by Hunter Bush
Happy (nearly) New Year, readers! As we bid a fine farewell to 2019, if you're someone who enjoys a little bit of the bubbly maybe raise your glass to EOINA. Exact date aside, I've been writing this column for Moviejawn for three years! Huzzah and cheers!
I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion. I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhäuser Gate. All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain. Or wait. No. You can actually go read any of the old EIONA columns here or on Moviejawn. I don't know what I was thinking. (RIP Rutger Hauer).
This year I got to review my first Nic Cage movie (a lifetime high point for sure) and at one point my phone autocorrected part of some rant or another to include the phrase "skunk of a bitch", so I'm just gonna make that mine now. I'm owning it. One thing I'm disappointed in about the past year is that I didn't watch nearly as many new movies as the year before. In 2018 I logged 68 so I spent some of 2019's final days trying to close that gap and ended up around 60. How about you? Any highlights you're especially proud of, let's hear 'em!
Now, looking ahead: This latest Everything Old Is New Again installment will be covering all the Remakes, Adaptations & Long Gap or Legacy Sequels or Requels (there are a lot of terms flying around out there y'all; watch your heads) for January & February of 2020. In this column's crop of flicks, there are a handful of movies that still have not dropped trailers despite their looming release dates, which is always a bummer (I was waiting for Polaroid to drop for about 3 years before it sneaked onto VOD late last year; still haven't watched it).
On the plus size, I noticed a higher-than-average instance of what I think of as Girls To the Front films. Movies with female leads would be considered rare in, I would imagine, almost any subdivision you choose as your data pool, but in the nook I've carved out here they're even more scarce. Yet within these two months, I spotted three instances of ladies leading what would traditionally be male-lead films. I shouldn't have to say this but I'll say it anyway: that's a good thing! Everyone should get the chance to see themselves represented onscreen because movies are for everyone! That's what's so great about them!
With that in mind, let's see what's to be seen.
JANUARY 2020
3rd:
THE GRUDGE - Hey remember The Grudge? Well it's back! But not in pog form; in the exact same form as it took the previous two times it existed: a creepy movie! (2002 Japanese language Ju-On: The Grudge & 2004 American The Grudge both by Takashi Shimizu). This one by Nicholas Pesce the writer director of last year's Piercing. On the plus side, there's a detective named Muldoon (Andrea Riseborough!) which the boys on We Hate Movies have conditioned me to chuckle at ("Shoot herrr!"). From what I can tell this is kinda the same story as the OG Grudge(s): there's a house with a tragic backstory and a detective who makes the mistake of visiting it, as everyone that does gets, for lack of a better word, infected by this curse. A twist here is that the detective (Riseborough) is a single mother, so her son is now in danger - the trailer has some cool Grudge-y effects of the spirit lurking around the kid's bed! The previous Grudges have each done interesting things with the "ghost" concept, giving their vengeful spirits a unique feel and that's something that will hopefully continue here beyond just copying the more inventive scares from previous installments (like the hand emerging from someone's hair in the shower). History aside, this looks like a fun spooky time with a great pedigree (once again produced by Sam Raimi & co., with a cast that includes John Cho, Lin Shaye & Jacki Weaver!) and I'm excited for it!
12th:
17th:
DOLITTLE - This Robert Downey Jr starring adaptation of the classic 1989 Pixies album stars the former Iron Man as Crackity Jones, a man tasked with retrieving his monkey (who has gone to heaven) when- wait, I'm being told that my information is faulty. Apparently this is an adaptation of the children's book series written by Hugh Lofting beginning in 1920, which has been adapted numerous times into many different formats, most notably a 1967 musical starring Rex Harrison and a series of five (FIVE!) more recent adaptations starting with 1998's Eddie Murphy vehicle. If I can speak seriously for a moment, the "What a Wonderful World" cover that plays throughout this trailer is atrocious and should be stricken from human memory (it seems to be credited to both "Ruben and the Dark" & "AG" but I honestly don't care enough to investigate who or what these entities are). Beyond that, this seems like a palette swap of the Guy Ritchie Sherlock Holmes flicks with RDJ doing another Brit-ish accent (annoying this time) and pulling goofy "What, Me Worry?" faces at the camera. I also get a distinct wanna-be-Pirates-of-the-Caribbean vibe from the stunts & direction on display. Much as I love RDJ (and I honestly do) and animals (ditto), I'll stick with the Rex Harrison version.
31st:
GRETEL & HANSEL - The latest adaptation of the Grimm Bros. fairy tale, Gretel & Hansel is notable for two things right off the bat: the name swapping in the title, perhaps meaning Gretel will take a more central role, and that it's directed by Oz Perkins! Perkins' previous directorial efforts - 2015's The Blackcoat's Daughter and 2016's I am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House - are meditative efforts that slow burn their way to intense finales. On top of that, Gretel & Hansel just looks different. The frame seems deeper that most and is crammed with detail in a way that still manages not to seem cluttered. The scarily enticing visuals, combined with interesting details (like the witch having black fingers) and a high practical effects ratio make this flick Extremely My Shit. I actually saw this trailer play in the wild before the abysmal IT: Chapter 2 and it received uniformly positive reactions from the crowd. This one is high on my list.
FEBRUARY 2020
7th:
BIRDS OF PREY - Based on some iteration or another of the (usually) all-female DC comic book superhero team that has existed since 1996, the trailers for this make it look like Harley Quinn: The Movie (seriously, I don't think a single other character was named) despite Harley not being a part of the team that I'm aware of (I could be wrong). Traditionally the Birds of Prey have involved Batgirl / Oracle, Black Canary & Huntress in spotlight roles with the rest of the members fluctuating. Despite the focus on Harley (Margot Robbie) both Huntress & Black Canary are notable in the trailer (played by Mary Elizabeth Winstead & Jurnee Smollett-Bell respectively) as well as Ewan McGregor playing the (thus far mask-less) villain Black Mask. It seems like Black Mask (whose backstory involves growing up rich and becoming a crime lord) has control of all the Birds-to-be until Harley decides to emancipate them all (the subtitle for this flick is officially And the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn btw). I wish I could remember more details of the trailer but I got distracted by how Harley has all this personally-branded clothing and wondering how that fit into the narrative if at all.
14th:
FANTASY ISLAND - Alright, now we're cooking. Based on TV series that ran from 1978-1984 (itself based on two TV movies in 1977 & '78) Blumhouse's updated take might seem like a bit of a curveball if all you know about the original Fantasy Island is Ricardo Montalbán in a white suit or Hervé Villechaize shouting "Ze plane! Ze plane!". The premise of a resort island in a secret location where you can pursue your ultimate fantasy was frequently only a hair's breadth away from going full Monkey's Paw, be-careful-what-you-wish-for at any moment with Mr. Roarke (Montalbán in the original, Michael Peña here) warning visitors that things could go wrong at any moment. This looks pretty fun, using the different guests' fantasies to lean into different genres of horror a bit - I saw some light body horror, psychological if-you-could-would-you horror and some straight up classic slasher goodness as well - and I'm here for it! It's hard to tell how interconnected the guests' stories will be so as a potential franchise, Fantasy Island could go in any number of directions up to and including full-on anthology. Hopefully that freedom will keep it from getting stale so we get years and years of Michael Peña saying "FAWN-tasy".
21st:
BRAHMS: THE BOY 2 - This was pushed back from a November release but, still no trailer.... There *are* however a few production still floating around and maybe a press packet with a threadbare plot description. Apparently when a new family moves into the same manner house from the original, and son Jude (Christopher Convery) befriends the now twice-titular haunted doll, only mom Liza (Katie Holmes) will stand between it and her son's safety. Is this a "requel"? Is it just retelling the first movie with a slight remix spin put on it? *coughcough* worked for Force Awakens *cough* Still, I'm interested to see if that movie's finale will work on a repeat viewing (or repeat go-round as this seems to be).
CALL OF THE WILD - Based on the Jack London novel you probably remember from junior high, the adaptation co-stars a CGI dog that is so unbelievably silly-looking and cartoonish that, much like Sonic the Hedgehog, I can't help but wonder Why? Why is this live action? Conversely, why sully this live action film based on a respected novel with such a goofy caricature? Harrison Ford (seen above being told the dog will be a CGI cartoon) has traded Chewbacca (based on George Lucas' dog; an Alaskan Malamute named Indiana btw) for some sub-Beethoven japery here. True, Ford long ago had his fill of paling around with a ragtag group of space puppets and he's entitled to that choice (I guess. Different strokes for different folks I suppose, but I would actually weep with joy if my job was to hang around onscreen acting against puppets and aliens. Just sayin'.) but I doubt he had this in mind. I'm actually (educated guess) pretty certain he signed on for what he figured would be a prestige picture based on a great American novel of some acclaim; a project that he, at nearing 80 years old, could hang his hat proudly on. And what I wouldn't give to have seen his face when they floated the idea of "computer illustrated dog costar" to him. He probably grinned roguishly and muttered "Here we go again" like Indiana Jones.
28th:
WENDY - Based on characters and settings from J.M. Barrie's Peter Pan stories, this Wendy-centric take from director / co-writer Benh Zeitlin (Beasts of the Southern Wild) gives me similar vibes to 2009's Where the Wild Things Are from Spike Jonze - equally myth-making & melancholy with an original interpretation on a familiar story. The trailer for Wendy has a fair amount of island / beach footage but, far from the lush or even fantastical imagery in Hook or more recent reimaginings, this more resembles Cast Away or the first season of LOST - just a beach, on an island. Simple. I like it. There's plenty of (I believe) original imagery as well including what looks like a top-of-the-train chase à la the opening to Indiana Jones & the Last Crusade. There's also kind of a lot of trailer time devoted to what I think is a whale or perhaps just some other large fish, possibly fantastical. The underwater stuff is what looks most "magical" here, which I found to be incredibly intriguing. Maybe this timeless island, presumably the future home of the Lost Boys, is somehow only accessible thru an underwater ingress? The plot seems to involve ne'er do wells threatening the Lost Boys, so maybe these (grown-up) bad apples represent adulthood? This looks beautiful and I'm extremely looking forward to it.
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That about wraps things up for this column and this year as well. As always I thank you for reading EOINA sincerely and from the bottom of my heart. Please drop a comment below about anything found herein - a flick you want to see, one you have seen, one you wish they'd stop remaking, whatever - and I will do my best to check in on the comments section from time to time. Maybe we can chat about movies. Movies, y'all! Movies are both the best and the blurst, but I can't help but love 'em.
I hope your 2019 was better than the year before, and I hope 2020 is better for us all. If you're so inclined after reading this, please download the new episode of Hate Watch Great Watch, the podcast I co-host with Allison Yakulis. Our first episode of the new year is on 2011's You're Next, which (though this wasn't planned) I kind of hope is your (and my!) energy heading into the new year: Look out 2020, cuz I'm comin' for ya!
Thanks as always for supporting Moviejawn which features some of the best writing from some of the best people I've ever had the privilege to share bandwidth with. Be safe this holiday season and I'll see you for March & April. Long Live the Movies!
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This article was originally written for, and published at, Moviejawn[dot]com. You should check them out, there's a lot of great stuff happening there!
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