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Movies Review

REVIEW – The Lost City

The short version is, I was expecting it to be funnier, but it’s still amiably charming. Aaron & Adam Nee’s film is reminiscent of ROMANCING THE STONE in the broad strokes, but sillier. Sandra Bullock is romantic adventure novelist Loretta Sage, a recluse in a bad place in her life who’s been dragged kicking & screaming out on a book tour to promote “The Lost City of D,” which is a gag deemed too obvious for them to use as the title of the film. After the first stop goes disasterously sideways, she winds up nabbed by goons in the employ of rich scumbag Abigail Fairfax (an intense, manic-grinning Daniel Radcliffe), who can tell from the well-researched bits in Sage’s latest steamy tome that she’s the only one who can lead him to a long-lost treasure located in the REAL titular lost city. Blaming himself for her storming off and winding up in this mess, her seemingly vapid book cover model Alan (Channing Tatum) forces himself into the rescue party. As they say, hijinks ensue, the majority of which you’ll have seen in the trailers. Yes, Brad Pitt is here as the real rescuer, and he’s a hoot. Bullock is doing a very fine job doing the sort of romantic comedy lead work she’s been doing for decades, with the sort of coming-out-of-her-shell, warming-to-her-costar arc you can set your watch by. Tatum’s character starts in a broad comedy himbo mode and then, like a switch was thrown, suddenly has to function as a viable romantic lead so he gets huffy about being treaded as a broad comedy himbo. Doesn’t quite work. The gags that weren’t spoiled by the trailer, many of which are found in a subplot about the misadventures of Sage’s publicist (Da’Vine Joy Randolph) making her OWN attempt at rescue, keep the film’s head above water. Radcliffe’s wild energy doesn’t help the flick’s general feeling of mismatched tones; I like what he’s doing here, but I also feel like the way he’s playing this he DEFINITELY would have shot our heroes dead at the end. Probably wait for rental or streaming unless you’re really jonesing for a trip to the cinema, but ultimately I think still worth a watch.

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Movies Review

REVIEW – The Batman

A whole meal of a film, practically a mini-series on the silver screen, in which the Dark Knight Detective (a growling Robert Pattinson) teams up with the One Good Cop in Gotham (Jeffrey Wright as Lt. Gordon) to take down the question mark-themed obsessive (Paul Dano, clad in some kinda tactical gimp mask instead of a bowler hat) who’s murdering Gotham’s corrupt elite. The levels of conspiracy in Matt Reeves’s film bring to mind certain passages of Grant Morrison’s late ’00s Bat-books or the early stages of Scott Snyder’s run a decade ago (or the issues of the recent Batman: The Adventures Continue comic book series, continuing the classic animated series, that reference the latter run). I adored how much of the film is Batman poking around crime scenes, like classic shots out of a ’70s or early ’80s issue of Detective Comics filtered through a modern aesthetic. Pattinson is the most convincing “weird rich guy who’d dress up in that outfit” since Keaton, and his rapport with Wright — hell, his rapport with all his allies, including Andy Serkis‘s Alfred (whose every scene, just about, is memorable in some fashion) and Zoe Kravitz‘s Selina Kyle (who I’d love to follow to a spin-off where she’s just cheating dudes and stealing stuff) — is fun to watch shift and evolve as the mission that drives him changes. There are fun twists and there are twists that feel a twist too far (or that twist & twist again too rapidly), but I like where the film lands both in terms of overall story and where it leaves the characters for the inevitable follow-up. It was three hours and twenty minutes if you include the trailers, and yet I’m not against the idea of hitting that again over the weekend — somehow THIS interpretation of the Bat-mythos hit me the same way Burton & Keaton’s ’89 flick did back then, filling me with joy as I watched the Caped Crusader beat down thugs, work through clues, and pursue his foes in his crazy rocket-powered car — all the things you want to see Batman do, larger than life, in a room full of similarly awed strangers. It was everything I wanted it to be. Wow.