Tuesday, April 30, 2024

Two Short Poems

The First
Consider
the thing itself
not what it requires
or its potential benefit

The Second
Activity is good
motion, momentum
but stillness is also good
quiet, communion

Thursday, April 25, 2024

'Abigail' A Review

Abigail is a horror movie loosely based on Dracula's Daughter. A group of criminals are hired to kidnap a tween ballerina heiress only to discover she is more than she seems.

The cast is excellent- Melissa Barrera as Joey the medic and defacto lead, Dan Stevens as Frank the former cop, Kathryn Newton as Sammy the tech wiz, Alisha Weir as the titular Abigail among others. Its a lot of talent and they do a good job imbuing the story with some immediacy, humor, and stakes. The script is simply not as strong as the cast and there seems to be some tension in tone. The movie can't quite decide if it wants to be a pedal-to-the-metal horror comedy romp or something with legitimate emotional stakes, in trying to do a bit of both it dilutes the impact of both approaches.

Visually slick, mostly set in one location(a haunted house!), with an eerie score and some cool Victrola diegetic songs. It works and it works on what now would be considered a "small" budget($30M). The action scenes are effective, the wire work by Weir and her dancing and bloody decapitations and dismemberments are really fun. The script simply needed to be punched up(who knows if the production timeline was expedited), its a great idea, and a decent execution, but it falls a bit short from being a homerun, a solid double.

Diverting but not ecstatic.

Currently in theaters, coming soon to VOD.

Rent It.

Wednesday, April 24, 2024

'Sasquatch Sunset' A Review

Sasquatch Sunset is a fantasy/drama about four sasquatches in the Pacific Northwest. The film follows the four over the course of a year in a series of vignettes, following their mating, eating, and sheltering habits as they contend with challenges and the encroachment of humans.

Jesse Eisenberg, Riley Keough, Christophe Zajac-Denek, and Nathan Zellner all put in intricate, interesting, non-verbal performance(yes, there is zero dialogue). At times it does play as an experiment, a theatrical exercise, but other times as a surprisingly impactful exploration of community and behavior. There is a lot of truth here, some laughs, and some things that go to far but overall its refreshingly unique and displays a pretty profound courage on the part of the actors.

Visually the film is patient, evoking the natural world and these sasquatches living in it. It feels rich and peaceful and when the sasquatches encounter a road or trees marked for lumber we, along with them, feel the affront. The score is subtle and helps bolster the filmmaking's intentions, filling out what is a relatively sparse audioscape.

There are some particularly gross scenes, some of them work some of them don't, but they are ambitious, brave. Similarly the comedic moments are a bit hit-or-miss and yet overall the tone is one of honesty and adventurousness. If still, lets not mince words, incredibly bizarre.

Certainly not for everyone but the first truly singular piece of US cinema in 2024.

See It.

Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Perennials

Like the tulips
the daffodils
the grape hyacinth
we emerge
after a period of repose
of dormancy
we are enlivened
restored, revived, refreshed
Spring
in all its possibilities of promise
of fragile and fleeting beauty
of sunshine and sociability
of risk and reward
fertility
in all its implications
once again
the land and its denizens awaken
we are renewed.

Sunday, April 21, 2024

'Rebel Moon – Part Two: The Scargiver' A Review

Rebel Moon - Part Two: The Scargiver is a SFF epic a sequel to the Rebel Moon - Part 1: A Child Of Fire released in December of last year. It picks up right after the events of the previous movie and delivers on the Seven Samurai premise with the first part being mostly set up for the battle in the latter half. It in no way stands on its own and both parts only together deliver a full narrative.

Much like the previous installment the lead Kora played by Sofia Boutella doesn't have enough to do or enough edge. The supporting cast, similarly, are underdeveloped and feel like undergrad aspiring screenwriter fumblings than actual characters. There is a ton of deadening exposition laden dialogue and scenes where characters painfully and explicitly set up flashbacks we are about to see. Its offensively juvenile writing but the actors do their best to breath some life into it to a modicum of success.

Visually the movie looks great, costumes are great, soundtrack is great, fight scenes are mostly great(if there is the standard Synder overuse of slow motion). And the idea behind it and the worldbuilding aren't half bad it is simply the characters and the dialogue, as written, are woefully boring, flat, and robotic.

Mildly diverting eye candy but no real substance.

Currently streaming on Netflix.

Stream It.

Wednesday, April 17, 2024

Transmutation

We look at the damage of the past
we don't ignore it, we don't fixate upon it
we move through it
we clean and bandage the wound
and we let it heal
then comes the leveraging of this experience
to benefit others
in doing so the healing continues
in perpetuity
and in this way are we made whole

Saturday, April 13, 2024

'Monkey Man' A Review

Monkey Man is an action thriller about a country kidin India who's village is destroyed and taken over by the government at the behest of a corrupt religious figure. Years later he(Dev Patel) is surviving in the city working as an underground fighter plotting his revenge.

Patel has moments of brilliance but overall his performance is overshadowed by the overstuffed script and production(his other duties as writer and director). There is just straight up too much going on in the film and Patel as a first time director is doing too much. The supporting cast has some wonderful folks in it but the focus is all over the place, the influences and ambitions so bloated it doesn't allow for any of the actors to really distinguish their characters outside of the relentless tone.

The dark saturated visuals paired with the shaky came quick cuts create a clipped momentum and a distinct mood(although it never really relents which in a 90 minute runtime would be perfect but at two hours is not as successful). The soundtrack has a couple on-the-nose needle drops but some decent scoring with one stand out training sequence with diegetic drumming. The action seems to be well choregraphed but follows the Paul Greengrass school of close up, hand held shooting which makes the fights incredibly difficult to actually see.

The are so many big ideas and themes in the film- class, religion, gender, capitalism- to name a few. It wants to be John Wick but it also wants to be political and also wants to be a modern day myth. Which is all great and a great start is made on a lot of the above but it never comes together, it doesn't coalesce, so what you are left with is something that is assuredly entertaining but not altogether satisfying. In attempting so much it is unable to fully deliver on any one thing.

Its reach exceeds its grasp.

See It.