Wipe away all the clichéd clutter and there’s actually a worthy story here.
Film Reviews
Review: The Boss
Melissa McCarthy has a few funny lines that she delivers with her usual aplomb. Mostly, though, the film puts her in situations which are humiliating rather than hysterical.
Review: Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice
It’s a mess, but it’s often a fascinating mess. It’s also the most nihilistic superhero picture I’ve ever seen, so dour and misanthropic that it makes Christopher Nolan’s Dark Knight Trilogy suddenly seem as chirpy as that animated Fantastic Four series from the ‘70s.
Review: Whiskey Tango Foxtrot
If the film never delves too deeply into the sociopolitical aspects of its setting, it’s still gripping enough to make it a sound vehicle for Tina Fey.
Review: 10 Cloverfield Lane
The terrific performances by the three leads and debuting director Dan Trachtenberg’s effective staging (the bunker atmosphere alternates between friendly and foreboding) are worthy enough to earn this a modest recommendation.
Review: London Has Fallen
Nationalistic nonsense from start to finish, calibrated to maintain such a fever pitch of patriotism that it makes Team America: World Police look like Communist propaganda by comparison. Lest we forget, Team America was a satire by design; London Has Fallen is a satire by stupidity.
Review: Zootopia
An unexpectedly complex mystery, one that also allows for an examination of cultural differences and the poisonous prejudices that result in being judged by the color — and, in this anthropomorphic world, the texture — of one’s skin.
Review: Triple 9
Director John Hillcoat (the Down Under Western The Proposition) prefers to shoot extensively in the dark, which adds ambience but also occasionally results in images so dim, you wish an a.d. would hand him a flashlight already.
Review: The Witch
Another winner in the indie-horror sweepstakes, joining the likes of The Babadook and It Follows in its ability to establish an unsettling atmosphere of dread and not let up until the light once more breaks across the auditorium.
Review: Deadpool
While other heroes eventually enter the fray, this is The Ryan Reynolds Show from beginning to end, with the actor clearly relishing the opportunity to rescue this character from being merely relegated to future Trivial Pursuit status.
Review: Zoolander 2
Juggling jokes that are predictable with gags that are idiotic.
Review: How To Be Single
With some tightening up of both characterizations and scenarios, this could have been a worthy entry in the rom-com genre.
