Change Your Image
NateWatchesCoolMovies
Michael Wincott
Chrisopher Walken
Mickey Rourke
Gary Oldman
Lance Henriksen
Billy Drago
William Forsythe
Robert Knepper
Malcolm Mcdowell
Ron Perlman
Norman Reedus
William Fichtner
Michael Mssee
Rutger Hauer
Thomas Kretschmann
Jurgen Prochnow
Udo Kier
Eric Roberts
Joaquim De Almeida
Steve Railsback
Gabriel Byrne
Tony Todd
Peter Stormare
Ray Wise
Michael Madsen
Chris Mulkey
James Russo
Kurtwood Smith
Tommy Flanagan
Ray Liotta
Jon Polito
Kim Coates
Sean Patrick Flanery
Willem Dafoe
Brad Dourif
J.E. Freeman
James Remar
Andrew Divoff
Tom Sizemore
James Gammon
Tom Hardy
Stellan Skarsgaard
Michael Ironside
Michael Biehn
Stephen Mchattie
David Bowie
Arnold Vosloo
Gary Busey
Powers Boothe
Karel Roden
Alan Rickman
Dennis Hopper
Denis Leary
Dennis Farina
Clancy Brown
Nick Nolte
Nick Chinlund
Peter Greene
Josh Brolin
Jean Reno
Robert Patrick
Robert Forster
Scott Wilson
Danny Trejo
Patrick Kilpatrick
M.C. Gainey
Arthur Nascarella
Robert Davi
Ted Levine
Armand Assante
Tom Berenger
Michael Rooker
Miguel Ferrer
R. Lee Ermey
Pete Postlethwaite
Bill Moseley
Benicio Del Toro
Sean Bean
Clifton Collins Jr.
Johnny Messner
Raymond J. Barry
Jeff Fahey
Elias Koteas
David Warschofsky
Dan Hedaya
Kenneth Welsh
Harvey Fierstein
Jason Isaacs
Tom Noonan
Giancarlo Gianninni
Michael Moriarty
Ciaran Hinds
Chris Penn
Ian Mcshane
Lenny Von Dohlen
Richard Brake
James Gandolfini
Scott Glenn
Peter Outerbridge
Tom Waits
Daniel Von Bargen
Ron Silver
Fred Ward
Tone Loc
Tom Towles
Rade Sherbedzija
John Noble
Liam Cunningham
Marco Rodriguez
David O Hara
Costas Mandylor
Sean Pertwee
Karl Urban
Joseph Gordon Levitt
Jimmy F. Skaggs
Richard Lynch
Mads Mikkelson
David Zayas
Jack Conley
John P. Ryan
Vinnie Jones
Frank Military
Nick Mancuso
Roddy Piper
Favorite Actresses:
Jodelle Ferland
Asia Argento
Gabrielle Anwar
Grace Zabriskie
Emmy Rossum
Danielle Harris
Lori Petty
Clea Duvall
Gina Gershon
Deborah Kara Unger
Nathalie Portman
Franka Potete
Ellen Barkin
Juliette Lewis
Musetta Vander
Michelle Rodriguez
Sheryl Lee
Ivana Milecivec
Patricia Arquette
Milla Jovovich
Natasha MacElhone
Saffron Burrows
Embeth Davidz
Vera Farmiga
Emily Mortimer
Rose Macgowan
Madeleine Stowe
Annabella Sciorra
Jennifer Jason Leigh
Linda Fiorientino
Leonor Varela
Fairuza Balk
Dominique Swain
Michelle Monaghan
Parker Posey
Favorite Directors:
David Lynch
The Coen Brothers
Kathryn Bigelow
Walter Hill
Quentin Tarantino
Robert Rodriguez
Sergio Leone
David Cronenberg
John Carpenter
Rob Zombie
Tarsem Singh
Michael Mann
Guillermo Del Toro
Peter Jackson
Wes Craven
Tony Scott
Nicholas Winding Refn
Genre Favorites:
-Action-
The Boondock Saints
Face/Off
The Rock
Oldboy
Once Upon A Time In Mexico
The Island
Runaway Train
Running Scared
Hero Wanted
Con Air
Training Day
Hard Target
Terminator 2
Predator
End Of Days
Crank
Shoot Em Up
Extreme Prejudice
48 Hours
Bone Dry
Johnny Handsome
Desperado
Blue Steel
-Horror-
Angel Heart
Suspiria
Near Dark
Phenomena
Halloween
Halloween (2007)
The Hitcher
Let The Right One In
Trauma
The Fog (John Carpenter)
The Thing (John Carpenter
A Nightmare On Elm Street
Wishmaster
New Nightmare
The Devil's Rejects
Pumpkinhead
Silent Hill
Bram Stoker's Dracula
Phantoms
Planet Torror
The Faculty
Sleepy Hollow
Masters Of Horror (tv)
Episodes:
-Cigarette Burns-
-Imprint-
-We All Scream For Ice Scream-
-Pick Me Up-
-Pro Life-
From Dusk Till Dawn
Joyride
Land Of The Dead
Dracula 2000
Brain Dead (aka Dead Alive)
Jeepers Creepers 2
Hannibal
Demon Hunter
-Western-
Dead Man
Renegade (aka Blueberry)
Seraphim Falls
Once Upon A Time In The West
The Proposition
The Quick & The Dead
Tombstone
Dead Man's Bounty
-Crime-
U-Turn
Natural Born Killers
True Romance
Romeo Is Bleeding
State Of Grace
Pulp Fiction
The Pope Of Greenwich Village
Reservoir Dogs
Snatch
Lock, Stock & Two Smoking Barrels
Fargo
Miller's Crossing
Sev7n
Heat
Fight Club
King Of New York
At Close Range
Mad Dog Time
Gangster No.1
A Clockwork Orange
Blue Hill Avenue
Gotti
Evilenko
Ronin
Domino
Year Of The Dragon
Man On Fire
Spun
The Salton Sea
Things To Do In Denver When You're Dead
Copland
Toxic
The Usual Suspects
Lucky Number Slevin
-Sci Fi/Fantasy-
The Keep
Paranoia 1.0
The Cell
The Fountain
Strange Days
Willow
The Lord Of The Rings
Moscow Zero
The Prophecy
The Prophecy 2
The Prophecy 3
Cyborg 2
Blade Runner
Aliens
Alien: Resurrection
The Lost World: Jurassic Park 2
Total Recall
Highlander
Robocop
The Seventh Sign
Virtuosity
Equilibrium
Resident Evil: Apocalypse
Faust: Love Of The Damned
Independence Day
-Comic Book-
The Crow
Blade 2
Sin City
Tank Girl
V For Vendetta
The Dark Knight
Batman Begins
Batman Returns
Watchmen
Hellboy
Immortal
300
-Thriller/Suspense-
Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me
Mullholland Dr.
Southern Comfort
Lost Highway
The Barber
Memento
Nick Of TimeBlue Velvet
The Silence Of The Lambs
The Phantom Of The Opera
The Abyss
Chasing Ghosts
Switchback
Wild At Heart
Eraserhead
Red (2008)
The Killing Gene
Fear X
-Drama-
A Little Princess
Crash (2004)
North Country
Between Stranger
A Broken Life
Four Days
Mystic River
The Journey Of Natty Gann
-War-
Downfall
Stalingrad
Escape From Sobibor
Das Boot
Castle Keep
The Thin Red Line
Saving Private Ryan
Black Hawk Down
Tears Of The Sun
Savior
-Comedy-
The Ref
Suicide Kings
Dead Fish
Knocked Up
13 Moons
Up In Smoke
-TV Shows-
Twin Peaks
Carnivale
Dexter
The X-Files
Millennium
Prison Break
Fringe
Family Guy
Burn Notice
24
Deadwood
Sons Of Anarchy
Masters Of Horror
Robot Chicken
Ratings
Most Recently Rated
Lists
An error has ocurred. Please try againReviews
The Wasp (2024)
Good lord
Guillem Morales' The Wasp is the most disturbing, disquieting horror/thriller this year and a strong contender for like.. ever. It's also just a sensationally well written/acted dramatic story with two emotionally flammable performances from Natalie Dormer and Naomie Harris, the latter giving what must be a career defining turn. I can't speak about plot much at all except to say that these two actresses play women who were once vaguely associated with each other when they were girls at school, and now reconnect in some form as adults, both now leading very different lives. The film shines an uncompromising beam of illumination on secrets from the past and deep hurt that people carry with them like a literal shard embedded in their self identity, and explores the often brutal and explosive behavioural ways in which that sort of residual pain lashes out when spurred on by karma decades later. It's a shocking, refreshingly unpredictable, often revolting experience that leaves one with a haunted, bitter shadow on the soul but it's also a brilliant, essential and very thought provoking story that takes on its characters and themes with utmost maturity. Harris has made a name for herself in prolific franchise stuff like 28 Days Later, Bond and Pirates Of The Caribbean, giving excellent and starkly varied performances in each. Here she is a terrifying, showstopping wonder and nails the roiling inner instability of her character's adolescent trauma bubbling forth through a calm, collected adult-life veneer. Dormer I've only seen in Game Of Thrones where her character is the exact opposite of the steely, unpleasant bi**h we see onscreen here, also a terrific portrayal. Bring an emotional umbrella for this one as it's a tough watch, but one you'll be glad you stepped out into the rain beyond your comfort zone for.
The Substance (2024)
Buckle up
It takes a lot of courage to put oneself out there in the sort of intimidating tornado of physical performance and thematic taboos that Demi Moore fearlessly undertakes in Coralie Fargeat's the Substance, a positively unhinged socially satirical body horror opus. Moore is Elizabeth Sparkle, a once radiant beauty queen movie star who is approaching the sunset of her 50's and is very unhappy with the perceived diminishment of her good looks, scrutinized under the ruthlessly shallow guillotine lens aimed at her by society at large (which includes us, whether we'd care to admit it or not). Also disappointed with her aging is grotesque network producer Harvey (Dennis Quaid like you've never seen him before), who fires her in favour of somebody younger and more... perky. As if listening in on the proceedings, a bizarre pharmaceutical corporation reaches out to her with their latest mad scientist concoction: 'The Substance,' a complex regiment of serums devised to give an aging body that much needed (or perhaps just desired?) nubile nitro boost. Ah, but not without its brutally karmic repercussions, mind you. Fargeat takes the sort of loony conceit one would find in a particularly imaginative episode of Tales From The Crypt and blows it up like a disgusting parade float with horrifyingly tactile sound design, glisteningly vile practical gore effects, crackhead sponsored editing and a trio of lead performances that seem ripped right out of a tongue in cheek nightmare. Moore is staggering and I'd spoil the best surprises this film has to offer if I mentioned the lengths she goes to in dedication to performance here, I haven't seen her chomp at the bit in her work since... well, since she herself was on Tales From The Crypt many moons ago. Quaid is on behavioural steroids here in a role originally meant for Ray Liotta (that would have been something), Harvey has one note and its 'hilariously despicable' whether he's screaming demands into his phone, changing from one Hunger Games level extravagant outfit to the next at rapid fire speed or devouring a plate of butter soaked prawns with fiendishly horrible enthusiasm. Margaret Qualley, the third musketeer in this casting spectacle, is also unbelievably dynamic and almost opulently hot as a character too fun to spoil with context in a review. Every artist involved gives it their career best all, right down to the B-cam operator tasked with haunting establishing shots of ominous palm trees to the FX team giving new meta meaning to the term "splatter zone." Something that truly has to be seen to be believed.
Murder in a Small Town: The Suspect (2024)
A nice first episode
I live on the Sunshine Coast where this was filmed, and know people in the production, this turned out a really nice first episode. Not too dark, edgy or arthouse-y like a lot of mystery/crime shows on streaming sites, more cozy, mellow and lowkey. I rarely watch cable shows anymore but attended the premiere with some friends and family who worked on the show and we were all happy with the result. Our beautiful town was put to really good use location wise, Rossif Sutherland is charisma on low burn as the chief of police and adorable Kristin Kreuk contrasts his wry, stoic energy nicely with her bubbly, effervescent aura. James Cromwell does a quietly magnificent guest arc and nails a monologue that had our crowd pin-drop silent, always nice to see him show up, I hope this show gets a fair shot, so far it fits comfortingly into that niche of elegiac rural procedurals that don't expect too much of the viewer other than to immerse oneself in gorgeous Pacific Northwest scenery and straightforward, undemanding intrigue. Excited for the rest of the season.
Earthling (2010)
Very fascinating, but it won't be everyone's thing
What if aliens lived among us on earth, in human form, unbeknownst not only to us... but also to them? Clay Liford's Earthling is a strange, ethereally beguiling low budget sci-fi that is very much placed upon the shoulders of its eclectic ensemble cast, who all do a fine job. Several disparate characters in urban USA suddenly find out that they are the extraterrestrial beings placed here by a kind of nomadic sentient spore organism, hung suspended in earths orbit indefinitely. They try to find each other and a way back home while some become attached to the human experience in ways both beautiful and unsettling. This is of course my interpretation of the story because it's told in a fashion that's very hard to coherently access or discern. That's not to say it's badly told or nonsensical, I think that Liford just made this an intensely personal thing from the internal perspective of these beings, and the audience serves merely as flies on a very dreamy wall, observing from the outside and looking down on an experience that's difficult for human brains to understand. It's a fascinating, lyrical, indescribable experience at times, the actors all doing a fine job including Rebecca Spence, William Katt, Savanna Sears, Twin Peaks' Harry Goaz and more. Perennial villain actor Peter Greene shows up surprisingly as one of the humanoid alien beings, getting to play refreshingly against type and display restraint, introspect and use his solid charisma for something other than intimidation. It's a very strange film and won't be for everybody, but if you use the unconscious rather than the intellect to feel your way through the story, you just may be rewarded greatly. Streaming now for free on Tubi.
1992 (2022)
Ray Liotta's last moment in film
Ray Liotta makes his cinematic curtain call in Ariel Vroeman's 1992, but it's a sadly superficial stock villain in a mediocre thriller that doesn't say or do much for the actor, who leaves a towering legacy behind him. In the violent mess of the Rodney King riots, single father Mercer (Tyrese Gibson) attempts to hide out with his teenage son at his workplace, a metalworks factory, during the chaos as it's in a much safer neighbourhood than his own. Of course it's an out of the frying pan into the cat and mouse situation as this just happens to be the night when vicious ex-con Lowell (Liotta) and his two sons (Scott Eastwood & Dylan Arnold) decide to rob the place, using the fact that most of the city's cops are distracted by the riots as cover. Cue a dimly lit parade of yelling, standoffs, shootouts, uninspired dialogue and thinly drawn characters facing off towards an eventual conclusion where lots of them get shot. It's almost comical how the script attempts tiny bits of social commentary regarding the riots and that infamous verdict before *immediately* getting distracted again by pedestrian thriller elements. Liotta is his typecasted self here: angry, volatile, scary and fired up, he doesn't get to do much else or display any depth beyond surface level menace, and it's unfortunate. The same can be said for the film overall, wherein a bit of atmospheric tension and feverish energy is mounted with the riot backdrop, before sinking disappointingly into the run of the mill conflict at the factory.
Beetlejuice Beetlejuice (2024)
The sequel I hoped for. So much fun.
As far as latter day 'legacy sequels' go (whatever that coined term means anyway) Tim Burton's Beetlejuice Beetlejuice is about as good as it gets and while it obviously doesn't quite match the original, which is one of the most singularly idiosyncratic films of all time, damn if it doesn't come friggin close. Burton has arguably been on a bit of a creative doldrum stretch since Big Fish, or maybe Sweeney Todd sometime after it. That's a hefty slump but with this film it's like he never left, effortlessly bringing the manic energy and bizarro horror comedy tone of the original classic in terrific form. The same can be said of Michael Keaton, reprising what has got to be the best role of his career and certainly his professed favourite. Beetlejuice is back, causing all kinds of otherworldly havoc in the bureaucratic nightmare that is Burton's vision of the afterlife, pursued by his long dead but newly resurrected ex-wife (Monica Bellucci, fitting the spooky goth vibe of this like a glove) and a boisterous undead detective (Willem Dafoe, an absolute hoot). Upstairs earth-side an adult Lydia (Winona Ryder, gorgeous and talented as ever) struggles to raise her teenage daughter (Jenna Ortega) and balance the conflicting chaotic energies of her insufferably pretentious boyfriend (Justin Theroux, oozing hapless smarm) and high strung stepmom (Catherine O'Hara, always an absolute delight). If there's one gripe I had it's that the film is a tad over plotted, with a lot of dialogue to chew through but it's a small issue when you consider how much fun this thing is. From some great surprise cameos to new musical numbers and a callback to the original Harry Belafonte haunts to Keaton being positively let off the chain to do his thing once again to the flat out gorgeous (and entirely practical) production design and effects, this is every inch the follow-up I was hoping for from Burton and everyone involved.
Lady in the Lake (2024)
Ambitious, well produced but kind of all over the place
Natalie Portman investigates several mysterious murders in Lady In The Lake, an ambitious, gorgeously staged, often magnificent yet sometimes frustratingly cluttered miniseries based on a novel by Laura Lippman. In 1960's Baltimore the murder of an aight year old girl prompts Maddie Schwartz (Portman) to gravitate away from her marriage to a persnickety Jewish businessman (Brett Gelman) and take it upon herself to not only solve that one but the apparent suspicious drowning of one Cleo Johnson (Moses Ingram), an African American woman dredged up from the bottom of a lake. From there it launches into a horde of subplots that get so complicated and fill the narrative so full to the brim that at times it feels like each and every episode has enough content to be its own series. That's the issue here is that by the time all is said and done it's tough to discern or remember exactly what *was* said and was done, and there are several plot points that still feel muddy to me. Nevertheless, the performances are all excellent, Portman is fiercely committed as ever, Ingram is a revelation as Cleo as they're supported by all sorts of recognizable faces including the always terrific Pruitt Taylor Vince, Noah Jupe, Mikey Madison, Dylan Arnold, Byron Powers, Josiah Cross and The Wire's resident despicable crime kingpin Wood Harris here playing, you guessed it, another despicable crime kingpin. The attention to 60's period detail in terms of both production design and sociopolitical issues is admirable and it all feels very well mounted. But yeah.. the story is like accidentally opening a shaken up beer can and having everything inside erupt all at once over the course of seven very hectic, often disorienting episodes that should have been more measured, more paced... and far more succinctly explained at the end of the day.
Strange Darling (2023)
Wild ride, great film
You don't often come across horror thrillers that are as genuinely thrilling as JT Mollner's Strange Darling, a small miracle of narrative ingenuity, pulp n' blood soaked violence, Pacific Northwest vibes, viscerally shocking plot revelations and stinging dark humour, all captured on gloriously grainy 35mm and lensed by none other than Giovanni Ribisi in his cinematography debut. A man (Kyle Gallner) and a woman (Willa Fitzgerald) meet at a bar and later arrive at a log cabin motel for some sexy shenanigans. Suspicions arise aligning with the presence of a serial killer in the region and a non linear game of extreme cat and mouse unfolds against lush Oregon scenery, dreamy soundtrack choices and lots of practical gore. Fitzgerald gives a performance for the ages here, shifting gears with uncommon talent and fiercely committed bravura, Gallner amps up his already solid horror presence with grit and menace, and they're supported by old veterans Ed Begley Jr and Barbara Hershey, both darkly effective comic relief. The film is told in chapters that are presented out of chronological order, a stunt that provokes confusion in some stories but here only adds to the sizzle of figuring out just what's going on. The moments of bloody, breakneck action and pursuit are always contrasted well by long passages of hushed, intimate dialogue where diabolical personas are laid bare and delirious nuggets of hysterical black comedy are imparted. It's one of the best films this year and one hell of a ride. Oh, and it has what might be the single funniest and most delicious looking breakfast preparation sequence in cinema, a gluttonous symphony of butter, syrup and ravenous fervour that would have Anthony Bourdain slow clapping and shaking his head.
The Crow (2024)
It's pretty atrocious
People have this thing where they forget that The Crow is a franchise with multiple movies and not just one original with a tragic real life death at its centre. The original is one of my favourite films of all time, I've never been I subtle about that, but some of the sequels after I have enjoyed and I've never been of that "there's only one Crow" school of thought. Having said that... The Crow (2024) is a pretty outrageously mediocre iteration, sitting squarely behind the solid first two sequels, City Of Angels and Salvation, yet still in front of the hopelessly dire Wicked Prayer. It's a shame because Bill Skarsgard is imposing and ethereally menacing as Eric Draven, he's an actor who can somehow simultaneously pull off sexy and creepy, which is exactly the type of aura needed to play a protagonist in this field. WhatsHerName Twiggs is also very good as Shelley, the two have genuine chemistry and the decision to dedicate a full first third of the film to their meeting and relationship, Mandy style, is a good one that you'd think would strengthen the eventual revenge story, if that story had any weight. Danny Huston gets casted in another of his snarling supernatural villain turns he's been stuck in since bringing down the house as the lead vampire in 30 Days Of Night, a performance he'll never live up to or top. That's a huge problem this film has, is villains; each Crow film before it, even the piss poor Eddie Furlong one, had very specific and varied gangs of bad guys, each with their own defining characteristics and style, that's kinda been the running theme. Here they're interchangeable, mostly silent, suit wearing boring people with no distinct mannerisms or character traits, just Eurotrash looking goons who barely utter a word. The visual look of the film is drab and so terminally middle of the road when you compare the look of sets, lighting and costumes from the rest of the franchise. Even the hellish purgatory Eric finds himself mired in just looks like the Vancouver shipyard ports on a rainy day, nothing evocative or innovative put into locations whatsoever. The soundtrack choices range from Joy Division to Enya (lol) and try to mimic the lightning in a bottle musical style of the first but none of the song picks feel organic or in service of story, they're just thrown in there right off Spotify. It's a shame because Bill and Twiggy do really good renditions of Eric and Shelley, their efforts deserved a film that took itself seriously and didn't just opt out of doing anything at less than absolute minimal effort. Overall waste of time.
La bête (2023)
Unbearable
Existential sci-fi about the reality of reincarnation and past lives might be my favourite niche sub-genre in film, my favourites ranging from Cloud Atlas to What Dreams May Come. Immense was my disappointment at the languid pretension, baffling incoherence and overloaded stagnancy of Bertrand Bonello's The Beast. This is a bizarre, two plus hour attempt at profound science fiction that sees Léa Seydoux and George McKay as two souls who I guess keep finding each other again and again over centuries, once in Olde France, then sometime in the early 1900's, present day and way in the future where a vague form of domineering Artificial Intelligence regulates human emotions to keep us from getting too excited. One only needs to show them this film and they'll settle right down for a nap. Léa and George are both phenomenal actors on their own and paired up elsewhere but they have no chemistry here (not to mention a hefty age gap), both looking terminally confused in every timeline, mumbling underwritten lines and wandering around corridors and neighbourhoods with nary an ounce of agency or clarity. This might have worked as a short film but it's stretched painfully out into 145 minutes of torturous gibberish that ends on Seydoux belting out a scream worthy of Laura Palmer, perhaps all at once realizing what a colossal waste of time her involvement in this film was.
Alien: Romulus (2024)
Enjoyed it for the most part
We have a new Alien film on our hands for the first time since 2017's disappointing Covenant and Fede Alvarez's Romulus is, for the most part, a slappin' great time at the movies. Taking place in a specific chapter of time between Alien and Aliens, it chronicles a team of young Weyland-Yutani employees who feel a bit more than disillusioned with the company and decide to hijack a derelict vessel floating in orbit above their bleak, dreary mining colony planet and get the hell out of proverbial Dodge. You don't have to guess what's waiting for them onboard and pretty soon they're faced with a fight not just to escape horrible bosses, but one for their very lives. The decision to cast Cailee Spaeny here is a great one; she first caught my attention almost walking away with the otherwise underwhelming Bad Times At The El Royale and has since been on a meteoric hot streak. Her protagonist Rain is one of the best lead characters in canon, a badass, bruised warrior with a fierce emotional compass and the will to survive. There are a few things that didn't work for me; some on the nose verbal references to other films in canon were kinda lame and the choice to add the cameo of a long deceased character (and actor, I might add) using really dodgy CGI is... questionable and didn't resonate at all with me. I was hoping the film would more do it's own independent thing within the Alien-verse rather than try so hard to tie in to every little aspect and please all the disparate fans spread out over the galaxy of what has been a decidedly segmented, somewhat divisive franchise since it began all those light years ago. Nevertheless, Alvarez's passion for the lore shines through and he has wrought a visceral, propulsive iteration that excites around every bend and has some of the nastiest, squirmiest gore and creature moments to date.
Cuckoo (2024)
Now THIS is a horror film
Tilman Singer's Cuckoo is a bone-fide miracle, the kind of hellbent, cheerfully berserk, wantonly WTF, aesthetically gorgeous piece of ethereally pulpy arthouse schlock madness we deserve in the genre. American teen Gretchen (Hunter Schafer) arrives to Bavarian alps to live with her dad (Marton Csokas, always a welcome face in intense horror/action fare), stepmom (Jessica Henwick) and their kid (Mila Lieu). They live near a creepy resort owned by Dan Stevens and his outlandishly perfect eurotrash accent and mannerisms, an outwardly affable German gentleman whose oddly agreeable demeanour barely masks a dangerous mad scientist persona lurking just beneath. There is something profoundly wrong going on at this idyllic sanctuary, and that's as far as I'll go in talking about it because this story is one jaw dropping, visceral ball of yard to unwind and get immersed in. Schafer is an uncommonly gifted actress and makes Gretchen a dogged survivalist with a warm emotional core, a fiercely relatable protagonist you literally cheer on and want a good outcome for in the end. Stevens is already horror royalty after unforgettable turns in stuff like The Guest, Apostle, A Walk Among The Tombstones, FX's Legion and the upcoming third season of AMC's superb The Terror. He's a spectacle onto himself here and while the (very hilarious) decision to make him a well spoken German weirdo could have come across as too gimmicky, he fully commits and offers up a performance of meticulously calibrated derangement. While I wasn't a fan of Singer's debut horror film Luz, this truly struck a chord with me, it's a a fully enveloping sensory vision with a Final Girl for the ages, a beautifully loopy score and, most importantly, horror that is genuinely terrifying. Brilliant film.
Trap (2024)
So much fun
M. Night Shyamalan's Trap hinges on a delicious high concept premise: what if a serial killer took his daughter to a concert, but authorities were tipped off he might be attending and set a highly calibrated, heavy artillery dragnet for him. This is all revealed in the highly marketed trailer so by the time we sit down for the film we're already one twist in and we can watch an unhinged Josh Hartnett, who plays both loving father and deranged mass murderer, attempt a daring exodus from the crowded venue with SWAT teams and a dogged FBI profiler (Hayley Mills, of ALL people) steadily closing in. This film is a ton of fun, Shyamalan knows what a larger than life scenario he's picked here and just pulls the ripcord for all it's worth and manages to generate a ton of crackerjack suspense. Hartnett slides so easily into the groove of an unassuming serial killer because he's casted so awesomely against type; who wouldn't trust such a good looking, affable dude? It could be the performance of his career and he gets to have so much diabolical fun as a dangerous man backed into a tight corner who uses ruthless stealthy violence and careful psychological tactics to escape. Shyamalan's own daughter Saleka is also fantastic in her film debut as Lady Raven, the pop star putting on the concert who isn't just a fixture up on stage but gets to actively participate in the cat and mouse game with her own ingenuity and agency. It's a terrific thriller and Shyamalan is on a roll these days (save for last year's disappointing Knock At The Cabin) with one of the best theatre going experiences of the year.
The Instigators (2024)
Tons of fun
Matt Damon and Casey Affleck get their own idiot-brand buddy comedy of errors in Doug Liman's riotous The Instigators, which is getting not so great reviews right out of the gate. I thought it was terrific but I can *kinda* see why people aren't taking to it; it's a very simple, loud, streamlined story of two hapless morons surrounded by a horde of aggressively unlovable, sometimes downright hostile supporting characters and anybody expecting a 'feel-good buddy flick' is going to be a bit burned. They play two Boston losers who are forced by an angry Jewish mobster (Michael Stuhlbarg in full ham mode) and his bakery owning colleague (Alfred Molina, restrained) into pulling off an ill advised heist by robbing the city's unbelievably corrupt, scumbag mayor (Ron Perlman in mad-dog mode) on a campaign party night. Of course everything goes about as wrong as it could go and soon these two schmucks are on the run with Damon's exasperated psychiatrist (Hong Chau, always excellent) as hostage, pursued by all kinds of lowlifes including a hotheaded townie thug (Paul Walter Hauser) and a relentless dirty cop (Ving Rhames). It's all a bit madcap and messy but damn is it ever hilarious, with Affleck and Damon playing up their idiocy to delirious heights and trading deftly scripted verbal banter (co-written by Affleck himself, no less) like bullets. It doesn't have a brain in its head or anything to say but it doesn't slow down for a friggin minute, has a wicked great ensemble cast all having a blast.
Heartbreakers (1984)
Wonderful 80's gem
Peter Coyote and Nick Mancuso are two edgy, slightly threatening character actors who routinely play intense dudes in action/horror/thriller stuff so it's refreshing to see them through the lens of a benign interpersonal drama, playing two regular dudes in the 80's navigating sex, relationships, the passing of a parent, corporate jobs versus artistic careers and most importantly the fierce, committed friendship they have to each other. Coyote is the restless artist having issues with his headstrong girlfriend, Mancuso the would be career man who yearns for a romantic relationship that has meaning to it, and both absolutely nail their performances, supported by an emotionally mature, grounded script by director Bobby Roth and a cheerfully ambient score by the great Tangerine Dream. A true hidden gem, streaming now for free on Tubi.
Monolith (2022)
Interesting, but the 'twist' doesn't really work
Monolith is a tricky one, an eerie one location thriller that tries a pretty ballsy bait and switch manoeuvre with its ending that I'm not altogether sure about being effective or not. A semi-famous radio journalist (Lily Sullivan) from a wealthy family sits alone in a fancy secluded manor, doing interviews over the phone for her podcast that probes into various obscure conspiracy theories. Her latest fixation is on some shred of evidence over the years that objects of alien origin have somehow made their way into human households, and she tries to track down accounts that back this up. What she really finds is some half forgotten secret closer to home that might even relate to her own past and this is where the film attempts a prompt and jarring turn right into left field that, although fascinating, grounds what could have been a spooky extraterrestrial horror experience into something very, how should I put it, socioeconomic and decidedly "of this world." It's a shame because I felt like the former option would have made for the better, stronger film. In any case it's still creepy, atmospheric, well acted and makes good use of its single location trappings.
Detained (2024)
Godawful
Detained is a strong contender for worst film of the year so far, I haven't seen a thriller this insanely overblown and outlandishly meaningless since... I dunno. It's sad to see a classy actress like Abbie Cornish stuck in this crap, playing a young woman who wakes up in a police station and is grilled by two hostile detectives (Moon Bloodgood & Laz Alonso) about a supposed hit and run that she has no memory of. Of course that's not really what's going on, and once the film gets past that initial setup and tries to orchestrate a bunch of stupid twists that it thinks are oh so clever, you'll abandon all hope of making sense of it. It tries everything to impress; weird double crosses, red herrings, nonsensical plot turns and even an eye rolling Keyser Soze angle that makes it feel even more like a try-hard ripoff. I have seen thrillers that walk a fine line in making sense of their more bombastic elements and even some that don't, but get a free pass on sheer energy and enthusiasm alone. This one gets neither; it's loud, mean spirited, lazy storytelling of the worst kind.
Deadpool & Wolverine (2024)
It is what it is
Deadpool is back for a third outing whether we like it or not, and the results are surprisingly fun, despite some shockingly overblown hate out there from some people. Look, I get it, I'm not a marvel guy and I agree that the gargantuan presence of the MCU languishing in cinemas for the past decade and a half has been detrimental kinda to all things 'cinema', or however you and Mr. Scorsese choose to personally word it. But as much as I'm not a marvel guy, I am a meta guy in the sense that I love self aware, fourth wall breaking storytelling and boundary pushing stuff, from Last Action Hero to Scream to Wayne's World to Roger Rabbit. Ryan Reynolds is a lot of fun in the role, clearly an ongoing passion project for him, it's like his version of The Mask where he just gets to run through walls with his naturally effervescent, joyously profane presence and bounce it off of Hugh Jackman's perennially pissed off Wolverine. Even if the multiverse malarkey makes the story almost indecipherable compared to the first two films, it's just a ride you take and sort of surrender to in all its messy, mad dog glory. And the cameos? Well, some people this the multiverse angle and all the delirious nostalgia indulgence will ruin coherency and restraint in film, but I'd be lying if a few specific characters we see here from pre-MCU Marvel flicks didn't make me feel all warm and fuzzy, and sort of long for those much simpler times in the Superhero genre.
Bad Boys: Ride or Die (2024)
Fourth time is the charm
Bad Boys are back! Honestly I could watch Will Smith and Martin Lawrence banter in these movies for infinity, I love their chemistry together and I hope they never stop making these, with or without Michael Bay. This fourth one is a big improvement on the slightly underwhelming third, capturing some of the berserkly irreverent shenanigans that made the second film the best. There's a scene in the second where Lawrence's Marcus accidentally takes ecstasy and spends a few scenes as a raving, unhinged joker. In this film he has a near death experience early on and wakes up from it an enlightened man, and then becomes extremely effervescent so he basically gets to more or less spend the entire film in joker mode and it's a genius move on the writers part because it lets Lawrence truly off the chain and Smith almost, *almost* struggles to catch up. They're out to clear their former captain's name against a frame up job of false corruption charges and while Joe Pantoliano's earthly presence is sorely missed here, he still gets a cameo from the great beyond to push the exposition ever onward. The villainy is perpetrated by an ex DEA agent (Eric Dane) gone spectacularly rogue and the film finds a strong, threatening antagonist in him, with added support from folks like Alexander Ludwig, Paola Núñez, Ioan Gruffudd and Vanessa Hudgens. Directors Adil & Bilal keep the camera work exceptionally dynamic in the spirit of Bay and even try some welcome experimental flourishes like a video game style first person shooter POV shot during action sequences. Smith and Lawrence have perfected these two characters and are endlessly watchable, hopefully in more sequels to come.
Where the Devil Roams (2023)
Adams Family makes another great horror film
The Adams Family (not *that* Addams Family) have made another daring, aesthetically beautiful, boundary pushing horror film in Where The Devil Roams, a hypnotic piece of Depression Gothic carnival spookiness. They are a kickass family of filmmakers, musicians and creative human beings whose prior films, the chilly upstate NY ghost drama The Deeper You Dig and the kickass modern witch flick Hellbender are among my favourite horrors in recent years. They strike genre gold again here in telling the tale of a family working for a travelling circus who slash a bloody wayward swath of supernatural violence and occult mayhem through America's 1930's heartland. Always meticulous in style, sound design and idiosyncratic performance, real life partners John Adams, Toby Poser and their daughter Zelda Adams write and direct their beautifully haunting tale and star as the sinister yet relatable carnies themselves, harbouring a dark collective secret that slowly burgeons with each new muted yet shocking blast of violence on their fascinating voyage through America during one of its roughest periods. It's a great film that does a whole lot on a lower budget and, as always, I look forward to whatever is next for this family of collaborating powerhouses.
American Fiction (2023)
Jeffrey Wright gets a rare lead role
It's nice to see Jeffrey Wright in a lead role that rises to meet his usual brand of introspective maturity in the acting craft, after a decades long career of scene stealing supporting turns. Cord Jefferson's American Fiction is a deft, corrosive literary satire by way of a wry, slightly melancholy dysfunctional family drama and one of the smartest scripts I've come across in a while, even if it does unravel like a ball of yarn just a tad in the third act. Wright plays a fiction novelist whose agent (John Ortiz) laments that none of his work is steered toward his supposed African American demographic. His response is to write a madly hyperbolic, hilariously exaggerated satirical volume of life as a ghetto black dude, something that no agent, critic or reader would ever be able to take seriously... except they do. His work is lauded as the penultimate modern manifestation of the 'Black Experience,' much to both his exasperation at not being taken seriously and his giddy surprise at the amount of money being offered for its publication. He's also dealing with his strained relationship to his sister (Tracee Ellis Ross) his mother's onset of dementia and his raucous, difficult yet loving brother (Sterling K. Brown). It's an impossibly witty, highly intelligent and aggressively funny story that meets Wright halfway as a performer who has never once half assed, phoned in or otherwise compromised the work in his career, ever. Even if it doesn't entirely stick a landing that isn't sure how it wants to end and attempts a multiple choice stunt without decidedly picking one outcome, the overall experience is one of such innovation and enjoyment in writing and acting, I've no choice but to give it full marks. Great film.
Daddio (2023)
Brilliant, challenging film
Sean Penn and Dakota Johnson are hypnotically spellbinding in Christy Hall's Daddio, a thematically challenging dramatic two hander that makes essential, cosmic work of the seemingly everyday and mundane. She's a 30-something girl taking a cab ride from JFK International into manhattan, he's the driver. They hit awful accident/construction traffic and the trip takes longer than expected. They talk. Trivially at first, as you might with a stranger but then their conversation goes to places ranging from captivating to elusive to uncomfortable to cathartic, each with their own distinct personality and worldview, clearly distilled by lifetimes of experience behind them. This is a film that challenged me personally; both characters are in positions and have perspectives that are quite easy to judge and become emotionally inflamed by, until I took a step back and humbly realized that I've been in *exactly* these situations before and that what Hall's script and Penn/Johnson's radiant, pitch perfect performances ask of the audience isn't judgment, but empathy and a caring ear. Had I dealt with these emotions and tough interpersonal relationships any different? It isn't necessarily about how they deal with it here rather than how they find in each other a kindred spirit, despite being strangers, to talk about what's going on for them and that is about as human as this experience gets. Brilliant film.
MaXXXine (2024)
My favourite in the trilogy
Mia Goth kills it again (literally) in Ti West's Maxxxine, third part of what could be described as his nostalgic horror porn trilogy, a blissfully lurid chapter of self referential horror that tackles showmanship, stardom and the need to make a name for oneself. Goth's Maxine feels this need deeply as she makes her way from the brutal 1970's farmhouse events of the first film into sleazy, fabulous 1980's Los Angeles where she works part time as a stripper, always looking for that big break. Someone else is out there looking for her though, a vicious killer who strikes close to home and litters the streets in her vicinity with bodies. This is my favourite film of the trilogy and not just for the obvious 80's nostalgia factor (which I am an abject sucker for) although admittedly that is part of it. The themes here and references to 80's horror in Hollywood are studious, charming and thought provoking as they mirror Maxine's bloody rise to stardom, the scrip arc is handled the best so far in this story. Also the cast is large, loud and just having so much fun. Standouts include Elizabeth Debicki as a no-nonsense horror filmmaker out to make a name for herself as well, Sophie Thatcher in a quick cameo as an expert makeup/FX artist, Giancarlo Esposito as Maxine's ruthless agent and Kevin Bacon in utter sleaze mode as a spectacularly grimy private investigator. Goth owns the character fiercely as Maxine emerges from her 1970's chrysalis into the 80's as a badass, beautiful woman who knows what she wants and will do anything to get it, including lots of murder. Great film.
Sleeping Dogs (2024)
Not great, not terrible
Russell Crowe broods, mumbles, drinks and stumbles his way through Sleeping Dogs, a bizarre, overcooked crime/noir thriller and another in his recent foray into B-grade territory. This isn't necessarily a bad film, just a confused, hopelessly convoluted one but Crowe's genuine performance as a former homicide cop with debilitating dementia trying to solve crimes from the past that still haunt him is actually fairly effective, as is the overall atmosphere of permeating melancholy. What isn't so effective is the plot; holy hell is it a labyrinth of dumb flashbacks, red herring suspects and pseudo-psychological nonsense that clouds up what could have been a fascinating narrative. Crowe's character has dementia that's being treated by some experimental neuro-rejuvenation program so he's forgetful but never forgetful enough to hinder the plot moving forward, which feels simultaneously lazy and innovative. Early scenes are interesting as he revisits his unnerving former partner (Tommy Flanagan, intense as ever) and tries to regain some semblance of coherence to solve a decade old cold case, but the film falls into a ridiculous midsection of extended flashback involving a weirdo college professor (Marton Csokas) and one of his less than scrupulous students (Karen Gillan, unusually hammy) that it never quite recovers from. Still, Crowe carries it dutifully and it still manages to sustain a creepy, mournful atmosphere thanks to an ambient, uneasy score. A darkly, sadly humorous scene in which Crowe's gruff ex cop realizes just how much he loves booze after seemingly forgotten about it for awhile is almost worth the price of admission alone.
Berlin Nobody (2024)
Wasted potential
Eric Bana and Sadie Sink sulk their way through Berlin Nobody, a drab cult thriller given the far less tantalizing title "A Sacrifice" for North American distribution. Bana is an American professor in Berlin working on a complicated thesis about cult mindset and dangerous groupthink, unaware that his teenage daughter (Sink) is slowly orbiting the very same deadly cult via a German boy (Jonas Dasser) she's started seeing. Bana is a brilliant actor who doesn't always choose the best scripts and this is unfortunately one of them, Stranger Things' talented Sink also falling into the same trap. They try to do honest character work but the writing lets them down hard, attempting some complex thematics regarding the cut angle that get left completely open ended like they just gave up in fully exploring their ideas and let the credits roll. Skip.