Wednesday, August 25, 2021

The Protege

I was pleasantly surprised by The Foreigner so I thought I would probably like another action thriller from director Martin Campbell.  I saw his latest, The Protege, last night and, even though it is not a great movie, I enjoyed it anyway.  Moody Dutton (Samuel L. Jackson) is a highly sought-after international assassin who rescues a young girl (Eva Nguyen Thorsen) in Vietnam after she kills the men who kidnapped her and killed her family.  He becomes a surrogate father to her and teaches her everything he knows.  Thirty years later Anna Dutton (Maggie Q) is also an international assassin working with Moody on high-profile contracts.  When Moody is assassinated Anna vows revenge and eventually locates the man responsible in Vietnam.  She must return to her native land to confront her past but not before going toe to toe with the killer's fixer, Michael Rembrandt (Michael Keaton).  The story is incredibly convoluted and doesn't always make sense (I had no idea what was going on some of the time and I felt like I had missed a key piece of information), the characters are very one-dimensional, and there is a strange twist in the third act but this hardly matters.  Maggie Q and Michael Keaton have tremendous chemistry, whether it is in the scenes where they exchange witty banter or in the scenes where they try to kill each other, and they are so much fun to watch.  The action sequences are fantastic, especially all of the hand-to-hand combat.  I also really liked the ending because it is bold and not what I was expecting.  Maggie Q is incredibly fierce in the role and I would definitely like to see her in more (and better) action thrillers in the future.  It's not what I would call a "must-see" but it is very entertaining so I recommend it to fans of the genre (especially when it becomes available on a streaming platform).

Tuesday, August 24, 2021

Reminiscence

I was incredibly unmotivated last weekend and canceled plans to see Reminiscence twice before I finally got my act together to see it last night.  Unfortunately, because I waited a few days, I saw some reviews and they were mostly negative so I was not especially looking forward to it.  However, I actually enjoyed it more than I was expecting.  I really liked the premise because it is a neo-noir thriller set in a dystopian future with a tortured protagonist named Nick Bannister (Hugh Jackman) and a mysterious femme fatale named Mae (Rebecca Ferguson).  Climate change has caused the level of the ocean to rise and temperatures to become more extreme, leading to wars and riots.  Such a bleak existence has forced many people to retreat into their memories.  Nick and a fellow combat veteran, Watts Sanders (Thandiwe Newton), run a business in Miami where people can see and experience their memories again and again and they sometimes use their equipment to help D.A. Avery Castillo (Natalie Martinez) interview incapacitated witnesses.  One night Mae arrives after hours asking to access her memories to find her missing keys.  Nick sees more of her memories than is necessary and falls in love with her.  They begin a relationship but Mae vanishes without a trace after a few months leaving Nick in despair.  Despite warnings from Watts about his reckless behavior, he spends most of his time using the equipment on himself to access his memories of Mae hoping to find a clue to her whereabouts.  Meanwhile, D.A. Castillo requests their help deposing a comatose patient to get evidence against a drug lord named Saint Joe (Daniel Wu) and, when Nick sees Mae in his memories, he realizes that she is not who he thinks she is.  The plot is very convoluted and I sometimes had a hard time keeping track of all of the secondary characters and stories.  It is also quite derivative (it reminded me a lot of Strange Days which is a better movie).  However, I enjoyed the world-building, particularly the depiction of a Miami that is mostly under water, and the images on the screen are often stunning.  The commentary about the division between the rich and poor is very interesting, especially regarding the control of land which is the most valuable resource in this society.  Jackman and Ferguson give great performances and I was always invested in their relationship.  I also liked the action sequences, especially a scene in a ballroom under water.  It is not perfect but there is enough for me to recommend it, especially if you subscribe to HBOMax.

Saturday, August 21, 2021

The Magic of Queen at Sandy Amphitheater

Last summer I really missed seeing outdoor performances (I wonder if I have mentioned that?) so this summer I made a list of all of my favorite outdoor performance venues and I have been trying to get to all of them (it looks like I will be able to check off most of them before the summer is over).  A few weeks ago I realized that I didn't include the Sandy Amphitheater (which is a great venue) so I decided to look at the website and see if there was a show that I might like.  I got very excited when I saw a show called The Magic of Queen (I wonder if I have mentioned that I really love Queen?) and I got even more excited when I saw that there were still good tickets available (it eventually sold out).  The show was last night and the weather could not have been better for an outdoor show!  Most of the summer has been unbearably hot and this week there has been a lot of rain but last night was nice and cool.  This was the first concert I have been to since I saw Sarah McLachlan at the Eccles Theatre in February of 2020 and I loved feeling the energy from such a large and enthusiastic crowd!  The Magic of Queen is a show featuring Brody Dolyniuk and his band performing the music of Queen (he also does shows performing the music of Led Zeppelin and Elton John).  He sounds like Freddie Mercury but he doesn't try to imitate him and I really enjoyed his versions of the classic songs.  The first half of the show included "One Vision," "Tie Your Mother Down," "Play the Game," "Keep Yourself Alive," "You're My Best Friend," "Killer Queen," "Now I'm Here," "Somebody to Love," and "Under Pressure."  After the intermission, they played a beautiful rendition of "Love of My Life" and then the crowd came to life during "Another One Bites the Dust" and "Fat Bottomed Girls."  Next came "Crazy Little Thing Called Love" and "Radio Ga Ga" (complete with clapping).  Dolyniuk introduced the next song by saying that it was the title of a recent movie about a rock star and then started playing "Rocket Man," which got a huge laugh from the crowd.  Then they performed a stirring version of "Bohemian Rhapsody" which is the song I had been waiting all night for!  It did not disappoint!  The concert concluded, as Queen concerts often do, with "We Will Rock You" and "We Are the Champions." I had so much fun at this concert and I am so glad that I suddenly remembered to add Sandy Amphitheater to my list!  Go here for the remaining shows this summer.

Friday, August 20, 2021

The Night House

Last night I saw a late Thursday preview of The Night House in an empty theater.  In retrospect, that might not have been such a good idea because this movie is really scary at times and I may or may not have screamed out loud.  Beth (Rebecca Hall) lives in a lake house designed and built by her husband Owen (Evan Jonigkeit) who has recently died by suicide.  She has a very dark past and her husband's death has clearly sent her over the edge.  She begins to feel a presence in the house, which she believes is her husband, and becomes obsessed with finding out why he decided to kill himself, seemingly out of the blue.  As she searches through his possessions, she finds several books about the occult, a number of pictures of women who look astonishingly similar to her, and architectural plans for a house that is a mirror image of her own which Owen had actually started building across the lake.  As Beth becomes more and more traumatized by the strange goings on in her house, she discovers that her troubled past may have had more of an impact on her husband than she imagined.  This is incredibly moody and atmospheric (my favorite kind of horror movie) and I especially liked the use of light and dark in the negative space in the house.  Shadows and outlines suddenly morph into something sinister and then back again and the effect is absolutely terrifying because Beth is not really sure of what she is seeing and neither is the audience.  I am not usually a fan of jump scares because they seem really lazy to me but there is one in particular in this movie that is very well done (this is where I may or may not have screamed).  The sound design is extremely menacing and it really adds to the almost unbearable tension.  Hall gives a brilliant performance and completely sells her character's grief, depression, anger, paranoia, and terror.  My biggest complaint with this movie is that all of the elements of the story don't quite come together as cohesively as they could have and it is a bit confusing.  The ending is very abrupt and not altogether satisfying after the buildup.  On the whole I did really enjoy The Night House and I would definitely recommend it to fans of horror movies.

Wednesday, August 18, 2021

Not a Happy Family

My Book of the Month selection for August was Not a Happy Family by Shari Lapena (the other options were Damnation Spring by Ash Davidson, The Inheritance of Orquidea Divina by Zoraida Cordova, The Heart Principle by Helen Hoang, and Once There Were Wolves by Charlotte McConaghy). I discovered Lapena during the lockdown when reading was my biggest source of entertainment and she quickly became one of my favorite authors! I devoured every one of her books in one sitting so I was thrilled when her latest was an option this month! I eagerly anticipated getting my blue box delivered to my door and, just like the others, I read it in a single day!  Fred and Sheila Mercer are a wealthy couple living in a secluded and affluent neighborhood in the Hudson Valley. They invite their three adult children and their partners, Catherine and her husband Ted, Dan and his wife Lisa, and Jenna and her latest fling Jake, to dinner on Easter Sunday. Fred has been a cruel and vindictive father and Sheila has been a passive and disinterested mother so tensions are running high even before the dinner. Fred uses the occasion to profess his disappointment in each of them and to make a bombshell announcement. Two days later Fred and Sheila are discovered dead, the victims of an especially brutal homicide. At first, the police believe it is a robbery that turned violent but they soon come to suspect all three of the siblings. Each of them have a strong motive and, more importantly, none of them have an alibi for the time of the murders. Shocking secrets are revealed, circumstantial evidence is found to connect all three of them to the crime, and desperate siblings eventually turn on each other but which one of them killed their parents? The chapters are short and alternate between the POVs of multiple characters who are unsympathetic and unreliable so it is incredibly suspenseful. I could not put this book down because new revelations, that continually changed who I suspected, appear in almost every chapter and I had to keep reading. Lapena kept me guessing until the very end, which doesn't happen often, and the resolution is incredibly satisfying! The final sentence made me cheer out loud! As a huge fan of Lapena I think this might be her best yet and I definitely recommend it (as well as all of her other books) to fans of murder mysteries.

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