Tuesday, March 26, 2024

Teen Titans Go! To the Movies (2018) - Letterboxd Review

I have been trying to use my Letterboxd account for more reviews that didn't inspire me to spend too much effort into films that try and burn me out seriously and critically reviewing them. Teen Titans Go! To the Movies is one of those movies that I spent the first 15 minutes wanting to walk away from. I mention in my Letterboxd review for this movie that I haven't been so affected by cringeworthy material since 2017 when I saw The Lego Ninjago Movie in theaters, yet could not bring myself to walk out because I paid for a full-price movie ticket. The hour-ish runtime remaining just doubled down on the tone-deaf references to popular culture that were in their prime decades before the target audience was either alive or semi-conscious. 

Next week's review will be picked from a list that I have compiled as "palate-cleansers" for when I am assaulted by movies that threaten burnout in this project.

Tuesday, March 19, 2024

Dream Scenario (2023) - Review

Dream Scenario is a black comedy film, which is the most recent offering from Nicolas Cage where he plays Paul Matthews, an unassuming and unimpressive professor. This may seem like a large dig at the completely meek man who finds himself at the center of unwanted attention - appearing in the dreams of those by which he is acquainted, and quickly reaching the larger community, even the world. Paul must navigate this new reality, coping with his newfound fame and infamy, or suffer the societal consequences. No one is sure exactly why Paul is at the center of these at first innocuous then graphic (in many ways) dreams, however they continue to suffer from this collective phenomenon until it passes for good.

The strength of Dream Scenario is its superb casting; the film boasts a solid cast of actors who on sight triggered memories of their comedic performances - Michael Cera, Tim Meadows, and Dylan Baker - but delivered subtly angry performances. The dean of Paul's university (Meadows), Brett, is a concerned friend but must walk the line between personal and professional lives, Trent (Cera) is the lead of a small marketing start-up and has to deal with Paul's newly inflated ego, and Richard (Baker) continues to be frustrated that he has to contemplate the aforementioned mediocre professor. These characters are all upset with the fact that they have not received a dream visitation by Paul in their own ways, yet for different reasons, and I cannot imagine any other actors being able to deliver these nuanced and subdued performances. Julianne Nicholson portrays Paul's wife Janet, another person who fails to have any dreams of her husband like all of those around her. She is also tortured by her husband's newfound celebrity status, and refuses to give in to his slow unraveling due to his self-serving nature. 

Out of the performances described above, Nicholson's performance deserves the most credit - the focus on her character's struggle is especially important because Paul does not know how to regulate the oxygen being sucked out of every room that he so desperately craves, even when his world comes crashing down. Her story highlights just how much that Paul tries to be mild-mannered, unassuming, and capitulating, but all of those character traits are just a mask for his egotistical desires. Cage also delivers the promise of his character from the absolute start: he remains this low-achieving academic who by no means has any control over his emotions. The Paul Matthews at the start is the same at the end, for better or for worse. The casting of Cage was also a wonderful move - this is a man 40 years into his acting career who is self aware of the image that he has in the public eye. I have made no attempt to hide the fact that I got into watching Nic Cage movies with more interest because of the viral freakouts of the late 2000s and early 2010s, and this seemed like the best form of closure that Cage could have ever had to his viral fame. Dream Scenario has quickly cemented itself as a staple for Cage's career and will be one of the films that haunt his fans, for better or for worse.

Tuesday, March 12, 2024

Update and a Special Review

I just concluded the most intense semester in my academic career, but that meant that I had to shift my focus away from this blog and to completing the avalanche of coursework that was required. I was able to complete a review for Snake Eyes and publish last Tuesday for the first time in a month if you want to want to go back and see what a break does to my critical eye.

Despite catching up to my coursework and having a huge weight lifted off of my shoulders, I was only able to complete one review for the project before flying across the country for a week. In order to keep the blog current, even though I don't have access to my regular accounts, I decided to write a letter to the various people on the plane ride out west whose entertainment choices were, shall I say, interesting. If you enjoy that letter, please do consider subscribing to my Letterboxd for similarly written reviews for movies. I have one serious review on that account that was written 8 years ago, but have since made it lie dormant until a muse inspires me (see: The Country Bears). As you may surmise, that account is not my review priority as this blog exists and has a defined purpose.

I had high hopes that my course load would stay manageable enough for me to work on putting together a kindle book this summer with my Cage reviews and selected essays, but that has stalled for the reason mentioned above. I still intend to work on this project, but it no longer has a projected completion date. See my support page for more details. I do have some sort of roadmap for future reviews, but any support that you all kick in can help in my selection paralysis.

Have a great week! I hope to have a new Nic Cage review ready next Tuesday at the normal scheduled time!

Tuesday, March 5, 2024

Snake Eyes (1998) - Review

Snake Eyes stars Nicolas Cage as corrupt policeman Rick Santoro, who is roped into an unravelling criminal conspiracy after the murder of the United States Defense Secretary at a heavyweight boxing fight. Gary Sinise plays Kevin Dunne, a U.S. Navy Commander who is in charge of the security detail for the Secretary of Defence and a childhood friend of Santoro. Thinking that determining the circumstances surrounding the assassination of the Secretary will raise his profile, Santoro starts to realize that the fight, the death of the Secretary, and the appearance of his friend are all connected.

Snake Eyes fits into Cage's filmography in a time where he was receiving critical success and after what I consider to be his trilogy of action stardom (The Rock, Con Air, Face/Off), and is often lost or overshadowed by opinions of those movies. Cage is able to slot into the role of Santoro effortlessly, and is the kind of performance one would expect to see from him in an average movie. Snake Eyes benefits, however, from Cage dialing back his usual overflow of unpredictability once the assassination attempt occurs. Santoro is initially portrayed as a corrupt officer whose ability to do his job is in question, but once he takes charge of the investigation with Commander Dunne, he is shown to be an effective investigator. This change in the tone that the character undergoes is something that I enjoy Cage using; it can be almost a cheap shorthand to use Nic Cage as the "goofy, zany, unhinged" character because of such roles as Vampire's Kiss or The Wicker Man have popularized. Snake Eyes allows Cage to partake in this insanity for contextually appropriate levity, while being able to flip a switch and act in a different mode altogether.

The plot for Snake Eyes is fairly straightforward - the corrupt cop whose gambling habits unwittingly gets him swept up into a criminal conspiracy seems to be a cliche and is usually quite tiring. The twist that Gary Sinise's Commander Dunne is the mastermind behind the entire events of the movie occurring nearly half-way through the movie (for the viewers) makes for an entertaining, multi-layered cat-and-mouse game. The betrayal that Santoro feels is earned once he realizes that he was simply meant to be used as an unwitting tool for his longtime friend's scheme - we have known for a while that Dunne is the true villain of the story, so we know that it is only a matter of time before Santoro catches up with the realization. I found it quite amusing that most of his progress on the murder investigation coincided with his personal investigation as to why the boxing fight was thrown, costing Santoro thousands of dollars in loss.

I entered this viewing of Snake Eyes with an overall positive opinion, and left it with the same level of enthusiasm. As stated above, Snake Eyes plays with familiar story tropes but with amusing and often entertaining results. Outside of strong performances from Cage and Sinise, Carla Gugino and Stan Shaw also brought complicated characters to the screen in supporting roles. I think the best way to describe Snake Eyes is that it is the equivalent of comfort food - you know deep down that the food is bad for you, but it provides a sense of comfort or normalcy to your life despite your present circumstances.