Honk for Jesus. Save Your Soul

Honk for Jesus. Save Your Soul streamed live on Peacock this week while the film is still in the theater, which helped me be able to watch this.

The movie was written, directed, and produced by Adamma Ebo, which was her feature debut. This was based on her 2018 short film of the same name.

The story featured Pastor Lee-Curtis Childs (Sterling K. Brown) and his beautiful wife Trinitie Childs (Regina Hall), who were, at one point, running a highly successful congregation until Pastor Childs became enthralled in a scandal that led to the closing of their church. This movie had a documentary inside the film taping the attempt by Lee-Curtis and Trinitie to try and reclaim their past success.

The best part of this movie is clearly the two main leads, Sterling K. Brown and Regina Hall. The film only works because of the power of their performances. Both actors brought excellent energy and elevated the satire of the script wonderfully.

There are some definite moments where the satire of the organized religions. Some of these moments work well and others fell a little flat. The story never quite went into specific of what the scandal was, but there were some definite hints that the movie showed about what had happened.

This is a movie that I would not have seen if I had to watch it in the theatre. By having it streaming on Peacock, I got to see it and it was a decent time with two powerhouse performers.

3.5 stars

Samaritan

Sylvester Stallone joined in with the super hero genre in the new film on Prime this weekend called Samaritan. However, Stallone is not unfamiliar with the super hero genre as he appeared in Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 and Judge Dredd.

Stallone played Joe, a garbage man who tried to stay out of the way and just fill his day by fixing junk that he would find in the dumpster. When Joe helped protect a young boy Sam (Javon Walton) from a group of bullies, Sam discovered that Joe had certain powers. Joe was a huge fan of the hero Samaritan, who had been believed to have died fighting his brother Nemesis years ago, but who Joe believed was alive.

Local criminal and gang member Cyrus (Pilou Asbæk) was looking to create chaos and burn the city down around him. He was able to find a powerful hammer that had been created by Nemesis as one of the only things that could hurt Samaritan. Cyrus, trending his best Arthur Fleck imitation from the end of Joker, roused up the street people into a mob to follow his orders. Cyrus had taken the identity of Nemesis for himself.

After that, the story gets a little too convoluted and the motives and desires of Cyrus was inconsistent. There was little development to the character and he was really just the old mustache-twirling villain.

Stallone looked like he was having quite a good time and Javon Walton was decent. The third act had the kid doing too much yelling and that never works for the subtlety of the moment.

Without spoilers, there was a twist in the film that I had guessed way back at the beginning. To be fair, I only thought it could have been a neat idea if the film went that way, but I did not expect they would. As the film went on, I thought it was much more likely, and I liked it when they actually went there.

There are some good moments in Samaritan and it gave us a branch of the super hero genre that we had not seen yet. It was a decent watch on a Saturday night at home. It may not be the greatest super hero flick we’ve ever seen, but it has some positives too. I liked watching it.

3.1 stars

Bullet Train

I had been looking forward to Bullet Train for awhile. They had played the trailer for the movie all the time, but I had already been sold on it. I have been battling with some issues so I have not been able to see it until today.

An assassin called “Ladybug” (Brad Pitt) by his handler because of penchant for bad luck, is out on his next mission as a snatch and grab aboard the bullet train. He was trying to find a briefcase that had a ton of money inside. It seemed like an easy job, but, little did he know, this was anything but easy.

A group of other assassins were aboard the train and heading after the briefcase among other revenge ideas. Chaos ensues.

The beginning of the film felt a little off. It was not a very cohesive story at the beginning. Eventually, everything they showed us in the initial section of the film, though it felt somewhat boring, paid off later so I forgave it by the end.

Once we got all of the characters in place and we understood what their motives were, the film got considerably better. Honestly, this is more of an ensemble character piece with a group of characters that are eccentric and entertaining. There are some awesome characters in Bullet Train.

Starting with Brad Pitt, who is just tremendous here, we get a lot of info with Brad Pitt and his recently changed philosophy. Pitt was so great here and holds everything together.

The twins Lemon (Brian Tyree Henry) and Tangerine (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) are trying to retrieve the son of the mysterious White Death, the leader of Japanese organization. Henry and Taylor-Johnson are absolutely standouts here. They are completely funny and engaging every time they were on screen.

There are a bunch of actors involved here. Bad Bunny, Zazie Beetz, Logan Lerman, Hiroyuki Sanada, Joey King, Andrew Koji, Michael Shannon, Sandra Bullock, Masi Oka, and several other cool cameos that I won’t spoil.

This movie is just a wild time and the action is over-the-top goodness. There is a lot of humor as these characters find themselves in bizarre situation after another and they all seem to have amazing chemistry with Brad Pitt.

It did feel a little long, and could have probably trimmed 15 minutes off the run time and not miss too much. Still, I do like how they spent a lot of time on the ensemble and not just make them typical assassin #1. Each of these characters felt like they were original characters that were their own people. That is a great point of the film. It is not just Brad Pitt and a bunch of faceless assassins.

I enjoyed Bullet Train. It may have been a little long, but the extra time devoted to character development was worthwhile and some of the actions scenes are tremendous. It has a humor to it and, once it got past the beginning sections, Bullet Train picked up speed.

3.9 stars

Beast

We’ve had killer sharks, killer crocodiles/alligators, killer primates, insects of all kinds, Hitchcockian birds, and a bear that mauled Leonardo DiCaprio nearly to death. This time, we have a massively dangerous killer lion.

Dr. Nate Samuels (Idris Elba) and his teenaged daughters, Meredith (Iyana Halley) and Norah (Leah Sava Jeffries), went on vacation to Africa after recently losing their wife and mother to cancer. As she was originally from Africa, they went to see where she was from and, during this time, they reunited with an old friend Martin (Sharlto Copley) who was acting like a guide.

However, when they came across a village of people that Martin befriended only to discover that they had been killed, the tension in the group rose quickly. Not too soon after the village, the family was attacked by a rogue lion that was apparently out for revenge after a group of poachers had slaughter the lion’s entire pride.

Yes, that bit of a lion wanting revenge and killing everyone he comes across is a little cringey, making on think of Jaws 4: The Revenge where the shark followed the Brody family to Florida. The difference is that the writing on this is considerably better and the scenes of with this lion were totally tense and anxiety-filled. There were plenty of times where the lion would attack and I gasped.

Idris Elba was sensational here and he showed some fantastic chemistry with the two actors playing his on-screen daughters. I believed every scene with the three of them together. The film made a wise decision too because at the first 15-20 minutes of the movie, they established a conflict between Elba and the girls dealing with the loss of the girl’s mother. Nate had been separated from his wife and had not been around for much of her battle with cancer or the struggles that the girls had been going through so they clearly had some resentment built up for him. These moments in the film really humanized these characters and allowed us to know them more, and thus care about them more.

The action was extremely well done and, although you could see the ending coming, that did not mean that it was not admirably done. The film had about the perfect run time for this type of film and it kept me on the edge of my seat the entire time.

I enjoyed this more than I thought I would and, if you like a tension-filled ride, this will give you the needs you are looking for.

4.2 stars

DC League of Super-Pets

I have continued to be behind in my movie reviews, so when I spotted the animated DC League of Super-Pets appear on Vudu, I was ready to rent it and finally see the film starring Dwayne Johnson and Kevin Hart, voicing pets of the DC heroes.

Krypto (Dwayne Johnson) had been the best friend of Superman (John Krasinski) since he was a baby on Krypton. Now, Krypto had a new rival for Superman’s attention, Lois Lane (Olivia Wilde), whom Superman wanted to marry. Krypto found himself feeling jealous of the attention Superman was giving Lois and was feeling that he was on his way out.

When the villainous Lex Luthor (Marc Maron) was trying to pull a meteorite of orange Kryptonite to earth, Superman and Krypto prevented him. A few pieces of the orange Kryptonite found its way to a local pet show where the evil guinea pig Lulu (Kate McKinnon) was waiting. The orange Kryptonite gave her super powers, but also gave powers to the other animals in the shop, hound Ace (Kevin Hart), turtle Merton (Natasha Lyonne), squirrel Chip (Diego Luna),and potbellied pig PB (Vanessa Bayer) were exposed too.

Lulu’s power was greater than imagined and she kidnapped Superman and secretly fed Krypto some green Kryptonite, which took away his powers. Can even the arrival of the Justice League help this situation?

This was a fun film. While there were a few moments that were eye-rollingly off, most of the bits worked. A lot of that is because of the chemistry between Johnson and Hart. They bring the voice acting here and it was very funny and entertaining.

Another voice that did a fantastic job was Kate McKinnon as Lulu. She brought the evil to the role and you believed everything that she said. She was just a guinea pig, yet there was a menace about her.

The Batman (Keanu Reeves) was a real hoot too. He had some of the best lines of the film.

I’m not sure how much I cared about the secondary characters after Ace. They all had roles to play in the movie, but I was not that interested in their story.

The film looked great, with the animation standing out. There were some solid character designs as well.

The story was pretty typical and predictable. You have seen most of this before.

This movie was better than it had a right to be, but I would not consider this in the upper echelon of animated films from 2022. It was decent.

3.5 stars

Orphan: Last Kill

The other day I was watching Matt Knost’s YouTube show Settle the Score. This week’s episode featured Ethan Erwin, whom I had learned about from the Schmoedown, and, at the end of the show, he mentioned that he was producing a new movie coming out the day after the show would air. It was called Orphan: First Kill. I wanted to watch to support Ethan.

Turned out that Orphan: First Kill is a prequel of a 2008 horror film Orphan. Amazingly, the main protagonist Esther was played in both the original and the new prequel by the same person, Isabelle Fuhrman. I had never seen Orphan, so I was interested to see if I would be able to follow the story of the prequel without having seen the first film. That was not a problem.

This film showed us where the mysterious Esther (not her real name) came from. She was originally at the Saarne Institute in Estonia and her real name was Leena. She was considered to be the most dangerous patient they had. Though Leena appeared to be a young child, she was, in truth, a 31-year old woman. Leena pulled off a bloody escape from the institute, leaving a trail of bodies in her wake. Learning that there was a girl in America named Esther Albright who was missing and whom she had a resemblance of, Leena decided to pretend to be the missing girl as a way to escape.

Our new Esther was “reunited” with her supposed parents, wealthy artist Allen Albright (Rossif Sutherland) and his wife Tricia (Julia Stiles) as well as her pretentious brother Gunnar (Matthew Finlan).

Despite the early joy from Esther’s return, it was not too soon when things started to go wrong.

This started off reminding me of a documentary from a few years ago called The Imposter, which told the story of a con man who stepped into a role of a missing child. Then, Orphan: First Kill went completely bonkers and the whole tone and idea of the film changed. It is a creative move and rolled the dice on the film.

Orphan: First Kill is not a film that you should sit down and pick through because there are a ton of details that could spoil the fun. If you are too picky on specific details, this film will not hold up. However, the movie is a fun and bizarre trip and, if you let yourself get swept up in the fantasy of the situation, you could enjoy the movie.

Isabelle Fuhrman was very creepy and presented a definitely sinister aura. She was the standout part of the film. Julia Stiles played opposite Fuhrman well and she took that character in so many unexpectedly different ways.

It was not much of a horror film, leaning more on the thriller aspect.

Orphan: First Kill was a preposterous movie with multiple crazy twists and plot devices. Yet, it brought an air of campy fun that raised the movie above what was in the script. Fuhrman and Stiles are wonderfully unhinged in their performances and they embrace the switch in the film with a robust insanity.

3.2 stars

Vengeance

Vengeance is the brainchild of B.J. Novak (from The Office). This was Novak’s first directorial film while he also wrote and starred. Produced by Blumhouse, Vengeance definitely had that independent film feel to it.

Ben Manalowitz (B.J. Novak) was a journalist and podcaster who had spent much of his recent time meeting and hooking up with several women, looking for nothing serious, nothing life altering. When he received a mysterious phone call in the middle of the night telling him that his “girlfriend,” Abby (Lio Tipton), had died, Ben was confused. He did not remember the woman, but the tearful story from her brother Ty Shaw (Boyd Holbrook) compelled him to go to her funeral in Texas.

After the surreal experience at the funeral, Ty told Ben that he wanted his help. Ty did not believe that his sister had overdosed, as the reports of her death indicated, and that he believed someone had killed her. He begged Ben to stay and help him gain vengeance for Abby. Sensing an opportunity, Ben decided to tell the story of Abby on a podcast and he would investigate the death and try and find out the truth.

Abby’s eccentric family took Ben in and tried to walk him through the culture of Texas, something that he had a difficult time adjusting to. The family included Abby’s mother Sharon (J. Smith-Cameron), her sisters Kansas City (Dove Cameron) and Paris (Isabella Amara), her brother Mason (Elli Abrams Bickel) and blunt grandmother Granny (Louanne Stephens).

The mystery of what happened to Abby deepened as the film progressed, all to the thrill of Ben’s podcast producer Eloise (Issa Rae).

I was looking through the Vudu new releases for something to watch today when I came across this movie. It sounded interesting and so I rented it. I am very glad I did. I loved this movie. I was completely engaged from the moment that the phone call from Ty woke Ben up in the middle of the night with an odd message. The mystery has several great twists and kept me guessing about what had happened to Abby. The script of the film was wonderfully written and took the story of the film in a direction to try and look at the problems of a divided America.

B.J. Novak does a excellent job carrying the narrative, but the eccentric characters from this small little Texas town really brought this to life. Like Twin Peaks, the surrounding characters helped make the tale special. Ashton Kutcher and John Mayer had roles in the film as well.

I loved the resolution as well. No spoilers obviously, but it was an extremely satisfying end to the movie.

Vengeance is one of those films that most people will miss, but it is well worth your time to watch for it when it comes available to see.

4.3 stars

Secret Headquarters

Owen Wilson joined the super hero community as The Guard, the world’s protector and hero, who after discovering a UFO crashed in the woods had the existing alien technology present him with a vision.

Unfortunately, the demands of the super hero life led to a split between Jack (Owen Wilson) and his wife Lily (Jesse Mueller) and Jack spent less and less time with his son Charlie (Walker Scobell).

Trying to make up for lost time, Jack had Charlie over for a weekend at his home, but his duties as The Guard pulled him away again. Charlie tricked his dad and stayed at the house, calling his friend Berger (Keith L. Williams) to come over. He brought with him Lizzie (Abby James Witherspoon) and Maya (Momona Tamada) for a rave.

The four kids stumble across a mysterious elevator which took them down into an underground cavern where they found all kinds of amazing gadgets and power sources.

I liked Walker Scobell quite a bit. He clearly built upon his work earlier this years in The Adam Project with Ryan Reynolds to pick up this role. He is a charming young man and is one of the strongest parts of the film. Owen Wilson is always great no matter what role he is given and he has some wonderful scenes with Scobell that help to define both characters.

Secret Headquarters (which is a terrible title for this) has that Spy Kids/Shark Boy vibe to it. It is designed for family fun and a very light hearted kids adventure. While this is not a great movie by any stretch, it had some moments that I thought were solid and there were bits that were well done. I expected this to be worse than I found it to be.

Of course, Secret Headquarters goes over the top and is filled with too much senseless materials. It feels about 15-20 minutes too long. This movie should have been a tight 90 minutes top, and you can feel the excess in the run time.

Michael Peña played the main villain, Ansel Argon, who was desperately trying to find the power source of the Guard. This character was too inconsistent, trying to be sinister, but having too many examples of his silliness. All of the villains here were one note.

Secret Headquarters can be a fun time for families, but it goes no further than that.

2.75 stars

Resurrection

Ok, that was something.

What exactly, I am not sure.

Resurrection is a psychological horror/thriller film starring Rebecca Hall and Tim Roth. Rebecca Hall played Margaret, a reasonably successful woman who had a happy relationship with her daughter Abbie (Grace Kaufman), who was preparing to head off to college soon.

Things took a turn for the dark as Margaret spots David (Tim Roth), an abusive and controlling boyfriend from her past that brought back the terrible memories of the end of that relationship.

I can’t go into any more of the story or plot without massive spoilers. I’m not sure how I feel about the story that is told. It feels as if Margaret is just losing her mind, trying to deal with the trauma from her past, but it takes a real swerve here out of the world of reality.

The performance of Rebecca Hall is completely amazing. She is the reason to watch this movie. Her decent into her breakdown is heart-breaking as the relationship between mother and daughter is strained. Hall has delivered several powerful performances in her career, but this psychological story allows her to take her work to a new level. About halfway through the movie, Rebecca Hall delivers a monologue telling her story with David that is chilling to the core.

One of the truths of Resurrection is that, as an audience member, there are plenty of time that you are not quite sure what was happening. There is a disbelief that anything we are seeing happening is actually happening and that it is nothing more than a delusion from the rapidly descending psyche of Margaret.

Tim Roth gives us a great performance opposite of Hall as well. He is totally creepy and someone who feels every bit as cruel and abusive as this character shows. His manipulations and power over Margaret made me yell out a couple of times or her to just tell this guy off. Roth made himself totally unlikable immediately and, when you discover the past between them, makes you hate him even more.

The ending is going to cause plenty of dissent. It is so out there that I can see how it will color audience’s perspective of everything else that came before it. It is weird.

The ending made me uncertain as well. I would say, overall, that I would recommend this, in particular for the work of Rebecca Hall and Tim Roth, but brace yourself.

3.75

Day Shift

Vampires. Every so often the blood sucking undead show their sometimes ugly faces to the world and we get a new vampire flick. Netflix has provided the newest addition to the genre this weekend with a film starring Jamie Foxx, Dave Franco and Snoop Dogg called Day Shift.

Down on his luck pool cleaner, Bud Jablonski (Jamie Foxx), has a secret life. He hunts vampires. Unfortunately, his second life has caused a rift between him and his ex-wife Jocelyn (Meagan Good) and his daughter Paige (Zion Broadnax). Jocelyn told Bud that she planned on moving then back to Florida. Bud begged her to wait until Monday so he could make the extra money that they needed.

This meant that Bud had to try to get back into the Union that he had been kicked out of awhile ago so he could make the money quickly. Union head Ralph Seeger (Eric Lange) allowed him to come back, despite his better judgement thanks to a recommendation from ultra cool vampire hunter Big John (Snoop Dogg), but Seeger assigned Seth (Dave Franco), a union rep, to follow Bud along, looking for violations so he could kick him out once more for good.

Day Shift had a lot of fun to it. Jamie Foxx was a perfect lead bad ass in the film, being given the most development of any of the characters. He was willing to do whatever he could to not lose his family. Snoop Dogg brought a lot to his limited screen time, ratcheting up his cool factor. I’m not sure how much I enjoyed the Dave Franco character.

The film does a pretty solid job of building the world around these characters. Set in the San Fernando Valley, there is a ton of information provided about the different vampiric types living in the area and the background of the Union.

There is not much to the story outside of the action beats. There are plenty of fun and graphic vampire kills as Bud’s trying to raise money. The ending battles may have gone on a bit long, but they are fairly well planned out.

In the end, the film rests on the charisma of its lead star and Jamie Foxx gives a solid performance to carry the story. If you are a fan of Jamie Foxx , this should be right up your alley. If you are a fan of vampire films, this one does a decent job, though there are a couple things that happen that made me question the rules of the world.

Overall, it is fun and a harmless viewing experience on Netflix.

3.4 stars

Luck

Apple TV + had a new animated movie on its service called Luck from Skydance Animation. Directed by Peggy Holmes, Luck has some flavor of Pixar to it, but there are some clunky aspects to an overall sweet tale.

Sam (Eva Noblezada) is one of the unluckiest people in the world and, after years in an orphanage, she was never able to find her “forever family.” She bonded with Hazel, another younger girl in the orphanage who is hoping to be adopted.

Sam, who found a lucky penny after feeding a black cat named Bob (Simon Pegg), accidentally flushed the penny down the toilet. This was when she found out that Bob could talk and was from a magical land called Luck. Hoping to find another magical penny to give luck to Hazel, Sam and Bob returned to Luck to save Hazel’s forever family.

The film is sweet and the characters are decent. Bob is a great animal friend character and there is a ton of imagination in the movie. The animation is top notch and the colors are wonderful. There is a lot to like here.

However, the story is very complicated. The whole workings of Luck require a lot of exposition along the way and some of the things do not work as well together as others.

The voice cast is strong. Eva Noblezada and Simon Pegg are our main two leads while there is also Whoopi Goldberg, Jane Fonda, Flula Borg, Colin O’Donoghue, Lil Rel Howery, and John Ratzenberger.

Luck may be a little long, but it is a good film to show the youngsters as it has a great message and they will love seeing the fun and interesting characters.

Luck is on Apple TV +

3.2 stars

Thirteen Lives

One of the most dramatic true stories of recent memory turned into the focus on Ron Howard’s latest film as Thirteen Lives, a film based on the group of footballer kids who would up trapped in a cave for 18 days as the water rose around them, found its release on Prime Video the past Friday.

The daring underwater cave diving rescue is compelling as can be and it is filmed expertly so. The rescue of the 12 children and their coach in 2018 from Thailand’s Tham Luang Nang Non made international headlines in 2018.

Ron Howard organized a great cast featuring Colin Farrell, Viggo Mortensen, Joel Edgerton, Paul Gleeson, and Tom Bateman who played the experienced cave divers who came to help with the rescue and eventually became a vital cog in an insane plan.

There were a lot of scenes that helped develop the story that were strong and powerful, but there was not a ton of depth given to characterization. The story was strong enough to carry the film through.

I thought this was a great movie, but, to be honest, I was not sure the purpose of making a big screen film version of the tale considering there is a documentary on Disney + called The Rescue that does the same job as this film, including dramatic real life videos and clips showing the rescue. Though I thought that Thirteen Lives was really great and an excellently created, I personally preferred the doc, which had me glued to every real image.

Still, Thirteen Lives is excellent, features a heart-warming true story, and has a top cast giving their best performances in a ton of water. I thought Colin Farrell was the standout as he beautifully portrayed the uncertainty of the situation on his face.

Thirteen Lives is on Prime Video

4 stars

Prey

I have been out of commission for almost two weeks and I have found myself behind on several of the movie and television projects that are coming out in early August. Now that I am back, I decided to start off with one of my most anticipated films of the summer. I was always a big fan of Predator, starring Arnold Schwarzenegger and, my personal favorite, “Mr. I ain’t got time to bleed” Jesse Ventura, and so when I heard about a prequel to the film set 300 years ago, my curiosity was piqued.

To be fair, I am not sure that I would define the film as a prequel. It is set prior to the events of the original film but, with the exception of the Predator itself, there is little connective tissue. I would say that it was more like a film set in the same world/universe.

Young lady Naru (Amber Midthunder) wanted to be more than what she was expected to be. She wanted to be a hunter like her brother Taabe (Dakota Beavers) and she was anxious to be able to prove herself. Naru was extremely intelligent and thought her way through each situation though most of the others in the Comanche tribe was unimpressed.

On the hunt for a killer lion, Naru realized that there was something else in the wilderness of the Northern Great Plains, something bigger, something unknown. She began tracking the new hunter and discovered some horrifying things along the way.

Amber Midthunder was an absolute rock star in this movie. She is a star in the making. You could put her on a list already of some of the best female action heroes of all-time and not be exaggerating. She was electrifying as Naru in just about every aspect of the film. She was great.

The story was simple. Hunter vs. hunter. The Predator kills things and Naru tries to survive. There were certainly underscoring of the themes including those of never giving up, don’t let others prevent you from accomplishing your dreams and intelligence can overcome strength.

I was glued to the film for the entire run time. It was well put together and beautifully shot, building some great tension and nervousness over the characters and their eventual fate.

Some of the special effects were definitely lacking at times. There were some sequences where the bear, or the fighting Predator look too video gamey, which was clearly an effect of the budget. However, it never became too distracting and there were several outstanding moments of action as well.

This was a serious movie. It did not have the over-the-top type characters of the original, which lent a fun aspect to that film, but it would not in in place here. As of right now, probably because of Jesse Ventura, I may place the original Predator at the top of the list, but this film is right on its heels and might supplant it eventually.

4.75 stars

The Gray Man

Anthony and Joe Russo brought us their next non-MCU film, back to the world of Netflix (though it has been available at the theaters across the nation for the last week). The Gray Man is an action thriller film with shenanigans involving the CIA and their off-the-books assassin in their Sierra program.

We see a distinctly de-aged Billy Bob Thornton recruiting Ryan Gosling from out of prison and into the Sierra program, to become a ghost, a killer that the CIA could point to what they want to happen and the killer would take care of the job. Facing the choice between this and prison, Gosling became known as Sierra Six.

When Six was sent after a former Sierra agent, Four, to assassinate, he realized that the CIA was not out for the best intentions. Six stopped the assassination when a young child got in the way despite the CIA handlers insisting that the kid was just acceptable collateral damage. Though Six still carried out the assassination, it was a considerably messier attempt. Before he died, Four gave Six an encrypted drive detailing the corruption at the CIA.

With Six going rogue, the CIA approached Lloyd Hanson (Chris Evans) to retrieve the drive and to kill Six. Hanson was a former CIA agent who had been kicked out of the agency because of sociopathic tendencies. Lloyd was going to do whatever it took to accomplish his mission.

The Gray Man was a mixed bag. The acting was pretty good for what was here. In particular, Chris Evans was absolutely fabulous. He was chewing every scene he was in, emoting out from behind that amazing mustache. Chris Evans had personality to spare and carried the enjoyment of the movie, despite the fact that he is playing a horrible person. Ryan Gosling was basically playing the same character that he typically would play, though he did it fine. He was very stoic in many ways as he played this assassin. They gave Billy Bob Thornton’s character a niece to put in jeopardy, played by Julia Butters. Ana de Armas played another CIA agent who wound up helping Six. She was fine, but her character was quite lacking. She was just a face that showed up to shoot guns.

The action was good, but there was a lot of it. There may be too many gun fights without quite enough other versions of the fight sequences. The hand-to-hand fights were always more interesting than just the guns being shot.

The final battle between Six and Lloyd was a letdown though, which I will not go into to avoid spoilers.

The Gray Man is better than many of the Netflix original films, but not by much. It is a film that could be an entertaining watch if you have nothing to do some afternoon. I would not have been happy to watch this at a theater, but at home on Netflix, there could be worst films.

2.9 stars

Nope

One thing for certain when you watch a Jordan Peele movie, you’ll be thinking about it after it is finished. Peele’s third film, Nope, does not break that streak.

Peele’s horror/thriller film followed brother and sister OJ Hayward (Daniel Kaluuya) and Emerald Hayward (Keke Palmer) who were horse trainers for movies. The Haywards were struggling with their business, forcing the to sell some of their horses off to pay their bills.

However, one night there was a discovery of something in the skies that changed the siblings’ mindset. Something that they believed would fix all their problems if they could just get this recorded.

Nope is one of those movies that is very difficult to talk about without dealing in spoilers, so I will do what I can to critique the film without going into specifics.

Let me start with the main two characters, portrayed by Daniel Kaluuya and Keke Palmer. Kaluuya is excellent as the stoic, quiet, almost brooding head of the horse training, but Keke Palmer steals the show. She was absolutely fantastic as Emerald, bringing so much energy, emotion, humor and anxiety to the role. Steven Yeun was good in his limited screen time, but I would have liked more from him. Brandon Perea added a nice touch as a supporting character from the Best Buy-type shop.

The visuals and the special effects were gorgeous and the cinematography was exquisite. This film looked amazing and helped create the tension that was prevalent in the movie.

Speaking of tension, Jordan Peele is unbelievable at creating anxiety and tension in his movies. You are constantly on the edge of your seat and are never quite sure what was going to happen next.

There are a couple of scenes that worked tremendously well, but did not seem to have any purpose in the film outside of providing some background to one of the lesser used characters. I loved the scenes, they were were filled with suspense and fright, but I am just not sure why they were included.

Then, the reveal of what was happening felt a little off. It is not really a twist in the story. It is really just telling us what was going on and it felt a little flat. Again, it looked amazing and it worked in the context of the scenes that it was in, but something felt lacking.

Nope did feel like there were a couple different movies crammed together into one, with each movie needing more to flesh them out.

While I do have some criticisms of the film, I liked it more than I did the last Jordan Peel film, Us, though it does not reach the excellence of Get Out. I enjoyed my experience of watching the movie and came out mostly satisfied.

3.7 stars