{"id":4057,"date":"2017-02-23T13:59:31","date_gmt":"2017-02-23T13:59:31","guid":{"rendered":""},"modified":"2019-04-16T12:37:10","modified_gmt":"2019-04-16T12:37:10","slug":"oscar-weekend-2017-all-or-some-of-the-movie-reviews-you-need-before-sunday-html","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/laughfrodisiac.com\/2017\/02\/23\/oscar-weekend-2017-all-or-some-of-the-movie-reviews-you-need-before-sunday-html\/","title":{"rendered":"Oscar Weekend 2017: All (or some of) the Movie Reviews You Need Before Sunday"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/span> To ensure that Jamie (Lucas Jade Zumann) grows into a decent man, Dorothea enlists the help of her tenant Abbie (Greta Gerwig) and Jamie\u2019s close friend Julie (Elle Fanning) to help steer him. They ask, well don\u2019t you need a man to raise a man? Dorothea thinks on it and responds, \u201cWell no\u2026I don\u2019t think so\u201d in a line that I think makes the women in every audience applaud. So Abbie teaches Jamie about feminism and the punk scene, taking him out partying at night with people like at least 10 years older than him. He also learns to provide moral support at her doctor\u2019s appointments; she is in remission from cervical cancer. To me, that was the most effective aspect of ensuring he wouldn\u2019t be a total dick, in hand with the way-beyond-his-years treatises on the feminist movement that Abbie had him read. And they dissect The Raincoats, which is cool because members of The Raincoats were sitting near me when I saw it. Abbie also is responsible for probably the most notorious scene in the movie \u2013 when Dorothea has a big dinner party and Abbie talks about how ridiculous it is for men, and women, to be scared of discussion about menstruation. So she makes everyone shout \u2018menstruation\u2019 a few times so they stop being uncomfortable with it. After my screening of the movie, there was a Q&A with Annette Bening and she made the audience do this. She is a queen.<\/p>\n Julie, on the other hand, has a more complicated relationship with Jamie. Jamie\u2019s in love with her, as 15-year-old boys usually are with their 17-year-old female friends. Julie\u2019s love for him is solely in friendship. She has already had so many (too many) awful sexual relationships with other boys, and so she treasures having a decent male in her life that actually cares about her and she doesn\u2019t want to ruin it. It\u2019s hard for both of them to understand, especially as Julie pushes the boundaries of what would be considered friendship, but Elle does a great job conveying how damaged and complex Julie is.<\/p>\n All of the characters in the movie are interesting, even Billy Crudup\u2019s laid back tenant William. The film\u2019s main focus seems to be making them layered, intractable at times and admirable at others. It\u2019s really surprising that a man is responsible for it. Nothing is straightforward about the women, but it\u2019s all real. Dorothea seems super liberal and presents herself as a free spirit, maybe a hippie, but then she is opposed to feminism as a movement, which is very hard to understand, since she is clearly living as a feminist. But she also seems to be holding onto a fading way of life, and maybe it\u2019s a way for her to avoid change. Her big sprawling old house, home to her, Jamie, Abbie, and William, is forever unfinished and under construction, and maybe with the world changing so drastically politically too, there was just so much she could admit she didn\u2019t have a handle on. Julie, the daughter of a psychologist, tries to analyze everyone in her life and tends to use that knowledge to obviously make herself seem wise beyond her years, but it really shows how little she is in tune with herself. And Abbie seems incredibly tough, considering what she has been through, and strong in her feminist ideals, but struggles in trying to reconcile that with her fear that having children, something she can\u2019t do, is the best or most important part of being female. And Jamie maybe is the most complicated of all, or at least in the most notoriously hard part of growing up. At times he is a poster child for not having children, and at other times he seems like he may indeed be one of the good ones. He makes a lot of bad decisions but nothing that out of the ordinary for teenagers. And Lucas brings a warmth to his immaturity that it makes you want him to turn out okay and have faith that he does.<\/p>\n Although there is no big dramatic plot, the film never loses your attention or interest in what the characters are going through. It successfully makes this group of people feel genuine and reflective of society. And the cinematography is precise and perfect for the time period. Everything looks like it\u2019s covered with a thin layer of dust from driving around in nonstop sunshine and dry weather and cigarettes. It all has that feel of slightly burnt edges. And the script is as engaging as it gets, with witty dialogue that\u2019s honest and smart without calling attention to it. Annette\u2019s portrayal of Dorothea really is fantastic. She is so subtle and controlled, making the smallest of lines incredible with her reading. It\u2019s a shame she wasn\u2019t nominated and that this movie didn\u2019t get more attention. <\/p>\n \n\u200b\n<\/div>\n Amy Adams plays a leading linguist who is hired by the government to communicate with aliens that have landed in 12 different regions of the globe. The aliens haven\u2019t done anything yet, besides park their (super undetectable long thin floaty) arcs\/arks (it works both ways! curves and ships! and so the balance shifts) in locations that don\u2019t seem to follow any pattern or reasoning. Amy\u2019s job is to figure out how to communicate with our visitors and find out if they\u2019re here for violence or for friendship \u2013 mostly, find out if they are a good squid or a bad squid. Unfortunately, despite her physicist mission partner Jeremy Renner being a pretty good squid, the government officials and military men in charge are (as usual) bad squids, who keep pestering Amy about how she isn\u2019t moving fast enough in TRYING TO LEARN AN ALIEN LANGUAGE. It\u2019s not like it\u2019s the sixth romance language or something you morons. It\u2019s literally ink spills and wailing. The government\/military being stupid is typical of these movies, when intelligence and patience struggle to triumph over their hurried might-is-right tendencies, but it quickly gets annoying, and then exasperating. The intensity of ignorance of those in charge may be indeed grounded in reality, but since this movie isn\u2019t (yet) maybe we could have gone a little lighter with that touch. The Serious Man man didn\u2019t need to be such<\/em> a d-bag. Even d-bags would realize it takes time to learn to talk to GIANT SQUIDS THAT COMMUNICATE BY WAILING AND THROWING INK, and, more importantly, might sometimes defer to the expert who is actually working with said giant squids.<\/p>\n Aside from those annoying men, though, this movie was very well done. Amy Adams, all serene and composed, might not be the first person you think of when you think squid aliens (not to be confused with Hep aliens) and science fiction films, but her quiet and kind of timid disposition really worked for me here. Her character never seemed weak, especially given the tragedy we see her suffer in the prologue, just kind of like she tries to take up less space among the bombastic and ultimately less intelligent men. So they underestimate her, and they don\u2019t suspect that she could not only discover the incredible but also have the gumption to handle things in her own way, without stupid military interference. Mostly, she doesn\u2019t seem like she could be powerful and then she is stronger than all of them, but with her mind, which is way cooler.<\/p>\n The film was a lot more engaging and moving than I expected, mostly because it focused on communication instead of the usual explosions and gunfire you get with typical alien movies. In that regard, it felt a lot more sophisticated than I would have predicted. I also really enjoyed the surprise time bend-y premise that was completely unexpected (and should remain unspoiled) but yet seems perfectly obvious because all good sci-fi movies mess with time. On that note, the first time I saw this movie, I thought it was fine but a little drab. Somehow, the second time I saw it, I was seriously impressed by its sophistication and its subtle illumination of the time matters. So, the moral is see it twice, and be nice to aliens.<\/p>\n \n\u200b\n<\/div>\n We return to Bridge\u2019s cheeky London life (I do not find life here so cheeky but I am not as fun or as dumb as she is) more than a decade since we last saw her et al. in the horrible aforementioned sequel to the fantastic original movie. And we find her \u2013 alone. No longer with Mark Darcy! In fact, Mark Darcy is MARRIED to someone else. I literally gasped. On an airplane! Through some well-placed flashbacks, we see how life with Mark was during the intervening years, and how things came to an end. To sum up, he was a dick. A real grade A, uptight, unreasonable, insensitive, cold, unsupportive jock strap in a bag o\u2019 dicks. Whereas, when they first began their romance, he would make his adorable amused smile at Bridge\u2019s antics, one that seemed to say \u2018Oh Bridge! You are quite silly now aren\u2019t you\u201d, in the important core years of their relationship he seemed always exasperated. Like, dude, just breathe and unclench! It\u2019s good to have someone in your life who isn\u2019t serious 100% of the time. Will help with your frown lines! Anyway so Darcy was always frowning and setting up camp in his mahogany and tweed bag o\u2019 dicks and Bridget was trying to make him smile and of course her joie de vivre made him furious and he expressed his clear and understandable self-loathing as annoyance with the nice lady in his life that he should have been thanking every day for putting up with his impotent bullshit and that kind of relationship cannot be sustained so they fell apart. He married a nondescript \u201clady\u201d while Bridget soared through the ranks to become a successful television producer. I adore that Bridget is kind of responsible for the new trend of women in pop culture who have shittastic love lives but who kick serious ass in their professional lives \u2013 like Mindy Kaling in \u201cThe Mindy Project\u201d (great gyno), and Lorelai Gilmore from \u201cGilmore Girls\u201d (great innkeeper and business lady), and Rebecca Bunch on \u201cCrazy Ex-Girlfriend\u201d (legit nuts in all areas but a fantastic Ivied attorney).<\/p>\n Bridget goes to a kind of Coachella event which is literally my nightmare so to be forced to look upon it while on one of my flying nightmares was a lot for me to handle without screaming but I took some deep breaths and got through it. She meets a super hot and super nice and just perfect seeming man played by Patrick Dempsey, who I do not believe for one second would be at such an event for smelly people. They have a one-night stand in a tent, or at least Bridget assumes that\u2019s what it is because a) hot man & b) that\u2019s what they do that\u2019s what they do, but Patrick (I don\u2019t remember his name he\u2019s prob just playing himself it\u2019s all good) isn\u2019t like that and really likes her! You expect that at some point in the movie a bad quality about him would come to light and show her how amazing Darcy was, but he just keeps getting cooler and more awesome seeming. Unforch, Bridget and a newly divorced Darcy reconnect soon after (or before it\u2019s hard to keep a timeline when you\u2019re getting interrupted for captain announcements) at an English countryside wedding which, having myself been to such a wedding, did not feature nearly enough fascinators. Bridget soon realizes that she is le preggers and doesn\u2019t know if it is Darcy\u2019s or Dempsey\u2019s and, more importantly, doesn\u2019t know who she\u2019d rather have a child with. IT\u2019S DEMPSEY, BRIDGE, IT\u2019S DEMPSEY, not the dick that took 15 years of your life and treated you like gum stuck to his shoe. But of course it was always going to be Darcy because I guess most of the fans would have revolted? But I am pretty representative of the fan base and I would have chosen Dempsey. He was so nice. Mr Darcy is kind of a real dick. Dempsey, on the other hand, had zero negative character traits. Seriously the worst thing about him was that he turned out to be a famous billionaire. And not the dickish kind, but the kind that does a lot to help the world and give to charity and stuff. But the fandom would have erupted if Bridge didn\u2019t end up with Darcy. Oh well, as long as Bridget\u2019s three best friends are still around, we good.<\/p>\n \u200b\n<\/div>\n \n\u200b\n<\/div>\n Will Smith played an advertising executive who is obsessed with dominoes, which people try to argue is a game but as far as I have ever seen is just a way to make short-lived motion art with smooth legos. I would have enjoyed a movie that had people debating how on earth knocking over blocks in patterns can be a game played with more than one person. Will (let\u2019s call him Will) constructs impressive domino setups instead of literally doing anything else, be it working or sleeping or eating or speaking to people who are standing right next to him and talking to him, because his 5- or 6-year-old daughter has died tragically. It\u2019s really sad, obviously. But when a year or two passes and he continues to exist in this barely functioning catatonic state, still without speaking, his three business partners decide to force him into therapy and medical care in order for their long-time friend to get a new lease on a life that accounts for his broken heart. Oh wait! That is what non-psychotic caring people would do! Oopsy! Instead of doing literally anything else, the three business partners\/supposed friends\/former infatuation junkies \u2013 Kate Winslet, Ed Norton, and Michael Pena (my computer won\u2019t make the squiggly \u2018n\u2019 I AM SORRY I DO NOT MEAN ANY DISRESPECT MICHAEL) \u2013 decide to hire a private investigator to catch Will being all cuckoo banana puffs pants so they can use that evidence to force him out of the company, leaving them to sell it and make some needed moolah or at least stop him from using his kookoopantsness to drive big clients to competitors, as was happening. Seems like you should have incorporated your business in a sensible way in the first place that might have allowed for doing things that are in the best interest of the company\/shareholders without resorting to such ridiculous efforts but hey that\u2019s your business!<\/p>\n So old lady private investigator \u2013 who I enjoyed; they are usually leathery wizened men \u2013 like on her first day on the job breaks into a U.S. postal service mailbox, and doesn\u2019t get caught or go to prison because America is totes into breaking all kinds of law now and disrespecting government agencies is a sign of patriotism. OLPI (old lady private investigator) retrieves three letters that Will put in the mailbox moments ago \u2013 letters to Love, Death, and Time, in which he yells at each of them for failing him and his family and causing such unwarranted pain. (LIFE IS PAIN HIGHNESS<\/a>.) Well for Love he just said like \u2018goodbye, we\u2019re done\u2019 which is le sad! So the Three Morons (Kate, Ed, and Michael) decide to hire actors to portray the Three, um, Entities? of Love, Death, and Time and having them interact with Will in broad daylight so they can film him talking to the actors but then edit out the actors so it looks like Will is just talking to himself and being completely off his rocker. GREAT PLAN, corporate executives! Great plan.<\/p>\n Ed Norton tells Keira Knightley to play Love cuz she pretty, Jacob Lattimore plays Time because he\u2019s young and tough, and Helen Mirren plays Death because she old like for the earth. They have hesitations about using their craft to destroy a man\u2019s life when it has already been destroyed by such tragedy but then Ed says he will finance their off-off-off-Br\u2019dway play so they are down. They each approach Will like twice in public and tell him oh I am Love\/Time\/Death and you wrote that awfully mean letter to me and I have something to say about it! Will is not as crazy as they think he is because he\u2019s sane enough to initially be like, trick please, who put you up to this? But they have the letters he wrote, and he didn\u2019t get the memo about how it\u2019s cool now to bust open mailboxes and commit postal felonies. Even more convincingly, OLPI sets it up so that no one nearby acknowledges the actors, forcing Will to question whether maybe they are really the entities. Like, Time visits Will in his office, and then Kate Winslet walks in to ask him a question and pretends not to see the Time actor, which I mean I would be sold too because I wouldn\u2019t suspect Kate Winslet of messing with me so hard. My favorite instance is when Helen Mirren is talking to Will on the sidewalk and OLPI walks by with a little child who she instructed to say, \u201cGrandma why is that man talking to himself??\u201d in Will\u2019s earshot. So yeah I\u2019d prob buy it too. He doesn\u2019t necessarily believe them, but he is super freaked out, shook as the kids say nowadays, to such an extent that he tries going to a meetup group for bereaved parents run by Naomie Harris, who is really nice and lovely here and not like her character in \u201cMoonlight\u201d.<\/p>\n Each of the Three Morons works with one of the Three Actors\/Entities on reviewing their interactions with Will and discussing what would work best next. Norton takes charge with Keira\u2019s Love because he is a dawg. Keira\u2019s first interaction with Will is her being all upset because he just wrote \u2018goodbye\u2019 and she is like \u2018you can\u2019t just say peace I\u2019m done with you to meeee\u2019 and he\u2019s like \u2018um I thought you were love, not stage 5 clinginess beeyotch\u2019 well I am paraphrasing this part but that\u2019s how I remember it so that\u2019s how it\u2019ll be. Keira starts therapizing Ed along the way, as he is having serious difficulties being an absent father to a spoilt little New York girl who doesn\u2019t care that he got her Hamilton tickets instead of ever actually being a father to her because she already saw it. (You know how I feel about pop culture using Hamilton references as a way to try to get cheap laughs and\/or make connections to the world. Lazy, cheap, amateur attempts at piggybacking off genius and it needs to stop.) Jacob\u2019s Time realizes that Kate wants a baby but her eggs are drying up because she is past 40, or maybe he just guesses that that\u2019s true because sexism, but anyway it is true and he tries to help her realize that she isn\u2019t out of time yet on that front. Michael Pesquigglyna unfortunately has had his cancer come back, and Helen Mirren tries to get him to tell his family and get his affairs in order since it looks like he won\u2019t be beating it this time. Around this time is when I was like OH SHIT. OHH SHIT. THEY ARE REALLY DOING THEIR ENTITY JOBS BUT FOR THE MORONS MAYBE THEY ARE NOT JOBS BUT REAL! Keira was actually helping Ed realize what love is and what it entails, and Helen was helping Michael cope with death, and Jacob was helping Kate deal with timeeee and it was so subtle and I was like HELL YEAH THIS IS AMAAAAZING. I like realizing things before you\u2019re supposed to! Ivy league educaysh! I loved the twist with Naomie Harris; I really did not see that coming until Will went in her house and I was like, hey how did you know where she lived stalker! I cried a good deal when I realized he wasn\u2019t a stalker.<\/p>\n There are two aspects I\u2019m still meh about. One is the fact that the actors were paid even though they weren\u2019t actors. Like, Kate Winslet gave Time\/Jacob what, $20,000 in CASH in an envelope? Where did that money go, Time?! Does it go to the angel fund for new fluffier clouds? Are they even ghosts or just spirits and what is the difference? How is it okay to take so much money from the people you\u2019re supposed to be helping! Ahhhh so much cashhh does he even need food? So that is bothering me. Next, the big scene where they explain what on earth the title means. Helen in the flashback is comforting Naomie Harris in the hospital, and she says that it\u2019s comforting to focus not on death but on the beauty that comes with death \u2013 the collateral beauty<\/em>. Like when tragedy happens and people act selflessly or lovingly and bestow kindness in the emptiness that the tragedy caused. Ummm hard pass. I guess it\u2019s kind of like today when we say all this truly awful stuff is happening to our country and people\u2019s lives are being destroyed but it helps to \u2018look for the helpers\u2019, all the decent people who come out to try to help? I guess it\u2019s kind of like that? But like I rather we just had a different president. And I don\u2019t think that people who are grieving the loss of a child are going to feel better if you\u2019re like \u2018but the nurses brought you balloonsss so nice!\u2019<\/p>\n Despite all its flaws \u2013 and there were many; I am not excusing that Daniel-Palladino-level-no-nobody-is-allowed-to-edit-my-script-it-is-fine-how-it-is type of dialogue (which, by the way, was just as bad in the acclaimed \u201cHidden Figures\u201d) \u2013 it really affected me with how raw its emotional development was. We are not used to seeing such unfiltered emotions presented as is, in any form, and that really was lovely. And it was an interesting premise. Sure it wasn\u2019t executed that well, and it should have and easily could have been better, but it was not nearly as bad as all the reviewers wanted it to be. <\/p>\n \n\u200b\n<\/div>\n<\/a>this best doggie in the whole world is named Oscar do you get it<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n
\n
\nI feel like it should go without saying but HELLA SPOILERS BELOW. \n<\/div>\n
\nARRIVAL<\/a>
\nBRIDGET JONES’S BABY<\/a>
\nCAFE SOCIETY<\/a>
\nCOLLATERAL BEAUTY<\/a>
\nFENCES<\/a>
\nHACKSAW RIDGE<\/a>
\nHIDDEN FIGURES<\/a>
\nJACKIE<\/a>
\nKUBO AND THE TWO STRINGS<\/a>
\nLA LA LAND<\/a>
\nLION<\/a>
\nMANCHESTER BY THE SEA<\/a>
\nMOONLIGHT<\/a>
\nNOCTURNAL ANIMALS<\/a>
\n\u200bSECRET LIFE OF PETS<\/a>
\nSULLY\u200b<\/a>\n<\/div>\n20TH CENTURY WOMEN<\/a><\/h2>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
ARRIVAL<\/a><\/h2>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
BRIDGET JONES’S BABY<\/a><\/h2>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
CAFE SOCIETY<\/a><\/h2>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
COLLATERAL BEAUTY<\/a><\/h2>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
FENCES<\/a><\/h2>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n