Tuesday, November 11, 2025

The Things You Kill (2025)


Canada's Oscar entry film concerns a professor who convinces a gardener to commit murder as revenge for the questionable death of his mother. Instead of making things better it kicks open a hornets nest of complications.

 This is an intense family drama that is being told in a very deliberate manner. Designed to string us along before dropping the floor out from us this is a film where we lean in while trying to hide from the body blows we know are coming. It's all made worse by the fact that there is a point where the film turns and we are not where we expected to be. The turn is the reason that I am not going to do a big review for the film, simply because I do not want to spoil where this goes. (I've seen several reviews that have used phrasing that wrecked things)

Know that this is a solid film and very recommended.

Trifole (2025), which opens Friday


A young woman who is living in England is sent to visit her grandfather in Italy. There she finds him wanting to do little more then search of truffles with his dog, while also bemoaning the changing nature of the world around him.

This is a small gem of a film. I don't want to over sell it so I won't say a great deal, but this is a lovely little film. Building slowly and quietly the film seems to be taking some expected routes, however it quickly becomes clear that how this is going to play out and how the characters interact is not going to be as we expect. I quickly went to enjoying the scenery but being slightly dismissive, to really enjoying the characters and wondering where it was going to go.

While this isn't the heaviest of tales, it is deeply affecting and it packs quite a punch. 

Recommended.

Monday, November 10, 2025

HUMANS IN THE LOOP (2025)

 A woman from rural India works in a firm that labels data so that AI can learn from it. Along the way she realizes that their are problems with the process.

I am mixed on theis film. It is a stunningly beautiful and wonderfully crafted film (seriously every image in this film, even the ones on the computer screen are oines you will want to hang on your wall) that has a great deal to say about the tech industry and most importantly how AI is being taught. It is in its way a film that will make you think.

At the same time the craft of the film and it's use of silences make this a film that feels les like life and more a work of art. While on some level that is very good, on others it gives the film a distance it shouldn't have. There are important issues here we need to enage with and not have lost in pretty pictures.

Quibble aside there is enough here that it is worth a look if you are interested, especially now that the film is on Netflix.

Drop Dead City (2025) hits digital November 14


DROP DEAD CITY is a wonderful film. It’s timing couldn’t have been better. This look at the point at which the city of New York almost defaulted and was told to drop dead by then President Ford is surprisingly relevant.

As a document of what happened and why, as well as a portrait of New York City in the bad old days, this film can’t be beat. It’s a film that shows us how a bunch of guys who really didn’t do what they should have been doing almost killed a city. Its an eye opening tale that most aren’t aware of. Actually as some one who lived through the crisis I didn’t know the details of most of this and I was focused on the film more than many films of recent vintage.

Honestly there is so much information here I need to see this another time or two just so I can connect up the various bits with the way the city is now.

And speaking of now, watching the explanation of what happened I was shocked by what is currently happening in Washington. The cavalier attitude of the trustees of New York in the 70’s matches the attitudes of many currently running rough shod over the government in Washington.  This film is a wake up call.

But I digress.

DROP DEAD CITY is a great film. While it can be a bit over whelming in the amount of information it gives us, its really nice to see a film that gives us a lot of material consider because it knows we can handle it.

Recommended

Valley of the Shadow of Death(2025) hits UK Cinemas on 14 November

 Anthony Wong gives a quietly pained performance as a priest who preaches about how suffering brings one closer to god. Three years after the suicide of his daughter in the aftermath of her being raped, Wong's and his wife's lives are thrown into free fall when the man who raped their daughter enters their lives and begins making strides toward redemption.

This is a very heavy film where what isn't said is just as important as what is said. Wong gives us a brave face but we can see behind the eyes that there may be gulf between what he preaches and what he actually feels and believes.  There are no easy answers here, and even as the screen fades to black you are going to not be certain of what you feel. I mean that in a good way since this film kicks up a great deal of ideas and emotions that you can not just walk away from.

In an age of hate, this examination of forgiving 7 times 70 times is serious food for thought.

This is one of the better NYAFF 2025 films and as such is recommended.

Sunday, November 9, 2025

DOC NYC 2025 Curtain raiser and recommended films


One of the best film festivals of any film year DOC NYC opens on Wednesday, and we are better for it.   The festival is both in person and online making the glorious selection of films available to everyone.

I have been covering the festival since its second year (I found out about the first fest the day after it ended) and I have been wading deeply into its goodies every year. How deeply? There have been years when we covered almost every film that played. Why? Because the curating of the festival is so good that I will try any and all films playing the festival simple because they are playing the festival. The programmers know their stuff and there have been, perhaps, maybe two films in sixteen years where I had no idea why the film was programmed. This goes for shorts and features.


The festival is both a great place to see new films, it is full of dozens of premieres, all of which are destined to be talked about; and it is also a great place to catch films you may have missed. The festival scoops up the best of other fests and brings them to New York to be screened. Before the festival started I had seen between 20 and 30 of the films playing (links to the ones I reviewed below). The festival also has a selection of the films they think will be in the Oscar race and it screens them. Their choices tend to cover most, if not all, of the Oscar documentary short list.

I love the festival, and I can’t wait to get on the ground to cover the films. Though, I think this year there won't be quite as many films covered as in previous years simple because life happens. (And if you sent me a film for coverage know I will cover it- though because of the sheer number of films I will be covering and because I can not post 8  or 10 reviews at the same time without them getting lost, some reviews will run later than their screenings.)

I can go on for hours waxing poetic, but you don’t need to hear that. What you need are the annual DOC NYC lists.

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First up are the list of films that we covered before (Click on the titles to go to the review)

SONG OF BLACK FOLK

HOLDING LIAT

LIFE AFTER

SECRET MALL APARTMENT

PUT YOUR SOUL OIN YOUR HAND AND WALK

PERFECT NEIGHBOR

MY MOM JAYNE

MR NOBODY AGAINST PUTIN

MISTRESS DISPELLER

COVER UP

COEXISTENCE MY ASS

APOCALYPSE IN THE TROPICS- I have not posted a review of this yet. It's tied up with another project- however it's a truly frightening film about the far right in Brazil and the damage they caused.

ARREST THE MIDWIFE


Secondly, and most importantly is the list of absolute must sees.  While I recommend every film playing the festival, these are the ones you should move heaven and earth to see.

OH YEAH!

NUNS VS VATICAN

LAST AMBASSADOR

DEATH EDUCATION

CREEDE USA

THE GAS STATION ATTENDANT

FLOPHOUSE AMERICA -easily one of the best films of 2025. This is a look at a young man over several year as he lives in a low rent hotel with his parents. The equal of last year's INHERITENCE this is a must see.

BEYOND- this is a look at a TED talk type of lecture given by inmates at the Sing Sing prison. This is awesome - and it is a brother to last year's award wing drama SING SING by one its stars.

NO MERCY- Do women make harsher films then men? The greatest female filmmakers in the world discuss that and other questions in one of the best films on film I've seen.

IMAGES FROIM TUVALU is a deeply disturbing look at climate change and how we will never care enough to fix it.

MATA HARI is what happened when David Carradine decided to make a film about Mata Hari over several year with his daughter in the lead. It will haunt you.

SUNSET AND THE MOCKINGBIRD - a jazz musician goes into that good night with love and music

SONS OF DETROIT- a man returns to Detroit to reconnect with the place and people he left years before. A personal journey that is one part diary and one part love letter to the city and people who raised him. Bring tissues (for happy tears)

BLACK IS BEAUTIFUL: THE KWAME BRAITHWAITE STORY The is a portarit of a photographer who changed the world. Just WOW.

IFTHESE WALLS COULD ROCK may not be the best film at DOC NYC but its endless parade of stories about rock star bad behavior is a blast.

THE SPIRITUAL ADVISOR- quiet gut punch portrait of Dr Reverand Jeff Hood who has acted as the spirtual advisor to people on death row. Be prepared to sit in stunned silence at the end.

And with that it’s time for me to go back to watching films. If you want more information on the films and both the in person and on-line portions of the festival- go here.

LITTLE AMELIE OR THE CHARACTER OF RAIN (2025)


Directors Liane-Cho Han Jin Kuan and  Maïlys Vallade, who worked on films such as  LITTLEPRINCE, LONG WAY NORTH,  CALAMITY, ZARAPHRA, THE ILLUSIONIST, come together to tell the story of a little Belgian girl born in Japan who thinks she is a god.

Containing some truly wondrous sequences, LITTLE AMELIE, is a beautiful film.  At times it has a sense of wonder that it truly magical and will make you feel good. There are some moments in the film which are so wondrous that you will get misty from the sheer beauty of them.

While told from the perspective of a three year old, the film never fully connected to me. The problem is that the film wants to view the world  from the three year old's sense of wonder, it is not a real three year old's sense  but that of an adult. It's not fatal,  but it takes the edge off the film, making it a film I like instead of love. To be fair I think the problem is that this comes from a novel and very often the conceits that work on the page does not work on the big screen. 

My quibbles aside, this is a truly beautiful film and worth seeing on any screen you can.

Thursday Murder Club (2025)

 I liked Thursday Murder Club.

Is it the greatest thing since sliced bread? No. I fully blame director Chris Columbus for his less than serious direction which is way less suspenseful as it should be.

The film is the story of a group of seniors (Helen Mirren Piece Brosnan and Sir Ben Kinglsey) who spend their time trying to solve unsolved murder cases. One of the owners of their home is murdered the group is thrown into an active investigation. Along with a new resident who was a trauma nurse, the pair work with a low-level cop to bring justice to the killer.

Feeling more like the pilot episode of a TV series, the film is a great deal of fun thanks to the stellar cast. This will be a world you want to revisit; I want a sequel.

Is this the greatest thing since sliced bread? No but it is a great way to pass two hours until they make a sequel.

(A brief note: while the plot of the film is more or less the plot of the source novel, apparently there is a change as to what happens to one person which may complicate sequels)

Saturday, November 8, 2025

DRIVE BACK HOME (2025)

In 1970 a man (Charlie Creed-Miles) in New Bruswick Canada is called by the police in Toronto. His brother (Alan Cumming) has been arrested on public morals charges (he's a gay man). If he comes to collect his brother and take him home they will make the charge go away. If not he will go to prison for 5 years. Goaded by Their mother he heads off to rescue his brother.

This is a bitter sweet comedy drama about family and society.  It is nominally a comedy, except that it's no longer funny. We live in an age when the far right wants us to march back to an age when gays are shunned and abused if not killed. The slings and arrows that the characters face,  Alan Cumming on a daily basis and Creed Miles since traveling with his brother, are returning in some places.  It's heart breaking.  Yes, there are laughs, but there is a sadness hanging over it all.

The film works as well as it does is due to the performances. Everyone is good, but Creed Miles and Cumming are amazing. They are both worth of Oscars. They make the brothers estrangement and return completely believable.  I was moved  because I could relate to them.

This is a fantastic film.  

Recommended.

(FYI there is a brief  sequence is the middle of the credits)

Tornado (2025)

 


TORNADO is the story of a Japanese woman in 19th century England. Traveling with her father, a former samurai turned puppeteer, she is chased by a bad on robbers who wants the gold she is carrying.

This is a good little historical action drama that works best because it is set in an unfamiliar world. Being set in England allows there to be certain suspense since we no longer can be certain  how it will play out.

Beyond the setting change the film is a well done, if familiar tale of a fight for survival and revenge. We’ve seen this before, but at the same time not always as well done as this. I had a good time.

This is a sweet little diversion.

Friday, November 7, 2025

Catch up reviews: TRAINWRECK: AMERICAN APPAREL, AMERICAN MANHUNT OSAMA BIN LADEN and AMERICAN MANHUNT OJ SIMPSON

TRAINWRECK: AMERICAN APPAREL 
A shallow look at the rise and implosion of the apparel brand. 

As with many of the films/ episodes of the series it is lacking a depth of details that is completely surprising for a network show. There is enough detail for 20 minute You Tube video. Actually I think many You Tube Videos would have been more detailed in less time.

A miss. 


AMERICAN MANHUNT BIN LADEN
Netflix look at the hunt for Osama Bin Laden.

This is good but slightly dumbed down and self congratulatory look at search for Bin Laden after the 911 attacks.  Yes there is a lot of good information here but it's offset by some of the interviewees attitude macho attitude toward the hunt. ("They thought they could not tell us anything but they were wrong" spoken in the most condescending tones)

I liked it but wish it was much less jingoistic.


AMERICAN MANHUNT OJ SIMPSON
A look at OJ Simpson case from the people who put it together.

One of the better OJ docs is a more nuts and bolts look at what happened via the evidence and the the people who collected it. While the series perhaps suffers from not having a slightly wider view of everything, I found I liked the closer to the ground take the series gave us.

Worth a look.

Thursday, November 6, 2025

Long Shadows (2025)


Young man whose parents were murdered years before, leaves the orphanage and heads off into the world to make his way and get revenge. Along the way he makes the acquaintance of a crusty old sheriff and connects with a young woman from his past.

Solid western doesn’t break any new ground but entertains pretty much every turn. This plays better than many recent westerns since it doesn’t try to reinvent the wheel and instead simply focuses on the characters and the situations. The result is one the rare inde westerns that I would actually want to see a second time. The only weak link in the film is Blaine Maye as the man seeking revenge. While he isn’t bad, he is a bit too brooding  and the performance comes off as a tad one note.

Quibble aside LONG SHADOWS is worth a look if you want a solid western.

Wednesday, November 5, 2025

PREDATOR BADLANDS (2025)


 I was sitting at dinner with my brother complaining about recent remakes and trips to over done franchises where they have simply given us repeats or visually spectacular retreads to hide that they are creatively bankrupt. An hour later I'm watching PREDATOR BADLANDS and I'm enjoying the hell out of a film that actually rethinks what the franchise could be, with the result I found one of my most favorite films of 2025.

To be fair, the Predator franchise actually is one of the best. The first film is a classic. The second one changed things up by moving things to a city. The Alien films at least tried to mix things up. Predators was a clever rethink. Prey and the animated film were actually good little stories. Only The Predator film which sought to restart it all fell on its face. I was hopeful that BADLANDS would continue being interesting and I was more than rewarded.

The plot has a "weakling" predator going to kill an unkillable monster on another planet. Along the way he fights monsters and meets a synthetic human (Elle Fanning)  who was torn in half. Fanning will help our hero so that she can get her legs back.

I won't say more because the less you know going in the better you will like this.It does not go as expected, and even when it kind of does, you won't care because the characters and storytelling are spot on. The characters are so good you won't mind the occasional weak CGI.

And if the world were just Elle Fanning would get an Oscar nomination for her performance here. It covers the spectrum from A to Z and is just as good as it gets. Seriously watch the small ticks and gestures that give depth to her role. Most people won't notice because of the monsters, but I did and she should be up for awards, okay maybe not winning them but in the discussion.

I love this film. Its a wonderful film about finding one's place. It is a brilliant coming of age film but with violence and monsters. This is why I go to the movies, to go somewhere I've never been and see tales that move my heart.

This is cinema of the highest order.

One of the best films of the year- see it on the BIG screen.

(a word of warning a lot of this is subtitled since the Predator speaks his own language and isn't dubbed)

Matter of Time (2025) opens in Seattle at The Admiral Theater on November 7th

 


Eddie Vedder gives a performance to raise money to help cure epidermolysis bullosa, a painful genetic disease that makes the skin seperate from the body. The skin ends up as fragile as a butterfy's wings. As we watch Vedder perform we get to know several of the people suffering from the disease.

This was one of the best films at Tribeca and maybe 2025. It was an absolute sin that this film played late in the festival because it greatly reduced the audience for the film and it prevented it from having a chance of winning many awards. I was the only member of the press in the screening and it was a fraking shame.

This film will moved you - bring tissues. The young people struggling to live their lives will break your heart with what they have to suffer and make your spirit soar because you will understand that we humans can overcome anything.

What I loved was that Eddie Vedder comes off a genuine wonderful person. His comments to and about the people we have met makes you realize that he loves each and everyone and that he considers the as friends. Too often you see celebrities phone in the love, but not here. When he introduces Better Man and dedicates it to one of his friends who passed you feel his loss.

This film is a great film.  You need to see this, for all sorts of reasons, but mostly to see some of the most amazing people you will ever meet. 

Highly recommended.

Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Nit picking Frankenstein (2025)

 


Guillermo del Toro's FRANKENSTEIN is perfectly okay. An awards bait version that references a large number of earlier cinematic versions, the works of GDT and numerous other films, but it suffers  because it's a film that is frequently lacking in connecting material that there are plot problems. I think it maybe del Toro's weakest film.

The problem for me began at the start of the film when the monster attacks the ship and we get CGI mayhem. Bodies are tossed about like animated bodies and the film instantly slipped into cartoon territory for me. The CGI issues run through the whole film with the wolves looking particularly bad. So much of the film looks like the wrong sort of unreal. I was never into the world on screen, which coupled with the fact that the set design, while stunning, is really just a series of cool looking locations and not a world that connects to anything.

I dislike that the film seems to be "paying homage" to every Frankenstein film ever made with shots mirroring the Hammer films(the monster's appearance at the foot of Frankenstein's bed echoes Christopher Lee's appearance in CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN), lines lifted from numerous Hollywood films (The line where Frankenstein said he knows the creature has a brain  or something  because he put it there nis lifted from I WAS A TEENAGED FRANKENSTEIN) and bits borrowed from some Euro-versions. The film also heavily references earlier GDT films (the stair way in the castle looks like the stairs in CRIMSON PEAK) and numerous other works of art (Bernie Wrightson is referenced everywhere), with the creature reminding me of the Engineers of the Ridley Scott Alien prequels if they went through a Ziggy Stardust phase. Elizabeth mirrors look like Mary Shelly. Much like a film from Quentin Tarantino, I kept being pulled out of the film by all of the homages and borrows.

The script and continuity are a mess. I'm not sure if it is because things were cut out or because del Toro simply didn't care and just focused on the big scenes and never connecting things up. The time frame is almost always suspect. Things just happen just because- Walz's character suddenly wanting to be put into the monster, which we suspected, but which happens at a point where it makes no sense other than to provide a way to remove him from the narrative. From the trapped ship suddenly being damn close to open water despite being trapped in the ice, to sets not matching their exteriors (The blindman cabin is four times bigger on the inside then outside), to mayhem happening and no one moving either a way or attempting to stem it (much of the wedding sequence where every person is just a mannequin).  The design of the lab looks cool but makes no real-world sense - I mean seriously what would that castle tower be in a real-world setting - if nothing else so much of the tower is open to the elements. (Yes I know it's a movie but it still makes no sense in that world or ours. Additionally, how do the sets connect to each other? We almost never see anyone go from place to place; we are just in each unconnected and wildly oversized location with effort to connect them up and make them a real place. On stage that is allowed out of the limits of the space, but in a film  it makes you wonder "how did they get there?"  

And speaking of locations, I think the film is going to play different between those who see the film on the big screen and those that see it on a small one. I think those who see it big will be overwhelmed to such a degree by the massive and glorious sets that they will never notice all of the problems with the plot, narrative structure and characters. 

And then there are the frequent moments where something is important until it's not. For example, Victor mentions worrying about decay, so he keeps some bodies and parts on ice (Christoph Waltz) but other body parts- like the creature, or the things he's vivisecting, are just left out. That is the most glaring problem but there are others.

The film is a small three or four character story in huge settings. Outside of the university, the ship, a street scene and the wedding there are no sense of people in this world except those that are needed. I suspect that this is because Frankenstein is so self-centered that he only sees the world as about him, but even the monster's tale has minimal characters.  This would have been okay because Frankenstein says that some of what he says is fact and some is not but it's all true, but at no point does he describe anything. The people listening to his tale would have filled in more people and details. All of the settings in the film exist for the shots but there is no real world beyond the walls even to connect up the locations. Worse if you watch the film many of the locations are only shot from one angle as if they truly are sets and not real locations. This is a huge flaw with the infamous CALIGULA  where so many of the sets are just a wall or two. Here many of the  castle/lab locations son't feel like a place you can really walk around.

The most damning part of the film is that there are no real characters, Frankenstein, like his father, is a shit from first frame to until right before he dies. The monster has no real arc. We pity him because we have 200 years of versions that say we should. Granbted he is largely a good guy until he decides, out of left field film wise, to be a monster in a change that is narratively necessary, but emotionally and intellectually false. The characters act in scenes where things happen but we never see how they get from emotion to emotion.  We don't see the creature's hatred of mankind because the only ones who hate him is Frankenstein and the hunters who would have shot at anyone who was in the situatins they were in when they ran across him - especially after the blind man. His flight into the polar wilderness, like almost everything that happens, doesn't make sense other than it is there to get us from point A to B. They do things because that's the way the story goes n(in the novel and other versions there is a reason why he flees north), not because it makes any logical sense. The other versions of the story that vary from the novel work because they give us real characters with emotions and desires that are more than one dimensional and make things happen, whereas here del Toro does everything in a kind of shorthand that is a slave to the basic narrative arc and cuts away everything else including characters.

As a result of the extreme limitations of the script the performances are adequate. Oscar Isaac is fine as son of a bitch Frankenstein but there is no range because he has nothing to do but rage. (Peter Cushing did a much better job of being a bastard creator, doin it so well he continued for 15 years or so of sequels). Jacob Eloridi is similarly hampered by a role which is either pained bewilderment or rage. Actually, there is nothing there but a mirror that we are forced to reflect our own feelings on because is simply able to give us anything but a basic performance.  Mia Goth's Elizabeth exists purely to be the moral center, of sorts but is limited to pontifications. Her seeming semi-fascination with Victor doesn't quite work, especially once she suddenly rejects him and she simply becomes a mouthpiece for morality.

Don't get me wrong the film isn't bad, I just don't think it's the best of the Frankenstein films, nor the best film of the year.  After all I stayed for the entire movie and never felt the need to leave the theater knowing that I could see the rest Friday when it hits Netflix. Ultimately, it's a good film but like the creature at its heart you can see how ir was sewn together from other better material.

Peter Gutierrez on PUT YOUR SOUL ON YOUR HAND AND WALK (2025) which opens Wednesday


With PUT YOUR SOUL ON YOUR HAND opening Wednesday here is a repost of Peter Gutierrez's review of the film from the NYFF

You wouldn’t expect that a doc consisting mostly of video call footage would hold your interest, let alone be riveting, but in this case you’d be wrong. In this collection of conversations with photojournalist Fatima Hassouna, Sepideh Farsi turns what are common frustrations, such as dropped audio or lagging/freezing video, into moments in which human connection itself, or even life itself, seems to hang in the balance. Also, the stunning images by Hassouna, besieged in North Gaza, open up this unforgettable documentary in ways that are never less than powerful. But of course, I’m largely talking about form so far, not content—perhaps because the content, or rather context, is just too heartbreaking and deserves far more attention than can be provided in a mere capsule. Let’s just leave it at this, then: one of the top documentaries I’ve been lucky enough to see this or any other year. Highly recommended.

Monday, November 3, 2025

Brief thoughts on Armed Only With a Camera: The Life and Death of Brent Renaud (2025)


The life of photojournalist Brent Renaud, who was killed by Russian soldies in Ukraine, is celebrated  by friends and family.

This is a celebration of the life and career of Renaud that is a good introduction to the man, but which will leave you wanting something more.One part biography and one part wake, this is a film that informs us but doesn't feel satisfying.  We don't really get enough of his story because we keep cutting back to his death and funeral. We only get a vague sense of Renaud as if we first met him, we don't fully get to know the man.

I liked this, but I didn't love it.

CATERPILLAR (2024)

                                              


50 year old gay man decides to change his eye color in the hope that it will kick start his life and bring him happiness.

This is an examination of a what we need to be happy, or we think will make us happy. Its a good, if by the number film whose main selling point is the change in eye color via surgery mill. How you react to the film is going to depend on whether you connect to David. I grew weary after a while. You mileage may vary

Sunday, November 2, 2025

Hedda (2025)



After I saw HEDDA I tweeted: “Wow, HEDDA is one hell of a produced and crafted film that screams “it’s a hell of a produced and crafted film- GIVE ME OSCARS!” and I stand by that one sentence review.

A new version of the Ibsen classic Hedda Gabler about a woman in high society who marries for money and lives to regret it,  it is a film that is at the top of cinematic craftsmanship of the last decade. Few films have looked this spectacular and as polished. It is a film where every moment is perfectly crafted for the maximum “wow”.

It is also a film that is so rigidly acted and tightly wound that there is very little life in it. We aren’t watching actors we are watching chess pieces being moved around the board. I would rave about the performances, but they are so straight jacketed as to be marble.

The film feels like the sort of proper English theater production that people would make fun of when they played on Broadway or PBS. While I know the transposition of the story to Edwardian England and I could see that in the party sequence, the scenes outside of that are just as rigid. It feels false- though undeniably well-acted. I’ve never seen a version of the story this buttoned up. We need to at least feel the emotion underneath and we don’t genuinely feel it for any reason than the film points it out.

Speaking of PBS – this is best viewed as a stogy version that might on played Masterpiece Theater. If you like that- do see this.

Catch Up Capsusles: ALTO KNIGHTS and WAR OF THE WORLDS (2025)


ALTO KNIGHTS
Robert DeNiro plays Frank Costello and Vito Genovese for no really good reason in an okay crime biography that really didn't need to be made. It's watchable but will leaving you wondering why they made it.


WAR OF THE WORLDS
Ice Cube stars in Amazon's modern remake- told entirely through computer screens and social media. It is one of the worst films of the year with everyone literally phoning in their performances. It's less characters and more just stuff happening on computer screens.