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IR Film Review: CONDOR’S NEST [Saban]
The context that drives "Condor's Nest" is revenge but one draped in the almost noir structure Westerns of the late 50s/early 60s portray where rage blinds a man despite the reasoning that he is up against. Will Spaulding is a man who lost his entire flight squadron during World War II to a sadistic colonel who took no mercy but chocked it up to the focus of war.
IR Film Review: PLANE [Lionsgate]
The texture of "Plane" has not been unseen in movie memory but its effectiveness is undeniably sound. Instead of more CG or heightened thrillers, Gerard Butler has delivered a more grounded, economical but also well paced and well acted action movie.
IR Film Review: LAST RESORT [Saban]
The texture of "Last Resort", an English-language action movie set and shot in Bangkok, has the DNA of a "Die Hard" with a little bit of "Inside Man". Its progression and baseline is formulaic for the most part but some of the hand-to-hand combat definitely ratchets above its pay grade.
IR Film Review: THE OLD WAY [Saban]
Nicolas Cage's previous western ("Butcher's Crossing" -- which played at TIFF 22) was a different animal of sorts that was more existential. His new entry "The Old Way" is more classic but more dynamic with a much more edged performance as well as better pacing and accessibility.
IR Film Review: HALLOWEEN ENDS [Universal]
The climactic element of the last film raised the stakes to the point where it needed to be. There was only one way it truly needed to go in: an all out war (within a Blumhouse confine). "Halloween Ends" doesn't quite do that or deliver on that promise. It goes a different way which is its prerogative but sort of a let down.
IR Film Review: HELLRAISER [Hulu]
The structure of the aspect of suffering in an interesting diatribe on the notion of self. The circumstances of living in certain ways create situational structures based on choice. "Hellraiser" as a metaphor is strictly about that but using the essence of body horror and consequence to fuel the fire.
IR Film Review: AMSTERDAM [20th Century Studios]
Making an original film with a period backing with unusual if not eccentric characters can either work gloriously or become hit-or-miss scenario depending on the beats the story takes. "Amsterdam", a new faux comedy from writer/director David O. Russell, is particular in many ways that always populate his films. However it depends on certain edge points.
IR Film Review: SMILE [Paramount]
The deconstruction of illusion and by extension, logic is always the crux of a supernatural approach to a film. “Smile” has done some interesting maneuvering since it is catchy but but by the trailers one would maybe see a one note slasher. This is far from the truth. It is a psychological character study about the dismantling of a psychologist in her own head through her own trauma.
IR Film Review: THE WOMAN KING [TriStar/Sony]
Viola Davis can rule a screen but it reflects in the range that she is always able to bring. “The Woman King” has her as the head commander of a tribal army led by females. Like the Samurai they take certain rules but unlike those perhaps, there is more of a hidden trauma that fuels these women, though they are hardest on others like them.