Decision to Leave (2022) dir. Park Chan-wook
The only Movie of the Year I care about.
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Decision to Leave (2022) dir. Park Chan-wook
The only Movie of the Year I care about.
MICHELLE YEOH â wins the award for Best Actress for her performance in âEverything Everywhere All At Onceâ at the 95th Annual Academy Awards (March 12, 2023)
Stephanie Hsu attends the 95th Oscars - Dolby Theatre, Los Angeles - March 12th, 2023
Iâm bad, and thatâs good! I will never be good, and thatâs not bad!
Wonât You Be My Neighbor (2018)
I think I would've enjoyed this a lot more if they told about Fred Rogers early life. I enjoyed the show as a kid, but I was a kid and didn't have good taste. The archival footage was cool, because I always like found footage. It was especially cool to see how he engaged with people and how the show adapted after he went away. Itâs also good to remember how famous he was for a while.
I did enjoy the part where he got PBS funding in Congress by testifying, but besides that....the pacing was weird and the animations were completely unnecessary.
I never knew about his Old Friends, New Friends show after he stopped filming old episodes of Mr. Rogers Neighborhood. That said, it felt saccharine. I appreciate his sincerity while he lived, and that he touched so many lives. It's more than we can say about a lot of folks, but I don't feel bad about avoiding the film until now.
Watching the show as a kid, Iâm not sure that I really learned anything or have particularly fond memories of the show besides the intro song and the consistency of him always putting on those sweaters. Perhaps it was because I was too young to really metabolize what the lessons were.Â
If thereâs a lesson from the show, itâs the value of what public television offers in ways that you canât always get from other networks. Getting the chance to experiment, be creative, and explore your ideas is a really powerful thing especially to a wider audience like Fred Rogers was able to.
Ant Man and the Wasp (2018)
Being a sequel is hard, and being a sequel when the first movie of the franchise to be witty is even harder. Ant-Man and the Wasp is hard to review in some ways because itâs competently done, but forgettable. Paul Rudd is good at playing Scott Lang-- who is now under house arrest-- and juggling his desire to be a good a present dad and be Ant-Man.
Except, he isnât. Not really. His ex-wife is supportive, his precocious daughter had all the lines of the supportive girlfriend trope except she was a child. so that was a little strange.Â
Instead, the plot is about Hope Van Dyne trying to rescue her mom from the Quantum land (I know itâs not called that, but I like it better), and Scott trying to re-ingratiate himself after he went to fight with Captain American and didnât tell them. Also, thereâs a well-manufactured clock in the plot to make it all feel urgent.Â
This is all well done. The script has some good jokes, the visuals are great, but they gave away the best parts in the trailer, which is not a choice I would make.
This review says nothing? Maybe? But the movie also doesnât, which works for summer.Â
Jump Tomorrow (2001)
I first saw this movie sometime last year. It was the middle of the night and I wanted something to watch as a fell asleep. This movie kept popping up on my recommendations via Netflix and I kept ignoring it, mostly because the cover art didnât reveal anything about it and I hadnât bothered to read the description. I think I pushed play without having much of an idea of what it was really about.Â
Then I stayed up until 4am watching it and propelled it into the pantheon of my favorite movies. I realize that this makes me an odd duck, because few people have seen it and the people Iâve suggested it to havenât come away riveted, but maybe Iâm not asking the right people?
Jump Tomorrow is the story of an office worker named George and a quirky free spirit named Alicia. George is Nigerian and has been setup by his family for an arranged marriage, while Alicia is hitchhiking up the east coast with her boyfriend â a former professor of hers. The two meet via happenstance and something understated and unusual happens.Â
The whole movie is whimsical, borderline campy and yet understated and cute all at the same time. Itâs not cerebral, the acting wonât blow you away and yet, everyone fills their role well and the story moves along briskly. Itâs an unconventional love story that traffics in the business of subtleness.
If youâre looking for a cute movie to waste time with, consider popping in Jump Tomorrow and see what you think.Â
Mid90s (2018) - Trailer
hmm...itâs time for lots of 90s nostalgia, I guess. Weâll see how this one plays out.
Kin (2018) - Trailer
This might be interesting. Saw a trailer and left intrigued.
Eighth Grade (2018)
I love a good coming of age movie, so after hearing all of the positive buzz (on Twitter, a terrible barometer for whatâs going to be good, tbh.) I decided to double feature this after seeing Blindspotting.
It was certainly a breezier film at times. The comedy was biting, Elsie Fisher was a star depicting Kayla. From there, the film is extremely uneven. The parts depicting social media culture in the current day had a lot of resonance, but the pacing felt off.Â
Itâs hard for me to write about the film without giving away spoilers, but there are just a dizzying array of choices made that donât reflect the average reality this film is depicting, and it gives you a lot more questions than answers. Where is Kaylaâs mother and what happened to her and the dad? Clearly it mustâve been tragic, which is why he lets her basically do whatever she wants.Â
In a world full of overscheduled teens, I had a difficult time believing much of what Eighth Grade wanted me to take at face value. Iâm inherent skeptical of a dude writing about a young womanâs experience anyway, which frankly was the hardest hurdle for me to jump over, in watching this.Â
The longer I watched, the harder it became for me to understand what resonated about this film for so many people, when it somewhat transparently appeared to be a film that an adult wrote about what they perceived to be stitches of awkward times.Â
Like the other indie films Iâve reviewed recently, Burnham gets points for attention to detail things that made the film immerse you, and Fisherâs deadpan and schlumpy awkwardness, coupled with a very real depiction of anxiety were handled very well. There were fragments of a good film somewhere, but this almost felt like a story thatâd have been better as a Netflix one-off series handled by the BBC so weâd get potentially better drawn characters, an opportunity to understand the âwhyâ and not just husks of potential storylines being discarded to deliver us to an unsatisfying ending.
June Richmond and Bea Griffith in 1947 film, Reet, Petite and Gone
Sorry To Bother You (2018)
Sorry To Bother You isnât a film I watched in a present reality which made it easier to watch. Itâs taking place in a world similar to ours, but with some differences. I appreciated its sharp takes on late capitalism and the ways that politicians are complicit on all ends of the spectrum in selling people out for baubles whenever itâs politically expedient.Â
The entire cast does a good job, the story itself is just plain weird and doesnât stop being weird throughout. Personally, Iâve yearned for movies that are just strange but have black characters in them, because so many movies -- of an indie sort -- have tended to depict worlds where weâre in the background or just donât seem to exist at all. Sorry To Bother You in some ways is challenging art, part sci-fi, and fantasy, while being a very relevant commentary on the challenges (and pitfalls) of âmaking it.â Much like my criticism of Blindspotting, âSorry To Bother Youâ seems to obscure black women (besides Tessa Thompson) in a city like Oakland which is a glaring oversight.Â
Sorry To Bother You is worth seeing. It ends better than an earlier effort to tell similar themes - Spike Leeâs Bamboozled - did, but I felt it certainly was inspired by that effort, and if you havenât seen it, add it to your list.
Blindspotting (2018)
Blindspotting is one part buddy movie, one part exploration of a real-life struggle that plays out in cities all the time. The connection between Diggs and Casal could simply not be faked, which was truly where the film shined. The supporting cast did a very good job, but were not especially drawn in complex ways. This film does the details so well, but the overall story tried to cram a lot of complexities into 90 minutes. The most glaring part of the movie for me, was how is it possible you set a movie in Oakland and somehow the only dark skinned black women who stand out are the main characterâs mother, and a bit player later in the film.Â
Iâm sure it was really a movie about his lived experience, but itâs a common thread among the two major releases that came out of Oakland this year and it shows why we need a broader array of filmmakers telling stories rather than relegating women to support roles.
Nonetheless, Blindspotting did the comedy and reflecting the relationship between two best friends well. It also showcased a real love for a city that is evolving rapidly.Â
Like many Americans, I used my Fourth of July holiday to perform my patriotic duty and watch a summer blockbuster, in this case, Pixarâs Incredibles 2. Overall, I found the movie to be an improvement over its (pretty good) predecessor, but I was left with some disturbing questions. First and foremost, just how, exactly, does the law work in the Incredibles universe?
The series will be run by Gossip Girl/Runaways creators Josh Schwartz and Stephanie Savage.
Finally someone has been reading my tweets about this idea.Â
Ali Wong: Hard Knock Wife
I didnât see Ali Wongâs previous standup special, so all of the jokes are new to me. While Iâm not huge on physical comedy, and there are surely too many raunchy jokes that arenât really to my taste, Wongâs delivery and writing are top notch. This special coupled with her work on Fresh Off The Boat makes her one of the best minds in comedy right now.