Reviews
Adolescence (2025)
Mixed feelings about it
The outstanding part of this TV show is the acting, especially that of the lead playing the little boy. The cinematography would be good enough for a movie feature. The split into the different episodes seems pretty formulaic, though. First episode is the police work and the intimidating atmosphere at the station. The second episode is about what happened at school. The impressive third episode is about the psychologist having her talk with the boy and the last episode is about what the boy's family is going through and how they are in the danger of falling apart. The mixed feelings comes from missing whole perspectives. The family of the victim is never in the focus. The victim is never in the focus. There is no trial and the various partys' reaction to its outcome. There is absolutely no media involvement. What fuels the discussion about this mini-series is in my opinion about the struggle of parents trying to be good parents - and finding no resolve, hitting home with all parents watching this show.
Sleeping Dogs (2024)
Plot holes
I gave the movie 6 stars for some decent cinematography and most of all the performance of Russel Crowe.
He plays the main character who is an ex-cop and who has Alzheimers and he basically has only fragments of memory remaining. Why he lives by himself might be attributed to the American health system but he should be basically considered fully handicapped and therefore live in a nursing facility and not stay by himself, especially with a gun. There is a revelation during the movie and the problem is that the motives of at least one character does not make any sense any more in hindsight. Other than that seems to be a mix of two better known movies.
Long Story Short (2021)
More thoughtful, than RomCom, but clicked with me
The main character is working too much and postponing too many things. Going to a graveyard to tell his grandfather about his new wife and how he didn't get to present her to him, but that he would have loved her. An old lady is overhearing the conversation and they are having a little chat, which the old lady ends with saying that she is giving him a gift. From then on after a few minutes in the now, he is transported to the next anniversary and he is going to experience his future. This clearly has way more similarities to stories like "A Christmas Carol" or a lot with the movie "Click" by Adam Sandler.
The comedic moments arise, when the main character gets to the next anniversary and has to find out what has happened in between.
Miller's Girl (2024)
Movie falls short
The best part about the movie is the acting. Even Martin Freeman is not being so much Martin Freeman in every role as he usually is. Jenna Ortega is certainly delivering as female lead. The movie itself is not very original. A literature teacher is impressed by a very talented young student who is admiring the teacher and tension ensues. There must be like dozens of movies out there exploring this, at the very least. You think that something is going to come still, but you miss what was supposed to be the climax and then the movie is suddenly ending. A lot of things that are indicated or used to describe characters or circumstances is not having a play at all.
What is a little going for the movie besides the acting is the cinematography and the polished phrases by the female lead.
Canary Black (2024)
Underwhelming, not Underworld
It is a far cry from the action in Underworld. There is nothing redeeming about the movie. There is nothing interesting about the cinematography of the movie, The choreography of the fights tries to replace smooth action with violence, as Kate Beckinsale is probably not up anymore for this kind of action. Also her voice sounds like wanting to give us an imitation of Christian Bale's version of Batman's voice with just sparing us from having to see ridiculous outfits.
Overall it looks like they got Kate Beckinsale for cheap and they just added a cheap location, cheap script and cheap actors. I think the only noteworthy acting happening in the movie is coming from Ray Stevenson as the boss.
Pauline (2024)
Good actors, weak plot
The production value was ok for this mini-series and the CGI used in a few scenes was not breaking the immersion. The script really lacked badly and was all over the place. It just felt there were only twists, but no development.
Yet, I think that the main actors - Nikeaata Thompson and Ludger Bökelmann - have a promising future. The sidekick of the Lucas character - Tammo(?) had some serious comedy chops.
It should be noted, though. That the show does not really end with this season.
I really wish that you shouldn't have to write novels for a review. They should really half the number of characters as requirement.
Atlas (2024)
Morbid fascination
The biggest problem is the main actress Jennifer Lopez. There is no mincing words. She is just not the right actress for her role and if it had been the first movie that she had starred in, I would have expected her movie career with this movie. She just can't act even if her life depended on it.
Maybe AI will be the hope for her and magically alter movies with her to make her look like she could act.
I feel sorry for the other actors. Mark Strong is usually pretty good in support roles, but he really didn't get much time and opportunity to shine. The invisible hero was the actor voicing the AI in her powersuit - or whatever they call it in that movie. I am not bothered enough to google for it now.
Civil War (2024)
Apocalyptic roadtrip to an expectable end
I frankly don't know what the message of this movie is supposed to be. War is bad? That message is gone with the wind i.e. Dated. US society polarized enough to have people go at each other's throat - you would have to be blind to not have noticed that big parts of society live in different perception of reality. The movie avoids to take any political stand. The president's party affiliation is never mentioned and western forces being comprised of California and Texas is made to avoid direct correlation to current politics. Also it is not put out how the situation escalated in the first place before the president did what he did, even if we can assume that a Trump would definitely be able to order these things. It is not explained how public order has broken down offside the battlefield. So we as audience are put there knowing even less than the average American in that movie.
I have no idea what the movie is to evoke in the audience other than discussion of broken premises. The production value of the movie is comparatively low - some cheap CGI here, some national guard footage there ? The sound design is nasty for making the gunshots very loud and to have inappropriate songs after grim scenes.
Dune: Part Two (2024)
Cinematic masterpiece with gaps for the uninitiated
The problem is that the book is like 900 pages long i.e. Easily the length of 3-4 average SF books and making each book of the series a season of various length would have been a better choice. There are just too many characters and even though the movie tries to reduce the number of characters that are focused upon, it seems that only Javier Bardem as Stilgar is permitted to shine. A total disappointment is Austin Butler as Feydt, who can only squeeze out two facial expressions, maybe three looking mostly like borderline feeble minded. There are scenes that appear superfluous like finding certain weapons, while other scenes seem to fall out of the blue with explanation or transition missing.
Also, the movie never explains how the Fremen get their high-tech or why some warmongering house like the Harkonnen or the imperator are so pretty bad at warfare or putting the planet under an effective siege with the perfect control of transportation possible.
Shot Caller (2017)
Could have been more
The ingredients were there - competent cast, decent director, classic camera - except for the substandard script.
At the start, we see the main character leaving prison and being probably a member of a gang given the tattoos - something like the aryan nation. Then we see flashbacks - nicely not requiring any different color or anything to color - because of the lack of beard in his former life. He is in prison because he caused an accident as driver having had alcohol, causing the death of a friend.
The initial prison sentence seems very harsh, consdering his white vest concerning crimes. What the script does not deliver, is the answer to the crucial question, why he is ready to kill a person with his own hands. It takes quite something or a psychopath to be ready for this. Since he is also portrayed as a loving father, it is probably not the psychopath.
Death and Other Details (2024)
Agatha Christie vibes that are not cashed in
The motive for the first murder is very weak. We are made to believe that the assistent of the detective has gotten his hands on pictures from all the ship's staff and actually had a good reason for that. After all, they could not have possibly been involved with the murder of the lead character's mother. So what, if he has recognized the villain as unregistered member of the crew? She could have jumped in last minute to replace somebody else - happens all the time. She could have made an appearance still as interpol inspector - which do not exist, btw - and claim that there were threats to the life and that she was undercover.
The first murder's sole purpose is to make the main character rebel against her mother.
All during this lengthy show there are way too many flashbacks and the most important with the car explosion, we are to believe that this gruesome scene is not memorized well and the main character fabricated her mother being in the car during the explosion.
There are unnecessary raunchy scenes and the problem is that there is basically no chemistry between any character in these scenes.
Also it does not make sense for the villain to have the server farm on the ship. It would as easily be possible to hack into servers and set them up all over the world. Also these server farms need technicians that we never see. The whole purpose for this server farm is to indicate that the ship's owner is in it and to have evidence that can be taken away during a life and death situation where only a helicopter is supposedly available and the ship is sinking.
Also, it is not made clear, how the families were made to conduct their business on the ship and why the villain would sink the server farm instead of getting the meeting subverted somewhere else.
And the list could go on and on.
Black and Blue (2019)
Good cast, but conventional story
The movie tries to touch the subject of police brutality and mostly black people being the victim of it and the difficult situation that black members of the police force are in because of this.
The core of the movie, though, is a very conventional manhunt. The hero of the story is a young black rookie, who gets to witness the execution of "civilians" by members of the police force. Since she has recorded it with the police camera that for some weird reason only she seems to wear, the corrupt members of police have to get hold of the camera and so the obligatory manhunt begins. The villain of the story does a gob with how he directs the manhunt, but his presence could be a bit more menacing.
The movie as such is entertaining enough to not consider it waste of time.
The Marvels (2023)
Disjointed and uneventful
The script for this movie really lacks. The idea that the Marvels get "entangled" leads to some funny moment, but gets stale pretty quickly.
The biggest problem for the movie is that the villain lacks by writing and by casting. Like Thanos, the villain has reasonable motive, but frankly, you don't need an ulterior motive for the villain, when a selfish one does just fine. There is no outsmarting the heroes and for some odd reason the heroes always know which target is next.
Another problem is that no hero in herself is given time and script to be presented in a way that the audience could be interested in them. Ms. Marvel has the additional problem that she has to be the fangirl all through the movie, making Jar Jar Binks look like a chill character in comparison.
A Murder at the End of the World (2023)
Enjoyable, great cast, great cinematography, great score, awful writing
Maybe the series is just too long with 7 episodes and expectations are too high in the last episode, when the murderer is finally revealed. The resolution of the murder puzzle is a bit sudden strike of a genius and doesn't feel as natural as in the Agatha Christie crime stories. The writing also does not do a good job of developing the main character or any character during the show. We only get to know glimpses of characters. Even the main character we only get to learn that she loves riddles - not really original, doesn't stop biting into a murder mystery - stapel food in crime stories, grew up in morgues and knows how bodies from crime scenes are examined and got some fashionable ADHS. But there is nothing during the show that really requires her to have her background to come to the conclusions she draws.
Killing Eve (2018)
Breaks down in the final season, questionable casting
The casting is very well done with unfortunately the main character - Eve - being a mismatch with Sandra Oh. Her acting is absolutely not to be faulted and is impressive, but she just doesn't look like anything that Villanelle would take interest in, starting, but not limited to, with the age gap of over 15 years.
The first two seasons are entertaining in a great way and the third season as well. The last season, unfortunately, feels disjointed and all over the place, no planned out story visible, crowned by an unsatisfying ending that leaves options for another season, should circumstances change favourably.
The soundtrack was very nice, as a side-remark.
About Fate (2022)
Real chemistry
What makes a RomCom rise or fall is the chemistry between the two lead actors and definitely, they both presented a good chemistry between their characters. Thomas Mann is not a photogenic actor, but I guess he might have been cast of both budget and being more relatable and he gives his lead with a bit of goofy charm. Emma Roberts I like to see in movies as she has the quirky charm and that mix of great looking, but still being relatable as that girl next door.
I have read that the movie is a sort of remake of a soviet classic, but I guess they could have put the exes of both leads together later towards the end of the movie - they kind of deserved each other.
Poker Face (2023)
Enjoyable mix of "Colombo", "Lie to Me" and "The Fugitive"
There are some nice twists in the show on how the perpetrators are getting caught or made to pay for their crimes. This doesn't come as a surprise, since Rian Johnson is involved in the production. What I also enjoy is the use of many former A-list actors like Nick Nolte in a role that brings up the magic of Ray Harryhausen. I already liked the main actress a lot in "Russian Doll" and that made me watch the show in the first place. I haven't regretted it so far and I hope that there will be more seasons. I guess it is good that Netflix isn't running the show, otherwise this might have been the last season.
The Villains of Valley View (2022)
Script falls short
The acting is ok for a TV show, but it doesn't stand out either. The idea of a family of super villains having to hide from the law and the fellow villains is an ok and interesting concept. The script falls short of delivering a joke that doesn't feel like it hasn't be brought already in a couple of other TV shows before. The character setup seems to be mostly ok with the oldest son wanting to blend in, the daughter fighting with being a villain/bitch and the father being an evil genius. That is good for creating situations later in the show. The mother's character feels lackluster in design and the youngest kid does not have any characteristic than trying out his new superpower.
I personally can't see this show getting another season.
Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves (2023)
Most entertaining fantasy movie in a long time
The script has a lot of situational comedy and smooth remarks, making it light hearted fun. The visuals are great, so the illusion of a fantasy world is not destroyed like in the first attempt of a D&D movie. The fighting scenes are well choreographed as well, so the movie feels like a well-rounded package. My favourite hero was the Tiefling druid Doric, but overall, the cast was really well selected. Not telling too much, but the graveyard scene is my favourite scene of the movie.
The setting for the movie is taken from the "Sword Coast" with all the cities like Neverwinter. Since I am not an avid D&D player, I can't tell how accurate that world is portrayed. The strongest tabletop game - as D&D is - came from the haphazard group of heroes that had to team up in this adventure. Fortunately, there is no narrator trying to create that dungeon master feeling.
If there is a sequel, count me all in.
Jurassic World: Dominion (2022)
Polished pile of dinosaur dump
It is so polished looking that it almost makes sense that the CEO of Biosyn - typo of Biosin, I guess - looks so much like Tim Cook of Apple. The movie is long and feels long and it seems that they made it that long in order to be able to show all kinds of dinosaurs. Less is more, I would say. The acting is a mixed bag, I would say, with Chris Pratt being the weakest link. But it doesn't beat the bad quality of the script. While the original Jurassic Park based on the book by Michael Crichton was science with some fiction, this movie is just fiction in so many aspects - starting with dinosaurs being comfortable in winter or having spread to other continents supposedly.
F9 (2021)
The Dumb and the Dumber
If you watch this, then you ar ein for cars, guns and action. Anything else is ridiculous in writing. Also the times of real stunts has gone for a few installments already and are replaced by computer FX.
Since I needed some filler from AI:
What the movie is not:
"From start to finish, this movie kept me on the edge of my seat. The plot was gripping and the characters were portrayed with such depth and emotion that I found myself fully invested in their journeys. The stunning cinematography and skillful direction brought the story to life, leaving me in awe. Overall, this film is a must-see for anyone who loves a great story and masterful filmmaking."
Avatar: The Way of Water (2022)
Technically top notch and entertaining
This new movie looked more crisp and cleaner than I remembered the first movie to be, which was already the best 3D movie at its time. Small nitpicking is that the fires in the movie looked very artificial. The movie is pretty long with over 3 hours run-time, but honestly, it didn't feel like that and there was no reason to feel bored. The weakest part is again the script, which is far from being original and having had 5 authors named for it surely didn't help. Also borderline pesky was Sam Worthington rambling on and on about family values with a lot of repeat. The movie paints again the story of greedy corprorates invading a paradise like moon. The movie itself is not a big concluding movie, but preparing for the next movies coming after it.
The Pale Blue Eye (2022)
Stellar Bale, good cinematography, but ...
The writing has a big problem. I can't go into the detail without spoiling, but the resolution of the murder mystery depends on things that might work in real life, but are not credible in fiction.
The pacing of the movie might be too slow for quite some people, but it was ok for me. The directing/acting for Poe made him a very annoying sidekick, which might do Poe justice - I have no idea - but usually characters are smoothened for movies when they are supposed to be heroes.
What is totally missing from the movie is West Point. There is hardly any insight into the institution and I feel that it should have mattered more to the story.
The Recruit (2022)
Fun spy flick
This spy series was a lot of entertainment for me so far. The introduction is quick - a lawyer brand new to the CIA is getting the newbie job of going through the letters sent to the CIA and filter out the nut jobs from the real threats. An inmate in a women's prison is threatening to expose all kinds of secrets and he finds out that this is the real deal and that the woman knows more than anbyody outside the CIA should know. Being is a hard-working and smart guy he soon finds out that this is just the beginning.
The series combines conventional thriller material with a lot of things to laugh about. The workplace at the CIA is exaggerated and everybody is paranoid, suspecting others of sabotage. The legal department, where the main character works, desparately tries to not know anything with witnesses in person or in writing around. This is garnered with many quirky characters. A running gag is that the main character keeps getting his suits ruined.
The Walking Dead (2010)
Homo Homini Lupus
If you will, this is a very long version of a "Lord of the Flies" or just Thomas Hobbes' view of human nature. Once the order of society is gone, the full aggressive nature of humans is coming out in a fight for survival in face of a constant threat - the zombies. This constant threat is also driving to a constant change in the cast, as characters die even more often than in GoT. The show fizzles out towards the end, as humans seems to go down the way of triablism and back into medieval equipment. So the biggest threat in this post-apocalyptic world are not the zombies, but the other humans and new faces are often treaten with distrust, rather than with happiness about some other survivor.