Watch Bonus Clips From Roland Emmerich MOONFALL – Available Now On 4K Ultra HD, Blu-ray And DVD

No one does end of the world like filmmaker Roland Emmerich. The director returns with his latest film, MOONFALL. The film arrived on Digital April 1 and on 4K Ultra HD Combo Pack (plus Blu-ray and Digital), Blu-ray Combo Pack (plus DVD and Digital), DVD, and On Demand April 26 from Lionsgate.

One not to be missed in theaters for it scope, dazzling visual effects and fascinating sci-fi story, Lionsgate has released a new retro-trailer plus new bonus clips. Check them out below.

From director Roland Emmerich (Midway, Independence Day franchise) and writers Roland Emmerich, Harald Kloser & Spenser Cohen, the film stars Academy Award® winner Halle Berry (Monsters Ball, John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum) , Patrick Wilson (Midway, The Conjuring franchise) , John Bradley (TV’s “Game of Thrones,” “Marry Me”), Michael Peña (TV’s “Narcos,” Fantasy Island), Charlie Plummer (Lean on Pete, Spontaneous), Kelly Yu (TV’s “Lost Promise”), Eme Ikwuakor (TV’s “On My Block,” “Inhumans”), Carolina Bartczak (TV’s upcoming “Painkiller”), and Donald Sutherland (The Hunger Games franchise, TV’s “The Undoing”).

In Moonfall, a mysterious force knocks the Moon from its orbit around Earth and sends it hurtling on a collision course with life as we know it. With mere weeks before impact and the world on the brink of annihilation, NASA executive and former astronaut Jo Fowler (Academy Award® winner Halle Berry) is convinced she has the key to saving us all – but only one astronaut from her past, Brian Harper (Patrick Wilson, “Midway”) and a conspiracy theorist K.C. Houseman (John Bradley, “Game of Thrones”) believes her. These unlikely heroes will mount an impossible last-ditch mission into space, leaving behind everyone they love, only to find out that our Moon is not what we think it is.

Moonfall 4K Ultra HD Combo Pack, Blu-ray Combo Pack, and DVD will be available for the suggested retail price of $42.99, $39.99, and $29.96, respectively.

The extras on the Blu-ray/DVD are amazing, especially watching it with the audio commentary from writer/producer/director Roland Emmerich and writer/producer/composer Harald Kloser. If you are a fan of 2012, INDEPENDENCE DAY and THE DAY AFTER TOMORROW, MOONFALL is one to add to your collection. The film plays extremely well at home and these extras on how the film was made are must-sees for fans of the genre.

4K ULTRA HD / BLU-RAY / DVD / DIGITAL SPECIAL FEATURES INCLUDE:

  • Against Impossible Odds: Making Moonfall Filmmakers and actors offer an insider’s view of the genesis of the film, a look at the epic action scenes, and a deep dive into the most groundbreaking moments of the film. 
  • Exploring the Moon: Past, Present, and Future What have we learned about the Moon through the ages and where is human exploration of our nearest celestial neighbor going next?  Scientists, historians and astronauts reveal all!
  • KC Houseman Speaks the Truth!  Unearth recent viral videos from Megastructurist KC Houseman. 
  • Sounds of the Moon Discover how the filmmakers utilized a palette of unique sound effects to bring the world inside of the Moon to life.

Chad Stahelski and Keanu Reeves Promise Surprises For The World Of JOHN WICK: CHAPTER 4 At Lionsgate’s CinemaCon

Chad Stahelski, Director/Producer, Keanu Reeves, Executive producer – Photo Credit
Eric Charbonneau

“We do some cars stuff… alot of cars… fighting and surprises,” gleefully said director Chad Stahelski and actor Keanu Reeves while attending the Lionsgate CinemaCon presentation in support of “JOHN WICK: CHAPTER FOUR” at the Colosseum Theatre in Caesar’s Palace on April 28th, 2022 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Check out what the two also had to say about the upcoming movie starring Keanu Reeves, Donnie Yen, Bill Skarsgård, Laurence Fishburne, Hiroyuki Sanada, Shamier Anderson, Lance Reddick, Rina Sawayama, Scott Adkins, and Ian McShane.

The film is directed by Chad Stahelski, written by Shay Hatten and Michael Finch and produced by Basil Iwanyk, Erica Lee and Chad Stahelski.

Filmed in Paris, Berlin and Jordan, JOHN WICK: CHAPTER 4 is headed to theaters on March 24, 2023.

https://www.lionsgate.com/franchises/john-wick

Keanu Reeves, Executive Producer, Chad Stahelski, Director/Producer – Photo Credit
Eric Charbonneau
Photo Credit
Eric Charbonneau

FIREBIRD – Review

Tom Prior and Oleg Zagorodnii, in the romantic thriller FIREBIRD. Courtesy of Roadside Attractions.

Set in Cold War-era Estonia, then occupied by the Soviet Union, a two young men, a soldier and a pilot, fall in love, a dangerous relationship forbidden by homophobic law, in the English-language romantic thriller/drama FIREBIRD. Appropriately, this moving film is debuting in St. Louis just as Cinema St. Louis’ QFest, its celebration of gay-themed film, kicks off on Friday, April 29.

Sergey (Tom Prior), Luisa (Diana Pozharskaya) and Volodja (Jake Thomas Henderson) are an inseparable trio, in military service at the Soviet Air Force base in Estonia, and as the film opens, the three friends have sneaked off to swim on the rocky coast. When a Soviet security patrol catches them, Volodja’s family connections keep them out of trouble but the tension of living in 1977 Soviet-occupied Estonia is made clear. Also made clear in the scene, as the three young people play in the sea, is that beautiful Luisa is infatuated Sergey, while Sergey is far more interested in Volodja.

The opening scene leads us to expect this be a romantic triangle but this fact-based story takes a different turn, with the arrival of a new pilot, Lt. Roman Matvejev (Oleg Zagorodnii). Private Sergey Serebrennikov has just informed his kindly commander Major Zverev (Margus Prangel) that he intends to leave the military, to return home to his family farm to support his widowed mother, but Major Zverev gives him a last assignment, as the driver and assistant to the new lieutenant. Sergey quickly discovers they share an interest in photography, theater, and Tchaikovsky, and the pilot encourages Sergey to pursue his deferred dream of attending acting school in Moscow. The pair really bond over a trip to a performance of The Firebird, where Sergey drives the lieutenant over the border and stays to watch the show from a back row while the lieutenant joins friends up front. The ballet is a revelation to the young Sergey, as is a secret embrace and kiss in a forest near the border where they pause when returning. Well aware what they are doing risky but deeply in love, the tension of their situation increases when an anonymous note is sent to the camp’s KGB officer Colonel Kuznetsov (Nicholas Woodeson). The KGB agent becomes determined to catch and expose the pilot and his unknown lover.

Again, this true story veers from our expectations, as it becomes increasingly complex. But it remains a tense, and ultimately heartbreaking and tragic romance as it unfolds. FIREBIRD is led by a fine performance by Tom Prior as Sergey, well supported by the rest of the cast and director Peeter Rebane’s nuanced direction. Prior and Rebane co-produced the film and co-wrote the script from the story by Sergey Fetisov.

FIREBIRD starts out feeling more like a basic gay romance with the added tension of the time period and place, but quickly deepens to something more, exploring other choices in life and the price others might pay for our choices, in addition to its political commentary on the fall-out of homophobic policies on individual lives. Peeter Rebane directs this complicated tale with sensitivity but a firm hand. There is a recurring use of water and swimming, with its symbolism of birth, rebirth, and the natural world, but the water also provides some romantic scenes with bare bodies and an extra frisson of excitement, without being particularly explicit, therefore making them more romantic than erotic. The acting is fine throughout, although the focus is very much on Tom Prior’s Sergey, but Diana Pozharskaya is a standout as well as Oleg Zagorodnii. The toxic influence of secrets runs through this tale.

FIREBIRD opens Friday, April 29, at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Cinema, the Chase Park Plaza Cinemas 5, and other theaters nationwide.

RATING: 3 out of 4 stars

MEMORY – Review

Liam Neeson stars as “Alex Lewis” in director Martin Campbell’s MEMORY, an Open Road Films / Briarcliff Entertainment release. Credit: Rico Torres | Open Road Films / Briarcliff Entertainment

Adapting an old comic line: of all the Liam Neeson action/revenge/rescue movies MEMORY is the most … recent. Neeson plays Alex Lewis, a hit man with scruples (again), seeking retirement (again) from his craft. But he’s forced into one more job (again) that goes awry (again) putting the target on his back (again). One of the reasons for his attempt to quit is awareness that the same dementia that has already deprived his brother of all awareness is starting that downward spiral for him. The complication that drives this tired plot is his refusal to whack a child, and his anger at those who did.

Guy Pearce supports the effort as FBI agent Vincent Serra, frustrated by constraints from his superiors that keep him from shutting down the human trafficking ring he’s been pursuing here and in Mexico. Coincidentally, when Neeson starts writing reminders on his arm in moments of clarity, anticipating lapses, it’s reminiscent of Pearce doing the same on his body for similar reasons in MEMENTO. Pearce must have had pleasant flashbacks to that excellent movie when reading this script. Presumably, that kept him from realizing how convoluted and predictable it was.

If you haven’t seen more than one of Neeson’s last half-dozen or so action flicks, you might still find this one engaging. The Alzheimer’s theme is relatively new but not exactly unique among crime dramas here and abroad. In fact, this one is apparently based on a Belgian film from 2003, THE MEMORY OF A KILLER (De Zaak Alzheimer), which I haven’t seen. In this incarnation, symptomatic episodes tend to occur in relatively benign moments but other films have been more daring, with their protagonists going blank during a fight or other dangerous situation.

The cast is full of stock types doing stock things on both sides of the law. What suspense exists is propped up by some ambiguity about who are the good guys, and whose strings are being pulled by the bad ones. Monica Bellucci sleepwalks through her rich, powerful villainess turn as an El Paso real estate magnate named Davana Sealman. Director Martin Campbell does no favors for his cast or audience with a slow pace in mostly dark settings that make it seem much longer than its 114-minute running time. The sex and violence elements are minimally graphic for its R-rating, adding to the dullness of the product.

At the risk of stating the obvious too obviously, MEMORY is eminently forgettable, if not regrettable.

MEMORY opens Friday, Apr. 29, in theaters.

RATING: 1 out of 4 stars

THE DUKE – Review

Jim Broadbent as Kempton Bunton, Helen Mirren as Dorothy Bunton in THE DUKE. Photo by Mike Eley, BSC. Courtesy of Pathe UK. Courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics.

In this delightful, true story-based, quirky comic tale, Jim Broadbent and Helen Mirren costar as a bickering couple in a tale of a working class Newcastle man with a plan to ransom a stolen painting, Goya’s portrait of the Duke of Wellington, to provide benefits for low-income retirees. Broadbent plays the rarely practical but idealistic man with the plan, while Helen Mirren stars as his long-suffering, more practical wife. THE DUKE focuses on a real 1961 incident in which a portrait of the Duke of Wellington by Francisco Goya, newly purchased by the British government for 140,000 pounds, was stolen from the national gallery, the first and so far only theft from the gallery to date. The authorities are convinced a professional ring of thieves, possibly Italian, are behind the theft, until they receive a ransom note demanding millions – for charity.

Britain is a nation famous for eccentric characters and director Roger Michell’s comedy mines the classic humor in that vein. Often these are upper-crust eccentrics, so this working class fellow is a refreshing change, especially with this character’s obsessive crusading on behalf of the poor and forgotten. The fact that this is based on a real person makes the film all the more charming and heart-warming, even if the film is more true-ish than strictly factual.

THE DUKE is as quirky and charming as its lead character, and much of its delightful charm comes from Jim Broadbent and also the comically crackling scenes between Broadbent and Helen Mirren as the seeming mismatched couple. Broadbent’s happy, impractical dreamer Kempton Bunton is described in the film’s promotions as a taxi driver but that is just one in a long line of jobs as the oddly-named fellow pursues his true passions, writing plays and waging an on-going protest campaign for free TV for seniors. Kempton Bunton is a self-educated, endlessly optimistic man who aspires to be a playwright and is a staunch defender of the poor, particularly veterans, widows and pensioners, but who has trouble holding a job and making a living. His perpetually-worried, practical wife Dorothy (Helen Mirren) takes up the financial slack by cleaning house for the well-off Mrs. Gowling (Anna Maxwell Martin), the wife of an local official, who admires her hard-working housekeeper and her idealistic husband.

In 1961, Britons are required to buy a license to own a TV to watch BBC, but Bunton protests that it is unfair to Old Age Pensioners (OAP) for whom TV might be their only entertainment or company. Bunton is outraged when the government buys the Wellington portrait, noting how many TV licenses it could pay for with those funds. His wisecracking, more practical and worried wife Dorothy loves him but is clearly frustrated by his lack of practical sense about making a living and embarrassed by his many community campaigns. Bunton makes a deal with Dorothy: if she lets him take a two-day trip to London to try to speak to Parliament about his TV campaign and it fails, he will give up his community activism and his play writing and just get a steady job. She agrees, but while in London, Bunton gets up to far more. When he returns, the news is full of talk about the theft of the painting.

Director Roger Michell’s film focuses more is on the trial than on the heist itself, although we do learn about that too, and on the couple’s home life. That choice gives more room for the entertaining banter between the couple as well as showcasing Jim Broadbent’s entertaining humorous patter in court. An excellent Matthew Goode plays Bunton’s barrister Jeremy Hutchinson, a high-priced attorney married to a famous stage actress, presumably doing pro bono work here. Goode offers his own humorous touches while also serving as a foil for the oddball Bunton, while John Heffernan plays prosecutor Edward Cussen, his nearly-unbeatable adversary, as amusingly superior as he calls his long list of witnesses. James Wilby plays the long-suffering judge, facing a court gallery filled with sometimes-noisy Bunton supporters, and who at one point reminds Bunton they are in court and he is not “auditioning for a musical.” Charles Edwards is droll as the very proper chief investigator Sir Joseph Simpson who is so certain he is tracking an elusive team of international pro thieves and is so chagrined when the real culprit is revealed.

The Buntons’ youngest son still lives at home but the couple actually had three children, although they lost their only daughter as a young woman in an accident that still haunts the family. Fionn Whitehead is excellent as the couple’s well-meaning younger adult son Jackie, a sharp contrast to their older son Kenny (Jack Bandeira), an often-broke petty criminal who returns home to lay low, along with his still-married girlfriend Pamela (Charlotte Spencer), much to the dismay of his morally-straight mother. Aimee Kelly plays Irene, who becomes Jackie Bunton’s supportive girlfriend

At a brief 96 minutes, THE DUKE moves along briskly, but gives us enough time to get to know the characters and explore the quirks of the oddball story. Cleverly, the film is partly shot in the style of 1961 films, with split screen shots and a bouncy jazz score, which gives it an extra charm.

The biggest delight in this off-beat warm and funny tale is Jim Broadbent’s performance as the quip-prone, idealistic Bunton. But he is closely followed by Helen Mirren and their marvelous bantering, battling scenes are among the film’s best. The film is structured to reveal some surprises that came out much later, long after the trial, but there are moments when jumping back and forth in time feels a bit awkward. Still, it is a minor flaw in an otherwise warm, amusing, unlikely true story tale.

THE DUKE opens Friday, Apr. 29, at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Cinema and other theaters.

RATING: 3.5 out of 4 stars

POMPO THE CINEPHILE – Review

Alright, who’s ready for a movie about making a movie? Pretty tired idea, eh? Sure we’ve seen recent flicks about the making of several classics, from CITIZEN KANE to PSYCHO, even THE ROOM. Why there’s now a streaming miniseries about all the effort to get THE GODFATHER made. Well, this flick’s got a couple of twists. First, it’s about a movie that’s not legit (kind of like the Rick Dalton movies of ONCE UPON A TIME IN HOLLYWOOD). Oh, and here’s the second, really big thing: it’s an animated feature. Specifically, an anime based on a manga originally serialized online. How’s that for “something completely different”. Plus the film title actually refers to this film’s producer, not the director or star, who is known as POMPO THE CINEPHILE.


So, where is she known? Pompo (voiced by Konomi Kohara) is practically royalty in the movie capital of the world, Nyallywood (hmm) where she is part of a dynasty, the teenage granddaughter of the founder of Peterzen Picture Studios. Of course, she’s hired lots of folks to help produce her big-budget (bur “B” in spirit) blockbusters starring the blonde “screen queen” Mystia (Ai Kakuma), the main one being the shy, nervous film fanatic Gene Fini (Hiroya Shimizu). That is, until one morning when Pompo stuns him by giving him the chance to direct her screenplay “Meister”, a somber drama about an artist getting back his creative spark. Oh, and it will star reclusive acting icon Martin Braddock (Akio Otsuka), who has been lured out of retirement. He’ll be back acting opposite an unknown, an aspiring actress Natalie Woodward (Rinka Otani), who Gene has adored from afar. After the footage has been shot, Gene toils for countless hours in the editing suite, only to realize he needs one more scene. But the premiere date looms, and Pompo has run out of money. Luckily Gene runs into an old classmate, Alan (Ryuichi Kijima) who has gone into banking, though he shares a love of cinema. Can he convince his bank’s stuffy board of directors to take a chance on what could be a movie masterpiece? Or will Gene be overseeing another Mystia action extravaganza?

Well, this is a big departure for animated features as it uses the medium (not a genre) to satirize and comment on the current state of cinema, while still establishing a whimsical fantasy “dream-world”. Its take on “Tinsel-town” is that of a wild and wonderful pastel and candy-colored utopia, although Natalie (nice nod to a screen legend) most take lots of menial jobs (but nothing seedy). Sure, it’s pretty much all-ages even with the scene of a giant octopus nearly squeezing Mystia out of her too-small bikini top (another nice nod, perhaps to Jessica Rabbit). The character design mixes fairly realistic-style looks (think the superhero toons) of Braddock and Pterzen with the wild, manic manga types (Gene and Nat) with large open mouths and exploding water beads. On the other hand, Pompo herself appears to be a mix of Sailor Moon and Pippi Longstocking (her braids and pigtails are fluffy and billowing). Credit is due to director Takayuki Hirao for finding a way to make software film editing cinematic as he pictures Gene in a bright-neon glow dreamscape fighting a celluloid hydra by brandishing a scythe/machete (maybe a Klingon mace). And as I mentioned earlier, the pace is frenetic, whipping back and forth through time and (inner) space, but it’s never confusing. Oh, I do whole-heartedly agree with the big cinema secret revealed in the final moments. Maybe we could use a few more studio heads who sympathize with the audience like POMPO THE CINEPHILE. And that’s a wrap!

3 Out of 4

POMPO THE CINEPHILE opens in select theatres everywhere and screens exclusively in the St. Louis area at the Marcus Ronnie’s 20.

HIT THE ROAD (2022) – Review

Ah, with the slowly rising temps and with most schools getting ready to finish u[ their “grade years”, many families are hearing the call of the open highway. Maybe more so than other forms of mass transportation, driving may be the best option with new “variants’ popping up . But long hours in such “close quarters’ can certainly put a strain on the old “family dynamic”. And that’s probably true with families all around the world. In this new release, we’re in the ‘passenger seat’ for a winding journey through the battered dusty highways and byways of Iran. What really complicates this trek is what’s “packed away” with the bottled water and snacks, namely some big secrets. So, will these “hidden agendas” keep locked away when they HIT THE ROAD?

This story begins with a “rest stop’ off the shoulder of a baking trail full of sand and rocks. Papa (Hasan Majuni) is trying to nap in the back seat, while his left leg, which has been in a plaster cast for a loooong while, stretches into the front armrests. Of course, his slumber is thwarted by his “spirited” six-year-old son who’s mainly known as “little bro” (Rayan Sarlak). Meanwhile, his older “big bro” (Amin Simiar) walks around the borrowed SUV, looking for dents and leaks. In the front passenger seat, Mama (Pantea Panahiha) is jolted awake by her little boy’s hidden cell phone he had promised not to bring it along, so she grabs it and dashes away to hide it under a nearby rock, insisting that they will pick it up on the return home (odd). Soon they are back on the move, with the somber big brother at the wheel. Along the way, they encounter a cycling fan and make several “pit stops” to take the dog Jessy (who is very ill, though his frailty is hidden from the youngster) for a “walk”. After much squabbling, they get directions to their destination from a shepherd. It’s a “drop off” point for Big Bro, who has told his Little Bro that he’s off to a new job in a new city. The parents go along with the big “fib” and try to comfort their younger son while worrying about the possible dissolution of their family.


There’s a reason that the marketers have put Sarlak on the film’s poster (solo at that). He’s that rarity of child actors, one who seems completely natural on-camera. Plus he’s like so many “little men” of so many families. His character tests the patience of everyone around him, exhausting his elders to the breaking point. But it’s so hard to stay mad at him as he’s so endearing and plain adorable (watch him dance to the local pop tunes on the radio). Oh, but there’s the stubbornness, like a “dog with a bone”, never letting up on the questions as though he’s a broken record (or sound file). He’s a “formidable opponent” and makes a good sparring “scene partner” for Majuni as the gruff, always somewhat annoyed papa. He teases and taunts as he doesn’t let his inner turmoil bubble to the surface. He is quite the counterpart to Panahiha as the matriarch with her “emotions on her sleeve”, also trying to hide her fears and comforting her two “fellas” and attempting to be the glue that must repair their fractured family. The most crumbling piece is her eldest who is an enigma as played by a very stoic Simiar. He’s trying to keep focused and not get caught up on the fable concocted for his tiny sibling. There’s a spiritual sword dangling above his head but struggles to keep it out of his thoughts.


Director/writer Panah Panahi deftly balances comic exchanges and deep interpersonal conflicts while following this quartet across the desert. Sure, we know folks get quarrelsome while traveling, but there’s much going on beneath the surface. That may be the most difficult aspect of this tale. Clues and hints are dropped, but we feel almost as baffled as “lil bro”, aching to know exactly why we’re there and what’s really the problem with “big bro”. But there are great “crumbs’ along the trail. An encounter with a cyclist provides some needed humor, while a camping sequence with papa and his lil’ boy has a cosmic, mystical vibe. But then we’re kept at arm’s length, observing scenes from far, far away (this makes the subtitling even more difficult to sort out), leading to an ending full of dangling plot threads. Thanks to the teaming of Sarlak and Mujani HIT THE ROAD chugs along but over its final miles, the film just meanders and runs out of gas.


2 Out of 4


HIT THE ROAD opens in select theatres everywhere and screens exclusively in the St. Louis area at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Cinemas

“Deadly Tropics” Season 2 – TV Series Review

(L-R) Gaelle (Beatrice de la Boulaye) and Melissa (Sonia Rolland) in “Deadly Tropics” on MHz Choice. Credit: ©Sylvie Castioni – Best Image. Courtesy of MHz Choice.

Season One of this light procedural from French TV, “Deadly Tropics” (“Tropiques Criminels”), was released for streaming and covered here last month, on Mar. 21. The “Deadly Tropics” Season One review and favorable recommendation, which remains useful for appreciating this second eight-episode season, can be found by scrolling through “Reviews” to that date.

Welcome back. Your indulgence is appreciated. Now that you’ve either been reminded or brought up to date, Season Two opens with Gaelle (Beatrice de la Boulaye) returning from a long self-imposed hiatus while nursing some emotional wounds. Melissa’s (Sonia Rolland) teenagers are still a pain in the butt; same, in a different way for their grumpy, misogynistic commissioner, who gripes far more than he contributes.

The first several episodes mix in a higher percentage of character comedy than we saw in Season One, particularly via an expanded role for Phil (Valentin Papoudof) the forensics expert. A new source of amusement/irritation comes from the unexpected arrival of Melissa’s first ex-hubby, Franck (Arie Elmaleh) – a charming layabout musician, supposedly searching for song-writing inspiration after a long dry spell. As I’d hoped before, the third team member, Aurelien (Julien Beramis), plays a larger part in each week’s outing, including a featured role in one.

As before, each of the eight episodes brings a self-contained crime to solve, with several subplot threads running through the season. The writers manage to shift the tenor of their scripts in opposite directions, broadening the appeal of the package. After the early increase in humorous sidebars, the latter episodes dive headlong into more global cultural topics than before, tackling abortion, gay and trans rights, computer hacking and social media frenzies. All the macro-scale issues mesh well with the crime(s) they revolve around, keeping them legitimately entertaining as procedurals, rather than polemics. The result is a season of shows that engage the social conscience without losing any of the entertainment value from Season One that made me eager for this continuation.

Most importantly, at least for some of us, there are no cliffhangers! The season ends with everyone in a satisfactory place if there’s not to be a Season Three, while leaving a few directions of interest for future exploration if there will. That’s the right way to wrap. Merci.

SEASON TWO of the French TV series “Deadly Tropics” (“Tropiques Criminels”), mostly in French with English subtitles, is available streaming on MHz Choice starting April 26.

RATING: 3 out of 4 stars

(L-R) Gaelle (Beatrice de la Boulaye), Melissa (Sonia Rolland) and Aurelien (Julien Beramis) in “Deadly Tropics” (“Tropiques Criminels”) on MHz Choice. Credit: ©Sylvie Castioni – Best Image. Courtesy of MHz Choice.

Win Passes To The St. Louis Advance Screening Of MARVEL STUDIOS’ DOCTOR STRANGE IN THE MULTIVERSE OF MADNESS

BROUGHT TO YOU BY… MARVEL STUDIOS’ DOCTOR STRANGE IN THE MULTIVERSE OF MADNESS. IN THEATERS EVERYWHERE MAY 6TH. TICKETS ON SALE NOW. 

DATE AND TIME:
Wednesday, May 4, 2022 at 7:00pm

The screening will be filled on a first come first served basis, so we encourage you to arrive early. Seats will not be guaranteed. 

Enter: http://gofobo.com/StrangeGeeks

No purchase necessary

In Marvel Studios’ “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness,” the MCU unlocks the Multiverse and pushes its boundaries further than ever before. Journey into the unknown with Doctor Strange, who, with the help of mystical allies both old and new, traverses the mind bending and dangerous alternate realities of the Multiverse to confront a mysterious new adversary.

“Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” stars Benedict Cumberbatch, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Elizabeth Olsen, Benedict Wong, Xochitl Gomez, with Michael Stuhlbarg, and Rachel McAdams. 

The film is directed by Sam Raimi, and Kevin Feige is the producer. Louis D’Esposito, Victoria Alonso, Eric Hauserman Carroll, Scott Derrickson and Jamie Christopher serve as executive producers. The screenplay was written by Michael Waldron. 

Websitehttps://www.marvel.com/movies/doctor-strange-in-the-multiverse-of-madness 

THE NORTHMAN – Review

Alexander Skarsgård stars as Amleth in director Robert Eggers’ Viking epic THE NORTHMAN, a Focus Features release. Credit: Aidan Monaghan / © 2022 Focus Features, LLC. Courtesy of Focus Features

For fans of both director Robert Eggers’ previous film, the historically-based thriller THE WITCH and the History channel’s TV series VIKINGS, Eggers has the perfect film. THE NORTHMAN is a Viking legend of revenge, a thriller packed with Eggers’ signature period-accurate details. While THE WITCH drew on tales of 17th century witch-hunt hysteria in New England, for thriller drama steeped in historically-accurate details, right down to the accents, THE NORTHMAN is a tale immersed the culture of 10th century Vikings, which also gets Eggers’ research-based treatment. THE NORTHMAN is based on the same Norse tale that Shakespeare used for Hamlet, but it departs significantly from the original legend of revenge, to blend in other Norse legends and aspects of Norse culture for another immersive thriller from Eggers.

THE NORTHMAN is about Vikings, so it is no surprise there will be blood, but there is much more in this tale of unrelenting vengeance. In the 10th century, Amleth (Alexander Skarsgard) is a Viking warrior who as the young prince of an island kingdom witnessed the murder of his father, King Aurvandil War-Raven (Ethan Hawke), by his father’s jealous brother Fjolnir (Claes Bang), then followed by the abduction of Amleth’s mother, Queen Gudrun (Nicole Kidman) by his uncle. A boy on the cusp of manhood, the frightened young Amleth (Oscar Novak) fled his homeland, lest he meet his father’s fate, while his uncle made himself king. Now grown, Amleth is part of a group of Vikings preying on Slavic peoples in the east, when he encounters a seeress (Bjork), who reminds the warrior about his boyhood oath: to avenge his father, rescue his mother, and kill his uncle. His homeland since has been were conquered by another Viking king and the uncle lives in exile in Iceland, with Amleth’s mother. Accompanied by a cunning Slavic woman named Olga (Anya Taylor-Joy), Amleth sets off to exact his long-delayed vengeance

The name Amleth easily changes to Hamlet by moving the letter at the end to the front. In fact, Hamlet follows the legend more closely than this tale, although both diverge from it, but writer/director Robert Eggers has more than the retelling of this one tale in mind.

This is Eggers’ third feature film, his follow up to THE LIGHTHOUSE, and this one reunited the director with both one of his stars from that film, Willem Dafoe (who here plays a wise fool/jester, who aids Amleth) and his star from THE WITCH, Anya Taylor-Joy. THE NORTHMAN shares Eggers’ devotion to well-researched historical realism with his other two films but is a bigger, wilder sort of tale. There is much more here about Viking culture, religion and family life, but vengeance and violence are aspects of Viking life and legends too. If you saw the “Vikings” series, some of this will be familiar but things are wilder in this film. THE NORTHMAN gives us a deadly soccer-like (or is it rugby?) game, Beserkers, and a final battle with naked warriors on a volcano.

But Eggers’ bigger goal with THE NORTHMAN is an adventure tale steeped in a more historically-accurate, immersive portrait of Viking culture than usual. was more interested in offering more than that tale. Eggers was after a more historically-accurate view of real Viking culture, beliefs and history, so his blended other legends and details into this script, which he co-wrote with Icelandic historian Sjon. Fans of the History channel series “Vikings” will recognize some elements of the story, but there is much more here, both in the history and the twisty story.

Since this film is inspired by an old Viking legend, THE NORTHMAN also fits in with a recent trend of re-telling old myths, along with the recent GREEN KNIGHT. Whether the people in Amleth’s story were real or not is lost to history, but it’s tale of revenge is a common theme in Viking tales.

The action and storytelling are highlighted with dramatic cinematography by Jarin Blaschke. Much of the story takes place in Iceland, and one could hardly ask for a more dramatic, breathtaking landscape. Eggers’ fills each scene with realistic details, meaning things are not prettied up, but his devotion to historical accuracy deepens scenes as well as adding the unexpected and fascinating. The tale is full of emotion and drama, and also unexpected curves, as Amleth’s path runs anything but straight. Elements of fantasy and Viking beliefs are blended in, including Valkyries and Valhalla, legendary swords and sorcery.

THE NORTHMAN is a wild, crazy, entertaining Viking legend-steeped hero’s tale, filled with violent fights and shocking plot twists, and featuring a sterling cast. If you love myths and history, and don’t object to tales of vengeance and bloody battles, Robert Eggers’ immersive Viking tale with an anthropology bent delivers the goods.

THE NORTHMAN opens in theaters on Friday, Apr. 22.

RATING: 3.5 out of 4 stars