Glass Movie Review

M. Night Shyamalan brings his two hit films ā€˜Unbreakableā€™ and ā€˜Splitā€™ together after nineteen years to celebrate an almost perfect sci-fi, thriller marriage in ā€˜Glass.ā€™
Within the story of ā€˜Glass,ā€™ the main characters from the two previous pictures are unwillingly united for reasons theyā€™re unaware of, however, once they see each other again, itā€™s agreed upon that fate has brought them together again to continue where they left off.
Samuel L. Jackson is, once again, Elijah Price or ā€˜Mr. Glassā€™ as he prefers to be called. Heā€™s a comic book enthusiast whoā€™s convinced that Superheroes truly exist and proves so by using his incredibly gifted brain to be a Supervillain. At the moment heā€™s in a mental hospital being helped by his doting mother. Mrs. Glass is played by, Charlayne Woodard, who returns after ā€˜Unbreakable.ā€™ Bruce Willis returns as David Dunn, the security guard now business owner, who helps catch criminals by touching people and receiving telepathically a crime that has been committed. The business David owns is in something he knows well and that is security. His son, Joseph, who’s played by Spencer Treat Clark who played the part originally all those years ago, helps him capture a criminal post vision.

Then thereā€™s James McAvoy. Let’s talk about James McAvoy. He joins them as Kevin Wendell Crumb and, of course, ‘The Horde’ which means weā€™ll also see Patricia, Dennis, The Beast, Barry, Heinrich, Jade, Ian, Mary Reynolds, Norma, Jalin, Kat, B.T., Mr. Pritchard, Hedwig etc., the personalities who live within Kevinā€™s brain and take over his body when they have the light that Kevin so desperately avoids. To them, holding the light is being the personality able to control the body completely and make their presence known to the outside world. Whichever one has or keeps the light has all the power. The Beast wants this power but can be controlledā€¦ for now. Casey Cooke, played by Anya Taylor-Joy, was the only person to survive The Beast and decides maybe she can help control him again. Look for her to step in at some point and give it a try.

Sarah Paulson makes her entrance as Dr. Ellie Staple. Sheā€™s convinced that these humans are delusional. She captures them and tells them they have three days to accept that reality, using their weaknesses to control the narrative. She keeps Glass heavily sedated, uses hypnotic strobe lights to control ‘The Horde’ and keeps David in a room that will fill with water and drown him if he tries anything stupid. These safeguards make it impossible for them to escape. Or do they? Kevinā€™s personalities, one by one, try to break the barrier. Here’s my small soapbox moment. I must say that it was wrong to see James McAvoyā€™s performance ignored after ā€˜Split.ā€™ This time, with the way he goes in and out of characters continually, it would be a travesty if he were to be overlooked. To this film, he was an absolute godsend. Little by little, more is divulged and you grow more curious as to what the big reveal will be. You know it’s coming.

I believe that ā€˜Glassā€™ was the perfect way to advance the story. Without revealing too much, I want to make it known that I think you should avoid listening to any negative press the film might be getting and say to you, ā€˜Just go and see for yourself.ā€™ Sure there will be things to question, some quite obvious, but theyā€™re harmless issues and donā€™t take anything from your belief in whatā€™s going on before you. The fascinating twists that Shyamalan once again delivers to you in this plot keeps you riveted and will leave you fulfilled. The cinematography, score, and intensity of the script are reason enough to see this but the acting by McAvoy is extraordinary. That said if you canā€™t enjoy a sci-fi without using it as an opportunity to search for and find every mistake that renders it incapable of being real, maybe this isnā€™t for you. However, if you want to see an excellent sci-fi film that thrills the hell out of you and captures what you so loved about M. Night Shyamalan in the first place, you will not be disappointed.

The Oath Movie Review

In ‘The Oath,’ actor and comedian, now producer, writer, and director of a feature film, Ike Barinholtz, plays Chris. Chris is the everyman and Barinholtz plays him quite well. ā€˜The Oath,ā€™ is a movie that needs its audience to connect with the lead in order to have faith in its message so casting was pivotal. The message is political and very powerful but no matter how you lean politically itā€™s a strong movie for both sides. Through a brutal comedy, you see both sides somewhat shredded and hopefully, everyone comes out on the other side the better for it. I think thatā€™s the central reason the film was made. One blatant and glaring spotlight is directed on the idea that the country is to fall in line with whatever the president says or wants. Nowhere in the Constitution of the United States of America does it even suggest we are to support the president, a person, but instead, the president is to support what he swore AN OATH to protect and thatā€™s the Constitution. The Constitution, in turn, protects the country and her people.

In the film, the president is asking that people sign The Patriot’s Oath. This is an oath of loyalty to him. Not only is he asking, though you are not required to, is giving you a tax deduction if you do signā€¦ and thereā€™s a deadline. The movie centers around this deadline moving closer and closer. The day will be after Thanksgivingā€¦ ā€˜Black Friday.ā€™

Todayā€™s political climate is all over this movie. With midterms fast approaching us and a 2020 presidential campaign looming ever closer, the film is released at the perfect time for reflectionā€¦ no doubt on purpose.

Chris is very progressive and against The Patriotā€™s Oath. He is continually educating his wife Kai (Tiffany Haddish), also progressive but not as dynamic as he, that what the government is asking of its citizens is wrong. He’s an angry patriot and his anger increases as he witnesses American citizens grow more hostile toward one another; dividing like at no other point in history. Racists feel free to scream statements at people such as, ā€˜Get out of my country!ā€™ Arguments and talking points are used to spread lies and fear, much like they are in the news you watch today. Chris believes heā€™s right and you are wrong which is ultimately the problemā€¦ there must be something that brings everyone back together. It canā€™t be just blind loyalty to only your beliefs.

The family is coming for Thanksgiving to Chris’ house and as tension toward the Oath builds, Chris prays to a God he doesnā€™t believe in, that he can get through the family visit. The day is here and, unable to let it go since the deadline to sign is tomorrow, Chris asks of his family members to reveal who has signed. At this point, the film digs deeply into the human psyche, and the bonds we develop, more than at any other time. Not only do we see who is with Chris and who is not, but there are a few unwelcomed visitors from the Citizens Protection Unit known as the CPU (thinkĀ  Dept. of Homeland Security) there to strongly suggest to people, in this case, Chris, to sign. This is where the movie goes from being a comedy that forces us to look inward, into something darker. That said, should we be led there so we can see we’re all capable of making mistakes? Anyway, the CPU isnā€™t there just to ā€˜askā€™ Chris to sign, as all the other family members, even Kai, have done, but to ā€˜tellā€™ him to. In a very cryptic way, Barinholtz may be trying to remind us all of whatā€™s important. Family. Friends. Water. Air. Who and what are we without these? Can he continue to fight against what seems to be the popular choice or should people who are signing an oath to a person wake up and see some of his point of view?

Barinholtz is great in this. Iā€™m impressed with his work behind and in front of the camera. Tiffany Haddish brings on the laughs but also gets to show that sheā€™s competent enough to explore a more serious tone for her audience. Nora Dunn and the rest of the cast are exceptional in coloring the landscape thatā€™s been created, rendering you incapable of avoiding the subject yet entertaining you at the same time. Another thing the film does is emphasize how bad things get at a moments notice and how quickly arguments can escalate out of control if cooler heads donā€™t prevail. See ‘The Oath’ for all the reasons I’ve listed but also look at it this way… it could serve as a warning to you to keep you from bringing up the topic of politics this year during the holidays. It comes out to today so see it as soon as possible.

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Halloween Movie Review (2018)

Thank you Blumhouse for helping to bring this back! This movie is terrifyingly fantastic. It has a rock solid, substantial, concrete script and itā€™s, Iā€™d have to say, exactly what any horror fan, especially if they liked this franchise, is looking for. I wasnā€™t sure about it at first, thinking to myself, ā€˜Here we go again,ā€™ as I rolled my eyes. I couldnā€™t have been more wrong to doubt it. The only way anyone coming out of the theatre after watching this could say that it was just ‘so-so’ or ‘meh’ either has a grudge against films of this type or they were asleep.

Not only is the story grotesquely imaginative and holds your attention the entire time but, pleasantly, I found that Danny McBride had a hand in writing it and you can feel his influence everywhere. I think his being involved made all the difference in the world. When there was some much-needed comic relief, he gave us plenty. Itā€™s not that the comedy takes over or anything, this is a true horror film, but when it does come it fits the characters and the moment. Another thing I was appreciative of was the score. To get it right, I believed John Carpenter had to do it and it was good to see I wasnā€™t disappointed there.

If youā€™re reading this, I wonā€™t give a lot away because youā€™d be rather mad at me for ruining the surprises for you. However, I do have to reveal a few things about the story. You know how the original ā€˜Halloweenā€™ started, right? If not, see it before you see this when possible. In the first film, Michael, as a little boy, stabs his sister to death with a butcher knife. She had just had sex with her boyfriend and that act seemed to have upset his fragile nature. They sent him away to a mental institution after that. Then we advance to fifteen years later where itā€™s 1978 and Michael has turned twenty-one. He escapes the institution heā€™s being held in and returns to his hometown of Haddonfield. Heā€™s on the hunt to kill again. He focuses his attention on trying to get to Laurie Strode (Curtis) but with the help of Michaelā€™s physician at the institution, Dr. Loomis (Donald Pleasence), she manages to survive his efforts to end her life. There were several films that followed but forget those. This is the direct sequel to the first film as if all the others never happened and it works beautifully.

We meet Laurie again when she’s much older and she’s living like a hermit. To avoid another bloodbath, she built a fortress, complete with panic room, around her house and around her emotions. Sheā€™s disconnected to protect herself. Michael may not have killed her body, but he killed her spirit. It was riveting to peer into how she lives yet somewhat heartbreaking to see that she has lost the ability to get close to anyone. This is obviously due to the fact that she was so traumatized and is still afraid Michael could be around every corner. She has to be prepared at all time and is she ever!

Laurie taught her daughter Karen (Greer) to defend herself, too, and how to use weapons.Ā  Karen now holds that against her. Having to tell your mother to stop being afraid of the ā€˜Boogie Manā€™ has been difficult for Karen to overcome. Now a mother herself, she wants her daughter Allyson (Matichak), to live the normal childhood she was denied so they, for the most part, keep their distance from Laurie.

By the time Michael gets to Haddonfield, he has already slaughtered a few people and wants to continue. The cinematographer does a magnificent job of putting you on edge by giving you shadow and reflection before you see the monster in action. There are several very creative shots you donā€™t usually find in horror. Youā€™ll love Michael’s prey, I mean the characters, especially young Julian (Nantambu). Heā€™s a very wise child, with a potty mouth, who knows more about the world than the babysitter whoā€™s watching him gives him credit for. His scene relaxes you for a moment but not for long.

Look, the film doesnā€™t try to be something itā€™s not. Itā€™s just trying to entertain people who love the genre and it does. There are times when the audience laughs, yells at the screen and jumps at the brutality of the quality kills Michael often proudly displayed. There are several I havenā€™t quite gotten over yet! Now, doesnā€™t that sound like something worth watching? If you remember, I mentioned to you that there are surprises. Oh, youā€™re going to love those. After watching, I’m sure you’ll agree that the first ā€˜Halloweenā€™ was a classic and that this one WILL BE, TOO.

The Nun Movie Review

Iā€™ll say it right here. James Wan, director, and creator of the original ā€˜Sawā€™ film knows a hit series when he sees it but needs to learn when to let it go. In fact, he has a number of record-setting credits under his belt and is best at taking something that previously worked and keeping it going but he so far lacks the awareness of when to let something die; literally and figuratively. In ā€˜The Nun,ā€™ the horror-fest that started from ā€˜The Conjuringā€™ series, he takes us into the world of the frightening character that was the evil presence in ā€˜The Conjuring 2.ā€™ She was magnificently terrifying and ultimately what made the film but in this new narrative, one in which youā€™d expect great things based on what you had previously witnessed, sheā€™s not all that terrifying but instead, rather anemic. In this film, what should have been its strengths seemed little trusted and scarcely used.

 

When the story begins itā€™s 1952. Weā€™re in an abbey in Romania and are witness to a tantalizing introduction. From the start, thereā€™s hope that ā€˜The Nunā€™ is going to be the noteworthy horror film weā€™ve been waiting for. Something purely evil needs a vessel to continue to survive so a nun sacrifices herself to stop it from using hers by hanging herself. Her body is discovered dangling from the window of the church. The Vatican is notified, and they send a priest by the name of Father Burke (Bichir) and a young nun, Sister Irene (Farmiga), who is about to take her final vows, to check it out. With the help of Frenchie (Bloquet) the very nervous man who found the Sisterā€™s body, they root around in the Abbey and discover quickly that itā€™s an unholy place. Frenchie believes the crosses surrounding the place are there to keep evil in rather than out. It seems thereā€™s little to prove otherwise.

 

After Father Burke is haunted by very real demons of his own, demons who wake the audience from a slow start, he and Sister Irene discover that Valak, the defiler and the profane, built a gateway to hell on the grounds so the wicked could walk amongst the living, but the church secretly sealed it hoping to keep Valak at bay. However, as evil usually does, it manages to, quite predictable, escape.Ā 

‘The Nuns’ downfall is that thereā€™s very little about it thatā€™s unique and try I did but I found little of the acting remarkable, as well. Having been scared frozen by her character in ā€˜Conjuring 2,ā€™ I assumed Iā€™d get much more from her yet was largely disappointed. If youā€™re a fan of the franchise Iā€™d say you will most likely enjoy parts of the film, especially its ending… except the part that suggests thereā€™s a way they could continue the storyline further. Quite frankly, after seeing this, Iā€™d like them to bury any idea they have of doing such a thing.Ā 

Halloween – New Trailer!

Jamie Lee Curtis returns to her iconic role as Laurie Strode, who comes to her final confrontation with Michael Myers, the masked figure who has haunted her since she narrowly escaped his killing spree on Halloween night four decades ago.

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Master of horror John Carpenter executive produces and serves as creative consultant on this film, joining forces with cinemaā€™s current leading producer of horror, Jason Blum (Get Out, Split, The Purge, Paranormal Activity).Ā  Inspired by Carpenterā€™s classic, filmmakers David Gordon Green and Danny McBride crafted a story that carves a new path from the events in the landmark 1978 film, and Green also directs.

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Halloween is also produced by Malek Akkad, whose Trancas International Films has produced the Halloween series since its inception, and Bill Block (Elysium, District 9).Ā  In addition to Carpenter and Curtis, Green and McBride will executive produce under their Rough House Pictures banner.Ā  Ryan Freimann also serves in that role.

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Halloween will be distributed worldwide by Universal Pictures.Ā Ā www.HalloweenMovie.com

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Genre:Ā Thriller

Cast:Ā Jamie Lee Curtis, Judy Greer, Andi Matichak, Will Patton, Virginia Gardner, Nick Castle

Director:Ā David Gordon Green

Written by:Ā Jeff Fradley & Danny McBride & David Gordon Green

Based on Characters Created by:Ā John Carpenter and Debra Hill

Produced by:Ā Malek Akkad, Jason Blum, Bill Block

Executive Producers:Ā John Carpenter, Jamie Lee Curtis, Danny McBride, David Gordon Green, Ryan Freimann

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In Theaters October 19

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Bad Times at the El Royale – Trailer

Director: Drew Goddard
Producers: Jeremy Latcham, Drew Goddard
Screenplay: Drew Goddard
Cast:Ā Jeff Bridges, Cynthia Erivo, Dakota Johnson, Jon Hamm, Cailee Spaeny, Lewis Pullman, and Chris Hemsworth

SYNOPSIS
Seven strangers, each with a secret to bury, meet at Lake Tahoe’s El Royale, a rundown hotel with a dark past. Over the course of one fateful night, everyone will have a last shot at redemption… before everything goes to hell. Jeff Bridges, Chris Hemsworth, Jon Hamm, Dakota Johnson and Cynthia Erivo lead an all-star cast in BAD TIMES AT THE EL ROYALE.

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In Theaters October 12, 2018

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Hunter Killer – Trailer

‘HUNTER KILLER’

Deep under the Arctic Ocean, American submarine Captain Joe Glass (Gerard Butler,Ā Olympus Has Fallen,Ā 300) is on the hunt for a U.S. sub in distress when he discovers a secret Russian coup is in the offing, threatening to dismantle the world order. Captain Glass must now assemble an elite group of Navy SEALs to rescue the kidnapped Russian president and sneak through enemy waters to stop WWIII.

Also starring OscarĀ®Ā winner Gary Oldman (Best Actor,Ā Darkest Hour, 2017), Common (John Wick: Chapter 2), Linda Cardellini (Avengers: Age of Ultron) and Toby Stephens (Die Another Day),Ā HUNTER KILLERĀ is a high-stakes thriller that unfolds both on land and at sea.Ā Only in theaters nationwide by Summit Premiere onĀ October 26th, 2018.

Directed by Donovan Marsh and written byĀ Arne L. Schmidt and Jamie Moss,Ā HUNTER KILLERĀ is based on the bookĀ Firing PointĀ written by retired naval officerĀ George Wallace and author Don Keith. The production of HUNTER KILLER was also fully supported by the United States Navy.

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In Theaters October 26

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Mission: Impossible – Fallout | New Featurette Available Now!

Experience Mission: Impossible ā€“ Fallout in theatres, RealD 3D and IMAX on July 27, 2018

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SYNOPSIS

The best intentions often come back to haunt you. MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE ā€“ FALLOUT finds Ethan Hunt (Tom Cruise) and his IMF team (Alec Baldwin, Simon Pegg, Ving Rhames) along with some familiar allies (Rebecca Ferguson, Michelle Monaghan) in a race against time after a mission gone wrong.Ā  Henry Cavill, Angela Bassett, and Vanessa Kirby also join the dynamic cast with filmmaker ChristopherĀ McQuarrie returning to the helm.

Ā WRITTEN & DIRECTED BY

Christopher McQuarrie

PRODUCED BY

Tom Cruise, Christopher McQuarrie, Jake Myers, J.J. Abrams

STARRING

Tom Cruise, Henry Cavill, Simon Pegg, Rebecca Ferguson, Ving Rhames, Sean Harris, Angela Bassett, Vanessa Kirby,

Michelle Monaghan, Alec Baldwin, Wes Bentley, Frederick Schmidt

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Ā 

www.MissionImpossible.com

#MissionImpossible

‘Glass’ – The announcement we’ve all been waiting for…

GLASS

 

In Theaters January 18, 2019

M. Night Shyamalan brings together the narratives of two of his standout originalsā€”2000ā€™s Unbreakable, from Touchstone, and 2016ā€™s Split, from Universalā€”in one explosive, all-new comic-book thriller: Glass.

From Unbreakable, Bruce Willis returns as David Dunn as does Samuel L. Jackson as Elijah Price, known also by his pseudonym Mr. Glass.Ā  Joining from Split are James McAvoy, reprising his role as Kevin Wendell Crumb and the multiple identities who reside within, and Anya Taylor-Joy as Casey Cooke, the only captive to survive an encounter with The Beast.Ā 

Following the conclusion of Split, Glass finds Dunn pursuing Crumbā€™s superhuman figure of The Beast in a series of escalating encounters, while the shadowy presence of Price emerges as an orchestrator who holds secrets critical to both men.

Joining the all-star cast are Unbreakableā€™s Spencer Treat Clark and Charlayne Woodard, who reprise their roles as Dunnā€™s son and Priceā€™s mother, as well as Golden Globe Award winner Sarah Paulson (American Horror Story series).

This riveting culmination of his worldwide blockbusters is produced by Shyamalan and Blumhouse Productionā€™s Jason Blum, who also produced the writer/directorā€™s previous two films for Universal.Ā  They produce again with Ashwin Rajan and Marc Bienstock, and Steven Schneider, who executive produces.

A Blinding Edge Pictures and Blumhouse production, Glass will be released by Universal Pictures in North America on January 18, 2019, and by Buena Vista International abroad.

Cast:Ā Bruce Willis, Samuel L. Jackson, James McAvoy, Anya Taylor-Joy, Spencer Treat Clark, Charlayne Woodard and Sarah Paulson

Written and Directed by:Ā M. Night Shyamalan

Produced by:Ā M. Night Shyamalan, Jason Blum, Ashwin Rajan, Marc Bienstock

Executive Producer:Ā Steven Schneider

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‘Mission: Impossible – Fallout’ Links, Images and New Featurette Available!

Ā Mission: Impossible – FalloutĀ 

ETHAN HUNT AND HIS IMF TEAM ARE BACK FOR THEIRĀ BIGGESTĀ MISSION YETĀ Ā 

Experience Mission: Impossible ā€“ Fallout in theatres, RealD 3D and IMAX on July 27, 2018

Tickets Available Now!

SYNOPSIS

The best intentions often come back to haunt you. MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE – FALLOUT finds Ethan Hunt (Tom Cruise) and his IMF team (Alec Baldwin, Simon Pegg, Ving Rhames) along with some familiar allies (Rebecca Ferguson, Michelle Monaghan) in a race against time after a mission gone wrong.Ā  Henry Cavill, Angela Bassett, and Vanessa Kirby also join the dynamic cast with filmmaker ChristopherĀ McQuarrie returning to the helm.

WRITTEN & DIRECTED BY

Christopher McQuarrie

PRODUCED BY

Tom Cruise, Christopher McQuarrie, Jake Myers, J.J. Abrams

STARRING

Tom Cruise, Henry Cavill, Simon Pegg, Rebecca Ferguson, Ving Rhames, Sean Harris, Angela Bassett, Vanessa Kirby,

Michelle Monaghan, Alec Baldwin, Wes Bentley, Frederick Schmidt

www.MissionImpossible.com

#MissionImpossible