Thursday, March 7, 2024

#Movie #review #Dune Part 2

SPOILERS BELOW:

Director Denis Villeneuve's long-delayed (due to the Screen Actor's Guild strike), and long-awaited sequel to 2021's Dune, has already been widely praised as a masterpiece, and deservedly so. Epic, and not just for its nearly 3-hour run time, its a beautiful film, much of it being filmed in a vast desert.

The script is well written and actors Timotheé Chalamet as Paul Atreides, and Zendaya, his desert lover, Chani, return from Part 1, to fill the screen with youthful energy from the film's first moments, claiming it as their own. "Elvis" actor Austin Butler plays the nephew of Baron Harkonen, a worthy antagonist who also was well cast here, strutting with arrogance and hate on his family's dimly lit planet, where even fireworks appear black in the sky. 

Odd to see Christopher Walken as Galactic Emperor Shaddam IV, who seemed a bit sullen and detached here, but that suited his character.  Shaddam IV has watched from afar as the Atreides family became more and more powerful,  and he eventually acts by allowing their rivals on the desert planet Arrakis, the Harkonnens, to slaughter the Duke Atraides and his family, missing only the son,  Paul, who flees to the desert sands and comes to see himself as a messianic figure, and after discovering the emperor's role in his family's demise, a rival to the emperor,  himself, as Paul seemingly abandons his desert love for a strategic marriage alliance with the emperor's daughter, Irulan, played by Florence Pugh.

The films (two of three planned in a trilogy by the director) are based on books by Frank Herbert, who was a giant of the Golden Age of Science Fiction - the early 1950s thru the 1960s. His world-building skills were epic and detailed, peering thru the script here in details such as mentioning that the Atreides family had 90 "Atomics" hidden for generations in the mountains of the planet. 

The empire itself is thousands of years old, and yes,  the Herbert books influenced other works of science fiction such as Star Wars.

As one can tell, this is a lot to absorb, but seems lighter fare than the first part, which was just as long but was mostly background to the empire, the families and the Spice, which is mined from large Worm creatures that exist only on Arrakis, and somehow power or guide all spaceships in the Galaxy.

The sheer power of the story is evident mostly in its second half, as The young Atraides publicly proclaims himself Duke and leader of both his family and embraces prophesies that he will turn the planet into a green paradise.

His mother, Lady Jessica, (Rebecca Ferguson) widow of Duke Leto Atraides, has taken the position of leader of an all-female religion known as the Bene Gesserit order. She stokes talk of her son as a prophet, often to Paul's disdain and annoyance, before he, himself begins to believe his own propaganda and embraces the religious aspect of his mission.

The film needs every minute of its nearly three hours, filled with Herbert's commentary on political intrigue, rapacious corporate captitalism, religious fundamentalism, environmentalism, and more.

Wednesday, February 7, 2024

#Movie #Review The Beekeeper Delivers Action

 (Mild to Full Spoilers throughout)

In the Beekeeper,  directed by David Ayer and fairly tightly written by Kurt Wimmer, Jason Stratham is a literal beekeeper who is tending bee hives and making jars of honey for Phylicia. Rashad, a retired teacher from whom he has been renting a barn and has been a good friend for an unknown amount of time. 

He is also retired, but his quiet life is ripped apart when his friend is the victim of computer fraud and is tricked into giving the anonymous people on the phone all her savings and those of a charity she created and manages. Distraught, she kills herself. That's when Stratham's Adam Clay springs into action, vowing to find and punish thise responsible for the theft. 

He rather quickly finds the call center that was responsible for bilking his friend, burning it to the ground. Clearly, Clay has had some connections, and paramilitary training. We infer (but it's not explicit until an hour into the film) that he is retired from a secret government agency that watches over all levels of society.  

He doesn't stop there,  though. Beekeepers, even retired ones, are tanacious. Like bees from which his kind take their inspiration. 

But he's not alone. While he is seeking vengeance,  his friends daughter, FBI Agent Verona Parker (played by Emmy Raver-Lampman) seeks justice for her mother, and keeps Clay in line. Sonewhat.

Derek Danforth (Hunger Games actor Josh Hutcherson) is next in Clay's sights, since his family's company, Danforth Enterprises,  runs srveral call centers. We soon learn that it's a very well connected company indeed. 

Danforth is a drug-using pretty boy, protected by former CIA Director Wallace Westwyld,  played by veteran actor Jeremy Irons, who is paid by the family to keep Derek out of troustarsWhen he discovers the truth about Clay, ven he's terrified.

Clay continues rampaging, attacking a Boston call center and getting info about Derek's involvement.  He's undeterred, spelling out what's to come.  

But Parker, also on the trail, has alerted higher ups, including the Deputy FBI Director, who gives her the resources she needs, and meets with the President (Jemma Redgrave) who happens to be Derek's mother.

No more details, because it's about the end when you realize who she is and what may come.  But there are a couple of surprises and it looks like as sequel and actual Beekeeper franchise might be set up by the ending. Let's hope so.

Violent? Yes, in parts. Some flaws? Very few. Big actors doing great acting? Definitely.  See it if you enjoyed Stratham in the Transporter film, see this.  


Wednesday, January 24, 2024

#Movie #Review #I.S.S.: A Good, Not Great, Space Drama

I.S.S. is the best movie about the International Space Station of 2024. And the only one. So far. Obviously. 

That's not to say I didn't enjoy much of it. Many didn't, tho. It has only a 43% audiencer"fresh" rating on Rotten Tomatoes (As usual, 63% of critics were more forgiving and gave it a "fresh" rating)  Gravity (2012) is a tighter adventure story, big namestars, and a better script. 

This film is directed by Gabriela Cowperthwaite, whose documentary film Blackfish exposed and embarrassed Sea World's treatment of whales in captivity, got a 99% fresh rating by critics on the famous "Rotten" site.  Clearly, she does better with documentaries.

The film starts with a few on-screen paragraphs and establishing shots of the station itself, floating on the edge of space for over 20 years, inhabited in this film by American astronauts and Russian Cosmonauts. It's frequently had some from other nations as well, and it might have been better to have add a mix of Canadians, Germans and Japanese, as in real life. But maybe not. It would complicate what follows. 

The action opens with two new astronauts arriving at the station, joining three Russians and one American already on board.

 This, too is routine in real life. 

The new arrivals are greeted warmly by them, and the new astronaut (an American woman, one of two women and three Americans of a six-person crew) is shown the ropes of living on the station. Again, it looks and sounds authentic, based on video we've seen of the real thing.

The backgrounds the crew are maybe too fleshed out by the movie's half point, but despite some weak writing, the FX are really good for an allegedly low-budget film. Anyone who has seen pictures of the views from the actual ISS will recognize this accuracy, instantly. Weightlessness and the cramped quarters are also portrayed well throughout the film. 

Soon, despite assurances from veterans of the ISS that politics don't intrude on the station,  ostensibly devoted to science, both sides get messages that hostilities have broken out on Earth (verified by an American seeing what at first look like "volcanoes" out a station window. An American doing a spacewalk tells colleagues not to look out the windows on the ẁar- ravaged planet below.

Both sides are told in internet texts by their two governments to "Take control of the station. By any means necessary." Shortly afterwards,  communication is lost with earth, and power flickers.

The rest of the film is predictable, as a mini war erupts in space on the station. First with acts of sabotage, then murder, occurring. To the director's credit, it's not clear which, if any, of the six crew will survive, especially as the station begins to fall out of space - something all space agencies are planning to let happen in the next decade anyway, since it is cramped and outdated. 

In the meantime, it requires periodic  adjustments to keep it orbiting, 250 miles above the earth. For a while, it's uncertain if it will get one. Why it's important to "take control" of it, and what use it would have, remains unclear. A subplot of a crewman doing important, relevant research for a post-WWIII earth is a rare unbelievable note. 

It is good to know much of this science background before going to the theater, since I bet most Americans forgot we had a station and that we mostly share it with Russia.

The film ends showing which of the crew survive, but not going into "what's next" for the future of the crew, the ISS, or the earth itself, but following a clear nuclear exchange and bloodshed on the station itself, the future looks dim, indeed. 

All the crew dying or the station's destruction would have been a poignant ending. But it ends ambiguously.

Rated R for violence and some language. See it in the theater soon.  It will likely go to streaming quickly.