Mockingbird In A Blizzard


By Nadia Ranaputri
 

Image source: nerdsite.com

Director: Matthew Vaughn
Cast: Taron Egerton, Colin Firth, Julianne Moore, Mark Strong, Pedro Pascal, Channing Tatum, Halle Berry, Jeff Bridges.

When Colin Firth's Harry Hart states "Manners maketh man," before engaging in a bar brawl, Kingsman: The Secret Service places its foot on a pedestal and sets its sights on a lavish and all out fun ride. Its sequel, The Golden Circle, boasts no less of them.

After becoming an official Kingsman agent, Eggsy Unwin (Taron Egerton) is greeted by an old foe that leads to a fight and an array of new complications ahead. When a criminal organization by the name of the Golden Circle attempts to wipe Kingsman out, Eggsy and his remaining Kingsman companions seek assistance to their American counterparts, the Statesman.

Taron Egerton's second round in the role of Kingsman agent Eggsy is still as fantastic as in the first film, but in here, there's really not as much of a development here as it was in the first film. It probably has something to do with the fact that being a spy is the highest development he's ever going to get, but it doesn't offer as much range and depth that the first film had. His companion, Colin Firth's Harry Hart, once an equal front man with Eggsy in The Secret Service; takes a backseat in the sequel, albeit still impeccably entertaining during his presence with his dry humor and compelling action scenes.


Image source: Allocine

The Statesman, being the Kingsman's new addition, adds in big names with some having wittily fun action sequences and some good humor, but that's about it. There's nothing much else under the surface for them. Halle Berry's Ginger Ale makes an intriguing companion alongside Mark Strong's Merlin. However, it's not until the very end that she truly gets the opportunity do something exciting for a little while. Channing Tatum's Agent Tequilla, the Statesman's resident bad boy, has a great entrance with a two-on-one brawl and a Southern accent to boot, but backs out from the rest of the action for most of the film's portion. Pedro Pascal, an ultimate charm who has played eccentric characters in Game of Thrones and Narcos; gets the biggest amount of screentime and action out of the rest of the Statesman. Even so, it doesn't entirely compensate his muddled motivation that doesn't seem to pan out as well as it could have. Ultimately, his character felt like a wasted opportunity, which is unfortunate, since I was already a fan of Pascal prior to this film, and his involvement made me even more excited for it than I already was.

If there's one thing that the film manages to really do brilliantly is its action, and despite relying half of its weight on CGI; it's pretty remarkable, and bloody, too (not a surprise, there.) There's a great action sequence involving Egerton's Eggsy in a cab fight around London with an old foe that starts the movie on a promising note. When it comes to the rest of the action afterwards, whether it was the fun rehash of the infamous bar fight scene from The Secret Service with an Indiana Jones like twist, or the color popping vicious brawl set to Elton John's Saturday Night's Alright for Fighting; it keeps its promise. Kingsman's humor and eccentricities are as expected, absurdly good, which isn't much of a surprise, but it is dialed up more here than it was in the first film. From a cussing Elton John to killer robo-dogs, a Kingsman film is not without its eccentricities, and The Golden Circle is no different.

Unfortunately, The Golden Circle, despite its glorious action sequences and wickedly colorful palette, overstuffs itself a little too much with its many ideas being plunged in all it once. Most of the concepts are brilliant, but it's so much to take in, that it feels like a Jenga tower that's slightly tilted, and nearly, just nearly; on the verge of falling. Only difference is, a Jenga tower could only fall if a couple of its blocks are removed. The Golden Circle, on the other hand, could been more solid by removing a small chunk out of its runtime (particularly on a scene that takes place in a music festival that doesn't really offer anything to the story other than to amp its vulgarity) and give a couple of minutes to process the things that just happened instead of running rapidly from one act to another.


Image source: Slash Film


Think of The Golden Circle as a roller-coaster. You're about to embark on a roller-coaster with your friends, and once the ride starts, the only thing you're focused on is the ride. Once you get off, all you remember is that sense of fun. Everything else, the people, all the twists and turns, are mostly blurred out, because your focus will be on how fun and exciting the ride was. That's Kingsman: The Golden Circle as a whole: all fun on the action standpoints, but a little forgettable on everything else, especially when it comes to its villain Poppy, who despite her devious plan of wiping out most of the Earth's inhabitants by her drug cartel and punishing her henchmen in gruesome ways; doesn't bring as much to the table as Samuel L. Jackson's Richmond Valentine did in The Secret Service.

There's something odd about The Golden Circle. When you look back and revisit the film, there's that sense of peculiarity from the film that doesn't quite sit well. It's eccentric in all the right ways, but some seem misplaced, as if they shouldn't really be there. For a sequel to a film that paints an entirely new slate to the spy genre, The Golden Circle doesn't feel as solid or memorable as The Secret Service, rather the opposite. It's still a fun ride that boasts a witty charm, and the action scenes are brilliantly boisterous, but that's probably the most memorable thing that you're going to get from it.

Stars: 2.5/5

Trailer
By Nadia Ranaputri

Image source: avclub.com

Director: Kathryn Bigelow
Cast: John Boyega, Will Poulter, Algee Smith, Anthony Mackie, Jason Mitchell, John Krasinski.

As Kathryn Bigelow's latest film, Detroit is an active detonator. It doesn't open with a bang, it opens with an inevitable spark of blazing fire that leads to days of riots, and days of full-blown war-zone.

It's 1967. All is peace and quite in the streets of Detroit. All is normal, but it's later proven to be the spark in what came to be the 12th Street Uprising, and the oncoming days of riots and relentless retaliation (including a vicious barging from the police at the Algiers Motel).

Detroit sets its story through multiple characters, particularly of John Boyega's Melvin Desmukes, a private security guard who is introduced when he is ordered to protect a grocery store, and offers a cup of coffee to fellow officers nearby before all hell breaks loose at the Algiers Motel. Torn between his loyalty to his job and his need to protect the people who are wronged and falsely accused, his performance brings Boyega to a whole other level, proving himself once again in another stellar role. Along with Boyega, Algee Smith's Motown singer Larry tears through the spotlight with a soulful and captivating performance.
 
Image source: amsterdamnews.com


On the opposing side is Will Pouter's Phillip Krauss, a ruthless officer who feels that his acts are righteous ("You believe this is USA?" he remarks in disbelief during one scene), is a force to be reckoned with. Poulter's performance snaps full attention as he runs around using his weapon to full use. He's seen shooting an African-American male heading out from the grocery store, then went on to claim that he "missed" when he's accused of it; another has him commencing his own game of judge and jury to try and get the assumed suspects at the Algiers Motel to confess, only to end in blood spills and Krauss acting like nothing ever happened. A character that one can easily hate the moment he steps in, but also a character whose presence warrants the outmost attention.

Detroit's visual palette is anything but clean. It's viscerally raw, and it's as real as it gets. Detroit begins with a party that turns into a riot of African-American citizens asking the police force what they did wrong to be granted injustice among them. The riots and the retaliating force of the police have turned Detroit into war-torn territory, or "No Man's Land," as one character calls it in the film. The majority of Detroit's African-American citizens are assumed to be a threat, and even one scene has the police force mistaking an innocent citizen peeping through a window for a sniper.

Image source: newsweek.com

Detroit's approach to the 1967 riots is like a vice grip, it holds you captive to see the brutal riots and unsettling injustice until it seeps its point right through the screen. We as the viewers are the witnesses who are trapped among the riots. In some cases, Detroit is like a walking trap filled with bombs that detonate once you step on the wrong plate; and in some parts, it may even feel like a documentary, given how its realism outweighs dramatization. The more settling parts can be seen as more of a dramatization, albeit still engaging enough.

Detroit sizzles with raging fire and relentless force. It has its moments where the spark fizzles, but it's when Detroit detonates and goes in full guns blazing that becomes the centerpiece of attention and sends its message straight to us. There is no better time for Detroit to tell its story on screen than now, when history has seemingly repeated itself in present day. Once Detroit sends its message, it's loud and clear, and once it's out, it becomes a lingering trail of smoke in the aftermath of a fire that doesn't go away.

Stars: 4/5

Trailer
By Nadia Ranaputri

Image Source: Movie Pilot
 
Director: Andy Muschietti
Cast: Jaeden Lieberher, Bill SkarsgƄrd, Finn Wolfhard, Jeremy Ray Taylor, Sophia Lilis, Chosen Jacobs, Wyatt Oleff, Jack Dylan Grazer.

There's an eerie yet brilliant coincidence that It's Pennywise awakens every 27 years in Stephen King's novel. Tommy Lee Wallace's It was released in 1990. 27 years later, It reawakens for the new generation.

Based on Stephen King's novel than spans of more than 1,000 pages worth of story, It takes place in the Summer of 1989 in the town of Derry, where after the disappearance of some of the town's young citizens, a group of young outcasts that go by the name of the Losers Club; decide to act upon finding the figure behind the disappearances: a mysteriously terrifying dancing clown named Pennywise.

Like Christopher Nolan's World War II blockbuster Dunkirk, It boasts fresh new faces in its ensemble. It's main lead Bill, played astoundingly by Jaeden Lieberher; is a stutterer, but a determined and passionate character at heart. His fellow friends in the Losers Club, all with different personalities; complete a compelling ensemble that provides the film of its many heart and humor. Most importantly, we care about them. Their daily lives are already a living hell for some of them, and the appearance of Pennywise becomes a bloody icing on a demolished cake. Another particular standout aside from Lieberher can be seen from the Club's loudmouth, Richie Tozier, played by Finn Wolfhard of Stranger Things, who is the occasional comic relief with his humorous remarks.


Image Souce: IMDB

As It's villain, Bill SkarsgƄrd's Pennywise is a fascinating yet immensely horrifying figure with an infectious smile that's meant to kill. From his childish laugh to his eerily cheery delivery of "Beep beep, Richie," notably one of It's most famous lines; Pennywise has a child-like demeanor that's both captivating and revolting, and SkarsgƄrd's performance creates a fine line between the two. He can be humorous when he needs to, but mostly sickening and gruesome once he shows how terrifying he really is.

It feels like a homage to a classic horror, from its way of muted coloring, tilted camera work to further emphasize the eeriness of the already creepy atmosphere, to Benjamin Wallfisch's score that ranges from the most eerie sound of a violin to an occassional haunting piece from the piano. It has the power to scare, to frighten, and at its worst way of making it the best it ever can: to terrify. It's horror is so familiar yet so new. The jumpscares are more frightening than annoying, and not a single one is a false jumpscare. It's a horror clichĆ© done right and used to its true potential. 

Once the scares start, It doesn't let audiences take a breath for more than a minute. It begins with a gruesome and eerie note. The events that happen after are no different. Despite that, It somehow manages to be a coming-of-age film that bleeds of horror. Pennywise isn't the only problem that the Losers Club stumble upon, but he's one problem that they're determined to face. What makes It so great is that we're invested in the story. It doesn't lose itself to making each scare bigger than the last, but it wants to make each act more interesting than the last. 

Image Source: IMDB

It is one hell of a terrifying ride, but a great one, and one full of heart as well. If there is one thing that one can walk out of the film in true admiration, it's the film's protagonists, the Losers Club. It's a genuine portrayal of young kids barely close to adolescence by incredible young actors. Think of It as The Goonies, but if Mama Fratelli was an embodiment of an entity and ten times scarier. It leaves a lingering trail of eeriness from its villain that is Pennywise, and a spoonful of heart from its main heroes. The aftertaste is one that leaves us wanting more from the Losers and the wicked dancing clown that they dare to face.

Stars: 4.4/5

Trailer
By Nadia Ranaputri

Source: IMDB

Director: Edgar Wright
Cast: Ansel Elgort, Kevin Spacey, Lily James, Jon Hamm, Jamie Foxx, Eiza GonzƔlez, Jon Bernthal.

 
After ending his Cornetto Trilogy on a high note with The World's End, Edgar Wright returns with a car-chasing tour de force that puts its bounty of music to good use.

Baby (Ansel Elgort) is a getaway driver for a group of heist-goers who drives to the beat of his music collection. Relentless, fast, but filled with a heart of gold, Baby sees a chance to escape his somewhat secretive criminal activity when he falls for a waitress named Deborah (played by Lily James).


Ansel Elgort takes the weight of the lead role, but carries it with great strength and passion that seeps through his performance of the quite yet kind-hearted getaway driver ("A good kid and a devil behind the wheel ", as Spacey's Doc describes him). His fellow supporting cast that boasts the ever familiar names from Kevin Spacey as Doc, Jon Hamm as Buddy, and Lily James as Deborah provide more than just a solid type of performance, but one that threatens to grab hold of the attention from one person to another.


Source: IMDB

Baby Driver is a relentless chase galore with a grounded sense of crazy. It knows its limits, but it knows how to amp things up a notch. As Damien Chazelle incorporates drums for Whiplash to tell his story, Edgar Wright's use of music through Baby's playlist is a story of its own. Car chases are set to exhilirating tracks, perfectly synced from beat to movement, and the more calming scenes are set to some lighthearted tracks, such as where Baby sings his heart out to a new song he had just discovered. As the film opens to a robbery set to Jon Spencer Blues Explosion’s energy-pumping Bellbottoms, it sets its sights on one of the most standout aspects of the film: its music. 

Like the windingly exhilirating car chases, Baby Driver is one heck of a beat-filled ride. Even the film is well aware of how well a song could fit into their scenes, from Jon Spencer Blues Explosion’s Bellbottoms during the opening scene, to an exquisite long take complete with Bob and Earle's Harlem Shuffle. The music plays such a pivotal part to the movements of the film just as much as it plays a part in Baby's life, that even one scene shows Baby's incompetence to start a heist if the movements aren't exact to the beat of his song. 


Source: IMDB

Baby Driver also has a heart to it. Baby, the protagonist, has a life outside of his job; and has a desire to avoid getting his hands dirty despite working with fellow criminals. His co-workers, some crazier than the others; are wild cards with unexpected depth that makes them more than just pieces in a chessboard. The love story, while it slightly derails the main story, pinches a little bit of sweetness to the chase galore, with Baby's developing fondness of diner waitress Deborah sparks an everlasting connection through their love of music after he overhears her sing to Carla Thomas' B-A-B-Y on her way to work.

Plot-wise, Baby Driver's story can be a little paper thin on some parts, but its use of music as a character and the passionate dose of heart makes it more than just a conventional type of story. It's as much of a crazy ride as it is grounded by heart. It's a brimming piece of originality that leaves you wondering what songs would make your playlist if you were to create a story of your own.

Stars: 4/5


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