THE EXORCIST: BELIEVER – Review

So October has finally arrived and the studios are truly “bringing out the big guns” in order to “scare up” some box office bucks at the ole’ haunted multiplex. We’re talking the “classics” here. No, it’s not another SCREAM entry, since this one goes back a lot further in fear film history. Not as far as the “thirsty Count” since we’ve had two flicks about the true first “bat-man” in the past year. But it is older than the HALLOWEEN (the crew behind the last three are behind this one) series or the assorted other sinister stalkers. We can call this a fright franchise since there have been four (some say five) entries and even a short-lived TV series. And it all started exactly fifty years ago as a best-selling novel was adapted into what was then the most profitable horror movie ever (for at least a couple of years). Talk about a “hard act” to follow! That’s the daunting task ahead for this “reimagining” titled THE EXORCIST: BELIEVER.

It begins, much like the original did, with a flashback in an exotic foreign land. Victor Fielding (Leslie Odom Jr.) is enjoying a vacation in Haiti with his very pregnant wife Sorenne (Tracey Graves) thirteen (oh oh) years ago. He’s indulging his passion for photography when they’re separated by a devasting earthquake, which leads to a tragic decision. Flash forward to today as Victor shares a home in a small Georgia town with his daughter Angela (Lidya Jewett), who is curious about her mother. Luckily she’s made many friends in school, particularly Katherine (Olivia Marcum). One day they each toss out fibs about studying at each others’ houses to their folks. Instead, the duo explores a nearby wooded area to light a candle and attempt to communicate with the “spirit world” (maybe Angela’s mum will answer her queries). Hours pass, darkness falls, and Victor starts to panic. He reaches out to Katherine’s folks, who think she’s with Angela. The panicked parents meet at the police station where the very religious Miranda (Jennifer Nettles) and Tony (Norbert Leo Butz) eye Victor with suspicion. Soon the trio are covering the town with missing flyers. Amazingly the girls turn up alive three days later, thirty miles away. They get a clean bill of health at the local hospital despite some odd scars on the feet and legs. And then the truly freaky behavior begins, as the duo begins to speak in low guttural voices and lash out violently. Victor starts to consider admitting Angela into a mental health facility until his neighbor, a local nurse named Ann (Ann Dowd) gives him a copy of a book written by a woman claiming that her daughter was possessed by a demon. After checking out some online interviews, Victor visits the author, former actress Chris MacNeill (Ellen Burstyn). She agrees to observe Angela, but can her knowledge and experience end the living nightmare of the parents and save their daughters?

Serving as the film’s anchor which strains to hold the disparate plot twists and turns is the talented Mr. Odom Jr. as everyman Victor. We first see him as a loving husband and later father who must not allow fear and panic to overwhelm him. We see that determination on Odom Jr’s face and a hint of desperation in his eyes. It’s then that he shifts into hero mode to rescue his precious daughter. In that role, Ms. Jewitt is quite endearing as the sweet, but often exasperating Angela as she peers into memories of that past which her father doesn’t wish to relive. Plus, she’s very creepy after her “return’, much like Ms. Marcum, who has a bright mischievous smile while disrupting class before morphing into a wild feral creature who terrorizes an entire church. Nettles is quite compelling as her devoted mama, while Butz is manic and boisterous as her “wildcard” papa. Ms. Dowd brings much gravitas and poignancy to the role of the neighborhood “nudge” (“Take in those trash cans!”) turned demon-fighter. Kudos also to Raphael Sbarge as Katherine’s Baptist pastor who eschews the usual cliche of the greedy mega-church huckster. But the film’s MVP is probably the franchise return of Burstyn who commands the screen as the haunted, but still fiery Ms. MacNeill, who is eager to join the battle despite her years, perhaps to release her from some half-a-century-old anguish.

Horror vet (the final HALLOWEEN trilogy) David Gordon Green takes over the directing reigns working from the script he co-wrote with Peter Sattler, Danny Mcbride, and Scott Teems. For the film’s first half, he keeps the pace flowing while setting up the creepy undercurrents of small-town America. Unfortunately, the specter of the 1973 original looms large, pushing him to try and emulate the quick editing unnerving image sequences of that iconic work. Green tries to temper this with more modern “jump scares”, which are offset by the loopy “set-ups” (Victor is barely slowed down when coming through the unlocked front door of his home). And did we really need the nast sequences at a homeless shelter or at a home for the mentally ill (shades of THE SNAKE PIT)? Speaking of modern, we get plenty of the current genre’s penchant for cruelty, especially with a pivotal scene involving MacNeill, that’s is so mean-spirited it pushes the boundaries of good taste for this much-maligned genre. But at least she’s not part of the final act “face-off’ in which a multi-faith Avengers-style team uses each of their religion’s teachings to battle the two possessed pre-teens sporting all manner of CGI-enhanced makeup prosthetics (Katherine sports a Frankenstein-like forehead while Angela harkens back to the 70’s grindhouse classic shocker ABBEY). All the chaos and pummeling sound and fury lead to a limp finale and a bland epilogue, even though a late “arrival” is somewhat charming. The folks at Blumhouse can’t quite work their monster magic on this familiar property, making THE EXORCIST: BELIEVER a reboot with no real “kick”, and only a smattering of those “Tubular Bells”.

1.5 Out of 4

THE EXORCIST: BELIEVER is now playing in theatres everywhere

Frightening Is What THE EXORCIST: BELIEVER First Trailer Is And Sees The Return Of Ellen Burstyn

(from left) Angela Fielding (Lidya Jewett) and Katherine (Olivia Marcum) in The Exorcist: Believer, directed by David Gordon Green.

Exactly 50 years ago this fall, the most terrifying horror film in history landed on screens, shocking audiences around the world. Now, on Friday, October 13, a new chapter begins. From Blumhouse and director David Gordon Green, who shattered the status quo with their resurrection of the Halloween franchise, comes THE EXORCIST: BELIEVER.

Since the death of his pregnant wife in a Haitian earthquake 12 years ago, Victor Fielding (Tony winner and Oscar® nominee Leslie Odom, Jr.; One Night in Miami, Hamilton) has raised their daughter, Angela (Lidya Jewett, Good Girls) on his own.

But when Angela and her friend Katherine (newcomer Olivia Marcum), disappear in the woods, only to return three days later with no memory of what happened to them, it unleashes a chain of events that will force Victor to confront the nadir of evil and, in his terror and desperation, seek out the only person alive who has witnessed anything like it before: Chris MacNeil.

Body and the Blood – hit the iconic Tubular Bells and catch the truly scary trailer now!

For the first time since the 1973 film, Oscar® winner Ellen Burstyn reprises her iconic role as Chris MacNeil, an actress who has been forever altered by what happened to her daughter Regan five decades before.

The film also stars Emmy winner Ann Dowd (The Handmaid’s Tale, Hereditary) as Victor and Angela’s neighbor, and Grammy winner Jennifer Nettles (Harriet, The Righteous Gemstones) and two-time Tony winner Norbert Leo Butz (Fosse/Verdon, Bloodline) as the parents of Katherine, Angela’s friend.

(from left) Chris MacNeil (Ellen Burstyn) and Victor Fielding (Leslie Odom, Jr.) in The Exorcist: Believer, directed by David Gordon Green.

When The Exorcist, based on the best-selling book by William Peter Blatty, was released, it changed the culture forever, obliterating box office records and earning 10 Academy Award® nominations, becoming the first horror film ever nominated for Best Picture.

Check out the new book The Exorcist Legacy: 50 Years of Fear by Nat Segaloff who was an original publicist for the movie and the acclaimed biographer of its director.

As William Friedkin said on many occasions, “I didn’t set out to scare the hell out of people as you do with a horror film. I set out to make a film that would make them think about the concept of good and evil.”

The THE EXORCIST: BELIEVER is directed by David Gordon Green from a screenplay by Peter Sattler (Camp X-Ray) and David Gordon Green, from a story by Scott Teems (Halloween Kills), Danny McBride (Halloween trilogy) and David Gordon Green, based on characters created by William Peter Blatty.

Director David Gordon Green on the set of The Exorcist: Believer.

The film is produced by Jason Blum for Blumhouse and by David Robinson and James G. Robinson for Morgan Creek Entertainment.

The executive producers are Danny McBride, David Gordon Green, Stephanie Allain, Ryan Turek and Atilla Yücer. Universal Pictures presents a Blumhouse/Morgan Creek Entertainment production in association with Rough House Pictures.

Ellen Burstyn and Jared Leto in Darren Aronofsky’s REQUIEM FOR A DREAM Arrives on 4K Ultra HD Steelbook January 18th

“Harold, I’m gonna be on television.”

One of the most powerful psychological films ever made, Requiem For A Dream arrives January 18th on 4K Ultra HD™ Steelbook from Lionsgate, exclusively at Best Buy.

One of the most powerful psychological films ever made, Requiem For A Dream arrives January 18th on 4K Ultra HD™ Steelbook from Lionsgate, exclusively at Best Buy. From Academy Award®-nominated director Darren Aronofsky (2010, Best Director, Black Swan), the critically acclaimed film features cinematography by two-time Academy Award® nominee Matthew Libatique (2010, Best Achievement in Cinematography, Black Swan; 2018, Best Achievement in Cinematography, A Star is Born), music by Golden Globe nominee Clint Mansell (2006, Best Original Score, The Fountain), and stars Academy Award® winners Ellen Burstyn (1974, Best Actress, Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore), Jared Leto (2013, Best Supporting Actor, Dallas Buyers Club), and Jennifer Connelly (2001, Best Supporting Actress, A Beautiful Mind), as well as Marlon Wayans (Scary Movie franchise, White Chicks). Featuring all new artwork from Vance Kelly, Requiem For A Dream will be available on 4K Ultra HD™ Steelbook at Best Buy for the suggested retail price of $27.99.

Darren Aronofsky’s Requiem for a Dream – with a screenplay by Aronofsky and Hubert Selby Jr., based on Selby’s novel – stars Oscar® winners* Jared Leto, Jennifer Connelly, and Ellen Burstyn, along with Marlon Wayans, in a hypnotic film about four people pursuing their visions of happiness. Even as everything begins to fall apart, they refuse to let go, plummeting with their dreams into a nightmarish, gut-wrenching freefall.

4K ULTRA HD SPECIAL FEATURES

  • “On Set: 1999” Featurette
  • “Transcendent Moments: The Score of Requiem for a Dream” Featurette
  • “Ellen Burstyn on Requiem for a Dream” Featurette
  • “Through Their Eyes: Revisiting Requiem for a Dream” Featurette

CAST
Ellen Burstyn                          Alice Doesn’t Live Here AnymoreThe ExorcistThe Age of Adaline
Jared Leto                               Dallas Buyers ClubSuicide SquadBlade Runner 2049
Jennifer Connelly                    A Beautiful MindHouse of Sand and FogNoah
Marlon Wayans                       Scary MovieWhite Chicks, TV’s “Marlon”

PIECES OF A WOMAN – Review

In just a couple of days, we’ll be raising a glass (considering current events, probably in our homes) and bidding farewell to a year many are glad to see end. As with other New Year’s, it’s a time of reflection, of “taking stock”, and strengthening those family connections. This new film looks at how those bonds, so solid for much of the year, can irreparably crumble and almost collapse as the months pass. In this case, a tremendous tragedy befalls a family as they work toward taking their lives into a new “phase”. But as the couple’s lives shatter, hope still stirs amongst those scattered PIECES OF A WOMAN.

However, as the story begins, we meet “the man”. Fall is easing into winter as the hard-working, gruff Sean (Shia LaBeouf) is about to take some time off from his stint on the team constructing a bridge in Boston. Across town, the woman, his wife Martha (Vanessa Kirby) is enjoying a “going away” party her employers are throwing at their swanky HQ in a high-rise. She’s nearing the end of her pregnancy, so a sabbatical has begun. She and Sean meet at her brother-in-law Chris’ (Benny Safdie) car dealership to upgrade their wheels, from compact to family SUV. At their home, Sean presents her with a gift for their just-completed nursery room: the sonograms in a nice frame. A few weeks later (but still a bit early) it’s “go time”. Martha is enduring extremely painful contractions as Sean frantically phones their midwife to begin the home-birthing process. But she’s stuck at another birth, so her co-worker Eva (Molly Parker) arrives. She’s concerned about Martha’s agony (and she’s worried that they’ve got a sub). After a dip in a warm bath, Martha starts pushing while Eva monitors the baby’s erratic heartbeat. Just in case, Eva tells Sean to dial 9-11. She then implores Martha to push with all her might. Finally, the baby emerges, and as the new parents coddle her, Eva is suddenly filled with alarm. Only she notices that the infant‘s skin tone has a purplish tint. While she attempts CPR, Sean sprints out the front to meet the ambulance. Jump to a month later as they are still reeling from that awful night. Martha tries to ignore the blank stares from her co-workers as she returns to her job. Eva is in the news as she is charged with criminal negligence. A dazed Martha signs the form to donate her baby’s body to a medical school. This angers Sean who is now united with the mother-in-law who never bonded with him, Elizabeth (Ellen Burstyn). They want a grave with a carved headstone, which baffles Martha. The rest of the family doesn’t understand why she’s not taking an active interest in the case against Eva. The couple begins to drift apart as Sean ends his years of sobriety.  Could the demise of their child hasten the end of their marriage?

Kirby astounds as the title “woman” delivering one of the best performances of the year, bringing Martha’s story “arc” to heart-wrenching life. As her co-workers eagerly touch her birth-ready belly, her body language conveys her anxious state tinged with embarrassment as though she’s a display ad for impending motherhood. But when that night arrives, Kirby contorts her face and voice to illustrate the utter agony Martha is enduring. That’s balanced by her need for comfort from her partner and her anxiety over this “scrub” scuttling the big birthing plans. After the unthinkable, Kirby, with her unsteady gaze and walk, shows how grief has almost “shut down” Martha. It’s acerbated when everyone seems to “gang up” on her for not grieving “correctly” and not passionately screaming for Eva’s head. Martha tries to feel something via self-medication at a dance club, but not even a flirtation with a stranger can jolt her back to reality. It’s wonderful work from an emerging talent. One of her best scenes is with an actress who is entering her seventh decade on film, the indomitable Burstyn. She imbues matriarch Elizabeth with a sad jittery fragility which makes the big family brunch showdown so surprising. Burstyn‘s Elizabeth unleashes her fierce “lioness” as all the bottled-up anger and frustration explode in a scathing monologue. At a time when many would be pondering retirement, Burstyn is still at “the top of her game”. LaBeouf gives voice (a graveled one for certain) to the blindsided Sean who can only work out his anger issues through booze and infidelity, even thinking that “dropping out” in Seattle is the “cure-all”.  Safdie, best known for his indie filmmaking, makes Chris a believable intimidated “patsy”, by Sean along with his wife Anita played with annoyed smirk by stand-up comedian Iliza Shlesinger.  There’s a terrific turn by Sarah Snook as their lawyer cousin, who is hiding her own secrets. At the heart of the drama is Parker’s overwhelmed Eva, who can’t quite put on a “happy face “ for the worried couple as she slowly realizes she’s out of her “depth”, even as she frantically skims through her workbooks, desperate to find an answer. Parker’s facial expressions in the courtroom, tell us more of Eva’s inner heartbreak than any dialogue.

Director Kornel Mundruczo eschews fancy narrative tricks to paint a portrait of unfathomable tragedy, while never stooping to “wallow” in melodrama. Particularly in the birthing sequence, his camera swoops past the principals, down the hallway, and focuses in the desperate drama in the characters’ faces. It’s an intimate form of chaos with no foretelling of the horrific outcome. Its impact owes a great deal to the moving screenplay by Kata Weber that never opts for easy answers and doesn’t paint in “broad strokes” to denote heroes and villains. All are flawed humans struggling to keep going with their inner anguish. Yes, this is quite a tear-jerker, but the finale offers hope of healing, that one can survive the unthinkable, even bask in the warm sunshine. One of the year’s best dramas hints that there may be a way to reassemble these PIECES OF A WOAMN.

3.5 Out of 4

PIECES OF A WOMAN opens everywhere and screens exclusively in the St. Louis area at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Cinemas beginning Wednesday, December 30, 2020. It is also streaming exclusively on Netflix.

A Look Back at THE EXORCIST – Screening This Weekend at Marcus Wehrenberg Theatres


Article by Jake Billingsley

William Friedkin’s The Exorcist is the third film in Marcus Wehrenberg Theatre’s Friday night scare series. The film will be shown October 19-21, and there will be one screening each night at 10 PM. Admission is only $5. For​ ​more​ ​details​ ​and​ ​a​ ​list​ ​of participating​ ​theaters,​ ​go​ ​HERE


William Peter Blatty’s novel, The Exorcist, served William Friedkin a beacon of horror opportunity that still shines 44 years later. Blatty’s 1971 novel displays the exorcism of Roland Doe, a pseudonym for a boy, which happened in St. Louis. Friedkin adapts the film nearly two years later with Blatty’s screenplay. However, The Exorcist isn’t Friedkin’s first great film. He won the Academy Award for Best Picture the previous year for The French Connection. The Exorcist is the film he is most remembered for; Friedkin gets another Best Picture nomination, the first for a horror film, but doesn’t win. A horror film getting a Best Picture nomination is unheard of today, let alone 44 years ago. The Exorcist is considered by many to be the greatest horror film ever made. This opinion seems to be dwindling amongst recent generations. The younger moviegoers have argued that Friedkin’s film doesn’t hold up today; I disagree.


With the recent success of It, The Exorcist has finally been dethroned from the top box office spot inside the horror genre. The Exorcist grossed an international high at just over $440 million in 1973, and Stephen King’s novel adaptation has made $630 million worldwide. While inflation isn’t factored into the comparison between the two, there is still impressive box office numbers coming in for horror films today. People are never going to get tired of being scared. Friedkin once said, “People only go to movies for three reasons, to laugh, cry, or be frightened.” He followed that with, “There are only three reasons to make a movie, to make people laugh, to make them cry, or to frighten them.” The Exorcist will make some laugh today, but I will wager in the direction of the tears and fears that have plagued moviegoers for over four decades.


So what is different about Friedkin’s masterwork? Like It, The Exorcist was a film that audiences flocked to. The difference is that nowadays we know what we are getting, but many moviegoers in 1973 didn’t know what they were getting into. The Exorcist is a film that exploits a different style of filmmaking; this is true for the horror genre in particular. Friedkin adopts a documentarian approach to this film, and that’s why the movie is traumatically memorable. Do we care about Regan as she progresses into her devilish state? Do we care about what happens to the priests in the end? Do we care about the characters at all or are we hypnotized by the horrific events that take place? This film is a spiritual character study that brings us to the common recognition of how evil our world can be. It is hard to feel an emotional connection to subject matter that is so dark. All you have to do is sit back and watch. The film will take care of the rest.

The Power of Christ Compels You to See THE EXORCIST Midnights This Weekend at The Tivoli


“Your mother’s in here, Karras. Would you like to leave a message? I’ll see that she gets it.”


THE EXORCIST screens this Friday and Saturday nights (August 4th and 5th) at midnight at the Tivoli Theater as part of their ‘Reel Late at the Tivoli’  Midnight series.


This ground-breaking, starkly filmed thriller THE EXORCIST stands for many as one of the most terrifying films of all time. Fairly explicit for 1973, it raised the bar in film-making for realism and adult horror and has been emulated many times. However, it is set apart by its well-written (Oscar-winning) script and realistic performances. Ellen Burstyn is an actress who begins to sense unusual behavior in her preteen daughter (Linda Blair). The bizarre symptoms (open sores, violent thrashing, etc…) escalate as Burstyn seeks help from all conventional avenues. Finally, she determines that Blair is possessed by Satan (or a demon at least) and must be exorcised. Jason Miller is a troubled priest whose own problems pale in comparison with the dilemma facing Burstyn. When things get worse instead of better, it is up to legendary priest Max Von Sydow to attempt to rid the child of the demons inside her.


The sense of fear and dread in THE EXORCIST is aided by the cold, claustrophobic settings and the use of the music ‘Tubular Bells’ during key moments. The visuals are primitive by today’s standards, but still provide major jolts, notably Blair’s explosive green vomit and her celebrated 360 degree head turning. The film is packed with gross-out moments and shockingly blasphemous episodes which work to upset and disarm the viewer. Mercedes McCambridge helped provide the raspy, vulgar voice of the possessed Blair. I have a soft spot for the disastrous and heavily-panned 1977 sequel THE EXORCIST II: THE HERETIC, which starred an older, bustier Blair and Richard Burton. Maybe we should screen the sequel at midnight one of these weekends!

The Tivoli’s located at 6350 Delmar Blvd., University City, MO. Admission is a mere $8!
The Tivoli’s website can be found HERE

http://www.landmarktheatres.com/market/st.louis/tivolitheatre.htm

Here’s the Reel Late at the Tivoli Line-up for the next few weeks:

Aug. 11-12           SPIRITED AWAY 
Friday and Saturday at midnight, Subtitled
Saturday matinee at noon in English

Aug. 18-19           THE SHINING 

Aug. 25-26           THE ROOM  with Tommy Wiseau in person! –
Preceded by a trailer for Tommy’s upcoming film BEST F(R)IENDS
All tickets $15; no passes

WIENER DOG – Review

weiner-dog

WIENER DOG, a four-story anthology from writer/director Tod Solondz, follows a little dachshund from one home to the next, finding masters who represent four stages of life –  childhood, young adulthood, middle age, and elderly. The pooch is but a linking device to introduce Solondz’s real subjects; the dark and despairing characters that we associate with the oddball director. With his output of deadpan black comedies like WELCOME TO THE DOLLHOUSE and HAPPINESS, Solondz has specialized in human weakness and cruelty, awkward exchanges, and embarrassing confrontations. He continues this tradition with WIENER DOG, easily his finest film since HAPPINESS and one which features a trio of human performances from Julie Delpy, Danny DeVito, and Ellen Burstyn that are among the year’s best.

In the first story, the pooch is adopted by a high-strung couple (Julie Delpy and Pulitzer-winning playwright Tracy Letts) for their son Remi (Keaton Nigel Cooke – introduced in a hilarious reference to BOYHOOD), a young cancer survivor. When Remi questions Mom on the necessity of neutering, Delpy launches into a jaw-dropping account of her own childhood pup who was “raped” by the AIDS-infected neighborhood stray “Mohammed” (who also raped squirrels!), then died in puppybirth. It’s one of several startling, inappropriate monologues Delpy delivers in deadpan style. After Remi indulges his Wiener Dog with granola bars until it craps all over the house (and in its cage, and all the way down the driveway in one long, nauseating tracking shot), it’s straight to the vet for euthanasia and another clueless speech from Delpy on the upside of their pet’s death (“It feels good. Like forgetting everything”). There are a few moments between boy and dog that provide a bit of warmth, but this is a queasy look at dysfunctional parenting with Lett’s hothead Dad no better than Mom with both child and pet discipline (“Heel Motherf***er!”).

But Wiener Dog lives on as the second chapter re-introduces us to Solondz’s most famous character – bullied middle-schooler Dawn Wiener from his breakthrough WELCOME TO THE DOLLHOUSE (1995). Dawn is now played by Greta Gerwig (an actress who looks and behaves nothing like Heather Matarazzo from DOLLHOUSE – a gimmick Solondz has delivered before) and is working at the veterinary clinic where Remi and mom have dumped their pet. Dawn takes pity on the dog, renames her Doody, and takes her on a road trip with Brandon, her chief tormentor from the earlier film who is now an aimless drug addict (now played by Keiran Culkin). The pair travel to Ohio, picking up a trio of comically sad Mexican mariachis along the way. They visit Brandon’s brother and his wife, who both have Down’s Syndrome but are still better adjusted to adulthood than Brandon. While I’m glad to see that Dawn Weiner has grown into a reasonably sane adult, this is the weakest, if sweetest, of the four stories in WEINER DOG.

After a kooky “intermission” with the dachshund marching past green screen backdrops (a cattle ranch, a strip club stage) accompanied by a twangy title tune, WIENER DOG delivers its third and richest story. Wiener Dog’s owner is now Dave Schmerz (Danny DeVito) a lonely film professor and screenwriter. His former fame (he wrote a hit script 19 years earlier) keeps him employed  at a NYC University where his negativity irritates his students and fellow teachers. Schmerz spends half his time on the phone with his agent trying to get someone to read his latest script and the other half dealing with students he can’t stand. Listening to the asininity of some of these budding filmmakers, it’s not hard to see why. One goes on about “Sticky Fingers”, the movie super-villain he’s created while another wants to make films because he loves movies – yet can’t name a single one that’s influenced him or that he has even seen (“there’s just so many”). My favorite is the special snowflake who wants to write a script about “90s queer theory from a racial perspective” only to be deeply offended when Schmerz asks “What if? Then what?”.  DeVito is so good and so touching in WIENER DOG, especially when giving a poignant speech where he reflects on writing a meaningful script only to have to juice it up with mistaken identities and mafia hijinks to sell it.

The final story finds Wiener Dog in the home of Ellen Burstyn’s’ miserable Nana who’s named her pet ‘Cancer’ (“it fits”). She gets a visit from her desperate granddaughter Zoe (Zosia Mamet – superb) who drags along her arrogant artist boyfriend Fantasy (“His actual name. He’s got a sister named Dream” – played Michael James Shaw) to hit up Gramma for money. Burstyn, her eyes covered with dark shades, says little and smiles even less, but she gives a powerhouse performance that deserves to be noticed and talked about. She’s especially devastating in a heartbreaking dream scene when she finally shows us her expressive eyes to confront a gaggle of identical little girls who represent the more satisfying directions her life may have taken had she made different choices.

Solondz is not known for happy endings, and certainly doesn’t provide one for poor Wiener Dog, yet despite his gloomy view of mankind, he is a sharp observer and a bold writer. His WIENER DOG is one of the best movies so far this year.

5 of 5 Stars

WIENER DOG opens in St. Louis July 8th Exclusively at Landmark’s The Tivoli Theater

wiener-dog-poster

WHEN MARNIE WAS THERE on Blu-ray October 6th

whenmarnie_hires_6

From Japan’s acclaimed Studio Ghibli comes WHEN MARNIE WAS THERE, a sweeping story of friendship, mystery and discovery which is coming to Blu-ray™ Combo Pack and DVD on October 6, 2015, from Universal Pictures Home Entertainment, in partnership with GKIDS. Based on the beloved novel by Joan G. Robinson, the WHEN MARNIE WAS THERE Blu-ray™ and DVD deliver stirring emotions and breathtaking animation as only Studio Ghibli can, as well as hours of bonus features that go behind the scenes of a timeless masterpiece.

whenmarnielt

Sent from her foster home in the city one summer to a sleepy town by the sea in Hokkaido, Anna dreams her days away among the marshes. She believes she’s outside the invisible magic circle to which most people belong – and shuts herself off from everyone around her, wearing her “ordinary face”. Anna never expected to meet a friend like Marnie, who does not judge Anna for being just what she is. But no sooner has Anna learned the loveliness of friendship than she begins to wonder about her newfound friend… Based on the novel by Joan G. Robinson, When Marnie Was There is the newest film from Studio Ghibli, and the second feature film by Hiromasa Yonebayashi, the director of THE SECRET WORLD OF ARRIETTY.

when-marnie-was-there-omoide-no-m-n-2014-hiromasa-yonebayashi-1-photo-420

The English-dubbed version of WHEN MARNIE WAS THERE features a great voice cast including Hailee Steinfeld, Kiernan Shipka, Ava Acres, Catherine O’Hara, Geena Davis, John C. Reilly, Ellen Burstyn, and Kathy Bates

When-Marnie-Was-There

The critics love WHEN MARNIE WAS THERE:

Peter Keoug of The Boston Globe said:

“Yonebayashi has touched on the greater mystery underlying everyday life, a world pulsing with wonder and possibility, edged with a shadow of melancholy.”

Brian Gibson at Vue Weekly wrote:

“A work as lush and lovely as you’d hope for from a studio that long ago made it clear that films about girls’ magical inner lives were for everyone–and anyone who cares about maturely considered, deeply considerate cinema.”

and Scott Renshaw of The Salt Lake City Weekly said of WHEN MARNIE WAS THERE:

“It’s an honest, rich story about the emotional volatility of a young girl, and it just happens to be a story that’s told through animation.”

whenmarniet

The WHEN MARNIE WAS THERE Blu-ray is packed with extras:

  • The Making of When Marnie Was There (1080i, 42:38): A whirlwind behind the scenes piece that explores a wide range of elements within the creative processes, the picture’s place in Studio Ghibli history, story details, and more. In Japanese with English subtitles.
  • Yohei Taneda Creates the Art of When Marnie Was There (1080p, 17:14): A condensed retelling of the movie in parallel with a look at real-life drawings and models that stand in for the animation. In Japanese with English subtitles.
  • Feature-Length Storyboards (1080p, all audio [but no subtitle] options available, 1:43:13): The entire film presented in storyboard form.
  • Behind the Scenes with the Voice Cast (1080p, 12:39): The English voice cast discusses the film and the characters they voice.
  • Foreign Trailers and TV Spots (1080p, 6:21): Seven unique previews. In Japanese with English subtitles.
  • US Trailer (1080p, 1:39).

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Other stats:

Video: Codec: MPEG-4 AVC, Resolution: 1080p, Aspect ratio: 1.85:1, Original aspect ratio: 1.85:1

Audio: English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.0, Japanese: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.0, French: DTS 5.0

Subtitles: English, French

Discs: 50GB Blu-ray Disc, Two-disc set (1 BD, 1 DVD), DVD copy

Packaging: Slipcover in original pressing

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THE AGE OF ADALINE – The review

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What would you do if life stood still? Now I’m not talking about the world continually frozen, like a projector stuck on one frame of film (maybe a better modern analogy would be a DVD unable to move past an image, perhaps with that annoying “buffer circle” spinning). I mean what if you, yourself, never changed and remained your current age forever. No wrinkles, no grey hairs, and no internal breakdowns (the plumbing works fine, muscles and joints in great shape). That’s been one of the major benefits of vampirism (like the eternal ten-year old Kirsten Dunst in INTERVIEW WITH THE VAMPIRE), a theme of fairy tales (SLEEPING BEAUTY), and science fiction (THE MAN WHO CHEATED DEATH, the COCOON flicks). Now comes a film that plays with that notion in a more modern, realistic fashion. Call it a modern romantic fable, or the ultimate May-December love story. Or you might just call most of the 20th century (and a good chunk of the early 21st) THE AGE OF ADALINE.

A somber narrator introduces us to Jenny (Blake Lively), a modern-day twenty-something running an important errand on this New Year’s Eve of 2014 in San Francisco. She’s paying a young computer hacker (in cash, of course) for an impeccable set of phony ID’s (passport, driver’s licence, etc.) that Jenny will use when she leaves town and starts over once more. Wha? But first, it’s off to her job , as a historian archiving research materials at the main library. As she threads some early news film into a 16mm projector (see the previous reference), the narrator returns to give us some info on Ms Jenny. For one thing, her name is actually Adaline Bowman and she was born in SF…in 1908! In the early 30’s she married one of the Golden Gate Bridge engineers and birthed a daughter, Flemming. After her husband’s death on the job, Adaline’s cruising down a lonely stretch of California country road when it suddenly begins to snow. This contributes to the skid that sends her roadster plummeting into a cold lake. Hypothermia leads to heart stoppage, but remarkably she is revived when the sinking car is struck by lightning. But the bolt has an unexpected side effect, Adaline never ages a day. As Flemming matures, Adaline passes her off as a kid sister. It looks like the ruse will work until federal agents attempt to whisk her away (for experiments, no doubt). After a narrow escape, mother and daughter must separate, as Adaline goes into hiding, changing her identity every ten years, but still keeping in secret contact with Flemming. So, that explains the errand.

That night, after a quick phone call with Flemming (Ellen Burstyn) who now goes by Jenny’s grandma’, Adaline reluctantly joins a friend for a New Year’s bash at a local swanky hotel. She successfully swats away suitors, until he walks in, the hunky Ellis Jones (Michiel Huisman). After a flirtatious elevator ride to the lobby, Adaline believes she has given him the big “brush off”. But Mr. Jones is not so easily thwarted. A few days later, she’s stunned when Ellis arrives at her job with a big donation to the facility (guy’s rich!). This begins a series of tentative romantic encounters that make Adaline anxious. Reluctantly she agrees to accompany Ellis to a big 40th anniversary celebration for his parents (Harrison Ford, Kathy Baker). But on this journey, Adaline’s past may finally catch up to her.

Ms. Lively rarely evokes her name as the film’s title heroine. Adaline is muted, very low energy, perhaps in order to blend into her surroundings as to not stand out (and she avoids being photographed which reminded me of Bill Bixby as the TV Hulk). This is prominent in her push/pull relationship with Ellis which extinguishes any sparks between the two. She does look fabulous in all the different hairstyles and fashions during the flashbacks, but besides her fugitive double life, Adaline is an enigma. Huisman fulfills all his leading man requirements (including the now obligatory “chick flick” staple of emerging dripping wet from the shower AKA  the “beefcake” shot), but we see his passion for Jenny/Adaline without really explaining it. This guy should have a thick “black book”, so why has he set his sights on the woman who often pushes him away (maybe he enjoys a “challenge”). Burstyn makes Blessing more of a supportive girlfriend than daughter (think Rhoda Morgenstern) often encouraging Mom to “go with it” and take a chance. And she’s a good sounding board and confident for the usually tight-lipped Adaline. Ford takes a detour from his recent run of “old grumps” to give us a man both content with his golden years while still more than a bit haunted by his past (that silver goatee helps pad his years). In a couple of flashbacks, his character is played by you tube star Anthony Ingrub whose impression of the screen icon often distractingly veers into “Rich Little-like” mimicry. Unfortunately Baker has little to do as the perplexed, annoyed matriarch.

Lee Toland Krieger’s direction has difficulty keeping up a consistent momentum, which may leave viewers to feel as though they’ve lived all of 107 years. The early century set-up is fascinating, but the drama gets too bogged down by the narration (maybe they should have heeded the anti-voiceover rants in BEING JOHN MALKOVICH), that uses some silly pseudoscientific “gobbledy goop” to explain Adaline’s plight/gift. That’s another reason why the script by J. Mills Goodloe and Salvadore Paskowitz should have gone through a couple more passes. Some unnecessary flashbacks slow the pace (a visit to the bank brings up a memory, as does a glance at a certain park bench) There’s too much dead time during which we ponder the story’s logic. How could Adaline escape the FBI so easily? Why then would she continue to live in the states? Did J Edgar’s men concentrate instead on Dick Clark (he looked 25 for many, many decades)? As the film finally plods to its conclusion, a couple of outrageous coincidences almost prove laughable (I heard a few titters). THE AGE OF ADALINE could have been a compelling journey with one unchanging lady through the eras, instead it’s part tepid love story and part modern “fractured fairy tale”.

2 Out of 5

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Rob Simonsen’s AGE OF ADALINE Original Motion Picture Score Available Digitally April 21; CD May 12

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Lakeshore Records will release the AGE OF ADALINE – Original Motion Picture Score digitally on April 21st and on CD May 12, 2015.  The album features the film’s original score by Rob Simonsen (FOXCATCHER, THE SPECTACULAR NOW) and the song “Start Again” with Simonsen and Faux Fix, featuring Elena Tonra.

The AGE OF ADALINE, a romantic drama, stars Blake Lively, Michiel Huisman, Kathy Baker, with Harrison Ford and Ellen Burstyn and will be released nationwide by Lionsgate on April 24, 2015.

The film is directed by Lee Toland Krieger from a screenplay by J. Mills Goodloe & Salvador Paskowitz and J Mills Goodloe; story by J. Mills Goodloe & Salvador Paskowitz. Producers are Sidney Kimmel, Tom Rosenberg and Gary Lucchesi.

After miraculously remaining 29 years old for almost eight decades, Adaline Bowman [Blake Lively] has lived a solitary existence, never allowing herself to get close to anyone who might reveal her secret. But a chance encounter with charismatic philanthropist Ellis Jones [Michiel Huisman] reignites her passion for life and romance. When a weekend with his parents [Harrison Ford and Kathy Baker] threatens to uncover the truth, Adaline makes a decision that will change her life forever.

“We all agreed that since the story spans the last hundred years, the orchestra was the appropriate instrument and tone for the score,” said Simonsen.  “While there are some ambiences and synthesized elements in there, they’re meant to add atmosphere for the most part, and not sound manufactured, per se.”

With a keen instinct for storytelling, Simonsen has established himself amongst a new wave of composers making a significant impact in the film industry. Under the mentorship of Mychael Danna, Simonsen apprenticed alongside one of the most respected film composers from the last two decades. In addition to co-scoring films like the Fox Searchlight hit (500) DAYS OF SUMMER, Rob provided additional music for films including MONEYBALL and LIFE OF PI, the latter of which won the Academy Award for Best Original Score in 2013.

Working independently, Simonsen garnered two 2013 World Soundtrack Academy Award Nominations for the Sundance hits THE SPECTACULAR NOW and THE WAY, WAY BACK. The same year, he scored the global ad launch for Apple’s iPhone 5 and provided the iconic piano music for their Everyday campaign.  His momentum continued in 2014, completing work on Zach Braff’s second feature, WISH I WAS HERE, and Bennett Miller’s multiple Oscar nominee FOXCATCHER.  Simonsen also recently completed work on Roland Emmerich’s much-anticipated STONEWALL.

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STONEWALL

Simonsen is a co-founder of The Echo Society, a composer collective presenting an ongoing concert series in Los Angeles, providing composers, musicians and artists a new and exciting platform to create and perform progressive musical works.   “Adaline’s theme is mostly heard on the piano,” Simonsen described. “We wanted something melancholic and pretty, yet not too sad. And while the love theme appears repeatedly throughout the movie, it is actually not heard in its entirety.  I wrote it away from picture and there was never a scene long enough to play it. However by repeating the opening phrases of the love theme, it has a quality of getting stuck in the ‘starting out’ mode, which is fitting for Adaline, who is stuck in time, repeating things in her life over and over, now a woman resistant to letting anything develop.“

TRACKLIST
1.     Adaline Bowman
2.     At Home
3.     January 1st, 1908
4.     First Resurrection
5.     No Scientific Explanation
6.     Never Speak a Word of Her Fate
7.     Ellis Brings Flowers
8.     Sunken Ship
9.     Another Death in the Life
10.  Tired of Running
11.  Adaline Apologizes
12.  Constellations
13.  William Recognizes Adaline
14.  He Named the Comet Della
15.  A Near Miss
16.  The Scar
17.  Twisted Around the Truth
18.  No More Running
19.  Second Resurrection
20.  Coming Back to Life
21.  Hospital Confessions
22.  To a Future with an End
23.  Start Again – Rob Simonsen and Faux Fix, Feat. Elena Tonra

http://www.lakeshore-records.com/

http://www.theageofadalinemovie.com/

Final Poster - ADALINE