Reviews

Directed by: Noah Hutton
Written by: Noah Hutton
Starring: Dean Imperial, Madeline Wise, Babe Howard, Ivory Aquino, Dora Madison, James McDaniel
Released: June 3, 2021
Grade: A-

Lapsis

When creating science-fiction movies about robots, the trend is to give them human-like qualities and follow one of two distinct paths.  You can make them friendly and loveable as illustrated by films such as WALL-E, A.I. Artificial Intelligence, The Iron Giant, Real Steel, Short Circuit, or you can make them villainous and world destroying as shown in The Terminator, Ex Machina, Transformers and The Matrix.

The reality is not quite so glamorous and action-packed.  Robots are changing our existence every single day but, instead of having to worry about being chased by a machine-gun wielding terminator, we are more likely to be affected economically through shifts in wealth distribution.  There are many jobs that will be taken over, if they haven’t already, by robots and artificial intelligence.

It raises an interesting theoretical question that I’ve often posed of friends – if our world reaches a point where almost every job on the planet is performed by a robot, what becomes of employment?  How can people earn a wage if there is no work for humans to perform?  Is there some kind of government welfare and if so, how is it funded and how is it disseminated?  Would it be subject to corruption and manipulation?

Writer-director Noah Hutton taps into these ideas with Lapsis.  It marks his feature-film debut (his background is in documentaries) and it earned him a nomination for best first screenplay at the recent Independent Spirit Awards (Andy Siara’s Palm Springs won the category).  Hutton describes it as science-fiction set in the “parallel present”.  It’s similar to the world we know today but with a few small differences to highlight thought-provoking themes.

The film’s protagonist is Ray (Imperial), a man in need of a well-paying job to help pay the pricey medical bills of his fatigued half-brother, Jamie (Howard).  Tipped off by a questionable friend, Ray becomes a contractor for a major global company that is laying high-speed network cables across the country.  It works in a similar manner to Uber.  Ray accepts contracts on his phone and once he’s hiked through forests and laid the cables, the company transfers money into his bank account.  There’s a catch though.  Robots are also performing the work and if they can do it faster, Ray doesn’t get a cent.

Lapsis has a lot to say about the gig economy, the diminution of unionisation, and the growing power of companies over individuals.  Hutton drew on his own experiences having worked himself as an independent contractor for the past decade and having to buy his own equipment and pay for his own health insurance.  What we see in the film may be over-exaggerated for comedic effect but it gets you thinking about the real world. 

Hutton frames the story as a dark comedy.  For example, there’s a great moment where Ray teams up with a more experienced contractor to slow the movement of a cable-laying robot that is on their tail.  You could look at this scene through a humorous lens and have a simple laugh about humans outsmarting robots.  However, on thinking about it deeper, you realise the only thing keeping Ray in a job is robot-sabotage and it won’t be long until he’s the one being outsmarted.

Lapsis is both strange and stimulating.  A great combination!

Directed by: John Krasinski
Written by: John Krasinski
Starring: Emily Blunt, Cillian Murphy, Millicent Simmonds, Noah Jupe, Djimon Hounsou, John Krasinski
Released: May 27, 2021
Grade: A-

A Quiet Place: Part II

Released in 2018, A Quiet Place was easily one of the top 10 movies of that year.  It’ll be compulsory viewing to fully understand this follow-up.  If looking for an abridged summary, it was set in a world which had been attacked by alien grasshopper-like creatures who kill anything that makes a sound.  A four-person family had taken refuge in a small country home where every part of their routine had been altered so as to make as little noise as possible.  It was a fascinating premise which asked the question - could you go the rest of your life without making a single sound if your survival depended on it?

A Quiet Place: Part II picks up where the last film left off.  The Abbott family home has been destroyed and they’ve set off to find somewhere equally safe.  Their travels take them to a dilapidated factory which is home to Emmett (Murphy), an old family friend who has also spent the last year of his life hiding away in a well-fortified basement.  He’s now there alone given his wife recently passed away due to illness.

In the same vein as the original, director John Krasinski builds suspense through the lack of dialogue, sound effects and music.  There’s a scene where the family are hiking along a forest path and they must carefully consider each step to avoid the sound of crackling leaves and snapped branches.  It’s an intense sequence where cinematographer Polly Morgan (Lucy in the Sky) zooms in on their bare feet and lets the images do the talking.  It reiterates that silence is one of the most effective tools in making audiences feel uncomfortable.  

The film’s second half borrows from a well-used formula and splits the characters up to create more subplots and more tension.  A few parts are predictable but it still works.  Krasinski weaves the stories together, increases the tempo, and gives us a fast-paced, edge-of-your-seat thriller that will take your breath away.  The special effects and sound crews deserve similar praise in creating some of the creepiest aliens we’ve ever seen on the big screen.  Their hideous faces and piercing shrieks will not be easily forgotten.

Emily Blunt (The Devil Wears Prada) won a Screen Actors Guild Award for her performance in the first film and, once again, she’s terrific as the resilient mother who will stop at nothing to protect her family.  The two likeable youngsters, Millicent Simmonds (Wonderstruck) and Noah Jupe (Ford v Ferrari), have more to do this time around and it’s cool to see their inquisitive/courageous characters develop into quasi-action heroes.

I’m normally sceptical of a sequel that relies on the same hooks and tricks as the original and while yes, that’s partially the case here, A Quiet Place: Part II is still exceedingly better than other action-thrillers coming out of Hollywood.

Directed by: JJ Winlove
Written by: JJ Winlove
Starring: Noni Hazlehurst, Claudia Karvan, Stephen Curry
Released: May 6, 2021
Grade: B+

June Again

A film that’s long stuck in my memory bank is Penny Marshall’s Awakenings, a 1990 drama that earned an Academy Award nomination for best picture.  It followed a physician (Robin Williams) who used an experimental drug on catatonic patients to “bring them back to life.”  I wouldn’t have believed it if not knowing it was a true story.  What if you were asleep for 30 years and then suddenly woke up?  How easy would it be to reconnect with family and to understand all that has changed in the world?

A similar idea is explored in June Again, an Australian film with Noni Hazlehurst in the title role.  June suffers from dementia (the effects of a series of strokes) and has spent her last few years living in an aged care facility.  She no longer remembers her family and she struggles to recall simple words.  The introductory scenes bear a curious resemblance to Florian Zeller’s The Father in that we see things through June’s confused eyes and it’s hard to work out what’s real and what’s not.

And then... a miracle happens.  June wakes up unexpectedly one morning with her memory restored.  She reads staff name tags, she completes a crossword puzzle, and she asks questions about her family.  Writer-director JJ Winlove goes with a not-so-heavy-handed approach and plays these moments for laughs.  Now that June’s full personality is on display, we see she’s a feisty, funny woman who loves to exert dominance.  She bluffs a security guard, sneaks out of the aged care home, and sweet-talks a taxi driver into giving her a free ride.  The end result - June is on the loose!

There are a handful of interesting misadventures (such as a moment where June befriends a young music student) but at its heart, June Again is the tale of someone effectively “coming back from the dead” and the impact it has on close friends and family.  On realising how much her two grown children have underachieved (at least in her opinion), June re-establishes herself as the meddling matriarch and is quick to dispense advice.  Her heart is in the right place but there are times when her ignorance of recent events and her general stubbornness cause more harm than good.

There’s a bit too much going on at times.  The weakest subplot involves June involving herself in family’s wallpaper production business and dishing out ideas.  Would she not have higher priorities to worry about?  The better stuff, and this a credit to the fine performances, are the squabbles between June and her two kids (exemplified by an awkward “intervention” where the son arrives with a six-pack of beer).  Hazlehurst wins the majority of laughs while a subdued Claudia Karvan and Stephen Curry are required to take things more seriously.  It’s a nice balance.

As fantastical as this scenario may appear, you grow to care about these three characters and their fate.  If there was any doubt, the film’s emotional punchline provides confirmation.  A feel-good movie about dementia?  June Again is a winner.

Directed by: Filippo Meneghetti
Written by: Filippo Meneghetti, Malysone Bovorasmy
Starring: Barbara Sukowa, Martine Chevallier, Léa Drucker, Jérôme Varanfrain, Muriel Bénazéraf, Augustin Reynes
Released: May 20, 2021
Grade: A-

Two of Us

It has a chequered history but the best international feature film category at the Academy Awards still plays a big part in bringing non-English language cinema to the world’s attention.  To be eligible, the feature film must be produced outside of the United States and more than 50% of the dialogue must be non-English.  Perhaps the most controversial rule is that each country may only submit one movie.  This places a heavy burden on those involved with the selection process to ensure they pick the film with the best chance of success.

In France, the process is overseen by the National Cinema Centre and the panel consists of directors, producers, sales agents, and other knowledgeable film folk.  They come up with a shortlist of roughly five movies, meet with the respective filmmakers, and then decide on a “winner”.  Their selection for the most recent Oscars ceremony was Two of Us and while it didn’t make the final list of nominees (a tough ask given 93 countries submitted in 2020), it’s easy to see why it was France’s worthy submission.

Marking the feature film debut of Italian-born director Filippo Meneghetti, Two of Us explores a dynamic that we don’t often see depicted on the big screen – a same-sex relationship between two 60-something-year-old women.  Nina (Sukowa) and Madeleine (Chevallier) have been lovers for roughly 20 years but, worried about how society will perceive their connection, they’ve kept it hidden from everyone.  It’s particularly problematic for Madeleine who is scared of telling the truth to her two grown children (from a former marriage).

So how have they kept it a secret for long?  By becoming neighbours.  They share adjoining residences on the top floor of an apartment building and they freely walk back-and-forth across the corridor when they need to see each other.  If one of Madeleine’s kids decides to stop by, Nina can easily slip back to her place and no one’s the wiser.  It’s an arrangement that’s served them well but, with hopes of moving into their own combined place, Nina has been pressuring an apprehensive Madeleine to finally “come out of the closet” to friends and family. 

It’s at the start of the second act when a tragic event tears these two women apart (it’s best I don’t reveal too much).  The tone shifts, other characters enter the mix, and the emotional heart of this story resonates.  Barbara Sukowa and Martine Chevallier are excellent in the lead roles and they will convince audiences of their love for each other.  Muriel Bénazéraf adds a layer of complexity with her scene-stealing performance as a caregiver with issues of her own.

The adage “sex sells” has been around since the 19th century and it’s a major reason why characters in romantic movies (whether they be comedy or drama) tend to be young and good looking.  Meneghetti and co-writer Malysone Bovorasmy wanted to buck that trend and provide a love story that contrasts with “society’s obsession with youth and the perfection of the body.”  It wasn’t easy to secure finance (as it was seen as “non-commercial”) but I’m glad they stuck with their vision and followed this through.

Directed by: Robin Wright
Written by: Jesse Chatham, Erin Dignam
Starring: Robin Wright, Demián Bichir
Released: April 29, 2021
Grade: B+

Land

Edee (Wright) is a middle-aged, suburban woman who has purchased a dilapidated, single-room cabin in the Wyoming wilderness.  You won’t find this place on Google Street View and there’s no highway or convenience store nearby.  Wyoming is already the least densely populated state in the contiguous United States and she’s deliberately selected this spot due to its remoteness from civilisation.

There’s a reason behind her unusual change of living.  Edee went through a tragic experience and, as she tells a psychiatrist in the film’s opening scene, she doesn’t want to be around people anymore.  Edee has pushed away those offering support so she, rightly or wrongly, can be “alone with her pain” and grieve in the way she desires.

One could look at Edee and see her actions as selfish and suicidal.  She hasn’t told her family where she’s gone (they must be worried sick) and she’s living in a freezing shack in the middle of nowhere with no car, no mobile phone, a minimal amount of tinned food, and zero skills when it comes to hunting and fishing.  It doesn’t matter what she reads in the handful of self-help books she’s purchased.  In the same vein as Christopher McCandless in Into the Wild, Edee’s is well-intentioned but ill-equipped.

Writers Jesse Chatham and Erin Dignam have structured the film as part drama (which works) and part mystery (which doesn’t work).  They try to build unnecessary intrigue by withholding details of Edee’s heart-breaking past, continually dropping hints via flashbacks and fantasy scenes, and then revealing all at the end.  Perhaps this decision was taken to mirror Edee’s insular nature (she gives up very little) but, as a viewer looking in from the outside, a greater understanding of her fractured psyche from the outset would have made it easier to “buy into” the decisions she makes along the way.

The film finds its feet in the second half through the introduction of Miguel (Bichir), a cowboy-like hunter who befriends Edee and helps out with a few things.  A cynical part of me saw his arrival as an attempt to add dialogue to the movie (there isn’t much when Edee is on her own) but ultimately, I loved the bond developed between these two leading characters.

They remind us that, however much we try to shut ourselves off from the world, there’s no substitute for meaningful human interaction.  We’ve seen this theme driven home in many other movies where two unrelated people come together and improve themselves by helping the other.  It rings true in this case thanks to the subtle performances of Robin Wright (Forrest Gump) and Demián Bichir (A Better Life).  It’s hard not be moved by the finale.

Marking the feature film directorial debut of Wright, Land is a simple but effective tale.

Directed by: Taylor Sheridan
Written by: Michael Koryta, Charles Leavitt, Taylor Sheridan
Starring: Angelina Jolie, Finn Little, Nicholas Hoult, Aidan Gillen, Jon Bernthal, Jake Weber
Released: May 13, 2021
Grade: B

Those Who Wish Me Dead

Those Who Wish Me Dead serves up a formulaic hero story with not much subtlety or nuance.  Everyone is either 99% good or 99% bad.  A forensic accountant (Webber) has uncovered incriminating information that would rival the stuff Jeffrey Epstein took to his grave.  It implicates high-profile people who will stop at nothing to ensure it is never made public.

These villains aren’t the type to use bribes or light coercion.  They’ve already killed a renowned judge (making it look like an accident) and their next target is the accountant and his 12-year-old son, Connor (Little).  Sensing the danger, they’ve fled to Montana to hide out with a family relative (who just so happens to be a trustworthy local sheriff).

It’s at this point where Hannah (Jolie) becomes of relevance.  She’s a risk-loving smokejumper who, in the midst of bushfire season, has been posted to a remote watch tower described as a “20 x 20 box on stilts with no toilet”.  If we’re being honest, she shouldn’t be there alone.  Hannah recently endured a traumatic work experience and it’s clear, as evidenced by her dreams, that she hasn’t come to grips with what happened.

Hannah stumbles across the scared Connor in the wilderness and, after an outlandishly convenient lightning storm destroys all their forms of communication (the special effects aren’t great), the pair team up to hike back to civilisation and alert news outlets about the bad guys.  I’m not sure why Connor’s dad didn’t do this at the outset… perhaps because it would have been a 10-minute movie otherwise.

It’s rare to be saying this about an action-thriller but the best element of Those We Wish Me Dead are the villains.  The Tyler Perry cameo is a head-scratcher but I enjoyed the perspective of the two experienced hitmen played by Aidan Gillen (Game of Thrones) and Nicolas Hoult (The Favourite).  I’ll acknowledge the resources at their disposal are a bit far-fetched (private planes, hacking tech) but they’re smart guys and their detailed strategic discussions make for good listening.  They’re more interesting than the heroes and perhaps that’s why they’re given a similar amount of screen time.

The film boasts a cool local connection with Brisbane-born 14-year-old Finn Little (Storm Boy) showing off his talent alongside Oscar winning star Angelina Jolie (Girl, Interrupted).  It’s a role that requires much emotion and Little shows he’s up to the task.  The man shaping those performances is director Taylor Sheridan – the screenwriter responsible for Sicario and Hell or High Water.  This isn’t as strong as those two outings but it’ll find fans amongst those looking for an entertaining chase movie.

Based on the 2014 novel written by Michael Koryta, Those Who Wish Me Dead could have used more complexity but it’s still a passable action-thriller.