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Review: ‘The Good Liar’, Ian McKellen And Helen Mirren Are Engaged In A Hitchcockian Game Of Cat And Mouse

Maybe it’s in response to the deluge of superhero movies, but we’ve seen an uptick in thrillers and mysteries aimed for mature audiences, and I for one am loving it. The Good Liar, a tightly wound tale of deception worthy of Hitchcock is the best of the bunch, featuring a delicious game of cat and mouse between screen veterans Ian McKellen and Helen Mirren.

I’ve often said evil Ian McKellen is the best McKellen, but I have to throw shady Ian McKellen in there now. He plays con-man Roy, a shifty old swindler who alongside his accountant pal Vincent (Downton Abbey’s Jim Carter) makes a modest living conning both wealthy businessmen and regular folks alike with get-rich-quick schemes that go nowhere. It’s a good way to earn a buck but also a lot of enemies.

It should come as no surprise an Internet dating site would be Roy’s preferred method of scoping out his next target. Lying comes so easily to those looking to make a good impression; for a con artist it’s even easier. A little fib about not smoking…maybe change your name…what’s the difference? Roy attracts the attention of Betty, a widow living in an empty house and with a lot of spare time on her hands. She also has a lot of spare money, and Roy wants to get his hands on it. The only thing standing in his way is earning her trust, and winning over her suspicious grandson (Russell Tovey) who is always sniffing around.

Directed by Bill Condon and adapted by Jeffrey Hatcher, The Good Liar keeps its twists and turns close to the vest at all times, heightening the tension in subtle ways. Revelations are earned by paying close attention to the things each character says, a subtle gesture, a glance…all of these things are given incredible weight by Hatcher’s screenplay and performance with the necessary nuance by McKellen and Mirren. It’s to everyone’s credit that what we think is the biggest reveal, and thus the most telegraphed one, is only a small part of a much bigger tapestry.This being a movie about a con artist, you know that somebody is going to get screwed out of something. That’s just the nature of this kind of story. The big finish is ultimately a satisfying one, but I would say there’s just one twist too many and there aren’t enough clues to go around.

What’s interesting about The Good Liar is that, for a lot of the way it doesn’t really portray itself as a crime movie. From the moment Betty and Roy connect, it’s as much about seeing the kind of influence a good woman like her can have on his dangerous lifestyle. Will she help turn him around? Maybe Roy will change his ways?  A couple of acts of surprising brutality help wipe away that notion, however. This movie is a lot more violent than I think its dignified air would suggest.

I think it’s fair to say the draw of The Good Liar will be the presence of McKellen and Mirren, who to the best of my knowledge have never done anything like this together before. The film is suspenseful enough to hold merits of its own, but rare is the chance to see two of cinema’s legends square off for two hours and it shouldn’t be missed.

3.5 out of 5

The Russo Brothers Are Developing A Marvel vs. DC Docu-Series

The Russo Brothers may be finished with Marvel (for now) following Avengers: Endgame, but they aren’t straying too far from the world of comic books. The duo are set to exec-produce a new docu-series titled Slugfest about the decades-long feud between Marvel and DC Comics.

Variety has the news on Slugfest, which is based on Reed Tucker’s book Slugfest: Inside the Epic, 50-year Battle Between Marvel and DC. The long-running rivalry really took off in the 1960s when comic book heavyweights Stan Lee, Jack Kirby, Steve Ditko, and others put Marvel on an equal footing with the long-established DC Comics. Over the years, both sides have been bitter enemies and occasional collaborators, including on the monumental 1976 comic Superman vs. The Amazing Spider-Man: The Battle of the Century, and later in the bestselling DC vs. Marvel Comics crossover.

Of course, this feud has been taken to a new level as fans rush to defend their favorite superhero moves on social media.

The series is being developed for Quibi, the streaming service  designed for mobile users, with content broken into 10-minute packages. At the helm will be Framing John DeLoran directors  Don Argott and Sheena M. Joyce.

Quibi launches in April 2020 and I think it’s a safe bet this will be a big part of their opening salvo.

‘A Million Little Pieces’ Red Band Trailer: Aaron Taylor-Johnson Is On A Brutal Path To Recovery

Drug addiction can be brutal to watch, but the recovery can be worse. That seems to be the point of A Million Little Pieces, a drama based on the bestselling-but-controversial book by literary charlatan James Frey. While the story it tells may be a giant hoax, we know that millions have been swept up in this one drug addict’s journey to find a better life for himself.

The film is directed by Fifty Shades of Grey’s Sam Taylor-Johnson, who co-wrote the script with her husband and star, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, who looks to be giving a career-best performance. Alongside him in the cast are Billy Bob Thornton, Juliette Lewis, Giovanni Ribisi, Charlie Hunnam, and Odessa Young.

SYNOPSIS: An alcoholic and a drug addict, 23 year-old James has two options: treatment or death. After waking up on a plane with a smashed up face and no memory of the past few weeks, he heads to rehab where he discovers much more than detox and therapy. As James endures the white-knuckle journey of mending his broken body, he heals his broken soul by connecting with other kindred spirits who also yearn and fight for a better life.

A Million Little Pieces opens on December 6th.

‘The Mandalorian’ Lead Character’s Name Is Revealed And He’s Not A Fett

I think it’s safe to say the kickoff of Disney+ was a massive success, with Disney touting more than 10M sign-ups on the first day.  It’s probably a sure bet that many of those folks were eager for The Mandalorian, a brand new Star Wars series with a lead character we’ve never met before. Or have we? Some have speculated the man under the armor is one we’re quite familiar with, like maybe Boba Fett? Or someone else in the Fett clan?

Well, star Pedro Pascal put that speculation to bed in a new ScreenSlam video, where he reveals his character’s name. Nope, not a Fett in sight…

“The Mandalorian, whose name is Dyn Jarren, is your iconically cool, flawed, mysterious, loner gunslinger that harkens to the best of the samurai movies and westerns,” said Pascal.

“In talking with Jon [Favreau], I was asking him what I should be looking at?” added Pascal. “I know he loves movies, I love movies. ‘What would you like me to watch?’ I asked him. He immediately brought-up Sergio Leone and Akira Kurosawa.”

As I said in my recap, The Mandalorian definitely nails the space Western vibe, and Kurosawa is clearly an influence.

The point is that The Mandalorian is treading new ground with new characters and that’s tremendously exciting. But as we saw with the first episode’s shocking finale, there will be secrets and mysteries that will also expand on the universe we know. This should be a lot of fun.

The next episode of The Mandalorian is tomorrow, November 15th.

Review: ‘The Report’, Adam Driver Investigates CIA Torture In Riveting Political Drama

(NOTE: This is a reprint of my review from the Sundance Film Festival. The Report opens November 15th. Check out our interview with Daniel Jones here!)

There’s a great scene in Scott Z. Burns’ The Report when a TV news item airs proclaiming to tell the full story about the capture of Osama Bin Laden and the use of enhanced interrogation in that operation. Then you find out it’s basically an ad for Kathryn Bigelow’s Zero Dark Thirty, which, as good as it might have been as a dramatic piece, was hardly full and hardly true.  With meticulous pacing, loads of facts, figures, and witnesses, The Report is Burns’ coldly calculated, analytical answer to Bigelow’s film.

There are ways Burns could’ve made a tense political thriller out of the investigation into the CIA’s use of torture following the events of 9/11, but by choosing to follow the facts and leave emotion behind, he has made an important movie about one of this country’s greatest embarrassments.  The name Daniel Jones isn’t likely to ring a lot of alarm bells, but he’s quietly one of the most important figures in our country’s history. Although like many well-known historical figures, some see him as a hero, and others as a traitor. Daniel was the guy hand-picked to lead the Senate’s largest investigation ever, into the CIA’s Detention and Interrogation program, which is basically their nice way of saying “torture”. Daniel is an all-around do-gooder with the track record to prove it: former FBI agent, Harvard grad, and a stint teaching kids in the Teach for America program.  Learning how to wrangle kids is a necessary skill up on The Hill, Daniel is told by future Chief of Staff Denis McDonough (Jon Hamm), just before it’s suggested he go and get more Intelligence experience before applying to work in the Senate.

The Report moves entirely on the momentum of Driver’s performance, capturing Daniel’s dogged drive and incorruptible morality. Burns isn’t pussy-footing around here; he knows this is important stuff that far too many people in this country don’t know about. So, like Daniel does, Burns puts his head down and does the work. Daniel is locked away in a confidential government office with a few desks, no windows, and not even a printer (paper tends to get people in trouble), and barely a lead to go on. What Daniel knows is that the CIA has been making interrogation footage disappear, and he needs to find out why. While he’s at it, keeping his emotions or any appearance of partisanship out of the report is key.

Of course, politics can’t simply be ignored, either. Daniel’s team is formed on bipartisan lines but the Republicans are playing hardball, and so too is the Agency which stonewalls him at every turn. On Daniel’s side is Dianne Feinstein, with Annette Bening capturing the Senator’s ferocity and independent spirit, the latter causing a few unexpected curveballs. But mostly this is a crime procedural on a national scale, with much of the film spent behind Daniel’s desk as he digs through reams of data looking for clues. However, if you think it’s boring that’s where you’d be wrong. Burns is able to take years of information and boil it down in an entertaining, thrilling package that’s easy to understand. We all can see the edges of a conspiracy in everything Daniel is looking into, and it stretches far beyond the actions of the Bush administration and into Obama’s, so nobody comes out of this looking very good.

To that end, it’s impossible not to place The Report in current context. The reason why torture is able to happen in this country is when powerful people become ruled by their own fear. There’s a scene that’s basically ripped straight out of Adam McKay’s Vice, and if you hated Dick Cheney after that movie you’ll loathe him after seeing the full extent of his clandestine activities. Flashbacks take us into the brutal tortures committed at black sites around the world. Although an Arabic FBI agent has shown that building a rapport with a suspected terrorist is an effective method of gaining intel, shady government contractors take advantage of the country’s collective fear after 9/11 to implement a more brutal technique. In one scene, the two contractors, who look like a couple of used car salesmen, list the many “proven” techniques at their disposal and they sound absolutely medieval : waterboarding, sleep deprivation, mock burials, and the squirm-inducing rectal rehydration. Burns is showing what happens when America loses its way, as a means of something like that hopefully never happening again. His goals aren’t dissimilar to McKay’s Vice, but rather than shaming us for allowing these things to happen, Burns wants to open our eyes to what was done in the name of keeping us safe, so that we never take our values for granted again.

While riveting throughout, The Report gets even better as Daniel fights to get his report published as the political winds keep shifting. Things don’t get better for him under the Obama administration, and he soon becomes a target himself so as to discredit the entirety of the report. As the Republicans regain power, Daniel must push the legal limits to see his work recognized, or see the years he spent on it all go to waste. If you don’t know the full story there’s a legitimate question of how things will end up, and if you do know it’s still eye-opening how bipartisan political expedience can be.

4 out of 5

‘Seberg’ Trailer: Kristen Stewart Is Targeted By The FBI In Amazon’s Political Thriller

Coincidence? What’s that? With Kristen Stewart making her big, splashy return to blockbusters this week with Charlie’s Angels, now is a good time to push that little drama film she has coming out later this year. Seberg finds Stewart playing the French New Wave actress Jean Seberg, whose career is mostly remembered now for her political activities outside of it.

Stewart finds herself surrounded by a stellar cast that includes Jack O’Connell, Anthony Mackie, Zazie Beetz, Margaret Qualley, Vince Vaughn, Stephen Root, and Colm Meaney, with Una director Benedict Andrews behind the camera.  The story centers on Jean Seberg, the talented French New Wave actress who became a target of Hoover’s FBI for her political affiliation with the Black Panther Party.

SYNOPSIS: Seberg is inspired by true events about the French New Wave darling and Breathless star, Jean Seberg (Kristen Stewart), who in the late 1960s was targeted by the FBI because of her support of the civil rights movement and romantic involvement with Hakim Jamal (Anthony Mackie), among others. In Benedict Andrews’ noir-ish thriller, Seberg’s life and career are destroyed by Hoover’s overreaching surveillance and harassment in an effort to suppress and discredit Seberg’s activism.


Amazon has given Seberg a December 13th release date. I’m surprised more of an awards push hasn’t started yet given the wealth of talent involved with this one, not to mention a subject that Academy voters would naturally gravitate to.

‘The Witcher’ Defeats Cancellation Before Getting Started With Netflix Announcing Second Season

Finding out a highly anticipated show has been renewed for a second season before the first even premiers can only be a good thing, right? Fans of The Witcher, the upcoming fantasy series starring Henry Cavil, have cause for celebration as Netflix has announced the series will get a second season even though it won’t premier for another few weeks. This must mean that execs have seen the series and are SO sure of its quality that they’re willing to spend more to keep it going. Well, that’s probably at least partly the case but you have to remember it’s Netflix and ratings, which can usually be directly correlated to quality, don’t really matter as much. Add to that the news that came out a while back about Netflix’s magic 3 season number (they no longer draw new subscribers for a show after 3 seasons, giving them no reason to keep producing a show past that) and you have to temper  your predictions a bit.

I’m not trying to be extra cynical here just pointing out all of the angles, honestly I’m soo cised for this series. I was a huge fan of Cavill’s superman and the character of Geralt seems a great fit for someone with so much experience in that medieval type world. I’m sure the show will be great, but this news, while exciting, isn’t as huge as it may seem.

Mark Wahlberg Trains the Next Generation in ‘Uncharted’ Casting News

I’m an Xbox guy through and through but there have been a few times that I considered jumping the lines and getting a PlayStation. Most recently it was the PS exclusive Spider-Man game, but prior to that it was always Uncharted, an adventure game with a modern Indiana Jones type called Nathan Drake in the lead. At least I think that’s the deal, I never got to play it but everything I saw and heard was great. With a story-line built for adapting to the big screen it’s amazing it’s taken so long. It’s been rumored for years with development delays prior to any green lights actually happening and while I still think Nathan Fillion looks the part more then anyone else I can’t argue with the direction they’ve gone casting Tom Holland as a younger Drake (gotta think of the franchise future folks). The news today is that Mark Wahlberg, himself once rumored for the lead role, has been cast as Victor Sullivan, who game fans will recognize as Drake’s mentor. If Holland’s age wasn’t enough the casting of a mentor all but confirms that the first film will be an origin story, I just hope they don’t go that whole “mentor becomes bad guy” route that has been popular lately, Solo being the most recent offender.

Disney’s ‘The Little Mermaid’ Remake Casts Jonah Hauer-King as Prince Eric

The Little Mermaid has found her prince. Deadline reports London actor Jonah Hauer-King has landed the role of Prince Eric in Disney’s live-action The Little Mermaid remake after months of searching for just the right actor. He had been listed as a contender months ago after Harry Styles turned an offer down.

Hauer-King won’t be a recognizable name to most of us here, but he’s starting to gain some traction. He recently appeared in A Dog’s Way Home which was a modest-sized hit, and has a role in the TIFF-premiering drama The Song of Names alongside Clive Owen and Tim Roth.

The Little Mermaid will star Halle Bailey as Ariel, Melissa McCarthy as Ursula, Awkwafina as Scuttle and Jacob Tremblay as Flounder, with Javier Bardem eyeing the role of King Triton and possibly Daveed Diggs as Sebastian. The film will be directed by Rob Marshall and begin filming next year.

‘The Batman’: Jayme Lawson’s Role Probably Isn’t What You Think

With all of the high-profile names being cast in The Batman, the addition of newcomer Jayme Lawson came as a surprise. The catch was that nobody knew who she was playing, which can’t be said about her A-list co-stars. There may have been a reason for that, as io9 claims to know what Lawson’s role will be, and it’s not someone known to be part of DC Comics.

The site has learned that Lawson is playing Bella, “a grassroots political candidate running for office in Gotham.”  This would be a brand new character, but still a substantial role based on the initial reporting. Looks as if Matt Reeves is including a political component to his Gotham City mystery, and if that’s the case don’t be surprised if Harvey Dent aka Two-Face shows up, as well. 

I guess this will quiet down speculation Lawson was playing Barbara Gordon aka Batgirl, which many sites jumped to because Jeffrey Wright is playing Commissioner Jim Gordon. I had hoped  she could turn out to be the new female Robin, and you know what? I’m not writing off that possibility. Getting screwed in politics then turning superhero sidekick/vigilante sounds like a feasible course of action.

The Batman opens June 25th 2021.