Three Billboards
Outside Ebbing, Missouri (2017) There’s a good movie inside this premise,
but this isn’t it. Mildred Hayes’s (Frances McDormand) daughter has been
brutally raped and murdered. The police have no suspects and Mildred’s tired of
waiting, so she pays for three billboards outside of town to get the police off
the dime, calling out the chief by name. The problem with her tactic—and the
movie—is that Chief Willoughby (Woody Harrelson) is a decent man doing what he
can with the evidence he has who is also dying of cancer. This pretty much
kills off any sympathy—or empathy—the town—and I—had for Mildred. We then learn
she was a bitch on wheels before any of this happened. Sam Rockwell earned his
Oscar—though he’s done work just as good on other occasions—but his character’s
transformation is not believable. There are also more plot holes than can be
described here. It’s the cinema equivalent of a literary novel: the creator had
some emotional duress he wanted to describe, and he plugged in the character as
needed. Odd way to treat them in what’s supposed to be a character-driven film.
Deadpool (2016) I
don’t do superhero movies but this looked like a satire and night be fun. It is
a satire and it was way past just fun. (Yes, I know it’s been out two years and
everyone knows it’s a satire. Thanks
for reminding me I’m old and get off my lawn.) A little like Ted for superheroes, good taste and
temperate plotting and language are not part of the equation here. Not for the
faint of heart or the easily offended, but I’m already in for the sequel.
The Great Train
Robbery (1978) A sweet little tongue-in-cheek fictionalized account of an
actual train robbery in England circa 1855. Sean Connery, Donald Sutherland,
and Leslie Ann Down are the core of a Victorian era Ocean’s Eleven. It won’t pay to look too closely at the plot
contrivances—which, to be fair, is true of almost all caper movies—and bask in
the great fun Connery, Sutherland, and Down have. Bonus coverage: that actually
is Sean Connery running across the top of the train.
Appaloosa (2008) A
labor of love for Ed Harris, who produced, directed, and starred in this
outstanding adaptation of Robert B. Parker’s first Virgil Cole – Everett Hitch
Western. Harris and Viggo Mortensen have outstanding chemistry as Cole and
Hitch and screenwriters Harris and Robert Knott were smart to preserve as much
of Parker’s original dialog as they could. Jeremy Irons is suitably greasy as
the corrupt rancher with contacts in high places. Renee Zellweger is all right,
but it’s hard to imagine such a pinched-face little ferret leading a man like
Virgil Cole around by the dick. I’ve read the original choice to play the part
was Diane Lane. I can believe her
having that effect on Virgil. Or pretty much anyone else.
Ted (2012).
“Hysterically funny and wildly inappropriate,” was how The Sole Heir™ described
this one to me after she saw it in theaters in as good and succinct a review as
anything I can give it. Just as funny (and inappropriate) the second time
around. Worth watching for the pleasure of Mark Wahlberg’s “lightning round” of
white trash names and the hotel room fight between him and Ted.
Heat (1995) Hadn’t
seen it in a long time but The Beloved Spouse™ had never seen it and Benoit Lelievre had just done a review in Dead
End Follies, I was on vacation, so what the hell. A little slower in spots than
I remembered and Pacino’s a little over the top, but the core of the film holds
as solidly as ever. This one will stay in film discussions forever for the
coffee shop scene and the climactic robbery, but those scenes, great as they
are, shouldn’t be allowed to overshadow how much other good stuff is here.
Sicario (2015) We
discovered Taylor Sheridan with Hell or
High Water, went all in with Wind
River, and are currently engrossed in Yellowstone,
so I took some of my vacation time to check out the film that got him his break
as a writer. As with the others, well written, especially so for the actors,
which makes sense considering Sheridan broke into the business as an actor.
Emily Blunt, Josh Brolin (for whom I gain more respect all the time), and
Benecio del Toro are all outstanding in this look at what the drug war has done
along the Mexican border and the lengths we’re willing to go. It’s fiction, but
there’s not much doubt there are “good guys” who don’t give much more of a fuck
than do del Toro and Brolin how things shake out.
True Grit (2010)
Damn, this is a good movie. The original is good, too, but Hailee Steinfeld vs.
Kim Darby and Matt Damon vs. Glen Campbell are no contests. (Glen Campbell?
Really?) The Coen Brothers stick very closely to the book, which provides a
much more satisfying ending based on what has come before than does the
original. I’ve seen this one a few times now and I expect to see it a few times
more.
Small Town Crime (2017)
There’s no one better than John Hawkes right now, and he gets to shine here.
Another good one I heard about courtesy of Dead End Follies and well worth it.
Hawkes is the stereotypical drunken cop who fucks up one time too often way too
bad and is out on his ass. His life is in the shitter until he stumbles across
a dead girl on the side of the road. Small
Town Crime isn’t a great movie but it does what it sets out to do once it
hits its stride with a nice mix of plot twists and drily dark humor. Robert
Forster has a small part and is, as usual, outstanding.
Die Hard (1988)
The original and still the best. By “original” I don’t just mean the first of
the Die Hard series; I mean of action
movies as we know them. Bruce Willis is perfect as John McClane, a New York cop
traveling to LA to try to repair his marriage who stumbles into the ultimate
worst-case scenario. You’ve seen the movie—if you haven’t you should probably
never read this blog again—so there’s no need to talk about the plot. The movie
works in large part due to Willis’s sense of vulnerability and ingenuity in
overcoming overwhelming odds. I’ve lost track of how many time I’ve seen it and
knew everything that was about to happen and still found myself on the edge of
my seat.
I agree with everything you have said here. Especially THREE BILLBOARDS. The flaws far exceeded any worth for me.
ReplyDeleteThree Billboards – You nailed it. Deadpool – My buddies keep telling me to watch this and its sequel. Maybe some night when my wife is out with her friends. And that goes for Ted, too. The Great Train Robbery – Saw it years ago, remember liking it. Appaloosa – Need to see this one. Thanks. Heat – Need to see this one again. Sicario – Intriguing, but no soul. True Grit Preferred Duke’s original. Small Town Crime – Really good film. I wrote about it on my blog. Die Hard – Not a Willis fan.
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