Wednesday 29 May 2024

The Whale (2022)

"The Whale" is a movie built around an essay about Moby Dick, Brendan Fraser in fat guy prosthetics, and the skeletons of the relationships that Fraser's character shares with those around him. It's left up to the actors to fill in the rest, which they (Fraser and Hong Chau in particular) do remarkably well. This isn't enough to make it a good movie, however, and Darren Aronofsky's direction doesn't gel with the performances. The finale, for example, is ruined by a couple of shot transitions (and one horrible thematic indulgence) that took me right out of the drama at a time when Fraser and Sadie Sink were really giving it their all. Maybe a director like Todd Solondz would have done something more interesting with this story. It wouldn't have been Oscar bait -- even for the actors -- but it would have been a better movie.









Child's Play 2 (1990)


Two years removed from the events of the first movie, killer doll Chucky (Brad Dourif) is unknowingly revived by the Play Pals Corporation and promptly sets his sights back on Andy Barclay (Alex Vincent), intent on possessing his body, lest he remain permanently trapped in that of a Good Guy doll. An improvement on the original movie in most of the ways that matter, "Child's Play 2" jacks up the action, gets creative with the kills, and boasts a crazily strong cast (featuring the likes of Christine Elise, Jenny Agutter, Grace Zabriskie, and Beth Grant). Best of all is a final act that takes place within a doll factory, in which Chucky, Andy and Kyle (Christine Elise) exchange various shots leading up to a gooey, glorious finale that feels cathartic. Armed with arguably the best incarnation of Chucky (second, perhaps, only to "Bride of Chucky") and scarcely wasting a moment of an apt 84-minute runtime, "Child's Play 2" remains one of the 1990s' most essential horror sequels.










Thursday 23 May 2024

Villains (2019)


After fluking their way through a successful convenience store robbery, on the lam couple Mickey (Bill Skarsgard) and Jules (Maika Monroe) hit a patch of bad luck when their escape vehicle runs out of gas a couple of hundred feet from a house in the woods, in which they discover a chained up child and a, well, villainous married couple who move to give them an education in menace over the course of a brisk 89 minutes. "Villains" hinges on the ability of its small cast to execute the hilarious moments of awkwardness and bad timing that keep its characters' battles of wits (minor as Mickey and Jules' may be) trucking along. Fortunately, Bill Skarsgard and Maika Monroe are more than equipped for the task of making their roles equally sympathetic and hilarious, whether they're extracting each others piercings or hatching hare-brained schemes to escape their entrapment. The standout performer, however, is Jeffrey Donovan, a charming, drawling antagonist who manages to maintain an aura of danger even as he goes for the movie's biggest laughs. Ultimately, "Villains" isn't quite as outrageous or extreme as it might have been ("Cheap Thrills" is in the clear on that front) but it never wears out its welcome and navigates a route to an ending that works well without being too unrealistic. Recommended.








Infested (2023)


A French creature feature that boasts some nifty monster designs but wants for endearing protagonists and doesn't really know when to quit, Sebastien Vanicek's "Infested" clocks in at a padded 106 minutes off the back of a limited premise to gain plaudits it doesn't really deserve, but it's still not a bad time. One thing that is consistently enjoyable about it is in the way in which the effortlessly multiplying spiders who represent the movie's constant threat are able to transform the apartment block where they run loose over the course of the film's runtime, to the point where it ultimately resembles a haunted house contraption that its human inhabitants must perilously navigate. The movie itself has elements of "Attack the Block" and "[Rec]" to it, although these similarities aren't ultimately flattering. I don't really understand the hype for this movie at all, to be honest, but the effects work is definitely praiseworthy.







Child's Play 3 (1991)

Undoubtedly the lesser of the first four "Child's Play" movies, "Child's Play 3", which pulls off a little time ...