Alien: Covenant Movie Review

While the Alien Covenant film is tolerable, mostly due to the visuals, the crew you should be rooting for during any crisis they may be facing is less than memorable.  None of the characters are especially noteworthy and you won’t grow particularly fond of anyone as the story progresses.  It’s this connection that’s needed and is so important for a story like this to propel you into the world they inhabit. 

Fearing for a character’s safety, especially in this particular franchise, is paramount to it being a success.  Though Covenant does bring back the horror element that was more dominant in the first film, Alien, it doesn’t quite capture the consternation that the original had.  That said, it is more on the gory side of the horror, sci-fi genre.   It’s set about a decade in the aftermath of Prometheus, a film not well loved by the Alien faithful.  Though the film may not have been well received, Michael Fassbender was and is in this film, as well.  He’s back as David and also as Walter, another synthetic.  Walter looks like David, has many of the qualities of David except for one little important difference.  I’ll let you discover that on your own.

Walter Minds the crew and the ship, Covenant, as its crew members and cargo of pilgrims make their journey to another planet similar to our own in the hopes of colonizing it.  A short time passes and, of course, insert one of the typical problems that happen in films where spaceships are floating along in deep space; they’re hit by something that does damage.  This also awakens most of the crew who have been in a deep sleep… killing a few along the process.

They receive a strange message from a planet closer to the one they had originally charted their course for.  This seems a little too convenient but the captain (Crudup) says it’ll be worth a shot and they set out for this planet instead.  This is where it really gets sloppy because the things these skilled professionals are doing say to a filmgoer that the filmmaker doesn’t take your intelligence into consideration when creating a story.  Several things happen that get different members of the crew ill when they land on this unknown land.  They aren’t really quarantined which leads to more devastation but at least it’s entertaining.  Per usual, the effects are great and the visuals of the first person, who shows signs of being taken over by a foreign entity and thusly being killed by it, is ghoulish and eerie… everything you could have hoped for.

Eventually they find David who has been alone here (obviously he’s the one who would have sent the message for them to pick up) and he and Walter get to know one another; and as long as you don’t get lost as to which is which it’s fairly easy to deduce that one is up to something and the other is now a useful pawn.

A spaceship has issues; check.  We have aliens; check.  The film has formulaic touches you’d expect it to have; check.  Unfortunately, its pacing is slow and flat in the beginning and the characters so drab, (which is sad because one is supposed to be the descendant of Ripley from Alien) that it’s hard to really get into it.  There are so many, if you really want to tear it apart, problems with it that if you concentrate on them, your brain will explode so, best not to.  One specific thing I feel I must address, though, is their brains.  This crew does this for a living and they just disregard all policy, procedure, rules and… all common sense the minute they land on a strange planet?!  It makes no sense so try not to think about it too much.  Just let things that defy logic or are the completely unexplained go.  If you love sci-fi films and the Alien franchise as a whole, you might have some need for this.  You’re not going to totally dislike it, you’re just not going to love it.  It’s not the worst of the bunch; however, it’s certainly not the best.  Rumor is there will be a few more of these… I hope Scott turns the helm over to someone who can steer a little better.

ALIEN: COVENANT Official Channels

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BABY DRIVER announces a first of its kind sponsored Geofilter Contest on Snapchat

CULVER CITY, CA, May 15, 2017 – TriStar Pictures and MRC’s upcoming highly anticipated new film BABY DRIVER announced today a first of its kind sponsored Fan Art Geofilter Contest on Snapchat.  Since the film’s rapturous debut at this year’s SXSW Film Festival, fans have flocked to social media to show off their fan art inspired by the movie.  In turn, the studio began a consistent #FanArtFriday campaign on the film’s social media handles to display the creativity from these fans.  For the contest, users can simply go to https://BabyDriverFanArt.com between now and May 24th to submit their BABY DRIVER fan art (creative guidelines and official rules are available on the site).  BABY DRIVER’s writer/director, Edgar Wright will judge the entries himself and the winning submission will run as a Snapchat Geofilter at a nationwide theater chain the week of the film’s release, starting on opening day, Wednesday, June 28th.   This is the first time a studio will showcase fan art from a Geofilter contest on Snapchat.

In BABY DRIVER, a talented, young getaway driver (Ansel Elgort) relies on the beat of his personal soundtrack to be the best in the game. When he meets the girl of his dreams (Lily James), Baby sees a chance to ditch his criminal life and make a clean getaway. But after being coerced into working for a crime boss (Kevin Spacey), he must face the music when a doomed heist threatens his life, love and freedom.

            BABY DRIVER stars Ansel Elgort, Kevin Spacey, Lily James, Jon Bernthal, Eiza Gonzalez, with Jon Hamm, and Jamie Foxx.

            The film is written and directed by Edgar Wright.  Producers are Nira Park, Tim Bevan, and Eric Fellner, and Executive Producers are Edgar Wright, Adam Merims, Rachael Prior, Liza Chasin, and Michelle Wright.

            BABY DRIVER opens in theaters nationwide on Wednesday, June 28th.

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Free Fire Movie Review

Free Fire is another terrific A24 release.  They seem to be cornering the market on must see films.  With outstanding and unique movies such as Room, Locke, The Lobster, The End of the Tour, American Honey and the 2016 Academy Award winning best picture, Moonlight, all which were well received when released, it seems A24 isn’t afraid to take a chance on something out of the norm… and we’re all the better for it.

Much in the same way that Pulp Fiction captured its audience by being surprisingly and overwhelmingly unconventional, Free Fire does that same thing.  If people are telling you to see this film, as I am now, listen to them.

It’s a fun movie with characters that are so well defined they grab you right away and you never once want them to let you go… and they don’t.  The acting is unbelievable.  The talent who worked from this uncommonly witty script was perfectly cast, never dropping character or ever releasing you from the story they’ve pulled you into until the credits roll.

Sharlto Copley and his group play gunrunners selling guns on the black market.  He is almost the singular reason to watch this film.  His Vern is the epitome of the word coward yet he hides behind a thin veneer of self-possessed hooligan that anyone can see straight through.  On this night, they are selling guns to an IRA buyer by the name of Chris (Murphy) and his group.  They are led into an old warehouse to meet Vern by a well-dressed, slick talker named Ord (Hammer) who sets the rules for the meeting.  Not long into the meeting… something goes wrong.  Once this happens, the film becomes a free-for-all where ridiculously hilarious words are exchanged as the two groups begin to also fire at one another.

Not wanting to reveal too much of the plot to encourage your interest in seeing this than there needs to be, I will say that if comedy plus action is your thing then there’s no way you can go wrong by giving this movie your full and immediate attention at the theatre today.  Armie Hammer is outstanding handling the dialogue with his brand of dry humor. 

Brie Larson, the only woman in the cast (and don’t think that isn’t addressed) who tries her best to calm the situation, gives the film that ladylike touch of femininity only a brave yet tender woman can bring.  I don’t have the space to tell you about everyone else.  There isn’t one character who’ll disappoint.

I can’t say enough about Free Fall and I do realize that I’ve barely said a thing but you’ll have to trust me on this one… this is insanely funny!  It’s a powerfully strong comedy that centers around an epic shootout where the characters screaming insults back and forth escalate the situation to the point of being barbaric.  It’s genius.  There are so many erratic, off the wall moments in this film that you’ll be turning around planning on seeing it a second time so that you can catch all the ones you missed.  Well done Ben Wheatley and Amy Jump for this magnificent movie.

Interview with Justin Barber of Phoenix Forgotten

Phoenix Forgotten is Based on the shocking, true events of March 13th, 1997, when several mysterious lights appeared over Phoenix, Arizona. This unprecedented and inexplicable phenomenon became known as “The Phoenix Lights”, and remains the most famous and widely viewed UFO sighting in history.  Phoenix Forgotten tells the story of three teens who went into the desert shortly after the incident, hoping to document the strange events occurring in their town.  They disappeared that night and were never seen again.  Now, on the twentieth anniversary of their disappearance, unseen footage has finally been discovered, chronicling the final hours of their fateful expedition. For the first time ever, the truth will be revealed…

A week ago, I had the pleasure of chatting a bit with the director of this sci-fi/ thriller, Justin Barber.  He was charming, open and very excited that the release date of his feature was drawing near.  I told him what I thought about the very idea of the film and why I felt that way and he replied that since making the film he’s heard about so many experiences people have had, even his crew, and he tried his best to get the feeling people expressed to him into the movie.  To start us off, I couldn’t help but ask him about himself.

 

Shari: Have you ever witnessed anything?

Justin: I have actually.  It was when I was in a cabin in South Africa with my brother when I was in my twenties.  It was in a rural area and we’re staying in a lodge; it’s kind of rustic.  In the middle of the night, I was awake and reading and my brother was across the room asleep.  A bright light shone into the room.  There were already sheer curtains so I couldn’t see outside but I could definitely see the light source as it shone in and it cast shadows across the room.  It seemed to be from an elevated position, shining down.  And then it shifted.  The light source moved and the shadows swept across the room I just remember distinctly seeing the light move across my brother’s face as he slept.  I didn’t hear anything; I didn’t hear the sound of a truck or anything but after about 3 seconds it was gone.  It freaked me out so much that I rustled him awake.  I felt rather silly.  I don’t know what it was.  In retrospect, it could have been a truck or something with its bright lights and I couldn’t hear it but it definitely freaked me out at the time.

 

Shari: How would you describe the film?

Justin: This movie, at first, is a documentary with a big twist in the middle and it becomes a more straight up found footage ride.  You experience everything through the characters.  If they don’t see it, you don’t see it and in a lot of ways, it makes it scarier from a suspense standpoint.

 

Shari:  What else makes some of your found footage sequences different from the rest?

Justin:  We have some new things you haven’t seen but in the end what elevates the movie is the cast.  I think the cast is really stellar.  The actors did an amazing job with their characters.  They just wanted to make a good movie.  I do like horror movies and movies of this nature because of the suspense and because of the scares but often with this type of movie, the characters don’t seem very memorable.  I wanted to make a movie where the character was more fleshed out and where you care about them more… where they’re a little more distinct so that when they are in the more tense situations, the movie is more powerful.  I think that’s where we succeeded.  I think that characters are a little more original and I think the actors (thinks) the cast was just stellar.  That’s what sets it apart.  In terms of originality, I thought it would be great to make a found footage Close Encounters, the Spielberg movie, but I was also inspired by more contemporary documentaries.  I think we’re sort of in a Renaissance in science-fiction right now which is great to see a lot of original sci-fi in ways we haven’t seen in the past but we’re also in a Renaissance of documentaries.  There’s a lot of cool documentary projects kind of hitting the mainstream in a way they haven’t in the past.  You have Making of a Murderer, you have Jinx, on HBO, so we kind of drill in all of those things in the first half of the movie.  Make it a little bit different than something that’s a shaky cam for ninety minutes, you know? 

 

Shari: A line in the film is that the government has been lying about UFO’s for fifty years.  Do you believe that?

Justin: Well, I put a lot of real people in the movie so there’s a documentary vibe and I had the character Josh ask people, ‘Do you think the government is lying about this?’ Without skipping a beat they were like, ‘Of course.  The government lies about everything.’  That was a very common sentiment from the people on the street who were willing to talk to us.  A lot of it was in Arizona.  We did spend some time in Phoenix trying to get to the bottom of this.  We did treat the subject matter as if we were making a real documentary.  But personally… I think the actual facts always come out later.  Regarding the Phoenix Lights, we are still waiting to see what it really was.  So, do I think there are things they’re not telling us?  Of course, I think that’s the case.  Do I think that they’re covering up actual aliens or actual UFO’s?  I don’t know about that but I do believe that there’s life out there… but I also kinda believe that, you know, often UFO on a radar is a distraction from something else they don’t want us to know.  Look over there, don’t look over here.

The story isn’t real but he treats it as though it really happened.  There’s actual news footage about the mysterious lights but the rest of it is fiction.  Having the actual news footage to play off of makes his story that much more believable and that much more fun to watch.

 

Shari: People are really going to appreciate your attempt at authenticity.

Justin: Close Encounters was a big inspiration for us but also the movie Catfish.  T.S. (Nowlin, writer) and Wes (Ball, producer) were in their office one night and were really taken with how it (Catfish) felt like this was real, and I’m actually suspect to this day (laughs) but it was that level of authenticity that I respect… and the original Blair Witch had that.  I was really impressed with how believable it was.  So when these kids go missing, law enforcement sets out to find them and we interview people who were involved in that search for these fictional kids but the people I interviewed are real police officers.  One of the guys is a private investigator in Phoenix.  A real private investigator who I made a case file for, which he studied; and then the character in the film who plays a filmmaker, I just did a real interview between them and she asked him these questions pertaining to the case and he went with it.  It was amazing.  We did a lot of things like that to catch the authenticity.

 

Shari: What was the biggest challenge and why?

Justin: Blair Witch was still one of the scariest movies I’ve seen.  That being said, it’s a genre UFO movie and I wanted to do as much practically as possible.  I love the ending of Blair Witch a lot.  I think it’s really full but there were some people that were probably a little put off by it, I think.  So, we just wanted to ride that line a little bit and we wanted to not show everything but it’s a genre UFO movie, you want to have a little bit of a payoff so, we do show… we do have a big finish but I wanted to do as much on camera as possible.  We found this great guy named Joe Pancake.  Joe Pancake is a special effects guy and I got connected to him through one of our guys at ScottFree and he works on huge movies.  I mean, he does big stuff.  He’s the guy you go to when you need a Transformer footprint.  He was willing to help us out with our movie, which is very small.  He went above and beyond what our budget was and helped us with some really cool, practical gags.  The thing about making a found footage movie in this day and age is that the cameras are totally disposable.  I got to destroy a lot of cameras to get some of these gag shots; my apartment is sort of a graveyard of broken cameras, but there are digital sections.   Some things you can’t do in real life, but I always try to at least ground it in a place with the actor where there’s real stuff going on and then add it later into the computer.  In a way, the challenge was that… it was meant to be a documentary and getting the actors to wrap their head around that… it took a lot of work to get them there; getting the authenticity of the modern day documentary moments I think was the most challenging in a way to make it believable but I think we did get there.  As far as with the found footage stuff… in a way that was easier because we did try to make it real for the actors with the practical effects so when they’re playing that fear, they’re able to react to things that are actually happening.

 

Shari: What drew Ridley Scott to the project?

Justin: T.S. Nowlin has worked on other stuff for ScottFree and just happened to be in a position where he could pitch this movie to Ridley and he really liked it.  What I learned in the course of making this movie is that Ridley is really invested in helping young filmmakers.  Conceptually, it was something he really liked.  I think he liked the idea of a found footage Close Encounters.  While I was making this movie, he was making his Alien movie but he was always available to offer his input.  Everybody across the board, from Ridley and the producers at Cinelou, all the way down to the cast and crew… this is the kind of movie that now when I look back I can see everybody in it.  It was a great team effort.  Everybody really contributed in one way or another and that’s something I’m really proud of; how everybody handled it.  From the top down.

 

When I first start talking to the extremely friendly Barber and considering the subject matter, I couldn’t help but mention something from his film that had happened to me in Northern AZ; because it was very similar to what he has his characters experiencing in the film.  I had always thought what I saw was odd and at the time I was frightened but that’s about as far as I go.  I thought it was fun to tell him and now you know so if anything odd has ever happened to you, maybe you’re not crazy?  Maybe we really are being watched.  Never know, right?  Regardless, watching sci-fi thrillers paint a story is a nice, safe way to enjoy the idea.  Phoenix Forgotten comes out today.  Enjoy!

Norman: The Moderate Rise and Tragic Fall of a New York Fixer Movie Review

Norman is the new film by Academy Award® nominated director Joseph Cedar.  In my opinion, having been only nominated could change with this absorbing and compelling narrative.  The film is remarkable.  Immediately, the title may lead you astray.  You’ll think this is just a story about a simple, meek and non-threatening older man named Norman Oppenheimer (Gere), which is a brilliant maneuver on the part of Cedar, who also wrote and produced the movie, to set you at ease right off the bat. 
It doesn’t allow for the watcher to be suspicious of any of Norman’s activities.  He seems to be as unassuming as they come.  At the start of the film, Norman is asking his nephew Philip (Sheen) who’s a lawyer, for information on a client.  Philip’s client is necessary for him to set up a deal where he can benefit financially and move up in the political and financial world of New York.  He promises the deal is so good, everyone will prosper, including Philip.  Less than excited about it, the dutiful Philip gives him the name of Bill Kavish (Stevens).  When he tries to speak with him we see the real Norman and his vulnerabilities exposed; he’s a nobody with no experience.  He’s a New York dealer trying to get the right connections hoping to join with the right people so that maybe something will pay off.

The film goes into four Acts.  Each is titled.  The first is, A Foot in the Door, because, a meeting finally does pay off.  He meets Micha Eshel, played by Lior Ashkenazi, who is brilliant in the movie.  Eshel is an up and comer in Israeli politics.  Norman sees Eshel admiring a pair of very pricey shoes and purchases them for him as a favor.  Several years later, we’re into Act Two which is Backing the Right Horse… and we learn that Norman did.  The shoes make it into several inventive and important shots.  When Act Two starts, we see them being worn by the new Prime Minister of Israel. 
We move up from the shoes to the face of the person wearing them and it’s Eshel.  Norman sees him backstage after an event and Eshel instantly recognizes him.  Norman finally has an in with someone in power.  Soon, we see some truly imaginative visuals and editing on the part of cinematographer Yaron Scharf (Footnote) and editor Brian A. Kates (Lee Daniels’ The Butler, Kill Your Darlings) to not only fill in an awful lot of the story in ingenious and stimulating ways but to keep us entertained.  You’ll be absolutely engrossed at what Cedar came up with to cover a few phone calls Norman has to make.

Eventually, a relevant character emerges; Alex Green (Gainsbourg).  She’s cold when Norman tries to get her to open up to him but then reverses it on him and begins to ask him questions… questions he should realize he shouldn’t be answering.  Cedar characters are so well developed, Norman in particular, that you being to worry about him; especially as flaws surface, such as talking about Eshel to strangers and his inability to tell the truth to anyone.  It’s critical to him that he is a friend of an important leader to get favors for one friend or another.  Those lies and promises start to stack one on top of the other.  How he hasn’t had a heart attack by now is beyond comprehension.

Without revealing too much about this provocative film or of who the real Norman is, Cedar does an extraordinary job of getting us to feel for the man he is or who we think he is.  He is compassionate… or is he?  He’s reliable and virtuous… or is he?  He’s a small man trying to get something to finally hit for his friends and finally for himself.  Maybe it has or it hasn’t… all due to a pair of shoes.  This is an amazing film with some outstanding acting.  Josh Charles has a small role but is noteworthy, as well as Gainsbourg but then everyone in this cast does an exceptional job bringing this impressive script to life and you don’t want to miss it.  This is a must see as soon as possible.

American Assassin w/ Taylor Kitsch – Trailer

Directed by Michael Cuesta

Screenplay by Stephen Schiff and Michael Finch and Edward Zwick & Marshall Herskovitz

Based on the American Assassin novel in the Mitch Rapp series by Vince Flynn

Produced by Lorenzo di Bonaventura and Nick Wechsler

Starring Dylan O’Brien, Michael Keaton, Sanaa Lathan, Shiva Negar, Scott Adkins and Taylor Kitsch

 AMERICAN ASSASSIN follows the rise of Mitch Rapp (Dylan O’Brien) a CIA black ops recruit under the instruction of Cold War veteran Stan Hurley (Michael Keaton).  The pair is then enlisted by CIA Deputy Director Irene Kennedy (Sanaa Lathan) to investigate a wave of apparently random attacks on both military and civilian targets.  Together the three discover a pattern in the violence leading them to a joint mission with a lethal Turkish agent (Shiva Negar) to stop a mysterious operative (Taylor Kitsch) intent on starting a World War in the Middle East.

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In Theaters Sept 15th

http://www.fandango.com

Unforgettable Advance Movie Screening

Movie Screening Summary: Tessa Connover (Heigl) is barely coping with the end of her marriage when her ex-husband, David (Stults), becomes happily engaged to Julia Banks (Dawson)—not only bringing Julia into the home they once shared but also into the life of their daughter, Lily. Trying to settle into her new role as a wife and a stepmother, Julia believes she has finally met the man of her dreams, the man who can help her put her own troubled past behind her. But Tessa’s jealousy soon takes a pathological turn until she will stop at nothing to turn Julia’s dream into her ultimate nightmare.

Director: Denise Di Novi
Writers: Christina Hodson, David Leslie Johnson (screenplay) (as David Johnson)
Stars: Rosario Dawson, Katherine Heigl, Geoff Stults
Unforgettable is in theatres April 23, 2017

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Advance Movie Screening For Unforgettable

Find your chance to receive special advance movie screening passes below.

 

Phoenix, Arizona

Advance Movie Screening Details

Movie Screening Date: Tuesday, April 18
Location: Harkins Tempe Marketplace
Movie Screening Time: 7:00pm
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Las Vegas, Nevada

Advance Movie Screening Details

Movie Screening Date: Tuesday, April 18
Location: Regal Red Rock
Movie Screening Time: 7:00pm
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Advance Movie Screening Information

To redeem a pass, simply click the Get Passes button. You will taken to our movie screening partner site (where you can sign up for a free account). Once you’ve done so, you’ll be able to print out your pass and bring it with you to your screening or event.

Admittance into a screening or event is not guaranteed with your pass. Events and advance screenings are filled on a ” first come, first served ” basis. To ensure that you stand a good chance of being admitted, we recommend that you show up 30 minutes to one hour early.

The number of admissions that are permissible for each pass are printed clearly on the ticket that you print out. You are allowed to bring as many guests as is indicated on your pass. For example, if your pass is for ” Admit Two, ” you can bring yourself and one guest. If you have an ” Admit One ” pass, you can bring only yourself.

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Detroit – Trailer

Annapurna Pictures has released the first trailer for the upcoming thriller DETROIT.  From the Academy Award-winning director of THE HURT LOCKER and ZERO DARK THIRTY, DETROIT tells the gripping story of one of the darkest moments during the civil unrest that rocked Detroit in the summer of ‘67.

Director: Kathryn Bigelow

Writer: Mark Boal

Producers: Megan Ellison, Kathryn Bigelow, Matthew Budman, Colin Wilson and Mark Boal

Cast: John Boyega, Will Poulter, Algee Smith, Jacob Latimore, Jason Mitchell, Hannah Murray, Kaitlyn Dever, Jack Reynor, Ben O’Toole, Joseph David Jones, Ephraim Sykes, Leon Thomas III, Nathan Davis Jr., Peyton Alex Smith, Malcolm David Kelley, Gbenga Akinnabve, Chris Chalk, Jeremy Strong, Laz Alonzo, Austin Hebert, Miguel Pimentel, Kris Davis, with John Krasinski and Anthony Mackie

DETROIT Official Channels

WEBSITE: Detroit.Movie

FACEBOOK: facebook.com/DetroitMovie

TWITTER: twitter.com/detroitmovie

INSTAGRAM: instagram.com/detroitmovie

#DetroitMovie

In Theaters August 4

http://www.fandango.com

Atomic Blonde – Trailer

ATOMIC BLONDE – July 28, 2017

 Oscar® winner Charlize Theron explodes into summer in Atomic Blonde, a breakneck action-thriller that follows MI6’s most lethal assassin through a ticking time bomb of a city simmering with revolution and double-crossing hives of traitors. 

The crown jewel of Her Majesty’s Secret Intelligence Service, Agent Lorraine Broughton (Theron) is equal parts spycraft, sensuality and savagery, willing to deploy any of her skills to stay alive on her impossible mission.  Sent alone into Berlin to deliver a priceless dossier out of the destabilized city, she partners with embedded station chief David Percival (James McAvoy) to navigate her way through the deadliest game of spies. 

A blistering blend of sleek action, gritty sexuality and dazzling style, Atomic Blonde is directed by David Leitch (John Wick, upcoming Deadpool 2).  Also starring John Goodman, Til Schweiger, Eddie Marsan, Sofia Boutella and Toby Jones, the film is based on the Oni Press graphic novel series “The Coldest City,” by Antony Johnston & illustrator Sam Hart.  Kurt Johnstad (300) wrote the screenplay.

                

Cast: Charlize Theron, James McAvoy, John Goodman, Til Schweiger, Eddie Marsan, Sofia Boutella and Toby Jones

Directed by: David Leitch

Screenplay by: Kurt Johnstad

Based on the Oni Press Graphic Novel Series “The Coldest City,” Written by: Antony Johnston and Illustrated by: Sam Hart

Produced by: Charlize Theron, Beth Kono, A.J. Dix, Kelly McCormick, Eric Gitter, Peter Schwerin

Executive Producers: Nick Meyer, Marc Schaberg, Joe Nozemack, Steven V. Scavelli, Ethan Smith, David Guillod, Kurt Johnstad

In Theaters July 28th

http://www.fandango.com

blackcoats_daughter

The Blackcoat’s Daughter Movie Review

Are you a horror fan looking for something new?  Then don’t miss Blackcoat’s Daughter; another winner from A24!  The short answer as to why you can’t miss this is that it totally embodies the new part that you’ve been looking for.  So, here’s a bit of unsolicited advice for you, if you don’t mind, don’t read much more about the film.  Don’t watch a trailer.  Go in cold, only knowing that you have to see it.  You’re a horror fan and that’s all you need to be.  If you’d like to continue reading, I don’t give away too much. 

Cinematically, it’s a stunner.  I’m ready to watch it again for the pure enjoyment of it.  The music is so unsettling, the way bows screech across their string instruments or the strings are plucked hard to get your attention in a given moment… genius.  Much like horror classics, the music is central in setting the sweeping tenor of the film.  It was absolutely unnerving. 

You’ll also be impressed with how this story, that centers on three different girls, starts to unfold.  Kat (Shipka) and Rose (Boynton) are stuck at their Catholic school in Bramford during winter break.  When their parents don’t come and pick them up, the headmaster asks that they are watched over by a couple of nuns.  Kat and Rose don’t know one another very well, nor do they particularly like one another, but they’re making due with the situation they find themselves. 
Then we are introduced to a young woman on the road named Joan who is played by Emma Roberts.  She’s odd; almost lifeless when she is approached by Bill (Remar) and Linda (Holly) who assume the girl’s in trouble and would like to help.  She reminds Bill of their daughter and he can’t help but tell her so.  Uncomfortable, but desperate to get to Bramford, she accepts the ride.  As Joan gets closer to Bramford, she gets more and more dark and we cut back and forth to and from the other girls.

We begin to pick up on more of each storyline.  Things are revealed about Kat who is having terrifying visions and she, like Joan, seems to get ill while her demeanor changes, as well.  Rose overhears something sinister and creeps around in the dark, abandoned school halls.  She does something that I don’t believe anyone in her situation would, however, and that is go downstairs where it’s dark and peeks through the window in a door she has no business looking through.  It’s here she sees something she wishes she hadn’t.  But when did this happen exactly and are you sure?  Just when you think you have this movie figured out, you didn’t know a thing.  What really works is how the tension builds in both storylines and you cannot wait to see them intersect… if that’s in fact what’s going to happen. 

Perkins’ writing and directing mixed with cinematographer Julie Kirkwood’s style, who worked with Perkins on the Netflix original I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House, as well, will leave an impression on you.  This is a well told, rare, impactful story.   Perkins took special care in making sure you remembered his characters long after the movie was over.  I can assure you that you will.  The weather adds shading, the sets add mood, the lighting creates fear and, of course, the performances grip you.  Perkins wastes nothing in enhancing the film’s ambiance to set a specific tone for you. 

I couldn’t wait to see where the stories would come together.  As the movie got further and further in, I was getting more and more uncomfortable watching it alone… I’ll admit to then allowing a little daylight in by opening the curtains.  Let’s see how you fair.  Catch Blackcoat’s Daughter exclusively at the Alamo Drafthouse in Chandler, or wherever it’s playing near you, this weekend.  Good luck!