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Tag: Reviews for The Easily Distracted

  • Reviews For The Easily Distracted: The Running Man – Houston Press

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    Title: The Running Man

    Describe This Movie In One Bruce Almighty Quote:
    BRUCE: Lower and debase myself for the amusement of total strangers? Yeah, I could do that. Sounds like fun.

    Brief Plot Synopsis: “Ben Richards, come on down!”

    Rating Using Random Objects Relevant To The Film: 2 Richard Dawsons out of 5.

    Credit: TriStar Pictures

    Tagline: “Millions hunt. One runs. Everyone watches.”

    Better Tagline: “Still more ethical than trophy hunting.”

    Not So Brief Plot Synopsis: Few things trigger desperation in a man like being unemployed with a sick child. Ben Richards (Glen Powell) knows more than most, having been blackballed from most employment for repeated “insubordination.” But there’s still one place where someone from the slums can earn some New Dollars, and that’s on the Network’s potentially lethal game shows. Producer Dan Killian (Josh Brolin) thinks the angry Richards is a perfect fit for The Running Man, in which contestants attempt to survive for 30 days while being hounded not just be the Network’s elite Hunters, but by ordinary citizens, who can earn money from contestant sightings.

    YouTube video

    “Critical” Analysis: Stephen King wrote the Running Man (as Richard Bachman) back in 1982, when constant surveillance was just a glint in Peter Thiel’s eye. Set in an economically depressed and dystopian 2025 (“fiction”), King’s novel was prescient in depicting both the stranglehold elites have on society and the increasing cruelty of reality television. What it may have overemphasized was the oppressed masses capacity for revolution, a pitfall stumbled into by both Paul Michael Glaser’s 1987 adaptation and this new version, directed by Edgar Wright (The “Cornetto” Trilogy, Baby Driver).

    Wright’s version is more faithful to the book than Glaser’s. Though in truth, it would be harder not to be. The latter starred Arnold Schwarzenegger as the “weak and tubercular” (King’s words) Ben Richards, who played a cop betrayed by his superiors, in a version of the game setting the “Runners” against glandular freaks armed with flamethrowers and chainsaws. Here, Richards’ background is largely intact, and the concept of Runners being hunted by both Network assassins and billions of ordinary citizens remains as well.

    Though referring to Glen Powell as “tubercular” is … a bit of a stretch.

    So, fine; it’s a better adaptation. But is it a better movie? It certainly looks better, having been shot on location in he UK instead of in a janky Hollywood soundstage. Brolin, Colman Domingo (as Running Man host “Bobby T”), and yes, even Powell, are also better actors than Schwarzenegger, Jim Brown, or Jesse “The Body” Ventura. The special effects, courtesy of ILM, are top notch, and — for the movie’s first half, anyway — it felt like everything was falling into place.

    Much like James Gunn, Edgar Wright has a tendency to mix comedy with occasionally shocking violence. This helps offset the brutality of the world Richards and his family inhabits. But should it? Because even this “more faithful” rendition runs counter to the bleak anti-capitalist message of the novel. The Running Man is the closest thing Wright has come to directing a straight action movie since Baby Driver. And some of the sequences are both gripping and amusing, but even the comedic flourishes are abandoned for the film’s third act.

    “What do you mean your grandfather committed some ‘light treason?’” Credit: Paramount Pictures

    This is also about where the 1987 version bogs down, and for similar reasons. Movies that tell downbeat stories without some form of comeuppance haven’t really been marketable to American audiences since the 1970s. The Schwarzenegger movie took the passages about Richards-inspired proletarian riot in King’s novel and blew them up into full-blown revolution (led by Mick Fleetwood and Dweezil Zappa, no less). In Wright’s movie, Richards shelters with a nerdy anarchist (played by Michael Cera) who publishes a zine that will blow the lid off the Network’s abuses.

    You read that right: in the year 2025, the masses will be moved to full-scale revolt by a type of publication that saw its popularity peak almost 30 years ago.

    It isn’t just the facile revolutionary bullshit, because even though this iteration of The Running Man hews closer to King’s book, it still softens many of its bleaker aspects, including the fate of Richards’ family and his own ambiguous final moments. To be clear, I never expected anyone — Edgar Wright or otherwise — to try and bring the written ending to the screen (though to his credit, he does have Killian acknowledge the possibility). But instead of finding a reasonable alternative, he gives us a finale that makes Arnold walking into the sunset with Maria Conchita Alonso look like The Mist.

    Admittedly, you don’t hire Edgar Wright if you’re just looking for a straightforward book treatment. And the aggravating thing is, The Running Man could’ve worked as an actioner that got some jokes in while still highlighting the depravity of a society that feeds its poorest citizens into a meat grinder for entertainment. But the movie’s utter cop-out of an ending (and ham-fisted credits buzzwords) now make me doubt if the director of Hot Fuzz really understands satire as much as I previously thought.

    Is There An Arnold Cameo? Sort of.

    The Running Man is in theaters today.

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    Pete Vonder Haar

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  • Reviews For The Easily Distracted: Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere – Houston Press

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    Title: Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere

    Describe This Movie Using One St. Elmo’s Fire Quote:
    ALEC: “No Springsteen is leaving this house! You can have all the … Carly Simons.”

    Brief Plot Synopsis: Singer-songwriter is born to run, but can’t escape the darkness on the edge of town his subconscious.

    Rating Using Random Objects Relevant To The Film: 2.5 Denise Huxtables out of 5.

    NBC

    Tagline: N/A

    Better Tagline: “Wrapped up like a douche, another runner in the night.”

    Not So Brief Plot Synopsis: Freehold, NJ’s own Bruce Springsteen (Jeremy Allen White) has just come off a successful tour in support of The River, and both the record company and manager Jon Landau (Jeremy Strong) are ready to strike while the iron is hot. Springsteen, however, isn’t content to chase the next hit single, and draws inspiration from Terence Malick’s Badlands and his own troubled history with his father for more somber inspiration. You could almost say he has a … hungry heart. Ok, I’ll stop now.

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    “Critical” Analysis: The relative trickle of musical biopics that came down the cinematic pike at the beginning of the century (Ray, Walk the Line) has turned into a deluge. This is thanks to a combination of Boomer nostalgia and such movies serving as reliable awards bait for its stars. The recent efforts have ranged from quite good (Rocketman, Elvis) to rather bad (Bohemian Rhapsody, Back to Black), with most efforts falling somewhere in the middle (One Love, Respect).

    Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere is the latter. Writer/director Scott Cooper is clearly a fan of the Boss (the screening I attended began with a clip of Cooper explaining his “vision” for the movie). And, with credits under his belt like Crazy Heart, has shown a knack for thoughtful examinations of artistic characters. Deliver Me From Nowhere attempts to replicate this, only with less success.

    Cooper takes a page from A Complete Unknown, James Mangold’s widely lauded 2024 Bob Dylan bio, by narrowing the film’s focus. Specifically, the two years following the River tour when Springsteen wrote and recorded songs in a rented house in Colts Neck, NJ. These songs would become Nebraska and, later, Born in the U.S.A. Springsteen is already “The Boss” at this point, having released a trio of superlative albums (Born to Run, Darkness on the Edge of Town, The River) and establishing a reputation for Herculean live performances.

    But Springsteen is a troubled guy; nonplussed by label demands, struggling with the direction of his new music, and coming to grips with his abusive childhood. The result is a lot of brooding Bruce: on the seashore, in his hometown of Freehold, and in his rental living room while Badlands plays seemingly on repeat.

    And nobody broods quite like Jeremy Allen White. Of course, he doesn’t really look like Bruce Springsteen. Even with his blond locks dyed Boss brown, there’s not the squint-and-you-can-kinda-see-it resemblance that Timothée Chalamet and Joaquin Phoenix had to Dylan and Johnny Cash. He has the Jersey patois down, and wears the jeans and leather jacket well, but it’s still a stretch.

    Credit: 20th Century Studios

    So it’s fortunate that Cooper isn’t focused on those aforementioned live performances. Aside from the opening scene and some of Bruce jamming with the Stone Pony’s house band (Cats on a Smooth Surface), Deliver Me From Nowhere is more concerned with his inner journey. It’d just be nice if the director concentrated on those more powerhouse scenes with White in the third act than having him staring into the middle distance the rest of the time.

    White’s pretty good, which is no surprise. Even better is Strong, who holds all the strands together. His Landau is both a friend to Springsteen and a champion of his vision to the suits at Columbia (personified by David Krumholz as label president Al Teller). He’s also who the one who finally got Springsteen help for his depression.

    Depression and other mental illnesses also afflicted Springsteen’s father Doug (Adolescence’s Stephen Graham, having quite the run of playing troubled dads), whose negative impact on his son is twofold: abuse — of both the physical and psychological variety — and Bruce’s growing fear that he may turn out like him.

    But that’s not exactly an unexamined aspect of biopics, and Deliver Me From Nowhere — though authentic to its surroundings and featuring solid performances all around — doesn’t have a lot new to say. It doesn’t stray significantly from formula, and is also strangely inert And that may be the biggest slight of all against its subject.

    Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere is in theaters today.

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    Pete Vonder Haar

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  • Reviews For The Easily Distracted: Tron: Ares – Houston Press

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    Title: Tron: Ares
    Describe This Movie Using One Dragnet Quote:
    FRIDAY: Reckless endangerment of human life, willful disregard of private property, failure to signal for a lane change.
    STREEBECK: Yeah, he’s really raking up the violations, isn’t he?
    FRIDAY: Not him, you.
    Brief Plot Synopsis: Tech CEO teams up with sentient security program played by Jared Leto … wait, come back!
    Rating Using Random Objects Relevant To The Film: 3 Frankenstein’s monsters out of 5.

    Wikipedia

    Tagline: “No going back.”
    Better Tagline: “Stop trying to make A.I. happen.”
    Not So Brief Plot Synopsis: ENCOM, the tech/gaming company formerly run by Kevin Flynn, is in a race with Dillinger Systems to obtain something called the Permanence Code, which will allow objects rendered in our world from cyberspace to outlast their current 29-minute lifespan. ENCOM CEO Eve Kim (Greta Lee) has the inside track, as the code is hidden in one of Flynn’s old gaming servers. However, rival CEO Julian Dillinger (Evan Peters) has a trick up his sleeve: a security program named “Ares” (Jared Leto) that may or may not have more human goals in mind.

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    “Critical” Analysis: Tron was always a weird choice for a franchise property. The 1982 original — still the most visually arresting movie about intellectual property disputes ever made — was lauded for its special effects*, but otherwise dragged for being a gorgeous snooze-fest. Somehow, director Joseph Kosinski (Top Gun: Maverick, F1) convinced Disney to make a sequel nearly 30 years later. Tron: Legacy was, like its predecessor, incoherent yet pretty to look at.

    Now it’s Joachim Rønning’s turn. Disney kept things in house by bringing on the Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales and Maleficent director for our latest descent into the Grid. One thing you have to give to Tron: Ares that you couldn’t always say about the first two movies: it isn’t boring.

    There are actually lots of things you can say about Ares. For one, Rønning and screenwriter Jesse Wigutow made the decision to set most of the action in the meatspace, where Dillinger (grandson of David Warner’s character from Tron and (presumably) son of Cillian Murphy’s uncredited Ed Jr. in Legacy) wants ENCOM’s code to shore up his pending A.I. contracts with the military. It’s a smart move — considering the groundbreaking F/X of the original were already old hat by 2010 — and helps ground the story.

    Or as grounded as a story about sentient code repeatedly violating the First Law of Thermodynamics can be, anyway.

    They also steer the protagonist arc mostly away from the Flynns. It’s the worst kept secret outside of Trump being named in the Epstein Files that Jeff Bridges is back in Ares (for maybe 10 minutes) as the virtual Kevin Flynn, but neither hide nor hair is to be seen of Garret Hedlund’s Sam, and that’s fine, really. Instead, we have Greta Lee’s Eve Kim, whose efforts to obtain the “permanence code” are propelled by the memory of her dead sister.

    Ares is a pretty blatant attempt to perpetuate the myth that artificial intelligence is good, actually. Kim, in contrast to Dillinger, wants to use the technology’s potential to feed the hungry, help cure illnesses, and mitigate climate change. It would all be very inspiring if our current real world crop of pasty A.I. gurus weren’t singularly hellbent on wiping out lower sector jobs, depleting water reserves, and plagiarizing creatives.

    Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures
    Which of these jackets is not like the other?

    But at the risk of sounding like Homer Simpson, where’s TRON? The names ENCOM and Dillinger are familiar, but Flynn is the only constant throughout all three movies, and his presence here is largely superfluous. The idea of a Grid-like cyberverse is now well-trod territory, and while it’s cool to see light cycles and Recognizers showing up on the streets of San Francisco Vancouver, it’s hard to shake the feeling that Rønning took creator Steven Lisberger’s original “aliens among us” inspiration, swapped out “aliens” for “A.I.,” and affixed a “Tron” label to it.

    Your opinions about the previous movies aside (I honestly have almost no memory of Legacy), all three feature kickass soundtracks. Wendy Carlos’ original remains the gold standard, but Daft Punk was one of the only reasons to recommend Tron: Legacy. Here, Nine Inch Nails take over, and aside from the unremarkable “As Alive As You Need Me To Be,” their score absolutely propels the action in Ares.

    It’s this same action that sets Ares apart from the first two, which one could charitably describe as “deliberative.” Ares ain’t that, with the Kim/Dillinger maneuvering only giving pause to the spectacle of a freeway light cycle chase or a Recognizer taking on fighter jets (piloted by NIN’s Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross, yes really). Gillian Anderson, playing Julian’s mother Elisabeth, even gets in on the action, slapping her son when the scale of his hubris spins out of control.

    I’m not even jealous, even though I’ve been longing to be slapped by Anderson for years.

    As for the Leto of it all, he’s not bad, even if I can imagine his publicity tour amounting to, “Hi, I’m Jared Leto. Please go see my new movie, but don’t read my Wikipedia entry.” And if Ares is simultaneously a paragon of enlightened self-awareness while also being the baddest dude in virtual *and* physical reality, I’m sure it had nothing to do with Leto’s status as executive producer.

    If you’re looking for a nuanced look at the ontological implications of artificial intelligence, I can recommend a few Substacks. Tron: Ares, on the other hand, is entertaining in the same way as an amusement park ride**. It’s loud, visually arresting, and the thrill wears off in minutes. It’s probably the least Tron of all three movies, which might be why it’s my favorite so far.

    *Fun fact: Tron was disqualified from the Best Visual Effects Oscar because the Academy viewed using computers as “cheating.”
    **Ironically, not the the Light Cycle ride at Magic Kingdom, which sucks.

    Tron: Ares is in theaters today.

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    Pete Vonder Haar

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