Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves stars Chris Pine, Michelle Rodriguez, Regé-Jean Page, Hugh Grant, Justice Smith, and Sophia Lillis. John Francis Daley and Jonathan Goldstein directed and wrote the script with Michael Gillio (Kwik Stop). And, as revealed by Collider, the adventure will last 2 hours and 17 minutes. This means it will be a great epic journey and an amazing introduction for new fans of the long-running tabletop RPG.
The trailer seemed amusing enough, and piqued my interest, for what it's worth.That is kind of shocking. Normally if a film is bad, they end up cutting so much (or not having filmed enough) that it comes in under 1:30 hours. I would expect an average movie in this genre to peg at 1:48 or something similar.
I have no idea what to make at 2 hours and 17 minutes. Did they actually have enough of a vision (which I can't recognize from the trailer) to justify that long of a film? Or is it just not edited well enough? Or... what?
Curiouser and curiouser....
Do you agree with Judd Hirsch being nominated for an Oscar with only a single scene? I haven't seen The Fablemeans yet but this is being talked about here and there and I wondered what you thought after seeing it.Watched The Fabelmans today. My major thought is about how much Spielberg loved both his parents -- the film really captures their essence at least in terms of their influence on him growing up -- and also what an honor he did them by picking two of the best actors of the time to portray them (Paul Dano and Michelle Williams).
If I have any quibble about this film, it's just that often it feels like a number of vignettes spaced out across time, capturing snapshots of events in his adolescence, without necessarily a connecting plot other than the lead character aging. But each of those excerpts of his life are expertly done, and all typically evoke some kind of response -- pain, laughter, grief, wonder -- evoked by the lens of a practiced, master director. The script also does nice setup so that the audience can come to certain realizations along with Sammy's growing awareness; it's all there if you are paying attention. Just really great performances across the board, including a short cameo by Judd Hirsch.
I think the relationship between Burt and Mitzi is fascinating and becomes apparent early in the film. While they love each other, they are both cut from different cloth -- she driven by art and her heart, he driven by science and his head. It's really clear that Burt looks at Mitzi as his shining angel, loving her from afar, because he cannot really understand her and meet her there. She meanwhile loves him but it's killing her to stay on the ground and lock herself into his extremely practical, tangible, rigidly rational mindset. They are both good parents (in the sense of what they contribute to their kids) who simply cannot be content together over the long haul because it will mean too much of a sacrifice for which ever one of them has to relinquish their own nature. It's just heart-rending to see them both trying to respond from good places even while their paths will eventually draw them apart.
Some of this scenes were a little too close to home. I got way too many flashbacks of bullies in middle and high school. The whole bit with the "Jesus freak" Monica also made me burst out laughing while also being really uncomfortable due to similar experiences I had within that environment. Really neat was one scene where Sammy "directs" one of this actors on what he should be feeling when he's doing his scene -- and how the guy starts with no clue whatever and ends up being literally shell-shocked with emotion by the time the scene is filmed.
As another really odd "what goes around comes around" moment, not only was this film reminiscent of other Spielberg films (like Saving Private Ryan), but it also reminded me of JJ Abrams and "Super 8," which was basically Abrams' version of Spielberg's E.T., with another young filmmaker and focusing on directing/camera technique, especially in regards to the train crash. Which director am I watching here? Did they influence each other and/or were both influenced by Greatest Show on Earth, and...? It all just goes around and around.
He was quite good in the 5-10 min of the film he was in, and I think I've seen people nominated for less in the past. He felt like a virtuoso on wheels, he embodied his role effortlessly -- which also happened to be one of those perfect Oscar bait roles (distinctive, idiosyncratic, offers pivotal advice to the protagonist, etc). So a perfect storm kinda thing?Do you agree with Judd Hirsch being nominated for an Oscar with only a single scene? I haven't seen The Fablemeans yet but this is being talked about here and there and I wondered what you thought after seeing it.
Judi Dench won an Oscar for like 8 minutes of screentime (Shakespeare in Love) so I can certainly see him winning. I also agree that Brendan Gleeson and Ke Huy Quan should be the ones to beat (I think Ke Huy Quan will win - he has far too good of a story in addition to his role).He was quite good in the 5-10 min of the film he was in, and I think I've seen people nominated for less in the past. He felt like a virtuoso on wheels, he embodied his role effortlessly -- which also happened to be one of those perfect Oscar bait roles (distinctive, idiosyncratic, offers pivotal advice to the protagonist, etc). So a perfect storm kinda thing?
That being said, I felt like Brendan Gleeson and Ke Huy Quan did heavier lifting in their films and should be the guys to beat.
I did not see Causeway, The Good Nurse, All is Quiet on the Western Front, Empire of Light, or Babylon (films that also have put up some Best Supporting Actor nominees this year during award season), so I can't really compare his performance to those.
We definitely saw the same movie. Well reviewed.Finally did the Dr. Strange 2 rewatch today, after having not seen it since opening weekend and also having not read my first review.
Without much ado....
So here is my thoughts now, after having not seen this film since opening weekend and also not rereading my old review:
First 15 min are essentially stake-less green-screen crap without any context, followed by 10 minutes of "eh" Marvel banter. We also see America Chavez doing what she does for most of the film (aside from about 30 seconds in the final act): Standing around behind other characters, doing nothing of value whatsoever. She's so darn passive, and we just get a forced memory later (and a contrived one) of why she might be this way.
The first Wanda scene is startling, with multiple moments of emotional impact. If only the high concept of the film wasn't so misguided, this might have been great, as Wanda's arc into the dark side was seemingly resolved (with a resultant stronger Wanda) in Wandavision. Now a tchotchke no one saw in the films just removes her autonomy and forces her to do evil, reducing her to a mere plot device for much of the film and ruining what actual moments of catharsis might have existed.
Now cue an hour of said character mindlessly destroying other people in the worst ways imaginable, in an impressive display of power (uh, GO WANDA! The Illuminati are real douchebags anyway -- and I'm not convinced whey would have beaten Thanos regardless, because they suck, aside from Xavier, who I guess still sucked based on outcome), but also feels like Raimi pointlessly smashing his toys in a sandbox. The casting of Krasinski as Mr. Fantastic and then brutally shredded onscreen just feels like a sneering snub to the fan base crying in the aisles.
[Side note: Never blame Elizabeth Olsen, who gamely plays all of this out with all of her formidable acting ability to the bitter end. She's both radiant and terrifying. It's the script that fails her.]
Near the end of the film are some moments of brilliance -- and I'm talking primarily about the fight between the two Stranges, using musical motifs, and then the raising of Zombie Strange. Really creative plotting and character design. There's even an uncharacteristically vulnerable moment for Stephen, admitting his frailty to 838 Christine. It's clear that, as much as every Stephen loves her in every universe, they also will never be together in any of them; both ultimately want different things... or at least Christine senses Stephen's split attention and feels herself deserving of more. But then of course things veer right back into Raimi fluff for the three staggered endings.
Some of the strength of the film is that it's been molded to fit Raimi's needs, but that is also its weakness: It seems to exist mainly to serve Raimi, rather than Raimi serving the film and a better story. (Note that I never felt that way about his Spiderman films.) The characters and film here are all just playthings without much regard for character continuity, bigger story concerns, or enduring meaningful value. If this film had never come out, aside from the universal destruction of the Darkhold -- which, again, never appeared in any of the films so far anyway -- it wouldn't have mattered.
Wait this was real, and not just a shitty stale meme?![]()
Critically Panned ‘Winnie-the-Pooh: Bloody and Honey’ Pro...
The reviews were not kind for the childhood-ruining slash...www.complex.com
I guess a 30x return on investment is nothing to say "oh bother" about.
Wait this was real, and not just a shitty stale meme?
No idea. Critically it completely bombed, but someone watched it enough to make three million or something.I don't care if someone takes the piss out of Winnie the Pooh, mind you. It's more that I think it's bad comedy, way past it's sell-by-date. It was funny when Peter Jackson did it in the 80s. I doubt this is anything worth seeing.
Yes, it is real. And they are making more. I think they were talking about a Tinkerbell film or something.
No idea. Critically it completely bombed, but someone watched it enough to make three million or something.
If it makes you feel any better, you're kind of living in your own real life horror movie: "In a world where nostalgia is marketed as a horror concept; one man must come face to face with a new wave of analogue horror. From the Studio who brought you 2020, and its ramped up sequel 2021 and visionary director Jordan Peele coming this October: