Skip to main content

Posts

In Praise of the Fall Guys, Tempered Praise for The Fall Guy

In the opening pre-show to The Fall Guy , a standard now for any blockbuster movie playing in theatres it seems, director David Leitch characterized the movie as a tribute to stunt performers, among the most under-appreciated artists working in Hollywood. In the bit, Ryan Gosling even made the now fairly common appeal for a Stunts category at the Oscars -also brought up in the movie itself. And if nothing else, the movie is dead-set on making that case, on emphasizing just how important stunt performers are to the movie industry and how thankless the job can seem -given the pain involved and lack of recognition. Leitch knows it first-hand, which is why though he didn’t write the movie, he was absolutely right to direct it. And indeed The Fall Guy  is the best movie in a while from the man who got his filmmaking start co-directing John Wick -probably owing to the palpable affection he has for the subject matter. The film is loosely based on a TV show from the 1980s your dad will rememb
Recent posts

Arcade Aesthetics Aren’t Quite Enough for Boy Kills World

I wonder if one of the repercussions of the unexpected success of Everything Everywhere All at Once  might be a new subgenre of frenetically shot action-comedies based around gonzo premises. The movie business is often one of witnessing rare original ideas take off and then expounding resources to copy it in both style and success as thoroughly and frequently as possible. It definitely appears that such thinking played some part in the creation of Boy Kills World , a wildly energized and flagrantly weird dystopia movie that might secretly be an attempt to adapt a new Street Fighter movie without having secured the rights. Certainly it makes no secret of its root inspiration in arcade fighter games, and sticks to that kind of general action apparatus in as competent a way as it can. But beyond that there’s definitely the sense of it trying too hard to capture a particular vibe that the movie itself can’t wholly define. Directed by German filmmaker Mortiz Mohr, Boy Kills World is set in

The Sensational, Sultry Game of Challengers

  When Tashi Duncan (Zendaya) likens playing tennis to a relationship between two people in varying sync, it comes off as mere ostentatious metaphor -a way to make a game feel more profound than it actually is. And yet years later when she has a heated argument with her boyfriend Patrick Zweig (Josh O’Connor) in her university dorm, we see their points fire back and forth between each other like a tennis ball being served and parried by two incredibly fierce players. Emotions, resentments, history, ego -it all just crosses and re-crosses, even over the course of years, until somebody inevitably has to miss their hit; somebody has to win. Luca Guadagnino’s Challengers  is a movie about a relationship that plays out on the tennis court. Quite literally we see its entire history expressed in the margins of an intense match at a Challenger tournament in New Rochelle, New York between Patrick Zweig and Art Donaldson (Mike Faist). As they trade swings, always between them watching astute and

The King Tide Grimly Though Insufficiently Develops a Cult

There is a uniquely ancient atmosphere to Newfoundland unlike anywhere else in Canada. Perhaps it is the imprint left on the land by the Norse or the Celtic heritage of a lot of its settlers embedding itself, or else its particular isolation from the rest of the country, but there is the touch of an old pagan influence that doesn’t extend much further west. And I think storytellers from Newfoundland have picked up on that, even when as in this case they are reluctant to equate it with that part of the country openly. The King Tide  never alleges it is set in Newfoundland -the characters make no provincial reference and more importantly have no accent. But it is obviously shot there and the character of the whole story is so informed by this influence that it really couldn’t take place anywhere else in Canada. The movie is also directed by proud Newfoundlander Christian Sparkes (who is such an islander his next movie is an adaptation of Michael Crummey). The King Tide  is not an adaptat

Back to the Feature: The Killing (1956)

It’s been a very long time since I wrote about one of the most popular and debated filmmakers of all time. But it really does seem sometimes that there isn’t a lot left to say about Stanley Kubrick. Even in my essay on 2001 several years ago, there were hardly any new observations to it -just myself affirming my own reading of it informed by various perspectives several others have had. But I hadn’t seen his earliest movies, which were surprisingly included in a retrospective series a national cinema chain was putting on this past month. And so I figured the time was finally right to at long last complete the Kubrick filmography. Given the stature of the man and those innovative works that have become definitive to cinema, these lesser-known early movies are a fundamental curiosity -what do they mean to the totality of his career, how do they point to the mythic figure, his voice, and his style? And probably the critical movie of Kubrick’s early career was 1956’s The Killing , a bridg

A Tale of Two Finales: The Opposable Last Statements of Cheers and Frasier

“You know something, I hate change. I mean you know, every day you wake up something’s changed. Everything just changing so fast, I like things to stay the way they are, you know. I like things you can count on.” -Woody Boyd, “One for the Road” “The only reason I’m leaving is because I want what all of you have now: a new chapter. Who knows if it’ll even work out… While it’s tempting to play it safe, the more we’re willing to risk the more alive we are. In the end, what we regret most are the chances we never took.” -Frasier Crane, “Goodnight, Seattle” On May 20 th , 1993, the most popular and arguably the defining American sitcom of the 1980s, Cheers , aired its final episode “One for the Road” after eleven years on the air. Bringing back Shelley Long’s Diane Chambers, the series’ co-lead from its first five seasons, it brought to a close the relationship arc between her and Ted Danson’s Sam Malone, capping off new developments for other characters as well. Ultimately it ended with Sa