‘Reel Late at the Tivoli’ Midnight Series Kicks Off This Weekend With THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW

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THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW  plays this weekend (March 29th and 30th ) at the Tivoli (6350 Delmar Boulevard) as part of their Reel Late at the Tivoli Midnight series.

They come wearing bustiers, corsets, and great gouts of eyeliner. And some women get into the act too! THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW, the longest-running midnight and audience partici-(SAY IT!)-pation movie of them all, will play at Landmark’s Tivoli Theater in St. Louis next weekend at midnight (March 29th and 30th ). The Tivoli does this every year and the shows are often sell-outs, so get your tickets early! The Tivoli does a great job of making ROCKY HORROR an interactive movie experience with a live “Shadow Cast” known as The Samauri Electricians who perform scenes during the movie and of course the audience is encouraged to respond to the on-screen action as well. The street party always starts early as attendees dressed as Frank N. Furter, Riff Raff, Magenta, and the gang line up outside the Tivoli hours before showtime and We Are Movie Geeks will be there to snap pics and help get the audience riled up. The Tivoli encourages folks to attend in costume, but does not allow outside props, but they do sell an essential “prop bag” for only two dollars. The bag contains rice, toilet paper, Glow Sticks, Time Warp Fliers, Rubber Gloves, Noisemakers, Confetti, and everything you’ll need even if you’re a ROCKY HORROR “Virgin” experiencing the fun for the first time. I used to see ROCKY HORROR at the (now-defunct) Varsity theater down the street in the late 1970′s and not much has changed in 35+ years, my only observation being that this new generation of fans is even less inhibited and likes to show off more skin (not that I’m complaining – they’re in better shape!) We hope to see everyone at the Tivoli (6350 Delmar Boulevard)
March 29th and 30th

Admission is $10

The Faceboook invite for the event can be found HERE

The Tivoli’s website can be found HERE

Here’s the rest of this Spring’s ‘Reel Late at the Tivoli’ schedule:

April 5-6              MANDY   

April 12-13         AUDITION  – The Japanese cult horror classic – New digital restoration!20th anniversary! 

April 19-20         SHREK  Friday and Saturday midnight, plus Saturday matinee at 12 noon  

April 26-27         THE SHAWSHANK REDEMPTION

May 3-4              ALIEN (original theatrical version)  40th anniversary!

May 10-11          PERFECT BLUE Subtitled  

May 17-18          THE CONJURING

Here are some photos taken by the staff of We Are Movie Geeks at past ROCKY HORROR festivities:

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HELLBOY ANIMATED: SWORD OF STORMS and BLOOD & IRON 4K Ultra HD Combo Pack (Plus Blu-ray and Digital) Available April 2nd

Everyone’s favorite witty half-demon is back, Hellboy Animated: Sword of Storms and Blood & Iron double feature comes to 4K Ultra HD™ Combo Pack (Plus Blu-ray™ and Digital) on April 2 from Lionsgate. Watch Hellboy fight off demons, sexy vampires, angry dragons and just about anything else you could think of! Poor guy just can’t catch a break…

One of the all-time greatest comics characters comes home when the Hellboy Animated: Sword of Storms and Blood & Iron double featurearrives on 4K Ultra HD™ Combo Pack (plus Blu-ray™ and Digital) April 2 from Lionsgate. Voiced by the very same actors from the popular live-action films, including Ron Perlman as Hellboy, Selma Blair, Doug Jones, and John Hurt, Sword of Storms and Blood & Iron arrive on 4K Ultra HD™ just in time for fans to catch up on the iconic franchise before the new reboot of the live-action film hits theaters on April 12. Experience four times the resolution of full HD with the 4K Ultra HD Combo Pack, which includes Dolby Vision® HDR, bringing entertainment to life through ultra-vivid picture quality. When compared to a standard picture, Dolby Vision can deliver spectacular colors never before seen on a screen, highlights that are up to 40 times brighter, and blacks that are 10 times darker. The 4K Ultra HD Combo Pack also features Dolby Atmos® audio mixed specifically for the home to place and move audio anywhere in the room, including overhead. Available for the very first time in this absolutely stunning format, the HellboyAnimated double feature 4K Ultra HD Combo Pack is packed with special features and will be available for the suggested retail price of $22.99.

HELLBOY ANIMATED: SWORD OF STORMSOFFICIAL SYNOPSIS

In the first animated feature from director Tad Stones (Buzz Lightyear of Star Command), a folklore professor becomes unwittingly possessed by the ancient Japanese demons of Thunder and Lightning. But when The Bureau of Paranormal Research & Defense dispatches a team of agents to investigate, a cursed samurai sword sends Hellboy to a supernatural dimension of ghosts, monsters, and feudal mayhem. Now, while pyrokinetic Liz Sherman and fishboy Abe Sapien battle one very pissed-off dragon, a lost and cranky Hellboy must find his way home. Even if he can survive the perilous journey, how much crap does a guy have to put up with from the two most vengeful and ferocious spirits of Japanese legend? 

HELLBOY ANIMATED: BLOOD & IRON OFFICIAL SYNOPSIS

When Hellboy, Liz Sherman, and Abe Sapien are assigned to investigate the ghost-infested mansion of a publicity-hound billionaire, they uncover a plot to resurrect a beautiful yet monstrous vampire from Professor Bruttenholm’s past. But before they can stop her bloodbath, Hellboy will have to battle harpies, hellhounds, a giant werewolf, and even the ferocious goddess Hecate herself. How much crap does a guy have to take from a Hungarian Blood Countess before he and his surrogate father can avenge the souls of the damned? It’s going to take more than just a horde of very pissed-off demons for our heroes to see the light in this animated adventure from creative producers Guillermo Del Toro and Mike Mignola.

4K ULTRA HD SPECIAL FEATURES

·            “A New Breed: Creating the New Hellboy” Featurette 

·            “Conquering Hellboy: The Actor’s Role” Featurette

·            “A View from the Top: The “Heads” Sequence” Featurette

·            “Tales from the Tomb: A Look Inside Blood & Iron” Featurette 

·            “’Iron Shoes’ with Introduction by Mike Mignola” Featurette

·            Sword of Storms Audio Commentary FeaturingHellboy Creator Mike Mignola, Supervising Producer-Director Tad Stones, and Director Phil Winstein

·            Blood & Iron Audio Commentary Featuring Mike Mignola, Tad Stones, and Vic Cook

·            “Reversal of Fortune, Professor Bloom’s Story” Featurette

CAST                                                 

Ron Perlman               TV’s “Hand of God,” HellboyHellboy II: The Golden Army

Selma Blair                 TV’s “American Crime Story: The People vs. O.J. Simpson,” TV’s “Anger Management”,HellboyHellboy II: The Golden Army

Doug Jones                TV’s “Star Trek: Discovery,”HellboyHellboy II: The Golden Army

and John Hurt             That Good NightHarry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Parts 1 &2HellboyHellboy II: The Golden Army

Check Out the STAN & OLLIE “Fat Suit & Prothetics” Clip – Now Available on Blu-ray

In my review of STAN & OLLIE, I wrote: “STAN AND OLLIE is a warm and clever look at the Hollywood that made Hollywood. I learned quite a bit about this seminal comedy pair, and I came away from it moved and happy. STAN AND OLLIE is a great movie, one of the 2018’s best. “ (read the entire review HERE)

STAN & OLLIE is currently available on Blu-ray and DVD from Sony Pictures Classics. The film stars Steve Coogan and John C. Reilly as Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy as well as Nina Arianda and Shirley Henderson as their respective wives.

Check out this exclusive clip on the amazing prosthetics and fat suit used in the film

Laurel & Hardy, one of the world s greatest comedy teams, set out on a variety hall tour of Britain in 1953. Diminished by age and with their golden era as the kings of Hollywood comedy now behind them, they face an uncertain future. As the charm and beauty of their performances shines through, they re-connect with their adoring fans. Even as the tour becomes a hit, Stan & Ollie can t quite shake the specter of Laurel & Hardy s past; the long-buried ghosts, coupled with Oliver’s failing health, start to threaten their precious partnership. A portrait of the most tender and poignant of creative marriages, they are aware that they may be approaching their swan song, trying to rediscover just how much they mean to each other.

DO THE RIGHT THING Screens at The St. Louis Library April 6th – ‘The Films of Spike Lee’


“Let me tell you the story of Right Hand, Left Hand. It’s a tale of good and evil. Hate: it was with this hand that Cane iced his brother. Love: these five fingers, they go straight to the soul of man. The right hand: the hand of love. The story of life is this: static. One hand is always fighting the other hand, and the left hand is kicking much ass. I mean, it looks like the right hand, Love, is finished. But hold on, stop the presses, the right hand is coming back. Yeah, he got the left hand on the ropes, now, that’s right. Ooh, it’s a devastating right and Hate is hurt, he’s down. Left-Hand Hate KOed by Love!”

Spike Lee’s DO THE RIGHT THING (1989) screens at The St. Louis Public Library Central Branch (1301 Olive Street St. Louis). The film begins at 1pm Saturday, April 6th. This is a FREE event.

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I remember seeing DO THE RIGHT THING at the now-shuttered Northwest Square Cinema in North St. Louis County the weekend it opened. I recall being the only Caucasian in the audience. I also remember when Samuel L. Jackson, as local DJ Mr. Senor Love Daddy remarked it was so hot there was a “Jheri curl alert. If you have a Jheri curl, stay in the house or you’ll end up with a permanent black helmet on your head fuh-eva!” The audience roared with laughter but I sat there not getting the joke….…and that’s the truth, Ruth!

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“Always do the right thing?” says Da Mayor, played by Ossie Davis in DO THE RIGHT THING. “That’s it?” retorts Mookie (played by Lee), “That’s it!” Da Mayor, is the local old-timer spending the day drinking, meditating, giving advice and occasionally flirting with Mother-Sister, a woman of the same generation played by Ruby Dee, Davis’ real-life wife, observing the neighborhood’s life through the window. But the most emblematic scene of DO THE RIGHT THING consists of characters of different races facing a camera and delivering a series of racist rants until Mister Senor Love Daddy tells them to chill out. Some remarkable writing there by Mr. Lee.

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30 years later Spike Lee’s DO THE RIGHT THING has endured as one of the very best movies of the ‘90s. (okay, technically it is a 1989 film, but that’s ‘90s enough for me). It was fittingly voted #96 in AFI’s Top 100 Greatest Movies and features a sprawling cast including Danny Aiello (Oscar-nominated for his terrific work here), Ruby Dee, Richard Edson, Giancarlo Esposito, Robin Harris, Samuel L. Jackson, Bill Nunn, Rosie Perez, and John Turturro. Lee’s film is a harrowing 24-hour journey into Brooklyn’s multi-ethnic Bedford/Stuy neighborhood and takes place during the summer’s hottest day. It’s not a coincidence that the suffocating atmosphere fits the overall mood of the film as it foreshadows the tragic inevitability of a coming storm. Apparently some in St. Louis thinks it foreshadows, or at least is pertinent in regards to, Ferguson and the recent race riots here.

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Don’t miss DO THE RIGHT THING April 6th at the  St. Louis Public Library Central Branch. Lee’s THE BLACKKKLANSMAN will screen there April 13th at 1pm

The Original 1954 GODZILLA Destroys Schlafly Bottleworks April 11th

“I can’t believe that Godzilla was the only surviving member of its species… But if we continue conducting nuclear tests, it’s possible that another Godzilla might appear somewhere in the world again!”

The original GODZILLA (1954) screens Thursday April 11th at 7:00pm at Schlafly Bottleworks (7260 Southwest Avenue Maplewood, MO 63143). The film will be hosted by We Are Movie Geeks own Tom Stockman. A Facebook invite for the event can be found HERE

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The original Japanese GODZILLA from 1954 is a historical classic. While it may seem a little hokey when considering contemporary special effects capabilities, the film nonetheless seems to rectify the dated destruction scenes with realistic, dramatic, and depressing aftermath scenes where orphaned children are crying, families are destroyed, and lives are lost as a result of the ‘Big G’s’ destructive wake. When analyzing the monster’s destructive capabilities it’s important to remember that GODZILLA was produced at a time when the after-effects of the nuclear bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were still remnant in the Japanese psyche and Western society at large with the looming Cold War and the possibility of a nuclear holocaust. GODZILLA as a film seems to dissect these delicate matters by emphasizing how the widespread destruction in the film was brought about by nuclear testing that awakened a dormant monster. Indeed, Godzilla himself is a metaphor for the destructive capabilities of nuclear weapons.

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If, like me, you grew up watching the Americanized version, GODZILLA KING OF THE MONSTERS, with much cut out and  footage of Raymond Burr (as Steve Martin) talking on the phone and pointing at the sky with his knit brow added, you may be amazed how different the original Japanese take is. I saw the original version of GODZILLA for the first time at the Tivoli  15 years ago when it played there for a week and I plan on seeing it again April 11th at Schlafly Bottleworks.

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$7  for the screening. A yummy variety of food from Schlafly’s kitchen is available as are plenty of pints of their famous home-brewed suds.

“Culture Shock” is the name of a film series here in St. Louis that is the cornerstone project of a social enterprise that is an ongoing source of support for Helping Kids Together(http://www.helpingkidstogether.com/) a St. Louis based social enterprise dedicated to building cultural diversity and social awareness among young people through the arts and active living.

The films featured for “Culture Shock” demonstrate an artistic representation of culture shock materialized through mixed genre and budgets spanning music, film and theater. Through ‘A Film Series’ working relationship with Schlafly Bottleworks, they seek to provide film lovers with an offbeat mix of dinner and a movie opportunities.

It’s Not What You Think It Is! SOCIETY Screens Midnights This Weekend at The Moolah


“You were right Billy, I am a butthead!”


SOCIETY (1989) screens Midnights this weekend (March 29th and 30th) at The Moolah Theater and Lounge (3821 Lindell Blvd, St. Louis, MO 63108) as part of  Destroy the Brain’s monthly Late Nite Grindhouse film series.


SOCIETY (1989) directed by Brian Yuzna (producer of RE-ANIMATOR) is a strange horror/sci-fi satire on the yuppie way of life.


Beverly Hills teen (Billy Warlock – great as our perplexed and horrified hero.) begins to suspect that there’s something very wrong with his snobbish family, is he imagining it or are they… inhuman?!

SOCIETY is one original and shocking black comedy. There’s never a dull moment in the wacky story, which starts out as a paranoia mystery then only gets increasingly weird from there on out. It all builds to a warped finale that you won’t forget! It’s one of those surreal and gruesome terrors that makes you wonder if you should be laughing or screaming at what you’re seeing. The makeup work of Screaming Mad George is very effectively disturbing. The direction of Yuzna is well-done and the addition of the Eton Boat Song as the films theme is a clever touch.

SOCIETY is one of those unique genre oddities that must be seen to be fully realized, one very wild trip that’s well deserving of a cult status and lucky St. Louisans will have the rare chance to see it on the big screen this weekend at The Moolah.


THE PSYCHOTRONIC PRE-SHOW STARTS AROUND 11:30P WITH THE FILM STARTING AT MIDNIGHT.


The Moolah Theatre & Lounge serves alcohol until 2:30AM! Feel free to show up early and stay late to have some drinks and get friendly with the amazing Moolah staff.

The Facebook invite can be found HERE

Terrifying Thriller MATRIARCH Coming to Digital and DVD April 9th

  
When the victims of a car crash stumble upon a farmhouse, miles from civilization, they think they’re safe, but the farm’s strange inhabitants have other ideas in Matriarch, arriving on DVD, Digital, and On Demand April 9 from Lionsgate. Charlie Blackwood, Scott Vickers, Julie Hannan, and Alan Cuthbert star in this chilling horror film that Vickers also wrote and directed. The Matriarch DVD will be available for the suggested retail price of $19.98.  
The trailer looks so creepy!


This terrifying thriller unfolds as pregnant Rachel and her husband, Matt, are stranded after wrecking their car on a remote Scottish road. Though hostile at first, a nearby farmer and his wife welcome them in after learning that Rachel is with child. Suddenly, Rachel realizes the family’s “daughter” is a local girl who’d gone missing years before, but when she and Matt attempt to escape, they’re held at gunpoint—just as Rachel goes into labor. Will their child’s first day on earth be the couple’s last?

Win Free Passes To The St. Louis Advance Screening Of SHAZAM!

David F. Sandberg (“Annabelle: Creation”) directs New Line Cinema’s “Shazam!,” the origin story that stars Zachary Levi (TV’s “Chuck”) as the titular DC Super Hero, along with Mark Strong (the “Kingsman” movies) in the role of Super-Villain Dr. Thaddeus Sivana, and Asher Angel (TV’s “Andi Mack”) as Billy Batson. Peter Safran (“Aquaman,” “The Conjuring” and “Annabelle” films) produced the film.

We all have a superhero inside us, it just takes a bit of magic to bring it out. In Billy Batson’s (Angel) case, by shouting out one word—SHAZAM!—this streetwise 14-year-old foster kid can turn into the adult Super Hero Shazam (Levi), courtesy of an ancient wizard. Still a kid at heart—inside a ripped, godlike body—Shazam revels in this adult version of himself by doing what any teen would do with superpowers: have fun with them! Can he fly? Does he have X-ray vision? Can he shoot lightning out of his hands? Can he skip his social studies test? Shazam sets out to test the limits of his abilities with the joyful recklessness of a child. But he’ll need to master these powers quickly in order to fight the deadly forces of evil controlled by Dr. Thaddeus Sivana (Strong).

SHAZAM! opens in theaters on April 5.

Enter for your chance to win two free passes to the St. Louis advance screening of SHAZAM!. The theatrical sneak preview will be on Monday, April 1 at 7pm.

Answer the following:

The Marvel Family, also known as The Shazam Family, are a group of superheroes who originally appeared in books published by Fawcett Comics, and were later acquired by DC Comics. Name the SIX members.

Add you name, answers and email address in our comments section below.

NO PURCHASE REQUIRED. A pass does not guarantee a seat at a screening. Seating is on a first-come, first served basis. The theater is overbooked to assure a full house.

The film has been rated PG-13 for intense sequences of action, language, and suggestive material.

www.ShazamMovie.com

GLORIA BELL – Review

Julianne Moore as Gloria in Sebastian Lelio’s GLORIA BELL. Courtesy of A24 Films.

Julianne Moore stars in GLORIA BELL, Oscar-winning Chilean writer/director Sebastian Lelio’s English-language remake of his romance/comedy/drama about a free-spirited middle-aged woman, GLORIA. Lelio’s 2017 A FANTASTIC WOMAN, about a transgender woman, won an Oscar and Lelio followed that up with DISOBEDIENCE, starring Rachel Weisz as a gay woman in an ultra-conservative Jewish community. Lelio also won praise and some international attention for his 2013 film GLORIA, which focused on another kind of character rarely put at the center of movie plots, a middle-aged woman.

Julianne Moore shines gloriously in GLORIA BELL, as the irrepressible Gloria, a long-divorced kind-hearted woman who loves to dance who is ever hopeful about finding love. While Moore is wonderful, the film itself is not as charming or involving as the original. Rather than feeling like Gloria is starting a new chapter of her life by the story’s end, it feels more like she makes a complete circle back to the same place.

Moore’s Gloria is a happy, free-spirited woman who does kind things for those in her life yet she seems a bit lonely and on her own. She has a good relationship with her grown children, Anne (Caren Pistorius) and Peter (Michael Cera), but they have their own lives. Gloria is at a low-point in her life as the film opens, with difficulties at work under her demanding boss, and her long-time co-worker friend (the wonderful German actress Barbara Sukowa) seems to be just hanging on. Long divorced, Gloria loves to go dancing, which she frequently does and seems to be a kind of escape from her worries. But while she dates, she has not found love. When she meets a new man named Arnold (John Turturro), it opens the door to romance and the possibility of a new chapter in her life.

Moore is undeniably cute singing along to the pop hits of her youth in her car, slightly off-key of course. She gains our admiration by the way she stands by her friends and wins our sympathy as she tries to connect with and help her grown children, who seem to love her but tolerate her rather than need her. She seems to give more than she receives, which touches our hearts.

Writer/director Sebastian Lelio mixes romance, comedy and drama into this character study, which has been re-set in Los Angeles. Moore glows as Gloria, and is supported by a good cast. While the film deserves credit simply for being such a warm portrait of a middle-aged woman and it is certainly lifted by Moore’s presence, the film itself is only modestly entertaining. It is not a bad movie, just a disappointing, mildly-frustrating one. Even though this re-make is by the original writer/director, it suffers from a common problem of remakes of a good film – that it is hard to recreate the magic a second time.

GLORIA BELL is filled with ’70s music to match the main character’s era, and Gloria’s favorite club is a ’70s throwback disco. The ’70s theme is so strong that we are some minutes into the film before it becomes clear that the story takes place in the present and not that decade. It is a clever way to suggest Gloria might be stuck in the past.

GLORIA BELL is best when it just focuses on Julianne Moore, who just glows with vibrant life, in her personal interactions with her children and friends. These scenes have an appealing naturalness, and the strong cast helps here. Gloria is a warm, kind-hearted person who is always taking care of others but has no one who takes care of her. Meeting Arnold seems to open the door that possibility but Arnold comes with his own baggage.

The problem is the story, which never seems to go much of anywhere. Sure, there is the evolving relationship with Arnold, which has is ups and downs, and there are are changes changes in her children’s lives that impact her, which Gloria rocks her emotionally. She has to cope with what is happening at work and her drunken ex-husband, with whom she is friendly. She weathers it all with resilience and grace, but we don’t feel like she is changed by her experiences. Instead, we feel like she makes a circle back to where she was. It makes the film less involving and less satisfying than the original, despite Moore’s luminous performance.

If one is a big Julianne Moore fan, the film offers some enjoyment, with plenty of lovely close-ups and lovely moments with the actress playing a charming joy-filled character despite her modest life. Her performance and the loving close-ups may be enough for some viewers. But for the rest of us, we want to see Gloria breakout of her confining life, and find a little more of the personal happiness she clearly deserves.

GLORIA BELL opens Friday, March 22, at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Cinema, the Hi-Pointe Theater and the Chase Park Plaza Cinema.

RATING: 3 out of 5 stars

US – Review

What is the difference between the lines that divide us and connect us? A line can be a form of communication or it can be a separation between two sides. It can be a line in the sand that you can’t cross or it can be a line that connects two points. It’s a word with multiple implications that represents the duality of the very things it connects or divides. In Jordan Peele’s US, lines and duality are echoed through the inclusion of two ordinary items: mirrors and scissors. One creates a connection between the self and the reflection, the other serves to separate one item from another. And yet, the mirror can break and the reflection splits, and the scissors only function when two halves come together. Like the line, both represent division and connection simultaneously. 

Jordan Peele already held a mirror up to the cultured, open-minded white Americans in GET OUT, and asked if they were going to ignore their own passing comments that add to the larger systemic problems with race in America. With US, he doesn’t just hold the mirror to the white faces suddenly blindsided by their own shame, but to all of privileged America. All of us, regardless of skin tone, who have been privileged to ignore those in the class below us; those whose voices aren’t heard and whose actions are seen as meaningless in society. Despite what some may think, the human connection to people across all classes exists even if some fail to acknowledge it.

GET OUT and US are both horror films that bring deep-rooted cultural issues to the surface, but US is much more subtle and less-incendiary in its approach. While the visual metaphors of mirrors and doppelgangers show how we’re all one-in-the-same, the message is more nuanced and harder to read. It’s a film that sprinkles in questions about political revolution and the class system amid tense stand-offs and shocking scenes of carnage. This might frustrate some looking for the culture shock that GET OUT provided but results in a film that will no doubt be studied and deconstructed for years to come.

After a chilling opening set in a carnival at night that perfectly sets the mood for the film, the story reveals a woman (Lupita Nyong’o) and her family returning to the beach that left a haunting impact on her as a child. What starts as a sunny getaway quickly turns into a nightmare for her and her husband (BLACK PANTHER’s Winston Duke) and two children (Shahadi Wright Joseph, Evan Alex) when their doppelgangers mysterious show up in the driveway one night. The arrival of these strangers triggers a series of terrifying events and revelations.

Much like Wes Craven’s THE HILLS HAVE EYES where a family vacation triggers a series of incidents where the protagonists have to look inward to defeat enemies, each family member in US has to defeat their own demons in order to battle… well… “themselves.” The daughter has to put down the iPhone; the son has to use intellect instead of his magic tricks; even the dad has to realize that money isn’t going to buy him happiness (though his new boat does come in handy). Most importantly is the journey of Lupita Nyong’o. She has to overcome her past trauma and become the strong one to lead the way for her family. But like the heroes in Craven’s grindhouse classic, she in many ways turns into the violent aggressor that she’s fighting. Even her son looks at her apprehensively at one point because her white garment becomes soaked in blood – turning her outfit into the red jumpsuit like that of the enemy.

Like GET OUT, Jordan Peele hints at a bigger world but still keeps it relatively small and claustrophobic. This allows for the central characters to shine. Winston Duke hilariously captures the awkward dad that’s trying to be cool. He walks the line perfectly without taking it into a caricature, providing many laugh-out-loud, tension-breaking moments. Despite a well-rounded cast that all leave their mark, the film is led by a powerhouse performance by Lupita Nyong’o. The role demands her to flex her emotional and physical acting chops. She transitions seamlessly from a woman dealing with past trauma to someone forced to protect her children. Even amid the chaos of the home-invasion-turned-chase story in the second and third act, Peele always has fun with the audience. His approach to horror and violence never feels over the top or mean-spirited. US is not a marathon that puts audiences through the wringer, but more of a journey through a funhouse complete with things popping out, nervous laughter, and reflections of ourselves.

Mike Gioulakis, best known for his striking cinematography in IT FOLLOWS and this year’s GLASS, lends the film a stark look with long shadows and a minimal color palette so that the red jumpsuits of the late night visitors pop off the screen. While GET OUT might have more iconic scenes, US has more iconic shots. Nothing proves this more than the final standoff. The tense sequence is masterfully filmed and intercut with gorgeous, unexpected footage. The beauty of the film balances the brutality. Peele’s decision to go with Gioulakis – a different cinematographer than his last film – shows that he’s continuing to sharpen his teeth as both a storyteller and filmmaker.

US opens with footage of the 1986 “Hands Across America” event playing on the television. In real life, despite the good intentions, the event became a symbol for the hypocrisy of how America has handled homelessness in this country. Outspoken people gathered hand in hand with their neighbors from the Atlantic to the Pacific to raise $50 million for the poor – each person in line was supposed to donate $10. The event cost $16 million to execute, and after expenses were paid, only $15 million was donated to charities. It became an empty, symbolic gesture with a message that fell on deaf ears. In 2019, there is still a sense of apathy in this country. What doesn’t directly affect us can be ignored. When you are living with even the most modest sense of wealth, you can afford to look the other way; you can avoid those who remind you of wealth disparity; you can mute their cries for help. While US might not have the same eye-opening effect that GET OUT left audiences, Jordan Peele, once again, successfully blends thrills with a message. It cements his standing as a master in “social horror” and serves as a reminder that a horror film that holds a mirror up to our society will always connect with audiences.

 

Overall score: 4 out of 5 

US opens in theaters everywhere March 22