Sunday, November 17, 2024

This Is How We Go On

wake up
make the bed
brush teeth
commute
eat breakfast
work
eat lunch
work
commute
work out
eat dinner
watch TV
repeat
repeat
repeat
see friends
see family
go to the movies
go for a walk
run errands
take a class
clean
repeat
repeat
repeat

this is not tedium
this is life
this is how we go on

enjoy it

Thursday, November 14, 2024

Two Short Poems

The Unknown
You don't know
what you don't know
you never will

that's good.

Inner Child
You did good
you got to the edge
but didn't go over

you endured.

Tuesday, November 12, 2024

'Heretic' A Review

Heretic is a horror/thriller about two young LDS missionaries, Sister Barnes(Sophie Thatcher) and Sister Paxton(Chloe East), who arrive at the home of Mr. Reed(Hugh Grant) to evangelize only to discover they are the ones in danger of conversion.

Grant continues his late career renaissance and gives an award worthy performance here, filled with his normal charm but corrupted, he's loquacious, petulant, frightening and absolutely captivating. He's able to really give some depth, nuance, and delight to this villain which in a normal genre piece doesn't necessarily get this kind of dimension. Both Thatcher and East also give great performances and have incredible chemistry primarily with each other but also as a unit in opposition to Grant. Thatcher brings a bit more edge and defiance, East brings more vulnerability and endurance together they just work great. Topher Grace pops up in a cameo but other than that the supporting cast is virtually nil.

Clearly shot on a budget(but not detracting from its effectiveness) almost exclusively in one location the film feels immersive, claustrophobic, and all the set dressing helps to evoke a kind of pan-religiousness as well as the house itself being labyrinthian furthering the themes. The sound design does in inordinate amount of work in ratcheting the tension(in a good way), its used a lot and in various subtle ways to elevate the mood, its nice to see this arm of the production which is usually under utilized get a fair amount of runway. There's also a focus on analogue tech(record and tape players, timers, keys etc.) which give this guy and this house texture.

The script is ambitious and complicated, thick with irony, metaphor, and commentary. The script and performances work in tandem for about the first half slowly and surely ratcheting up the tension and danger and tackling various ideas in a compelling way. It loses its footing in the back end, the script dipping below the quality of the performances, struggling to land the plane and kind of abandoning some of its richer ideas. Nevertheless its an ambitious, interesting piece of cinema.

Three great leads, a stupendous beginning leading to only a satisfactory end.

Currently in theaters.

See It.

Thursday, November 7, 2024

Animal Companions

Fundamentally
they are simple
easy to read
-I'm hungry
-Let's play
-Pet me
but why we love them
why we need them
they say without saying
-I am here
they say
-I am here too

Tuesday, November 5, 2024

'Anora' A Review

Anora is a rom-dramedy about a NYC stripper Ani aka Anora(Mikey Madison) who meets Vanya(Mark Eydelshteyn), the son of a Russian oligarch, at her club. He initially pays her to be his 'girlfriend for a week' and the two develop a burgeoning romance culminating in a Vegas wedding. Once his family becomes aware of the marriage they intervene.

Madison is totally present, totally committed, and gives a textured, transcendent performance as the titular Anora. She conveys all kinds of layers and contradictions- strength, desire, vulnerability, joy, calculation- the whole gambit but above all what shines through is a beautiful and delicate humanity. It's truly stunning. Yura Borisov as Igor is the only one that's able to really push up to her level offering a character that's interesting and with dimension. The supporting cast are all competent but they are either as-written or as a result of the script just not as engaging. Eydelshteyn for example serves the role but the character is a petulant, immature, Peter Pan, there is simply no depth to him, that seems to be intentional but it doesn't make it any easier to watch and he's onscreen quite a lot.

As with all of Sean Baker's work it looks incredible, shot on location, with evocative lighting, an effective thrumming soundtrack the production all works, its transportive. Where it stumbles is simply in the run time, in the pacing, the middle section languishes and unintentionally highlights the shallowness of the supporting cast. It picks up at the end but by that time it feels the film has already ended two or three times. The film is still great but it does not reach the heights of Baker's earlier work Tangerine or The Florida Project. Maybe that's an unfair comparison it's just a shame the film as a whole doesn't quite meet Madison's performance.

A must-see for Madison alone.

Currently in theaters.

Don't Miss It.

Friday, November 1, 2024

'Venom: The Last Dance' A Review

Venom: The Last Dance is a superhero/buddy comedy, the third and final installment in the Tom Hardy helmed series started with 2018's Venom. Eddie Brock(Hardy) is on the run from the law after the events of Venom: Let There Be Carnage only to be attacked by multi-dimensional monsters at the behest of the symbiotes creator Knull. Eddie also crosses paths with the Imperium the alien-focused branch of the government/military.

Hardy is as compelling and funny as ever, taking his performance even further turning what has heretofore been a kind of a double act, he and Venom(who he also voices), into almost a straight up love story. Its gonzo and effective. The supporting cast don't have a ton to do but its great to see Chiwetel Ejiofor, Juno Temple, and Rhys Ifans although Temple and Ifans have some pretty bizarre American accents. Overall a solid cast if a noticeable glut of Brits. The best of course is the return of Peggy Lu as Mrs. Chen who makes a brief appearance for a wonderful dance sequence.

Filmed in Spain it doesn't really look like the American southwest but it looks good. There are a fair amount of needle drops which are cool but don't totally make sense tonally. The CGI is used sparingly until the final battle and it works well.

This has always been an odd series, not quite sure what it wants to be, conventional superhero fair or an inversion of it. At least tonally this hits closer to home, it is exceedingly odd, which it seems to have been trying to be all along. But its not really able to go fully off the leash and not only here but throughout the series has never been able to meet its potential.

Pleasingly bizarre and surprisingly heartfelt if constrained by convention.

Currently in theaters, coming soon to VOD.

Rent It.

Wednesday, October 30, 2024

Life On Life's Terms

It's work
every day
it can seem
endless
there's joy too
hope, contentment
all the goodies
but it always
requires effort
the small things
need to get done
the big things
need to be addressed
for every triumph
a new trial
for every moment of peace
a fresh irritant
that's the deal
we didn't ask for this
yet
here we are