The Holdovers

Directed by Alexander Payne, The Holdovers was emotional, entertaining and filled with some of the best acting of the year, among an exceptional cast.

According to IMDB, “Nobody likes teacher Paul Hunham (Paul Giamatti) — not his students, not his fellow faculty, not the headmaster, who all find his pomposity and rigidity exasperating. With no family and nowhere to go over Christmas holiday in 1970, Paul remains at school to supervise students unable to journey home. After a few days, only one student holdover remains — a trouble-making 15-year-old named Angus (Dominic Sessa), a good student whose bad behavior always threatens to get him expelled. Joining Paul and Angus is head cook Mary (Da’Vine Joy Randolph)-an African American woman who caters to sons of privilege and whose own son was recently lost in Vietnam. These three very different shipwrecked people form an unlikely Christmas family sharing comic misadventures during two very snowy weeks in New England.

This is wonderfully written and spends a great amount of time developing these three main characters of the film. Paul Giamatti and Da’Vine Joy Randolph are amazing in these roles, with these two characters that are so broken and pulled down by life. Giamatti and Randolph act their butts off.

Dominic Sessa played Angus, the one boy who winds up stuck at the school during break, does an excellent job as well, playing off Giamatti. He never looked out of place opposite Academy Award nominated actor Paul Giamatti.

The story was simple, but the characters were extremely deep and developed, bringing the conflict with them. This is not a plot driven film. It tells a story about these people and we see how they get through their lives.

The Holdovers was funny, dramatic, and full of a natural energy. The performances were so good, and I have a feeling that there may be one or two of these names will be back come Oscar time.

4.6 stars

Trolls Band Together

The third film in the Trolls animated franchise arrived in theaters this weekend. Like all of the Trolls movies, there were some fun music and color galore.

This is the typical story trope as we discover that Branch (Justin Timberlake) was once in a boy band with his brothers called BroZone and he has to go and ‘get the band back together’ to save their missing brother.

This was fine. I did like the use of the music throughout the film. The music was highly entertaining as it was more than just boy band music.

The colors are sensational and the animation looked great. It is certainly a visual feast for the young child’s mind. Of course, younger kids are the target audience for Trolls Band Together and, in that manner, it should be very successful.

Positively, I do think there are some clever writing sprinkled in the script that will keep the adults in the audience entertained.

It started a little slowly, but they were into the mission soon and things got better. It has a good message and has great music and visuals.

3.4 stars

American Horror Story: Murder House S1 E7

Spoilers

“Open House”

AHS: Murder House continues to peel back the layers of the pain and mystery contained inside the walls of Murder House.

An Armenian arrived at the open house looking to perhaps purchase the Murder House. He planned on tearing the house down to put up affordable housing, making a mint.

This possibility sent the crew into an anxious moment and made uneasy allies out of Constance, Moira and Larry, who murder the man (letting him die off the property so he would not be wandering around inside the house).

Several other tidbits appeared in this episode.

  • We find out Larry’s story, and his desire for Constance, which led to his wife’s suicide by fire and his own burns.
  • Vivien is pregnant with twins. Double anti-Christs?
  • Back with the Murder Tour and Josh Gad. The story of the Montgomerys are told.
  • Vivien sees a photo of the Montgomery family and recognized Nora.
  • Violet and Tate continue to grow close.
  • We meet another of Constance’s children who died in the house, a deformed Beau, who is in the Murder House’s attic.
  • Marcy packs a handgun!

Murder House is absolutely a fantastic series and one of the best of the AHS run.

Picket Fences S2 E6

Spoilers

“Dairy Queen”

Breasts become a handful in Rome, Wisconsin.

The city hires a model to promote milk using her sexual nature. Turned out, she was being abused by her husband. She was also a woman pulled over for speeding years before by Jimmy.

This whole storyline was designed to cause some issues in the marriage of Jimmy and Jill, but that just did not work for me. I had little concern with the model’s storyline. Her husband did punch a cow and knocked it out, but otherwise the abusive husband story was not

Kimberly’s story was about breasts as well. She ran an experiment by wearing falsies and realized she received more attention with bigger breasts than she did before. This led to her beginning to think about the possibility of getting breast implants.

This, of course, freaked Jill out, who was already having some issues with Jimmy. Kimberly called in Lydia for another opinion.

This episode did not feel like much of anything to me. The story with the model and her abusive husband was too sparse to be worthwhile and it did not feel organic.

It also seems as if the show has completely forgotten the entire Douglas Wambaugh is a rotten person arc from two episodes ago. He was here backing the abused model and no one even made any references to that apparently character defining moment.

Sounds as if we are gearing up for the next Thanksgiving episode, which was mentioned a couple of times during this show.

Moonlighting S2 E8

Spoilers

“Portrait of Maddie”

One of the best Moonlighting episodes from the first part of season two is Portrait of Maddie. An episode that was expertly written, especially with the dialogue for Bruce Willis.

I know the show always has great dialogue for the character of David Addison, but this episode’s dialogue was especially sharp and witty. I found myself laughing out loud several times at the cleverness of the writing.

The painting was amazing too, by the way.

A painter who had never met Maddi, painted a portrait of her looking into a vanity mirror and then he killed himself. When Maddie was question by the police about this fact, she became obsessed with the painting and about the mysterious painter that appeared to be obsessed with the former model.

I will state that there were some questionable moments with the police in this episode. Maddie kept being able to take the painting home with her despite it clearly being evidence in this case. I can excuse these silly oversights since the detective in the case, played by Dan Lauria of the Wonder Years fame was involved in the case on the villainous side.

The final conflict with Lauria does turn a little sillier than I liked, with a lot of paint involved, but it is minor and does not distract from such a solid episode.

It was funny, because in the opening credits, I saw Paul Rudd listed as a guest star. I did not remember Paul Rudd, aka Ant Man in the MCU, being on Moonlighting. In fact, he was not. It was another Paul Rudd who died in 2010, an actor who had several guest appearances on other TV shows such as Knots Landing, Hart to Hart and Murder, She Wrote.

This episode included a couple of examples of one of the techniques that I loved from this series. It was when the show would break the 4th wall. These examples were beautifully weaved into the dialogue, not causing any real issue with the show. Here David told Maddie to be careful what she says or they will move them to cable. Ha Ha. Love that.

Portrait of Maddie is right near the top of my current list of Moonlighting episodes, just behind “The Dream Sequence Always Rings Twice.”

Picket Fences S2 E5

Spoilers

“The Dancing Bandit”

Marlee Matlin guest starred on Picket Fences as Laurie Bey, aka The Dancing Bandit. Laurie was a deaf woman who would rob banks, and then send the money that she steals to worthy charities in the area. The old Robin Hood mentality. The deaf woman would end each bank job with a dance.

She had a whole gang of experts helping her along the way, including prince Humperdinck himself, Chris Sarandon, who played her husband. The Dancing Bandit Gang were shown to be extremely intelligent and able to pull off remarkable complicated plans, fooling the local police and the FBI.

However, it appeared that Laurie’s luck had run out when she came to Rome, Wisconsin. She wound up shot in the back by Jimmy when she had tried to escape.

Thing was, Laurie had already charmed Jimmy’s son Zach, who was one of the hostages during her attempted bank robbery. Laurie was impressed that Zach knew some sign language and kept calling him cute.

This classic episode really displayed how the intelligence of Matlin’s character and her gang kept them several steps ahead of the FBI and everyone else. That was very impressive and was a cool thing to show. At times, because of their disability, some deaf people are perceived to be less intelligent than others, but there is no stereotype going on here.

Marlee Matlin was charming as could be in this role, a role that she will return to later in the series. She received an Emmy nomination for this episode.

The Dancing Bandit is an excellent episode of Picket Fences.

Wish

I got the opportunity tonight to go to an early screening of the new Disney animated film, Wish, at Cinemark. Wish is scheduled to be released for the Thanksgiving holiday next week. I love getting the chance to see this early.

However, it was, at best, an okay Disney animated film.

I did not hate the film. I did not love it either.

According to IMDB, “Wish will follow a young girl named Asha (Ariana DeBose) who wishes on a star and gets a more direct answer than she bargained for when a trouble-making star comes down from the sky to join her.

Wish felt more like a series of references to past Disney animated movies than a new and vibrant story of its own. There were a bunch of Easter eggs to former Disney films and it was fun to spot the allusions, but it also tended to get in the way of the story this film was trying to tell.

As always, the animation and the visual look of Wish was stunning and extremely beautiful to watch. There is no doubt that plenty of young children will be engrossed by the movie simply by the way it looked.

The music was okay. Some of the original songs were catchy, but, honestly, there are none that stick out in my head, just a few hours later. While I tapped my toes and nodded my head during the actual songs, there is nothing that sticks out as a big-time hit like films such as The Lion King, Aladdin or Beauty and the Beast had. There was not even songs like Let it Go or We Don’t Talk About Bruno on this soundtrack.

Chris Pine provided the voice for the antagonist of the film, King Magnifico, and he does a solid job. The voice cast was very consistently solid, including Alan Tudyk, Victor Garber, Evan Peters, Jennifer Kumiyama, Angelique Cabral, Natasha Rothwell, and Harvey Guillen.

For a film about the magic of wishes, there did not feel like there was enough Disney magic to make the film feel special.

Having said that, Wish is certainly not a bad time. It was beautiful to look at and had a simplistic message about giving up one’s dreams that is worth hearing. I just would have liked to have connected to this movie more than I did.

3.2 stars

Next Goal Wins

This one is a long way from Jo Jo Rabbit.

Heck, it is a long way from Thor: Love and Thunder.

I was excited about this movie, from Taika Waititi, since I saw the trailers. Michael Fassbender as a coach of soccer, trying to turn around a team from American Samoa that lost a FIFA match 31-0. A soccer game, 31-0. That just should not happen and yet it is a true story.

Sadly, the film was about as good as that soccer team. Not very good.

It was a typical sports movie, with the underdog team getting better as their coach struggled with his own problems.

The film was just not funny. The best parts of the film, I had already seen in the trailers, which I enjoyed. The rest of the film seemed childish and overly silly.

Taika Waititi does have skill at weaving in emotion to what should be a ridiculous situations and there are some moments at the third act that work well. Unfortunately, by that point, I was checked out and was not willing to check back in.

The reason Fassbender was the way he was could have been a real powerhouse moment, but it was not developed properly during the film and so it felt as if it came out of left field, excuse my mixing of sports metaphors.

Within the first ten minutes, I kept saying to myself, “Uh Oh.” I could feel that this wasn’t going to be an enjoyable time, but I held out my hope because I enjoy Waititi so much. The hope was gone soon after and it felt like a wasted opportunity for a really funny and enjoyable sports film.

2.2 stars

The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes

This was a prequel that I never thought that I wanted. To see the trailers leading up to this film, I was just not interested. It felt as if the Hunger Games had really been played out and did not need anything more. Certainly not a prequel focusing on Coriolanus Snow, the villain of the Hunger Games trilogy.

However, after seeing the movie, I can see the purpose behind the film, and I enjoyed it, for part of it at least.

We see Coriolanus Snow (Tom Blyth) who becomes a mentor for one of the tributes in the tenth annual Hunger Games. His tribute was Lucy Gray Baird (Rachel Zegler). Snow was looking to advance in the society and gave ideas to change and adapt the Hunger Games to Dr. Volumnia Gaul, the creator of the games.

Trying to get Lucy Gray to be more engaging, Snow started to bond with the girl. He did whatever he could to help her survive the games.

I really liked the first hour and forty five minutes of this movie. The first two acts were tremendous and I was thoroughly entertained. Unfortunately, the third act was added on and felt totally like a different movie. The characters seemed different than they were in the first two acts and I did not like the ending near as well.

It also became very long. The second act (or split into chapters as the film does) seemed like a perfect ending for the film, but suddenly, we got another 45 minutes and, I am sorry to say, I felt it.

I think Rachel Zegler is a star. She is fantastic though the entire prequel and she did have chemistry with Tom Blyth. Unfortunately, the pairing of Snow and Lucy Gray seemed to happen too quickly for any sort of romantic pairing. Both actors did a sensational job with their performances though.

Viola Davis was great too, with her extremely creepy portrayal of Dr. Gaul. She was a great villain in this role, and turned out to be a considerable mentor for Snow.

The look of the film was great. The CGI and the action were top line and the section with the actual 10th Annual Hunger Games was clearly the standout section of the movie. I just did not like the third act. It felt out of place and dragged the movie along.

I still enjoyed the film. It just felt like I saw two completely different movies, with the first two acts being compelling and thrilling and the third act being drawn out and different than what we had seen in the first two. Still, overall, I think the movie was able to justify its existence.

3.6 stars

Monarch: Legacy of Monsters S1 E1 & E2

Spoilers

Episode 1: “Aftermath”

Episode 2: “Departure”

The new Apple + series that fills out the world of Monarch, the monster hunting organization from the Godzilla/Kong movies, from Skull Island to the recent Godzilla vs. Kong.

I really enjoyed these first two episodes, both dropped in Apple TV + this weekend. The next episode looks to be dropped next Wednesday.

The story jumps around in time, starting off in 1973 with John Goodman during Kong: Skull Island time. We went to the 20-teens and also back to 1959.

What is really cool about this is that, with the different time frames, Wyatt Russell is playing the same character ( a younger version) that his father, Kurt Russell, plays. Such a fun bit of stunt casting.

The show spent a good deal of time setting up characters and the world building. There were some monsters in the episode, but Godzilla appeared in scenes from the 2014 Godzilla movie. And a fascinating part of the episode was dealing with the world suffering from the danger of Godzilla.

Cate (Anna Sawai) heads to Japan to look into her recently deceased father’s apartment (that she did not know about) and found her father had another family. Cate had been front and center in G-Day (when Godzilla rampaged through San Francisco) so she is suffering from Godzilla PTSD.

We’ve seen some other monsters, including a really frightening bug-monster/World War Zombie-like moment.

This is a good start to this series. I am curious to where it is going from here.

Picket Fences S2 E4

Spoilers

“Under the Influence”

Two storylines collide, both dealing with the influence over people. Alcohol and manipulation by a therapist. Well, he was not a therapist at the time.

I hated that character of Danny. I hated watching what he was doing to Maxine. Tearing her down, preying on her insecurities and trying to isolate her from her friends and co-workers. Danny was a grade A jerk.

He had Maxine so messed up that she allowed a drunk driver go. The driver was just a few blocks away from her house and Maxine thought it would be okay, but the driver ran a stop sign and crashed into another driver, putting him into a wheelchair. Maxine told the drunk driver to go into her house and wait.

The rest of the episode focused on Douglas Wambaugh. The drunk driver called Wambaugh who instructed her to have some scotch immediately.

The episode showed how slimy Doug can be. He was doing all kinds of things that were borderline criminal to try and win his case. The show then seemed to show Douglas changing his tune. He helped the drunk driver plead the case out (instead of going to trial). Though it looked as if Douglas had learned his lesson and turned over a new leaf, he was actually setting up a lawsuit against the city for the guy in the wheelchair. It was a marvelously horrific lawyer trick that sent Wambaugh into a jail cell for contempt.

Maxine was able to pull herself away from Danny, finally seeing how his manipulations were affecting her, thanks to Kenny and Jill.

There are still several pieces of info dropped. Kenny and the new mayor are sleeping together, making office politics a new thing.

Bodies Episode 6

Spoilers

“The World is Yours”

Whoa. An amazing episode of this show, as several of the pieces start to fall into place in what exactly had happened. We saw some amazing things happen over the course of this episode and I’m not sure where this now goes, until it goes right back to the beginning.

I was unaware that this series was based off a graphic novel of the same name by British writer Si Spencer. My friend Todd had heard of it and while we were discussing the series, the graphic novel came up.

No doubt that this series is science fiction goodness with a big dose of time travel. This episode feels like the low point in the middle of act two, but it is just unclear where the show goes from here over the final two episodes of the limited series.

Everything that was said to happen does happen this episode. The massive bomb takes out London by Elias’s hand. We see where the body came from and how 2053 Gabriel Defoe winds up a dead body with a bullet wound in his eye but no bullet in his skull. And shot by Iris Maplewood. Wouldn’t have seen that coming. Whiteman finds his revenge/justice and that leads him to the end of a noose. Alfred Hillinghead arrested for murder in front of his wife and daughter after telling his male lover to escape.

Lots of action and intensity in this and it sure seemed that Elias, or Mannix/Harker/Elias seems to have won, starting the loop once again.

Two more episodes of Bodies on Netflix, which I should get done over the weekend. This has been a top notch adventure so far.

Picket Fences S2 E3

Spoilers

“Unlawful Entries”

I remember when this episode first aired… I hated… just hated Danny Shreve, the therapist who had claimed to be in love with his former patient, Maxine. Maxine had him arrested last episode for crossing the line and taking advantage of his position as therapist.

This episode found him doing his best to get Maxine to drop the charges, and he was clearly manipulating her, and I loved Maxine and I hated him for what he was doing.

At the end of the episode with Danny and Maxine in bed together seemed so sinister that I hated him once again.

The rest of the episode was quite disgusting. They had a case where a male was raped by a female and they way he was treated as a victim was just appalling. I know the idea was to highlight how rape victims are treated by the system, but listening to Douglas Wambaugh, one of my favorite characters, spout off the platitudes of the ridiculous statements used in rape cases was sickening. Watching Henry Bone’s reactions were also obscene. Nothing spoke more than to see John Littleton’s eyes being adverted in shame, avoiding the gaze of the victim.

The victim was played by Alan Ruck, the actor from Spin City and Ferris Buhler’s Day Off. He played the anger and embarrassment with such a heart-breaking pain.

This episode also found the debut of a character in Picket Fences called Rachel Harris. Played by Leigh Taylor-Young, this is a character who fumbled into the mayor’s office after Bill Pugen exploded last episode. She has a huge role moving forward.

Overall, this episode was more of a set-up for stories for the future.

Picket Fences S2 E2

Spoilers

“Duty Free Rome”

Last episode, I wondered if it was the episode where Bill Pugen spontaneously combusted. It wasn’t.

It was this episode.

This was an absolute shock when I first saw this episode back in the 1990s. I couldn’t believe that a serious TV show had a character die by spontaneously combusting. And then to treat it like that was a truth.

I have always enjoyed the mysterious things, and I remember having some knowledge of spontaneous combustion, but to see it used in the show like this, well, it was a shock.

It also started the long running gag of Wambaugh instructing his clients that they shouldn’t tell him the whole truth. The idea that a client telling their lawyer the truth could hamstring the lawyer is something that I have seen elsewhere (The Practice and Boston Legal spring o mind.. both David E. Kelley shows) but I think this is where it originated.

The story with Maxine and her therapist started in this episode and, if I recall, gets worse for Maxine before it gets better.

There was also the religious argument going on. A couple who both have a genetic marker for a terrible birth defect are scared to have sex and the church will not allow them to use birth control without it being considered a sin. Roy Dotrice joined the cast as Father Gary Barrett. He would be involved with several religious fights in Rome over the series.

Picket Fences S2 E1

Spoilers

“Turpitude”

What can be great about rewatches like this, I haven’t seen these Picket fences episodes in a long time and I may not necessarily remember the ending. So while I remember this episode very well, I was not remembering exactly how it wrapped up and that is cool.

I remember the carjacking episode, where Mayor Bill Pugen shot his carjacker after the man had dropped the knife. The mayor shot him because the man had threatened to come back after his jail time and get Pugen and his family. Perfectly understandable.

However, Jimmy saw it as vigilantism (which it is, by the way) and he was determined to uphold the law, even if everybody was telling him he shouldn’t.

This was also the episode where Don Cheadle came to Rome.

Don Cheadle is one of my favorite actors, and that love started in Rome as Cheadle joined the cast as District Attorney John Littleton and immediately gets thrown into the dep end by Jimmy and this unpopular decision.

Cheadle takes this role that had been so uncertain over the first year of the show and truly makes it his. Every time he asked anyone listening “Who is this man?” in reference to Douglas Wambaugh, I could’ve died.

As I said, I was not sure what way the court decision would go, and I kind of thought there would not be a verdict because of the whole spontaneous combustion story, but that is not in this episode.

So I was surprised when Pugen was found guilty. This show was never afraid to go for the big swings.