After racing through The Crown, we’ve filled the void with some very good movies lately.
Don’t Breathe
Robbing a blind man
should be easier than this.
Rocky times ahead.
The camera moves like a snake in this absolute nailbiter of a thriller. Yes, there are some familiar jump scares and boneheaded moves by the victims, but no complaints from me.
Kubo and the Two Strings
A boy and his “ax”
with Monkey and Beetle, too
fight for their story.
Never have I seen such smooth stop-motion. I didn’t even realize it was stop-motion until I looked it up; I was certain it was all CGI. The story gets muddled at the end, but well worth the journey. The supporting characters are a riot, and also quite affecting.
Southside with You
Michelle and Barack
before Jesse and Céline
walk and talk and love.
This movie very much channels Richard Linklater’s Before Sunrise, but that’s not a bad thing at all. In fact, it’s a wonderful thing. Parker Sawyers, the actor who plays Barack Obama, doesn’t impersonate him and yet somehow embodies him. I don’t quite understand how he pulled this off, but it’s a remarkable performance.
Hell or High Water
a pair of brothers
robbing banks to rob them back
sad justice for all
It’s what The Big Short wishes it could’ve been: an evisceration of the financial crisis with heart, humor, and tragedy.
Sully
The human factor:
did it save or did it hurt?
One man knows the truth.
My wife had the best line after seeing this movie: “Laura Linney really phoned in her performance, didn’t she?” All joking, of course. Linney is fine in it, in the limited time she has. The film goes into the back story in ways I didn’t know, so it was not only entertaining but quite informative.
Don’t Think Twice
It is time to ask:
Does improv improve with age?
Heavy thoughts with smiles.
I can’t recommend this film enough. Gillian Jacobs is the heart of this movie and she’s so perfectly cast. Keegan-Michael Key is as fine a dramatic actor as he is a comic one. Don’t miss this one.