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My Week in Movies - October 29th
- Authors
- Name
- James Abels
- @psikik1
This week I begin my end of the year movie binge and I kick off with several thrillers of varying quality and a few book adaptations.
I watched this movie on the recommendation of Ben. It took a while to get to but it was worth the wait. Based on the takedown of Robert Hanssen played by Chris Cooper. Eric O'Neill, played by Ryan Phillipe, is assigned to investigate Hanssen for sexual deviancy. The initial investigation goes nowhere until, O'Neill's handler, Kate Burroughs, explains that Hanssen is a traitor who has been selling secrets to the Russians for years. The lying, thrills and relationships in this movie are top notch.
Watch It: If you're in the mood for a slow, but expertly crafted thriller.
Skip It: Don't.
Another thriller with a faster pace than Breach. The Loft tells the story of five married men who share a condo for discrete encounters. Led by Karl Urban's Vincent and James Marsden's Chris, we watch the five men deal with a dead woman in their hideaway. As the story unfolds, we flashback to the precipitating events that led to the girl's death. Slowly, it is revealed exactly what, how, and why things transpired the way they did.
Watch It: If you're in the mood for another thriller with some decent twists.
Skip It: It's pretty skippable. Certainly not a top tier thriller.
Billed as a "crime thriller", this was more of an action flick and poor Jason Statham vehicle. Statham plays a gambling addict who currently pays the bills by chaperoning1 rich people as they visit Las Vegas. He's called in by a friend of his, Holly played by Dominik Garcia-Lorido, to help her get revenge against a local gangster. The movie follows Statham as he follows up on leads to locate DeMarco, played by a creepy Milo Ventimiglia.
Watch It: If you're willing to suffer through a bad film to see some good Statham fight scenes.
Skip It: If you want something, anything, of substance.
A film I caught in theaters, Goosebumps is an entry banking on timing, and boy did it work. Released in October, it's a perfectly not-so-scary scary film catering to kids. It's also using nostalgia for all of the now-all-grown-up 90s kids. Jack Black did well as R.L. Stine and the villain was absolutely on point. The themes were resonant. All around good film. Not so much a book adaptation but a series adaptation.
Watch It: Good humor. Fun scares. Interesting characters.
Skip It: You have an issue with puppets.
A second book adaptation film, Seventh Son is based on The Spook's Apprentice, which I haven't read. But it doesn't seem to matter because from what I gathered on wikipedia, it was nothing like the book. It had a few actors I like. Julianne Moore. Jeff Bridges. Alicia Vikander. But the plot was lacking anything distinguishing. All the women being evil, with one exception, didn't help either.
Watch It: If you need to see a high-ish fantasy flick.
Skip It: If you want to save yourself from boredom and a string of tropes.
I remember liking the original Hot Tub Time Machine while catching it on Netflix a year or two ago. But this follow-up was an unnecessary mess. The characters are the same and still haven't grown up. And playing with the paradoxes of time travel is a little heady for this film and the ending is unsatisfying at best.
Watch It: If you absolutely must see these guys attempt to solve a murder mystery.
Skip It: If you want to retain any shred of your sanity.
The final movie this week is the young adult comedy, The Duff. Despite Mae Whitman being ten years out of high school, she manages to pull off the age of the role pretty well. Her co-stars do a solid job opposite her and I appreciate the message of the movie, even if it's been done so many times before. This time the magical moment of exiting her cocoon of blandess, isn't so magical and unbelievable. The transformation is just the right amount.
Watch It: For the laughs and awkwardness of another high school rom-com.
Skip It: If you've seen this theme one too many times.
Footnotes
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