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The Perfectly Cogent and Bitter Satire of No Other Choice

None are exempt from the dehumanization of capitalism. It has always been true but has felt supercharged in the modern era. The movements of monopolies, mergers, conglomerates leaves so many people behind, who are then forced into desperate circumstances to hang onto the comforts of their lives and livelihoods. And whatever comes of it is no guarantee. There is no job security in the modern age -not really. So few understand how close they are to the brink until they are literally looking down it. No Other Choice  is Park Chan-wook’s Parasite . Just as Bong Joon-ho’s now classic film examined the impacts of late-stage capitalism and the extremes it drives people towards, so too does his friend Park’s new movie showcase with raw anger the ramifications of an unfeeling system on everyday people forced to contend with it for their survival. Where Bong honed in on a poor and struggling family, Park centres a patriarch who is notably much better off -but the weight that is felt is much ...
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Running on Fumes

Early into the  Running Man  game, Glen Powell’s Ben Richards while receiving assistance from a friend played by William H. Macy insists he had no choice in entering the game. Macy’s character responds very bluntly that he did. And indeed he wasn’t forced to enter the game, he was persuaded to by the notion of setting up his struggling family for life. It is something he has reckoned with later in the story after some devastating consequences, and he responds to an alternate statement with an affirmation of his choice. But on some level, he didn’t have that choice did he? The society he exists within did force him to the point of desperation: the tactic that feeds The Running Man  as well as other briefly glimpsed game shows where the lives of the poor and disenfranchised  -a larger (but not that much so) proportion of the population in this dystopian world- are sacrificed for the amusement of the general public as a distraction from their own woes. Stephen King’s no...

Charlie Brown at the Movies: Race for Your Life, Charlie Brown (1977)

Race for Your Life, Charlie Brown  is not based on any particular run of Peanuts  strips and that is why it feels so different from the prior two movies. Charlie Brown had gone to camp before, but usually on his own -or with just as Snoopy as a companion. Charles Schulz wrote this original screenplay however based on a rafting trip he took with his family -and being written as a film it is notably less episodic than its predecessors had been, which were working in daily gags and merely expanding on certain scenes and plot beats. And it does feel a little bit like alien territory for a Peanuts  movie. Certainly it is an alien environment -the movie being set in the wilderness of what looks like Utah or Wyoming rather than the humble Minnesotan world the strip usually occupies. It’s interesting seeing these characters against watercolour backdrops of forests and mountains and deep canyons. And this context is the biggest novelty for the movie, the background of an elaborate...

Not a Keeper

Keeper is a movie that was entirely written, produced, and shot in a period of about five months while production on   The Monkey  was on hold due to the 2023 Hollywood labour strikes, and it shows. Essentially it was an excuse to keep the predominantly Canadian crew working during this time, director Osgood Perkins also hiring a non-WGA Canadian writer Nick Lepard to draft the screenplay and casting the film with Canadian actors such as Tatiana Maslany -who could perform in it under her ACTRA membership while temporarily waiving her SAG-AFTRA status. A bit of a sneaky way around the labour dispute for Perkins, but it did allow his crew in Canada to not lose work -which is nice for them. It doesn’t make the movie they were working on any better though. Unsurprisingly for a film that was designed as a rush job, the premise is incredibly basic. Maslany stars as Liz, a woman celebrating her anniversary with her partner Malcolm (Rossif Sutherland), a fairly wealthy and successful ...

Futurama Reviews: S10E10 -"The White Hole"

Not counting the broadcast season breaks during the Comedy Central run (and the status of “Overclockwise” as the real season six finale over “Reincarnation”), “The White Hole” may be the first season finale of Futurama since “The 30% Iron Chef” more than twenty years ago that does not feel like it was written as a potential series finale. Sure it is pretty grand in scope, but largely uses that canvas for jokes, rather than the notes of sincerity or profundity. Also it lacks that focus on Fry and Leela, which has long been a staple of closing episodes. There is something a little refreshing there, that the writers know they have at least one more season to produce and so don’t feel the obligation to put a lot of weight into this one, though it still has a bit of an air of that in places. Written by series veteran Patric M. Verrone, the central tenet of the episode is a White Hole that suddenly appears over Earth and a voice from within beckoning representatives from this universe to ent...

Putting Nuremberg on Trial

There was a TV miniseries called Nuremberg I remember watching in high school history class as a way of teaching us students about the Nuremberg T rials. It featured Alec Baldwin and Christopher Plummer, and I remember Brian Cox was Herman G รถ ring -the most significant figure of those hearings  pretty much exactly as he wanted. The Nazi Reichsmarschall, last of Hitler’s innermost circle not to commit suicide before answering for his crimes, wanted to be the main character of that chapter of history regardless of what happened to him. Much as the trials were designed to diminish and discredit the Nazis, it can be argued their effect historically was more complex. That’s not what James Vanderbilt’s movie Nuremberg  believes, much as it gives credence to the complicated aspects of the Nuremberg Trials in terms of their apparent goal. Vanderbilt sees such a thing as purveyor of drama, but doesn’t seem to take seriously its validity all that much. His movie’s attitude towards Nure...

A Brilliantly Raw and Eccentric Cry of Postpartum Anguish

When it comes to the subjects of her movies, Lynne Ramsey does not take any half measures. Whether it is the frankness of a parent alienated from her psychopathic child in We Need to Talk About Kevin  or the unrelenting viciousness of a hitman systematically killing the architects of a sex trafficking ring in You Were Never Really Here , her approach is never subtle or expected. And that is especially true of her latest film, Die My Love , which tackles a subject very rarely discussed on film -postpartum depression- and accentuates it to the most visceral extremes. Profoundly bizarre and disorienting, and very much because of this profoundly effective. Jennifer Lawrence stars as Grace, who moves with her partner Jackson (Robert Pattinson) from New York City to a small house in the woods in his home of rural Montana. In a frenetic montage that is probably the best opening sequence of the year we get a sense of their joy-filled early days in this place filled with sex,...