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"It" Review

*I have not read the novel or see the miniseries. I also like clowns.*

Stephen King adaptations -there have been bad ones, good ones, and great ones. "It" is one of the good ones. 

We follow seven kids- yes, seven!- who all individually encounter this inexplicable extra-dimensional creature who seems to be very fond of terrorizing children and manifesting itself as a clown. Right off the bat, I thought that maybe seven is a bit too many to follow within a two-hour duration. After watching it for the first time (I do intend on seeing it again!) my thoughts have remained unchanged. Out of the seven protagonists, six of them had dramatic weight to them while the last one is kind of left in the dust only to serve as a plot device towards the end of the movie, kind of. The second and third acts all seem a bit formulaic and cliche along with its scares. But bear with me -this movie is very good and there are a myriad of things that I enjoyed.

For starters, this film features a relentless onslaught of scares. Having over half a dozen kids while there's an evil child murdering Lovecraftian creature on the loose means that we get, half a dozen more scares per minute (that's like 7 spm... I think I've worked out the math). Sure, each scare has an obvious set up but they're done in the most spectacular way imaginable. Hats off to the movie for making some of the most creative scares in horror movie history!

The dialogue and performances are all very sharp -Sophia Lillis in particular with her mature and badass take on Bev and Bill Skarsgård as the eponymous "It" creature -holy shit, that's a wacky performance.

Watching "It" is a lot like going to the circus. You get to see an assortment of feats and it wows regardless of how obvious the formula or set ups are. It's fun and highly memorable and serves as the crowning achievement of contemporary big-budget horror. If it happens to actually scare you in the process, then it succeeds at a higher level than it already did for me.

"It" Review

Raymond Thang September 16, 2017
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"mother!" Review

"Mother!" is a brutal and blunt representation of the human condition that blends together religion, environmentalism, and a creepy house. In the end, the message is clear but the journey there is a disjointed and actively incomprehensible series of events. Though this is intentional.

We follow a very primal Jennifer Lawrence as the eponymous "mother" (in my opinion, her best performance since Winter's Bone) in a house with Javier "never disappoints" Bardem. For the majority of the movie, things kind of just happen arbitrarily that kind of throws me off everytime I see something that I could remotely cling on to. It kind of throws basic screenwriting rules out the window (yes it's that kind of movie) but at a certain point, everything will gel together... Well, mostly everything. It throws in as much symbolism and craziness as it can at an extremely accelerated rate especially towards the end. I was into it for the most part and I don't think the film is quite as hard to decipher as some people have let on. Though of course there are many ways you can interpret the movie but there's one common interpretation to extrapolate from.

Mother! Is Aronofsky at his most primal and unhinged. If you're not into close up handheld shaky footage or the feeling of cold hopelessness for humanity, you might wanna stay clear of this one.

"mother!" Review

Raymond Thang September 16, 2017
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"A Ghost Story" Review

"A Ghost Story". I thought this was actually going to focus on the relationship of the two leads but nope, it's literally a story about a ghost. I really should've payed more attention to the title.

The movie seems to channel the style and cinematic poetry of Tarkovsky. It's wonderfully shot and edited in a way that maximized the performances of its actors (Rooney Mara in particular). Scenes would extend for uncomfortable amounts of time and the atmosphere feels meditative but never boring. That being said, the movie didn't resonate with me after it abandons the drama that it meticulously sets up. Its rules for its supernatural elements are vague and at times frustrating and there's a scene late into the movie that felt more patronizing than philosophical. Overall, it's a very good movie that takes some unexpected and somewhat unsuccessful turns.

"A Ghost Story" Review

Raymond Thang September 16, 2017
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"Atomic Blonde" Review

The following is a dramatic re-enactment of my inner monologue while watching "Atomic Blonde":

*movie starts*
"Oh baby, I love Charlize Theron and the John Wick movies. I hope this is gonna be good. I read that she did at least 80% of her stunts and had to get dental surgery after because she's so hardcore."

*a few minutes later"
"This looks so pretty. The colour grading and cinematography is so gorgeous! The music choices are so good."

*a few more minutes later*
"Okay, this music is getting a bit annoying, I hope it doesn't keep doing this. What's even happening to the plot right now? lol."

*some time later*
"Um, I don't think I'm liking this at all... why is anyone doing any of this? Omfg this music needs to stop playing."

*later*
"That was so badass."

*later*
"This movie is a bit over 2 hours but why does it feel like it's 3 hours long? I wonder what my friends are up to right now."

*during an action scene*
"Oh, I know the movie that's playing in the background! I would love to watch that right now instead of this to be honest."

*a few minutes later*
"Whoever edited the music into this movie should've been fired."

*what feels like an eternity later*
"OMFG THIS IS AMAZING!!!!"

*moments later*
"OMFG HOW DID THEY SHOOT THIS???!!!*

*later*
"Ohhhhh!!!! I don't get it"

*movie ends*
"OHHHHHHH!! I still don't get it...."

*on the way home*
"Man, I wish I went to see A Ghost Story instead."

"Atomic Blonde" Review

Raymond Thang September 16, 2017
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"Dunkirk" Review

*Let me just state right now that I do not enjoy WWII films, and I am not the biggest fan of Nolan's work*

"Dunkirk" is written and directed by Christopher Nolan and is based on the Dunkirk Evacuation that occurred in 1940. This film shows you the perspectives of the same situation on land, air, and sea. Three perspectives. Three timelines. So fancy! Intentionally so, it throws you into the moment. There's very little dialogue (and when there is, it's mostly improvised) and it shows rather than tells. But it doesn't really come together in the end.

Let's start with the characters: On one side, we see people react to gunfire and cope with the hopelessness of the situation but we don't get to spend the time that would've been so necessary for me to empathize with. We follow a young soldier in the first scene but I quickly lost track of where he goes as soon as the movie cuts to a new timeline. It's rather hard to decipher and maybe it would benefit from a second viewing but as it stands, the fact that most of the soldiers are young white men with slick back hair (which is intentional, I know) makes the drama extremely hard to decode. I wasn't even sure who I was looking at for more than half of the time.

Tom Hardy portrays a pilot and he shoots at other planes and I guess that's it for his character. I don't actually know why his character was in the movie to be honest. I don't know what his character motivation was about. What he does in the end would've maybe made more sense if we knew his character more.

Lastly, we follow a group at sea led by Mark Rylance. Unlike the other two perspectives of the movie, every character on the boat makes sense. We don't get the notoriously clunky exposition dialogue that Nolan films have been cursed with; we just get enough from Rylance, Tom Glynn-Carney, Barry Keoghan, and Cillian Murphy to empathize with them. It's dramatically complex and even made me tear up at times. I would've rather just seen a whole movie about these characters opposed to the cluster-fuckery of the other two narratives.

Nolan movies have been a mix bag of editing choices since Batman Begins. Lee Smith returns once again to try to tie different narratives together to form some sort of dramatic coherency between them- think the climaxes of The Dark Knight and Inception, but this time it's extended to a feature length film. There were some really great moments like a torpedo heading towards a ship full of people, or two guys carrying an injured ally across a bridge that has just been blown up. But there were so many times where I was watching something with Mark Rylance and then it cuts to the other characters that I don't care about. Also the ending, is a complete mess (mostly because I was so confused as to what was happening to Tom Hardy while simultaneously trying to figure out if the soldiers in the scene were the same soldiers that I've been following from scene one). There's a beautiful shot that the movie lingers on that made me think, huh, that's a cool shot to end your movie with, but then, again, the drama cuts away to someone else for some weird reason and it made little to no sense to me.

Hans Zimmer teams up with Nolan again and deliver a score that's louder and more obnoxious than the one in Interstellar. At one point it was referencing Elgar's Nimrod but it felt like a cheap knock off of the piece rather than a tribute. They could've just used Nimrod instead. The sound design was loud and immersive. Every gunshot felt like it had weight to it and every explosion sounded devastating. But, similar to Interstellar, the dialogue was impossible for me to decipher underneath the deafening soundscapes and music. Great sound design but terrible mixing and sound editing.

Overall, I liked a third of the movie. It was way too loud and the editing was kind of terrible (though I appreciate the risks that the editing took). I couldn't really empathize with most of the characters on screen and I kind of tuned out mid way through out of exhaustion. It's worth seeing in true IMAX (as was intended) for the sound design and the visuals (particularly the scenes in the air and over the sea). It's probably the best IMAX experience I've had since "Gravity". That being said, Dunkirk isn't a movie that I would watch again.

"Dunkirk" Review

Raymond Thang September 16, 2017
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"The Big Sick" Review

"The Big Sick" loosely follows the real life story of Kumail Nanjiani (played by Nanjiani himself) and Emily Gordon (played by Zoe Kazan) and what I really love about this movie is its unflinching and honest portrayal of the immigrant experience and non-romanticized look at love and relationships. It understands that most things in real life usually don't wrap up neatly, especially not in the way that a romantic comedy would have you believe. It starts out like a standard romantic comedy and takes a hard turn in a different direction that forces its characters to readjust to their surroundings as well as the audience. In lesser hands, this would've been a disaster. Nanjiani and Gordon basically ignores some of the big rules of screenwriting to great effect with some hyper-realistic cringe humour dialogue laced here and there to make the whole thing feel super uncomfortable.

Almost nothing feels out of place in The Big Sick, not even the extreme tonal shifts that feel weird at first but make sense in relation to the psychology of the characters. And these shifts are made all the more digestible by Nanjiani and Kazan as well as Holly Hunter, Ray Romano, Anupam Kher, Zenobia Shrof as the parents. I only got to spend 2 hours with these characters but I came out of it feeling as if I've known these people for years. At times hilarious and other times heartbreaking, this is definitely a movie that can't be missed.

"The Big Sick" Review

Raymond Thang September 16, 2017
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"War for the Planet of the Apes" Review

"WftPotA" is an introspective conclusion to the new Apes trilogy with a simple and often predictable plot. Although it's littered with weird music cues, plot conveniences and pacing that feels undeserving of its 2 hour 20 minute runtime, its beautiful character moments, jaw dropping visuals and performances (especially Andy Serkis' Shakespearean portrayal of Caesar) are well worth sitting through and would satisfy longtime fans of the Apes franchise. It's just not a movie that I find myself ever revisiting though but it's just my personal taste.

Apes. Together. Strong but not as strong as the previous two movies.

"War for the Planet of the Apes" Review

Raymond Thang September 16, 2017
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"Spider-Man : Homecoming" Review

To start off, I'm someone who's a sucker for stories set in high school and it just so happened that Marvel Studios and Sony decided to make a high school comedy with my favourite superhero in it. So yeah, "Spider-Man: Homecoming" is a movie that I can't help but love, but that be said, there are some things that need to be addressed.

If you haven't noticed already, Marvel movies aren't the best at crafting a compelling villain in most cases. Homecoming is no different. The movie, for some reason, chooses to develop its villains off screen so I could never really wrap my head around how their minds work. You got Michael Keaton in here as a character who fights for the working class (cool), he scavenges around for cool tech, as if he's some kind of Vulture (cool) then it cuts away... Maybe it was a pacing thing but by showing more of your villain, you'd have a better chance at developing them and that would only help your movie. If you've payed for Michael Keaton, why not use him more? Another thing, his character was progressing so well until he does something really fucked up that made him irredeemable. This movie tries really hard to make you not notice this moment and makes a joke out of it but it's still pretty fucked up and makes what could've been a cool character into a confusing moment and what I consider to be a mediocre attempt at screenwriting. There are a lot of moments in this movie where something happens... but it doesn't make sense why it's happening, and then someone makes a joke about it. If you're gonna tell a joke, have it make sense. There's also a love interest in here somewhere but no one really cares about her "character" if you can even call her that. If there's anything this movie could've learned from those shitty Andrew Garfield Amazing Spider-Man movies, is that the person Spider-Man falls in love with matters. Unfortunately, Homecoming, a movie named after a romanticized high school dance, somehow ended up completely missing the mark. There's no tension between him and his crush because they know nothing about each other and we know nothing about her personality and motivations in the script. She's yet another strong female Marvel character archetype that does nothing important.

On to the good stuff. Tom Holland is our new Spider-Man and I think he's more compelling to watch than Tobey Maguire and Andrew Garfield combined. We follow a very vulnerable and enthusiastic portrayal of Peter Parker (Maguire and Garfield missed the mark on the latter in my opinion). We get to see how awkward he is, and how he struggles to prove himself to be a member of the Avengers, it's great storytelling and Holland pulls it up so effortlessly. RDJ's appearance feels organic as a mentor to Peter and even as an antagonist (he's a better antagonist than the Vulture). He chews a lot of the scenery but doesn't overstay his welcome. We get a close study of Peter's relationships with his bff, Ned (Jacob Batalon) and aunt May (Marisa Tomei). Both actors are able to help ground Spider-Man and reminds us that at the end of the day, Spider-Man is just a kid with great power and responsibility. He needs help from his friend when going on missions and he needs his aunt to figure out what to wear and how to act for a school dance. The fact that the scope of the movie is so small sets it apart from your typical superhero movie. Every action that Peter makes feels emotionally rich and pales in comparison to the dramatic impact of, say, a bunch of superheroes sparring with each other at an airport.

Spider-Man: Homecoming may not be the action movie that people expect. But it's able to capture the heart and soul of Peter Parker and it's never afraid to show his flaws. It's hilarious (at times to the point of nonsense) and its main villain is kind of a mixed bag but this movie managed to move me and restore my faith in Spider-Man movies. It's not as dark and intense as the first two Raimi films and it's not as stupid as the Marc Webb films. This version of Spider-Man just feels right.

"Spider-Man: Homecomeing" Review

Raymond Thang September 16, 2017
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"Transformers: The Last Knight" Review

True story: When I saw Transformers 4, I was so nauseous from the action and editing and stupidity, I actually vomited. To this day, "Transformers: Age of Extinction" is the only movie that made me physically ill. This new Transformers movie isn't as bad but it's still terrible.

Michael Bay’s "Transformers: The Last Knight" is an interesting experiment on what happens if a filmmaker was given infinite money to make something just because he can. There's a story in here about retrieving a staff and saving the world but there's also a plot in here about Suicide Squad robots, BB-8 and C-3PO, a forced romance between inventor Cade Yeager (are we still seriously sticking with this name?) played by Mark Wahlberg and Laura Haddock, who plays the archetype Michael Bay hot girl (except this time, she has a PhD!) and something about the military again, and Cybertron crashing into Earth Melancholia-style, Optimus Prime being brainwashed by a villain who only has around ten lines of dialogue, Xcalibur and Earth being Unicron (don't worry, those two things seem super important but the movie just kind of forgets about them for some reason), a girl who wants to do... something... oh, and Anthony Hopkins is in it. Also John Turturro, John Goodman and Steve Buscemi are in it (if these three actors seem to be pointing towards a Big Lebowski reference, it's not). Oh, also Megatron is working with the villain even though at no point do these characters appear on-screen together. Oh, and also, it's about Bumblebee getting his voice back. If this seems like a super confusing and unfocused description of an equally confusing and unfocused plot, it's because it is. I don't remember what actually happened. It has too many ideas and too many plots and too many characters. Nothing is fleshed out and there are no answers... Just sharp grey objects exploding into each other and lots of helicopters during sunset. Every scene in this movie takes place either during sunrise or sunset!

The movie (fifth in the franchise) tries really hard to satisfy the most primitive urges of the male reptilian mind with its fetishization of explosions and shiny, tanned female characters -though that would be an insult to men, reptiles, explosions, and women everywhere. The premise only requires the heroes to find the MacGuffin, but it does this in the most convoluted way possible, because why not? The last two movies have already drilled so deep into the grave than the other two films had already dug, so, why stop now? People clearly asked for another wacky and weirdly racist adventure and so here’s another wacky and weirdly racist adventure for everyone!

For someone who's known for explosions, Michael Bay doesn't understand the physics behind them. All explosions are literal fireworks and they all come with sparks for some reason. The action is the most incomprehensible thing ever. Every shot is dynamic and is cut to another different dynamic shot. It's done so quickly and frequently that the audience wouldn't have time to adjust to the new shot and is made even worse considering how shaky the camera work is. No geography is ever established during its action set pieces. Robots just fight and shoot at each other with no sense of tension or stakes or danger, like dude, this is too much and it's all happening too quickly and it's too loud, holy fuck is this a loud movie.

This movie was made for no one. No Transformers fan in their right mind would want to watch this. No movie goer is gonna come out of this and be able to explain to you what they had just sat through for two and a half hours. As soon as the credits rolled I got up from the seat and went for the door. Then there was an after credits scene and I said "I'm done, I don't give a fuck." and left without turning back. DO NOT watch this movie. You might think to yourself "Maybe the explosions will be fun!" it's not. It looks ridiculous and it's a sad excuse for a movie and it's impossible to follow and insults everyone and everything.

"Transformers: The Last Knight" Review

Raymond Thang September 16, 2017
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"Okja" Review

"Okja" is directed by Bong Joon-ho (The Host 2006, Snowpiercer) and tells the story about a young girl named Mija (Ahn Seo-hyun) who goes to rescue her best friend (a giant pig creature named Okja) from a giant pig rearing company led by Lucy Mirando (Tilda Swinton). It is awesome.

We are quickly introduced to its world through some clever exposition through Tilda Swinton, who plays the main antagonist in the most flamboyant way possible. I can watch Swinton act for days without exhaustion. We then switch to our protagonists Mija and Okja. The movie and script knows exactly when to slow things down and we get to spend quality time with these two characters (one being a giant CG creature who doesn't speak). The scene is told with little to no dialogue, we get to see through their interactions how these characters operate -their unbreakable bond that will surely be tested to the breaking point as this story unfolds and their innocence which probably will be lost as the movie trots along at a steady pace. I quickly fell in love with these two and when the inciting incident occurs and separates them, I wanted nothing more than to have them reunite. This is it. That sense of adventure and drive that I haven't experienced since I saw "Spirited Away" in 2001. Okja is not an adventure film I'm just trying to explain to you how I felt. So it is.

Along the journey we meet a very nauseating zoologist played by Jake Gyllenhaal (I think he really overdid this role in my opinion), Paul Dano (the leader of an animal rights activist group and bae), Steven Yeun (who plays the only character with any true conflicts I think), and other great actors like Giancarlo Esposito and Byun Hee-bong. I'm not gonna pretend that any of these characters are complicated. These characters usually have one single goal in mind for the entire story even after the credits. But it ultimately strengthens the emotional core because of its simplistic characters and very basic and easy-to-understand plot. So easy to understand that, regardless of English and Korean dialogue, you can watch it without subtitles and still have a comfortable understanding of everything that's going on. If a movie is able to transcend its dialogue and language barriers, and still be captivating, I think it truly succeeds at being a good and highly focused movie.

The chase scenes are so beautifully crafted through its shots and editing. They're able to establish great geography while weaving through different locations within single sequences. There was one sequence in particular near the beginning of the second act that brought me to tears with its use of tension, danger, and music and weirdly enough reminded me of the main chase from "The Dark Knight". Due to better editing, I think Okja's chase may very well be even better than the one from The Dark Knight.

Going into this movie, it was apparent that the CG on the giant creatures didn't look as convincing as it could have if it had been produced by a major studio. Okja's movement and other's like her were a bit over-animated and looked artificial. But the movie itself is able to overcome that hurdle quickly during its first 20 minutes once it establishes how realistic and organic the creature interacts with Mija. As mentioned before, the characters and plot are a bit basic but are blended so well that these flaws are barely an issue especially when the emotional stakes are so high.

Okja is a brilliant piece of filmmaking and succeeds magnificently through its endearing and memorable characters and impeccable direction. It may lack the complexities and subtlety that you'd expect from someone of Bong Joon-ho's caliber, but the emotional results are unforgettable. This movie is on Netflix and in limited run in theatres. Regardless of how you decide to watch, it might turn you into a vegan. That's what happened to Bong Joon-ho when during preproduction.

"Okja" Review

Raymond Thang September 16, 2017
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"Cars 3" Review

We return to one of cinema's most horrifying universes for the third time (a place where humans have probably gone extinct and cars have taken over). It looks and feels more exciting than its predecessors thanks to its tightly edited racing sequences and excellent sound design. Newcomer Cruz Ramirez (Cristela Alonzo) is a welcomed addition to a somewhat underwhelming cast of characters new and old. She's fun to watch and has a beautiful character arc through the movie (without giving too much away). All I can really say is that the last act saves the movie from become just another standard sports movie while closing off Lightning McQueen's journey in the best way possible.

That being said, "Cars 3" has one of the saddest excuses for an antagonist that I've ever seen in Jackson Storm (Armie Hammer) who's ultimately reduced to a one-dimensional cocky rival with virtually no character development whatsoever. That and the pacing are huge potholes that the movie struggles to overcome throughout its entire runtime. This is definitely the best movie in the series and hopefully the last.

"Cars 3" Review

Raymond Thang September 16, 2017
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"It Comes at Night" Review

"It Comes at Night" is a bleak psychological drama movie directed by Trey Edward Shults (Krisha) and it's about a family who gets struck by a mysterious plague in a desolate home. Simply put, it's an unnerving and claustrophobic tale about death, trust, and family with a brilliant cast attached to it (Joel Edgerton, Carmen Ejogo, Christopher Abbott, Kelvin Harrison Jr., and Riley Keough). Although it's not necessary to know this to appreciate the movie, Shults' movies are very personal to his life. This movie specifically is the manifestation of his grief after his father had died. In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Shults stated that "[the movie] represented the emotions I was going through. Coming right after my dad, it was death and it was fear and it was regret and family... And all of that kind of bubbled up and boiled together into what this movie is." The decisions of its characters feel desperate, helpless, and angry. The plague that affects the world of the film's narrative is as unforgiving and frightening as death itself. One can feel a bit cheated after watching due to the film's lack of answers but how can it explain something that's so inexplicable to begin with?

The movie's dreadful atmosphere, i.e., the tense camerawork, grim lighting, and allusive script seems to take cues from the cinematography and pacing of a typical Terrence Malick film as well as the darkness and active avoidance of exposition in Jeff Nichols' "Midnight Special" (two filmmakers Schults has worked for in the past.) He harnesses the best techniques of both of these artists' filmography which accumulates in what is one of 2017's most unflinching confrontation of mortality. "It Comes at Night" is not a film for everyone and is surely emotionally exhausting to sit through. That being said, it's a story that's worth your attention despite how bleak it is.

"It Comes at Night" Review

Raymond Thang September 16, 2017
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"Wonder Woman" Review

Wonder Woman finally makes her live action feature length debut. It took us 76 years but here it is! Does Diana Prince have what it takes to bring on the much needed depth that has sorely been lacking in DC’s overstuffed, and somewhat incoherent cinematic universe? In short, yes.

Wonder Woman is directed by Patty Jenkins (Monster) and it tells the origin story of everyone’s favourite fictional feminist icon played by Gal Gadot. It's a classic hero's journey set in the First World War and checks off every typical beat of a big budget action movie. Unfortunately, this is where most of the movie’s problems come from. Understandably, Jenkins is new to the Hollywood blockbuster game, and the fight scenes, although well choreographed, is a mixed bag, at times feel gorgeous to watch unfold and other times lack kineticism and impact due to the exhausting use of slow motion that usually brings the action to a complete stop when combined with the movie's questionable CG work. All of these elements: the awkward action direction, editing and sloppy CG, morphs into a full on assault during its third act. On top of that, we have some of the most one-dimensional villains I think I've ever had the pleasure to forget. Almost nothing in the last third of the movie feels quite as convincing as it wants to be but is saved by Chris Pine’s above average and super likeable portrayal of Steve Trevor and Gadot’s fearless but naïve version of Wonder Woman.

All that being said, the movie is able to overcome its abysmal villains and technical hurdles. There’s a clearer sense of character than most superhero movies. It feels emotionally ripe and intimate (for those who’ve seen Monster will know that Jenkins excels in establishing empathy for that film’s main characters. This knack of a character driven plot remains intact in her big budget debut). This is a superhero movie at its purest. It’s a movie about love and fighting for those who can't fight for themselves. Screenwriter Allan Heinberg, having written some Wonder Woman comics himself, is no stranger to the character. I think he has a full grasp of her and the supporting characters who fight alongside her. It’s just too bad that such great protagonists have been put in such a standard plot. Though, a silver lining to a simple plot means that there’s more room for characters to interact and develop. Ignoring the cheesy-looking CG and awkwardly edited fights, the first two acts were a joy to sit through. Seeing a shot of Wonder Woman defending herself against gunfire with her shield brings an indescribable warmth to my heart. Even with its faults, the movie does its damnest to be good and true to its message and it succeeds.

Four movies in, Wonder Woman is the first character in the DCEU who truly feels like a superhero. Having the story take place mostly outside the main plot of the cinematic universe makes this an easy watch. The simple premise and plot beats makes it easy for audiences to relate to and root for. Even though it has its problems, we can all breathe a collective sigh of relief knowing that Wonder Woman is a step the right direction for DC movies. Although it's not a great movie, it succeeds in capturing everything that a character like Wonder Woman represents and I can't help but recommend it. Though if you want a far more competent and mature Wonder Woman movie I would point you in the direction of its 2009 animated counterpart.

"Wonder Woman 2017" Review

Raymond Thang September 16, 2017
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"Alien: Covenant" Review

"Alien: Covenant" is the 8th movie in the Alien saga (depending on what you consider canon) and serves as the sequel to Prometheus and the prequel to the original Alien. Although it provides fans and audiences with some cool visuals and tightly edited horror sequences, it ultimately feels like a painful rehash of the previous movies that came before it. Also the script and characters are really really dumb.

Every twist and turn can be detected light years away, and everything bad that ends up happening to the characters could've easily been avoided if there was at least one person on board who would maybe consider wearing a space helmet when wandering into a planet they had literally no reason to be on (there's a reason but I'm not buying it). For a movie that spends a lot of its time pontificating on humanity's place in the universe, there was no humanity to be found in its human characters. Thank goodness Michael Fassbender is a good enough actor to carry the entire film. Imagine if he wasn't in it… then I don't know what else there would be to actually enjoy. Also there are two Michael Fassbenders, so that's a bonus.

Whatever that was mildly clever about Prometheus has long perished and have now become a shell of its former self. At its core, Covenant wants to be a tense, action packed science fiction film but it fails to realize that it's merely a b-horror slasher movie where all the dumb teenagers are replaced with dumb scientists and the slasher is a silly looking cg monster. It's doubtful at this point whether future films will garner the level of reputation of its first two films. It's doubtful at this point if this franchise can be saved at all even with Ridley Scott at the helm. Besides some great body horror practical effects and sound mixing, and two really good performances from Michael Fassbender, there's nothing else in this movie for anyone. Do yourself a solid favour and skip this one.

"Alien: Covenant" Review

Raymond Thang September 16, 2017
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"Baby Driver" Review

"Baby Driver" is a high octane joy ride that can be summed up as a nearly 2-hour-long music video with plenty of car chases and biting humour that long time Edgar Wright fans would come to expect.

It tells the story of "Baby" (Ansel Elgort) a highly skilled getaway driver who has tinnitus and uses music to drown out the noise. Along for the ride we have Lily James, Kevin Spacey, Jon Hamm, Jamie Foxx, Eiza Gonzálezm and a criminally underutilized Jon Bernthal who are all able to deliver sharp and emotionally poignant performances based off of Wright's punchy and often stylized mobster dialogue that only a filmmaker like himself can get away with at this day and age.

Sprinkled generously throughout its 113 minute runtime is an eclectic selection of hard rock, pop ballads, traditional R&B, soul, hip-hop, jazz and electronic music that are all seamlessly incorporated and timed to Jonathan Amos and Paul Machliss' virtuosic editing that's accented by impeccable sound design and Bill Pope's kinetic long-take-heavy cinematography. It's mind boggling how a movie like this is possible to put together that somehow is able to balance great character work with comedy and heart-stopping stunts, yet Baby Driver succeeds in what most action movies fail at. If I were to pinpoint a flaw it would be the movie's focus on plot rather than characters (though again, the characters in it are great). Wright seems to always have a bit of trouble fleshing out female characters who are usually in the story to propel the plot, and this, unfortunately, is still the case (though Lily James is able to bring a certain vulnerability and likability to the somewhat boring role of Baby's love interest), and lastly the sound mix made it a bit hard to decipher dialogue at times but these are all minor issues in the grand scheme.

Baby Driver is a tour de force in direction and editing. It brings great comedy, and high emotional stakes and combines it with amazing stunts, editing and music to jaw dropping effect. It's fast-paced and endearing and deserves your attention and multiple viewings.

"Baby Driver" Review

Raymond Thang September 16, 2017
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"Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2" Review

For the first time in a while we're given a Marvel movie that isn't focused on setting up the next movie in a carefully constructed cinematic universe. Finally, a movie that just does whatever it wants outside of being another feature length commercial for the next Avengers team up. "Vol 2" feels just as confident as the first Guardians movie with just as much if not more laughs to be had than before. James Gunn's script is able to elevate the movie's somewhat mediocre plot and almost makes you forget about its laughably dull antagonists and uncomfortably clunky exposition. It's paced extremely well and the character work matches and surpasses all expectations. It's visually gorgeous to look at and is a breath of fresh air from the usual muted colours of the other Marvel movies. Maybe it's the new camera they're using, maybe it's the direction -it's probably both. Its soundtrack is pretty neat (though the movie indulges in the music a bit too much in my opinion), and the ending (no spoilers) is my favourite ending to any Marvel movie. Ever. Go watch it. It's fun. It's hilarious. It's surprisingly emotional. And it has a pretty amazing prison escape sequence that puts the one in Vol 1 to shame.

"Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2" Review

Raymond Thang September 16, 2017
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"Colossal" Review

"Colossal" is a beautifully staged giant monster movie that somehow works as a brilliant metaphor for alcoholism. I've always wanted to string those words together in a sentence.

We follow Anne Hathaway's character through a darkly comedic and heart felt journey through urban and psychological desolation where she is forced to confront her own monsters in the most literal way possible. To avoid any spoilers, the way the antagonist is handled works great thematically but before that's realized, there's a weird abrupt turn of events that unfortunately wasn't set up too well. I could've let this moment slide but the movie does such a great job at setting everything else up, I expected it to handle its character turn better than it did. That being said, the moment the third act hits, it feels like the greatest and most satisfying third act since Whiplash.

This movie is a pretty weird one and you'll be surprised by how human it feels from beginning to end. It's extremely well directed, acted, edited. The sound design is worth a mention as well. You'll know what I'm talking about when you see it.

"Colossal" Review

Raymond Thang September 16, 2017
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"The Discovery" Review

As intriguing as its premise is and all of the existential questions that come with it, "The Discovery" abandons the philosophical for the familiar. With cast members as terrific as Jason Segel (End of the Tour), Rooney Mara (The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo), Jesse Plemons (Breaking Bad and Fargo), and Robert Fricken Redford, the movie explores the depressing backstory of this one particular family. It relies heavily on the relationship between Segel and Mara's characters, but the movie, unfortunately, does a poor job of setting up these characters -not to mention the movie's two leads have little to no on-screen chemistry.

As mentioned already, the questions that The Discovery asks is fascinating and could've easily been a great symposium about existence when the afterlife has been proven to be real. About two thirds of the film focuses on this but it chooses to pursue a far less interesting and poorly written mystery that's supposed to result in some sort of solace after sitting through an hour and a half of impressionistic camera work and editing. As cool as the entire thing looks, it ultimately feels like a parody of a long-winded TV trope.

"The Discovery" Review

Raymond Thang September 16, 2017
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"Ghost in the Shell 2017" Review

Based off of the influential manga by Masamune Shirow, "Ghost in the Shell" stars Scarlett Johansson as a ghost... in a shell... who has a weird robot walk for some reason (it really doesn't make sense when you really think about it). If you don't know what a ghost or a shell is, don't worry, this movie will stop at nothing to remind you what that is. Let's get this out of the way, the controversial casting is the least of this movie's problems. Johansson is more than capable of portraying The Major. It really isn't a big deal... until it becomes a big deal later on... That's all I'll say.

This movie is highly derivative of Mamoru Oshii's 1995 film adaptation (considered one of the most influential anime films outside of "Akira" and still holds up today) but this remake completely misses the mark on almost everything except for its cinematographer.

Cinematographer Jess Hall did a lot of research on how to achieve the look of Oshii's 1995 film. It's too bad he wasn't put to good use. Almost every shot in this movie felt like a waste of so much money. It looks really expensive yet it looks so... bland. The CG work was also a bit of a let down.

The script is an amalgamation of a bunch of stuff from the IP and has been dumbed down for contemporary audiences, lacking all of the nuances that made the first Ghost in the Shell so interesting. It asks a lot of questions about memory and human consciousness but at no point did it really take its time to explore the concepts that felt so necessary to the ghost of the source material. The screenplay was written partly by Ehren Kruger (of Transformers, Scream and The Ring franchises) and while the movie never feels as silly as a Michael Bay Transformers movie, it sure feels just as dumb. The antagonist is also the most generic and two-dimensional thing I've ever had the pleasure of forgetting and fails to fill the shoes of its superior predecessors in characters like The Puppet Master.

As mentioned already, Johansson has the credentials to play The Major (Under the Skin, Avengers, Her) but was a Major let down (puns always intended) perhaps she wasn't directed well or perhaps they simply cut together the first takes of all her performances. Somehow, a complex character played by a talented actor resulted in one of the stiffest portrayals since Jennifer Lawrence in X-Men Apocalypse or Jennifer Lawrence in the first Hunger Games. It's not all bad though, Pilou Asbæk is a distinct and good choice for Batou, and Juliette Binoche, for what she has to work with, brings a certain class to the ensemble.

This has been said in every other review, this movie is just a shell of its source material. It has some great stories and characters to pull from and it manages to emulate shot-for-shot the main sequences in the 1995 original but the context of these scenes have unfortunately been lost. If you want a movie that really explores AI, try Ex Machina or Ghost in the Shell 1995. If you want a fix for your cyberpunk fetishes, try The Matrix (which was inspired by Ghost in the Shell), or Blade Runner, or, again, Ghost in the Shell 1995. I can't emphasize enough how pointless this remake is when we already have something as great as the original to begin with. Watch anything but this version. The silver lining at the end of the day is hearing Kenji Kawai's chant during the credits and having it easily eclipse Clint Mansell's and Lorne Balfe's hollow score, even with the weird techno remix.

"Ghost in the Shell" 2017 Review

Raymond Thang September 16, 2017
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"Your Name" Review

For those who have fallen in love with the style of Makoto Shinkai's storytelling, "Your Name." will serve as a perfect companion piece to 2007's "5 Centimeters Per Second". That being said, the only characters that show any sort of development are the two leads. The movie is held up by one staple and wobbles on a flimsy foundation -the assumption that I'll fall in love with these two characters miraculously falling in love with each other. On top of all that are the film's excellent visuals (and no other director is able to capture environments quite like Shinkai, mind you.) which are great and all and strengthen the on-the-nose dramatic needs of its two characters, but it still somewhat fails to delivery a worthwhile character piece. Not to mention the final act felt like a cliche of "The Butterfly Effect" proportions. Although it never really dips towards the mediocrity of that film, the final moments of Your Name made me feel just as hollow.

Everyone will admit that there is something special about Shinkai and his filmography but a lot of his work seem to be missing the subtlety and nuances that make his characters as memorable as the characters you'd see from a Hayao Miyazaki or a Mamoru Hosoda. It's not a terrible movie though! The consistent low-fantasy logic that Your Name's fantastical elements operates on feel unpredictable and original and provides a special visual/audio treat at the cinema for casual audiences and Anime die-hards alike. It tackles themes of love, loss and literal star-crossed lovers -you know, all the themes that one would expect from an average love story about two people who are prone to Freaky Friday body swaps.

"Your Name" Review

Raymond Thang September 16, 2017
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