Monday, April 21, 2025

Presidential Inception

 


I'm sure there's some kind of essay to be written on Dennis Quaid going from trying to prevent a Ronald Reagan stand-in from starting a nuclear war to, 20 years later, playing Ronald Reagan, but we'll leave that for another time. Peacock is streaming 1984's Dreamscape. Let's go.

Quick Plot: Dr. Novotny is running a successful series of studies on dream immersion, sending psychics into patients' REM cycles to help identify underlying problems in their lives. It's great for curing impotency, but Novotny's aims are peanuts compared to government agent Bob Blair, who sees this new technology as a means of far greater things. 


Since Blair is played by Max Von Sydow, you can be pretty sure such things are not exactly related to world peace.

Enter Alex Gardner (Quaid), a former psychic prodigy turned loan shark-owing gambler. Novotny brings Alex back to help develop his studies. While there, Alex falls for Dr. Jane DeVries (Kate Capshaw), a woman who could do a lot better than a jerk who sneaks into her dreams to have sex with her without consent. But it's 1984, they're both attractive, so we move on to them uniting to save the world.


See, there's a very important man having nightmares: the President of the United States. He's plagued with visions of a nuclear wasteland, which worries Blair, who would rather not see his country move to disarmament. Blair's plan is to send his pet psychic Tommy into the President's dream for a sleepy assassination. Alex has some warning from horror novelist Charlie Prince (Norm!) but as bodies begin to pile up, it's clear the only way to save the world is to do some inception.


Dreamscape is a fun little sci-fi horror dripping with its time. The script has multiple writers credited, including Chuck Russell, who would go on to use quite a few small touches from this film into the beloved Nightmare On Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors. Director Joseph Ruben was never a stranger to oddness in genre cinema: this is the man who turned a kidnapping film into an alien invasion in The Forgotten, and who I think about every day for the last 30 years because he's responsible for the absolutely bonkers The Good Son. 


We do not talk nearly enough about The Good Son.

Dreamscape doesn't quite reach those heights (and literally, because REMEMBER HOW THIS MOVIE ENDS?)


Sorry, it's hard to ever focus on something that isn't The Good Son when talking adjacently about The Good Son.

AS I WAS SAYING, Dreamscape is neat. It feels of its time in catching that late '70s/early '80s psychological experimental era of The Brood and The Fury, but with more electric music that even bridges the upcoming early '90s with some sexy saxophone magic. Plus, there's even some timely nuclear war politics! Quaid shows the charisma that would make him a star. Capshaw is smart and sexy. The dreams are just weird enough to feel like dreams. It's a good time. 



High Points
By golly this is a good cast

Low Points
Aforementioned ickiness regarding the fuzzy sexual assault question and resolution


Lessons Learned
The best way to get a cad to do something is to invoke the IRS

In our dreams, we're often very racist

The easiest shorthand to imply 'unhinged psychopath' is simply casting David Patrick Kelly



Rent/Bury/Buy
Dreamscape is quite fun. Sure, the visual dream language is basically a karaoke music video filmed in 1992 eastern Europe, but there's a lot to enjoy here. I watched via Peacock, which did occasionally have a weird bug happening where at least two scenes weren't transferring correctly. Not sure if that was simply my connection, but I figured it was worth a warning.

Monday, April 14, 2025

It's Really Coming Down Out There

 


It's never a good thing to watch a horror movie and wonder if the Hallmark Christmas version would be better, but when a film comes loaded with a Hallmark-ready title and Lifetime-budget CGI, it's inevitable. 

Quick Plot: Five college pals head to rich daddy's boy River's remote cabin for a New Year's celebration. As the alcohol flows, the snow comes down hard, quickly trapping them inside and shutting down the power. With no cell service, things look grim.


Thankfully (or not), med student Eden has a big old brain loaded with tricks about how to survive hypothermia. Apparently, such a process is far less fun than death. 


There's no more drinking, sleeping, Twizzlers, or fresh snowcones to be had. Instead, the group must battle their own psyches and paranoia amid the rampant hallucinations that come with, well, no sleeping or Twizzlers. 


It's a good idea for a low budget horror movie, and make no mistake: despite literal phoned (well, Zoomed)-in cameos by Patrick Fabian and hey! Hallmark favorite Jonathan Bennett, Snow Falls is not an expensive film. There's a CGI snowman that makes me wonder if both late '90s incarnations of Jack Frost were ahead of their time. Digital snow that makes Tubi originals look fancy. And so on. 


Written, directed, and co-starring Colton Tran, Snow Falls has the benefit of streaming on Amazon Prime, where I've recently watched some pretty insufferable horror movies from this decade. This one is pretty far from being what anyone would call good, but it feels less offensive than some of its peers. 

The main downside of Snow Falls is that it lacks a certain spark. The first scene suggests we're in for a batch of obnoxious young people who complain about things like seat belts, but quickly, they become less awful and more dull. We've got shy good boy River (The Passenger's Johnny Berchtold), fit Kit (played by Tran), hypochondriac Em, and her boyfriend Andy (whose main defining trait is "boyfriend"). Eden stands out for her medical knowledge and backstory involving a recently deceased mom, the latter of which seems like it's intended to go somewhere spooky or heartfelt and simply...doesn't. 


The setup of Snow Falls gives plenty of opportunity for surprise, but unfortunately, that only seems to work on its characters. The audience is always aware that any moment of hope is a hallucination. That gets old fast, even in just 80 minutes.

High Points
You know what? I learned a lot about hypothermia! That's useful!



Low Points
An 80 minute educational video about hypothermia may have been more suspenseful

Lessons Learned
When you have 11K followers, people expect to hear from you

To survive hypothermia, you have to be very, very lame


There's always a very sharp piece of furniture when tensions rise

Rent/Bury/Buy
Snow Falls is far from the worst little thriller you'll find on Prime, but it's still hard to summon any real reason to recommend it. 

Monday, April 7, 2025

You Gotta Have Faith

 


There are few worse conversations to be stuck in than the ones with people whose opinions you share, but who are incredibly obnoxious about making sure everyone around you knows why those opinions are so right.

Now let's make that conversation take 111 minutes.

Quick Plot: Mormon missionaries Sister Barnes and Sister Paxton are out and about on a chilly late afternoon to spread the word. Sister Barnes is a bit more experienced, having made several conversions even though (or perhaps because) she carries some emotional weight that led her to this faith. Eager Sister Paxton is all smiles and hope, and both tactics seem like they might work on their new target: Mr. Reed.


Played by a bespectacled and warm sweater-wearing Hugh Grant, Mr. Reed lives in an unusual house surrounded by trees and built with metal walls, the better to block your cell phone signal with. He teases the girls with the scent of blueberry pie being baked by his shy wife, then welcomes their stories of Joseph Smith with a little too much curiosity. 


What follows is a sort of theology debate that Jigsaw might have had in his freshman college year. Mr. Reed first lectures the girls on the similarities between Christianity, Islam, and Judaism, embarking on a very prop-heavy Monopoly metaphor that makes you wonder if retirement just isn't for everyone. He then traps his audience in his basement, dropping in a decrepit old lady with secrets of her own. Will they discover the one true religion in time for...well, I don't really know. Where exactly is this going?


Heretic is one of those movies that I didn't mind while watching, but with every day that passes, I find it...annoying. Writer/directors Scott Beck and Bryan Woods didn't do much for me with Haunt or their screenplay for A Quiet Place, so this may be a case where I just don't eat from their restaurant much longer. 

An A24 film, Heretic certainly shares some DNA with The Menu, a similarly snide and snarky horror comedy that has the advantage of being miles more entertaining. Sure, it might be repetitive once you understand the goal of villain chef Ralph Fiennes, but it has style, it has panache, it has things to say about artists who compromise their vision when their work becomes commodified for a wealthy paying audience. 


Heretic has Hugh Grant doing a fun Jar Jar Binks impression. 


I found this movie sluggish because, without spoiling anything, not much really happens, and when it does, the filmmakers get coy and cute about what it actually means (if anything). It's annoying all around. 

High Points
No, I didn't care much at all for this movie, but let's be clear that none of this comes from the performances, which are universally wonderful. Sophie Thatcher carries over her excessively watchable Yellowjackets energy. As Sister Paxton, Chloe East infuses all the positive earnestness of a young Mormon in a genuinely lovable way. Hugh Grant is always at his best when he's actively acknowledging that he's smarter than those around him, and while I found Mr. Reed insufferable as a human being, it was certainly a joy to watch Grant drill into his skin and yes, do the occasional Jar Jar Binks impersonation


Low Points
I just don't think this movie is as smart as it prides itself on being

Lessons Learned
Never trust a teenage girl with a camera

The only thing worse than a missionary at your door is a person eager to talk with the missionaries at your door


When trapped in a room without an exit, always observe where the liquid goes

Rent/Bury/Buy
Heretic is a polished film, and there's certainly an audience that will enjoy it. I'm just a bit too tired to be part of it. 

Monday, March 31, 2025

Where'd You Go?

 


Ah, the made-for-TV movie. Even as the golden era ended at the turn of the century, stations like TBS kept gifting the world with these treasures. 

Quick Plot: Nothing unites a new family like a road trip! Dad Jim (my early Clash of the Titans crush Harry Hamlin) is hoping that some Nevada desert will warm his nice teen son Matt and bitter tween daughter Katie to his new wife Patty (The Partridge Family's Susan Dey), a book editor with a cell phone (slightly ahead of the curve in 2002). Also in tow is Matt's pal Ethan. 


After stopping for terrible burgers at a greasy diner filled with ominous locals, budding photographer Matt convinces his family to take a detour to an abandoned mining village. It's a fun hour spent wandering a mysteriously empty main street but also just enough time to cause some car trouble. The family makes a camping trip out of it with a sense of adventure until they discover a dusty video camera with some early found footage home movie of the last group to open their sleeping bags in the same house. 


Things look worse in the morning when the car goes missing. Yes, these hills have eyes, and they're not smiling. 


Made for the TBS Superstation (THROWBACK!), Disappearance is a curious piece of cinema (well, small screen cinema). The film is written and directed by TV veteran Walter Klenhard, a man with dozens of Garage Sale Mystery credits to his name, plus the irresistibly titled Baby Monitor: Sound of Fear. 


I've been talking a lot about one's level of expectation when approaching a genre film. Standards change depending on budget and ambition. They also get very skewed when we're talking about a television network that hasn't aired its own film content in twenty years. 



Like any TV movie, Disappearance shows its format with some commercial fade outs and a fairly clear TV-14 limit. But it's also filmed in the sprawling Australian outback and has an aura of something slightly bigger. The cast is strong, and that includes the younger actors who feel quite lived in and comfortable as this family. There's a kind of YA literature energy to how things go down, which I mean as a compliment.


I think a lot of viewers, both from 2002 and 2025, won't find much in Disappearance. But if you go into it with an open mind and fondness for a time when the letters TBS had a certain ring, you might, as I did, walk away having had a surprisingly good, albeit confusing time. 

High Points
The combination of good writing and confident performances from young Jer Adrianne Lelliott as Matt and Basia A'Hern (who went on to do editorial work for Furiosa, which is pretty badass) as Katie really do help to make the family antics of Disappearance work well



Low Points
I love a good ambiguous ending, but it's genuinely bizarre how little a made-for-TBS thriller ends up disclosing. I have no idea what actually happened in this movie, which is admirably daring on Klenhard's part, but incredibly unsatisfying on mine

Lessons Learned

Any pilot knows never to nose in 


The best defense against a rattlesnake is a cushy polyester wallet




If it's on tape, it has to be real


Rent/Bury/Buy

I had fun with Disappearance, though it's certainly not for everyone. Find it on Amazon Prime (or your local TBS station).

Monday, March 24, 2025

Flying Economy

 


A few months back, I watched the first three entries in the Airport series over the course of a few days. The experience was, well, weird. 


Have you seen these movies? They're insane, in both terrible and wonderful ways. Each one comes loaded with gender politics that would make Andrew Dice Clay blush. Every flight attendant (well, in these cases, stewardesses) is having an affair with a much older married superior. Old ladies scam their way through security. Suicidal bombers cheat the insurance industry. The third installment sees the plane buried at the bottom of the ocean. Everyone from Christopher Lee to Gloria Swanson shows up. This series is madness!


Anyway, for someone whose reference to Airport was always just Airplane! (which, it turns out, isn't THAT much zanier than Airport), this was a wild ride that no colors every other piece of culture I consume set on commercial aircraft. 

Quick Plot: The worst people imaginable board a flight headed to Tokyo. Among them are a new racist bride, a soon-to-be-divorced-but-faking-it-for-their-friends couple, a sad pregnant girl not in love with her partner, a racist petty thief, and a few portly men who dare to EAT on a plane (we can assume at least two of them are also racist). We know this is a crime because the attractive and trim flight attendants make jokes about it. I should also mention that the head of the crew is hoping that this is the trip that will finally convince her captain boyfriend to leave his wife and kids. 


A reminder: this is a 12-hour flight. We're going to be with these jerks for a while.

Up in the air, oddness ensues. A passenger guarding a mysterious coffin-like box has some kind of a seizure, dying instantly and causing some mild panic just as weather conditions jostle the plane. Air masks drop down, luggage descends from the upper storage, and a corpse goes missing. The only thing worse? First class passengers are forced to move down to economy. The horror!


Flight 7500 is directed by Takashi Shimizu, best known for both the original and surprisingly good American remake of The Grudge. This film definitely shares some of The Grudge's style, albeit in diluted form. It doesn't help that Craig Rosenberg's script is filled with so many awful characters, though most are thankfully played by good actors who manage to make them pop onscreen. 


Look, when I queue up a genre movie I've never heard of on Amazon Prime, my expectations are in a specifically low place. As soon as actual actors like Amy Smart and Johnathon Schaech show up, my brain has to do some recalculating. Where is the bar? 


The easy answer could be at 20,000 feet. Dad jokes aside, Flight 7500 is kind of like a junk drawer that has a few pleasant objects messily tucked inside. Based on the haircuts and fashion, Flight 7500 feels like it couldn't have been filmed after 2008, though it's currently on Amazon Prime with a 2014 date. The way these people speak to one another comes from another world.


And yet, I was kind of into Flight 7500's story? Even if it didn't line up in any logical way? There's a twist that hits at the 3/4 mark that isn't very satisfying in a narrative sense, but then you land on a good actor's face as they react and you walk away feeling like these 90 minutes had some value. 


And then you end on a very dumb jump scare and become even more convinced that the 2014 date is a lie. 

High Points
Genuine standing applause to much of the cast of Flight 7500, most of whom are overqualified for this kind of movie. Leslie Bibb is, for all intents and purposes, playing a woman whose primary motivation is to pull a cad away from his family, but we're able to forget that because she's also quite good as an actual flight attendant. Even Nicky Whalen, last seen by me as a shark hunter in Maneater, makes her terrible human being of a character, actually fun to watch

Low Points
If you start thinking about the details in Flight 7500, you will very quickly find that you have watched a movie that makes very little sense

Lessons Learned
The longer the flight, the more racists onboard

It's bad luck to board a flight without saying I love you

Screenwriting 101, courtesy of The Darkest Hour: if you need to establish a character as being unlikable, the easiest bit of dialogue is to have him rant against the 'no electronics during takeoff' rule



Rent/Bury/Buy
I think of Flight 7500 along the same lines as The Asylum's Flight of the Living Dead. These are not, by traditional definition, 'good' movies, but they're both far better than their poster art and pedigree would suggest. If hearing something described as "The Grudge on a plane" lends any interest, this is a fun watch. 

Monday, March 17, 2025

What Pairs Best With Foot?

 


You know what subgenre doesn't get the credit it deserves? Dinner party horror. Give me an elegant shot of protein's greasy skin, the sparkle of a dangly earring frantically bouncing as the tense but impeccably dressed hostess pours the wine, and that moment of awkwardness when a guest asks the wrong question and what can I say? I'm very easy to satisfy.

Quick Plot: Upper class Gwyn and Glenda (THAT'S FUN TO SAY) are hosting a hoity toity soiree in their sprawling country estate with the last minute assistance from Cadi, a quiet local. Also in the mansion are spoiled adult sons Gweirydd (a triathlon athlete) and (maybe) recovering drug addict Guto.


Glenda doesn't seem to notice that Cadi has virtually nothing to say, mostly because the rich socialite seems to really enjoy the sound of her own voice. Her husband is equally insufferable as a member of parliament. Their first guest of the evening, Euros, is somehow even worse: he's a snobby businessman in charge of drilling for valuable minerals underneath farmland. 



Considering The Feast's first tag is "folk horror", you can guess where this is going. 

Throughout the evening, Cadi seems to absorb the rotten core of her employers, process it, and spit it right back out at them. These are awful people who take what they want with no regard for the land it comes from. They deserve a very, very bad night.


Witten by Roger Williams and directed by Lee Haven Jones, The Feast is a simple story with a clear message.  Making his feature film debut, Jones shows admirable skill behind the camera. The Feast looks and sounds impeccable. And then it gets very, very gross.


That's a good thing! There's an all-in style that I appreciate, even if it feels a little easy. This isn't an epic film or one for any all-time list, but it's a solid entry into the always welcome folk (and dinner party) horror. 

High Points
The overall tone of The Feast is positively intoxicating. Between Samuel Sim's moody score, Bjørn Ståle Bratberg 's rich cinematography, and the entire cast's unnerving performances, this is a sumptuous experience



Low Points
At barely 90 minutes long, it's perfectly reasonable for The Feast to feel small, but I do wish it threw in a teeny bit more of a challenge. Minor spoilers: the family is so unrepentantly awful that it's pretty hard for the audience to feel much actual tension once Cadi's hand is revealed. It's certainly satisfying, but I just wonder if there was a bit more room for surprise (and yes, I realize I'm saying this about a film where a character inserts a glass shard in her vagina and feeds a man his host's maggot-infested shin)



Lessons Learned
You won't find bok choy on a local grocery shelf




So much of early motherhood is cutting fruit into small pieces

A whole lot of work goes into making a pavlova



Rent/Bury/Buy
I caught The Feast as it was leaving Hulu, but it's likely moving to another streamer (it feels VERY Kanopy). Any fan of folk horror will find a lot to digest (SEEWHATIDIDTHERE).