Tuesday, May 17, 2022

EVERYTHING OLD IS NEW AGAIN, Vol. 39 - May 2022

 Everything Old Is New Again

Vol. 39 - May 2020


By “Doc” Hunter Bush, Podcast Czar



Howdy, howdy, one and all and welcome to Everything Old Is New Again! Seeing as this MAY be your first time reading the column, I MAY as well explain how it works around here. If a movie or TV series is debuting or returning in the coming month, I’ll write a little about it provided it is based on some previously existing idea. So if it was originally a book, an older movie, or maybe something more esoteric, like a song (it happens) - it’s EOINA material.


My reviews work like so: I watch any & all trailers available, explain what (if anything) I know about the core intellectual property and say whether the trailer gripped me at all or not. Then down at the bottom of the column, I’ll recommend one or two recent additions to streaming services that meet EOINA criteria, even if they usually aren’t exactly new releases.


We like to have fun here, as they say, so if I say something disparaging about a property or person you’re fond of, know that I rarely mean any harm. I’m just venting.


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May 2022



PREMIERES - Films or series coming to screens great & small that meet EOINA requirements


2nd


Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (dir. Sam Raimi)

Where: In theaters


I’ve made no secret of being kind of very tired of the clockwork schedule of Marvel’s MCU releases and the increasingly insular nature of their storytelling and world building - in short it’s just exhausting. BUT. I do love me some Sam Raimi. Baring in mind that (thanks to that clockwork production schedule) most of the large scale scenes and moments have been pre-visualized and begin production before a director is even chosen sometimes, it’s hard to wrap your head around how much flavor a director can possibly bring to one of these movies. But Raimi gave us the original modern Spider-Man films, thereby helping to codify the visual DNA of the current blockbuster landscape, so hopefully he’s better suited to an undertaking of this size than anyone else?


There also seems to be quite a lot of outright horror elements on display here, and the most recent trailer certainly heavily implies that the main antagonist will be frequent Strange nemesis and other-dimensional nuisance Nightmare which would be a perfect fit for that tone. But I’m getting ahead of myself. Doctor Strange the character was created in 1963 by Steve Ditko and Stan Lee. An arrogant surgeon who loses the fine motor function in his hands via car accident and after exhausting all other options, turns to mysticism for a cure, Stephen Strange becomes the Sorcerer Supreme for our dimension, protecting it from the magical dangers and beings that would put our world at risk.


Since the character’s debut film (2016, dir. Scott Derrickson) he has saved the world multiple times but has also, in 2021’s Spider-Man: No Way Home (dir. Jon Watts), fractured the multiverse, allowing (in that film) multiple Spider-Men to exist in one dimension. Fun! But you can’t unring that bell as they say, so now some of those other-dimensional baddies are a-coming to wreck our shit.


I’ve always dug the Doctor Strange comics, because they were weird, wild, psychedelic, and pretty varied. So I caught references to a handful of comic book characters that might be appearing: the aforementioned Nightmare (evil ruler of the Realm of Dreams), Rintrah (a green minotaur), America Chavez (played by Xochitl Gomez - a member of the Young Avengers) and most notably Shuma Gorath (a kaiju-sized eyeball with tentacles). On top of that, they’re folding in storylines and characters from the wider Marvel films, such as Mordo (Chiwetel Ejiofor - a rival sorcerer), Scarlet Witch (Elizabeth Olsen - a mutant witch and magical pariah), Christine (Rachel McAdams - Strange’s fellow surgeon and love interest), and thanks to Strange’s shattering of dimensional barriers (and corporate lawyers) Professor Charles Xavier (Sir Patrick Stewart - mutant telepath and head of a school for similarly gifted youngsters). That is, I’ll admit, pretty exciting!


From what I can gather from the various trailers, Strange has just royally screwed up whatever barriers existed between our universe and all the others, so all kinds of things and folks are coming here for whatever reason(s). There also seems to be some of Strange traveling to other, worse universes including one where a bunch of Ultron robots (the antagonist character motion-captured by James Spader in the 2nd Avengers movie) imprison Strange with sci-fi handcuffs preventing him from doing his magical hand gestures. My theory is that this is the universe that America Chavez is from/in, one where the Avengers we’re familiar with are gone/defeated/dead and Ultron/somebody else(?) is in charge, leading to the formation of the Young Avengers - a group of kids inspired by the Avengers to rise up. Just a guess, but it makes sense.


Enough rambling from me. I’m excited for this. Excited for a new Sam Raimi film, and the inevitable appearances from Bruce Campbell and an Oldsmobile Delta ‘88 that this all but guarantees. Real ones know.



13th


Kids in the Hall (series)

Where: Amazon Prime


A new KITH series? Debuting on Friday the 13th? Huzzah! The Canadian good boys of comedy (alphabetically Dave Foley, Bruce McCulloch, Kevin McDonald, Mark McKinney, and Scott Thompson) are back and they seem to be just as weird as they always were. Some fan-favorite characters may be returning (McKinney’s “I’m crushing your head” guy) but the thing I always loved most was the rapid-fire goofiness and self-deprecation, which seems to be as present as back in 1989 (the original series ran until 1993 on various channels, followed by the movie Brain Candy in 1996).


The tone of the trailer at least seems to match what I’ve loved about the Kids in the Hall since I first saw them airing after Saturday Night Live in the ‘90s - like adult-sized children given full control of the playpen, things looks horny, silly, violent, and goofy all with a satirical, self aware edge to them.


I don’t know what else to say, except to quote one moment from the trailer: “That cat has my gun!


Firestarter (dir. Keith Thomas)

Where: Peacock


Based on the novel by Stephen King (which I have never read) and therefore sharing source material with the 1984 film starring a young Drew Barrymore (which I have actually never seen all the way through) - I think this looks great! Now before you decide that my opinion matters less having neither read nor seen these previous versions of this story, I should clarify that not only am I a huge Uncle Stevie fan but obviously I’m aware of Firestarter through cultural osmosis if not exactly recollection. My thing with King (that rhymes!) is that he’s one of my absolute favorite authors, so I prefer to keep some of his work unread to look forward to. Same with Neil Gaiman, Laird Barron, and China Mieville among others. As authors they have yet to let me down, so if I’m ever completely in need of a specific literary experience, I know there’s something of theirs out there. I saw (let’s say maybe) most of 1984’s Firestarter (dir. Mark Lester) years and years back on maybe the SyFy Channel (?), but there were commercial breaks and I had trouble staying invested, so I bailed.


If you’re even less familiar with Firestarter, in brief it’s about a young girl named Charlie (Ryan Kiera Armstrong) who manifests supernatural forces when in a state of distress. Her father Andy (Zac Efron) believes that she can learn to control her abilities and live a normal life, but as she begins to enter young adulthood, and her emotions and powers grow stronger and less predictable, she begins to pose a greater threat to those around her. Not only that, but a mysterious organization that Andy already knows about becomes aware of Charlie and sets out to capture her.


Now let’s get back to how good this looks (and sounds!) - the direction, as much as can be seen in a trailer, seems to keep things small and close not only to contrast with larger shots of Charlie’s powers, but maybe to help the audience empathize with Charlie’s child-size perspective. Smart. I don’t recall Charlie’s powers in the original being anything besides heat/flame related (which is called pyrokinesis btw) but there’s definitely some comparatively regular degular telekinesis (moving objects with one’s mind) on display in this trailer. But, for sure, the fire effects are the draw here and they also look fantastic: big jets of flame, people’s heads igniting like strike anywhere matches, metal objects melting like wax - it all looks great and maybe largely practical effects (?) which is super exciting to me.


Somehow even more exciting is the score. Way back in the ‘80s, John Carpenter was considering directing Firestarter but was ultimately dropped from consideration after The Thing’s commercial failure. Now he’ll at least get to leave his mark in some fashion, via contributing the score along with his son and frequent collaborator Cody. Let me tell you that whatever the piece of music in the trailer is, it sounds a-m-a-z-i-n-g in headphones! Hear for yourself! Needless to say, I will absolutely be checking this out when Friday the 13th rolls around!



20th


Jackass 4.5 (dir. Jeff Tremaine)

Where: Netflix


Twenty damn years ago, a perfect storm of stupidity struck and pop culture was never the same. And while it might not ultimately be a Good Thing all told, I sure am glad that Jackass brought these lovable goofballs into my life. Combining sports video tricks and skits with physical challenges and pranks, Jackass usually has something that will appeal to almost anyone.


In the wake of the release of Jackass Forever earlier this year, my house - Mt. Mausoleum - have been revisiting the old MTV series. Sure, some of the segments haven’t aged well (they were juvenile to begin with and it was 20 years ago) and boy Bam Margera is hard to take, but some things are just fun and harm no one (other than whichever Ass is directly involved). I was glad to see, in Jackass Forever, that as much as things change (the crew are folding in some new blood so that longtime fans don’t have to watch silver foxes Johnny Knoxville and Steve-o do themselves even more bodily harm) the more they stay the same (we actually do see those things happen in Forever, easily the least fun and most uncomfortable moments).


Jackass 4.5 follows in the tradition of the previous Jackass films by releasing a .5 version with footage cut from the main release. Not just parts of segments, but entire bits. The teaser for this release relies primarily on a deleted segment where performers in mascot costumes ride a treadmill past others on a swing set, hoping to avoid being kicked by their pal mid-swing. As with all Jackass outings as I get older, I hope nobody got hurt, but I hope they almost do? It’s weird, I admit.



27th


Top Gun: Maverick (dir. Joseph Kosinski)

Where: In theaters


Once, long ago, I wrote a very positive write-up of the Top Gun: Maverick trailer on the eve of its release. Then at literally the last minute, they changed the release date a-g-a-i-n and we had to cut it. So here we are again. Kind of fitting I suppose because that’s how TG:M feels - familiar. Based on the 1986 film (dir. Tony Scott) which was itself based on a California magazine article, OG TG was the story of Pete Mitchell, callsign Maverick (Tom Cruise), a cocky pilot with the skills to back it up. Along the way he romanced Charlie (Kelly McGillis), lost his best friend and co-pilot Goose (Anthony Edwards), pissed off rival Iceman (Val Kilmer), stumbled from a war game scenario directly into an actual air battle and most importantly played some very homoerotic volleyball.


Minus the volleyball, this looks like it hits very similar beats. This time, at the behest of Iceman (who has achieved some kind of status in the intervening years), Maverick is brought in to teach a class full of aspiring pilots, your assorted Tops Gun, including Goose’s son played by Miles Teller and NOT Ryan Gosling for some reason. I mean, c’mon!


Anyhoo. This looks a little too close to the original if you ask me, and by continuing to read this paragraph, you do. It even seems like the class (and Maverick) will end up in an air battle (but like, of course they would - it’s a jet pilot movie, what are they gonna do, karate? So I’m wondering if this is all an intentional mislead. Maybe the trailer was cut to showcase the more familiar aspects of Top Gun, to draw fans back, but secretly has more story waiting in the wings (pardon the pun).


This actually looks excellent. Joseph Kosinski previously brought us Tron: Legacy (which kind of did the familiar trailer/secret story payload thing I’m describing actually) and Tom Cruise sleeper sci-fi banger Oblivion, so the flick is in good hands. Plus fighter jets are very fast and go very high, so slapping a camera on one of them bad Larrys is gonna net you some exciting footage! I’m not going to theaters for this, but I’ll keep an eye out for it on streaming eventually.


The Bob’s Burgers Movie (dir. Loren Bouchard, Bernard Derriman)

Where: In theaters


Bob’s Burgers premiered on Fox back in 2009 from creator Loren Bouchard (of Home Movies fame) with tons of charm, an endearingly wacky and open-minded heart, and lots of funny names for burgers. The Bob’s Burgers Movie seems to check all the boxes the show is known for: financial trouble for parents and restaurateurs Bob (H. Jon Benjamin) and Linda (John Roberts); Goonies-like adventures for kids Tina (Dan Mintz), Louise (Kristen Schaal), and Gene (Eugene Mirman); and also maybe a UFO, robots, trap doors, magic powers, and musical performances - though to be fair some of those are definitely going to be elaborate fantasies, another hallmark of the series.


All I know of the plot for sure is that Bob is distraught as they only have seven days to make an important payment and also a huge sinkhole opens up in the street out front of the restaurant. But like, it’s Bob’s Burgers, whatever happens it’ll kind of be adorable and fun, right?


My only question is - why a movie? What will be accomplished in the feature film format that Bob’s couldn’t tackle in the half-hour format they’ve been so successful at? Visually the only noticeable difference is that the film seems to have much more dramatic lighting than the show. But I suppose we’ll see. Again, I’m not visiting theaters for this, but can’t wait to catch it streaming later in the year.



SPOTLIGHT - Not new, but recommended EOINA material


1st


Candyman (1992) (dir. Bernard Rose)

Where: Shudder


The original Candyman is pretty much a stone cold masterpiece. The pacing is incredible, the ways in which it adapts and updates Clive Barker’s original short story “The Forbidden”, the performances, the amazing score (by avant garde composer Philip Glass), and of course Tony Todd’s iconic performance as the titular being. I love this flick and always recommend it to people who haven’t seen it.


Bonus Rec: The 2021 Candyman remake (dir. Nia DaCosta), which updates the themes of this film for a modern POV and folds the previous trilogy’s mythology into its world in a really fascinating and intelligent way. Seek it out. 


The Rage: Carrie 2 (1999) (dir. Katt Shea, Robert Mandell)

Where: Amazon Prime


I’ve actually been meaning to rewatch this for a while now. The incredibly long-gap sequel to 1976’s Carrie (dir. Brian De Palma - based on the novel from the aforementioned Uncle Stevie), I remember watching this once, long long ago, drunk in a basement one Halloween night in my college years and kind of bad-movie enjoying it? I then immediately cast it from my mind and never thought about it after. Then a few years ago, on the eve of the modern Stephen King resurgence in adaptation popularity and pop cultural presence, I was reminded that it even existed.


In case you don’t know, the original Carrie is about a high school aged girl who has telekinetic powers which are exacerbated by the hormonal changes in her body and famously sets her whole prom on fire after being routinely ridiculed and humiliated. Good for her I say. The Rage: Carrie 2 follows Carrie’s half sister who also has telekinesis and uses it to avenge her best friend who was driven to suicide by abuse and bullying.


I can’t give this the kind of strong recommendation that I usually like to within this space, but please - consider joining me in giving this truly baffling oddity a (re)watch and just maybe we’ll have a good time.


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My hope with EOINA is that MAYbe I’ll turn one of you on to some project that you weren’t aware of, or that you MAY be more inclined to check out with more knowledge of its legacy. If that’s the case, drop a comment or seek me out online. Same goes for if you end up watching one of these flicks and wanna talk about it: comment here or find me on twitter, insta, or letterboxd.


Thanks as always to MovieJawn for hosting and posting, and to YOU for reading! If you’d like more from me, I co host the Hate Watch/Great Watch podcast with Allison Yakulis. We’ve just finished up a five episode miniseries on the films of Baz Luhrmann and we’re cooling things down with episodes on 1998’s raunchy comedy Dirty Work (currently available here, with guests Tina Dillon & Michael Chalfin), 1995’s Jackie Chan comedy/action piece Rumble in the Bronx (drops on May 4th) and another Uncle Stevie adaptation, The Shawshank Redemption (available May 18th, with guest Bryan Bierman) before heading into Pride month! If you’re so inclined, give a listen and if you like it please like, share, comment, heart, star, horseshoe, recommend, fave, and smash that subscribe button or whatever because it all helps expand our reach and helps more people find us.


Until next time - Long Live the Movies!


Wednesday, May 4, 2022

"THE UNBEARABLE WEIGHT OF MASSIVE TALENT" (2022)

The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent

Directed by Tom Gormican

Written by Tom Gormican, Kevin Etten

Starring Nicolas Cage, Pedro Pascal, Tiffany Haddish

Running time: 1 hour 47 minutes

Rated R for language throughout, some sexual references, drug use, and violence.


In theaters April 22


By “Doc” Hunter Bush, Podcast Czar



The world was not ready for The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent. The film suffers and we are all the worse for it. The movie is being sold on the memetic Nicolas Cage; the legacy of Cage. The mercurial wildman, the Tasmanian devil of thespian swagger who when presented with a list of ways to actualize a performance, will create an entirely new approach. The “Not the bees!” Cage; the Cage who lists every letter of the alphabet to chastise a subordinate in Vampire’s Kiss; the scream-crying, drinking whiskey in his tighty whities Cage. That is the Cage that UWMT is trading on.


There’s nothing wrong with that Cage. He’s damn entertaining. He’s the embodiment of unpredictability; acting as 4 dimensional chess - predicting expectations and obliterating them. The phrase “He zigged when I thought he would zag” does not apply to this Cage. This Cage doesn’t do either. For lack of a better word, he zangs. He does something you didn’t even imagine possible.


The Cage presented in UWMT isn’t that Cage. He’s closer (probably) to the actual Cage: an enthusiast for, and artisan in his chosen profession who now has to navigate personal relationships and professional hurdles in a world he finds himself unprepared for. If that description sounds pretentious, it is, but that doesn’t make it less apt. Half of this movie, the better half easily, dances around being a hangout film between Cage (playing a semi-fictionalized version of himself) and Pedro Pascal (playing Javi, a billionaire super fan) as they drink, discuss cinema, and leap into the ocean. This kernel of an idea, a story about Cage finding someone on his wavelength, someone to whom he can really relate, is the movie I was hoping to see.


I try to approach each film on its own merits. With some films, that’s the only way you can view them. To that end, it’s unfair of me to engage in armchair quarterbacking. Always saying what a film “should have been” is a weakness as a filmgoer and anyway is purely speculation because I had no hand in it; only the creators can really say whether the film we’re getting is what they intended. But sometimes the film itself tells you.


About ⅓ of the way through UWMT, after the bromance between Cage & Javi has blossomed, they’ve decided to write a screenplay together which will star Cage. Admittedly, a bunch of this is in-world wheel-spinning to buy Cage time to snoop around, but put a pin in that and we’ll come back to it in a moment. Javi & Cage are hyping each other up on their screenplay as something character and performance driven, an adult drama for people who appreciate the craft of filmmaking. But, as Cage tells Javi, they need a hook. Something to bring people into theaters, because unless you’re a major studio franchise you don’t have a guaranteed audience and no one is going to go see the kind of movie they want to make.


To that end, in UWMT Cage is conscripted into working for the CIA (agents played by Tiffany Hadish and Ike Barinholtz) who believe Javi is the head of an international cartel responsible for kidnapping a rival’s daughter and holding her for ransom. So when, at Haddish’s prompting, Cage pitches Javi on adding a kidnapping angle to their otherwise stately character piece screenplay, everything he says about putting butts in seats sounds like screenwriters Tom Gormican (who also directed) and Kevin Etten lampshading the inclusion of a trite action-thriller premise into their story. That’s what I meant when I said the world wasn’t ready for this film. In another world, another time, with the film business in a different state, maybe The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent could have been more its own beast and not needed to court wider audiences with a fairly rote kidnapping plot.


Still while the balance of these two halves is handled fairly well for the duration of the film, the third act shifts the focus more squarely onto action/comedy and that’s where the film stumbled most for me. None of the action is bad, it’s just unremarkable. The problem is, throughout the film leading up to it, the characters are constantly invoking (and footage is occasionally shown from) some of Cage’s illustrious career, so when you keep bringing up Face/Off, or The Rock, or Con Air for an hour, your action scenarios are going to pale in comparison. That’s not a dig by any means. These are films made by (mostly great) directors at their peak, in the era of the over-the-top action blockbuster. Few could hope to come close.


The smart choice then would be to lean into anything that sets your film apart from those, namely the comedy and the meta-awareness of Nicolas (“Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaa-woo!”) Cage. There are attempts at both things but they just slightly miss the mark. A prime action comedy scene involving Cage & Javi attempting to escape over a wall blows the big punchline by showing that the wall isn’t really that large halfway through the gag, then just going back to it without adding or changing anything, making the true punchline feel like a footnote. A trivial complaint, to be sure, but one that stuck out to me. A bungled opportunity.


Mostly though what we do get is fine. A perfectly serviceable, decently self-aware action/comedy starring a true original. It could definitely use more Cage-ness. For example Cage name-checks his “nouveau shamanic” acting method, which I’m reasonably familiar with, but would have loved to hear Cage (even a semi-fictionalized version of him) wax poetic about, at length. There’s also a whole aspect of the plot involving Cage’s relationship with his (fictional) ex-wife and (fictional) daughter (played by Sharon Horgan and Lily Mo Sheen respectively) that works extremely well to help drive things early on but becomes just another by-the-numbers action/thriller component by the end of the film. Even knowing that these relationships are made up, I would rather have mined them for comedic set-ups than just fold them into an unrelated action scenario.



Would I have preferred this film be something else, something befitting the originality of the star whose name it’s trading on? Absolutely. A two-person hangout film perhaps, something like Sideways but about acting rather than wine (there would still be plenty of wine) highlighting the easy camaraderie between the enigmatic Cage and the infinitely lovable Pedro Pascal? Yes. Pascal carries his fair share of the movie, not due to anyone slacking, but because he has to play against this version of Cage’s Cage and between them they have to maintain a very specific tone that allows for you to believe that a real actor in ostensibly our real world could and would be put into the scenario presented; that the CIA would think that a famously volatile personality is their best bet for a dangerous, high-pressure recon mission. When events run the risk of getting too obviously parodic, Pascal is there to ground things, but when it’s time to get silly, Pascal can hold his own. 


Maybe it could have been a sort of Slumdog Millionaire action comedy where Cage continuously draws on moments and lessons learned from his expansive career? Certainly. Cage drawing on experiences from his career during the action, with asides like “I learned this car trick filming Gone in 60 Seconds” or “The bee wrangler on The Wicker Man taught me this” would have gone over like gangbusters during the final act because the film had laid so much tonal track already.


The moments in which we get flashes of these things still work and it’s a genuinely enjoyable experience watching Cage addressing his legacy, even from this slight remove, while in a noted career resurgence. I had hoped that this would be another idiosyncratic character piece for Cage, something that would fit nicely alongside Mandy or Pig, albeit one with a slightly silly, gonzo meta element to it and while this isn’t that, it’s a fine addition to Cage’s ever-expanding, always unpredictable oeuvre.