Showing posts with label thriller. Show all posts
Showing posts with label thriller. Show all posts

Sunday, 31 December 2023

The Killer (2023) - Movie Review

A new David Fincher film coming out is always cause for celebration. A new David Fincher film coming out after he scored another career highlight with Mank, more so. A new David Fincher film coming out with reuniting with writer Andrew Kevin Walker, the scribe behind his breakthrough work Se7en (and script doctor on his other crowning work Fight Club), even more so than that. Sure, I can’t say I was expecting this to entirely reach those same heights, but as someone who holds both creatives in such high esteem, I was definitely curious to see what a new team-up between them would look like. And in a lot of ways, it’s business as usual for the both of them, and in just as many, there’s something different going on here.

Saturday, 23 December 2023

No One Will Save You (2023) - Movie Review

This feels like the kind of flex every screenwriter-cum-director wants to make. After making his mark with some incredibly well-scripted efforts with The Babysitter, Love And Monsters, and even his directorial debut with Spontaneous, it looks like Brian Duffield wanted to show that he could tell a great story without even needing dialogue. And indeed, this is a film about a largely-mute protagonist who says all of one line, and the rest of the cast are just as silent. As someone who has been growing to love Duffield’s cinematic work, I was definitely curious about how such a venture would shape out.

Thursday, 21 December 2023

Guy Ritchie's The Covenant (2023) - Movie Review

I haven’t been fair to Guy Ritchie. Hell, if we’re being honest, I haven’t been that fair to his ex Madonna either, given how I blamed her for Ritchie’s downturn after Snatch; that shit isn’t cool. And neither is how I’ve been framing Guy Ritchie’s films for as long as I’ve been looking at them on here. Having grown up with Snatch, I had a concrete idea in my mind that that is what Guy Ritchie was good at, viewing pretty much everything else that came after it as him trying to diversify into new areas and stepping out of his reach. While I still stand by some of that criticism of him making films that don’t fit his strengths (e.g. the Aladdin remake), thinking that he absolutely must keep making snarky Brit-hard comedic crime dramas for the rest of his career just isn’t reasonable. And it’s only with his latest that I finally got around to understanding that about the guy.

Tuesday, 19 December 2023

Silent Night (2023) - Movie Review

John Woo, the action filmmaker that just about every other action film or even parodies of every other action film over the past forty years owes some artistic debt to, has returned to Hollywood. While his work State-side never really managed to reach the artistic heights of his heyday, as memetic as films like Face/Off and even Mission: Impossible 2 have become, I’m still calling this a moment of potential celebration because… well, it makes the most sense why 2023 would be the year that he would come back. In the same time frame that John Wick, a franchise that simply wouldn’t exist without John Woo’s iconic approach to action thrills, reached its creative apex with Chapter 4, getting more of that grandeur direct from the source is quite the offer.

Monday, 18 December 2023

Freestyle (2023) - Movie Review

Not a lot of Hip-Hop cinema came out this year, at least from what I could find. There was that House Party remake (made by the same guy who thought casting Jack Harlow in White Men Can't Jump was in any way appealing, and this same damn year at that), but otherwise… yeah, I had to look to Poland to find what I needed. And I specify “needed” because, as I consider Hip-Hop part of my personal cultural make-up, and 2023 marked the 50th anniversary of that culture, it wouldn’t be right if I didn’t give it some shine before the year ended. Well, that and starring the lead from The Hater, one of my faves from 2020, helps too.

Friday, 15 December 2023

Tetris (2023) - Movie Review

I have pretty much given up trying to anticipate anything that Jon S. Baird does. With each new release, he not only creates something that stands out wholly from anything else that’s released next to it, but even from the previous production Baird worked on. He's gone from the psychological dark comedy of Filth to the vaudeville tragedy of Stan & Ollie… to a Cold War-era political thriller wearing the skin of a corporate biopic in Tetris.

Thursday, 7 December 2023

The Wrath Of Becky (2023) - Movie Review

When I looked at Becky in 2020, it made for one of the more pleasant surprises in a year that desperately needed as many as it could muster. However, I can’t say I was expecting much else to come from it. So you can imagine how quickly I prioritised checking out its sequel once I discovered its existence. I mean, sure, it’s written and directed by the same duo behind The Open House, one of the most pointless Netflix originals in the history of the platform, but as I got into in that first review, a teenaged vigilante laying waste to neo-Nazis is a pretty damn difficult idea to fuck up. Even on accident, this should allow for some cathartic joy, and thankfully, it offers just that.

Tuesday, 5 December 2023

The Royal Hotel (2023) - Movie Review

After landing on my Best of 2020 list with the chilling and rather emblematic The Assistant, I was definitely curious to see what writer/director/editor Kitty Green would come up with next. And sticking to her roots as a documentarian, she pulled inspiration from the doco Hotel Coolgardie to tell the story of two American backpackers who find themselves in the middle of woop woop, working at a bar until they can make enough to continue their trip. Well, if they make it that far, that is.

The Dive (2023) - Movie Review

As unhelpful as “it’s a [insert genre here] movie that even people who hate [insert genre here] like” is as a critical observation, I do like being able to see and even recommend films that fall into areas that are… outside of my expertise, let’s say. I may frequently rail against bad talking animal movies, and be generally ambivalent towards Westerns, but that just makes my encountering examples I actually like feel just that much better; it's like biting into a BeanBoozled and getting a normal flavour. And here, we have a survival film that had me properly invested from end to end.

Friday, 1 December 2023

Retribution (2023) - Movie Review


 The decision to watch this movie was something of a desperation measure. At time of writing, I’m not only still dealing with the finale of the After series with After Everything, which even for that series is pretty damn bad, but also having watched the new Digimon movie the night before and… well, recovering from the realisation that a kids’ movie could turn out that badly. As such, even though Liam Neeson’s film career has been in a bit of a worrying place in recent years, I went into this knowing that it wasn’t going to some grand masterwork, but still hoping that it would least be better than the other shit I’ve seen over the past 24 hours. And thankfully, I can report that this film is actually not that bad.

Wednesday, 11 October 2023

Saw X (2023) - Movie Review

On the 11th of October, 2014, I made my first blog post for Mahan's Media titled “Why didn’t I start this sooner?” I named it that partly because I originally started Mahan’s Media as a holdover while I kept trying to get my old YouTube videos together, which took way too bloody long because, as anyone who has read anything I’ve written before will tell you, I’m not that great at editing. But also because I had been writing mini-reviews for myself for quite a while before that. They weren’t as detailed as the thousand-word-minimum stuff I used to put up on here, but there were a lot of them, along with their accompanying place on a ranked list for 2012, 2013, and 2014.

That was the policy with their listings on here too, until I finally realised that listing them in that arbitrary order made it far more difficult to actually find specific reviews that it should have been. I still keep those lists on my computer, and use them for reference when drafting the year-end lists, but I figure being user-friendly should come first, so I rearranged them alphabetically by year when I did my four-year-long clean-up of the blog. Of course, since I still list everything by year of Australian release, there’s likely to be some further confusion but hey: At least I’m learning.

And indeed, the nine years that have transpired since that first post have indeed been a learning experience for me. I started out as an Angry Critic clone who was fascinated by the art of riffing, but didn’t have any formal training in such things, and quite frankly, I didn’t really know what I was doing. Hell, I’m still not sure if I know. All these reviews and listicles have been as much about figuring myself out as figuring out any film or other piece of media that I’ve come across, and I genuinely think that writing so damn much on here has helped shape me into the man I am today.

What began as an obsessive hobby has grown to the point where my high school dream of becoming a paid writer actually came true thanks to FilmInk bringing me on-board. I may miss one or two screenings due to bad scheduling on my part, but I pride myself on my consistency otherwise with a same-day turnaround for any screening my editor sends me out to. I cut my teeth on watching four films a day at the cinema, and doing mini-reviews for all of them between screenings; I’ve put in my 10,000 hours and then some, and in my case, I have been rewarded for my efforts.

Tuesday, 12 September 2023

How To Blow Up A Pipeline (2023) - Movie Review

I get the feeling that, considering the subject matter of this review and… well, just take a look at the title for the bloody thing, I should probably try and cover my own arse by writing a notice saying, as explicitly as possible, that I do not condone the actions that are depicted in this film and I do not encourage anyone to re-enact them in real life. Y’know, just in case someone gets pissed off enough about what I think of a certain movie to go digging for dirt on me, and decides to quote-mine for anything that they consider wrongthink.

Of course, despite what most media would tell you about pacifists, I am not a coward. As much as my opinions and worldviews are subject to change over time (this blog is having its ten-year anniversary next month; I doubt that I’m even the same person I was ten months ago), I still stand by every word I’ve put down here, if for no other reason than they genuinely represent my understanding of things when I initially wrote them. What I’ve written here is no different.

Besides, if someone truly ends up being inspired by this review, or indeed by the film itself, to try and act out this particular narrative… that’s probably just a stray droplet of water on what was already a tree with deep roots.

Tuesday, 5 September 2023

Sanctuary (2023) - Movie Review

For about as long as I’ve shown any real interest in film, I’ve always tried to advocate for enjoying films regardless of where that enjoyment comes from. I have sat through way too many bad films that I went into knowing that they’d be bad, of my own free will, to turn my nose up at what anyone else chooses to do for fun in their off-time. And while I can’t say I have all that much first-hand experience with S&M and other such play routines, quite a bit of my understanding of engaging with media, and indeed my championing of Edgelord Optimism (finding positivity in disturbing and weird shit), shares a lot of DNA with BDSM philosophy. Pain can lead to its own form of pleasure, even if it’s the hyperbolic pain of a bad movie.

Thursday, 10 August 2023

Oppenheimer (2023) - Movie Review

The existential threat posed by the atomic bomb has always felt like an abstract concept to me. Being born after the bubbling conceptualising of it during WWII, and its position as the final safeguard during the Cold War, I haven’t really considered that kind of devastation as something real. Or, at least, beyond the perplexing optimism of the time that, should one of these bombs go off, the public would be perfectly fine if they just hid under a table with their arms over their heads. Part of my struggle with dealing with media in the context with which it was made (usually when dealing with anything made pre-1995) extends beyond just media and even for actual shit that has happened, and could very well happen again. And yet, for the longest time, I’ve always treated it as something historical, something academic, rather than anything concrete.

Watching this film changed that for me. Big time.

Tuesday, 25 July 2023

Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One (2023) - Movie Review

What is the worst thing you can say to a raging narcissist with a saviour complex? And I don’t mean “worst” as in “what will hurt their feefees the most?”; I mean what would make this already-precarious situation even worse?

You tell him that he might actually be onto something.


Monday, 12 June 2023

Hypnotic (2023) - Movie Review

There are few things that fill me with more delight than seeing the words “Directed by Robert Rodriguez” in big fuck-off letters on a cinema screen. I’ve gotten to the point where I would willingly watch the guy work on just about anything, but there’s something special about seeing his work on the big screen. The human lab rat turned one-man film crew who lives and breathes neo-exploitation and old-school pulp cinema, he’s the guy that marked the real turning point for my fascination with filmmaking as a creative process, and auteur theory in particular. And with his latest, a detective-led crime drama that spirals out into a government conspiracy involving psychics and the power of hypnotic suggestion, there’s quite a bit of other auteurs to be found in the construction here.

Tuesday, 11 April 2023

Cocaine Bear (2023) - Movie Review

Elizabeth Banks’ last two directorial efforts (Pitch Perfect 2 and the latest Charlie’s Angels) were… alright. They had their strong feminist moments, and I’m thankful that the days of Movie 43 are far behind her at this point, but they weren’t necessarily the most memorable within their respective franchises. So when news hit that her next feature would be… well, a creature feature that looked destined to be a meme from the title alone, I wasn’t expecting much from it. But to be honest, this is the first time Banks has genuinely impressed me as a filmmaker, and the film itself is a whole lot of fun.

Saturday, 8 April 2023

65 (2023) - Movie Review

Dinosaurs aren’t interesting anymore. The sense of wonder that Steven Spielberg once instilled in audiences by using modern cinema technology to bring prehistoric predators back to life with 1993’s Jurassic Park has since lost its lustre. There’s something to be said about how much further CGI and practical effects have come since then (or, if we’re being honest, how much harder they’re being pushed for the bulk of mainstream blockbuster visuals), but there’s the impact of that film’s own sequels to consider as well. The cleverest thing to come out of the Jurassic World trilogy (and bear in mind that I’m a staunch defender of Fallen Kingdom) is its potentially-unintentional observation of how jaded modern audiences have become, to the point where what once was considered breathtaking is now just… there. It's the kind of statement that makes the presence of even one sequel, let alone all five, seem counterproductive.

Saturday, 25 March 2023

Missing (2023) - Movie Review

While 2018’s Searching may not be the first example of the ‘screenlife’ movie (even outside of producer Timur Bekmambetov’s prior experiments with the format, it has been kicking around since the early 2000s in works like Thomas In Love and The Collingswood Story), it has shown to be the point where that particular style became viable. Where Unfriended used the format as a means to prop-up dusty teen horror tropes and characterisation, Searching dived head-first into turning Extremely Online existence into a bedrock for tense thrills, in a way that felt very Black Mirror and yet was wholly distinct from that show's usual style.

I checked out Searching as part of FilmInk detail, and while I still think this kind of cinema is designed to watched at home via streaming (same deal with Rob Savage’s Host and Dashcam), it showed that there was real potential for this new(ish) avenue for found footage cinema. I know that audiences and critics have grown tired of such things after the reign of terror unleashed by Paranormal Activity, but as someone who also spends most of my time attached to my computer screen, I’m more than okay with this becoming more of a trend. Especially if it’s being done by the same crew as Searching, which is the case here.

Well, not exactly the same crew, I should mention. While Aneesh Chaganty and Sev Ohanian did the initial story treatment for this, and are attached as producers, the writing and directing this time around are being done by Will Merrick and Nick Johnson, who not only did the editing for Searching but also Chaganty and Ohanian’s more traditional domestic thriller Run. And quite frankly, if any other crew members had to be given the reins for a new film, Merrick and Johnson were the best picks because… well, quite frankly, it’s the editing that makes this format work. It’s the ability to arrange all these different screengrabs of people’s smart devices, laptops, and security cameras, in a way that keeps attention on the screen and (most importantly) doesn’t let the screenshot aspect of the footage distract from the story being told with it. Their work on Searching and Run is absolutely brilliant, and helped make those films so bloody good as thrillers, so there’s definite hope that they can still work in this bigger position.

And work they do, as while the story being told is along the same lines as Searching in its cyber-sleuth framing to do with a missing family member, it goes the Taken 2 route and switches it to the child being the one who tracks down the missing parents, in this case being Storm Reid as June. Right from the start, with a showing of an episode of ‘Unfiction’ that is an in-universe dramatisation of the events of Searching, the film creates an understanding that there’s a certain perverse interest that these kinds of stories engender in an audience. One that doesn’t usually let things being far-fetched get in the way of the entertainment value. Admittedly, this film doesn’t go as far into bending disbelief as, say, the pharmacy “I’m on a scavenger hunt” scene in Run. But there’s still a sensationalist edge to the story, part of which is in the narrative proper with all the news footage and Podcast Bro reactions to events as they unfold.

But quite frankly, the pacing and tense atmosphere are just that exacting that it’s difficult to care much about such niggles in the moment. Editors Austin Keeling and Arielle Zakowski do a terrific job of keeping things moving as June exercises as many options as she can in trying to find out why her mother Grace (Nia Long) and her boyfriend Kevin (Ken Leung) never arrived back from their holiday in Colombia. As I watched June cross-reference all these different bits of data across so many platforms, along with trial-and-error-ing her way into a few accounts, it felt I was seeing an in-progress research stream from someone like Coffeezilla, and it’s honestly kind of cool to be on the inside of the kind of in-depth work June puts into figuring out what happened to her mother.

Where things get interesting on top of that is how the ease at which June is able to put together a makeshift plan to sort through the evidence, on two different fronts, manage to make this entire thing even more unsettling to witness. On the first front, there’s the underlying idea that someone, just with access to a computer, is even capable of doing something like this, up to and including using an online freelance service to get Colombian local Javier (Joaquim de Almeida) to do some extra legwork for her. Beyond just being another reminder that people who use one password for everything really need to change things up, it also shows the true extent of which the phrase “the internet is forever” applies to what we put onto it.

But the second front goes one step further, as June begins to question if she really knows the people she’s looking for in the first place. Like with Searching and Run, the main core of the emotional drive here has to do with the complex relationship between parent and child and, more specifically, the lengths that parents will go to for their children. Searching showed unethical behaviour out of fear for a child’s life, Run was full of medical gaslighting out of a warped sense of what it means to be a parent, and Missing… well, I’m not going to spoil how that applies here, but let’s just say that it looks at both sides of the equation when it comes to why someone would attempt to cover up their digital footprint, and where that overlaps with the real world.

In all honesty, between the length and the growing familiarity with Chaganty and Ohanian’s style of storytelling, I can’t say I got into this as much as Searching. Maybe it doesn’t feel quite as novel, maybe it’s because of the specific character arcs being tapped into, or maybe it’s just because I watched Run for the first time less than 24 hours before this, and those are big shoes to fill for any film. But even with that said, this is still very effective as a thriller, with incredible pacing, punchy yet never overstated use of Julian Scherle’s soundtrack, and Storm Reid doing quite well in keeping the audience’s attention when the ’camera’ spends so much of the time focused on her face.

As the third installment of a loose anthological universe (containing references not just to Searching, but also a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it epilogue for Run), I’ll admit that I’m definitely interested to see where things go from here for this franchise. But as much fun as this format still is for me, I would like to see a bit more variety with the stories being told; there’s only so much that can be gotten out of parental friction as the main dramatic point. Then again, that’s kind of what this format is; what is screenlife if not the bratty, tech-savvy offspring of found footage?

Friday, 30 December 2022

Poker Face (2022) - Movie Review


I picked this film purely for nostalgic reasons, and I don’t mean that in a fond way. Russell Crowe’s directorial debut, The Water Diviner, was one of the first movies I ever reviewed on here way back in December of 2014. That was back when I was still heavily in the phase of obsessing over people who talked about movies, as opposed to obsessing over the movies themselves, and I still had a lot of growing up to do as a writer and just as a person in general. Chances are there are quite a few films from back then that I’d likely have a different take on if I were to write about them today (hell, that has definitely been the case for a few of them, like The Babadook), but Crowe’s first attempt as a director has never struck me as one of those potential examples. So, let’s see how he goes at his second attempt in the chair, and him now writing the script as well.