Hoppers – Review

It’s been a tumultuous road in the 2020’s for Pixar Animation.  They were caught up in the massive disruption of the Covid-19 pandemic, with their spring 2020 release of their movie Onward (2020) getting shut off once theaters began closing for the lockdown.  Then for the next 3 releases on their line-up, the powers that be at their parent company Disney decided to skip theatrical releases altogether and take their movies directly to streaming. Pixar wouldn’t see the big screen again until the release of the Toy Story (1995) spin-off film, Lightyear (2022), which was a highly divisive film that alienated longtime Pixar fans.  While a lot of Pixar’s problems were out of their control, such as with the pandemic, they were nevertheless determined to keep their high quality standards up at the studio, but internal pressures were also taking their toll.  The re-shuffling of management at the top of Disney, with the much disliked Bob Chapek lasting only 2 disastrous years as CEO before being replaced by his predecessor Bob Iger who came back to clean up his mess, also negatively affected Pixar.  During Pete Doctor’s tenure as head of the studio, Pixar has unfortunately seen massive layoffs come down on them from Disney’s corporate offices, and it has affected the creative culture that helped to fuel Pixar’s rise.  Doctor has tried the best that he can do to keep Pixar humming along through all the turmoil.  Despite the falling box office, audiences are still approving of Pixar’s output, with their movies often getting strong critical and audience scores.  Elemental (2023) managed to survive a disastrous opening weekend and become a modest hit through strong word of mouth.  And Pixar did have it’s biggest hit ever a year later with the box office phenomenon Inside Out 2 (2024).  But a year later they suffered their biggest box office failure ever with Elio (2025), which became their first non-pandemic affected film to ever fail to gross over $100 million.  It seems that Pixar’s only saving grace now is in making sequels to their past hits, and that in itself is yet another demoralizing blow to the studio.

It’s disheartening to see Pixar having to justify it’s existence now by banking on their already established franchises, but sadly they are at the mercy of the accountants over at Disney.  The corporate offices aren’t taking into consideration the quality of the story or the animation.  What they look at is the fact that Elio lost Disney a lot of money, while Inside Out 2 made all of the money.  That’s why the future line-up of Pixar Animation is so sequel heavy, with movies like this summer’s Toy Story 5 in the works as well as Incredibles 3, Coco 2, and Monsters Inc. 3 all coming in the years ahead.  Now, of course Pixar is no stranger to sequels.  In the past, they have put out four Toy Story’s and three Cars film, plus sequels to Finding Nemo, The Incredibles, Monsters Inc. and the aforementioned Inside Out 2.  But in between all of these sequels, they have continued to also put out original movies, and these are the ones that more often have the longer staying power.  In fact, the eras that seem to define Pixar the most are when they are trying new things.  The 2000’s was the time period where Pixar was at their strongest, with movies like The Incredibles (2004), Ratatouille (2007), Wall-E (2008) and Up (2009) helping to define Pixar as not just another animation studio, but as a brand that defined quality.  The 2010’s saw them still continue to perform strong, but they also seemed to be relying a bit too much on sequels to help boost their box office.  However, their justification for these sequels was that it would help keep them financially secure so that they could keep experimenting with their untried new ideas.  Sadly, the pandemic cut short what would have been a planned roll out of nothing but originals for a solid five year run.  Onward, Soul (2020), Luca (2021), and Turning Red (2022) all were movies that came from new original ideas from first time filmmakers who were being promoted through the ranks at Pixar (except Soul, which Pete Doctor made himself).  Because none of these movies got the big screen exposure that they deserved, they unfortunately have muted Pixar’s reputation as an innovator, and now they are sadly trying to play it safe.  There is one last original film coming this year from Pixar that could help salvage the studio and prove that they can still prosper on original ideas.  The only question is whether Hoppers (2026) can be the movie that can do that?

Hoppers tells the story of a spirited young woman named Mabel Tanaka (Piper Curda).  Mabel is passionate about nature, which was passed down to her from visits to a special secluded glade outside of town with her Grandma Tanaka (Karen Huie).  Unfortunately, the glade is about to be paved over for a new beltline freeway, promoted by Mayor Jerry (Jon Hamm), who Mabel has had a longtime beef with.  Mabel has tried every tactic to slow down the construction of the freeway, but to effect.  She then comes up with the idea of reintroducing the beaver population into the area, with the hopes that their construction of a beaver dam will help bring the wildlife back.  However, when she finds a beaver in the wild, she sees it behaving very weirdly.  She follows it to a secret laboratory at Beaverton University, where she attends school.  There Mabel finds her professor Dr. Sam (Kathy Najimy) has created a top secret program that allows human consciousness to be transferred into robotic animals, which has allowed them to better observe the behavior of animals.  Seeing this technology as a perfect way to communicate directly with the animals in nature, Mabel puts herself into the machine and transfers her mind into that of a robotic beaver.  She manages to make it to the woods outside of town, where she quickly realizes that she can understand everything the animals are saying.  Not only that, but she also learns there’s a code that they all live by called Pond Rules.  Confused by their social order, a couple of the animals called Ellen the Bear (Melissa Villasenor), Tom Lizard (Tom Law) and Loaf the Beaver (Eduardo Franco) decide to bring Mabel to the Pond where she can talk to King George (Bobby Moynihan), the leader of their animal community.  George turns out to be a welcoming leader who respects Mabel’s passion about saving their community from human development.  But, Mabel wishes to stop Mayor Jerry’s plan once and for all, so King George summons the Animal Council, which includes the Bird King (Isiah Whitlock Jr.), the Amphibian King (Steve Purcell), the Fish Queen (Ego Nwodim), the Reptile Queens (Nichole Sakura), and the most feared member, the Insect Queen (Meryl Streep).  Mabel makes her case to the Council, but they unfortunately take the wrong conclusion and decide that Mayor Jerry must be “squished,” leading Mabel to realize that she may have gone a tad overboard in her crusade.

The one thing that helps Hoppers to stand out is the fact that it not only is an original idea for a movie, but it also is one that never once goes down a familiar path.  One of the great things about Pixar Animation is that their ideas for movies have always been atypical, and embraced original concepts that may have sounded too weird at first.  That’s why you had movies where Monsters power their energy grid off the screams of children, or a rat becoming a gourmet chef by puppeteering a human by pulling on his hair.  They are a studio that has always embraced weird ideas and it’s what has made their movies feel so fresh over the years.  Hoppers thankfully embraces that oddball spirit, and even goes a step further.  What I particularly loved about Hoppers was the fact that it was so unpredictable.  The concept itself is not the strong point of the movie.  The idea of our main character doing a body swap to put their mind in the body of an animal is nothing we’ve never seen before.  In fact, the movie itself points this out with Mabel herself saying this is just like Avatar (2009), to the chagrin of Dr. Sam.  But it’s what the movie does with that set-up afterwards where the story really shines.  The story doesn’t just follow plot points, it just kind of unravels in an ever escalating series of chaotic situations, each more bizarrely inspired than the next.  It has a very stream of conscious flow to it, where one bizarre idea flows into the next, and that made the movie all the more enjoyable because it always kept us the audience guessing what may happen next.  And yet, in typical Pixar fashion, it doesn’t lose track of the heart at it’s center.  There in fact is a strong through line of Mabel learning to be more responsible with her activism and finding better ways to inspire others to follow her lead.  The friendships she builds along the way are also a strong point of the movie, especially the bond she makes with King George.  The movie also delivers a potent message about conservation and living in communion with nature that thankfully naturally flows out of the story and never feels heavy handed.

If the movie has a flaw, it’s that it doesn’t really find it’s footing until midway through the film.  The pacing in the first half of the movie is a bit too frantic, making it difficult at times to connect with Mabel and her plight.  I’d say it’s at the point where King George enters the picture close to the mid section of the movie that things start to settle, and that’s also the point where the movie begins to let loose and defy convention.  One of the most surprising things about Hoppers is just how funny it is, and I don’t mean in the usual Pixar family friendly way.  Hoppers‘ sense of humor can get surprisingly dark at times, to the point where I was shocked that Disney allowed them to get away with some of these gags.  Not that this is adult humor that is inappropriate for children, or something that may end up traumatizing little kids.  It’s just so surprising that this movie was allowed to be as weird as it is.  There’s a bit with a shark that especially had me giggling in the theater.  There’s also another moment where something is “squished” that may be the darkest gag that Pixar has ever put into one of their movies, and it got a massive reaction out of the audience I was watching the movie with.  This is the thing that I think may be the difference maker for Pixar with Hoppers; the fact that it didn’t try to play things safe and just repeat formula.  While many of their recent slate of films have all still had a lot of heart and charm to them, Pixar also really hasn’t taken this big of a swing either.  By embracing a wildly stranger tone and sense of humor, Hoppers really does feel the most like the Pixar of old, where the attitude was more centered around “anything goes.”  When they were creating the original Toy Story, the Pixar creative team actually threw out much of their original script because it was too formulaic, and they instead went with the philosophy of making something that isn’t aimed at all audiences, but rather aimed at what they themselves would want to see, and that in turn made their movie funnier and more daring in the flow of it’s story.  From that point, Pixar followed this ethos for a long time, making sure they only put the work into the movie if the story felt right.  Hoppers feels like the best implementation of that idea from Pixar in a long while.

One of the reasons why the humor in this movie hits so well is because the voice cast does such a great job of bringing character and personality to the film.  Piper Curda brings a lot of passion and energy to the character of Mabel.  She may come across as too strong in the beginning, which may be a result of the first half’s awkward pacing, but Piper manages to nail the more heartfelt moments later on in the film when Mabel goes through her realization phase in the story.  But perhaps the one who stands out the most in the film is Bobby Moynihan as King George.  Moynihan is no stranger to voicing cartoon characters, and in fact he’s been in a couple past Pixar films already in minor roles, such as Monsters University (2013) and both Inside Out movies.  Here he now gets to play a featured role for the first time for Pixar, and the Saturday Night Live alum makes the most of it.  He brings so much warmth to the character of King George, making him a bright ray of optimism in an often cynical world.  He might actually be my favorite character from a Pixar movie in a very long time, just based on his upbeat demeanor that both is funny in contrast with Mabel’s sharper edges and also in how he constantly tries to make the best out of impossibly bad situations.  Moynihan embodies that perfectly in his vocal performance, managing to deliver on both the more hysterical and tender moments with the character.  The remainder of the cast also delivers some great moments, and in typical Pixar fashion, they always look for the voices that are best suited for the characters, rather than chasing after a big marquee name.  Jon Hamm does a great job voicing Mayor Jerry, allowing him to be more than just a stock antagonist for the film and even finding ways to be as silly in his performance as the rest of film.  It’s also hilarious how they end up using Meryl Streep in the film, given how prestige she brings with her.  Just like the movie itself, it’s great to see the cast letting loose in their roles, embracing the oddball vibe that pervades the story.  But, Pixar also manages to make their roles work in service of the story as well.  It’s one thing that I always appreciate about Pixar movies, where you feel like the voice actors are embodying the characters, and you never get the sense that this was just a quick job in a recording booth for them.

Hoppers is also a visually impressive movie as well, which for Pixar is standard practice.  A lot of naysayers of recent Pixar have lamented over how the studio has changed their style in recent years, particularly with their character animation.  This has been dubbed the “bean mouth” era of Pixar by some critics, as Pixar has used a simplified character modeling style where the characters (particularly human ones) have open mouths that appear bean shaped.  This can be seen in movies like Luca, Turning Red, and Elio, where the human characters are very much more stylized and simple in design that Pixar characters of the past.  I for one don’t mind this kind of style, because one I find it charming and two Pixar isn’t the first animation studio to try to update their house style.  Look at their sister animation studio Disney, which has updated their house style many times; even in Walt’s era this was true, with Sleeping Beauty (1959) looking vastly different from Snow White and the Seven Dwarves (1937).  Hoppers continues this trend with the “bean mouth” style, and it honestly helps to make the movie look even better.  I love the highly expressive faces that these characters make, and their more stylized look fits better with that manic nature of the humor in this movie.  One of the best visual ideas in the movie is how characters appear different through the perspective of hopping from human to animal.  From the perspective of the humans, all the animals (including the robotic ones) looking like animals, with beady eyes and expressionless faces.  But once the characters transplant their consciousness, or find a way to communicate with the animals, the faces on the animals change, with big expressive eyes and human like mannerisms.  It’s a simple visual idea, but one that works very well and also helps to enhance some of the comedy, especially when the perspectives suddenly change.  The movie is also colorful and beautifully detailed.  This will be a movie that’ll play especially well on home video, especially if people have HDR set ups on their TV sets.  But, it should definitely be experienced on a big screen first, because it’s a beautifully immersive experience.  It’s great to see that even through the ups and downs of Pixar’s fortunes, they still haven’t lost their edge as visual artists.

It may not be the absolute pinnacle of Pixar Animation overall; seriously this studio has the highest bar to clear of any animation brand in the world.  But, Hoppers is probably the most assured and daring movie they have made in quite some time.  I’ll need to stew a bit longer over where I would rank it among the best of Pixar’s films, but for what it is, I definitely say that I had a lot of fun watching this movie.  The thing I appreciate the most is that it refuses to stick with formula and go by the Pixar playbook.  The way this movie unfolds, with each twist and turn being unexpected is what really helped to make this movie so entertaining.  In an animation industry that has been hit hard by layoff and facing the existential threat of AI, it’s inspiring to see Pixar defying the headwinds that’s pushing them towards just coasting on their brand.  Pixar has always been an industry leader, setting the bar high, and they should indeed continue to be challenging themselves by taking chances.  It’s certainly seems like Hoppers is an unexpected example of this, because on the surface a movie about talking animals seems like the most formulaic movie idea of all in animation.  And yet, Hoppers throws out convention at every turn and makes this a movie that truly does feel unlike anything you’ve seen before.  I love the bold swings it took to make it funnier at every turn, and not be afraid to go a little dark at times.  This is the same kind of spirit that fueled Pixar’s rise in the first place, and it’s inspiring to see a little bit of that still alive at the Emeryville, CA based studio offices.  Whether we can still see that spark of creativity inspire more original ideas in the future remains to be seen, as Pixar’s upcoming slate seems to be very sequel heavy.  My hope is that Hoppers manages to do well enough to convince Disney that there needs to be more original films sprinkled within all these sequels to help keep the spark of originality going, both at Pixar and at Disney’s own studio.  For the time being, Hoppers proves to be a genuinely pleasing surprise that I think represents the best of what Pixar has to offer, and hopefully audiences will agree and help bring Pixar back to the peak of their powers once again.

Rating: 8.5/10

Feel Good Cinema – The Winning Formula of Upbeat Movies at the Oscars

Here’s an interesting case study about how Hollywood, and in particular Academy voters, make their choices come Awards season.  It’s 1982 at the 54th Academy Awards.  It was a year that perfectly summed up the transition between old Hollywood and the new.  The movie On Golden Pond won two of the elder icons of the industry their final Oscar wins for Best Actor and Actress; the only one ever for Henry Fonda and the fourth for Kathrine Hepburn.  At the same time, one of Hollywood’s most celebrated new directors, Steven Spielberg, was enjoying his resurgence with the big hit Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981), itself a nominee for Best Picture.  But if there was any film that looked like a certainty for the top award at that year’s ceremony, it was the epic historical drama Reds (1981).  Warren Beatty was a firmly established leading man by the time he Directed and Produced this movie biopic about American Communist John Reed and his chronicling of the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917, but his rise was certainly a by product of the shifting tide in Hollywood.  He was a representative of that transition in the industry, having started under the old Hollywood system and becoming a central figure of the new Hollywood that came up afterwards.  Reds was only his second film as a director after Heaven Can Wait (1978), and it was ambitious to say the least.  A sprawling 3 hour and 17 minute epic with an all star cast that included Beatty as well as Diane Keaton and Jack Nicholson.  It was the kind of historical drama that Hollywood often fawns over, and it went into the Oscar season as a heavy favorite.  The movie picked up many Awards on Oscar night, including one for Warren Beatty for Best Director, though he lost out on Actor and Screenplay.  But, Best Director almost always indicates that Best Picture is in the bag as well.  But to everyone’s surprise, and perhaps most of all to Warren Beatty’s, Reds ended up losing Best Picture that year.  And the victor was one that few saw coming; a little British movie about Olympic track runners called Chariots of Fire (1981).

The loss of Best Picture for Reds may have made sense if a movie like On Golden Pond or even Raiders of the Lost Ark had gotten it instead, but Chariots of Fire?  When stacked up against these juggernaut films, Chariots seems trivial, and yet it managed to pull off the upset.  It’s not quite the most egregious upset in Oscar history; no Crash (2005) or Green Book (2018) here.  Chariots was a generally well liked movie by both critics and audiences alike, and that may have been key to it’s last minute victory.  There are a lot of political factors that go into play leading up to Oscar night.  There are Academy voters that certainly put a lot of thought into their selections, but there are also Academy voters that rarely see any of the nominated movies, and their choices are purely made on just vibes alone.  Sometimes, an Academy voters pick for Best Picture may have been the only nominated movie that they had seen that year.  It’s not necessarily about Academy voters being lazy; a lot of them are still actively working in the industry so it’s difficult to find the time to actually watch all the nominated movies.  So, to still be a participating Academy voter, a lot of them purely go by what their gut tells them, and this can sometimes go against what the prevailing winds say about who’s out in front in the race for Oscar.  There’s also the factor of the ranked choice voting system that is used to tally votes in the Best Picture race.  This is where things can get complicated, because Oscar favorites can rise and fall based on the consensus of how well they are liked by the voters.  However, the 1982 Oscars didn’t have that voting system in place.  Back then, it was a purely decided by popular vote, which made the upset all the more impressive.  But, why Chariots of Fire.  It was not a particularly huge success at the box office, and while it was liked by audiences it wasn’t exactly loved either.  Really, the only remarkable thing about it was the Vangelis musical score, with it’s groundbreaking use of electronic synth rhythms, which of course won an Oscar itself.  What helped to carry Chariots of Fire across the Oscar finish line more than anything was that it was a feel good movie, and that has indeed been a winning formula in most Oscar seasons.

Reds was an ambitiously assembled film with grand vision and a lot of passion.  There’s no denying that Warren Beatty did an amazing job directing the film and he certainly deserved that Oscar.  But, it’s a 3 hour epic with a tragic ending, the death of it’s main hero after a steep decline in both his health and well-being.  While Academy voters may be impressed with the technical aspects of the movie, they just don’t seem to want to sit through 3 hours if the endpoint is a tragedy.  Like regular audiences, Academy members like rousing stories of over-coming adversity, and that’s what Chariots of Fire represented.  It was not just a movie about overcoming prejudice, but also a sports flick about underdogs competing in the Olympics.  What it did, and what Reds failed to do, was leave the audience uplifted as the credits rolled.  Of course there was also the political environment at the time, with Warren Beatty’s unapologetic favorable portrayal of a Communist leader in American history perhaps not going over too well with Academy voters during the ultra conservative Reagan years.  Chariots of Fire, by being a safer, less political film made it a less controversial choice.  While this held true in the year 1982, it’s also been evident in many other years throughout Oscar history.  The Academy Awards are often more defined as a snapshot of each year on it’s road throughout history rather than a indicator of the direction of the industry as a whole.  Each year the studios submit what they think is their best shot at the Oscars and then those movies are up to a vote.  There are quite a few movies that indeed have withstood the test of time, and their Oscar wins are just another jewel in their crowns.  But there are plenty of Oscar wins that only make sense in the context of their respective years and have aged very poorly over time.  And the common thing that a lot of those Oscar wins that have aged poorly is that they were the safe choice.

Perhaps the most famous example of the Oscars missing the mark is the year when How Green Was My Valley (1941) beat out Citizen Kane (1941) for Best Picture.  One of the movies was a beautifully made drama from one of Hollywood’s most celebrated directors, and the other would go on to be considered the Greatest American Movie of all time.  How Green Was My Valley had all the things that the Academy valued; John Ford behind the camera, lavish production values and heartfelt performances from established actors.  Orson Welles came into Hollywood as a bit of an outsider and he was using his film Citizen Kane to break down many long held traditions in filmmaking, as well as taking aim at some powerful targets.  It’s very well known that Welles based his Charles Foster Kane character after William Randolph Hearst, the newspaper magnate and one of the most powerful men in the whole of America as well as in Hollywood.  On that Oscar night, a loss for Citizen Kane in the Best Picture category may not have been seen as that shocking given that Welles made a pretty powerful enemy with his unflattering parody of the vindictive Hearst.  But, through the arc of time, Citizen Kane‘s profile has only improved while How Green Was My Valley has been almost completely forgotten.  Safe choices don’t always pan out beyond their moment in time.  Over the years, the greatest movies manage to find their audience and it’s often because they were movies that took chances and moved the needle in Hollywood towards a different direction.  There are plenty of other times when movies with darker themes missed out on the Oscars and have gone on to become heralded as masterpieces; Vertigo (1958), Do the Right Thing (1989), and The Matrix (1999) to name a few.  They all had the disadvantage of being a little harsh for their time, but even if Academy voters turn a blind eye to them, the audiences will ultimately have the final say determining their place in history.

But even darker themed movies can somehow push through to win Best Picture at the Oscars.  It seems that the best way to do it is to be so good that your movie cannot be ignored, even if it is a bit of a downer.  One of the best examples of this is The Silence of the Lambs (1991).  The Jonathan Demme masterpiece managed to defy all expectations and sweep through the Oscars despite it’s dark and often grisly subject matter.  The Academy overlooked all that, even though there were more traditional and safer alternatives that year at the Oscars, like The Prince of Tides (1991), JFK (1991) and Beauty and the Beast (1991).  But Lambs managed to beat them all because it was just that good, and time has only proven the Academy right in their decision as the movie is still viewed as a masterpiece 35 years later.  And it’s a story involving cannibalism and torture where even after the case is solved, a mad serial killer is still on the loose by the end.  Sometimes these movies do luck out by running the table in a year with little competition, but great movies can still win at the Oscars even with uncompromising elements to their stories.  Sometimes a movie can win the Oscar with darker themes at it’s center if they do offer that little glimpse of hope at the end.  Steven Spielberg’s Schindler’s List (1993) is one of harshest movies ever put on screen with it’s unvarnished look at the horrors of the Holocaust, and yet it offers hope in the end through the inspiring story of how so many Jews’ lives were spared thanks to the efforts of the movie’s main subject, businessman Oskar Schindler.  Spielberg’s movie is a gut punch, but you don’t leave the movie feeling awful in the end.  Even a movie that ends on a downer, like Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer (2023) where it’s main character stresses over how he’s responsible for a nuclear arms race, still had enough moments of triumph beforehand that make the journey to that dark moment still feel worthwhile.  There are certainly these exceptions that prove it’s possible to win over the Academy even when your movie is not a pleasant watch all the way through and it seems that the only way it works is if the movie is exceptionally good.

But, it all depends on the mood of the Academy voters as well.  The voting body of the Academy is made up of mostly actors and also includes industry professionals as well as people of special distinction by the Academy. Just like any other election, campaigning is a crucial part of the process in voting for the Academy Awards.  This includes many different tactics like trade ads and special functions to draw awareness to a film, as well as Academy screenings throughout the season.  But, like I stated earlier, some Academy members don’t have the time to see everything, so they’ll sometimes vote based on vibes or defer to their friends and staff over what they think will be the right choice.  When the span of awareness is limited, what usually ends up happening is that the movie that has the most appeal to the broadest audience possible ends up winning in the end.  A great recent example was in 2022, when the “feel good” movie CODA (2021) picked up Best Picture over the more nihilistic The Power of the Dog (2021).  While objectively looking at both movies, The Power of the Dog was the more impressively assembled film, with great cinematography and standout performances delivering a monumental cinematic experience; but it was also bleak and unforgiving as well.  CODA on the other hand was very unassuming and low budget, but it had heart and warmth to it.  It’s not surprising that CODA appealed to an Academy that was in need of a pick-me-up after the harsh Covid lockdown year prior, though Power of the Dog’s Jane Campion still came away with a Directing Oscar.  When Academy voters are low on awareness of the movies to choose from, they often go with the movie that makes them the happiest.  It’s where the ranked choice voting works the most in favor of “Feel Good” movies.  It’s a voting body motivated by feelings more than by technical merits.  This can sometimes shed a light on some of the inherent biases found in the Academy too.  It was reported that a lot of Academy voters admitted to not having seen the movie 12 Years a Slave (2013), but they still voted for it as Best Picture because they felt it’s message was important.  They’re not wrong to feel that way, but they would’ve been better able to back up their claim of the movie’s importance if they had actually seen the movie and judged it on that.  Unfortunately, it’s that lack of insight that can sometimes cause the Academy to be out of lockstep with the rest of the audience when it comes to these movies.

So, looking at this year’s Academy Awards, does this “Feel Good” formula still apply.  As of this writing a couple weeks prior to the Academy Awards of 2026, the front-runner appears to be Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another (2025).  It’s not too surprising, given that it’s not exactly a harsh movie to watch, often filled with enough levity to keep things entertaining throughout.  But, it’s also a movie that doesn’t pull it’s punches either, being shockingly prescient with today’s headlines involving authoritarian acts by the government and the everyday resistance that the citizens of this country are trying to enact to fight back against oppression.  It’s legacy over time will be interesting to watch, but for right now the movie is connecting at the right time by being a dark mirror of our current world.  But, even with it’s darker elements, it still has a story that comes across as a “feel good” one.  It’s a traditional good vs. evil storyline, where the bad guy loses and the good guys win, even if the larger backdrop of the movie’s setting still paints a bleak picture.  The micro, intimate main plot gives us that traditional story of triumph, as Leonardo DiCaprio’s father figure character does reunite with his daughter by movie’s end.  One Battle After Another seems unique in this way amidst the field it’s up against in the Best Picture race.  It’s main competition, Sinners (2025), has a lot of incredible moments in it, but it’s also a movie where all but one of the main characters is either dead at the end or turned into a vampire.  Movies like Sentimental Value (2025) and Hamnet (2025) spend most of their run times dealing with characters processing their grief.  And then there’s also Marty Supreme (2025), which is a story of triumph for the worst kind of person in the world.  From the looks of it, the odds favor One Battle After Another because it does come the closest to matching that “feel good” formula, but this race is still undecided for now.  In the end, it helps to be the most entertaining of the nominated films, because it leaves the best final impression.  It may not be a great indicator of how well the movie might age over time, but it certainly makes a difference when the choice needs to be made in the moment by Academy voters.

Movies by design are meant to be appealing; otherwise what’s the point in making them.  The best movies take risks, and sometimes that can be enough to gain the attention of the Academy voters when they are choosing Best Picture.  But most of the time, what matters in the moment is how this relatively small voting block feels while they watch a movie.  For some Academy members it’s what matters most.  Back in 2012, actor and singer Meat Loaf (who was an active Academy member with voting privileges) confessed that he voted for the Steven Spielberg movie War Horse (2011) for Best Picture purely because it was the movie that made him cry that year.  If that was the determining factor for him, then all the power to him; at least he voted for a movie he had watched.  But the bigger problem is disengagement from the voting members of the Academy, where they just go by vibes rather than making educated choices based on what they watched.  There may have been a variety of factors that could’ve contributed to Warren Beatty losing out on Best Picture to Chariots of Fire; his political stances, the entrenchment of old Hollywood in the Academy, the fact that Warren may have burned a few bridges over the years to get where he was at the time.  The judgement over time is that the Academy was ultimately making the safe choice that year and picked the least controversial film in the pack.  What Warren also represented (the outspoken voice of New Hollywood) also may have ruffled a few old time Academy members as well.  Thankfully, requirements for Academy membership has changed, and the Academy now has a broader, more diverse voting body than it did decades ago.  This has helped lead to more risk taking movies winning Best Picture, such as Everything, Everywhere, All at Once (2022) and Anora (2024), but even still, those were movies with that were crowd-pleasing in the end, with a lot of “feel good” elements.  Unless you are one of the best movies ever made, you’ll be all but forgotten if you don’t leave a positive impression on your audience.  Happy Academy voters are generous Academy voters, and in the nearly century long history of the Academy Awards, this has been the formula that has most often brought home the gold.

The Rainbow Connection – The Underused Art of Muppet Filmmaking

For generations, the Muppets have been entertaining audiences with their good natured and yet slightly chaotic sense of fun.  And the remarkable thing is just how broad their fanbase has become.  They are truly an audience of all ages pleaser, from grown ups to young toddlers.  For many of us, Generation X’s all the way to Gen Alpha, they have always been there as a part of growth as individuals.  We learn the ABC’s and 123’s from the likes of Big Bird and all of his friends on Sesame Street during our youngest years and eventually we grow up to appreciate the delightfully absurdist and subtly adult humor of the Muppet Show.  Kermit the Frog may be the most recognizable character to represent a whole brand across the whole world since Mickey Mouse.  And the Muppets can even count people like Elton John and Quentin Tarantino among their biggest fans.  But what has made these characters who are just puppets made of felt so beloved by so many.  The Muppets weren’t the first puppet characters to become household names.  Puppeteering has been an artform for centuries, going all the way back to the Punch and Judy days.  But what seems to have set the Muppets apart has been the way they are presented to us.  The men and women behind the Muppets are not just great puppeteers, they are also skilled in the art of filmmaking as well.  The Jim Henson Company has been just as instrumental over the years as Industrial Light and Magic and the Stan Winston Studio in changing the way that movies are made.  What started as just a place to build and craft new types of puppets has grown into a visual effects workshop where some of the most creative minds in the industry can experiment with new ways to make the impossible possible.  And yet, even with all the technical advancements that have been employed by the Jim Henson Company to create all their brilliant practical effects over the years, the Muppets which are still puppeteered by hand are still their most magical creations.

To understand the reason why this kind of “Muppet Filmmaking” is special, it helps to understand the man who made it all happen.  The company’s namesake, Jim Henson, was a true original creative genius.  Born in Mississippi and raised in Maryland, Henson always dreamed of becoming a filmmaker.  While in high school, he found a creative outlet in creating puppets and performing with them.  He attended many workshops over the years where he would meet other puppeteers that shared his interests, including a fortuitous meeting with a future collaborator named Frank Oz.  After college, Henson and his small band of fellow puppeteers created a short form comedy for a local Baltimore TV station called Sam and Friends.  The puppets in the show were very simplistic, often lacking in much detail and character, but one puppet modeled after a frog that Henson puppeteered himself managed to stand out from the rest.  The other Sam and Friends puppets faded into obscurity, but Kermit as he became known lived on and would become the catalyst for what was to follow.  In 1968, Jim Henson’s workshop was hired to develop puppets for the new public broadcasting show for children called Sesame Street, a show that took the nation by storm and quickly became a institution for young audiences everywhere.  All the while, Henson was developing more and more elaborate puppets, which by now were being called Muppets.  In 1976, Henson and his team were given a prime time slot on television with The Muppet Show, and it became his biggest breakout hit yet.  Not only was the Henson Company making it big with their success as puppeteers, but they were also doing so while take bold experimental swings with what they could do with puppets on television.  They weren’t just bringing puppets to life, they were making them feel alive.  On the Muppet Show and Sesame Street, the most magical trick that Henson and his team pulled off was to make you forget you were watching puppets at all.  The Muppets feel like real living characters and that’s largely due not just to how they are performed, but the way they are staged as well.

Jim Henson, surprisingly, never considered himself a family friendly entertainer.  It was never his ambition to make anything just for children.  He always saw himself more as an Avant Garde filmmaker; someone using the medium of film to experiment with the illusion of life.  And while we may view the Muppets as a mainstream entity today, what Henson saw with his popular characters was a way to do things in film that no one would have ever thought was possible.  After the success of The Muppet Show, Henson was granted his greatest wish which was to direct a feature film, naturally starring the Muppets.  The Muppet Movie (1979) may seem like a fun comedic romp starring Kermit and the gang, but when you take a step back and think about some of the scenes in the movie, especially those where the Muppets are out in the real world, you start to realize just how experimental the film acutally was.  It’s simple things like Kermit and Fozzie the Bear driving around in a car that you don’t think are out of the ordinary until you realize they had to rig a car to drive on it’s own just so they could fit Jim Henson and Frank Oz into the front of the car to make it look like the Muppet characters are really driving.  There are many other incredible illusions found throughout the film, including in the opening shot where Kermit sits on a log in a real swamp playing his banjo, which involved Jim Henson cramming himself tightly into a hidden submersible that they then placed into swamp water so it would leave Jim hidden from view.  But perhaps the most mind-blowing sequence that the Henson Company ever put into one of their movies was in 1981’s The Great Muppet Caper, where the Muppets all ride bicycles through a park.  This sequence baffled visual effects experts for years wondering how they managed to get Muppets to look like they are really riding bicycles.  It was revealed that there was a hidden marionette rig just out of frame that helped to create the illusion, but it’s just another great example of how the Jim Henson Workshop was taking both filmmaking and puppeteering and elevating both artforms at the same time.

But the Henson Company wasn’t just keeping these tricks strictly in house either.  They were gladly aiding other filmmakers in developing more imaginative worlds for the big screen.  They worked on movies like The Witches (1990) and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1990), creating creatures that could believably exist in the real world, while still being entirely out of this world at the same time.  Perhaps the strongest example of just how well the Jim Henson team’s talents had grown over the years was found in the galaxy far, far away known as the world of Star Wars.  While Star Wars creator George Lucas was getting help from many different visual effects companies from all over the industry, he saved a very special assignment for Henson and his crew.  In the second film of the trilogy, The Empire Strikes Back, Lucas created this important new character called Yoda; a centuries old, diminitive alien creature who would end up training the hero of the story, Luke Skywalker.  It would’ve been impossible to cast any human actor in the role, so he knew that he had to turn to puppeteers to bring Yoda to life.  And who better to turn to than the greatest workshop for lifelike puppets in the entire world.  Yoda would be a lot different than the other Muppets.  Instead of felt, he would be made of foam and plastic, with highly detailed features sculpted into his face so that he would feel more lifelike.  To bring him to life, Frank Oz would be doing the honors of giving Yoda voice and movement.  The results were beyond successful, as Frank Oz and the Jim Henson artists proved that their Muppet characters could not only hold their own acting opposite human characters, but that it was also possible to have them give dramatic performances as well.  Yoda’s even sharing the screen with an acting titan like Alec Guiness and he still doesn’t feel out of place.  George Lucas tried and failed to campaign for an Oscar nomination for Frank Oz’s performance as Yoda, but regardless of a nomination or not, the creation of the character proved just how far the artform had progressed to where an acting nomination didn’t seem like too much of a stretch for a Muppet character.

One of the key things that really helps to make these characters come alive is the way real human actors interact with them.   It’s not just the case with Yoda holding his own with his Star Wars co-stars.  The collection of Muppet films over the years also demonstrates many different examples where the human actors truly make you believe that talking directly to a puppet is completely ordinary.  It’s honestly not a difficult thing to do, because the Jim Henson puppeteers are so good at their craft that they can bring the illusion of life easily into these characters just through personality alone.  There are so many examples you can find through interviews and special appearances made by the Muppets over the years where your eye is drawn directly towards the character and not at the performer puppeteering them, even when they are visible too.  These puppeteers just know how to make these felt creations feel alive in front of you and that’s helpful for the actor on the opposite end.  It’s easy to see how The Muppets have attracted so many talented people to appear beside them in both the Muppet Show series and in their films.  Sometimes, you even get performances from the human actors in the movie that actually shine through beyond what is called for in a movie where Muppets are their co-stars.  Some of the most special cases are Charles Grodin’s hilariously over the top villainous role in The Great Muppet Caper, as well as Michael Caine’s surprisingly straight forward performance as Ebenezer Scrooge in Muppet Christmas Carol (1993).  The fact that Caine’s performance as Scrooge would feel right at home in any other serious adaptation of Charles Dickens’ classic novel is all the more remarkable when he’s acting opposite Kermit the Frog.  It’s always a great thing that these Muppet movies have human actors that are selling the illusion alongside their puppet co-stars.  Keeping the artiface up only helps to make us see these characters as genuinely alive, and it’s remarkable how well that translates even into the real world.

Unfortunately, many films today don’t seem to try as hard in making the impossible feel real like these Jim Henson enhanced movies have over the years.  When Henson died suddenly in 1990 at the age of 53, he left a big hole in the world of visual effects.  No one quite had the same intuitive ability to think of ways of doing things differently the way he did.  A large reason why the Henson Company is now a part of the larger Walt Disney Company today is because Henson agreed to have them operate the management of his company while he would continue doing the things he loved the most, which was crafting in his workshop.  He wanted to create bold new things, and having the responsibility to run a company was getting in the way of that.  Sadly as a result of his absence, the industry began to move away from his workshop’s very DIY method of filmmaking.  One of the big things that changed was the advancements in computer generated imagery, which unfortunately was making the need for handcrafted puppetry obsolete in the creation of fantastical creautres on screen.  Ironically, it was a filmmaker who helped to give them one of their big breaks that was also leading the change that would hasten their downfall.  When he decided to create his prequel trilogy to the original run of Star Wars, George Lucas didn’t return to the Henson company to have them craft new and imaginative alien Muppets to populate his film.  Instead, he had his team rely heavily on CGI, including with the creation of characters in the film.  Jar Jar Binks would be a break through creation in character animation through computer animation, and sadly even Yoda would be given a CG make-over in the series (albeit still voiced by Frank Oz.  Now, Jim Henson was never opposed to embracing new technology to help improve the work that his team was doing.  In fact, Henson was already starting to experiment with a new rigging system that would allow him to animate a CGI character by hand the same way he would do with a puppet in something they called Project Waldo.  However, the only time this experiment was ever used was in Jim Henson’s last ever project before he died; the Muppet Vision 3D attraction found at the Disney Hollywood Studios at Disney World.

Since then, the need for these felt puppets in live action films began to wane, as CGI was giving filmmakers better and more lifelike results.  Even still, the Muppets never truly went away.  Sesame Street still provides valuable educational entertainment to young children even after being on public broadcasting for over 50 years.  The Muppets have also continued to make movies over the years, though many of them don’t have the same high quality as the ones that came out during Jim Henson’s time.  And though they keep trying, the Walt Disney Company doesn’t to know quite what to do with the Muppets that are now under their control.  They’ve tried to reboot the characters in many different ways, but audience interest seems to have waned considerably.  There really hasn’t been an adequate replacement at the Jim Henson Workshop since the sudden loss of Jim Henson himself.  Frank Oz had already left the workshop to pursue his own career as a film director and Jim’s son Brian didn’t last very long at the time top before leaving to pursue other things as well.  It also didn’t help that Henson’s hand-picked successor to play Kermit after him, Steve Whitmire, was fired by Disney due to toxic workplace complaints leveled against him by Workshop staff.  The Jim Henson Company has been in search of an identity in the years since Jim’s death, and sadly it has led to a long decline where the their influence in the world of visual effects has considerably waned.  And yet, there is still an appetite for Muppet related content.  The visual wonder of the movies made by Jim Henson during the 1980’s, including his more mature films like The Dark Crystal (1982) and Labyrinth (1986) have a strong nostalgic value, especailly as more and more people are getting bored with what CGI has been offering us lately.  And who knows what will happed to the Muppets in the AI era of visual effects. What really made the Jim Henson visual effects stand out is the fact that so much of the creativity comes through in the construction of the visuals.  Unlike other movies today, the Henson visual effects team are building things that are tangible and present in front of the camera. And that’s what’s getting audiences more interested again in the practice of Muppet Filmmaking; the fact that what we are seeing is present in the scene itself, even when it’s a talking Frog or Pig.

There are strong signs that some filmmakers want to bring back more physical effects into their movies.  And when your movie or show is filled with alien style creatures, the Henson Company  has a proven history in delivering on that.  This was definitely evident in parts of the Star Wars sequel trilogy, with J.J. Abrams incorporating many puppeteered aliens to fill out his scenes in The Force Awakens (2015), and Rian Johnson bringing back the non-CGI, Muppet version of Yoda in The Last Jedi (2017).  Sticking with the practical effect of having a Muppet style puppet in Star Wars properties, the popular Mandalorian series also won over many audiences with the introduction of Grogu (aka Baby Yoda), a true fully puppeteered character just like the original Yoda.  But the real test of the future will be whether the Muppets manage to survive the shifting sands of the movie industry.  As a counter balance to the rise of AI, more and more people are valuing the things that are tangible and real in their consumption of media, and the Muppets fit right into that.  Even as AI media generation improves, the appeal of the hand-crafted Muppets is enough to help boost it’s profile into a whole new generation of audiences.  One would hope it’s not just the characters themselves that are gaining popular traction with audiences; that the inventive thinking that enabled the Jim Henson company to take bold artistic risks also spills over into the general visual effects field as well.  There’s a reason why the original Muppet projects like the Movie, The Great Muppet Caper, Muppet Christmas Carol and Muppet Treasure Island still hold up and it’s not just the characters alone.  Jim Henson knew that audiences needed to be dazzled by visuals often never achieved before by special effects.  Muppet Filmmaking may be undervalued at the moment by the industry, but audiences are coming to realize it’s value, and it is shifting movie studios towards considering more practical approaches to creating imaginative special effects without the aid of computers.  Regardless of the shifting priorities in Hollywood, we know that there are still enough people out there who have been raised their whole lives with the Muppets being an especially fond part of our childhood memories.  Tmes will change, but there will always be a place in our culture  for Kermit the Frog, Miss Piggy, Fozzie Bear and Gonzo to keep us looking for that rainbow connection.

Wuthering Heights (2026) – Review

Few works of literature have managed to enchant generations of readers the same way the Wuthering Heights has.  The sole published novel of 19th century author Emily Bronte, Wuthering Heights has remained one of the most beloved stories of lost love ever put on page since it’s debut in 1847.  It is the quintessential story of forbidden love that has inspired countless imitators throughout the years.  And of course, it was perfectly suited for the cinema as well.  There has been over 30 film and television adaptations of the story throughout the years, ranging from the very faithful to the wildly re-imagined.  Of course, the most well known version is the 1939 Hollywood classic, directed by William Wyler and starring Laurence Olivier and Merle Oberon.  It’s also a surprisingly international story as well, with adaptations found throughout the world in places like India, the Philippines, and Mexico.  But given that the story has been re-adapted so many times, one has to wonder if there is anything new that can be brought to the story that can make it feel new to a whole different generation.  Some have tried to re-examine the story through a different prism of context.  British filmmaker Andrea Arnold famously created a very stripped down version of the story, keeping it within it’s Victorian setting but shooting it in a very modern documentary like style.  She also finally realized something from the book that has never truly been done in other adaptations, which is to cast an actor of color in the role of Heathcliff, whom Emily Bronte described in novel of being of Romani descent.  But, even by modernizing the aesthetic used to tell the story, the roots of Wuthering Heights are still bound by the gothic Victorian setting, though Bronte’s novel was still ahead of it’s time in many ways.  There are many different ways to modernize the story, but the most effective way to help audiences today connect with this nearly 200 year old tale is to stick close to what is at the heart of the narrative.  In essence, it a story about the obstacles we put upon ourselves in the pursuit of love, and the terrible things that can come from unquenched desire.

What is interesting now is what a provocative filmmaker like Emerald Fennell saw in Wuthering Heights that made her want to adapt the story her way.  Fennell has been something of an interesting rising star in filmmaking recently.  After working for a while as an actress, including a featured supporting role on the hit series The Crown, Emerald got her chance to write and direct her debut feature film.  The film was a thriller called Promising Young Woman (2020), starring Carey Mulligan, and it won enough acclaim to propel Emerald to an Oscar win for Best Original Screenplay.  And while Promising Young Woman had it’s provocative moments to be sure, it was nothing compared to her next film, Saltburn (2023).  Saltburn was a daring and taboo busting satire of wealth inequality that has since become something of a cult hit.  While the movie didn’t do much at the box office, and was completely ignored during Awards season, it became a streaming sensation, especially with reactions to some of the movie’s more shocking and gross out moments.  It certainly showed us what Emerald Fennell was capable of as a filmmaker.  She could create these lush, exquisitely produced shot compositions with incredible artistic vision, and use that same vision to showcase the grotesque and weird, as well as frame it in a shockingly erotic manner.  Saltburn’s twisted story of decadence and desire was well suited for Emerald’s provocative vision, and for me personally it was one of the best movie experiences that I had that year, mainly because I just admired the daringness of the whole thing.  But, what was Emerald going to do as a follow-up.  In a way, Wuthering Heights seemed to be an odd choice.  As daring as Bronte’s novel was at the time, it is still chaste compared to what we have now in modern media.  Could the shocking sensibilities that we saw in Saltburn work in a classic piece of romantic literature that has lasted centuries, or was Emerald going to have to tame her directorial instincts in order to remain faithful to the book.  Regardless, Emerald Fennell managed to get Warner Brothers to finance her adaptation of Emily Bronte’s classic novel, and place it in an ideal pre-Valentine’s Day release window.  But, does Emerald Fennell’s take on Wuthering Heights breath new life into this classic tale, or was she a bad fit from the beginning.

The novel Wuthering Heights has been a part of many English and Literature class curriculums throughout the world, making it one of the most widely read novels in history.  But if you did manage to miss out on the novel through both your high school and college years, here’s a brief over view.  Set in the Yorkshire moors of Northern England during the early 19th century, the story centers on a young girl named Catherine Earnshaw (Charlotte Mellington) who lives in a dreary old manor house called Wuthering Heights.  Her father Mr. Earnshaw (Martin Clunes) one day brings home an orphaned boy (Owen Cooper) whom he takes in as a ward of the estate, mainly to keep Catherine company as something like a pet. The boy has no name, so Catherine names him Heathcliff.  Over time, Catherine and Heathcliff grow closer together, and Heathcliff becomes very protective of her, shielding Catherine from her father’s alcohol fueled fits of rage.  As they grow older, Catherine (Margot Robbie) and Heathcliff (Jacob Elordi) remain friends but something between them seems to be building, which is noticed by Catherine’s close friend Nelly Dean (Hong Chau).  But, the years of drinking and gambling by Mr. Earnshaw have take their toll on the wealth of the Wuthering Heights estate.  In order to avoid financial ruin, Catherine takes it upon herself to attempt to court the wealthy Edgar Linton (Shazad Latif), who live on his vast estate with his eccentric sister Isabella (Alison Oliver).  Linton is smitten by Catherine almost immediately upon their first encounter, and in a short amount of time he asks to wed her.  Despite getting what she wanted, Catherine feels like she is betraying her love towards Heathcliff, whom she loves in a more visceral way than she does Edgar.  But, the choice to marry becomes more essential when Heathcliff suddenly leaves Wuthering Heights.  Years pass, and Catherine is living a luxurious life at the Linton estate, though she is largely romantically unfulfilled.  Then she learns that Heathcliff has returned, now a man who has gained his own fortune and has just bought Wuthering Heights from her dead beat father.  Is it too late to rekindle the flame of their old love, and will it bring both Catherine and Heathcliff to ruin if they act on their desires while she remains a married woman?

Emerald Fennell has more than just the classic Bronte novel to live up to with regards to her adaptation.  Her film is also going to have to stack up to the classic 1939 adaptation, which many herald as one of the great works of early Hollywood cinema.  Indeed, it’s hard not to think about the version with Olivier and Oberon when watching this movie, but I’m also an avid consumer of classic cinema as well.  I don’t think most modern day audiences are as familiar with that movie, and that’s probably who Emerald Fennell is appealing to more with her version of Wuthering Heights.  Her take on Wuthering Heights is definitely made to appeal more to a millennial and Gen Z audience, especially with a lot of the modern touches she adds to the film, including a soundtrack with contemporary sounding original songs by Charli XCX.  It’s definitely a modern kind of movie with the trappings of a period costume drama.  But, for literary purists looking for a faithful adaptation of the novel, this is definitely not it.  Emerald’s adaptation is very loosely tied with the original novel, retaining it’s core premise and characters, but throwing in some bold detours away from the original narrative itself.  But, does it all work out?  In some ways yes, and in other ways no.  The generally positive side is that the movie is never boring.  In it’s nearly 2 hours and 20 minutes, the movie manages to keep us engaged with it’s often manic pacing and bold choices that definitely cause a stir.  But, Emerald Fennell also perhaps pushes a bit too much in the direction of being provocative and shocking that she in a way kind of misses the point of the story in general.  Wuthering Heights at it’s heart is a tragedy, even before (Spoilers ahead, even though this widely read book has been around for almost 200 years) Catherine dies at the end.  It’s a tragedy about how two soul mates miss their opportunity for happiness together due to finances, and when they reconnect years later, it’s too late.  And that unrequited love turns toxic as a result, leading to a lifetime of bitterness, especially for Heathcliff who far outlives her and remains haunted by her memory.  Emerald Fennell seems less interested in that, and sees the story more as a vehicle to present some twisted portrayals of sexual awakenings through the prism of a classic literary romance.

It stands to reason that Emerald Fennell is very much a fan of the novel; I don’t think that she would have chosen it otherwise as her next movie project if she wasn’t.  But there is so much more to Bronte’s novel that Fennell chooses to leave out.  What is interesting about this in comparison to the classic Olivier version is that both movie adaptations stop at the same point; at Cathrine’s tragic demise.  Bronte’s novel actually has this as the halfway point, where the story skips ahead many years later in the second half of the novel.  There we see the toll of losing Catherine has had on Heathcliff, as he has become bitter and meanspirited.  That’s the tragedy of the novel, Heathcliff becoming a far worse person over time as his time with Catherine was all too brief and un-fulfilled, and he spreads that pain to the next generation, with Cathine’s only child Cathy being the target of most of his wrath.  In a strange way, both movie adaptations look more kindly upon Heathcliff than Emily Bronte does, where she largely portrays him as brute.  I can see why the change is made, because it makes the role a more attractive one for leading men, and Heathcliff is inherently the most fascinating character of the whole book.  In place of that darker aspect of the character, the classic 1939 makes Heathcliff and Catherine’s story more about the tragedy of lost love.  You would think that Emerald Fennell would use her version to examine the dynamics of passionate love versus a life of privilege creating friction between these two tragic characters, but that seems to get lost in some of her cinematic indulgences.  The movie treats it’s romance in a steamy way, but Emerald rather interestingly doesn’t seem to portray any of her characters in a favorable light, and that makes it more difficult to sympathize with the romantic side of the story.  Heathcliff is a brute, but Catherine is also equally detestable in the way she manipulates everyone around her in order to get her way.  And it seems every character has that flaw, treating each other poorly in the pursuit of their own gain.  It seems like Emerald still seems to be in the mindset of what she brought to the narrative of Saltburn, where everyone was contemptable in that story.  It worked spectacularly in that story, but feels out of place in Wuthering Heights.

On the positive side, Emerald does make this movie look gorgeous from beginning to end.  Not only that, but her fearlessness in visual aesthetic actually helps to make this movie stand out that much more.  I certainly would never have expected some of the bold design choices in this movie.  The design of Wuthering Heights itself, built in the middle of these jagged, black stone rocks jutting out of the ground, feels like something out of a Tim Burton movie, and that’s just the first taste of all the weird things to come.  The interior design of the Linton estate is equally bizarre in concept.  There’s one room that has a floor that is blood red, and it spotlighted by the sheer white walls that rise up from it.  There’s also a clever reference to Jean Cocteau’s classic 1946 re-telling of Beauty and the Beast, with the wall sconces holding up the candles that light the room being modeled after human hands.  Fennell also does a remarkable job of shooting the remarkable landscapes of the moors.  The movie was shot by DP Linus Sandgren, who has worked on films like La La Land (2016), No Time to Die (2021), and of course Emerald  Fennell’s Saltburn.  For this film, he shot much of the movie with Vistavision cameras, marking yet another major studio movie to re-vitalize this long dormant format after The Brutalist (2024) and One Battle After Another (2025) have brought it back to prominance. The results are undeniable, as some of the wide angle shots in the outdoor scenes has some epic sweep to them.  This is definitely a movie that benefits from a large screen experience.  I also appreciate the fact that Emerald Fennell isn’t afraid to get a little strange in her visual storytelling.  There is one room in the Linton estate that is made to resemble the color and texture of human skin on it’s walls, even with the details of imperfections like moles included.  It’s where Emerald Fennell’s oddball sensibilities work in the film’s favor, even while the story is a let down.  It’s a mess, but it’s one of the prettiest messes you’ll ever see.

The film also benefits from committed performances from the actors.  This movie wasn’t just a passion project for Emerald Fennell, it was also spearheaded by Margot Robbie as well, who also served as producer.  The two have history of working together, with Margot being a producer on Emerald’s first two films in addition to this one, and Emerald getting to appear alongside Margot in the movie Barbie (2023), playing Midge, the pregnant Barbie doll.  While the character herself may be a tad difficult to like as a whole, you’ve still got to give Margot credit for her committed performance.  She balances the performance well, playing so many sides of the character including being charming, amusing, and also cunningly manipulative.  Jacob Elordi does fine in the role of Heathcliff, though I do think that he gets less to do here than he should.  It may be an unfair comparison, but I feel that Olivier brought a lot more gravitas to the role of Heathcliff.  Olivier made his version far more brooding and a force of nature.  Elordi’s Heathcliff is certainly an imposing figure, with that 6’6″ frame of his making him tower over everyone else.  But his Heathcliff is a lot more passive in this version of the story, never quite leading us to believe that he becomes the brute that he eventually turns into in the book.  It’s interesting that this is the second movie in a row where Elordi has brought to life one of the great brutish characters of English Literature.  However,  I feel like he brought a lot more to his performance as Frankenstein’s creature in last year’s film from Guillermo Del Toro.  Even still, Elordi does deliver when it comes to the romantic fireworks boiling under the surface.  There’s also a lot to be said about the strong performances coming from the young actors who play Catherine and Heathcliff in the opening part of the movie.  For Charlotte Mellington, this is her film acting debut, and she does a great job portraying the chaotic, impulsive nature of Catherine in her youth, and she is complemented perfectly by young actor Owen Cooper in the role of Heathcliff, with this coming off the heels of his awards winning performance in the hit Netflix series Adolescence.  Another standout is Alison Oliver as Isabella, whose eccentric performance helps to bring some unexpected levity to this film.

I do admire the fact that Emerald Fennell wanted to take on this classic story and do it in her own way.  And the movie is elevated by it’s incredible visuals and strong performances.  But I also feel that it falls way short in it’s re-telling of Emily Bronte’s classic story.  Wuthering Heights has endured because it’s far more than just another steamy romance about forbidden love.  It’s also a great exploration about the way love and desire can turn even the purest souls into dark and meanspirited people when it’s denied them, and how that extends across generations.  Emerald seems to have gotten the steamy romance part right, but she doesn’t add much else.  It’s a very shallow examination of the themes of novel, and for the most part it just seems like Emerald is using the premise of the story as a means of injecting her own indulgences.  While Wuthering Heights has never truly been adapted fully on the big screen, with most adaptations leaving us with the two lovers being seperated by a tragic death, Emeral Fennell’s version seems even more detached from the source novel.  It’s going to be interesting how people will react to this movie.  I feel like most people who are familiar with the book probably won’t like it, while casual audiences might embrace it more; if they aren’t put off by all the weird choices Emerald Fennell made with her version.  For me, I feel like you’ll get a better understanding and experience overall if you seek out the classic Laurence Olivier version.  While it isn’t perfect, it’s closer in spirit to the original book than this new version.  All that being said, Emerald Fennell’s Wuthering Heights is still a visual treat that warrants seeing it in a theater.  And some of her artistic choices are pretty bold and daring, even if they clash a bit too much with the story being told.  I’d say go in with an open mind and see if the weirdness works for you.  Emerald Fennell certainly loves this strory and it’s characters, but her indulgences don’t do a whole lot of favors for them in the end.  I’d say if you end up being quizzed about the story in literature class, don’t uses this version as you Cliff Notes quide to the story’s meaning.  It’s very much Emerald Fennell’s take on this story for better and worse, and while she delivers on the visual spectacle, I feel like she should probably choose something other than a beloved literary classic as her next project, unless it’s something that makes for a better fit for her style.

Rating: 6.5/10

What the Hell Was That? – The Blind Side (2009)

Baseball is viewed at large as the great American sport, and it has likewise inspired it’s fair share of movies, from inspirational like The Pride of the Yankees (1942), to the comical like Bull Durham (1988), to movies that do both like A League of Their Own (1992).  But the other great American sport known as American Football hasn’t really left a cinematic mark in the same way Baseball does, despite being a much bigger and wealthier sports league.  In fact, there are far more popular movies devoted to lower league football then there is of the NFL, at least when it comes to the ones that people remember.  College Football left it’s mark with the classic Rudy (1993), about a plucky underdog who finally gets his shot playing for Notre Dame.  High school football also has given us some memorable films, like Friday Night Lights (2004).  But when we think of memorable movies about the professional football league, it usually centers on underdog stories about true life individuals who battled against the odds to get to the league.  This is true of movies like the Mark Wahlberg headlined Invincible (2006).  But, when inspirational movies are the things that draw people in for a movie about football, the tendency can sometimes be for the filmmakers to take some liberties with the story they are telling to make their narratives more cinematic.  It’s harmless if the movie still sticks to the heart of what it needs to be about, namely how their subject beat the odds.  But it also opens up the movie to become more manipulative too, and that can sometimes be a dangerous thing if there is an agenda behind the making of the film that intends to distort what really happened.  Sadly this is the situation with a very flawed rags to riches football movie known as The Blind Side (2009).  While it isn’t the only sports movie to ever play fast and loose with it’s history, the changes that were made to the true story of it’s subject have since revealed it to be a rather exploitative film over time, and one that gets even more problematic after learning all the things that have come to life since then about the subject as well.

The Blind Side tells the story of Michael Oher, a young man raised in terrible conditions who through the charitable support of the affluent Tuohy family was able to get a football scholarship to play for Ole Miss, which then led to him being drafted into the NFL in the first round.  Oher would play 7 seasons in the NFL, including a Super Bowl winning season with the Baltimore Ravens, before he was cut in 2017 due to an injury.  Oher’s rags to riches storyline caught the attention of author Michael Lewis, a non-fiction writer known for chronicling major financial events and scandals in his books.  He had previously written a best-selling book about team management in Baseball with the acclaimed Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game (2003), which of course would be adapted into an Oscar nominated film in 2011 starring Brad Pitt.  His follow-up book would stick in the world of intersecting sports with competitive strategy similar to those found in the financial world, and that book would be The Blind Side: Evolution of a Game.  Contrary to what you may think, Michael Oher is not the main subject of Lewis’ book, but is rather a featured player whose storyline is part of Lewis’ larger narrative about how professional football has evolved over the years, particularly with the way players are recruited now.  While there was a lot of fascinating information detailed throughout the book, many people latched onto the narrative involving Michael Oher’s journey to the NFL.  One of the main reasons why Oher’s storyline became such a prominent part of the book is because Lewis was familiar with the Tuohy family already; he was former classmates with Sean Tuohy, the father in the story.  This access allowed him to observe Oher’s rise first hand, and that helped to give the book a more personal touch overall.  Of course, Hollywood took notice of this inspirational story, and the book was quickly optioned for a movie adaptation, particularly focused on Oher and the Tuohy story.  You would think that this would lead to a nuanced exploration of the way Oher’s rise to NFL stardom represented a shift in the way the sport of football rosters are managed these days, but sadly that is not what we ended up with.

The fundamental flaw with the movie is that it forgets who the movie should be about in the first place.  Michael Oher is sadly treated as little more than a prop in this movie as it’s the Tuohy family that gets most of the focus.  More specifically, the matriarch of the family, Leigh Anne Tuohy is the primary focus of this story.  One of the reasons for this is because it made the project more attractive as an awards worthy vehicle for an A-list actress to take.  And that’s exactly what led to the casting of Sandra Bullock for the role.  Bullock, up to this point, had been one of the most consistently successful actresses working in Hollywood over the last decade.  But, she was also viewed as something of a genre performer as well, seen as more comfortable performing in comedies and romances rather than in a “serious” role.  This was the era of Miss Congeniality (2000) and Two Weeks Notice (2002), which gave her a lot of box office wins, but no gold on her shelf.  All the while, Bullock was still building up the reputation of being one of the nicest and most charitable people in show business, so she wasn’t without her admirers.  The industry wanted to show their love for Sandra Bullock, but the right role just never surfaced for her.  And then came the big year of 2009, which was where Sandra finally seemed to break through.  She had a critically panned comedy in the spring called All About Steve (2009) which bombed pretty hard, but on the heals of that was the surprise box office hit, The Proposal (2009), co-starring Ryan Reynolds.  So Sandra Bullock was already riding a wave once her more “serious” movie The Blind Side was about to hit theaters. The movie itself was received with mixed reactions by critics, but it was warmly embraced by audiences, giving Sandra yet another box office win.  And come awards season, Sandra seemed to be a clear front runner for the coveted Best Actress prize, and sure enough that momentum carried her all the way to Oscar night.  After a long, storied career, Sandra Bullock was now finally an Oscar winner, and still being the ever self-effacing type, she opened her Oscar speech saying, “Did I really win this, or did I just wear you all down.”

If the intention of this movie was to give Sandra Bullock the kind of role that would finally win her an Oscar, than job well done.  But, the shift that it took to put her character into the central role of the movie did so at the expense of telling the more compelling story of Michael Oher.  Oher’s story is greatly reduced to him being found by the Tuohy family while he was homeless and having them build him into the star athlete that he would become.  The Tuohys as a result, and more than anything the character of Leigh Anne, come across as much more of the driving force in his life, while Michael remains this passive figure in his own story.  Of the many falsehoods told in the film, the biggest one would be that Leigh Anne was the one who introduced Michael to the sport of football.  In reality, Michael had already been playing the sport for many years before he had met the Tuohy family.  One crucial fact from the book that the movie leaves out is that Michael had been supported by multiple foster families over the years as he kept working on his talents as a football player.  The Tuohys were only one of the families he had relied upon for support, and were the ones most crucial for steering him towards choosing Ole Miss as the school he wanted to play for, given that it was their own alma mater.  He did live with Tuohys during his final year in high school, and they were the people he relied upon throughout his college career, at one point naming them as his adoptive family.  But that’s where the movie deviates from the truth.  This movie glorifies the Tuohy family much more than it does Michael.  Michael is almost insultingly without personality in this movie.  This would become a contentious point many years later, as Michael Oher would come to object to the way that he was portrayed in the film.  The movie makes him out to be like a simpleton; a sad puppy that needed nurturing in order to become whole again.  While the movie wants us to be inspired by Michael’s transformation, it forgets to treat him as anything other than an archetype.

The Blind Side unfortunately is one of the most blatant examples of what has been called a “white savior” narrative.  It’s where Hollywood creates a story about an oppressed people, but frames it’s from the point of view of the un-oppressed person who takes it upon themselves to help those in need.  Often it’s a white character whose personal journey intersects with a community of color, and they become the difference makers in the end in the pursuit of justice, while at the same time robbing the agency of the oppressed group themselves in their own struggle.  Think movies like Dances With Wolves (1990), or The Help (2011), or Green Book (2018).  Even a sci-fi flick like Avatar (2009) still falls into the same tropes.  There are nuanced ways to portray these kinds of stories, like my favorite movie of all time Lawrence of Arabia (1962) where the oppressed group still has agency in their own destiny and the “white savior” is not without some major flaws.  But the worst offenders of this type of film often are the ones where they seem to just exist to reinforce the power structure of race dynamics.  We unfortunately are no where near resolving race relations in America, and if anything things are growing worse.  And it just makes movies like The Blind Side come off as naive and pandering.  It’s a movie made purely for a white audience to make themselves feel better about racial issues.  This is largely what “white savior” movies do, which is to present a movie about racial issues, but make the audience identify most with the “good” white characters who stand up to the bigotry of the “bad” white characters, presenting a very superficial portrayal of what makes racism a societal problem that we still live with today.  It unfortunately treats the minority characters as superfluous beings, there merely to be victims to be saved.  As history has shown, minorities don’t rise up out of the generosity of enlightened white people, but often because they are brought to the point where they have no other choice than to take the initiative themselves.  Sadly, Hollywood for the longest time has never seen the need to tell the story from this perspective, because they’ve always been under the mistaken assumption that a movie will only succeed if it caters to a white audience first and foremost.  Thankfully with the rise of filmmakers like Spike Lee, Barry Jenkins, and Ryan Coogler, we are seeing more movies being made today that tell the story of race in a America from the point of view of the oppressed, but unfortunately, there are still too many movies like The Blind Side that still get most of the money out of Hollywood.

Where the story of The Blind Side takes a darker turn into an even more loathsome place is the reality that has come in the wake of the movie being released.  Fourteen years after the movie came out, Michael Oher was ready to tell his side of the story when he began to write his memoir.  In 2023, he made a discovery while researching his time with the Tuohys that has fundamentally changed his relationship with them, and reframed everything he thought he knew about his time with them.  He had always thought that the Tuohy family had formally adopted him when he turned 18, shortly before he graduated high school and went off to play for Ole Miss.  But in his research, he found out that the paperwork that they had him sign back then was not for adoption, but instead was to put him legally into a conservatorship.  In a conservatorship, the guardian has full control over the the conservatee’s personal affairs, including all financial decisions.  This meant that the Tuohys had final say over Michael Oher’s future earnings, especially with regards to the rights over his own life story.  Despite having significant control over Oher’s financial future, they thankfully never exploited it once he made a lucrative career in football, which is perhaps why such a thing went unnoticed for so long over the years.  But, upon learning of his conservatorship status, which at the time was still active in 2023, Oher began to wonder how much he was actually being denied over the years in compensation as the Tuohy family gained fame and recognition off of his name due to the success of the movie.  Oher took it upon himself to file a lawsuit against the Tuohys, seeking an end to the conservatorship and issue an injunction barring them from ever using his name or likeness in their own self promotional dealings.  He also wanted them to stop them from calling themselves his adoptive family.  This was certainly a blow for the Tuohys, considering the fact that they’ve used the success of the book and film to boost their own profile, particularly as motivational speakers and celebrities in right wing political circles.  Loosing their connection to Michael Oher’s story would be significant to their profile, but they indeed misled the public about their true relationship with Michael by repeatedly stating that he was adopted into their family.  In 2024, both sides settled, with the Tuohys removing all references to their “adoption” of Michael Oher from their website and pledging to honor that agreement moving forward.

All of this points to The Blind Side being not just a bad “white savior” story line, but also a dangerous one, because it’s based around a blatant lie.  The Tuohy family made Michael Oher believe for years that he was adopted when he wasn’t, and that their financial success over the years was built around the fact that they owned the rights to Oher’s life story, and he did not.  Oher did not pursue holding them financially liable, given that he himself had already done well enough because of his time in the NFL.  What his lawsuit was meant to do was to give him back control over his own narrative.  That’s the reason why The Blind Side feels so icky now, because it’s not insightful about the issue of race and instead uses it as an ego trip for the white people who had control over the story from the very beginning.  The movie makes it appear that the Tuohys were responsible for giving Michael Oher the talent to play football with their financial support and stable household, which is just a flat out lie.  The most shameless moment in the movie is where Leigh Anne sidelines the coach and tells Michael the fundamentals of the game.  It’s a moment purely there to make Leigh Anne look like a badass mama bear and to give Sandra Bullock another highlight reel acting moment.  But, as Michael Oher has pointed out in telling his own story, he lived with many other families who all supported his pursuit in playing the game of football.  By the time he met the Tuohys, he was already a star athlete.  But the even more damaging thing that happened to Michael Oher is that the movie presented him as this pathetic individual who needed to be saved.  It took a toll on people’s public perception of him, with many believing he was uneducated and a loner.  In an interview during his lawsuit, he stated that “when you go into a locker room and your teammates don’t think you can learn a playbook, that weighs heavy.”  So, in controlling the narrative around Michael Oher’s life story, the Tuohys may have ended up driving him further away, because his life has not been made better by the movie, but theirs had.

The movie itself is mediocre at best, but it’s made all the worse when you discover the whole truth around it.  Michael Oher may not have been exploited by the Tuohys before the movie came out, but he certainly was after.  The Blind Side is purely built to reinforce the idea that racial harmony has been achieved in America, but all that is now shown to be a lie.  Michael Oher had to put a stop to the Tuohys using his story for their own aggrandizement so that he could finally tell his own story from his perspective.  In doing so, he’s shone a light on the still existing lack of agency that minorities still have in talking about racial issues in a media landscape.  The rise of the internet has allowed for better access to hearing stories from all kinds of oppressed groups around the world, but Hollywood is only just recently getting around to allowing people of color to be the ones to tell stories from their point of view.  Before, the “white savior” perspective was the only way to draw attention to racial issues on film, because the industry was still under the mistaken impression that a white audience must be catered to first and foremost in order for a movie to make its money back.  While movies like Dances With Wolves, The Help, and The Blind Side may have been made with good intentions, they nonetheless come off as patronizing to the minority characters who don’t seem to matter as much.  Things are changing for the better though, as witnessed by Sinners’ record breaking 16 nominations at the Oscars; a movie where the only prominent white character is a literal vampire.  People of color have more platforms to tell their stories their way, and that is thankfully making movies like The Blind Side more antiquated than ever.  The best thing you can say for the movie is that it did finally get Sandra Bullock an Oscar, though her much better career defining performance would come later in Alfonso Cuaron’s Gravity (2013), a movie where she would’ve deserved her Oscar a lot more.  But, the worst part of this movie’s existence is that it robbed Michael Oher of the chance to have his story told the right way on the big screen.  In the end, we see a version of him that makes him look weak and sad, which is an insult to his true achievements as a star NFL player.  At least in the end he managed to reclaim his agency and put a stop to people like the Tuohys who were boosting themselves up over his success.  That’s a positive sign that the “white savior” trope is loosing it’s hold in Hollywood, because this movie showed us all the harm it truly does to someone who has lost control over his own image.

A True Tinseltown Throwdown – The Battle for Warner Brothers and the Problem With Media Consolidation

It’s been only a couple of months into this back and forth battle between two media titans in Hollywood over the ownership of another media titan.  After declaring it’s intent on taking ownership of Warner Brothers last fall, the new Paramount media empire under the leadership of Skydance opened up a pandoras box that may likely change the make-up of Hollywood and movie-making in general forever.  Paramount’s intentions were ambitious, but ultimately they found themselves out maneuvered by Netflix, which put in the more lucrative bid for Warner Brothers CEO David Zaslev.  Netflix’s intentions were to bid as high as Paramount was in their first pitch, but say that they only were looking into buying the parts of Warner Brothers that weren’t connected to television broadcasting.  Since the merger with Discovery Networks in 2022, Warner Brothers has struggled to keep their massive media empire in top form, so they were looking to re-split the company up and sell each part for profit to new owners.  Warner Brothers would retain it’s movie production infrastructure, it’s studio lot, and it’s legendary library, while Discovery would be bundled together with all of the cable channel assets that Warner Brothers already held, such as networks like TBS and TNT, as well as the new channel CNN.  Paramount’s new owners, the Ellison family who had created Skydance Entertainment, were intent on collecting the entire package of both Warner Brothers and Discovery, but Netflix’s very huge offer to buy just the WB side of the business perhaps may have put Paramount out of reach.  They may still be able to purchase the spun off Discovery side, which will be worth significantly less, but from the actions that the Ellison family has taken in the wake of their dismissed offer indicates that they are still intent on winning the entire thing.

David Ellison, the new CEO of Paramount Skydance, and son of Oracle founder Larry Ellison, escalated things pretty heatedly by trying to circumvent David Zaslev’s agreement with Netflix, and go directly to the Warner Brothers Discovery shareholders in what is known in the business world as a hostile takeover.  But there’s still the flaw in their overall plan as they try to appeal to the shareholders with new bids to buy out the company with an assessment that still falls short of the value that Netflix has put on the Warner Brothers side of the business alone.  As it currently stands, Warner Brothers shareholders seem to be backing Zaslev’s plan to split the company up and secure two profitable sales instead of just the one.  Paramount may soon try to double up their offer if they truly want to gain the whole thing, but by that point, they may put themselves so deep in a debt hole that it could thwart any long term plans they have in building up their business.  This is the same situation that Disney has found itself in after they bought (and some would say overpaid) 20th Century Fox.  Disney beat out Comcast for the ownership of the legendary movie studio, but the cost was so high that it has put Disney into a debt whole that they’ve been trying hard to dig themselves out of.  Disney isn’t suffering too much, but having to deal with Covid on top of paying down the debt they accumulated from the acquisition of Fox led to many severe cut back over the last decade, and it’s led to a loss in quality control with many of their properties like Star Wars and Marvel.  Also, they own the massive Fox library of movies and shows, and have barely done anything with it.  Eventually things will be sorted out at Disney, and signs have recently shown that they are balancing out already for the studio, but it was after years of cost cutting, layoffs, and damage to the brand.  Whoever ends up getting Warner Brothers in the end will likely have to deal with some of the same problems, and it’s a symptom of one of the larger problems facing the industry as a whole, which is the trend of media consolidation negatively affecting the artform of movie-making.

Much like the banks, communications, and airlines, Hollywood is an industry that has fallen into the trend of consolidation as a means of generating profits for shareholders at the expense of the consumers.  This isn’t something new to the business however.  Movie studios have risen and fallen, and sometimes it was the regulating power of the government that had to step in to make the movie studios play more fair.  Ironically, one of the biggest regulatory smackdowns that affected Hollywood for years also involved Paramount Pictures.  The Paramount Decision delivered by the Supreme Court in 1948 broke up the monopoly that movie studios had over distribution in the early years of cinema.  Before the decision, the studios owned the movie theaters that their films played in, meaning that they had completely control over the programming.  It was great for the Studio system, but bad for the consumer, because depending on the market, your access to the movies would be limited by who owned the theaters in your area.  It also shut out independent theater owners from having access to movies that were in high demand.  So, recognizing that the movie studios wielded too much power over the access to the movies they made, the Supreme Court broke up their monopolies, which in turn led to the rise of the movie theater industry that ran independently from the studios.  This led to new exhibition innovations over the years that would in turn help to revolutionize Hollywood, such as the creation of multiplexes and large formats like IMAX being used for blockbuster films.  Had the Paramount Decision not been laid down, cinema would be very different today, and likely wouldn’t have proliferated like it had and become consumer driven.  For an industry to survive, it needs competition, and the more of it the better.  Monopolies only end up stifling innovation, because when fewer and fewer companies own a giant percentage in the market, they have less incentive to make changes that lead to improvement in their industries.

Unfortunately over the years, the regulatory restraints that helped to keep Hollywood in a competitive nature for a while have lessened, and we are seeing a renewed push to consolidate our media landscape again so that more power is in the hands of fewer people.  One of the biggest moves that has caused this in recent years is the rise in streaming.  Streaming offered Hollywood a new way of distributing their products; one which faced fewer regulatory restrictions than distributing through movie theaters and home video.  Netflix jumped on board this new technology early and it has grown them to such a level that they are now making a play to buy a big chunk of the old Hollywood with Warner Brothers.  All the other studios tried to jump in to compete, but Netflix has still managed to outpace them all.  Unfortunately, it’s all coming at a cost, with the movie theater industry suffering a significant reduction in revenue as they have had to adjust in this new streaming dominated environment.  In many ways, Netflix and streaming’s rise in general is Hollywood’s way of clawing back some of that monopoly like power they had before the Paramount Decision was thrust on them.  And indeed, the Paramount Decision has been defanged over the years, to the point where it no longer is enforced.  Movie studios have been able to own individual theaters across the country in years past, such as Disney buying up the El Capitan and Netflix buying Grauman’s Egyptian Theater (both in Hollywood), but in the last couple years we saw one major studio buy up an entire chain of theaters when Sony Pictures became the new owners of Alamo Drafthouse.  On the plus side, an institution as beloved as the Alamo Drafthouse has been save from bankruptcy, but on the other hand, they are now beholden to a mega corporation like Sony.  Is it possible that we might see more studios buying up more theater chains.  Alamo Drafthouse doesn’t quite have the same reach as say Regal or AMC, but it’s not that far off to think of a media conglomeration like Apple or Amazon buying up those chains just like Sony did.

That’s the other big fear being cast over Hollywood; the groups that are coming in to buy up these legacy studios.  It’s not unusual for the big Hollywood studios to have been part of some larger conglomerate.  At one point, Paramount Pictures was owned by an oil company called Gulf+Western, and this was during a time when Paramount was experiencing it’s Golden Age in the 60’s and 70’s, with movies like The Godfather (1972) coming from their studio.  Warner Brothers at one point was owned by AT&T and Columbia Pictures of course is now just referred to as Sony Pictures.  Out of all the major movie studios in Hollywood, only one has managed to retain it’s own independence throughout it’s whole history, and that’s Disney, which in a way has become a conglomerate in it’s own right.  One way or another, Hollywood has done what it need to do to keep the showbiz rolling along, including many of it’s most storied studios having to sell to outside interests.  The only hope that we can get from this shuffling around of ownership in Hollywood is that the studios themselves will manage to maintain an identity through all of it and still deliver for audiences.  Gulf+Western managed to succeed with Paramount during it’s time because they had someone like Robert Evans in charge of production; a guy who could pick all the right films to make.  But, when a bad leadership team is in place, one that usually is put in by a corporation that doesn’t know how to run a movie studio, it leads to some disastrous results.  A major reason why Warner Brothers is in the position of being bought out now is because of poor management in the past, especially after the disastrous launch and re-branding of HBO Max and the Project Popcorn initiative that saw them suffer heavy financial losses.  But bad management alone is not the only worry.  A lot of the new suitors that are trying to consolidate power in Hollywood are making changes that will fundamentally change Hollywood, and not always for the better.

Coming back to Paramount Skydance again, there are some troubling signs about what might happen to both Paramount and Warner Brothers if both were to come under the control of the Ellisons.  Larry Ellison is a major figure in the world of big tech, and one of his most recent business ventures has been to invest heavily in the field of AI.  This has boosted his net worth making him one of the richest men in the world as his Oracle data centers and cloud services have been instrumental in building the rise in AI.  And with his son David now calling the shots at Paramount, it’s very possible that AI is going to be integrated into the productivity of that studio to a very invasive degree.  It’s something that we are already seeing being played out at another massive data driven company that also now owns a legacy studio.  Amazon became the owners of MGM 2021, which itself was already a heavily diminished brand from it’s heyday, and in the years since people have noticed that they’re movie output has leaned very heavily on Amazon product placement.  The notorious straight to streaming remake of War of the Worlds (2025) was ridiculed heavily for it’s shameless incorporation of Amazon branded products, but it doesn’t just stop at the things we buy off their website.  Amazon is also a web hosting platform for much of the internet, and they are very much trying to jump on that AI bandwagon.  Their most recent action film release, Mercy (2026) starring Chris Pratt and Rebecca Ferguson, is just straight up pro-AI propaganda, and that is a tad bit concerning.  It’s also very sad given that it’s an MGM release, further tarnishing that legendary brand.  At this moment, we don’t know what the Ellisons may end up doing with Paramount because they have only just started there.  And it’s not a good sign when David Ellison’s first action as a studio head is to aggressively pursue the acquisition of another studio.  He should honestly prove himself at Paramount first before we think he would do a good job of running Warner Brothers as well.  The meddling from Larry Ellison is also not a great bode of confidence, given his shady ties with fellow financers.

Netflix being the other top contender isn’t ideal either.  If their streaming business model were to be applied to a studio like Warner Brothers, it would be Armageddon for the movie theater and home video industries.  Netflix Productions CEO Ted Serandos has publicly put it out there that he would honor the same theatrical window that Warner Brothers already has for all their future projects, but what guarantee do we have that he’ll keep that promise?  Netflix is also another mega corporation that’s built on collecting data, and they are not opposed to incorporating more AI technology into their platform.  One of the more disturbing ideas that has been floated around with regards to places like Netflix and Paramount is a thing called User Generated Content.  The movie studios basically want to turn their streaming platforms into another YouTube space, with more of the platform being devoted to short videos made with AI to boost the content available on their platforms.  It’s one of the reasons why Disney allowed OpenAI to use their IP characters for their video generating AI software Sora.  Disney at some point wants to host these AI videos on their streaming platform, creating more user engagement similar to the traffic that YouTube sees on a regular basis.  Unfortunately, it minimizes what makes streaming worthwhile in the first place, which is to have movie and TV shows on demand.  By turning these platforms into YouTube clones, with lower quality AI videos as their main draw, it continues to devalue media in general.  It’s already bad enough that movies and shows have been reduced to being called content.  Now they’ll have to compete for attention with AI shorts, which by the way the users on the platform will never be able to own for themselves, because these streaming giants will own all the rights.  That’s one of the disturbing realities of tech companies starting to move in an take over Hollywood.  It’s a further erosion of the things that made movies special.  You just know that this AI driven stuff is what will be boosted by the algorithms, and the movies that were made by hand and employed hundreds of people are going to be push into obscurity.

In any case, the most immediate problem is that Hollywood is going to feel a lot smaller.  No matter who ends up with it, Warner Brothers will no longer be independent, and it may end up loosing it’s identity in the process, like how 20th Century Fox has now just become 20th Century Studios, a subsidiary of the Disney Company.  Every time there is one of these consolidations in Hollywood, it makes it all the harder to get anything made because one more buyer has been taken out of the market.  But, it’s something that can’t be stopped at this point.  By law, Warner Brothers must be sold to the highest bidder in order to please their shareholders.  The fact that such a transaction is so insanely expensive that only the biggest corporations in the world would have the kind of capital to make it happen is itself another troubling aspect of all this.  More and more money is in fewer hands these days, and the ones with the kind of capital to buy a legendary, 100 year old studio like Warner Brothers are also the ones with not the greatest intentions for running a studio the way it should be run.  A lot of these acquisitions usually leads to a loss over time in the original studio’s identity.  MGM is a shell of it’s former self, and Amazon is not exactly helping to restore it to glory.  We don’t even know how Paramount will be under the Ellisons because all they’ve done is try to buy more of the pie that is Hollywood.  Netflix could have kept growing to become a competitor with all the other major studios, but instead they’re using their capital to move into a legacy studio.  In the end, whoever gets Warner Brothers will then have ownership of one of the greatest movie libraries in Hollywood, if not the greatest one.  But the cost will be severe for the industry, as many people will be laid off due to redundancies and the competition between studios will be reduced.  Like I said before, industries see better innovation when there is competition.  When the number of studios in Hollywood is reduced by one, we get less needs from those remaining studios to improve on their own output.  Eventually, prices will rise while the “content” becomes less appealing, because there is less care put into them.  That push for User Generated Content is one of the most troubling new trends, though hopefully the failure of Quibi showed that consumers are not interested in paying premium prices for short form content.  It’s up to us the consumer to keep the standards up with our demands of the studios, and let’s hope that we’ll make our demands heard depending on who ends up with Warner Brothers in the end, because that’s what a studio with it’s great legacy of making our lives better with it’s movies deserves.

Sticking the Landing – The Nightmare of Closing Long Form Stories for Movie and TV Writers

This last month, as people all over the world were ringing in the New Year, another event was taking place both on the big and small screens.  Netflix’s flagship series Stranger Things was ending it’s 9 year, 5 season run and unlike other premieres on the streaming platform, it wasn’t rolling the season out with all episodes available at once.  Instead, they released the final episodes of the show in three batches; four episodes during the Thanksgiving holiday, the next three on Christmas Day, and the final episode would premiere on New Year’s Eve.  Clearly Netflix wanted to allow their audience to savor this moment over a longer period of time, allowing anticipation to build before the final episode would drop.  But that wasn’t all they were doing.  In select theaters across the country, they would also be playing the final episode on the big screen at the same time it premiered on the platform.  This was especially impressive, given Netflix’s traditional aversion to the theatrical experience.  There are only a few TV shows that could generate this kind of anticipation for it’s final episodes, and especially rare for it to warrant four walling the experience in a theater.  But Netflix wanted this show to go out with a bang, and now the world has had a chance to digest this final run for the series.  And the response has been, well to put it lightly, lukewarm.  In general, the final episode’s response has garnered generally positive remarks, but the consensus is also that it was more good than great.  And there is also a fairly vocal contingent of viewers out there who were really let down by the final episode.  But, what is especially interesting is seeing just how extreme the reactions can sometimes be.  There are tons of videos online slamming the final episode of Stranger Things as a betrayal to the fans, that the show is now considered a failure because it didn’t end the way they wanted.  Stranger Things is only the recent big franchise to face this kind of scrutiny, as bringing a long running series to an end has become an increasingly difficult thing to do in today’s media landscape.

There’s something that should be understood about any development of a television series and that it’s not as easy as it may seem.  Coming up with a killer concept for a show and then selling that to a network or streamer almost seems like the easy part.  After that comes the execution of that idea, and this is where things can get complicated.  What is true for most shows is that they have the benefit of novelty in their first season.  That was definitely the case for The Duffer Brothers, the duo behind Stranger Things.  Their hybrid of Spielbergian adventure tropes and Stephen King style horror really caught the attention of audiences when it first premiered on Netflix in 2016.  It wasn’t authentically unlike anything else on television at that time.  And it quickly grew a following, becoming a true cultural phenomenon.  The thing that really helped the show develop it’s quick rise in esteem with audiences was the fact that it had a very easy entryway into it’s story.  The 80’s era aesthetic was great nostalgia bait, and the tightly scripted story kept the plot moving at a strong pace.  Not only that, but it was also exceptionally well cast, especially with it’s child stars, most of whom were making their debut with this show, as well established veterans like Winona Ryder and David Harbour who saw this show propel them to new heights.  If the show never got a second season, you could still tell that it felt like a complete work in it’s 8 first episodes.  But, like most successful shows, there inevitably needs to be more.  Stranger Things got a second season renewal fairly quickly, and that puts a whole new level of pressure on the creators of a show.  Not only do you need to do it all again, but you have to make it even better.  There has been talk that the Duffer Brothers didn’t have a plan past season one, but that is almost never true of anyone who sells a show.  All writers who pitch shows knows that they need to have long term strategies in their pockets just in case their show lasts beyond it’s first season, especially if they are telling a serialized story.  Throughout it’s 9 year run, the Duffer Brothers have always had to prove themselves to get that next season greenlit and keep it going for one more run.  But, they were also well aware that it could all just stop without warning.

To their credit, they knew that this couldn’t go on for very much longer.  While it was only 5 seasons long, with less than 50 episodes in total, each season came with lengthy breaks in between.  Seasons 1 and 2 followed in quick succession, but then it took 2 years to get the third season, then three years to get season 4 (mainly because of Covid) and then another three years after that to get the final season.  And in all that time, the cast themselves were also growing older.  The child stars were now all in their 20’s, and it was becoming harder with each passing year to make us believe they were still teenagers.  So, there clearly needed to be an endgame, and it was time to execute.  But what is particularly interesting about each progressive season of Stranger Things is that each season keeps building in scale.  If you watched seasons one and five back to back, you would be amazed as the scaling up the show went through.  Netflix opened up their wallets for the final 8 episode run of the show, putting nearly half a billion into the season.  That makes it one of the most expensive shows ever produced, which is remarkable given how it started as just a small nostalgia driven horror series.  But, when things scale up at this rate, this is where some shows begin to fall apart.  For the Duffer Brothers, the question that keeps being asked about how they handled the final season was if this was truly their vision from the get go, or were they being mandated by Netflix to go big and loud in their final season.  The biggest criticism levied at the final season was that it felt bloated and lacked the tight scripting of the first couple seasons.  Most of the final season involved a lot of talking about the plot rather than characters actually doing anything.  But, even with everything as big as it is in the final season, the Duffer Brothers still executed a plan to tie everything up.  This often becomes the biggest problem with most shows that try to come to a satisfactory end.  Sometimes the story becomes too big and unwieldy to ever be wrapped up in a way that pleases everyone.  The fact that even though it ran for nearly a decade Stranger Things didn’t have too many episodes over that span of time, making the overall story far less of a quagmire to regin in.

We have a good many other examples in recent years of shows and franchises that have attempted to close the book on their stories to varying degrees.  The year 2019 in particular was especially noteworthy for franchise capping finales, and it also showed us the different extremes between how to end the story the right way and the wrong way.  On the good side, we had the Marvel Cinematic Universe close out what would be known as their Infinity Saga with the record-shattering blockbuster Avengers: Endgame (2019).  Pretty much across the board, the movie was hailed for it’s exceptional handling of how it ended it’s story, which spanned over 20 movies over ten years.  No other film in the world was more anticipated than this one, especially after it’s predecessor Avengers: Infinity War (2018) shocked us with one of the most devastating cliffhanger endings in movie history.  But the reason it worked was because there was a plan from the get go about where Marvel wanted their multi-franchise spanning narrative to go, with seed planted across multiple films, all culminating in this final event.  The same couldn’t exactly be said about the other major two franchises that closed their stories that same year.  Game of Thrones was undoubtedly the biggest television series in the world during it’s run in the 2010’s.  And through seven seasons it was unwavering in it’s audience appreciation.  But it’s eighth and final season was a different story.  Something was off about the final stretch of episodes, like it was speed running through too many important events in order to get the show over with much quicker.  The short and oddly paced final season of Game of Thrones felt like a different show entirely from all the seasons that came before it and audiences felt that the they weren’t being rewarded for all the time they invested in this story.  Part of why things were so disjointed was because the show had far exceeded the source material it was based on, the original books by author George R.R. Martin, who gave show runners David Benioff and D.B. Weiss the broad strokes, but not all the details about how the series would end, so a lot of it was up to their interpretation, which probably ran contrary to what fans wanted.  And then there was the unmistakable failure of Star Wars Episode IX -The Rise of Skywalker (2019), a movie that is a clear representation about the dangers of executing a multipart story without commitment to a plan.

The two latter examples are perfect illustrations about the risks involved in developing a story to span many years without a clear idea about how to execute the final phase of that story.  It’s easier to fly the plane than it is to bring it down for a safe landing, to use an apt metaphor.  While it is fun to build anticipation and provide twists and turns that can change the course of the story at any moment, eventually every story needs to come to an end, and this can often be the trickiest part.  One of the most basic lessons in screenwriting is learning the three act structure.  Sure some writers play around with linear storytelling and try to break free of act structure, but the vast majority of stories told follow this principle, where the first act introduces character, their world and the inciting incident, then act two proceeds with ascending action until the story reaches a turning point, which then leads to a climatic third act that brings the story to an end.  Most popular shows get that first act right and then has a little too much fun in that second act, losing too much focus leading into that third.  It’s hard to bring the story to a close when you’ve set up so many side characters and subplots to fill out that middle part of the story.  For Game of Thrones, things got a little too complicated, with so many main characters that became fan favorites populating the storyline.  In order to bring closure to all that, the show would’ve need at least a full 10 episode season rather than the 6 that it got.  Unfortunately for Benioff and Weiss, they never expected to be the ones to bring this story to a close.  They were adapting Martin’s novels, and unfortunately he hasn’t published a new volume since 2011, the same year that the show started airing.  So they had to improvise in the last stretch of the show, interpreting the broad strokes that Martin had given to them.  They clearly didn’t deliver for most people, but it was almost an impossible mission to accomplish.  It should have been easier for The Rise of Skywalker, but that was a whole different level of failure in execution.  It’s been pretty well reported that the Sequel Trilogy of Star Wars was put into motion without a clear endgame about how it would end.  It started off strong with The Force Awakens, but Rian Johnson’s trope killing second chapter The Last Jedi took some bold swings that divided many fans, and in a panic Lucasfilm decided just a year and a half out from release to scrap what they were doing for Episode IX and start from scratch, creating a wholly unsatisfactory finale that tries to please everyone and instead does the opposite.  Improvisation only gets you so far as long as you can “yes and” each segment of your story correctly, and Star Wars did not do that.

A lot of these major franchises have to balance between being bold in their final acts while at the same time being mindful about what the audience wants.  Sometimes, one is taken into consideration more than the other.  One thing that often becomes a problem in the final stretch of writing a long form story is getting too attached to the things you create.  This is particularly true with the characters.  Something that a lot of people have noticed about shows that run for a long time is that you can tell who the most popular characters are by how much plot armor they have in the story.  Plot armor is where characters seem to defy the odds a little too well in the story and survive situations that otherwise would’ve been their downfall in any other case.  For a show like Game of Thrones, this is something that really separated the early seasons from it’s latter years.  The show was notorious for killing off main characters in sudden shocking moments, like the now infamous Red Wedding scene.  Then in the later seasons, popular characters would manage to survive in the most convoluted ways possible.  To a lesser extant, this is a criticism leveled at Stranger Things too.  But, not every story should be so ruthless to it’s characters in order to tell a compelling story.  There is a term used in writing called “kill your darlings” which is the way of telling writers to not be so protective of something they love in their story when it’s actually acting as an impediment to plot progression.  But, this saying doesn’t mean that telling a compelling story involves actually killing off characters either.  The struggle of writing is to follow the story as it progresses and find that balance that works in it’s service, even if it means being a little ruthless.  But stories need to inspire too, and sometime that involves doing something to please the audience as well.  As the story gets bigger, this balancing of plot also gets more complicated, and many writers find working with that pressure to be a bit too much.  That’s often why the longest running shows are the ones that are open-ended, where each episode is one self-contained story.  A show like The Simpsons still keeps going for over 30 years with no end in sight because there was none to start with.  It’s just a show that lets us observe one adventure at a time with the citizens of Springfield and makes every episode a continuation of that formula.

One thing that showrunners and their team of writers also have to deal with in the execution of their final episodes is the proliferation of fan theories.  The longer a show goes and the bigger a hit it is, it will inevitably bring a lot of discussion by fans around how they think it’s all going to come to a close.  Sometimes the theorizing takes on life of it’s own, and shows unfortunately end up disappointing fans because it didn’t meet the expectations that they had created in their own heads about how the show would end.  Stranger Things ran into this scenario, which resulted in a rather bizarre fan theory that there was going to be a secret final 9th episode that would be the true ending of the series, instead of the one that we actually got.  Suffice to say, the “Conformity Gate” theory proved to be nothing but a hoax, and the Duffer Brothers specifically went out of their way to say that their finale was indeed the end of the show.  For a lot of fans, it’s hard to say goodbye, and making up excuses for things not going the way you wanted it to go doesn’t mean that the show betrayed you.  Writers try their best to wrangle together a story the best they can, and then it’s a coin flip as to whether it will please everyone or not.  The only situations where it’s appropriate to criticize the work of the writers is when it’s clear they did not put the effort into making their endings work.  The way that Benioff and Weiss seemed to check out early in the writing of the final season of Game of Thrones is worthy of criticism, as is the corporate meddling and the lack of a plan that derailed The Rise of Skywalker.  But, fandoms can also get a little out of hand in the way it assesses the ending of a long running series.  A lot of people sharply criticized the final episode of The Sopranos when it ended with a non-ending as the screen cut to black abruptly in it’s final moment.  But over time, that abrupt cut has sparked numerous discussions about it’s meaning, and now it’s proclaimed as one of the most memorable finales of all time.  Oftentimes, it takes a moment to sit with the ending of a show to come to terms with how you feel about it.  In time, what we feel as a betrayal by the show with how it didn’t meet our expectations will over the years be looked at as exactly the way it should have always ended.

For many things, it isn’t just the journey that matters but also the destination.  For Stranger Things, not everything about the fifth and final season was perfect.  It had many problems to be sure and probably could have been trimmed down considerably; especially with many of those sitting around and talking moments.  But, for me as a fan of the show since it started, I do have to say that they nailed the final scene of the show.  We met our main characters as little kids playing a game of Dungeons and Dragons in a basement game room, and in it’s final scene, Stranger Things has those same characters once again playing D&D in a the basement.  It’s a full circle finale that ties it all together; these are the same characters, but they are fully reshaped by the adventure they’ve been through, and the game now hits very different for them.  It reminded me a lot of the way one of the greatest franchise finales, The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003) also ended.  In that movie, adapted from J.R.R. Tolkien’s novels, the Hobbits also return to their unspoiled home forever changed.  Life goes on, but it will never be like it once was.  The final scene of Stranger Things finds that same note and executed it perfectly.  In the end, for someone like me, it makes it all worth it if you get that final note right, even if everything before it wasn’t the tidiest.  Honestly, it what defines the greatest finales from the ones that are either bad or forgettable.  No one really remembers everything that happened in the final episodes of CheersNewhart, or The Sopranos, but we all remember Ted Danson telling a late bar patron “sorry, we’re closed,” or Bob Newhart waking up and realizing it was all a dream, or the lights literally going out on Tony Soprano.  That’s the sign of great storytelling, where the ending just feels right.  It will take time for us to fully assess where Stranger Things lies in the history of franchise finales.  It may not have been the smoothest landing, but it still got the job done.  Sure it was a tad too long, and a little overblown with big bombastic moments, but that tender final scene of friends bonding over a game they love is what brings it to a satisfactory close and that’s something that the Duffer Brothers clearly should feel proud of.  They tackled one of the most difficult jobs in all of writing and left us with something that more than anything feels full and complete.

28 Years Later: The Bone Temple – Review

It feels like it was only yesterday that we were revisiting the post-apocalyptic world of the 28 Days Later series on the big screen, and that’s not too far off from the truth.  It took 20 years for director Danny Boyle and writer Alex Garland to revisit their zombie movie classic with a fresh new sequel, 28 Years Later (2025).  In that time, Danny Boyle would become an Oscar winning filmmaker with the success of Slumdog Millionaire (2008).  Also in that same time, Alex Garland would become a director of note, with movies like Ex Machina (2015) and Civil War (2024) to his name.  So, a lot of fans of the original 2002 classic were very happy to hear that both Boyle and Garland were coming back to this franchise; hoping that they would bring all the prestige that they’ve acquired over the years and bring new life into this world of the living dead.  And for the most part, the long wait was worth it.  While it was not as groundbreaking as the original film, 28 Years Later nevertheless was a strong return to form for the series, and the film received praise from audiences and critics.  But what surprised many was that there wouldn’t be a long wait for another film in this series.  In fact, we wouldn’t even have to wait a full year.  A mere 7 months after the release of the last film, we are getting another movie picking up right where the last one left off.  This was always by design, as Alex Garland conceived of this new story thread as a trilogy.  And Sony Pictures, the studio behind this series, remarkably agreed to this concept, greenlighting the two films to be shot back to back.  There was only one big difference in the development of this project; Danny Boyle would only be directing the first film.  Instead of filming one movie at a time, these two films would be getting made simultaneously, and that would require the talents of two directors.  Surprisingly, Garland did not take up the opportunity to direct the second film himself.  Instead, the team looked outside their pool and sought someone else who would be a good match for the series.

They managed to find that someone in American filmmaker Nia DaCosta. DaCosta has had experience working in the horror film genre, having directed the Candyman (2021) remake.  She also was just coming off a stint working at Marvel, directing the Captain Marvel centered The Marvels (2023), which unfortunately ran into some headwinds at the box office due to the strikes that year.  She may have been an outside the box choice for this very British production, but DaCosta was very much up to the challenge.  The only question though was if she could pick things up from where Danny Boyle left off.  Boyle is a filmmaker with a very distinct style.  He shoots his movies in almost a guerilla like way, often handheld and with something as simple as a camcorder.  The original 28 Days Later was filmed using MiniDV tapes, which gave it that very gritty, visceral look; like we were watching found footage a la Blair Witch Project.  28 Years Later did something very similar, albeit with updated technology, by shooting the movie using iPhones.  Nia DaCosta by contrast is a much more conventional filmmaker, shooting her movies with industry standard digital cameras.  While the movie may have a different overall look to it, it’s still carrying over a lot from the last film.  Alex Garland is still the writer of both movies, and much of the same crews of production designers who crafted this post-apocalyptic world have their fingerprints in both movies.  For both Garland and Boyle, they clearly saw what Nia DaCosta could bring to this series and they trusted her with telling this next chapter in their story.  But, the question remains if audiences will react to this movie in the same way.  We barely digest the last film from seven months ago, and now it’s time yet again to pick up the story.  So, does 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple maintain the momentum of the last film or is it all too much too early.

In the closing minutes of 28 Years Later, the young man at the center of that film named Spike (Alfie Williams) has chosen to leave behind the commune that he had called home and instead live out on his own in the pandemic ravaged wasteland that was once Northern England.  Out in the wild, there are still dangerous hordes of zombies, all infected with the Rage Virus that instantly turns it’s victims into mindless feral beasts.  But that’s not the only danger out there.  In the final scene of the last movie, Spike has been captured by a gang of track-suit and blonde wig wearing warriors known as the Fingers.  Their leader, Sir Jimmy Crystal (Jack O’Connell) is a ruthless man, leading his follower with a cult like fervor, terrorizing any small civilized settlement they come upon.  He names them each Jimmy, including Jimmy Shite (Connor Newall), Jimmy Ink (Erin Kellyman), Jimmy Jones (Maura Bird), Jimmy Snake (Ghazi Al Ruffai) Jimmy Jimmy (Robert Rhodes), Jimmy Fox (Sam Locke) and Jimmima (Emma Laird), and they look up to him like he’s the second coming.  But Jimmy Crystal is not a Christian man, instead leading his followers in worship of the Devil, or Old Nick as he likes to call him.  Spike is about to become their latest victim, but he manages to become accepted into their gang after he defeats one of them in combat.  Meanwhile, the doctor who had helped bring a human and peaceful end to Alfie’s ailing mother’s life days before, Dr. Kelson (Ralph Fiennes) is conducting a new experiment with one of the zombies that has been roaming his territory.  An “alpha” zombie, which has evolved over the years to be able to command the lesser specimens, has been given the name Samson (Chi Lewis-Parry) by Kelson and the doctor believes there may be something to the monster’s display of intelligence.  Using a powerful sedative, Kelson has managed to subdue and even domesticate the powerful creature, and his hope is that with a careful dosing of drugs on hand, he may have found a cure to the virus.  But Kelson’s plans may run into some interference when Jimmy Crystal and his Fingers come across the Bone Temple that Kelson has spent years erecting from the bones he’s collected.  Can Kelson and Spike manage to survive the threats they face from both zombie kind and human kind, and which one is more likely to spell their doom.

When two movies from the same franchise release in such close proximity to each other, there is inevitably going to be immediate comparisons between the two.  While 28 Years Later was a very well made movie, it was also not without some flaws.  The inconsistency of tone was a major issue, with Danny Boyle being somewhat scattershot in his approach to telling the story.  With a different filmmaker taking the reigns for the second movie, many people became interested in seeing how someone else would approach this same world in their own style.  While I do admire what Danny Boyle did with 28 Years Later, I do think that Nia DaCosta did things much better with her film The Bone Temple.  Tone wise, this film is just much more consistent and free of the abrupt shifts that Boyle included in his movie.  The Bone Temple is a much more methodical movie; allowing scenes to flow better together.  Danny Boyle has a very flashy sort of style when it comes to editing his movies together, harkening back to his Trainspotting (1996) days, which also harkens back to the original 28 Days Later.  This works well in some parts, like the harrowing montage early in the film, underscored with the haunting reading of the Kipling poem “Boots.”  But other time, it just makes the scenes where they are being hunted by killer zombies feel too disjointed and artificial.  Nia DaCosta avoids that, and instead allows for scenes to build through atmosphere, which sometimes takes it’s time to pay off.  And it’s not just with the scenes with the zombies either; there’s some very effective tension built up with the Fingers gang too.  The way that she films the scenes where the Fingers are torturing their victims brings us the audience uncomfortably close to the action and holds us there.  This allows for the moments when the chaos happens to feel all the more visceral.  But Nia DaCosta also balances things out with some beautiful natural photography as well.  The way she films the Bone Temple itself is pretty captivating, making it feel like a character onto itself.  One show near the end in particular, where the point of view is literally flipped on it’s head, gives the Temple a very otherworldly feel.

A lot of praise should also certainly go to Alex Garland as well for finding a way to avoid just telling the same story over again in the same world.  This movie in particular is very different from any other zombie movie, because it really isn’t about the threat of zombies.  28 Years Later was much more of a survivalist story, with Spike and his mother (played by Jodie Comer) having to survive out in the wild with zombies at every turn.  In this movie, the zombies are almost an afterthought, with the focus put far more on Dr. Kelson and Jimmy Crystal’s gang.  But this opens up the film to a whole lot more different opportunities.  For one thing, this is the first zombie film that I can think of that puts some hope into the fate of the zombies.  The character of Samson, who was merely an existential threat in the first movie, is actually given some character development here, as we see him actually evolve and remarkably find a way out of the nightmare that has been his existence as a monster.  While the first movie did it’s job as a fairly harrowing coming of age tale in a zombie filled apocalypse, The Bone Temple is a story that ponders how a world like this can find ways of rebuilding itself.  I get the feeling that this movie is closer to what made Alex Garland want to revisit this world again, and the first movie was just a prelude to get here.  The hope in a hopeless world angle is a far more thought provoking one, and it shows much more than the first 28 Years movie that there are fresh ideas to explore in this series.  I also appreciated the subtext of the story, where science and reason are the paths to a brighter future, and not superstition and false prophecies from flashy con artists.  While some may lament that characters like Spike take a back seat in this story compared to how they were in the first, I think that this is the aim of Alex Garland with regards to how he sees this series progressing from here out.  The way he wants to tell the story is to casually move around this world finding the different tale within it.  Some stories will intersect, but for the most part, Garland sees this world as a very broad canvas.  Spike had his story told, now it’s time to see others.

In the whole of the movie, there is now doubt that the one who stands out the most is Ralph Fiennes.  He was already great in the first film, playing the eccentric hermit Dr. Kelson.  But here he is the primary focus of the story, with his (perhaps foolhardy) pursuit of a cure being the driving force.  The way he deals with Samson in particular, gently nursing him back to health and even over time considering him a friend, is captivating to watch.  Fiennes hits just the right tone for the character, making him deeply sympathetic, but also showing that he’s got a dangerous streak within him as well.  A lot of praise should also go to Chi Lewis-Parry, who brings a surprising amount of humanity to the character of Samson.  Similarities to the development of Frankenstein are probably intentional, as Samson goes from animal-like back to being human in a surprisingly emotional way.  Some of the most surprising moments in the film come from him showing that there is indeed intelligence behind those crazed, bloodshot eyes and that he needed the help of Kelson to bring that dormant humanity back out.  On the opposite end we also have Jimmy and the Fingers.  Jack O’Connell is having a pretty good run lately playing some memorable villains in high profile horror flicks.  Just last April, he was a scene-stealing vampire in Ryan Coogler’s Sinners, and through this and last year’s 28 Years Later he’s proven he can be equally as sinister a presence.  Jimmy Crystal is a truly terrifying presence in the film, lording over his cult followers like a king, espousing platitudes that sound erudite, but are in fact all hogwash.  Jack O’Connell does a fantastic job portraying the character, making him both unnerving while also funny in many ways.  The way his flashy style clashes with Fiennes very subdued performance as Kelson also makes for some of the film’s most entertaining back and forth exchanges.  When the characters are this rich and full of personality, you really forget that this is a zombie film at it’s core, and that’s a good sign that Alex Garland has managed to enrich his post-apocalyptic world with enough fascinating stories to sustain this series for years to come.

One other thing to appreciate with Nia DaCosta’s direction on this movie is just how good it all looks.  For this film, she’s working with veteran cinematographer, who among other things was the DP on films like 12 Years a Slave (2013) and Judas and the Black Messiah (2021).  He gives the movie a gritty but still naturalistic feel.  It’s very different than Danny Boyle’s handheld, guerilla style approach to shooting the movie, which was done with Anthony Dod Mantle (who also won an Oscar for Slumdog Millionaire).  Both styles work for their respective films, and it’s interesting to see them both work in service of showing the same world.  I for one just appreciated that we get to live within this one more without all of the Boyle flourishes that get a little distracting.  The production design across both films is exceptional, making this feel like a world being reclaimed by nature.  We’ve seen that many times before, like with the recent Planet of the Apes movies, but perhaps not with this kind of accuracy involved.  The bones of the old world are still there, and perhaps could still function if things were to improve.  As it stands, it’s the world we know, but twisted ever so slightly into a harsher reality.  Of course, the location that stand out is the titular Bone Temple itself.  We were introduced to it in 28 Years Later, but it definitely plays a more significant role in this movie, and the filmmakers knew exactly how to film it to make the place feel both foreboding and also ethereal.  The movie’s make-up and effects team also do an amazing job with this movie, and that’s not just with the work they did to create the many different zombies.  The look of Dr. Kelson is pretty iconic, with Ralph Fiennes covered in orange paint for most of the movie.  Also the costume choices for Jimmy Crystal and the Fingers bring a lot of personality to the characters, especially with the combo of track suits and platinum blonde wigs.  I also love how Jimmy Crystal’s whole get up involves him wearing all the jewelry they’ve stole off unfortunate victims, including a tiara.  And there’s a sequence towards the end of the movie that I don’t want to spoil, but it does something pretty spectacular with the Bone Temple itself with the way it’s lit up at night.

It’s not a flawless movie, but 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple is still a worthy successor to the film we saw last summer, and in many ways it’s an improvement.  The first 28 Years seems much more now like a warm up for what Alex Garland and Danny Boyle really want to do with this franchise, which is to broaden the scope of their world and tell many more stories within it.  Sure it picks up where the last one left off, but after the quick reintroduction, the movie moves away from Spike’s story to tell an entirely different one.  I like that these filmmakers aren’t trying to serialize this narrative, but instead introduce the idea that the world itself has many different stories worth telling.  The next film we get in this franchise may not even have any connection to the first two at all, though the final scene in this movie (without spoiling anything) hints at more familiar character returns.  I like the fact that these movies aren’t just recycling old zombie movie cliches.  They are exploring all the quirks and odd things that may occur when society falls apart, and having that be the thrust of their storyline.  The original 28 Days Later was perhaps the most influential film to come to the zombie movie subgenre since George A. Romero’s Dead series; creating it’s own set of rules and also changing the way movie like it could be presented.  While Danny Boyle’s iPhone shot style is perfectly suited for him, I actually prefer the more traditional approach that Nia DaCosta brought to this movie.  It may be less experimental, but it at least works in the service of allowing us to absorb this world and it’s many intricate details better.  It will be interesting to see who takes the reigns next.  Does either Boyle and DaCosta make a return behind the camera, or does Alex Garland close out the trilogy himself?  Or do they find someone else outside of their circle.  Regardless, this and the movie we got last summer proves that this franchise is very much alive and well, and in many ways is getting even better.  It was a short, 7 month downtime between these movies, and usually absence makes the heart grow fonder, but that’s not an issue with Bone Temple.  It is a movie that only builds on the goodwill set by the last film, and it hopefully is a positive sign of things to come.

Rating: 8.5/10

Collecting Criterion – It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963)

The Criterion Collection to many seems to be the place to find what many consider to be “serious cinema.”  But that’s not Criterion solely wants to focus on.  In fact, they have done a great job of preserving and spotlighting some of the greatest comedies found in world cinema.  Of course they have put out solid releases of most of Charlie Chaplin’s movies, from the one of his earliest classics The Kid (1921, Spine #799) to one of his later masterpieces, Limelight (1952, #756).  Some of the great Hollywood screwball comedies like Bringing Up Baby (1938, #1085) and His Girl Friday (1940, #849) also are a part of the Collection, as well as many of the movies of Billy Wilder like his comedic masterpiece, Some like It Hot (1959, #950).  But Criterion doesn’t just limit it to Hollywood comedies, as they have also spotlighted the works of other international comedic geniuses, like Jacques Tati.  More recent films from filmmakers working in the realm of comedy have also gotten the Criterion treatment, including John Waters, Wes Anderson, and Albert Brooks.  Shockingly enough, even Kevin Smith has made it into the Criterion Collection with his third feature, Chasing Amy (1997, #75), so yes there is a movie in the Criterion vaults with Jay and Silent Bob on the cover.  But, there’s one comedy that’s made it into the Criterion Collection that represents the intersection of comedy and big Hollywood entertainment, creating what many to believe is the grandest comedic film ever made.  Maybe not the funniest, but certainly the grandest; a big screen, star-studded extravaganza that dwarfed all other comedies in it’s time, and perhaps of all time.  It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963, #692) was the comedy of all comedies, and a movie that certainly gets the prime Criterion Collection treatment, and offers up a fascinating look at how Hollywood spectacles have held up over the years.

What is interesting about It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World is that it did not come together from the mind of an established comedic genius.  No, instead it came from one of Hollywood’s most serious filmmakers, Stanley Kramer.  Kramer was seen in Hollywood as a “message film” director.  A life long ardent liberal, Kramer devoted his talents as a filmmaker towards making socially conscious movies, tackling issues as varied as racism, censorship, and the dangers of authoritarianism.  He spent many of his post-war years producing movies at Columbia Pictures, including the Oscar-winning High Noon (1952), before leaving Columbia to step behind the camera as a director.  He directed two well received films called Not as a Stranger (1955) and The Pride and the Passion (1957) before he got his big breakout hit, The Defiant Ones (1958), starring Sidney Poitier and Tony Curtis.  From that, Kramer was seen as a prestige film director, and was granted the opportunity to make bigger social issue movies with grander scope and bigger casts.  Kramer’s most ambitious film to date came in 1961, we he made the film Judgment at Nuremberg (1961), a dramatic recreation of the trials of the Nazi high command that were conducted after the end of World War II.  Nuremberg was a critical and financial success, winning multiple awards, including a Best Actor Oscar win for German actor Maximillian Schell.  But, Judgment at Nuremberg also demonstrated how well Stanley Kramer could direct a film with an all-star cast.  In addition to Schell, the film had many high profile Hollywood actors in the cast, including Spencer Tracy, Burt Lancaster, Marlene Dietrich, Montgomery Clift, and even Judy Garland in a rare dramatic role. After the success of Nuremberg, you would think that Kramer would seek out another serious film to make, but that was not the case.  Instead, he wanted to do the exact opposite, and make a comedy.  But, this wouldn’t be any ordinary comedy.  It would be an “epic comedy.”  Just like Nuremberg, it was going to be an all-star extravaganza, featuring many of the most well-known comedians at the time, and throwing them into a screwball scenario that would run a lengthy three hour runtime; with intermission of course.  But the question remained during it’s making; could it work?

It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World starts off with a literal crash.  A criminal on the run named Smiler Grogan (Jimmy Durante) runs his car off the road and is critically injured.  A few passers-by who witnessed the crash try to help Smiler, but it’s too late.  With his dying words, he tells them that he buried all the money he stole under a big “W” in the coastal town of Santa Rosita.  Suddenly realizing that they have been pointed to the location of a potential gold mine, the group quickly rushes back to their cars and speed away in a race to find Smiler’s hidden fortune.  Among them is Melville Crump (Sid Caesar) and his new wife Monica (Edie Adams); Ding Bell (Mickey Rooney) and “Benjy” Benjamin (Buddy Hackett), two friends taking a vacation together; businessman J. Russell Finch (Milton Berle), his wife Emmeline (Dorothy Provine) and her mother Mrs. Marcus (Ethel Merman) and truck driver Lennie Pike (Jonathan Winters).  As they scramble down the road, more greedy interlopers get involved including motorist Otto Meyer (Phil Silvers) and vacationing British Lt. Col. J. Algeron Hawthorne (Terry-Thomas).  After getting into several mishaps, Mrs. Marcus resorts to calling her son, the free-spirited Sylvester (Dick Shawn) to come to her rescue.  Several mishaps occur, like a destroyed gas station and a flooded car swept into a river.  All the while, the Santa Rosita Police Department that was looking for Smiler takes an observational approach to the mayhem, hoping these foolish treasure seekers will stumble upon the hidden money themselves, thereby saving them the trouble of looking for it.  The operation is overseen by the Police Chief T. G. Culpeper (Spencer Tracy), who may have his own designs on capturing the treasure for himself.  All of this leads to a series of increasing screwball situations as the different factions of greedy treasure hunters look high and low for that mysterious “W” that marks the spot of the treasure.

When Stanley Kramer promised to make the biggest comedy ever, he meant it.  Not only is the main cast in the film impressively stacked, but there are numerous cameos throughout the film from many other comedy icons.  There are the briefest of glimpses of Jerry Lewis, Jack Benny, Peter Falk, Don Knotts, Buster Keaton, and many more that show up throughout the movie.  But it’s not just the cast that makes this an epic comedy.  Kramer treated this like he would with any other epic of the era; creating as Roadshow style presentation that included an overture and intermission.  But, the intermission itself would be unique for it’s time period, as speakers throughout the theater and even in the lobby would still play pre-recorded police com-chats giving updates on the characters all while the screen itself was dark.  Kramer also had the film shot on the extremely wide Ultra Panavision 70 format.  This is the same format with the extreme 2.76:1 aspect ratio that was used on epics like Ben-Hur (1959) and The Greatest Story Ever Told (1965), as well as getting a revival many years later for Quentin Tarantino’s The Hateful Eight (2015).  It was an interesting experiment seeing the tools used for making historical and biblical epics being used for a what is basically a screwball comedy.  But it does work in helping to make It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World feel grandiose.  Some moments like a scene involving a plane flying way too close to a watch tower really benefit from the big screen presentation.  It’s interesting to note that the movie we know as It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World is not even the full version that Stanley Kramer envisioned.  The movie was the opening day attraction for the brand new Cinerama Dome in Hollywood, a state of the art facility specifically built for presenting Cinerama films.  Though World was not made in Cinerama, it’s extremely wide format still fit the dimensions of the Dome’s massive screen.  At it’s premiere, the full runtime of the movie was 192 minutes, with overture and intermission.  This itself was parred down from a director’s cut of 202 minutes.  Unfortunately that cut of the movie remained unavailable for many years, and was mostly lost, with only the full soundtrack of the longer cut surviving.  The general release that most people over the years were familiar with was a truncated 162 minute version, and it wasn’t until a careful reconstruction many years later that we finally got the full version back, kind of.

Thankfully, Criterion has included this longer version as part of their release.  When I say that it is “kind of” the fuller version, that’s because a lot of the missing footage was never found.  Only the audio survives from these lost scenes.  So, as part of the reconstruction of the movie, led by famed film archivist and restorer Robert A. Harris, the audio from the missing scenes are placed in their rightful spot within the movie, accompanied with set photos of the same scene to give us a visual representation of what the scene was supposed to look like.  It’s not ideal, but it at least helps to give us a better sense of what the original film would’ve been.  It’s very similar to the reconstruction of the cut for George Cukor’s A Star is Born (1954), with Judy Garland.  If there miraculously happens to be a more complete print of the Roadshow version of the movie that played at the Dome back in 1963 that turns up, then hopefully we’ll get to see the movie that Kramer intended, but for now this restored version with the patchwork fixes is the best we have.  As a cinematic exercise, there’s no denying that It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World is an impressive achievement.  Kramer did a fantastic job making this a spectacle, with some moments that still look impressive to this day (that aforementioned plane scene).  But it works much better as a spectacle than a comedy.  Not that it isn’t funny in most parts.  It’s just that no one would ever declare this movie as the funniest they had ever seen.  In many ways, I feel like the epic length is a detriment to the comedy.  You look at the movies of Mel Brooks for example, and how they pack so many jokes into such a short amount of time.  That rapid fire delivery is what is essential for most comedies, and that’s why so many great comedies know not to overstay their welcome, clocking in on average around 90-100 minutes.  There’s very funny moments in Mad World, but they are spread out over a bloated three hours and change.  After a while, the comedy becomes tiresome, because it doesn’t have that rapid fire pace that it needs.  So, while the movie does succeed in being a fun romp, it comes across as a bit lacking in truly iconic laughs.

For this Criterion release, a full 4K digital transfer was conducted of both the the theatrical (162 minute) and Roadshow (198 minute) versions of the film.  The Roadshow cut includes many of those “reconstructed” scenes I talked about as well as some additional edits to get the movie as close to Stanley Kramer’s original version.  In both cases the movie looks amazing.  The 4K scan of the surviving elements looks immaculate.  The film is very bright and colorful, benefitting from all those sun-soaked California locations.  The restoration makes good use of the large format film stock elements, and we get a movie presentation that feels as close to how the original film must have looked back when it first premiered.  As a resident of Los Angeles as I’m writing this, I have had the great fortune of visiting the Cinerama Dome in the past, and I was privileged to have seen It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World screened on that same screen it premiered on over 60 years ago.  So, I have a pretty good reference for how the film was meant to look on the big screen.  I can definitely say that Criterion has done the film justice.  Even the reconstructed scenes with their inferior elements still work as part of the whole package.  Unfortunately, a 4K disc release hasn’t been made for the film yet, so we just have the Blu-ray edition for now.  Hopefully this one gets a 4K re-issue in the future.  It’s also a good thing that they restored both the longer and shorter versions, so that fans of the film can choose their preferred cut.  Personally, I feel that the restored cut is the better version, mainly because it gives more context to the story itself.  Criterion has also done a great job with their audio mix for this film.  Like most large format movies of the era, Mad World already had a 6 track source, which Criterion was able to restore into an impressive new 5.1 master audio.  It’s not as dynamic as movies of this era, but it still does a good job of preserving the theatrical experience.  The Ernest Gold score benefits the most from the audio restoration, and there are some pretty great surround sound effects, like with the runaway plane and the film’s finale in the rundown skyscraper.  Both visually and audibly this is another solid effort from Criterion in preserving the thematic feel of this classic film.

Like with most other studio made films that have made it into the Criterion Collection, Mad World has a wealth of behind the scenes material to help fill out the bonus features found on this set.  On the first disc with the restored cut, we get a re-issue of the audio commentary from 2013, made by aficionados of the film Mark Evanier, Michael Schlesinger, and Paul Scrabo from the movie’s original Blu-ray release from MGM.  Also re-issued from that disc is a documentary about the film’s sound and visual effects, including many behind the scenes footage taken from the film’s shooting.  There’s also a fascinating short documentary about the film’s restoration.  An excerpt from AFI’s 100 Years…100 Laughs special discussing the film is included, with many high profile fans talking about how much they loved the movie, as well as people who were in the film like Milton Berle and Carl Reiner.  A recording of the Q and A panel from the screening of the movie at the Last 70mm Film Festival in 2012 at the Samuel Goldwyn Theater is also included.  Hosted by Billy Crystal, it included interviews with many cast and crew from the movie who were still alive at the time, including Jonathan Winters, Mickey Rooney, and Sid Cesar.  On the second disc with the theatrical cut, there are many legacy materials of the film from when it was first released.  We get a two part episode of the Canadian series Telescope, which covers both the making of the movie as well as it’s premiere at the Cinerama Dome.  There are also press interviews with Stanley Kramer and many of the films stars that have been assembled, many of them discussing what it was like working on the film and with all these other stars assembled together.  A 10 year reunion special hosted by Kramer is also included, with the director reuniting in 1974 with to people like Buddy Hackett, Sid Cesar and Jonathan Winters and talking about their experiences working on the movie.  Finally, there radio promos and trailers from both the original release as well as the 1970 reissue included on this set as well.  All in all, there is a lot to pour through in this set, and it gives us a fairly substantial look at how the movie was made and what it’s legacy has been.

Over 60 years later, It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World still has left a mark on both cinema and comedy in general.  There were many other all star extravaganzas made around that time period; some with similarly absurd lengthy titles.  There was the Oscar-winning Around the World in 80 Days (1956), as well as Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines or How I Flew from London to Paris in 25 Hours and 11 Minutes (1965); which also coincidently starred Terry-Thomas.  But, few of these movies have had the same kind of staying power as Mad World.  It’s perhaps the assemblage of talent that people find impressive in this movie.  Every funny person from that era makes an appearance in the movie.  Even the Three Stooges show up for a brief cameo.  And while not all of them are at their funniest, it’s still quite an achievement for Stanley Kramer to have found enough room for them all.  Of the cast, the ones who shine the most are Jonathan Winters, whose destruction of the gas station is an inspired moment of physical comedy, and Dick Shawn’s truly manic performance as Sylvester.  What really helps to make this movie stand out the most though is it’s spectacle.  This stands right up there will all the other big screen extravaganzas of the time period.  And with Criterion’s excellent restoration work, we get a beautiful recreation of the movie it’s very wide screen glory.  While the movie is something that Stanley Kramer could be proud of as a filmmaker, it’s also not that surprising that he left comedy behind thereafter, instead choosing to go back to his comfort zone of “message films” which included the classic Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner? (1967).  Still, the movie stuck with him, and he appreciated more and more in his retirement years.  In 1997, he published his memoir, which he affectionately titled A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World: A Life in Hollywood.  For those who are experiencing the film for the first time, this Criterion Collection edition gives you a faithful re-creation of the film both in it’s original cut as well as the one that most people had been familiar with over the years.  Hopefully Criterion will revisit this with a 4K re-issue, and hopefully before then a more in-tact cut of the movie may resurface.  Until then, this will be the best presentation we can hope for.  It may not have the biggest laughs, but the laughs have never come in a bigger package than this one.

Criterion Collection – It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World 

Top Ten Movies of 2025

2025 was definitely a year of an industry in flux.  A lot of the things that seemed like sure things over the last few years didn’t exactly go as planned this year.  Super Hero movie fatigue seems to have really set it, with Marvel especially seeing diminishing returns on their franchise films, despite movies like Thunderbolts* and The Fantastic Four: First Steps getting positive critical reception.  We’re also seeing the fact that a movie franchise cannot sustain on just star power alone, as Tom Cruise’s latest and possibly final Mission: Impossible movie struggled at the box office, even after Top Gun: Maverick (2022) broke records only a couple short years ago.  But, as we also saw, areas where movies have failed in the past suddenly showed signs of life again.  Comedy saw an unexpected return with the surprisingly successful relaunch of The Naked Gun series with Liam Neeson.  Also, horror films had perhaps their greatest year ever, led by massive hits like Sinners, Weapons, Final Destinations: Bloodlines, and The Conjuring: Last Rites.  But, it’s a year where uncertainty about the future, especially with regards to the role AI is going to play in it, has cast a cloud over Hollywood.  Couple this with mega-mergers creating less competition and it’s creating a lot of anxiety with creatives across the spectrum of Hollywood.  Some of the movies this year seemed to strangely reflect the mood of the world and the business in their stories and it was interesting to see how storytellers dealt with a world that is rapidly changing.  The mood of the industry certainly started to become a lot more dour, given that the year began with a devastating fire in Los Angeles that left many people, including a lot of movie industry professionals, without a home.  A lot of bad things went down over the last year, and it especially seemed to hit close to home for Hollywood.  And yet, even still, the show must go on and the industry that has helped the world heal through terrible times with their ability to uplift through storytelling is proving to itself why it’s important to keep creating.

Just like every year I will be sharing my picks for the Top Ten Movies of the Year, as well as sharing what I think are the bottom 5 (aka the worst).  I once again bested my number from the previous year and saw a total of 132 films total in a theater setting, which has given me the widest pool possible to make my choices for the list.  Some were easy choices, while a couple proved to be tough choices.  Below are a few of the films that didn’t make my Top Ten, but I still feel are worth recommending, in alphabetical order:  28 Years Later, A House of Dynamite, The Ballad of Wallis Island, Black Bag, Blue Moon, Die My Love, Eephus, Freaky Tales, Hamnet, It Was Just an Accident, Kpop Demon Hunters, The Long Walk, Marty Supreme, Mission: Impossible: The Final Reckoning, The Naked Gun, The Phoenician Scheme, Sentimental Value, Thunderbolts*, Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery, Warfare, and Zootopia 2.  All very good movies worth checking out, but the Top Ten I’ve selected below are the ones that struck a cord with me the most.  So, with all that said, let’s dive into my picks for the Top Ten Movies of 2025.

10.

FRANKENSTEIN

Directed by Guillermo Del Toro

You’ve got to hand it to Guillermo Del Toro; the man never misses when it comes to creating a lavish visual feast for the eyes.  But, here he managed to undertake a particularly difficult challenge, which was to bring something fresh and new to one of the most often retold stories in cinema.  We have seen so many filmmakers bring their own voice to the classic story of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein over the years, dating back to the early days of cinema with James Whale’s 1931 original starring Boris Karloff; a movie that Del Toro cites as one of the films that inspired him to become a filmmaker.  So, how was Del Toro going to tell this 200 year old story differently than everyone else?  It turns out his method was to go all the way back to the beginning and bring to life Shelley’s original text, with his own sense of style of course.  For the first time, we actually get the story the way Mary Shelley had written it, with the original novel split into two parts, one telling the story from the point of view of Victor Frankenstein, and the other from the view of the Creature he created.  The duality of these two stories told together particularly brings out the overall theme of Shelley’s novel much better, talking about the nature of creation itself and in particular the role me must take in the nurturing that which create.  This movie was a passion project for Del Toro for many years, and it shows.  It has all of his trademark gothic style, much of it striking, but it’s all in service of a compelling story about these two characters.  Oscar Isaac is of course brilliant as Victor, but the movie really belongs to Jacob Elordi’s remarkably soulful performance as the Creature, creating one of the most interesting versions of this iconic character we’ve ever seen on the big screen.  The only thing that’s keeping this movie from being higher than 10 is the fact that it does feel a bit too long and indulgent at times.  But Guillermo’s incredible eye for design and texture, and the standout performances from Isaac and Elordi, help to elevate the film past it’s shortcomings, and the movie is without a doubt the most visually stunning accomplishment of the year.

9.

SOVEREIGN

Directed by Christian Swegal

Moving to something on the grittier end of the scale, writer/director Christian Swegal created a harrowing portrait of extremism in America with a few of the year’s most poignant performances from some unlikely players.  The movie tells the story of a young man, played by Jacob Tremblay, who is caught up in the actions of his extremist father, played by an incredible Nick Offerman, who is a leader in the Sovereign Citizen movement in America.  Their journey together, which is a harrowing look at the effect intergenerational trauma has on male adolescence, leads them down some very dark roads and towards a fateful confrontation with the law, personified by a local sheriff played by Denis Quaid.  The great thing that Swegal does with his story is to not throw judgment on his characters from any side.  The movie of course doesn’t condone the actions of Offerman’s character, nor supports his movement.  But the movie still treats him like a human being, and shows how the actions he takes are a part of a bigger problem systemic in American society, namely the toxic masculine social pressure that is pushing young and old men into radicalization.  Tremblay’s character in particular perfectly demonstrates the way that extremism is tearing people like him apart and denying them a happy and fulfilling life.  The film does a great job of delivering that message, while at the same time telling a compelling story that feels true to the nature of rural American life.  And it is really neat seeing an actor like Nick Offerman, whose mostly been known as a comedic performer, showing off his dramatic chops here, delivering one of the year’s most grounded and emotionally raw performances.  Even though the movie hits some dark places, it is a story that absolutely needed to be told in this current social climate, and given the fact that actors from opposite ends of the political spectrum like Offerman and Quaid felt that it was a story worth telling gives me hope that we can all find some common ground.

8.

WEAPONS

Directed by Zach Cregger

One of the surprise hits of the Summer, this horror film had one of the year’s best mystery box storylines with a killer (literally) payoff.  Cregger got some strong notice for his 2022 film Barbarian, but Weapons really illustrated his ability to tell a story in a truly unconventional way.  It’s a horror movie that doesn’t leave anything up to the imagination, and yet still manages to leave us surprised with things we never expected.  I don’t want to spoil much of what happens in the movie, since the twists and turns are part of what makes the experience so fun.  But, I will say that it makes great use of non-linear storytelling; breaking up the story between multiple point of view characters, and allowing the story to piece together as it unfolds with each new character.  The movie even manages to darkly comic at times, with some of the best laughs you may likely have watching a movie this year.  Cregger certainly had to have been mapping out this story and it’s many different layers for years, because it all remarkably comes together in the end, with perhaps the year’s greatest and most cathartic ending scene.  The film does have some great performances too, particularly from Julia Garner and Josh Brolin, and also from a great debut performance from young actor Cary Christopher.  But of course it’s veteran actress Amy Madigan who is getting the most attention for her villainous role in the film, which is all well deserved.  It’s a movie like this that is making a lot of people believe that we are currently in a Golden Era for horror filmmaking.  A lot of that is because audiences are choosing to flock to movies that feel original and unlike anything we have ever seen, and currently the freshest and most original stuff is coming out of the horror genre these days, including Weapons.  If it weren’t for another entry you’ll see on this list later, I would say that Weapons was easily the best horror film of the year, but even as a runner up it is already a film that I can see being a classic for many years to come.

7.

TWINLESS

Directed by James Sweeney

Without a doubt the year’s most original comedy.  This sophomore feature film from writer, director and co-star James Sweeney tells a richly funny story about male companionship built out of loss that also includes some unexpected turns.  Two men meet at a support group for twins who have lost their twin brother or sister, and they become fast friends through their shared grief.  But, of course, not all is as it seems, as one has ulterior motives for creating this friendship.  Sweeny has a lot to balance in this story with regards to tone, particularly with his own character who could have really come across as unlikable if handled poorly in the story.  But, he manages to carry the movie through with a lot of creative ideas, and his performance perfectly captures the underlying angst that would drive someone like him to take such drastic measures.  But as strong as Sweeney’s performance is, the biggest standout in this film is Dylan O’Brien, giving a truly raw and emotional performance as this tragic and fragile young man who lost his gay twin brother (who O’Brien also plays in a flashback).  Dylan O’Brien is an actor who is really starting to come into his own as a performer, and Twinless is his best work yet.  It’s impressive to see him play two twin brothers with very divergent personalities (one confidently gay and the other uncomfortably straight), but it’s also astounding to see him really give the surviving brother such a soulful presence, especially when that grief bubbles up to the top.  Sweeney makes great use of his co-star’s truly Awards level performance, and does an excellent job of telling a story about a lot of things all at once; about grief, about how twins interact, about being a gay millennial, and so much more.  And he manages to make it all thoroughly funny and clever as well, showing that he’s a comedic voice worth following in the years to come.

6.

SUPERMAN

Directed by James Gunn

DC Comics struggled to define itself in the Snyderverse years when they were in direct competition with the MCU.  With the DCEU finally put to rest, it was time to start anew, and it called for a movie that would set the right tone for what they planned to do in the future.  James Gunn, who had already found success at Marvel with his Guardians of the Galaxy series, would be the man who was now calling the shots and it was up to him to take the first step in DC’s new era.   Naturally, he would choose to launch the new DCU with it’s most iconic character, the “man of steel” himself, Superman.  But, bringing the last son of Krypton faithfully to the big screen has been a challenge over the years.  Christopher Reeve’s pitch perfect performance in the original Richard Donner classic has just cast too much of a shadow.  Brandon Routh and Henry Cavill gave it their best shots, but the movies they were featured in just never really got the character and what he represents right.  But James Gunn managed to figure it out.  With the ideal casting of David Corenswet as Superman, Gunn and company managed to bring the character back to what he truly was meant to be in the first place, not just as a guy who punches really hard but also as a guy who actually cares about being good.  Gone is the Christ-allegory of the Snyder films and in it’s place is a Superman who is relatable and sympathetic, and likes punk rock.  Corenswet is easily the best to wear the cape since Reeve, and he puts his own unique stamp on the character, making him both funny and sincere in that typical James Gunn fashion.  We also get Nicholas Hoult creating the greatest version of Lex Luthor ever put on screen, finally bringing to life the truly menacing and loathsome nature of the character from the comic book page.  And as with all other James Gunn projects, it is the weird and obscure outsider characters that really shine, especially Edi Gathegi who immediately turned Mr. Terrific into a fan favorite.  It was a smart choice on James Gunn’s part to build the foundation of this new cinematic universe on the shoulders of it’s most famous but often mishandled character.  And it brings to DC something it has been deeply lacking for a long time, which is a lot of heart.  Easily the best blockbuster film of the year, and hopefully a good sign of things to come from DC Films under the guidance of James Gunn.

5.

THE TESTAMENT OF ANN LEE

Directed by Mona Fastvold

It’s surprising to think that the year’s best screen musical wasn’t in the land of Oz, but rather was set in the backdrop of the American Revolution.  Last year my pick for the movie of the year was The Brutalist (2024), directed by Brady Corbet.  He co-wrote the movie with his wife Mona Fastvold, who herself is also an accomplished filmmaker.  Right on the heels of their Oscar-winning success with The Brutalist, the husband and wife team of filmmakers got funding for another one of the scripts they co-wrote; this one about the founder of the “Shaking Quakers” religious movement that rose to prominence in revolution era America.  This time, it would be Mona who would call the shots behind the camera, and she gets to show off her own impressive vision with this lavishly crafted movie.  The movie is hauntingly beautiful, but it also is an incredible exercise in staging.  The film may not have the traditional characteristics of a musical; all the musical performances are portrayed as natural, grounded moments in reality.  But Mona Fastvold allows the camera to capture some incredible moments of movement around all of these people whose expression of worship is through dance and song.  And the songs are performed in full, so you can still say it’s a musical in that sense.  The standout of course is Amanda Seyfried as the titular Ann Lee.  She is no stranger to singing on screen, having appeared in traditional musicals like Mamma Mia (2008) and Les Misérables (2012), but this is a very different kind of musical performance, and she delivers an incredible, raw portrayal of this real life religious leader while at the same time showing off those impressive pipes.  She gives perhaps the most multifaceted performance of the year for any actress, and it’s great to see her emerge as a performer capable of this style of acting.  The film is also incredibly well crafted, effectively bringing us back into that time period, and doing so on a limited budget, similar to what we saw with The Brutalist.  As a team, both Corbet and Fastvold are on a roll, and it’s great to see them both reminding us all of what epic filmmaking can be.

4.

NO OTHER CHOICE

Directed by Park Chan-wook

Korean cinema has really taken the world by storm in the last several years, and one of the filmmakers who has been instrumental in making that possible is Park Chan-wook.  He first made his name known around the world with his ground-breaking Oldboy (2003), and since then he’s continued to create a steady stream of iconoclastic, genre-bending masterpieces, both in Korea and also in western cinema as well.  His newest film, No Other Choice is an especially poignant film that feels especially prescient with today’s current events.  The story involves a man who must find work after being let go from his job of over 20 years.  But, in order to get his desired job, he must eliminate the competition of equally qualified men who could beat him to it.  The movie is the darkest of dark comedies, as the main character bungles his way through not very well thought out assassination attempts.  And Park Chan-wook is not afraid of taking this story down some dark paths, even while pointing out how ridiculous the whole plan is.  And as we see in the film, it’s for a prize that is not all that deserving of all the effort and may not even be a permanent solution to the main character’s problems.  That’s the brilliance of Park Chan-wook’s satire, showing how our hyper-capitalistic society is pushing those in the middle class to take on such dehumanizing efforts just in order to hold onto what little that they have.  It definitely feels very akin to the film Parasite (2019), made by Park’s friend and frequent collaborator Bong Jong-ho, and No Other Choice would make a great double feature with that film.  The movie also has a great standout performance from Squid Game alum Lee Byung-hun, who does a great job of balancing the humor of his character’s predicament with a very real portrayal of man panicking about his future.  Another accomplished achievement from one of the most unique filmmakers of world cinema.

3.

BUGONIA

Directed by Yorgos Lanthimos

I don’t think I have ever turned around on a filmmaker as much as I have with Yorgos Lanthimos.  I first became aware of him after watching a movie that I deeply despised called The Lobster (2015).  But since then, he has made some of my favorite movies of the last decade.  Two things have made this possible.  One is he stopped writing his own movies and instead directed screenplays from other writers.  And secondly, he started working with Emma Stone, who has become his muse in the last decade.  The duo are now on their fourth collaboration together, after The Favourite (2018), Poor Things (2023), and Kinds of Kindness (2024), and remarkably they have struck gold again.  I was worried about this new film Bugonia because Yorgos wasn’t working with the same writer of the other two films that I loved, Favorite and Poor Things.  Instead of Tony McNamara, this film is written by Will Tracy, who also recently wrote the thriller The Menu (2022).  Thankfully, Tracy’s script is just as twisted and unexpected as McNamara’s, and perfectly fits with Lanthimos’ oddball style.  The movie is a simple but intriguing character study that explores the twisted world of unchecked conspiracy theory delusions.  Jesse Plemons, whose already built a impressive career up to now, gives perhaps his best performance to date as a conspiracy nut who kidnaps a pharmaceutical company CEO (played perfectly by Emma Stone), believing that she is an alien sent to conquer the world.  Stone and Plemons are electrifying in their performances, and the movie is a deranged and hilarious delight while we watch these two spar off each other, while things get increasingly more off the wall.  Yorgos takes some pretty hefty swings with this movie, especially in it’s finale, but it all feels in line with the demented world that these characters live in.  And the cat and mouse game that evolves over the course of the movie also helps to make it thrilling to see unfold.  Again, I’m happy to have come around on Yorgos Lanthimos as a filmmaker because he is really one of the most daring storytellers out there right now, and I am anxious to see what he’s going to do next.

2.

SINNERS

Directed by Ryan Coogler

Ryan Coogler has been one of the most fortunate filmmakers to have emerged in his still young career.  His debut, Fruitvale Station (2013) helped to bring him to the Rocky franchise, which he delivered a phenomenal reboot to the long lasting series with the movie Creed (2015).  He then followed that up with a move over to Marvel where he soon set records with his adaptation of Black Panther (2018).  While working on the second Black Panther film, he was also pitching his idea for a vampire movie set in the Deep South during the Great Depression.  A lot of studios passed on the idea, until Warner Brothers gave it the greenlight.  And with it, not only did Ryan Coogler show that he was more than just another franchise filmmaker; he was a auteur capable of even wowing some of the greats.  Sinners is Ryan Coogler really showing us what he’s capable of as a filmmaker, which is something given the resume he has had already.  The film is a harrowing portrayal of the Deep South under Jim Crow that also is a celebration of black culture not just of it’s time but throughout all of history, and it even manages to find a way to bring vampires into the mix.  It’s a combination of elements that shouldn’t work, and yet Coogler masterfully ties it all together into an unforgettable experience.  It’s also great to see him playing around with the mechanics of cinema as well.  This is very much a big screen spectacle, utilizing two different large film formats in the process; the extremely wide Ultra Panavision 70 and the enormous 15 perf IMAX 70.  Both make this a movie that demands to be seen on the biggest screen possible.  One particular scene in the movie, where the central night club location is captured in a breathtaking oner that moves throughout the set and includes musicians and dancers from multiple eras, is perhaps the single most impressive cinematic moment of the year; a scene that even left Christopher Nolan impressed.  The movie also has Coogler’s longtime friend and frequent leading man Michael B. Jordan delivering his best performance yet as the Smoke Stack Twins.  Coogler has delivered his greatest cinematic effort yet with Sinners, and showed us that he is indeed one of the best filmmakers working right now.

And my choice for the Best Movie of 2025 is…

1.

ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER

Directed by Paul Thomas Anderson

There is really no other filmmaker that tells stories quite like Paul Thomas Anderson.  One Battle After Another is his most expensive movie to date, with a budget north of $100 million, but he doesn’t put any of that money to waste.  This is an incredible feat of filmmaking that keeps on surprising the further it goes.  It’s also a film that feels very prescient to out point in time, with spirited revolutionaries pushing back against authoritarian regimes.  But Anderson doesn’t just tell his story in any conventional way.  The fascist villains of his story are as absurd as they can be, especially when you have a white supremacist organization of elites that call themselves the Christmas Adventurers Club.  It’s that sly bit of satirical edge that makes this a distinctively P. T. Anderson story.  But even with all of the weirdness going on in the world, there is this poignant story at it’s heart about a father who will go through hell and back just to bring his child safely home.  The movie manages to become transcendent thanks to the performances of Chase Infiniti as the girl caught up in all the madness of the world around her, and Leonardo DiCaprio as the long out of practice revolutionary who has devoted himself to being her father.  Infiniti really shines in her big screen debut, making her character Willa this one pure thing in a crazy backward world.  And DiCaprio gives yet another brilliant performance, and perhaps one of his funniest as well.  His whole bit arguing with the customer service rep of their secret revolutionary network is probably the funniest thing you’ll see all year.  Sean Penn also delivers a knockout performance as the villainous Col. Lockjaw, which can also be side-splittingly hilarious.  And for the second straight year, a movie shot in the Vistavision format tops my list for the year, showing how well that long dormant format has come back into fashion in Hollywood circles.  Anderson uses the format in particularly spectacular fashion with the climatic chase scene at the end; one of my favorite screen experiences of the year.  It’s great to see a filmmaker with an already impressive body of work like Anderson hit a home run once again and even surprisingly exceed expectations.

So with having gone through all the best that the year had to offer, it’s time to quickly run through the very worst movies that I had to sit through in the last year.  I usually try to avoid watching movies that I know are going to be bad when I go to the movies, but there are some that either peaked my curiosity with regards to how bad they would be, or ended up sneaking up on me.  So, let’s take a look at my choices for the Bottom Five Movies of 2025:

5.  JURASSIC WORLD: REBIRTH – Perhaps there was a thought that moving away from the increasingly bad storyline of the last couple Jurassic World movies that centered around stars Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard would be a good thing.  Boy was I wrong, as the movie just got even dumber.  Sadly, good actors like Scarlett Johansson and Mahershala Ali are wasted trying to bring new life into this franchise that clearly has run out of new ideas.  And to make it even worse, the movie clearly tries to rip off scenes wholesale from the other films in the franchise just to earn some nostalgia points.  The shameless use of John Williams’s iconic score to elevate a scene that ultimately means nothing felt especially insulting.  Please just lay this franchise to rest so that it doesn’t disgrace the memory of the original classic anymore.  Sadly, given how much this movie made again at the box office, we’re likely going to go back to Jurassic Park again soon for even more nostalgia baiting.

4. THE SMASHING MACHINE –  Mark this as my Oscar bait that missed the mark for me this year.  The Safdie Brothers team that delivered one of the most remarkable thrillers of the last decade with the Adam Sandler starring Uncut Gems (2019) split up in the six years since, with both pursuing their own solo directorial efforts.  Of the two brothers, Josh Safdie was the one who actually created a movie that felt like it belonged in the same category with Uncut GemsMarty Supreme, starring Timothee Chalamet.  The other brother, Benny Safdie (who has also been making his mark as an actor) made a different kind of movie; a biopic about pioneering MMA fighter Mark Kerr, starring Dwayne Johnson.  Unfortunately, it became the kind of biopic that I don’t like, which is all about the transformation of the actor, and offering no actual insight into the actual subject himself.  I also found it to be a bit self-indulgent and emotionally manipulative as well.  In the end, it just ringed hollow, which is too bad given the talent in front and behind the camera.  Can Benny Safdie deliver as a solo filmmaker? Of course, but this movie was not the one to convince me of that.  And I don’t quite know if it was him, or Dwayne Johnson’s influence that ended up making the movie not work.  Credit Dwayne Johnson for trying to be more of a dramatic actor.  I feel like we’re going to actually get a better realization of that when his upcoming Scorsese film premieres.

3. THE ELECTRIC STATE – Probably the year’s most pointlessly bloated and wasteful cinematic spectacle, and it didn’t even play on the big screen.  This movie is one of the brightest examples of why Netflix’s business model doesn’t make much sense, since they spent $300 million on this Russo Brothers directed fiasco, more than most blockbusters that still play in theaters, and they just let it run unceremoniously on their platform where it quickly got buried by the algorithm.  Maybe they knew this thing was a turkey a long time ago, and their reluctance to screen it in theaters was to spare them the embarrassment of flopping at the box office.  Regardless, it’s perhaps the clearest example of wasteful spending from Netflix.  Starring Chris Pratt and Netflix “golden girl” Millie Bobby Brown, this movie is ugly and unimaginative, and certianly a failed attempt at world-building.  Given that this movie is the one that is preceding the Russo Brother’s return to Marvel, where they are directing the massive new Avengers films Doomsday (2026) and Secret Wars (2027), doesn’t fill me with a whole lot of confidence.  It’s also another reason to worry about the acquisition of Warner Brothers that Netflix is attempting, given that they waste so much money on movies like these and just let it be forgotten in the glut of streaming options. Hopefully they learn the right things from Warner Brothers, and that Warner Brothers doesn’t take on the worst of Netflix.

2.  ELLA MCCAY – It’s sad when you see one of the great veterans of cinema try to make a return to filmmaking in their twilight years after many years out of practice and just show us how out of touch they are.  Last year, we saw Francis Ford Coppola fall flat on his face with his long in the making flop Megalopolis (2024).  This year, 85 year old James L. Brooks makes his first film in 15 years, and suffered the same embarrassing fate.  At least with Coppola, Megalopolis turned into a fascinating failure of a movie.  I can’t say the same about Brook’s Ella McCay.  There is nothing that works about the film, not even on the WTF kind of way that Megalopolis did.  Brooks, who once crafted some of the smartest screenplays in the world like Broadcast News (1987) or As Good as it Gets (1997), just lays on nothing but schmaltz and self-important non-sense on this would be political satire.  None of the characters talk or act like real people, which would have worked if this was a more heightened world, but Brooks just makes this world as bland as possible, while also dragging some really talented people into this mess, including working with his Broadcast News star Albert Brooks again.  Just ignore Brooks’ late career attempt at recapturing the magic and just stick with the classics.

And the Worst Movie of 2025 is…

1. LOVE HURTS – It wasn’t a particularly strong year for John Wick style action movies.  Two franchise films like Wick spinoff Ballerina and the sequel Nobody 2 failed to live up to the success of their predecessors.  But at least those movies had some creative moments that stood out.  Nothing like that can be said about the movie Love Hurts, which not only was an action movie that lacked any substance at all, but it even made me start to get bored with the whole John Wick style action beats as well.  This should’ve been an easy sell.  The movie stars Oscar winner Ke Huy Quan, who himself at one time was a stunt coordinator before he decided to make a come back into acting.  You have a star who is naturally charismatic and is a capable stunt fighter as well, and yet the movie doesn’t capitalize on any of that.  Quan’s character is a hollow void of character cliches and the movie’s fight choreography is so poorly shot that none of it ever looks impressive.  Not only that, but the movie also wastes the talents of another Oscar winner, Ariana DeBose, here trying to be a sort of femme fatale figure from the main character’s shady past.  The story is insultingly dumb, and it wasted so much potential.  I really hope that the John Wick formula is not fully played out, because the Wick movies really did prove that action movies could be fun again.  Hopefully, the Wick franchise is saving their A-game for the next chapter, because these spinoffs and rip offs are starting to make the formula fall apart.

And there you have my choices for the Best and Worst of 2025.  It was a year of change and anxiety for the industry, but there was still good entertainment in there as well.  Though not much of it ended up on my best of the year list, I actually thought we had one of the most consistently strong Summer seasons this year, with most of the films from week to week actually getting good reviews from audiences and critics; the only rotten score going to Jurassic World: Rebirth in fact.  But the ones who really need some help are the movie theaters.  2025 was supposed to be a big recovery year, but sadly that recovery didn’t manifest the way people hoped it would.  Only two Hollywood productions managed to cross the billion dollar mark at the box office (Disney’s Lilo and Stitch remake and Zootopia 2) last year with maybe a third (Avatar: Fire and Ash), which is the best since the pandemic, but still down from pre-pandemic levels.  Hollywood and the movie theater chains are going to need some heavy hitters in the next year.  We will be getting Christopher Nolan’s ambitious adaptation of The Odyssey next summer, a movie so hotly anticipated that it managed to sell out IMAX screens a year ahead of release.  We’re also getting Denis Villeneuve’s next chapter in the Dune series, another sci-fi blockbuster from Steven Spielberg, a Tom Cruise/ Alejandro G. Iñárritu collaboration, Toy Story 5, another Tom Holland Spider-Man movie, and we’re going to close out the year of 2026 with Avengers: Doomsday.  Can the next year turn things around?  We’ll have to wait and see and hope for the best.  Things in our world are changing rapidly and not always for the better.  Let’s hope that movie theaters, which have already had to suffer through the pandemic and strikes, don’t have to deal with yet another disruption.  Movies on the big screen is still a cherished past time and my hope is that this year shows us a lot more reasons why we should still keep going to the movies.  So, have a great 2026 and let’s hope that better days are ahead.

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