This Week’s WAMG Podcast – SAUSAGE PARTY, PETE’S DRAGON, and More!

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This week’s episode of our podcast WE ARE MOVIE GEEKS The Show is up! Hear WAMG’s Jim Batts and Tom Stockman talk movies. Our guest in the studio this week is Lynn Venhaus, film critic for The Belleville News Democrat and the Kirkwood/Webster Times. We’ll discuss the weekend box office  and we’ll review HELL AND HIGH WATER, SAUSAGE PARTY, PETE’S DRAGON, INDIGNATION, and DON’T THINK TWICE. We’ll then talk about the 1983 horror film EYES OF FIRE and pay tribute to the late Kenny “R2D2” Baker.

Here’s this week’s show. Have a listen:

 

GLEASON – Review

In this Monday, Jan. 18, 2016, photo, former New Orleans Saints NFL football player Steve Gleason watches as his four-year-old son, Rivers, plays on his father's tablet as his wife, Michel, answers a question during an interview in their home in New Orleans. “GLEASON,” a feature-length documentary that gives an unfiltered look at his life with ALS premieres at the Sundance Film Festival on Saturday. (AP Photo/Jonathan Bachman) ORG XMIT: LAJB107

Review by Stephen Tronicek

GLEASON  is simply an incredible documentary. As a film it’s shot well, it has a purpose, and its exploration of the football stars fight with ALS is fascinating and engaging.

Not too much can be said from a critical standpoint about the film, though. There aren’t actors so there are no  performances to judge. This isn’t written so there’s no writing or plot or structure to judge. There’s just real life, and the strength Gleason takes from it. The feelings of bubbling nostalgia, and unwanted fear that come with the passage of time,  also representing the idea that hope and self-fulfillment will come in life. Gleason as a film holds the simple purpose of showing the audience what it’s like to live in Steve Gleason’s shoes and luckily that is enough to analyze the previously mentioned themes of life.

Steve Gleason is a good person, an almost endlessly positive man-child that inspires in his simple resilience. He’s also an incredibly smart person, who in his speech reveals a well-read and philosophical mind. His musings without pretense may have seemed pretentious, but that’s the benefit of a documentary. Coming from a written character this might all come off as clunky, but coming from a real man everything is poetic. In his shoes and the shoes of his family, we watch his confrontation with the religious aspects of his life, and the personal aspects of his life and all of this is wrenching because it’s authentic and so is Steve Gleason. His wife, Michel Varisco-Gleason, and his son, Rivers, are also big players in the documentary as snippets of a video log that Gleason made to teach his son about life becomes a paramount framing device for the film. Michel and Rivers, like Steve, make for interesting characters as Rivers is born and grows into a boy only vaguely understanding the situation that his family is in and Michel powerfully keeps her family together. The overall effect of hanging around Steve Gleason and his family is one of warmth, but also stress and that brew of emotions make for a cathartic effect.

That’s all GLEASON , as a film, needed to do. It needed to tell the story. Put us in the place of Steve Gleason and let us bask in his delightful personality and the hardships this personality,  and his family, help him deal with.  It was nice to go along with Steve Gleason, hardships and all.

4 1/2 of 5 Stars

GLEASON is playing in St. Louis exclusively at Landmark’s The Tivoli Theater. 

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THELMA & LOUISE Ride Back into Cinemas August 21st and 24th

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“You’ve always been crazy, this is just the first chance you’ve had to express yourself.”

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Twenty-five years ago, in one of the greatest road movies of all time, Geena Davis and Susan Sarandon rode to everlasting fame as two women who embark on a crime spree across the American southwest in THELMA & LOUISE – and on Aug. 21 and 24, they’re journeying back to more than 500 movie theaters across the country.

Title: THELMA AND LOUISE ¥ Pers: DAVIS, GEENA / SARANDON, SUSAN ¥ Year: 1991 ¥ Dir: SCOTT, RIDLEY ¥ Ref: THE079BE ¥ Credit: [ MGM/PATHE / THE KOBAL COLLECTION ]

For two days only at 2:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. local time, audiences can take the wild ride with Thelma (Geena Davis) and Louise (Susan Sarandon) all over again in a special THELMA & LOUISE 25th Anniversary celebration, presented by Fathom Events, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and Park Circus. This special two-day-only event also includes an exclusive all-new introduction from movie critic Ben Lyons.

Tickets for the THELMA & LOUISE 25th Anniversary can be purchased online beginning Friday (July 22) by visiting www.FathomEvents.com or at participating theater box offices. Fans throughout the U.S. will be able to enjoy this eventin more than 500 select movie theaters through Fathom’s Digital Broadcast Network. For a complete list of theater locations, visit the Fathom Events website. (Note that theaters and participants are subject to change.)

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Directed by action master Ridley Scott (The Martian, Black Hawk Down, Gladiator) from an Oscar-winning screenplay by Callie Khouri, THELMA & LOUISE is an exhilarating, full-throttle adventure hailed as one of the best road movies of all time. Susan Sarandon and Geena Davis star as accidental outlaws on a desperate flight across the Southwest after a tragic incident at a roadside bar. With a determined detective (Harvey Keitel) on their trail, a sweet-talking hitchhiker (Brad Pitt) in their path and a string of crimes in their wake, their journey alternates between hilarious, high-speed thrill ride and empowering personal odyssey … even as the law closes in.

“There’s never been an on-screen pair quite like Thelma and Louise, and there’s never been a movie as fearless, exciting and provocative. Thelma & Louise is as stunning, powerful and downright entertaining as it was when it was released 25 years ago,” Fathom Events Vice President of Studio Relations Tom Lucas said.

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Originally released on May 24, 1991, THELMA & LOUISE received six Academy Award nominations, including Best Director (Ridley Scott); Best Actress in a Leading Role for both Susan Sarandon and Geena Davis; Best Cinematography (Adrian Biddle); and Best Editing (Thom Noble), with Callie Khouri winning an Oscar for her memorable screenplay.

Movie fans also have the chance to win the Ultimate Road Trip adventure by posting a selfie with THELMA & LOUISE using the hashtag #ThelmaAndLouise25. Visit the THELMA & LOUISE “selfie-standee” in select movie theaters, and read the full contest details at FathomEvents.com/event/thelma-and-louise/more-info/sweepstakes.

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Here are 25 facts for 25 years of THELMA AND LOUISE

1.     Oscar-winning screenwriter Callie Khouri says the story came to her “in a flash” and she saw that, “through a series of accidents, they would go from being invisible to being too big for their world to contain”

2.     Thelma & Louise was Callie Khouri’s first produced screenplay

3.     George Clooney auditioned for the role of J.D. five times 

4.     Brad Pitt had unsuccessfully auditioned for Backdraft before Ridley Scott saw him audition for J.D. 

5.     Brad Pitt said he first became familiar with Ridley Scott when he was 15 years old and snuck in to a movie theater to see Alien

6.     Geena Davis says that she had her agent call Ridley Scott every week for a year before he agreed to consider her for one of the leading roles

7.     Initially, Geena Davis wanted to play the role of Louise, and had prepared for it – but in their first meeting with Susan Sarandon, both Davis and Ridley Scott say they knew she was Louise

8.     Thelma & Louise takes place on the road from Arkansas to the Grand Canyon – but was filmed entirely in California and Utah

9.     The “Grand Canyon” in the movie is actually Dead Horse Point State Park in Utah

10.  The Oklahoma City motel where Thelma and Louise encounter J.D. still stands – in downtown Los Angeles: It’s the Vagabond Inn at 3101 S. Figueroa St.

11.  Five identical 1966 Thunderbirds were used in production

12.  Ridley Scott says the visual style of the film was strongly influenced by the still-life paintings of John Register

13.  Thelma Dickerson’s birthday is November 27, 1956 – while screenwriter Callie Khouri’s real birthdate is November 27, 1957 

14.  Charlie Sexton performs two songs in the film, “Tennessee Plates” and “Badlands,” and has a cameo as the lead singer in the band playing in the bar

15.  Geena Davis planned to use a body double for her sex scene with Brad Pitt, but when she saw models being interviewed, she decided to do the scene herself

16.  Susan Sarandon says of her driving experience: “I got so sick of that car – it took me weeks to stop driving like a maniac!” 

17.  Although the film was shot out of order (as are most films), the final scene shot was the final scene in the movie: the car going off the cliff

18.  Producer Mimi Polk Gitlin said that the agreement with the film’s distributor specifically forbade changing the script’s ending 

19.  In addition to Callie Khouri’s Oscar-winning screenplay and nominations for Geena Davis and Susan Sarandon, Thelma & Louise was nominated for Best Director, Best Editing and Best Cinematography

20.  Although he had directed such classics as Alien and Blade Runner, Thelma & Louise marked the first Oscar nomination for Ridley Scott 

21.  Thelma & Louise is one of only four films in which two lead performers were nominated as Best Actress; the others are All About Eve (1950), Suddenly Last Summer (1959), and Terms of Endearment (1983) 

22.  Thelma & Louise was a box-office hit, grossing $45 million in the U.S. (on a budget of $16.5 million)

23.  Thelma & Louise has become a pop-culture touchstone, and the countless references to it include lyrics in the song “Today 4 U” in the Pulitzer Prize-winning musical Rent

24.  Thelma & Louise was featured on the cover of Time Magazine on June 24, 1991 – exactly one month after its release

25.  The American Film Institute has named Thelma Dickerson and Louise Sawyer to the list of 100 top film heroes.  Together, they rank 24 … two spots above Superman

Fathom Events, MGM and Park Circus present Thelma & Louise 25th Anniversary, coming to more than 400 select movie theaters nationwide for two days only: Aug. 21 and 24, at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. (local time) daily.  For tickets, information and a full list of participating theaters, visit www.fathomevents.com.

Your’e Killing Me Smalls! THE SANDLOT Midnights This Weekend at The Tivoli (and Saturday at Noon)

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“Anyone who wants to be a can’t-hack-it pantywaist who wears their mama’s bra, raise your hand!”

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THE SANDLOT (1993) plays this weekend (August 19th and 20th) at The Tivoli at midnight as part of their Reel Late at the Tivoli midnight series. It will also screen at noon on Saturday.    

THE SANDLOT is a beloved film that over the last 23 years has gained quite a cult following thanks its joyous nostalgia that’s along the lines of A CHRISTMAS STORY. Unlike many movies that claim to be family films, THE SANDLOT actually is a “family film”. Kids like it for the  situations and dialogue, while adults relate to it as well. Young Scotty Smalls (Tom Guidry) moves into a new town and desperately wants to fit in with the rest of the neighborhood boys and in the summer of 1962, a bat and a ball is all it takes. A solid swing will send the ball sailing over the fence to never be seen again for it lands in Mr. Mertle’s (James Earl Jones) backyard, which is guarded by a humongous dog…a super slobbering “beast” that devours anything and everything. The high drama and dilemma of the summer is trying to retrieve a Babe Ruth autographed ball from the beast. Other cast members of note: Patrick Renna, Mike Vitar, Chauncey Leopardi, Denis Leary and Karen Allen. THE SANDLOT is nostalgic, sentimental and stuffed full of innocence and humor. Worth watching again…and again and you’ll have your chance this to see it  three times this weekend when THE SANDLOT plays midnights Friday and Saturday (August 19th and 20th) and Saturday at Noon!. It’s definitely a must see for anyone who has their old mitt lying somewhere in a closet or attic at home, and count on wanting to find it and take it outside to play catch when the movie is over (at 2AM!!)

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Don’t miss THE SANDLOT when it screens midnights this weekend at The Tivoli (and Saturday at Noon!)

The Tivoli’s located at 6350 Delmar Blvd., University City, MO. Admission is a mere $8!

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The Tivoli’s website can be found HERE

http://www.landmarktheatres.com/market/st.louis/tivolitheatre.htm

Here’s the midnight for the next several weeks:

August 26-27 –        EVENT HORIZON

September 2 – 3 –   PRINCESS MONONOKE

September 9-10 –   THE BIG LEBOWSKI

September 16-17 –  PSYCHO

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Reel Late at the Tivoli takes place every Friday and Saturday night and We Are Movie Geeks own Tom Stockman (that’s me!) is there with custom trivia questions about the films and always has DVDs, posters, and other cool stuff to give away. Ticket prices are $8. We hope to see everyone late at night in the coming weeks.

 

Get Your Fright On In This New Poster For Tyler Perry’s BOO! A ‪MADEA HALLOWEEN

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Check out the new poster for TYLER PERRY’S BOO! A MADEA HALLOWEEN and then watch the trailer for the upcoming comedy‬ – haunting theaters October 21.

Directed by Tyler Perry, the movie also stars Perry, Cassi Davis, Patrice Lovely, Lexy Panterra, Yousef Erakat, Andre Hall, Brock O’Hurn, Jimmy Tatro and Bella Thorne.

In TYLER PERRY’S BOO! A MADEA HALLOWEEN, Madea winds up in the middle of mayhem when she spends a hilarious, haunted Halloween fending off killers, paranormal poltergeists, ghosts, ghouls, and zombies while keeping a watchful eye on a group of misbehaving teens.

http://Boo.movie
http://Facebook.com/MadeaHalloween
http://Twitter.com/MadeaHalloween
http://Instagram.com/MadeaHalloween/

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Check Out The First Teaser From Robert Zemeckis’ ALLIED Starring Brad Pitt and Marion Cotillard

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Photo credit: Daniel Smith © 2016 Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

Brad Pitt plays Max Vatan and Marion Cotillard plays Marianne Beausejour in the first teaser trailer for ALLIED from Paramount Pictures.

Directed by Robert Zemeckis, ALLIED is the story of intelligence officer Max Vatan (Pitt), who in 1942 North Africa encounters French Resistance fighter Marianne Beausejour (Cotillard) on a deadly mission behind enemy lines. Reunited in London, their relationship is threatened by the extreme pressures of the war.

ALLIED is in theaters November 23.

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AlliedMovie/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/AlliedMovie/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/AlliedMovie/
Website: AlliedMovie.com
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Check Out the New Green Band Trailer for BAD SANTA 2

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Academy Award-winner BILLY BOB THORNTON to the screen as America’s favorite anti-hero, Willie Soke. Fueled by cheap whiskey, greed and hatred, Willie teams up once again with his angry little sidekick, Marcus (TONY COX), to knock off a Chicago charity on Christmas Eve. Along for the ride is ‘the kid’ – chubby and cheery Thurman Merman (BRETT KELLY), a 250-pound ray of sunshine who brings out Willie’s sliver of humanity. Mommy issues arise when the pair are joined by Academy Award®, Golden Globe and Emmy-winner KATHY BATES, as Willie’s horror story of a mother, Sunny Soke. A super butch super bitch, Sunny raises the bar for the gang’s ambitions, while somehow lowering the standards of criminal behavior. Willie is further burdened by lusting after the curvaceous and prim Diane, played by Emmy Award-nominee CHRISTINA HENDRICKS, the charity director with a heart of gold and libido of steel.
Check out the new trailer:

You better watch out: BAD SANTA 2 is coming to town.badsanat3

MARK WATERS directs BAD SANTA 2 from a screenplay by Johnny Rosenthal and Shauna Cross, based on characters by Glenn Ficarra & John Requa. GEYER KOSINSKI and ANDREW GUNN produce. Executive producers are Zanne Devine, David Thwaites, Gabriel Hammond, Daniel Hammond, Mark Waters, Jessica Tuchinsky, Adam Fields, and Doug Ellin. The film is a BROAD GREEN PICTURES and MIRAMAX® release. In theaters November 23, 2016.

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FLORENCE FOSTER JENKINS – Review

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Could singing so bad it provoked laughter raise the spirits of a nation at war? In the case of Florence Foster Jenkins, an heiress and patron of music, it did, although many of her fans did not realize that Mrs. Jenkins didn’t know she was being funny. She really did think she could sing.

This strange but true story is the basis of  director Stephen Frears’ FLORENCE FOSTER JENKINS. The film stars Meryl Streep as the deluded Mrs. Jenkins, Hugh Grant as her solicitous manager/assistant/second husband St. Clair Bayfield, and Simon Helberg as her beleaguered accompanist Cosme McMoon. Actually, there may have been a reason beyond ego for Mrs. Jenkins’ belief in her singing voice, as a tragic illness might have impacted her hearing. A promising pianist when young (whose performances reportedly included one at the White House during President Rutherford B Hayes’ time), her wealthy father had forbidden a professional career in music, frustrating his daughter’s theatrical bent, and an unhappy series of events further ended those dreams. But her love of music never died and in the 1940s, rumors circulated about a wealthy woman, a generous supporter of serious music and sponsor of many musical greats, whose private performances featured costumes and tableau vivant (elaborately staged poses of a historical or mythic event, popular early in the century), and some truly bad singing. But as the concerts were private and attendance carefully screened, reports in the press were vague, although wits and wags relished sneaking in to secretly mock the delusional diva. During World War II, that situation changed, as the socialite longed to play Carnegie Hall.

This same real-life person was, more loosely, the inspiration for the 2015 French film MARGUERITE, but that version moved the story to France and also transported it to the 1920s. In that film, Catherine Frot creates a more complex version of the person, in contrast to Streep’s simpler, sweet one. This new film version is closer to the story of the real Florence Foster Jenkins, who was American and had her heyday in the 1940s, but it is still a fictional film.

Not surprisingly, Frears’ film is polished and filled with wonderful period costumes and sets. As FLORENCE FOSTER JENKINS shows us, Mrs. Jenkins has a taste for fancy costumes, especially with angel wings, despite her heavy, past middle-age figure, and Streep handles the scenes with unflattering outfits with comic style. Jenkins also has a taste for theatrical staging, as she sang some of opera’s most difficult arias. Like any diva, she liked to be the center of attention.

Streep (who actually can sing) warbles dreadfully as Jenkins, but crafts a character who manages to charm us with her generous spirit nonetheless. Streep’s Florence can be quirky and temperamental, as well as easily hurt, and Grant as her protector/husband struggles mightily to shield her from all unkind words. A former not-too-successful British Shakespearean actor, who still occasionally performs in Florence’s private concerts, his life now revolves around soothing and encouraging his wife. For this he is well rewarded, with his own apartment and a younger mistress, Kathleen (Rebecca Ferguson) to whom he goes home after his wife goes to bed for the night, a situation Florence appears to ignore.

When Florence is in need of a new accompanist, to help her prepare for an upcoming concert, a plethora of musicians apply, all determined to woo her with their passionate playing. But cagey Cosme (Helberg) correctly assesses the situation and wins the job with oozing charm and a soothingly classic piece. Once he hears his new employer sing, he is not sure any amount of money is worth this.

In many ways, Grant is the real center of this film, a complex character who is more than he seems. In one entertaining party scene, he steps out with some smooth dance moves to some hot ’40s swing music. Helberg as Cosme also gets a featured role as the ambitious but starving musician worried about what Florence’s career is doing to his own. Helberg and Grant provide a lot of the comedy in Frears’ generally sweet little film, while Streep does the pathos. Nina Arianda has a featured comic spot as well, as the blonde trophy wife of one of Florence’s rich friends, literally rolling on the floor laughing. Oddly, Streep’s singing as Florence, which reported sparked uncontrollable laughter, is not particularly laugh-provoking, just cringe-inducing. It is a flaw of sorts but it does not really harm the film.

Frears’ ode to a unique personality is a sweet, oddball tale which is kinder and gentler with its real-life central character than the earlier French film. Still that film added a bite to the story, and a fuller, human depth to the character, which Streep’s too-winsome portrayal lacks. FLORENCE FOSTER JENKINS is a warm and appealing film but it could have used a bit more depth and thoughtfulness.

4 of 5 Stars

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INDIGNATION – Review

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Indignation is indeed one theme in the movie INDIGNATION, based on Phillip Roth’s 2008 novel of the same name, along with death, life, and the “what if” of choices made. Set in 1951, young college freshman Marcus Messner (Logan Lerman) is filled with indignation on several levels, even before coming to Winesburg College in Ohio from his working-class home in Newark, New Jersey. The Korean War, which Marcus avoids with his college deferment, is a looming presence throughout the story.

INDIGNATION perfectly captures both the look and the feel of  a repressive, restrictive, conformist 1950s America. It was a buttoned-down time of tightly controlled emotions, with World War II still in the near past, Cold War commie-hunting in full swing and women safely back in traditional roles, and the youth culture and freethinking of the 1960s still in the future. .

The film beautiful recreates the look of the period, from costumes to a muted tones recalling photos and advertising of the time, all carefully researched. The attention to detail draws us into the world of Roth’s story.

This well-acted, beautifully-detailed, and restrained drama is the first directorial effort for James Schamus, a scriptwriter, producer and past CEO of Focus Features, a company known for BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN and FAR FROM HEAVEN among other art-house gems. Although Schamus left Focus Features, INDIGNATION is the kind of serious, grown-up film for which the studio is known.

This film is also one of the most successful adaptations of Roth’s works for the screen. Although the film diverges in some details from Roth’s novel, it remains true to the book’s sense, and particularly to the director’s response to it. The story is semi-autobiographical, partly based on Roth’s college experience at Bucknell University, although the name is changed to Winesburg College, a reference to Sherwood Anderson’s “Winesburg, Ohio.”  The story mixes elements of melancholy, romance and a meditation on life and fate.

In 1951, the Korean War, the smaller Cold War proxy conflict that predates the longer Vietnam one, means that worries about the draft and death on a battlefield dog the working-class Jewish neighborhood where Marcus and his parents live in Newark. The war hovers in the background throughout the film, and in fact, it opens The only child of a Kosher butcher Max (Danny Burstein) and his wife Esther (Linda Emond), Marcus has been the “perfect son,” as his mother puts it. Dutifully working along side his father in the butcher shop in Newark, Marcus gets straight As at school, earning his a scholarship from his temple. Attending college will exempt him from the draft and the Korean War.  Fear of losing his only child in a far-off war grips his father. By choosing a Midwestern college, Marcus hopes to escape his father’s clinging and constant worry. Although he does not openly admit this to his father, his mother knows and understands..

A kind of culture shock awaits Marcus at Winesburg College, which is Christian as well as  conservative. A self-disciplined and ambitious young man, he has great confidence in his own intellect but, typical of the time, he is emotionally reserved and shares little of his inner life. Marcus arrives on campus planning to focus entirely on his studies. He is assigned a room with the only two other Jewish students in the dorm, Bertram Flusser (Ben Rosenfield) and Ron Foxman (Philip Ettinger), but politely declines their invitations to socialize. Equally politely, he  turns down a personal invitation from charming Sonny Cottler (Pico Alexander), the head of the one Jewish fraternity on campus, and his frat brother Marty Ziegler (Noah Robbins),  to join. His studies and his job in the library take up all his time, he tells them.

One of the things Marcus resents most is the requirement to attend the weekly chapel service, not because he is Jewish but because he is an atheist. Nonetheless, Marcus cooperates with the rule and keeps his opinion to himself – at least, until confronted by Dean Hawes Caudwell (Tracy Letts), the college’s Dean of Men in a meeting in the dean’s office. During this powerful, pivotal scene, Marcus tries to evade the dean’s probing questions while maintaining his personal integrity, but eventually references Bertrand Russell’s “Why I Am Not a Christian.”

The scene is an acting tour-de-force for both Lerman and Letts, as well as one of the dramatic turning points for the film. Letts’ Dean Caudwell is an overbearing personality convinced he is mounting a charm offensive  as he bullies Marcus – encouraging him to join a fraternity or the baseball team, asking him about dating. But Marcus’ life-long self-discipline leads him to repeatedly try to politely deflect the dean’s assault.  During the course of their verbal fencing match, Marcus, suffering from undiagnosed appendicitis, gradually lets down his steely guard and reveals his long-hidden indignation.

In an earlier scene, Marcus’ plan to focus only on his studies is altered when, while working in the library, he finds himself hypnotized by the swinging ankle of a beautiful blonde fellow student. Olivia Hutton (Sarah Gadon) seems to be everything Marcus is not – wealthy, sophisticated, elegant, coolly bold. Borrowing his roommate’s car, he takes Olivia on a date to the town’s one fancy French restaurant. While Olivia is charmed by Marcus’ mix of inexperience and intelligence, the date leaves Marcus confused. Despite her seeming confidence, Olivia has a troubled side,  a survivor of a suicide attempt. Somehow, the two find themselves slowly but irresistibly romantically drawn to each other.  .

Lerman is very good as Marcus, where his innocent and boyish looks help in playing the character as calm on the surface but tense underneath, with the character often described as “intense.” Gadon is the perfect mix of vulnerability and poise, wary yet frank, and she generates most of the romantic warmth in the relationship. The director shot in New York, which allowed him to draw on a talented pool of Broadway actors for supporting roles. Both Lerman and Letts, the only person to win both a Tony award for acting and a Pulitzer prize (for “August: Osage County”), are outstanding in their duel of wills, which starts with the riveting scene in the dean’s office. The most romantic scenes, strangely, take place when Marcus is hospitalized. Their idyll is interrupted by the arrival of Marcus’ mother, whose practical concerns extract a promise from her son, in a pair of scenes featuring moving performances from Emond.

There is something of Greek tragedy in this moving, melancholy tale of best-laid plans gone awry, and the story’s what-if scenario gives it a timeless element. INDIGNATION is not for the action crowd but for for fans of finely crafted drama and splendid acting, it has much to offer.

4 1/2 of 5 Stars

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DON’T THINK TWICE – Review

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It’s not easy being thirty. At least that seems like the case for Mike Birbiglia. The comedian, actor, writer, and now director isn’t quite at the level of Eeyore, but he’s definitely one of indie cinema’s recent favorite sad sacks. A consistent theme in his work is a male character (always himself) self-analyzing his life and career and pining after the “shoulda been me” moments that could have propelled his career. Part of this introspection is centered around how the thirties is ultimately the final nail in your budding professional career. At that point you might as well turn off the microphone and settle down into a life of domesticity. Well… at least in the eyes of Birbiglia.

I admit that I wasn’t much of a fan of his previous film – the directorial debut SLEEPWALK WITH ME. It’s consistent down beat tone became a slog to get through. His follow up, DON’T THINK TWICE, doesn’t let Birbiglia bring down the festivities as much. Thankfully, he places himself in an ensemble filled with characters going through their own personal highs and lows, making it a team effort in the drama department.

Given the nature of the team’s work though, the laughs come in just as frequently as the earnest moments. DON’T THINK TWICE follows an improve group that consists of Miles (Birbigilia), Jack (Keegan Michael-Key), Sam (Gillian Jacobs), Bill (Chris Gethard), Allison (Kate Micucci), and Lindsay (Tami Sagher). Success for this group is the notierity that comes with getting a role on Weekend Live (basically Saturday Night Live). When a talent scout from the tv show comes to one of their live shows and asks for two of the six members to audition, the bond that held the group together begins to come undone.

The quirky charm of the group is immediately infectious. Birbiglia clearly knows this world and liberally focuses his lens on the training and artistry that goes into each and every stage performance. As they point out, everything is always conceived in the moment, and these moments that take place on stage are pure magic. These scenes are given room to breathe and slowly build, just like they would if you were seated in front of this live performance.

However, several later moments are a little too brief to the point that they aren’t exploring the emotional weight of the scene enough. For instance, a restaurant scene involving Birbiglia discussing the name of an unborn child that he wants to help raise feels stunted by having to make room for the turning points in other character’s lives. While some of these later emotional beats seem slightly too brief, the time spent with these characters thus far will still keep you emotionally invested as they painfully struggle for the next step in each of their careers.

Where the film succeeds the most is as an examination of the artistic process. Beginning with a historical look at the founders of improv places the group’s work as a true form of art. Furthermore, watching these characters study YouTube clips for impersonations and practicing voices in their spare time highlights the hard work that goes on off the stage (even if the voices become a bit exhausting). DON’T THINK TWICE soars when it focuses on how your craft can be strengthened with the help of those around you. Just like in life, improv is not a solo mission – there are always those who will “have your back.” I’m not sure if Birbiglia is pondering whether the strength of your craft begins to dwindle over time or if its your overall passion to keep grinding along. Either way, I like to think that the creative process doesn’t haven an expiration date.

 

Overall rating: 3.5 out of 5

DON’T THINK TWICE opens at St. Louis’ Landmark Tivoli theater on Friday, August 12

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