The Spider-Man 3 Disappointment of the Year

Going along with the Gomers, we now have the Spider-Man 3 Disappointment of the Year. These are movies that had high levels of anticipation but failed to reach that level. It does not require hating the movie. This award is named after Spider-Man 3, which I do not hate. It had some good things in it. It just failed to be as great as it could have been. Some times the films that win this are horrible, but others are okay.

Previous Winners:  In the Heart of the Sea, The Snowman, Amazing Spider-Man 2, After Earth, Dark Knight Rises, Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter, Batman v. Superman, Christopher Robin, IT: Chapter Two

This was, of course, a difficult year for this category. A bunch of the films that I was anticipating wound up sent to 2021 because of the pandemic. The movies that I did not know or had only found out about during the year did not fit in this category. There had to be some amount of hope of excellence for there to be disappointment.

Other films that I expected to not be very good such as Doolittle or Bloodshot could not be considered disappointing. Because of all that, the list of these will be lower.

We will start off with our winner….

Tenet

Tenet: New Images And Poster For Christopher Nolan's Blockbuster | Movies |  Empire

Christopher Nolan insisted on having Tenet released in the theaters and not delayed to 2021 or released on streaming and Tenet paid for it. But that was not why it was disappointing to me. I did head out to the theater to see it. The disappointment was that it was confusing, hard to hear and not a great story. It could have been so much better than what it was. I anticipated this being a film with a major story dealing with a mysterious element, but this was a slog to get through.

I did not hate Tenet, but there were enough issues with the film to make it the Spider-Man 3 Disappointment of the Year,

Runners-Up: I only have three others on this list. The most recent was the Netflix sequel, Christmas Chronicle 2. I so enjoyed the first one of these and I was excited to see the second one but it was dull and such a disappointment. Where as Christmas Chronicle 2 may have been somewhat watchable, Disney +’s release of Artemis Fowl was very much unwatchable. It was truly one of the worst movies of the year and I had been holding out hope that it might be better than I thought. Nope. The third film on this list is the Blumhouse adaptation of Fantasy Island. I used to love this show on TV, and I thought a movie version by the preeminent horror movie studio was a great idea. I love Michael Pena, but he was terribly miscast as Mr. Rourke. Fantasy Island was just terrible.

2020 The Gomer Award Winner

Surprise! Surprise! Surprise!

For those of you too young to understand the reference of the title of this award, it is named after Jim Neighbors’ character from the Andy Griffith Show and his own eventual spin-off series, Gomer Pyle. Gomer’s catch phrase was “Surprise! Surprise! Surprise!” and that works perfect for this year end list of movies that I expected little from, but surprised me with how good they were.

Some of the films that receive consideration for the Gomer may not necessarily make the Top 30 end of the year list, but they turned out better than I could have imagined.

Previous Gomer Award Winners:  The Gift, Ferdinand, Edge of Tomorrow, We’re the Millers, The Campaign, Ouija: Origin of Evil, Bumblebee, Crawl

These were surprises in a positive way. The films that surprised me with their badness will be in the Spider-Man 3 Disappointment of the Year Award, which is still coming.

So… after some close battles, the Gomer is awarded to….

Greenland

The Gerard Butler disaster movie killing it on Amazon

A disaster movie starring Gerard Butler? We’ve seen that before, haven’t we? Well, the answer to that question is yes… as recently as a few years ago with Geostorm. However, we have never seen one like Greenland.

If you can believe it, Greenland is truly more of a character piece than a high-effects, CGI fest where Butler is the super hero everyman (in Geostorm he was a scientist. A scientist?)

Here, the events going on around them are secondary to the struggle and challenges faced by this little family and the problems that they were facing prior to the comet striking the earth. Yes, there are some of the typical beats of a disaster movie, but this film does not feel as if they had to embrace those. It feels as if it through those in as an afterthoguht.

I did not expect to like this one as much as I did, which is why it is the Gomer winner of 2020.

Runners-Up: Black Box on Amazon Prime was one of my favorite Halloween films of the year and it is still underappreciated by many fans. Palm Springs was on Hulu and takes the Groundhog Day story into a different direction in a fun and humorous manner. Hulu ‘s efforts this year included Pooka Lives! a horror/comedy sequel that far surpassed the original. Another Amazon Prime movie was The Vast of Night about an alien arrival on earth in the 1950s. After the hugely disappointing Penguins, Disneynature needed a win for me, and they delivered with the unexpectedly great Disneynature’s Elephant. Shudder tossed a great surprise with the short but terrifying Host.

Documentary of the Year

There were some great documentaries this year. There were actually several more that I saw on TV or as an original on a streaming service than I saw in the theater. I see last year’s winner was Finding Neverland and that was a TV documentary so I do not have to specify that this is for any form of doc.

I should say off the top that a lot of people will probably be wanting the Michael Jordan doc, The Last Dance to make my list, but I did not watch it, so I cannot include it. I know it was a pop culture event so I thought I might mention it.

Here are the list of prior winners of this year end award.

Best Documentary

Previous Winners:  Won’t You Be My Neighbor?, My Scientology Movie, Tickled, Finding Neverland

This year’s runners-up included the following: The Social Dilemma (which was more frightening than most of the horror movies this year). Another disturbing tale was American Murder: The Family Next Door from Netflix about the Watts family murders from 2018. It was a difficult watch as well. Another documentary that messed me up this year was Robin’s Wish, the story of Robin Williams and his final days of his life with Lewy body dementia that led to his suicide. As a huge Robin Williams fan after watching this, I needed an immediate palate cleanser (so I headed to The Princess Bride on Disney +). HBO Max’s The Mystery of D.B. Cooper was more fascinating to me after seeing the trailer for Loki, next year on Disney +. Finally, there was a tremendous five-part documentary series on the WWE Network featuring the story of the Undertaker. It was called Undertaker: The Last Ride and it gave wrestling fans a look at the mysterious Undertaker and showed him the “Dead man” in a way they have rarely seen him. WWE Network also gave us a doc on The Rated R Superstar Edge called You Think You Know Me which was a great look at the returning Edge. WWE really do a fabulous job of creating documentaries about their superstars and giving us a glance behind the curtain of kayfabe. Another fantastic docu-series focusing on the world of pro wrestling (though not produced by WWE) was the second season of The Dark Side of the Ring, which included a powerful and heartbreaking two-part story on the Chris Benoit tragedy.

However, the winner of this award is a documentary series that transcended all of the rest and became a nationwide sensation. It was release on Netflix right at the beginning of the pandemic and, with so many people at home isolated, this was seemingly all anyone could talk about.

Tiger King

Tiger King' star Joe Exotic loses control of Oklahoma zoo properties to  Carole Baskin: Report

Legitimately, the craziness of this Netflix series was what we needed in the world at that time. We saw a ton of downright rotten people whose stories were unbelievable. The feud between Joe Exotic and Carol Baskins kicked this off, but we saw many other unlikable characters that just left you thinking… this can’t be real, right? It has to be because if it were fiction, nobody would be able to accept the story.

Roald Dahl’s The Witches

I have been a fan of Roahl Dahl for some time now. I especially have enjoyed his poetry such as The Pig, a charming and darkly comedic take on why a pig is alive. However, I will admit that I have either not been a huge fan of most of the movie adaptation of Dahl’s work or I have not seen them. Obviously, I love Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory and The Fantastic Mr. Fox is extremely well done. Matilda is fun too. I have actually never seen James and the Giant Peach, did not love The BFG and actively disliked Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. When I came across the movie Roald Dahl’s The Witches on HBO Max, I must admit to being intrigued.

I had never heard of this story and I also was unaware that there was another version of this film from 1990 starring Anjelica Huston and featuring Jim Henson puppetry. I will have to check that out.

So I entered this film without any knowledge of The Witches at all outside of the fact that it was a Roald Dahl story.

I was unimpressed.

In The Witches, a boy (Jahzir Bruno) is orphaned in a car crash and goes to live with his grandma (Octavia Spencer). Little did he know, witches were real and they were all around. His grandma had encountered a specific witch when she was a child and that witch turned Grandma’s friend into a chicken. So when the boy encounters a witch at the store, Grnadma took him away to a seaside resort. Unfortunately, there was a witches convention going on there with the Grand High Witch (Anne Hathaway) unleashing her evil plan to change all the children of the world into mice.

There are some huge names connected with this project. It was directed by Robert Zemeckis. The score was composed by Alan Silvestri. The credits included names such as Guillermo del Toro and Alfonso Cuarón. That is a lot of talent to be connected to this film especially considering how disappointing this was.

Octavia Spencer is always awesome and she does her job here really well. Anne Hathaway is so over-the-top in The Witches as the Grand High Witch, it seems as if she is having a blast. Stanley Tucci is in the film too (not sure why).

The cast was not the issue. Roald Dahl’s work is wonderfully dark and funny. Even Willy Wonka has undertones in the film of the darkness that exists. Here, much of the darkness has been removed in favor of family friendly moments. The only really dark moment was the ending with the fate of the Grand High Witch, which was satisfying. I would have enjoyed that tone more.

There were several plot points that seemed to be important, but were totally dropped. For example, Grandma spent the whole film coughing badly, implying that she was sick. I guess not as it does not come into the story at all. There was several references to garlic in a soup scene that made you believe that garlic may play into the resolution of the arc. Nope. I guess it is just a one off joke.

Another issue I had that, for a film from 2020, the CGI was below average. There were many places in the film where the CGI was noticeable and that is a sin for a current movie, in particular for a film where three of its main characters are talking mice.

This might be an effective film to plop the children down in front of during this holiday season, but for the adults in the room, be prepared to engage elsewhere.

2.5 stars

Home Alone (1990)

An iconic movie is on the docket next as I revisited the John Hughes classic Home Alone. I had been wanting to rewatch Home Alone for a little while now, and, with it on Disney + and a season for Christmas movies, I played the film.

It really is silly. The things that happen just are not really possible. However, I think that is part of the fun. It is an escapist fantasy where the audience can cheer for this little boy who is trying to protect himself and his house from these crooks. Sure, Kevin McCallister (Macaulay Culkin) could not have set up all of those booby traps for the Wet Bandits and these traps would potentially kill Harry (Joe Pesci) and Marv (Daniel Stern)– at the very least concuss them.

The whole set up for the family heading off to Paris without Kevin is a series of coincidences and happenstances that have to all happen for the plot to work. Again, you suspend that clear doubtful situations because it is fun. Catherine O’Hara as Kevin’s mom Kate adds credibility to the story with her mere presence. Her character makes a ton of mistakes, but you can relate to her easily, from the stress from holiday family gatherings and rushing to the airport to her mama lion determination to make it back to her son.

Joe Pesci and Daniel Stern are veterans who bring a great amount of charisma and chemistry with one another. They fall right into the same type of comedic pairing like Abbot and Costello, able to bounce back, almost cartoon-like, from these devastating slapstick booby traps.

By the way, how about the scene of the whole family rushing through the airport and arriving mere minutes before the plane is to depart. That sure is a picture of a bygone era. No way that would happen in today’s society of being at the airport hours ahead of time. It was the first thing I thought as I watched that moment in the movie.

Home Alone is an enjoyable film with a breakout performance from Macaulay Culkin and a group of wonderful actors surrounding him. I did not even mention John Candy, John Heard, and Roberts Blossom, who all are significant actors in the cast. It is similar to the Road Runner/Wile Coyote situation in the Looney Tunes cartoons.

It is a classic.

EYG Top 10 Christmas Movies of the 21st Century

I haven’t done one of these in a long time. I have not had the time available during the last few months to do these lists. They do take longer than a normal entry does to write it up. Plus, with the new format of Word Press, I cannot do this the same way that I used to. I am not sure how this post is going to look because of that.

The new list this week with John Rocha and Matt Knost on the Top 10 Show was a Christmas themed episode chosen by one of their patreons. They picked out the top 10 Christmas movies of the 21st century. That takes out Die Hard, Muppet Christmas Carol and Scrooged. (Yes, Die Hard is a Christmas movie).

Krampus Movies: Films About the Evil Santa Claus – Creepy Catalog

#10. Krampus. A cool Christmas horror movie with a creepy creature known as Krampus. This is some fun, comedic horror that is an enjoyable film.

Disney Plus' 'Noelle' is a mediocre holiday movie that's better suited for  streaming - Insider

#9. Noelle. This one was unexpected. I liked this a lot more than I thought I would. Santa’s daughter taking over the role of Santa because her brother did not want to. Anna Kendrick is charming and carries a huge chunk of the film. This is better than it had any right to be.

Arthur Christmas Review | Movie - Empire

#8. Arthur Christmas. A fun British animated movie featuring a dorky and clumsy son of Santa. James McAvoy voiced the role of Arthur. One of the best things about this movie is how they set up Santa’s organization. The behind the scenes at the North Pole was cool.

Disney Plus Confirms 'Iron Man 3' Is A Christmas Movie

#7. Iron Man 3. Marvel has claimed that Iron Man 3 is a Christmas movie. Is it really? Maybe, maybe not, but if Die Hard counts… so Iron Man 3 can count as well. Iron Man 3 has its detractors, but I thought it was better than people give it credit for. Robert Downey Jr shows that he does not need the armor to carry a film.

Kurt Russell is a 'real' Santa in Netflix's 'The Christmas Chronicles'

#6. Christmas Chronicle. I never knew that I needed to have Kurt Russell as Santa Claus until I saw this Netflix movie. This was a great surprise and it was so much fun. The sequel was not anywhere near as good as this first film, but Christmas Chronicles was worth the watch,

Disney's A Christmas Carol | EW.com

#5. A Christmas Carol (2009). The iconic story from Charles Dickens meets up with the new technique of motion capture in this Disney film from Robert Zemeckis. I liked this more than a lot of people. Jim Carrey does a great job playing multiple characters, especially Ebenezer Scrooge. Some of the faces are a tad weird, but the rest of the film is lovely and a solid inclusion of the most filmed Christmas movie topic of all time.

The Man Who Invented Christmas review: Deeply silly but enjoyable - Vox

#4. The Man Who Invented Christmas. A new take on the Scrooge story, this time focused on Charles Dickens himself and his way that he wrote the book. Dan Stevens is fantastic as Dickens and Christopher Plummer becomes a magnificent hallucination of Scrooge. This was another movie that I did not expect to love as much as I did.

Kiss Kiss Bang Bang' On Amazon Prime Video: A Perfect Showcase For Shane  Black's Seasonal Sensibilities | Decider

#3. Kiss Kiss Bang Bang. This is the film that truly kicked started Robert Downey Jr. back into relevance in Hollywood. He showed that he was capable of being a lead star once again, and soon after, was cast as Tony Stark. Kiss Kiss Bang Bang is an amazing noir film and an irreverent look at the Hollywood life.

Klaus (2019) - IMDb

#2. Klaus. Another film surprise, this animated film from Netflix last year became an instant classic. There was beautiful art work and spectacular voice work from the stellar cast. I loved the way they approached the origin story of Kris Kringle in a different way that brought a ton of emotion and human connection to the character. Klaus is fantastic and masterful.

Bizarre 'Elf' Fan Theories | Mental Floss

#1 Elf. Okay, I just watched this last night for the first time. I have never been a big fan of Will Farrell and so this film was one that I just had little interest in seeing. However, I finally decided to sit down and watch it and I absolutely loved it from beginning to end. This was the best performance I have ever seen from Will Farrell and the film was laugh out loud funny. This will be a Christmas classic for years to come.

Honorary Mentions: There were a few others I considered. Truthfully, I bumped Rise of the Guardians out of the top 10 when I decided to include Iron Man 3. Rise is a solid animated movie based on a series of young novels. The Grinch with Benedict Cumberbatch was a fun film, and I liked it more than the Ron Howard version, for sure. Office Christmas Party had some real funny moments and benefits from the dry wit of Jason Bateman. I have never seen Love Actually, and I am not interested in fixing that (at least for now). The Night Before was okay, but I have never been a stoner comedy fan and Seth Rogan usually plays into that. Still, there are some real funny laughs there too.

The Midnight Sky

Christmas break began with the first of several big movies coming out with Netflix’s The Midnight Sky directed by and starring George Clooney kicking things off.

The science fiction story was adapted from a novel called Good Morning, Midnight. George Clooney played scientist Augustine who was isolated in the Arctic on a planet that had suffered some kind of catastrophic event. Augustine discovered a little girl who did not talk named Iris (the debuting Caoilinn Springall).

Meanwhile, a crew of astronauts were attempting to return to earth after their trip to one of the moons of Jupiter. The captain, Adewole (David Oyelowo), and Sully (Felicity Jones) were together and trying to find their way home.

The astronauts did not understand why they were not able to contact anyone on earth.

The Midnight Sky was pretty slow, and I am not sure if anything really happened. The film looked beautiful and was filled with some wonderful shots, but it was pretty dull.

George Clooney does a good job as the lonely scientist performance-wise. The acting on the shuttle was strong as well with David Oyelowo, Felicity Jones, Kyle Chandler, Tiffany Boone and Demián Bichir were at the very least solid. Some of them did not get as much time as others, but they fit well into the narrative that was being told.

The film was also pretty depressing for 2/3s of the run time. There was a ton of melodrama in the movie and there were few points of brightness. There is one major exception with “Sweet Caroline.” There was just too much depression and, when it compares with the slow pace of the film, it became difficult to watch at times.

The Midnight Sky looked great but the rest of the film was a bit of a slosh to get through. Clooney’s performance was good, but it did not elevate the film enough.

2.75 stars

Elf (2003)

I had never seen Elf.

Honestly, I was not in a big hurry to watch it wither. You see, I am not a big fan of Will Farrell and this felt like just more of the same. I have liked a few of Farrell’s films, but not enough to search out any past films of his to watch.

Some of my 7th grade students found out that I had not seen Elf just today, and they were shocked. Then, tonight, I was listening to the Top 10 Show with John Rocha and Matt Knost and they each had Elf at their number one on their lists of Christmas films from the 21st Century. I had thought that I would eventually watch the film, so I decided I would watch it tonight. Get it out of the way.

I was thoroughly thrilled and unbelievably charmed. I see what everybody has been saying. Elf is wonderful.

Will Farrell played Buddy the Elf, a human baby who accidentally winds up in Santa’s (Ed Asner) sack and returns with him to the North Pole. Once there, Buddy is given to Papa Elf (Bib Newhart) to raise. Papa Elf does all he can for Buddy, but it soon becomes clear that Buddy was not a regular elf.

Once he discovered the truth, Buddy is told about his real father, Walter Hobbs (James Caan), an executive at a publishing house in New York, who had no idea that he was Buddy’s father… or that Buddy even existed. So, Buddy took off from the North Pole to go to New York and find his father. One problem. According to Santa, Buddy’s father was on the naughty list.

This is the best performance I have ever seen given by Will Farrell. One of my issues with him is that he is too chaotic as an actor. I have found him loud and really playing the same character. However, I found this to be the most subtle and in control Will Farrell has been. Buddy was so filled with innocence and a joy of the unfamiliar world that was unfolding before his eyes, and Will Farrell brought this to this character in spades. He was totally charming and easy to love and I couldn’t believe how much I was enjoying the performance.

The film was really funny as well. I found myself laughing out loud throughout the movie. Again, I have always found Will Farrell humor to be forced and unfunny. This was not how I found Elf. It was such an easy watch and so light and pleasant. I had a big smile on my face the entire time and even had a few tears in my eyes at the end.

Elf was not perfect, but I thought it was near so. The one area that felt rushed was how quickly Walter turned from angry, negligent father who wanted no part of Buddy, to father who is willing to leave his job to find his oldest son. It did not feel gradual. It felt like a switch was thrown and that was the one area that I had a problem with.

That was about it for negatives. Everything else worked extremely well and I could not believe how much I loved this movie.

WWE 2020 Year in Review

The world of WWE in 2020 had some highs and a bunch of lows. I will discuss my choices for best in WWE, which includes the NXT brand. I do not watch other wrestling companies so I cannot include AEW or any of the others. No offense to anyone who prefers non-WWE.

Match of the Year

By the way, I separated out the Cinematic matches from this list. They will have their own list later.

#15. “The Fiend” Brey Wyatt defeated Daniel Bryan, Royal Rumble. These two never fail. I actually believed that Daniel might beat the Fiend.

#14. Roman Reigns defeated Jey Uso, Clash of Champions. One of the best story telling matches of the year. So much emotion and great acting from the wrestlers.

#13. Drew McIntyre defeated AJ Styles and Miz, TLC. From last night. Drew McIntyre has been a huge performer this year for RAW. Miz failed in his Money in the Bank cash-in.

#12. Sasha Banks defeated Bayley, Hell in the Cell. The great feud between former friends came to a conclusion as Sasha Banks won the Smackdown Women’s Championship.

#11. Timothy Thatcher defeated Matt Riddle in Fight Pit, NXT Takeover. Brutal match. This was Matt Riddle’s final NXT match and holy crap. Thatcher lost teeth!

#10. Roman Reigns defeated Kevin Owens, TLC. Another one from last night. Roman Reigns and Kevin Owens are amazing storytellers and the TLC match was brutal. KO had so many challenges to overcome, and he came up just short.

#9. Women’s War Games Team Candice defeated Team Shotzi, NXT Takeover: War Games. Some thought this was the best match at NXT Takeover War Games, but I disagree. It was amazing though. I have to say the use of the tool box took me out. Surprise ending too.

#8. Walter defeated Ilja Dragunov, NXT UK. Holy crap. I am not sure that I have seen two people just beat the crap out of each other like these two did. The chops were savage. It feels as close to a real fight as you are going to find.

#7. AJ Styles defeated Daniel Bryan, Finals of Intercontinental Tournament, Smackdown. Best regularly televised match of 2020 (non-PPV). Daniel Bryan and AJ Styles are masters of their work and this match was beautiful.

#6. Roman Reigns defeated Drew McIntyre, Survivor Series. What a great match. I want a longer feud between these two. It was between the two biggest stars of the year.

#5. Miz and Morrison win the Smackdown Tag Team Championship Elimination Chamber. Featured The New Day (Big E and Kofi Kingston), The Usos (Jey Uso and Jimmy Uso), Heavy Machinery (Otis and Tucker), Lucha House Party (Lince Dorado and Gran Metalik), and Dolph Ziggler & Robert Roode. Some amazing work here from some top notch tag teams.

#4. Randy Orton defeated Edge, Greatest Wrestling Match Ever. Greatest Wrestling Match Ever is #4 on my list. Promoting this match that way was always going to be a poor choice, but the match was sensational.

#3. Io Shirai defeated Charlotte Flair and Rhea Ripley for NXT Women’s Championship, NXT Takeover. Io Shirai became the NXT Women’s Championship in a fantastic match with Charlotte and Rhea. Shirai was flying all over the place. Top women’s match of the year.

#2. Men’s Royal Rumble. Drew McIntyre won the event and had one of the best moments of 2020, before the crowds went away. McIntyre’s elimination of Brock Lesnar, who had been ripping through the first half of the Rumble.

#1. Men’s War Games The Undisputed Era defeated Team McAfee, NXT Takeover. I thought this was so epic. The eight men put their bodies on the line, but they also told a great story about the Undisputed Era and their battle to remain in control. It was amazing.

The Undisputed ERA celebrate WarGames victory: WWE Network Exclusive, Dec.  6, 2020 - YouTube

Male Wrestler of the Year: Drew McIntyre.

Runners-Up: Roman Reigns, Adam Cole, Keith Lee, Braun Strowman, Brey Wyatt

I went back and forth between McIntyre and Reigns. I decided for Drew McIntyre as winner here because he has been there the entire year and Roman has only been here since SummerSlam. However, Roman has been so great since. The others on the list were far from the top two.

Female Wrestler of the Year: Asuka

Runners-Up: Bayley, Sasha Banks, Charlotte Flair, Io Shirai.

Asuka was the clear MVP for RAW on the women’s side of the ledger during the no audience time. Her victory at Money in the Bank was great and then she stepped into the role left by Becky Lynch, who left to give birth. Bayley is a close second as she embraced that heel role and she had an amazing story with her partner and enemy Sasha Banks.

WWE's Asuka on Fighting Bayley and Sasha Banks at SummerSlam and Kairi  Sane's Departure | TV Guide

Tag Team of the Year: The Street Profits.

Runners-Up: Undisputed Era, The New Day, The Viking Raiders, Miz and Morrison

Tag Team wrestling has not been great this year, but The Street Profits have been one of the top stars of the division. Undisputed Era has been a focus on NXT all year long. The New Day split with Big E and took a new step.

Manager of the Year: Paul Heyman

Runners-Up: MVP, Pat McAvee

The manager has been a role that has seen better days. However, when the reveal of Roman Reigns being a Paul Heyman guy happened, the internet exploded. Heyman has been one of the best managers (even though he was technically an advocate.)

On the Mike: Roman Reigns.

Runners-Up: Paul Heyman, Kevin Owens, Daniel Bryan, Brey Wyatt

Roman Reigns has elevated the storyline that he has been involved in by his speaking/acting. Roman has shown that he truly is a talented dude.

Feud of the Year: Orton vs. Edge.

Runners-Up: Sasha Banks vs. Bayley, Roman Reigns vs. Jey Uso, Drew McIntyre vs. Randy Orton, Roman Reigns vs. Kevin Owens, Adam Cole vs. Pat McAvee

The one on one promo battle leading up to Wrestlemania this year was as brilliant as you are going to find. Orton and Edge showed their veteran work.

Underused: Cesaro

Runners-Up: Elias, Chad Gable, Shinsuke Nakamura

I could just start calling this the Cesaro Award. I think he is one of the winners of this every year. It is just a crime that this man cannot find himself into the main event scene.

Cesaro makes an incredible statement about his future

Comeback of the Year: Edge.

No other choices here. Edge’s return was unbelievable. Nine years later. He came back better than ever.

Face of the Year: Drew McIntyre.

Runners-Up: Daniel Bryan, Dominik Mysterio, Kevin Owens, Otis

Drew McIntyre was booked better than anyone this year. He may not be a specific face in peril type of wrestler, but he has been so fantastic all year.

Heel of the Year: Roman Reigns

Runners-Up: Sami Zayn, Randy Orton, Bayley, AJ Styles

Roman Reigns came back as a heel, which is what everyone always wanted, and he was absolutely brilliant at it. You wonder why this hadn’t happened before this.

Storyline of the Year: Roman Reigns, Head of the Table.

Runners-Up: Sasha and Bayley break up, The Fiend and Alexa Bliss

Roman Reigns’ heel turn is the best of the year and his determination to being called the head of the table truly has determined his character.

Big Dog to Tribal Chief: Roman Reigns talks WWE character transition,  ongoing feud with cousin Jey Uso - CBSSports.com

Best Match/Worst Finish: Seth Rollins vs. Rey Mysterio, Eye vs. Eye Match.

This match at Extreme Rules was really great, but that finish…woof. The fake eye hidden in Rey’s hand was just ridiculous. Not the way to end this hard hitting and exciting match.

Breakout for 2021: Karrion Kross.

He was here for a bit in 2020, got injured and now is returning and Karrion Kross, whose entrance is the best in the business, is going to be huge in 2021. I do not think he will be in NXT for long before arriving on the main roster. How about Kross vs. McIntyre? Whoa.

Best Broadcaster: Samoa Joe.

Samoa Joe has been a revelation on the desk. He has made the RAW team so much better with his commentary and his humor. Though I want him back in the ring, if he cannot, then the desk is great for him.

Top 4 Cinematic Matches

#4. Gargano vs. Ciampa, One Final Beat.

#3. Firefly Funhouse Match, Brey Wyatt vs. John Cena, Wrestlemania

#2. Money in the Bank Ladder Match (on the roof).

#1. Boneyard Match, Undertaker vs. AJ Styles, Wrestlemania.

The Boneyard Match might have been the overall match of the year if I combined the lists together. AJ and Taker brought it and it looks as if it will be the final match of the Undertaker’s glorious career. This was like a huge accomplishment and, apparently, a very difficult filming (as the Undertaker reveals in his exceptional documentary series, Last Ride).

Behind the scenes details of The Undertaker vs AJ Styles Boneyard match at  WrestleMania 36 revealed

The Croods: A New Age

When I went to see the original The Croods animated movie a few years ago, I hated the experience. I have always wondered if I hated the movie as much as I hated the experience.

You see, the theater I saw The Croods in was cramped, filled with screaming children, and there was a child throwing up a few rows behind me. I was stuck in the furthest seat over and was hating the entire environment. There is no doubt that the movie viewing experience can affect the way you perceive the movie so I did not enjoy the first Croods movie.

Now, the public at large did not seem to love the film either and I am not sure who was exactly clamoring for a sequel seven years after. I avoided the film. There was no pull for me to head out to the theater and potentially expose myself to the Covid-19 virus to see the sequel to the Croods.

Heck, it came out on streaming and I still was not anxious to see it. Finally, I decided that I should watch it.

The first thing that I realized was that Ryan Reynolds voiced the character Guy, something I did not remember from the first one. I remembered Nicolas Cage doing the voice of Grug, the father, but Reynolds was a surprise.

Then, the first half of the movie was about what I expected. Harmless. Unremarkable. Predictable. In fact, it felt like I was watching a Bizarro version of Aladdin with Guy as Prince Ali and Dawn Betterman (Kelly Marie Tran) as Jasmine. Perhaps that made Eep (Emma Stone) Abu. Although later on I thought maybe Eep was Aladdin instead.

I guess I should give a plot synapsis. The Croods found “Tomorrow”, the land Guy was searching for and met up with Guy’s parents’ old friends, the Bettermans, Phil (Peter Dinklage) and Hope (Leslie Mann). The Bettermans wanted Guy to come back and hook up with their daughter Dawn, and they tried to manipulate Grug to give Guy back.

Grug was feeling scared about Eep leaving the tribe so he was easily manipulated by Phil.

This was about the first 45 minutes of the movie and it was fine. Nothing major. There were a few funny bits, but nothing that I cared about, as you could tell from the weird Aladdin analogy I was mentally working on.

Then….

The movie went completely bat shit crazy.

I mean… totally bat shit crazy. I have to say, I liked it. It was bizarre, wild, flipping insane.

You have to respect a movie that is willing to let itself go this bat shit crazy. I’m not even sure how to describe it. King Kong on acid? Land of the Lost meets Willy Wonka? The Partridge Family and the Flintstones have a baby? There was even a series of Jack Black songs from out of nowhere.

Thunder Sisters? Punch monkeys language lessons. Wolf Spiders. Flying hair named Wigasus.

All of this feels as if they needed to cram everything possible into the third act because they knew the remainder of the movie was average at best. And yet, that third act was so nuts that it might have won me over. I don’t think I need to see the original again and I don’t think another sequel is needed, but this can only be experienced.

3 stars

Greenland

A disaster movie starring Gerard Butler? I’ve seen this before. Nothing special here….

Oh, wait.

I take it all back.

I loved this movie. I never expected to love it as much as I did. I mean, come on. All of these disaster movies are the same and there is little difference about them. At best, they provide a couple of hours of escapist fun and at worst they are big, dumb spectacles that make no sense.

However, Greenland showed that it was more than this. Not only was it big, dumb escapist fun, it was also filled with emotional beats and surprisingly tense situations that felt true to the moment. It was more than our indestructible hero wading through CGI destruction to save his loved ones. While there is some of that, it is not the center of the movie. The movie’s center is actually the flaws of the characters and the nature of the human species.

A comet, dubbed Clarke by the media, approached the earth and the expectations were that it was not going to cause an impact on the planet. However, construction worker John Garrity (Gerard Butler) received a presidential alert on his phone that he and his family had been selected to be taken to a bunker. Though currently estranged from his wife Allison (Morena Baccarin), John maintained a positive relationship with his son Nathan (Roger Dale Floyd). When the notification came through, it became apparent that Clarke was going to be more of a problem than what was being reported.

The Garritys packed quickly and headed for the location presented them. After they arrived, they were split and it was determined that, because of his diabetes, Nathan was no longer eligible for the program. The family struggled to reunite and to find a way to safety.

Yes, a lot of that synopsis sounds familiar to other such genre films, but you have to trust me. This film elevates above the others through some exceptional writing.

One of the things that really sold me on the film I was watching was how it pulled no punches in the execution of the plot. There seemed to be little special about John Garrity. He was not a major scientist (as Butler was in Geostorm) or a former government agent of some sort. He was just a normal guy who had his own problems. I immediately was able to accept Butler in the role. It fit him beatifully.

Another thing Greenland did was it showed how horrible the situation was as the Garritys had to face the fact that they were leaving their friends and family behind. There were some scenes of real anguish where they were faced with desperate parents begging them to take their child too, and John knowing that they were restricted from doing it. The audience knew the result of John’s rejection of the idea, and the film did not shy away from showing the anxiety built by these near-Sophie’s choice like moments.

But what this film does above all else that I loved was how it elevated the no name heroes to a huge status. It did not just show the dark side of the human condition (looting, violent reactions etc.), but it showed the men and women of the human race just trying to help where they could. The army major (Merrin Dungey) who there doing her job despite having to leave her own family behind. The nurse who is able to help Nathan with his diabetes during a time where he had been separated from his parents. The family willing to pick up Allison alongside of the road and take her with them. The kind hearted young man who told John about the flight to Greenland. These were characters who were, most likely, not going to survive the extinction level event that was coming, but who were simply trying to do what they could to make a difference where they could. It was a true portrait of the best of the human society and it was the message that stuck with me more than those who embraced the chaos.

Scott Glenn had a short, but powerful appearance as Allison’s father. In just a few scenes, Glenn was able to imbue Dale with a humanity and a forgiveness that was desperately required for his family.

Roger Dale Floyd does a great job as Nathan, and the character of Nathan is allowed to be smart. There is one scene in particular where Nathan is in deep trouble, but he does the smart thing instead of the typically stupid choice that is served to just extend the plot. When that happened, I actually fist pumped and I was so proud of Nathan. That’s weird I know, but I loved that he was given the opportunity to be a real person.

Sure the movie has its warts too. There are definitely coincidences that happen to allow the Garritys to make it to where they were going and the trip to Canada seemed fairly simple (with the exception of one firestorm). Still, those are things that can be ignored with suspension of disbelief. Truthfully, there is less suspension of disbelief needed here than most of this type of genre movie.

And the ending of the movie was not necessarily strong. There was a spot where I thought the movie was going to end which would have left me feeling differently than where it ultimately did end at. I kind of wish they would have gone with the more uncertain conclusion.

So while this is not a perfect movie and it does get weighed down at times with the conventions of the genre, Greenland elevates so much more beyond the typical clichés and expectations of a disaster film that it was a sweet surprise and a film that I truly enjoyed watching.

4.25 stars

2020 In Memoriam

2020 has been a terrible year for loss of life.

I had no idea there was as much until I started working on the In Memoriam section for the Year in Review. Not only quantity, but there were some massively huge names as well. Chadwick Boseman, Sean Connery, John Lewis, Regis Philbin, Kirk Douglas, Kobe Bryant, RBG, Alex Trebek, Eddie Van Halen, Charlie Daniels… the list goes on and on.

So much so that I wound up doing two fully separate In Memoriam collages in honor of the ton of celebrities’ that are gone…and I am sure I missed some.

And what is worse… usually this is one of the first things I do with the Year in Review because I like honoring these people who inspired so many of us, but I pushed this back because I did not want to miss anyone. Literally, I was checking Twitter as I was finishing up the work on MS Paint to make sure no one passed away today. It even now feels as if there could be more before finally 2020 mercifully comes to a close.

If I need to add to these images, I will do so. I prey that I do not have to.

RIP to all.

Couple to add…

Brodie Lee (aka Luke Harper)

Kevin Greene

Kevin Greene Dies at the Age of 58 — Details on What Happened

And another loss… Phil Niekro

Meet the Inductees: Phil Niekro - "Knucksie" | Georgia Sports Hall of Fame

And Today, I have to add one more. Mary Ann from Gilligan’s Island, Dawn Wells

Dawn Wells (@therealmaryann) | Twitter

Let Them All Talk

The first movie that I will review from HBO Max is the new film starring Meryl Streep called Let Them All Talk.

Meryl Streep is a huge star. She is considered one of the best actors of the last couple of decades. Having her new movie on the streaming service is a big deal. Of course, HBO Max is heading toward huge releases starting with WW84 on Christmas. Let Them All Talk is a nice way to kick it off.

Meryl Streep played Alice, a famous author who was taking a cruise to England to accept a prestigious award and she invited her old college friends Roberta and Susan (Candice Bergen & Dianne Wiest) to travel with her. The three friends had fallen away from one another in the years since Alice’s success.

Alice also invited her nephew Tyler (Lucas Hedges) to come along. Tyler was the glue that keeps the trio together and managed to handle whatever came up. One of those details was the publishing house’s agent Karen (Gemma Chan) who was trying to find out what Alice was writing, with the hope that it was a sequel to her huge hit book, that incidentally revealed a ton of details on the life of Roberta.

The film is harmless and focuses on the three ladies, as well as a “relationship” between Tyler and the older Karen. There were some solid performances in the film and the characters were well developed. However, there was no doubt that the character that I enjoyed the most was Roberta and the main reason for that was the charming and exceptional Candice Bergen.

Bergen got the meatiest character to play, a woman whose difficult life came from the publishing of the original book and who looked to be out for herself. Among other things, she was on the prowl across the ship for a potential husband who may have plenty of money. Roberta’s back story was just as fascinating making you wonder exactly what kind of person she was.

Meryl Streep’s Alice was played snooty and overbearing, yet there was something relatable to her. That may be because of Streep’s overt charm. You warm to her as the film pressed on and you realized that there was more to the story than what you could see.

Steven Soderbergh directed this movie and it was a solid and enjoyable experience as three great legendary actresses chewed up the scenes. I will admit that the scenes with Lucas Hedges and Gemma Chen were less interesting for me, but they are harmless and help play into the overall narrative. Alice’s connection to Tyler is one of the things that helped to humanize her for the audience.

The ending took a turn that I did not expect and that is always welcomed.

3.3 stars

Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom

Based on a Tony Award winning play by August Wilson, Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom is the final performance of actor Chadwick Boseman, and what a performance it was.

Boseman passed away in August from a years-long battle with cancer. Best known as King T’Challa from Marvel’s Black Panther, Boseman has been impressive in his film roles, but there may not be anything more impressive than his turn as Levee, a temperamental trumpeter with plans of musical success.

As Chadwick Boseman’s performance was not enough, Viola Davis absolutely slays it as Ma Rainey, the real life black singer called the “Mother of the Blues,” a demanding singer unwilling to budge from what she wanted.

Viola Davis recently won an Oscar for her role in Fences, another movie based on a play, alongside Denzel Washington, who produced this film. Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom feels much like a play on film, just like fences did. The sharp dialogue, the powerhouse monologues, and the claustrophobic sets give this film its tone. Davis and Boseman bring the fire.

The film told the story of a recording session in 1927 on a hot Chicago afternoon. Ma Rainey, late arriving, tried completing a recording session with her white manager and producer. Her backing band had their own troubles, led by the emotionally unstable Levee.

The dialogue of the film was equally parts brilliant and uncomfortable. The constant use of the n-word was difficult to hear even though I know that is the verbiage of the culture. However, the monologues, in particular those delivered by Boseman, were utterly spellbinding and revealed the deep seeded pain of the character and made us understand the choices that he made.

Viola Davis is practically unrecognizable as the Mother of the Blues. The costume design and the manner in which the film was shot were beautiful and transcendent. The music was alive and electric. The film was a look at race, prejudice and the power of music to overcome the boundaries placed upon some.

This is another amazing film from Netflix this year. You cannot help but feel the loss of Chadwick Boseman, the unanswerable question of just how high he could have taken his career. You need to make sure you see this raw and stirring performance.

5 stars

The Kurt Russell EGO De-Aging Award

Last year was the introduction of the new De-Aging award. Fact is, however, that there was not much along the line of de-aging this year. While there were several in 2019, 2020 did not use the technology much. For example, the Spike Lee film Da 5 Bloods, which was prime to use de-aging, chose a different path. In my research, I found a couple of choices.

Then, something big happened, and it led me to expand this award a tad to include the deepfake. Deepfake is, according to Wikipedia, “synthetic media  in which a person in an existing image or video is replaced with someone else’s likeness.” It is a technique that has been used effectively for the last few years, and, while it may not always present the most impressive CGI feel to it, it can lead to a massive moment in a film or series.

And this year’s winner absolutely falls into that category.

By the way… do not read any further because there are SPOILERS for the finale of The Mandalorian included.

Last year’s winners are listed below too.

The Kurt Russell EGO De-Aging Award

Previous Winners:  Robert DeNiro (The Irishman)

Let’s also talk about the two runners-up before we head into the winner, just to give a little more space fromt he top of this article. I do not want anyone spoiled (although by now the word may be out).

Runners-Up: Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter from Bill & Ted Face the Music. This was a fun film and the iconic pair go everywhere in time. And Tenet’s Kenneth Branagh who played the character Sator during a flashback.

Honestly, though, I did not remember either of these. The winner though I believe will be an impact for quite some time.

Winner:

Mark Hamill (Luke Skywalker) in Mandalorian Season 2 Episode 8 finale, “The Rescue”

Who played Luke Skywalker in The Mandalorian? What Luke's Return Means

Yes, the look of Luke is a tad off, but his arrival, cutting through the Dark Troopers on his path to find Grogu, was jaw dropping and thrilling. Played by actor Max Lloyd Jones, Disney used the CGI face (and voice) of Mark Hamill to bring the Jedi to the screen. It was a shocking twist that punctuated one of the best seasons of Star Wars television yet.

“This is the way.”