Terry Richmond (Aaron Pierre) enters the town of Shelby Springs on a simple but urgent mission– post bail for his cousin and save him from imminent danger. But when Terry’s life’s savings is unjustly seized by law-enforcement, he’s forced to go head to head with local police chief Sandy Burnne (Don Johnson) and his combat-ready officers. Terry finds an unlikely ally in court clerk Summer McBride (AnnaSophia Robb) and the two become ensnared in a deep-rooted conspiracy within the remote township. As the stakes turn deadly, Terry must call upon his mysterious background to break the department’s hold on the community, bring justice to his own family– and protect Summer in the process.
REBEL RIDGE, the next film by Jeremy Saulnier (GREEN ROOM), comes to Netflix September 6th.
In WAMG’s review, writer Michael Haffner wrote, “GREEN ROOM is a lean and mean machine that hits hard.”
Saulnier told Netflix on his latest movie, “As a filmmaker, I dig grounded ’80s and ’90s action films that not only deliver on spectacle, but succeed in tying on-screen mayhem to a real and true emotional component. Smaller scale, bigger impact. Less veneer, less artificiality. They’re rooted in a ‘kick up the dust’ level of craft and authenticity that I don’t see often in the current space, and I was interested in making a film more like that.”
From the acclaimed writer/director of Blue Ruin and Hold The Dark, REBEL RIDGE is a deeply human yet high-velocity thriller that explores corruption and morality in the context of bone-breaking action and ever-coiling suspense. Produced by Anish Savjani, Neil Kopp, Vincent Savino and Jeremy Saulnier, REBEL RIDGEalso stars David Denman, Emory Cohen, Steve Zissis, Zsané Jhé, Dana Lee and James Cromwell.
This weekend sees the release of another addition in the movies’ complex relationship with criminals, in particular gangsters. Or the “made men”. But not “made-up men” as in those early-talkie Warners classics, or the celebrated Corleone trilogy. This guy was the “real deal”, although he would’ve grimaced at seeing his name on a theatre marquee. He preferred working and plotting (a wiz at making the numbers click) in the shadows. Ah, but films have found him fascinating because of his unique heritage, as he was one of the few underworld figures who was Jewish, rather than the prevalent Catholic-raised Italian-Americans. Now, there was a fictionalized version of himself in that second of the earlier mentioned series, being Lee Strasberg as Hyman Roth in the superior sequel, THE GODFATHER PART II. But several acclaimed actors have portrayed him on the big and small screen including Patrick Dempsey and Oscar-winners Richard Dreyfus and Sir Ben Kingsley. Now another heavy-hitter (a vet of many mob movies) offers his take as Meyer LANSKY.
But before we meet the “big man”, we get to know struggling writer/ex-reporter David Stone (Sam Worthington). He’s fibbed to his estranged wife about his trip to Miami in 1981. There’s no big “book-signing” event, but rather the chance to get back on the “best seller list’, because he’s been “hand-picked” by the subject to write a biography of legendary crime figure Meyer Lansky (Harvey Keitel). The two meet in a local “family-style” restaurant (similar to an IHOP or Denny’s) where the “big boss’ lays down a few rules, including no tape recorders and no selling it to publishers until his approval or demise. David then jots down pages of notes on the elder’s long history, going from mastering back alley craps games 70 years ago to climbing the ranks of the mob with pal Benjamin “Bugsy” Siegel (David Cade) as they prove invaluable to “big man” Charlie “Lucky” Luciano (Shane McRae). In the late 30s, Meyer (John Magaro) would start a family with the volatile Anne (AnnaSophia Robb), earn a chair at the “organization’s table”, and actually aid the feds in flushing out Nazi spies. Later, Lansky was a big financial contributor to the formation of Israel. In between the interviews, David returns to his modest motel, where he’s often distracted by the sultry woman at the pool, Maureen (Minky Kelly), and by the car that slowly cruises the parking lot near his room. The driver is FBI agent Frank Rivers (David James Elliott) who soon pressures David to get info about a missing mob fortune (about 300 million). But can the down-on-his-luck scribe tread the dangerous tightrope between the “feds” and the still-connected aging gangster?
As the “silver lion” of the “organization” (maybe “last man standing” rather than “last man living”) Keitel really “delivers the goods” in the title role. Somehow he can turn on a dime, from a “reminiscing about those good ole’ days’ charmer” to an intimidating “iron hand”. Though he knows that the final sunset is quickly approaching, Keitel gives Lansky quiet dignity as he trie to “go out” on his own terms and finally chooses to boast, a bit, of his long legacy. But there’s still a great deal of tragedy, as he recalls his afflicted son and his rebuff from his “promised land”. And though he’s been in some of the biggest recent hit films (and those upcoming AVATAR sequels) Worthington is often overwhelmed in the many duets with Mr. K. It may be due to the familiarity of his character, a creative grasping at straws as he finds himself between “a rock and a hard place”. Plus his pleading phone calls with the family quickly become tiresome, as does the stilted romance with Kelly’s flirtatious “femme fatale” Maureen. That role feels “tacked on” in order to “spice up” the dreary modern-day sequences that are minus Meyer. Another addition to David’s dilemma is Elliot as the dogged, obsessed “G-man” who has the determination to carry on J. Edgar’s legacy but little of his arrogant aggression. His Agent Rivers is more of an annoyance than a true threat. As for the flashbacks, Magaro doesn’t try for a Keitel impression as the younger Lansky, but still projects a quiet menace (as opposed to the sadistic Ben) as he tries to divert the mob from being “backbreakers to “bean-counters”, replacing muscled goons with nit-picking auditors. But his version is less compelling despite the scenes of his home life. Ultimately those devolve into shouting matches with Robb’s Anne who overdoes the histrionics as she screams about “divine punishment”. I’m sure a better-written role would have showcased her considerable talents.
Everything moves at a languid pace under the pedestrian direction from Etyan Rockaway, who co-wrote the script with relative Robert. The interview segments have a quiet tension, due mainly to Keitel, but the flashbacks often feel like hazy basic cable TV crime “doc-show” recreations, complete with whirling newspaper headlines, odd hairstyles, ill-fitting fashions, and outright anachronisms, as when we see the 1920s sedans at resorts in the late 1940s. The FBI office scenes play like outtakes from a 70s TV cop show, while the repeating CGI-enhanced headshots fail to give the mob history a gritty contemporary edge. Most frustrating is that the man in the center remains an enigma, though more complex now (the Nazi-smashing and Israel support are less reported aspects of his story), many questions are left dangling as we get many long lingering pan-shots of him shuffling along the Alabama *doubling for Florida) shoreline. Despite the always compelling Keitel, LANSKY is a real letdown, often putting us to sleep, along with the fishes.
2 Out of 4
LANSKY opens in select theatres and is available as a Video-on-Demand via most streaming apps and platforms beginning Friday, June 25, 2021
Harvey Keitel is Meyer Lansky LANSKY – In Select Theaters and On-Demand June 25th. Here’s the trailer:
In LANSKY, Sam Worthington plays David Stone, a renowned but down-on-his-luck writer, who has the opportunity of a lifetime when he receives a surprise call from Meyer Lansky (Academy Award nominee Harvey Keitel). For decades, authorities have been trying to locate Lansky’s alleged nine-figure fortune and this is their last chance to capture the aging gangster before he dies. With the FBI close behind, the Godfather of organized crime reveals the untold truth about his life as the notorious boss of Murder Inc. and the National Crime Syndicate.
LANSKY stars Harvey Keitel, Sam Worthington, John Magaro, AnnaSophia Robb, Minka Kelly, Danny Abeckaser, and David James Elliot and is written and directed by Eytan Rockaway.
WORDS ON BATHROOM WALLS tells the familiar story of bright 16-year old Adam (Charlie Plummer), who suffers from schizophrenia. Expelled following a fistfight, he is sent to a Catholic school to finish out his senior year. Adam makes little attempt to fit in until he meets Maya (Taylor Russell), a hyper-intelligent girl from the wrong side of the tracks and there is an instant soulful and romantic connection. When he starts hearing voices and seeing people who aren’t there, he attempts to hide his illness because he fears it will interfere with his dream of attending culinary school.
The screenplay for WORDS ON BATHROOM WALLS stuffs in every cliché about teen angst yet is a laudable attempt to seem heartfelt without too much blatant manipulation. It’s an uneven film, but generally succeeds thanks especially to a winning central performance Charlie Plummer. The film itself often seems schizophrenic. The lightness of tone and playful score is often at odds with a serious story that explores the need for schizophrenics to stay on their medication. WORDS ON BATHROOM WALLS was directed by Thor Freudenthal, who directed the first DIARY OF A WIMPY KID movie and his new film at times plays like a belated entry in that franchise, as if the wimpy kid has grown up but is now battling demons more serious than an obnoxious brother Roderick. Like the Wimpy Kid films, WORDS ON BATHROOM WALLS leans on an over-reliance of self-aware monologues addressed to the camera that seem gimmicky. There’s also a trio of imaginary friends only he can see and only when his meds aren’t kicking in that are supposed to be personifications of his illness: a muscle-bound bouncer known as the ‘Enforcer’ (Lobo Sebastian), the New Age cheerleader/fairy Rebecca (AnnaSophia Robb), and Joaquin (Devon Bostick), who wears a bathrobe but whose purpose is otherwise unclear (the less said about a rumbling and grumbling black cloud that follows Adam around the better).
Charlie Plummer is likable as Adam and makes you really root for this kid. Less successful is Taylor Russell’s Maya, the type of annoying overachiever too often in these types of films that doesn’t ring true. Molly Parker is fine as Adam’s concerned mom while a cast-against-type Walton Goggins brings great depth to his role as her boyfriend.
WORDS ON BATHROOM WALLS asks an interesting question – should the mentally ill be forcibly medicated? It’s a good question since each person reacts differently to each treatment and sometimes the cure is more distressing than the symptoms of schizophrenia. Here Adam loses his sense of taste when his meds are working, which is a huge problem seeing how he aspires to be a professional chef. The script explores various facets of schizophrenia but it doesn’t dwell on them long enough to depress the viewer or make the film dark. It is a bittersweet, if occasionally precious, teen movie that ends happily. Sufferers of schizophrenia may feel that the film trivializes their illness but at the end of the day it is a film about young adulthood, not mental illness.
Experience thedarkpowersand supernatural thrills within Blackwood Boarding School whenDownaDarkHallarrives on Blu-ray (plus Digital), DVD,and Digital October 16 from Lionsgate’s Summit Entertainment.
Experience the dark powers and supernatural thrills within Blackwood Boarding School when Down a Dark Hall arrives on Blu-ray™ (plus Digital), DVD, and Digital October 16 from Lionsgate’s Summit Entertainment. This film is currently available On Demand. Based on the best-selling novel by Lois Duncan and produced by the author of The Twilight Saga, this terrifying young adult thriller features an all-star cast including AnnaSophia Robb, Isabelle Fuhrman, and Oscar® nominee Uma Thurman (Best Supporting Actress, Pulp Fiction, 1994). The Down a Dark Hall Blu-ray™ and DVD include an all-new featurette and never-before-seen deleted scene and will be available for the suggested retail price of $21.99 and $19.98, respectively.
Kit Gordy (AnnaSophia Robb), a difficult young girl, is sent to the mysterious Blackwood Boarding School when her heated temper becomes too much for her mother to handle. Once she arrives at Blackwood, Kit encounters eccentric headmistress Madame Duret (Uma Thurman) and meets the schools’ only other students, four young women also headed down a troubled path. While exploring the labyrinthine corridors of the school, Kit and her classmates discover that Blackwood Manor hides an age-old secret rooted in the paranormal.
BLU-RAY/DVD/DIGITAL SPECIAL FEATURES
“Welcome to Blackwood: Venturing Down a Dark Hall” Featurette
Deleted Scene
CAST
AnnaSophia Robb Bridge to Terabithia, Soul Surfer
Isabelle Fuhrman Orphan, The Hunger Games, Hounddog
Victoria Moroles TV’s “Teen Wolf,” “Liv and Maddie,” Cloud 9
Noah Silver TV’s “Tyrant,” Last Knights, Jamie Marks Is Dead
Taylor Russell TV’s “Lost in Space,” Before I Fall, Dead of Night
Rosie Day All Roads Lead to Rome, Outlander, The Seasoning House
and Uma Thurman Kill Bill franchise, Pulp Fiction, Batman & Robin
Welcome to Blackwood, where lost girls find their way…
From the producers of The Twilight Saga comes the very creepy new trailer and poster for DOWN A DARK HALL. Turn up the volume – I dare you.
DOWN A DARK HALL opens in Theaters, On Demand, and On iTunes August 17th.
Kit (AnnaSophia Robb), a difficult young girl, is sent to the mysterious Blackwood Boarding School when her heated temper becomes too much for her mother to handle. Once she arrives at Blackwood, Kit encounters eccentric headmistress Madame Duret (Uma Thurman) and meets the school’s only other students, four young women also headed down a troubled path. While exploring the labyrinthine corridors of the school, Kit and her classmates discover that Blackwood Manor hides an age-old secret rooted in the paranormal.
Based on the classic gothic YA novel of the same name by Lois Duncan – author of “I Know What You Did Last Summer” – and produced by Stephenie Meyer (author of Twilight, The Host), DOWN A DARK HALL is a supernatural thriller directed by Rodrigo Cortés (Buried), from a screenplay by Mike Goldbach and Chris Sparling, and stars AnnaSophia Robb (Soul Surfer, The Carrie Diaries), Isabelle Fuhrman (Orphan), Victoria Moroles (Teen Wolf), Noah Silver (The Tribes of Palos Verdes), Taylor Russell (TV’s Falling Skies), Rosie Day (Outlander), and features a truly memorable turn by the iconic Uma Thurman (Pulp Fiction, Kill Bill: Vols. I & II).
Starring Dennis Quaid, Helen Hunt, AnnaSophia Robb, Lorraine Nicholson (Jack’s daughter), Kevin Sorbo and in her film debut, Carrie Underwood.
SOUL SURFER is the inspiring true story of teen surfer Bethany Hamilton, who lost her arm in a shark attack and courageously overcame all odds to become a champion again, through her sheer determination and unwavering faith.
The film features an all-star cast, including AnnaSophia Robb and Helen Hunt, with Carrie Underwoodin her film debut, and Dennis Quaid.
In the wake of this life-changing event that took her arm and nearly her life, Bethany’s feisty determination and steadfast beliefs spur her toward an adventurous comeback that gives her the grit to turn her loss into a gift for others.
Bethany (Robb) was born to surf. A natural talent who took to the waves at a young age, she was leading an idyllic, sun-drenched, surfer girl’s life on the Kauai Coast, competing in national competitions with her best friend Alana (Lorraine Nicholson), when everything changed in a heartbeat. On Halloween morning, Bethany was on a typical ocean outing when a 14-foot tiger shark came out of nowhere and seemed to shatter all her dreams.
SOUL SURFER reveals the moving aftermath of this headline-making story, as Bethany fights to recover and grapples with the future. Strengthened by the love of her parents, Tom (Quaid) and Cheri (Hunt), she refuses to give in or give up, and begins a bold return to the water. Still, the questions keep hammering her: Why did this happen? Why did she have to lose everything? Will she ever feel the joy and power of riding the waves again? And if she can’t be a surfer, then who is she?
The devastating 2004 tsunami in the Pacific Ocean unexpectedly gives Bethany a new perspective. Traveling to Phuket, Thailand with her youth-group leader Sara Hill (Underwood), she witnesses life beyond her own shoreline and discovers her greater purpose—she can make a difference in the lives of others. Filled with a new sense of hope and direction, she returns home with a renewed resolve to conquer her own limitations and set an encouraging example for people facing adversity.
At the National Championships, Bethany bravely faces off with her fiercest rival, Malia Birch (Sonya Balmores), and takes her astonishing one-armed surfing technique to the limit. But as the horn blows, and the suspenseful competition kicks off, Bethany is no longer thinking about the challenges of her body. Now, her surfing, her biggest dreams and her life have become about pushing her own physical limits to touch the souls of others.
Directed by Sean McNamara, the screenplay was by McNamara, Deborah Schwartz. Douglas Schwartz and Michael Berk. SOUL SURFER is based on the book by Bethany Hamilton, Sheryl Berk and Rick Bundschuh. The screen story by Sean McNamara, Deborah Schwartz, Douglas Schwartz, Michael Berk, Matt R. Allen, Caleb Wilson and Brad Gann.