Put on a Happy Face! The New Trailer For TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE Has Arrived – Premieres on Netflix on February 18th

From a filmmaking team that includes Fede Alvarez (Evil Dead) and co-writer of the 1974 classic The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Kim Henkel, TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE arrives on Netflix on February 18, 2022!.

Here’s the new trailer:

Logline :After nearly 50 years of hiding, Leatherface returns to terrorize a group of idealistic young friends who accidentally disrupt his carefully shielded world in a remote Texas town.

Melody (Sarah Yarkin), her teenage sister Lila (Elsie Fisher), and their friends Dante (Jacob Latimore) and Ruth (Nell Hudson), head to the remote town of Harlow, Texas to start an idealistic new business venture. But their dream soon turns into a waking nightmare when they accidentally disrupt the home of Leatherface, the deranged serial killer whose blood-soaked legacy continues to haunt the area’s residents — including Sally Hardesty (Olwen Fouéré), the sole survivor of his infamous 1973 massacre who’s hell-bent on seeking revenge.

TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE stars Sarah Yarkin, Elsie Fisher, Mark Burnham, Moe Dunford, Nell Hudson, Jessica Allain, with Olwen Fouéré, with Jacob Latimore, and Alice Krige

Leatherface is Back! Here’s the First Look at TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE – Premieres on Netflix on February 18th

From a filmmaking team that includes Fede Alvarez (Evil Dead) and co-writer of the 1974 classic The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Kim Henkel, TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE arrives on Netflix on February 18, 2022!

Logline:After nearly 50 years of hiding, Leatherface returns to terrorize a group of idealistic young friends who accidentally disrupt his carefully shielded world in a remote Texas town.

Melody (Sarah Yarkin), her teenage sister Lila (Elsie Fisher), and their friends Dante (Jacob Latimore) and Ruth (Nell Hudson), head to the remote town of Harlow, Texas to start an idealistic new business venture. But their dream soon turns into a waking nightmare when they accidentally disrupt the home of Leatherface, the deranged serial killer whose blood-soaked legacy continues to haunt the area’s residents — including Sally Hardesty (Olwen Fouéré), the sole survivor of his infamous 1973 massacre who’s hell-bent on seeking revenge.

TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE Cr. Yana Blajeva / ©2021 Legendary, Courtesy of Netflix

TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE stars Sarah Yarkin, Elsie Fisher, Mark Burnham, Moe Dunford, Nell Hudson, Jessica Allain, with Olwen Fouéré, with Jacob Latimore, and Alice Krige

THE ADDAMS FAMILY (2019) – Review

Move over ABOMINABLE, it’s time for another big animated feature film to hit the ole’ multiplex. Unlike the past Summer’s hit TOY STORY 4 and the upcoming FROZEN 2, it’s not a sequel, but it’s not exactly an original concept or idea. Even though the characters have been kicking around the pop culture ozone since 1937, they’re now in “uncharted territory”. Yes, it was over eighty years ago when Charles Addams debuted this frightfully funny family in the New Yorker magazine. They were part of a series of “one panel” cartoons so popular that they continued to pop up in issues, eventually being collected in book form. Eventually their creator gave them first names (Gomez, Morticia) along with the same surname as the artist. It wasn’t until the 1960s that they gained their greatest fame as part of the fantasy TV sitcom fad (begun by MY FAVORITE MARTIAN and encompassing BEWITCHED, I DREAM OF JEANNIE, and some equally odd neighbors living at 1313 Mockingbird Lane). Now, there’s a bit of controversy around who arrived first. The Addams project was first announced in the “trades” and eventually “beat” THE MUNSTERS to the airwaves by six days. After its brief (only two seasons) run on ABC-TV, the family returned as a Hanna-Barbera Saturday morning cartoon in 1973 (with son Pugsley voiced by Jodie Foster), and was revived by the same studio in 1992. The previous year saw the release of an enormously popular live-action feature film, with a sequel coming out in 1994 (25 years, wow). Now, after a recent Broadway musical, they’re back on the big screen, not in live-action or in 2-D “cell” animation, but in 3D-like CGI renderings. So, as that peppy ole’ theme music from Vic Mizzy says, “…it’s time to pay a call on… THE ADDAMS FAMILY”.

The cartoonist creator and his kooky creepy clan

Let’s label this romp an “origin story”, to borrow a term from the superheroes. Thirteen (of course) years ago, the entire Addams clan is gathered in the “old country” for the midnight wedding of Gomez Addams (voice of Oscar Isaac) and Morticia Frump (Charlize Theron). Unfortunately, before their first dance, the locals arrive with the pitchforks and torches (they may have wondered over from the Universal backlot). There’s only one place the lovebirds can go. With the helping hand of Thing, they make it to America. After “acquiring” their hulking servant Lurch (Conrad Vernon), the Addams newlyweds settle into their new home. Not a museum (as the song states), but an abandoned, haunted asylum. As we forge into the present day we view pics of the family’s expansion, first with gloomy daughter Wednesday (Chloe Grace Moretz), then son Pugsley (Finn Wolfhard). They adore their secluded haven until a red balloon drifts into the yard. The fog lifts to reveal, far below them, a brightly painted planned community. Said “planner” is none other but cable TV’s design and decorating diva Margaux Needler (Alison Janney), who now has “designs” on the creepy mansion overlooking her “picture perfect’ village of Assimilation. Gomez decides to take a break from preparing Pugsley for his Mazurka sword ceremony, assisted by the newly arrived Uncle Fester (Nick Kroll). and greet their new “neighbors”. Wednesday bonds with Margaux’s teenage daughter Parker (Elsie Fisher) and decides to join her at the “middle school”. Can she possibly “fit in”? And what nefarious scheme is Margaux plotting as the Addams distant relatives begin to arrive for Pugsley’s “big day”? Will the celebration become a catastrophe? And, just what is Cousin It (Snoop Dog) babbling about?

An interesting mix of actors (a couple of Oscar winners) and comedians have been assembled to give voice to the famous family and fiends…er, friends. Isaac is a smooth as silk classic Latin lover type as patriarch Gomez. Theron’s Morticia is the epitome of the oh so cool vamp as the matriarch. There’s a terrific energetic raspy cackle to Kroll’s Fester. Margaux has a patronizing “sing-song” delivery, all saccharine with a hint of strychnine thanks to Janney. Unfortunately, the kids feel a tad bland, with Moretz trying to come across as an aloof sounding menace, but seems more bored than demented, while Wolfhard only gives Pugsley an anxious, breathy quality. Luckily comic vets Bette Middler as Grandmama along Catherine O’Hara and Martin Short as the Frump ghosts (SCTV reunion…yes) provide lots of chuckles in their limited screen time. And Vernon gives Lurch a most impressive guttural growl.

In addition, he’s co-director with Greg Tiernan on this, their first big project since 2016’s racy and raunchy SAUSAGE PARTY (quite a turnabout from those R-rated hi-jinks to this family-friendly PG project). For the most part, they recreate the look of those classic characters from the pen and ink panels of Mr. A, though many of the supporting players get into a bit of a design rut, resembling potatoes with “pipe cleaner” thin arms and legs. And the faces are small features surrounded by a fleshy circular ‘noggin. Luckily the fam’ is more interesting. Gomez’s rotund, “striped beach ball” torso works well with his round Peter Lorre caricatured head (great dark sunken eyes). I missed the ever-present cigar that John Astin twirled ala’ Groucho, but I guess that was nixed to get the PG rating. Those same eyes and torso (they’re brothers after all) work well with Fester, paired with his droopy banana nose. Morticia, on the other hand, is comprised of “hard angles” with cheekbones and a chin so sharp they could “thin slice” deli meats. And rather than shoes we see the spider-like hem of her skirt as she glides across the floor (not teeny tiny steps, but hovering). Not sure if the high forward of Wednesday works, but the twin egg-like eyes of Pugsley that look as though they may fall out of his head are quite expressive. The brow and heavy-lidded eyes are a nice nod to the classic Frankenstein monster for Lurch, whose bulk appears to be a black mountain looming and blending into the house’s shadowy corners. And his mouth “quiver” as he delivers the classic “Yoooou rang?” is superb. Ditto to the massive blond bouffant of Margaux, balanced by her plump hips that almost burst out of her blue jumpsuits. Her daughter Parker has a much different look with a button nose and huge expressive eyes making me think of the talented young actress Joey (WISH UPON) King.

If only the same amount of thought and planning of the look of the cast had gone into the uneven script. Yes, there’s much of the same subversive spirit that Paul Rudnick gave to those 90’s features, but the screenplay (credited to three writers) seems to run out of “juice” after the one hour mark, falling prey to the usual funny flick third act “lull”. It abounds with so many great visual gags (Thing’s internet interests) and one-liners (Kroll’s timing kills), but the story has the feel of three sitcom episodes “stitched” together, bouncing haphazardly from plot “A” to “B” to “C” and back again. And these stories mainly focus on the Addams kids, making Morticia and Gomez into secondary support players. And with that PG rating, much of their smoldering sexy banter has been neutered (in the tame 60s sitcom-world, these two generated real “heat”). Only one bit of Gomez driven wild over Morticia tossing out a phrase in French…C’mon?! Still, a few sequences are full of inspired satire, particularly the “Up with People”-style anthem sung by the cheerful Assimilation quintet and Wednesday’s take on biology class (a 70’s sci-fi movie classic reference). But these are shuffled aside to make way for the convoluted plottings of Margaux, who often seems to be at cross purposes. It’s a muddled mess, but the wee ones should be amused by the creepy but not too scary elements (the pet lion Kitty Kat looks like a massive stuffed doll). Even though they’ve seemingly been with us forever, this kooky clan’s non-conformist ways still feel fresh and needed today. Thankfully, despite the script bumps, these folks (cue the big guy on the harpsichord) are still “altogether ‘ooky’, THE ADDAMS FAMILY”. “Snap, snap!”

3 Out of 4 Stars

EIGHTH GRADE – Review

Elsie Fisher as Kayla in EIGHTH GRADE. Photo by Linda Kallerus, courtesy of A24

Writer/director Bo Burnham’s EIGHTH GRADE is a remarkably true and honest portrait of a 13-year-old girl’s journey through the last year of middle school, a refreshingly accurate snapshot of early teen years that avoids all the teen movie stereotypes and presents life, zits and all, as it really is. But the film is further boosted by an appealing performance by Elsie Fisher as Kayla trying to negotiate this territory along with her single parent dad Mark (Josh Hamilton). Well-meaning Dad is desperate to connect with his only child, and Kayla is just as desperately ignoring her poor, adoring dad.

There is plenty that is laugh-out-loud funny in this film and just as many moments that are poignant, even heartbreaking. Some people make the kind of transition that Kayla is struggling to make in high school or even college but the experience is universally familiar, although Burnham steeps it in the contemporary culture of constant smart phone use, Snap Chat, and online videos. There is even an scene, featured in the trailer, where the high school students Kayla meets while shadowing one as part of her transition to that next educational level, have their own culture shock moment, aghast at the thought that Snap Chat became a thing when Kayla was in fifth grade.

Kayla makes little self help instructional videos that are really lessons for herself. Interestingly, Bo Burnham was best known as an amateur comedian on YouTube. Burnham makes a strong feature film debut with this touching comedy, which might be a star-making vehicle for lead Elsie Fisher.

Elsie Fisher is enormously charming as shy but determined Kayla. Fisher and Burnham are not afraid to show the real awkwardness of adolescence, and to frankly tackle issues. Unlike most teen movies, Kayla has problems with her complexion, she is slightly chubby, a bit shy and socially awkward. At school, we see her encounter mean girls at lunch and we watch her participate in “active shooters” training drills. Kayla copes with some of her social awkwardness by making YouTube videos in which she gives advice one how to deal with socially difficult situations, exactly the issues she is dealing with. In her videos, she is self-assured and relaxed, but anything but that in real social situations. She rolls her eyes at her well-meaning but clueless dad, barely interrupting posting “likes” on her phone to knowledge his presence at dinner. She seems to ignore his advice, but the videos reveal she is actually listening.

We see Kayla cope with snobby popular girl Olivia (Emily Robinson), whose mother pushes her to invite Kayla to her pool party birthday party, and Kayla’s crush on a cute boy at school, Aiden (Luke Prael). The pool party sequence is both very funny and painfully touching, sure to bring back memories of awkward teen-aged moments for viewers. Despite her shyness, Kayla does some bold things and considers other things that will make parents cringe.

All in all, EIGHTH GRADE is just an excellent film, well-acted, well-shot, well-written and perfectly paced. Parents, and those of us who were once teen-aged girls, will recognize the situations and issues dealt with so well in this excellent drama. This is the kind of true-to-life approach one wishes all coming of age films would take. EIGHTH GRADE is worth seeing, for its honest approach to a difficult time in life well experience, and also for its wonderful lead performance by Elsie Fisher.

EIGHTH GRADE opens in St. Louis on Friday, July 27, at the Tivoli and Plaza Frontenac theaters.t. Louis on Friday, July 27, at the Tivoli and Plaza Frontenac theaters.

RATING: 4 1/2 out of 5 stars