Saturday, 13 June 2026

Disclosure Day (2026)

Much has been made of legendary director Steven Spielberg's so-called return-to-form with Disclosure Day. Most of us associate him with his biggest films, tentpole genre films like Jaws, Jurassic Park, Indiana Jones, and of coarse E.T., films which remain some of the best genre films of all time. But his filmography is honestly far more diverse with the last 20 years seeing him tackle Lincoln, The BFG, a remake of West Side Story, The Fabelmans, and The Post. While these films are very well regarded, they don't really hold the popular imagination in the way his genre films do. You have to go back to Savings Private Ryan or Schindler's List to find one of his drama films that captured the zeitgeist in the way his fantastic films have. But it really hasn't been that long since he made Ready Player One. He's always experimented with different forms. He is a story teller after all... and a very good one. 

But there is something about Disclosure Day that feels more "Spielbergian" (if I can call it that) than a lot of his more recent work. There is a hopeful energy and a sense of wonder thrown in amongst a timeless sense of adventure. There are characters we latch on to, seeing ourselves in them. And there is a magic that few others are able to convey in the way he does. Disclosure Day does all that but perhaps in a different way than in his other famous "flying saucer" movie, Close Encounters of the Third Kind. His look here feels far more like someone looking through eyes of deep experience than with a new sense of awe. 

Like that film, Disclosure Day is actually far more about humanity than it is about aliens. It asks us to reflect on who we are and what we are hopeful for. It asks us about our obligations to each other. The aliens are just a catalyst for us to look at who we are as human beings. Spielberg doesn't give us answers as much as he lets us sit with questions. Similarly he doesn't hold our hands as he tells us his story. He drops us into the events and lets those events unfold gradually giving us more of an awakening to what is happening. He lets us sit with the mystery a bit. He has always thread religion and spirituality through his films and never does so in a preachy way. Instead it is that question of mystery which is so fascinating to him. Here it is more than just subtext. It is full on text. He is letting us wrestle with robust and complicated questions and lets his story play out without giving us a play by play. 

The film, while more thoughtful that most "alien contact" movies, still manages to be packed with adventure set pieces, many of which are top notch. They fit organically into the larger narrative he is trying to tell while also giving us a reason for our pulses to race. But for me, honestly, more than the train scene or car chases, it is the film's rather cerebral and emotional climax which really gives the thrills. I was surprised at how moving I found it and much of this had to do with Spielberg's narrative choices.

John Williams is back from retirement with another score for Spielberg, perhaps not as iconic as some of his work, which rank amongst the greatest film scores of all time, but a truely beautiful and accomplished work. If this is his final big screen full score effort it would be a fitting cap on a legendary career. 

Disclosure Day is a strong film in so many ways and a real encapsulation of what makes Spielberg regarded as the film maker he is. Only time will tell how this fits into his filmography but for me it is a reminder of his power as a storyteller who knows how to capture our imagination. 

Disclosure Day
Starring: Emily Blunt, Josh O'Connor, Colin Firth, Eve Hewson, Colman Domingo, Wyatt Russell
Director: Steven Spielberg
Writer: David Koepp 

Friday, 12 June 2026

The Furious (2026)

The Furious is a good old fashioned Hong Kong martial arts action movie. Reminiscent of Indonesian film The Raid (especially because it features Ruhian), The Furious has a solid (if thin) story that has a big heart at its core and is enough to string together the electric set pieces. Perhaps it is guilty of some of the genre's excesses (people who should long be dead or incapacitated get up and keep fighting again and again - the script often feels rather elementary) but it grabs you and doesn't let go for a solid 113 minutes offering a satisfying time.

You got to hand it to these film makers. They know how to leave it all on the screen. The final fight sequences is epic, perhaps a bit excessive, but will be remembered as a core of the genre. The cinematography and choreography are top level. You'll be sweating at the end. 

One of the things I loved about The Furious is how it handles its subject. This is a film about child trafficking but instead of wallowing in the gore porn that it could have it keeps all that off screen, suggested, to instead focus on the action. It helps reminds us that yes these are very bad people our heroes are beating up, but also we aren't going to take any sick pleasure from that. 

The Furious is a damn good action film that reminds you why going to the movies is so damn fun. 

The Furious
Starring:Xie Miao, Joe Taslim, Yayan Ruhian, Yang Enyou
Director: Kenji Tanigaki
Writers: Mak Tin-shu, Lei Zhilong, Shum Kwan-sin, Frank Hui

Saturday, 6 June 2026

Power Ballad (2026)

Carney makes movies about loving and making music. With Power Ballad he focuses on the nebulous relationship surrounding the "ownership" of music, in the specific context of what constitutes writing a song? Power Ballad muses on this question in interesting ways, surprisingly not offering us too easy an answer making this a far more intriguing story that I had anticipated. Presented as a simple moral question, the film actually goes in different directions, as we explore how ones relationship to art can affect ones relationship to the people they love.  

I liked how Power Ballad  doesn't go where you think it's going to go. The film is the least interesting when it is following funny hijinx of Rick trying to reach Danny. It is at its most interesting when each is struggling with their relationship to the song in question, the catchy and very digestible titular ballad. 

For me the film doesn't quite have enough juice and feels like it needs to pad its story a bit. The lead up to Rick and Danny's final confrontation errs on the silly side a bit too much for my tastes, but when they do finally talk, really talk, again the film finds its groove. And the final moments worked for me, a rather satisfying conclusion of the thorny issue that finds a realistic way to resolve the plot, even if it doesn't quite answer the central question, a question I feel is more complicated than a simple yes or no. Sure the film gives us what the legal answer may be but its focus on relationships gives the film its emotional centre. 

Power Ballad
Starring: Paul Rudd, Nick Jonas, Peter McDonald, Marcella Plunkett, Beth Fallon, Havana Rose Liu, Jack Reynor
Writer/Director: John Carney

 

Friday, 5 June 2026

Masters of the Universe (2026)

Despite being in the generation that grew up with Masters of the Universe, it was not my thing. I had a couple of the toys as a child, I'd watch the show occasionally, but I was never into it or followed it that closely. I never quite understood the appeal. This is a property that is based on a toy line before it is any narrative or set of characters. Everything is built around the toys being sold. So the attempt to readapt it into something for a modern audience faces specific challenges and now that I've seen it, I'm not sure the new attempt pulls it off. 

Is this as bad as 1987 live action film? Not even close. That was a disastrous mess that wasn't even on a it's-so-bad-it's-good level. But is this a clever, self-acknowledging nostalgic tribute a la Dungeons and Dragons Honor Amongst Thieves? I don't think it gets there. It certainly leans into its self-awareness, mocking itself manytimes throughout, but it pushes past a teasing tone into mockery. 

And the story just isn't the fun, playful romp it needed to be. It's rather on the cliched and rote side. Dare I say it was a little dull? The production is at a high level (especially when we have 1987 to compare it too) but the script feels half-assed. The cast, acts like they are constantly winking at the audience with Leto and Brie being the most scenery chewing of the bunch. I get that it would be incredibly hard to take the premise and characters of Masters of the Universe not feel ridiculous but it could have been done with a tone that wasn't so condescending to itself and perhaps showed a bit more affection for the property. 

Masters of the Universe
Starring: Nicholas Galitzine, Camila Mendes, Idris Elba, Alison Brie, James Purefoy, Morena Baccarin, Jóhannes Haukur Jóhannesson, Kristen Wiig, Jared Leto, Dolph Lundgren, 
Director: Travis Knight
Writers: Chris Butler, Aaron Nee, Adam Nee, David Callaham

Friday, 29 May 2026

Backrooms (2026)

I am often drawn to films that explore what is unnerving over explicitly "scary" images. Sometimes this difference is more a matter of how we understand the experience than the experience itself. I find the ideas behind the story to be the parts which are the most effecting. Rarely do films which feature a "monster" chasing people scary. The idea of our understanding of reality being challenged is far more impactful for me. Backrooms is the sort of film that draws this out of its audience with its atmospheric unsettling ambiance. 

I understand the film has roots in initial images of subliminal spaces which went viral before being adapted into a web-series which had a following of it's own. Backrooms takes full advantage of the cultivated visual aesthetic from these sources creating a complete world it exists in that is so disquieting in both its familiarity and its uncanniness. The film's power lies in the way it takes the mundane and alters it slightly enough to rattle us. 

Backrooms sometimes feels like there are a few ideas being played with simultaneously but it does so mostly in a way that feels consistent. There are only a few moments where I felt like it was taking some short cuts (like a character explaining a little to much, or another stumbling upon answers a bit to quickly). 

Despite critiques that say the film is not traditionally horror, it does have some rather normal horror tropes such as a persistant, mostly unseen monster hunting down its final girl. Thankfully it uses this sparingly focusing more on the way the characters' memories and emotional interiors are fabricated into a confounding "reality". Parsons finds a balance between the stalking monster trope and the more interesting aspects of how we remember who we are and what that makes us into. 

I was worried the film would attempt to "explain" itself, especially in its end scenes which begin to go down that road, but fortunately it pulls back and leaves us with more questions than answers... exactly what it should do. Sometimes the film does attempt to provide us with a helping hand a bit more often than I would have preferred but I appreciated how the ending can be interpreted a few ways. I look forward to all the conversations about what this story.

Backrooms
Starring: Chiwetel Ejiofor, Renate Reinsve, Mark Duplass, Finn Bennett, Lukita Maxwell, Avan Jogia
Director: Kane Parsons
Writer: Will Soodik

Monday, 25 May 2026

Tuner (2026)

Sometimes a movie just comes together completely and Tuner is one of those movies. It has a great premise whose screenplay brings out its best features. The performances are top notch with Woodalll and Liu showing they both have the potential to carry a film. And Roher directs it all so beautifully into a really entertaining film. 

This is the sort of film I can confidently recommend to almost anyone. It gets a little intense at the end so I'd watch for that if you are somewhat sensitive, but it's worth risking that for such a pleasing movie. I really don't want to say too much about it except go see it. 

Turner
Starring: Leo Woodall, Dustin Hoffman, Havana Rose Liu, Lior Raz, Tovah Feldshuh, Jean Reno
Director: Daniel Roher
Writers: Robert Ramsey, Daniel Roher

Friday, 22 May 2026

I Love Boosters (2026)

I'll watch whatever Boots Riley puts out. He knows how to wrap up sharp social commentary into a delicious package that is a gas to watch. I Love Boosters certainly does fall into that category even if it starts to collapse onto its own silliness a bit by the end. Still I had a great time and I appreciate it's heart and soul. 

The film is very funny and visually incredible to watch. Riley has created a dystopic world for his very real world analogy and filled it with dynamic characters and a plot that perhaps cross just into the ridiculous. While I had a great time, I did feel it tipped over to the point where it became too much. But just a bit. I didn't feel it's overly optimistic ending was completely earned. 
 
Still having said that the film is a wonderful watch and it brings to the fore, with little to no nuance, very important issues. The best thing about this is Palmer's rich performance. Despite all the craziness around her she grounds her character so effectively and powerfully breathing a pathos into the film it might not have without her. Yet she remains part of this over-the-top world bridging it to our reality. 

I Love Boosters
Starring: Keke Palmer, Naomi Ackie, Taylour Paige, Poppy Liu, Eiza González, LaKeith Stanfield, Will Poulter, Don Cheadle, Demi Moore
Writer/Director: Boots Riley