CODA – Review

Emilia Jones as Ruby in “CODA,” premiering globally on Apple TV+ on August 13, 2021. Photo courtesy of Apple TV+

CODA is writer/director Sian Heder’s charming coming of age comedy/drama about the daughter of a family of scrappy, independent fishermen, who all happen to be deaf except her. CODA means “child of deaf adults” but it also has a musical meaning, making it the perfect title for a film about a teen with a passion for singing, something her family neither hears nor comprehends.

With deaf actors in the roles of the girl’s brother and parents, including Oscar-winner Marlee Matlin as her feisty mother, and wonderful performances all around, writer/director Sian Heder’s often-funny, warm tale of a family, different from the ordinary and yet not, is sure to bring smiles and delight audiences.

CODA has been praised by deaf communities both for casting deaf actors in the roles and for its realistic depiction of a deaf family. The film won the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance, along with other awards, and is a true crowd-pleaser that also impresses with its authenticity. Shot on location in Gloucester, Massachusetts, it is an American remake of the 2014 French film LA FAMILLE BÉLIER with a strong, and surprisingly international, cast.

CODA certainly does feel authentic, but the film’s appeal goes beyond that, with its focus on believable family dynamics and distinctive personalities, where the parents’ deafness is just a part of the picture. CODA is, at its heart, a coming-of-age story more than anything, with a delightful performance by English actress Emilia Jones as a girl who loves her quirky family but has ambitions that are just different from family tradition.

Ruby Rossi (Emilia Jones) is a 17-year-old living in the coastal Massachusetts town of Gloucester, where she is the only hearing member of her fishing family. Every morning before school, Ruby joins her father Frank (Troy Kotsur) and older brother Leo (Daniel Durant) on their fishing boat. Having Ruby on the boat allows them to monitor the radio for alerts and communicate with hearing fisherman and those who buy the catch on the dock when they return. At home, her mother (Marlee Matlin) does the bookkeeping for the family business. At school, Ruby faces some bullying but having best friend Gertie (Canadian actress Amy Forsyth) to count on helps.

As the film works through the family dynamics, it also explores Ruby’s budding interest in singing when she impulsively signs up for choir. The choir teacher Bernardo Villalobos (Mexican actor/comedian Eugenio Derbez), also know as Mr. V, is a quirky character but despite Ruby’s shyness, he recognizes her talent. Mr. V suggests she apply to a music college in Boston, even offering to coach her for the audition. Suiting the interests of his students in this fishing village, he picks a classic pop ballad to prepare for Ruby’s audition. For the upcoming school concert, the teacher also pairs her with Miles (Irish actor/musician Ferdia Walsh-Peelo), a boy Ruby is interested in.

Ultimately, a crisis in the family business arises and Ruby is faced with a choice between her own ambitions and her family.

Writer/director Sian Heder hails from Massachusetts, although not from Gloucester, so she understands the strong family fishing tradition in this part of New England. The Rossi family has done this for generations, as dad Frank tells us, and they are counting on Ruby to help continue the family business, and even more so as the only hearing one in the family. That the rest of her family can’t hear the singing Ruby loves doing, just makes it all the more difficult for them to understand her passion.

In many ways, it is just like any family business, where a child develops an interest far outside its expectations and traditions. But Ruby’s ability to hear is a particularly useful skill for her deaf family, enabling them to keep more of their aloofness from the hearing community around them than they might otherwise. Her parents’ dependence on Ruby to do these things puts pressure on her and frustrates their son Leo, who reads lips, and wants to do more to help them deal with the hearing community the surrounds them.

While some elements of the story are familiar, the script handles them very well. But the real appeal of the film is its characters and the performances. All the actors are terrific, especially Emilia Jones as Ruby, who is a complete charmer, and completely believable, beaming with energy and high spirits, and bouncing back from set-backs with determination, despite her shyness and normal teen self-doubts. She is perfect in the ensemble scenes with the family, and both cute and self-possessed in the ones with love-interest Ferdia Walsh-Peelo as Miles.

The scenes with the family are delightful, as they joke and tease. The use of sign language and Ruby’s combination of signing and speaking is handled so well that we never are confused about what is going on, and the snappy banter and warm quirky family scenes move smoothly at a brisk but clear pace.

By casting deaf actors, the film goes a long way towards getting things right from the start. As her parents, Marlee Matlin and Troy Kotsur are perfectly cast as a couple, and completely delightful, funny and loving and with a nice together-we-can -do-anything feeling. As Ruby’s older brother, Daniel Durant is excellent as well, presenting his struggle to assert himself as an asset to the family and his own independence, while engaging in playful sibling teasing with his sister.

Some of the funniest, most appealing scenes are with this lively family. Humor dominates the family scenes, along with a sassy, thumbing-their-noses-at-the-world independence. The family scenes are the film’s highlights, and the ensemble acting is wonderful. Marlee Matlin, unsurprisingly, shines as the still-sexy mom and Troy is appealing as Ruby’s rebellious but loving dad. The sibling squabbling between Ruby and Leo is spot on as well.

Unlike some deaf families, the Rossis do not live in a community of deaf people but of hearing ones, and see their deaf friends infrequently. The family lives apart from the rest of the community, in an appealing kind of close-knit, defiant independence. Dad comes from a long line of New England fishermen, mom was a model in her youth, and despite years of marriage, they can’t keep their hands off each other. Although their older child Leo, played well by Daniel Durant, is also deaf, he reads lips and feels much more comfortable interacting with the hearing community than his parents do. He would like to have a more active role in helping them but they continually turn to their hearing daughter for that role, much to Leo’s frustration.

As the film works through the family dynamics, it also explores Ruby’s growing ambitions and passion for singing, and her budding romantic interest in Miles.

Ruby’s quirky music teacher Mr. V, provides a big dose of humor. Mr. V is a bit of a character as well as an immigrant, in a town that seems to have few of them, and Eugenio Derbez creates one of the film’s funniest, most memorable characters who as much as outsider as Ruby feels she is in her small town. His outsider status and his skill as a teacher help her see beyond the fishing boat and her life with her loving but inward-looking family.

There are a lot of parallels to the immigrant experience to Ruby’s “outsider” family in CODA. One can see echos of stories of second-generation children, who have a foot in both worlds, the “new” and the “old” with Ruby, among them that she says that when she started school, kids teased her for her “deaf accent,” referring to the distinctive speech style of deaf people who are taught to speak, a nice detail which reveals that her loving parents did their best for their hearing daughter by speaking to her.

Subtle insights like that are woven smoothly into Heder’s well-written script. Heder’s script is well-crafted, effective, warm and entertaining, the direction is seamless and skillful, and the characters are memorable, particularly Ruby and her charmingly quirky family.

CODA’s characters are so appealing in their feisty quirkiness and family warmth, that it is the kind of film you will want to revisit. The story is both universal and unique to these characters, and that is a combination that is hard to beat.

CODA, the winner of the 2022 Oscars for Best Picture and Best Adapted Screenplay and with Troy Kotsur winning for Best Supporting Actor, re-opens Friday, April 1, at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Cinema and is streaming on Apple TV+.

RATING: 4 out of 4 stars

YOU WON’T BE ALONE – Review

Noomi Rapace stars as “Bosilka” in director Goran Stolevski’s YOU WON’T BE ALONE, a Focus Features release. Photo credit: Branko Starcevic / Focus Features

With a story built around witches, the East European-set YOU WON’T BE ALONE certainly starts out like a horror film set in a medieval-ish rural Eastern European world. The location brings to mind a host of classic horror films and legends, and the time period setting and other elements are reminiscent of 2015’s THE WITCH. But the film soon turns in a somewhat different direction, towards fairy-tale. The Brothers Grimm variety, not Disney.

If you’ll remember, those original tales are often dark and even horror-like but also have elements of kindness and hope along with the terror and gruesomeness, in their good versus evil struggles. The fairy tale/folk tale of YOU WON’T BE ALONE leans more into the human side of the story of its villain and its young heroine, and also has a feminist viewpoint, making this tale much more layered and complex. There is a reason behind the older witch’s unquenchable anger, which we learn mid-way through, but the young witch is not always good or kind either, like heroes and heroines in fairy tales sometimes can be.

The tale opens in a rural, medieval-ish Macedonia (although it is supposedly the 19th century), with a cat walking across a grass field. As the cat walks off screen, we hear a terrible cry, but then the cat walks back on screen. We follow the cat to a village, where a woman tending her baby, leaves briefly to shoo away mischievous playing neighboring children. Returning inside her home, she finds a strange, disfigured woman standing over her baby.

The woman is covered in scars from burns (in an impressive feat of make-up) yet she has a powerful presence about her. It is clear the mother recognizes her, and the terrified woman immediately begins to beg for the life of her child, telling the burnt woman (Anamaria Marinca, 4 MONTHS, 3 WEEKS AND 2 DAYS) how sorry she is about what happened to her. Specifics are not spoken but we know immediately the strange woman was burned as a witch. The mother starts bargaining, telling the witch that “babies are such a bother” and saying she can raise her until she is sixteen and then bring her to the witch. “So you won’t be alone in your old age,” the desperate mother says. A bargain of sorts is stuck with the witch, but it is not what the mother hopes for, and the baby is both marked by the witch and struck mute.

The mother hides her child in a cave, where the girl grows up alone except for visits by her fearful mother. Despite the mother’s efforts, the witch still comes for her daughter Nevena (Sara Klimoska) when she turns 16, takes her away, and turns her into a witch like herself.

That has a familiar ring to it, doesn’t it? While there are elements of classic fairy-tales here, as well as mythology and folk tales, this engrossing tale also is full of twists we don’t see coming and deeper human meaning. The film’s Macedonian-Australian director/writer Goran Stolevski was inspired by the Macedonian folk tales he grew up with for his script, which also has something timeless to say. The film is an Australian production but it is in Macedonian with subtitles and was shot in Serbia. YOU WON’T BE ALONE is Goran Stolevski’s first feature film, and it is an impressive debut.

The witch that Anamaria Marinca plays with impressive power is known as Old Maid Maria and she is actually a mythical creature called a Wolf-Eateress, a combination witch, vampire, werewolf and skin-walker/zombie that stalks the countryside drinking the blood of peasants. Far from a mindless monster, Maria is a cunning, and angry, creature, more human than we expect, with a real, understandable reason for her rage. The witch is able to take the form of any person or animal but it must die for her to assume its form, leaving a bloody smear behind.

There are moments of blood and violence that the more-squeamish should be warned about but this film is also not typical horror film fare. This film is not non-stop horror action, and the scary or bloody moments are interspersed with long contemplative moments, as the young woman promised to the witch struggles to understand the world and herself. The story is steeped in elements of fairy-tale and folk tale but it all unfolds at a more contemplative pace that brings Terrence Malick’s films to mind, as do the scenes of fields of waving wheat and the stream-of-conscious voice-over by the mute main character. However, those dreamy sequences are punctuated by confrontations, dramatic twists and sometime bloody violence. Both Maria’s story and Nevena’s experiences with the rural folk, as the young witch adopts various people’s lives, have a feminist bent, focusing on the historic treatment of women, patriarchy, and witch-burning hysteria. It is a film that is hard to categorize but one that draws you in.

Shot on location in rural Serbia, the photography by cinematographer Matthew Chuang is lush and grounded in the natural, and the film’s contemplative tone is supported by a score that includes Macedonian folk tunes, gentle classical, and a couple of pieces by composer Arvo Part.

Anamaria Marinca’s Old Maid Maria is a cunning, angry being who wants to see everyone suffer, including her young charge. But she despairs of Sara Klimoska’s soft-hearted young Nevena, and the older witch is frustrated in her attempts to mold the gentle teen into a cold-hearted witch like herself. There is always tension and foreboding present in this film, and a longing by the girl, for a childhood and human life she missed out on, fueling a curiosity about the ordinary farm folk around her.

The young witch watches the older witch, her mentor/adopted mother, as she takes various forms and feeds on the villagers from time to time. When the young witch accidentally kills a young farm woman, Bosilka (Noomi Rapace, GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATOO), the young witch adopts her identity, by using what she has learned from the Wolf-Eateress, as a way to escape.

Nevena has an air of innocence as we see her move through various forms, with several actors, including Noomi Rapace, Carloto Cotta, Anastasija Karanovich and Alice Englert, playing the main character. In these forms, she tries out various roles in the human rural society, with indirect commentary on the structure of that society. Often the young witch’s lack of experience with normal human life leads to trouble and forces her to move on, but the changes are also her attempts to find her place in the world, to have the experience she needs to understand human life.

Details on the plot are likely to be spoilers but there are plenty of twists, just at a slower place than would be in a typical horror movie. The voice-over is philosophical more than something providing exposition for the story, which largely is told visually. That can make the film challenging at times, but director Goren Stolevski trusts the audience to look closely, think and figure things out, relying on the strong cast to convey any needed information.

Fortunately, the acting is consistently strong from all the cast, which adds greatly to a story that is more often told through what we see than what we hear.

The hard-to-categorize YOU WON’T BE ALONE isn’t for every audience, but for those approaching it with an opening mind, it has rewards as it makes its way through its deeply human folk tale.

YOU WON’T BE ALONE, in Macedonian with English subtitles, opens Friday, April 1, at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Cinema.

RATING: 3.5 out of 4 stars

BETTER NATE THAN EVER – Review

Rueby Wood as Nate in 20th Century Studios’ BETTER NATE THAN EVER, exclusively on Disney+. Photo by David Lee. © 2022 Disney Enterprises, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Much like Don Lockwood’s “Broadway Melody” hero in SINGIN’ IN THE RAIN, this title kid’s “gotta’ dance”. And sing. And, well, just be on the stage. Any stage, but one on the “great white way”…someday. Yes, this is another tale of a youngster following his “dream” while trying to survive small-town life. Plus he’s trying to keep that dream alive, protecting it from being crushed by those that just don’t “get it”. In this original Disney feature film, this dreamer’s determined to prove he’s got the “chops” because when his big breaks looms, everyone will realize that it’s BETTER NATE THAN EVER. And he’s not gonna be late.


So when we meet Nate (Rueby Wood) early on a school day morning, he’s prepping for the big cast announcement for his middle school’s big stage musical. Of course, his room is adorned with posters of hit Broadway shows past and present. His older brother Anthony (Joshua Bassett) is more concerned about his football team (and girls) while their parents Sherrie (Michelle Federer) and Rex (Norbert Leo Butz) really try to be supportive of both. Rushing to the school office bulletin board, Nate finds out that he has been cast…as a tree. Not “Honest” Abe (if there can be a Hamilton musical, then..). At least he can share his heartbreak with BFF and fellow “theatre geek” Libby (Aria Brooks). Oh, but she knows something that will lift his spirits. It seems that there will be open auditions this weekend for a stage musical of the film LILO & STITCH…in NYC. Oh, but Nate’s folks are going on a weekend getaway leaving Anthony in charge. Could he get past big bro and board an early bus with Libby to the Big Apple? Perhaps they might be able to pull off the “stay over switcheroo” (“I’m staying at Libby’s” “I’m staying at Nate’s”). And they can grab the early evening bus back home after the try-outs. Of course, they won’t run into Nate’s aunt Heidi (Lisa Kudrow), also an aspiring actress now estranged from sister Sherrie. But can they bluff their way past the show’s talent staff who require a parent or guardian to sign the releases (and hopefully a contract)? Really, can these obstacles possibly block the goals of these two “starry-eyed” kids?

With an energy that could light up all of 42nd street, Wood is a most likable lead. His Nate is warm, endearing, but not overbearingly cloy though he does switch over to Disney cable channel emoting a few times. Oh, and he’s a pretty smooth crooner, matched by his often frenetic footwork. Brooks as Libby is the more calming influence, helping Nate get his feet back on the pavement as he reaches for those stars. Yes, she’s a bit sassy (the “tone” gag is overused) but Libby’s good heart shines through. Federer, Bassett, and real Broadway vet Butz make a solid family support unit. But the movie’s true secret weapon, its MVP is the dependable Kudrow who really gets to exercise her sublime comic timing while exposing her nurturing side as the adult who still hangs on to a bit of the dream that propels her nephew, though her hopes are bruised and battered. Boy, were we spoiled when we got to see this gifted pro on TV every week.

Making his feature film directing debut, Tim Federle (who wrote the screenplay adaptation of his own book) keeps the pace moving, propelling us through Nate’s bouncy glittery world. It really plays like a modern fable with NYC a dreamland with only a few sourpusses (they’ll smile when the singing starts). Here’s hoping families will watch this together so there can be discussions about the safety of secret bus trips (you won’t be a social media sensation). Federle does get in a few good digs at “stage parents and kids” behavior while showing the turmoil of cattle calls. But in the wake of other stage-translated Disney flicks would the main character have a full head helmet (more like a cowl/cap and a bit of makeup so the human face shows)? Despite the story’s often implausible twists and coincidences (look who’s at the auditions down the hall), this is a pleasant bouncy bit of fluff buoyed by the terrific Kudrow who truly helps BETTER NATE THAN EVER earn some kudos.

2.5 Out of 4

BETTER NATE THAN EVER begins streaming on Disney+ this Friday, April 1, 2022

THE CONTRACTOR (2022) – Review

Just a few weeks after the release of the armed forces “dramedy” DOG, Hollywood calls upon another of its “hunkiest” action stars/leading men to don the “camo” and “gear up”. Now there’s no specially trained canines to chase after in this film, but like Channing Tatum’s Briggs, this movie’s focus wants desperately to get “back in” and rejoin his “band of brothers” in the current “hot spot”. If only he was given a road trip/mission like Briggs. That’s the main reason his “title” changes. He’s not “the soldier”, but rather THE CONTRACTOR.


That “warrior” is named James (Chris Pine), who is still considered “wounded”. We first see him in his early morning routine in order to get his body back into fighting shape after taking a bullet to his right knee in his last tour of duty. But the jogging and the weightlifting “reps’ at his cabin “sanctuary” deep in the woods aren’t enough, prompting a few “injection enhancements. Unfortunately, the “docs” at the local military camp are able to detect his “juicing” and Jim is officially discharged from Special Forces. So how will he be able to keep the home he shares with nursing student/wife Brianne (Gillian Jacobs) and their pre-teen son Jack (Sander Thomas)? As the “past due” notices pile up and debt collectors fill their answering machine, James is enticed by a visit with his old “grunt buddy” Mike (Ben Foster). Seems that Mike has been earning loads of cash by offering his “special skills” as a military contractor, who “slips in under the radar”. He puts James in contact with the director of the contracting company, another vet named Rusty (Keifer Sutherland), who offers a nice “gig”. Despite Brianne’s pleading, James gets his gear in working order and joins Mike in an undercover assignment in Berlin. They’ve got to ‘scoop up” a radical scientist that’s creating biological weapons. And though the plan is simple, several things go “sideways’ as James is separated from the team and becomes a “loose end” to be “severed”, As his wound acts up can James keep himself alive and somehow make it back to the states?


Taking a break from the twin “tentpole” franchises that are WONDER WOMAN and STAR TREK, Pine proves that he can get “down and dirty” as a “working Joe”/action hero carrying (he may be in every scene) this grim “grabbed from the headline” dramatic thriller. James is no “super-soldier” as he winces in pain pushing his battered body in the opening “getting back in shape” sequence. But that’s merely a prelude to the agony to come. First up is humiliation and frustration as his military “home” pushes him aside adding extra tension to his actual home as Pine shows us the worry closing in on James as forces “pick him clean”, making him to grasp at any lifeline, no matter how shady. And when the “payday” goes awry PIne shows us how James tries to ignore his old and new wounds while holding on to his moral code which further complicates his survival. As usual Foster is solid as the old cohort Mike who may not be completely open about their new “C.O.” and recruiters. Sutherland slathers on the “fatherly charm” and “gung ho” encouragement as he binds James with a promise of quick moola with little risk. Jacobs is a welcome addition to the story, but her Brianne is later regulated to the cliched “spouse on the phone” when the story shifts into “chase and elude mode”. Though introduced close to the big finale, Eddie Marsan is a welcome supporting player as the mysterious Virgil who comes to the aid of the battered James.

The script from J.P. Davis switches gears from domestic drama to globetrotting thriller, a detour carefully executed by director Tarik Saleh, who knows when to concentrate on character and when to “amp up” the tension and plunge us, alongside James, into the “danger zone”. He makes excellent use of the overseas locales as James and Mike stalk their “target”, then slowly lets us in on the “truth”. The “hand-to-hand” throwdowns are staged and shot effectively, while the “fire fights’ are filled with moments of chaos and calamity. Unfortunately, the real villains and motivations fall “into place” too cleanly and the last act denouncements and showdowns seem too rushed, letting the story seem too familiar to any number of military action “potboilers”. The first-rate cast can’t quite elevate the “plot beats” making THE CONTRACTOR an intermittingly engaging but quickly forgettable modern-day “shoot em up”.

2 Out of 4

THE CONTRACTOR opens in select theatres and is available as a video-on-demand beginning on Friday, April 1, 2022

MORBIUS – Review

Already, it’s been over three months, so who’s ready to return to the Marvel Universe via your nearby multiplex? Now, before the littlest hands “rise up”, be forewarned that this is the “dark, spooky” corner of Marvel. Oh, and technically it’s not the official MCU, but rather the “Sony-verse’ as this is labeled “in association with Marvel”, much as was the Oscar-winning SPIDER-VERSE animated epic and the twin VENOM flicks. But it does tie into our favorite “wall-crawler” as did the former films. To coincide with Spidey’s sixtieth (must be something extra in that radioactive “bite”). we’re getting another villain “spin-off” (insert web-spinning puns). Now, the oozing symbiote was from the 1980s and the “baddie quintet” from December’s blockbuster are all from the 1960s. So what about those swingin’ sparkly 70s? To be precise, 1971 saw a lot of change in the “funny books’ as the Comic Code Authority (a self-regulating group) finally let the monsters rise again. Naturally, Marvel tested the waters by introducing one to face the “amazing y’know”. And now he makes his big-screen debut (after a two-year pandemic delay). So put on your scarves “true believers”, here comes the very thirty vampire known as MORBIUS. As a count named Floyd would say, “ooooo, scary keeds’!”.

After a brief present-day prologue in Costa Rica, we’re whisked back twenty-five years to a childrens’ hospital special unit in Greece where we meet pre-teen Michael Morbius. He’s suffering from a rare blood malady, leaving him very weak and under the care of the kind Dr. Nikols (Jared Harris). We also meet Michael’s newest friend and neighbor (he’s got the bed next to him), Lucian, whom he dubs Milo (after the last occupant of the space). Michael’s already a science whiz, which leads him a couple of decades later to invent life-saving artificial blood. And now Dr. Morbius (Jared Leto) is the “top dog” at the Horizon medical center alongside friend (maybe more) Dr. Bancroft (Adria Arjona). But while Dr. M tends to the kids there, he’s got another project brewing, namely a cure for his own weakened condition. Now because some of his ideas are considered radical, Horizon won’t “foot the bill”, so Michael must turn to Milo (Matt Smith), who’s now a wealthy businessman (though the biz is more than a bit “shady”) and is still tended by Nikols. He really wants that healing “fix” so he hires a cargo ship out of Panama manned by local mercenaries to take Morbius and Bancroft to Central America. Onboard, the two perfect a “serum” which has disastrous side effects for Dr. M. After one of the crew knocks out Bancroft, Dr. M transforms into a powerful bat-like blood-drinking “demon”. When the ship drifts to the coast of Long Island with its crew drained of blood and Bancroft unconscious, two FBI agents, Stroud (Tyrese Gibson) and Rodriguez (Al Madrigal) investigate while searching for the missing Mobius. Meanwhile, he’s roaming the streets of NYC, secretly entering the Horizon lab, hoping to make a cure to his botched “cure” and trying to keep his “inner beast” caged by consuming his own artificial blood supply. But his body seems to crave the “real deal”. Will he turn the Big Apple into his own blood bank? And what about Milo’s mania for the cure? Could this lead to a showdown between childhood pals?

Leto brings some much-needed humanity to his role as one of Marvel’s early anti-heroes (many forget that Hawkeye and the Black Widow originally teamed up against Iron Man) and gives us a look into the conflicted nature of Michael. With dark, haunting eyes, Leto conveys the doc’s empathetic nature, first with young Milo, then with his afflicted child patients, gifting them with a bit of origami. But when the “hunger” overtakes him, there’s a feral intensity in those eyes, showing us that he’ll do whatever it takes to survive. Then the remorse sets in as guilt cast its shadow and Leto’s disturbed doc thinks that he must save the world from himself. Smith is very effective as the “flip side of the coin”, also ailing but with no compulsion about humanity, adding lots of danger to his “dandy” persona from ONE NIGHT IN SOHO. Arjona makes a terrific partner for Leto as the co-worker who challenges him while slowly sliding from the professional to the personal in their relationship. Harris brings lots of father-like compassion to his too-small role as Nikols. Plus Gibson and Madrigal make a good team, call it a “dour cop/wiseacre cop” team as the agents are almost always a few steps behind the monster mayhem.

Hey Marvel-maniacs, here’s the first appearance of Morbius fighting a multi-armed Spidey (don’t ask)!

The horror and superhero elements somehow mesh together under the assured direction of Daniel Espinosa working from the script by Matt Sazama and Burk Sharpless (and based on the Marvel character created by Roy Thomas and Gil Kane). The brief “origin” sequence has a haunting childhood melancholy like a nostalgic nightmare. And that’s the correct way to describe the last part of that origin as the tragic “transformation” turns the cargo ship (check out its familiar name) into a floating deathtrap. Since Morbius becomes a vampire via science and not a magical curse, the effects team has found some interesting ways to twist the horror trope. Morbius in attack mode seemingly bursts into a mass of flying bats or leaves a trail of them in his wake. His speed is slowed down for a few seconds to highlight his animal-like stance and stride. When he must feed his face morphs into the lean angular rodent visage (I thought of the vamps that Buffy dusted on TV). One nice touch is the appearance of ridges in his earlobes when he uses his sonar abilities. Later when he leaps across the city a color trail (the orange jumpsuit) barely catches up to him. Set against the glittering neon cityscape, the visuals are stunning, but it doesn’t quite make up for some of the script’s problems. Nikols is an underwritten enigma, we’re not quite certain of Milo’s true “interest’, and the romance of Morbius and Bancroft feels like a bit of plot motivation. I did enjoy this more than the Venom films, but then I’ve also preferred this character in Spidey’s “rogue’s gallery”, mixing the ferocity of Lee’s Dracula with the romantic sadness of Frid’s Barnabas. And no, he’s not got that dark blue with red highlights open chested suit of the comics, but it’s not really missed in the long run. It’s not at all close to the scope of the last Spider-Man opus but there’s quite a bit of bite in MORBIUS.

3 out of 4

MORBIUS is now playing in theatres everywhere

A Vengeance-Seeking Femme Fatale! LADY SNOWBLOOD Screens April 6th at the Arkadin Cinema & Bar – “Strange Brew”

“People say you can’t wash away the mud of this world with pure white snow. You need asura snow – stained fiery red.

The Strange Brew Cult Movie night returns at their new home, the Arkadin Cinema & Bar, with a screening of LADY SNOWBLOOD (1973) on Wednesday, April 6th at 8:00 pm. The Arkadin is located at 5228 Gravois Ave, St Louis, MO 63116. The Strange Brew Cult Movie night takes place the first Wednesday of every month at Arkadin Cinema. Films are currently showing on the Backlot Patio (Enter through the Heavy Anchor) and bringing extra lawn chairs is strongly encouraged. Admission: $9.00. Tickets can be purchased in advance HERE.

Yuki’s family is nearly wiped out before she is born due to the machinations of a band of criminals. These criminals kidnap and brutalize her mother but leave her alive. Later her mother ends up in prison with only revenge to keep her alive. She creates an instrument for this revenge by purposefully getting pregnant. Though she dies in childbirth, she makes sure that the child will be raised as an assassin to kill the criminals who destroyed her family. Young Yuki never knows the love of a family but only killing and revenge.

Carl ‘Apollo Creed’ Weathers Will be at FANEXPO ST. LOUIS May 13-15th at America’s Center

Apollo Creed vs. the Italian Stallion. Sounds like a damn monster movie.”

FAN EXPO St. Louis is the ultimate go-to event for sci-fi, horror, anime, and gaming event in St. Louis that attracts hundreds of thousands of people to America’s Center (701 Convention Plaza, St. Louis, MO 63101). There will be plenty of celebrity guests at FAN EXPO ST. LOUIS (Formerly known as COMIC-CON) May 13-15th including The Shat (!) but the name that excited us most here at WAMG was the legendary star Carl Weathers who will be there all three days. Keep checking back here at We Are Movie Geeks for more info about FANEXPO ST. LOUIS and check check out the event’s site HERE.

Carl Weathers is an actor, television director and former professional football player. He is known for his roles as boxer Apollo Creed in the first four Rocky films (1976–85), George Dillon in Predator (1987), Action Jackson in Action Jackson (1988), and Chubbs Peterson in Happy Gilmore (1996) and in Little Nicky (2000), and Combat Carl in the Toy Story franchise. He also portrayed Det. Beaudreaux in the television series Street Justice (1991–93) and a fictionalized version of himself in the comedy series Arrested Development (2003–19), and voiced Omnitraxus Prime in Star vs. the Forces of Evil (2017–19). He has a recurring role as Greef Karga in the Star Wars series The Mandalorian (2019–).

As a football player, Weathers played from 1970 to 1971 for the Oakland Raiders of the National Football League and from 1971 to 1973 for the B.C. Lions of the Canadian Football League.

Kevin Costner and Judd Nelson in FANDANGO Available on Blu-ray April 12th From Warner Archive

“There’s nothing wrong with going nowhere, son. It’s a privilege of youth.”

Kevin Costner and Judd Nelson in FANDANGO (1985) will be available on Blu-ray April 12th from Warner Archive. Order it in advance at The Warner Archive Store HERE

FANDANGO: (fan-dang-go) 1. A lively Spanish dance. 2. The music for this. 3. A foolish act.

Academy Award winner Kevin Costner and Judd Nelson star in this story about five young men about to graduate from college in the summer of 1971, who take one last, wild trip across West Texas before facing their lives as adults–which will include marriage, careers, and service in the war in Vietnam–in this heartfelt and adventurous coming-of-age story. Kevin Reynolds (Waterworld) made his feature film directorial debut with this fan favorite.

SPECIAL FEATURES:

  • NEW 2022 1080p HD Master!
  • BD50
  • Aspect Ratio:16×9 1.85:1 WIDESCREEN
  • COLOR
  • Audio Specs DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 Surround
  • 91 Minutes.
  • Includes Theatrical Trailer (HD)

Landmark Theaters Presents RetroREPLAY at the Plaza Frontenac Tuesdays in April – WIZARD OF OZ, CABARET, GREASE and MAMMA MIA!

“I’m going to be a great film star! That is, if booze and sex don’t get me first”

The Wildey isn’t the only place in town to see old movies on Tuesday nights! Landmark’s The Plaza Frontenac Theatre (210 Plaza Frontenac, in the Plaza Frontenac Shopping Center, Frontenac, MO, 63131) has announced RetroREPLAY for Tuesdays in April. Tickets are only $7 and can be purchased in advance HERE

Here’s their schedule:

April 5th – THE WIZARD OF OZ at 1pm and 7pm.

April 12th – CABARET at 1pm and 7pm

April 19th – MAMA MIA! – 1pm and 7pm

April 26th GREASE – 1pm and 7pm


ROBOCOP – 4K Ultra HD 2-Disc Limited Edition Collector’s Set Available April 12th From Arrow Video

“Excuse me. I have to go. Somewhere there is a crime happening.”

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ROBOCOP 4K Ultra HD 2-Disc Limited Edition Collector’s Set will be available April 12th From Arrow Video

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RoboCop, from Orion Pictures, marked director Paul Verhoeven’s (Flesh + Blood) Hollywood debut & now the future of law enforcement is back in a definitive 4K Ultra HD presentation packed with hours of brand new bonus features & exclusive collectible packaging.

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4K ULTRA HD BLU-RAY LIMITED EDITION CONTENTS

  • 4K restoration of the film from the original negative by MGM, transferred in 2013 and approved by director Paul Verhoeven
  • New artwork by Paul Shipper
  • Director’s Cut and Theatrical Cut of the film on two 4K (2160p) UHD Blu-ray discs with Dolby Vision (HDR10 compatible)
  • Original lossless stereo and four-channel mixes plus DTS-HD MA 5.1 and Dolby Atmos surround sound options
  • Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing
  • Six collector’s postcards (Limited Edition exclusive)
  • Double-sided fold-out poster (Limited Edition exclusive)
  • Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly-commissioned artwork (Limited Edition exclusive)
  • 80-page Limited Edition collector’s booklet featuring writing on the film by Omar Ahmed, Christopher Griffiths and Henry Blyth, a 1987 Fangoria interview with Rob Bottin and archive materials (some contents exclusive to Limited Edition)
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DISC 1: DIRECTOR’S CUT

  • Commentary by Paul Verhoeven, executive producer Jon Davison and co-writer Ed Neumeier (originally recorded for the Theatrical Cut and re-edited in 2014 for the Director’s Cut)
  • Commentary by film historian Paul M. Sammon
  • Commentary by fans Christopher Griffiths, Gary Smart and Eastwood Allen
  • The Future of Law Enforcement: Creating RoboCop, interview with co-writer Michael Miner
  • RoboTalk, conversation between co-writer Ed Neumeier and filmmakers David Birke (writer of Elle) and Nicholas McCarthy (director of The Prodigy)
  • Truth of Character, interview with star Nancy Allen
  • Casting Old Detroit, interview with casting director Julie Selzer on how the film’s cast was assembled
  • Connecting the Shots, interview with second unit director and Verhoeven collaborator Mark Goldblatt
  • Analog, featurette on the special photographic effects, with interviews with Peter Kuran and Kevin Kutchaver
  • More Man Than Machine: Composing RoboCop, tribute to composer Basil Poledouris with film music experts Jeff Bond, Lukas Kendall, Daniel Schweiger and Robert Townson
  • RoboProps, tour of super-fan Julien Dumont’s collection of original props and memorabilia
  • 2012 Q&A with the Filmmakers, panel discussion featuring Verhoeven, Davison, Neumeier, Miner, Allen, star Peter Weller and animator Phil Tippett
  • RoboCop: Creating A LegendVillains of Old DetroitSpecial Effects: Then & Now, three archive featurettes from 2007 featuring interviews with cast and crew
  • Paul Verhoeven Easter Egg
  • Four deleted scenes
  • The Boardroom: Storyboard with Commentary by Phil Tippett
  • Director’s Cut Production Footage, raw dailies from the filming of the unrated gore scenes, presented in 4K (SDR)
  • Theatrical trailers and TV spots
  • Image galleries
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DISC 2: THEATRICAL CUT

  • Commentary by director Paul Verhoeven, executive producer Jon Davison and co-writer Ed Neumeier (originally recorded for Theatrical cut of the film)
  • Isolated Score tracks (Composer’s Original Score and Final Theatrical Mix)
  • Edited-for-television version of the film, featuring alternate dubs, takes and edits of several scenes (95 mins, SD only)
  • Split screen comparisons between the Director’s Cut and Theatrical Cut, and the Theatrical Cut and edited-for-TV version
  • RoboCop: Edited for Television, compilation of alternate scenes from two edited-for-television versions, with outtakes newly transferred in HD.