THE RUNNING MAN (2025) – Review

Glen Powell stars in Paramount Pictures’ “THE RUNNING MAN.”

Seems only a couple of weeks ago we saw a remake of a early 1990s classic thriller, THE HAND THAT ROCKS THE CRADLE. Oh yes, it was just a couple. Well, with only a few weeks left, Hollywood is unleashing another one. Ah, but this is going right to the multiplex, not “straight to streaming” like CRADLE. Oh, and this one’s original “take” (aside from the literary source material) was a few years earlier, 1987 to be precise. Plus, this new flick has a link to last week’s box-office champ. Arnold Schwarzenegger had a busy 1987, going from PREDATOR to this week’s new remake’s “inspiration”. This 2025 “edition” is getting a lot of “heat” since it’s helmed by a cult movie icon and stars an “up-and-coming” screen star. But can he somehow move faster than Arnold as a “2.0” spin on THE RUNNING MAN?


In the not too distant future, the gap between the “haves” and “have-not” seems to have lengthened considerably, especially now that a few corporations have their fingers in everything from the media to law-enforcement. One of the “have-nots” is hard-working stiff and struggling family man Ben Richards (Glen Powell). When we meet him, he’s begging that his former boss rehire him and take him off “the blacklist” for the unforgivable “crime” of meeting with a union rep over safety issues at the factory. But the answer is no, despite Ben bringing along his flu-stricken infant, Cathy. Ben returns to the Co-Op City slums where he shares a tiny broken-down apartment with his wife Shelia (Jayme Lawson) who’s working double shifts at a “gentleman’s club”. The frustrated papa clicks on the tube to catch some “Freevee”. Watching promos for the network’s slate of game shows, Ben believes that the only way to earn some quick medical funds for his daughter is to audition on a show. Promising Shelia that he won’t try out for the most dangerous of these programs, “The Running Man”, Ben heads downtown to the network studios, The staff there notices his fiery temper and sends him right up to the swank office of their big boss, Dan Killian (Josh Brolin) who wants him for that most violent show. Dangling a possible billion dollar prize jackpot, Ben reluctantly agrees. He’ll be one of the new trio of contestants on “The Running Man”. But with a heavily armed squad of “hunters” on his trail, along with a citizenry eager for a bit of the “bounty”, can Ben stay alive for thirty days (no one has yet) and return to his loving family?

So, this truly makes it official. Powell is the “real deal” as a movie star, going from the frothy rom-com ANYONE BUT YOU to action lead here, with a slight detour in between into front the disaster-thriller TWISTERS. He brings us into Ben’s heart, willing to do anything to save his struggling family. But there’s no halo over his head, as Powell conveys that bubbling angry frustration that suddenly boils over. There’s also a touch of a charming rascal during the quieter comic interludes, before Powell displays his physical prowess in the many action set pieces. He’s also a great “team player” as Powell shares the screen with an impressive supporting ensemble. Brolin’s a focused business baddie who keeps his evil impulses cloaked, using his “goon army” led by a surly Lee Pace at the ready. Colman Domingo appears to be having a blast as the cynical, flamboyant game show MC “Bobby T”, doing a flashy “peacock strut”. As for the folks in “Ben’s corner”, William H. Macy is the surly, but soft-hearted tech wiz who is something of a father figure to him in a pivotal early scene. Much later, we meet the very intense Michael Cera as an “underground rebel” who balances “old school” methods (dropping pamphlets) with some creative weaponry (a “super-squirter”…really). And in the finale, a somewhat indifferent “have” played by Emilia Jones (CODA) has her mind and heart opened up by Ben. Also of mention are the excellence comic performances of Katy O’Brian and Martin Herlihy (SNL’s “Do Not Destroy”) as Jenni and Tim, Ben’s “less lucky” game show competitors.

That cult icon filmmaker at the helm is Edgar Wright (BABY DRIVER), who co-wrote this adaptation of the Stephen King (as his alias Richard Bachman) novel with Michael Bacall. Wright seems to be having fun as he plays in this big, flashy, sometimes grimy futuristic toy box. It’s a slightly satirical take on current pop culture extremes, though it may be relevant today after the 21st century rise of the reality completion shows, from “Survivor” to “Squid Game”. And without directly calling out the tech terror, Wright also shows the dangers of “AI” as footage of Ben’s battles and video screeds (he has to record himself every day and drop it in a “drone/mailbox”) is manipulated to serve the game’s “narrative”. Yes, some of the parody is almost “shooting fish in a barrel”, especially with the cutaways to a Kardashian-like program, but Wright builds on the media-skewing that ROBOCOP also did so well in 1987 (what was in the “water” that year). Many of the action sequences are inspired, as Ben rigs up found objects in an almost Rube Goldberg fashion to harm the “hunters”. But unfortunately it gets a tad tiresome as the story limps along to a finale that’s way too convoluted with (another action flick problem) far too many endings. Those fans of the original should get a kick out of this spiffy more modern take (though it’s hard to match iconic game-show host Richard Dawson back in the day), but the casual film fans may just feel worn out as hints of “test market tinkering” try to hinder the brisk marathon-pace of THE RUNNING MAN.

2.5 Out of 4

THE RUNNING MAN is now playing in theatres everywhere

IN YOUR DREAMS (2025) – Review

While we’re awaiting the big year’s-end animated sequel from the “Mouse House”, here’s quite a tasty CGI (mostly) appetizer you can stream at home. Fledgling Kuku Studios , with assists from Netflix and Sony Animation Studios (yes, the Spider-Verse folks) have produced quite a charming bit of lyrical whimsy that focuses on family dynamics via the imaginary world dotting the “dream-state”. Sure, it sometimes veers into nightmare territory, but more often several rousing fantasy adventures occurs IN YOUR DREAMS.

We’re first introduced to the story’s main character, a pre-teen girl named Stevie (voice of Jolie Hoang-Rappaport) during a pleasant daydream set in the not-too-distant past. She’s having lots of fun making a French toast breakfast in the kitchen, along with her lovably goofy musician Dad (Simu Liu). Soon after Mom (Cristin Milioti) joins them, the dream shifts into chaos with the sudden arrival of a baby brother. Stevie awakens in the present day as she is distracted while making breakfast by the antics of her now eight-year-old wannabe magician kid brother Elliot (Elias Janssen). Mom and Dad are nearby having a pretty serious discussion (the thin walls allow Stevie to get the gist). Mom is heading to Duluth (several hours away) to interview for a higher-paying job, since Dad’s music career has somewhat stalled. Could this prompt a big move. Unfortunately, Dad wants to remain in the old house, so could this lead to them breaking up? Fortunately, Stevie is given a task to take her mind off her worries. She’s going shopping with Elliott to find a book he can write a report on for his class. At a second-hand shop, Elliot innocently brings home a tome from the “off-limits” back room (that dreamy clerk did say it’s priceless). The dusty ole’ storybook is all about “the Sandman”. As if prompted by its subject, Stevie has a weird dream that Elliot’s bed behaves like a flying horse. Or is it a dream? Before she can figure things out, the duo are whisked to a land of living breakfast foods where Elliot is reunited with his thought-to-be-lost favorite childhood toy, a stuffed giraffe named Baloney Tony (Craig Robinson). Somehow he leads them to the land of the Sandman (Omid Djalili) who gives Stevie a chance to make all her dreams come true. Can this be the only way to keep her family together?

This film is truly an entrancing tale with splendid dollops of “eye candy’ that will dazzle animation lovers of all ages (there’s even a few seconds of 2D-style classic “line art”). Big congrats to Erik Benson and Alexander Woo on their feature film directing debut and on the heart-tugging, witty script they co-wrote with Stanley Moore. In that aspect they’ve crafted a most sensitive approach to a great fear of family fragmentation with empathy and maturity. But they haven’t been stingy with the laughs. Baloney Tony may be the big breakout comedy star due to his bouncy, “floppy” physicality and the infectious energy in the vocal work from Robinson. Ah, but those visuals…particularly in the dream settings, with the Sandman’s desert-like domain highlighted by a grainy castle inspired by M.C. Escher (stairs in every possible direction). I was also impressed by the land of breakfast treats, from their sprightly intro to the later “dark turn” with “zombie donuts”. Much of the film’s strength comes from the steady pacing, allowing us to drink in the themes without manic “in-your-face” extreme reactions. But when things kick into action mode, the movie soars, much like the amazing over-the-city and above the clouds flight of Elliot’s bucking-bronco-bed. Also worth savoring (hit that rewind) is the hilarious montage of nightmare trope (“naked in public”, “unprepared for a test”, “teeth falling out”, etc.). All the excellent animation acting (the natural gestures and bouncy double and triple-takes) are given extra “oomph” by the subtle music score by John Debney. Sure, it’s not a big epic blockbuster, but family audiences will savor the wonders and everyday warmth (lots of laughs and heart) of Stevie’s journey throughout IN YOUR DREAMS.

3 out of 4

IN YOUR DREAMS is now streaming exclusively on Netflix

Time To Return To Bikini Bottom! Check Out The Trailer For THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE: SEARCH FOR SQUAREPANTS

Check out the new trailer for THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE: SEARCH FOR SQUAREPANTS.

SpongeBob and his Bikini Bottom friends set sail in their biggest, all-new, can’t miss cinematic event ever…The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants. Desperate to be a big guy, SpongeBob sets out to prove his bravery to Mr. Krabs by following The Flying Dutchman – a mysterious swashbuckling ghost pirate – on a seafaring comedy-adventure that takes him to the deepest depths of the deep sea, where no Sponge has gone before.

Based on the Series “SpongeBob SquarePants” Created by Stephen Hillenburg, THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE: SEARCH FOR SQUAREPANTS opens in theaters December 19th.

https://www.spongebobmovie.com

The cast includes Tom Kenny, Clancy Brown, Rodger Bumpass, Bill Fagerbakke, Carolyn Lawrence, Mr. Lawrence, George Lopez, Isis “Ice Spice” Gaston, Arturo Castro, Sherry Cola with Regina Hall and Mark Hamill .

Directed by Derek Drymon, “THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE: SEARCH FOR SQUAREPANTS” is rated PG for rude humor, some thematic elements, and mild language.

The movie features ICE SPICE in her debut acting role and her new original track, “BIG GUY”!

THE NEW SINGLE WILL BE AVAILABLE EVERYWHERE TONIGHT. PRE-SAVE HERE!

Gary (Tom Kenny), Mr. Krabs (Clancy Brown) and Squidward (Rodger Bumpass) in The Spongebob Movie: Search For Squarepants from Paramount Animation and Nickelodeon.

Second Season Of Apple TV’s Monsterverse Series “Monarch: Legacy of Monsters” Sets Premiere On Friday, February 27, 2026

Today, Apple TV unveiled a monstrous preview of the highly anticipated second season of its Monsterverse series “Monarch: Legacy of Monsters,” starring Kurt Russell, Wyatt Russell, Anna Sawai, Kiersey Clemons, Ren Watabe, Mari Yamamoto, Joe Tippett and Anders Holm. The 10-episode second season of “Monarch: Legacy of Monsters” will premiere globally on Friday, February 27, 2026 with the first episode, followed by one episode every Friday until May 1, 2026.

Season one of “Monarch: Legacy of Monsters” tracks two siblings looking to uncover their family’s connection to the secretive organization known as Monarch. Clues lead them into the world of monsters and ultimately down the rabbit hole to Army officer Lee Shaw (played by Kurt Russell and Wyatt Russell). The first season takes place in the 1950s, as well as half a century later when Monarch is threatened by what Shaw knows.

Season two will pick up with the fate of Monarch — and the world — hanging in the balance. The dramatic saga reveals buried secrets that reunite our heroes (and villains) on Kong’s Skull Island, and a new, mysterious village where a mythical Titan rises from the sea. The ripple effects of the past make waves in the present day, blurring the bonds between family, friend and foe — all with the threat of a Titan event on the horizon.

Hailing from Legendary Television, “Monarch: Legacy of Monsters” is executive produced by Joby Harold and Tory Tunnell from Safehouse Pictures, alongside Chris Black, Jen Roskind, Matt Shakman and Lawrence Trilling, who also directs four episodes, as well as Andrew Colville, who writes two episodes and serves as executive producer. Black serves as showrunner on season two. Hiro Matsuoka and Takemasa Arita executive produce on behalf of Toho Co., Ltd., the owner of the Godzilla character. Toho licensed the rights to Legendary for “Monarch: Legacy of Monsters” as a natural byproduct of their long-term relationship with the film franchise. Apple TV has a multi-series deal with Legendary Entertainment, which includes a second season of “Monarch: Legacy of Monsters” and multiple spinoff series based on the franchise.

Catch up on the first season of “Monarch: Legacy of Monsters,” now streaming globally on Apple TV.

Legendary’s Monsterverse is an expansive cross-platform story universe centering around humanity’s battle to survive in a world facing a catastrophic new reality — the monsters of our myths and legends are real.

Beginning with the “Godzilla” film in 2014 and continuing through 2017’s “Kong: Skull Island,” 2019’s “Godzilla: King of the Monsters,” 2021’s “Godzilla vs. Kong,” and most recently, the record-breaking “Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire,” the franchises’ highest-grossing installment and the highest-grossing “Godzilla” film of all time, along with the eagerly anticipated sequel “Godzilla x Kong: Supernova,” which is set to release in 2027, the Monsterverse has accumulated over $2.5B at the global box office and expanded into the highly successful series “Monarch: Legacy of Monsters” for Apple TV. Including an interconnected world of video games, graphic novels, toys and live experiences, the Monsterverse represents epic entertainment on the largest possible scale.

Win Passes To The St. Louis Advance Screening Of WICKED: FOR GOOD

And now whatever way our stories end, I know you have rewritten mine by being my friend …

Last year’s global cinematic cultural sensation, which became the most successful Broadway film adaptation of all time, now reaches its epic, electrifying, emotional conclusion in WICKED: FOR GOOD.

THIS THANKSGIVING, UNIVERSAL PICTURES PROUDLY PRESENTS THE MAGICAL EVENT OF THE YEAR!

#WickedForGood only in theaters November 21.

https://www.wickedmovie.com

The St. Louis screening is at 7PM on Tuesday, November 18th at The Alamo Drafthouse – City Foundry.

ENTER HERE FOR PASSES: https://gofobo.com/igTwX93310

Please arrive EARLY as seating is not guaranteed.

Rated PG

Cynthia Erivo is Elphaba in WICKED FOR GOOD, directed by Jon M. Chu.

Directed once again by award-winning director Jon M. Chu and starring the spectacular returning cast, led by Academy Award® nominated superstars Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande, the final chapter of the untold story of the witches of Oz begins with Elphaba and Glinda estranged and living with the consequences of their choices.

Elphaba (Cynthia Erivo), now demonized as The Wicked Witch of the West, lives in exile, hidden within the Ozian forest while continuing her fight for the freedom of Oz’s silenced Animals and desperately trying to expose the truth she knows about The Wizard (Jeff Goldblum). 

Glinda, meanwhile, has become the glamorous symbol of Goodness for all of Oz, living at the palace in Emerald City and reveling in the perks of fame and popularity. Under the instruction of Madame Morrible (Oscar® winner Michelle Yeoh), Glinda is deployed to serve as an effervescent comfort to Oz, reassuring the masses that all is well under the rule of The Wizard. 

As Glinda’s stardom expands and she prepares to marry Prince Fiyero (Olivier award winner and Emmy and SAG nominee Jonathan Bailey) in a spectacular Ozian wedding, she is haunted by her separation from Elphaba. She attempts to broker a conciliation between Elphaba and The Wizard, but those efforts will fail, driving Elphaba and Glinda only further apart. The aftershocks will transform Boq (Tony nominee Ethan Slater) and Fiyero forever, and threaten the safety of Elphaba’s sister, Nessarose (Marissa Bode), when a girl from Kansas comes crashing into all their lives.

As an angry mob rises against the Wicked Witch, Glinda and Elphaba will need to come together one final time. With their singular friendship now the fulcrum of their futures, they will need to truly see each other, with honesty and empathy, if they are to change themselves, and all of Oz, for good.

Wicked: For Good also stars Emmy nominee Bowen Yang and Bronwyn James as Glinda’s fawning assistants, Pfannee and ShenShen and BAFTA and Grammy nominee Sharon D. Clarke (Caroline, or Change) as the voice of Elphaba’s childhood nanny, Dulcibear.

The filmis produced by returning Tony and Emmy winning powerhouse Marc Platt p.g.a. and by multiple Tony winner David Stone. The executive producers are Stephen Schwartz, David Nicksay, Jared LeBoff, Winnie Holzman and Dana Fox. The first film, Wicked, released in November 2024, earned 10 Academy Award® nominations, including Best Picture, and won the Oscars® for Costume Design and Production Design. To date, the film has grossed $750 million worldwide.

Wicked: For Good is based on the generation-defining musical stage play withmusic and lyrics by legendary Grammy and Oscar® winning composer and lyricist Stephen Schwartz and book by Winnie Holzman, from the bestselling novel by Gregory Maguire. The screenplay is by Winnie Holzman and Winnie Holzman & Dana Fox. The film score is by John Powell & Stephen Schwartz, with music and lyrics by Stephen Schwartz.

“Master Crimes: Season 2” – TV Series Review

In  “Master Crimes: Season 2”,  Professor Arbus and her posse of post-grads return for six more 45-minute episodes of solving murders via psychology and logic, usually differing from where the available clues would lead normal police forces, in this light French procedural. The main cast returning for Season 2 includes Muriel Robin as Professor Louise Arbus, Anne Le Nen as Barbara Delandre, Olivier Claverie as Oscar Rugasira, Victor Meutelet as Samuel Cythere, Astrid Roos as Mia Delaunay, Nordine Ganso as Boris Volodine, Thaïs Vauquières as Valentine Vallée, Michaël Cohen as Théodore Belin, Léon Durieux as Grégoire, and Nicolas Briançon as Pierre Delaunay.

https://www.wearemoviegeeks.com/2024/09/master-crimes-season-1-tv-series-review/

The crimes and twists are comparable in quality to the first season. The humor is somewhat more prevalent, as Arbus and Delandre have become friendly, and comfortable with each other’s skill sets. There are also more romantic and other types of intrigue among all the principals that unfold throughout the season. The most notable arc is for Valentine, the perky social media maven, who adds new dimensions, tinged with mystery, to her character. We also learn a lot more about Mia’s backstory and its residual complications.

As far as principal plots in the stand-alone episodes are concerned, they open with a nekked dead guy, posed like The Thinker in a gallery (no naughty bits shown on-camera). He’d been the model for a small art therapy class of fresh-faced suspects. The second begins with a stiff in a cave within a hippie-style, self-sufficient eco-community, replete with secrets beneath its Kumbaya façade. Then we go to a dead dude in a wolf mask, laid out in a pet cemetery. He was the founder of a successful dating site that matches couples, using their pets as the prime indicator of compatibility.

Then a rich young woman who embarrassed her family by running her own sex site is found dead in her horse’s stall of the family stable. Obsessive fan, or family squabble behind the crime? The next involves the preserved head of a woman, posed in a coffin that’s part of the décor in an Escape Room adventure. The last starts with a burned body in a burned circle in the guy’s back yard. It looks like some sort of ritual, which is confirmed by other boldies appearing in the same charred condition at the same time.

There’s no need to binge this one, since each is a new crime. In fact, it might be better not to. Arbus’ well-earned aura of wry superiority straddles the fence between amusing and smugness. Too much of that too close together might grate on some viewers. As before, all the crimes are solved, as are most of the subplots. No cliffhangers, though the finale dangles a new matter begging for a third season. I truly hope it shall come to pass.

“Master Crimes: Season 2”, in French with subtitles, streams on MHz Choice on November 11, 2025.

3 Out Of 4 Stars

PRISONER OF WAR – Review

I should start this review of PRISONER OF WAR by declaring myself to be a solid Scott Adkins fan. His martial arts movies – even the cheapies – reliably deliver on the action sequences that motivate our eyes to look at his screen time. And rightly so. He’s pursued training in multiple disciplines since he was 10, which was more than a decade before he began acting. His career has placed him mostly in hero roles (including a few action comedies), though he’s excelled as a villain, too. He played a brutal, racist GI in IP MAN 4: THE FINALE (2019); He was comically unrecognizable, yet surprisingly agile, as a crime boss in a massive fat suit opposite Keanu Reeves in JOHN WICK: CHAPTER 4 (2023). He’s probably best known for playing Yuri Boyka in three of the four flicks in the UNDISPUTED franchise – the ones earning higher ratings than the original, which was before moving to Russia and adding the Boyka character.

But my favorites are his one-man army gigs as the tough hero overcoming long odds. This film is not the ideal vehicle for showing his chopsocky chops. It’s a rather standard POW tale, set in WW II, as Scott is a downed RAF fighter pilot captured by the Japanese in 1942 and held in a Philippine jungle prison camp under the thumb of a sadistic officer. He and a handful of fellow captives must endure extreme hardships, tortures and executions before the inevitable escape. The only suspense is who else will join him, plus a little novelty in how they do it.

I say little suspense because the opening scene is in 1950, when Scott strolls into a karate dojo and beats up the whole school, looking for the former commandant who runs it. That sequence is reminiscent of times that stars like Donnie Yen and Bruce Lee did the same to prove Chinese Kung Fu is better than Karate, and the occupying Japanese are not their superiors. Scott’s agenda is more personal. Before that plays out further, they quickly cut back to his plane crashing in the jungle and fill in the gap from there on.

There’s nothing special about the performances or the plot, the latter of which is as generic as the title. The character types, conflicts and strategies are quite familiar to action fans. Scott’s fights, as expected, are the highlights, along with a twist at the end that upgrades the package.  If you’re looking for escapism about an escape, this one will serve quite adequately, albeit less than top of the line.

PRISONER OF WAR, mostly in English, debuts on Blu-ray & DVD November 11, Veterans Day, from Well Go USA.

2.5 stars out of 4

PREDATOR: BADLANDS – Review

In a flip from the recent Summer movie fare, let’s take a break from the serious “award-bait” cinema of the current Fall/Winter works and head to the multiplex for a big, loud, thrill-packed SF flick. And talk about “flips” this new release turns the usual movie marketing trend on its ear. While some films like COMING TO AMERICA and HAPPY GILMORE had sequels that went straight to streaming decades later, this newest franchise entry in a series that begin all the way back in 1987 is in theatres after the previous two went right to Hulu. Yes, from big screen to small (er) screen then back to the big screen (not that the last two weren’t worthy of a wide run at the multiplex). Oh, and it’s not a remake or rehash, but rather a fresh spin as we span the galaxy with PREDATOR: BADLANDS.


Here’s one bit of “freshness”: this story actually begins on the predator home planet of Yautja Prime where the “runt” (actually just around six Earth feet) of the “hunter clan”, Dek (Dimitrius Schuster-Koloamatangi) is being “put through his paces” by his tutor big brother Kwei (Mike Homik). The training lessons are cut short by a brutal family tragedy, which traps Dek on Kwei’s spacecraft cruiser. Its onboard navigator whisks him away to the savage, distant planet Genna. Dek had been preparing to travel there in order to “earn his cloak” by defeating a beast that had claimed scores of his kin, the towering killer colossus Kalisk. But first, Dek just has to survive the place, since a new unknown danger seems to lurk around every bend. When it appears that he’ll be a meal for the ferocious forest (the tree limbs are alive and hungry) Dek hears a voice calling to him. It is a human-looking woman who calls herself Thia (Elle Fanning). After he heeds her advice and survives the attack, Dek locates her and is surprised to see she’s missing her lower half. Thia explains that she’s a “synthetic” (much like a robot or android) who was damaged and separated from her “team” that was sent to capture the very same Kalisk for her “makers” at the Weyland-Yutani Corporation (yes, the same company creeps from the ALIEN series). She promises to help him if Dek can return her to her ship, where she hopes to connect with her “twin sister” Tessa. Ah, but it turns out that the Kalisk-damaged WY ship is able to repair Tessa and her army of male “synth” drones. Joined by a fiesty local beast dubbed “Bud”, can Dek and Thia survive against Tessa and her team after they are tasked by “mother” to not only capture the Kalisk for the company, but also “acquire” the lone Yautja predator and his weaponry?


What really keeps us invested in this tale filled with special effects wizardry and action-packed chaos are the two terrific performances at its center. Foremost is Schuster- Koloamatangi who informs us of Dek’s inner-turmoil and profound sadness through his body language, since most of his features are CGI augmented (mainly those “pincer” jaws and mouth, though much is also told with those wide yellow-tinged eyes). Sure, he’s got that warrior swagger down, but somehow this predator commands our empathy as he strives to prove himself and shatter his image as an “outcast”, while now being “the hunted”. Talk about your “family issues”. I’ll be interested in seeing this actor in more roles sans alien enhancements. Adding to his surprising humanity is the pairing with Fanning who almost “steals the show” as the chatty and very,very emotional “artificial” (her eyes state “property of WY Co.”). Thia is very funny, as many of her exchanges with Dek simply drip with snark, be she’s much more than a “sassy bot”. Fanning shows us her compassion for the “runt”, while not hiding her own sadness as she yearns to be with her sister. Let’s hope the fantasy settings don’t distract from Ms. Fanning’s talents, which should garner her many supporting actor nominations.

The guiding force behind this excellent “reboot” trilogy (along with the Hulu exclusives PREY and PREDATOR: KILLER OF KILLERS) is director Dan Trachtenberg, who worked with Patrick Aison on the screenplay based on the original film script from Jim and John Thomas. Despite Fox Studios attempts to revive the franchise in 2010 and 2018, the series seemed to be defunct, even after two dust-ups with the ALIEN, he has proved to be this franchise’s Frankenstein, sparking new interest from older fans while capturing so many newcomers. Every aspect of the production is top-of-the-line, from the look of the different planets (Genna seems like Australia on steroids) to the creative weaponry (love the glowing red tether lines) to the immersive booming audio. (really try to see it on a big screen with a superior sound). Who would think that, since its introduction in the original, we’d be rooting for an offspring of the monster trying to whittle down “Ahhnold” and his merry band of mercenaries in the jungle. It’s a “thrill-ride” that doesn’t forget to engage us with the heroes and villains. Plus, I really enjoyed the “borrowing” from the other Fox franchise, adding to their mythos. Here’s hoping that Trachtenberg and company can continue guiding the series in theatres (though his last two are worthy of a Hulu “trial”) after basking in the edge-of-your-seat triumph that is PREDATOR: BADLANDS.

3.5 Out of 4

PREDATOR: BADLANDS is now playing in theatres everywhere

DIE MY LOVE – Review

Just as the end of the year family holiday preparations are beginning, moviegoers are getting another flick about the dark side of motherhood (something to think about as you await her never-dry turkey). Think of these as the flip-side to those Hallmark cable movie staples. So, last year we saw Amy Adams howling at the moon as NIGHT BITCH. And just a few weeks ago, I endured (that’s right, though many of my fellow critics are embracing it) Rose Byrne careening close to the edge in IF I HAD LEGS I’D KICK YOU. Now for the first full weekend of November, an Oscar-winning actress who’s been a movie MIA for the last couple of years is returning in a flick with a mixed-message title (or is it somewhat passive-aggressive) title, DIE MY LOVE (I wonder if they toyed with a title riff on the Everly Brothers classic and called it “Dye, Dye, Love”).

After several seconds of a black screen with ambient sounds, the story begins as longtime couple Grace (Jennifer Lawrence) and Jackson (Robert Pattinson) enter what will be their new home. Actually he’s been there before, since it was owned by his late uncle, but she’s a tad “under-whelmed” by the rickety, weather-beaten shack in the middle of rural Montana. Nonetheless, they soon turn it into their family home with the arrival of a baby boy. Ah, but we then get a flashback as pregnant Grace is hosting a big holiday dinner for her in-law, including Jackson’s doting mother Pam (Sissy Spacek) and his addled papa Harry (Nick Nolte), who somehow connects with Grace. The story springs ahead as Jackson begins taking jobs that keep him away from her and the baby . This sends Grace down a road of despair and delusion. She’s certain Jackson’s cheating on her, since their passion has cooled. Is that why Grace likes to crawl around like a cat in the tall grass? Or is it the reason she joins Pam on her midnight sleepwalking strolls? And is the mysterious man on a motorcycle, Karl (LaKeith Stanfield) real or a “player” in her fevered fantasy dream state? Can Jackson get his own act together to guide Grace away from the abyss of possible madness?

Though the two leads get fairly equal billing in all the marketing, this film serves as a reminder that Ms. Lawrence is one of our most compelling and adventurous actresses. Once again, she’s “without a net” as the complex Grace who elects our sympathy just before showing “her claws” (listen to how she verbally assaults that poor cashier). What a handful, though Lawrence conveys her deep almost fanatical devotion to her child (mama Grizzly, indeed), while seeming to endanger herself frequently (always eyeing Pam’s rifle). Her Grace is sad and scary. Let’s hope it’s not another two years until Lawrence “graces” the big screen. Thankfully, she has chemistry to spare with Pattinson, who brings more humanity to Jackson than’s there in the script. He’s not as complicated as Grace, but Pattinson draws us in to see the shift from the beer-swilling “good ole’ boy” to the husband struggling to understand his spouse. Happily, these current film stars share a few scenes with a couple of veteran actors who made their “mark” nearly fifty years ago. Spacek is a caring and giving “Earth mother”, who is one of the few elders who notices something is “off” with Grace and embraces her as a way of destroying the “demons”. But she’s also “fragile” after the loss of her own love, played by the raspy, often menacing Mr. Nolte. Harry isn’t around for the story’s big catastrophic turns, but Nolte projects a pride that shines through even as he struggles to make it past his mental “fog”, which is parted by the concern and compassion of Grace. He’s not given much dialogue, but Stanfield says so much with his dark, brooding eyes, which is like gasoline to the still smouldering embers of passion in Grace’s libido until he gets tangled in her mania.

This exceptional cast is guided by director/co-screenwriter (joining Alice Birch and Edna Walsh in adapting the book by Ariana Harwicz) Lynne Ramsay, whose 2011 horror/drama WE NEED TO TALK ABOUT KEVIN is far too relevant. She keeps the characters operating in an almost dream-like state, perhaps to reflect Grace’s slowly cracking psyche. This puts us at a distance as the timeline is shifted haphazardly (that family flashback doesn’t fir with the first act). I was reminded of another “artsy” drama in which Lawrence was a tortured (in all ways) lead, the baffling MOTHER. Like that “experiment” we’re subjected to a near constant feeling of danger as Grace makes bizarre choices that often leave her naked and bloody. In that way, Jackson is seemingly an “after thought”, showing up to try to “clean up the mess”. And it’s so messy, sometimes scuttling any incident into the very real challenges of postpartum depression (Grace juggles that with her cluttered “head space”). This makes for frustration for the folks around the couple along with us. And, once again, good intentions are part of the road to Hell and Hellish cinema. Even though Lawrence is still a most watchable talent, her bravado can’t work its magic on DIE MY LOVE.

2 Out of 4

DIE MY LOVE is now playing in select theatres

Win Passes To The St. Louis Advance Screening Of ETERNITY

In an afterlife where souls have one week to decide where to spend eternity, Joan is faced with the impossible choice between the man she spent her life with and her first love, who died young and has waited decades for her to arrive.

Starring Miles Teller, Elizabeth Olsen and Callum Turner, ETERNITY opens on November 26th.

The St. Louis screening is at 7PM on Wednesday, November 12 at Marcus Ronnies 20.

ENTER HERE FOR PASSES: https://forms.gle/bLcqc3uTqYDR2TRJ7

Please arrive early as seating is not guaranteed.

Rated PG-13.