RENFIELD – Review

(from left) Renfield (Nicholas Hoult) and Dracula (Nicolas Cage) in Renfield, directed by Chris McKay. Courtesy of Universal

The horror comedy RENFIELD gives the Dracula story gets a modern twist by re-imagining the vampire’s servant Renfield, played by Nicholas Hoult, as in a co-dependent relationship with his demanding boss/ master Dracula, played with scenery-chewing glee and comic menace by Nicolas Cage. A big part of the real fun of this very bloody horror comedy is in it fabulous recreations of Tod Browning’s classic 1931 DRACULA with Bela Lugosi. Hoult does an impressive Dwight Frye as Renfield impression, including that crazy laugh, in these sequences (and occasionally throughout the movie). Nicolas Cage mimics the elegant Bela Lugosi in the recreations of Tod Browning’s classic but otherwise Cage’s Dracula is his own mix of monsters, drawing on more on Christopher Lee and others than Lugosi.

Actually, a lot of the fun for classic movie fans in director Chris McKay’s bloody vampire comedy are the beautifully-executed recreations of that classic monster movie. McKay also alludes to various other Dracula movie incarnations, and references how the monsters in monster movies tend to get bigger and more powerful in sequels while still having the same kind of showdowns with the forces for good battling them. The film alternates between comedy and bloody cartoon violence action scenes, while Renfield grapples with his toxic relationship with Dracula, and his longing for a normal “life” (even though he is also undead).

The film opens with Renfield (Nicholas Hoult) at a self-help group for people with co-dependency issues. He isn’t there to talk about his relationship with his controlling boss, the Prince of Darkness, Dracula (Nicolas Cage) but to hunt for victims for his master. But Renfield tries to play nice guy by not targeting the people at the session, but their tormentors, along with whatever criminals he comes across.

Dispatching one of these tormentors brings Renfield in contact with a drug-dealing crime ring, and the drug lord Teddy Hobo (Ben Schwartz), who runs that part of the Lobo crime family business for his powerful crime boss mom, Ella (Shohreh Aghdashloo), and then in contact with straight-arrow cop Rebecca Quincy (Awkwafina), rebelling against corruption in the force, and her partner (Adrian Martinez), who is less committed to that fight.

The story is set in New Orleans, a perfect spot for this tale, where Dracula is in hiding as he recovers from a very nasty encounter with a van Helsing-type and a priest, which leaves Renfield to do the hunting (or should that be shopping?) for him. Before the tale really gets underway, narrator Renfield gives us a quick recap of that and how he and his boss Dracula met.

This launches us into that wonderful flashback with a marvelous recreation of early scenes Tod Browning’s 1931 black and white DRACULA, either sampling the Universal monster classic (and not that this film is the same studio as distributor) and inserting Nick Cage and Nick Hoult in to the Dracula and Renfield roles. These bits of homage to the original sound film are worth the ticket price alone and there are more snippets later. The classic movie recreations are followed by a quick summary of how Renfield and Dracula ended up in New Orleans, where the story takes place and where Dracula is in hiding as he recovers from a nasty encounter with a van Helsing-type and a priest, which leaves Renfield to do the hunting (or should that be shopping?) for him.

However, Renfield is growing tired of his long life of servitude – and his temperamental and demanding master, and longs for something like a more normal life. When Dracula complains about the quality of the victims, all baddies, that Renfield is bringing him, and demands a better quality of blood – like from nuns and cheerleaders – Renfield reaches a new low. Maybe it is time to admit he is co-dependent.

You can see the comic potential in that, and the script dives right in. In between the drama between Renfield and his toxic boss, we get plenty of action sequences, of the cartoon violence variety, and in the horror movie “buckets-o-blood” vein (ahem). This is over-the-top stuff, with spurting red stuff and limbs severed and heads popped off, but those sensitive to blood and guts should take note.

The film has some great comic moments but overall it suffers from too-slow pacing and a tendency to repeat or draw out some scenes, as if wanting to extend the running time. Generally the comic and relationship scenes work better than the action ones, where the slow pacing and a lack of inventiveness does not work well with a blood-and-gore horror, where speed is needed. While there are some delightful moments between the two Nicks, and an especially funny and spot-on for relationship humor where Cage questions Hoult when Renfield is trying to conceal information from the Prince of Darkness, but the best parts of the film are by far the classic movie recreation scenes, where both Cage and Hoult reveling in the parts with winking humor.

Both Nicks are excellent in this, milking their scenes together for comedy, as Nick Cage’s Dracula plays the worst boss ever with hints to everyone kind of toxic relationship. Where the film falls short is in the action sequences. RENFIELD subscribes to the Buckets-O-Blood school of horror, with cartoon violence that involves spurting founds of red and limbs torn off and heads popped off in the most exaggerated manner. The problem is that the action is a bit slow and repetitive, not nearly fast enough to make it work, and has lackluster, almost generic music under it, which doesn’t help. Oddly, the sound track to the more comic relationship parts is excellent.

Renfield is taken with officer Quincy’s unshakable ethical standards but the scenes between Hoult and Awkwafina don’t always completely work. Hoult plays the smitten Renfield well, with a sweetness and innocence, but Awkwafina seems less comfortable in her narrowly defined role which does not give her enough room to shine. The casting seemed a good idea but as the part as written is too confining, although Awkwafina does get some drama mileage out of it, regarding avenging her father and protecting her sister. Among the supporting characters, Iranian American actor Shohreh Aghdashloo is the elegant and coolly-powerful stand-out in her few scenes. As her son, Ben Schwartz is more noisy and blustering than scary, like an overgrown teenager determined to show how bad he is, while still trying to impress his mom.

RENFIELD serves up gory horror comedy fun, very much on the bloody side. Although some scenes seem to repeat points already made and the action scenes could be energetic, the impressive classic film sequences more than make up for any flaws.

RENFIELD opens Friday, April 14, in theaters.

RATING: 3 out of 4 stars

RENFIELD Trailer Lands Starring Nicolas Cage, Nicholas Hoult and Awkwafina

Copyright © 2023 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved. Photo Credit: Michele K. Short/Universal Pictures

Nicolas Cage and Nicholas Hoult star in director Chris McKay’s RENFIELD. In theaters on April 14, watch the crazy new trailer.

www.renfieldmovie.com

Evil doesn’t span eternity without a little help.

In this modern monster tale of Dracula’s loyal servant, Nicholas Hoult (Mad Max: Fury Road, X-Men franchise) stars as Renfield, the tortured aide to history’s most narcissistic boss, Dracula (Oscar® winner Nicolas Cage). Renfield is forced to procure his master’s prey and do his every bidding, no matter how debased. But now, after centuries of servitude, Renfield is ready to see if there’s a life outside the shadow of The Prince of Darkness. If only he can figure out how to end his codependency.

Renfield is directed by Chris McKay (The Tomorrow War, The LEGO Batman Movie) from a screenplay by Ryan Ridley (Ghosted series, Rick & Morty series), based on an original idea by The Walking Dead and Invincible creator Robert Kirkman.

The film co-stars Awkwafina (The Farewell, Marvel’s Shang-Chi and the Legend of Ten Rings), Ben Schwartz (Sonic, The Afterparty) and Adrian Martinez (The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, Focus).

Renfield is produced by Skybound Entertainment partners Robert Kirkman and David Alpert (The Walking Dead, Invincible), co-presidents Bryan Furst (Daybreakers) and Sean Furst (Daybreakers) and by Chris McKay. McKay’s producing partner Samantha Nisenboim (co-producer, The Tomorrow War) will executive produce.

THE TOMORROW WAR – Review

CHRIS PRATT stars in THE TOMORROW WAR. Courtesy of Amazon Studios

OK, folks. Strap yourselves in for another time-travel opus, with all the brain-warping snags that entails. Soldiers from 30 years in the future dramatically appear in 2022, warning of imminent extinction by a horde of alien invaders, requiring the initiation of a draft. Lots of cannon fodder from our now are needed in their then because Humanity is going down in flames. They’ve made this portal that only allows weekly trips between their present and ours for shuttling personnel. That’s supposed to minimize audience speculation about why they’re not using the technology in more sensible ways. Like going back to the initial encounter with enough weapons to prevent the whole disaster. Or fill in your own solutions. That’s what my brain keeps churning during moments of quiet dialog between the massive CGI clashes.

This may be my own nit to pick but time travel as a premise works best in comedy, when the logical quagmires don’t particularly matter. Let Bill and Ted, or Marty and Doc calendar-hop all they wish to give us some grins. But when we’re supposed to take this stuff seriously, it’s hard to suspend and maintain enough disbelief. Accepting a regular ol’ alien invasion or zombie apocalypse is easily doable. Just don’t complicate it with yet another mindless temporal leap into someone else’s fantasy.

As to the action that we’re salivating over, they truly deliver the goods while animating and battling the conquering hordes on an epic scale. The product displayed seems a mashup among STARSHIP TROOPERS, WORLD WAR Z, six SHARKNADOs and the TERMINATOR series. The aliens are huge, bug-like and hard to kill; they breed like crazy and swarm impressively; the measures used to resist them will trigger associations with the aforementioned and other genre films you’ve seen. That includes the trope of one family destined to play a much larger role in saving our species than logic would dictate. Oh. And a bit of messaging about how this all happened.

Watch it for the adrenaline. Turn off your brains, so any mental activity, intended or on autopilot, doesn’t interfere with the visceral. THE TOMORROW WAR releasing exclusively on Amazon Prime Video on Friday, July 2nd.

RATING: 2 out of 4 stars

Chris Pratt, Yvonne Strahovski, J.K. Simmons, Betty Gilpin Star In Trailer For THE TOMORROW WAR – On Prime Video July 2

Tune in to Chris Pratt’s Instagram (@prattprattpratt) TODAY, May 26th at 4pm PT / 7pm ET for a special IG LIVE!

In The Tomorrow War, the world is stunned when a group of time travelers arrive from the year 2051 to deliver an urgent message: Thirty years in the future mankind is losing a global war against a deadly alien species. The only hope for survival is for soldiers and civilians from the present to be transported to the future and join the fight.

Among those recruited is high school teacher and family man Dan Forester (Chris Pratt). Determined to save the world for his young daughter, Dan teams up with a brilliant scientist (Yvonne Strahovski) and his estranged father (J.K. Simmons) in a desperate quest to rewrite the fate of the planet.

Check out the new trailer in 3… 2… 1…

I am so hyped for this movie and Chris Pratt list of films now include dinosaurs, Star Lord and the Guardians and battling aliens to save the Earth, ala an ID4 vibe.

Amazon Studios will exclusively release THE TOMORROW WAR globally on Prime Video July 2nd, 2021

CHRIS PRATT stars in THE TOMORROW WAR

Credit: Courtesy of Amazon Prime Video

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