SOVEREIGN – Review

(l-r) Jacob Tremblay as Joe Kane and Nick Offerman as his dad Jerry Kane, in SOVEREIGN. Courtesy of Briarcliff Entertainment

It is not kings but citizens as sovereign, as Nick Offerman stars as a father of a teen-aged son, played by Jacob Tremblay, in the true story-based thriller in SOVEREIGN, about these followers of the extremist, anti-government Sovereign Citizen belief system. The film also features Dennis Quaid, who plays a police detective, also a father but of a grown son who is training to become a policeman, who the father and son extremists encounter. This tale of two fathers is tense, moving and heartbreaking, as their world views come into conflict.

A little research uncovers that “Sovereign Citizen” is an actual far-right, anti-government world view, based on pseudo-legal beliefs derived from their interpretation of parts of the U.S. Constitution, a version of the Magna Carta and British common law. Those interpretations lead them to conclude that if they reject citizenship of a state or country, they can act as individual “sovereign” entities not constrained by normal laws, such as a requirement to have a driver’s license, and other rules of society.

The film itself gives scant few details on the extremist Sovereign Citizen belief system underlying these tragic events, leaving the film’s audience wondering and unclear on much of it, and in fact, doesn’t even use the term “sovereign citizen.”

Still, SOVEREIGN is very well-acted, well-made and a tense film that blends family drama and crime thriller elements in which things spiral down when opposing belief clash, but it is a film that can be grim and hard to watch. It was directed and written by Christian Swegal, based on a 2010 West Memphis, Arkansas, incident involving a father-son pair who adhered to far-right Sovereign Citizen ideas. In the film, ultimately, your heart breaks for this teenager, a good son to a misguided parent.

Nick Offerman is excellent in this film, and the same can be said for Jacob Tremblay as his dutiful son, in this tragic, true story-based drama/thriller. Jerry Kane (Offerman) is a single parent raising his son Joe (Tremblay) according to these extremist beliefs. Jerry makes a living by traveling around the country giving seminars on legal matters, like ways to avoid foreclosure, by following steps derived from Sovereign Citizen beliefs. Ironically, while Jerry is advising people on legal matters, particularly on real estate, he and his son are facing foreclosure on their rundown, modest ranch home.

What little the film shares with audiences on these extremist views in delivered when Nick Offerman’s character, Jerry Kane, talks about those concepts as he lectures his audiences, in his “legal” seminars and on a podcast where he is a regular guest, both with audiences already familiar with Sovereign Citizen beliefs. The film’s audiences would have benefited from a little more basic details, maybe with some text at the film’s start, explaining what Sovereign Citizen is. We do not get an exposition scene from the authorities (mostly police or the courts) in the film, because the authorities Jerry Kane encounters are as unaware of Sovereign Citizen as most of the film’s audience likely is.

While his father is traveling for his work, the home-schooled Joe Kane is left at home, so he is there alone, when a representative of the bank comes by to serve notice that foreclosure is looming. Joe accepts the official papers, and when the policeman with the bank representative tells Joe he has to clean up the house and property and maintain it so it can be sold, Joe dutifully does that.

Returning home, Jerry is irritated that Joe accepted the legal documents, but not unduly so. He has a solution, which is to go out on a speaking tour, collecting donations at each seminar. Usually Jerry leaves the teen home alone when he hits the road but this time he takes his son along to help, and his son’s dog too. Joe is thrilled to tag along with his dad, and is hopeful that they will raise enough money to make a payment on the mortgage and get to keep their home.

The father and son encounter Dennis Quaid’s police detective after a traffic stop, when dad Jerry is taken into custody for driving without a license and insisting on his pseudo-legal belief that his does not need one because he is “traveling” rather than engaged in commerce. While Jerry sorts out his issues with the law, teenager Joe is place in a juvenile group home and encounters kindly social workers that give him a glimpse of a different world. While still wanting to stay loyal to his father, the home-schooled Joe starts to dream of going to high school and of a different future for himself.

In many ways, Offerman’s Jerry is a good father, supportive of and encouraging to his son, although his extremist worldview blinds him to what might be best for his son Joe. Joe is a good kid, a dutiful son who loves his father, but is less certain about the Sovereign Citizen beliefs.

The film is also a kind of tale of two fathers, as Quaid’s character is also a dad, although of a grown son, Adam (Thomas Mann), who is training to be a police officer. While Offerman’s Jerry is warm and encouraging to his son, Quaid’s character is more inclined to criticism, even critiquing his grown son’s parenting skills with his own infant son. Both Quaid’s and Offerman’s characters have their strong beliefs about the world, one conventional and the other extremist, and both have loving sons who are eager to please them. But the fathers diverge in their interpersonal styles with those sons, just as they do in their worldviews, although not in the ways you might assume.

As events unfold with the bank and Jerry Kane’s belief system clashes with the way the world really works, things start to spiral down for both the Kanes, and tension builds in the film. A moment of violence both raises that tension to a high-pitch, and brings Quaid’s character back into their sphere, as the film rushes to its stark conclusion.

SOVEREIGN is a heartbreaking study of a father-son relationship impacted by extremist views, and a belief system (about which the film is unnecessarily vague) at odds with the real world, told in parallel with another father-son relationship. The story of the fathers and their sons is both gripping and moving because it is true, but ultimately, the film’s story is also a sad, grim experience, with tragic consequences all around.

SOVEREIGN opens in theaters in select cities and is available to rent or buy starting Friday, July 11, 2025.

RATING: 2.5 out of 4 stars

THE HILL (2023) – Review

Two true-life sports movies opening on the same weekend! Oh yeah, it was bound to happen but we’re taking a big detour (hmm), maybe even a U-turn (okay, enough already) from the video game F1 flick. For one thing. this one is set squarely in the past, before Pong was a staple, way back in the splashy 1970s, after a brief stop in the sensational ’60s. Oh, and this concerns the American pastime (as in hot dogs and apple pie), in the tradition of THE NATURAL and THE ROOKIE (with which it shares a star). Now the title doesn’t refer to the pitcher’s mound, but rather to the obstacles its focus must face (perhaps closer to a steep mountain). And since it’s also the last name of the family in this faith-based drama it’s simply THE HILL.

After the briefest of prologues in which a seemingly angry teen jumps in his beat-up 70s auto and cranks up a power ballad, we’re whisked away about ten years ago as he spends a lazy day outside his father’s country church. Little Rickey Hill (Jesse Beery) smacks pebbles over the treetops using a stick as a makeshift bat. That’s because his pop, Pastor James Hill (Dennis Quaid) doesn’t believe in encouraging this “sport” by buying proper equipment. And he can’t afford it, as the family barely scrapes by (Sunday dinner is a pan of cornbread). Oh, plus Rickey can’t run the bases with any speed as he’s still wearing a pair of leg braces due to a degenerative spinal condition. Things get worse when the preacher is booted out by his surly congregation (he called them out for “chewin'” and smoking during his sermons). So, he’s got to pack up his three kids, his wife, and her mother-in-law, the no-nonsense Gram (Bonnie Bedelia), and hit the road. Through a bit of chance, they learn of a nearby Texas town in need of a pastor. But there, Rickey’s love of baseball is stoked by the grade school team, Thus begins a new battle of wills between father and son, until Rickey learns he can shed the braces. Flash forward several years as teen Rickey (Colin Ford) is a homer-smackin’ high school phenom. But an injury benches Rickey and gives more fuel to his father’s hopes that he’ll follow him to the pulpit. Somehow the town rallies to fund the needed surgery. But can Rickey heal in time to impress a major league scout, Red Murff (Scott Glenn) at an upcoming audition? And will Papa Hill ever embrace his son’s athletic aspirations?

Though he’s not “on the field”, the film’s “heavy hitter” is Quaid (a “rookie” no more) who easily dominates every scene as the stern, but often sympathetic man of God. He’s able to channel a bit of that old “Jerry Lee” charisma (can that FIRE flick really be 34 years old) when Pastor Hill is delivering “the word” and can be quite intimidating as the strict head of the household. But Quaid shows us that hint of uncertainty as his faith is tested time and again. And he’s got a very strong spiritual sparring partner in Bedelia as the feisty, sassy Gram who won’t be “bulldozed” by his ways. Ford is a likable and sweet-natured sports hero as the slugger aware of his gifts but thwarted by his physical “restraints”. Ditto for Berry as the pre-teen version, as he aches for a chance to take on a bully who taunts him with the moniker “Robo-boy”. Glenn is stern and savvy as the baseball “wizard” who needs to test Rickey’s stamina and skills.

Director Jeff Celentano strives to bring a new spin on the familiar story of the athlete hero fighting a debilitating illness (BANG THE DRUM SLOWLY amongst many others), while addressing conflicting religious beliefs (Papa Hill believes baseball cards encourage the worship of false idols). The father is the main obstacle (after Rickey’s health) and he often seems a tad obstinate but he’s never cruel and is capable of change. And though I must praise the producers for giving the press access (most faith-based films aren’t screened for us), I had problems with the odd script choices. I attended services through the 70s and never encountered the chain-smoking congregations shown here (even at Hill’s new church), so it feels contrived. More than that, the huge leap in time, probably a decade) as Rickey goes from grade-schooler to high school senior seems like two separate stories barely stitched together. What changed in those “shadow years”? Plus the “rekindled romance” feels a tad “tossed in”, more to give Rickey a “sounding board”. And the mix of movie pros with more inexperienced actors can be distracting. These quibbles just can’t push my interest in this “true tale” over THE HILL. Maybe a solid double or so…

1.5 Out of 4

THE HILL is now playing in theatres everywhere

THE HILL Trailer: Dennis Quaid, Colin Ford And Scott Glenn Star In True Story

Briarcliff Entertainment has released the first trailer for THE HILL.

Growing up impoverished in small-town Texas, young Rickey Hill shows an extraordinary ability for hitting a baseball, despite being burdened by leg braces from a degenerative spinal disease.

His stern, pastor father (DENNIS QUAID) discourages Rickey from playing baseball to protect him from injury, and to have him follow in his footsteps and become a preacher.

As a young man, Rickey (COLIN FORD) becomes a baseball phenomenon. His desire to participate in a try-out for a legendary major league scout divides the family and threatens Rickey’s dream of playing professional baseball.

Based on a true story, THE HILL is directed by Jeff Celentano and also stars JOELLE CARTER, country music singer and songwriter RANDY HOUSER, Golden Globe nominee BONNIE BEDELIA, and SCOTT GLENN.

THE HILL opens in theaters August 25, 2023.

STRANGE WORLD – Review

UNFORGETTABLE ADVENTURE STORY – Walt Disney Animation Studios’ “Strange World” introduces a legendary family of explorers, the Clades, as they attempt to navigate an uncharted, treacherous land. The original action-packed comedy adventure features the voices of Dennis Quaid as legendary larger-than-life explorer Jaeger Clade; Jake Gyllenhaal as Searcher Clade, a family man who finds himself out of his element on an unpredictable mission; Gabrielle Union as Meridian Clade, an accomplished pilot and Searcher’s partner in all things. Jaboukie Young-White as Searcher’s 16-year-old son, Ethan, who finally finds the adventure he’s always wanted; and Lucy Liu as Callisto Mal, fearless leader of the mythical Avalonia who spearheads an exploration into a strange world. “Strange World” opens in theaters nationwide on Nov. 23, 2022. © 2022 Disney. All Rights Reserved.

In order to continue the big holiday festivities, the “mouse house” is releasing another full-length animated feature to enjoy with the whole family once the leftover goodies are sealed off and sent to the fridge. But you can enjoy this if you’re celebrating solo, too. Now a few days ago, I praised a remake. or re-imagining, of one of their iconic animated classics, and I was lukewarm on their own sequel to a popular hybrid (live and ‘toon) from 15 years ago. So, naturally, they’re sending out an original cartoon flick, not a sequel, prequel, or spin-off. And it’s not set on an Earth-bound fantasy kingdom, but on another world. Ah, but then so was last summer’s LIGHTYEAR from sister studio Pixar. Nope, this is from the artists that really delivered the previous year with ENCANTO (just an opening title song here), Walt Disney Animation Studios, who hope that you’ll join them in a journey to a truly STRANGE WORLD (cue the theremin).

Yes, the title tune brings us up to speed in the film’s first few minutes, giving us the “4-11” on the world of Avalonia, a technically primitive society (horse carts, windmills, and such) that yearns to see what’s beyond the massive mountains that surround them. Why, that’s a job for their most intrepid and adventurous explorer, Jaeger Clade (voice of Dennis Quaid), and his teenage son Searcher (Jake Gyllenhaal). All’s going well until a most dangerous passage reveals a weird, glowing plant called Pando, It emits crackling electric-life energy, and Searcher wants to harness it for the Avalonians. This prompts a stand-off as Jaeger insists on forging ahead despite almost certain doom. And thus begins a parting of father and son, as Jaeger continues, while Searcher and the rest of the crew return home with the Pando. Several years passed and the plant has indeed changed the planet, powering new contraptions and transports, and also providing a plentiful food source, So plentiful that Searcher oversees his own massive Pando farm along with his wife Meridian (Gabrielle Union) and their teeage son, who has gotten his grandpop’s explorer genes, Ethan (Jaboukie Young White). Jaeger never returned, so a statue of him along with his son tower above the nearby village. All seem’s well, until the Clades notice that part of the crop has no, well, spark. It’s a bust. This precedes an unexpected visit from former crew member, and current president of Avalonia, Callisto Mal (Lucy Liu). She’s discovered that all the Pando crops are connected via their roots to a massive “heart’ deep underground. And that central “organ” is failing. She implores Searcher to join her and her aides aboard a massive airship, the Venture, on a journey into the dark depths to save their precious food/energy source. Searcher bids his family farewell and boards the Venture. As it begins its mission, Searcher is stunned to see that Meridian is tailing them in a small one-person crop duster. It turns out that it’s a family reunion because she tells him that Ethan and the family pooch are stowaways on the ship. Before Meridian can return with them the Venture comes under attack and gets two new crew members. When they finally escape the threat, the ship lands in a bizarre world filled with weird unknown creatures. What new dangers await them and their cohorts in this odd hostile new environment? Can they save their precious Pando?


Now here’s a rollicking adventure tale with satiric touches, imaginative creatures and backdrops, cool gizmos, and a family saga at its core (which is the setting for most of the really wild antics). Plus it features a terrific vocal ensemble. Quaid provides the macho blustering as Clade senior, Jaeger, and Gyllenhaal scores a good many laughs as the dad who just wants his kid (and his pals) to think he’s the cool papa. Union’s a no-nonsense mom that keeps her family grounded(and alive). And Young white bursts with youthful yearning. Oh, I hinted at the look of the film, which is eye-popping. The Pando-fueled transports have a retro beauty, a mating of steampunk and Flash Gordon with intricate little flourishes and fins. Now the underground world is a rainbow pastel explosion with curving slopes and jagged edges. And the wildlife, wow. Check out those magenta-glowing dragons. Or the horses with exlpoding worms for a head. All seem to be a candy-colored mix of Dali and Dr. Seuss. As a bonus, we’re treated to a cool comic book-inspired prologue with the classic 2D animation accented with old-school printers’ dots enhanced by a rousing choral march right out of a grainy TV ‘toon. So, it’s a true visual delight, but something just feels off. The characters look like true caricatures (Jaegar owes much to the bulk of Bluto, Popeye’s arch nemesis), but the movie gets bogged down with the bickering between the different Clade generations. And the ecological message is often pretty heavy-handed, even as we marvel at the weird sidekick Splat who resembles a shiny strobing rubber beanbag filled with gelatin. What may be at fault is the nearly two-hour running time (so many this film year) making several of the non-stop perils fairly repetitive. There are countless wonders to dazzle the senses in this STRANGE WORLD, it’s just a shame it doesn’t engage our hearts and heads.

3 Out of 4

STRANGE WORLD is now playing in theatres everywhere

AMERICAN UNDERDOG – Review

Anna Paquin as Brenda Warner and Zachary Levi as Kurt Warner in American Underdog: The Kurt Warner Story. Photo Credit: Michael Kubeisy/Lionsgate

So, you’ve survived the big holiday rush and are feeling a bit restless after the big meal. Perhaps you usually recoup by watching one of several football games on the tube that afternoon. But what if you’re not that invested in the match-ups and just want to get out of the house for a bit? Well, why not combine the two by taking in a new flick at the multiplex…one all about football. Oh, but it’s not a fictional tale of a group of “ragtag’ misfits pulling together for a beloved but often cranky coach. No, it’s all true, a sports biopic, but also a love story in the vein of the classic PRIDE OF THE YANKEES, minus the disease finale. And unlike that “chestnut, this man’s story is still “being written”. So, as all the details are revealed it becomes clear why the title is AMERICAN UNDERDOG..

It all starts with a young boy’s dream of tossing the ole “pigskin” like his idols on TV. That lad studying the tube and practicing his throw grows into the quarterback for the University of Northern Iowa Panthers, Kurt Warner (Zachary Levi). After much prodding from a teammate pal, he sets aside his studies and practice for an evening at a local country-western bar. And that is where he meets her, Brenda Meoni (Anna Paquin). He’s so gobsmacked that his buddy teaches him line dancing in order to join her on the dance floor. The former marine and current nursing student is stunned when Kurt shows up on her doorstep with a rose. That day he meets her mama along with her two children from a previous marriage, sweet five-year-old daughter Jesse and ten-year-old son Zack who is legally blind. The kids, especially Zack, bond with him immediately, so the ‘gun-shy” Brenda agrees to date him. Their budding romance is tested over the next four years as Kurt tries to get a shot at the NFL Then finally the Green Bay Packers tap him for a tryout. But his time is short there, as the coach sends him back home after just two days. Brenda’s family lets him stay in their basement as he stocks groceries at night while still dreaming of another opportunity. And it happens, not with the NFL though. The scrappy owner of the Iowa Barnstormers, a team in the AFL(Arena Football League), Jim Foster (Bruce McGill) offers him a contract. After barely scraping by, Kurt takes the job despite the hardships of traveling on his new family. Eventually, he marries Brenda just as a rep for the NFL’s St. Louis Rams comes to see him. And though he’s a bit “long in the tooth” for a rookie, he works with coach Dick Vermeil (Dennis Quaid) as a backup quarterback. But things change when the first-string QB is injured. And though the media believes that he’s an “aging hack”, Kurt, buoyed by the love of Brenda, knows that this is his moment.

In the title role, Levi deftly balances the drama and athlete aspects involved in this story. He looks confident on the field, while also doing his best to prove his worth to his soulmate. He’s charming in their courtship and warms to the kids with no prodding. But he still has his frustrations as he looks wistfully at a box of Wheaties, thinking he’ll never adorn it. Luckily Levi has great chemistry with Paquin as the tough, world-weary Brenda. She’s touched by this lumbering “puppy dog’ even though her emotional wall is still solid. We see the sadness in her eyes as she opens up to Kurt about her first marriage. And Paquin doesn’t make her merely a devoted “cheerleader”, confronting him about his goals. They’re the heart of the film, ably assisted by a quartet of great teachers/ coaches to Kurt. Adam Ballwin is his growling bulldog-like college coach (“Stay in the pocket”). And just as tough, but more amusing is McGill as the larger-than-life Foster who’s got Foghorn Leghorn’s bluster paired with Scrooge McDuck’s wallet as he promises a “C-note” for every touchdown. But he’s a pushover compared to Rams coach Mike Martz, played with scowling intensity by Chance Kelly. Luckily he’s offset by the warm, father-like Vermeil played with a calm strength by Quaid, Their conversation in which he sees Kurt as a kindred spirit is an emotional highpoint of the film.

The direction by the brothers Erwin (Andrew and Jon) is brisk and confident, whether in the locker room or at the dinner table, making it an engrossing story for those with little interest in sports. Though many of the domestic scenes have the feel of a basic cable miniseries, the sprawling intensity of the game scenes elevates the story taking us right to the center of the action, and groaning with each tackle and “hit”. The script by Jon, Joe Gunn, and David Aaron Cohen adapting the book “All Things Possible” by Michael Silver and Kurt avoids many sports film cliches as we see how the relationship of the Warners endure through the dark dire times ( a scene on a snowy road is harrowing) right through the triumphs. And although the Erwins are mainly known for “faith-based” films, the message is never hammered home but is tackled with subtlety and sincerity. They show us how to move past the disappointments and tragedies of the past, often gaining strength from adversity and turning failure into determination. It’s inspiring and sweet without getting syrupy. As far as biographies go, AMERICAN UNDERDOG is often a solid scorer.

2.5 Out of 4

AMERICAN UNDERDOG opens in theatres everywhere on Christmas Eve

Win Free Passes To The St. Louis Advanced Screening Of AMERICAN UNDERDOG – Stars Zachary Levi

AMERICAN UNDERDOG opens in theaters Everywhere Christmas Day! Starring Zachary Levi, Anna Paquin, and Dennis Quaid!

For a chance to win 2 free passes to the advance screening on Monday, Dec 20th @ 7pm at AMC Esquire 7, enter here:

 http://www.lionsgatescreenings.com/hbZdl20631

American Underdog tells the inspirational true story of Kurt Warner (Zachary Levi), who went from a stocking shelves at a grocery store to a two-time NFL MVP, Super Bowl champion, and Hall of Fame quarterback. The film centers on Warner’s unique story and years of challenges and setbacks that could have derailed his aspirations to become an NFL player – but just when his dreams seemed all but out of reach, it is only with the support of his wife, Brenda (Anna Paquin) and the encouragement of his family, coaches, and teammates that Warner perseveres and finds the strength to show the world the champion that he already is. American Underdog is an uplifting story that demonstrates that anything is possible when you have faith, family and determination.

Official Site: http://americanunderdog.movie/

Dennis Quaid as Dick Vermeil and Zachary Levi as Kurt Warner in American Underdog: The Kurt Warner Story. Photo Credit: Michael Kubeisy/Lionsgate

AMERICAN UNDERDOG “From The Dream to The Big Screen” Behind the Scenes Featurette Of Kurt Warner Biopic Stars Zachary Levi, Anna Paquin And Kurt Warner

Zachary Levi as Kurt Warner and Anna Paquin as Brenda Warner in American Underdog. Photo Credit: Michael Kubeisy/Lionsgate

Lionsgate has released this first look at AMERICAN UNDEDOG, due out in cinemas later this year.

The film chronicles the incredible true story of Kurt Warner (Zachary Levi), who went from stocking shelves at a supermarket to become a two-time NFL MVP, Super Bowl champion, and Hall of Fame quarterback.

The film chronicles Warner’s unique story and years of challenges and setbacks that could have derailed his aspirations to become an NFL player, and when his dreams seemed all but out of reach, it is only with the support of his wife, Brenda (Anna Paquin) and the encouragement of his family that Warner perseveres and finds the strength to show the world the champion that he already is inside. American Underdog is an inspirational story that demonstrates that anything is possible when you have faith, family and determination.

The stars and Warner discuss AMERICAN UNDERDGOG in this brand new featurette.

Warner won two National Football League (NFL) Most Valuable Player (MVP) awards (1999, 2001) and a Super Bowl title (2000) as a player for the St. Louis Rams. If you lived in the St. Louis area at the time, everyone had “Warner fever”, it was that palpable. He threw for a Super Bowl-record 414 yards and was named the game’s MVP as the Rams defeated the Tennessee Titans 23–16 for the franchise’s first Super Bowl title at Edward Jones Dome. Click HERE and watch this NFL video of the quarterback legend.

Zachary Levi as Kurt Warner and Kurt Warner on the set of American Underdog. Photo Credit: Michael Kubeisy/Lionsgate

Warner also guided the Arizona Cardinals to the franchise’s first Super Bowl berth (2009).

AMERICAN UNDERDOG will be in theaters December 2021.

Follow the film on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/americanunderdg/

Zachary Levi as Kurt Warner and Dennis Quaid as Dick Vermeil in American Underdog. Photo Credit: Michael Kubeisy/Lionsgate
Zachary Levi as Kurt Warner in American Underdog. Photo Credit: Michael Kubeisy/Lionsgate
Zachary Levi as Kurt Warner in American Underdog. Photo Credit: Michael Kubeisy/Lionsgate

WAMG Interview: Sean Patrick Flanery – Writer and Star of BORN A CHAMPION

Sean Patrick Flanery was raised outside of Houston, Texas. His first role in Hollywood was a Kellog’s Corn Pops commercial starring alongside Paul Walker. In 1992, he landed the title role in George Lucas’ The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles Since then, Flanery has been in numerous films and TV shows, including POWDER, SAW3, SUICIDE KINGS, and the runaway cult hit THE BOONDOCK SAINTS. Off camera, Flanery is a high ranking martial artist having earned his black belt in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu from the Renzo Gracie lineage in 2008 and trains regularly when his film schedule allows. In his new film BORN A CHAMPION, which he wrote, Flanery plays Mickey Kelley, one of the first American black belts in Brazilian jiu-jitsu, who gets pulled away from everything he loves and into an unsanctioned MMA tournament.

Sean Patrick Flanery took the time to talk to We Are Movie Geeks about his career and BORN A CHAMPION.

Interview conducted by Tom Stockman December 15th, 2020

Tom Stockman:  I watched your movie BORN A CHAMPION recently and really enjoyed it. 

Sean Patrick Flanery: Thanks a lot.

TS: I found it exciting and very well done.I like movies where I feel after watching them, that I have learned something.

SPF: What did you learn?

TS: I feel like I learned about this sport of Brazilian jiu-jitsu. Technical things such as the rules and the lack of rules, and all about these illegal tent matches that they have out in the desert of Dubai. Is that a real thing?

SPF: It is yes. The film is a place where my heart has been living for quite a while. 

TS: And I learned about you seeing this film. I didn’t know you had written BORN A CHAMPION until I started watching it. 

SPF: Is that right? 

TS: Where did you get the idea for the story? 

 SPF: Being a martial artist, there are a couple of forums out there were fighters congregate and chat. One is called MMA Underground. You have UFC fighters and some pretty big names in the sport post and discuss things there. I wrote a story and posted it there about a girl I met when I was a young kid when I was first studying martial arts. It got a pretty good response and immediately after that, I wrote a second story which I did not post to the forum. I immediately decided that I needed to make it into a film. I wrote that story in 2007, which gives you an idea of how long it takes to go from story to final film.  We shot it in the summer of 2019 so it’s been a long gestation process. 

TS: Was Mickey Kelley, the character you play in the film, based on a true fighter?

SPF: The story is based on a lot of truths but Mickey Kelley is completely fictional, but there are a number of pretty strong truths in the film. For example RAW Champ. RAW is an acronym for Real American Wrestling. It was an academy out in San Pedro. So there’s a lot of authentic elements to the story, but no actual Mickey Kelley, but having said that, there are a lot of Mickey Kelleys out there. 

TS: Did you do all your own fights and stunts in the film? 

SPF: I sure did. 

TS: Were there any injuries during the making of this film? 

SPF: No, no injuries. This is something I do on a daily basis so in a way, it was another day at the office but it was a joy and a pleasure to do it in front of a camera. 

TS: When did you start fighting? 

SPF: I started in martial arts when I was nine years old. A lot of people talk about being inspired by Bruce Lee for getting into martial arts.  My inspiration was actually Elvis Presley. I saw him singing Suspicious Minds on the Vegas stage and he was wearing a jumpsuit that looked like a kimono and was doing these karate kicks. I asked my dad if he was doing karate. My dad, who had been a Golden Gloves boxer, said that yes, Elvis had trained with Ed Parker in Kempo Karate. I just thought I would love to do that. We did not come from a lot of money but one day I saw a girl in white pants pushing a bicycle with a flat tire. She was carrying her karate gi top in the basket, and I followed her as she went into this little karate studio that was next to a Piggly Wiggly Supermarket. I went in there and that’s how I got into martial arts. I followed a girl, just like everything else in my life. 

TS: When you were growing up, were you a movie buff? Did you like the movies that star actors like Bruce Lee and Chuck Norris? 

SPF: Absolutely, but I’ve always been a story buff.  Some of the best stories I’ve ever heard were firsthand stories from my grandfather and my dad.  We all loved movies. John Ford movies. John Wayne films, All the way through Clint Eastwood  and Bruce Lee and Chuck Norris, all of that.  It was a huge part of my upbringing as well as other films. I liked all the big WWII conflict stories like MIDWAY. I would see those with my dad and they had a profound impact on me. 

TS: Speaking of MIDWAY, there was a remake of that last year costarring Dennis Quaid, who is your costar in BORN A CHAMPION. Talk about working with Dennis Quaid. 

SPF: Dennis Quaid is one of the very best people I’ve ever had the opportunity to work with. Through and through, on the set and off, that dude is 100% authentic and a perfect example of a gentleman.  I had a wonderful time working with him.  He was sort of the conscience of the piece. I don’t think the film would’ve worked nearly as well without him. 

TS: He’s one of my favorite contemporary actors as well. I think he’s one of those actors that just elevates everything he’s in. 

SPF: You’re absolutely right. 

TS: Your nemesis Marco in this movie is played by a big charismatic guy named Edson Barboza. Talk about him a little bit. 

SPF: Edson is a very high-ranked UFC fighter. I had him in my mind when I wrote this script. I was trying to get in contact with him and found him on Facebook.  He didn’t respond to me at first, but I sent his wife a message that I had written a story and wanted to cast her husband and wanted to see if he would be interested in reading it.  She responded, and then he responded.  He is a consummate professional and can be scary looking, but he could not be more docile in person. He was so worried about anyone getting injured. He’s a true friend to this day.

TS: Yes, and he has presence. I can see him getting other villain roles in films based on his performance in BORN A CHAMPION.  You said you wrote the screenplay in 2007. You also wrote a novel called Jane Two. Was that after you had written the BORN A CHAMPION screenplay? 

SPF: I wrote the novel right around the same time. I accumulate little pieces I called “thought trash”. Anytime I have a component of a story, I write it on whatever is handy, be it a candy wrapper or the cardboard at the bottom of a box of donuts.  So I was writing both of those about the same time, but the book actually came out in 2016, so it beat the film by three years. 

TS: Do you want to write more? 

SPF: The storytelling aspect is something that I enjoy thoroughly. From the inception, to the idea, to seeing it realized visually and then combining it with the musical element. When I look back, every single pronounced moment that has happened in my past has a soundtrack. You could be driving down the road and listening to a popular song, or you smell the chlorophyll in the air from freshly cut grass and that may trigger a memory. Trying to re-create that combination I find ultimately thrilling and therapeutic  at the same time. If the public consumes it, or digests it, and ends up with a smile on their face, then  maybe someone will ask you to do it again. I do enjoy it and I hope to write another film again. 

TS: I can tell by watching this film that you love what you do. You are a busy guy. Where do you teach jujitsu?

SPF: I actually started my first martial arts Academy in Los Angeles in 2003.  I moved to Texas about three years ago when my parents became sick so started a Brazilian jujitsu Academy here in Houston.  I teach every single day. Coming up later this month I am commentating a huge event for Submission Grappling in Houston, so this aspect of my life takes up a lot of time, even though my bread-and-butter is the film and entertainment industry . This helped my sanity when I’m in-between films and waiting for the phone to ring.

TS: I met you at eight or nine years ago at a movie convention here in St. Louis.  Did you do a lot of those and do you miss doing those? 

SPF: I do. Being in the film industry you don’t get immediate feedback, which is like nourishment for the soul.  I love being in films, but the feedback is delayed. The boom operator holding the mic is not paying attention to your performance. They are too busy focusing on their job.  So at the end of the scene, you may have thought that you poured your soul out, but the director says “cut” and everyone just walks over to the next set.  You’re kind of left wondering how you did.  Going to these conventions is when you really get the first-hand experience of the viewer. To me they are invaluable. I absolutely love those moments.  Being on panels at those conventions are some of my favorite moments from being in the entertainment industry. You have a crowd of people who happen to love something that you did, or hate something that you did, but they want to hear you talk about it. You get that first-hand experience.

TS: At the con where I met you, you and David Della Rocco were on stage together. Norman Reedus was supposed to show up and join you guys but he never made it there the whole weekend. Do you remember that one? 

SPF: I do. Anytime Norman has a weekend free and I do as well, we would like to meet up in a city for one of those. We have been buddies since 1998, but we actually first met in 1994. But that has happened on more than one occasion where he has not been able to show up. Sometimes filming gets delayed, and that’s what happens when you’re on a popular show like he was (The Walking Dead). 

Norman Reedus and Sean Patrick Flanery in THE BOONDOCK SAINTS

TS: Are you surprised at the depth of the cult following that THE BOONDOCK SAINTS still has?  I’ve seen guys with THE BOONDOCK SAINTS tattoos. 

SPF: I think you’re always surprised when something takes on that big of a life.  People see maybe one percent of the things that we have done throughout our careers  so when something is what they call a cult hit,  and it starts growing and it seems to  never stop growing, it’s mesmerizing  and astounding. You’d love to be able to replicate that recipe and make something like that every day. I’m blown away and honored to have been part of something that inspires somebody to get a tattoo of it.  It’s flattering. 

TS: What’s your next project Sean? 

SPF: I’ve got one project in the works but I can’t really talk about much right now. An announcement is going to be made soon about a pretty cool TV show that is coming up on Amazon prime.  I can’t say too much, but I am going to be on that. 

TS: Well maybe we can talk again when you’re working on that. Good luck with BORN A CHAMPION. It’s a terrific film. 

SPF: I appreciate that. I really do. 

Epic Blockbuster MIDWAY Now Available on Digital, 4K, Blu-ray, DVD, and On Demand

Epic blockbuster filmmaker Roland Emmerich (Independence DayThe Day After Tomorrow) directs an all-star ensemble cast when Midway arrives on Digital February 4 and on 4K Ultra HD Combo Pack (plus Blu-ray and Digital), Blu-ray Combo Pack (plus DVD and Digital), DVD, and On Demand February 18 from Lionsgate. An intimate portrayal of historic actual events written by Wes Tooke, Midway stars Ed Skrein (DeadpoolAlita: Battle AngelIf Beale Street Could Talk), Golden Globe® nominee Patrick Wilson (2016, Best Performance by an Actor in a Limited Series or Motion Picture Made for Television, TV’s “Fargo”), Luke Evans (Dracula UntoldBeauty and the BeastFast & Furious 6Anna), Golden Globe® nominee Aaron Eckhart (2007, Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture –Musical or Comedy, Thank You for Smoking), Golden Globe®nominee Nick Jonas (2018, Best Original Song – Motion Picture, Ferdinand), Golden Globe® winner Darren Criss (2019, Best Performance by an Actor in a Limited Series or a Motion Picture Made for Television, TV’s “The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story”), with Golden Globe® nominee Mandy Moore (2017, Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role in a Series, Limited Series or Motion Picture Made for Television, TV’s “This Is Us”), with Golden Globe® nominee Dennis Quaid (2011, Best Performance by an Actor in a Limited Series or Motion Picture Made for Television, TV’s “The Special Relationship”), and Oscar® nominee Woody Harrelson (2017, Actor in a Supporting Role, Three Billboards outside Ebbing, Missouri). A story about heroes you need to know, Midway features fully realized characters, incredible special effects, and gorgeous cinematography.
 

Midway centers on the Battle of Midway, a clash between the American fleet and the Imperial Japanese Navy which marked a pivotal turning point in the Pacific Theater during WWII. The film, based on the real-life events of this heroic feat, tells the story of the leaders and soldiers who used their instincts, fortitude, and bravery to overcome the odds. Directed by Roland Emmerich.

 Take home Midway and immerse yourself in history with multiple featurettes, including “We Met at Midway: Two Survivors Remember” and “Joe Rochefort: Breaking the Japanese Code,” which focus on real-life Midway decorated flyers sharing their story of survival and the enigmatic genius Joseph Rochefort, whose team broke the Japanese naval code essential to winning the battle. Experience four times the resolution of full HD with the 4K Ultra HD Combo Pack, which includes Dolby Vision, 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. Additionally, the 4K Ultra HD Combo Pack features Dolby Atmos, which will transport viewers from an ordinary moment into an extraordinary experience with moving audio that flows all around them. Fans will feel like they’re inside the action as the sounds of people, places, things, and music come alive with breathtaking realism and move throughout the space.

The Midway 4K Ultra HD Combo Pack, Blu-ray Combo Pack, and DVD will be available for the suggested retail price of $42.99, $39.99, and $29.95, respectively.
 

4K UHD / BLU-RAY / DIGITAL SPECIAL FEATURES 

  • Audio Commentary by Roland Emmerich
  • “Getting It Right: The Making of Midway” Featurette
  • “The Men of Midway” Featurette
  • “Roland Emmerich: Man on a Mission” Featurette
  • “Turning Point: The Legacy of Midway” Featurette
  • “Joe Rochefort: Breaking the Japanese Code” Featurette
  • “We Met at Midway: Two Survivors Remember” Featurette
  • Theatrical Trailer

DIGITAL SPECIAL FEATURES

  • Audio Commentary by Roland Emmerich
  • “Getting It Right: The Making of Midway” Featurette
  • “The Men of Midway” Featurette
  • Theatrical Trailer

MIDWAY (2019) – Review

While the studios generally key lots of releases (mainly horror flicks and thrillers) for the Halloween holiday, the next major one, Veterans’ Day, rarely gets a true-life military battle docudrama. But that’s just what’s “heading ashore” at the multiplex this three day weekend. Following on the heels of 2017’s acclaimed box office hit, DUNKIRK, this new film chronicles an epic World War II battle, this time in the Pacific rather than the Atlantic (and much of Europe). And there’s no “jumping around the timeline” though the new film does begin several years prior. Oh, it should be noted that Hollywood has been there before, way back in 1976 as a showcase for the glorious cinema experience of Sensurround (bet it blew out some of those special speakers). And who’s directed this new take but a man who has orchestrated two different attacks on this planet by invaders from another galaxy. So how does he fare when both forces are from this world, more than 75 years ago, in the current take on the battle of MIDWAY?

The roots of the title encounter begin in Japan circa 1937, at a dinner party attended by strategist Lt. Commander Edwin Layton (Patrick Wilson). During a conversation concerning recent strikes against China, a Japanese officer warns Layton of any attempt by the West to cut off their oil reserves. Flash forward to that first lazy Sunday in 1941 at Pearl Harbor. Flying ace Lt. Dick Best (Ed Skrein), whose wife Anne (Mandy Moore) and their daughter live in a cottage off base, is supervising the start of church services on the deck of one of the carriers. The morning calm is shattered by Japanese bombers dropping out of the clouds to rain death and destruction on the stunned sailors. As we hear FDR’s “day of infamy” speech, Admiral Chester Nimitz (Woody Harrelson) assumes command of the US naval forces. Part of the fleet, the USS Enterprise is helmed by the determined sea vet Vice Admiral ‘Bull’ Halsey (Dennis Quaid) which becomes the launching pad for the April 1942 bombing raid on Tokyo led by Lt. Colonel Jimmy Doolittle (Aaron Eckhart). This helps set the stage for the big showdown against the Japanese fleet in June of 1942, one that could establish dominance in the Pacific Theatre of WWII. Lt. Best must quickly train his young pilots to take on the enemy at the atolls and islands that are known as Midway.

Covering the first year of the US’s entry into the war, the sweeping saga encompasses several real heroes, but the one getting the most screen time may be Skrein’s gung-ho, hotshot flyboy (er..flyman) Best, whose airborne skills match his name. Skrein seems to have stepped right out of the late, late show (the closest to that now is the wee hours of cable’s Turner Classic Movies), peppering his dialogue wit’ lotsa’ dese’, dems’ and dos’, while having an over-confidence and impatience that make Best more than a bit abrasive. But he’s got the love of wife Anne played with adoring gazes by Moore, whose screen time primarily consists of concerned staring into the skies. She does get to “cut a rug’ at a USO dance hall while getting some lusty looks from one of Best’s rivals turned battle partners McClusky played by Luke (Gaston in the live BEAUTY AND THE BEAST) Evans. Nothing comes of this possible romantic triangle subplot since there’s a war to win. Eckhart makes for a dashing Doolittle even as he has to contend with wary Chinese locals after he bails out of his fighter. Wilson takes a break from researching spooks in THE CONJURING series and spin-offs to bring an academic spin (he’s got the apropos eyeglasses) on the battleplans as Layton. Quaid plays Halsey as a glaring, growling old “sea dog”, who is frustrated by his frailties (that #*% rash!), while Harrelson balances gravitas and a subtle sense of humor as the burdened Nimitz. And for the “youngsters” dreamy pop star Nick Jonas gets a break from his brothers as the burly sailor who leaps into action while sporting a swell Clark Gable ‘stache.

Director Roland Emmerich once again proves his knack for big bombastic battles utilizing the latest in CGI effects to make us feel that we’re right on deck as the bombers swarm the skies of Pearl. The same goes when we’re strapped in with the diving pilots as they seem to pull up with just a few feet to spare just as they release their “lethal load’ all while twirling through never-ending streams of artillery fire (looking like yellow glowing gnats). It’s pretty harrowing as the superb editing by Adam Wolfe gives us a “front-row seat” briskly going from the long shots to the commanders to the men twirling about in those cramped cockpits. Unfortunately, the dazzling visuals make the battle interludes rather dull as actors race in and out of rooms, laying out maps, and reciting some awkward exposition. Unlike the ’76 version there’s no turgid “forbidden romance” subplot to slow things to a crawl, but there’s not much in the way of human drama in this first feature film script from Wes Tooke. He does take us behind the closed doors of the enemy, but their restrained in-fighting feels more like political and personal squabbles in an office rather than “empire-makers”. And I’ll give him kudos for the subplot involving one of the titans of cinema. The period costumes, hairstyles, and auto look terrific thanks to the “Norman Rockwell” glow of Robby Baumgartner’s cinematography. And since it’s a period piece, the producers found the right balance in the depiction of tobacco use (in some flicks nobody’s puffing away while in others the smokey haze nearly obscures the actors). MIDWAY uses the newest tech to honor “the greatest generation”, but the writing doesn’t truly bring history to emotional life.

2 out of 4