BONES AND ALL – Review

(L to R) Taylor Russell as Maren and Mark Rylance as Sully in BONES AND ALL, directed by Luca Guadagnino, a Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures film. Photo Credit: Yannis Drakoulidis / Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures. © 2022 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved.

“My Cannibal Romance” or “The Fine Young Cannibals” might be alternate titles for this film except that it suggests comedy rather than the high-concept horror film that BONES AND ALL really is. Starring Timothee Chalamet and Canadian actress Taylor Russell as a very different kind of star-crossed lovers, BONES AND ALL does two surprising things: combining romance with horror in a very different way and creating a new kind of monster beyond the usual vampires, werewolves and zombies. The characters at the center of this tale are born as cannibals, compelled to eat human flesh the same way vampires are compelled to drink blood. However, despite the image that evokes, BONES AND ALL is surprisingly restrained in what it shows on screen. There are bloody scenes, but the like in a film where the gory is the point. That will probably disappoint the torture porn crowd or those looking for buckets-o-blood violence. There are no Jeffrey Dahmer-like bone-cracking or cooking scenes. Instead, these compulsive cannibals are treated more as people with an unfortunate affliction, something they have no say in. The focus is on people living lonely, isolated lives, people who have a compulsion they would rather not have, but something they unfortunately must do, periodically, in order to live. Their only choice is when, and who. That gives this unusual horror story a completely different tone.

Set in the upper South and Midwest of the mid-’80s,Maren (Taylor Russell) is a lonely high school senior living with her dad (Andre Holland), who is “the new girl: who doesn’t fit in at her new high school – again. The father and daughter have moved around a bit but Maren longs for friends, and here she is finally forming some tentative friendships. Yet we get a sense she is hiding something, although it might just be that she is living a trailer park, unlike her new friends.

Her dad sets strict rules for her, including no nights out, but one night she sneaks out anyway, to go hang out at her new friend’s sleep-over. All goes well as first, until it doesn’t. What happens sends daughter and dad on the run.

In her new rundown rental home, she wakes one day to find dad gone, but an envelop of money and a tape and recorder left behind. Dad’s tape answers some questions about why she is different, while leaving others unanswered. Maren decides to seek those answers by finding the family of the mother she never knew.

Already you see the parallels to any young person who is different in some way, where bi-racial (as she is) or from a different country or religion, or born with a “condition” although not likely to be like her particular affliction. On the road, she is surprised to meet others like her, such as Sully (Mark Rylance, in another striking performance), an oddball, colorfully dressed man with a Southern drawl, and later another young person with the same affliction, Lee (Timothee Chalamet).

It’s Timothee Chalamet, so of course, they will fall in love, although it takes awhile. Also in the fine cast are Michael Stuhlberg, Chloe Sevigny, Jessica Harper, Jake Horowitz and David Gordon Green. Director Luca Guadagnino’s impressively varied credits include CALL ME BY YOUR NAME, SUSPIRIA, A BIGGER SPLASH and I AM LOVE. Here, the director shows a firm hand and fills scenes with tension, sadness, yearning, and a sense of the tragic by turns, always making the most of his fine cast.

Like all horror films, realism and the plausible are not priorities. The acting is the film’s standout strength, but the concept deserves credit. as a fresh way to show people who exist on the fringes of society, as these people, as well as a new horror creation. By making these characters into people rather than monsters, the film turns the usual horror film structure on its head. Other than their compulsion and “dietary needs,” and how that forces them to live, they are completely ordinary people, who would rather not do want they must. They are filled with revulsion by encountering an ordinary human turned cannibal, as they do at one point. The young couple try to create something like a normal life for themselves, with starry-eyed dreams of avoiding their need to eat, as they inevitably must.

It makes for an unexpectedly heartbreaking story, and the film is in many way more a tragic romance of star-crossed lovers than a horror film. Timothee Chalamet and Taylor… as the star-crossed lovers, who are what they are without choice, give marvelous performances. The two develop a convincing chemistry, and their shared problem

But the most unforgettable performance is Mark Rylance’s. The already lauded British actor, who some may recall from BRIDGE OF SPIES, is having quite a year – with wide ranging performances. He plays a charming British eccentric, a sparkling comic role, like the delightful PHANTOM OF THE OPEN, and a shy unassuming tailor bullied by gangsters in the twisty mystery thriller THE OUTFIT. Here, Rylance plays Sully, whose smooth Southern accent and mix of menace and loneliness sets us on edge in very scene, and a performance that sears its way into our memory. Whenever he is on screen, we are uneasy, even though what he says is often pitiful. When he pops up unexpectedly, “stalker” is the word that comes to mind.

Any film that makes these kinds of bold choices deserves credit for creativity and courage, even while the film’s subject is inevitably squirm-inducing. There is blood and blood-covered faces, and we know that these folks are doing, but it is less about that, about gory effects, than the complicated characters at the center who were born with this awful curse. That makes for a fresh kind of horror film, one that invites thought about something more that how they did that effect.

BONES AND ALL opens Wednesday, Nov. 23, in select theaters.

RATING: 3 out of 4 stars

ESCAPE ROOM: TOURNAMENT OF CHAMPIONS Available on Blu-ray and DVD October 5th

GAME MASTER EXPOSED IN EXCLUSIVE EXTENDED CUT OF ESCAPE ROOM: TOURNAMENT OF CHAMPIONS WITH OVER 25 MINUTES OF ALL-NEW FOOTAGE INCLUDING ALTERNATE BEGINNING AND ENDING!

ESCAPE ROOM: TOURNAMENT OF CHAMPIONS is the sequel to the box-office hit psychological thriller that terrified audiences around the world. In this installment, six people unwittingly find themselves locked in another series of escape rooms, slowly uncovering what they have in common to survive…and discovering they’ve all played the game before. Thenever-before-seen EXTENDED CUT, available on Blu-ray and Digital, reveals the masterminds behind Minosand features even more deadly escape roomswith over 25 minutes of all-new footage!

BONUS MATERIALS:

BLU-RAY

• Theatrical and Extended Cuts of ESCAPE ROOM: TOURNAMENT OF CHAMPIONS

• Go Inside the Minos Escape Rooms•Meet the Players

• Director Adam Robitel on Raising the StakesDIGITAL

• Go Inside the Minos Escape Rooms•Meet the Players

• Director Adam Robitel on Raising the Stakes

DIGITAL

• Go Inside the Minos Escape Rooms

• Meet the Players•Director Adam Robitel on Raising the Stakes

*Extended Cut included as a bonus feature on participating platforms; otherwise available for separate digital purchase

CAST AND CREW

Directed By:Adam Robitel Story By: ChristineLavaf& Fritz Bohm Screenplay By: Will Honley and Maria Melnik & Daniel Touch and Oren Uziel Produced By: Neal H. Mori tz Executive Producers :Adam Robitel, Karina Rahardja, Philip Waley

Cast: Taylor Russell, Logan Miller, Indya Moore, Holland Roden, Thomas Cocquerel, Carlito OliveroBLU-RAY•Theatrical and Extended Cuts of ESCAPE ROOM: TOURNAMENT OF CHAMPIONS•Go Inside the Minos Escape Rooms•Meet the Players•Director Adam Robitel on Raising the StakesDIGITAL•Go Inside the Minos Escape Rooms•Meet the Players•Director Adam Robitel on Raising the Stakes*Extended Cut included as a bonus feature on participating platforms; otherwise available for separate digital purchaseCAST AND CREWDirected By:Adam RobitelStory By: ChristineLavaf& Fritz BohmScreenplay By:Will Honley and Maria Melnik & Daniel Touch and Oren UzielProduced By: Neal H. MoritzExecutive Producers:Adam Robitel, Karina Rahardja, Philip WaleyCast:Taylor Russell, Logan Miller, Indya Moore, Holland Roden, Thomas Cocquerel, Carlito Olivero

WORDS ON BATHROOM WALLS – Review

WORDS ON BATHROOM WALLS tells the familiar story of bright 16-year old Adam (Charlie Plummer), who suffers from schizophrenia. Expelled following a fistfight, he is sent to a Catholic school to finish out his senior year. Adam makes little attempt to fit in until he meets Maya (Taylor Russell), a hyper-intelligent girl from the wrong side of the tracks and there is an instant soulful and romantic connection. When he starts hearing voices and seeing people who aren’t there, he attempts to hide his illness because he fears it will interfere with his dream of attending culinary school.

The screenplay for WORDS ON BATHROOM WALLS stuffs in every cliché about teen angst yet is a laudable attempt to seem heartfelt without too much blatant manipulation. It’s an uneven film, but generally succeeds thanks especially to a winning central performance Charlie Plummer. The film itself often seems schizophrenic. The lightness of tone and playful score is often at odds with a serious story that explores the need for schizophrenics to stay on their medication. WORDS ON BATHROOM WALLS was directed by Thor Freudenthal, who directed the first DIARY OF A WIMPY KID movie and his new film at times plays like a belated entry in that franchise, as if the wimpy kid has grown up but is now battling demons more serious than an obnoxious brother Roderick. Like the Wimpy Kid films, WORDS ON BATHROOM WALLS leans on an over-reliance of self-aware monologues addressed to the camera that seem gimmicky. There’s also a trio of imaginary friends only he can see and only when his meds aren’t kicking in that are supposed to be personifications of his illness: a muscle-bound bouncer known as the ‘Enforcer’ (Lobo Sebastian), the New Age cheerleader/fairy Rebecca (AnnaSophia Robb), and Joaquin (Devon Bostick), who wears a bathrobe but whose purpose is otherwise unclear (the less said about a rumbling and grumbling black cloud that follows Adam around the better).

Charlie Plummer is likable as Adam and makes you really root for this kid. Less successful is Taylor Russell’s Maya, the type of annoying overachiever too often in these types of films that doesn’t ring true. Molly Parker is fine as Adam’s concerned mom while a cast-against-type Walton Goggins brings great depth to his role as her boyfriend.

WORDS ON BATHROOM WALLS asks an interesting question – should the mentally ill be forcibly medicated? It’s a good question since each person reacts differently to each treatment and sometimes the cure is more distressing than the symptoms of schizophrenia. Here Adam loses his sense of taste when his meds are working, which is a huge problem seeing how he aspires to be a professional chef. The script explores various facets of schizophrenia but it doesn’t dwell on them long enough to depress the viewer or make the film dark. It is a bittersweet, if occasionally precious, teen movie that ends happily. Sufferers of schizophrenia may feel that the film trivializes their illness but at the end of the day it is a film about young adulthood, not mental illness.

2 of 4 Stars


WAVES – Review

(L-R) Kelvin Harrison Jr., Taylor Russell, Sterling K. Brown, Renée Elise Goldsberry in WAVES. Courtesy of A24

One might call WAVES a family drama but that fails to capture the emotional tsunami that this outstanding film truly is.

The story is set in South Florida but the title has little to do with the shoreline. Instead, the waves are more the emotional kind, ebbing and flowing through the tides of life, sometimes gentle and soothing, sometimes rough and buffeting, and at times threatening to overwhelm and knock us off our feet.

Writer/director Trey Edward Shults uses a dynamic, kinetic camera and a pounding score to place us right in the emotional heart of this story of an upper middle-class African American family in South Florida. From the outside, the family looks perfect with everything going for them – two happily married successful parents, two teenage children, the oldest of which, the son, with a particularly bright future. They have every reason for hope and optimism.

An opening scene sets the film’s powerful, immersive tone. With a rotating camera inside a car, we travel along a causeway over the ocean as the teenage son in the family, Tyler (Kelvin Harrison Jr.) and his friends laugh and clown around. The effect is both expansive and claustrophobic, creates an immediacy and high tension, and hooks us immediately.

The drama focuses primarily on the two teenagers, Tyler and his quieter younger sister Emily (Taylor Russell) more than the parents, dad Ronald (Sterling K. Brown) and step mother Catherine (Renee Elise Goldsberry). It centers on each teen individually by turns, rather in the relationship with each other, an interesting approach to its exploration of family dynamics and this family’s journey. The film is essentially divided into two parts, centered first on the son, then the daughter, with a shattering event as the pivot point between the two threads.

The first half is built around Tyler and his relationship with his domineering father Ronald (Sterling K Brown). A promising scholar-athlete with a bright future, Tyler is the family star and Dad drills him relentlessly like a coach, pushing him to succeed as a wrestler and setting high standards for him in all aspects of life. In one scene, Dad has one over several intense talks with his son. “We are not afforded the luxury of being average,” he cautions him. “I push you because I have to.” Good intentions are there but the pressure is enormous.

The family appears happy as well as prosperous, with everything going for them, but there are hidden internal strains, mostly from the pressure and expectations Ronald places on his talented son. Tyler has a lot going for him – a star on the wrestling team, scholarship prospects, lots of friends and a beautiful girlfriend, Alexis (Alexa Demie). Tyler obediently complies with Dad’s strict drills, striving to please his father but the weight he feels is clearly heavy. Out of Dad’s sight, he is testing boundaries, and the contrast creates an edgy tension to the film. Director Shults further pumps up this tension with restless hand-held photography and a camera that follows the son around very closely, as he goes about his life as a popular high school student.

The tension in this drama, and its sense of foreboding, is worthy of a thriller. That effect is greatly amplified by a searing, pounding score, brilliantly crafted by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross. We know something is going to happen to upset this family’s idyll and shatter dreams, but we are unsure exactly what that will be. As Tyler engages in the kinds of pushing-the-boundaries behaviors of often associated with male adolescence – too many friends and distractions while he is driving, sneaking over to his girlfriend’s house, going to a party where the parents are out of town, drinking and other misbehavior – there is a feeling of an accelerating pace. As that pace increases. we wonder which of these might lead to the tragedy we know is coming. When it does come, Sterling K. Brown’s reactions as the father are riveting, a complicated mix of disbelief, heartache and guilt, played out across his face.

After tragedy strikes, the drama shifts its focus to the daughter Emily, but the whole tone of the film shifts as well. It changes from the frenetic pace and high tension of Tyler’s life and personality, to the quiet stillness of Emily’s, as she copes with jumbled emotions in the aftermath of what has happened. While all the cast is good, Taylor Russell is a revelation, creating a compelling and intimate inner life for her character, and a far deeper and more layered portrait than we expect, allowing Russell to dominate the screen in her own fashion. In this second part, Lucas Hedges provides strong support to her work, in a fine performance as Emily’s new boyfriend Luke.

It is an impressive film, with director Shults masterfully blending a dynamic visual style, insistent score and excellent performances with strong storytelling, each aspect reaching high levels but coalescing into a seamless whole. There is a striking immediacy in this drama, a relentless pull to its personal stories, and an overwhelming sense of immersion in their lives, that far exceeds most family dramas. The film is more about the personal and inner life than events themselves, about the human emotions around it. The camera keeps us close to the characters so that we feel a part of their inner lives without the need for them to speak. Although a tragedy is the center of the plot, WAVES is a film about hope, feelings, human connections, and life being lived, even in the wake of the unthinkable.

RATING: 4 out of 4 stars

ESCAPE ROOM – Review


ESCAPE ROOM tells the story of a half-dozen strangers trapped in a series of rooms who need to figure out why they’re there and/or discover a way out. Also, the rooms are trying to kill them. We’ve seen this before (CUBE and MAZE RUNNER come to mind) and while ESCAPE ROOM sometimes plays like a bloodless, young-adult version of the SAW films, it’s an interesting PG-13 attempt at something a little different. Despite the generic promises of its title, ESCAPE ROOM is not as stale a take on the convention as you might expect. It begins with a nice Twilight Zone-style vibe to it, but the story tips its hand too soon, runs out of ideas, and fails to sustain suspense.

ESCAPE ROOM is a cash-in in on those interactive adventure games that have popped up in strip malls. Places where folks pay to solve a series of puzzles and riddles using clues, hints, and strategy to complete objectives and get out “alive” within a set time limit. That’s basically this film’s plot and it’s what Jason (Jay Ellis), Zoey (Taylor Russell), Danny (Nik Dodani), Amanda (Deborah Ann Woll), Mike (Tyler Labine), and Ben (Logan Miller) think they’re getting into as the story begins, but they soon learn that it’s no game and that the rooms have murderous intentions.

ESCAPE ROOM is a decent thriller, its plot structured to keep the audience guessing, and it does take these six strangers and the story to imaginative places. It’s ambitious enough and it held my attention with its pretzel-logic plot, at least for the first half. A big problem with the script is that these rooms become less and less interesting as the story progresses. The sequence in the first room, a seemingly normal den that begins turning into an oven, is clever and exciting. Room 2 isn’t a room at all, but an exterior near a frozen pond, a scene that seems to go on forever. Room 3 is an inverted pool hall, which makes for some eye-popping visuals but the sequence also seems to run on. At about the one hour mark, ESCAPE ROOM runs out of steam and starts revealing secrets about these characters and why they’re there. It turns out they all share a certain trait, but it’s not a particularly compelling twist. The story eventually enters CABIN IN THE WOODS territory, with a showdown with the game-masters behind the curtain, which spells out too much and seems anti-climactic. Though never for a moment original, ESCAPE ROOM forges ahead with the kind of conviction and energy that may keep horror junkies entertained, at least for a while.  While the strength of ESCAPE ROOM is some early tension, the weakness in is the dialogue, which sometimes turns remarkably trite. The cast is comprised of attractive actors that young viewers may recognize from TV shows, but nobody stands out. Keep your expectations low and you may find ESCAPE ROOM just crafty enough to warrant your time.

3 of 5 Stars

 

Win Passes to the St. Louis Advance Screening of ESCAPE ROOM Tonight!

Six strangers find themselves in circumstances beyond their control, and must use their wits to survive! It’s THE ESCAPE ROOM and it opens everywhere January 4th.

Enter for your chance to win two free passes to the St. Louis advance screening of THE ESCAPE ROOM . The theatrical sneak preview will be on December 18 at 7pm at The Gravois Bluffs Theater.

Just leave your name and email address in the comments section below and we’ll contact you soon.

THE ESCAPE ROOM stars Taylor Russell, Logan Miller, Deborah Ann Woll, Jay Ellis, Tyler Labine, Nik Dodani with Yorick van Wageningen

Scares And Frights Await In New Trailer For DOWN A DARK HALL Starring AnnaSophia Robb And Uma Thurman

Welcome to Blackwood, where lost girls find their way…

From the producers of The Twilight Saga comes the very creepy new trailer and poster for DOWN A DARK HALL. Turn up the volume – I dare you.

DOWN A DARK HALL opens in Theaters, On Demand, and On iTunes August 17th.

Kit (AnnaSophia Robb), a difficult young girl, is sent to the mysterious Blackwood Boarding School when her heated temper becomes too much for her mother to handle. Once she arrives at Blackwood, Kit encounters eccentric headmistress Madame Duret (Uma Thurman) and meets the school’s only other students, four young women also headed down a troubled path. While exploring the labyrinthine corridors of the school, Kit and her classmates discover that Blackwood Manor hides an age-old secret rooted in the paranormal.

Based on the classic gothic YA novel of the same name by Lois Duncan – author of “I Know What You Did Last Summer” – and produced by Stephenie Meyer (author of Twilight, The Host), DOWN A DARK HALL is a supernatural thriller directed by Rodrigo Cortés (Buried), from a screenplay by Mike Goldbach and Chris Sparling, and stars AnnaSophia Robb (Soul Surfer, The Carrie Diaries), Isabelle Fuhrman (Orphan), Victoria Moroles (Teen Wolf), Noah Silver (The Tribes of Palos Verdes), Taylor Russell (TV’s Falling Skies), Rosie Day (Outlander), and features a truly memorable turn by the iconic Uma Thurman (Pulp Fiction, Kill Bill: Vols. I & II).