MADAME WEB – Review

Hey “True Believers”, is it time for another trip into the Marvel Universe so early in the new year? Well, since the last adventure of the Ant-Man and the Wasp hit the multiplex almost on the same date last year, then it’s “Avengers Assemble” once more. But with a couple of big exceptions. You see, this isn’t a Marvel Studios production, rather it’s Sony “in association with Marvel” (small print on the poster, almost Scott Lang-sized). So, this is another effort by them to “spin-off” Spidey and bring another secondary character from the comics into their very own feature film. Oh, and the others were the “rouges gallery” AKA the bad guys. First, it was VENOM, who got a sequel followed by the disastrous MORBIUS, with KRAVEN “waiting in the wings” (probably sharpening his claws, too). Ah, but this time it’s another hero so Sony hopes that moviegoers will get tangled up in the strands spun by MADAME WEB.


Much like that vampire villain, this “origin story” starts in an exotic foreign land, far from NYC. In the rainforests of Peru circa 1973, a very pregnant Constance Webb (Kerry Bishe)is trying to find a rare strain of spider that can supposedly pass on miraculous powers and healing abilities. But when she’s successful her exploring partner Ezekel Simms (Tahar Rahim) steals it after shooting the whole research party and leaving Constance clinging to life. Luckily, the “spider-enhanced” local tribe retrieves her and delivers the baby before she passes away. Spring ahead to 2003 in the Big Apple as paramedics Cassie Webb (Dakota Johnson) and her partner Ben Parker (Adam Scott) respond to a traffic accident over a river. Cassie is trapped in a car that plummets into the water. Before she passes out she has a strange vision of light strands, and “ghost images”. Cassie awakens after Ben revives her. But the visions haunt her, and they happen again on a call as she sees a foreshadowed tragedy. Meanwhile millionaire Ekekel has nightmares of his own death at the hands of three costumed young women. He harnesses the powers of the rare spider to track down the trio, all high school-aged women. And somehow they all converge at Grand Central Station, just as Cassie is buying a ticket. On the train she sees a black-clad assassin kill them. But suddenly she snaps back and realizes these are images of what can happen. So Cassie goes into action to save Julia (Sydney Sweeney), Anya (Isabela Merced), and Mattie (Celeste O’Connor). Later the quartet is on the run from the arachid-like crawling killer, with Cassie as their “den mother”. Can she keep them safe? And what is her connection to their super-human hunter?

In between the big “evade and escape” action “set pieces” the cast does their best with their unevenly written roles. At the forefront is Ms. Johnson as the constantly evolving Cassie. We see her disconnect from humanity in the opening scenes (scoffing at a kid’s “thank you” crayon art), only bonding with her ambulance “side” man. Johnson shows her confusion as the “awakening” of her destiny forces her to become “engaged”. Ultimately she veers from nurturing “mama bear” to snarky “iron fist” as she gets her “gals” in line. Still, she doesn’t quite have the dynamism to convey the heroic leader mantle. Her “flock” are mainly teen flick cliches, though the actresses try to put a fresh “spin” on them. Sweeney upends her TV (and recent rom-com) persona as the timid, hesitant Julia, who begins to blossom around her new “sisters”. O’Connor is all sassy attitude as the pop tune-loving, skateboarder rich kid Mattie. As the dark, brooding but brilliant Anya, Merced brings a bit of soul to the often undefined neighbor of Cassie (Queens isn’t that small). Rahim gives good physical energy to the snarling, growling Ezekel who mainly barks threats when not suppressing his nightmare visions, and walking barefoot through the subway. Scott provides some much-needed humor as the confused but concerned “work buddy” Ben. Two terrific young actresses aren’t given much to work with in near-cameo roles. Emma Roberts is Ben’s expectant sister-in-law Mary who figures into the big finale, while Zosia Mamet is stuck at the computer monitors (yes, a spin on “the guy in the chair”) as Ekekel’s tech “tracker” Amaria.

In her feature film debut, TV director S.J. Clarkson works hard to get the pace taut while delving into the personality of Cassie Webb, but the sophomoric script derails her efforts. It all plays out as a superhero spin on the Terminator series, with Ezekel as the nearly indestructible seeker springing up to “jump-start” the sluggish plot and distract from the limp dialogue. He’s almost a spider-stalker, although he’s not spinning or swinging on web strands like our pal Petey making him look like a big silly black rubber frog as he jumps from buildings to the hoods of cars. Speaking of that, what kind of car can plow through the front of a building and drive off with merely a buckled hood? And that’s just one of the oddball story turns that rival the “skating on oil” ARGYLLE scenes. It’s tough to compellingly convey Cassie’s “power” as it’s really a barrage of “fake outs” to set up the big stunts, which become somewhat tedious, as does the bickering between the quartet. Oh, the tension is broken up so that Cassie can “dump” her charges on Ben in order to fly off for an absurd cave pool “therapy session”. I’m not spoiling things, but I should warn them about the “bait and switch” from the movie marketing team because these heroes only “suit up” for a minute or so of the nearly two hours. Ah, but there’s plenty of time for “in your face” product placement for that “other cola”. Plus, there are no bonus credit scenes, though the ending almost pleads for a follow-up franchise. There’s little chance of that since this initial entry should effectively squash the “spider sisterhood” led by MADAME WEB.


1.5 Out of 4


MADAME WEB is now playing in theatres everywhere

MADAME WEB First Trailer Drops And Stars Dakota Johnson

MADAME WEB opens in theaters on February 14, 2024.

“Meanwhile, in another universe…” In a switch from the typical genre, Madame Web tells the standalone origin story of one of Marvel publishing’s most enigmatic heroines. The suspense-driven thriller stars Dakota Johnson as Cassandra Webb, a paramedic in Manhattan who may have clairvoyant abilities. Forced to confront revelations about her past, she forges a relationship with three young women destined for powerful futures…if they can all survive a deadly present.

Directed by SJ Clarkson, watch the first trailer now.

MADAME WEB stars Dakota Johnson, Sydney Sweeney, Celeste O’Connor, Isabela Merced, Tahar Rahim, Mike Epps, Emma Roberts, Adam Scott

Listen to Dakota Johnson talk about the film below.

Cassandra Webb (Dakota Johnson) in Columbia Pictures’ MADAME WEB.

THE HUNT – Review

A vicious reflection of election cycle politics, THE HUNT is bloody fun if you like your violence and exploding body parts played for laughs. If you’re looking for an edgy political subtext that you may have heard about (this film was supposed to open last September but was postponed when President Trump tweeted about it), you’ll likely be disappointed. There’s style and attitude to spare, but THE HUNT struggles to balance its comedic and satiric elements.

After a gruesome (if unnecessary) prologue set aboard an airplane, THE HUNT finds twelve right-wing archetypes suddenly awake and lost in the middle of a field with a large wooden crate full of firearms to choose from. Also in the crate is a playful pig wearing a white shirt, the first of the script’s many references to George Orwell’s Animal Farm. But before you can say “Arnold Ziffel”, these folks are tumbling into spike pits, stepping on landmines and having their heads blown to bits. It turns out there is an underground organization of wealthy liberal elites who so look down on Bible-thumping,  gun-clinging “deplorables” they drug and fly them to an intricate shooting range in Croatia (disguised as Alabama) called “The Manor” where they’re picked off with sniper rifles while the hunters smirk and sip pricey champagne. Much blood is spilled and many comic quips are uttered as the absurdities pile up, but THE HUNT never adds up to much.

Yes, THE HUNT is yet another variation of The Most Dangerous Game (first filmed on 1932), one that somewhat cynically uses our current, ugly state of partisan conflict as the angle for an oft-told story. Craig Zobel’s direction is confident, moving things at a lively, entertaining pace (its 89 minutes whiz by) but the underdeveloped screenplay relies too much on cartoonish portrayals of political extremes. There are some familiar names in in the cast, but if you’re going to see THE HUNT as a fan of actors such as Emma Roberts, Ike Barinholts, Ethan Suplee, Amy Madigan, or Sturgill Simpson, don’t get too attached. A running gag in the film’s first act is killing off characters you assume will be at the film’s center. That ‘Final Girl’ honor belongs to Betty Gilpin, last woman standing from about the film’s halfway point. Gilpin is good in THE HUNT, but the film’s second half underwhelms. Audiences may delight in the carnage, yet find themselves longing for a strong payoff instead of the extended kitchen-set catfight right out of the first KILL BILL. THE HUNT has some funny moments but it doesn’t always work (they do nothing interesting with that pig). It’s neither witty nor exciting enough to make it a must-see.

2 of 4 Stars

THE BLACKCOAT’S DAUGHTER Arrives on Blu-ray Combo Pack and DVD May 30th

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Terrifying and suspensefulThe Blackcoat’s Daughter arrives on Blu-ray Combo Pack (plus Digital HD) and DVD May 30 from Lionsgate. Emma Roberts stars as a troubled young woman who embarks on a journey to an isolated prep school while two stranded students (played by Kiernan Shipka and Lucy Boynton) face a sinister threat from an unseen evil force.

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Terrifying and suspenseful, The Blackcoat’s Daughter arrives on Blu-ray Combo Pack (plus Digital HD) and DVD May 30 from Lionsgate. Emma Roberts stars as a troubled young woman who embarks on a journey to an isolated prep school while two stranded students (played by Kiernan Shipka and Lucy Boynton) face a sinister threat from an unseen evil force. Praised as “truly unsettling” by RogerEbert.com, the movie premiered at the 2015 Toronto Film Festival and the 2015 Fantastic Fest. From writer-director Osgood Perkins, The Blackcoat’s Daughter Blu-ray Combo Pack and DVD will be available for the suggested retail price of $24.99 and $19.98, respectively.

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OFFICIAL SYNOPSIS

Beautiful and haunted Joan (Emma Roberts) makes a bloody and determined pilgrimage across a frozen landscape toward a prestigious all-girls prep school, where Rose (Lucy Boynton) and Kat (Kiernan Shipka) find themselves stranded after their parents mysteriously fail to retrieve them for winter break. As Joan gets closer, Rose watches in horror while Kat suffers terrifying visions and becomes possessed by an unseen force.

THE BLACKCOAT'S DAUGHTER, (aka FEBRUARY), Kiernan Shipka, 2015. © A24

BLU-RAY/DVD/DIGITAL HD SPECIAL FEATURES

  • Audio Commentary with Writer-Director Osgood Perkins
  • “The Dead of Winter: Making The Blackcoat’s Daughter” Featurette

CAST

Emma Roberts            Nerve, TV’s “American Horror Story” and “Scream Queens

Kiernan Shipka           TV’s “Mad Men” and “Flowers in the Attic”

Lucy Boynton              Sing Street, Miss Potter

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WAMG Giveaway – Win the NERVE Blu-ray

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The technology driven thriller NERVEstarring Emma Roberts and Dave Franco, was a modest box office hit, making $54 million on a reported $20 million budget, but it received many positive reviews and praise, especially from the younger demographic which it focuses upon.

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NERVE hit shelves on Blu-ray and DVD on October 25th. Now you can win the NERVE Blu-ray. We Are Movie Geeks has three copies to give awa, All you have to do is leave a comment and answer this trivia question: What movie co-starred Emma Roberts’ aunt Julia Roberts and David Franco’s brother James Franco? It’s so easy!

We’ll pick the winners next week. 

OFFICIAL RULES:

1. YOU MUST BE A US RESIDENT. PRIZE WILL ONLY BE SHIPPED TO US ADDRESSES.  NO P.O. BOXES.  NO DUPLICATE ADDRESSES.

2. WINNERS WILL BE CHOSEN FROM ALL QUALIFYING ENTRIES.

No purchase necessary

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The special features for the Blu-ray release are divided into a “Player” section and a “Watcher” section, and are as follows:

“Player” Features

  • Creating Nerve
  • The Fat Jewish Gets Tattewish – Outtakes
  • The Governor’s Ball Takeover – Social media stars dare eachother to acts similar to the “Nerve” game from the film

“Watcher” Features

  • Do You Have the Nerve? Game
  • Are You a Watcher or a Player – A personality quiz
  • Player Profiles

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NERVE Available on Blu-ray October 25th

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Lionsgate Home Entertainment announced today the Blu-ray and DVD release of their inventive, social media and technology driven thriller NERVEstarring Emma Roberts and Dave Franco. Nerve was a modest box office hit, making $54 million on a reported $20 million budget, but it received many positive reviews and praise, especially from the younger demographic which it focuses upon.

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NERVE will hit shelves on Blu-ray and DVD on October 25th.

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The special features for the Blu-ray release will be divided into a “Player” section and a “Watcher” section, and are as follows:

“Player” Features

  • Creating Nerve
  • The Fat Jewish Gets Tattewish – Outtakes
  • The Governor’s Ball Takeover – Social media stars dare eachother to acts similar to the “Nerve” game from the film

“Watcher” Features

  • Do You Have the Nerve? Game
  • Are You a Watcher or a Player – A personality quiz
  • Player Profiles

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WAMG Giveaway – Win A NERVE Poster Signed By Emma Roberts, Dave Franco And Ariel Schulman

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Industrious high school senior, Vee Delmonico (Emma Roberts), has had it with living life on the sidelines. When pressured by friends to join the popular online game Nerve, Vee decides to sign up for just one dare in what seems like harmless fun. But as she finds herself caught up in the thrill of the adrenaline-fueled competition, the game begins to take a sinister turn with increasingly dangerous acts, leading her into a high stakes finale that will determine her entire future.

NERVE is directed by Henry Joost & Ariel Schulman (Catfish, Paranormal Activity 3) from a screenplay by Jessica Sharzer (“American Horror Story,” “Turn the Beat Around”), based on the novel by Jeanne Ryan.

Starring Emma Roberts, Dave Franco, Emily Meade, Miles Heizer, Colson Baker and Juliette Lewis, NERVE is playing in theaters now.

WAMG is giving away a NERVE poster – signed by Emma Roberts, Dave Franco and Ariel Schulman.

For a chance to win:

ENTER YOUR NAME AND E-MAIL IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION BELOW. WE WILL CONTACT YOU IF YOU ARE A WINNER.

OFFICIAL RULES:

1. YOU MUST BE A US RESIDENT. PRIZE WILL ONLY BE SHIPPED TO US ADDRESSES.  NO P.O. BOXES.  NO DUPLICATE ADDRESSES.

2. WINNERS WILL BE CHOSEN FROM ALL QUALIFYING ENTRIES.

No purchase necessary.

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NERVE – Review

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NERVE is a paranoid suspenser about an extreme on-line game as well as a look at the ridiculousness of our contemporary fame-obsessed culture. Taking place throughout a single night and crafted with precision by co-directors Henry Joost and Ariel Schulman,  this timely story is an enjoyable watch which at times strains credibility, but it’s clever and well-paced. While NERVE can’t escape from the limitations of its premise and builds to an unsatisfying conclusion, it’s better than expected.

NERVE tells of 18-year old, risk-averse high school photographer Venus (or ‘Vee’ – played by 25-year old Emma Roberts) who lives with her single nurse mom (Juliette Lewis) and had a brother who died two years earlier. A humiliating encounter with the football stud she has a crush on inspires her to join her more popular best friend Sydney (27-year old Emily Meade) in playing Nerve, a game where she can be well-paid for successfully completing a series of embarrassing, illegal, and/or terrifying dares (“like Truth or Dare without the truth”). These are broadcast live online where viewers, called “Watchers”, pay huge bucks to follow and record them. Vee discovers that the powers behind the game, who operate on the ‘Dark Web’, are intimately familiar with her. She’s tempted with information pulled from her Facebook page and challenged to kiss Ian, a hunky stranger (David Franco) soon revealed to be a fellow player she’s destined to partner with. At first the game is relatively innocuous – sing in public, flash your butt, try on an expensive dress, get a tattoo, steal clothes from the dressing room where another player is trying on that expensive dress. Vee and Ian’s fans cheer them and the other players on to riskier dares with higher stakes – hang from a skyscraper, lie under a train, steal a cop’s gun. But the game takes a twisted turn when it builds to the all-or-nothing Grand Prize round, where players become ‘Prisoners of the Game’ with their lives on the line. Can Vee trust Ian and just how far will she go before losing her Nerve?

NERVE plays like an updated teen version of the classic paranoia thrillers from the 1960s and ’70s, where some mysterious force is pulling the strings from behind a curtain, while at the same time its one-night structure fits it neatly into the genre of film as theme park ride. A scene where Ian must hit 60mph blindfolded on his motorcycle, with Vee as passenger, is a thrill and as the actions shift from adrenaline rushing to dangerous and cruel, the audience is kept on edge. NERVE is very effective in terms of a pace and rhythm that feels natural rather than episodic. Unfortunately, the film does not sustain its tension through a weak climax featuring implausible gunplay and a bloodthirsty mob dressed like refugees from THE PURGE that feels jarringly inconsistent with the rest of the picture. Jessica Sharzer (from a YA novel by Jeanne Ryan) has concocted a script that’s ultimately too clever for its own good. This is one of those movies that’s so tightly written and densely plotted, it leaves no room for error – or viewer questions which will start before the movie’s over — head-scratchers on the order of  “Wouldn’t their plans fall apart if he had reacted to this situation differently?” and that old standby: “Where are the police?”

Emma Roberts and Dave Franco make for likable, if somewhat bland, leads (both are too old to be playing high-schoolers and both have distractingly bushy eyebrows) while Emily Meade (who with one scene stole MONEY MONSTER) is a standout as Vee’s damaged friend (the actress would have made a more intriguing Vee). Juliette Lewis is given little to do except wonder why so much money is suddenly being deposited in her and her daughter’s joint bank account (“white people’s problems” notes her black patient). NERVE isn’t perfect but it will certainly keep you hooked.

3 1/2 of 5 Stars

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Win Passes To The Advance Screening Of NERVE In St. Louis

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Industrious high school senior, Vee Delmonico (Emma Roberts), has had it with living life on the sidelines. When pressured by friends to join the popular online game Nerve, Vee decides to sign up for just one dare in what seems like harmless fun. But as she finds herself caught up in the thrill of the adrenaline-fueled competition, the game begins to take a sinister turn with increasingly dangerous acts, leading her into a high stakes finale that will determine her entire future.

NERVE is directed by Henry Joost & Ariel Schulman (Catfish, Paranormal Activity 3) from a screenplay by Jessica Sharzer (“American Horror Story,” “Turn the Beat Around”), based on the novel by Jeanne Ryan.

Starring Emma Roberts, Dave Franco, Emily Meade, Miles Heizer, Colson Baker and Juliette Lewis, NERVE opens in theaters on July 27.

WAMG invites you to enter for the chance to win TWO (2) seats to the advance screening of NERVE on July 25 at 7PM in the St. Louis area.

Answer the following:

Nerve is both an edge-of-your-seat thriller and a razorsharp examination of the seductive power of social media. In the game of Nerve, thrill-seeking players accept increasingly risky dares from anonymous watchers to win valuable rewards.

Would you be a watcher or a player?

TO ENTER, ADD YOUR NAME, ANSWER AND EMAIL IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION BELOW.

OFFICIAL RULES:

1. YOU MUST BE IN THE ST. LOUIS AREA THE DAY OF THE SCREENING.

2. No purchase necessary. 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. The theater is not responsible for overbooking.

The film is rated PG-13 for thematic material involving dangerous and risky behavior, some sexual content, language, drug content, drinking and nudity – all involving teens.

Visit the official site: www.playnerve.com

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Fantastic Fest 2015: FEBRUARY – The Review

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Osgood Perkins carries on the family tradition with a directorial debut that is both haunting and enigmatic. The son of screen legend Anthony Perkins has crafted a tale told in three parts. Each titled with a girl’s name, the three chapters ultimately form a story of evil that quietly builds beneath rural banality.

I knew that FEBRUARY took place in a boarding school before seeing the film. And yet, that is the only thing that I knew. In a best case scenario, that would be the only thing you would need to know before watching the film. However, trailers, clips, and stills that appear online make it harder and harder to go into a film blind. FEBRUARY is one of those films that especially benefits from knowing very little because how the story unfolds might be the most interesting element to the film.

Perkins creates dread even out of seemingly mundane visuals. Granted, for those expecting more of a lively scare-fest, these blank walls and abandoned hallways may not come across quite as ominous; the drab and cold color pallet doesn’t help matters. But that’s kind of the point. There’s a desire to show how fiery, pure evil can emerge forth from nothing.

Kiernan Shipka is a revelation. Her blank stare becomes more and more chill-inducing as the film progresses. The whole cast adds to the dream-like  – though fever-dream might be more appropriate – nature of the film. Shipka especially though, creates a character that is as equally as complicated as downright terrifying. Her delivery of a line towards the end of the film is one of the most memorable cinematic moments I will most likely see this year.

On the surface, FEBRUARY is a disjointed art film with laborious pacing, that amounts to a random assemblage of scenes. However, the film itself plays out like a mystery that’s worth solving- not just the story. Everything comes together in the end, but the story takes its time dishing out the pieces. FEBRUARY will leave you with many questions at the outset, and more than likely will leave you with just as many after the chilling but emotional ending. Osgood Perkins delivers a confident film debut that examines the horrors of loneliness and innocence.

 

Overall rating: 4 out of 5