Red Sparrow

Let me preface this review with the fact that I think Jennifer Lawrence is an incredible actress. Unfortunately, being so good, sometimes the material that she is working with does not live up to her talents. “Red Sparrow” is fair, maybe good, but not great. Lawrence is excellent with a Russian accent. The plot is a throwback to a Cold War spy story. Her character starts out as a gifted ballet dance who suffers a career ending injury. She is recruited by a clandestine spy network that does terrible things. The film is bloody and graphic with nudity. It is also too long. The ending will knock you out and makes it worth sitting through. Not a bad thriller.

Lara Croft: Tomb Raider

This film is a remake of the early 2000’s version starring Angelina Jolie. First, Alicia Vikander is no Angelina Jolie, but then who is? She is a great update and a badass in her own right. The movie is a worthy remake, with a lot of action and nasty bad guys. Lara goes in search of her father who, of course, is a billionaire explorer bent on saving the world from an evil ghost. He has been lost for seven years and Lara ends up on the island he allegedly died on. As you would expect she is the only one who believes he is alive. Lots of action, some of it even believable with an ending that all but says “and we’re going to make a sequel.” Fun and mindless.

A Wrinkle in Time

Here is a fantasy, produced by Disney, about time travel and a father who goes missing after discovering the secret of how to do it. His children go in search for him with the help of the “Mrs.”, three women with special powers. The cast and special effects were quite good, but I felt like I was in one of the Tomorrowland exhibits at the Magic Kingdom. If you’re look for realism, stay away. A good film for kids. The special effects should be seen on the big screen to be appreciated.

7 Days in Entebbe

“7 Days in Entebbe” tells the story of the hijacking of an Air France jet by members of the Palestinian Liberation Army in 1976. The government of Uganda, led by Idi Amin allowed them to land the plane there and keep the hostages at the old airport terminal. The movie tells the story from two points of views: The hijackers and hostages and the Israeli government. Even though we know the outcome, the film is tense and suspenseful. Well done, realistic and good acting. Worth seeing.

The Hurricane Heist

Here is a movie, like “Snakes on a Plane”, that describes its plot in the title. Basically, at a U.S. government treasury facility in Gulfport, Mississippi that shreds old money, some guys decide to take $600 million of the old money during a hurricane. (Old money, new money. I wouldn’t be picky.) Simple enough. I wasn’t sure what to expect, thinking that it could be a cheaply made piece of junk, but it turned out to be pretty good. I was entertained. The depiction of the storm was realistic and there were more than a few plot twists. There are no stars in this film, but the actors did a good job. Action, suspense, good production values and a plot that keeps you guessing. Not a bad diversion.

Gringo

What a disappointment “Gringo” was! It has a wonderful cast, what should have been an interesting, action -filled premise, and some funny moments, but it couldn’t make up it’s mind on which direction to go. Charlize Theron, Joel Edgerton and David Onlyelowo head the cast. None of them are bad, but their parts are underwritten. Also, I am sick of Theron playing the femme fatale, with no morals and who uses sex as a weapon. She has proven that she is a good actress and Lord knows she is gorgeous, but will someone give her a decent part? The plot revolves around a corporation run by Theron and Edgerton that smuggles drugs in and out of Mexico. Oyelowo is their patsy. Things go wrong when they try to clean up the company for a takeover. This is one of those movies to watch when nothing else is on, the weather is terrible outside and you are bored out of your mind.

Death Wish

The remake of “Death Wish” is everything you expect it to be and less. It’s the same movie but with some updates, literally. This time the hero(?) played by Bruce Willis is a surgeon and he does a passable job. There is plenty of killing and the questions about vigilante justice shines through. It’s your typical low level action film. I’ve seen better and I’ve seen worse.

My Oscar Picks

Tomorrow night the 2017 Academy Awards will be presented. In today’s age of instant access to information, there aren’t many surprises. Usually there is one among the “big” awards like last year’s best picture that no one sees coming. With that in mind, here are my predictions as well as who I would choose if I were voting.

Best Picture: I think it will be ‘The Shape of Water” but “Three Billboards Outside of Ebbing, Missouri” could squeak in. I liked both films, but the latter didn’t feel like an Oscar film. I loved “The Shape of Water”, but it has a lot of detractors. Some didn’t care for the fantasy of it. I thought it was a brilliant piece of film making.

Best Actor: Gary Oldman gives an amazing performance as Winston Churchill and deserves the Oscar. Please note, he is not one of my favorite actors, but he killed it in this film. There has been a lot of talk about Timothee Chalamet in “Call Me By Your Name”. His performance was quite good, very nuanced for such a young actor (He was 21 while filming it.), and in any other year he might win the prize, but Oldman is in a field by himself.

Best Actress: Frances McDomond has been racking up wins in many of the pre-Oscar races and she will probably take home the statue Sunday night (Or will it be Monday morning by the time they get around to giving it out?). In a performance that took no prisoners, she is fierce, determined and doesn’t give a damn what anybody else thinks. She is also an actress who has never given a bad performance in my mind. However, if I were voting, I would vote for Sally Hawkins in “The Shape of Water”. Her mute janitor was magical. She conveyed so many emotions without saying a word. I loved her performance. By the way, any of the five nominees could win and I wouldn’t be disappointed. They were all amazing.

Best Supporting Actor: Sam Rockwell deserves to win for “Three Billboards Outside of Ebbing, Missouri”. He is like a chamelion, always seamlessly transforming into the character he is playing.  In this film he gave another great performance of a dislikable, complex character. His biggest competition is Willem Dafoe for “The Florida Project”. Dafoe is another one of those underrated actors who always gives a good performance. I didn’t care for the film and I have seen him do a better acting job in other films.

Best Supporting Actress: I am torn by the nominees in this category. Allison Janney has won most of the pre-Oscar awards for her mother-from-hell performance of Tanya Harding’s mother in “I, Tonya”. I would not be disappointed if she won as I love Janney as an actress and she did an incredible job. She was the worst mother on film since Mo’Nique in “Precious”. On the other hand, I loved Laurie Metcalf’s mother in “Lady Bird”. She was real, funny, frustrated and loving while trying to raise a teenage daughter who just wants to get out. I really wish that Janney and Metcalf would tie because they were both gave wonderful performances on opposite ends of the spectrum of motherhood, but I think the former will win.

Best Director: Guillermo Del Toro will and should win for “The Shape of Water”. His mark is all over the film, from the story, that he co-wrote, to the color scheme, to the acting.  And he did all of this in a film that was somewhat based in reality, but was really a fantasy. It was visually beautiful, interesting and different. His nearest competition wasn’t even nominated. Martin McDonagh, who wrote and directed “Three Billboards Outside of Ebbing, Missouri” was overlooked by the Academy, in my opinion, unjustly. The only other director who might upset Del Toro could be Christopher Nolan for “Dunkirk”. He is another artist who doesn’t know how to make a bad film. Directing the special effects and technical aspects of the film, while keeping the story going back and forth, was amazing. Still, I think Del Toro will win.

So there are my predictions for the top six categories. I have only been 100% right once in the last 20 years, so we’ll see.

Black Panther

The first great movie of 2018 has come out. “Black Panther” is the latest Marvel superhero to get his own film and it kicks ass. Like “Wonder Woman” last year this one is different, telling the story of a nation, Wakanda, that is invisible to the outside world. I went into the movie knowing that the Black Panther was going to be a black super hero, but I was bowled over by his warriors and guards. They were all women and trust me, you do not want to mess with them. The inventions and technology are very innovative. And the acting was quite good. Chadwick Boseman, who was phenomenal in “42” and “Get on Up”, is very good in the lead, Michael B. Jordan as the villain almost steals the show. But the real stand outs are the women. Being a super hero movie, there are a lot of special effects and battle scenes. An entertaining, well done movie.

The 15:17 to Paris

“The 15:17 to Paris” is the latest film directed by Clint Eastwood. It tells the story of three friends who end up touring Europe On a train to Paris they thwart a terrorist and become heroes. These characters were not played by actors but by the real heroes. This was not one of Eastwood’s best efforts. While it was admirable to cast the actual people involved, the dialogue and pace was rather clunky. It is definitely one of his lesser films.