Sunday, 29 September 2024

"Megalopolis" - Mercy Killing

In the not-too-distant future city of New Rome, "genius" architect Cesar Catilina (Adam Driver) is attempting to pave the way for a new Utopia, using his new material "Megalon", a multi-purpose material which also gives him the ability to stop time. He is opposed by Mayor Franklyn Cicero (Giancarlo Esposito) and a director out of his fucking mind. Stuck in the middle are Cicero's daughter Julia (Nathalie Emmanuel) and the people of the city, whilst from the sidelines Catilina's driver Fundi Romaine (Laurence Fishbourne) narrates, and television presenter Wow Platinum (Aubrey Plaza) ingratiates herself into the life of not only Catilina, whom she loves, but his treacherous inbred cousin Claudio (Shia LaBouef) and disgustingly wealthy uncle Hamilton Crassus III (Jon Voight, yay?)...

A palindrome of tedium and a monument to grandiose emptiness, presided over by the decaying husk of auteurism, seizing upon scattered imagery in the same way in which a first time watcher of "Baraka" who is exceedingly enamoured with psychotropic drugs and the works of Terrence Mallick but also really thinks he's "not like the other kids" because he reads books and Shakespeare rather than watches Tik Tok would do.

Made over the course of several lifetimes (including that of his wife, to whom this film is dedicated and deserved far, far, far better), "Megalopolis" cost $120 million in Coppola's own cash, a pet vanity project free from the shackles of studio interference and corporate ghouls tethering his vision and genius.
Where are those 9 producers on "Hellboy" (2019) when you need them?
A preposterously backwards looking attempt to grasp at any idea, hurling images and the most embarassing kind of dialogue in a manner so haphazard you'd think it was a 1st year film student: you'd tell that pretentious cravat-wearing prick to get a real job if he showed you this.
Cast members are not characters, but dolls spewing philosophy at each other in increasingly cheap setpieces (underpopulated nightclubs, C-roll from "King of New York") between title cards etched into stone rather than the memory, as they attempt to jangle keys in front of you in attempt to gain "cult status": Aubrey Plaza femdomming Shia LaBouef and dressing as a slutty Cleopatra; Adam Driver fighting a brick wall as he hallucinates on drugs that he has a million clown arms; recreations of Ancient Roman gladiatorial arenas which look more akin to an event to sell a patricularly odious timeshare; Jason Schwartzmann playing the drums, or Dustin Hoffman randomly dying to collapsing pillar in what feels like a fucking cutaway gag on "Mr Show".
But instead of wonder and weirdness, they grasp at boredom. For a movie about a central character who can "control time" I'll give them this: time did indeed seem to compress and dilate on a whim in this movie, stretching like the shooting schedule of "Apocalypse Now" or the French Plantation Scene of "Apocalypse Now" in a manner which is frankly criminal. It should be illegal to make me look at my watch this much. It should be illegal to make something more tedious than a silent documentary on a "weird dream a pigeon had last night" shot out of focus..
Laurence Fishbourne drones in quotes and narrates events we already watch. An editor would have caught this in post: it's that shit cut of "Blade Runner" but instead of budget Sam Spade, it's Sam Spade quoting the bylines of every Andrew Tate fan on a message board from 2001.
We get terrible renditions of Shakespeare in place of dialogue, and where the rest of the dialogue is not simply quotes, misquotes or pretentious corrections of misquotes with the original quotes: it is repetitive. When not repetitive, it repeats itself. When it is not doing that, it duplicates. And beyond duplication it clones itself. And it's repetitive to boot.
I am entirely unsure what was inside the copious amounts of weed FFC was smoking when he made this movie and molested several people, but I hope that one day it can be weaponised so that we can one day infect other nations with the power to dictate such terrible choices in acting, plotting, coherence and storytelling: that shit was potent enough to eliminate the human mind's capacity for reality, reason and coherent thought.
Shia LaBouef prances like a preening theatre kid, but not in a fun way, more like that annoying one who won't stop singing Hamilton at you in a cafe one night because you mentioned that you liked Lin Manuel Miranda's "In the Heights".
Adam Driver is as wooden as his daughter in "Annette" (just watch "Annette", that movie fucking rules).
Nathalie Emmanuel is done by harder than she is in the "Fast and Furious" movies.
Giancarlo Esposito is... fucking hell... not the worst here, he gives as good a go as any but fuck me, not even he makes this dialogue work.
Aubrey Plaza somehow comes out unscathed: she plays her "Wow Platinum" social climber fem-domme femme fatale money expert golddigger like April Ludgate infiltrating a theatre troupe and mocking them all the way, but somehow getting nominated for both leads in their production of "Blood Brothers" for her talent. I love her.
The central conceit of the film, as he has stated, is to try to compare the fall of Rome to modern day America, and vice versa - in between the Roman names (weirdly casting Cicero as a villain and Catalina as a hero, in a reversal of a conspiracy that only like, 4 scholars and my mate Sam care about) and the blunt force trauma imagery, we get limp-wristed "satire" which I have to read as satire because otherwise my brain cannot comprehend a script this terrible. Red caps thrown at a fallen wannabe grifter dictator who curses their name whilst a sign reads "Make New Rome Great Again!" is discarded.
That sort of bullshit.
But this is not the core concept, as much as he wants it to be.
FFC (who has our leads discuss the fact that their baby who will "lead the future" will be called Francis, and names one of his 2 protagonists after himself) is actually making a movie about a "visionary" who is misunderstood by the world around him, oppressed and threatened and plotted against by rich bankers and wealthy elites who do not care for his vision: and unintentionally makes himself out to be a vile, condescending, pretentious, sexist, sorrowful drug fiend and dickhead surrounded by Yes-Men (fucking James Remar is in this! I legally have to see James Remar movies! And he gets, maybe, like, 2 lines! Fucking BLASPHEMY!); and that's just the character. I almost want to believe that there is some sort of plot against FFC, that there are studio executives with grudges and axes to grind, who have been praying for this film to fail, because that then would at least be some sort of reasonable explanation for this film being so dreadful (other than the obvious and correct assertion that it is simply dreadful). But no such luck.
I know that reading this back makes it sound somewhat interesting, somewhat fascinating as a failure, that in years this is going to be seen as a comedy camp classic, that there will be a reevalutaion of this work:
But no.
Genuinely, do not bother.
This was interminable, there was constant derisive laughter in our audience, and myself and the two people I was watching this went through the stages of grief in about 8 seconsds, or longer: time means nothing.
I can't even find time to talk about how all of the incestuous banking family and villains throw out jussssssssssst enough Yiddish to make it seem deliberate, but not QUITE enough to make it seem like it's being anti-Semitic, or the fact that the movie's sexist as shit to boot (I mean, you could probably guess that).
Fuck this movie.
Fuck me.
It is purely by his own Folly, his own petard hoisted by arrogance (and molestation allegations) that has led him to this disaster, and this will be how he goes. As coherent and meaningful as a collection of untranslated Horus poetry loaded into a shotgun and fired at a passing windmill made of bees. As fucking exciting as reading my fucking blogs.
As doomed as its namesake but nowhere near as interesting, coherent, respectable or with anything to say.

"Hellboy: The Crooked Man"

As they transport a giant spider across Appalachia, somthing goes awry and Bureau of Paranormal Research and Defence agent/partial demon man "Hellboy" (Jack Kesy) and first-time-in-the-field reasearcher Bobbie Jo Song (Adeline Rudolph) find themselves stuck in the sticks. First looking for the spider and a phone, they soon realise that something dark lurks in these woods, and it is very much their job to fix it. Alongside a pleasant enough country boy here to meet his parents (Jefferson White), they find themselves drawn into the legend the locals call "The Crooked Man"...

After the festering pile of executive tomfoolery in the shape of a film "Hellboy" (2019) and continued sagas of screwing over Guillermo Del Toro, this one comes as a bit of a surprise. Nobody was begging for one, there was not an ounce of build up, and it dropped the same weekend as "Megalopolis" (excited to watch that fucking trainwreck! Stay tuned!).
It's actually alright.
From one of the directors of "Crank", it is a mish mash of tones and genres, but just about sticks the landing. It is at its best when it is about the American folklore, the strange backwater superstitions and the "odd folk in the woods", left behind in the post-War countryside and fending for themselves with witchcraft and bargains. The build up is rushed and over-tightened, and the atmosphere doesn't quite get the air it needs to breathe and be as scary as it wants; but there are some spooky images (I appreciate the pitch black backdrops, and a juddering, jarring nightmare edit of a serpent on a lady) and some old-school horror played straight. The main villain isn't as spooky as I wanted him to be, but when the movie starts to breathe and take off, and be about a blue-collar guy and his bookish sidekick helping a regular-Joe fight zombies; it's fun! Kesy is fine as Hellboy, and I wish there was more Adeline Rudolph, and honestly it's kind of an interesting and refreshing take having the hero/lead character be Jefferson White's Tom Ferrell. It all adds a pleasant peasant-eye view to proceedings. I like the campier B-movie silliness as they use blessed shovels to fight demons, but when it tries to tie into "lore" and "history" of our titular hero, whom we are seemingly expected to simply know, it doesn't feel as earned as it could be, though I like the editing of the parallel traumas between Song and Hellboy.
This one I can see becoming a cult classic. It just about sticks the landing with its juggling of genres, and uses its lower budget well. Nothing too egregious sticks out in terms of mess (despite the MOUNTAIN of producers attached) and it is a solid rental.

Saturday, 21 September 2024

"The Substance" - Review

Workout star of a prime time show, and hottest thing on the planet, Elizabeth Sparkle (Demi Moore) has it all! But all good things must come to an end: she's 50 and, as made abundantly clear by her slithery boss Harvey (Dennis Quaid), there's no room for her in this industry now. Despondent and miserable, she finds her way back in: far from pulling a Mikey Saber, she instead uses "The Substance", to create a "newer", "hotter", "better" version of herself (Margaret Qualley), to ride high once again in that industry. All seems well, she has to follow a few rules and success seems given: Stabilize every day, swap every seven days, and remember that there is no she and her, only "Us". Fame, youth, beauty and more, are only an injection away...

Rightfully compared to David Cronenberg, I'd agree but not for the reasons people think when they immediately think Cronenberg: it has that almost asexual, clinical dissection of glamour and sex, that horniness and sleaze eyed up with an almost alien fascination and disgust which feels more akin to fascination than perversion. It's less titillating and more inquisitive and ponderous.
The whole movie is gorgeously shot, very French.
It has frequent wide angle lenses, immaculate colour design (the yellow coat and orange hallways are a particularly striking set of images), making for frequently bright, memorable imagery. There are a lot of wide angle and fish eye lenses, usually with an exquisitely ghoulish Dennis Quaid (playing his best Ray Liotta, RIP) far too close, adding disgust and discomfort effortlessly. And then the surgical, looming, disgusting gross body horror you came for is (whilst underplayed for a majority of the film, we'll get there...) neatly done, slow, effective, gross.
The sound design is the star of the show: I never want to hear a man eating shrimp ever again. Fucking gross There's a lot of food and consumption and devouring imagery and metaphors. The film descends into addiction, the biases and loaded decks and prejudices against women, the hypocrisy and vulgarity of the entertainment industry and society's double standards for women, and to this extent casting Demi Moore (giving one of her best performances in a lifetime) is an inspired piece of parody. She is great in this: her cookery scene is great fun, and encapsulates the movie well.
The final act is where you, I, and everyone with a semblance of understanding of horror movies, Cronenberg, body horror and pacing are expecting it to come together:
Oh boy it does that!

Deliciously gross, surprisingly rather "Society" inspired stuff (I kept humming the "Eton Boat Song" in my head, you'll see why...) comes alive in the finale: gross, bloody, manic, and a suitable slice of madness from what we have seen so far. It's not as unhinged as something like "Cuckoo", and is a more reserved, collected, orderly affair with something to say, but if you have the patience for it, and enjoy the Soska Sisters remake of "Rabid", I can recommend this.

Thursday, 12 September 2024

"Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" - Review

Lydia Deetz (Winona Ryder) works as a television ghost whisperer, alongside her lover and producer (Justin Theroux). She gets called back home by her performance artist stepmother Delia (Catherine O'Hara, naturally stealing the show), for a family emergency - just in time to reconnect with her sullen daughter Astrid (Jenna Ortega) and be drawn into the afterlife of notorious dickbag ghost "Betelgeuse" (Michael Keaton), who has his own problems with rampaging ex-wife Dolores (Monica Bellucci) on a double-murderous rampage, and a plan of his own to weasel out of it...

This is good clean fun, something of a return to form for Tim Burton. I laughed a lot more than I thought I would (Catherine O'Hara, perhaps unsurprisingly, stole the show and got most of them), and the whole affair has a rather cartoony, brightly patterned nonsense energy, complete with fanciful sets and that Goth-nostalgia he's known for. Honestly, it works. It's less "reverence for a classic" and more "fuck it, let's do another whackadoodle adventure". My screening was the full spectrum of viewers: a person who hadn't watched "Beetlejuice", a person who watched it 20 years ago (me) and vaguely remembers it, and a big fan of the first. All three of us had a good time, we laughed at different parts and at various parts, enjoyed some of the creativity on display (the claymation sequence is both fun, and a good way to not have Jeffrey Jones in your movie...), and the cast are having fun: Jenna Ortega fits well into the Burton-verse with her big eyes and Goth girl pout; Winona Ryder is always good, Beetlejuice is not overused; Burn Gorman gets some very "Corpse Bride" lines as a priest; Justin Theroux has a blast as a new age shitbag ex-husband; and Willem Dafoe is a bizarre but delightful addition as a movie-star turned cop. Bellucci is underused, and the plot takes a while to get going, laying a lot of groundwork and spinning a lot of plates.
It's a fun film, it doesn't have anything to say and is rather disposable, but it's not trying to be anything else. It's enjoyable, competently made, and does well with its lunatic bouncy energy.