Walk the Line (2005)

DailyView: Day 241, Movie 334

This movie has been on the watch list since the DailyView began back in April but the timing never worked out. When I extended the DailyView to be 365 days, I placed the image of Joaquin Phoenix and Reese Witherspoon on the banner so that I would make sure not to skip it.

Walk the Line is the biopic of country/rock music legend, Johnny Cash with a heavy part of the biopic focusing on the relationship Cash had with his eventual wife June Carter Cash.

Johnny Cash faced a lot of conflict in his life which led him to his marriage with June. Johnny went through drug problems, a violent temper, father (Robert Patrick) issues, the death of his older brother (Lucas Till) when he was a child, divorce, jail. Johnny Cash dealt with his demons with his music and the relationship to June Carter and she stuck by him despite his bad behavior.

Joaquin Phoenix and Reese Witherspoon were brilliant in these roles, both receiving Oscar nominations for them. Witherspoon took home the Academy Award for June Carter. The film absolutely rested on the powerhouse performances by both of these two actors in the challenging life of the Rock-n-Roll Hall of Famer.

The music was excellent as well. Both Phoenix and Wetherspoon did their own singing for Walk the Line, the soundtrack winning a Grammy. Their roles are not an imitation of the iconic duo, but they bring the essence of John and June Carter Cash to the screen in many elegant and some not-so elegant ways.

A shout out should also go to Ginnifer Goodwin for her efforts in the role of Vivian Cash. She brought some serious acting chops into that role (and eventually went into Storybrooke as Snow White in Once Upon a Time). Goodwin was tremendous opposite Phoenix as Johnny’s first wife.

It was about time that this film made the DailyView. It is an exceptional biopic. There have been some controversy that they ignored a lot of Johnny Cash’s life and omitted some of the political aspects of his world, but it is not as if there was not already rich material to use. Walk the Line is excellent.

El Camino Christmas (2017)

DailyView: Day 241, Movie 333

I meant to watch this first thing this morning for the DailyView, but I woke up to the internet connection being out. Not sure how long the internet would be out, I watched one of the Studio Ghibli films off DVD. However, it was not too long after I finished watching that movie that the internet returned. So I wrote the review for The Tale of the Princess Kaguya and then I went to Netflix for El Camino Christmas.

I had seen the Rotten Tomatoes score for the film and it was at 40%. My expectations were low.

I really enjoyed this movie. I found it funny, filled with some awesome characters with a fantastic cast.

Eric Norris (Luke Grimes) arrived in El Camino, Nevada hoping to find the father who deserted him as a baby. Unfortunately, his trip led him to a drunken former vet Larry Roth (Tim Allen). Meanwhile, crooked local law officer Carl Hooker (Vincent D’Onofrio) and his idiot partner Deputy Billy Calhoun (Dax Shepard) arrest Eric on suspicion of meth dealing, and Carl beats Eric up trying to get a confession.

To avoid the potential police brutality charge that was coming, Billy let Eric loose. Eric was seen by Carl and they engaged in a car chase. This ended up with Eric inside a Liquor store with Carl, shot in the leg by Larry, the owner of the store Vicente (Emilio Rivera), liquor store worker Kate Daniels (Michelle Mylett) and her five-year old son Seth (Ashton Essex Bright), turning into a hostage situation.

Sheriff Bob Fuller (Yearwood Smith) is out front with Billy, keep control of the crazed situation that was only being escalated by the local police intervention.

I really enjoyed this movie as it went from straight comedy to a thriller with some tense moments. It even takes some time to take the potentially one note Carl and give him some character motivation that makes sense and creates an understanding of why Carl is the way he is. Vincent D’Onofrio is great as always and brings a level to Carl that a less talented actor may not have been able to do.

Tim Allen is better here than I have seen him in a long time and he plays a character unlike any other Tim Allen character I have seen before.

This was dark and funny, with engaging characters in a terrible situation. It was not what I expected, but I like this a lot.

The Tale of the Princess Kaguya (2013)

DailyView: Day 241, Movie 332

I woke up this Christmas morning to the Internet service I subscribe to out completely. That put the DailyView into uncertainty. I had intended to watch the El Camino Christmas on Netflix (which will come later this afternoon), but that is yet to come. Because of the lack of streaming, I pulled out my Studio Ghibli DVD and looked for one of the remaining films I needed to see.

I picked The Tale of the Princess Kaguya.

What a sad and joyous experience that was. It was a long film, one of the longest animated movies that I have seen, and it was a gorgeously animated film, with images of amazing artistic skills and glorious hand-drawn art.

I watched the English dubbed version of the film, so I heard some voices that I recognized such as Mary Steenburgen, Chloë Grace Moretz and James Caan.

The Bamboo Cutter (James Caan) was cutting down bamboo when he found a tiny princess. He took her home and gave it to his wife (Mary Steenburgen). The princess turned into a baby and started to grow quicker than normal. As she ages, she meets local kids and becomes close with them. Eventually, her father finds gold in the bamboo and he decided that he needed to take her to the capitol so she could become a proper princess in the upper class of Japanese society. Being dubbed Princess Kaguya in a naming ceremony, Kaguya started to rebel against the expectations of being a princess.

The story is an adaptation of one of the oldest Japanese folklore tales. The story is beautiful and the characterization is wonderful. It shows the way that women are treated in Japanese society, as well as in many other areas of the world as well.

It was too long. However, it is such a beautiful piece of art and a lovely and very sad film. It is a commitment to watch, but it is worth the time.

White Christmas (1954)

DailyView: Day 240, Movie 331

I was not expecting to see this movie start off with a scene from World War II. White Christmas is a classic Christmas film that has only a tangential connection to the holiday, but features Bing Crosby and Danny Kaye in all their glory.

After saving his life during the war, Phil Davis (Danny Kaye) convinced musical star Bob Wallace (Bing Crosby) that they would work better as a theatrical pair when the war was over. With great success, they stop off to see a new group, the Haynes Sisters. Judy (Vera-Ellen) and Betty (Rosemary Clooney). They hit it off and they wind up at the same place in Vermont. an inn owned by their beloved former General, Thomas Waverly (Dean Jagger). The unexpected lack of snow has caused financial struggles for the General. Wallace and David decided that they would help the general out by putting on their show.

There was a lot of great music. Again though, the only Christmas music is White Christmas which is done at the beginning and at the very end.

The dancing is brilliantly choreographed, especially the first dance scene with Danny Kaye and Vera-Ellen. That dance routine to “The Best Things Happen While You’re Dancing” is so spectacular.

The film is totally sweet and I can see where some people may think it was too much. There were typical misunderstandings involved in the plot that cause problems that could be overcome with just some communication. Thanks a lot, Mary Wickes (who played the nosy Emma).

There are some great parts tot eh film. It might be a bit too long, but the music and dance were fantastic and Bing Crosby, and especially, Danny Kaye were wonderful.

A Very Murray Christmas (2015)

DailyView: Day 240, Movie 330

Christmas Eve brings a little treat I found on Netflix. Bill Murray in a Christmas special featuring a group of celebrities, music and some funny comedy.

Bill Murray starts off in the middle of a blizzard in a hotel where he is scheduled for a live Christmas special, but the spirit was hardly jolly within him. Paul Schaffer was with him, happily playing the piano.

A series of celebrities showed up to sing, even if they could not truly sing. We have Maya Rudolph, Chris Rock, George Clooney, Miley Cyrus, Amy Poehler, Julie White, Jason Schwartzman, Rashida Jones, David Johansen, and the band Phoenix.

There were several songs that were just off enough that they worked very well. I loved the whole Bill Murray/Chris Rock duet “Do You Hear What I Hear?” Chris Rock’s entire antipathy of the moment was only out shadowed by the electricity going off.

With the live special cancelled, Murray took it to the bar and there was just some joyous performances. The French indie pop band Phoenix performed a wonderful song called “Alone on Christmas Day” with Murray jumping in and out of the frame.

There was a fun section that occurred in Murray’s mind after he passed out from too much drinking. This moment included the arrival of George Clooney and Miley Cyrus. Clooney was a hoot in the song “Santa Claus wants Some Lovin”.

In the end, I enjoyed this film, a homage to the old variety show format. I was also impressed with the voice on Maya Rudolph, who I do not think I have heard sing before. A Very Murray Christmas was witty and fun, a real surprise for the season.

Trick ‘r Treat (2007)

DailyView: Day 239, Movie 329

We are just two days away from Christmas, so there is no better time to watch a Halloween horror anthology film than now. Okay, maybe instead I am watching this movie, 2007’s Trick ‘r Treat because it is leaving HBO Max at the end of December and I want to watch it. A little bit of October in December never hurt anyone…except perhaps a whole bunch of characters in this movie.

Trick ‘r Treat had several small stories all taking place in the same town of Warren Valley, Ohio on Halloween night where a certain add trick-or-treater named Sam (Quinn Lord) seemed to be enforcing the riles and customs of All Hallows’ Eve.

There are several stories that were being told in a non-linear narrative, jumping around showing how they may be tied together. These include a school principal Steven Wilkins (Dylan Baker) who, along with his annoying son Charlie (Brett Kelly), appeared to be some form of serial killer (though the film does not go into much detail on this bit of the tale), a group of kids pulling a trick dealing with an old legend of a bus crash, Kreeg (Brian Cox), Wilkins ill tempered neighbor and his hatred of Halloween and mysterious background, as well as Laurie (Anna Paquin) and her sister Danielle (Lauren Lee Smith) who were attending a surprise party.

These stories appeared separate but they did continue to mix across during the narrative. There were some real gross out moments (I hate vomit scenes) and several extremely creepy moments. The irony is thick through Trick ‘r Treat and it keeps you intrigued to see where it was going next. It also makes you wonder why this town is such a mecca for the mysterious.

The framing of the film was much like a comic book, which DC Comics put out a graphic novel of the film (which was initially supposed to be a four issue weekly series but had to be redone when the film was delayed).

Merry Christmas to all and a Happy Halloween!

MacGruber (2010)

DailyView: Day 239, Movie 328

There are some comedy movies that I skip because I believe that I am not going to like the humor and then, when I see it, I laugh and find it extremely funny and wonder why I ever doubt it.

And then there is MacGruber.

This was so stupid. I hated it. It was filled with so much stupid immature humor that I may have giggled at once (maybe) and I feel dumber after watching it.

It did not help that I watched this on Peacock and I had to pause for commercials throughout the movie despite having paid for the No Ads.

That aside, this SNL skit was nowhere near effective or funny enough to extend out to 90 minutes. The film was filled with humor that was obnoxious.

It was cool to see former and current WWE superstars Chris Jericho, Mark Henry, The Great Kahli, MVP, Big Show and Kane as MacGruber’s squad that die immediately. Their appearance was a highlight and their death a low light.

Kristen Wiig is decent in the stupid movie. Val Kilmer is here too.

I can’t believe that I wasted my time with this.

The Gambler (1980)

DailyView: Day 238, Movie 327

I needed a movie that would fit into the small window I had today and I went on to Peacock to find it. I almost watched it last night before Hawkeye episode 6 was broadcast, but time got away from me. So I picked up The Gambler, starring country music superstar, the late Kenny Rogers.

The Gambler is a Western. Kenny Rogers played poker connoisseur Brady Hawkes, a grifter who received a letter from a son (Ronnie Scribner) he did not know he had. His son, Jeremiah, wrote that he and his mother needed his help.

As he was traveling by train, Hawkes met a young, brash gambler named Billy Montana (Bruce Boxleitner) who was cheating in a poker game. Hawkes taught Billy a lesson taking his money from him.

This was a fun, TV movie form 1980. Kenny Rogers is fine, though you can tell he is not an experienced actor. We get several examples of poker playing and we see how Brady Hawkes is an amazing gambler. The friendship between Hawkes and Billy that built through the movie and they worked well together.

The poker game they played with the character Doc Palmer (Lance LeGault) was really great and brought an intensity to a card game that was unexpected.

I liked this for what it was. It was a decent Western with good characters and a simple story. Most of the time, if you got that, then you’ve got something.

Reindeer Games (2000)

DailyView: Day 237, Movie 326

Aggressively stupid.

Reindeer Games was an action/crime film starring Ben Affleck and Gary Sinise, and it is just terrible. Affleck played a convict in prison with a cell mate who has been having a pen pal with a woman named Ashley (Charlize Theron). When his cell mate was killed in prison, Affleck took his place upon being released from prison when he was going to meet Ashley. However, things took a turn when her crazy brother (Gary Sinise) arrived.

This film had so many stupid moments. The characters are utterly stupid. The conclusion was as unbelievable and about as far fetched as you can get.

How a film with three such stars like Affleck, Sinise and Theron could be so bad is beyond me. It is one of the worst big budget films that I have seen. None of it makes sense. Characters are doing things only so the plot will continue, but as soon as any of them would do something sensical, the plot falls apart.

Coincidences abound. Without them, none of this could even move forward. I almost said that none of this could even work (instead of move forward), but I can’t say that because none of this works. You can’t watch this and get involved in the story or the plot because you have to spend every second rolling your eyes.

How could the director of the original Manchurian Candidate, John Frankenheimer, direct some drivel like this? I guess this is more along the lines as the historically terrible Island of Dr. Moreau that he also directed. Reindeer Games was his final film directed and it put a final stain on a career.

Tis the season to be jolly… but there is no holiday cheer in Reindeer Games.

Cleopatra (1963)

DailyView: Day 236, Movie 325

As I am working on the year in review section at EYG, I am compiling the list of Best Actresses, which will be given The Liz Award. The Liz has a picture on it that comes from the epic film that I watched today for the DailyView, the 1963 Cleopatra starring Elizabeth Taylor.

This is not a film that you just sit down and watch, though. It is four hours plus in runtime. It is a film that had to be scheduled, planned. Again, because it is over four hours long.

This historical epic followed the rise and eventual death of Cleopatra (Elizabeth Taylor), through her relationship with Julius Caesar (Rex Harrison), her love with Mark Antony (Richard Burton) and the eventual end at the hands of Octavian (Roddy McDowell).

There were some great moments throughout the long film. My personal favorite moment was showing how Cleopatra came to Rome the first time with this gigantic procession like she was Prince Ali coming into Agrabah in Aladdin. This was a lot of fun.

A lot of tragic events happen and Elizabeth Taylor does an excellent job in the film. She is in control even when she is not. She showed the power of the character and how manipulative she was.

Rex Harrison was fantastic as Julius Caesar. He was nominated for an Academy Award for the role. The whole Ides of March attack is well done and was filled with intensity and fear.

I was happy to watch this epic and I enjoyed it.

The Matrix Revolutions (2003)

DailyView: Day 235, Movie 324

I finished the original Matrix trilogy this morning in preparations for The Matrix Resurrections on Dec. 22. After watching and being disappointed by the first sequel from the Wachowskis, I went to HBO Max for the third film in the trilogy, The Matrix Revolutions.

Unfortunately, The Matrix Revolutions fails to help reimagine the second film for me and doubles down on the parts that were what led to my disappointment with Reloaded.

It felt very convoluted and spent a good chunk of time with characters that I either did not know or did not care about. The action for most of the movie was overlong and featured too much gunfire. These extended scenes of robots and humans in robot attire firing guns of some sort at each other became dull quickly.

There were large chunks of the film that do not include Neo (Keanu Reeves). There was a section at the very beginning of this movie that found Neo trapped in a space between the Matrix and the real world. This section of the film is utterly unimportant and irrelevant to the overall story. It just felt like it was something to toss into the film to pass time and allow them to leave a cliffhanger at the end of Reloaded.

The CGI is, of course, amazing. The Sentinels are a marvel of movie magic as is everything dealing with the battles with Agent Smith (Hugo Weaving). It is clearly a beautiful film that looks special.

Speaking of Agent Smith, I found his inclusion in this movie to be over-the-top and a massive step down from previous movies, in particular the first one. Some of his monologues were sillier than I expected them to be. As one of the top actors in the cast, I just feel that his work in the Matrix Revolutions became all cheese and no substance.

Morpheus (Laurence Fishburne) was reduced to a side character among the group of nobodies and unknowns around Zion.

Here is hoping that The Matrix Resurrections avoids the problems that mucked up the two sequels to The Matrix and can create a new and entertaining path to take.

The Matrix Reloaded (2003)

DailyView: Day 234, Movie 323

So I have begun a rewatch for the Matrix trilogy before the new Matrix movie comes out next week. I watched The Matrix (aka the Good One) first and then I started into The Matrix Reloaded. As I was watching this, I realized that I had not seen this whole film. I remembered the highway chase scene, but everything else, including the finale of this movie was new to me.

I believe that what happened was that I had rented the DVD of this movie because I did not head to theaters as much during this time. and I did not like the movie and probably either ignored it or shut it off. That means, it qualified for the DailyView. The third Matrix film I have never seen because I never liked the first of the sequels so I did not see the second.

Having watched this now fully on HBO Max, I can say without reservation that The Matrix Reloaded was not as bad as I thought I remembered, but it is nowhere near as great as the original was.

The story is way too complicated, convoluted and makes little sense. While the highway chase scene was pretty decent, it lasted way too long. The film is hampered by the Deus Ex Machina that Neo has become with his super speed and flight, able to come out of nowhere and pluck characters out of their certain deaths.

It also did not help that Harold Perrineau was now in the cast and I kept waiting for him to yell for Walt. I know that is not fair, but I could not help myself. Some of his facial expressions were quite funny though.

Legitimately, the third act is as ridiculous as I have ever seen and I hated the end of the film with super surgeon Neo. Not only is he a Deus Ex Machina, but he is also a natural defibrillator.

All of the action scenes are well done, but over long. The battle with Neo and the army of Agent Smiths started fun but lost a lot as it kept going on.

The whole Architect thing made no sense and feels like it was just setting up an attempt for a story for the third film.

Many of these new characters mean nothing to me and I could barely keep them straight. Outside of Mike (er I mean Link) I had no idea about any of these extra faces on my screen.

I can see why I did not remember finishing this movie. There is just too much dumb here, which is disappointing, especially for how awesome The Matrix was.

Miracle on 34th Street (1947)

DailyView: Day 234, Movie 322

One of the all-time classic Christmas movies is today’s DailyView. Miracle on 34th Street has one of the most iconic scenes in all of movies and I have, of course, seen that section of the film. I have never seen the entire movie though and that makes this eligible for the DailyView.

Christmas store Santa, Kris Kringle (Edmund Gwenn) claimed to be the real Santa Claus and, because of his belief, winds up being committed at Bellevue. He had been tremendously successful at Macy’s, having the support of the bosses and the woman who hired him, Doris (Maureen O’Hara), and her daughter Susan (Natalie Wood).

John Payne played Fred Gailey, a lawyer who winds up in a relationship with Doris.

Edmund Gwenn is extremely charming in this role. He performs his role as if he were truly Santa Claus. He is easily the best part of the movie as his Academy Award win for Best Actor can attest.

Miracle on 34th Street is a sweet movie with a funny, kindly story of a man who just wants to be Santa Claus, and has been proven to be so by the fancy lawyer tricks of his lawyer.

This was the famous scene during the hearing on Kris Kringle when Fred had bags and bags of letters delivered from the Post Office to Kris at the court house admitted as evidence that the Federal governmental agency the Post office recognized Kris as the real Santa Claus. What I did not know about that scene was that it was dumb luck on Fred’s part as the Post Office sent the letters to the court house as a way of getting rid of them. I guess it wasn’t as much of a fancy lawyer trick as I had always believed it to be.

This is a Christmas classic and is a wonderful story for all people.

The Hound of the Baskervilles (1939)

DailyView: Day 233, Movie 321

The first of the images on the extended banner was from this movie. The Hounds of the Baskervilles is one of the most famous Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes stories and this was the first of the Basil Rathbone/Nigel Bruce Sherlock Holmes films.

Set during the Victorian time (which was the setting for the original stories), The Hound of the Baskervilles tells the story of a legendary and monstrous dog that haunted the moors of the estate of Baskerville in Devonshire. The legend stated that the hound would kill all family members of the Baskervilles, after it had started with Sir Hugo Baskerville (Ralph Forbes) hundreds of years prior.

However, Sherlock Holmes (Basil Rathbone) and his friend and sidekick Dr. Watson (Nigel Bruce) saw more to the legend than just a terrible family curse.

Interestingly enough, 20th Century Fox was uncertain about the selling power of Sherlock Holmes so instead of leading the cast with Basil Rathbone, actor Richard Greene, who played Sir Henry Baskerville received top billing. Fascinating bit of trivia considering Basil Rathbone would lead over a dozen more Sherlock Holmes films in his time.

The film is very atmospheric, with the shots on the moors being very cinematic and the foggy circumstance around the finale really brought a feeling of uncertainty and dread.

Rathbone and Bruce show exactly what they are capable of doing with the roles and they must have eased any doubt the studio had about the property. Rathbone is such an iconic performance of the Baker Street detective that every time we visit him, it is an enjoyable time.

There are several twists to the mystery and it was a fun film to see.

Mickey’s Christmas Carol (1983)

DailyView: Day 232, Movie 320

One of the most classic Christmas tale is Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol. It has been adapted into countless variations over the years, both live action and animated. This is one of the Disney animated versions of A Christmas Carol starring Mickey Mouse, Scrooge McDuck and other Disney characters.

Ebenezer Scrooge (McDuck) was a covetous old sinner, more concerned with his gold than people. He spent his days counting his money and tormenting his clerk, Bib Cratchit (Mickey Mouse). On Christmas Eve, he was approached by the ghost of his old deceased business partner Jacob Marley (Goofy), who claimed that, if Scrooge did not change his ways, he would spend eternity hauling around heavy chains, just as Marley has to do. Marley told Scrooge that he would be visited by three spirits and that these spirits were the only way to avoid such a fate.

Each spirit (which included Jiminy Cricket, Willie the Giant and Pete) showed Scrooge scenes from the past, present and future, including scenes from the family of Bob Cratchit and his family, which featured his sickly son, Tiny Tim.

These ghostly visits changed Scrooge, making him a caring, loving individual, who embraced all that Christmas had to offer.

This was a nice adaptation. They covered the story effectively despite having to edit out a lot of the story because of the time. Tis could have benefitted from a little longer run time as the 26 minutes felt a little rushed.

Truthfully, being familiar with the story, it is more apparent with what Mickey’s Christmas Carol left out than what it had. There were some classic lines of dialogue that always appear in the adaptations that had been removed from this version that minimize the impact of the tale.

Still, this would be a nice way to introduce the story to a younger audience (although I think the Muppet Christmas Carol would be even more effective). The music was interesting, especially the opening song.

This was fine, but I think a longer, more involved version would allow for more depth of story and character and less of, look who is playing whom.