Evolution of Character – King Kong

One thing that seems to not have lost any appeal over the years in the history of cinema is a good monster movie.  There’s something very cinematic about the thrills that come from seeing a giant beast rampaging through a city or town and striking fear into the hearts of the humans that live there.  We have seen many different monsters brought to life on the big screen, but the whole subgenre itself owes it’s existence in the annals of movie history to the granddaddy of them all; King Kong.  Kong was the first true noteworthy movie monster; an incredible larger than life beast that could only come alive through the magic of movie-making.  Without Kong, we wouldn’t have ended up with Godzilla or Jurassic Park.  He was the true pioneer who paved the way for creature creation in the movies.  And he still remains a character at the forefront of so many different  advances in cinematic artistry.  Starting off as a mere puppet brought to life through stop motion animation, Kong now is given life through CGI technology that makes him feel even more lifelike and capable of conveying a whole range of emotions on screen.  In time, he has grown from a fearsome monster into something of an unexpected hero and protector of the human race, especially as he becomes a central character in what is know as the Monsterverse series of movies.  It is fascinating to see how Kong has evolved with the times through his nearly century long history, sometimes with some rather embarrassing results (especially during his more kid friendly era in the 1960’s.)  While much of Kong’s character remains the same, his impact on cinema takes some very interesting turns, and it shows that he is truly a timeless character that can still appeal to audiences of multiple generations.  In this article, I will be taking a look at some of his most noteworthy screen appearances and see how they individually impacted Kong’s legacy on the big screen.

KING KONG (1933)

The debut of the Eighth Wonder of the World.  Everything that we know about King Kong’s place in cinematic history stems from this iconic film.  This was the movie that placed RKO on the map as a powerful player in Hollywood, delivering a blockbuster that contained at the time some truly groundbreaking visual effects.  The film was the brainchild of director Merian C. Cooper, who co-directed the movie with Ernst B. Schoedsack.  One can’t help but see some meta-textual elements in the story, with Cooper creating a self-insert of himself in the character of Carl Denham (played by Robert Armstrong), a filmmaker who seeks to capture on film a creature the world has never seen before.  The journey takes him and his crew to the mythical Skull Island, where it is said that prehistoric creatures still live, enclosed by the native population behind an ancient stone wall.  They soon learn that the strongest of all the beasts behind the wall is a 50 foot tall giant ape known as Kong.  Kong was brought to life through several different techniques.  One was a giant mechanical head for the facial close-ups, and the other was through stop motion animation, done by pioneering animator Willis H. O’Brien.  O’Brien’s groundbreaking animation of Kong went beyond just bringing the creature to life.  He also gave Kong personality; even to the point where we have sympathy for him as he tries to fight back against the humans trying to hunt him.  O’Brien’s work would be a great influence on future special effects wizards in the industry, including the legendary Ray Harryhausen.  But it wasn’t just the animation that made the movie iconic; it was how Cooper and Schoedsack staged their action as well.  Not only did they have Kong rampaging through his native jungle, but he was also set loose on New York City as well, leading to a final confrontation on the then recently completed Empire State Building.  Thanks to this movie, not only was Kong immortalized, but so was his connection with the iconic structure.  Even after 90 years of standing tall in the New York Skyline, the image of Kong battling airplanes at the top of the skyscraper is still what most people will think of when they see it in person.  For being called the Eighth Wonder of the World, this movie went a long way towards helping Kong earn that title.

KING KONG VS. GODZILLA (1962)

Of course, King Kong had appeal far beyond just Hollywood.  In Japan, the original King Kong was a profound influence on an aspiring filmmaker who had an idea for a monster movie of his own.  In 1954, Ishiro Honda would change Japanese cinema forever with his groundbreaking monster film Godzilla (1954).  Instead of a giant ape, Honda imagined the people of Tokyo being terrorized by a giant lizard, born out of the after effects of nuclear fallout.  Godzilla was meant to be a metaphor of the terrible trauma that the Japanese people endured after the nuclear strikes in Hiroshima and Nagasaki that ended World War II.  The film itself would go on to become a massive hit not just in Japan, but across the world itself, sparking a new era in monster movie filmmaking.  And it was only inevitable at some point that both Kong and Godzilla would cross paths.  The studio behind Godzilla, Toho Productions, managed to secure the rights to use King Kong in one of their movies, which of course would pit him in a one on one confrontation with their iconic monster.  Honda himself would return to direct, though he objected to the more comical tone that Toho wanted to push on this movie.  His Godzilla was made like the original King Kong to be a terrifying experience for the audience, fitting with the message that he wanted to deliver about the dangers of nuclear war.  But, as both Godzilla and King Kong had grown to become these characters with mass appeal with audiences, the tone shifted from being serious to playful, and that’s largely what King Kong vs. Godzilla ended up being.  Unlike in his original film, Kong would be played physically by a man in a giant ape costume.  It fits with the style that Toho had developed with their Godzilla style monster movies up to this point, but the rubber masked actor doesn’t quite match the personality that was given to the stop motion puppet in the original.  Still, the show down between these two titans would indeed be popular, and of course, it wouldn’t be the last time they would share the big screen either.

KING KONG (1976)

After a decade of being a part of Japan’s monster movie pantheon, Hollywood would reclaim their iconic titanic ape for another big screen adaptation.  But, like with his Japanese portrayal, he would be brought to life through an actor’s portrayal in an ape suit.  What may be the most shocking detail of about this film is that the man in the ape suit is none other than legendary multi-Oscar winning make-up artist Rick Baker.  Baker designed and crafted the ape suits himself, but it’s rather surprising that he would be the one to wear it all himself.  While the facial sculpting and mechanical extensions to his hands are fairly impressive, it still creates an inauthenticity effect when you can clearly tell that it’s still a human actor playing this giant ape.  As hard as Rick Baker tries, he just doesn’t convincingly move the same way that a real ape does.  Interestingly, the movie takes the same story of the original film, but updates it to the present day, which at the time would have been the mid-70’s.  Instead of Carl Denham the eccentric showman hunting for a glimpse of King Kong, we have an oil tycoon named Fred Wilson (played by Charles Grodin) seeking to eliminate Kong so that he can extract resources from his home on Skull Island.  And instead of ending at the recently completed Empire State Building of the original, this version has it’s climax at the then recently completed Twin Towers of the World Trade Center.  There is an unmistakable environmental message being delivered, which does tie into the original film’s underlying theme about man’s hubris when it comes to attempting to conquer nature.  But, the delivery here is a lot less subtle with it’s message, and in many ways undermines the plot itself.  Unfortunately for all involved, the movie was a major financial bomb and put Kong into hibernation in Hollywood for quite some time afterwards.  At least for Rick Baker, this movie would lead to a very prosperous career afterwards where he would truly break new ground in visual and prosthetic make-up effects over the next several decades, becoming a true legend in the industry.  And he probably was happy that he didn’t have to be the guy in the monkey suit ever again.

KING KONG LIVES (1986)

This film made a decade after the last is indeed a direct sequel to 1976’s King Kong, and yet it also feels like a reboot of sorts.  I didn’t matter anyway since this movie also was a financial failure.  The noteworthy thing about this movie is that it introduces the idea that Kong is not alone in the world.  A second Kong is discovered, and she’s a female.  This prompts Kong to escape as he pursues his potential mate, even though he still suffering from the after effects of his fall from the Twin Towers.  Yes, doctors actually perform heart surgery on Kong in this movie, giving him an artificial heart to keep him alive.  It’s all a convoluted way to build Kong into a franchise character.  Part of what made Kong such an appealing character in the first place was the tragic pathos of his journey.  Even the 1976 film got that.  Kong is a creature that only attacks after being provoked.  His fury is not out of malice, but as a response to human beings not respecting his privacy.  The story of Kong is one of mankind attempting to find common ground with mother nature, or else it will succumb to forces it doesn’t understand and is too arrogant to honor.  But King Kong Lives ignores all that and just turns the film into an action packed thriller where we see Kong tear things apart.  Sadly, given the limited budget this movie had, all of the miniatures of the tanks and trucks that Kong tears apart just end up looking like he’s playing with toy cars.  Played by Peter Elliott this time, the ape suit is not quite as well constructed as the Rick Baker one, so it just reinforces the artificiality all the more.  The movie only stands out for it’s depiction of Kong undergoing heart surgery, which in a way is kind of a ridiculous campy moment that needs to be seen to be believed.  They literally take his old heart out like it’s a toy from a giant claw machine game.  Other than that, this was another failed attempt to recapture some of the cinematic magic of seeing King Kong alive on the big screen.  Thankfully, it would also mark the end of Kong’s ape suit era.

KING KONG (2005)

Finally, we have Kong brought to life in a way that feels true to his origins.  Instead of using a man in an ape suit or stop motion animation, this version of Kong would be brought to life through the newest advances in CGI technology.  It would not only help to make Kong look like a real ape, but also act like one too, while at the same time still displaying the personality that has helped to set him apart as a cinematic icon.  Director Peter Jackson has always pointed to the original 1933 King Kong as the biggest inspiration for him as a filmmaker.  It’s the movie that lit his fire, not just as a storyteller, but also as a filmmaker who makes extensive use of visual effects to tell his story.  After changing the world of cinema with his Lord of the Rings trilogy, Jackson was ready to deliver his loving tribute to the original King Kong.  And indeed, he would give Kong the epic treatment, taking the original story and expanding it into a 3 hour long extravaganza.  Of all the Kong movies, this one perhaps takes it’s subject the most seriously.  It’s definitely the most emotional portrayal of Kong we’ve ever seen, brought to life by the king of motion capture performance Andy Serkis, who previously brought the character of Gollum to vivid life for Peter Jackson in the Rings films.  You really become emotionally attached to this version of Kong, and that’s in large part thanks to what Serkis is able to do with his remarkable physical portrayal.  He would continue to build on what he did with Kong when he played another powerful, albeit much smaller, ape character as Cesar in the Planet of the Apes series.  Another key to the film’s success was the way they fleshed out the character of Ann Darrow.  Played famously by Fay Wray in the original, Ms. Darrow was not much more than a typical damsel in distress, but in Peter Jackson’s version she is played by Naomi Watts and is a woman with agency and someone who finds more connection with this massive ape than she does with any human.  The movie may be a tad too long and overly reverential, but it does give Kong a worthy portrayal that indeed is the best we’ve seen since his early days.  And it definitely proved that this was a character best realized through animation and not by way of a man in a monkey suit.  This movie set the standard for how we would see Kong brought to the big screen from here on out.

KONG: SKULL ISLAND (2017)

The Peter Jackson King Kong was more or less it’s own stand alone project, playing out much as the original did with the “twas Beauty killed the Beast” ending.  To depict Kong once again on the big screen would call for a reimagining.  Ten years after Jackson’s film, Legendary Pictures was developing their own slate of movies combining all of cinema’s most famous giant movie monsters into a shared universe, and they wanted to bring King Kong into their fold as well.  The Monsterverse, as it has come to be known, got it’s launch with a modern update of Godzilla (2014).  Naturally, the plan was to lead up to a confrontation between the two biggest icons, but Kong needed a new introduction to differentiate from all other versions of him we’ve seen before.  The people at Legendary came up with a rather unique idea by having Kong’s newest movie be done in the style of 70’s era Vietnam war flick, making this newest Kong film both grittier but also stylish in a way that matched the new tone.  This would also be the largest Kong we had ever seen before.  Previous Kongs, including the original and the Peter Jackson version, were estimated to stand as much as 50 ft. in height.  This Kong dwarfs them all by topping out at nearly 300 ft.  Instead of scaling skyscrapers, this Kong is one.  Like with Andy Serkis’ portrayal, this Kong is brought to life through mo-cap performance, this time by actor Toby Kebbell, and though he isn’t given as much of an emotional range as Serkis’ version, Kebbell still gives his Kong a menacing presence.  His Kong is very much a force of nature kind of creature; by poking the bear, you’ve become more likely to be torn to pieces by him.  The movie is more or less about the land of Skull Island itself and all the perils it holds, with the crew of humans led by Tom Hiddleston, Samuel L. Jackson, Brie Larson, and John Goodman all learning that Kong’s kingdom is best left to the King.  Overall, it does a good job of introducing King Kong into the Monsterverse, and in many ways it hinted at just how much of a powerful force he was going to bring to the series in the years to come.

GODZILLA VS. KONG (2021) and GODZILLA X KONG: THE NEW EMPIRE (2024)

As promised, the Monsterverse did bring it’s two biggest hitters together in a one on one confrontation, and it thankfully didn’t disappoint.  Any time Godzilla and Kong share the screen, it is magnificent.  Of course, the weakest parts of all these Monsterverse movies have been the human characters, and over time it feels like the people at Legendary have figured this out too.  The growing trend throughout the Monsterverse movies that feature Kong is that he is being given more and more screen time.  In many ways, he’s grown into the main protagonist of the series, and that overall has been a good thing.  The Kong we meet by the time we get to Godzilla vs. Kong is older and more accustomed to being around humans.  The organization in the Monsterverse called Monarch that oversees the Titan creatures like Kong and Godzilla have found ways to accommodate human society around these monsters and even rely on them as protectors from more dangerous threats out there.  It’s weird to think of King Kong and Godzilla as forces for good in our world, but somehow the Monsterverse movies have managed to make that concept work in their movies.  Of all the Monsterverse characters, Kong is clearly the best defined, and he makes for a strong and likable hero in this franchise.  One of the best ideas the franchise has put forth is that Kong and Godzilla are begrudging allies in this world they co-inhabit, teaming up only when it’s necessary to take down a greater threat.  Otherwise, they’ll be fighting each other for supremacy.  This version of Godzilla is very territorial and doesn’t want anyone to challenge his reign as King of the Monsters, which Kong seems to oblige just as long as he gets to live freely in his home in the hollow Earth.  These movies are becoming increasingly ridiculous, but that’s kind of been their charm too.  In many ways, these Monsterverse films accomplish more effectively what the Toho monster films were attempting; creating silly but engaging entertainment around these iconic monsters.  And the crazier these movies get they somehow become more entertaining.  And the filmmakers knew that Kong would be the best one to anchor this whole Monsterverse together.

Over the 90 plus years that King Kong has been seen on the big screen, he still stands as one of cinema’s most enduring icons.  The original film is still a masterpiece of action filmmaking, with visual effects that have gone on to inspire so many other film creations over the years.  And at it’s center was proof that even a visual effect could act and show emotion.  You can see why people like Ray Harryhausen and Peter Jackson were so inspired by what the movie accomplished.  It was a movie that really showed what the medium was capable of.  And as we’ve seen with the Legendary Pictures’ Monsterverse movies, Kong is still a character that audiences can root for.  But, it’s his story that also resonates across the years.  Mankind has often pushed itself into places it’s perhaps should have left alone, and as a result has paid the price for it.  We are still grappling with the effects of our impact on nature, and how we as humans treat animals great and small.  In the original story, Kong isn’t so much killed by his chase after Beauty, but instead by being out of his natural element.  He is pulled away from his home on Skull Island to the concrete jungle of Manhattan, and it dulls the instincts that kept him alive all these years.  He has grown more tame, because he doesn’t understand this new world he’s been brought to, and that made him vulnerable.  It makes one reconsider what we are doing to the great ape species like him when we observed them behind bars at a zoo.  King Kong’s original story is a profound one, but we’ve also seen how Kong can endure when his story isn’t bound to tragedy.  The great thing about the Mosnterverse franchise is that it’s shown us a Kong that is truly set free and allowed to earn that title of King in his own domain.  We’ll see where his adventures take him next, but there’s no doubt of his rightful place as one of cinema’s true icons.  The Eighth Wonder of the World and so much more.

Liking and Subscribing – How YouTube Ultimately Won the Streaming Wars

For the last few years, the entertainment industry has gone through a massive upheaval, chasing after a brand new online based revenue stream.  This “streaming war” involved a huge amount of capital being poured into creating the infrastructure as well as the exclusive content that would draw audiences to these new platforms.  For the longest time, Netflix was alone as a streaming provider, and Hollywood was taking notice of just how much money they were making on monthly subscriptions.  Netflix continued to grow even more as they had gained the ability to form their own production wing, and were not as reliant on all the licenses that they were paying the movie studios for in order to play their movies and shows.  As Netflix continued expanding, the movie studios (in particular the Big 5 of Disney/Fox, Paramount, Warner Brothers, Universal and Sony) began to consider that it would be in their best interest to take Netflix’s formula and repeat it under their own umbrella.  The expense of setting up all of these streaming platforms was not unsubstantial, but Hollywood believed that it was an investment worth making for the long term, as it seemed that streaming was the future of entertainment.  But, what ended up happening was that the pool of potential subscribers was split up among the separate streamers and many of them couldn’t reach the lofty growth projections that they hoped to reach.  Even with the assist of the pandemic forcing many people to turn to streaming as a sole outlet for entertainment over the course of that turbulent year, many of the streaming platforms struggled to find their footing.  Now, over half a decade in and only one of the studio run streaming platforms (Disney+) has managed to reach profitability, and just barely.  What Hollywood failed to see was that another factor in the streaming content market was also affecting the viewership patterns of the audience pool that the studios were hoping to capitalize on.  The user generated video streaming site YouTube has not only emerged as a primary player in the streaming wars, but possibly also it’s victor.  And the truth behind it’s dominance all comes down to economics; particularly when it comes to the audience itself.

YouTube of course existed long before there was any concept of streaming entertainment.  When it launched in 2005, home entertainment was still dominated by the likes of Blockbuster Video.  Netflix had only just started it’s DVD by mail service, and it would be another 6 years before they would make their first jump into streaming.  And yet, YouTube would instantly make an immediate splash in the online world.  The concept of “Viral Video” stemmed from the way user uploaded videos would suddenly gain attention not just in the online community, but in the whole pop culture zeitgeist itself.  Google, which clearly saw the potential of YouTube’s ability to generate buzz worthy content, purchased the platform for a then substantial $1.6 billion.  With Google’s backing, YouTube was able to expand it’s revenue through advertising monetization program, which enabled people who uploaded to the platform to make money off of the content they created.  Being a YouTube content creator could actually help people earn a living, and in some cases, people who were able to gain a massive subscriber base could become multi-millionaires.  But, to get to that place is difficult, and a large part of YouTube content creation is trying to figure out how to manage the algorithm and get noticed in a competitive market.  That’s why so many YouTubers are working a hustle in all their videos, asking people to like and subscribe to their channel.  The constant pressure to meet quotas for viewership in order to make money off of the platform has also led to a lot of creators burning out over time.  But, even with all that, YouTube still has managed to evolve into something that not only provides plenty of material for broadcast on a daily basis, but many of the creators on the platform has improved the quality of their content so much that it rivals much of what we see on linear television itself.  One big factor that helped to make YouTube even more of a worthy competitor to television itself was in 2010 when they removed the time limit for video uploads.  Before then, all content creators were bound by a ten minute ceiling, but afterwards the sky was the limit.

Now people regularly go to YouTube for any kind of entertainment they desire, and creators could take advantage of the creative freedom allowed on the platform.  YouTube became a place for underground outlets of journalism and experimental film-making.  Of course, terms and conditions set by YouTube and their parent company Google applied, but YouTube content creators found that this platform afforded them an outlet that could reach a totally different audience than they would’ve through traditional media.  The barriers to getting noticed were also smaller, as it didn’t matter if you had a foothold in the entertainment business beforehand; you could reach a massive audience and become famous if you managed to stick out in the algorithm.  Even Hollywood was taking note.  While viewership numbers for linear TV shows have been declining for years, those same shows can still retain relevancy if the clips on their YouTube channel still get a lot of views.  The Nielsen ratings, once the major barometer for judging the success of television show, now only tells half of the story.  The viewership patterns for NBC’s Saturday Night Live are a good example of this, as their TV ratings make it look like the show is falling off every single season due to dwindling broadcast numbers.  And yet it’s cultural relevance still has not waned, because it also enjoys a massive following on YouTube.  It has a 16 million large subscriber base, and their clipped videos almost continually do millions of views even in the course of a week after airing.  And in case of some of their more viral videos, like the “Lonely Island” music videos they’ve put out, they can reach far more viewers than they ever would’ve during their late night broadcasts.  YouTube has significantly changed the way that people consume television, with a lot people opting not to check out these shows live when they were originally scheduled, but instead on their own time, and repeatedly if they are viral enough.

But there is a much bigger factor in what has ultimately made YouTube the true king of streaming; that it’s free to use.  Where all the other streaming platforms derive revenue from monthly subscriptions, YouTube is primarily funded through ad revenue.  Sure, there is a YouTube Premium service available where people can subscribe to watch their content ad-free, but for the most part, people have largely accepted the ad service model as a way of getting content at no cost to them.  This is why YouTube is the second largest trafficked website on the planet, because there is no barrier to logging in and watching.  And as stated before, the quality of the content has risen so much over the years that YouTube channels are now competitive with what we see on television.  Sure, network television is still made free for the public, and also supported by add revenue, but the number of stations is limited to just a handful of networks; ABC, NBC, CBS, FOX, CW, and Public Broadcasting.  Cable Television was created as a paid alternative to give viewers more choices in programming, but the fact that it’s pay walled has diminished it’s value over time, especially in competition with what streaming provides.  One thing that we have seen the big studios struggle with in the last couple of years is what to do with linear television, as the ad revenue they can generate from their holdings have shifted to other places like YouTube.  Advertisers have learned that more eyes are going to streaming instead of the networks and cable channels, so that’s where they are putting their money now.  Disney, whose holdings include ABC and ESPN, has had to reshuffle their corporate structure in order to meet the new reality in broadcasting; so much so that many have speculated that Disney may be looking to offload their linear television channels in the future in order to focus on streaming instead.  The tolerance for ad breaks has been one of the biggest surprises to come from the streaming wars, largely due to the fact that YouTube’s ad support model is getting the most traction in the online space.  That’s probably why so many of the streaming platforms have created their own ad-supported tier as a more budget minded alternative; including Netflix.

But one thing that YouTube has decided is not in their wheelhouse is the idea of creating their own original content to compete with the likes of Netflix.  Not that they didn’t try.  Before YouTube Premium became an ad-free only option, YouTube had another paid service called YouTube Red.  YouTube Red was going to be ad-free like Premium ultimately ended up being, but it was also going to offer original shows and films made by YouTube’s own in house production company.  YouTube Originals would create a string of original shows and movies that not only would compete with the likes of Netflix, but would also be useful in spotlighting the brand of YouTube itself.  One thing that YouTube Originals did was tap into their own pool of content creators to develop shows and films that would be extensions of their own channel content, only with a more substantial budget.  Creators like gamer PewDiePie and others were among the people tapped to start up this new phase of YouTube’s programming, with a large emphasis on reality based content.  But, there were scripted programs made too, including a couple of buzz-worthy programs.  It may surprise many to know that a hit show like Cobra Kai, a spinoff series based on the Karate Kid films, started it’s life as a YouTube Original.  YouTube produced the first two seasons of the series, and for those seasons it became the driving force for YouTube Red’s subscriber growth.  But it clearly wasn’t enough.  In 2018, YouTube announced that they were phasing out YouTube Red in favor of growing their Premium service, and this included the shuttering of YouTube Originals.  The majority of the original shows that premiered on YouTube Red were quietly cancelled, but a couple were allowed to be shopped out to other interested parties.  In the case of Cobra Kai, it was picked up by Netflix, which kept the show running for an additional four seasons, all of which were wildly successful for the streamer.  In the end, YouTube saw their value as a platform for content creation rather than a production outfit themselves.

This has helped YouTube to stay ahead of so many other streamers in the race for attention from potential viewers.  So many of the studio run streamers cater to such a specific kind of audience, while YouTube is literally a place where you can find anything to watch.  Sure, YouTube can’t run movies and television shows from the major studios (and they have strict rules about uploading pirated movies onto their platform as well), but they are the place where everything else is available to see: how-to tutorials, video podcasts, highlight reels, and tons of videos about cute pets.  What YouTube has done in it’s 20 year existence is change the viewing habits of the average consumer.  One phenomenon that has come from consuming programming on YouTube is the “rabbit hole” binge watching habit that so many people have developed.  It comes from people choosing one video to watch on YouTube, and then clicking on one of the algorithmic selected suggestions that are attached to that video, and then repeating the same function after watching that.  Some people can spend hours just watching the random stream of videos that are suggested to them through YouTube’s algorithm, and that’s the thing that Hollywood is trying to compete against.  Of course all the streamers operate on some kind of algorithmic programming that caters to the subscriber’s viewing habits, but their suggestions are often confined to the niche selection that they have curated from their own libraries.  Meanwhile, YouTube literally contains billions of random types of videos on their platform, with countless more added each day, so those who go down the YouTube rabbit hole are far more likely to encounter something new they haven’t seen before when they are given suggestions from the platform’s algorithm.  This is why so many people are giving their time over to YouTube; the variety of options and the simple interface of YouTube’s platform that makes it easy for viewers to continue watching.

The streaming wars as a result has become less of a race to the top and more of a contest for third place.  Netflix had a ten year head start on all the other wannabe competitors, but even Netflix has to compete for time with what YouTube has to offer.  The bad news for Hollywood is that there doesn’t seem to be any alternative path to being able to do what YouTube is able to do.  It really is an entity without peers.  Disney or Universal is not going to suddenly launch a competitor to YouTube, where users can upload videos onto a site they run.  With YouTube, it’s better to find ways to work with it than compete against it, and all the major studios have their own channels on the platform where they launch movie trailers, as well as a couple YouTube exclusives of their own.  But just like everyone else, they are subjected to the ebb and flow of how YouTube’s algorithm works, so it’s not exactly the place where they can launch one of their multi-million dollar projects.  The problem Hollywood faces now is trying to figure out how to maximize their audience reach in a market that clearly has been shaken up by streaming.  With YouTube pulling in millions of views daily, and Netflix showing little signs of weakness, the studios are searching for new ways to drive engagement on their own platforms.  For the longest time, exclusive content was the thing to bring in subscribers, but that required an insane amount of capital to produce, especially in the early days of the streaming wars when these new platforms had so little to offer.  What we’ve seen happen is a lot of these traditionally powerful media giants face some hard financial pitfalls due to their ramp up of production to feed these streaming monsters.  But, because of the large amount of offerings out there (with every studio jumping in) the potential audience was splintered and the amount or revenue coming in was not countering the investment it took to put it all together.  That’s why so many mergers and acquisitions are happening, as the studios are trying to shore up their financial burdens due to the amount of money they burned through in such a short amount of time.  Meanwhile, YouTube and Netflix have continued to maintain their leads in the streaming race, with their already firmly established hold on their audiences allowing them to weather the stormy seas of the streaming wars.

YouTube may not be a powerful player in terms of production, it still is the place where most people go to for quick, easy to digest entertainment.  Hollywood is learning more and more that their goal should be to offer audiences entertainment that is special enough to get people to click of their computers and phones for an hour or two.  For a long time during the streaming wars, the studios were under the Field of Dreams belief that “if you build it, they will come,” but as we’ve seen building isn’t enough.  You need to make people want to actively go out and see something, whether it be in a theater or on a separate platform.  One of the biggest problems facing streaming right now is the rising cost of everything.  The low price points at launch were a big help in getting people to subscribe to these new streaming surfaces, but all the incremental price increases since then have caused a lot of budget conscious people to tune out.  Moving to streaming was a big part of the whole “cutting the cord” movement that drew people away from subscribing to cable, but now the costs have risen to the point where streaming is now on par with cable TV and possibly even more depending on how many services people have signed up for.  While streaming can be a good value overall depending on how robust their libraries are, people are becoming more picky about which ones they want.  And that audience churn has become the biggest problem facing the market today, especially for the studios that have seen their growth stagnate even after spending billions creating exclusive programming for it.  All the while, YouTube is free to use, easy to navigate, and offers a lucrative creator incentive structure that enables a higher quality of entertainment than just simple home videos.  At the same time, there is truth to there being too much of a good thing, and YouTube’s monopoly on people’s attention is not exactly healthy in the long term for the future of entertainment.  Hopefully Hollywood discovers a way to deal with the competition that they face with YouTube and manage to build something special that either competes strongly against the pull of YouTube, or manages to survive alongside it.  In the face of television and home video, Hollywood has always managed to find ways to bring audiences back to the movies and prestige entertainment.  In the meantime, enjoy the best that YouTube has to offer, but in good moderation.  There are plenty of good content creators on YouTube that are deserving of your attention.  But just remember to come out of that YouTube rabbit hole before it consumes too much of your day and support the arts in far more direct and personal ways beyond it.

Top Ten Wicked Witches in Movies

One of the most popular icons of this Halloween season is the Witch.  Of course, we all have our ideas of what a witch looks like; pointy hat, flying around on a broom, usually accompanied by a pet cat and brewing spells around a cauldron.  But, as pop culture has shown, witches aren’t all typical of that familiar image.  Witchcraft can be by just about anyone who knows the spells to cast.  We’ve seen witches in movies and television that look like they’ve stepped out of a Norman Rockwell painting and give the appearance of an ordinary life.  There are also many examples of good witches that have been portrayed in media.  The Wizarding World of Harry Potter for example is a story all about young witches and wizards learning to hone their craft for noble purposes.  And while it never explicitly states it in the book or the movie, it can be argued that Mary Poppins is a witch; of course using her command of magic for the goodwill of others.  But, when we think of witches in the movies, the ones who stand out are the wicked kind.  They are the kind of witches that live up to the scary image that we commonly refer to around Halloween time.  And they aren’t all the ugly, wart faced crones that we commonly see as the archetypes.  Sometimes bad witches are stunningly beautiful, using their beauty as a weapon in catching their prey.  For this Top Ten List, I’m taking a look at some of the most noteworthy movie witches that stand as the most wicked ever put on the silver screen.  Of course, each one of these entries has to be undeniably evil within their own stories; so no misunderstood outcast witches or good witches.  These represent the worst of the worst, and in turn, they are among the most iconic.  So, let’s take a look at the Top Ten Wickedest Witches of them all.

10.

THE SANDERSON SISTERS from HOCUS POCUS (1993)

Played by Bette Midler, Sarah Jessica Parker, and Kathy Najimy

The trio from this Halloween movie favorite certainly fit the bill of everything we expect out of a portrayal of witches.  But what makes these characters stand out is the campiness of their characterizations.  This Disney made comedy definitely makes the Sandersons very cartoonish caricatures of the classic witch aesthetic.  But it’s the actors performing the parts that really helps to make them memorable.  Bette Midler, a noteworthy performer known for her musical talents on the stage and screen, hams it up the most as Winifred, the de facto leader of the group.  It’s a testament to Midler’s acting chops that she manages to make the caricature work, especially with those chipmunk like buck teeth, and still find a way to make Winifred menacing within the story.  She’s also balanced well by Sarah Jessica Parker’s sultry portrayal of Sarah Sanderson and Kathy Najimy’s bumbling Mary Sanderson.  The Three Stooges come to mind as inspirations for the character dynamic between the sisters.  And while the movie itself is a mixed bag, never really being as funny nor as scary as it wants to be, the Sandersons are easily the highlight of the movie, and the element that indeed has helped to turn Hocus Pocus into a perennial favorite every Halloween.  And of course, given that Bette Midler is in the starring role, there has to be a musical number to show off her musical theater skills.  In this case, it’s a cover of Screamin’ Jay Hawkins’ “I Put a Spell on You,” which the movie puts a disco night club spin on.  When it comes to the Sisters, this movie definitely puts a fun spin on being Wicked.

9.

MOTHER HELENA MARKOS from SUSPIRIA (1977)

Played by Lela Svasta

One of the most surreal depictions of witchcraft on the big screen is found in Dario Argento’s horror classic Suspiria.  The story revolves around an American dancer named Suzy Bannion (Jessica Harper) coming to Germany to study at a prestigious ballet academy, only to find that the academy is a front for a coven of witches who feed off of the beauty and youth of their students.  At the center of the coven is a mysterious benefactor named Mother Markos, someone who the ladies at the school never see in person, and yet her dark presence is felt everywhere.  Markos is a great example of portraying the specter of witchcraft without letting us see her fully in person.  The spells she casts present to us the evil presence she holds over the academy, and that in it’s own way makes her scarier than just seeing the old crone that she would have normally been presented as.  The 2018 Luca Guadagnino directed remake does show us Mother Markos in it’s final act, and she’s portrayed as a grotesque, monstrous figure (played by Tilda Swinton under a ton of make-up).  The portrayal of the character is much more effective in Argento’s original film, with her being more of a specter than an actual physical presence.  The movie gets away with so much with just the littlest hints of evil lurking around.  An image of two disembodied eyes in the darkest is an especially unnerving moment in the movie.  We do eventually get the briefest of looks of her when Suzy manages to stab her in the neck while she has been sneaking around while invisible.  Lela Svasta, who was not a professional actress, does fit the imagined appearance of what Mother Markos would look like, and while she only gets a second of screen time, it’s enough to embody this mysterious figure that we’ve come to fear throughout the movie.  The whole coven of witches in the movie are terrifying enough, but by being the most enigmatic of them all, Mother Markos stands out as the scariest of the whole movie.

8.

MINNIE CASTEVET from ROSEMARY’S BABY (1968)

Played by Ruth Gordon

One of the prime examples of going against the stereotypical image of a wicked witch.  From the moment she first appears in Roman Polanski’s eerie thriller, Minnie Castevet comes across as disarming and a somewhat sweet old lady from across the hall.  Neighborly and attentive, she offers help to make Mia Farrow’s Rosemary time during pregnancy as comfortable as possible, which makes her seem like a kind matronly figure.  But, it’s only during the course of the film that we learn that Minnie’s true aim is to help Rosemary give birth to what will ultimately be the Anti-Christ.  All those kind gestures were in their own way subtle works of witchcraft in the service of her true master, Satan.  A glass of milk here, a piece of cake there.  It’s only after Rosemary pieces together all the peculiar things that have been happening around her that we ultimately see that Minnie this whole time was a diabolical witch.  And not just her, but everyone else in the apartment building; all part of a cabal of Satanists intent on bringing forth the Anti-Christ.  What is great about Ruth Gordon’s performance is that her character never changes, even after the truth of her intentions is revealed.  She plays Minnie as this charming, batty old lady who has this charmingly silly way about her.  Once she is revealed to be the witch that she is, she still acts like the disarming, sweet old lady that she was before, only now it comes off as more menacing that we know the truth of who she is.  Gordon was a Hollywood veteran who surprisingly got her start as a writer before going into acting.  She uses her witty bravado well in creating the character, and her performance ended up earning her an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress that year.  There are a lot of movie witches that certainly stand out as scary from the get go, but what makes Minnie Castavet so memorable is that deception in her character.  Like Rosemary, we are lulled into feeling safe around such a colorful and seemingly sweet person like Minnie, but it ultimately makes the reveal all the more terrifying when we realize all that was in the service of something truly demonic.

7.

MISS ERNST, THE GRAND HIGH WITCH from THE WITCHES (1990)

Played by Angelica Huston

An actress like Angelica Huston definitely seems at home playing gothic characters.  She of course famously played Morticia Addams in The Addams Family (1991) only a year after playing a terrifying witch in this adaptation of a Roald Dahl novel of the same name.  She’s also an actress not afraid to disappear under a ton of make-up.  That’s what makes her performance in this movie so special.  We get to see her excel in both sides of the performance, in her human disguise of course, which certainly seems like a dress rehearsal for her role as Morticia, as well as her full blown appearance as the Grand High Witch.  The movie involves a boy stumbling upon a Witch convention at a hotel which leads to him being turned into a mouse which the witches then intend to eat him as.  The movie is exceptional in it’s use of practical effects, all done by the talented artists at the Jim Henson Company, and that is especially true about the transformation that Angelica Huston goes through to become the Grand High Witch in her truest form.  Her witch makeup is the most extreme of all in the entire movie, with a gigantic hooked nose and wrinkly skin all over.  The fact that Ms. Huston was still able to give a wildly expressive performance under all that make-up is especially impressive.  But when she’s in her more beautiful disguise, she also manages to deliver a menacing presence.  It wouldn’t surprise me if this role helped to make her the easy front-runner for that Morticia part in The Addams Family, as the characters have a very similar look to them; though of course, Morticia is the far less evil of the two.  And as a portrayal of this character in particular, she is far better than that nightmare inducing, CGI enhanced version that Anne Hathaway played in the Robert Zemekis directed remake from 2020.  This movie in particular is a clear example of why practical effects are better in bringing a fanciful story like this to life, as well as having an actress willing to fully disappear under some really imaginative make-up.

6.

URSULA from THE LITTLE MERMAID (1989)

Voiced by Pat Carroll

Disney has had it’s fair share of memorable witches, given that so many of their movies have been adapted from classic fairy tales.  Their first film had one of the most iconic witches ever put on screen when the Evil Queen in Snow White and the Seven Dwarves (1937) transforms into her hag disguise.  But one of the greatest Disney witches made her debut in the movie that helped to save Disney animation and launch the company’s Renaissance era.  In Hans Christian Andersen’s original story, The Little Mermaid’s Sea Witch is a fairly minor character, there simply to enable Ariel to make the transformation from Mermaid to Human, at the cost of her voice of course.  That’s all there is to the transaction, but for Disney’s version, they sought to make the Sea Witch a far more meaningful presence in the story.  Thus came the creation of Ursula, by far one of the most popular Disney Villains to ever come out of the canon.  Ursula has her goals of usurping the throne of King Triton by manipulating his daughter, and she has no qualms about using her magic for her own evil ambitions.  She even keeps the damned souls of the people she tricked as trophies in her “garden.” Everything about Ursula is iconic, especially her look which was heavily inspired by famed drag queen Divine.  And Pat Carroll gives a tour de force vocal performance as the character, making her equal measures of terrifying while also being surprisingly funny at just the right moments.  The huskiness of her voice especially makes her stand out amongst all other Disney Villainesses, especially with that cackle of a laugh she has.  It’s not surprising that to this day Ursula remains one of Disney’s most popular characters, let alone one of the most popular Villains.  It’s a good thing that Disney was at a point where they allowed their animation team to take some license and create a wholly different take on an evil witch in one of their movies.  With her drag queen like bravado and a killer vocal performance from Ms. Pat Carroll, Ursula was a new kind of movie witch that would indeed set a new high standard for years to come.

5.

AUNT GLADYS from WEAPONS (2025)

Played by Amy Madigan

One of the more recent depictions of a witch to leave a big impact on cinema, Aunt Gladys is the black hearted center of Zach Cregger’s hit mystery box horror flick.  A lot of Weapon’s success lies in the fact that the movie withholds the truth about what really is going on until late into the movie, which makes it a fascinating mystery to unravel.  When we finally find out that every disturbing event in the movie is the product of witchcraft, it helps to reframe the movie in a very satisfying way.  And this largely due to how well they pull off the reveal of the mysterious character that is Aunt Gladys.  Portrayed in an absolutely transformative performance by Amy Madigan, Gladys is a very different kind of movie witch compared to everything else we’ve seen.  She wears bright colored clothes, and almost has the look of a circus clown given her heavy use of make-up.  But, underneath all that color and a bubbly persona that she puts on, she is as black hearted as they come.  She uses her magic to essentially puppeteer people and make them do her bidding, which includes family members as well as an entire classroom of children.  It’s vague about why exactly she does this, and they movie never fully reveals how she became a witch in the first place, other than she uses it to keep herself alive; sort of in a succubus kind of way.  But, the damage she inflicts is pretty terrifying.  It’s a great way to reimagine witchcraft as an element in modern horror.  Zach Cregger wisely avoids using the classic symbols of witches from popular culture; there’s no brooms, no black cats, no cauldron.  Aunt Gladys merely uses twigs from an inky black shrub that she keeps in her room to conduct her black magic.  And Amy Madigan’s performance is remarkably effective, making Gladys an unsettling presence both in her silly moments as well as in her darkest moments.  And the comeuppance she faces at the end of the movie is one of the most cathartic and satisfying finales we’ve had at the movies in a long time.  Gladys will probably become one of cinema’s most iconic witches in the years to come, and it shows that there is a lot of spooky elements to the concept of witchcraft that can still be explored in modern horror movies today.

4.

BELLATRIX LESTRANGE from the HARRY POTTER series

Played by Helena Bonham Carter

It’s hard to have a witch character that stands out in a movie franchise about a school for witches and wizards.  But, one in particular really does leave a mark as one of the most terrifying witches ever put on the silver screen.  Bellatrix Lestrange is a witch that really defines the dark side of magic in J.K. Rowling’s long running series.  Though not the main threat to Harry Potter and his allies, as she is second banana to the Dark Wizard Voldemort, Bellatrix nevertheless stands out as a great and menacing villainess in her own right.  Wonderfully brought to life in an unhinged performance by Helena Bonham Carter, Bellatrix is chaos incarnate.  You really don’t know what she’ll do next, which makes her such a memorable threat in the series.  Carter definitely makes a meal out of her portrayal of the dark witch.  Her maniacal cackles is especially a key part to the portrayal, showing how she clearly gets a kick out of being as evil as she is.  Of course, she is impactful to the story as she ends up murdering Harry’s godfather and mentor Sirius Black (Gary Oldman).  She also commits all of her actions without remorse, including the torture of other wizards and witches.  One of her most sinister moments comes when she teases Harry’s friend Neville about torturing his parents, an act that left them in a vegetable like state.  It’s an effective characterization of a character that you just know is rotten to her very core.  While Voldemort is subdued in his presence, she is everything but, making herself big and loud wherever she reigns her destruction.  While she does fill the bill of a wicked witch, with her gothic attire and unhinged cackle, she manages to stay effectively terrifying throughout and avoids being too much of a caricature.  This is a real testament to Carter’s performance, where she was able to bring a lot more to the character than just her bad girl persona.  She managed to create an evil witch that exists out of something even more terrifying, which is desire to destroy purely out of her own twisted sense of fun.  And among other witches and wizards, that becomes something truly worth fearing.

3.

THE BLAIR WITCH from THE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT (1999)

Played by ???

It’s kind of remarkable that one of the most terrifying witches in movie history is one that we never get to see; an maybe doesn’t exist at all.  It’s a testament to the movie’s power of suggestion that the presence of the Blair Witch is still felt throughout the movie, and it makes her (or it) all the more scary.  The Blair Witch Project was a groundbreaking horror film that helped to launch the found footage style of storytelling in cinema.  Everything in the film is shot on video tape by the characters, making it a movie within a movie, and it adds to the true life feel of the narrative.  Over the course of the film, the characters document their hunt for the elusive Blair Witch and the deeper into the woods they go, the more weird stuff ends up happening.  We don’t know if this is entirely their own minds playing tricks on them, or if there really is a Blair Witch out there.  The movie does a great job of building that tension over time, and bringing us into the paranoid state of mind of the characters.  We hear strange noises out in the darkness of night.  Shadows begin to play tricks on us.  Eventually, we do see the most direct evidence of the Blair Witches own handiwork, as the explorers capture strange wooden figures displayed near their campsite.  Is it a prank being pulled on the characters?  We never know, and that’s what makes The Blair Witch Project such an effective experience.  It uses the limited information that we see from the found footage to suggest that a Blair Witch may end up being real, and it’s much more effective than actually showing us a real witch.  Something is out there in the darkness, and it is hunting them.  It’s great that the movie commits to the very end in keeping the truth about the Blair Witch literally in the dark, especially with the haunting final scene which is open to interpretation.  It’s a great way of showing how the idea of a witch being present alone is enough to drive out our worst fears.  That’s why the Blair Witch has become one of the most terrifying witches in movie history.  The less we know about it, the creepier and more powerful it becomes, letting our own imagination conjure up what the true evil specter may look like.

2.

MALEFICENT from SLEEPING BEAUTY (1959)

Voiced by Elanor Audley

While Ursula from The Little Mermaid and the Evil Queen from Snow White and the Seven Dwarves are iconic in their own right, there’s no denying that Disney’s greatest cinematic witch is the mistress of all evil herself, Maleficent.  Maleficent has become the gold standard by which all other Disney villains are judged by, and it’s for good reason.  She really epitomizes everything great about an iconic Disney Villain, both in her design and in her presence.  The combination of her dark flowing robes with the bat wing like collar around her neck and that crown of pointy horns just makes her stand out immediately.  Couple that with the absolutely chilling vocal performance from actress Elanor Audley, and you’ve got the makings of one of cinema’s greatest villainesses.  But, Maleficent is not just any witch.  She almost feels like a force of nature, able to command magic without a spell book or magic wand, though she does wield a staff that seems to channel her magic.  One of the best things about her character is her often calm demeanor.  She can loose her temper, but most of the time she is quiet and methodical in her evil deeds, clearly showing how much she knows she’s in command.  She doesn’t seek power; she knows she already has all of it.  Her evil is manifested in toying with those who don’t have magic.  And it’s that petty nature about her that makes her evil all the more loathsome.  Of course, her transformation into a spectacular dragon is one of the all time masterpieces of animation, but throughout the movie she is iconic.  To this day, she remains one  of Disney’s most popular characters, far eclipsing the movie she first appeared in and becoming something of a brand of her own within the Disney company.  There’s a reason why Disney made her the climatic showpiece of their nighttime spectacular at Disneyland called Fantasmic.  A true original all her own among cinematic witches and Disney villains alike, Maleficent is likely going to remain at the top tier for many more years to come.

1.

THE WICKED WITCH OF THE WEST from THE WIZARD OF OZ (1939)

Played by Margaret Hamilton

If there was ever a witch that set the standard for all cinematic witches to follow, it’s this iconic portrayal from the classic The Wizard of Oz.  The Frank L. Baum story was brought to magnificent life by MGM in a marvelous technicolor production.  But what really stood out to audiences over the many decades since it first premiered was this iconic portrayal of the villainous Wicked Witch of the West.  She has remained such a fixture in pop culture that even a musical adaptation centered around her called Wicked has become a massive hit on it’s own, both on stage and screen.  But there’s no doubt that the Wicked Witch’s memorable presence is all due to the remarkable performance given by Margaret Hamilton.  She brings the character to vivid life thanks to a delightfully eccentric performance.  From her high pitched cackle to her sinister grin, she delivers the quintessential portrayal of a witch on the big screen.  It’s perhaps the reason why so many depictions of witches today often include a pointy hat and green colored skin.  Hamilton’s portrayal of the Wicked Witch is true high fantasy, finding the actress really relishing the role and making the performance feel huge in every way.  It wasn’t all easy for her though.  She famously suffered severe burns when a trap door didn’t drop her in time to miss the pyro effects that followed her exit from the Munchkin land set.  And the performance remained so iconic that it unfortunately left her typecast for the remainder of her career, though she found ways of capitalizing on her fame as the character later in life, and she never regretted playing the role in the first place.  One can’t imagine anyone else playing this role, even though there were others who tried out for the part before she inevitably got it.  Margaret just feels like she was born to play this character, and even after 85 years, her performance still captures the imagination of audiences of all ages.  While there are plenty of iconic movie witches out there, it’s the Wicked Witch that more than any of them seems to define the ideal of what a cinematic witch should be.

So, there you have my picks for the most iconic wicked witches ever put on the silver screen.  A couple of them, particularly the Wicked Witch of the West and Maleficent have gone on to set the standard for what we think a witch should be.  And then you have some other ones like Minnie Castevet in Rosemary’s Baby that stand out by being contradictory to what we perceive a witch to be.  And then there’s the Blair Witch who remains unseen throughout the whole movie, and yet you can still feel it’s presence.  There’s so many ways to imagine a witch in cinematic storytelling, and so many different ways to make them terrifying to an audience.  There is something innately unsettling about witchcraft itself, even when it’s used for good purposes by good witches.  That’s why it’s still a potent element used in horror movies today, though to varying degrees of success.  The recent horror hit Weapons offers up an especially effective new take on witchcraft and how it would be used in a contemporary setting.  Likewise, Aunt Gladys has emerged as a very new kind of movie witch, and one that really turns into a terrifying presence in her movie.  During Halloween time, witches remain one of the most popular of icons, and it’s largely thanks to some of the witches on this list that many of them have made such an impact in pop culture.  Just look at the phenomenal success of Wicked to see just how much the Wicked Witch, and by extension Margaret Hamilton’s performance, still have a foothold in our culture.  It’s also why Disney continues to mine through so many fairy tales for their animated projects, because they know a good fairy tale is made all the better by the presence of an especially wicked witch.  And with Harry Potter, you get the best of both with good witches (Hermoine Granger) and the bad (Bellatrix Lestrange).  We’ll see a good many iconic witches in the years to come in cinema, but leading up to now, these have been the ones that have undeniably left a huge mark on our understanding of witches overall in pop culture.

Focus on a Franchise – Evil Dead

When we sit down to watch a spooky movie for the holidays, there are a variety of different types to choose from.  There are haunted house stories, demonic possession stories, zombie epidemic stories, etc.  Most horror films tend to stick with one subgenre amongst them, but there’s a series of horror flicks that definitely flies in the face of convention.  In the early eighties, an ambitious young filmmaker named Sam Raimi got a group of his closest friends together to make a new kind of horror flick.  Instead of focusing on one subgenre of horror films, Raimi’s flick would incorporate a little bit of everything all into something new for the world of horror.  Demonic possession mixed with a little bit of zombie terror and plenty of supernatural spookiness all came together to define what we know as The Evil Dead (1981).  But, even though Sam Raimi was able to make his vision successfully come to life in his first film, he didn’t just rest on his laurels after that.  Like most horror franchises, there were inevitably sequels made, but instead of repeating himself Raimi would continue to experiment with each new film.  The sequels Evil Dead 2 (1987) and Army of Darkness (1992) have a continuing thread through them, but each film is dramatically different in not just tone, but also in many ways style.  And of course, the Evil Dead franchise is noteworthy for one other thing, which is that it made a star out of Bruce Campbell, a childhood friend of Raimi’s who would go on to become a horror movie icon thanks to his appearance in these films as the character Ashley “Ash” Williams.  One of the horror genre’s most defining images of the last several decades is of Ash with either a chainsaw in hand or in place of his hand.  There’s a lot to discuss about why the Evil Dead series stands out as one of the most important horror franchises that’s ever existed, especially in how it set the standard for how to craft a memorable horror flick.  And the evolution that the series went through movie by movie is also just as fascinating to observe as well.  So, let’s crack open the Necronomicon and take a look at Sam Raimi’s Evil Dead movies.

THE EVIL DEAD (1981)

One thing to note, The Evil Dead wasn’t the first “cabin in the woods” horror flick to be made, and certainly not the last.  But, over the years it has become viewed as the seminal horror flick in that subgenre.  Raimi, Campbell and their friends (which included the Coen Brothers by the way) managed to scrape together around $350,000 in funds to make their dream project together.  At the time they started to roll cameras, Raimi was barely over the age of 20, having dropped out of college to make this film.  He had never directed a feature film before; his only work up to that point being little seen shorts he made with Campbell.  And yet, when you watch the movie, you see that miniscule budget utilized to remarkable effect.  There’s a ton of creativity on display, showing that Raimi knew what he was doing even if this was his debut.  The Evil Dead features a lot of new tricks that were novel for a horror flick.  He would have his cameramen run through the forest with the camera on a stick, giving that stalking effect a lot more character as the camera swooped close to the ground.  One shot in particular, with the camera floating across the pond, was filmed by Raimi himself as he laid on a dingy and was pushed forward by Campbell.  The shooting went on through the dead of winter in a real abandoned cabin in Tennessee, and the cold damp night shoots really helped to give the movie the right amount of atmosphere.  But, they were limited in time with the actors they had cast in the film.  Once the movie starts to pick away at the cast as they become one with the “evil dead,” the performers (Ellen Sadweiss, Richard DeManincor, Betsy Baker and Theresa Tilly) would be replaced with what Raimi called the “Fake Shemps” which were actors buried under make-up to make them look like decaying, possessed corpses.  Some of those Fake Shemps even included Sam Raimi’s own brothers, Ted and Ivan.

But, one thing that’s interesting about the movie is how Bruce Campbell’s Ash emerges as the primary character.  The Ash that we come to know throughout the series isn’t fully formed yet.  Bruce keeps things fairly restrained with his character in this film.  Given that he was the one actor who was also deeply involved with the entire off and on multi-year shoot from beginning to end, he was pretty much destined to be the last man standing.  Still, Bruce does stick out immediately.  His square jaw appearance definitely gives off a leading man aura right away, but Campbell as we all know is no conventional leading man.  He’s not afraid to go a little oddball, which is why he and Raimi were so like-minded.  There are a little bit of hammy acting that Bruce throws into his performance, but it fits with the moments of insanity that the movie increasingly throws at the audience.  The Evil Dead is also a gloriously gory film that really lays into the bloodletting.  Perhaps as a nod to the classic Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1975), the chainsaw is the weapon of choice for Ash Williams, and it leads to some pretty extreme blood splattering.  The movie would end up receiving an NC-17 rating as a result, but that wouldn’t the film in the end.  Thanks to it’s small budget, the movie managed to become profitable pretty quickly.  It also would not just prove to be influential on the horror genre as a whole, but also on both Sam Raimi and Bruce Campbell’s career.  A lot of the trick shots that Raimi utilized in this movie, like the spinning camera move and Dutch angles, would become his trademark over the years.  The movie also introduces the 1973 Oldsmobile Delta 88, a car that not only shows up in all of the Evil Dead movies, but would also cameo in every movie that Raimi has ever made his entire career; even the stuff he’s made for Marvel.  But, for horror movie fans, they saw The Evil Dead as a great example of doing a lot with very little, and it would have a profound influence on horror filmmaking in independent cinema.

EVIL DEAD 2 (1987)

Sam Raimi would follow up his horror classic with a twisted thriller called Crimewave (1985), which he co-wrote with the Coen Brothers.  The movie had a more substantial $3 million budget, but the movie would end up being a box office flop.  In order to bounce back, Raimi decided to return to his Evil Dead roots and deliver a sequel.  Naturally, Bruce Campbell would step back into the roll of Ash, and it would take place in a cabin in the woods once again, but that’s where the similarities end.  Evil Dead 2 is very much a different kind of horror flick from it’s predecessor.  Sam Raimi has long said that major influences on him as a child were comic books and slapstick comedies, and this is very evident when watching Evil Dead 2.  While there were some goofy moments sprinkled throughout the original Evil Dead, the sequel fully embraces the madness.  Everything in Evil Dead 2 is surreal in it’s execution.  The grounded, DIY feel of the original movie is replaced with a stylized, bizarro world version of the same story.  The cabin itself even feels far more artificial and stylized, like something out of a silent German Expressionist thriller like The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920).  And Bruce Campbell’s performance is also more heightened to match the new tone of this movie.  What we think of Bruce Campbell as an actor and Ash as a character was born out of this movie, much more than the original.  The highly improvised scene when Ash battles his own possessed hand may be one of the greatest moments of physical comedy ever put on film.  And that’s just one of the movie’s many iconic jumbles of horrific imagery and slapstick comedy.  It was certainly a gamble on Raimi’s part to shift tone so dramatically, but given the full commitment of Bruce Campbell’s performance and the endless creativity of all the weirdness in the movie, audiences not only embraced the movie but considered it even better than the original.

Of course this would also be the movie that solidified Ash as a horror movie icon with one particular change to his appearance; the chainsaw arm.  After he’s forced to cut his hand off because of it being possessed and out of his control, he later retrofits a chainsaw to latch onto the stub.  Pair that with a shotgun in his other hand and you’ve got the makings of a true movie badass.  But, one thing that the movie needed to demonstrate with all of it’s bizarre characteristics is that it could still terrify it’s audience even as the gore was toned down.  The movie managed to come together thanks to the influence of a high profile fan of the original; author Stephen King.  King wanted to help Sam Raimi make a sequel, so he convinced producer Dino DeLaurentis to finance the film, but it was under one condition; that they keep the movie rated R.  Part of the reason that the movie is as hyper stylized as it is comes as a result of this rating restriction place on them.  That’s why the blood is often different colors throughout, so that the deaths in the movie are much less realistic.  By playing around with all the different loopholes in the movie rating system, Raimi was able to keep the movie sufficiently gory while staying true to DeLaurentis’ demands.  And a large reason why Sam Raimi chose to change so much between the movies is because he wanted Evil Dead 2 to be something of a soft reboot for the series.  This movie was going to be the template for where the series would go thereafter, especially in tone.  And Raimi certainly had bigger plans for a franchise, given that he ended the movie on a cliffhanger, with Ash transported back in time in the movie’s final scene.  And when he would finally get his next chance to make another film in this series, he would change style and tone once again.

ARMY OF DARKNESS (1992)

With his third film in the trilogy, Raimi wanted to expand much more into the lore behind the terrifying creatures of the “Evil Dead,”  Here we see the medieval origins of the Necronomicon, and how it’s a product of a more magic centered world.  While Sam Raimi still carries over some of the terrifying creatures he imagined for Evil Dead 2, Army of Darkness is much less of a straight forward horror movie and more of an action adventure with horror elements.  But, Ash is still Ash in this movie, and the story picks up right where the last film left off.  Both Raimi and Campbell have a lot of fun with Ash’s fish-out-of-water presence in this medieval setting.  One of the movie’s most memorable scenes involves Ash demonstrating his use of a shotgun to the people of the kingdom, calling it his “boomstick.”  Raimi also ratchets up the cartoonish elements in this film, with one battle against the Deadites involving slapstick routines straight out of a Three Stooges short.  Once again, Bruce Campbell is the right man for the job when it comes to these tonal shifts, and he even is not afraid to portray Ash as a tiny bit dumb in this film.  One of the funniest running gags in the movie is that he can’t remember the words to a spell, those being “Klaatu barada nikto” which of course is a reference to the sci-fi classic The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951).  It’s a way to add another dimension to Ash’s character, where some of that bravado we saw established in Evil Dead 2 is undercut by his own foolish mistakes, which helps to make his character a lot funnier as a result.  But even with all his blunders, Bruce still gets some hilarious badass moments throughout the movie, with some perfectly delivered one liners along the way.

For it’s time, this was also the most elaborate movie that Sam Raimi had made up to that point.  It didn’t have the same Avant Garde style of Evil Dead 2, but it was impressive in it’s scale.  It’s hard to believe that this movie with it’s epic scale period detail and lavish visual effects grew out of a series that started from a production made for less than half a million.  And yet, it still feels like an organic extension.  Perhaps it’s the way that each film chose to be so different from what came before, but only in it’s style.  The character of Ash is what makes the series feel whole.  Had The Evil Dead been just a one and done horror flick, we might not have seen the growth in this character happen.  It’s a testament to Bruce Campbell as an actor that he keeps finding new ways to play this character, and the reason most people have returned to the series is primarily because of him.  After Army of Darkness, the series went into dormancy, but Ash as a character would live on, at least in Comic Books.  The Evil Dead series would emerge in the early 2000’s as a comic book continuation of the adventures of Ash Williams, with both Sam Raimi and Bruce Campbell contributing story ideas to the series on the page.  One of the graphic novels that came from this even included an adaptation for a sadly never realized crossover movie called Ash vs. Freddy vs. Jason, which would’ve pitted Ash against two of the horror movie genre’s other most iconic characters.  There was an Evil Dead (2013) remake that Sam Raimi had a hand in producing, but it lacked Ash as a character, instead focusing on new protagonists.  Unsurprisingly, the movie didn’t do too well.  But, Bruce Campbell would return to the character for a three season long run in the series Ash vs. Evil Dead on the Starz Channel.  But despite all the different attempts to reboot the series, a lot of fans agree that Army of Darkness is where the series hit it’s peak.

While Sam Raimi has gone on to do many big things in Hollywood ever since, it’s still pretty clear that his Evil Dead series remains his favorite child.  The DNA of those movies runs throughout every other movie he has made since then.  You can definitely see the influence of Evil Dead in some of the most memorable moments of his Spider-Man movies, especially the Doc Ock operating room scene from Spider-Man 2 (2004).  The fact that he continues to put the Oldsmobile into every one of his movies (yes even in a Western like 1995’s The Quick and the Dead) is a testament to how much he wants to create a through line of everything he makes back to where it all began.  That’s also the reason why he always has a part for Bruce Campbell to play in every one of his movies, even in the briefest of cameos.  It’s a blessing to have a director like Sam Raimi continue to have that strong connection to his roots, because it allows him to keep making movies with the same amount of creativity, even if the scale and the budgets are a lot bigger.  Even in something massive in scale like Oz, The Great and Powerful (2013) or Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (2022) you still see those unique camera moves and artistic transitions that have been a staple of his filmography over the years.  He’s even managed to still mix horror and comedy successfully in a spiritual successor to the Evil Dead movies like Drag Me to Hell (2009).  But, his greatest legacy will certainly be in the way he’s inspired a whole new generation of horror filmmakers.  It’s his DIY approach to horror filmmaking that’s left the most impressive impact, and it’s made the most recent crop of horror auteurs so effective recently, as their goal is to bring horror back to it’s practical effects roots.  Originality and creativity is what audiences are seeking right now, and that means even taking horror into some weird and borderline absurd places.  While Sam Raimi himself has moved onto more mainstream projects, it’s his influence on horror that will be his most profound legacy.  Whether it’s the bizarre tone he set for the genre, or the fact that he made a star out of a true original like Bruce Campbell, Sam Raimi’s Evil Dead will always be a cornerstone on which the genre of horror will be forever defined.  Groovy.

Tron: Ares – Review

There are movie franchises that often take their time in releasing new entries, but when it comes to the movie Tron (1982), it’s had perhaps the longest periods of fallow that any movie franchise has seen.  The original Tron was not exactly a mega hit when it first released in 1982.  Like so other movies that summer, it got overshadowed by the box office behemoth that was Steven Spielberg’s E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial (1982).  It wasn’t until many years later that it received a re-evaluation by both critics and audiences.  Tron was a movie that in terms of the technology that went into it’s production was well ahead of it’s time.  It was the first studio production ever to utilize computer animation, which of course now has become omnipresent as a part of the film-making industry, to the point of replacing many once necessary jobs in the business.  The film’s story about rogue AI programs taking too much control also now seems prophetic, despite coming from very early on in the history of computing.  When computer animation started to take hold in Hollywood in the mid-90’s, a lot of the digital artists and animators often cited Tron as an inspiration.  Without Tron, we probably wouldn’t have had the digital revolution in film-making that we know of today.  And this digital revolution brought more attention to Tron itself.  Disney, the studio that made the film, put the movie out on DVD in 2002 for it’s 20th anniversary, and it became a strong seller for them, helping them to realize that the movie was indeed growing in esteem.  It was time to think about the possibility of a sequel, though this would be a gamble as well.  A lot of time had passed since the last Tron, and the world had advanced so much in those 20 plus years in terms of computer technology.  Was it possible to make a sequel to this film that would feel just as cutting edge as the original.  Despite some of those challenges, we did indeed see the Tron franchise finally come to fruition in 2010.

Tron: Legacy (2010) released into theaters during the holiday season that year.  While it did perform a lot better at the box office than the original film, it also didn’t exceed expectations either.  Audiences were mixed, as well as critics.  Much like the original film, Legacy was viewed as visually stunning but emotionally hollow.  The biggest praise for the movie went instead to the musical score written by the techno punk DJ group Daft Punk, who saw their soundtrack become an award winning best-seller.  Legacy was a valiant attempt to capture some of the unique charm of the original movie while at the same time trying to modernize it and make it relevant again.  But, Tron is still a franchise with a very niche fan base.  The people who are impressed with the Tron movies are usually people with a fair amount of knowledge about computer tech.  They recognize the technical achievements that these movies represent.  To think that the original Tron was rendered with megabyte levels of computing power is astounding.  Legacy also became one of the first movies ever to use digital de-aging on it’s actors, a tool that we are seeing being used more and more in big budget blockbusters.  But, casual audiences are not aware of those things, and the Tron films often feel too cold and detached from emotions to ever feel as thrilling as most other blockbusters from their respective eras.  But, just like with the original, Tron: Legacy has also received a bit of a re-assessment over the years.  While it’s not considered by many to be an all time great action flick, people have come to admire it’s ambition and unique style.  One thing that also has helped to give this movie some extra attention is that it was the first film directed by Joseph Kosinski, who has since gone on to become a very successful movie director in the 15 years since Legacy, including being a part of a little film called Top Gun: Maverick (2022).  With both movies now having some noteworthy attention paid to them, Disney seems to be convinced that it’s time to try again with this franchise, adding a new film into this trilogy.  The only question is, does Tron: Ares manage to justify making the return to the world of Tron after such a long absence, or is it game over for this franchise for good?

The story of Tron: Ares brings the story up to where we are in the present day.  Kevin Flynn (Jeff Bridges), the eccentric founder of the ENCOM corporation has been missing since 1989, becoming now more myth than man.  His son Sam has also abdicated his role as CEO of the company and is living off the grid, so ENCOM now lies in the guiding hands of Eve Kim (Greta Lee) who hopes to run the company in the same spirit as Flynn did.  But, she faces stiff competition from the Dillinger Corporation, run by Julian Dillinger (Evan Peters), the grandson of it’s founder and former corrupt CEO of ENCOM Ed Dillinger.  Both companies are trying to create the next breakthrough in AI technology, which involves creating living matter out of 3D printing with AI to give them sentience.  The only problem is, the creations can only keep their structure together for a maximum of 29 minutes before they disintegrate.  Eve believes that Kevin Flynn managed to crack the code for this problem back when he was still the head of the company, creating what’s been dubbed the Permanence Code, and she’s been digging through decades old computer systems trying to find it.  She manages to find her answer in a secret lab in the frozen Arctic Circle and she hopes to bring it back home with the intent of using the Permanence Code to fix things like food and medicine shortage.  Dillinger, however, wants to use the code to mass produce soldiers and war technology.  In a desperate attempt to steal the Code, he sends out two of his most elite warrior programs, Ares (Jared Leto) and Athena (Jodie Turner-Smith).  The two manage to track down and corner Eve, but Ares starts to question the motives behind his programming, believing that Dillinger is crossing the line by seeking to literally destroy his competition.  So, Ares goes rogue and elects to help Eve instead.  But, Dillinger doesn’t take the betrayal lightly, and he re-programs Athena to now hunt down both Ares and Eve together.  What follows is a battle of wills that chaotically shows what happens when AI programs with elite warrior skills take their battle out of the Grid and bring it into the real world.

As the third film in a long running series such as this, Tron: Ares will undoubtedly face immediate comparisons with it’s predecessors.  It’s also difficult to really stack up each film together, considering that each one came from such different eras of filmmaking, to the point where each one almost feel more of a product in it’s own time than cohesive whole.  Tron: Legacy almost felt more like a reboot of the series rather than a straight forward sequel, only loosely tying itself to the original film through the general premise and return of Jeff Bridges.  Tron: Ares pretty much feels the same way as well.  It’s almost like Disney is once again starting from scratch, with this movie choosing not to continue the story of Legacy and instead doing something new with a whole new set of characters.  In some ways that is both a blessing and a curse.  Tron: Ares does have a lot of things going for it that it does do a lot better than the previous films in this series, but it’s also lacking some of the things that made the other films stand out as well.  Truth be told, the Tron movies have never been known for having great stories.  It’s always been a film franchise built on style over substance.  Tron: Ares keeps up that tradition by being as cookie-cutter as possible with barely dimensional characters.  It’s an unfortunate problem that definitely weighs the movie down, but at the same time, it’s kind of par for the course for this series.  The only character of note from this entire series has been Kevin Flynn, and he only stands out because of Jeff Bridges natural magnetic charm.  But unfortunately, starting over again also undercuts most if not all of the previous world-building work that had been put into the series.  There are fleeting references to the previous films (plus one admittedly pretty cool nostalgia filled scene referencing the original Tron), but otherwise Tron: Ares is carving out it’s own path.  That can be good if you want the movie to stand on it’s own, but it also means that Ares also has to go through the whole world-building gauntlet again, and that unfortunately burdens the film more with a lot of unnecessary extra exposition.  It shows Disney being undecisive in their approach to this franchise.  They want to continue to bank on the nostalgia value of the Tron brand, but they also feel like audiences can’t be trusted to already be familiar with the lore of the previous films, so unfortunately we have to have it all spelled out for us again.

But, there is one area where Ares does outdo both of the previous Tron films and that is in the action scenes.  The original Tron certainly was limited by what was possible with computer animation at the time, and still managed to make the most of it.  The light cycle race in particular is still an iconic moment in cinema and remarkably harrowing given the primitive animation used to make it.  Legacy’s biggest problem was that while it was visually a big step up in visual effects, it was also a bit lackluster in the action scenes.  It lacked a visceral feeling, with more emphasis being put on the style of the action rather than any tangible impact; ironic given that the same director went on to make the immersive Top Gun: MaverickTron: Ares actually manages to be the best of both worlds.  It manages to be as thrillingly impactful as the action scenes in the original Tron, while also having the advanced visual style of Tron: Legacy.  The movie hits a high point midway through the film when we have Ares and Athena drive their light cycles in the real world for the first time.  We’ve seen light cycle races in both of the previous Tron movies, but this film makes their scene much more thrilling.  Here we finally see how these things perform under real world physics, and it creates a stark contrast.  One of the great things about this scene is that it looks like they really built physical light cycles as a workable prop in the movie.  It reminded me a lot of the bat cycle scene from The Dark Knight (2008), with this out of this world vehicle cruising through a real city street.  Director Joachim Ronning also makes the wise artistic choice of mounting the camera on the cycle itself, placing us the audience in the drivers seat.  The Tron series has been lacking in action scenes that feel immersive and that’s what helps Ares to stand out.  And while the cycle scene is a definite highlight, the rest of the movie also manages to keep the tempo moving, with a lot of bombast and style working in tandem.  It’s only when the action set pieces stop that the movie starts to lag.  Thankfully, the movie is action heavy, much more so than Legacy, and that helps to make the film a mostly fun time.

One of the things that makes Ares feel different from the other Tron movies is it’s aesthetic.  The original Tron was unlike any other movie ever made, with the use of back-lighting giving both the environments and the characters themselves a neon like glow.  That has carried on throughout the franchise.  While Tron: Legacy added in more naturalistic color, especially on the facial tones of the characters, it also maintained the back-lighting aesthetic with lights built into the costumes.  Tron: Ares does that as well, but here they really upped the contrast between light and dark.  The warrior programs created by the Dillinger Corp. all have the color definition of red in their suits (a carry-over from the original Tron where all the bad guys were in red and the good guys were in blue).  Most of the movie takes place during the dead of night, so when Ares and Athena are out on their cycles or are brandishing their weapons, that red really stands out against the darkness.  This is definitely the darkest film in the series when it comes it’s visuals.  A big reason why the movie looks as good as it does is because it was shot by celebrated cinematographer Jeff Cronenweth, who has famously done many films for David Fincher including Fight Club (1999) and The Social Network (2010).  He’s a master when it comes to creating dark scenes with stark lighting contrasts, which is probably why Disney sought him out.  Another element of the movie that really adds to the experience is it’s music.  Perhaps as an answer to the success of the Tron: Legacy soundtrack, Disney wanted to get another famous rock band involved without having to go back to Daft Punk, who are not the kind of band intent on repeating themselves.  To give the movie a whole different sound, they went to Oscar winning composers Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross.  The famed Nine Inch Nails members have been working in film composition for years now, including being employed by Disney before with their Oscar winning score for Pixar’s Soul (2020).  Given the synth style of music, they seemed like a perfect fit for Tron, but the duo went a bit further, deciding to get the entire band involved on this project.  It would have been unimaginable a decade ago that we’d see a Disney film scored by the likes of Nine Inch Nails, but that’s what make Tron so unique as a series.  And the NIN socre is perfectly suited for this movie, especially if the theater is equipped with a robust sound system.  This film score will definitely be rattling your bones with it’s aggressive sound.  Unfortunately, most of it all feels the same throughout the film, which does make it less memorable than Daft Punk’s Legacy score.  This is the one are where I feel Tron: Legacy was better, because Daft Punk put so much variety into the different themes, whereas Nine Inch Nails just stick with the same beat throughout.

One of the more controversial choices during the making of this movie was casting Jared Leto in the titular role of Ares.  Leto has, to put it lightly, been a controversial figure as of late.  Scandals aside, he’s also had a recent loosing streak at the box office, being a part of multiple box office bombs like House of Gucci (2001), Morbius (2022) and Disney’s Haunted Mansion (2023).  Not just casting him in this multi-million dollar tentpole but also placing him at the center is a major risk on Disney’s part, but Leto is far from being the movie’s main problem.  If anything, he’s appropriately cast as Ares.  Ares is by design to be devoid of character; an AI in search of an identity.  It’s in this that Leto’s understated style of acting actually fits, and I’ll take understated Leto over whatever the hell he gave us in House of Gucci or his performance as the Joker in Suicide Squad (2016).  A lot of the other actors do what they can with characters that are unfortunately just as ill-defined as Ares.  Evan Peters has a presence on screen as Julian Dillinger, but his villain role is overly eccentric and cliché and beneath the talent that someone like Peters has shown in other roles.  You definitely miss the aura of grandeur that the late David Warner brought to his villainous role as Dillinger in the original Tron.  Greta Lee also tries her best to make the most of her character, who is also very thinly defined.  The actor who stands out the most is Jodie Turner-Smith as Athena.  She brings a real menacing presence to the film and helps to make her character a lot more memorable than probably was on the page.  What does become clear while watching the movie is that a lot of the performances feel like they were more fleshed out in longer cuts of the movie.  Disney seemed pretty adamant about keeping this movie under 2 hours, and the editing done on this film seems to have mostly centered on fleshing out the action scenes.  So, a lot of character development is missing in the final edit.  Truth be told, Tron has never had the most memorable characters, other than Bridges’ Flynn (who thankfully gets a nice extended cameo here), but you definitely get the feeling that the movie would be a lot more exciting if we actually cared more about what happens to these characters.

You would think that after 15 years of development that Disney would have cracked the code over how to make a Tron movie that actually lives up to it’s potential.  Instead Tron: Ares is just another generic, albeit we-crafted, action movie capitalizing on the nostalgia of it’s predecessors.  If you’re looking for Tron to finally break out and become an elite franchise in the same class as something like Star Wars, you’ll have to wait a bit more because Tron: Ares is not that movie.  It’s hard to tell if there is any future for Tron at all, given the amount of time that we’ve waited for each installment.  If this movie underperforms, Disney may just end up giving up on it entirely.  The one thing that Tron had going for it initially was it’s ground-breaking visual effects and unique aesthetic, and that perhaps was not enough to build a long lasting franchise on, even though 40 plus years later Disney was still trying.  The positive thing about Tron: Ares is that it didn’t solely capitalize on past nostalgia.  It attempted to do things a bit different, and the result did yield some pretty impressive action sequences.  The smart thing that the filmmakers did with Tron: Ares was to keep it from being too self-important, which was Tron: Legacy’s biggest flaw.  It knows that the big selling point is the visuals and the action, and that’s where the focus was put, and the result makes this a better than average action flick that is best appreciated on a big screen with a robust sound system.  I saw this movie in 3D IMAX, and it honestly had some of the best 3D I’ve seen in a long while.  I just wish that maybe Disney would’ve given the script just a little more polish, allowing for better character development so that we could appreciate the story more.  Overall, the original Tron still stands as the best in the series, thanks to it’s pioneering visuals and overall nostalgic charm, but Ares definitely has the best action scenes in the series while Legacy has the best soundtrack.  A lot of people may end up just skipping the movie and end up buying the Nine Inch Nails soundtrack by itself, which is fair.  The sad reality is that there may have been a time and place where Tron could have turned into one of the biggest franchises in movie history, but it’s timing was at the wrong time.  It was either too ahead of it’s time, or just missed out on the right moment to reach it’s audience.  It’s hard to say if Tron: Ares will get the same reassessment from audiences and critics that it’s predecessors did in the years ahead.  Given that Disney is less inclined to give their franchises time to gestate over multiple generations of audiences, it may indeed end up being the end of line for Tron. 

Rating: 7/10

Let’s Do the Time Warp – The Twisted 50 Year Legacy of The Rocky Horror Picture Show

It’s astounding, time is fleeting.  Madness takes its toll.  50 years ago, a little movie based on a small experimental play performed on the stage in London made it’s way to the big screen for the first time.  It’s initial release was met with plenty of indifference from audiences and critics at the time, but what came next took everyone by surprise, including the people who made the movie.  The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975) became a cult hit with audiences who were made up of what society would consider outsiders.  People of the LGBTQ community, punk rockers, and just people who defy societal conformity of any kind were drawn to the unashamed and in your face campiness of the film, and it’s enduring message about living open and free.  But, Rocky Horror is more than just any cult film; it is “The Cult Film.”  The very idea of “cult movies” exists because of Rocky Horror, mainly because of how the movie set the standard for creating a subculture all on it’s own.  The audiences who go to see the movie are not just there to be viewers; they are active participants.  Screenings of Rocky Horror have turned into ritualistic events, where people dress up as their favorite characters, bring their own props to imitate what they see on the screen, as well as make call backs to the movie itself with what has evolved into a whole secondary script just for the audience.  Since it’s re-release in 1977, The Rocky Horror Picture Show has remained in continuous exhibition all over the world.  No matter what day it is, there is likely some theater out there playing The Rocky Horror Picture Show; most likely around the midnight hour.  Now, even after 50 years, Rocky Horror not only has maintained it’s subversive edge but it seems even more essential for our world today than ever before.  But why this movie?  What was it that made this movie the film that would launch a subculture of it’s own that makes this more than just a movie?  The strange journey that The Rocky Horror Picture Show has taken over this half century is certainly a peculiar story on it’s own.  So, let’s do the time warp again and see how this movie became the cult hit that it is today.

The Rocky Horror Picture Show began as an idea from a struggling actor in London named Richard O’Brien.  As a fan of science fiction and B-Movie horror, he drafted a concept where he combined all the elements he loved into a rock and roll musical.  While O’Brien was briefly appearing in a London staging of Jesus Christ Superstar, he shared his concept script with the show’s director Jim Sharman.  Sharman liked O’Brien’s play so much that he decided he would make it his next project.  They managed to secure space at an experimental theater stage above the Royal Court Theater.  The mish-mash of B-movie camp and rock and roll music proved to be a hit with the London counter culture scene and it quickly outgrew the tiny 60 seat venue.  It later expanded to larger venues and eventually it crossed over the pond to be staged in America.  While the show drew in audiences everywhere it went, it still remained a bit of an underground production.  But, it did reach the attention of one very key fan of the show.  The theatrical run of the show in Los Angeles played at the Roxy Theater in West Hollywood, which was owned by a very successful music producer named Lou Adler.  Adler was the man who produced the hit albums of the Mamas & the Papas and Carole King, and now he was looking towards producing for the big screen as well.  It was fortunate timing that Rocky Horror would fall into his lap at the Roxy.  Thanks to Adler’s connections, he was able to get financial backing for a big screen adaptation of the show from a major film studio; 20th Century Fox.  Though the production was going to be financed by a major American film studio, Adler still believed that it was important to still keep the English roots of the show intact, so Jim Sharman was hired to direct the film while Richard O’Brien would adapt the play into a film script.  The production would also operate out of England, with most of the production happening at the Elstree and Bray Studios.  For the stately manor house that serves as the main location for most of the movie, the gothic style Oakley Court was chosen, mainly due to it being a favorite shooting location for the fame B-movie horror studio Hammer Films.

Most of the actors from the original stage version were carried over, except for a couple of noteworthy replacements.  Perhaps to please the American studio backers, the parts of Brad and Janet were re-cast with American actors, and rock singer Meat Loaf was also added to the cast in a small role.  In the end, the casting change worked to the movie’s advantage, because Brad and Janet were meant to be send-ups of bland, clean cut American archetypes seen in the B-Movies of the 1950’s that the show was parodying.  The production managed to find the right duo for the parts, casting stage actor Barry Bostwick as Brad and Susan Sarandon (in her first film role) as Janet.  Their sweet natured innocent performances perfectly fit the tone that the movie need to set with the two, especially in how they clash with all the other characters we meet.  Though initially reluctant to appear in the film himself, Richard O’Brien eventually gave in and brought to life the hunchbacked caretaker of the spooky manor, Riff-Raff.  Two other key roles, Magenta and Columbia, were also filled with veterans of the original stage musical.  Veteran character actor, Charles Gray, was also cast to play the omniscient narrator role of the Criminologist, lending the movie it’s only air of stateliness.  But, when we think of Rock Horror, there is one person above all who comes to mind.  The role of the diabolical Dr. Frank-N-Furter, the mad, transvestite alien scientist, will be forever linked with the one and only Tim Curry.  Curry originated the role on the stage, and despite some rumors of rock singers like Mick Jagger being eyed for the role, there was no doubt that Curry would also play the role on film as well.  From the moment that Curry first makes his descent down that iron elevator and onward, he takes command of the film.  He is nothing but swagger and indomitable confidence.  And given that he presents himself as this pansexual dynamo dressed in the most flamboyant of outfits, he was really unlike anything we had ever seen in a movie before, or really ever since.  Curry’s unique voice also helps to make the character stand out, with his smooth drool combined with a refined way of speaking which Curry purposely took inspiration from Queen Elizabeth herself in creating.

What set The Rocky Horror Picture Show apart at the time was not because of the shocking, sexualized nature of the movie.  John Waters had been making a name for himself for years that continually pushed the envelope with regards to “bad taste” in his movies (which Rocky still feels pretty tame compared to).  No, what made Rocky Horror stand out was that this was a mainstream production made by a Hollywood studio.  20th Century Fox was really taking a chance by putting their logo on this film, and initially they may have regretted doing so.  Rocky Horror was a big financial flop when it first released.  Critics didn’t know what to make of it, and audiences stayed away, forcing many theaters to pull it quickly from release due to poor attendance.  After a couple years, Fox began tossing the movie aside, allowing it to be licensed for screenings at a steep bargain.  This led to it being put on the roster for midnight screenings across the country, as various art house theaters were looking for movies that fit the kind of cheap, B-movie thrills that midnight audiences desired to watch.  Over time, audiences at these midnight showings began to realize how much a hidden gem Rocky Horror was.  The showings began to fill up more and more and pretty soon, Rocky Horror became a small cult hit.  But it would evolve to be something even more than that.  It’s hard to say when the audience interaction part of the Rocky Horror experience began, as it seems to organically grow out of so many individual showings across the world with their own contributions.  Where it seemed to be first observed was at the Waverly Theater in New York around a year into the movie’s midnight screenings run, when people at one of the screenings overheard someone else in the theater react to Susan Sarandon placing a newspaper over her head in a rainstorm by yelling, “Buy an Umbrella, you cheap Bitch.”  Overtime, more and more “call outs” as they call them were being heard at the screenings, and over time, it became part of the reason to go see the movie.

Halloween midnight screenings offered their own contribution as people started coming to the theater dressed as their favorite characters from the movie.  Dr. Frank-N-Furter was an especially favorite costume for a lot of people, particularly those who really wanted to get in on the gender-bending thrill that the character represented.  All the while, the original Rocky Horror Show continued to be performed on the stage.  While the movie was still playing in theaters, the same cast could be seen on the Broadway stage, though sadly it too had a short life span and lasted only 45 performances.  But, somehow, the movie itself would give the live show an unexpected new life of it’s own.  As the midnight screenings began to attract more an more people who dressed up, a few of those audience members went even further and began to imitate what they were seeing on the screen itself, putting on their own performance.  This evolved from just a spontaneous interaction between people in the audience and the movie itself into a stage presentation in it’s own right.  This spawned what we know now as the “Shadow Cast” phenomenon, where a group of actors will literally reenact the entire movie in front of the screen while the movie is playing.  Many people who don’t know what they are getting into when they first see one of these Shadow Cast shows may find the gimmick distracting, but for long time fans of the movie, it’s become another fun addition to the overall experience.  It’s without a doubt one of the most unique things you’ll see in any movie theater, as you’ll feel like you’re getting both a play and a movie for the price of one ticket.  There are several theater troupes across the country whose main focus is just to perform as Shadow Casts at midnight showings of Rock Horror, which apparently is a high demand gig as there are so many of those happening all over the place.  This would eventually reflect back well on the original stage musical as well.  The Rocky Horror Show would have a much longer revival on Broadway in the year 2000, which itself would embrace the raucous interactive nature of the film with audience call backs being encouraged throughout the show.

Over the years, Rocky Horror  has gone on to have a major influence on both the movies and cinema culture at large since then.  In terms of style, it helped to mainstream the glam rock aesthetic, which artists like David Bowie would continue to lean into more over the coming decade.  And of course it popularized the very idea of cult movies in the pop culture lexicon.  Many films have tried to stir up the same kind of cult status that Rocky Horror enjoys, but few have ever come close.  The only movie that seems to have come any where near what Rocky Horror has become as an audience involved experience is Tommy Wiseau’s so bad it’s good cult hit The Room (2003).  Just like with Rocky HorrorThe Room has become a classic due to it’s embrace of audience call backs shouted during screenings.  But, the call back participation itself has spawned it’s own long lasting legacy in the form of a little gimmick called riffing.  In the late 80’s, the show Mystery Science Theater 3000 launched, and it’s appeal was due to the hilarious comedy that would arise from it’s characters watching very bad movies and cracking jokes the whole time while commenting on what they are seeing.  Joel Hodgson, the co-creator of Mystery Science Theater has cited Rocky Horror and it’s audience “call backs” as one of the inspirations for the comedy on the show.  Beyond just Mystery Science Theater, riffing on media has become something of a comedy staple over time, and it stands to reason that we have the rowdy audience members of The Rocky Horror Picture Show to thank for taking out all of the politeness of media consumption.  Rocky Horror’s influence even extends into the Halloween season that it very much feels at home in.  Most Halloween parties are bound to have “Time Warp” on their playlists.  It’s also got a very strong influence on several horror films over the years, including Rob Zombie’s House of 1000 Corpses (2003), which the death metal performer turn filmmaker directly cited as a major influence.

But, perhaps the most profound influence that this film has had is the effect that it had on the LGBTQ community.  The Rocky Horror Picture Show is an unapologetic queer movie and that’s probably what has helped it to retain it’s relevance over so many years.  It’s a movie all about sexual liberation and more importantly about finding yourself in a community that embraces you for who you are.  Frank-N-Furter even has a song in the film called “Don’t Dream It, Be It,” which itself has become something of an anthem in the queer community.  The movie became a lifeline for many queer people particularly during the ultra-conservative Reagan/Thatcher administrations in America and Britain.  As society began to ostracize people for their differences in sexual orientation, especially during the scourge that was the AIDS epidemic, the midnight screenings of The Rocky Horror Picture Show became something of a safe haven for outcasts.  There, being queer was not just normal but also celebrated, and it was a great place to meet other people in the queer community who also weren’t afraid to let their flame burn brightly.  The Rocky Horror Picture Show may not have been the thing that helped to make camp entertainment such a key part of queer culture, but it definitely helped to give it some mainstream credibility.  And given the state of the world we are in now, where the transgender community in particular has been under attack, Rocky Horror’s message of inclusiveness and liberation feels like it’s need now more than ever.  Richard O’Brien, who himself identifies as non-binary, always intended for Rocky Horror to have this deeper meaning about letting go and being yourself regardless of what everyone else thinks.  The transgender community especially holds Rocky Horror and Dr. Frank-N-Furter in particular in high regard.  It’s almost a certainty to see any drag performance include a performance of the song “Sweet Transvestite” at some point; even from cisgender straight performers who just want to indulge a little bit in some gender-bending.  The fact that Rocky Horror has been safe harbor for a queer community that has gone through some very hard times over the years has been probably the most fulfilling legacy this movie has enjoyed in it’s 50 years.

It’s strange to think about where Rocky Horror stands now.  In 2019, 20th Century Fox was merged into the Walt Disney Company, meaning that the family audience centered “House of Mouse” is now the current steward of this film.  Though there were some worries about how this movie was going to be treated by it’s new owners, Disney has thankfully treated Rocky Horror respectfully enough.  It refrained from putting the film into the Disney Vault like it has with so many other Fox properties and has kept the record-breaking streak of the movie’s 50 year limited theatrical run still going.  For it’s 50th anniversary, Disney has even given the movie a 4K restoration, helping to preserve the movie for the next 50 years and beyond.  And now that it’s reached that milestone, people are reflecting on just how meaningful and important the film has been.  It’s been singled out for preservation by the National Film Registry at the Library of Congress for “cultural and historical significance.”  It’s impact on the LGBTQ community alone is something that certainly is worth celebrating.  In that regard, it was way ahead of it’s time, and we are only now starting to recognize how influential it has been.  For the cast and crew of the movie the film is something that everyone involved looks back on fondly.  Tim Curry went on to have a prosperous career both on screen and as a voice actor, and even continued to be a beloved presence on stage, including in musicals like Spamalot.  Unfortunately he suffered a major stroke in 2012 that left him partially paralyzed, which hindered his abilities as a performer, though he still maintains work as a voice actor.  Richard O’Brien attempted to make a sequel to Rocky Horror in 1981 with the movie Shock Treatment, and while it too has a small cult following, it still pales compared to the legacy of the former.  Still, Rocky Horror has helped to keep him in the spotlight over the last 50 years and given him consistent work as an actor in both film and on the stage.  As an experience, The Rocky Horror Picture Show is really a one of a kind.  From personal experience, I actually came to this pretty late, only getting my first true Rocky Horror midnight experience this very year at the TCM Film Festival of all places.  And it was the first time where I truly got what all the hype was about.  It’s more than any movie; it’s an experience.  For anyone interested, find yourself a midnight showing with a shadow cast performance because you really haven’t seen the movie until you’ve watched it in that way.  The Rocky Horror Picture Show is everything a movie can be rolled into a one-of-a-kind experience, so take the plunge and let the movie fill you with ANTICI…PATION.

One Battle After Another – Review

Paul Thomas Anderson is in a class of his own as a filmmaker.  I don’t think there is any other director who balances tone better than he does.  His films could feature some of the darkest, most disturbing moments ever put on screen and then within a single scene transition he can shift to something hilariously comical, and it still would fit together.  He’s made a career out of delivering some of the darkest comedies, with movies like Boogie Nights (1997), Punch-Drunk Love (2002), and Inherit Vice (2014) on his resume.  His movies have also either leaned more fully into the darker side, like There Will Be Blood (2007), or the more comical side like Licorice Pizza (2021).  But one thing that remains constant in his films is a sense of keeping his audience on the edge, making sure that they’ll never know which way his films are headed.  That has made him one of the most admired filmmakers still working in Hollywood today.  Every new film he puts out always garners our attention, because we know that it’s going to be unlike anything we have seen before.  And as a filmmaker, he’s done a lot of things that we’ve thought were impossible.  He’s the guy who showed us that Adam Sandler could actually give a great performance with Punch-Drunk Love, which we’ve now learned was no fluke thanks to the Safdie Brothers several years later.  Anderson has an eye for talent and visual storytelling that is truly unique, and it has earned him a strong place in the filmmaking community.  However, as beloved as Anderson is among filmmakers, his reach still feels a bit limited.  Because of the unusual nature of his films, his reach hasn’t really crossed into the mainstream in the same way that his contemporaries have like Quentin Tarantino or Christopher Nolan.  While many of his films are big in concept and ambitious in execution, he’s still been playing with limited budgets and small art house premieres.  But that seems to have changed.

For his newest film, Anderson is getting something he’s never had before; a substantial budget.  With the financial backing of Warner Brothers, Paul Thomas Anderson for the first time is making a film with a budget north of $100 million.  Thus far, we’ve seen him be a filmmaker who has done a lot with very little in the way of funds.  There Will Be Blood was one of the most impressive looking American epics of it’s time, and remarkably it was made for around $20 million.  While it does excite a lot of Paul Thomas Anderson fans to think about what he might do with a budget of that size given his overall track record, it also leaves a lot of people worried about what that might mean for his style of fillmaking as well.  Anderson has managed to thrive being something of an outsider from the studio system.  So seeing him working with a major studio and taking their money for a film budgeted over 5x more than his average film makes many of his fans worried that he might be selling out.  Will this new movie actually still feel like a Paul Thomas Anderson film, or will it be a soulless studio product?  One of the positive signs is that the movie is not a pre-existing IP, but rather a project of Anderson’s own choosing.  It’s a loose adaptation of a Thomas Pynchon novel called “Vineland” and it’s pretty clear that the reason he’s making this movie is not because he needed Warner Brothers money but rather because they wanted his new film.  Warner Brothers, despite some of their own misguided steps in the past, have actually been quite good at attracting prestige filmmakers to bring their big concept projects under their banner.  It’s something they did with Christopher Nolan for a while with his films Inception (2010) and Dunkirk (2017).  Just this year they also got a big win with Ryan Coogler’s Sinners (2025).  So, they recognize that it’s worth the investment to give a filmmaker like Paul Thomas Anderson the money he needs to make his big vision project come to life.  The only question is, does One Battle After Another prove that Anderson can still deliver on a much bigger scale, or does the movie fall apart under the weight of all those lofty ambitions?

The story of One Battle After Another is set in an America that’s been living under an authoritarian, militaristic regime that has been rounding up migrants and placing them in concentration camps.  Fighting back against this regime is a domestic terrorist group call the French 75.  Two of the members of this group are Bob Ferguson (Leonardo DiCaprio) and Perfidia Beverly Hills (Teyana Taylor).  The two revolutionaries have a fiery romance that builds while they conduct their many acts of resistance against the government.  But, their love affair and antigovernmental crusade hits a roadblock once Perfidia becomes pregnant.  Once their child is born, Perfidia begins to become unhinged and it results in botched raid that gets her arrested.  In order to save herself, and protect her daughter’s secret identity, she ends up naming names of the other French 75 members.  Bob ends up going on the run with his infant daughter, who will grow up believing that her mother died in prison.  16 years later, the young girl named Willa (Chase Infiniti) finds herself suddenly thrust into the chaotic world of her father’s past once an old adversary has picked up the trail.  Colonel Steven J. Lockjaw (Sean Penn), an old enemy of the French 75 has now been given new authority to hunt down the remnants of the revolutionary group, and he’s got a personal matter involving Willa herself that he wants to settle once and for all.  While Bob is still very protective of his daughter, he’s also been out of the revolutionary game for many years, so a lot of his instincts are rusty.  He ends up seeking help from Willa’s karate teacher Sergio St. Carlos (Benicio Del Toro), who himself is involved in his own underground resistance movement.  As Willa becomes the target of this government crackdown, it becomes an endless race between two highly opposed forces; Bob using his network of revolutionaries to help him find his daughter’s safe house refuge, and Lockjaw using his military back might to get to her first.  And all the while, Willa desperately is trying to adapt to all the chaotic events that suddenly have been thrusted upon her.  With all that happens, it’s clear why this movie comes to us with the title One Battle After Another.

There is a lot that unfolds within the story of One Battle, but at the same time, the movie is very simple in it’s narrative.  In the end, it’s just a story about a father doing everything he can to save his daughter from a ruthless predator and the system that has propelled him to power.  A lot of people who have been worried that some of Paul Thomas Anderson’s style would get lost under the weight of a much bigger budget will be rest assured that this movie thankfully still feels like an Anderson film to it’s core.  It’s honestly kind of surprising that this movie actually cost as much as it did to make, because Paul Thomas Anderson doesn’t really do much to flaunt the budget of this movie.  It still feels like one of his grounded, street level films that were made on significantly smaller budgets.  If expensive visual effects were used in the making of this movie, they are barely noticeable as the movie still feels like a very hand crafted film.  But, regardless of how the budget was used, this is undoubtedly another triumph for Paul Thomas Anderson.  It features all of the incredible filmmaking instincts that have made him one of our more exciting cinematic storytellers over the years, with perhaps a bit more scale to it.  I would also say that as entertaining as the film is, it also feels a bit slack in it’s pacing, especially compared to some of his much tighter films like There Will Be Blood and Punch-Drunk Love.  While the overall experience is still thrilling, you can feel at times when it slips into indulgence, which has hurt Anderson’s films sometimes.  But, it’s a minor nitpick on the film, because when the movie does get cooking it is an amazing thrill ride.  Again, Anderson’s skill with balancing tonal shifts is unmatched, and he does that a lot here.  At times you will be laughing hysterically at the absurdity going on in the film, and then a scene later the film will hit you with a gut punch of tension and gut-wrenching tragedy.  In many ways, that’s the biggest asset that this film has, because it is constantly leaving you unsure about what’s going to happen next, which is thrilling in it’s own way.  It’s a movie that only he can make, and that’s a rare specialty in cinema these days, especially when done on this scale.

What I especially love about what Paul Thomas Anderson does in One Battle After Another is the subtle world-building.  While there certainly are a lot of parallels in the film with regards to the state of the world today, the movie also creates this heightened world that only these kinds of characters could exist in.  The shadowy government organizations feel familiar to us, but Anderson also puts his own absurdist spin on them as well, making their secret organization a joke in of itself.  I also like how the revolutionary groups have become so entrenched in their routines, that their code speak way of communications has over time devolved into something like trying to reach customer service through a corporation’s hotline.  Everything is grounded and yet heightened at the same time.  There will probably be some discussion around this film that may make it controversial.  Certainly the mass incarceration of migrant people (primarily Latin American migrants as shown prominently in the film) is going to draw immediate parallels with the current situation in America.  Also the movie isn’t afraid to define the characters in clear black and white terms; the revolutionaries are definitely the good guys here and the white supremacists coded government figures are the bad guys.  The timing of this movie couldn’t be more prescient.  And yet, Anderson doesn’t use this movie to push any agenda either.  It’s merely the backdrop for this cat and mouse chase involving DiCaprio’s Bob, his daughter Willa, and Sean Penn’s Col. Lockjaw.  I do love that Anderson shows restraint here, because I can imagine this movie loosing all of it’s subtlety if it were given over to a less skilled storyteller.  Anderson certainly wants you to think about the injustices committed in this world and be conscientious, but at the same time he knows that the story must be engaging enough to guide us through this crazy world, and that’s why it remains focused on above all else.  It’s the thing that we all will engage with the most on our first watch of the movie, but I’m sure all the extra world details will help to make people want to revisit the film many times over in order to really absorb the world that Anderson created for this film.

The thing that I’m sure most people are going to take away from watching this movie are the performances.  Anderson has always been a great actor’s director, and he’ helped many of his performers deliver some of the greatest work of their careers.  He helped launch Mark Wahlberg’s career with Boogie Nights, showed us a different side of Tom Cruise in Magnolia (1999), made us believe in Adam Sandler in Punch-Drunk Love, and got Daniel Day-Lewis the second of his three Oscars for There Will Be Blood. Now, for the first time he gets to work with one of the greatest actors of his generation, Leonardo DiCaprio, and the long awaited team up does not disappoint.  What I especially love is how loose Anderson allowed DiCaprio to be in this movie.  One of DiCaprio’s most under-utilized talents as an actor has been his knack for comedy, which we’ve seen used only sparingly in Scorsese’s The Wolf of Wall Street (2013) and Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (2019).  Thankfully, Paul Thomas Anderson uses DiCaprio’s comedic chops to great effect here.  It’s especially hilarious watching how clumsily DiCaprio’s Bob steps back into the revolutionary game after so many years out of loop, and his growing frustrations with how the network operates now as opposed to when he was in his prime.  DiCaprio has some pretty spectacular freak-outs in this character role, and a lot of the fun of this movie stems from his character.  But, the true scene-stealer is Sean Penn as Col. Lockjaw.  This is one of Penn’s best performances ever, and that’s saying a lot for the two time Oscar winner.  His Lockjaw is a true transformative performance.  There are so many layers to this character that Sean Penn brilliantly gets to peel back.  I love how his tough guy exterior is so extreme that all it does is spotlight his insecurities that much more.  I especially love that Penn even worked out a unusual gait to the way Lockjaw walks, like every muscle in his body is clenched at all times.  And he’s also not afraid to make Lockjaw as loathsome as he possibly can be, and that in a way makes him even more absurd of a figure.  This is the kind of performance that I’m sure we’re going to be hearing a lot about come Awards season.  The movie also gives us a breakout performance from Chase Infiniti as Willa.  This is her first ever film role, and it is an impressive debut.  She has to carry so much of the film given that so much of it centers around her character, and she manages to have an incredible on screen presence for someone fairly new to this.  It’s especially impressive, given that she’s able to command the screen even in the presence of heavyweights like DiCaprio and Penn.  And while their roles are minor in comparison, Teyana Taylor and Benicio Del Toro also manage to shine in their performances as well.  In addition, like with so many other Anderson films, even the side characters have a ton of personality.

One thing that Paul Thomas Anderson has never failed to deliver on is making his movies look good.  He always works with the best cinematographers in the business, and the production designs on his movies are always incredibly detailed.  He’s also been a purist when it comes to shooting his movies on film.  He’s worked with 70 mm photography on many of his past films, but with One Battle After Another he decided to do something different.  Here he’s working with 35mm film, but he shot the movie utilizing a Vistavision camera.  Vistavision is experiencing a rather surprising resurgence lately after going unused for decades in Hollywood.  A precursor of the IMAX process, Vistavision allowed for larger image captures on 35mm film stock by running the film horizontally through the shutter of the camera rather than vertically.  This allowed for an image that was 8 perforations wide rather than the standard 4, making the image captured twice as sharp and large as usual.  Over time, the format went out of style, but gained attention again last year thanks to the Oscar winning camera work on Brady Corbet’s The Brutalist (2024).  While The Brutalist used Vistavision for parts of the film, Anderson made use of it for the entire movie.  The result is really impressive, as it give the movie some really breathtaking visual flair.  While Anderson doesn’t go overboard with the photography, he nevertheless allows for the Vistavision image to do interesting things with depth of field and focus in many shots.  There is a spectacular sequence involving a car chase near the end of the movie that is one of the most breathtaking uses of camera work I’ve seen in a while.  The placement of the camera in that sequence is truly inspired.  Anderson is working with cinematographer Michael Bauman for the second time after their collaboration on Licorice Pizza, and this is his most dynamic camera work that we’ve seen yet.  Another excellent part of this movie is the musical score from Jonny Greenwood.  The Radiohead band member turned film composer has written music for every Anderson film since There Will Be Blood, and this is yet another brilliant piece of work from him.  The score at times plays like a heartbeat that just keeps pounding through the movie, driving up the tension.  It’s minimalist in the right ways, at times only consisting of one note played over and over again, but it perfectly fits with the chaos that’s unfolding on screen.  Both of these elements, combined with a film production that still feels hand crafted and lived in really helps to show that even with a larger budget at his disposal, Paul Thomas Anderson still can craft a film that feels distinctively him.

While I still hold a couple of Paul Thomas Anderson movies above this one, especially There Will Be Blood which is one of my favorite movies in general, I can definitely say that this is one of the year’s best films.  It’s just great to see one of cinema’s greatest talents still taking chances as a filmmaker and coming out with his integrity as an artist still in check.  It will hopefully bode well for filmmakers in general if this movie does very well at the box office, because it will allow the major studios to see the value in giving filmmakers like Anderson the money they need to make their big original concept films knowing that there is an audience out there for them.  Not every filmmaker manages to do that working under the judemental eye of studio executives.  But Anderson has built a respected reputation over the years as a filmmaker, one that only a fool would try to stand in the way of in Hollywood, and it’s great to see a studio like Warner Brothers recognizing that too.  They know that Paul Thomas Anderson can deliver on his promises as a filmmaker, and that’s why they allowed him to have the budget that he needed for this film.  As someone who has enjoyed many of his films, it is great to see Paul Thomas Anderson succeed so well in maintaining his unique cinematic voice while working within the studio system.  It may be a costlier movie, but it still maintains his signature to it’s core.  The performances are certainly worth the ticket price alone, especially with Sean Penn’s completely transformative work here.  And there is some thrilling camera work on display as well.  It will be interesting to see what kind of replay value this movie has with audiences over time.  I’m certainly eager to see it again, hopefully to catch all the things I missed the first time.  And thanks to the Vistavision photography, this is a movie that demands to be seen on a big screen.  I caught it in IMAX, and it made the experience all the more immersive.  That aforementioned car chase is especially breathtaking on a true IMAX screen.  But even so, this is a Paul Thomas Anderson movie that is indeed going to please his long time fans, while also at the same time hopefully drawing in a few new ones.  He’s a one of a kind filmmaker who certainly deserves more attention, and while One Battle After Another may not be his magnum opus, it is still a masterpiece that hopefully will add onto his already legendary status in Hollywood.

Rating: 9/10

Beyond the Screen – The Wizard of Oz Sphere Experience and the Use of Gimmicks in Cinema

Las Vegas has done a lot to define itself as the Entertainment Capital of the World.  Started of as a hub for legalized gambling in a dry arid region with nothing else around, the city revolutionized casino operations and on top of that became a resort destination onto itself.  Beyond the slot machines and blackjack tables, Vegas catered to it’s clientele by attracting big name entertainers to come to their city and perform.  Frank Sinatra and his “Rat Pack” associates Dean Martin and Sammy Davis Jr. became almost synonymous with the city after their long time residency.  Later on, Elvis Presley would come to Sin City and many others would follow in the decades to come, including Celine Dion and Adele.  It was also the place where illusionists like Penn & Teller and Siegfried and Roy would become international celebrities.  Vegas was definitely the place to go for live entertainment on the grandest scale.  And there were so many options too, with every Casino Resort on the Strip being home to at least one marquee theater.  But, as big as the live acts were on the strip, there was one form of entertainment that had failed to catch on in Las Vegas; the Movies.  Sure, like any city Las Vegas has it’s fair share of multiplexes scattered around, but there wasn’t a movie theater anywhere in town that fit with the larger than life character of the City.  The closest thing that Vegas could do to create a bigger than average destination for the movies in their town was an IMAX theater housed in the cavernous atrium of the Luxor Hotel; which has since closed and been replaced with a museum.  It just seemed like Vegas was going to just be a beacon for live entertainment and not be a destination for the grandest of movie experiences.  That was until 2023 when the Madison Square Garden Company (MSG) opened up a theater venue unlike anything the world had ever seen near the Las Vegas Strip.  Called “The Sphere,” this new venue was not just going to turn the live entertainment world on it’s head, but also the movie going experience as well.

The MSG Sphere is a true engineering marvel.  The $2.3 billion spherical structure is 366 ft. high and 516 ft. wide and includes enough interior seating for 20,000 spectators.  But, what sets the venue apart from everything else is it’s colossal 160,000 square foot LED screen.  The screen projects at 16K resolution, making it not just the largest LED screen in the world, but also the sharpest as well.  And if the screen inside wasn’t impressive enough, the exosphere of the building is also it’s own LED screen, lighting up the Vegas skyline with a free show for all to see.  The venue is primarily designed for live shows, with the floor in front of the screen set apart from the grandstand in order to provide room for the stage.  But concerts in the Sphere are unlike anything ever seen before.  The MSG company spends months preparing a video package for the bands that perform at the venue to play on the massive screen.  The screen allows for the sensation of being transported away as a part of the show.  For the Sphere’s opening, the band U2 was given a residency and their best hits show had the giant screen display background settings as incredible as a desert landscape, a kaleidoscope of Vegas style icons, the datascape of a computer, and an angelic like dome that envelopes the entire audience.  The concert could pretty much feel like it could be set anywhere, with only what we can imagine being the limit.  After U2, other famous rock bands have come to the Sphere to perform, such as The Eagles and the Backstreet Boys.  And each of their shows includes those custom made video packages that deliver an experience like no other.  But, a year after blowing the concert world away with the capabilities of the Sphere’s screen feature, the MSG company looked towards doing something even more state of the art.  There was always a plan to incorporate film experiences as a part of the Sphere’s rotation of acts.  While U2 had it’s concert program going, the Sphere also had an hour long nature documentary from director Darren Aronofsky called Postcards from Earth (2023).  But, MSG was looking beyond, seeking a movie going experience that already had a built in audience that at the same time would also take advantage of the capabilities of the venue.

Fast forward to this year where the Sphere debuted a new presentation of a beloved cinematic classic, The Wizard of Oz (1939).  One of the most watched movies of all time, Oz is a universally known film that has managed to remain a draw for audiences for over 80 years.  But, presenting it as is on a screen the size of the one in the Sphere is not so easy.  For one thing, as good as the restorations have been over the years to keep Oz looking pristine and sharp, the resolution of the movie maxes out at 4K resolution.  It’s limited by the fidelity of the film stock that was used at the time.  It also was made long before widescreen had gone mainstream, utilizing the standard Academy Ratio of 1.37:1. Blown up to play on a screen the size of the one inside the Sphere would also amplify all the imperfections built in to the original film stock.  The film’s grain, which helps to give it a healthy texture when played on a standard sized screen, would look very blocky on the Sphere’s screen.  So, here is where we get to the controversial side of the Sphere’s presentation.  In order to get the movie to match the 16K resolution of the screen, the movie was upscaled using AI programs to create extra detail in the image.  This is not unusual, as AI has been a tool used before in film restoration, though always with great care to retain the fidelity of the original image.  But, The Sphere team went a step further.  They used AI to not only upscale the movie, but to also add more image beyond the original dimensions of the film.  This was so they could conform the film’s image to the dimensions of the screen, which is much wider and taller than even the average IMAX screen, and also built with a curve to envelope the audience.  So, now audiences are not only watching The Wizard of Oz in a way they haven’t seen before, but in many ways also watching a version of the movie that’s never existed before.

It raises a lot of concerns about how AI should be used in the movie making process.  What is at issue with many people is that there is no one left alive from the making of the 85 year old movie, so none of them have consented to the alteration of their work with this version of the film.  Some of the demos of the making of this Sphere presentation show how AI has been used to add on to the original movie, and some of it is indeed borderline questionable.  One particular demonstration showed how they altered a scene where Dorothy is speaking with her Auntie Em and Uncle Henry inside the farm house.  In the original film, we see the actor who played Uncle Henry walk off screen for a few seconds and return.  We don’t see what he was doing off screen in that time.  In the Sphere experience, the scene from the film, which included a lot of panning around to capture the action has instead been turned into a fixed shot.  In order to keep it fixed, as lot of the shots that panned across the room were stitched together to keep the image fixed in one place using AI.  And this includes the moment when Uncle Henry is out of frame for a moment.  We don’t know what he was doing offscreen, but the AI constructed movement that never existed before of the actor pacing around the room to fill those missing moments.  This is beyond just restoring an old film; it’s putting things in that never existed before at all. You can see why so many actors are concerned about how AI will use their images in the future, because here we have a clear example of new imagery being created using a long deceased actors image out of nothing.  Now, the MSG company’s explanation is that this version of the movie is not in any way intended to replace the original.  More than anything else, they are using The Wizard of Oz as more of a test subject for presenting older films on their record breaking screen, and using it as more of an experience than a true film presentation.

The question is; will what they are doing at the Sphere be the start of a new trend in filmmaking?  Are we looking at the future of cinema with the Sphere’s Wizard of Oz experience?  The one thing we do know for sure is that this presentation in particular has been an enormous success.  With ticket prices that range in the same ballpark of concert tickets (usually higher that $100 per seat on the low end), the presentation is selling out shows and with only one screen, the movie has amassed over $50 million in grosses so far.  People are turning out to see this one of a kind experience and it’s making Hollywood take notice.  It’s been reported that MSG is already starting talks with Disney and Warner Brothers over the possible use of their own catalog titles for this Sphere experience.  It probably won’t be long before we see movies from the Star Wars and Harry Potter franchises getting the Sphere treatment.  At least with those films you still have the original filmmakers still around to approve and maybe even oversee the alterations to these films to conform them to the Sphere’s screen dimensions.  But, a large question arises about if this is where Hollywood sees film going in the years ahead.  Are we going to see more venues like the Sphere popping up across the country, and are audiences willing to pay extra for ticket prices to see films in this way?  Part of the reason why the Sphere in Vegas is doing as well as it is is because of the novelty of it all.  No other venue in the world has created an audio/visual experience on this scale before.  And that largely is why people are paying up to experience The Wizard of Oz in this format, even if it’s a movie that most people have likely seen many times before.  If you build one of these kinds of venues in every city, it will rob the original of some of that novelty, which is something that the MSG company probably is hesitant to do.  As the saying goes, what happens in Vegas is best left in Vegas.

But, we are at a time when movie attendance is down from where it was pre-pandemic.  This is largely due to economic uncertainty coupled with the ever rising cost of a movie ticket and also the dwindling number of movies making it to the big screen these days.  It’s not the first time that cinema has fallen into the doldrums.  Just as streaming is currently threatening the theatrical business there was a time when movie theaters also had to contend with the rise of television.  Theaters needed something more to draw in audiences beyond just a good movie.  They needed to create something that you just couldn’t do with television at home.  Thus came an era in the 50’s and 60’s when cinema tried to liven their movies up with gimmicks that enhanced the film experience.  One of the most famous filmmakers who revolutionized the use of gimmicks in movie presentations was a man named William Castle.  Castle worked primarily with B-movie thrillers and horror, but what he’s most famous for was the wacky gimmicks he would employ in the promotions of his films.  He famously gave out life insurance certificates to audience members in the case any of them would die of fright at one of his films.  He also implanted buzzers inside theater seats to jolt audiences members during the presentation of his horror film, The Tingler (1959).  Despite the mad science of all of Castle’s ideas, these gimmicks were still effective, as it helped to make the movie going experience more of a multi-sensory experience.  You can see the influence of Castle’s gimmicks today in the 4DX film presentations at select theaters across the country.  There were other like-minded gimmicks that also came out of that era as well, like the short-lived Smell-O-Rama.  But there were other gimmicks that managed to last much longer, like 3D, which improved over the years as the technology got better.  You could even say that Widescreen was a gimmick at first before it caught on and became a mainstream tool in filmmaking.  What movie gimmicks do more than anything is allow for innovation and experimentation with the artform of cinema, even if they sometime can come off as crude and distracting.  But, for an artform over a century old as cinema is, it’s also got to go through periods of renewal in order to survive changing times.  And using gimmicks is sometimes the best way to draw people back in after they’ve grown tired of the artform after a while.

There’s no doubt that what the Sphere is doing is another in the tradition of using gimmicks to draw people in to watch a movie.  And there are nods to the in theater gimmicks that William Castle was famous for.  In The Wizard of Oz presentation, the famous tornado scene is accompanied with in theater effects a well.  When the tornado glides across the screen, massive fans built into the auditorium will recreate the forceful winds of the twister, making it feel like a real tornado is blowing through the venue itself.  Not only that, but artificial leaves and smoke will also be blowing through the auditorium, further reinforcing the illusion.  It’s clear that MSG doesn’t merely just want to play the movie on their screen; they also want to make it come alive as well.  It could be something that supplants the theatrical experience as we know it now, or it could become something else entirely separate.  It’s an experience that uses the movie we already know and making it into an experience that we’ve never seen done before.  But, is it something that we should be doing with older movies.  If anything, what the Sphere has created is a new type of film experience that would be better suited for newer films.  The documentary made by Darren Aronofsky doesn’t have the controversy surrounding it as the Oz experience does, mainly because it was made from scratch for the venue and not enhanced with AI.  There are many filmmakers out there who might look at the Sphere and see a creative challenge that could lead them towards creating a whole new era of innovation in filmmaking.  There are also a lot of rising talent who may find the dimensions of the Sphere’s screen perfect for their revolutionary visions that they would like to immerse their audiences in.  Because of how new the Sphere is we don’t quite know how much of a lasting impact it will have on the future of cinema as a whole.  But what we know from history is that filmmaking thrives when the tools break new ground and change the way we look at the movies in general.

Speaking for myself, I have yet to actually see what the Sphere experience looks like with my own eyes.  I can only judge from a distance, and while the scale of the venue is awe-inspiring in of itself, the way they are using it could be disruptive for the art of filmmaking in general, and not all in a good way.  Taking a classic film like The Wizard of Oz, and “enhancing” it with AI as a lot of ethical red flags behind it.  If you are presenting it with a good chunk of the image added on artificially, it robs the original film of its artistic merit.  The brilliance of Oz is the unbelievable craft behind it, and a lot of the artistic intent was determined by the limitations of the film stock that was available to them.  You change things like adding on to backgrounds, removing edits, and crafting additional performances from offscreen actors that never existed before through AI technology, you have to wonder if it’s still the movie you grew up loving anymore.  The best thing for this presentation to do is to stay one of a kind, and be treated as nothing more than a gimmick.  The last thing that should happen is for Hollywood to take the wrong message and believe that the best way to re-release their films is to use AI to add on more movie.  It’s like those awful AI generated expansions of famous artworks that people began circulating on social media about a year ago.  Sure, AI is capable of filling in what could exist beyond the frames of these famous works of art, but without the original artists input to say so the artwork loses impact because their original limited frame of view was as the artists intended.  Filling in what’s not there misses the point of the composition. The same seems true for this Wizard of Oz experience.  It’s impressive looking, but it’s also not Oz.  Even still, there is potential for the Sphere to have a positive influence on filmmaking.  Imagine if other big scale filmmakers like Christopher Nolan and Denis Villeneuve look at the Sphere’s massive screen and see it as a challenge that fits with their visions.  For now, it stands as a true achievement for the city of Las Vegas.  Finally, they have managed to gain the attention of the cinematic world and created a venue that could indeed change the theatrical experience for good.  We’ll see what the future of the MSG Sphere holds, but there is no doubt that it is one massive leap in innovation when it comes to the presentation of movies.  True to the city of Vegas, it’s a gamble of a project, and as is the case with their presentation of The Wizard of Oz, they seem to have hit the jackpot.

Tinseltown Throwdown – Megamind vs. Wreck-It Ralph

It’s a common theme in this series to see two major animation studios going up against each other with eerily similar films.  More often it’s a case where the two studios are looking at the same idea, but from different angles.  And then you have the very interesting case of Dreamworks’ Antz (1998) being purposely sped up in release to get out ahead of Pixar’s A Bug’s Life (1998).  It wouldn’t be the last time those two would duel it out, with Dreamworks’ Shark Tale (2004) and Pixar’s Finding Nemo (2003) also making it to theaters in close proximity.  But, as both studios managed to find their footing after a decade in the business, they had the confidence to pursue their own directions as studios and not be in constant competition in the form of comparable ideas.  Perhaps the reason there was so much overlap in the early days of computer animation was because movies about bugs and fish were easier to animate under the limitations of the medium.  Both Dreamworks and Pixar have since shown that they could develop much more complex stories with grander scale animation like How to Train Your Dragon (2010) or Inside Out (2015).  But, in the 2010’s, Disney Animation began to find it’s footing once again with it’s own computer animation division, and they were making the market a lot more competitive as a result.  Disney of course still heavily relied on their tried and true formula of fairy tale fantasy, like with Tangled (2010) and Frozen (2013), but they were also branching out and telling original contemporary stories as well.  And one of their ideas for a new animated film seemed to have a lot in common with another film coming from Dreamworks around the same time.  In this case, we had two stories about “bad guys” who wanted to be good.  While both movies are similar in that theme, their approach to it offers some very interesting variations and it makes both of them equally rich in their explorations.  So, what is it that helps to make Dreamworks’ Megamind (2010) and Disney’s Wreck-It Ralph (2012) unique from each other?

One of the interesting things that the two have in common is that the lead voice actor in both were the stars of the 2008 Adam McKay comedy Step Brothers; Will Farrell and John C. Reilly.  Not really relevant, but I thought it was fun little fact.  And actually, the two actors have appeared in a number of films together, making them a winning comedy duo.  But, here they are the stars of these separate movies.  Will Farrell plays Megamind, the diabolical super villain with supreme intelligence who is constantly attacking the citizens of Metro City, which is protected by a Superman-like hero named Metro Man (voiced by Brad Pitt).  John C. Reilly plays a video game villain by the name of Wreck-It Ralph, a Donkey Kong-esque adversary whose only job is to wreck buildings in a retro style arcade game called Fix-it Felix, named after Ralph’s Mario Brother-like opponent.  The two actors are perfectly suited for their roles, with Farrell really getting to ham it up with his hilariously operatic villain role.  Reilly by contrast plays Ralph much more subdued, but still nevertheless geared well to his comedic talents.  The first big difference between the two ways that these actors play their roles is that Ralph is aware from the start that his role as a villain is purely artificial.  It’s more or less just a job for him, and that’s the way that Reilly approaches the character; as someone who has a role to play but when the job is done, he feels bored by the rest of his existence.  For Megamind, his whole life has been centered around conflict, and that is how Will Farrell plays the character in the beginning.  Farrell perfectly captures the petty one-upsmanship that defines classic comic book villains, and he goes way over the top with his performance in the character’s intro.  But where Megamind and Wreck-It Ralph find their stride in their story is when the characters make that turn to change their direction in life, and that’s where you see the actor’s skills as voice over artists really help to give dimension to what normally would be stereotypical characters.  We see these characters grow and evolve into something very different by the end, while at the same time still retaining that menacing demeanor that defined them before.

“I’M GONNA WRECK IT!!”

One thing that splits the two films is where they start out.  For Megamind, when we first meet him, he’s still satisfied in his role as a villain.  It’s the cat and mouse game he plays with Metro Man that gives him purpose in life.  In the film’s prologue, we see the way he grew up, living a parallel life with Metro Man who has had all the luxury of a good life while Megamind literally is raised behind bars since he was a child.  Because Metro Man came to symbolize everything that is good in humanity by the time he matured into his super hero persona, Megamind had no other direction than to take the opposite route and be his adversary.  And then the movie posits an interesting twist on this traditional comic book story; what if the villain won?  It appears that Megamind got what he wanted and defeated Metro Man, literally blasting him away into dust and bones, and the movie then puts Megamind int the position of asking “what now?”  Megamind is the dog who caught the car that he was chasing, not knowing what course to take next after getting what he wanted.  And that is where the shift in Megamind’s character arc happens.  Wreck-It Ralph on the other hand starts his arc in a different way.  He’s already come to the realization that he’s not satisfied being a villain.  For him, villain work has become routine, especially when he sees how the “good guy” characters in his game treat him less like a co-worker and more like the villain that he has always been for his whole existence.  And this has fueled and existential crisis in Ralph.  He even has chosen to attend villain support group meetings with other video game villains like Bowser and Dr. Robotnik in the movie’s iconic opening sequence. It’s clear from the start that what will motivate Ralph is a desire to reverse his role in life and turn towards being a good guy.

“What’s the use of having it all, if there’s no one around to stop you?”

Of course, for both Megamind and Ralph, reversing their roles in life is not such an easy thing to do.  For Ralph, he merely thinks that jumping from one game to another and filling the role of a hero will do the trick, but heroism is not a field that one slips into quickly.  Ralph tries his hand at participating in a first person shooter game and immediately gets in over his head, and the resulting chaos puts him and the rest of the arcade games in serious trouble.  Ralph over the course of the film keeps getting confronted with the fact that despite his desire to “go good,” his selfish behavior still makes him adversarial to others, and he can’t just on a whim become a good person.  The movie Wreck-It Ralph explores that idea of what defines being a good person.  In the world of the arcades, everyone has that role to play, good and bad.  But people are more complex than that.  Ralph believes that a shiny medal for beating a game automatically makes him a hero, but as he soon discovers that heroism is not in pursuit of glory but rather in the action of doing good things in a thankless way.  One thing that definitely defines both Wreck-It Ralph and Megamind is that their selfishness have put them into their own existential crises.  But while Ralph’s has been built up over a lifetime of routine, Megamind’s manifests through a feeling of absence.  Once the hero is gone, what is a villain to do.  What does the Joker do after he kills the Batman?  Sure, like a lot of villains he continues to do dastardly deeds, but the acts feel empty for him because it’s not what motivated his actions before.  Before it was about using his intellect to destroy his enemy and now that has no outlet.  All the crimes thereafter doesn’t fill that void.  It’s a different starting off point to be sure.  Ralph knows that he’s not a bad guy from the start and is frustrated that no one else sees that, but Megamind used to relish his villain-hood until there was no need for it anymore.  And it makes him wonder if there was any purpose in it at all.

One of the interesting ways that the movies intersect is in how both Megamind and Ralph make their transitions from villain to hero through their interactions with an unexpected ally.  For Ralph, he ends up getting stuck in a candy themed racing game called “Sugar Rush” after his encounter in the FPS game goes haywire.  In there, he meets an obnoxious little girl named Vanellope Von Schweetz (voiced by Sarah Silverman) who annoys him when he first arrives.  But, over the course of the movie, he learns that she is being bullied by the other characters in the game and grows more sympathetic to her plight.  He agrees to help her win her race if she agrees to help him get his hero medal.  And over the course of the story, Ralph finds purpose in helping someone else improve.  In the end, Ralph finds that he doesn’t need to be the ultimate hero to be satisfied; he just needed to find that one friend who would always look at him as their hero.  In a wonderful moment in the movie, Vanellope gives Ralph a sugar cookie medal, which he ends up valuing more than the gold one that he was so desperate to claim before.  It’s the value of friendship that ends up changing Ralph by the end.  In contrast, Megamind makes his turn through a different way.  After defeating Metro Man, Megamind has a run in with local reporter Roxanne Ritchi (voiced by Tina Fey), who is basically the movie’s equivalent of Superman’s Lois Lane.  In a desperate attempt to evade being exposed by her, Megamind disguises himself as her colleague Bernard, and it leads to an unexpected relationship thereafter.  Roxanne begins to have feelings for him, but that leaves Megamind distraught over being revealed because he starts to have feelings for her too.  What ends up motivating Megmind’s hero turn is discovering the fact that hurting someone that he actually cares for makes him feeling rotten inside, and that translates into discovering that a lot of horrible feelings he has had were of his own making.  It’s certainly different from Ralph’s transformation as his motivations are more out of romantic attraction, but ultimately the two find their purpose out of finally learning how to love someone other than themselves.

“Because if that little kid likes me, how bad can I be?”

One big difference between the two stories though is in how they respond to different threats.  Megamind, out of his own sense of insecurity, decides that he wants to start anew by creating a replacement super hero to fight against.  He ends up genetically modifying a regular guy into a super powered being named Tighten (voiced by Jonah Hill) and grooms him into becoming a replacement for Metro Man.  But Tighten proves to be just as petty and selfish as Megamind was, but without the self-awareness to reconsider his morals.  What Megamind ultimately learns is that his own insecurity has been his greatest enemy.  He’s only ever defined himself through adversarial conflict with Metro Man.  The film gives Megamind an extra bit of self-realization once he learns that (spoiler) Metro Man faked his own death.  It turns out Metro Man had the same existential crises that he had been going through and he saw that it was best for everyone to break the cycle by removing himself from the equation, hoping that Megamind would do the same.  Tighten only exists because Megamind refused to change and now that he’s become a major threat, Megamind has no other choice but to be the bigger man and fill that hero role.  The only disappointing factor in this is that there isn’t much to Tighten’s character other than to be that dark mirror for Megamind going through his own transformation.  This stands in contrast with Wreck-It Ralph’s antagonist who also is a black mirror of Ralph in the story.  We hear throughout the film that one of the worst things a video game character can do is to go “Turbo.”  What going Turbo refers to is an incident where a racing game character of that name got jealous of the brand new racing game that was installed in the arcade, and he responded by invading it himself which ended up not just breaking his game but also the new one as well.  Since then, it’s been a cautionary tale for all game characters.  But, as we soon learn, Turbo never went away, he instead injected himself into the Sugar Rush game and has been in disguise of a character named King Candy (voiced by Disney favorite Alan Tudyk).  He not only injected himself into the game, but he also changed it’s code, erasing the memories of all the other players, and excluding Vanellope who was supposed to be the main character.  He essentially is what Ralph has become, but with without the moral scruples to recognize that his selfishness was indeed the contribution to his problems.  What the movie does so well is that it makes King Candy a far more insidious figure; someone who not acts without shame, but in the end also seems to relish in his evil deeds.

Where Wreck-It Ralph seems to come ahead is through its ability to balance the multiple plots that unravel.  One thing that really helps to define Ralph as a hero is that he has that moral compass from the beginning.  It’s what helps him to ultimately recognize that something is off when he arrives in Sugar Rush.  A key clue comes when he notices that everyone says that Vanellope is a glitch that doesn’t belong in the game, but because he’s an outsider he is able to observe Sugar Rush from the view of his own game world and he notices that there is a contraction in that.  Why would she be a glitch in the game if her image appears on the arcade machine itself?  It’s that detective like instinct that helps to unravel everything else into an engaging final act for the story, where Ralph not only has to save one character’s life, but everyone else’s as well; albeit from a mess that he helped to create.  But, through his actions, he manages to undo a much bigger conspiracy that King Candy has been subjecting the people of Sugar Rush to for who knows how long.  Ralph didn’t need to be a hero to be a good person; it’s instinctually a part of him from the beginning.  That’s what separates him from someone like King Candy, who was noting without the attention that he he craved, even if he had to force it out of others.  It’s a different arc from Megamind, because he didn’t quite start out with that inherent goodness inside.  He does start out as petty and cruel, but indeed learns that there is value in caring about others.  The disconnect in his arc though comes from the fact that none of this matters in his confrontation with Tighten in the end.  Tighten is more or less just a mess of his own making that he needs to clean up.  Megamind becomes a hero more or less out of default because the people of Metro City need one in that moment, and he assumes that role.  He still shows some strong character development through it all, particularly in the way his relationship with Roxanne evolves, but the story ultimately is about self-acceptance rather than self-discovery, which is ultimately where Ralph’s story arc takes him.

“There’s a benefit to losing:  You get to learn from your mistakes.”

In the end, both Megamind and Wreck-It Ralph present very engaging portrayals of bad guys turning good, and are led by two very fun and engaging main characters.  But, it’s ultimately Wreck-It Ralph that comes out on top, thanks to its much more richly crafted world.  The strength of Megamind mainly stands with how strong of a character Megamind is.  Will Farrell’s over-the-top vocal performance really helps to make him a fun character to watch, but Farrell also nails the more subtle moments of character reflection as well.  It is also fun to see Megamind assume the role of hero by the end, while also still utilizing his talents as a supervillain.  Those theatrics end up being very handy when facing a threat like Tighten, and ultimately brain wins over brawn in that battle.  But what sets Wreck-It Ralph apart is that it doesn’t solely rest everything on Ralph getting his dues as a hero.  What he ultimately learns is that medals and cheering crowds are not the thing to make oneself happy; it’s knowing that there is someone whose life is made better by you being in it, even if it’s one person.  In the end, Ralph makes it count by putting others before himself.  In one of the film’s most powerful moments, Ralph attempts to sacrifice himself to save Sugar Rush from destruction, and in what he thinks are his final moments, he repeats the mantra from his support group meetings, “I’m bad, and that’s good.  I will never be good, and that’s not bad.  There’s no one I’d rather be than me.”  There lies the heart of being a hero, learning to like oneself, and when you learn that and accept all your flaws and quirks, you learn to be better to others as well.  Ralph needed to learn that the villain and hero dynamic of the gaming world was all superficial, and that he had value all along by just being himself.  Thankfully, after all the chaos that he started, the other characters come to accept him as more than a villain too, especially Felix who sees him much more as a friend through it all too.  And the movie really gives you a richly detailed look at the video game community as a whole too, with even Sonic the Hedgehog and several Street Fighter characters all appearing in cameos.  Both Wreck-It Ralph and Megamind are equally strong as characters, but there seems in the end to be a lot more to Ralph’s story than what we see in Megamind’s.  But overall, there’s a lot more good than bad for both of them.

”One game at a time, Ralph.”

How Big is Big? – KPOP Demon Hunters and How Netflix Measures Success in Streaming

It’s difficult to believe that a movie released quietly in the month of June on Netflix would by the end of August that same year the biggest movie in the world, even to the point of reaching the top of the weekend box office in a short 2 day run.  That is the reality we have seen happen with the sudden phenomenon that is KPOP Demon Hunters.  The film made it to the streaming platform after it was abandoned by its original creators, Sony Animation, and right now Sony is probably kicking themselves over relinquishing this film to Netflix.  But success on streaming has come to mean many different things, and a lot of it isn’t exactly clear to most people outside of the business,  To be regarded as a success, a film needs to be measured with different kinds of barometers that assess it’s value.  For most of cinematic history, films have been judged by their box office sales.  The measure of a successful film traditionally has been based on if it can turn a profit in ticket sales, and this is weighed against the cost of making that film.  If the movie makes more than it’s cost, than it has justified it’s existence, and the goal thereafter is to maximize that profit even further.  But, the passage of time can also swing certain film’s fortunes from disappointing to successful, and this is based on ancillary factors like home video sales and tie-in merchandising.  But, streaming is a whole different kind of market that has changed the ways we judge a film’s success.  With streaming, you can calculate the value of a film based on individual sales, because there is no pay to watch factor.  With Netflix, entry is a monthly subscription fee and that opens the viewer up to watching anything they want when they want that’s available on their platform.  And the actual viewership numbers for each program is not independently measured but is instead reported by Netflix itself.  So, in that kind of market of on demand content for one nominal monthly fee, how exactly do we know what is a hit and what is not?

For KPOP Demon Hunters success was not immediate.  It released on June 20th without much in the way of fanfare.  Internally, Netflix was pleased with the viewership numbers that they were seeing, but it was not exceeding what they had gotten from other original animated films on their platform.  Films like Klaus (2019) The Sea Beast (2022) and Orion and the Dark (2024) were just modest successes for Netflix as an original animation producer.  More often, they were more successful being the refuge for small independent studios when their movies were in limbo after the studio either closed down like Blue Sky, which Netflix got the film Nimona (2023) out of, or were the place for more experimental fare, like Guillermo Del Toro’s Pinocchio (2022).  During the pandemic, a big studio like Sony looked to Netflix as the place where they could get their newest film released so they could avoid disaster with the theatrical market shut down at the time.  The film, The Mitchell’s vs. The Machines (2021), made it to the platform in this circumstance, and this likely helped Sony down the line determine where to send their other film that they seemed to have little faith in recovering their investment in.  KPOP Demon Hunters certainly had a built in audience with the rapid pop music fandom that would’ve certainly given it a chance, but Sony seemed more concerned with the direction that their more successful Spider-Verse was heading in.  Spider-Man: Across the Spiderverse (2023) was a massive success, but completing it’s follow-up sequel was becoming an issue and that’s where Sony Animations’ focus was being directed.  KPOP Demon Hunters would’ve been too much of a creative risk for Sony which was trying hard to compete with the top dogs like Disney, Dreamworks and Pixar, and they didn’t want a financial disappointment to derail that.  So, giving it to Netflix would help to shield them in case it didn’t work out.  Maybe there it would find it’s audience.  Little did they know just how much of an audience Netflix would help this little movie find.

It wasn’t immediate.  It premiered modestly at first, bolstered no doubt by KPOP super fans.  But the premiere numbers were not exceptional.  It’s first week viewership, based on Netflix’s numbers, paled in comparison to those of the Disney+ premiere of Moana 2 (2024), a movie that was also a huge success in theaters.  But, what Netflix started to notice that took everyone by surprise was that the viewership numbers for the film weren’t going down; they kept going up, week after week.  After a month, KPOP Demon Hunters had reached the top ten movies of all time on Netflix’s streaming charts and was still climbing.  But, there was another phenomenon that proved that the movie was more than just a streaming success.  The film’s soundtrack was rising up the chart in record sales.  One of the songs from the film, titled “Golden,” had even reached number one on the pop charts.  The last song to do that was Disney’s Encanto’s (2021) “We Don’t Talk About Bruno,” and it was the first movie soundtrack to chart at #1 since Encanto too.  The success of a movie soundtrack is a pretty good indicator that your film is becoming a success outside of it’s streaming boundaries.  But, it also seems that even Netflix underestimated how big this would be as well.  When you know your movie will have broad cinematic appeal, you would want to maximize profit off of it with a lot of tie-in promotions.  But, Netflix didn’t think that far ahead.  There are no tie-in merchandise or cross promotions going on with this movie, and Netflix is having to play catch-up quick so that they don’t miss the opportunity while this movie is still on a hot streak.  But, one thing they could do was break their longstanding rule about not giving their movies a wide release in theaters.  As KPOP Demon Hunters fever was at it’s highest point, the streaming giant relented and put out a Sing-Along version of the film into 1,700 screens across North America for just two days.  And even though it was brief, the end result still gave Netflix their first ever #1 film at the weekend box office.

It wasn’t the first time Netflix had charted in the box office top 10.  Two and a half years prior, Netflix had put out Rian Johnson’s Glass Onion (2022) into theaters for a one week run; likely due to an obligation in their contract with the director.  The film was a modest success in that one week, and many wondered if it would’ve continued to perform well if given a lengthier run over the holidays.  The problem is that Netflix has never allowed themselves to pursue that question even further.  They have been, since the beginning, a streaming centered business model.  They have spent billions on production costs to build up their library of films and shows, but the only revenue that is generated for them is based on their monthly subscription revenue.  Their investment in quality shows and movies has seemed to pay off in the long run, as they are undisputed the kings of streaming, beating out even the competition from the major studios that all launched their own streaming platforms in the last couple years.  But, they at the same time seem to leaving a lot of money on the table by not putting their films out in theaters.  The movie theater owners are not against accepting their movies, even though Netflix has done a lot to drive down their business over the years.  Netflix seems determined to stick with their own business model, which is to make the movie industry conform to them and have their streaming first form of distribution be the new norm of Hollywood.  But, as we have seen play out in the last couple of weeks, there is still an appetite for watching movies in theaters when it’s the right kind of movie.  A movie like KPOP Demon Hunters certainly got it’s start on streaming, but it’s grown far bigger than that and perhaps Netflix is handicapping themselves by still sticking with their own business model.  They put the movie out on their own terms, just for two days, but all it has led to is more questions about their choices.  How much bigger would it have been had they kept it playing in theaters longer than they had?

Part of Netflix’s rationalization for releasing movies they way they have is that they believe that movie theaters are a dying business and that streaming is the future of entertainment.  There is some validity to Netflix’s claim in this sense, as movie theaters have been struggling in the last few years.  Of course Covid was a major factor in the downturn of the theatrical business, but there have been underlying issues that were present long before the pandemic.  The rising cost of tickets has been a particular sticking point with customers.  For many people, they feel like they are being priced out of the movie theater experience, with tickets on the low end costing upwards of $15 dollars in most places now.  This has become especially expensive for for families, with a day out to the movies possibly costing around $100 after tickets and concessions.  Paying Netflix or any of the other streamers a flat monthly fee between $10 and $15 just seems more economical by comparison.  But, there are still movies that are able to draw people to the theater.  The number of them are fewer than it has been before, but they’ve managed to keep theaters afloat in these difficult times.  Netflix makes the case that their platform allows for better visibility for movies that normally wouldn’t have a chance in competition at the movie theaters.  It’s probably why you see a lot fewer mid-budget movies in the theaters, because putting them on streaming has been viewed as a safer bet.  Previous box office titans like Adam Sandler and Eddie Murphy almost exclusively premiere their films on streaming now.  But there’s also the argument that the reason movie theaters are struggling is because they don’t have enough in the way of movies that could boost box office, such as the ones that go to places like Netflix.  The slate of films playing in theaters are either low risk indie films like the ones from A24 and Neon, or big studio tent-poles.  What movie theaters need is more variety, particularly with the movies that have since left them for streaming.  Netflix may argue that people who go out to the movies are not the same as the ones that consume movies on their platform, but KPOP Demon Hunters just proved very definitively that there is definitely a lot of crossover that they have been ignoring.

One thing that has been changing recently is the mindset of the major studios regarding where they are choosing to premiere their films.  Disney in particular made a different judgment call with two projects that they initially planned for streaming on Disney+, and it led to some much needed financial success.  Moana 2  started off in development as a six part animated series, continuing the adventures of the characters from the popular 2016 original as an exclusive for Disney+.  But after a string of disappointments for the Disney Animation studios with Strange World (2022) and Wish (2023) falling hard at the box office, Disney needed something with a built in audience to help boost the ailing studio’s image as a box office contender.  The series was whittled down into a 100 minute film and was released in theaters in November 2024, and the result was a billion dollar grossing film.  Some complained that the film was uneven because of it being reworked in the eleventh hour and that it was not as good as the original, but that didn’t matter.  The film was a financial success because it was a movie that people wanted to see in theaters, including a lot of families.  A similar switch in release strategy also happened with the Lilo and Stitch (2025) remake, as that film was also originally developed as a Disney+ exclusive.  The lesson learned by Disney is that they should strategize which movies would have the best chance of bringing families to the theater, rather than trying to bank on just their brand giving them the boost they need.  The downside would be that studios like Disney would bank more on safer bets rather than big risks, but as well as Lilo and Stitch and Moana 2 have done, it’s counterbalanced with failures like Snow White (2025) and Wish.  What these successes have done is show that theatrical grosses are the most effective barometer for signalling how your brand is doing and it’s something that Disney and other studios are returning more often to now for deciding their future directions.  Had they gone all in on the streaming route, they would’ve missed out on $2 billion worth of revenue on those two films alone.  And premiering in theaters first has not cut into their appeal on streaming either, because Moana 2 has been one of the most streamed movies of the year; even in KPOP Demon Hunters territory.

Netflix can certainly think that monthly subscriptions alone can sustain their company.  It’s been a benefit to them so far, as they are one of the most valued brands right now in the entertainment business.  But, as KPOP Demon Hunters record-breaking weekend grosses have shown, they can make even more money if they wanted to.  The theatrical experience, given the right movie, can help a film endure far beyond it’s original release.  A lot of films benefit from audiences reactions, and that’s something that you can’t replicate just in your living room by yourself or with a couple friends and family.  KPOP Demon Hunters‘ brief but explosive run in theaters was a big deal because audiences finally had an opportunity to see this movie with a crowd of fans, all singing along with them.  It was like a concert experience for them.  Keep in mind, many of the people who sold those screenings out had already seen the movie over the two months that it had been playing on Netflix.  They already loved the movie, but they hadn’t experienced it in a way like this, and that was something worth leaving the house and paying a ticket price for.  KPOP Demon Hunters will undoubtedly be remembered far longer in pop culture because of that.  Most other Netflix films, even the ones deemed a success, have short life spans in the public conscious.  This is largely due to way that Netflix’s algorithm works.  Some movies are pushed to the top of the home page, especially the ones that Netflix wants you to see right away, but there are so many films that quickly disappear into the background if there is low interest in them.  Most people probably aren’t even aware that Netflix has had many other original animated movies on their platform, including another one from the same Sony Animation team that made Demon Hunters; The Mitchell’s vs. The Machines (which, personal opinion, I actually like a lot more).  Netflix honestly has nothing to lose and more to gain if they put their movies into theaters first before putting them on streaming; and I mean in wide release.  Something like KPOP Demon Hunters should have been playing on twice as many screens as it had and it would probably been hitting 9 digit figures in grosses by now.  It’s hard to make the argument that it’s the biggest animation success story of the year when the only thing you have to show for it is a single weekend gross and a chart topping soundtrack.

Netflix will almost certainly fall back on what has worked for them before, but I feel like KPOP Demon Hunters has challenged their business model the most out of all the other movies they have made.  There has to be some talk around the studio about what they’ll do when they inevitably make a sequel to the film.  It would be foolish not to give a sequel a wide release in theaters.  They’ll reap the benefits of a huge box office payday and see that same audience follow the film to their streaming platform.  In general, movie studios across Hollywood are definitely looking at theatrical first release strategies as a net benefit for their brands.  Some movies take more time to find an audience, but at least with a theatrical release you get that upfront monetary value to gauge the movie’s initial appeal.  You make a profit in theaters, then the rest is all an added bonus.  And we’ve seen that movies don’t lose their value by the time they make it to streaming.  If you place the movie on streaming first, there is a good chance that the film may get lost in the shuffle and buried in the algorithm.  At least when it’s put out in theaters it has a chance to generate some individual value.  Let’s not forget, Netflix has their controversial money losers too, including this year’s The Electric State (2025), which for some reason the studio poured over $300 million into.  Did Electric State drive any more traffic to Netflix? Unlikely, and after about a couple of weeks it was out of their top streaming chart and buried deep in the algorithm.  Even Netflix’s accounting couldn’t hide the wasteful spending that that movie clearly showed.  Would theatrical exhibition have helped?  Probably not, but at least you would have a clear dollar value on how audiences received the film rather than the internal number of viewership that they keep track of.  As the streaming wars have died down, the movie studios are looking at streaming as an extension of a movie’s life span more and more and not as the thing that’s going to take over the business.  They are diversifying, and Netflix should consider that as well.  They have a great many films that are sadly overlooked by most audiences, and a lot of those films would have generated more buzz if they were properly presented on a big screen from the start.  KPOP Demon Hunter’s phenomenal success could be the thing that shifts the way Netflix looks at exhibition, and hopefully we’ll see that bright red “N” logo on many more big screens in the future.

This is….