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VERONICA (2017) - REVIEW + SPANISH HD TRAILER

Verónica (2017)


Madrid, 1990s. After making an Ouija with friends, a teenager is besieged by dangerous supernatural presences that threaten to harm her whole family. Inspired by terrifying police files never solved.

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Madrid, June of 1991. Verónica is a teenage girl surpassed by the circumstances after her father recently, her mother works on a bar all day and she must care of her three younger brothers, twin girls Lucía and Irene and youngest Antoñito. Still mourning by her father's death, Verónica decides to play Ouija with her friends Rosa and Diana, taking advantage a total solar eclipse where all classmates and teachers are on the school's rooftop watching it. Alone on the cellar, the girls try contact their recent deceased familiars, but the session get wrong and Verónica vanishes. Hiding to her mother the happening, Verónica starts to feel strange presences on the house, fearing that these ghosts threat to anybody of her brothers. Advised by Sister Narcisa (nickmaned by the children as Sister Death) about the sinister spirits close to her, Verónica looking for a way to break the contact with the ghosts to save all, suffering hallucinations and horrible visions that progressively up in ...  

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25 August 2017 (Spain)  »

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El expediente  »

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Making its international bow at TIFF next month, Paco Plaza’s ‘Veronica’ puts a supernatural spin on a real-life Spanish case from the 1990s. 

As one half of the directing tandem responsible for the Spanish [REC] horror franchise, Paco Plaza has a reputation to maintain. [REC] 3: Genesis, which he helmed solo, was essentially comedy-slasher fare, making Veronica his first feature-length excursion into more psychological, Conjuring-style horror — and, aided by some great child performances, plenty of stylistic chutzpah and a strong sense of place, he makes it work, despite the project’s overall lack of finesse.

Veronica’s forthcoming TIFF appearance and likely positive buzz among the horror fraternity — the bloggers of Spain, for starters, are over the moon that such Emily Rose creepiness might be unspooling in their own backyard — should guarantee a degree of international interest for this latest cinematic riff on how adolescents are really just little monsters in disguise.

The credits take place over an impressively chilling sequence involving a terrified call to the cops. Onscreen titles proudly announce that what we’re going to see is based on a real-life story that took place in 1992, when a teenage girl in a south Madrid barrio flirted with our old friend Ouija and was briefly hospitalized and died. (Though it’s apparently based on the police report of the case, the script plays fast and loose with the facts.)

Veronica (Sandra Escacena, debuting and carrying practically the whole weight of the film on her young back) is a student at a religious school; her father is dead, her mother (Ana Torrent, famously the little girl from Victor Erice’s classic The Spirit of the Beehive, Spain’s definitive children-in-trouble movie and the final girl in Alejandro Amenabar’s debut Thesis) works long hours in a bar. So Veronica, who is presented from the outset as a dutiful, responsible young woman and not an accident waiting to happen, is effectively bringing up her younger siblings — Lucia (Bruna Gonzalez), Irene (Claudia Placer) and her tough-but-cute, bespectacled 5-year-old brother Antonito (Ivan Chavero) — whilst also being ripe for possession.

Veronica and her pals Rosa (Angela Fabian) and Diana (Carla Campra) buy an occult mag and get out the Ouija board to contact Diana’s boyfriend, who died in a motorcycle crash. But they accidentally dial the wrong Ouija number and end up making contact with Veronica’s father instead. Standard horror tropes pile up — the glass breaking on the board, the objects which take on a life of their own and red stuff coming out of Veronica’s mouth (in a nicely homely Spanish touch, the red stuff is the healthy portion of meatballs she’s having for dinner). Entertainingly but superfluously, there is even a blind, ciggie-puffing (and possibly dead) nun called Sister Narciso (Consuelo Trujillo) on hand to explain to Veronica with black humor the mechanisms of reversing what she’s accidentally set in motion.

Veronica keeps waking up screaming after horrible dreams about her father: The doctor tells her she has low blood pressure and asks whether she is having periods yet, which brings in a new trope — that of the seriously stained mattress. Though none of this is very new or interesting, it’s slickly done. But what is interesting is how much of this is Veronica’s imagination, and how much is "real." The killer triangle of dead father, absent mother and religious (read: “supernatural”) education have clearly made the poor girl the way she is. We do indeed feel her pain, but the script doesn’t want to go there.

The real horror in Veronica is not in the CGI visuals, or in Pablo Rosso's frantic cinematography, or in the aural bombardment of sound effects and music; it’s in the relationship between the children (who are all played with a wonderful naturalism, apparently helped along by judicious improvisation). Slowly their sister’s dark new world infects them and their innocence is destroyed, entirely plausibly: Given this pearl of a chance, the debuting Escacena seizes it with both hands, and it’s both appalling and touching to watch her psychological decline.

But Torrent is a letdown. In the only major adult role, she feels miscast, and her relationship with the kids is disappointingly one-dimensional and lacking in the tenderness which would have brought a more human touch.

Another negative is that Veronica is lacking in subtlety and truth — those little details of psychological characterization that make a film not only realistic, but shudderingly real. This is mainly down to Plaza’s wish to drive everything through at breakneck speed and his boyish enthusiasm for jump scares — while the viewer never gets to see how Veronica herself might be feeling about what is happening to her, which keeps her a little too remote.

Careful attention has been paid to the '90s period detail, which Plaza obviously knows and has a fondness for — for example, in the interiors and in the music, which features such iconic Spanish bands as Heroes del Silencio and Bunbury. Much of the film’s value is how credible all this good contextual work makes it feel.
This Veronica is not to be confused with Carlos Algara and Alejandro Martinez-Beltran’s same-name drama, which appeared recently at FrightFest.
  
The movie is one of the biggest surprises and really really great.
 

8/10 genre

7.5/10 overall

 
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TALES OF AN IMMORAL COUPLE (2016) - REVIEW + HD TRAILER ENG

La vida inmoral de la pareja ideal (2016)



Martina and Lucio meet again 25 years after their appasionate young romance.

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The story tells how Lucio and Martina, two young students met in the early years of school. With an indescribable chemistry, they decide to eat the world without imagining that fate and society have prepared a surprise that will tear them apart forever.

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28 October 2016 (Mexico)  »

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Tales Of An Immoral Couple  »

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A former couple’s chance meeting sets a masquerade in motion in a screwball comedy by Mexican writer-director Manolo Caro. 

There are two narrative strands in the new rom-com from Manolo Caro. In the main action, two 40-somethings go to farcical lengths to deny their still-powerful feelings for each other. The second thread explores their impetuous teenage romance. The former could stand quite well without the other, but in Tales of an Immoral Couple (La vida inmoral de la pareja ideal), Caro and his appealing cast strike a winning balance between the familiar and the fresh. By turns ardent and absurd, the movie doesn’t quite suspend disbelief but embraces it, to charming effect.
Finding its own, fluid pulse — with fine work by a trio of editors — the pic’s push-pull nostalgia is fueled by pop music and dance, as well as affection for San Miguel de Allende, the arts-centric Mexican city where much of the action unfolds. Tonatiuh Martinez’s widescreen lensing favors symmetrical compositions that emphasize the story's comic artifice, with Fernanda Guerrero’s bright production design putting its own stamp on the feature’s Almodovar Lite sensibility.

Though they’re determined to prove otherwise, Martina (Cecilia Suarez, excellent) and Lucio (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo) have essentially been waiting for each other for 25 years. Even after a quarter-century, their bond is so intense that they instantly recognize each other’s voices after only a few overheard words in the random store where they cross paths. Flustered and smitten all over again, they both invent marriages for themselves on the spot and then have to recruit friends to play the invented parts during an upcoming night at the theater.

With the lure of a year’s free rent, Martina gets her tenant, Igor (Juan Pablo Medina), a depressed alcoholic writer, to play her hubby, while Queta (Nina Rubin), the mouthy 9-year-old daughter of her semiestranged sister, Beatriz (Mariana Trevino), is cast in the role of her kid. Lucio’s pregnant friend Loles (a terrifically game Paz Vega) eagerly digs into the chance to thesp out as his wife, but she and her husband, Vicente (Andres Almeida), complicate the ruse with their own secret.

The awkward fiction the grown-ups create, which culminates in a sharply played, vivaciously silly dinner scene, is intercut with the central duo’s memories of their love story. As the teenage Martina and Lucio, Ximena Romo and Sebastian Aguirre give the Catholic high schoolers’ connection an earnest, sensual curiosity. He fearlessly joins the school’s otherwise-female ballet class in order to be near her, and Caro’s zingy screenplay condenses the initial stages of their friendship into a few breezy yet charged scenes.

The filmmaker treats the young couple’s drugs-and-sex experimentation with refreshing respect, rather than sensationalism. At the same time, he casts an ambivalent eye toward a couple of adults — Martina’s dance teacher (Javier Jattin) and an erotic photographer (Erendira Ibarra) — who become a part of their adventure. But the soapy melodrama involving Martina’s best friend (Natasha Dupeyron) that eventually tears the two apart doesn't have quite the intended impact. It doesn’t so much enrich the present-day action as punctuate it.

The contrast between the moralistic and the open-minded that Caro addresses in the memory sequences simply hasn’t the oomph of the adults’ folly, with its ridiculously emphatic rejection of sentiment. It’s the deliriously silly grown-ups — written, directed and performed with such fine-tuned friction — who are irresistible.

The movie is great in the genre but not good if I compare it to others.

 7.5/10 genre

5/10 overall


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LEATHERFACE (2017) - REVIEW + HD TRAILER

Leatherface (2017)


A teenage Leatherface escapes from a mental hospital with three other inmates, kidnapping a young nurse and taking her on a road trip from hell while being pursued by an equally deranged lawman out for revenge.

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20 October 2017 (USA)  »

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Texas Chainsaw 4  »

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French directing duo Alexandre Bustillo and Julien Maury craft a respectful origin story for the long-running 'Texas Chainsaw Massacre' horror franchise. 

A landmark in hillbilly horror, the late Tobe Hooper’s grungy 1974 slasher classic The Texas Chain Saw Massacre has so far spawned seven sequels and reboots of variable quality. Erasing the traces of previous origin stories, Leatherface pitches itself as a canonical prequel to the original. It is certainly a superior film to its most recent franchise predecessor, Texas Chainsaw 3D (2013), which earned damning reviews but still turned a healthy profit. Hooper died just as this latest installment received its world premiere at FrightFest in London last weekend. He is credited as executive producer here, an unintended but respectable epitaph to his half-century career in movies.

French directing duo Alexandre Bustillo and Julien Maury, best known for their terrific 2007 debut Inside, deliver a superior pulp shocker with their English-language debut. Leatherface was shot in low-cost Bulgaria with a mostly European cast and crew, but it feels more like a stylish indie production than a cheap grindcore knockoff. The gory carnage is sparingly but vividly staged, the suspense-driven plot twisty enough to tax the brain. Seasoned U.S. players Lili Taylor and Stephen Dorff also add modest marquee value. The film makes its North American debut via DirecTV on Sept. 21 ahead of simultaneous VOD and limited theatrical release on Oct. 20.

At the ramshackle Sawyer family farm in rural Texas in 1955, a young Jed Sawyer (Boris Kabakchiev) proves squeamish when his demonic mother Verna (Taylor) tries to initiate him into the clan tradition of chainsaw slaughter. But the boy later plays his dutiful role in a macabre roadside ambush, donning animal skins to lure a passing couple into a grisly trap. Enraged after his daughter is murdered by the Sawyers, vengeful sheriff Hal Hinton (Dorff) has insufficient evidence to convict Verna, but he punishes her anyway by removing Jed to a state mental infirmary, Gorman House.

Ten years later, new nurse Lizzy White (Vanessa Grasse) begins work at Gorman House just as Verna Sawyer fails in her latest legal bid to get Jed released. Her grown-up son is now a stranger to her, his name changed for his own protection, a shamelessly dramatic contrivance designed to keep viewers guessing for the next hour. Mission accomplished.

The hospital is a gothic purgatory where insubordinate inmates suffer a sadistic regime of electroconvulsive therapy. When a bloody riot breaks out, Lizzy is taken hostage and forced to go on the run with a gang of escapees: the childlike Bud (Sam Coleman), the sweetly protective Jackson (Sam Strike) and the bloodthirsty psycho-lovers Ike (James Bloor) and Clarice (Jessica Madsen). There are some fairly overt movie homages here, from Badlands to One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest to Natural Born Killers.

With Dorff’s sweaty, unshaven, increasingly trigger-happy lawman in bloodthirsty pursuit, the runaways leave a trail of bodies on their doomed rush to the Mexican border. A tense meal break at a roadside diner becomes a brain-exploding shotgun massacre. An overnight shelter in a remote trailer ends in a necrophiliac sex orgy — but hey, we’ve all had crazy nights like that, right? Jed’s identity is not difficult to guess, especially once the gang begins dying off in gunfights and car chases. But such are the formulaic thrills of genre movies, serving up a checklist of guilty pleasures with Pavlovian predictability.

Leatherface is not a wildly original reboot, it simply brings a breath of refreshingly foul air to a moribund franchise. Commendably, it also manages to remain gripping while avoiding the self-referential irony and sexualized torture-porn that has dominated much of horror over the last two decades. The climactic chainsaw-wielding bloodbath will surprise nobody, but it has a satisfying splatterpunk energy that Tobe Hooper himself would surely have relished.
 

7/10 genre

6/10 overall


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LAST FLAG FLYING (2017) - TRAILER

Last Flag Flying (2017)






Thirty years after they served together in Vietnam, a former Navy Corpsman Larry "Doc" Shepherd re-unites with his old buddies, former Marines Sal Nealon and Reverend Richard Mueller, to bury his son, a young Marine killed in the Iraq War.

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3 November 2017 (USA)
 
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My Favorite Things From the Week of August 20



Trending Star of the Week

It's safe to say that Brigette Lundy-Paine is having the summer of her acting life. This August, she introduced herself to moviegoers as the adult Maureen Walls, Jeannette Walls' youngest sibling, in The Glass Castle. But it's her most recent work in Netflix's "Atypical" that's garnering the actress new fans on IMDb. In the series, Lundy-Paine plays Casey Gardner, a protective presence to her autistic brother Sam. The show has generated varied reactions about its treatment of some challenging themes and issues. But among IMDb users, there's clear consensus about Lundy-Paine's appeal: She's catapulted to No. 7 on IMDb's STARmeter. What's next for the actress? A role in The Wilde Wedding alongside Glenn Close.

Box Office Milestone We Love

At a time when the movie industry is licking its wounds from underwhelming summer box-office receipts, Girls Trip has at least two reasons to celebrate: It is the first live-action comedy of the year to reach $100 million at the U.S. box office, and it's also the first movie made by an African American cast and director/writer/producer team to surpass $100 million as well. Bootyhole!

Flashback of the Week

Ahead of the 3D rerelease of Terminator 2: Judgment Day, we sat down with actor Robert Patrick, who chilled us to the bone in 1991 with his portrayal of a liquid-metal killing machine. In reality, the star could not have been more affable and was happy to recreate a short moment of his scary performance for us while recounting the reason why the film holds up after all these years. He even recalled how he had a crush on co-star Linda Hamilton. The T-1000 and Sarah Connor. Who could have imagined?!

Brain-Freezing Fashion Moment of the Week

When all the dragon fire went out and the lake froze over again, one of many lasting images from "Beyond the Wall," the most recent "Game of Thrones" episode, was ... Daenerys' incredible winter coat. Resembling a piece of outerwear we'd expect to see on a return to planet Hoth, the heavily structured and furred garment was as breathtaking as the first flights of Drogon, Rhaegal, and Viserion.

Origin Story Announcement of the Week

With all the successful superhero origin stories sprouting up for movie fans, we were wondering when a supervillain's background would finally be explored. Looks like we won't have to wait much longer as Warner Bros. and DC announced they would be digging into the origins of the iconic Joker. Todd Phillips, director of The Hangover franchise will direct and co-write the gritty '80s-era Gotham tale with screenwriter Scott Silver (The Fighter, 8 Mile). With Martin Scorsese coming on as a producer, we're super excited to hear more, especially who will be cast to play Jack Napier, the man who becomes the Joker.

TV Teaser of the Week

He's coming … and we'll be watching. Netflix revealed its first teaser trailer for "The Punisher," a standalone series starring Jon Bernthal, who brought his incarnation of the titular character to life in Season 2 of Marvel's "Daredevil." The teaser, which features Punisher pounding his insignia into cement with a sledgehammer, also shows glimpses of what appears to be Frank Castle's backstory. One thing's for sure: The cold brutality of the trailer promises a continuation of the serious tone we saw in "Daredevil."

Lifetime Achiever of the Week

We can never give IMDb fan favorite Morgan Freeman enough accolades for his impressive body of work on the big screen. This week, he earned yet another professional achievement with the announcement that he'll be the 54th recipient of the Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award. It's a fitting honor for an actor who's won both an Oscar and a SAG award, been nominated for four other Academy Awards, and has starred in nearly 100 films. Oh, and let's not forget his work in The Shawshank Redemption, which stands atop IMDb's Top Rated Movies chart. Don't ever retire, Mr. Freeman.

Movie Release Date Announcement of the Week

Mother of god! Super Troopers 2 is finally coming to theaters, and we're freaking out, man! On April 20, 2018, Thorny, Farva, Rabbit, Mac and Captain O'Hagan return to the big screen after a 16-year hiatus, and they have a bunch of new shenanigans in store. This time around, the Troopers are called upon to establish a Highway Patrol station during a border dispute between the U.S. and Canada. Mounties vs. Vermont's finest? Needless to say, we're stocking up on maple syrup bottles right meow! 


Renewal of the Week

Our wait for the Oct. 27 premiere of "Stranger Things" Season 2 just got a little easier now that the Duffer brothers have confirmed that we will be getting a third and probably fourth season of the sci-fi series. We know that Season 2 is supposed to be larger in scope and darker in tone, but what will that mean for Season 3? Will things get even worse? Either way, we are counting the days and happy to know that the one of our favorite shows is not ending anytime soon. See the "Stranger Things" cast in and out of costume

New York Superhero Episode of the Week

Have you watched and rated "The Defenders"? The show currently has a strong 8.1 user rating, but Episode 3 has the strongest rating of 9.1. If you've already started watching, be sure to rate your favorite episodes. And if you haven’t started watching yet, be sure to make it at least to Episode 3.

Learn more about "The Defenders" and the stars who play them

Tribute of the Week
We bid a sad farewell to Jerry Lewis, the beloved comedian, who died at 91. The star was perhaps best known for his comedy pairing with Dean Martin, his unparalleled slapstick performances, and his fundraising telethons. But he also found renown as an actor in films such as The King of Comedy and remained vital even into his late 80s, with the likes of Max Rose playing the Cannes Film Festival in 2013. Lewis was an inspiration to countless performers, including Jim Carrey, who paid tribute by simply saying: "He was a blessing."

TV Casting Announcement of the Week

We're excited to hear that Timothy Hutton is joining the upcoming Netflix series "The Haunting of Hill House." A prequel in the style of "Bates Motel," the series tells the story of the Crains, the family of the old woman who last inhabited Hill House before that fateful summer detailed in the novel. The addition of Hutton to the cast suggests a gravitas worthy of Jackson and the 1963 movie adaptation directed by Robert Wise. We're keeping our fingers crossed.

Get more TV casting updates


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DEATH NOTE (2017) - REVIEW

Death Note (2017)


Light Turner, a bright student, stumbles across a mystical notebook that has the power to kill any person whose name he writes in it. Light decides to launch a secret crusade to rid the ...

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25 August 2017 (USA)  »

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Desu noto  »

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2.35 : 1 
 
Light Turner, a bright student, stumbles across a mystical notebook that has the power to kill any person whose name he writes in it. Light decides to launch a secret crusade to rid the streets of criminals. Soon, the student-turned-vigilante finds himself pursued by a famous detective known only by the alias L.
 

'Blair Witch' director Adam Wingard's Netflix original movie co-stars Nat Wolff, Lakeith Stanfield and Willem Dafoe.

Netflix's adaptation of the Japanese manga Death Note marks the latest incarnation of this well-established property, which has seen numerous previous movie, TV and anime treatments in Japan and overseas, but no prior live-action English-language version. With the streamer's global reach, the latest iteration will easily attract a worldwide audience in conjunction with a limited U.S. theatrical run, but building an eventual franchise on the back of director Adam Wingard's latest feature may prove more challenging across such a wide variety of territories and cultures.
Teenage wish-fulfillment fantasies, while sometimes violent, rarely involve the intervention of a Japanese "shinigami" death god, but writer Tsugumi Ohba and illustrator Takeshi Obata's Death Note manga, first serialized in 2003, relies more on supernatural elements than a typical thriller. The transference of this plot device in Jeremy Slater's script, co-written by Charley Parlapanides and Vlas Parlapanides, doesn't always play out altogether smoothly, but the film's high school setting will be comfortably familiar to American audiences.
Brainy loner Light Turner (Nat Wolff) can't seem to catch a break: Between beatdowns by the school bullies and stern lectures from his widowed Seattle police detective dad James (Shea Whigham), he's always on the defensive. It's not until a mysterious leather-bound antique notebook literally falls from the sky at his feet that he begins to gain the upper hand. Inscriptions in the book, titled Death Note, explain that writing somebody's name on the ancient parchment pages and imagining their face will result in their almost instantaneous death. Further elucidation of the book's power is provided by Ryuk (Willem Dafoe), an 8-foot-tall, porcupine-spined shinigami who controls the Death Note and appears to Light every time he opens it up, while remaining invisible to anyone else.
Ryuk encourages Light to test the Death Note's power, and soon he's targeting terrorists and criminals worldwide for elimination. In order to conceal his identity, he adopts the pseudonym Kira, a Japanese approximation of "killer." Light's secretiveness surrounding the book attracts the attention of badass cheerleader Mia (Margaret Qualley), who eagerly goads Light into claiming more victims after she effortlessly seduces him.

With the death count topping 400, the mysterious Kira becomes a worldwide phenomenon, celebrated for ridding the world of unrepentant criminals, while at the same time topping law-enforcement's most-wanted list. The Japanese authorities recruit the American teen super-sleuth known only as "L" (Lakeith Stanfield) to track down Kira and bring him to justice. When L takes the hunt to Seattle, recruiting James for his investigative team, Light suddenly realizes that his anonymity may not be assured, just as Ryuk and Mia push him to step up his vigilante campaign.
The potentially problematic Ryuk character succeeds largely due to clever casting, with Dafoe supplying layers of sardonic humor and nerve-rattling cackles to punctuate his most emphatic line readings. In a role far removed from his performances in YA titles like ​Paper Towns and ​The Fault in Our Stars​, Wolff's Light Turner, despite being saddled with an cringingly obvious name, evinces a sympathetic degree of moral confusion once he begins to understand the frightening power of the Death Note.

Stanfield, whose L character wears a black turtleneck covering the lower half of his face to conceal his identity for two-thirds of the movie, impresses as more self-conscious than mysterious, never quite developing a three-dimensional identity. Qualley's Mia, on the other hand, is very clearly delineated, and the actress seizes the role with enthusiasm, squeezing as much disruptive unpredictability as possible into a disappointingly truncated arc.

The film's frequent violence, blood and gore would surely earn an R rating in the U.S., but Netflix doesn't need to worry about that with a streaming release (the theatrical version will go out unrated). Even so, Death Note is a far sight tamer than Wingard's typical horror fare, lacking either the manic terror of You're Next or the deadly irony of The Guest, for instance. Rather than relying on amplifying typical genre conventions, Wingard methodically lays the foundation to set up this particular Death Note adaptation for a potential sequel, but the outcome is more deliberate than inspired.


3/10 genre

2/10 overall


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GIRL ON THE EramDGE (2015) - REVIEW

Girl on the Edge (2015)



A troubled teenager falls victim to an online predator. Unable to cope with the trauma, Hannah Green becomes self destructive, and her parents make the heartbreaking decision to send her away to an alternative healing center in the wilderness.

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13 wins & 1 nomination.

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23 February 2015 (USA)  »

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The Secret Place  »

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 Girl on the Edge is the award-winning powerful true story of a troubled teenager who falls victim to an online predator. Unable to cope with the trauma, Hannah becomes self destructive, and her parents make the heartbreaking decision to send her away to an alternative healing center in the wilderness. With it's unconventional approach to therapy, and with the help of an eclectic staff and horse named Betsy, Hannah begins to learn that the path to recovery is sometimes the one less traveled. 

Sexual trauma is a serious situation. In the prolific film Girl On The Edge filmmaker Jay Silverman compassionately focuses on the message that no-one wants to face or talk about. With the instant commands in today’s society & extreme pressure from social media it’s has become an even deeper matrix.
The script writers Joey Gamache & Joey Curtis (Blue Valentine) captured the authentic moments of life and gentle circumstances. It was an all-star cast with the lead actor (ABC Family sitcom Melissa & Joey) Taylor Spreitler’s performance was rich, so vulnerable and shined in her darkest moments.

Jay Silverman has excelled as a leading Director, Producer, and Photographer for over 30 years specializing in award-winning television, digital, and print campaigns; having worked with renowned celebrities such as Denzel Washington, Beyonce, Quentin Tarantino, Jamie Foxx, and Ray Charles.
Silverman Co-Created and Executive Produced A&E’s “The Cleaner", starring Benjamin Bratt; an hour long drama based on a real life interventionist who uses unorthodox methods to save lives of those who battle addictions.
Other notable shows include “Roots 30 Year Anniversary Special” for TV One, “The Secret Things of God” for Fox, and “D’Jango Unchained”, a one hour special for Weinstein Company.
A graduate of Brooks Institute in Santa Barbara with a Master of Science Degree, Jay founded Jay Silverman Productions in 1979 in Hollywood California, and built a 40,000 square foot facility including 3 sound stages.

Though its hard to believe that I began this journey nearly five years ago, Girl on the Edge was—and remains—a deeply personal project for me, as well as everyone whose hard work and dedication helped it come this far. Among those deserving of my thanks and gratitude is my daughter, whose poem is what originally inspired me to make the film. I remember reading it for the first time very clearly, as it described a rape as only a survivor could, which was devastating enough to read as a father, but it wasn’t until I found a program where she could receive treatment—a place I never even knew existed—and realized the potential our story had to help others liker her that I was convinced that it was also a story worth sharing. It is my hope that whether you relate to this story as a survivor or an ally of one that you will find Girl on the Edge as healing and empowering to watch as it was for me to make. - Jay Silverman 

Maheo Academy, the fictional facility where Girl on the Edge protagonist Hannah Green receives treatment for post-traumatic stress, is loosely based on the Residential Treatment Center (or RTC) Uinta Academy in Wellsville, UT, and the Wilderness Therapy Program Pacific Quest in Naalehu, HI. Both facilities are focused on treating adolescents struggling with a wide variety of behavioral, mental, and emotional health issues, and take a holistic approach to recovery.
In addition to its overarching philosophy and the portrayals of individual staff members, the on-screen depiction of Maheo drew extensively from the practices of its real-life sources. For example, Uinta Academy uses a warm homelike environment, Equine- Assisted Psychotherapy, and Parelli Natural Horsemanship much like Maheo does in the film, and the depictions of its Social Horticultural Therapy, model of sustainable living, and three-day “Solo” rite of passage were inspired by Pacific Quest. These methods, while drastically different from the clinical and pharmaceutical standards, have high rates of success in its young patients, the majori
 
I'm so thrilled to announce that this is a major winner of a film, not only the incredible writing and actors but the story itself is intense and deep and totally visceral. I couldnt help but feel the incredible outrage at the technology that allows young boys to use a particular app that can allow access to 15 year olds' homes, as well as the home fighting between daughter and Dad, between Dad and his new sweetheart.

Based on a true story that reveals the outpourings of romantic love, a rebellious spirit that goes awry and anger at everyone and everything, we find Hannah entering a wholistic healing center (with touches of shamanism) where famed actor Peter Coyote plays its director. Hannah's total rejection of all rules, her squirming at any discipline whatsoever contrasts deeply when she slowly melts and begins the journey of self discovery and opens herself to vulnerability, honesty and sharing her journey with other girls at the center. This is a profound film that will touch so many families who find themselves disconnected, where sex, drugs, continual distractions and shouting are all intertwined to show the absolute failure of isolated modern day affluent families. This is a story of privilege. Not many families can afford such treatment. Hopefully films like this will reveal the challenges, the needs, the precautions... and perhaps the schools, the churches, the local healing centers can be those bridges so more and more intelligent and heart felt modalities can happen amidst the watchful eyes of our youths adult care-takers.

This film is not only for young girls but parents, school teachers, politicians, app designers and healers of all stripes. Be sure to watch it all the way through to not only the footage of the real live Hannah but how the film team unusually and creatively worked with the acting horses. And the actress playing Hanna, Taylor Spreitler, will certainly be winning awards for her role!

8/10 genre

6/10 overall


But please pay attention here to the genre result, a must watch movie and most of all I will remember the amazing landscapes of the ranch, a place where I want to have the rest of my life. Thanks for reading and have fun watching movies.

OVERDRIVE (2017) - REVIEW

Overdrive (2017)


Two car thief brothers, who journey to the south of France for new opportunities, wind up in the cross hairs of the local crime boss.

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The story centers on two car thieves, brothers, who journey to the south of France for new opportunities and wind up in the cross hairs of the local crime boss. Andrew and Garrett Foster (Scott Eastwood and Freddie Thorp) are thieves who specialize in luxury cars, only the most expensive cars. They've been hired to steal a gorgeous Bugatti 1937 valued million euros, so they head to the south of France for the job. But they get caught, and Jacomo Morier (Simon Abkarian), the local crime boss who owns the Bugatti, doesn't take it lightly. In exchange for their lives the two brothers will have to steal a car from Max Klemp (Clemens Schick), Morier's arch-rival, and not any car, Morier wants them to steal Klemp's 1962 Ferrari 250 GTO, his most prized car.

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28 June 2017 (Philippines) 

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The phenomenal success of the Fast and the Furious series has inevitably spawned a spate of rubber-burning copycats, from the deluxe nerd porn of Edgar Wright’s wildly overpraised Baby Diver to more nakedly obvious cash-ins like this glossy French heist thriller. Parallels with the multibillion-dollar car-chase franchise are more than cosmetic. Overdrive’s American screenwriters Michael Brandt and Derek Haas scored their first hit with 2 Fast 2 Furious, while leading man Scott Eastwood had a minor role in the most recent blockbuster installment, The Fate of the Furious

Colombian helmer Antonio Negret is mostly known for his TV work, but producer Pierre Morel is the key name here. A graduate of the Luc Besson school of French-set, English-language action thrillers, Morel directed Liam Neeson in the first Taken movie back in 2008. Currently in U.K. theaters ahead of its French debut later this week, Overdrive is receiving a staggered European and Asian release before its U.S. launch. This kind of rollout is usually reserved for dead-in-the-water duds, but it worked for Taken and may yet help turbocharge the commercial prospects of this formulaic adolescent-male button-pusher, which is witless and brainless but not entirely joyless.

Eastwood and his vapid pretty-boy Brit co-star Freddie Thorp play transatlantic half-brothers who finance their international playboy lifestyle by stealing high-end classic sports cars for shady clients. Their current base of operations is the sun-drenched French port city of Marseille, where they make the grave error of hijacking a 1937 Bugatti Type 57 that has just sold at action for $41 million to a notorious local crime boss, Morier (Simon Abkarian). To avoid lethal punishment, the brothers rashly promise to purloin a priceless 1962 Ferrari 250 GTO from Morier’s even more brutal German rival Klemp (Clemens Schick). With French cops shadowing every move by both the thieves and mobsters, what could possibly go wrong?
Overdrive comes with all the standard features for this kind of cheerfully inane auto-erotic escapade. The twist-heavy plot is totally preposterous and the trite dialogue could have been written by a computer algorithm, but the breakneck car chases are staged with kinetic efficiency, making excellent use of the dramatic gorges and mountain roads north of Marseille. The two stars are blandly attractive eye candy, the villains cartoonish ogres with fortress-like villas and the female leads supermodel-pretty male-fantasy figures with implausibly geeky interests in cars and gadgets. Mechanic Pixie Dream Girls, in short.
That said, Cuban-born Ana de Armas (soon to be seen in Blade Runner 2049) radiates more kick-ass charisma than her thankless sidekick role might suggest. And Eastwood’s increasing resemblance to his superstar father lends a kind of eerie second-hand cool to his sardonic squint and unruffled manner, adding a vague approximation of depth to a resolutely shallow screenplay, just as Clint himself brought a touch of class to his own mid-career Eurotrash vehicles like Kelly’s Heroes or The Eiger Sanction. Fans of vintage Ferraris, Porsches, Bugattis, BMWs and more will also find plenty of buff bodywork to drool over here, since the film’s four-wheeled stars are lit and shot with more devotional attention to detail than even the most demanding Hollywood diva.

Untaxing as drama, thin as entertainment, but modestly enjoyable as a revved-up caper movie, Overdrive is pure escapist fluff with a light French accent. Which still makes it smarter, leaner and cooler than any of the Fast and the Furious films it shamelessly mimics.
  

5.5/10 genre

4/10 overall


Thanks for reading and have fun watching movies.

GEMINI (2017) - REVIEW

Gemini (2017)



 
A heinous crime tests the complex relationship between a tenacious personal assistant and her Hollywood starlet boss. As the assistant unravels the mystery, she must confront her own understanding of friendship, truth, and celebrity.

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12 March 2017 (USA)  »

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Playing the personal assistant to Zoe Kravitz as an impulsive Hollywood star, Lola Kirke becomes both suspect and investigator following a violent crime in Aaron Katz's Los Angeles-set neo-noir.
The flipped opening images of palm trees against an indigo night sky signal from the start that the Hollywood canvas of Aaron Katz's compelling mystery, Gemini, will be a disorienting jungle, not a La La Land of glittering dreams. The architecture and geography of Los Angeles are intriguing characters in this densely atmospheric neo-noir, which channels a seductive female gaze to consider questions of identity, celebrity and intimate relationships. While the payoff could have used some extra punch, the teasing path that leads there is bewitching, with Lola Kirke serving as an enigmatic guide.

Continuing something of a mini-trend started by Olivier Assayas in Clouds of Sils Maria and Personal Shopper, Gemini explores the ambiguities of the dynamic between female star and assistant, in this case blurring the lines separating professional service from co-dependent friendship, duty from devotion. As such, it represents a moody fusion of genre strands with a probing study of women's relationships, which should help draw a female audience to streaming platforms and perhaps some limited theatrical play.

Giving off a sleepy-eyed but smart vibe that recalls Chloe Sevigny at her best, Kirke plays Jill, whose skills with organization, mediation, damage control and conflict resolution are being put to the test by the impulsive behavior of her boss, Heather Anderson (Zoe Kravitz), a Hollywood starlet seeking a spell from the exhausting spotlight and the all-seeing eye of social media.
As the movie opens, Heather has bailed on boyfriend Devin (Reeve Carney), another celebrity tabloid fixture, in whose swanky Moroccan-style villa she's living, and is deep into a secret relationship with slinky female model Tracy (Greta Lee). Sending Jill to do her dirty work, Heather at the eleventh hour drops out of a feature commitment, making writer-director Greg (Nelson Franklin) insane and her agent Jamie (Michelle Forbes) furious. She's even refusing to do reshoots on a previous project. There's no shortage of pissed off people openly wishing they could kill the elusive Heather.

Meanwhile, Heather does her best to shut out the drama, hiding behind the shield of her mellow best-girlfriend rapport with Jill, who has her own ambitions to move up in the industry, possibly developing projects with her boss. Heather's need to shrug off responsibility may partly explain why she's so willing to indulge the attentions of look-alike superfan Sierra (Jessica Parker Kennedy), a borderline-stalker who ambushes her idol with Jill at an Eagle Rock eatery and is quick to post breathless Instagram evidence of the encounter.

Paparazzo Stan (James Ransone) is sniffing like a skeevy bloodhound around the story of Heather's seismic love life, and the pop of a flash convinces her that someone captured a shot of her in a smooch with Tracy. Confiding that she feels unsafe, Heather asks to borrow the .22 snub-nose revolver she's seen at Jill's apartment, which sure enough, not long after becomes the weapon in a bloody homicide.

All that happens in a superbly paced first half-hour or so, unfolding most of the way in richly textured nighttime scenes captured by cinematographer Andrew Reed's sinuous camera with splashes of neon color and pools of burnished low-light glow amid the inky blackness. Keegan DeWitt's electro-jazzy score adds to the unsettling effect, communicating from the start that danger pervades the air. Even a boozy moment of reprieve, in which Heather, Jill and Tracy escape reality with some private partying in a K-town karaoke bar, has a surreal, dream quality.
John Cho shows up in an initially promising role, though he ends up being underused as Detective Edward Ahn, who sidles up to the visibly traumatized Jill without making it entirely clear whether she's a serious suspect. But her self-protective instincts prompt her to keep giving him the slip as she begins pursuing her own trail of clues. That leads to testy encounters with cool-headed Jamie (the always-excellent Forbes is wonderfully brittle in her single scene), irrational Greg, volatile, douchy Devin and inscrutable Tracy, who conveniently keeps a hot motorcycle and fabulous leathers in her garage to provide Jill with a fast and furious exit.

There are droll meta aspects in Greg's reflection that if he were writing the screenplay, he'd be looking for motive, opportunity and capacity, making Devin the too-obvious culprit. But despite ably littering Jill's investigation with suspect characters and false leads, indie writer-director Katz (Cold Weather, Land Ho!) parcels out a few too many clear hints to make the eventual outcome either surprising or completely satisfying. The big reveal happens with a casual indifference that would have benefited from a tighter-coiled release, and a leap forward in the wrap-up scene (with a cameo from Ricki Lake) seems a tad thin in its commentary on obsessively scrutinized celebrities taking back control over their image. The sardonic twist doesn't quite pay off.
While it's consistently involving and often wryly amusing, the film works best as a character study of an observant outsider — Jill, like Katz, is a transplant from Portland, Ore. — navigating the Hollywood fishbowl, albeit in the far-reaching shadows. Seen often in mirrors or reflective windows, Kirke is terrific, maintaining just enough of a sphinx-like air to keep us questioning her behavior, while Kravitz also makes a strong impression as a flaky beauty whose entitlement doesn't exclude genuine affection or need.

Katz deftly manipulates mood and tension throughout, making expert use of locations in and around Los Angeles, from ultra-modern real-estate porn to vintage settings from an earlier era; from funky hideaway bars to sprawling exteriors overlooking the glimmering city below. He creates a sleek package that remains highly watchable, even if its denouement disappoints.

 
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