Friday, January 6, 2023

A Man Called Otto

I really enjoyed the Swedish film A Man Called Ove so I have been looking forward to the remake, A Man Called Otto, starring Tom Hanks ever since I heard about it.  I had the chance to see it last night and, much like the original, I found it to be very touching.  Otto Anderson (Hanks) is a curmudgeonly old man who, as the former chairman of the neighborhood association, takes great pains to see that the rules are followed to the letter which sometimes puts him at odds with his neighbors.  He is also despondent over the death of his wife Sonya six months earlier (the younger version of Otto shown in flashbacks is played by Hanks' son Truman) and wants to join her but his half-hearted attempts at suicide always go awry.  A stray cat, a young pregnant woman (Mariana Trevino) who moves in across the street with her family, a transgender teenager (Mack Baydan) who takes refuge with him after he is kicked out by his father, and the former friend (Peter Lawson Jones) who staged a coup to remove him as head of the association all help him find the joy in living once again.  This is incredibly predictable and a bit manipulative (and probably didn't need to be made since it follows the original beat for beat) but I would be lying if I said I didn't enjoy it because it is just so heart-warming.  I think Hanks is incredibly appealing (even when he is grouchy) and he does a great job with Otto's transformation.  I also really enjoyed Trevino's charismatic performance and I loved it whenever Marisol goes toe-to-toe with Otto because she has great chemistry with Hanks.  There are some really dark themes but there is also quite a bit of humor and my audience laughed out loud many times.  This is an old-fashioned crowd-pleaser that almost everyone is sure to enjoy and I highly recommend it!

Note:  My favorite scene in A Man Called Ove is when Ove and his friend Rune have a falling out over Volvos vs. Saabs.  I'm glad that this was kept and that Otto and Reuben clash over Fords vs. Chevrolets (I laughed out loud during this moment).

Wednesday, January 4, 2023

The Pale Blue Eye

My first movie of 2023 was The Pale Blue Eye which I saw at the Broadway last night.  This moody and atmospheric murder mystery was actually the perfect movie to see on a gloomy and snowy winter evening.  World-weary detective Augustus Landor (Christian Bale) is summoned to West Point, the U.S. Military Academy, in secret to solve the grisly murder of a cadet before bad publicity can shut the fledgling institution down in 1830.  He is approached by another cadet named Edgar Allan Poe (Harry Melling), who has some ideas about the case, and the two eventually work together.   They begin to suspect that the occult is involved until Poe discovers the truth in a shocking twist.  Bale is as compelling as always and the rest of the cast, which includes Gillian Anderson, Lucy Boynton, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Toby Jones, Simon McBurney, Timothy Spall, and Robert Duvall, is outstanding but Melling gives an absolutely brilliant performance as the young (and somewhat fictionalized) Poe. The bleak setting, the middle of winter in the Hudson valley, and the ominous tone really emphasize the brutality of the crime and I loved the cinematography, especially the overhead shots of snow-covered trees during the search for another missing cadet, the period costumes, and the haunting score.  I also enjoyed the Gothic horror elements (I literally jumped out of my seat when a character walks down a foggy path in the middle of the night with just a lantern for illumination) but I think the story falls apart in the third act when this genre is abandoned in favor of a more mundane ending.  Despite my disappointment with the resolution, I definitely think it is worth a watch when it starts streaming on Netflix this weekend.

Saturday, December 31, 2022

2022: Year In Review

This year has had its share of difficult moments but I am finally back to feeling like myself again and the good definitely outweighed the bad.  Among other things I have had so much fun going on camping and road trips and seeing a lot of amazing theatre productions!  Here are some of the highlights!
Road trips to Las Vegas to see Jagged Little Pill, SIX, and Hamilton at the Smith Center

I hope everyone has a prosperous and healthy new year!  For once I am really looking forward to the new year (I already have three road trips planned) instead of feeling relieved that the old one is over!

Friday, December 30, 2022

Favorite Movies of 2022

This year I was able to see 121 new releases in the theater and, as in year's past, I thought it would be fun to compile a list of my top ten favorites.  My ranking is not based on the critical response or on box office receipts but, rather, on how much I enjoyed each movie so it is an interesting mix of blockbusters and indie darlings!  (Click on the title to read my original review).

I enjoyed this movie about the end of a long-standing friendship so much more than I was expecting!  The goings-on descend into the absurd at times and there are some genuinely hilarious moments but this has some thought-provoking things to say about depression, isolation, loneliness, mortality, and the desire for a legacy and I think McDonagh strikes the perfect balance between the comedy and the tragedy.  Both Colin Farrell and Brendan Gleeson deliver incredible performances and Kerry Condon and Barry Keoghan are also superb.  The cinematography is simply breathtaking and I loved the haunting score.

This is the most quietly devastating movie I've seen in a long time but I loved the complex relationship between a father living with regret and a daughter just starting to live.  Writer/ Director Charlotte Wells employs hazy cinematography and an episodic structure to convey the fragmented nature of childhood memories and the ambiguity of the final shot is more heartbreaking than something more explicit would have been.  Both Paul Mescal and Frankie Corio, in her debut, give incredibly moving performances and I was absolutely gutted by the end.

This neo-thriller about mutual obsession is complex but ultimately very compelling.  What I enjoyed most is how Park Chan-wook plays with perception by having images come into and go out of focus and by using clever editing and innovative camera work.  This is a straightforward police procedural but these stylistic choices, as well as multiple subplots, keep the audience guessing until the haunting conclusion.  Tang Wei gives an enigmatic performance worthy of Hitchcock's best femme fatales and the chemistry between her and Park Hae-il is smoldering.  The overhead shots of mountain peaks and crashing waves are beautiful and the woodwind heavy score is incredibly evocative in this atmospheric mystery.

I laughed out loud during the entirety of this social satire that takes aim at the vacuous and shallow idle rich!  I loved how class divisions are dismantled in an absurdly amusing way (a scene involving just about every bodily fluid imaginable) and I really appreciated the message that people should not be judged solely on their wealth or looks but rather their knowledge, abilities, and experience and that it pays to treat the people who serve you with kindness and respect.  The cast is fantastic but Dolly DeLeon gives a standout performance in the third act and I am still thinking about her character's actions in the final scene!

This is a very simple revenge story but the references to Norse mythology and symbolism are what make it so interesting and compelling.  The images on the screen are stunning and feature the usual atmospheric world-building that Robert Eggers is known for.  The medieval warfare is visceral and unrelenting and I also loved the sound design and the heart-pounding score.  Alexander Skarsgard is an absolute beast but I also found Nicole Kidman's performance to be fascinating and Anya Taylor-Joy is luminous.  It is brutal, bloody, and brilliant and, while it may not be for everyone, I loved it!

5.  TÁR
This cautionary tale about a brilliant conductor's fall from grace is incredibly compelling and thought-provoking.  Cate Blanchett gives an unbelievably powerful performance because her character is very unsympathetic and yet you somehow begin to feel sympathy for her.  Every scene is fraught with meaning (the significance of which is not always immediately apparent but is eventually revealed) and I loved the ambiguity of the narrative because the audience is never really sure if she is guilty of what she has been accused.  It is an interesting commentary on cancel culture and I haven't been able to stop thinking about it or the discussion of whether artists should be judged by their work or their behavior.

I really loved the darker tone of this movie because it feels more like a classic noir thriller rather than a stylized superhero action movie.  I also really loved Bruce Wayne's character arc as a man almost broken by the weight of living up to his parents' legacy to finally accepting their fallibility and Batman's journey from exacting vengeance to becoming a symbol of hope for Gotham City.  Robert Pattinson is brilliant in the role and I enjoyed the juxtaposition between his more explosive performance as Batman with his restraint as Bruce Wayne.  The action sequences are exciting and intense and the images on the screen are gorgeous (I loved the use of red).  Finally, the atmospheric score by Michael Giacchino is one of the best I've heard this year.

The narrative is chaotic, strange, fantastical, and sometimes even ridiculous but it tells an incredibly touching story about the weight of missed opportunities and the pressures of living up to expectations.  I laughed uproariously through most of it but I had a tear in my eye at the resolution.  The images on the screen are gorgeous and I loved the fact that each of the multiverses has its own unique visual style with brilliant cinematography and editing.  Michelle Yeoh gives an amazing performance that showcases her range (I was so impressed that she performed her own stunts) and both Ke Huy Quan and Stephanie Hsu are also outstanding.  I loved this quirky masterpiece!

That this is an immersive spectacle with unparalleled visual effects is to be expected from James Cameron but I think it is so much more than that.  I really loved the emphasis on what it means to be an outsider, particularly the relationship between Lo'ak and Payakan, a cetacean who has been shunned by his species.  I also really loved the journey that Sully and Neytiri take as parents because they focus so much on protecting their children but ultimately end up being saved by them and the father-son relationship between Sully and Lo'ak is incredibly poignant.  Finally, the theme of respect for the environment is very powerful, particularly the scenes where the whalers hunt tulkuns merely for the sake of acquiring a valuable resource.  The action sequences in the third act kept me on the edge of my seat and I was very impressed by the emotional performances of Sam Worthington and Zoe Saldana.  Seeing this was a thrilling experience but it didn't quite live up to that of watching...

This is quite possibly the most exhilarating movie I have seen in a very long time!  The story is incredibly compelling and a lot more emotional than I was expecting.  It pays homage to the original, with a lot of fun callbacks that fans will instantly recognize, while paving the way for a new narrative with a new group of pilots who are easy to root for.  The action sequences are unbelievably thrilling and immersive (the audience is literally in the cockpit with the pilots thanks to all of the practical stunts) and the final dogfight in an F-14 Tomcat had me cheering out loud.  I loved Tom Cruise's performance and Maverick's character arc is a logical progression from the original movie because, even though he is still a bit cocky, he is more mature and feels his responsibility to his team of young pilots.  Val Kilmer's performance reduced me to tears and Miles Teller is outstanding.  I loved everything about this movie and I had a smile on my face during the whole runtime!

Mannheim Steamroller Christmas at the Eccles

I have had a lot of fun seeing Christmas performances this holiday season!  I had one more last night featuring Mannheim Steamroller at the Eccles Theater and, as always, it was a wonderful show.  Mannheim Steamroller is known for incorporating authentic period instruments, such as harpsichords, lutes, and recorders, with synthesizers so their sound is a mash-up of Renaissance music and rock and roll and I love it.  They performed their arrangements of "Joy to the World," "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing," "Greensleeves," "Good King Wenceslas," "O Little Town of Bethlehem," and "Angels We Have Heard on High."  I really enjoyed "Catching Snowflakes on Your Tongue," which Chip Davis wrote as a lullaby for his three children, because the theme played by the recorder made me imagine a snowflake floating in the air.  I also enjoyed "Fairies" because it is a rock and roll version of "Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy" from the Nutcracker Suite by Tchaikovsky.  They ended their first set with "Cantique de Noel (O Holy Night)" and this was the fifth time that I was able to hear my favorite Christmas song live.  It was an incredibly beautiful version!  After the intermission, they performed their well-known arrangements of "Deck the Halls," "We Three Kings," "Gagliarda," "Christmas Lullaby," "God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen," and my favorite Mannheim Steamroller song, "Pat-A-Pan."  In addition to their Christmas music they also performed "Morning," which was written after the devastating fires in Yellowstone, and the songs "Come Home to the Sea" and "Dancing Flames."  They ended the concert with "Carol of the Bells," which is one of their best known songs.  For the encore, they performed "Stille Nacht, Heilige Nacht" and "Hallelujah," which is another favorite.  This concert was a great way to end the holiday season!  I almost didn't get a ticket because I've seen them so many times but I'm glad I changed my mind!  There is a matinee and evening show today and I highly recommend getting a ticket (go here) for one last dose of holiday cheer!
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