August 30, 2021 “Rushed” (**1/2 out of four) was a reasonably moving story about a husband and wife (Siobhan Fallon Hogan and Robert Patrick) who are devastated by the death of their son (Jay Jay Warren) in college in a fraternity hazing initiation and they soon begin to learn of other deaths of other students across the country in similar incidents and begin a campaign to change fraternity hazing rituals; upon being frustrated about the indifferent results, the wife then attempts more direct action. Strong acting from the two leads and incisive subject matter keep you watching but story takes some bizarre twists and turns in its final third and its ending is somewhat obscure. Hogan also wrote the screenplay. Continue reading →
August 30, 2021 “The Stairs” (** out of four) was a fairly bland thriller which begins in 1997 in which a young boy (Thomas Wethington) and his grandfather (John Schneider) go hiking in the forest and stumble upon a mysterious set of stairs and go missing; 20 years later a new group of hikers (Adam Korson, Stacey Oristano, and others) stumble upon it as well and try to avoid the same fate. Tension builds but story is never really all that scary or chilling. Somehow though, this won Best Feature Film at the Haunted House Fearfest in the UK this year. Continue reading →
August 27, 2021 “The Gateway” (** out of four) was an overplotted melodrama about a dedicated social worker (Shea Whigham) who tries to intervene in the life of a young girl and her mother (Olivia Munn) when the girl’s father (Jay Hieron) returns home from prison and falls back into crime involving a sleazy underworld kingpin (Frank Grillo who can play this role in his sleep and does) resulting in an impending bloodbath. Strong central performance from Whigham does all that it can to keep this story from wandering into too many unpleasant directions but by the time of its gory and violent ending, it just seems a waste of time. And what a waste of a strong supporting cast (including Bruce Dern and Keith David)! Continue reading →
August 27, 2021 “Tides” (**1/2 out of four) was a moderately compelling but muted melodrama set in the distant future in which Earth has become a giant wasteland and a shipwrecked female astronaut (Nora Arnezeder) struggles to fight for survival and must decide to save the planet or save herself as she tries to make sense of what has happened since she was gone. Yet another bleak futuristic story in which Earth has become desolate and debauched, dressed up with striking and moody cinematography from Markus Forderer and held together by Arnezeder’s strong lead performance, but story never builds much momentum and actually gets slower as it goes along. Originally titled “The Colony” until the filmmakers likely realized there was a 2013 film of the same name and with a similar story. Continue reading →
August 26, 2021 “No Loss, No Gain” (*** out of four) was an entrancing melodrama about a malicious, multi-million dollar bank that is robbed and a mysterious, modern-day Robin Hood (John Valley) gives the victims of this robbery a valuable opportunity to recoup their money while various bank administrators and law enforcement try to make sense of all this. Writer/director Christian Rousseau neatly weaves suspense into social commentary about capitalism and consumerism and holds your attention throughout. Offset by a sense of aloofness that is possibly intentional showing the film’s themes of corporate misanthropy and greed. Continue reading →
August 26, 2021 “Jurassic Shark 2: Aquapocalypse” (*1/2 out of four) was a lame and low-rent sequel that I don’t think too many were waiting by the Redbox machine for about the return of the megaladon shark from the original who terrorizes a local fishing village and a series of oil rig workers and town members (Jamie Morgan, Jeff Kirkendall, James Carolus, and others) who band together to try to stop it once and for all. Maybe it’s about time low-budget horror filmmakers stopped ripping off “Jaws” and also stopped putting the word “Jurassic” in their film titles in an attempt to elicit filmgoers. Pretty cut-rate and toothless, even by the low standards of these things. Continue reading →
August 26, 2021 “Buckley’s Chance” (** out of four) was a pleasant but minor children’s adventure about a mother (Victoria Hill) and son (Milan Burch) who relocate from NYC to Australia to start a new life; unhappy there, the boy runs away from home to the outback where he faces certain death but befriends a young dingo and they form an unlikely bond and relationship that saves both of them and brings him back home. Beautiful Australian scenery and a very cute dog do all that they can to enrich a very predictable storyline. Aimed squarely at young kids. Continue reading →
August 26, 2021 “The Forever Room” (** out of four) was an overly cerebral and unpleasant horror melodrama about a young woman (Samantha Valletta) who awakens chained in a basement and soon finds to her horror that her captor and tormentor is her own mother (Vickie Hicks) and she is soon beset by frightening hallucinations and ruminations that begin to blur the delirious line between reality and insanity. For anyone who’s longed to see a cross between “One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest” and “Saw” with elements of “The Shining” sprinkled in, look no further; this isn’t bad and does have some good acting and provocative elements but it becomes numbing after a while. Co-star Hicks also wrote the script. Continue reading →
August 26, 2021 “It Came From Below” (** out of four) was a middling derivation of “The Descent”, “The Cave”, and too many others to mention about a group of friends (Becca Hirani, Megan Purvis, Tara MacGowran, and others) who go exploring in a subterranean cave and find themselves stalked and preyed upon by a creature not of this Earth who makes leaving the cave impossible. Far from the worst of this genre with some decent acting and occasional jolts but an overwhelming sense of deja-vu hangs over the entire proceedings. Feature-film directorial debut of noted short-film creator Dan Allen. Continue reading →
August 25, 2021 “Free Guy” (**1/2 out of four) was a reasonably diverting action comedy about a meek bank teller (Ryan Reynolds) who suddenly realizes that his life is a video game and that he has to save his friends or else they will be deleted by the game’s owner (Taika Waititi) and he has to embrace his role as an everyman superhero! Cleverly done amalgam of elements of “Ready Player One”, “The Matrix”, and “The Truman Show” except those movies were all better and this one starts to skid off into incoherency after a while. Still, it throws in everything but the kitchen sink to never stop moving and give fans their money’s worth. Alex Trebek actually pops up in his final film cameo ever. Continue reading →