh, and it’s excellent in most of the ways that count, from creepy chills and smart performances to an unrelenting sense of dread.

In short, director Ti West has done it again.

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The year is 1979, and a band of filmmakers decamps to a small Texas town to shoot a nudie film. The VHS revolution is under way, and films like “Debbie Does Dallas” made their creators rich.

Why not them?

They strike a deal to shoot on an elderly rancher’s property, setting up shop in a building away from the main house. Wayne (Martin Henderson) oversees the venture, which finds his girlfriend Maxine (Mia Goth) and a gung-ho stripper (Brittany Snow) enjoying on-screen relations with a Marine turned adult movie star (Scott “Kid Cudi” Mescudi). 

This motley crew of dreamers, lovable if hopelessly naive, think their project will make them rich and famous.

“It is possible to make a good dirty movie,” says R.J. (Owen Campbell), the camera man with art-house aspirations. He posits himself the next Scorsese or Coppola, but he needs a tip from Snow’s character to make a simple gas-pumping scene more erotic.

Funny stuff.

 

 
 
 
 
 
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The cast and crew hide their real intentions from the rancher, but that secrecy is short-lived. And that’s when the horror elements bubble to the surface.

West’s previous horror films, like “The House of the Devil” and “The Innkeepers,” typify “slow burn” storytelling. They demand patience but make it worth the viewers’ while. With “X,” that’s only partially true. We enjoy getting to know the cast of characters, and the sly but essential humor keeps us engaged from the jump.

Who cares if blood doesn’t spill in the first act?

Plus, the mystery of the old rancher and his equally odd wife keeps viewers off balance for the film’s running time.

RELATED: How ‘Terror in the Aisles’ Perfectly Captures ’80s Horror

Sex is front and center here, for obvious reasons. The film-within-a-film’s moral boundaries feel hackneyed. Yes, it’s the late 1970s, and the cultural conversation on sex has matured since then. West still dedicates too much time to those exchanges, assuming there’s something profound to share.

That’s not the case. The film’s other theme, the collision of sex and Father Time, proves far more engaging.

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Another microscopic miscue? The story repeatedly falls back on a TV preacher’s sermons, an element West overplays while adding little to the story.

Otherwise, “X” is squarely on target, using smart cinematography and an era-appropriate soundtrack to warn us the film in question may not wrap on schedule.

West may be paying homage to the era’s horror classics – there’s a distinct “Texas Chainsaw Massacre” vibe given the setting. Those films didn’t ladle on the blood and gore as we see here, though.

You’ve been warned.

“X” shows how horror films can tackle deeper subjects without ignoring the genre essentials. And West knows precisely how to combine those two, riveting elements.

HiT or Miss: “X” offers throwback genre treats along with a layered approach to sexuality.

The post How ‘X’ Captures Very Best of ’70s Horror appeared first on Hollywood in Toto.



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Lady Gaga To The Rescue! West Side Story’s Rachel Zegler Shares How Celebs Rallied To Help Her When Her Awards Dress Broke

Lady Gaga ran to the rescue of West Side Story's Rachel Zegler when she ran into a wardrobe malfunction at the Critics' Choice Awards.

Dwayne Johnson Shares Just How Much He Eats On Leg Day Along With A Sweet Hawaiian Sunrise

The Rock knows how to start a day.

Some Kids Asked Ryan Reynolds About His ‘Feud’ With Hugh Jackman. He Hilariously Joked It Has To Do With Greatest Showman

Ryan Reynolds will even badmouth Hugh Jackman in front of children.

Tethered Review: A Clever Horror Premise Runs Out of Steam

A blind boy lives alone in the deep woods with only a rope to guide him safely home. Tethered is an indie horror-thriller with a clever premise that starts strong. The foreboding setting, ominous music, and hinted presence of lurking danger set up an engaging first act. The film then dramatically loses steam as time progresses and a new character is introduced. The building mystery has a predictable resolve with few surprises. Tethered also falls into a rut of tired genre tropes that bludgeon creativity.


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Kid Cudi and Jenna Ortega’s Horror Film X Is Getting A Surprise Prequel And We Saw Footage

If you're already hyped up to see Kid Cudi and Jenna Ortega in X, writer/director Ti West's announcement of a prequel should be a welcome surprise.

Power Of The Dog Director Totally Invoked The Doctor Strange Set When Responding To Sam Elliott’s Viral Complaints About The Netflix Film

Power of the Dog director Jane Campion invites Sam Elliot to hash it out with her and Benedict Cumberbatch on the set of Doctor Strange after he bashes her film.

Will Smith And Denzel Washington Are Both Competing For Best Actor This Year, But The King Richard Star Just Landed Another Awards Win

Will Smith just landed another awards win over Denzel Washington ahead of the 2022 Oscars.

X Reviews Are Online, Read What Critics Are Saying About The Porn-Centric Slasher Movie

Ti West is back after a decade with the throwback horror movie X, which shows its stars driving in to remote Texas to film a porn movie.

The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey Review: A Mystery, Tragedy, and Lesson in Kindness

In 2020, over fifty-five million people worldwide were said to be affected by and living with dementia. The statistics for dementia, and an aging population, offer a grim outlook for the future. They predict the number of individuals with dementia is projected to double every twenty years. In countries with high levels of income and wealth, a prevalent problem is that most cases of dementia go unrecognized by doctors, whether it be through a lack of income to see a doctor or a failure to identify and recognize the signs of cognitive decline.


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Dreaming Hollywood Review: Waking Up From the Machine

The American Dream used to be somewhat simple. Whether it was beautiful and realistic or an illusion to exploit the working class, the basic idea was that "all [people] are created equal" with the right to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness," and that, through diligent effort, people can become the best versions of themselves and attain contentment and a good, decent life.


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Broadcast News And MCU Star William Hurt Is Dead At 71

William Hurt was unquestionably one of the greatest actors of his generation.

After A Nic Cage Super Fan Hung Posters At SXSW Asking The Actor To Call Him, Nic Cage Did, And There’s Video

After a super fan hung posters of Nicolas Cage with his phone number on them, the star actually called him.

A Walt Disney World Attraction Caught Fire, And A Guest Shared Video

A Disney World attraction experienced a fire, and one park attendee caught the situation on video.

The Lost City Reviews Are Here, Check Out What Critics Are Saying About The Sandra Bullock Action Romance

The Lost City premiered at SXSW, so what did critics have to say about Sandra Bullock and Channing Tatum's adventure romance?

Wicked Alum Kristin Chenoweth Explains Why Ariana Grande Is The Right Person To Play Glinda In The Film Adaptation

Ahead of Wicked hitting the big screen, the original Glinda shares her thoughts about the casting.

Mark Ruffalo Reveals Why He ‘Almost Quit’ Jennifer Garner’s 13 Going On 30

It sounds like making 13 Going On 30 forced Mark Ruffalo way out of his comfort zone.

Twilight’s Ashley Greene On Alice Cullen Being Many Fans’ ‘Gay Awakening’

Ashley Greene shares her reaction to being a queer icon for many Twilight Saga fans.

Michelle Yeoh's Exhilarating Everything Everywhere All At Once Proves The Multiverse Is For More Than Marvel

Michelle Yeoh embraces a kinetic mind-mess of a movie that grapples with destiny, life's choices, and Everything Bagels.

Nicolas Cage Reveals How He Was Convinced To Play Himself In The Unbearable Weight Of Massive Talent

The actor has opened up about the filmmakers got him on board to play himself in the upcoming action comedy.

Whoopi Goldberg Gave Oscar Host Regina Hall Some A+ Advice About The Gig

Four-time Academy Awards host was "generous" with advice for the Girls Trip star.

Steven Spielberg Explains What Went Wrong With Jurassic Park: The Lost World

Decades after the release of The Lost World: Jurassic Park, Steven Spielberg has some thoughts on exactly what went wrong with his dino-sequel.

How Dune 2 Will Leave The Door Open For Dune Messiah, According To The Screenwriter

One of the Dune writers shares how Part Two will set the stage for a potential Dune Messiah film adaptation.

Why Disney World And Disneyland Are In No Hurry To Reach Full Capacity

Disneyland and Walt Disney World still aren't at max capacity, and Disney may keep it that way.

The James Bond Odds Have Taken A Big Turn, As Regé-Jean Page Loses The Top Spot Yet Again

Regé-Jean Page's James Bond odds just saw another turn, and it involves losing the top spot to a relentless competitor.

How Halloween Ends’ Michael Myers Is Celebrating The Horror Trilogy Wrapping Photography

Halloween Ends is coming this October, and Michael Myers himself is psyched about photography wrapping.

To All The Boys' Lana Condor Is Joining John Cena In Upcoming Looney Tunes Movie

Universal Studios Hollywood Celebrated Mario Day In The Best Way Possible

Universal Studios Hollywood has given us a much desired update on Super Nintendo World.

Following Florence Pugh Casting Rumors, Looks Like Dune 2 Has Found Its Feyd-Rautha

Feyd-Rautha is an important character in the original Dune novel, and it looks like the team behind Dune 2 have selected who they want for the role.

Halloween Ends Has Wrapped Filming, See How The Producer Celebrated

Jamie Lee Curtis' final bow as Laurie Strode in Halloween Ends has never felt more real.

‘Adam Project’ Puts Focus Where It Belongs

Too many action movies pay lip service to the people in harm’s way.

Audiences know the drill, too, patiently waiting for the next action sequence to light up the screen. The characters on-screen are mere conduits to some killer CGI adventures.

 “The Adam Project” offers a fresh alternative. The film’s sci-fi action is just fine, if perfunctory, but it’s the heart-to-heart exchanges that power the Netflix original.

That, and Ryan Reynolds in full wiseacre mode, make this “Project” something the whole family can enjoy. Just be warned. Parents should keep some Kleenex within arm’s length.

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Reynolds stars as Adam Reed, a fighter pilot from the year 2050 who travels back in time to stop his love (Zoe Saldana) from getting killed by a tech mogul (Catherine Keener, terribly miscast). Said mogul’s company created the time travel device Adam uses, except his trek goes off course. He winds up in 2022, not his preferred 2018 landing spot.

Adam bumps into his younger self, a precocious 12-year-old (Walker Scobell) who gets bullied on a daily basis. Together, they must reunite with their father (Mark Ruffalo) back in 2018 and stay away from Keener’s goon squad in the process.

The story itself is messy, as are the motivations for too many characters. The action sequences, professionally delivered by director Shawn Levy (“Free Guy,” “Date Night”), feel recycled from other, better, sci-fi romps. The goons in question, robotic warriors with marginal fighting skills, are no match for either Adam.

That hardly matters since Reynolds, Ruffalo, Saldana and Jennifer Garner as Adam’s mom give “The Adam Project” their all. An early scene finds adult Adam consoling Mama Garner about the perils of parenthood. It’s a throwaway moment by action movie standards, but the stars dig deeper than expected, making it one of “Project’s” high points.

Similar bonding between the Adams and Papa Adam are equally strong, and when the obligatory action scenes commence we miss that witty, warm banter.

 

 
 
 
 
 
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Keener either sleepwalks through the film or her character is so inert no star could bring her to life. Saldana delivers her standard-issue charisma, but the screenplay keeps reminding us she’s Strong, Empowered and Just As Tough as Adam.

Eye roll.

Otherwise, the movie moves swiftly, and the laughs arrive at a steady pace. This is the Ryan Reynolds Project on full blast, meaning every other line is a withering quip. His comic persona is staggeringly consistent, and it’s yet to wear out its welcome.

The film appears to end earlier than expected, but everyone involved realized a blowout finale isn’t why “The Adam Project” exists. We need more time with these characters, and a traditional ending just won’t do.

That means the third act is unlike most action adventures, and you’ll be glad that’s the case.

HiT or Miss: “The Adam Project” feels cobbled together from other blockbusters, but the film’s big, beating heart can’t be denied.

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Jason Statham’s The Meg 2 Has Taken A Thrilling Step Forward, So Bring On The Shark Action

There are not enough movies where Jason Statham fights a giant shark.

Jurassic World: Dominion’s Chris Pratt Shares Fun Set Photo With Sam Neill

Jurassic World: Dominion is almost here, uniting the current cast with OG's like Sam Neill.

Michael B Jordan And Lori Harvey Are 'Missing' Each Other As Production Continues On Creed 3

Michael B. Jordan and Lori Harvey are just adorable.

Ryan Reynolds Explains Why He’s Not Interested In Directing

The Adam Project Review: A Passable Sci-Fi Adventure

A pilot from the future travels back in time and teams up with his younger self. The Adam Project is a passable science fiction adventure with good cast chemistry and visual effects. Star Ryan Reynolds trademark sarcastic delivery gets a worthy accomplice with young Walker Scobell. Their sharp back and forth, along with solid action scenes, make up for a disjointed script. The time travel aspect has logic holes you can drive a truck through.


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Ludacris Has Some Questions For His Former Fast Co-Star After The Rock Shares An Unusual Cheat Meal

Dwayne Johnson and Ludacris have history together in the Fast & Furious franchise, and now the latter is wondering something about the former’s latest cheat meal.

Amy Schumer Reveals Real Reason She Dropped The Barbie Movie

The comedian gets candid about why her Barbie movie fell through prior to the upcoming Margot Robbie version.

New Report Details How Many Guests Were Arrested Over Guns At Disney World Last Year

There are a surprising number of people who apparently try to bring guns to Disney World.

Delayed Rides At Disneyland Resort And Disney World Aren't Dead After All

Two attractions we thought were dead at Disney World and Disneyland may still arrive...eventually.

Why No Time To Die Singer Billie Eilish Actually Practiced Writing James Bond Songs Before Ever Getting The Job

The songwriters behind the Oscar-nominated tune share their intriguing past with the franchise.

Hope You Weren’t Spur-Of-The-Moment Expecting To Visit Disney World Or Disneyland Over Spring Break

If you're planning a trip to a Disney theme park soon, there's one thing you'll need to check first.

Black Widow's Florence Pugh Is Being Eyed For A Key Dune 2 Role

Following her outings as Yelena Belova in Black Widow and Hawkeye, Yelena Belova is reportedly being considered for a big role in Dune 2.

Jurassic World: Dominion’s Bryce Dallas Howard Shares Fun Reunion Photo With The Cast, Including The OG Trio Of Heroes

Jurassic World: Dominion is almost here, and the cast has reunited to start promotion.

Song for Cesar Review: A Vibrant Musical Retrospective of the Farm Workers Movement

Song for Cesar is a vibrant musical retrospective of the artists who supported the plight of farm workers in America. It is not specifically a historical documentary about the life of activist Cesar Chavez. But a collection of archival footage, interviews, and recording session concerts from those who were instrumental in spreading his message. It recalls a sweeping grassroots movement that demanded change through non-violent protests. Music was a unifying and empowering force for the subjugated workers fueling the country's growth.


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Robert Pattinson Allegedly Threw A Batman Party At Pal Pete Davidson’s Club, And The Music Was All Kanye West

Robert Pattinson's The Batman afterparty was at Pete Davidson's new bar, and he allegedly played a ton of Kanye West there.

Benedict Cumberbatch Reacts To Sam Elliot’s Profanity-Laced Review Of The Power Of The Dog

The Power of the Dog star Benedict Cumberbatch responds to some pretty harsh criticism from Western genre vet Sam Elliot.

Why Ben Affleck And Jennifer Lopez Are Reportedly Moving To The U.K. For The Summer

Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez are seemingly headed for the U.K., but why?

Disney's Hollywood Studios Turned Into a Water Park Due To Heavy Rain And The Video Is Wild

Disney's Hollywood Studios became an unscheduled water park last night.

Droll ‘Hyperions’ Can’t Summon That Superhero Sizzle

It’s not easy bringing something fresh to the superhero genre in 2022.

We’ve seen blockbusters (too many to count), super comedies (“Hancock,” “Kick-Ass”) and even supervillain romps (“Birds of Prey,” “Suicide Squad”).

“The Hyperions” may be the most original spin on the genre to date.

The indie comedy features a superhero clan squabbling over its leader’s intentions, a very public kidnapping and the group’s legacy. It eschews car chases and fisticuffs, savoring familial bruises instead.

It’s droll beyond words yet rarely generates enough friction, alas, to keep our attention.

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Professor Ruckus Mandulbaum (a sensational Cary Elwes) created a group of superheroes called The Hyperions in the early 1960s, but he’s been known to tinker with the lineup over the years. That leaves former members scrambling for their identities and ties to the professor.

He’s like a father to them, but the professor seems more interested in the Hyperions brand than returning that affection.

That leads to a bizarre kidnapping at the group’s official museum and tribute center. Former Hyperions Vista (Penelope Mitchell) and Ansel (Alphonso McAuley) want their old Titan badges back, the trinkets created by the professor that grant them their super powers.

The duo’s motivations aren’t as obvious as some would expect, forcing Professor Mandulbaum to reconnect with them in a curious, and curiously drab, showdown.

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“The Hyperions” has few resources behind it, apparent from the lack of CGI wonders and battle sequences. What it has in abundance, though, is writer/director Jon McDonald’s imagination, along with a keen sense of pop culture theatrics.

The film screams late ’70s style, and by the end credits you’ll swear The Hyperions really were part of TV lore. The sound design is equally crisp and inviting, from period-friendly nobs clicking in retro fashion to flash bulbs exploding at just the right moments.

McDonald’s cast, led by Elwes’ inscrutable professor, nails the dry tone necessary to tell the tale. It’s not hard to spot the conservative values baked into the yarn, with Hyperions clinging to each other, and a wary patriarch, for a richer sense of self.

So what’s missing?

 

 
 
 
 
 
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At times “The Hyperions” echoes the stylish overkill seen in too many Wes Anderson comedies. That leaves us disengaged from the key players, no matter how inventive the compositions may be. Vista’s background should instantly register with viewers given the secret she’s been keeping from the professor. It doesn’t impact her character arc until very late in the story.

The professor himself, a collection of crumpled suits and plummy bon mots, also lacks enough warmth for a possible redemption.

Some scenes generate smiles, even a chuckle or two, but long stretches go past that repeat the story’s themes sans that impish humor.

The film’s third act strikes a tender chord, but the lack of superhero theatrics becomes glaringly obvious. We’re not here for that brand of action, already played out in most genre films, but a sampling of the group’s might wouldn’t hurt.

“The Hyperions” shows how resilient, and dynamic, Hollywood’s favorite genre can be. It’s also a warning that style and innovative tics aren’t enough to keep a story afloat.

HiT or Miss: “The Hyperions” offers a rich tapestry of superhero tropes, but the main story can’t generate enough tension, or laughs, to rally audiences to its side.

The post Droll ‘Hyperions’ Can’t Summon That Superhero Sizzle appeared first on Hollywood in Toto.



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Arnold Schwarzenegger Shares Update On Twins Sequel Triplets Following Ivan Reitman's Death

Ivan Reitman passed away in February, and now Arnold Schwarzenegger has given an update on what this means for Triplets.

Following Oscar Snub, Dune Director Denis Villeneuve Responds To The Broadcast Cutting Key Categories

The Dune director has a strong opinion on the Oscars laving several awards out of the live broadcast.

Scream Star Melissa Barrera Explains What She Wants To Explore With Her Character In The Sixth Film

Another Scream is coming, and actress Melissa Barrera has thoughts about her character's future.

Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty Review

In 2019, Adam McKay and Will Ferrell called it quits. Like children of a messy divorce, audiences everywhere were upset and curious as to why the creative geniuses behind Gary Sanchez Productions and Funny or Die would end on such a sour note, after having created some of the most famous comedies of the past two decades (Anchorman, Step Brothers, The Other Guys, and more). Turns out, it was over a casting decision; McKay chose Michael Shannon (who later dropped out) and then John C. Reilly, over Will Ferrell, when casting the role of former Lakers owner Dr. Jerry Buss in a biographical series.


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Turning Red Review: Pixar's Brilliantly Creative Exploration of Puberty

Turning Red takes a transformational moment for girls into a hilarious and brilliantly creative exploration of adolescence. The film uses a family's greatest secret as an ingenious allegory for reaching puberty. Getting your first period should not be an embarrassing or taboo subject for discussion. Growing up is a whirlwind of physical and emotional changes. Turning Red embraces that awkwardness with CGI humor and heart. Pixar continues to be groundbreaking.


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Star Trek: Picard Season Two Premiere Recap & Review: No Time For Love

Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) has conquered many obstacles, but apparently love isn't one of them. Star Trek: Picard's season two premiere, "The Star Gazer", has the legendary Starfleet admiral engaging in time travel shenanigans once again. La Sirena's crew reunites from various Alpha quadrant locales to investigate an anomaly in space-time. The episode has soap opera contrivances until a thrilling climax. We also get the requisite return of classic Star Trek: The Next Generation characters. It's an uneven start that continues the narrative issues from the first season.


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Taron Egerton Updates Fans After Collapsing On Stage In The Midst Of His West End Play

Is Taron Egerton okay? The performer fainted on stage during previews of his live show, COCK. But he has a new message for fans, so read it now.

Alexander Skarsgård Looks Impressive In The Northman, But Talks Difficulty Of Being 'Shackled' And 'Dragged' For New Movie

Alexander Skarsgård reflects on the physical challenges he faced while filming Robert Eggers' The Northman.

Stephen King Reveals The Stephen King Adaptation He Believes Should Have Won An Academy Award

Stephen King highlights a Stephen King movie that should have not just been nominated for an Oscar, but won one.

Rob Schroeder Discusses Ultrasound and Directing Vincent Kartheiser

Rob Schroeder has made the most of his feature film debut with Ultrasound, based on the graphic novel Generous Bosom. The plot spares no time, jumping right into the thick of an unexplainable epiphany-esque experience.


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Jamie Lee Curtis On Her Relationship With Lindsay Lohan And How Her Freaky Friday Co-Star Has Dealt With Fame

It's been nearly two decades since Freaky Friday, but Jamie Lee Curtis is still keeping tabs on Lindsay Lohan.

If Jason Momoa Was Cold Filming Those Aquaman Scenes, You Should Check Out His Latest Shirtless Post

Jason Momoa is shirtless again, as the Aquaman star is back in freezing waters for his newest post.

One Disney Park Has Added Drones To It's Nighttime Spectacular, And It's Amazing

To celebrate a momentous anniversary, one Disney Park is going all out with a drone display -- and the results can't be missed.

Will Smith Opened Up About The Sincere Message Denzel Washington Gave Him As They Both Compete For Awards This Year

After winning his first SAG award, Will Smith shared the sincere and supportive message Denzel Washington gave him as both actors compete against each other this awards season.

Dwayne Johnson Shares Sweet Post About Friendship With Kevin Hart After Video Of Past Trolling Is Shared

The Rock and Kevin Hart love their bromance as much as you do.

How Hugh Jackman Played Matchmaker For Ryan Reynolds With The Free Guy Director

Apparently, the Wolverine actor had vital role in Shawn Levy and Ryan Reynolds' recent collaborations.

One Way You Can Work Around Disney’s Afternoon Park-Hopping Rule—If You Have The Money

These days, if you want to insure an easy vacation at Disney World, you'll have to budget for some serious upgrades.

Will Encanto Get A Sequel? Here’s What Lin-Manuel Miranda Thinks

Will the Madrigal family return? Lin-Manuel Miranda has some thoughts.

The Boys Presents Diabolical Review: The Superhero Show Gets Animated

Anthology shows have been all the rage for a while now. The format was popular in the 1950s and '60s, but took a pretty hard break until 2011, when Black Mirror and American Horror Story revitalized the concept. The advent of streaming only added to the mix, leading to a slew of anthology shows which promised different storylines (and even cinematic styles) with each episode or season. From the sci-fi hit Love Death + Robots to the tender real-life romances of My Love, anthologies are able to unravel a colorful array of threads stitched together by one unifying pattern.


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