RESURRECTION (2022) – Review

There have been many compelling movies about domestic abuse. Some for enlightenment about a serious, widespread cultural blight; others primarily designed purely as thrillers, usually with a victimized woman prevailing over her oppressor(s) with varying degrees of bloodshed. That last component depends largely on whether the film is made for theaters or the Lifetime Network. RESURRECTION accomplishes neither goal.

Rebecca Hall plays a single mom and successful executive with a daughter (Grace Kaufman) about to leave for college. A glimpse of a guy (Tim Roth) at a seminar sends into the first of many panic attacks. Eventually we learn that he tortured her physically and mentally 22 years earlier throughout a sadomasochistic relationship in which his debasement of her worsened until she finally left.

Fairly early on, in the film’s most compelling scene, we learn the horrors of that chapter in her life. It’s all downhill from there, as Hall’s actions become less rational, and less true to the character we met at the beginning. Initial empathy for what she suffered and how deeply the scar tissue remains dwindles with her irrational, counterproductive actions. Most egregiously, although she’s zealous about protecting her daughter from this resurfaced peril, she conceals the reason for her fears, even after telling the gruesome story to an office underling.

The casting is fine. Hall has racked up a slew of awards and nominations here and in her British homeland. Roth does low-key creepy about as well as any living actor. Writer/director Andrew Semans’ script might have worked well as a short, but dragging her ordeal out for 105 hyperbolic minutes needlessly burdens his viewers. One soon realizes there are two possible endings, but neither could have resurrected my concern for the fate of the characters.

I would have given up after about 40 minutes of these histrionics but for my obligation to complete this assignment. My computer even rejected the streaming screener, requiring multiple reloads. Those of you with freedom of choice can resist the false hopes raised by the presence of its stars and skip the movie, so something positive will result from my slog through the whole thing.

1/2 Out of 4

RESURRECTION opens in Theaters and Available On Demand on Friday, August 5, 2022

Courtesy of IFC Films. An IFC Films release.

RESURRECTION Delivers Up The Scares For Rebecca Hall In First Look Trailer

“ELECTRIFYING . . . I was buzzing for hours . . . Hall is absolutely mesmerizing . . . an unbelievable, zany ride . . . YOU’RE JUST GOING TO HAVE TO SEE FOR YOURSELF” – Thrillist

“A gripping, gruesome thriller . . . the kind of creeping dread and shocking climax that hallmarks some of the best horror.” – Time Out

Screenwriter and director Andrew Seman’s jaw-dropping sophomore feature, RESURRECTION had its world premiere at the 2022 Sundance Film Festival.

Margaret (Rebecca Hall) leads a successful and orderly life, perfectly balancing the demands of her busy career and single parenthood to her fiercely independent daughter Abbie. Everything is under control. But that careful balance is upended when an unwelcome shadow from her past, David (Tim Roth) returns, carrying with him the horrors of Margaret’s past. Battling her rising fear, Margaret must confront the monster she’s evaded for two decades who has come to conclude their unfinished business.

Hall has starred in a multitude of films including David Bruckner’s super creepy The Night House. Read Jim Batts’ review HERE.

The actress has also starred in Adam Wingard’s Godzilla vs. Kong; Max Minghella’s Teen Spirit; Etan Cohen’s Holmes & Watson, Oren  Moverman’s The Dinner, costarring alongside Richard Gere, Laura Linney and Steve Coogan; Steven Spielberg’s The BFG, with Mark Rylance and Ruby Barnhill and Joel Edgerton’s The Gift opposite himself and Jason Bateman.

NANCY, PLEASE, Andrew Seman’s debut feature as writer/director, premiered in competition at the Tribeca Film Festival and was distributed theatrically by Factory 25.

RESURRECTION will be released by IFC Films in theaters on July 29th and on Demand on August 5th.  Shudder will be the exclusive streaming home in November 2022.

PASSING – Review

(L-R) Ruth Negga as Clare and Tessa Thompson as Irene in PASSING. Credit: Netflix © 2021

In 1920s New York, two women, once childhood friends, meet again accidentally one hot summer day. Both are Black but one of them, Clare (Ruth Negga), is “passing” as white, married to a successful white banker (Alexander Skarsgard), who has no idea his wife is Black, while the other, Irene (Tessa Thompson), is married to prosperous Black doctor (Andre Holland) in Harlem. Set during the Harlem Renaissance and based on Nella Larsen’s 1929 novel of the same name, PASSING is actor-turned-director Rebecca Hall stunning directorial debut, in a drama that explores not only race but identity, feminism, personality clashes and the dynamics of women’s friendships in a tale that borders on psychological thriller.

Shot in gorgeous black-and-white, with a 4:3 aspect ratio that mirrors films of the 1920s time period, PASSING is an impressive, involving and thought-provoking film. It is, of course, not the first film to focus on “passing,” meaning the ability of some light-skinned Blacks to be taken as white, which allowed them during the era of segregation to cross the color line, whether temporarily for shopping or work, or by living under an assumed white identity. Previous Hollywood films, such as IMITATION OF LIFE, have address the practice, although they tended to punish the transgressor crossing the color line, but PASSING takes a more complicated look. Author Nella Larsen had some direct experience with passing, as she was mixed race but raised in a white neighborhood, and had a foot in both worlds as an adult. PASSING explores issues of race and “passing” but also delves into other questions of identity, of women’s satisfaction with their lives, the dynamics of friendship, and contrasting personalities, in a drama that almost borders on psychological thriller.

Director Hall draws fine performances from Negga and Thompson, and shows a firm hand as the story unfolds from the heat of summer to the chill of winter, and finally to its devastation conclusion. But one may wonder why a white English woman is directing this story about racial passing but things are not always what they seem, to paraphrase a character in the film. Hall recently revealed that she had learned at some point that her maternal grandfather, who she never met, was a Black man passing as white. So when Hall read Nella Larsen’s novel, it resonated with her, leading her to adapt it for the screen, and eventually make this film.

In a sense, both women are passing when they meet as film opens. The story is set in New York during the flourishing of the Harlem Renaissance, but it is also the time of Jim Crow and lynchings in the South, as the film notes at one point, Even in New York, segregation is in place and crossing the “color line” is risky. But it is a hot summer day, and Irene (Tessa Thompson) has taken refuge from the heat in a whites-only hotel restaurant, where she knows that with her light-toned skin means she is likely to be take as white. Irene’s awareness of that passive deception, and her nervousness about it, is revealed by how she hides much of her face under her cloche hat, as if looking people in the eye will give her away. But the day is hot, and she knows he can find a cool spot and a cool drink in that hotel. She does not expect to find Clare.

When a blonde-haired woman approaches her table, Irene tenses up, and does not recognize her old friend Clare. When Clare suggests they move to her hotel room to chat, Irene quickly agrees, uncomfortable with the public attention they might draw.

Both the women appear happy with their choices and both have comfortable lives, with husbands, children and financial stability. But Clare longs to reconnect with her friend, and her black identity, while Irene is cool to the idea. While Irene dotes on her two boys, Clare has sent her daughter to a boarding school in Switzerland, far from the racial attitudes of the U.S. When Clare asks her if she’s never considered passing, Irene bristles and reveals her disdain for what Clare is doing. She also expresses a fear for Clare’s safety, if she tries to reconnect with her black past, as well as worry about being too near that risk herself. When Clare’s husband appears, and reveals both that he is completely clueless about his wife’s identity and a confirmed racist, Irene can’t get out of there fast enough.

Irene has no intention of seeing Clare again. As we learn shortly, back in Harlem, Irene is active as a volunteer with an organization working to advance rights for Black people and a prominent member in the community. She is a devoted mother to her two boys and fully confidence in her own world, with none of the nervous we saw as she moved through the white part of town. Although she is not interest in renewing her friendship with Clare, Clare shows on her doorstep nonetheless

As charming, charismatic Clare slowly inserts herself into Irene’s life, Irene’s settled, quiet life becomes unbalanced, and cracks in the happy facade of both women begin to appear. Irene has built her life around devotion to her sons but now that seems to occupy her life yet she resists her husband’s suggestion they move to another country, as they once planned, raise the boys in a less racist environment. Irene seems to both resent and envy Clare’s freedom, moving between white and Black worlds and free from husband, who is often traveling, and child. There is a frisson of attraction between her and vivacious Clare but Irene senses a worrying similar frisson between Clare and her husband. Clare, on the other hand, seems to becoming bolder as she crossing between worlds, ignoring the risks she is taking.

There are personal dynamics between these two very different women, which plays out against the backdrop of Irene’s world, the one Clare wants to be part of while keeping her privileged one in the white world. The acting is excellent, and Hall explores the complex issues and the personal dynamics as the film builds tension, as the season change. Hall used the period details, the black-and-white images, and skillful mis-en-scene to both create the time period and the specific world of these women, While the focus is on the two women, the men are fully rounded characters and neither one-note villain or hero. All the ideas are gray areas, in contract to the film itself. t ends with with a shocking scene, where there is a flurry of action where it is not clear what happened, although we kind of know.

PASSING is a thought-provoking film, a well drawn view of the historical time period but a timeless look at interpersonal dynamics and the nature of some friendships. Hall has made an impressive start with an intelligent, gripping drama that also keeps you on the edge of your sear, and hopefully will follow up with another soon.

PASSING opens Friday, Oct. 5, in theaters.

RATING: 3 out of 4 stars

THE NIGHT HOUSE – Review

Rebecca Hall in the film THE NIGHT HOUSE. Photo Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2021 20th Century Studios All Rights Reserved

Okay, we know. Last Friday was the thirteenth, the day that the studio generally releases a spooky flick to chill the bones (and get butts in the seats). And the thriller sequel DON’T BREATHE 2 was unleashed. But that doesn’t mean that the following Friday can’t get one too. And what better place to encounter some “unfriendly spirits” than a creeky ole’ haunted mansion. That’s the reasoning behind the new fright flick, except…This spectral showcase is nearly brand new. Still, there are lots of strange stuff happening when the sun goes down at THE NIGHT HOUSE.


As the story starts, we’re viewing shaky home videos and wedding photos of the happy couple who occupied the newly built home tucked away in the woods on the banks of a tranquil lake. “Occupied’ is the proper term as the two-story lovenest is the site of a tender goodbye, as a friend tries to console recently widowed Beth (Rebecca Hall) after the memorial service for late hubby Owen (Evan Joingkeit). But people mourn in very different ways. As soon as her pal’s car pulls away, Beth dumps her food tray (a pan wrapped in foil, perhaps a lasagna) into the trash. Then it’s an uneasy overnight alone she’s awakened by odd noises and visions. The next morning Beth is surprised to see the gate to the dock swinging open. Luckily a concerned neighbor, Mel (Vondie Curtis-Hall) volunteers to help out and cover the canoe with a tarp. Her best pal Claire (Sarah Goldberg) is stunned when she returns (a little too early) to her job as a speech teacher at the local high school (a brusk meeting with a pushy parent does not go well). The nighttime weirdness continues as Beth begins sleepwalking. As she packs away Owen’s stuff she comes across obscure books about mazes and architectural “trickery” (he had done most of the building work on their home). Soon Beth is drawn to the area surrounding her home and discovers another, smaller version of the house that Owen built in a hidden spot in the forest. This raises “red flags” with both Mel and Claire as Beth begins getting night texts from Owen’s old number. Is he trying to tell her something? Perhaps warn her? And what of the handgun, the one that Owen used to end it all, that seems to move from one packing box to another?

Everything here depends on the performance of Hall as Beth, who’s basically our surrogate eyes, witnessing all the strangeness for us (and reacting to images and sounds that may not really exist). Hall elicits our sympathy in the first act as she navigates her new journey into widowhood. She has the expected vulnerability, but Hall surprises us by revealing Beth’s simmering anger, mostly directed at her hubby, and a bit at herself for not picking up on the “signs”. And just as she appears to give in to the terrors of the darkness, she fights back by diving deep into Owen’s shadowy past with a fervent zeal. The talented Hall has expertly balanced her career between intimate “indies’ like this (CHRISTINE is a stunner) and studio blockbusters, more recently as the big ape’s aide in GODZILLA VS. KONG, and even dipped her toes in the MCU with IRON MAN 3. Goldberg, best known as the flighty actress/girlfriend of HBO’s “Barry”, is very effective as Beth’s concerned and often puzzled BFF. And Curtis-Hall brings great warmth to his role as the neighbor pal who just may know more than he says but does his best to steer Beth away from a most deadly and dark path. Also of note is Stacy Martin, a bewildered bookseller somehow sucked into the secret life of beth’s secretive spouse.

A veteran of horror features and shorts, David Bruckner, directs with a deft hand, eschewing the loud noise “jump-scares’ so overused in many genre flicks. The quiet nighttime scenes build in intensity as he cleverly uses the angles of doorways and columns to suggest sinister silhouettes. There’s some gruesome imagery, but he never goes in for shock close-ups and doesn’t dive into gory details. An overall feeling of dread seeps into nearly every scene, even in the bright daylight, as the looming trees almost lean in to swallow up Beth. Unfortunately the script “goes off the rails” in the far too confusing third act, exploring parallel dimensions and spirit possessions, leading to a final denouncement that falls flat. leaving us with more queries as the end credits begin to roll. But Hall is a powerful and capable “horror heroine”, and her work more than merits a harrowing couple of evening hours in THE NIGHT HOUSE.

3 Out of 4

THE NIGHT HOUSE opens in theatres everywhere on 8/20/21

This New Trailer For THE NIGHT HOUSE Starring Rebecca Hall Looks So Scary!

THE NIGHT HOUSE, will be in theaters nationwide August 20th, starring Rebecca Hall and from director David Bruckner. This trailer looks terrifying!:

Reeling from the unexpected death of her husband, Beth (Rebecca Hall) is left alone in the lakeside home he built for her. She tries as best she can to keep it together—but then the dreams come. Disturbing visions of a presence in the house call to her, beckoning with a ghostly allure. Against the advice of her friends, she begins digging into her husband’s belongings, yearning for answers. What she finds are secrets both strange and terrible and a mystery she’s determined to resolve.

THE NIGHT HOUSE stars Rebecca Hall, Stacy Martin, Sarah Goldberg (“Barry”), Evan Jonigkeit (X-Men: Days of Future Past)

Rebecca Hall in the film THE NIGHT HOUSE. Photo Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2020 Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation All Rights Reserved

GODZILLA VS. KONG New Posters And Trailers Hit Before Adam Wingard’s Battle Of The Titans Debuts On HBO Max March 31

The battle of the Titans is coming to HBO Max in March.

From director Adam Wingard, GODZILLA VS. KONG will be released nationwide in 2D and 3D in select theaters and IMAX on March 31, 2021 and will be available in the U.S. on HBO Max for 31 days from theatrical release.

Check out the latest previews and brand-new posters.

From Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures comes the long-awaited showdown between two icons in the epic adventure “Godzilla vs. Kong,” directed by Adam Wingard.

Legends collide in “Godzilla vs. Kong” as these mythic adversaries meet in a spectacular battle for the ages, with the fate of the world hanging in the balance. Kong and his protectors undertake a perilous journey to find his true home, and with them is Jia, a young orphaned girl with whom he has formed a unique and powerful bond. But they unexpectedly find themselves in the path of an enraged Godzilla, cutting a swath of destruction across the globe. The initial confrontation between the two Titans—instigated by unseen forces—is only the beginning of the mystery that lies deep within the core of the Earth.

The film stars Alexander Skarsgård, Millie Bobby Brown, Rebecca Hall, Brian Tyree Henry, Shun Oguri, Eiza González, Julian Dennison, with Kyle Chandler and Demián Bichir.

https://www.godzillavskong.com/

Wingard directed from a screenplay by Eric Pearson and Max Borenstein, story by Terry Rossio and Michael Dougherty & Zach Shields, based on the character “Godzilla” owned and created by TOHO CO., LTD. The film was produced by Mary Parent, Alex Garcia, Eric McLeod, Jon Jashni, Thomas Tull and Brian Rogers, with Jay Ashenfelter, Herbert W. Gains, Dan Lin, Roy Lee, Yoshimitsu Banno and Kenji Okuhira executive producing.

The director’s behind-the-scenes creative team included director of photography Ben Seresin, production designers Owen Paterson and Thomas S. Hammock, editor Josh Schaeffer, costume designer Ann Foley and visual effects supervisor John “DJ” DesJardin. The music is by Tom Holkenborg.

Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures Present a Legendary Pictures Production.

It is rated PG-13 for intense sequences of creature violence/destruction and brief language.

Searchlight Pictures Announces That it Has Acquired Worldwide Rights to David Bruckner’s Psychological Thriller THE NIGHT HOUSE

Searchlight Pictures announced today that it has acquired worldwide rights to David Bruckner’s psychological thriller THE NIGHT HOUSE following its world premiere in Park City as part of the Sundance Midnight program of the 2020 Sundance Film Festival. Based on an original screenplay by Ben Collins & Luke Piotrowski (STEPHANIE), THE NIGHT HOUSE follows a widow (Rebecca Hall of THE TOWN) who begins to uncover her recently deceased husband’s disturbing secrets. Bruckner returns to Sundance with this film, having most recently premiered his first solo-directorial feature, THE RITUAL, at the 2017 Toronto International Film Festival. THE NIGHT HOUSE was financed and produced by Sébastien Raybaud’s company, Anton. David Goyer’s Phantom Four developed the script, and also produced.  The producers are Phantom Four’s David Goyer (THE DARK KNIGHT), and Keith Levine (47 METERS DOWN), and Anton’s John Zois (HOTEL ARTEMIS). Executive Producers are David Bruckner, François Callens, Ben Collins, Rebecca Hall, George Paaswell, Luke Piotrowski, and Anton founder Sébastien Raybaud.


  “THE NIGHT HOUSE instantly drew us in,” said Searchlight Pictures Chairmen Nancy Utley and Steve Gilula. “David Bruckner’s masterful direction creates an unrelenting suspense thriller anchored by an astonishing performance by Rebecca Hall.”
 
“Searchlight is a beacon of quality and inspired curation. To be working with them on THE NIGHT HOUSE is nothing short of a dream come true,” said Bruckner.
 
“This is the perfect home for this film. Searchlight’s exemplary taste and their global campaigns are masterful,” added Anton’s founder Sébastien Raybaud.
 
“For a challenging, layered and lingering film like THE NIGHT HOUSE, we couldn’t be in better hands,” said Phantom Four’s Keith Levine. “We are thrilled to bring the film into the Searchlight family.”
 
THE NIGHT HOUSE features a musical score by Ben Lovett (THE SIGNAL), editing by David Marks (THE LAST BLACK MAN IN SAN FRANCISCO), cinematography by Elisha Christian (COLUMBUS) and costumes by Samantha Hawkins (JONATHAN). The deal was brokered by Searchlight Pictures’ EVP Business Affairs Megan O’Brien, SVP Acquisitions Chan Phung and SVP Legal Affairs Ben Wilkinson, with Endeavor Content and Sébastien Raybaud of Anton. THE NIGHT HOUSE is scheduled for a theatrical release in 2020.
 
Searchlight Pictures recently released Radio Silence’s hit horror-comedy READY OR NOT, which grossed nearly $60 million worldwide, and will soon unveil Scott Cooper’s supernatural horror thriller ANTLERS starring Keri Russell on April 17, 2020. With THE NIGHT HOUSE, the trio of films mark a return to acclaimed genre filmmaking hearkening back to the company’s 2002 breakout hit 28 DAYS LATER, directed by Danny Boyle.

Luke Evans, Rebecca Hall And Bella Heathcote Star In Three New PROFESSOR MARSTON & THE WONDER WOMEN Posters

Luke Evans, Rebecca Hall, and Bella Heathcote are featured in three new posters for PROFESSOR MARSTON & THE WONDER WOMEN.

The film, written and directed by Angela Robinson, is set to premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival, and will open in theaters on October 13th.

In a superhero origin tale unlike any other, the film is the incredible true story of what inspired Harvard psychologist Dr. William Moulton Marston to create the iconic Wonder Woman character in the 1940’s.

While Marston’s feminist superhero was criticized by censors for her ‘sexual perversity’, he was keeping a secret that could have destroyed him. Marston’s muses for the Wonder Woman character were his wife Elizabeth Marston and their lover Olive Byrne, two empowered women who defied convention: working with Marston on human behavior research — while building a hidden life with him that rivaled the greatest of superhero disguises.

Visit the official site: www.marston.movie

WAMG Giveaway – Win THE DINNER Blu-ray – Stars Richard Gere


Based on the international best seller of the same name, The Dinner, a dark pyshological thiller about how far parents will go to protect their children, arrives on Blu-ray (plus Digital HD) and DVD on August 8th from Lionsgate. Boasting powerful performances from an all-star cast, including Golden Globe winner Richard Gere (2003, Best Actor – Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy, Chicago), Oscar nominee Laura Linney (2007, Best Actress, The Savages), Oscar nominee Steve Coogan (2013, Best Picture,Philomena), Oscar nominee  Chloë Sevigny (1999, Best Supporting Actress, Boys Don’t Cry), and Golden Globe nominee Rebecca Hall (2009, Best Actress – Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy, Vicky Christina Barcelona), the film was nominated for Best Film at the 2017 Berlin International Film Festival. Written and directed by Oscar nominee Oren Moverman (2009, Best Writing, Original Screenplay, The Messenger), The Dinner Blu-ray and DVD include audio commentary with Moverman and Linney and a photo gallery and will be available for the suggested retail price of $24.99 and $19.98, respectively.

Now you can own the THE DINNER Blu-ray. We Are Movie Geeks has FOUR copies to give away. All you have to do is leave a comment answering this question: What is your favorite movie starring Richard Gere? (mine is PRETTY WOMAN…. – Just Kidding! – it’s AMERICAN GIGOLO!). It’s so easy!

Good Luck!

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.

Two estranged brothers and their wives meet at a restaurant to discuss a dark crime committed by their sons. With their involvement still a secret, they must decide how far they’ll go to protect the ones they love.
BLU-RAY/DVD SPECIAL FEATURES

  • Photo Gallery
  • Audio Commentary with Writer/Director Oren Moverman and Actress Laura Linney


CAST
Richard Gere               ArbitrageChicago
Laura Linney               SullyNocturnal Animals 
Steve Coogan             PhilomenaRules Don’t Apply
Rebecca Hall               Vicky Cristina BarcelonaChristine
Chloë Sevigny             Love & FriendshipBoys Don’t Cry

THE DINNER Starring Richard Gere and Rebecca Hall Arrives on Blu-ray and DVD August 8th


Based on the international best seller of the same name, The Dinner, a dark pyshological thiller about how far parents will go to protect their children, arrives on Blu-ray (plus Digital HD) and DVD on August 8from Lionsgate. Boasting powerful performances from an all-star cast, including Golden Globe winner Richard Gere (2003, Best Actor – Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy, Chicago), Oscar nominee Laura Linney (2007, Best Actress, The Savages), Oscar nominee Steve Coogan (2013, Best Picture,Philomena), Oscar nominee  Chloë Sevigny (1999, Best Supporting Actress, Boys Don’t Cry), and Golden Globe nominee Rebecca Hall (2009, Best Actress – Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy, Vicky Christina Barcelona), the film was nominated for Best Film at the 2017 Berlin International Film Festival. Written and directed by Oscar nominee Oren Moverman (2009, Best Writing, Original Screenplay, The Messenger), The Dinner Blu-ray and DVD include audio commentary with Moverman and Linney and a photo gallery and will be available for the suggested retail price of $24.99 and $19.98, respectively.

Two estranged brothers and their wives meet at a restaurant to discuss a dark crime committed by their sons. With their involvement still a secret, they must decide how far they’ll go to protect the ones they love.
BLU-RAY/DVD SPECIAL FEATURES

  • Photo Gallery
  • Audio Commentary with Writer/Director Oren Moverman and Actress Laura Linney


CAST
Richard Gere               ArbitrageChicago
Laura Linney               SullyNocturnal Animals 
Steve Coogan             PhilomenaRules Don’t Apply
Rebecca Hall               Vicky Cristina BarcelonaChristine
Chloë Sevigny             Love & FriendshipBoys Don’t Cry