Saturday, May 10, 2025

Shadow Force

I wasn't really interested in Shadow Force but there are not a lot of new releases in theaters this weekend and my nephew is a fan of Omar Sy so we went to see it last night.  If I hadn't seen Magic Farm at Sundance I would call this my worst movie of 2025.  Isaac Sarr (Sy) and Kyrah Owens (Kerry Washington) are highly trained agents who were once part of a multinational covert organization, known as Shadow Force, led by Jack Cinder (Mark Strong) who now works for the G7.  After they fell in love, got married, and had a son, they decided to leave the organization knowing that this decision would put a bounty on their heads.  Kyrah spends the next four years hunting down the agents who were once their colleagues while Isaac goes deep under cover to care for their son Ky (Jahleel Kamara).  However, when Isaac uses his highly specialized training to foil a bank robbery, he blows his cover and Cinder doubles the bounty on them because he doesn't want his involvement in the organization to come to light and ruin his chances of becoming Secretary General (does such a position even exist?) of the G7 (or it might be because he is in love with Kyrah and is bitter that she rejected him).  They go on the run to evade all of the other operatives now chasing them but they are helped by the spies "Auntie" (Da'Vine Joy Randolph) and "Unc" (Clifford "Method Man" Smith), who have some sort of unexplained connection to them.  Eventually, everyone involved ends up on an island off the coast of Colombia for a final confrontation (that lasts forever).  The script is an absolute mess because it relies on having the characters, who are supposed to be the most elite and highly trained covert assassins in the world, make one incomprehensible decision after another in order to sustain the action.  At one point, Kyrah has all five of the operatives she has been chasing for the past four years in her sights (they are literally standing in a row) but she just walks away from them.  At least this afforded us many opportunities to yell at the screen ("Take the shot!") and that was somewhat entertaining.  There are a lot of (unnamed) characters to keep track of and one's betrayal is telegraphed almost from his first appearance and another one's assistance comes out of nowhere (it made me laugh out loud).  With the exception of Kamara, who is adorable, and Sy, who has a few touching moments with Kamara, the acting is incredibly melodramatic (Washington has several monologues that are meant to be poignant but they made my nephew laugh out loud because they are so cheesy).  All of this might be forgiven if the action sequences were exciting but they are edited in such a scattershot way that it is difficult to see what is going on most of the time.  My nephew said that he wasn't expecting this to be great but he also wasn't expecting it to be so bad.

Thursday, May 8, 2025

Utah Opera's Madame Butterfly

I really love Puccini's opera Madame Butterfly (Utah Opera's 2014 production is one of my very favorites by the company) so it was with a bit of trepidation that I went to see a bold new version last night at Capitol Theatre.  I tend to be a purist and I usually dislike it when classics, especially classics that I love, are reimagined.  However, much to my surprise, I really enjoyed it because it retains the story and, more importantly, the incomparable music but adds a framing device to emphasize the fact that the character of Butterfly is Pinkerton's stereotyped version of a Japanese woman and not reality.  It is very effective!  Act I begins when a young man named B.F. Pinkerton (Eric Taylor) enters his sleek and modern apartment, which is decorated with posters depicting Japanese anime characters, and, using a VR headset, joins a game set in Japan at the turn of the century using the avatar of a U.S. naval officer.  The alternate world he enters is a fantastical one.  He is wearing a uniform but the cut is exaggerated and it is without adornment, his house features shoji screens, lanterns, and cherry blossoms but everything is bright and stylized, and the Japanese people he interacts with are dressed traditionally but the colors are vivid and bold and the hairstyles reflect the cuts and colors you would find in Japanese anime.  Pinkerton is an interactive player in the game and he soon requests that Sharpless (Nmon Ford), the U.S. Consul, allow him to wed a Japanese geisha named Cio-Cio San (Hiromi Omura), or Butterfly, for convenience.  Sharpless agrees but warns him to treat her carefully because she loves him.  After they are married, Butterfly confesses that she has secretly converted to Christianity, which causes her uncle the Bonze (Zaikuan Song) to disown her, so he comforts her before they spend a blissful night together.  Act II begins three years later and Pinkerton, who is now married to Kate (Sarah Scofield), is a passive observer in the game.  Butterfly eagerly awaits Pinkerton's return and she chastises her maid Suzuki (Nina Yoshida Nelsen) for saying that he is not coming back, refuses a marriage proposal from Prince Yamadori (Kevin Nakatani), and dismisses Sharpless when he attempts to read her a goodbye letter from Pinkerton.  Butterfly eventually sees Pinkerton's ship in the harbor and keeps vigil all night waiting for him to come to her and their son.  In Act III, Pinkerton, an active participant once again, reaches a new level in the game and is allowed to pick a wife but, when he chooses Kate's avatar rather than Butterfly's, he sees how his actions have impacted Butterfly.  She decides that her child will have a better life with Pinkerton and Kate but this drives her to a desperate act that abruptly ends the game leaving present-day Pinkerton in despair.  This particular narrative is absolutely brilliant and I was mesmerized by the staging but I was most impressed by the cast!  Omura gives an incredibly passionate performance.  The love duet between Butterfly and Pinkerton after their wedding ("Love me, please") is beautiful and filled with longing while the aria she sings insisting that Pinkerton will return to her ("One fine day we shall see") is so emotional that I had tears in my eyes (the audience burst into spontaneous applause).  Taylor has an expressive voice but I especially enjoyed the transformation in Pinkerton as he silently observes Butterfly's love for him in Act II.  I also loved Ford's voice in the duet between Sharpless and Butterfly ("Now for us") because it is filled with compassion knowing that the truth will devastate her.  Finally, my favorite moment features the "Humming Chorus" because it is so haunting and I was very moved hearing the Utah Opera Chorus sing it last night.  I did not expect to love this thought-provoking production as much as I did and I highly recommend it!  There are two more performances but act quickly (go here) because there are not many tickets left.

Wednesday, May 7, 2025

Waitress at PTC

I really love the musical Waitress so I was thrilled when it was announced as the final show this season at PTC. I went to see it last night and it exceeded my expectations in every way! Jenna (Claire Saunders) uses baking to cope with her dead-end job as a waitress and her unhappy marriage to an abusive husband (Brent Thiessen). When she learns that she is unexpectedly pregnant and begins an ill-advised affair with her gynecologist (Ben Jacoby), she expresses her hopes, dreams, fears, and frustrations by telling the audience the ingredients for a pie that will help her current situation (play close attention to the specials board), always beginning with "Sugar. Butter. Flour." Eventually she realizes that the one ingredient she is missing is courage! I think all of the songs in this show are incredibly clever, especially "What's Inside," "Opening Up," and "It Only Takes a Taste," because, while they are ostensibly about baking, they are also great metaphors for life. However, my favorite song is "She Used to Be Mine" because it is such a powerful turning point for Jenna. I have been lucky enough to see Jessie Mueller, who originated the role of Jenna, perform it on Broadway and Sara Bareilles, who wrote the music and lyrics, perform it in concert and, in my opinion, Saunders is on par with both of them because her rendition is incredibly raw and emotional (I had tears in my eyes during the entire performance). The rest of the cast is also outstanding and I was very moved by the beautiful harmonies between Saunders and Candace Marie Woods as Becky and Lexi Rabadi as Dawn in "A Soft Place to Land" and "Everything Changes" as well as between Saunders and Jacoby in "You Matter to Me." In addition to the poignant messages about finding your inner strength, this show is also really funny and the cast does a great job with the witty one-liners and physical comedy, particularly in the songs "Never Ever Getting Rid of Me" and "Bad Idea" (they were definitely big crowd-pleasers last night). The use of the ensemble is brilliant because they are all distinct characters within the diner but they also come together to act out what is happening in the narrative of the songs (this is especially effective in "Bad Idea") and they assist Jenna whenever she makes the pies. I've seen this iconic show several times and I really appreciated all of the subtle touches used to differentiate it from other well-known productions, including the yellow gingham fabric used for the uniforms and the neon used throughout the diner. If you have seen this on Broadway or on tour, you will definitely not be disappointed with PTC's version and, if you have never seen it before, you are in for an amazing evening of laughter and tears! It runs through May 17 and tickets may be purchased here.

Monday, May 5, 2025

The Little Mermaid at Tuacahn Amphitheatre

Every year I try to see at least one show at Tuacahn Amphitheatre so last weekend I went on a quick road trip to St. George (a four hour drive south from where I live) to see The Little Mermaid and it was so much fun because my sister was able to come with me (it was easy to convince her because The Little Mermaid is one of her favorite shows).  The best production I had ever seen of The Little Mermaid was at Tuacahn in 2014 and this production surpasses that one because it is absolutely dazzling!  The state-of-the-art special effects are pretty incredible!  The stage is flooded at the beginning of the show so Ariel first appears on her rock in the middle of the water for "The World Above" and then Prince Eric's ship actually moves through the water during "Fathom's Below."  The LED screens all around the stage show sea creatures, seaweed, and coral moving from screen to screen and the large moving set pieces depict King Titon's throne, Ursula's lair, Ariel's grotto, and Prince Eric's palace.  You might expect the sea creatures to fly around the stage during "Under the Sea" (and they do) but having Prince Eric's rowboat fly in order to show the fish and other sea creatures below it during "Kiss the Girls" is amazing and I was also very impressed by the aerial choreography when Ariel saves Prince Eric during the storm and during her transformation at the end of Act I.  The use of blacklight during "Les Poissons" is a lot of fun as is the fire in Ursuala's lair and the sparks from King Triton's trident.  The colorful neon costumes are spectacular (I loved the starfish) and the use of Segways by the mermaids, Heelys by Flounder, Flotsum, and Jetsum, and a cart with tentacles as wheels by Ursula is really clever.  The cast is as good as what you would see on Broadway!  Kelsey Lee Smith and James Everts have beautiful voices as Ariel and Prince Eric and their renditions of "Part of Your World" and "Her Voice," respectively, gave me goosebumps.  However, the entire cast is just as talented and I was equally impressed with Eric B. Anthony as Sebastian (he tones down the Jamaican accent and I think that really works), Fred Inkley as King Triton, and Julia Cardia as Ursula.  Alec Talbott and Scott Whipple steal the show as Flotsam and Jetsum, respectively, in "Sweet Child" while the tap dancing in "Positoovity" (usually my least favorite number in the show) blew me away!  I loved every aspect of this production (so did my sister) and I cannot recommend it enough (especially for kids).  It runs in repertory with The Wizard of Oz and Newsies through October 25 (go here for tickets).

Note:  We ate at the Tuacahn Cafe for the first time before the show and we were really impressed with the food (I had the cheeseburger basket and it was so good), the price, and the service.

Friday, May 2, 2025

Thunderbolts*

Last night I went to a Thursday preview of Thunderbolts* with my nephew and I can’t remember when I was so excited for an MCU movie!  Luckily, I was not disappointed because I absolutely loved it!  In fact, this is the first time I can say I loved an MCU movie without qualifications in a really long time!  CIA Director Valentina Allegra de Fontaine (Julia Louis-Dreyfus) is being investigated for illegal activities by Congress so she has her assistant Mel (Geraldine Viswanathan) get rid of the evidence against her, including the covert agents who work for her.  Yelena Belova (Florence Pugh), John Walker (Wyatt Russell), Antonia Dreykov/ Taskmaster (Olga Kurylenko), and Ava Starr/ Ghost (Hannah John-Kamen) are lured to a secret underground facility where they are tricked into attacking each other and Ghost kills Taskmaster before they realize that it is a trap.  They also discover a mysterious man named Bob Reynolds (Lewis Pullman) who creates a diversion that allows them to escape before he is captured by de Fontaine.  The group is eventually recovered by Alexei Shostakov/ Red Guardian (David Harbour) and then apprehended by Congressman Bucky Barnes (Sebastian Stan) but they reluctantly decide to work together to rescue Bob when they learn that he was the subject of one of de Fontaine's secret experiments and that, because he now possesses superhuman strength, she plans to use him as the weapon Sentry.  This is very character-driven because they all have a reckoning over the things they have done, especially Yelena because she must reconcile her trauma in order to help Bob face the darkness he feels inside.  As someone who has struggled with mental health issues, I think the portrayal of the Void, the alter ego of the Sentry, is one of the best and most accurate depictions of depression that I've seen (I actually had tears in my eyes several times during the scenes with the Void because they resonated so deeply).  I really enjoyed seeing Bucky take on a leadership role as someone who has also had to make peace with his actions and the relationship between Alexei and Yelena is incredibly poignant (even though Alexei provides much of the comic relief).  Pugh is such a great actress and she gives an incredibly emotional performance throughout Yelena's arc (I was also really impressed with Pullman).  Finally, all of the action set pieces (many of which feature practical effects) are a lot of fun but I found the sequence where the Thunderbolts protect people from the Void and then are hailed as heroes to be especially moving.  It was so much fun to feel the same exhilaration that I once did for the MCU again and I am now really looking forward to Phase Six!

Note:  There is a mid-credits scene and an end-credits scene.  They are both really good!

Thursday, May 1, 2025

The Shrouds

David Cronenberg is definitely not for everyone but I really like him as a director so I was excited, and nervous, to introduce my nephew to him by seeing The Shrouds at the Broadway last night.  Businessman Karsh (Vincent Cassel) is so grief-stricken over the death of his wife Rebecca (Diane Kruger) from a virulent form of cancer that he creates a company called GraveTech which uses specially designed shrouds with 3D cameras to allow loved ones to watch the decomposition of the deceased's corpse through a live feed but this keeps him from moving on.  When several graves are vandalized, including Rebecca's, the live feed is hacked and Karsh is drawn into several conspiracy theories.  One involves Rebecca's oncologist, Dr. Jerry Eckler (Steve Switzman), who Karsh suspects was experimenting on his patients after discovering unusual protrusions on Rebecca's bones and on the bones of those in the other defaced graves.  Another involves a suspected plot by the Chinese government, who are investors in GraveTech, to use the live feed for surveillance.  Yet another involves his former brother-in-law Maury (Guy Pearce), who wrote the code for GraveTech's security, because of his growing paranoia over Karsh's relationship with Rebecca's sister, Terry (Diane Kruger).  I had prepared my nephew for Cronenberg's use of body horror in his movies but, while this does show the devastating effects of cancer when Karsh has a series of dreams about Rebecca's worsening condition before her death, I think it is pretty mild.  However, both of us found it incredibly thought-provoking with commentary on several topics.  My nephew was intrigued by the use of technology, particularly Karsh's reliance on the AI assistant modeled on Rebecca, but I was struck by the theme of obsession and its dangers.  Karsh is preoccupied by Rebecca's body which is why he eventually begins a relationship with Terry because her body is so similar to Rebecca's and why he is tormented by jealousy because Dr. Eckler was more intimately involved with her body at the end of her life than he was.  Both Karsh and Maury go to extreme lengths to maintain possession of Rebecca and Terry, respectively, because they cannot let them go.  I know that some will be frustrated by the ambiguity of the ending (there are no definitive answers about the conspiracy surrounding the vandalism of the graves) but, to me, the resolution comes from Karsh letting go of his obsession for Rebecca in order to move on (although I interpret the final scene to mean that, even though he has someone new in his life, he will still carry the memory of his wife wherever he goes).  I loved Cassel's detached and almost stilted delivery because, in my opinion, it shows that Karsh's desire to be with his wife has kept him from truly living.  I think this is brilliant (I haven't been able to stop thinking about it) but it is not something I would recommend to everyone.

Wednesday, April 30, 2025

Until Dawn

Despite the fact that I have never played the game, I really wanted to see Until Dawn because the premise sounded intriguing.  I convinced my nephew, who loves the game, to see it with me last night and we both hated it.  Clover (Ella Rubin) is still traumatized by the disappearance of her sister Melanie (Maia Mitchell) a year ago so she and her friends Max (Michael Cimino), Nina (Odessa A'zion), Megan (Ji-young Yoo), and Abel (Belmont Cameli) travel to her last known location hoping for some closure.  A severe thunderstorm forces them to stop at an abandoned house in Glore Valley and they notice some unsettling details.  There is a giant hourglass that suddenly flips over, there is a guestbook signed by each visitor (including Melanie) thirteen times, and there is a bulletin board filled with posters of missing people (including Melanie).  Nina signs the guestbook and then they are all brutally killed, one by one, by a mysterious figure in a mask.  Everything resets and the five of them are back to where they started the previous night but the hourglass flips again, Nina's name appears in the guestbook a second time, and all of them appear on the bulletin board as missing people.  Every night they are killed in a new and gruesome way (my favorite is when they explode after drinking the tap water) and then everything resets again.  They eventually realize that they will be stuck in this time loop until they can survive the night.  I thought this was really clever and I enjoyed the first act but then it becomes an incoherent mess.  They eventually learn that those who are killed more than thirteen times become wendigos, supernatural beings who then torment the next visitors to the house, and that Melanie is now a wendigo.  They also learn that Glore Valley was the site of a mining tragedy that killed over 11,000 people and that a psychologist named Dr. Hill (Peter Stormare, who is reprising his role from the game) was brought in to help the survivors overcome their trauma.  Dr. Hill is now running an elaborate experiment to help Clover, who is apparently his patient, overcome the trauma of her sister's disappearance (they never learn how Dr. Hill is able to create and manipulate all of the supernatural elements in the house).  There is absolutely no logic to the narrative and, in my opinion, the filmmakers should have chosen the supernatural story with the wendigos or the psychological story about trauma with Dr. Hill but not both.  I had so many questions for my nephew afterwards but he said that the movie is nothing like the game (the game actually sounds really interesting).  To add insult to injury, it looks terrible because it is so dark that you can't see what is happening and the dialogue is incredibly cringe-worthy (I lost track of how many times the characters say, "Holy shit").  This is definitely one to miss and my nephew recommends playing the game, instead.

Tuesday, April 29, 2025

A Gentleman's Guide to Love and Murder at the Terrace Plaza Playhouse

There was a time when A Gentleman's Guide to Love and Murder was the show that I most wanted to see so, even though I have now been to productions at just about every Utah theatre (with another one scheduled this summer), I was still really excited to see it again at the Terrace Plaza Playhouse last night because it is so hilarious. Some shows are better than others at this theatre and this is one of the best I've seen there! I absolutely loved it. After his mother dies, Monty Navarro (Joe Robinson) learns from one of her friends, Miss Shingle (Melissa Trenery), that she was part of the illustrious D'Ysquith Family (Scot D. Struble) and was disinherited for marrying his father. He is really Montague D'Ysquith Navarro and he is in line to inherit the earldom (there are only eight family members ahead of him). When his vain and heartless girlfriend Sibella (Karlie Ady) decides to marry the rich and handsome Lionel Holland, Monty decides to kill every family member ahead of him in the line of succession in order to become the earl and win her back. While in prison awaiting trial for the murder of the only D'Ysquith for which he is not actually guilty, he begins writing his memoirs detailing how the Reverend Lord Ezekial D'Ysquith fell from the tower of his cathedral, how Asquith D'Ysquith, Jr. fell through the ice in a skating accident, how Henry D'Ysquith was stung by a swarm of his own bees, how Lady Hyacinth D'Ysquith was presumed dead on a philanthropic mission to a tribe of cannibals, how Major Lord Bartholomew D'Ysquith was decapitated while lifting weights, how Lady Salome D'Ysquith Pomphrey was killed by real bullets in a prop gun during her debut in Hedda Gabler, how Lord Asquith D'Ysquith, Sr. was driven to a heart attack by all of the family tragedies, and how Lord Adalbert D'Ysquith, the Earl of Highurst, was poisoned. He also details the relationship he began with Phoebe D'Ysquith (Jordyn Tracy) to make Sibella jealous. The charges are dismissed when Phoebe and Sibella each give proof that the other committed the murder but Monty might not live happily every after because Chauncey D'Ysquith, the next in line to the earldom, is lurking! This show features lots of madcap physical comedy and some really fun songs (my favorites are "Better With a Man" by the flamboyant Henry, "Lady Hyacinth Abroad" by the socially conscious Hyacinth, and "I've Decided to Marry You" by the lovestruck Phoebe). Robinson, Ady, and Tracy have beautiful voices but I especially loved Struble's performance because he is brilliant with distinct characterizations for each member of the D'Ysquith Family and I laughed out loud at all of his antics (this theatre is very intimate so I could see all of his facial expressions). Unlike other productions I have seen, this one has a very minimal set with just a few pieces moved on and off stage by the ensemble but this works because the projections and moving panels used as backdrops are fantastic.  The staging is extremely clever, especially when Monty tries to keep Sibella and Phoebe apart in different rooms at his flat and when the portraits at Highurst Castle sing. Finally, the beautiful period costumes are some of the best I've seen at this theatre and I particularly loved the gowns worn by Sibella and Phoebe at Highurst Castle. This is one show that you don't want to miss (go here for tickets). It runs on Mondays, Fridays, and Saturdays through May 31.

On Swift Horses

I didn't really know much about On Swift Horses but I was really excited about the stellar cast so I decided to see a matinee at the Broadway yesterday.  It looks beautiful and has a powerful message but I found it strangely underwhelming.  After a troubled childhood, Lee Walker (Will Poulter) has a plan for his life which includes going out West to California, buying a house, and starting a family but his wife Muriel (Daisy Edgar-Jones) and his brother Julius (Jacob Elordi) feel constrained by the conventions of the 1950s.  Muriel begins betting on horse races but she hides her winnings from her husband.  Julius takes a job as security in a Las Vegas casino even though he still acts as a card sharp.  However, the biggest gamble that Muriel and Julius take is to begin clandestine relationships with Sandra (Sasha Calle) and Henry (Diego Calva), respectively.  Will they risk it all for love?  I am really torn on this because the visuals are absolutely gorgeous and I enjoyed the performances because they are filled with so much wistful longing shown with lots of closeups on the beautiful faces of Edgar-Jones and Elordi.  I also think the gambling metaphor works very well for the risk taking and secrecy involved in pursuing a forbidden love and the journey to break free from conformity is one I always appreciate.  There is just something that kept me from loving this.  The pacing is incredibly slow but I didn't feel a connection to any of the characters because they are not very well developed.  I also found the ending to be really ambiguous for all of the characters and I wanted something more after the endless build-up.  I suspect that the novel by Shannon Pufahl, upon which this is based, is much better and I recommend waiting for streaming to watch it.

Monday, April 28, 2025

Revenge of the Sith

Of the three Star Wars prequels, my favorite is Revenge of the Sith because, even though I already knew what would happen the first time I saw it (anyone familiar with A New Hope knew what would happen), I still found it incredibly compelling.  I was really curious about why Anakin Skywalker (Hayden Christensen) turned to the dark side of the Force and I wanted to see how he was physically transformed into Darth Vader.  I was eager for the confrontation that had been building between Darth Vader and Obi-Wan Kenobi (Ewan McGregor) and to learn why the latter was compelled to live as a hermit on Tatooine afterwards.  I wanted to know how Chancellor Palpatine (Ian McDiarmid) was able to take over the Senate and become the Emperor of the Galactic Empire.  Finally, I was most interested in how and why the twins Luke and Leia were taken from Padme Amidala (Natalie Portman) and raised separately.  I eagerly awaited all of these revelations and I remember being blown away by the emotional conclusion to the trilogy.  Episode III is now back in theaters to commemorate its 20th anniversary (what?) and I was so excited to see it on the big screen again with my nephew last night.  I loved all of the exciting action sequences, especially the light saber battles between Anikan, Obi-Wan, and Count Dooku (Christopher Lee) during the rescue of Palpatine, between Obi-Wan and General Grievous on Utapau (even though he resorts to an uncivilized blaster to destroy him), between Palpatine and Mace Windu (Samuel L. Jackson) in Palpatine's office on Coruscant, between Darth Vader and all of the Separatists on Mustafar, between Yoda (Frank Oz) and the newly created Emperor in the Senate chamber on Coruscant, and, of course, the epic battle between Obi-Wan and Darth Vader on Mustafar.  Christensen's performance has been much maligned but, in my opinion, his portrayal of the conflict within Anakin is very powerful and I loved the cross-cutting between Anakin in the council room and Padme in their apartment before he makes the fateful decision to go to Palpatine.  The music by John Williams is always a highlight and, while I found "The Battle of the Heroes" to be incredibly stirring, I absolutely loved the callbacks to "The Imperial March" when Anakin pledges himself to the Sith and to the Main Theme when Obi-Wan delivers Luke to Owen (Joel Edgerton) and Beru (Bonnie Piesse) on Tatooine.  I cheered every time I saw a reference to the original trilogy (Padme's buns!) and I was particularly struck by the armor worn by the clone troopers who execute Order 66 because they appear to be an early iteration of the armor eventually worn by the stormtroopers (I don't know why I have never noticed that before).  Seeing this again was so much fun and I highly recommend it (especially if you have never seen it on the big screen).

Note:  Apologies to my nephew for my unhinged behavior which started during the opening crawl (although he said I wasn't as crazy as some of the other people watching it with us).

Sunday, April 27, 2025

The Wizard of Oz at the SCERA Center for the Performing Arts

My sisters were really impressed when we saw a preview of The Wizard of Oz at the SCERA gala in February so the three of us went to see it last night. The show is delightful and we had a lot of fun watching it. The stage musical, based on the 1939 movie, tells the story of how Dorothy Gale (Mia Hansen) lands, literally, in the fantastical world of Oz and how she travels with the Scarecrow (Jared Wilkinson), the Tin Man (Bryan Johnson), and the Cowardly Lion (Ambrocio Mireles, Jr.) to see the Wizard (Chad Taylor), hoping that he can get her back to Kansas, while avoiding the Wicked Witch of the West (Kimberly Nearon), who wants the ruby slippers given to her by Glinda the Good Witch (Camilla Curtis). Hansen gives an incredible performance and her rendition of "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" (which is what impressed my sisters so much at the gala) will definitely give you goosebumps.  Wilkinson, Johnson, and Mireles are also outstanding and they each have a moment to shine in "If I Only Had a Brain," "If I Only Had a Heart," and "If I Only Had a Nerve," respectively. I especially enjoyed Wilkinson's acrobatics because it really seems like his body is made of straw (I was also impressed with his consistency in all of the of the choreography in the show). I loved seeing all of the children in the cast, especially Allison Farnsworth, Elsa Parry, and Scout Olenik as the Lullaby League and Ian Evans, Jeb Buffington, and Maxwell Harper as the Lollipop Guild, because they are adorable and very talented and Mia steals every scene she is in as Toto. The costumes are colorful and whimsical and one of the touches I really enjoyed is the change in Dorothy's gingham dress from a muted gray in Kansas to a vivid blue in Oz. I also liked that the costumes for the Scarecrow, the Tin Man, and the Cowardly Lion incorporate elements from their counterparts in Kansas. The costumes for Glinda and the Wicked Witch of the West are as gorgeous as you would expect after seeing the movie Wicked. The flying effects are impressive, particularly when Mrs. Gulch flies across the stage on her bicycle and when the Wizard leaves Oz in his balloon, and the projections, especially for the tornado, are pretty spectacular. Finally, the scenic design, including the apparatus used by the Wizard (complete with moving eyes and mouth), the yellow brick road, and the farmhouse with its picket fence, is very effective in transporting the audience to both Kansas and Oz. My only complaint is that the pacing in the second act is a bit sluggish but I highly recommend this show (there were lots of families in the audience last night and the children were mesmerized). It runs at the SCERA Center for the Performing Arts on Mondays, Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays through May 3 (go here for tickets).

Note:  My sisters are now eager to see more shows at SCERA.

Saturday, April 26, 2025

Puffs at the Empress Theatre

Last night I went to the Empress Theatre for their production of Puffs, Or Seven Increasingly Eventful Years at a Certain School of Magic and Magic. I think this show is so fun and clever and I had a blast watching it with a large and boisterous crowd who laughed out loud all night! It is a parody of the beloved Harry Potter franchise and all of the well-known characters are alluded to with enough recognizable traits to know exactly who they are without naming them (my favorites are A Certain Potions Teacher, Professor Turban, Professor Locky, A Very Tall Man, and Real Mr. Moody) and all of the memorable events still happen but they are shown from the perspective of secondary characters who are not involved in the action. A Narrator (Jana White) introduces the audience to a brave orphan wizard with a lightning bolt scar named Harry Potter (Lexy Osborne) but then tells us that this story is about another orphan named Wayne Hopkins (Raiden Dwight) who is also sent to the school of female magic and male magic after learning that he is a wizard. When he arrives, there is a ceremony to sort everyone into one of the four houses: Braves, Smarts, Snakes, and Puffs. Wayne is sorted into Puffs and he is soon introduced to the prefect, Cedric Diggory (Brendan Sampsel), and the other outcasts and misfits in this house, including Oliver Rivers (Brady Neilson), Megan Jones (Hannah Stark), Susie Bones (Lexy Osborne), J. Finch Fletchley (Adrian Young), Sally Perks (Lucy Bawden), Ernie Mac (Konor Hafen), and others. On the same fateful night when Harry, Ron, and Hermione become friends while defeating a troll, Wayne becomes friends with Oliver, a math prodigy, and Megan, the daughter of one of the Dark Lord's followers, while hiding from the troll in a forbidden chamber. Over the next seven years, Wayne struggles to learn magic and protect everyone from Mr. Voldy (Brendan Sampsel) but he is constantly overshadowed by Harry who steals all of the attention, including the moment when the Puffs are finally allowed to shine during the Three Wizard Tournament. In the final battle, Mr. Voldy mistakes Wayne for Harry and kills him and, when he meets the Headmaster, he complains that his life was useless. The Headmaster tells him that everyone is a hero to someone and then we see in the Epilogue nineteen years later that Megan and Oliver have named their son Wayne. Fans of the books and movies will find so many hilarious references (but you have to pay attention). I laughed so hard I couldn't breathe when Wayne says that he and Cedric will be like Batman and Robin (a subtle nod to Robert Pattinson's role as the caped crusader) and when Blondo Malfoy tells his son Scorpius to avoid time turning in the Epilogue (an allusion to Harry Potter and the Cursed Child). The action is non-stop with most of the actors playing multiple roles (two different actors play the Headmaster and three different actors play Hermione at the same time in a time turning mishap) and I was very impressed with everyone in the cast because the physical comedy is extremely well done. I especially loved Dwight, because Wayne's exasperation every time Harry steals his thunder is so convincing, Osborne, because she is so energetic and over-the-top as Harry (she literally jumps into every scene), and Sampsel, because his facial expressions as Mr. Voldy are hilarious (especially whenever he uses a megaphone). The set is very simple (I loved all of the portraits located around the theater) but the costumes are fun and the props are incredible (particularly the snake and the dragon). You will definitely have a great time at this show (go here for tickets) but there are only two more performances so act quickly!

The Legend of Ochi

The trailer for The Legend of Ochi was absolutely beautiful so I decided to see a matinee at the Broadway yesterday afternoon.  I mostly loved this throwback to the adventure movies of my youth.  Yuri (Helena Zengel) is a young farm girl living on Carpathia, an isolated island in the Black Sea.  The inhabitants share the island with mysterious creatures, known as ochi, that are feared and hunted.  Yuri's father Maxim (Willem Dafoe) is especially zealous in his desire to hunt them down and trains a group of boys, including an orphan he has adopted named Petro (Finn Wolfhard), who he takes out on patrol every night.  Yuri rejects much of what her father says so, when she finds a baby ochi in one of his traps, she releases it and smuggles it home.  Yuri interacts with the baby and, when she realizes that it is a gentle creature, she decides to try and find its family.  On the journey, she encounters her mother Dasha (Emily Watson), who left the family because of Maxim's brutality, and discovers that she has studied the ochi extensively.  Her father hates them and her mother respects them but it is Yuri who truly understands the ochi and it is her bond that will ultimately bring about acceptance.  The theme of fearing what is different is not new but it is so gorgeously rendered that I was absolutely enchanted by Yuri’s quest.  I loved all of the stunning visuals of the island and the puppets are amazing (the baby ochi is adorable).  The relationship that develops between Yuri and the creature is so moving because there are many parallels between them and I think the lack of dialogue is really effective (she communicates with the ochi in their language) although some might find the pace sluggish as a result.  I really enjoyed the Eastern European influences because they make the story feel like a fairy tale (Maxim hunts the ochi wearing medieval armor) but the music is sometimes overpowering.  Zengel is luminous and Dafoe is as unhinged as ever but I especially liked Watson's performance (Wolfhard has very little to do and his character's motivations are very ambiguous).  However, I found the scene in a grocery store to be incredibly jarring.  I think it is included as commentary about the encroachment of the modern world into traditional life on the island but this theme is underdeveloped and the scene feels like it belongs in a completely different movie.  I found this dark fantasy to be very magical most of the time and would recommend it but I seem to like it more than most.

Friday, April 25, 2025

The Accountant 2

I went to see The Accountant on a whim and was very pleasantly surprised by how much I enjoyed it so I was really looking forward to the sequel.  I had the chance to see a Thursday preview of The Accountant 2 last night with my nephew and, unfortunately, I found it a bit underwhelming.  Raymond King (J.K. Simmons), a retired Treasury Agent now working as a private investigator, meets with a mysterious woman named Anaïs (Danielle Pineda) in the course of his search for a family of three from El Salvador who went missing while crossing the border into the U.S.  During their meeting, King is ambushed by assassins but manages to write a message to find the accountant on his arm before he is killed.  King's former colleague at the Treasury Department, Marybeth Medina (Cynthia Addai-Robinson), sees the message and reaches out to Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck) through his handler Justine (Allison Robertson) at Harbor Neuroscience.  Medina and Wolff begin working together to solve King's murder but eventually unravel a vast human trafficking organization run by Burke (Robert Morgan) and they recruit Wolff's estranged brother Braxton (Jon Bernthal) to help find Anaïs and the missing family.  The central mystery is very convoluted and there were many times when I had no idea who a character was or how they were involved in the story (and after a while I didn't really care who was who).  I was also disappointed by how much Wolff relies on his cadre of students at Harbor Neuroscience and their hacking skills rather than his own extraordinary abilities to solve the puzzle (which is what I liked about the first movie).  There are some fun action sequences but, in my opinion, the culminating gunfight in a detention camp in Mexico is tedious because it is incredibly far-fetched, to the point of incredulity, and it goes on way too long.  I did really like the dynamic between Affleck and Bernthal as brothers who each have their own way of finding information in some hilarious scenes and as brothers who are trying to forge a relationship with each other despite these differences in some touching ones.  This was a mixed bag for me and I suspect people who are fans of buddy comedies or action movies will like it but fans of the first movie might not.

Thursday, April 24, 2025

Pride & Prejudice

Believe it or not I didn't see Joe Wright's adaptation of Pride & Prejudice when it was first released because I didn't think it could possibly compare to the BBC version and I couldn't see Keira Knightley as my very favorite character from literature.  Of course I now love it and I have probably seen it close to a hundred times, just never on the big screen.  It is back in theaters for a limited run to commemorate its twentieth anniversary (what?) and I was beyond excited to finally see it as it was meant to be seen with my sister (I think she loves it more than I do) last night.  Even though I initially thought that Knightley was much too beautiful to play Elizabeth Bennet as she is written in the novel by Jane Austen, I really love her plucky performance and her chemistry with Matthew Macfadyen, who gives Mr. Darcy a vulnerability that makes me swoon, is off the charts as they spar with each other.  The scene where it looks like they are leaning in for a kiss but then touch their foreheads together instead had everyone in the crowded theater audibly sighing.  I also love everyone else in the ensemble, especially Tom Hollander as the priggish Mr. Collins (the audience laughed out loud at the comment about the excellent boiled potatoes), Donald Sutherland as the curmudgeonly Mr. Bennet (I love the tears in his eyes as he gives his permission for Elizabeth to marry Mr. Darcy), Judi Dench as the imperious Lady Catherine de Bourg (she is just so mean), and Kelly Reilly as the haughty Caroline Bingley (her side-eye is second to none).  The shot composition is absolutely brilliant and my favorites are the tracking shot as Elizabeth walks through a field while reading a book, the shot of Elizabeth walking away from Mr. Darcy with a smirk on her face at the assembly hall, the shot of Elizabeth and Jane (Rosamund Pike) talking under the covers, the continuous shot of Betsy (Sinead Matthews) walking through the house amidst preparations for the Netherfield ball, the shot where Mr. Darcy suddenly appears behind Elizabeth and then quickly disappears at the Netherfield ball, the shot of Elizabeth and Mr. Darcy dancing in a crowd which then cuts to them dancing alone at the Netherfield ball, the shot showing the passage of time as Elizabeth spins on a swing, the shot when Mr. Darcy sees Elizabeth in the mirror at Pemberley, and, of course, the wide shot of Mr. Darcy walking towards Elizabeth through the mist as the sun rises (sigh).  The visuals are gorgeous (one of the reasons why I was so excited to see it on the big screen) and I loved the locations used for Meryton, Longbourn, Netherfield, Rosings, and Pemberley as well as those in the Peak District (the shot of Elizabeth overlooking the moor with the wind blowing is iconic).  Even though I do love an empire waist, I think the use of an eighteenth century silhouette for the costumes really works and the subtle change from stiffly formal to completely undone in Darcy's costumes is incredibly effective (sigh).  Finally, the score is amazing (the reason I think my sister loves this movie just a bit more than I do is because she owns the soundtrack) and I especially love that the same piece, based on a Beethoven piano sonata, used in the opening scene is also played by Elizabeth and Georgiana (Tamzin Merchant).  I love this movie and it was so much fun to see it with my sister (we recited all our favorite bits of dialogue the whole drive home).  I definitely recommend seeing this while it is in theaters!

The Ugly Stepsister

I had planned on seeing The Ugly Stepsister at Sundance this year and I was even in line for the screening but I decided that I was too tired to enjoy it and went home instead (festival fatigue is real).  When I saw that it was playing at the Broadway, I went to a matinee yesterday and I really liked this twisted take on Cinderella.  Rebekka (Ane Dahl Torp) marries Otto (Ralph Carlsson) because she thinks he is wealthy but is dismayed to learn that he was penniless after he dies.  She now must take care of her daughters Elvira (Lea Myren) and Alma (Flo Fagerli), as well as her new stepdaughter Agnes (Thea Sofie Loch Naess), on her own.  She believes that the only solution is for one of her daughters to marry well and, since Alma is too young, she pins her hopes on Elvira even though she thinks that she is unattractive.  Elvira fantasizes about marrying Prince Julian (Isac Calmroth) so, when it is announced that he is throwing a ball, she submits to her mother's primitive and painful attempts to make her beautiful even though her personality deteriorates as her physical appearance improves.  The prince seems to fall in love with her at the ball but he ignores her when an enchanted version of Agnes suddenly appears.  When Elvira realizes that it is Agnes who has stolen her prince, she moves to attack her but Agnes escapes leaving behind her shoe.  The prince declares that he will only marry the girl whose foot fits inside the shoe so a desperate Elvira maims herself (this occurs in the original fairy tale by the Brothers Grimm).  What I found interesting is that every character is extremely unsympathetic (even Agnes because she is really in love with the stable boy but is willing to marry the prince to escape her stepmother) except for Alma, who cares nothing for beauty and does most of the work around the estate, and it is she who ultimately rescues Elvira.  The commentary on the lengths to which women will go to be beautiful reminded me of The Substance but this takes the body horror to a whole new level!  It is sometimes really gross and there was a scene involving a tape worm that actually made me gag (there were lots of audible reactions from the crowd to several other scenes).  The production design, costumes, and score are all what you would expect from a traditional fairy tale so this subversive take is a lot of fun!  I dug it but I would only recommend it to those with strong stomachs!

Wednesday, April 23, 2025

The Wedding Banquet

There was a lot of buzz for The Wedding Banquet at Sundance this year and I had the opportunity to see it but, because it already had a release date (I saw a trailer for it at the Broadway before Sundance even started), I decided to see something else (the film I saw instead was Rebuilding with Josh O'Connor and I ended up loving it so it was a good decision).  It is now playing at the Broadway so I saw it last night with my nephew and I have to admit that I was a little disappointed because it is very different from what I was expecting.  Lee (Lily Gladstone) and Angela (Kelly Marie Tran) are a lesbian couple hoping to have a child through IVF but two attempts have failed and they are not sure if they can afford a third.  Chris (Bowen Yang), Angela's aimless best friend from college, lives in their garage with his boyfriend Min (Han Gi-chan), the scion of a wealthy family in Korea who is about to lose his student visa.  Min proposes to Chris but he refuses because he knows that Min's family will disown him and cut him off financially if they find out he is gay.  Min is disappointed but then decides to ask Angela to marry him instead and, in return for helping him get a green card, he will pay for the next round of IVF.  Angela agrees but complications ensue when she tells her mother May (Joan Chen), who has made supporting LGBTQ+ causes her whole personality after initially rejecting Angela, and when Min's grandmother Ja-Young (Youn Yuh-jung) decides to come for the wedding.  This is a remake of the 1993 movie of the same name by Ang Lee and, since I have not seen the original, my expectations were based on the trailer alone and it led me to expect a comedy which I did not get.  While there are a few funny moments (which all appear in the trailer), this is more dramatic with themes of acceptance and reconciliation as flawed people learn the importance of found family.  All of the characters have interesting arcs but the resolutions for some of them feel very rushed, especially Angela's fear about being a mother and Lee's anger about an infidelity.  However, I loved how Ja-Young gradually comes to understand her grandson and Youn Yuh-jung gives a lovely performance (that brought a tear to my eye).  Chen steals every scene she is in and Tran impressed me with the depth of her emotional performance but Gladstone is underused and Yang doesn't really sell the dramatic moments (he is a much better comedic actor).  I didn't hate this but I definitely didn't enjoy it as much as I thought I would.

Note:  I really hate when the marketing for a movie is misleading.

Tuesday, April 22, 2025

Sinners

I finally had the opportunity to see Sinners last night with my nephew and to say that I was hyped for this movie would be an understatement.  Let me tell you now that the hype is real and I honestly cannot see anything beating this as my favorite movie of 2025.  World War I veterans Elijah "Smoke" and Elias "Stack" Moore (Michael B. Jordan) flee Chicago after stealing from the mob and return to their hometown in the Mississippi Delta to buy a sawmill from the local Klan leader and turn it into a juke joint for the Black community.  The twins recruit their young cousin Sammie (Miles Caton) to play guitar despite the fact that his father, who is a pastor, believes that his ability is supernatural.  They also employ Delta Slim (Delroy Lindo) as a piano player and Pearline (Jayme Lawson) as a singer as well as Smoke's estranged wife Annie (Wunmi Mosaku), who has a strong belief in the occult, as a cook, a field hand named Cornbread (Omar Benson Miller) as a bouncer, and Chinese shopkeepers Bo and Grace Chow (Yao and Li Jun Li, respectively) as suppliers.  At the grand opening, Stack's former girlfriend Mary (Hailee Steinfeld) appears and he tries to make her leave because she passes for white and he fears for her safety, and his, but she refuses.  Remmick (Jack O'Connell), an Irish immigrant who is a vampire, is drawn to the juke joint along with other vampires and asks to be admitted but Annie has a bad feeling and they are refused.  However, several people eventually leave, including Mary, and are turned into vampires which results in an epic confrontation after Remmick suggests that becoming vampires will help those inside fight against the racism all of them have faced.  I loved the slow build-up to the events at the juke joint because you really get to know the characters and what they have experienced as marginalized people in America, particularly the oppression of Black people in the South during the Jim Crow era (I was particularly moved by Mary because she doesn't seem to belong anywhere).  I found the use of vampires to be incredibly thought-provoking, especially in regards to assimilation, and the juxtaposition between the threat from them and the threat from the KKK is compelling.  But, most of all, I loved the way that music is portrayed as a way to connect the stories from generations in the past to those in the future and, once again, I absolutely loved the juxtaposition between a blues performance inside the juke joint (this scene, shot in one take, is absolutely brilliant and must be seen on the big screen) and an Irish jig performed outside.  The music is absolutely incredible and, as previously mentioned, Caton's performance of "I Lied to You" and O'Connell's performance of "Rocky Road to Dublin" gave me goosebumps.  Jordan is fantastic in the dual role because each brother is very distinctive (I was struck by the different ways in which the brothers interact with the women in their lives) and the rest of the cast is outstanding but Caton, in his first role, is absolutely captivating.  The cinematography, costume design, production design, sound design (there is a scene involving the memory of a lynching that is haunting), and score (Ludwig Göransson has never been better) are all incredibly immersive and I felt like watching this movie was an experience.  I really loved it and, because it is so thematically rich, I suspect that I will be seeing it again soon.

Note:  There is a mid-credits scene and an end-credits scene and both are important to the narrative so be sure to stick around!

Sunday, April 20, 2025

Indiana Jones Marathon

My sister Kristine and I have really enjoyed going to movie marathons at the Megaplex (we've been to the Harry Potter and Twilight marathons) so yesterday we went to another one for the Indiana Jones franchise and this time Trent joined us.  It featured the original trilogy and it was so much fun to see these movies again on the big screen.  The intrepid archaeologist Dr. Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford) joins forces with his former girlfriend Marion Ravenwood (Karen Allen) to locate the Ark of the Covenant before his nemesis Rene Belloq (Paul Freeman) can give it to the Nazis in Raiders of the Lost Ark, he and his sidekick Short Round (Ke Huy Quan) inadvertently team up with a nightclub singer named Willie Scott (Kate Capshaw) to rescue children kidnapped by an evil cult searching for sacred stones in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, and he must work with his estranged father Dr. Henry Jones (Sean Connery) to find the Holy Grail when he learns that Walter Donovan (Julian Glover), the wealthy businessman who hired him to find it, and Dr. Elsa Schneider (Alison Doody), the art historian with whom he has been working, are in league with the Nazis in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.  These movies have lots of really exciting action sequences and some of my favorites are a boat chase through the canals of Venice, a fight near the propeller of a plane, a high speed cart chase through a mine, an aerial dog fight between a biplane and two fighter planes, a fight on the top of a moving tank that eventually goes over a cliff, a jump from a plane in an inflatable raft, a fight for control of a speeding truck, and a giant boulder rolling through a corridor in a temple (I think the special effects hold up really well).  I love the maps that show the routes taken around the world and I may or may not have cheered out loud the first time I heard the instantly recognizable fanfare from "The Raiders Theme" by John Williams (this crowd was very subdued compared to the other marathons). The character of Indiana Jones is iconic with his signature fedora and bullwhip and I really enjoyed seeing his ingenuity in action as he follows the clues (and avoids booby traps) in search of treasure.  Ford is a great action hero (he did most of his own stunts) and his taciturn demeanor reminds me of Humphrey Bogart.  Connery is a hoot, especially in his humorous interactions with Ford (Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade is my favorite in the series), and I love Allen's feisty portrayal of Marion but I think Capshaw is really annoying as Willie (Kristine tried to count how many times she screams but she lost track).  I always love revisiting movies from my youth because I like to see if they still affect me in the same way and these movies definitely do!  Seeing them again was a great way to spend a Saturday afternoon!

Note:  We can't wait for the next marathon at the Megaplex!  Trent would like to see one for the Mission: Impossible franchise and I am still hoping for The Hunger Games.
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