The week took an unexpected turn, so there were only two songs on my #nowplaying playlist this week.
About Fred
Weekly Movie Roundup
I watched another 6 movies last week. It got off to a very rough start, but I think the week ended well:
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- I probably expected too much from a movie called Your Sister Is a Werewolf, but holy hell is Howling II bad.
- Krull is dull. There’s probably a version of this material that could appear hokey but charming, dumb and derivative but silly and fun. But this version of it is just so very boring.
- Frankenhooker plays more than a little like “Re-Animator, but if it was bad.” The movie is at its best when it fully embraces its cheap and gag-like absurdity, but its best is still no better than hit or miss. Having now seen three of Frank Henenlotter’s movies, they’ve all impressed me in the same way: never exactly very good, but too weird and occasionally imaginative to be completely terrible.
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- Die, Monster, Die! has a little bit of gothic atmosphere, a fun if goofy title, and a pretty good performance by Boris Karloff. Sadly, it doesn’t have a lot more than that, and doesn’t do enough with what it does have.
- It’s been a while since I’ve seen the previous two movies, but I think I can safely say, at least in this moment, that Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 is my favorite of the three. It’s an incredibly effective send-off for these characters—some of whom I’m sure Marvel will force to return—and a genuinely affecting story of found family and kindness. It’s often also really funny and easily the best movie that Marvel has made in quite a while.
- Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse is less focused than Into the Spider-Verse. But even if it feels sprawling and even a little too loose at times, it never once feels padded, and it’s endlessly inventive and visually astounding.
I also re-watched Shaun of the Dead, which I haven’t seen for close to twenty years. It still really holds up, remarkably effective as both a comedy and a horror movie.
Now Playing
Here are all my #nowplaying songs from this past week:
Weekly Movie Roundup
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- What’s Up, Doc? is a lot. Even by the standards of the screwball comedies it’s imitating, the movie is aggressively madcap—though maybe that’s it’s strength, since you never have a chance to exactly get bored even if you also never exactly laugh out loud at anything on screen.
- Don’t Let Go has a strong cast, and a neat (if somewhat familiar) time-travel concept, but it gets bogged down by a formulaic plot that wastes a lot of its actors and potential.
- If you can forgive the not very good makeup effects, the cliched plot, the padded running time, and the cultural appropriation that extends to unconvincing brown face, The Ghoul is a midlly interesting footnote in Boris Karloff’s career.
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- Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows isn’t an amazing movie—even if ten-year-old me would strongly disagree—and it probably is for the best that they discontinued this Michael Bay-produced series. But it also isn’t terrible, and like the movie before it, it has some fun moments. I paid ninety-nine cents to rent the 2014 version of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and remember thinking that was about right for what I got. I didn’t pay anything to rent the sequel, and I feel like I got a real bargain.
- Roger Ebert described Crash—favorably, I need to add, in a three-and-a-half star review—as being “like a porno movie made by a computer.” It’s a deeply unenjoyable movie, but I don’t think Ebert was wrong in also calling it “challenging, courageous and original” in the things it has to say about sex and fetish and compulsion.
- Something from Nothing: The Art of Rap isn’t necessarily an informative documentary, even if it does talk at length to many of the pioneers and grandmasters of hip hop. But there is something to be said for simply listening to smart people talk about their creative process, and letting them just talk about the art that they love. It’s a scattershot history of the musical genre, but there are a lot of interesting, fun, and even insightful moments that arise in its conversations.
I also re-watched Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, which I remember liking the first time around, but which I actually think I liked more now, having just recently watched the first season of Andor.
Now Playing
Here are all my #nowplaying songs from this past week: