HOW TO BUILD A GIRL – Review

So, who’s ready for a nostalgic hop across the pond? But really, after a couple of months lockdown, who’s not up for that? And what kind of nostalgia, any particular decade? Why let’s bounce back to the wild, weird 1990s. Oh really? Now I know how my folks felt when we went crazy for the 50’s back in the late 70s. But there’s one thing all those eras have in common: rock n’ roll, or the more encompassing “pop music”. Toss in lotsa’ family drama, some “coming of age” angst, and a smidgen of snoggin’ (well, romance is more apt) and you’ve got this flick’s recipe. Actually it’s more of an instructions guide, but don’t let the title lure you into thinking that it’s a reboot (or “re-imagining”) of the John Hughes teen fantasy WEIRD SCIENCE. Nope, that’s not the gist of this self-empowerment manual/journey that’s HOW TO BUILD A GIRL.

That title girl is fifteen-year-old high schooler Johanna Morrigan (Beanie Feldstein) who daydreams about the perfect boy that will change her life. Well, since that’s not going anywhere, she plots her own destiny as an aspiring writer, a big goal for someone growing up in a council estate in Wolverhampton. Dad Pat (Paddy Considine), an aspiring musician struggles to make ends meet on his disability benefits, while mum Angie (Sarah Solemani) is a near-zombie after recently birthing twins (at age 38). And Johanna has two brothers, grade-schooler Lupin (Stellan Powell) and a grade-ahead-of her Krissi (Laurie Kynaston), who’s also yearning for a boyfriend. After winning a writing competition, she makes a splash on a local TV morning “chat” show. Spurred on by the taped pictures on her bedroom wall of her idols and inspirations (they come to life when nobody’s around but her), Johanna sets her sights on becoming a rock music reviewer/journalist for the glossy “fanzine” called “Disc & Music Echo” (DME). Most of the London bullpen scoffs at her, but one staffer (Frank Dillane) convinces the editor to give her a chance. But first, Johanna must “make herself over”, create a persona. Dyeing her hair a rich red magenta and donning an outfit that resembles DC comics “super-magician” Zatanna (top hat, tails, and fishnet stockings), she adopts the “pen name” Dolly Wilde. DME gets lots of positive feedback on her piece, so they give her a showcase assignment, a one-on-one interview/profile of pop sensation John Kite (Alfie Allen). The two make an emotional connection resulting in a fawning “fan-girl” puff piece that nearly gets her fired. To keep the money flowing Johanna decides to turn Dolly into an acerbic, name-calling, “poison pen” critic, which earns her more acclaim and cash. But what happens when the character she’s created starts to take over? Will the demonic diva Dolly obliterate the sweet jovial Johanna? Or will she resist the siren call of fame to stay true to herself?

After sharing the screen in recent teen “drama-dies” like LADY BIRD and BOOKSMART, Feldstein gets the chance to carry a film on her own talents. And she does for the most part, despite the too obvious story mechanics (and a whispy, breathy accent). In the opening sequences, she’s got an effervescent energy, lighting up the screen as she glides from home to school, then soaring into the London DME offices like a stealth bomber. Her wide-eyed optimism for that first half makes the transition to the dark side in the second act a bit too difficult to accept. Luckily she has excellent acting support, particularly from Kynaston who deftly morphs from a delighted cheerleader ( a spin on the best gay pal of cliched “rom-coms”) to the true confidant who will deliver that much-needed “wake-up call” to get her back on track. At one point he delivers a monologue about his very closeted beau that is heart-wrenching. Considine is an endearing delight as the playful patriarch who barely stays on the “straight and narrow”, wanting to care for his family but still holding to a tiny bit of his rock n’ roll dreams. A good deal of the drama is handled deftly by Solemani, whose Angie adores her kids but fights the energy-draining effects of her late in life twins. Though her eyes are nearly always at “half-mast” they’re filled with affection. As for Dolly’s encounters, Allen is quite compelling as the somewhat jaded pop performer whose muse is awakened thanks to her open nature. Aside from her family, Johanna has the strongest emotional connection with him. Plus there are some terrific cameos from many talented British comic vets. Chris O’Dowd is hilariously awkward as the stiff TV host blindsided by Johanna’s studio coup. Joanna Scanlan is superb as Johanna’s tough but encouraging school writing teacher. Emma Thompson shows up close to the finale as another mentor who guides with just the right hint of snark. Best of all is the “who’s who” wall of idols in Johanna’s bedroom including some inspired pairings from Michael Sheen as Freud to Lucy Punch as Sylvia Plath and Sharon Hogan from TV’s “Catastrophe” as a very hard-edged Jo March.

A nice blend of whimsey and satire is achieved in the first half-hour thanks to the assured direction by TV vet Coky Giedroyc and the screenplay by Caitlin Moran, based on her novel. This is especially true as Johanna literally fills her backyard with every type of fantasy “dream boy”. But things change with the introduction of the Dolly personality and the story starts to stray into familiar “morality lesson” terittory. It becomes more jarring as Dolly almost transforms into Johanna’s “Ms. Hyde”, sloshing booze, and dismissing her family. This is driven home by the film’s most graphic sequence (no doubt earning that R rating) as Dolly cruelly and in great detail, relates the laundry list of sex partners (and positions) to her frustrated older brother. It’s a lurid montage that seems so out of place in the story of a teen following her dreams. We’ve seen that downward spiral in too many young adult pop tales. The same could be said for the interchangeable settings (I almost expected the family from last year’s BLINDED BY THE LIGHT to be next door) which made the era hard to identify (there are no cell phones so is it the 80s, but there are still cassettes, so is it…). Plus the delightful “talking wall of fame” is completely forgotten for the middle hour. Feldstein’s Johanna is (for much of the tale) a compelling heroine but HOW TO BUILD A GIRL stumbles and fumbles toward the task’s completion.

2 Out of 4

HOW TO BUILD A GIRL opens in select drive-ins across the country and is available as a Video On Demand through cable and satellite systems and can be purchased through most streaming platforms

HOW TO BUILD A GIRL Starring Beanie Feldstein Opens Next Week

HOW TO BUILD A GIRL WILL BE AVAILABLE IN SELECT THEATERS, DIGITAL AND CABLE VOD MAY 8TH

The critics love HOW TO BUILD A GIRL!

Beanie Feldstein is incandescent.”

Katey Rich, VANITY FAIR

“It’s a joyful thing to behold. As fun as a night in the mosh pit with your best mate”

Leslie Felperin, THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER

“A loving tribute to young women with overactive imaginations and a desire to reinvent themselves. Beanie Feldstein is as charming as ever.”

Anne Cohen, REFINERY29

Check Out the trailer:

Johanna Morrigan (Beanie Feldstein) is a bright, quirky, 16-year-old who uses her colorful imagination to regularly escape her humdrum life in Wolverhampton and live out her creative fantasies. Desperate to break free from the overcrowded flat she shares with her four brothers and eccentric parents, she submits an earnestly penned and off-beat music review to a group of self-important indie rock critics at a weekly magazine. Despite being brushed off initially, Johana clamors to the top of the 90s rock music scene by reinventing herself as Dolly Wilde – a venerable, impossible-to-please music critic with an insatiable lust for fame, fortune, and men. It isn’t long before the rapid pace at which Johana’s life is changing becomes overwhelming and she runs face-first into a devastatingly real, existential crisis: Is this the type of girl she wants to become? Or does she need to start over and build again from the ground up? Based on the best-selling novel by Caitlin Moran, How to Build a Girl is a sassy, sexy, and a profoundly touching coming-of-age comedy that traces the rocky road to womanhood through the lens of a unique and wildly hilarious protagonist. Co-starring Alfie Allen, Paddy Considine, Chris O’Dowd, and Emma Thompson.

About the director: Coky Giedroyc is a British, critically acclaimed director most recently celebrated for her work on Harlots, written by Moira Buffini for Monumental Television and Hulu. In 2016, she was awarded a BAFTA for best director of The Sound Of Music Live starring Kara Tointon and Alexander Armstrong. Coky set up the award-winning drama The Hour written by Abi Morgan and starring Dominic West, Ben Wishaw and Romola Garai which she was nominated for a Golden Globe and an Emmy. She was nominated for both an International Emmy and a BAFTA for the BBC Drama, The Virgin Queen, starring Anne Marie Duff and Tom Hardy. She directed Oliver Twist and Wuthering Heights, both of which also starred Hardy. Other credits include the four-part BBC1 series What Remains written by Tony Basgallop, Spies of Warsaw, an adaptation of Alan Furst’s novel and Nativity, a Canadian co-production starring Tatiana Maslany. Her work in the US has included: The Killing, Penny Dreadful with Eva Green and Rory Kinnear, Broad Squad, a pilot for ABC, Veena Sud’s series Seven Seconds and Gypsy, starring Naomi Watts and Billy Crudup. Coky served for four years on the board of Directors UK and is a mentor to young female film makers starting out in the industry.

JOJO RABBIT Opens in Theaters October 16th -Check Out This New Trailer

Writer director Taika Waititi (THOR: RAGNAROK, HUNT FOR THE WILDERPEOPLE), brings his signature style of humor and pathos to his latest film, Jojo Rabbit, a World War II satire that follows a lonely German boy (Roman Griffin Davis as Jojo) whose world view is turned upside down when he discovers his single mother (Scarlett Johansson) is hiding a young Jewish girl (Thomasin McKenzie) in their attic. Aided only by his idiotic imaginary friend, Adolf Hitler (Taika Waititi), Jojo must confront his blind nationalism. Jojo Rabbit with a screenplay by and directed by Taika Waititi is based upon the book Caging Skies by Christine Leunens and stars Roman Griffin Davis, Thomasin McKenzie, Taika Waititi, Rebel Wilson, Stephen Merchant, Alfie Allen, with Sam Rockwell and Scarlett Johansson. 

JOJO RABBIT Opens in Theaters October 16th. Check out this new trailer:

Jojo Rabbit offers a sharply funny, yet profoundly stirring, child’s-eye view of a society gone mad with intolerance.  Drawing on his own Jewish heritage and his experiences growing up surrounded by prejudice, writer-director Taika Waititi (whose mother is Jewish, while his father is Māori) makes a powerful statement against hate with this pitch-black satire of the Nazi culture that gripped the German psyche at the height of WWII.  Waititi takes a story almost too appalling to approach with sober solemnity—that of a boy who, like many at that time, has been brainwashed into absolutely gung-ho devotion to Hitler. He then mines from it a dark, mesmerizing comedy that ultimately unravels the toxic ideas of anti-Semitism and persecution of the other.  Balancing on a comedic high-wire, Waititi mixes the fury of satire with an insistent sense of hope that fanaticism and hate can be overcome. 

            The film follows very much in the footsteps of some of Waititi’s personal filmmaking heroes:  Mel Brooks, Charlie Chaplin, Ernst Lubitsch and Stanley Kubrick to name a few.  Like those directors, Waititi was in search of a fresh way to re-visit the most unsettling of topics through the paradoxically moral force of out-and-out parody.  Waititi echoes Brooks in particular, as a Jewish actor disrupting the enduring power of Hitler’s image with a zany, ridiculing portrait.   But much as the film owes to its bold forbearers, Jojo Rabbit feels very much of our times, with its deeply human characters whose blinded foibles might amuse but whose inner predicaments are deadly real and pointedly relevant right now.    

More Predators, More Explosives! Shane Black’s THE PREDATOR Red Band Trailer Is Awesome!

In two weeks, the Hunt is On! I can’t wait for this!!

20th Century Fox has released a new red band trailer for THE PREDATOR.

Directed by Shane Black, the film stars Boyd Holbrook, Trevante Rhodes, Jacob Tremblay, Keegan-Michael Key, Olivia Munn, Sterling K. Brown, Alfie Allen, Thomas Jane, Augusto Aguilera, Jake Busey and Yvonne Strahovski.

Purchase advance tickets for the must-see film of September at www.ThePredatorTix.com.

For fans headed to TIFF, THE PREDATOR will kick-off the Midnight Madness screenings on September 6th. For more information, please visit: www.tiff.net/midnightmadness.

Watch the new red band trailer below.

From the outer reaches of space to the to the backwoods of southern Georgia, the hunt comes home in Shane Black’s explosive reinvention of the Predator series. Now, the universe’s most lethal hunters are stronger, smarter and deadlier than ever before. And only a ragtag crew of ex-soldiers and an evolutionary biology professor can prevent the end of the human race.

Written by Fred Dekker & Shane Black. Based on the characters created by Jim Thomas & John Thomas.

Fans of the series have been looking forward to another installment of the franchise. For those needing a refresher. the series started in 1987 with
PREDATOR with Mega-star Arnold “if it bleeds we can kill it” Schwarznegger, PREDATOR 2 staring Danny Glover and Bill Paxton (1990), director Robert Rodriguez’s awesome PREDATORS(2010) with Adrien Brody, Alice Braga, Danny Trejo, Walton Goggins, Oleg Taktarov, Topher Grace, Mahershalalhashbaz Ali, Louis Ozawa Changchien and Laurence Fishburne.

The crossover series, spawned by the trophy room with an Alien xenomorph head at the end of PREDATOR 2, included Alien vs. Predator (2004) and Aliens vs. Predator: Requiem (2007).

THE PREDATOR opens in theaters on September 14, 2018.

JOHN WICK Filmmakers LIVE on Reddit – Check Out The New Trailer and Poster

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In anticipation of their buzzworthy and highly-entertaining action-thriller, JOHN WICK, filmmakers and veteran stuntmen Chad Stahelski and David Leitch are logged-on to Reddit /r/ movies AMA RIGHT NOW to answer your questions about the explosive film that received rave reviews from its debut at Fantastic Fest.

See the red carpet photos HERE and read Michael Haffner’s review HERE.

Tune in to hear what the filmmaking team and legendary stuntmen have to say, and check out the new poster and trailer.

Click on the below link NOW to find out more about the filmmakers in their LIVE Reddit /r/ movies AMA:

An ex-hitman comes out of retirement to track down the gangsters that took everything from him. With New York City as his bullet-riddled playground, JOHN WICK (Keanu Reeves) is a fresh and stylized take on the “assassin genre”.

Willem Dafoe, Ian McShane, Adrianne Palicki, Michael Nyqvist, Alfie Allen, Lance Reddick, Dean Winters and John Leguizamo also star.

Be sure to head to theaters on October 24th when the action-packed JOHN WICK hits cinemas.

http://johnwickthemovie.com/
https://www.facebook.com/johnwickmovie
https://twitter.com/JohnWickMovie #JohnWick

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Watch Keanu Reeves In JOHN WICK Trailer

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It’s Steve McQueen reborn ala BULLITT. Keanu Reeves is back in the over-the-top, mayhem packed trailer for directors David Leitch & Chad Stahelski’s JOHN WICK. Multiple viewings are required.

This is going to be awesome!!

An ex-hitman comes out of retirement to track down the gangsters that took everything from him. With New York City as his bullet-riddled playground, JOHN WICK (Keanu Reeves) is a fresh and stylized take on the “assassin genre”. Willem Dafoe, Ian McShane, Adrianne Palicki, Michael Nyqvist, Alfie Allen, Lance Reddick, Dean Winters and John Leguizamo also star.

The film’s score is from Joel Richard and Tyler Bates (GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY). During my interview with him over the summer, Bates said, “I just finished on a movie with Keanu Reeves and Willem Dafoe called JOHN WICK. That was very cool. As with GUARDIANS, there are songs interspersed in this film as well. There’s a song I wrote with Marilyn Manson. There’s a song I wrote with my friend Ciscandra Nostalghia, whose career is blowing up right now. I worked on the score with my friend Joel Richard. It’s really a great collection of people on the team.”

The movie will screen at Fantastic Fest this Friday, September 19th.

Clear your calendar for the fourth Friday next month – JOHN WICK opens nationwide on October 24, 2014.

http://johnwickthemovie.com/
https://www.facebook.com/johnwickmovie
https://twitter.com/JohnWickMovie #JohnWick

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Keanu Reeves Seeks Vengeance In JOHN WICK Poster

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Lionsgate has revealed the first poster for filmmakers Chad Stahelski’s and David Leitch’s action thriller JOHN WICK.

An ex-hitman comes out of retirement to track down the gangsters that took everything from him. With New York City as his bullet-riddled playground, JOHN WICK (Keanu Reeves) is a fresh and stylized take on the “assassin genre”.

Come back on Friday when the first trailer debuts.

The film also stars Michael Nyqvist, Alfie Allen, Adrianne Palicki, Bridget Moynahan, Dean Winters, Ian McShane, with John Leguizamo, and Willem Dafoe.

GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY composer Tyler Bates has written the score for the movie.

Prepare for bullet-riddled scenes with full throttle mayhem when this film hits theaters October 24.

Official Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/johnwickmovie 
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