Is This Thing On? is Bradley Cooper’s most mundane movie yet -though not in a bad way. Compared to A Star is Born and Maestro , big movies in either scale or concept about celebrity, legacy, and art, this is a movie incredibly small and intimate -about a relationship and an artistic calling, though an incredibly localized one. In a way it feels like the movie that would have built up to those others, had Cooper come to filmmaking from a more traditional avenue than being a movie star and entrusted with a big budget and sweeping story on his debut. And in a way it might be him attempting to demonstrate some range to earn his clout with a scaled-back human story. It is a curious story that originates with of all people the British comedian ( and brief Doctor Who companion ) John Bishop, whose own life story and marriage is the basis here. Bishop, though very successful and a household name in the U.K., is not particularly known in the U.S.; and so unlike when Kumail Nanji...
Any primatologist is free to correct me, but I somehow doubt a chimpanzee has quite the muscle strength depicted in this movie to rip through human faces like they’re silly putty. Primate is the latest in a surprisingly long line of killer monkey movies, such as Monkey Shines and Link , although it is perhaps the first to use the lifelike motion-capture technology developed primarily through the modern Planet of the Apes series to render its homicidal simian as opposed to a real trained animal. Safer certainly for the cast and crew, and it affords some new degrees of horror effects, which director Johannes Roberts is only too happy to exploit. But enhanced visual tangibility isn’t everything -we’ve seen other movies with realistic-looking apes and other movies about wild animals stalking defenceless humans. How does one make such a film stand out as more than a mere creature-feature? It turns out there are a few ways, though they don’t necessarily interest R...