THE INSTIGATORS – Review

It’s funny how an old TV catchphrase will just magically pop into your brain. While watching this new comedy action caper I recalled George Peppard as Hannibal Smith, leader of the NBC 80s ratings juggernaut, “The A-Team”. With a big cigar clenched between his pearly whites, he’d grin and exclaim, “I love it when a plan comes together” as the bad guys’ vehicles would flip over (though there had to be a shot of them climbing out of the windows unscathed for the censors). Well, the two main characters of this film might say, “I hate it when a plan falls apart”. And it does spectacularly for these luckless schmoes, actually played by members of the “Ocean’s Crew” (the 2000s reboot). And though they spend most of the story’s runtime trying to escape and survive, the title ironically labels them THE INSTIGATORS.


In the film’s opening minutes we meet one half of the duo, the stoic Rory (Matt Damon). He’s attending one of his mandatory therapy sessions at a Boston area VA hospital. He says very little, but a few comments concern the staff psychologist Dr. Rivera (Hong Chau). He talks of making a set amount of money (down to the decimal) and then “cashing in his ticket”. Meanwhile, a “low-rent” petty criminal named Cobby (Casey Affleck) gets a grade-schooler to activate the breathalyzer activator on his motorcycle. The two men cross paths at Mr. Kelly’s neighborhood bar. where a hustler named Scalvo (Jack Harlow) enlists them in a heist. The real mastermind behind it is restaurant owner/crime-boss Mr. Besegai (Michael Stuhlbarg) and his partner, bakery chef Richie (Alfred Molina). The big score ties in with tomorrow’s mayoral election. They think the challenger is no match for long-time crooked incumbent Miccelli (Ron Perlman). The big victory party will be held at a fancy riverport ballroom facility where lots of local business owners will show up to “kiss the ring” as they pass along huge amounts of cash. Before the armored car arrives to pick up the payola, the trio plans to sneak in via motorboat and lift the moola. But the next day, the unthinkable happens…a major political upset. However, Scalvo and his bosses decide to proceed. Everything that can go wrong does, and Rory and Cobby are on the run from Besegai’s “retriever” Booch (Paul Walter Hauser) and Michelli’s ex-police enforcer Toomey (Ving Rhames) along with the entire Boston police force. Can these two bunglers “blow Beantown” and cross the border to chilly Canada? And how does Dr, Rivera fit into the big getaway?

The two main actors prove to be a fairly potent comedy pairing. Damon would be the “straight man” of the two, and he more than fulfills that function as Rory is rigid, maybe “uptight”, and somewhat obsessive over the details, frustrating partners as he wants to write everything down, or needing tidbits repeated. Affleck’s Cobby is the wildcard as he scoffs at Rory’s concerns and fears, while making sure his needs are met, insisting he drive with a painful shoulder wound for fear that he’ll be dumped out on the road. The duo becomes a trio with Chau as the clinical Rivera who upholds her ethics and throws out bits of “self-help jargon” as they dodge bullets and evade endless police cruisers. Harlow is quite funny as the team leader who really doesn’t inspire fear or respect as he tries to mimic pop culture tough guys. Much more intimidating is Stuhlbarg as the perpetually annoyed crime boss, who can’t believe he can’t get smarter “goons”. Molina is much more “laid back” as his “right hand” who’d rather just “make the donuts”. Perelman dominates every scene as the blustery, greedy politico who can’t give up his power, or the graft. And he’s hooked on heaping abuse on his assistant, played as a jittery “toady” by the marvelous Toby Jones. Hauser is dripping with sarcasm and snark as Besegai’s “clean-up man”, while Rhames is at his scary surly best as the SWAT tank-driving “muscle” for the Mayor.

So, how do you celebrate 30 years of feature film directing? If you’re Doug Liman you release two big action comedies…to streaming. Earlier this year he was in a big “kerfuffle” with Amazon Prime over his remake of ROAD HOUSE, and now the main outlet for his newest flick is Apple TV+, though it got the briefest, very limited theatrical run. It’s a shame since both movies would have great appeal for fans of big stunt sequences. While the earlier film focused on the fisticuffs, this one has the most auto-destruction perhaps since the original BLUES BROTHERS (both leave piles of “cop cars”) thanks to that SWAT tank, an armored car, and a fire truck! It’s just a shame that the terrific tech crew (stunts and pyrotechnics) weren’t in service of a stronger script. All we are told of Rory is that he’s a vet who wants to do right to the son taken from him, and we know even less about Cobby, other than his boozy behavior and a wonky flirtation with Rivera (talk about rooting for a couple not to “hook up”). Earlier I noted Damon and Affleck’s part in the Oceans franchise, which helps hammer home that this is the opposite of those slick caper stories, as these bunglers are closer to the early 70s cult fave THAT GANG THAT COULDN’T SHOOT STRAIGHT. If only some of the earlier movie’s grimy charm was upgraded. The impressive supporting cast is really putting in an effort, but some of the twists and turns stretch reality and logic too much. The Boston locales are great (unlike this week’s IT ENDS WITH US this town looks frigid and very “lived in”). Unfortunately all that talent never truly ignites or invigorates THE INSTIGATORS.

2 out of 4

THE INSTIGATORS is now streaming exclusively on Apple TV+

Watch Casey Affleck And Matt Damon In First Trailer For Doug Liman’s THE INSTIGATORS

Apple TV+ has dropped this first trailer for the comedy heist thriller THE INSTIGATORS starring Matt Damon, Casey Affleck, Hong Chau, Michael Stuhlbarg, Paul Walter Hauser, Ving Rhames, Alfred Molina, Toby Jones, with Jack Harlow and Ron Perlman.

Directed by Doug Liman and written by Chuck MacLean and Casey Affleck, check out this first look now.

Rory (Matt Damon) and Cobby (Casey Affleck) are reluctant partners: a desperate father and an ex-con thrown together to pull off a robbery of the ill-gained earnings of a corrupt politician. But when the heist goes wrong, the two find themselves engulfed in a whirlwind of chaos, pursued not only by police, but also backwards bureaucrats and vengeful crime bosses. Completely out of their depth, they convince Rory’s therapist (Hong Chau) to join their riotous getaway through the city, where they must put aside their differences and work together to evade capture—or worse.

An Apple Original Film hailing from Artist Equity, Studio 8 and The Walsh Company, “The Instigators,” is directed by Doug Liman, written by Chuck MacLean and Casey Affleck,  produced by Ben Affleck, Matt Damon, Jeff Robinov, John Graham, Kevin J. Walsh, Alison Winter with Celia Costas, Dani Bernfeld, Kevin Halloran, Michael Joe, Cynthia Dahlgren, Luciana Damon serving as executive producers. 

THE INSTIGATORS will premiere in select cinemas and stream globally on Apple TV+ from 9 August, 2024.

Focus Features To Takeover The Landmark Theatres Sunset In Los Angeles For Wes Anderson’s ASTEROID CITY In A One-Of-A-Kind Immersive Experience From June 15th – June 30th

Get ready to Blast Off!

Focus Features is transforming the Landmark Theatres Sunset in Los Angeles into a real-life Asteroid City for an exclusive two-week immersive experience. The pop-up will be open to the public beginning with 7:45PM preview screenings of ASTEROID CITY on Thursday, June 15th, with all five screens at the theater showing Wes Anderson’s newest film for the first two weeks of its theatrical run. ASTEROID CITY takes place in a fictional American desert town circa 1955, when the itinerary of a Junior Stargazer/Space Cadet convention is spectacularly disrupted by world-changing events.

Brimming with vibrant colors and the unique aesthetic that has come to represent a Wes Anderson film, this singular experience will transport fans into another world. Patrons will have the opportunity to explore the fictional town of Asteroid City in person while capturing photos with set re-creations, props from the film, and costume displays. The theater’s concession area will be transformed into the 1950’s luncheonette seen in the movie, and interactive elements inspired by the film’s fictional town will be featured throughout the space.

Kevin Holloway President Landmark Theatres commented, “Landmark Theatres is proud to have innovative and collaborative studio partners like Focus Features, that like us, remain committed to celebrating specialty films like Wes Anderson’s latest, ASTEROID CITY. We’re excited to unveil our latest Landmark location by dedicating our entire Sunset complex to this fully immersive experience.”

Added Lisa Bunnell, President of Distribution at Focus Features, “Watching a Wes Anderson movie is an incredibly unique experience that can often feel like you’re stepping into an entirely new universe. We’re excited to partner with our friends at Landmark Theaters to bring his newest film to life with this pop-up and give fans the opportunity to experience a bit of Wes’ magic in person.”

(L to R) Jason Schwartzman stars as “Augie Steenbeck” and Scarlett Johansson stars as “Midge Campbell” in Wes Anderson’s ASTEROID CITY, a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features

In addition to standard admission tickets, fans can also purchase a premium experience ticket which will include a movie ticket, an exclusive t-shirt, and concessions.

Located at the Landmark Theatres Sunset at 8000 W Sunset Boulevard, the pop-up experience will be open from June 15th – June 30th.

For more information and to purchase tickets to ASTEROID CITY, visit: www.focusfeatures.com/asteroid-city

ASTEROID CITY takes place in a fictional American desert town circa 1955. Synopsis: The itinerary of a Junior Stargazer/Space Cadet convention (organized to bring together students and parents from across the country for fellowship and scholarly competition) is spectacularly disrupted by world-changing events.

The film’s huge cast features Jason Schwartzman, Scarlett Johansson, Tom Hanks, Jeffrey Wright, Tilda Swinton, Bryan Cranston, Edward Norton, Adrien Brody, Liev Schreiber, Hope Davis, Stephen Park, Rupert Friend, Maya Hawke, Steve Carell, Matt Dillon, Hong Chau, Willem Dafoe, Margot Robbie, Tony Revolori, Jake Ryan, Jeff Goldblum.

ASTEROID CITY opens in limited theaters in NYC and LA on Friday, June 16th and expands nationwide on June 23rd.

(L to R) Tom Hanks as Stanley Zak, Hope Davis as Sandy Borden, Tony Revolori as Aide-de-Camp, and Liev Schreiber as J.J. Kellogg in writer/director Wes Anderson’s ASTEROID CITY, a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features

SHOWING UP (2023) – Review

Aside from the warmer temps and the arrival of the big Summer blockbuster flix, the waning days of Spring also bring the conclusion of the school year for many students from public schools and colleges (yes, they often operate with limited classes in Summer). So, how about a fairly somber film set in the world of academia? And to get more specific, perhaps a slice of life set in an art school, a place filled with folks working on projects for display from paint on canvas to hanging bits of string and fabric would “fit the bill”. Yes, that’s the setting for this character study about an artist that learns that much of the hard work of her creative life is focus, determination, and simply SHOWING UP.

The artist in question is Lizzy (Michelle Williams), who spends most of her time in the workshop space she’s set up in the garage of the house she’s renting. Well, she’s really living in half of the house owned by another artist named Jo (Hong Chau). Lizzy is furiously working on clay sculptures that will be on display soon at a gallery show of her creations. Not helping her progress is the lack of hot water, which landlord Jo is not attending to (instead she’s also prepping for a show and making a tire swing for the big backyard tree). They both are on the staff of an art college outside of Portland run by Lizzy’s frazzled mother Jean (Maryann Plunkett). The rest of the eccentric teachers are helpful and supportive, especially Eric (Andre Benjamin) who runs the kiln (essential to Lizzy). The tension ramps up when Lizzy’s cat mangles a pigeon that swooped inside her place. She releases the injured bird into the wild, but Jo retrieves it and asks her to look after it as it heals (and Jo sets up her own art display). Then Lizzy must visit her pottery artist father, Bill (Judd Hirsch), and personally invite him to her show, He has his hands full with visiting houseguests (Amanda Plummer and Matt Malloy) who are content to mooch food and take over his living room. Luckily Bill can give Lizzy info on her socially awkward brother Sean (John Magero) who hasn’t responded to any of her invitation attempts. Between her family, the injured bird, and her slow-moving landlord, will Lizzy get everything together before the “big show” opening day reception arrives?

Williams cements her “rep” as one of our most versatile screen stars with her take on an everywoman who almost blends into the background, in many sequences. Her Lizzy is there to react and “roll with the punches” when dealing with other personalities and unexpected situations. It’s not to say that she “coasts along” as her domestic chaos finally “lights her fuse” (“Who’s in my parking spot?!”). Williams shows how Lizzy’s almost at “the brink” as she pushes herself toward her artistic “finish line”. For much of the story’s runtime, her adversary is Chau’s Jo who seems indifferent to Lizzy’s concerns as she doesn’t let her own art shows overwhelm her while seeming to ignore her tenant’s pleas. Perhaps Lizzy is envious of Jo’s blase attitude toward her work and life. Benjamin is the campus”mellow fellow”, quick with a smile who is “diggin’ the groove” in his work and social life. Plunkett is prickly and distracted as Jean who flits about the school’s offices as though she has a dozen plates spinning with her animosity toward her ex-husband finally earning her intense focus. Hirsch is an affable charmer, the “godfather of clay” who delights in the blossoming talents of his kids but is content to be a distant mentor. Magaro conveys a real sense of slowly simmering volatile chaos as the unpredictable, flighty Sean, whose main concern is his lack of access to his TV shows (“I’m being blocked.”). Plummer and Malloy supply some quirky comic relief as the guests that linger well past the “welcome stage”.

This film is the fourth collaboration between Williams and filmmaker Kelly Reichardt who directed from the screenplay she co-wrote with Jonathan Raymond. And of the four it may be the least compelling. Being a former art college student I appreciated the attention to detail, getting the atmosphere of languid creativity just right, much like the comedy/mystery ART SCHOOL CONFIDENTIAL from 2006. Like that weird graphic novel adaptation I was almost experiencing sensory flashbacks (“sniff” is that turpentine or epoxy) and feeling as though the camera was right behind me in those hectic days of deadlines and endless “drying times” as artists worked on too-long strips of canvas on the hallway floors. But the mood’s not enough to make the story interesting as little subplots drop in and out with little resolution, from the wounded bird to the somewhat unhinged brother. At the tale’s heart is the odd passive-aggressive bond between Lizzy and Jo which feels dramatically shallow. The sense of “art drudgery” is there, but the build-up to the big gallery show doesn’t puck a real thematic “punch”. It’s great to see Williams paired again with the always-engaging Hirsch, and she is a strong scene partner for Chau, but they can’t overcome the meandering pace. The details are spot on, but it’s not enough to spark interest in the non-art school crowd who the studio hopes will be SHOWING UP at the cinemas.

1.5 Out of 4

SHOWING UP is now playing in select theatres

Wes Anderson’s ASTEROID CITY First Trailer Features The Stellar Cast Of Jason Schwartzman, Scarlett Johansson, Tom Hanks, Jeffrey Wright, Tilda Swinton, Bryan Cranston And Jeff Goldblum

Focus Features has released the first trailer for Wes Anderson’s ASTEROID CITY.

ASTEROID CITY takes place in a fictional American desert town circa 1955.

The itinerary of a Junior Stargazer/Space Cadet convention (organized to bring together students and parents from across the country for fellowship and scholarly competition) is spectacularly disrupted by world-changing events.

Deadline is reporting that the film will debut in May at the Cannes Film Festival. Anderson’s previous films to bow at the festival are MOONRISE KINGDOM and THE FRENCH DISPATCH.

The huge cast includes Jason Schwartzman, Scarlett Johansson, Tom Hanks, Jeffrey Wright, Tilda Swinton, Bryan Cranston, Edward Norton, Adrien Brody, Liev Schreiber, Hope Davis, Stephen Park, Rupert Friend, Maya Hawke, Steve Carell, Matt Dillon, Hong Chau, Willem Dafoe, Margot Robbie, Tony Revolori, Jake Ryan, and Jeff Goldblum.

Focus Features will release Asteroid City in select theaters on Friday, June 16th nationwide on Friday, June 23rd.

Scarlett Johansson in director Wes Anderson’s ASTEROID CITY, a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features

(L to R) Jake Ryan, Jason Schwartzman and Tom Hanks in director Wes Anderson’s ASTEROID CITY, a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features

Steve Carell in director Wes Anderson’s ASTEROID CITY, a Focus Features release. Credit: Courtesy of Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features

THE WHALE (2022) – Review

With the holidays in full swing, the movies want us to know that it’s not the happiest of times for some families, and for those who struggle to survive the entire rest of the year. And we’re not talking about Clark Grisswald or even George Bailey. And since it’s also awards season, the multiplex will have plenty of somber, serious cinema like this tale of truly “blue” people (aside from those on Pandora). Yes, addiction plays a major role alongside the actors in this drama. But this kind is rarely seen on screen, compared to booze, drugs, and even sex. This may stem from its being too complicated since the addicted can’t quit (pardon the phrase) “cold turkey”. And this leads to the nickname of this main character, who’s referred to (and sometimes called to his face) as THE WHALE.

It all starts with what has become a familiar situation, a virtual online class, similar to a zoom meeting. All the students are in squares on the laptop screen, except the center is black. We hear the teacher explain that his laptop camera is still busted. Then the view opens up to reveal the speaker, along with a possible reason for his “fib”. That “unseen” writing instructor is Charlie (Brendan Fraser), a man dealing with extreme obesity, tipping (or toppling) the scale at close to 600 pounds. At the conclusion of his class, he kills time waiting for his pizza delivery by going to an “adult” streaming video site. A knock on the door interrupts his “research”, but it’s not pie. It’s a young (early 20s) traveling missionary for the New Life Church, Thomas (Ty Simpkins). After an unsuccessful “pitch”, Charlie’s home care “nurse”, Liz (Hong Chau), stops by to check his vitals. She’s alarmed by the BP test, but Charlie refuses to be taken to a hospital, claiming poverty. This enrages Liz who is more “family” than an employee to him. Later, Charlie gets a surprise visit from his actual family, His estranged teenage daughter Ellie (Sadie Sink) pushes past her revulsion at his appearance to ask for a loan. Eager to reconnect with her Charlie promises her that she can have his savings (another fib) if she will visit him and allow him to help her pass her English course. Over the next few days, as Charlie’s condition continues to deteriorate, Thomas makes him his personal mission, while Liz clashes with him and Ellie, prompting another reunion, as Charlie’s angry ex Mary (Samantha Morton) finds out that Ellie has been dropping in. But can these new and old friends, along with his neglected family, inspire Charlie to get the medical and psychological help that could save his life?

Many media outlets have been filled with variations of “Welcome back Brendan”. To be honest, he never really left the “biz”, toiling in supporting roles, such as last year’s Soderbergh’s noir thriller NO SUDDEN MOVE. Rather this is his first leading role in over a dozen years, and he makes the most of it, delivering his best work since the underrated GODS AND MONSTERS. Much like Charlize Theron in MONSTER, Mr. Fraser made his mark in the glamour roles, building toward this superb character at the center of the story. Charlie is burying his broken heart with calories, but the pain hasn’t taken his often caustic wit (his Bible critique), nor his compassion for others (if only he left some for himself). He’s a prisoner of his body, stuck in a squalid second-floor apartment, who yearns for human connections and contact. We especially see and feel that in his warm relationship with Liz. Chau expertly conveys that she loves him like a brother, but is angry over the frustration at his refusal to stop his cycle of despair and self-loathing. But then Chau shows us her own guilt as she becomes the supplier of the edibles that spur the health spirals she must “slap a bandage on”. But her rage is a spark compared to Sink as the seething Ellie who has cocooned herself with anger to protect herself from his exit from her life, never to open up herself to new pain. But like Liz, her “tough love” will not be the “fix”. Neither will the platitudes of Thomas, who Simpkins plays as a twitchy innocent who needs to “sell Charlie” in order to make up for his past misdeeds. Plus he’s got to suppress his attraction to Ellie, who seems to enjoy toying with him, like a cat with a trapped mouse. And though she’s not seen until the last act, Morton’s compelling as Charlie’s former love who can’t accept that he still cares about her and their child, needing instead to punish him for their shared past.

Actually, this marks more of a feature film return for its director, Darren Aronofsky, than for Fraser. He’s been absent for five years after helming MOTHER. Unlike that trippy “fever dream”, this is a more character-driven drama (but it has a few laughs). And though it’s mainly set in Charlie’s home, it doesn’t feel claustrophobic or “stagey” even though its roots are in the play by Samuel D. Hunter, who adapted his work. Still, there are times when the setting feels like a prison, much like Charlie’s crushing girth. And much of the credit for that, along with the film’s realism and power, goes to the incredible work of the seven-person makeup team who transform Fraser into Charlie, allowing his performance to shine through the prosthetics. Everyone involved worked to make this more than a “carnival show”, avoiding any bit of cruelty or exploitation. Much as with the lead in LEAVING IN LAS VEGAS, we see Charlie as more than his disease and want to save him, even as he pushes everyone away. This makes the sequence of him on a food binge (more of a rampage) truly disturbing and horrific. Some may shun this film, saying it’s a “downer”, which would deprive them of the stellar ensemble cast and a story of love tossing a lifeline to a sweet soul drowning in regret and despair. Despite it title, THE WHALE is a haunting tale of compassion and forgiveness.

3.5 Out of 4

THE WHALE opens in select theatres on Wednesday, December 20.2022

THE MENU Trailer Offers Up A Horrific Take On The Dining Experience – Stars Ralph Fiennes and Anya Taylor-Joy

Ralph Fiennes and Anya Taylor-Joy in the film THE MENU. Photo by Eric Zachanowich. Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2022 20th Century Studios All Rights Reserved

A couple (Anya Taylor-Joy and Nicholas Hoult) travels to a coastal island to eat at an exclusive restaurant where the chef (Ralph Fiennes) has prepared a lavish menu, with some shocking surprises.

In theaters on November 18, 2022, watch the trailer for THE MENU.

Can anyone say “Gordon Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares”? This sinister looking movie looks to be a tasty delight this Fall.

The film stars Ralph Fiennes, Anya Taylor-Joy, Nicholas Hoult, Hong Chau, Janet McTeer, Judith Light, Reed Birney, Paul Adelstein, Aimee Carrero, Arturo Castro, Mark St. Cyr, Rob Yang and John Leguizamo.

THE MENU is directed by Mark Mylod (TV’s Entourage, Game of Thrones, Shameless, and Succession), written by Seth Reiss & Will Tracy and produced by Adam McKay and Betsy Koch.

First Look: Ralph Fiennes And Anya Taylor-Joy In THE MENU, In Theatres November 18, 2022

Ralph Fiennes and Anya Taylor-Joy in the film THE MENU. Photo by Eric Zachanowich. Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2022 20th Century Studios All Rights Reserved

Searchlight Pictures has released a first look at THE MENU from director Mark Mylod.

A couple (Anya Taylor-Joy and Nicholas Hoult) travels to a coastal island to eat at an exclusive restaurant where the chef (Ralph Fiennes) has prepared a lavish menu, with some shocking surprises.

The film also stars Nicholas Hoult, Hong Chau, Janet McTeer, Judith Light and John Leguizamo. The film is produced by Adam McKaqy and Betsy Koch.

THE MENU will open in theaters on November 18, 2022.

DOWNSIZING – Review

DOWNSIZING, the latest from writer/director Alexander Payne, begins as a satirical comedy then halfway through, veers off into a darker, more serious story tackling issues such as immigration and the environment. Your enjoyment of the film may depend if you find this direction the film takes intriguing. If you don’t, you’re in for a long two hours and fifteen minutes, but I liked where it went. The dialogue is written with wit and romance and it’s a story I had not seen before. DOWNSIZING is not entirely successful, but it is new and fresh and ambitious, not shy of taking chances and with so many movies fitting into easily-defined niches, those are refreshing characteristics.

Matt Damon stars in DOWNSIZING as Paul Safranak, a mild-mannered occupational therapist on staff with the Omaha Steaks company in Nebraska. He and his somewhat unhappy wife Audrey (Kristen Wiig) are charmed by what’s presented by slick salespeople as a luxurious lifestyle change (Neil Patrick Harris and Laura Dern are a stitch in small roles as ‘downsizing’ pitchmen). Scientists have discovered a way to shrink humans down to five inches with no damaging side effects (unless they forget to remove fillings in your teeth prior to the shrinking process. In that case your head will explode). Once one has ‘gotten small’ (an irreversible process), fewer resources are needed, upper-class comfort can be found within a couple of feet of living space, and your dollar has substantially more spending power. Scientists figure that if enough people choose this option and reside in environmentally friendly micro-communities, the world can be saved. Paul and Audrey decide to take the plunge, and in an extended sequence, the bizarre process of shrinking is detailed. This includes being shaved, receiving an enema, and being flipped onto a tiny gurney with a spatula.  Paul awakens from his surgery and, after checking to make sure his genitalia survived intact, is eager to join his wife. This brings us to the funniest scene in the film, where Audrey, one eyebrow shaved off, tries to explain on the phone to her husband why she got cold feet and has backed out of the deal. A dejected Paul settles in as a tiny bachelor, briefly dates a woman (Kerry Kenney) and makes friends with hard-partying neighbors Dusan (Christoph Waltz) and Konrad (Udo Kier), smugglers who make money bootlegging full-sized contraband. But Paul slowly discovers that this tiny world they call Leisureland is far from the paradise he’d been promised, too often emulating the normal-sized world with corruption, prejudice, rampant consumerism and chain restaurants while the miniature poor are walled off in a tiny ghetto. Worse, the downsizing process is being used for nefarious global ends, with dictators forcibly shrinking rivals and teeny terrorists infiltrating the U.S. border.

These early scenes where the central gimmick is milked with jokes and sight gags are the most conventional parts of DOWNSIZING. Around the halfway mark, we’re introduced to Dusan’s maid Ngoc Lan (Hong Chau), a Vietnamese illegal immigrant who was shrunk against her will while imprisoned as a dissident. Ngoc was the only survivor of a group who tried to make entry into the U.S. inside a TV box, losing a leg in the process. This is where DOWNSIZING changes tone and veers off into heavier territory. After Paul offers to repair Ngoc Lan’s defective prosthetic leg, she convinces him to help the lower-class ‘smalls’ who live outside the walls of Leisureland in a shabby housing project. DOWNSIZING suffers from a case of split personality, abandoning the gags for a heavy, end-of-the world twist and a boat trip to Norway to confront the scientist who invented the shrinking process. Some viewers may have trouble embracing this shift in tone, and the plot does meander toward the end, but I appreciated that Payne took the story in this direction instead of simply continuing the obvious comic possibilities of its premise. Hong Chau gives a heartbreaking, Oscar-worthy turn as Ngoc Lan. With her abrasive, broken English, she initially borders on caricature, but she’s given a couple of speeches that really give the film charm and emotional resonance. Damon is fine, though this role isn’t much of a stretch for him while I could watch the droll interplay between the great German actors Christoph Waltz and Udo Kier all day long (I’d love to see a spin-off film just about those two). Hard to classify, DOWNSIZING is that rare Hollywood movie that manages to say something and be not just entertaining, but funny as well. Recommended.

4 1/2 of 5 Stars

 

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

DOWNSIZING imagines what might happen if, as a solution to overpopulation, Norwegian scientists discover how to shrink humans to five inches tall and propose a 200-year global transition from big to small. People soon realize how much further money goes in a miniaturized world. With the promise of a better life, everyman Paul Safranek (Matt Damon) and wife Audrey (Kristen Wiig) decide to abandon their stressed lives in Omaha for a new downsized community, taking the irreversible leap that will trigger life-changing adventures when they become small.

DOWNSIZING is directed by Academy Award© winner Alexander Payne (The Descendants, Sideways), starring: Academy Award© winner Matt Damon (The Martian, Good Will Hunting), Academy Award© winner Christoph Waltz (Inglorious Basterds, Django Unchained), Hong Chau (Inherent Vice, Big Little Lies), Academy Award© nominee Kristen Wiig (The Martian, Bridesmaids), Udo Kier (Melancholia), Jason Sudeikis (Colossal), Academy Award© nominee Laura Dern (Wild, Rambling Rose), Neil Patrick Harris (Gone Girl), and Rolf Lassgård (A Man Named Ove).

DOWNSIZING opens in theaters December 22, 2017

WAMG invites you to enter for the chance to win TWO (2) seats to the advance screening of DOWNSIZING on December 18 at 7pm in the St. Louis area.

Answer the Following:

DOWNSIZING is the second collaboration for Wiig and Damon. The two costarred in which Ridley Scott movie?

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.

RATING: R for language including sexual references, some graphic nudity and drug use.

www.facebook.com/DownsizingFilm

Udo Kier plays Konrad, Christoph Walts plays Dusan, Hong Chau plays Ngoc Lan Tran and Matt Damon plays Paul in Downsizing from Paramount Pictures.