BACK TO BLACK – Review

Marisa Abela stars as Amy Winehouse in director Sam Taylor-Johnson’s BACK TO BLACK, a Focus Features release. Credit: Olli Upton/Focus Features

Talented singer/songwriter Amy Winehouse’s tragic life was already the subject of an Oscar-winning documentary, AMY in 2015, made a few years after her death in 2011at age 27 from alcohol poisoning. So my first reaction on hearing of the biopic drama BACK TO BLACK was to wonder if we needed another Amy Winehouse movie. The excellent 2015 documentary seems to have have told her story well and thoroughly, but reportedly the Winehouse family was unhappy with it. However, the family granted permission to the filmmakers of this new biopic drama, BACK TO BLACK, with access to materials and song use.

Director Sam Taylor-Johnson and writer Matt Greenhalgh previously collaborated on another music biopic, NOWHERE BOY, a fine drama about the childhood of John Lennon. The filmmakers assert that the Winehouse family had no say on the final film but the family does come across in a more positive light in this drama and they also have a more prominent role than in the 2015 Oscar-winning documentary.

BACK TO BLACK follows the familiar rise and fall pattern of biopics of other gifted but tragic musicians but does feature some nice acting performances and a chance to hear her songs again. It starts out with young Amy (Marisa Abela) on the verge of her fame, surrounded by her loving, working-class, Jewish family in the Southgate section of London. Amy is talented, and ambitious, and encouraged by her beloved paternal grandmother Nan (Leslie Manville), a still-cool, stylish, former jazz singer, who influenced Amy’s love of jazz and her ’50s-’60s fashion style of beehives, heavy eyeliner, and tight retro dresses. Amy is also funny, strong-willed, out-spoken, hot-tempered and driven. She also already has a big drinking problem.

First off, it is important to mention that the documentary is the much better film, and you will learn much more about the talented but self-destruction Amy Winehouse from it than this biopic. BACK TO BLACK often assumes the audience knows things about Amy Winehouse and her life that they may not, such as her struggles with bulimia, which makes for some confusing or even misleading scenes.

That said, Marisa Abela does a fine job portraying Winehouse, capturing her mannerisms, accent and assertive yet funny persona. The same is also true of the wonderful Lesley Manville as her beloved grandmother Cynthia, whom Amy calls Nan. Eddie Marsan is also very good as her father Mitch, along with Jack O’Connell as Amy’s charismatic, handsome but toxic husband Blake. Juliet Cowan plays Amy’s mother Janis Winehouse, a pharmacist suffering from multiple sclerosis, who raised Amy after separating from her father, and Sam Buchanan as Nick Shymansky, Amy’s friend her became her first manager, but the bulk of the narrative is carried by those first four characters.

The best parts of BACK TO BLACK are the cast’s performances and the chance to hear some of Amy Winehouse’s hit songs. However, the drama assumes that audiences know some things about Winehouse that they may not, and if you want to really learn about Amy Winehouse’s life and career, that Oscar-winning documentary is still the better choice. But you do get more of a feel for her family life and growing up Jewish in London’s Southgate in BACK TO BLACK.

Abela does her own singing and while she does well enough, she is an actress, not a singer, and certainly does not have Amy Winehouse’s distinctive, golden voice. Still, Abela does her best to sing in Winehouse’s style, and is at her most convincing singing the signature “Back to Black.” However, it would have better to have used Amy Winehouse’s real voice, instead of following this craze of actors playing famous singer doing their own singing, often with mixed results, and depriving fans of hearing the real star’s voice, the thing that made them famous.

Abela tries to capture Winehouse’s singing style, and does pretty well, but she is better in capturing Winehouse’s speaking voice, her mannerisms, and gives a convincing and touching portrayal of this funny, demanding, and fascinating talented woman who knew what she wanted and had a deep knowledge and love of jazz.

Lesley Manville is marvelous as Amy’s beloved grandmother Cynthia, a jazz singer who dressed stylishly and influenced Amy’s style and encouraged her musical interest from a young age. The film captures how Winehouse adored her paternal grandmother, whom she called Nan, and depicts Amy as she gets her tattoo paying tribute to her. The other delightful performance is from Eddie Marsan as Amy’s taxi-driver dad Mitch, who had a close loving relationship with his daughter but didn’t always make decisions in her best interests. As Amy’s career soars, dad Mitch is more of an ever-present figure, while mom Janice virtually disappears until late in the film. Mitch had a strong influence and worked closely with his daughter as her career took off, but was not always as good an influence.

Audiences may have some confusion over the relationship between Mitch and Cynthia, as Manville is only 12 years older than Marsan, and they look about the same age. It is easy to assume they are siblings rather than mother and son, and the drama does nothing to clarify this situation, one of the drama’s several problems.

The drama gives a little nod, although not enough, to Winehouse’s skill as a songwriter, and accurately depicts her as a perfectionist in her work, at least until drinking and drugging took their toll. While the bulimia is not directly mentioned until the end, the drama does a better job with her alcoholism, Even before her career really launches, Amy has already had a serious drinking problem, including incidents of seizures. A later scene depicts a confrontation with her manager about going to rehab, with her father siding with his daughter after she promises to cut back, something echoed in the lyrics of her song “Rehab.”

The film is stronger and more focused overall in its first half. The drama starts out fairly well, although it focuses more on Amy’s personal and family life than her career and work. However, it makes a turn into a doomed romance story after Amy meets her future husband Blake Fielder-Civil. The turning point comes after a strong, emotionally powerful sequence where Amy meets Blake. Those scenes are very good, with strong romantic chemistry between Abel and O’Connell, laying the groundwork for the obsessive, toxic love affair that follows. But once Amy falls for Blake, the film becomes increasingly disorganized, jumping around in time and failing to explain several things that pop up. There is a scene where the hard-drinking Amy discovers her new love’s drug problem and firmly rejects and even condemns drug use, yet in almost the next scene, we see Amy buying her own drugs, without Blake, leaving us puzzled as to what happened in between. The film continues to deteriorate in that fashion, ans once Manville’s Nan dies, both Amy and this drama go off the rails, morphing into a film about the toxic romance rather than her music, with Amy repeatedly talk about her longings to be a wife and mother.

Whether Blake was the real villain in Amy Winehouse’s life or not is another matter, as it seems more likely a combination of factors, including Amy’s self-destructive behavior, the loss of a strong hand to steady her with the death of her grandmother Cynthia (reportedly the only person she would listen to when she was out-of-control), a shark-like media, family and friends who failed to intervene to protect or help her, and her drug-addicted husband. But in this drama, the major blame is placed on a drug-addict husband who wanted to hitch his wagon to her rising star.

Although there are a few nice concert scenes after the biopic switches to toxic romance, the film continues to unravel, with several scenes that leave the audience confused about what is going on with the singer. While someone might argue that the film’s narrative falling apart might be meant to mirror Winehouse’s increasingly chaotic life, that explanation doesn’t really hold up. The film continues as a confusing mess until fizzles to a weak ending, with Amy walking away from the camera and seeming on the way to recovery, followed by a black screen and texts telling us of her death from alcohol poisoning at age 27. Then instead of just going to black, there is another scenes with Abela, instead of footage of the actual Amy, saying all she wanted to do was entertain with her songs.

Again, despite the strong performances and warm early scenes with family, you will not really learn much about Amy Winehouse in this biopic drama. Again, the 2015 documentary AMY is the better choice, and a better film overall, where you will learn much more about the massively talented but self-destructive Amy Winehouse.

BACK TO BLACK opens Friday, May 17, in theaters.

RATING: 2 out of 4 stars

Win Passes To The St. Louis Advance Screening Of BACK TO BLACK

The extraordinary story of Amy Winehouse’s rise to fame from her early days in Camden through the making of her groundbreaking album BACK TO BLACK that catapulted Winehouse to global fame. Told through Amy’s eyes and inspired by her deeply personal lyrics, the film explores and embraces the many layers of this iconic artist and the tumultuous love story at the center of one of the most legendary albums of all time.

The film is directed by Sam Taylor-Johnson and stars Marisa Abela, Jack O’Connell, Eddie Marsan and Lesley Manville.

BACK TO BLACK opens in theatres nationwide on May 17.

https://www.focusfeatures.com/back-to-black/synopsis/

The St. Louis advance screening is Tuesday, May 14th at 7pm at Marcus Ronnies 20 Cine. (6PM or earlier Suggested Arrival)

PASS LINK:  http://focusfeaturesscreenings.com/lafGI80828

Please arrive early as seating is not guaranteed.

Rated R.

BACK TO BLACK (2024)

See The First Trailer For BACK TO BLACK Starring Marisa Abela As Amy Winehouse

Here’s your first look at the all-new trailer for BACK TO BLACK starring Marisa Abela, Jack O’Connell, Eddie Marsan and Lesley Manville.

The extraordinary story of Amy Winehouse’s early rise to fame from her early days in Camden through the making of her groundbreaking album, Back to Black that catapulted Winehouse to global fame. Told through Amy’s eyes and inspired by her deeply personal lyrics, the film explores and embraces the many layers of the iconic artist and the tumultuous love story at the center of one of the most legendary albums of all time.

Directed by Sam Taylor-Johnson, Focus Features will release BACK TO BLACK in theaters nationwide on Friday, May 17th.

https://www.focusfeatures.com/back-to-black

(L to R) Marisa Abela as Amy Winehouse and Jack O’Connell as Blake Fielder-Civil in director Sam Taylor-Johnson’s BACK TO BLACK, a Focus Features release. Credit : Courtesy of Dean Rogers/Focus Features

Marisa Abela stars as Amy Winehouse in director Sam Taylor-Johnson’s BACK TO BLACK, a Focus Features release. Credit : Courtesy of Dean Rogers/Focus Features

Marisa Abela stars as Amy Winehouse in director Sam Taylor-Johnson’s BACK TO BLACK, a Focus Features release. Credit : Courtesy of Dean Rogers/Focus Features

Amy Winehouse Biopic Trailer For BACK TO BLACK Is Here And Stars Marisa Abela

Marisa Abela stars as Amy Winehouse in director Sam Taylor-Johnson’s BACK TO BLACK, a Focus Features release. Credit : Courtesy of Dean Rogers/Focus Features

The story of Amy Winehouse is coming to the big screen. The first trailer for BACK TO BLACK dropped this morning.

Hitting theaters May 10, check out the trailer now.

Directed by Sam Taylor-Johnson, the film stars Marisa Abela (MAX series Industry (2020–), BAFTA-winning actor Jack O’Connell as Blake Fielder-Civil, Eddie Marsan as Mitch Winehouse, Juliet Cowan as Janis Winehouse and Golden Globe and Oscar-nominated Lesley Manville as Amy’s grandmother, Cynthia.

A celebration of the most iconic – and much missed – homegrown star of the 21st century, BACK TO BLACK tells the extraordinary tale of Amy Winehouse. Painting a vivid, vibrant picture of the Camden streets she called home and capturing the struggles of global fame, BACK TO BLACK honours Amy’s artistry, wit, and honesty, as well as trying to understand her demons. An unflinching look at the modern celebrity machine and a powerful tribute to a once-in-a-generation talent.

Featuring many of Amy’s hit songs recorded and performed in the film by Marisa Abela, BACK TO BLACK is made with the full support of Universal Music Group and SONY Music Publishing.

Director Sam Taylor-Johnson says: ‘Discovering a talent like Marisa Abela is akin to finding gold dust. The moment she looked into the lens at her first audition I knew she was the perfect actor to play Amy Winehouse. She put in an enormous amount of work, attention to every detail and she trained daily for hours to be able to sing throughout the entire movie. She doesn’t impersonate Amy, she inhabits her.’

The film will also be released in cinemas across the UK & Ireland on 12 April 2024.

(L to R) Actor Marisa Abela and director Sam Taylor-Johnson on the set of BACK TO BLACK, a Focus Features release. Credit : Courtesy of Dean Rogers/Focus Features

Marisa Abela stars as Amy Winehouse in director Sam Taylor-Johnson’s BACK TO BLACK, a Focus Features release. Credit : Courtesy of Dean Rogers/Focus Features

FAIR PLAY (2023) – Review

Now what would be more cozy on a brisk Fall evening than a film about an office romance? Y’know, just like Pam and Jim on that TV sitcom set in the previously mentioned locale. The flirting, the smoldering glances, and the eventual declarations of affection. Ah, but what if employee intimate relationships are frowned upon, or just plain verboten, at the company? That too has been fodder for sitcoms like “The People’s Choice” and “Occasional Wife” and…I’m really, really aging myself. In this week’s new release, that notion isn’t played for laughs as the stakes are truly high. So, if all’s fair in “love and war”, then what could truly be considered FAIR PLAY when the “going gets tough” and desperate?


This tale starts with the story’s main couple full of the excitement of, often physically exhausting, romance. Twenty-somethings Emily (Phoebe Dynevor) and Luke (Alden Ehrenreich) twirl away from the dance floor of a wedding reception into the ladies’ lavatory! They don’t get “busted”, instead Luke “pops the question”. Emily gives him an excited “yes”, but insists that they keep it “under wraps” for a bit (except for their folks). The passion continues at the NYC apartment they share, allowing themselves a brief slumber before they get to work. The duo go their separate ways out of the subway. Luke arrives at the headquarters of the hedge fund firm One Crest Capital and hops into an elevator. Before the doors close, Emily also jumps in. Ah, they both work at OCC, which has a no “inter-office romance” policy (they hope to “prepare” everyone, and maybe have a “back-up plan”, before “coming clean). At their desks (several feet apart), the two, along with the rest of the staff, observe the firing of an MP (management partner) who has disappointed OCC’s tyrannical owner Campbell (Eddie Marsan). As the former MP is led away, Emily overhears some “scuttlebutt”, which she passes on to Luke: he’s next in line for the vacated spot. That night in the apartment is celebratory, only interrupted by constant nuptial calls from Emily’s abrasive mum. Finally, an important call comes through from one of the other MPs at OCC. Emily needs to join him at the preferred “watering hole”. Though it’s late she jumps in a cab, and enters the pub, but can’t find him. Oh oh, she does see Campbell. Joining him for “last call”, he offers her the MP job. She giddily accepts, but how will Luke react? Can he handle being passed over…for her? And can their engagement handle this added stress, or will “love conquer all”?

After her breakout role on the Netflix streaming sensation “Bridgerton”, Ms. Dynevor confidently dives into a most modern romance, as a woman doing her best to balance her personal and professional lives. Her Emily is smart and savvy, but never cutthroat as she tries to maneuver through the big business “boys club”. Through Dyvenor’s darting eyes and hesitant line delivery, she conveys that Emily is “weighing her words” She tiptoes, briskly, through that stock market minefield. Somehow she seems to be most careful and deliberate in her dealing with her true “partner” Luke. It’s great to see that the engaging Mr. Ehrenreich has bounced back professionally from the box office “drubbing” he endured after trying to fill some big “space boots” as Chewy’s co-pilot. Only a few months ago he shined as part of the big OPPENHEIMER ensemble, Ehrenreich utilizes that leading man charisma as the likable Luke who believes he can keep treading water and evading “the sharks”. We’re rooting for him even as we can almost smell Luke’s sweaty desperation as he strains to make the “big score” in order to be on the same level as his lady love. But can anyone keep their cool when they’re on the receiving end of a dead-eyed glare from the thuggish Campbell, played by the always impressive Mr. Marsan? He’s the seething barrel of venom as he appears to sniff out weakness and failure in his “fiefdom”. At his side is the cold-blooded sycophant, and “hatchet-man” Paul played with creepy passive-aggressive spite by with equal evil banality by Rich Sommer, in quite a change from his affable “Mad Men” role. Speaking of that classic series, one of his co-stars, Patrick Fischler has a tasty cameo as a self-help guru who seems to be throwing out a life preserver to the floundering Luke.


This modern cautionary fable marks the feature film debut of TV series veteran writer/director Chloe Domont. She has an excellent ear for workplace dialogue, matched by the quieter scenes after hours. Domont keeps the action and exchanges in low light, giving the film a claustrophobic and often intimate aura. This makes the greatest impact in those moments of raw passion, whether Emily and Luke are exploring each other’s bodies or verbally hammering away at their inner demons. Some viewers may feel quite queasy by the sexual content, but the intense emotions may prove the most unsettling. Fragile egos and ambition prove to be the true destroyers of this couple. This makes the story’s final act so frustrating as the lead characters go “off the rails” while these big “blow-ups” have consequences that don’t mesh with the established setting. And then it sputters with a final encounter that feels exploitive and violent (from verbal to visceral). The actors are compelling while in the political “Thunderdome” of Wall Street, but the script’s collapse will have many screaming foul play at the uneven FAIR PLAY.

2.5 Out of 4

FAIR PLAY is now playing in select theatres and is streaming exclusively on Netflix

Check Out the Exciting Trailer for THE CONTRACTOR Starring Chris Pine – In Theaters, On Digital and On Demand April 1st

THE CONTRACTOR stars an ensemble cast of Chris Pine (Star Trek, Wonder Woman), who also executive produced the film, Ben Foster (Lone Survivor, Hell or High Water), Gillian Jacobs (Come Play, “Community”), Eddie Marsan (The Gentlemen, “Ray Donovan”), JD Pardo (F9: The Fast Saga, “Mayans M.C.”), Florian Munteanu (Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten RingsCreed II) and Kiefer Sutherland (“Designated Survivor”, “24”). The film is directed by Tarik Saleh (The Nile Hilton Incident – 2017 Sundance film festival winner for World Cinema Grand Jury Prize -Dramatic) and written by J.P. Davis. TEH CONTRACTOR opens In Theaters, On Digital and On Demand April 1st

Here’s the trailer:

Chris Pine stars in the action-packed thriller as Special Forces Sergeant James Harper, who is involuntarily discharged from the Army and cut-off from his pension. In debt, out of options and desperate to provide for his family, Harper contracts with a private underground military force. When the very first assignment goes awry, the elite soldier finds himself hunted and on the run, caught in a dangerous conspiracy and fighting to stay alive long enough to get home and uncover the true motives of those who betrayed him. Also starring Kiefer Sutherland, Ben Foster, Gillian Jacobs and Eddie Marsan.

FLAG DAY – Review

FlagDay_FilmStills_081_R Sean Penn stars as John Vogel in FLAG DAY A Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures film Photo credit: Courtesy of Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures Inc. © 2021 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved.

With Labor Day less than a couple of weeks away, it’s only natural that the studios would release a family flick around a holiday, though not this particular one. No, it’s from a couple of months ago, though the exact date differs in other countries. Ah, but that word “family” is the constant, and not in the overused “blanket” term mumbled by the cast of F9. No, this is for real, an autobiographical “coming of age” drama that rips away the hazy nostalgia that obscures the truth about growing up with a parent, who, despite all odds, refuses to grow up. That’s the case of this tale’s heroine, whose ner do well daddy proudly proclaimed that he was born on FLAG DAY.

The film begins very near the end of the story’s main relationship. Law-enforcement officers “saddle up” in the mid-1990s during a wild highway pursuit. Just as they surround a speeding SUV, we’re taken to a conversation between a US marshall and twenty-something Jennifer Vogel (Dylan Penn), who learns of her father’s skill as a counterfeiter. Her mind then drifts back to hazy mid-seventies Summer days as she, along with kid brother Nick and mother Patty (Katheryn Winnick), are awaiting a brief visit from father John Vogel (Sean Penn). After a short interlude filled with horseplay and laughter, Papa John would be on the move. Eventually, they became a complete family again, but violent arguments (usually about money) split the parents up. But since Mom wasn’t the “fun one”, the kids wanted to be with their daddy “full time”. But after a few months, John sent them back to his ex as he evaded the law (yet another of his houses burned down), creditors (including some “leg-breaker” outlaw-types), and heartsick girlfriends. Soon Mama remarried, but after stepdad got too “handsy”, teenage Jennifer ran away to rejoin her father, who bragged of his business prospects. When she learns of his real job as a groundskeeper at a tiny airport, the two split (after John’s arrest for an inept bank hold-up). Jennifer reunites with Mom and Nick before becoming a journalism student at a Minnesota college. Her investigating skills land her a job reporting for the local free newspaper (some call it a “hippie rag”). Then Daddy shows up, out of the blue. He boasts of his ownership of a small print shop. As usual, Jennifer learns the hard way, that “Papa John” just can’t tell the truth, or keep on the “straight and narrow”.

The film’s strength is definitely in the real-life father-daughter dynamic of the two leads. Though she’s only had roles on TV and film, Dylan Penn has a compelling star charisma as the camera adoringly frames her (she is a stunning beauty). Ms. Penn convincingly ages from 16 to nearly 30, while handling drastic changes in makeup (a punk/goth style in high school) and fashions (that Lois Lane reporter-look). Her Jennifer also changes emotionally from vulnerable, but tough-talking teen to probing, smart investigator (though a “gotcha” interview feels clunky). Ms. Penn also works well with the rest of the cast, but her best moments are with her “old man”, the two-time Oscar winner. We’ve seen a bit of the twitchy “hustler’ character in some of Sean Penn’s earlier roles (THE FALCON AND THE SNOWMAN and CARLITO’S WAY spring to mind), but there’s a much darker tragic edge to John Vogel. We see the twinkle in his eyes as he relates to his kids by going to their level, whether he’s helping little Jennifer “drive” or as he gleefully takes an “aqua-car” into the lake on his birthday/holiday. But then that spark is dimmed as we see the “gears working’ as Vogel must come up with a new set of lies and excuses when he’s cornered. Penn still projects some charm as we see how pathetic John’s spiraling life has lead him (he actually believes his B.S.). Winnick is terrific as the frustrated matriarch who struggles to keep her family together while ignoring the pleas for help from her siblings. Mr. Penn has also lined up several acting vets for small supporting roles. Josh Brolin is solid as the understanding but stern Uncle Beck. Eddie Marsan is slick and sinister as he tries to intimidate the inquisitive Jennifer. And Norbert Leo Butz oozes evil as the slimy, creepy stepfather.

Oh, I forgot to mention that Mr. Penn is doing “double duty” as the film’s director (he’s made several features, but hasn’t cast himself till now). He does a very good job of capturing the hazy golden glow of childhood memory in the story’s early sequences, expertly evoking the feels of the still wild and wooly seventies. Ultimately his work is undone by the meandering, often unfocused script by Jez Butterworth whose screenplay adapts Ms. Vogel’s memoir. The plot’s construction, beginning with the tragic conclusion, dilutes some of the story’s surprises. And at times, this film doesn’t know if it wants to be Jennifer’s story or the saga of John. The end result lurches between the somewhat cliche struggles of Ms. V and the funny, but very sad adventures of Mr. V. That whole idea that living with an impish Peter Pan “man-child’ is hammered home with a numbing frequency. And in repeating this, some of the characters are given short shrift with brother Nick almost an afterthought in many sequences. Despite the strong work of the Penns, this father/daughter fable never soars. It’s one FLAG DAY just fails to inspire. And certainly not worthy of celebration.

2.5 Out of 4

FLAG DAY opens in theatres everywhere and screens exclusively in the St. Louis area at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Cinemas on August 27, 2021

THE VIRTUOSO – Review

So, here’s another example of a film that sports a somewhat misleading, or maybe a tad confusing title. The word in question is one usually attached to musicians like concert pianists or classical violinists. But no, this concerns another profession entirely. Although…they do share quite a bit in common. There’s the study, solitary dedication, practice, and planning. A huge part of the latter is timing, namely hitting the beats, and releasing those notes at the exact, precise moment for the proper impact. Now this film’s holder of this title doesn’t deal with notes. More often than not, it’s bullets. He’s a highly-paid hitman, one that strikes from the shadows, liquidating swiftly than disappearing into the ether. leaving no trace of his presence. His services are so lauded and coveted that he’s only known as THE VIRTUOSO.


The film opens at the conclusion of the latest “hire’ of the “services” of Mr. V (Anson Mount). In order to appreciate his talents, he provides a narration taking us through the job’s completion. Soon he’s out of the city and back in the wilderness, living by himself in a spartan wood cabinet deep in the woods and well off the grid. His only contacts are a big stray dog lumbering onto his front porch for food and a “burner” cell phone report to V’s agent/supervisor AKA “The Mentor” (Anthony Hopkins) confirming the end of his “gig”. The only way to contact the Virtuoso is by mail sent to a non-government “postal box”. After a few days, a letter arrives. The mentor explains that it’s a “rush job”, only 48 hours, which concerns V. but the fee more than makes up for the haste. But things go sideways and horrific collateral damage occurs. When a shaken V doesn’t answer his phone, Mr. M tracks him to his father’s grave. After relating a story about his time with V’s father in Vietnam, Mentor advises him to push thru the pain and “answer your damn phone”. And soon the next job comes. The envelope contains the cryptic message (maybe a name)”White Rivers” and the map coordinates that lead to Rosie’s Diner outside a cold tiny town in the mountains of the US northeast. In the eatery, V strikes up a conversation with a friendly waitress Dixie (Abbie Cornish) as he tries to figure out his “target’ . Is it the chatty couple at a table? The burly Loner at the counter (Eddie Marsan), who appears to be “packing”? Or it might even be the stoic Deputy (David Morse), who seems to be at every corner of the town? As the snow begins to drift down, the Virtuoso keeps track of all the patrons as he continues to ponder the mystery of the Mentor’s message.

The title role coulld be considered a feature film lead breakout for Mount, mostly known for supporting movie roles and a few TV leads (right now he’s “killing it” as Captain Pike, an early commander of the starship Enterprise on “Star Trek: Discovery”, streaming on Paramount Plus, which I’m told is a mountain of entertainment. The V isn’t a talkative chap, so Mount (aside from his narration) has to relay his state of mind via body language and his dark brooding eyes. And Mount shows us the painful socially awkward qualities of the hitman as he’ll pause during a mission to practice facial expressions in the car’s rearview mirror. He still draws us in, making us wonder about what’s going on in his head. Hopefully, this film will open the gates to more complex roles for him. Cornish makes Dixie a more accessible, friendlier person, though, with her piercing eyes, she remains more than a little enigmatic, as her off-the-cuff cynicism makes her an odd fit for this tiny town. As for newly awarded two-time Oscar-winner Hopkins, well, he’s the standard “man behind the desk”. Most of his time, aside from a rambling clunky ‘Nam monologue at a gravesite, he’s in his Mahogany-toned office, sitting in the dark or by fireplace light. It feels like a quick”grab the check” for a couple of days’ work to inject some star power gig that many veteran actors indulge. It appears that they cut in unimportant bits of business of him: cleaning his weapons, staring at his platoon of cell phones, and so on in order to make it seem that he has a bigger role in the film. And with his new accolades, I’m sure he’ll be featured more prominently in the marketing, but this will never make Tony’s tribute reels. Also, the same roles assigned to two of our best character actors, Marsan and Morse, are little more than beefed-up cameos with little to aid the mystery plot, other than fueling V’s heightened confusion.

Director Nick Stagliano crafts a fairly rote modern action “B” picture (thinking it’ll be a late-night premium cable TV staple very soon) from James C. Wolf’s meandering script. We’ve seen stories of working-class killers before (the two versions of THE MECHANIC spring to mind), but there’s little in the way of film style or offbeat dialogue to set this one apart. There’s a sluggish “spinning their wheels” feel to all the non-action sequences, which aren’t as engaging as needed. It’s especially the case with the endless bits at the diner, as V makes two tedious visits. It all leads up to a USUAL SUSPECTS-inspired flashback explanation which muddies up the mystery element even more and still confuses. The continuity gaffes (Dixie’s concerned up the big snowfall, but just moments later V is cruising on pristine clean streets) add to the general incoherence. Despite the “shouldn’t they know better” cast, THE VIRTUOSO is pretty much the opposite of that title. It’s more a novice, barely hitting his notes and missing the (action) beats.

1.5 Out of 4

THE VIRTUOSO opens in select theatres on Friday, April 30, 2021.

THE GENTLEMEN – Review

As THE IRISHMAN begins the home stretch to the Oscars are you in need of another mob movie fix? Like Scorsese, this director has a history of flicks about the “thug life” featuring guys and goons that can “lean” on anybody that gets in the way. Well, this is one quite a bit different as it’s not set on the mean streets of East Coast USA, but rather in swinging (like a pendulum do’) London, so it’s got an international flavor. Plus this flick expands past Picadilly into the country estates and castles (hitmen at Downton Abbey. oh dear). So it involves the elite, but people who don’t fret about getting blood spilled on those custom-tailored suits and gowns. Yet, somehow most of the world believes that these “goodfellas'” can still be called THE GENTLEMEN.

After a brief flashforward involving one of the plot principals, the story really begins on a dark night as Ray (Charlie Hunnan) discovers a most unwelcome visitor lurking in the shadows of his plush home. It’s a sleazy P.I. named Fletcher (Hugh Grant) and he’s got a business offer. He’s just finished a job for “Big” Dave (Eddie Marsan), editor of the popular tabloid the Daily Print, digging up lots of “dirt’ on Ray’s boss, “cannabis king” Mickey Pearson (Matthew McConaughey). But Ray can buy it all from Fletcher before it sees print. Of course, Ray needs a hint at what he’d be buying. We get the backstory on Mick: born to poor parents in Florida, USA he wins a Rhodes Scholarship at Oxford, where he balances his studies with a lucrative pot-selling “side hustle”. He amasses a “weed” empire, deciding to put down roots in the UK by marrying the gorgeous Rosalind (Michelle Dockery). They rub elbows with the highest of high society, which answers one of the mysteries about him. Namely, where does he grow and produce his “primo” product”? He attracts the attention of another rich Yank, Matthew Berger (Jeremy Strong), who intends to buy the operation. Luckily Mickey wants to start a family, so after naming a hefty price tag he lets Berger in on the big secret. Mickey has made deals with the cash-strapped “upper-elites” (the Earls, Lords, etc.) to set up underground greenhouses on their secured properties. Mickey even takes Matthew to visit one. Then word leaks out about Mickey’s retirement. An ambitious young mobster from the East, Dry Eye (Henry Golding) makes an offer that’s is quickly rejected by Mickey. Then that secret “bush” locale is hit by a bunch of young thugs. Throw in a tough boxing coach named, well, Coach (Colin Farrell), and the drug-addled daughter of royalty, and it’s starting to look as though Mickey will never “get out”. But just how much evidence does Fletcher have? And will Ray convince his boss to buy it?

A stellar cast has been assembled for this crime caper with Oscar-winner McConaughey front and center as the American who’s just as sophisticated and cultured as any of the native brits (well, really more so than most in this tale). He seems to be channeling more of this TV ad persona (you’ve seen those baffling car ad in which he’s featured) than most of his screen work (Mickey is almost the inverse of the yahoos in GOLD, MAGIC MIKE, and even DALLAS BUYERS CLUB). He’s smooth as silk, only creasing his GQ ensembles when someone disrespects him. Or when he’s around his wife. Much like Gomez in THE ADDAMS FAMILY his Mickey is hopelessly enamored of the ravishing Rosalyn played with a smoldering tough sensibility by Dockery, who seems ecstatic to be out of the Downton finery. Another “happy camper” is Grant who can barely contain his joy in being cast as the skeevy, pervy (his threats to Ray are mixed with aggressive flirtations) private eye. He flits about the screen like a mischievous imp as he spins a tale of double-crossing and deceit. Farrell is quite entertaining as the gruff, no-nonsense Coach who only gets his hands dirty in order to protect his beloved “lads”. Speaking of dirtying your hands, Goulding appears to relish his turn as the scowling, always plotting Dry Eye, who seethes as he’s denied a seat at the “adults’ table”. Strong scores as the somewhat foppish (not quite the fashion plate as Mickey), but dangerously brilliant (at least two steps ahead) Berger. And as Mickey’s #1, Hunnam is everything you’d want in a right-hand man, though he’s got a real cleanliness mania, whether it’s Fletcher removing his shoes or having to go into a high-rise drug “nest”. Filth is this tough guy’s Kryptonite.

This flick marks sort of a homecoming, or at least a return to his roots, of director Guy Ritchie, who also wrote the screenplay with a story assist from Ivan Atkinson and Marn Davies. In the dozen years since ROCKNROLLA Ritchie has bounced about from the RDJ Sherlock HOLMES franchise, to franchise wannabe THE MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E., to the darned near-unwatchable KING ARTHUR: LEGEND OF THE SWORD, to last Summer’s fairly sanitized ALADDIN (though not the worst of the live-action reboots). He’s back in his “comfort zone” and his “home turf” as he keeps the action zipping briskly along while throwing us many unexpected curves and bits of inspired hilarity (Old MacDonald will never sound the same). Ritchie even throws in some satiric jabs at his own profession as Fletcher indulges his own cinematic aspirations (he includes a screenplay in his blackmail package). And he still has a taste for film making flourishes, slowing down the actions, speeding scenes in reverse, along with creating a rap music YouTube street-fighting video. Sure he still peppers the script with “F-bombs” (and being in the UK there are “C-bombs”) and blood, though he saves the gore to make the most impact. And there’s even a nice tribute to the recently departed, much-missed “Mr. Creosote”. Needless to say, the fancy mansion and wardrobes are quite dazzling. To sum things up, THE GENTLEMEN is an unpredictable, most welcome return to the lowlife and high-class law-breakers in Guy Ritchie’s London underworld.

3 Out of 4

Win Passes To The St. Louis Advance Screening Of VICE – Stars Christian Bale, Amy Adams And Tyler Perry

VICE explores the epic story about how a bureaucratic Washington insider quietly became the most powerful man in the world as Vice-President to George W. Bush, reshaping the country and the globe in ways that we still feel today.

Opening in theaters on Christmas Day, VICE stars Christian Bale, Amy Adams, Steve Carell, Sam Rockwell, Jesse Plemons, Alison Pill, Lily Rabe, Tyler Perry, Justin Kirk, LisaGay Hamilton, Shea Whigham and Eddie Marsan and is directed by Adam McKay.

Enter for your chance to win two free passes to the St. Louis advance screening of VICE. The theatrical sneak preview will be on December 20 at 7pm.

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NO PURCHASE REQUIRED. A pass does not guarantee a seat at a screening. Seating is on a first-come, first served basis. The theater is overbooked to assure a full house.

WEBSITE: https://www.vice.movie/

Christian Bale as Dick Cheney in Adam McKay’s VICE, an Annapurna Pictures release.
Credit : Greig Fraser / Annapurna Pictures
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