According
to the American Academy of Sleep Medicine, more people say they are sleepy on New
Year’s Day than on any other day of the year. The first day back at work in
January came in second (57% vs. 45%). I think we know the reason why, and it
hasn’t much to do with having stayed up until midnight the previous eve. So,
many of us will be on our couches tomorrow with chips on the coffee table, aspirin
in our bloodstreams, and TV remotes in our hands. (I personally plan to be
hangover-free this year, but only because I’ve experienced being otherwise in
past ones.) If the reader has seen too many Twilight
Zone marathons to wish to see another one and is furthermore no big fan of
college football, he or she might struggle to find something watchable with
that remote. This past weekend I happened to watch (in one case rewatch) three
movies, all of which I can recommend. By the end of the third, the funk should
be lifting – depending on just how much overindulgence was involved.
Ad
Astra (2019)
I
almost saw this in the theater several months ago but ultimately opted for Joker instead. That was the right
choice, but this would not have been a bad one either. (I could, of course,
have seen both, but I don’t go to the theater frequently anymore.) The title (“to
the stars”), as any first year Latin student knows, is part of several Latin
sayings, notably ad astra per aspera
(“to the stars through difficulty”: the motto of Kansas of all places) and sic itur ad astra (“thus one goes to the
stars”: Aeneid IX 641).
Even
scifi films that make an effort to portray spacecraft and space habitats
realistically tend to make them overly
polished. Not Ad Astra: here they are
credibly worn, gritty, and lived-in. The special effects in the film are
phenomenal without overwhelming the story. Brad Pitt pulls off a much deeper
and contemplative performance as the astronaut Roy than I had expected from
him.
Earth
is suffering damaging EMP surges that seem to come from the anti-matter power
source of a presumed-lost crewed probe beyond Neptune. The probe was designed
to image planets in other solar systems. It is commanded by Roy’s father. The
highly skilled but deeply flawed character Roy sets out to find the probe and
destroy it. There is much in the film about personal identity, generations,
morality, and whether meaning is to be found out there or within oneself. Lest
that sound like too much philosophy and not enough action, there is enough of
the latter, too. The pacing isn’t rushed, but at 2 hours it doesn’t drag.
For
those who like hard scifi (e.g. The
Martian), this is a solid entry.
****
****
Ready
or Not (2019)
Getting
the balance right between humor and horror when mixing the two is no easy
matter. A few pull it off including Cabin
in the Woods and Tucker and Dale vs.
Evil. Ready or Not does, too.
Grace
(Samara Weaving) marries a young scion of a super-rich family that made its
fortune in playing cards and board games. Family tradition has her pick a game
card from a very special game on her wedding night. Most of the cards are
innocuous, but unknown to her one of the cards will declare her “it” in a game
of hide-and-seek in which the family tries to kill her. Her only chance is to
survive until morning. Naturally, she draws this card.
This
is a warped but entertaining film with something to say about what people will
do for love and money – and love of
money.
****
****
Road
House (1948)
This
has nothing to do with the better-known Patrick Swayze movie of the same title.
The 1940s were a marvelous decade stylistically and in the popular
arts. Film noir defines the decade on
the screen more than any other genre, and this noir drama is one worth seeing. Ida Lupino is superb as the world-weary
performer Lily in a rustic road house owned by the somewhat unstable Jefty
(Richard Widmark) and managed by his best friend Pete (Cornel Wilde). A love
triangle develops. Betrayals upon betrayals including attempted murder ensue.
There is suspense, fine acting, and a well-written script.
The clip from the film below is Ida singing about the reason so
many of us are on our couches with remotes.
**** ****
If, after those three flicks you’re still feeling off, have some
Alka-Seltzer and take a nap. Tomorrow all will be better… unless tomorrow is
that work day that came in second in that AASM survey.
Ida
Lupino - One for My Baby (and One More
for the Road)
Good reviews. I'll probably see Ad Astra at some later date. I watched the first part (disc) to Chernobyl, and it was very good. I also saw Midsommar the other night as well, and enjoyed it.
ReplyDeleteAd Astra is more engrossing than I expected. I haven't seen Chernobyl or Midsommar. The latter sounds like a Swedish Wicker Man, which would not be a bad thing.
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