Tuesday, July 30, 2019

Lester's List of Contenders for 2020 Best Picture Nominations

Lester's List of Contenders for 2020
Best Picture Nominations

Blue Strong Contenders

“A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood” (Sony – November 22)
Director: Marielle Heller
Writers: Micah Fitzerman-Blue, Noah Harpster
Cast: Tom Hanks, Susan Kelechi Watson, Matthew Rhys
Plot: A jaded magazine writer is assigned a profile of Fred Rogers.

“Cats” (Universal – December 20)
Director: Tom Hooper
Writer: Lee Hall (who adapted  T.S. Eliot’s poetry collection “Old Possum’s Books of Practical Cats”)
Cast: Jennifer Hudson, Taylor Swift, Idris Elba, Judi Dench, Ian McKellen, James Corden, Rebel Wilson
Plot: A tribe of cats called the Jellicles must decide yearly which one will ascend to the Heaviside Layer and come back to a new Jellicle life.

“Fair and Balanced” (Lionsgate – December 20)
Director: Jay Roach
Writer: Charles Randolph
Cast: Charlize Theron, Nicole Kidman, Margot Robbie, John Lithgow, Allison Janney, Connie Britton
Plot: A few women decide to take on Fox News boss Roger Ailes and the toxic male culture he presided over.


“Ford v. Ferrari” (20th Century Fox – November 15)
Director: James Mangold
Writers: James Mangold, Jason Keller, Jez Butterworth, John-Henry Butterworth
Cast: Christian Bale, Matt Damon, Caitriona Balfe, Jon Bernthal, Remo Girone
Plot: The true story of the battle between Ford and Ferrari to win Le Mans in 1966.
“Gemini Man” (Paramount – October 11)
Director: Ang Lee
Writers: Billy Ray, Jonathan Hensleigh
Cast: Will Smith,  Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Clive Owen
Plot: An over-the-hill hitman faces off against a younger clone of himself.
“The Goldfinch” (Warner Bros. – October 11)
Writer/Director: John Crowley (who adapted Donna Tartt’s novel of the same name)
Cast: Ansel Elgort, Nicole Kidman, Jeffrey Wright, Sarah Paulson
Plot: A boy in New York is taken in by a wealthy Upper East Side family after his mother is killed in a bombing at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
“Harriet” (Focus – Fall)
Director: Kasi Lemmons
Writers: Kasi Lemmons, Gregory Allen Howard
Cast: Cynthia Erivo, Janelle Monae, Joe Alwyn,  Leslie Odom Jr.
Plot: The story of iconic freedom fighter Harriet Tubman, her escape from slavery and subsequent missions to free dozens of slaves through the Underground Railroad.
“The Irishman” (Netflix – Fall)
Director: Martin Scorsese
Writer: Steven Zaillian (who adapted “I Heard You Paint Houses” by Charles Brandt)
Cast: Robert De Niro, Al Pacino, Joe Pesci, Harvey Keitel, Anna Paquin.
Plot: A mob hitman recalls his possible involvement with the slaying of Jimmy Hoffa.
“Just Mercy” (Warner Bros. – December 25)
Director: Destin Daniel Cretton
Writers: Destin Daniel Cretton, Andrew Lanham (who adapted Bryan Stevenson’s memoir of the same name)
Cast: Michael B. Jordan, Jamie Foxx, Brie Larson, O’Shea Jackson Jr., Rob Morgan, Rafe Spall, Tim Blake Nelson
Plot: Civil rights defense attorney Bryan Stevenson recounts his experiences and details the case of a condemned death row prisoner whom he fought to free.
“The Last Thing He Wanted” (Netflix – Fall)
Writer/Director: Dee Rees (who adapted Joan Didion’s novel of the same name)
Cast: Anne Hathaway, Willem Dafoe, Ben Affleck, Toby Jones
Plot: A journalist quits her newspaper job and becomes an arms dealer for a covert government agency.
 
“The Laundromat” (Netflix – Fall)
Writer/Director: Steven Soderbergh
Cast: Meryl Streep, Gary Oldman, Antonio Banderas, Alex Pettyfer, David Schwimmer, Will Forte, Matthias Schoenaerts, Jeffrey Wright
Plot: A group of journalists unearth 11.5 million files, linking the world’s most powerful political figures to secret banking accounts to avoid taxes.

“Little Women” (Sony – December 25)
Writer/Director: Greta Gerwig (who adapted Louisa May Alcott’s novel of the same name‎)
Cast: Saoirse Ronan, Florence Pugh, Timothee Chalamet, Emily Watson, Meryl Streep
Plot: Four sisters come of age in America in the aftermath of the Civil War.
“Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” (Sony – July 26)
Writer/Director: Quentin Tarantino
Cast: Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt, Margot Robbie
Plot: A faded TV actor and his stunt double strive to achieve fame and success in the film industry in 1969.
“The Report” (Amazon – Fall)
Writer/Director: Scott Z. Burns
Cast: Adam Driver, Annette Bening, Jon Hamm, Michael C. Hall, Jennifer Morrison
Plot: In the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, CIA agents begin using extreme interrogation tactics on those they think were behind it.
 “Ad Astra” (20th Century Fox – Fall)
Director: James Gray
Writers: James Gray, Ethan Gross
Cast: Brad Pitt, Ruth Negga, Tommy Lee Jones
Plot: An astronaut travels to the outer edges of the solar system to find his missing father and unravel a mystery that threatens the survival of the planet.
“Dry Run” (Focus Features – Fall)
Director: Todd Haynes
Writers: Matthew Carnahan, Mario Correra
Cast: Anne Hathaway, Mark Ruffalo, Bill Pullman, William Jackson Harper
Plot: A corporate defense attorney takes on an environmental lawsuit against a chemical company that exposes a lengthy history of pollution.
“Joker” (Warner Bros. – Oct. 4)
Director: Todd Phillips
Writers: Todd Phillips, Scott Silver
Cast: Joaquin Phoenix, Robert De Niro, Zazie Beetz, Frances Conroy
Plot: A failed stand-up comedian is driven insane and becomes a psychopathic murderer.
“Judy” (BBC Films – Fall)
Director: Rupert Goold
Writers: Tom Edge (who adapted Peter Quilter’s stage play “End of the Rainbow”)
Cast: Renée Zellweger, Rufus Sewell, Finn Wittrock
Plot: Judy Garland arrives in London in the winter of 1968 to perform a series of sold-out concerts.
“Lucy in the Sky” (Fox Searchlight – Fall)
Director: Noah Hawley
Writers: Brian C. Brown, John-Henry Butterworth
Cast: Natalie Portman, Zazie Beetz, Jon Hamm
Plot: The story of a female astronaut who, upon returning to Earth from a life-changing mission in space, begins to slowly unravel and lose touch with reality.
“Motherless Brooklyn” (Warner Bros. – November 1)
Writer/Director: Edward Norton (who adapted Jonathan Lethem’s novel of the same name)
Cast: Edward Norton, Willem Dafoe, Bruce Willis, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Leslie Mann, Bobby Cannavale, Alec Baldwin
Plot: A private detective afflicted with Tourette’s Syndrome tries to solve the murder of his mentor and only friend in 1950s New York.
“1917” (Universal – December 25)
Writer/Director: Sam Mendes
Cast: Dean-Charles Chapman, George MacKay
Plot: Set against the backdrop of the last full year of World War I.
“Pain & Glory” (Sony Pictures Classics – Fall)
Writer/Director: Pedro Almodóvar
Cast: Antonio Banderas, Penelope Cruz, Asier Etxeandia
Plot: A film director reflects on the choices he’s made in life as past and present come crashing down around him.
 “Wendy” (Fox Searchlight – Fall)
Writer/Director: Benh Zeitlin
Cast: Shay Walker, Tommie Milazzo
Plot: Set on a mysterious island where aging and time have come unglued, the tale of two children from different worlds fighting to maintain their grip on freedom and joy.
 “The Farewell” (A24 – July 12)
Writer/Director: Lulu Wang
Cast: Awkwafina, Tzi Ma, Diana Lin
Plot: A Chinese family discover their grandmother has only a short while left to live and decide to keep her in the dark, scheduling a wedding to gather before she dies.
 “The King” (Netflix – Fall)
Writer/Director: David Michod
Cast: Timothee Chalamet, Robert Pattinson, Ben Mendelsohn, Joel Edgerton
Plot: A retelling of Shakespeare’s “Henry V”
“Knives Out” (Lionsgate – November 27)
Writer/Director: Rian Johnson
Cast: Daniel Craig, Chris Evans, Lakeith Stanfield, Michael Shannon, Jamie Lee Curtis, Toni Collette, Christopher Plummer.
Plot: A modern murder mystery in a classic whodunit style.
 “Queen & Slim” (Universal – November 27)
Director: Melina Matsoukas
Writers:  James Frey, Lena Waithe
Cast: Daniel Kaluuya, Bokeem Woodbine, Jodie Turner-Smith
Plot: A couple’s first date takes an unexpected turn when a police officer pulls them over.
 “Tolkien” (Fox Searchlight – May 10)
Director: Dome Karukoski
Writers: David Gleeson, Stephen Beresford
Cast: Nicholas Hoult, Lily Collins, Colm Meaney, Anthony Boyle, Patrick Gibson
Plot: The formative years of the orphaned author as he finds friendship, love and artistic inspiration among a group of fellow outcasts at school.
“Where’d You Go Bernadette” (United Artists – August 16)
Writer/Director: Richard Linklater (who adapted Maria Semple’s novel of the same name)
Cast: Cate Blanchett, Billy Crudup, Kristen Wiig, Laurence Fishburne, Emma Nelson
Plot: After her anxiety-ridden mother disappears, 15-year-old Bee does everything she can to track her down.
“The Light House” (A24 - Release TBD)
Director: Robert Eggers
Cinematography: Jarin Blaschke
Screenplay: Robert Eggers, Max Eggers
Cast: Willem DaFoe and Robert Pattinson  
Plot: The story of two lighthouse keepers on a remote and mysterious New England island in the 1890s.

“Clemency” (December 27, 2019 (USA)
Director: Chinonye Chukwu
Cast: Alfre Woodard – Aldis Hodge
Bernadine is a stoic prison warden, but two back-to-back executions put a strain on her marriage, career and convictions.


Saturday, July 27, 2019

Little Woods - Review


Little Woods (On demand)

Little Woods, North Dakota, a fracking boom town well beyond its prime. Ollie (Tessa Thompson) is trying to survive the last few days of her probation after getting caught illegally running prescription pills over the Canadian border. But when her mother dies, she is thrust back into the life of her estranged sister Deb (Lily James), who is facing her own crisis with an unplanned pregnancy and a deadbeat ex. The two find they have one week to settle the mortgage on their mother's house or face foreclosure. As bills and pressure mount, Ollie faces a choice: whether to return to a way of life she thought she'd left behind for just one more score or to leave it all behind.

REVIEW: Lots of the story line of “Little Woods” plays out very similar to the superior 2016 Oscar Nominated film “Hell or High Water. Two siblings confronted with losing their dead parent’s home and land. One sibling is on parole while the other is not the best at parenting. The bank sends a foreclosure notice that will collect their home at the end of the week unless they can come up with $3,000. Pushed to extremes the sisters resorts to crime (selling drugs) to pay the bank loan before the COB Friday deadline. 

Besides having a solid plot the most significant compelling aspect to this film - the reason to see it is just how effective actress Tessa Thompson is in carrying and elevating this film’s material through her words, the anxiety painted on her face and her actions. Especially so  when she is confronted by men who see her as weak because she is a woman. She is no ones' push over, she is strong and she is the "one who get things done". Thompson’s portrayal of “Ollie” is a refreshing look at a woman who is self-reliantly tough and emotionally determined and yet equally fragile and feminine around the edges even when she is pushed to extremes, she always finds a way to persevere. This is Tessa's best work yet.

With the ambiance of a cold, dark, bleak and dank North Dakota, “Little Woods” is a quietly imaginative film operating through an intimate microscopic look at how some working class people get pain pill dependencies, not as addicts, but just as a means to keeping their jobs to pay the bills, to keeping a roof over their heads and to being able to feed their families. And on the flip side it also shows why some other working class people take up the part-time profession of selling drugs only to paying the bills, to keeping a roof over their heads and to being able to feed their families.

"Little Woods" is a slow nuanced film, but one that seems to manage to have from scene to scene a genuinely huge empathetic heart about decent people just wanting to survive.

“Little Woods” is worth a see.

3.25 Stars.

Once Upon A Time…in Hollywood - Review


 Once Upon A Time…in Hollywood

Quentin Tarantino’s “Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood” visits 1969 Los Angeles, where everything is changing, as TV star Rick Dalton (Leonardo DiCaprio) and his longtime stunt double Cliff Booth (Brad Pitt) make their way around an industry they hardly recognize anymore. The ninth film from the writer-director features a large ensemble cast and multiple storylines in a tribute to the final moments of Hollywood’s golden age, who while are.

REVIEW: "Once Upon A Time" threads a rather unusual story line needle through the societal and cultural complexity of transcendence of one generation to the next and also the weird oddities of how sometimes the slightest decision can change historical fate.

With transcendence Tarantino looks in the rear view mirror of America to focus his screenwriting talents on the year 1969. He sees it  as one of the most unique moments in America culture, probably far more transcendent for us all than we have ever imagined. And through his lens and words he looks at the year focusing on the celebrity famous and not so famous as well as their fashion, art, politics, power, fame, beauty, entertainment and yes, even death. He brings this convergence of issues through that fabulous alternate universe observant conversational mind of his by focusing the story on two fictional actors whose relationship with one another “more than a brother and less than a wife” as two men who are reluctant – resistant to change. And in the backdrop of these two men lives is a cult family hanging initially very innocently in the shadows as some small harmless counter cult just wanting to live free without rules or having responsibilities.  If the world was torn apart or started to burn one day that would be OK with them.

Rick Dalton (DiCaprio) and Cliff Booth are the past and they also are the alter egos of one another. One (Rick) is the embodiment of emotional excesses………..always drinking, smoking and worrying  while the other Cliff (Pitt) exudes charm, wit, and confidence;  always cool under pressure and supremely capable in his abilities. Together they are deliciously codependent upon one another as a dying breed of men in Hollywood who are not just ready yet to accept the new counterculture movement who in their minds are always hell bent to being disruptive; not wanting to accept the norms. For these two old timers they see the “Hippie” movement is just something that is not cool and it will never been cool and they want nothing to ever do with it. So, Rick and Cliff are like all other generations; at some point they think their time was the best to doing things but just like most former generations they are always the last to see the change coming and there is nothing they can do about it.

Beneath transcendence QT also delves into how fate can sometimes change events in the universe with just a simple decision or conversation. To that point if you don’t know, in 1969 the real actress Sharon Tate (played by Margot Robbie), was brutally murdered in her home on Cielo Drive along with four of her friends. The killers (the cult mentioned above) lived not too far away at the Spahn Ranch and occupied by disciples of a then failed musician named Charles Manson. As a backdrop to that murder Tarantino uses the difficulties of Rick and Cliff up and down professional lives in an industry that seemed to be passing them by to offering up a slightly different alternate ending to the Tate’s murder, predicated on a decision Rick and Cliff made months before. And let me say this alternate ending to that tragic night was shocking, very violent, very delirious, very funny and filled with tension.

“Once Upon A Time…in Hollywood” is hard to characterize largely because it’s just not like any of QT previous works. This work is far more pedestrian, far more patient and far more respectful to the people and events his tries to draw upon that were prominent in 1969. And while I think a lot of his fans will come out wondering what they just experienced I felt the whole 2:45 minutes running time down this fictional lane in 1969 was very entertaining.

Through Quentin’s use of layers upon layers acting cameos and subplots including appearances by Kurt Russell, Michael Madsen, Bruce Dern and Zoe Bell; Al Pacino as a bottom-feeder agent, and Lena Dunham and Dakota Fanning as two of Charles Manson’s dim witted disciples, this film will be studied in films schools for decades as a homage to old movies, especially westerns, counter culture change and oddities of how the simplest of decisions can change historical fate …………….impacting an array of lives while  seemingly while they are just making ordinary plans.

“Once Upon A Time…in Hollywood” is a bit of an intellectual mind twist – a mind challenge, but I wager you can never stop thinking about what you just saw.

3.50 Stars

Friday, July 19, 2019

The Lion King (2019) - Review


The Lion King (2019)

Almost 25 years later to the day Director Jon Favreau has brought back to the audiences of 2019 one of film history’s most celebrated and successful animation films in the Disney story “The Lion King”. Only in his new effort here we don’t have a new story to share but rather a bold and ambitious reimagining of the exact same story in the form of “Live Action” animation.

“Live Action” animation is simply explained as a combined form of cinematography and videography that uses photography instead of pure animation. An while “live action” video simulates the real world better than animation can, animation gives director and cinematographer the power to do far more than is possible in real life, all with the power of simply drawing. Got it?........... So the bottom line is this 2019 version,.......... the “$#it” looked real.

THE FILM’S PLOT (again):  Young Simba (JD McCrary) idolizes his father King Mufasa (James Earl Jones) and takes to heart his own royal destiny on the plains of Africa. But not everyone in the kingdom celebrates the new cub's arrival. Scar (Chiwetel Ejiofor), Mufasa's brother and former heir to the throne has plans of his own. The battle for Pride Rock is soon ravaged with betrayal, tragedy and drama, ultimately resulting in young Simba's exile. Now, with help from a curious pair of newfound friends in Pumbaa the Wart Hog (Seth Rogen) Timon the Mir Cat (Billy Eichner) young Simba must figure out how to grow up and take back what is rightfully his.

REVIEW: For a story I knew how it would end, the 2019 version held my attention throughout the 2:00 running time, minus the few minutes the annoying little adolescent  rug rat who kept kicking the back of my chair…………..but I digress. But the mandatory reason to see this story again in the theater is the extraordinary technological advancement of making these animals and the natural environment they reside in look amazingly real. It was simply exquisite and dazingly to look at. To see the detailed faint flicker of hair move from a subtle breeze would have you serious wondering is this fake or an episode of “Animal Planet”. In The Lion King, these details will both enthrall  and captivate you.

Kudos to most of the actors for bringing theses iconic characters back to life, especially Seth Rogen and Billy Eichner as the best buddy tandem of the Wart Hog and Mir Cat. They stole the film exuding a lot rich humor, warmth and acting chemistry.

On the other hand, Beyoncé portrayal as the mature Nala sounded more like someone simply reading lines. She came across flat and devoid of any emotional inflection in her voice which is a major requirement in any animation film -  to be able to project and inject authentic in the moment feelings and emotions.  With her, I didn’t hear it.

Also, I was a bit amused early on to hear the adult animals talking as if they were educated at Cambridge and Oxford Universities and the baby animals sounding as if they attended Geogetown Prep School. Sophistiicated eloquence and erudite cadences were not what I was epecting. But over time I find their banter and exchanges more in line with the overall story than anything particularly distracting.  

Rotten Tomato score has this film under water. But for me this 2019 “The Lion King” rises to the full challenge of retelling something old into something effectively new by way of a full throated fantastic and majestic piece of family viewing entertainment. It's absolutely gorgeous. It's absolutely colorful. It's absolutely lush. Its absolutely fun.  Jon Favreau's should take a bow for his visually stunning effort here.

So, “Hakuna Matata”……………aka “no worries” as this Lion King is well worth the cinematic safari trip to see again. 

3.50 Stars

Friday, July 5, 2019

Maiden - Review


Maiden

In the documentary “Maiden” we are quickly introduced to Tracy Edwards as a young girl. Even then she obviously a highly intelligent British girl who was a restless vagabond malcontent who had a history by her loving mother of “being unable to finish anything”. Fast forward a decade later somewhere in Greece at the age of 22 she literally had the most random chance encounters one could hardly ever imagine by being in the presence of the then King Hussain of Jordan. He cordially and friendly engaged in her in respectful conversation that proceeded for him to encourage her to never give up on your dreams,………..never at all costs.

That conversation resulted in that very moment of Edwards to obsessively spend the next 4 years of her young life preparing, raising money, repairing her second hand 58 foot aluminum-hulled yacht and eventually selecting the very first all-female crew in history to compete in the 1989 Whitbread Round the World Race. A grueling and highly dangerous yachting competition that covers 33,000 miles that lasts nine months. And you ask, what was Tracey Edwards’s prior sailing experience at that point to taking on such a monumental perilous task? She was a cook on a boat for several months.

REVIEW: This is as brilliant film and an even greater emotionally moving and inspiring story you will ever see…………EVER. Its directorial brilliance lies in its ability in the running time of 1:37 minutes to show initially the sexism she endured daily but also how she meticulously forged ahead day after day. Always kept inching a little bit more forward to her goal by plodding, pushing and being a force of determined nature to sailing her ship. And if the financial backing naysayers were not enough to deter her, she also persevered through a gauntlet of negative press and coverage, tons of maligning sexist jokes and some even going as far to outright predict by then highly experienced male sailors that Tracey and her entire crew would certainly all be lost at sea in the first 30 day.

The other side of the brilliance of this film and the area I found most compelling was through both the stunning archival footage and the many compelling interviews by Edward’s and her amazing “Maiden” crew recounting all of the harrowing and stressful circumstances they found themselves. Including some of the in the moment gutsy tactical decisions they made with Tracey as the Skipper and Navigator and a crew who had no experience with this daunting type of sailing to know if they were wrong or not.

One such decision that stood out involved the second leg of the race from Uruguay to Australia. Typically heading eastward off the coast of South Africa most experienced sailors would take the more northern route to Australia. Tracey and her crew decided to take the more southern route closer to the continent of Antarctic that had the greater sustained winds. It also had the roughest and most unpredictable seas with the highly dangerous increased possibility of running into an iceberg at night.

This truly fabulous documentary reminded me in some ways as the “Apollo 11” documentary did that the ocean just like deep space will always be trying to kill you. And as with space when the land disappears behind you………….you are all alone with no one to rescue you... But if you can conquer it, dare I say even master it, the experience of surviving the journey (as the women testified to) was like having some type of deeper rebirth of their spirits. A rebirth that has never left them and is clearly still with them today.

Most of you will never heard of their names before this film. That’s’ a shame.  But the crew of Mandy Swan Neal; Mikaela Von Koskull; Claire Warren; Tanja Visser; Tracy Edwards MBE; Sally Hunter; Nancy Harris; Marie-Claude Kieffer Jeni Mundy; Jo Gooding and Sarah Davies were as wickedly determined, focused, driven and fearless as any men could have been. And from my perspective I would venture to say that in 1989 I believe these 11 brave women were more focused and determined than then their male counter parts.

If you want to see something that will lift your spirits then you absolutely must see “Maiden” in the theater. Not for some footnote feminist achievement, but for the triumph of the human spirit to succeed at all costs.

4.00 Stars

Midsommar - Review


Midsommar

Starring my favorite new actress Florence Pugh (2016 “Lady MacBeth” and 2019 “Fighting With My Family”) her latest project is called “Midsommar”. An apparent word twist on an actual event simply called “Midsummer” which is the period of time centered upon the summer solstice, and more specifically the northern European celebrations that accompany the actual solstice or take place on a day between June 19 and June 25 and the preceding evening………………Yeah, but this film is not that.

In “Midsommar” we see Pugh play a character named “Dani”, an emotional wreck and justifiably so, but both a source of frustration and concern by her longtime boyfriend “Christian”. However, Christian’s friends don’t feel quite the same about her and urge him to dump her before they all venture off to Sweden to work on their PHD subjects with “Pelle” played by Vilhelm Blomgren. “Pelle” is a good friend of Christian's and his classmate who invites them all to his home in Sweden as a good source area to finishing their academic work.

Feeling depress, Dani invites herself to join Christian with his friends on their trip to an once-in-a-lifetime midsummer festival in a remote Swedish village.  But the carefree friendly summer holiday in a land of eternal sunlight takes a turn when the insular White toga wearing villagers invite their new guests to partake in some of the festivities that increasingly become disturbing.

REVIEW: In my many, many movie going experiences, there has been an occasion when I went into a theater to see some latest popular turn and instead of seeing something provocative or compelling I ended up experiencing a bat “S#!t”  crazy something totally hard to explain to anyone story. Previous similar movie experiences were the 1975 and it’s remake 2006 “The Wicker Man” and the more recent 2019 ‘Us”. But to their credits there was a bit of an effort of maintaining some reasonable chain of reality attached to the plot (for the most part). "Midsommar" starts out good with some similar based focus details but with a running time of 2:30 minutes it devolved into something far more sadistic and far more disturbing than the other two films. It's a mix of the Georgetown Jim Jones and Waco David Koresh massacres ……………minus the Kool Aid drinking and Koresh’s obsession with guns and him exclusively having sex with all of the females on his compound.

“Midsommar” failed for me as do other stylized films because the principles characters always seemed never to respond normally to the basic craziness happening around them…………aka like thinking about running the hell away,.......... running anywhere in the manner World Olympian champion sprinter Usain Bolt. Or just taking some minimum steps to calling the police authorities to investigate. Instead they unrealistically stay in the same bizarre environment only to continue to spiraling downward at their own clear peril.

I cannot reveal more. But oddly I am recommending everyone at some point should see this film, if for no other reason than the way the direction and writing keeps ad-hoc reimagining the strange events in a compelling and totally watchable way. But to what end? What greater purpose and value to those involved. BUT TO BE SURE, only watch it on free basic cable night in your home when it’s snowing outside and nothing else to do. That way when the film is over you don’t have that far to go to smoke some weed and have a few shots of bourbon to “etch a sketch”  this weird grisly want a be horror film trick out of your mind.

1.75 Stars