EssayMoviesReview

Very Short Takes On (Mostly) Very Long Movies

In a concerted effort to wean myself from CNN and the endless stream of apocalyptic news, I’ve been bingeing on a slew of current movies. My thoughts at large, on very long movies, in case anyone cares:

Killers of the Flower Moon—I idolize Scorcese, but someone needs to tell him he needs an editor–as with his previous snorer, The Irishman, this potentially very interesting film bogs down in endless reaction shots and static dialogue. DeNiro is predictably fine as the villain, but much-overhyped Lily Gladstone is reserved to the point of comatose. Really grim throughout—it wouldn’t have hurt him to lighten the mood a bit.

The Holdovers—Another overlong disappointment from a director I usually like (“Sideways” is a classic), this one comes off as a something a retread of “Cider House Rules” and a schmaltzy Christmas movie. Paul Giamatti is a fine actor, but I don’t necessarily want to look at him for three hours and I was never sure if this was supposed to be comedy or melodrama.

Napoleon—some cool (and supposedly historically accurate) battle scenes but the generally excellent Joaquim Phoenix seems too whiny/neurotic to play an emperor, and his Josephine lacks any sort of schwing. Plus the film, for some reason, was shot with sepia filters, looks really dark and claustrophobic and could have easily stood to lose about 45 minutes (sensing a theme here?).

Zone of Interest—I initially thought this film was overly stylized, and it moves at a lugubrious pace, but it’s genuinely unsettling and visually brilliant.  The scene where Hoss tells his young son about increasing the “yield” of the death camps he supervises gave me nightmares, as did the screams emanating from outside the walls of his villa. Sandra Huller as Mrs. Hoss should have gotten the Oscar.

Anyone But You—please don’t judge me, but I enjoy the occasional brain-dead rom-com. This one, unfortunately, lacks both the rom and the com and the plot, even by the standards of the genre, is sub-moronic. Busty young Sydney Sweeney isn’t a bad actress (she was very good in “Reality”), but she has zero chemistry with her semi-naked co-lead and she just ain’t funny. Two hours of my life I wish I had back.

Poor Things—a really imaginative feminist take on Frankenstein, this movie has the quality lacking in almost all the other Oscar nominees—it’s entertaining, as opposed to merely cinematic. Emma Stone is great, but Mark Ruffalo steals the show as the rakish cad.

American Fiction—another one I wanted to enjoy more than I actually did. Jeffrey Wright does pretty well with what he’s given, but the ghetto novelist theme is less edgy than intended and the whole dissipated middle-aged college professor milieu feels tired.

Road House II—the very idea of remaking the classic original is sacrilegious. This version has lots of big explosions, some amusing scenes with Conor McGregor and an absurdly jacked Dalton, but wholly lacks the sheer, joyful idiocy of its predecessor. Pain don’t hurt?

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Author

  • Loomis

    Head-Fier since 2014. Based in Chicago, Loomis T. Johnson is a practicing attorney, failed musician, and lifelong music fanatic and record collector. He has frequently contributed to such review sites as Headfi, Sound Advocate, and Asian Provocative Ear (as well as many other far less interesting non-musical periodicals). A former two-channel and vintage gear obsessive, he has sheepishly succumbed to current trends in home theater and portable audio. He’s a firm believer that the equipment should serve the music and that good sound is attainable at any budget level.

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Loomis T. Johnson (Chicago, USA)

Head-Fier since 2014. Based in Chicago, Loomis T. Johnson is a practicing attorney, failed musician, and lifelong music fanatic and record collector. He has frequently contributed to such review sites as Headfi, Sound Advocate, and Asian Provocative Ear (as well as many other far less interesting non-musical periodicals). A former two-channel and vintage gear obsessive, he has sheepishly succumbed to current trends in home theater and portable audio. He’s a firm believer that the equipment should serve the music and that good sound is attainable at any budget level.

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