Jumat, 31 Januari 2020

Netflix: Review of UNCUT GEMS: Serious Sandler

Watch Movies TV - February 1, 2020



Howie Ratner perilously juggled his gems dealing business with his addiction to high-stakes gambling, for which he has incurred a huge debts for various creditors. It reached a point when he would take out a loan to place a bet usually on the outcome of NBA basketball games, and used his winnings to pay off another debt in a vicious circle.

One day, he was able to get his hand on a piece of rock from Ethiopia which contained a huge lode of opal, which he had committed for a gems auction. When basketball superstar Kevin Garnett desperately wanted to own the opal for its perceived energy, Ratner thought this was his way out of his most major debts from ruthless loan sharks. 

I first heard about this movie was when its lead actor Adam Sandler won the Best Actor award from the National Board of Review early last month. That was really big surprising news for me. Not only because Sandler is not exactly noted for his dramatic acting chops, but even his comedy acting had taken quite a bad rap in recent years. Now here, he actually won Best Actor in a year dominated by Joaquin Phoenix's "Joker" and that is truly incredible. (I felt bad that Sandler was snubbed for an Oscar nomination for this performance as this would probably be his closest brush with it.) 

Sandler's Howie was not a likable guy. He was loud and sleazy in speech and fashion. He split his time with his legal wife Dinah (Idina Menzel) and his employee girlfriend Julia (Julia Fox). He was street-smart to a fault, always trying to sweet talk his way out of the tight fixes he found himself caught in because of his risky activities. As the film went along, things do get out of hand, and that reflected on Sandler's increasingly panicked vocal inflections and erratic behavior. Sandler still had some of his known joker in Howie, but the stress here was definitely real and palpable. 

Aside from the inherent suspense of Howie's dangerously chaotic obsessions, director / co-writer brothers Josh and Benny Safdie also gave this project a lot of esoteric touches. The opening shot was that of an extreme closeup of the patterns within a gemstone which segued to an endoscopic view of a colon, which went around vice versa at the end. Another innovative feature was its most unusual musical soundtrack, which used psychedelic tunes seemingly totally unconnected to the action onscreen. It was distracting at first, but later that music becomes a mesmerizing aspect. I thought this could have been an Oscar nominee for best picture, but too bad it did not make the final list. 8/10. 




The Rotting Zombie's Round-up of Horror News for January - First News Post of 2020

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It's a new year and I currently find myself having a renewed love for watching horror. So far it has been enjoyable doing my blog in 2020, trying to keep sticking to the one new blog post every other day. Before I get onto the chunk of news I have for January a note to say the latest reimagining of The Grudge is currently at the cinema. Apparently it isn't very good, as I write this I haven't seen it, but by the time this post goes up I will have, so should have my review of it.

On the videogame front I am currently working my way through the DLC for Resident Evil 7: Biohazard which will take the form of several mini-reviews, and is also being live-streamed on my YouTube channel. I have also returned to the horror homage to Castlevania that is Bloodstained: Ritual of the Night, the review for that will be fuzzy as I got right to the end of it last year and then just stopped playing.
Another horror game I am currently working through is the original 1992 version of Alone in the Dark that I reviewed over ten years ago, but will be adding to that review.
Finally, on X-Box One I am part way through the survival horror game Blair Witch. It isn't blowing me away but I am having fun with it. A review of that will also follow.

There is a new poster for Michael S. Rodriquez's (Last American Horror Show Part 1) new film: Lake of Shadows: The Legend of Avocado Lake. Based on an actual lake that has had many deaths associated with it, the film is about three wannabe journalists who set out to discover just why so many have died there, but soon learn the truth is more horrific than they imagined.
A new poster has also been released for Harley Wallen's Ash and Bone. This stars Jamie Bernadette (I Spit on Your Grave) and Mel Novak (Bruce Lee's Game of Death) and is about a rebellious teen who crosses paths with a notorious family after leaving the city for the countryside.


Now here is some Arrow Video (US) latest release news. On January 28th José Ramón Larraz's Edge of the Axe gets a Blu-ray release. This Spanish-American slasher is about a masked killer armed with an axe picking off innocents in a small Californian village. This 2K restoration includes Spanish and English versions of the film as well as two new audio commentaries and more.
MVD have acquired additional titles from the Bob Yari catalog for their Rewind and Marquee collections. Mind Games is released on Blu-ray and DVD on 11th February and is described as a 'taut psychological thriller about a family's battle for survival against a cruel, scheming stranger'. First Snow is due to be released on 14th April. In this one a slick salesman's life begins to unravel after he learns from a psychic that his life will end when the first snow of the season hits. Finally, returning to Blu-ray and DVD is the chiller Possession. This stars Sarah Michelle Gellar (Buffy the Vampire Slayer TV show) and is about a car accident her, her husband, and brother-in-law get into. This one comes out on 14th April too.

Emerald Wolf Studios has released the first trailer and art for Death Trap. This is Deandra Spinner's directorial debut and is about six friends on Halloween 1999 who get caught up with Baptist zealots after crashing their car in the Florida Everglades.



Best Dude Films has released the first trailer and stills for director/writer Stacy Brown Jr's The Pit. This features survivalist Les Stroud alongside Brown as two friends who become trapped after falling into a pit while hiking in an isolated forest, and must resort to their animal instincts in order to survive their ordeal.



A teaser trailer for Roberto D'Antona's Caleb is now online. This Italian horror is by L/D Production Company and is about a woman who heads to a remote town looking for her sister who went missing in the area. There she discovers the towns folk don't dare to leave their homes after sundown, it seems it may well involve vampires.



Australian horror Turbines is now out to watch on a number of online platforms that include among them Vimeo, Amazon, Filmocracy and Xumo. The press release states 'Turbines is entertaining to watch and takes you on a journey with a lonely couple in a foreign country. But it is the unexpected series of events that will keep you on the edge of your seat'.

Slasher is currently requesting 'Red Band' trailers for its app. The app aims to bring everyone involved in the horror industry together in one place and call themselves a 'true alternative media solution for horror filmmakers'. Sadly this app isn't available in the UK but in the US can be found on the Apple and Google stores. If you are interested in submitting a 'Red Band' trailer then email pr@slasher.tv.

The online streaming channel American Horrors has announced its choice for the 'Female Visual Artist of 2019'. The winner was Snovonne from Modena, Italy, she 'is the living embodiment of a world class art vigilante smashing her way through modern art house conventions, using her talents in music, video, photography, editing and live performances to create a unique nightmare realm'. The 'Male Visual Artist of 2019' pick was Chris J. Miller. The American Horrors channel is available on Roku and for free online at the American Horror's website and at Strictly Streaming.

Adrian Tofei (creator and star of the stellar found footage Be My Cat: A Film for Anne) has announced the name of his next feature film. Dr. Frankenstein will be a contemporary adaptation of the classic story and will somehow include both the Be My Cat and We Put the World to Sleep (an apocalyptic film currently in post-production) universes. Sleep is due to be at festivals 2020-2021, while Dr. Frankenstein will be 2021-2022. Be My Cat is planned to come to DVD and Blu-ray in the first quarter of this year.

Horror director Jared Masters (Slink, After School Massacre, 8 Reels of Sewage) has released an autobiography titled Thoughts Are All You Have. His 5th book 'explores his roots, passions, love affairs, secret knowledge, sordid stories and more. It's wildly entertaining and hilarious as well as heart warming. It's a quick read you need.' The book is available to buy from Amazon.


Onto music now and electro-industrial artists SpankTheNun have announced their first full-length release: Initial Decay Control, which includes the single Glitch. This twelve track album is already available on Bandcamp and was released on CD on 28th January also.



New Zealand four piece Devilskin have released the official music video for Corrode which is the latest single of theirs. It has been taken from their upcoming album titled Red, that releases on 3rd April. Corrode is about 'being completely overwhelmed and submerged in grime and stress. Fighting your way through it all and rising to ask for help'.



While that is it for news this month that isn't exactly true. I wrote this post last Sunday, but in the week that has passed since I have received loads of newsworthy emails. I could have spent some time adding those onto this post, but it is after the end of a ten hour shift at my day job and so I'm not going to do that. Instead the late news I received shall of course go onto February's undoubtedly exciting news post.

Oscar Nominated Shorts Reviews

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I quite enjoy going through the Oscar nominated shorts every year – when I can at least, it’s not always possible. This year, I haven’t been able to see all of them, but a combination of Vimeo, Youtube, Netflix and other sites meant I could see most of them. Below are reviews, by category, of the twelve out of fifteen shorts I have been able to see so far. For each category, I start with my least favorite, and work my way up.
 
Animation
Sister *** / *****
Directed by: Siqi Song.
Written by: Siqi Song.
 
Sister, by Chinese director Siqi Song, is an interesting looking short. It’s a stop motion animated film, using figures that are essentially like sock puppets. In narration, we hear a man talk about his little sister – how she annoyed him as a baby, and how she continued to annoy him as he grew up. There are little vignettes – places in times – where the two characters’ poke and prod at each other the way siblings do. The short is only about 8 minutes long, but honestly, for about 6 of those minutes – even as the film looks quite good – you do wonder where the story is going, or why Song felt the need to tell it. The reason does come out – and its kind of gut punch – but I’m not sure it really works as it feels like a cheat. Still, the film looks very good, and the message is good – but there were other, better ways to tell this story.
 
Kitbull *** ½ / *****
Directed by: Rosana Sullivan.
Written by: Rosana Sullivan.
 
Kitbull is an amusing little short about the unlikely friendship between an adorable kitten with huge eyes, who lives in an alley, and a pit bull, whose owner chains him out back, and (it is implied anyway) uses him for dog fighting. The kitten is fearful of anything – including the pit bull – but the pit bull is a big softy at heart, and soon the two of them are playing with a bottle cap together – and slowly bond. The film is nothing more than that – it’s a very amusing 8 minutes, with a heartfelt ending designed to elicit tears, and a cartoon-y animation style that brings to mind classic short cartoons. It lacks ambition, surely, but it’s so good at what it does – looks so good – and is so much fun, you won’t care.
 
Memorable **** / *****
Directed by: Bruno Collet.
Written by: Bruno Collet.
 
I have seen a few animated shorts that get nominated over the years about an older person slowly losing their memories – it’s a surefire way to build emotional stakes, while at the same time the short runtime doesn’t lend itself to repeating itself. But Bruno Collet’s Memorable is one of the best of the sort I have seen. The best thing about it is the animation itself – the man whose memory is fading is a painter, who uses his hands when painting, and Memorable takes that as its cue for the visual look – the characters and backgrounds look like thick coats of painted, sloppily, yet beautifully constructed. There are only two characters – the man and his wife, and it’s a beautiful and heartfelt film – as his mind goes, and doesn’t remember who she is, he is still stunned by her beauty. In terms of its story, Memorable isn’t all that new – but in terms of how it looks, it is one of the best in its field.
 
Hair Love **** ½ / *****
Directed by: Matthew A. Cherry & Everett Downing Jr. & Bruce W. Smith.
Written by: Matthew A. Cherry.
 
The most widely seen of any of the nominated shorts this year (it played in front of The Angry Birds 2 movie, and quite frankly was the only reason to see that awful film) is Hair Love. Directed by Matthew A. Cherry, Everett Downing Jr. and Bruce W. Smith, Hair Love is the heartwarming story a little African American girl, with an unruly head of hair, who wants it styled just like mom used to – but with mom away, dad struggles to do things right. The film is an absolute charmer from start to finish – fun and funny, wonderfully animated, and ending on a note of pure heartwarming goodness. This is an example of what great animated shorts can do – in 7-minutes, the filmmakers deliver a very specific cultural story, in an extremely entertaining, funny, heartfelt and brilliantly animated package. The highlight of the shorts this year to be sure.
 
Live Action
Nefta Football Club ** ½ / *****
Directed by: Yves Piat.
Written by: Yves Piat.
Featuring: Eltayef Dhaoui, Mohamed Ali Ayari, Lyes Salem, Hichem Mesbah.
 
Nefta Football Club is a very slight short – running just 17-minutes – set in the middle of nowhere in Tunisia. Two young brothers find a donkey wandering around out there in the desert, with headphones playing music on, and bags of white powder strapped to its back, and decide to take it to their village – the older one knowing what going on, but lying to his brother about it. Meanwhile, two bumbling men are looking for that same donkey, and cannot figure out where it is. This is all supposed to be comic, with misunderstandings with both pairs at its core, but I don’t really think director Yves Piat’s film really goes anywhere. You see the ending – and the final shot – coming from the beginning, and when you get that far ahead of a short right from the start, you’re in trouble. Mildly amusing, but not something I suspect you’ll remember.
 
The Neighbor’s Window **** / *****
Directed by: Marshall Curry.
Written by:  Marshall Curry.
Featuring: Maria Dizzia, Greg Keller, Juliana Canfield.
 
Marshall Curry, who directed the wonderful documentary short A Night at the Garden, nominated last year, moves into fiction territory with The Neighbor’s Window – a 20-minute film about how we should be grateful for what we have, and never really know what is going on with others. The film stars the wonderful Maria Dizzia as a New York mother – with two kids, and a third on the way (who we will see nursing as the film progresses). Along with her husband, Greg Keller, they are struggling with what many couples with kids struggle with – the pains of raising kids, of growing older, of settling into a routine, etc. Then a younger couple move into the building across the way – and leave their blinds open all the time, so the older couple see them having sex, throwing parties, and generally being young and having no responsibilities – until, of course, something happens. The film doesn’t go in any of the sordid directions you may think – it’s actually quietly profound in the way it makes you re-evaluate everything in the end. Everyone always wants something else – and we often don’t see it, because we are trapped in our own perspectives.
 
Brotherhood **** / *****
Directed by: Meryam Joobeur.
Written by: Meryam Joobeur.
Featuring: Kais Ayari, Mohamed Grayaa, Mouldi Kriden, Jasmin Lazid, Walid Loued, Alaeddine Mandhouj.
 
A lot of acclaimed shorts end up as features at some point – and often, the features don’t work as well, as they feel like what they are – a story that should be told in 30 minutes, ballooned up to take 90. Brotherhood is different – this 25 minute short would be well-served with a feature length treatment, as there is so much here worthy of explored, that the very talented writer/director Meryam Joobeur, a Tunisian-Canadian film director, only touches upon. Brotherhood is a film about Mohamed, a father raising his sons with his wife, who is shaken when his oldest son returns from Syria – where he went to fight – with a new wife, a young teenager who stays quiet and completely covered. It makes him question everything – and he grows angry at the son he feels he no longer knows. But, of course, it isn’t that simple. A longer version could add more complexity to the story, and the characters who aren’t Mohamed – and make that strong ending, even stronger. Still, this is a great short film – and one that makes me curious for what Joobeur will do next.
 
A Sister
Directed by: Delphine Girard
Written by: Delphine Girard
Featuring: Selma Alaoui, Veerle Baetens, Guillaume Duhesme.
 
In many ways, the simplest of the nominees – and one that will likely remind some people of the 2018 feature The Guilty – all about one long 911 phone call, where we never leave the operator. This one though does flash back and forth between a woman calling 911 after she has been taken by an acquaintance, but is not free to talk as he can hear what she is saying (she pretends she is talking to her sister, about her son) – and the 911 operator who has to figure out what to do. The film is tense, building the tension up throughout its 16-minute runtime. It’s no more complex than that – but it’s just expertly handled throughout its runtime – and I’d be curious to see what Girard does next if she moves into feature thrillers. Unlike some of the other films here, that are shorts that seem to want to be features, this one is perfect as is.
 
Documentary
 
Walk, Run, Cha-Cha *** ½ / *****
Directed by: Laura Nix.
 
Walk, Run, Cha-Cha is a lovely, calm little doc – it runs just 20 minutes, and tells a small, intimate story. It is the story of Paul and Millie Cao – both originally from Vietnam. They met back in their home country, and dated for six months – before Paul and his parents had to flee for America to get away from the communists. He and Millie never lost touch – but they didn’t see each other for 6 years – and were nervous that they wouldn’t still be right for each other after that time apart. But now, they’ve been together ever since. Now, in their twilight years, their daughter is grown, living her own life, they have successful careers – and they spend practically every night dancing the cha-cha. They take lessons, they go to the club. They just love it – and each other. In many ways, this is a gentle film – a small, not very ambitious film. Which makes it perfect for a 20-minute doc (longer would not work). But it’s also quietly profound – and quite lovely, building to a great final sequence that may just bring a tear to your eye. Yes, it’s minor – but it’s so lovely, who can complain?
 
Life Overtakes Me**** / *****
Directed by: John Haptas & Kristine Samuelson.
 
Life Overtakes is a timely and powerful documentary about refugee children, living in Sweden, who suffer from something called “Regression Syndrome” - where essentially they fall into a coma like state for months or years at a time. There is nothing medically wrong with them – but they have suffered so much in the past, and the stress of their new existence in Sweden – mainly the stress of not knowing if they’ll be able to stay there, or be sent back to a place where they may be killed, makes them fall into this state. Life Overtakes Me is a documentary that in many ways uses the syndrome as its guiding force – this is a calm documentary, at times a very beautiful one, that takes it time in telling its story. No doubt about it, some of the stories of the families who came are heartbreaking and horrific and the film doesn’t shy away from that – but it is a very quiet film just the same. The film tells these stories, and speculates on why it seems to happen in Sweden – and not elsewhere (although an end title card says that similar cases are now happening in Australia). Whatever the reason, this is a serious issue – and a further reminder of the harm we are doing to children, who just want a better life when they flee with their families.
 
In the Absence **** / *****
Directed by: Seung-jun Yi.
 
Seung-jun Yi’s In the Absence is in many ways a very simple film – and yet it is in its simplicity that it finds it powers. The film is about the Sewol ferry disaster back in 2013 in Korea – where a ferry tiled, and eventually sank, killing hundreds of people, most of them students on a field trip. The first third of the film – which is the best part of the movie – documents what happened as the ship slowly sank – where the government seemed more concerned about getting a camera on the ship than rescuing everyone. People did get out – including the Captain – but the response was shockingly slow and inept. From there, the film documents what happened next – the divers who spent months going back in to pull out the bodies, the protests against the President, whose action didn’t help anything that day, and may have hurt (she has other problems to) – to the point where they finally salvage the ship, years later. It is in many ways, simple – but it is a powerful overview of a massive tragedy, that perhaps didn’t get the attention outside of Korea it deserved.
 
Learning to Skateboard in a Warzone (If You’re a Girl) **** / *****
Directed by: Carol Dysinger.
 
Learning to Skateboard in a Warzone (If You’re a Girl) is the perfect subject for a short documentary. It is about a group of female teachers in Afghanistan who recruit young girls to come to school – they teach them to read and write and do math – skills that their mothers never learned, because under the Taliban they weren’t allowed, and many families still don’t want them educated. They also teach them to skateboard. Director Carol Dysinger gets great footage of these young Afghan girls – wearing their safety equipment, skateboarding – inside, of course – and slowly getting better and better. It is an inspiration film – watching these girls learn and come out of their shell. It’s also a film tinged with sadness – one girl talking about how her older sisters are not allowed to come here – the Skatistan as it’s called – because when they get older women cannot go outside, and then realizing that one of her older sisters is just 13 – one year older than the girl talking. The film is a reminder about this country – that has been a war for decades, and the struggle that is still going on there – wrapped in a feel good package that offers hope, but not blind optimism.

Classic Movie Review: The Forest for the Trees (2003)

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The Forest for the Trees (2003) 
Directed by: Maren Ade.
Written by: Maren Ade.
Starring: Eva Löbau (Melanie Pröschle), Daniela Holtz (Tina Schaffner), Jan Neumann (Thorsten Rehm), Ilona Schulz (Frau Sussmann), Robert Schupp (Tobias), Heinz Röser-Dümmig (Lutger Reinhardt), Martina Eckrich (Renate Pföhler), Nina Fiedler (Bine), Hans-Rüdiger Kucich (Gerd Postweiler), Ruth Köppler (Elvira Fischer-Walter), Achim Enchelmaier (Bernd), Monika Hirschle (Melanies Mutter), Volker Jeck (Melanies Vater).
 
It’s fairly remarkable that The Forest for the Trees is not only Maren Ade’s debut film – but also a student film. The evidence at the time was clear that she would go onto become a master – as she has with her two subsequent films, Everybody Else and Toni Erdman (and it’s a shame that there’s only been two, with such huge gaps between all of her films). And people immediately recognized that talent – the film went to be featured at TIFF and Sundance, and thankfully, with the success of Ade’s two other films, is now available for us all to see – and marvel about how she seemed to emerge right from the start a fully formed artist.
 
The protagonist of The Forest for the Trees is the painfully awkward and idealist Melanie (a great Eva Löbau) – a new teacher, who moves to a new city, breaks up with her boyfriend, and takes a job teaching a troubled class. She is convinced that she’ll be able to reach them with her “new teaching methods”. At the same time, she tries to make new friends – all of the teachers, except for one, pretty much ignore her – and are mean behind her back. She does make friends – kind of – with her neighbor across the street, whose apartment she can see into. This is Tina (Daniela Holtz) – who seems happy enough to spend time with Melanie if there is nothing better to do – but frequently forgets to call when she says she will, or invite her places, etc. Melanie keeps trying – and its painful to watch her try and integrate herself in the life of someone who clearly just doesn’t care about her that much. Painful to see her try and interact with her friends, or her on again/off again boyfriend. And its equally painful to watch her in class, try and reach these kids who sense blood in the water, and go for her immediately. The Forest for the Trees is a movie designed to make you squirm and be uncomfortable from beginning to (almost) the end.
 
The key for The Forest for the Trees working as well as it does is that Melanie is both sympathetic and annoying. If she was just annoying, then the film may flip into obnoxious territory – punching down at the character. But Melanie, for the most part, seems like a nice person – that she really does care for those kids, that the talk behind her back really does hurt her, that she really is looking out for Tina’s best interests – and wants to be her friend. She is just utterly, completely clueless at reading the social clues she is being given. You can both understand why the others view her the way they do – it is annoying to be a veteran teacher, and have someone come in and imply you are bad at your job. It is annoying when an acquaintance – which is really what she is to Tina – oversteps their bounds, and think you are closer than you want. And yet, she is so guileless, and these slights hurt so much that you cringe because it’s so awkward, but also because a character you like is being repeatedly hit.
 
And then, there is the ending of the film. As you watch the film – and its short, at just over 80 minutes – you wonder how Ade is going to end it. And Ade finds the most unexpected, and yet perfect way to end the film – an ending that is freeing for Melanie – and for us in its strange, surreal way. Ade has become one of the best filmmakers in the world – I really wish she would work more often – but as this film shows, she is brilliant right from the start.

Top 100 Films of the 2010s - 60-51

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60. Carlos (Olivier Assayas, 2010)
Olivier Assayas three-part, five-and-a-half-hour film that chronicles 30 years in the life of Ilich Ramirez Sanchez – a Venezuelan terrorist and mercenary, who grabbed headlines, and become a wanted man the world over. The movie opens with him in his early 20s – where he pretends to be an idealist, in the Che Guevara – but it quickly becomes apparent that he isn’t really ideologically motivated. He will fight on behalf of the Palestinians, and other groups. While his “bosses” admire what he can do – they also know he cannot fully be trusted – he is a narcissist, and doesn’t like to follow orders. The final third of the film – with Sanchez drifting into irrelevance and excess isn’t nearly as exciting as the first two parts – which have some of the best set pieces of the decade – but are necessary to show just what becomes of a man like this. Yes, the film is very long – but it moves like gangbusters – like a Scorsese film (GoodFellas) that has been given even more time to breath. Call it a TV miniseries if you want – I saw it on the big screen, in one sitting, and loved every second.
 
59. A Separation (Asghar Farahadi, 2011)
Iranian auteur Asghar Farahadi peaked (so far anyway) with A Separation – a complex portrait of a couple who have to decide whether to leave Iran for a better life for their child, or stay and look after an elderly parent with Alzheimer’s – made even more complicated, when a seemingly innocent interaction, spirals into violence and tragedy. Farhadi’s film is a masterclass in screenwriting, showing all the complexities of this situation. It is an intimate portrait of Iran and its culture – grounded in this personal story, which becomes universal. Farhadi hasn’t come close to matching this since (The Salesman comes closest – but I wasn’t much of a fan of The Past, and Everybody Knows was pretty mediocre) – but in this film, he constructed a masterpiece.
 
58. Moonrise Kingdom (Wes Anderson, 2012)
Wes Anderson’s Moonrise Kingdom is a deceptively sweet, deep film about young love. The two young teenagers at its center run away from their hometown – and parents, for varying reasons – and head out to an island – causing a search party to fan out and try and find them. The film, inspired by Jean-Luc Godard’s Pierrot Le Fou (one of his very best films) – but entirely Anderson’s own. The two kids romance is sweet – the girl loves storybooks, and their romance is very much like those out of her books, which Anderson contrasts very nicely with the weird, twisted complicated world of their parents. As with everything Anderson does, the film is meticulously crafted and designed – but rarely has one of his films so emotionally attuned. After two live action films in a row (Life Aquatic and Darjeeling Limited) where I don’t think he quite got the balance right, Moonrise Kingdom was a great return to form.
 
57. Nightcrawler (Dan Gilroy, 2014)
Jake Gyllenhaal gives one of the great performances of the decade as a shifty eyed psycho which harkens back to the films of the 1970s – specifically kind of combining Taxi Driver and Network, but updated for today’s dark media landscape. He plays a freelance cameraman, who makes his money filming accidents and crime scenes, and selling them to the highest bidder – and then he starts crossing one line after another. As great as Gyllenhaal is – and he has never been better – he is matched by Riz Ahmed, as his assistant, who seemingly has some scruples, and Rene Russo, who has none. The cinematography by Robert Elswit is great – no one quite shoots dark L.A. like him – and it is a great directorial debut for Dan Gilroy (his two films since cannot match this – but he’s always pushing something). One of the defining films of the decade in terms of just how screwed up the media landscape is.
 
56. The Babadook (Jennifer Kent, 2014)
One of the great films about parenting ever made, The Babadook is a horror film about a monster in the basement that threatens a mother and her son – but is really about the mother’s fear that she hates her own son, who may be a violent psychopath. This was Jennifer Kent’s directorial debut – and it seems like the American distributer didn’t know what they had (the film didn’t make my top 10 list back in 2014 for instance – because in Canada, it didn’t get released until March 2015) – but has gone on to be one of the most loved horror films of the decade. There is a reason for that – Kent is a natural at horror movie ascetics, making this old (but not quite dilapidated) house into a truly scary space – but making sure you know its what’s inside the house that is truly terrifying. Parental horror films had a great decade – and The Babadook is one of the very best.
 
55. 12 Years a Slave (Steve McQueen, 2013)

I understand why many want to leave slave narratives behind – and concentrate on other aspects of African American life and history. Still, I’m not sure we will see a better film that directly confronts American audiences with slavery in a dramatic movie – one that makes it clear that even the “good” slave owners were horrible people, and just how traumatic, violent, painful the slave trade was. By concentrating on the case of a man (played brilliantly by Chiwetel Ejifor) who was born free, became and slave, and then got out – the film is telling a more “uplifting” film than most slave narratives – where people were born, lived and died in chains, but Steve McQueen’s film doesn’t skirt that issue – doesn’t put a happy face on this, and shows the pain of those who were left behind. It’s a brilliantly directed film – like his other films, it concentrates on the physical body, and what is goes through. The camera doesn’t look away, and it is unflinching. The performances by Ejiofor, by Fassbender, by Nyong’o – and the entire cast is brilliant. It is a powerful and important film – and not just because of its subject matter.
 
54. The Act of Killing/The Look of Silence (Joshua Oppenheimer, 2012/2014)
The two documentaries by Joshua Oppenheimer, looking at the genocide in the 1960s in Indonesia make a great one-two punch. The Act of Killing was the first, and more innovative, of the two documentaries which follows those who perpetrated the killings, and have been national heroes ever since, even going to so far as to give them cameras so they can do stylized re-enactments in the form of different movie genres. Some felt that movie ignored the victims – and Oppenheimer told them to just wait, and the result was the powerful The Look of Silence two years later, a less innovative, but more emotional documentary that is from the victim’s side. Between the two films, Oppenheimer produced some of the best documentary filmmaking of the decade – and ones that will remembered and remain relevant as time goes by.
 
53. Before Midnight (Richard Linklater, 2013)
My favorite film of the Before trilogy was this one – because it is the first film that felt that is built on something real, something substantial, not based on romantic idealism like the first two films. Now, the couple (played wonderfully by Ethan Hawke and Julie Delphy) have been together for nine years, and their conversation as they walk and talk through Spain means something, it’s built on their shared life, and how complex that can be. The film can be painful and awkward in its realism, but it is also still romantic and beautiful. For me, this is among Linklater’s very best films – and made the whole series better in retrospect. I would gladly take another chapter in 2022 – but for the first time in this series, I don’t think we need one.
 
52. Under the Skin (Jonathan Glazer, 2013)
Under the Skin is strange, complex, brilliantly well-made, disturbing film that shows just how much talented Jonathan Glazer. He’s made three films now – the other two being Sexy Beast and Birth – and they could be more different stylistically, but are all great. Scarlett Johansson (back when she could still take risks, and not just be in Marvel movies) stars as alien, driving around Scotland, seducing men for her own dark purposes. The film has images that will never leave you – some of them of the creepy, horror variety – like when she shows her true form, some that seem like they are out of a David Lynch film – the strange red places she goes with her men – and some just very real, like a crying baby near the water. I underrated this at the time I saw it at TIFF (it was released theatrically the next year, and didn’t make my top 10 list – a massive mistake) – but it’s been one of the most haunting films of the decade so far.
 
51. Her (Spike Jonze, 2013)
Spike Jonze works slowly – this was his only feature film this decade – and it’s one of his best. It is a film about the modern world, and how obsessed we all are with our phones – how personal that relationship feels. Joaquin Phoenix gives one of his gentlest, saddest performances as a man who grows through a breakup – and then basically falls in love with a more advanced version Siri – voice by Scarlett Johansson, who is also brilliant in her role. The film is a meticulously designed and shot film, and one that is both touching in its sincerity and sad in its depiction of this dystopia we are putting ourselves in. Jonze is a great filmmaker – his entire feature career is just Being John Malkovich Adaptation, Where the Wild Things Are and this one – and they are all great. Here’s hoping the next decade has more than one film from Jonze.

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Review of DOLITTLE: Madcap Menagerie

Watch Movies TV - January 31, 2020



Dr. John Dolittle (Robert Downey Jr.) was a doctor noted for his remarkably ability to talk to animals. Since his beloved wife Lily passed away, he closed himself off from any human contact and became a miserable recluse in his manor. His only companions were his menagerie of animals he had helped over the years, like Chee-Chee the nervous gorilla (Rami Malek), Yoshi the friendly polar bear (John Cena), Dab-dab the noisy duck (Octavia Spencer), Plimpton the finicky ostrich (Kumail Nanjiani), Jip the smart diagnosing dog (Tom Holland) and Polynesia the wise macaw (Emma Thompson). 

One day, Tommy Stubbins (Harry Collett), a boy who loved animals, sought Dr. Dolittle's help for Kevin a squirrel he accidentally shot. That same day, Lady Rose (Carmel Laniado), a young princess from the palace, was also calling on Dr. Dolittle to deliver a message from Queen Victoria (Jessie Buckley) herself, who wanted the good doctor to go and treat a mysterious malady she was experiencing. This would begin a seaborne adventure to search for the island where the legendary Eden tree that bore a fruit that could heal anything. 

Honestly, we almost gave this film a pass because of all the bad reviews it had been receiving since it was released in the US a couple of weeks ago. We tend to be wary if a film gets a January release, with the reputation that these are unpromising films which could not be summer blockbusters.  However, we are talking about Robert Downey Jr. here in his first film since hanging up his Tony Stark / Ironman costume. You also cannot ignore the A-list actors they gathered together to voice all the animals. I needed to see this for myself.

Being introduced as a devastated man who cannot move on from the death of his wife, Dr. Dolittle was at first a bitter recluse, hence his disheveled look and reluctant behavior at first. This meant that most of the film's energy and comedy were delivered by the animals around him. Downey generously shared his screen time with the cute CGI animals, and amazingly he had realistic rapport with all of them. Michael Sheehan played the one-dimensionally villainous rival doctor Mudfly. Antonio Banderas played pirate king Rassouli who was also fathering a big loss, as Dolittle also did.

My verdict? It was actually not as bad as I was expecting at all. The premise was simple but the execution was very elaborate. The CGI animals were done quite well to be fair, and the voices were indeed funny in their delivery of zingers. There were scenes on a sailing ship at sea pulled by whales for more speed, a pirate palace (which looked a lot like that of Agrabah in "Aladdin") that had a dungeon with a neurotic tiger, and an uninhabited island with a healing tree guarded by a fire-breathing dragon. 

From the start, you knew right away that this was made for children. That climax that featured a massive release of flatulence confirmed it in a major way. Yes, the lines were mostly of the cheesy corny variety, but I think kids will enjoy the light and juvenile tone of this adventure film a lot. No matter what those critics say, I know my inner child quite enjoyed it. 6/10. 


Terminator: Dark Fate

Quick Sips - Tor dot com January 2020

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Art by John Anthony Di Giovanni
Welcome to Tor dot com's January, which turned things up to eleven with three short stories and three novelettes. That's...a lot, thanks in large part to the release of three linked stories on the same day (pretty sure that was a novel's worth of words in the same setting out at once, so yeah, lots). The stories are a mix, as always, though fantasy dominates, with historical fantasy and slipstream leading the way and the lone science fiction piece balancing things out. There's a lot to get to, a lot of versions of our world to experience, so I'll cut to the chase and get going with my reviews!

Stories:

“Something Fishy” by Harry Turtledove (6033 words)

No Spoilers: We’re back with Governor Bill Williamson, who presides as chief executive of a fictional state located in the Pacific Northwest. And who, just fyi, is a sasquatch, who have a shrinking population but are still present enough to, well, be governor. Things aren’t all fun and games, though, and something of a puzzle has fallen into his lap as the local tribal nation has a complaint about fishing rights. This leads a little wider, and the piece explores new facets of the fictional world by introducing a new element—merfolk. The tone is once more heavily tongue-in-cheek, but the humor isn’t exactly...PC. That said, if you liked the earlier story featuring the setting and character, you might find more to like (and much more given this is the first of three stories about Bill released on the same day).
Keywords: Sasquatches, Merfolk, Native Americans, Fish, Negotiations, CW- Slurs/Racism
Review: On one level, this story further and explores the setting in a rather interesting way. The addition of the Karuk tribe and their relative animosity with the sasquatches is interesting, and the story doesn’t really make anyone here “the bad guys” so it’s not like they are introduced just to provide a group to make fun of. That said, I wasn’t sure until I looked it up that the Karuk are a real people, and wouldn’t really have been surprised if they had been a similar invention of the story. Whatever the case, I have some hesitations about their inclusion in the story, not because it’s not nice to see diversity in fantasy. Rather, it’s because the story not only places them in the context of two other completely fictional minorities, but also sets it up that despite arriving ten thousand years ago, they are viewed as essentially colonizers/invaders by the sasquatches. It’s what could be a very interesting wrinkle if not for the very real issues that the story doesn’t exactly gloss over, but that it seems to approach with a certain amount of both-sides-ism. I felt at least that a large part of the story was a reminder that everyone has their own issues. The Karuk are experiences pressure because their access to the area salmon is being limited by the merfolk. But the merfolk are only responding from other interests over fishing. The main idea seems to be that the real issue here is massive corporate/industrial exploitation, which hurts everyone. That isn’t a terrible message, and the story overall follows smoothly (if a bit too easily for my specific tastes), but there are just those lingering issues that caught me up and made this a project I just couldn’t warm too (perhaps especially because I had bounced off the first story that I read when it was released last year). Again, fans of that story might have an easier time here. Indeed.

“Always Something New” by Harry Turtledove (12903 words)

No Spoilers: The story of Bill continues with an even longer tale, this one again dealing with fish, though in the singular instead of the plural. Because, on the very day of Reagan defeating Carter in the 1980 election, Bill is called with news that a mythical fish might just have been caught. The piece returns with its light humor, near-historical fantasy take on the Pacific Northwest, and seems to be trying to capture what makes the area special. Not just the different peoples who live there, but the mentality that seems to bind them all together. It’s partly political, partly anecdotal, and kinda about a past that seems to be especially distant through a modern lens.
Keywords: Fish, Sasquatches, Politics, Elections, Interviews
Review: I think I might have a certain amount of anxiety reading about elections now, even ones that happened in the past. And I understand that the story seems to be making a case for adopting more of a historical lens to view our particular moment of fear, shame, and anger. Because the piece opens with an election. Where a republican defeats a democrat. Where someone with flash defeats someone who seems to care much more about people. It feels like more than just a defeat of a person or political power, but a defeat of justice. And the story shows that A Lot of people voted for it. And the story seems to choose to show not how this speaks to divisions that are irreconcilable, but how despite a person’s politics, you can still be kind, can still be a good person, can still be generous and generally not an evil asshole. It’s not really what I want to hear now, and I don’t think it’s necessarily what I need to hear now, but there’s certainly something to be said for harmony, for social cohesion. The story seems to me to say that the reason that the story works is that people in this fictional state are much more able to let people live their own lives. It’s a bit of give and take, but everyone respects everyone else. And I think that’s a big part of why this kind of quasi-nostalgia doesn’t really work for me, because it implies that everyone can be welcome and respected in Jefferson when that’s never really been the American truth. People have always had to hide, had to deny themselves, had to erase themselves in order to fit in enough, to escape the threat of violence. Not that the story’s message is a bad one. We should all respect each other. But given the stakes of the story are very low, and no one who violates this easy-going mentality comes forward to complicate Bill’s philosophy, it’s perhaps never challenged enough to feel complete. It’s a rather light story, though, and has its cute moments, and its fun. A fine read!

“Tie A Yellow Ribbon” by Harry Turtledove (10902 words)

No Spoilers: Three months after the previous story, Bill is getting ready to welcome home one of Jefferson’s citizens who has been held hostage in Iran. Mark is back and to help him adjust, Bill strikes up a friendship with the young man. Mostly this involves listening and eating, which is rather great. The piece continues on a lot of the themes of the previous two stories while giving yet more world building to the setting and showcasing even more of the diversity of the state of Jefferson.
Keywords: Sasquatches, Food, Language, CW- POWs, Friendship
Review: It continues to strike my how these stories present these very slice of life moments that don’t exactly feature the highest of stakes. Here the story follows a friendship begin, and shows how Mark is dealing with being back from being held prisoner. The piece is very much concerned with discrimination, with hatred, with intolerance and extremism. And the weight of carrying that, of being different, of being viewed in many places as not a person, as a monster. It might even be a warning away from nationalism, away from globalism. Not in the ways that those things bring people together, but in the way that they tend to erase regional differences, creating something in the middle of everything, but which lacks the depth that makes for a lot of cultural richness. I like the focus on food and ceremony, and I like the way I feel the story handles Mark’s feelings about being back. Uncomfortable about being used, uncomfortable even with his own military, because he sees the echoes of the extremism that nearly killed him in the USA, too. Throughout these stories, there has been a growing sense of what it means to be...I guess Small Town. Small State? Again, there seems to be a certain nostalgia for a simpler time, when politicians could be mostly decent people and people regardless of their religion, nationality, or skin color, could all just sort of be friends without having to be perfect. And there is a warmth to the stories, a certain feeling of trying in good faith, for all the off-color and sometimes-offensive jokes. I’m just not sure how the pieces come together for me as stories. But maybe that’s also the point, that here the stakes aren’t life and death, are more down-to-earth, people just getting by and living their lives. For me, I’m not sure it was enough to really hold my attention and make me want to return for more. It’s not a sentiment or nostalgia I can connect to, though for those who do or can, the world is interesting and some of the characters are rather charming. Another fine story!

“How Quini the Squid Misplaced His Klobučar” by Rich Larson (11415 words)

No Spoilers: The narrator of this story is planning a heist. Or, well, the heist might only be secondary. What they’re really doing is planning some revenge. Against a crime boss who just happened to take possession of an extremely valuable piece of art. The narrator, a hacker, just needs the right team. A friend who also might have some of the mark’s DNA. And a person who doesn’t have an sort of digital modifications or implants. Of course, there’s more going on, and more to the narrator’s desire, than seem obvious at first. And there’s definitely a few twists, disasters, and bruises that the narrator didn’t foresee at all to keep things interesting. It’s a thrilling, tightly paced, and exhilarating read.
Keywords: Heists, Art, Trans MC, CW- Amputation/Torture, Virtual Reality, CW- Suicide
Review: This story flows thanks to its emotional beats and a tight pacing paired with characters built in broad strokes but distinct in their voice and roles enough to make for a compelling dynamic. The team, as it comes together, is small enough to work for a novelette, but there’s still chemistry and conflict. The narrator and Nat have history, but what it is isn’t exactly clear. It’s messy, a bit like the narrator in general, it seems, and added to the mix is a new person, a relative unknown, and somehow the narrator knows somewhat early is not going to like one particular aspect of the job. Aside from them, the main villain, the Squid of the title, is sadistic and cruel, a predator who operates on his own whims and moods, most of which involve anger. He’s terrifying, which makes for a few really tense and squirmy scenes, but also makes the resolution that much more satisfying. And despite the violence and the uglier moments in the piece, it maintains a sense of fun, a sort of quickly expanding disaster that seems sure to kill them all. For me, the piece does play with some deeper elements, too, namely how people deal with corrupt systems, systems that essentially don’t leave them with great options. Where everything is about how much money you have, which has more to do with who you’re willing to hurt than how hard you’re willing to work. There’s something defiant about it, though, and perhaps especially about the narrator’s statement here. It’s more art than it is about the money. Sure, the payday will be huge if it works, but that’s not the point. Like the artist mentioned in the title, seeing yourself become a tool of something you kinda hate means having to figure out where to go from there. For the artist, it meant going out on her own terms. For the narrator, it means not hiding any longer, and embracing who they are. But first they have to put the past to rest, which means this job is their way of embarking on a new life, if they can survive that long. An exciting and wonderful read!

“The Girlfriend’s Guide to Gods” by Maria Dahvana Headley (2483 words)

No Spoilers: Told in the second person, you are a woman, a story, a myth. A person who gets into relationships that follow their own mythic qualities, Greek gods and heroes filtered through a more contemporary lens. Orpheus a stoner in a bad band. Icarus as a affluent Chad. Zeus as a serial cheater. The story walks you through these relationships, each of them framed as their own myths and you often the one left behind, erased, forgotten. At least until there’s a turn, and the story changes to something more empowering and transformative. It’s a poetic, heavily lyric piece, with a fluid relationship to plot and world building but a lovely way of revealing you as a character and mythical figure.
Keywords: Gods, Myths, Relationships, Marriage, Stories
Review: The story flows nicely from myth to myth, the you of the piece finding embodiment in a shifting assortment of figures. You are Eurydice or a nymph who has wed Zeus. You are a woman who doesn’t always get a name, who doesn’t always have a happy ending. Well, who never really gets a happy ending. Your relationships are always with men who are basically the worst. But they are also with the men who are the main characters. Who are the gods and demigods. The heroes. The ones who are supposed to be admirable or flawed. But if they are flawed it is Fatally Flawed. Their flaws are there precisely to make them important, whereas you are there to give them some extra context or tragedy. You don’t even get to be that sad or tragic, because these men are the ones who are really tragic. Their tragedy moves people. Yours? Eh, no one cares. At least for me, it builds this mythic structure, shows how toxic not just the stories individually are, but how toxic the roles are that everyone must inhabit. And I like where the story takes that, cycling through until you have the chance to kind of take a break from it, to decouple. To spend some time not a part of someone else’s story. Which becomes this huge, empowering act, one that allows you to sort of transform, to become a goddess where before you were an afterthought. And it sets up the ending as a new beginning, the realization of godhood as the start of something new, something wonderful. And it’s a great read!

“The Case of the Somewhat Mythic Sword” by Garth Nix (6803 words)

No Spoilers: Some #angst #pining going on in this story for sure as Magnus Holmes, cousin of Sherlock Holmes (but with a much more supernatural focus) and Susan Shrike, almost-doctor, investigate the strange events surrounding an inn and a maybe-ghost. The piece seems connected to a larger series, but the story does a good job of grounding it very quickly. Magnus is suffering from a curse, one that makes him incredibly dangerous to foe and friend alike. He and Susan are trapped out of decorum and his somewhat-altered state to not acting on their attraction for each other. And there’s...not exactly a mystery to solve, here, but definitely a plot to foil, and some magical wrongs to try to set right. It’s a tightly paced, quick read that gives enough of a taste of the setting and characters to be memorable and leave me quite willing to pursue it forward.
Keywords: Transformations, Historical, Holmes, Swords, Ghosts
Review: For me this is a pretty straight forward tale of suspense and magical daring do, with a bit of Doomed Lovers going on as Magnus and Susan deal with not really being able to be open about their feelings because they’re British. Er, I mean, because one of them sometimes transforms into a murderous cloud of gas and needs to spend nights restrained in an asylum while the other is dealing with being a professional woman in a time and place where that’s very much not smiled on. And their suppressed emotions come out in the way the they treat each other, in the delicate and fragile way they view the curse that Magnus has been afflicted with. Because as terrifying as it is, as potentially disastrous, it’s also the only thing that gets them through certain situations. Like this one. The mystery aspect of the story isn’t exactly deep. It’s much more of an adventure story, and one that plays out with plenty of chills and spills. The hook is interesting, this ghost that shouldn’t exist, this inn that’s part of something much older. But the resolution comes with a rush, with a sudden confrontation and things breaking and people dying. The action is immediate and gripping, visceral and challenging. The stakes really couldn’t be higher, given everything, on both a societal and personal level. And the resolution is thrilling and well done. It’s a story that hits all its moments and leaves enough questions that there feels like there still a lot more to come. For me, it’s solidly entertaining and contains some great world building and character work, but thematically there’s not much to really dig into. The villain is brief and thin, the protagonists a bit more complex but still wearing their emotions on their sleeves. The work doesn’t really seem to dig deeper or complicate the themes of Sherlock Holmes, but for fans of those stories, it does offer up a solid read!

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Kamis, 30 Januari 2020

Spider-Man: Far From Home (5 Stars)

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The first 23 films of the Marvel Cinematic Universe are referred to collectively as the Infinity Saga. The six infinity stones are shown repeatedly in the films, though their significance isn't always clear to the uninitiated. What I mean to say is, those who have read the comics written by Steve Englehart and Jim Starlin in the late 1980's and early 1990's know what the stones are supposed to be, but then they have to work out if they're something different in the films. Those who haven't read the comics can only scratch their heads in confusion.

We see the first stone, the Space Stone, in "Captain America" (the fifth MCU film). Starting in "The Avengers" (the sixth film) we see Thanos beginning to gather the stones to give himself great power. In the comics the united power of the stones makes him a God, but in the films they merely combine to become a super-weapon. He succeeds in gathering all the stones and using his weapon in "Infinity War" (the 19th film). The Avengers use the weapon against him in "Avengers Endgame" (the 22nd film).

Now we have "Spider-Man Far From Home" as a sort of epilogue. Thanos is dead and the stones have been scattered throughout the universe. Now we see the aftermath of the "Blip", as people have come to call it.

50% of the Earth's population disappeared, probably in 2018. The exact year of the disappearance is unclear, but what we know is that five years later, probably 2023, they returned without having aged. This causes more confusion in school than anywhere else. Children who were the same age are now five years older than one another. Peter Parker, aka Spider-Man, is one of those affected. It's 21 years since he was born, but he's still 16. This leads to ethical problems. Is he allowed to drink alcohol or isn't he?


Fortunately for Peter, the girl he loves also blipped, so she's still the same age as him. In the film (and in school) she's only referred to as MJ. That was the nickname of Peter's girlfriend and future wife in the comics, Mary Jane Watson. The film's producers have stated that in the MCU Spider-Man films MJ's nickname stands for Michelle Jones, but until that's verified in the films themselves I choose not to believe it.


MJ is cute, in a girl-next-door-ish sort of way.


The actress Zendaya Coleman was actually 22 when the film was made, but she looks like a 16-year-old in the film.


Tom Holland, who plays Peter Parker, is also 22. Let's hope they keep their young looks so they can make another few films together.


The super-villain in this film is Mysterio. He was one of Spider-Man's oldest and most deadly enemies. Incidentally, Sam Raimi wanted to cast Bruce Campbell as Mysterio if he'd been allowed to direct "Spider-Man 4".


He looks remarkably similar to the way Steve Ditko drew him in the comics. That's not something we can take for granted. The Marvel films get almost every costume wrong.

This is a better film than "Spider-Man Homecoming", though not up to the level of the Sam Raimi Spider-Man films. Where will the Spider-Man franchise go from here? We need continuity. We don't want a reboot and yet another Spider-Man any time in the next few years.

Success Rate:  + 5.1

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