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Reviews: ‘Driveways’

Hong Chau And Brian Dennehy Breathe Life Into A Quiet, Comforting Drama

Driveways is the movie we need right now. In a time where Covid-19 keeps us far from each other, the coming of age tale feels like a warm hug. Written by Hannah Bos and Paul Thureen and brilliantly directed by Andrew Ahn, the film provides a warm and sincere sense of relief in these trying times.

The longline could easily make the film seem like a Hallmark movie:  A sensitive and lonely boy, helping his mom clean his recently deceased aunt’s cluttered house, bonds with an elderly war vet. Its nuisance is what makes it a home run. Hong Chau (Downsizing) plays Kathy, that single mom trying her best raising a sweet boy and dealing with not only the death of her sister but her sister hoarding habit. Her son Cody (Lucas Jaye), has always had trouble making friends and the transition to his aunt’s neighborhood is no different. On their first day there he receives help turning on the hose from a neighbor, Del. Renowned actor Brian Dennehy (Cacoon, Silverado) who passed away last month, plays him as a vet who has certainly seen some “shit” but still goes with the flow. Slowly over the course of the summer, Cody and Del become closer, talking about Del’s past playing bingo and reading manga. It should be too ordinary for an 80-minute feature, but its grounded reality is what makes it work.

Hong Chau brings out a side of the single mom archetype that we haven’t seen before. Her portrayal of Kathy, one of quiet grief and strength, anchors most of the film. Chau was nominated for an Independent Spirit Award for her performance and its easy to see why. Jaye plays Cody as a genuine kid, losing any “overacting” sheen that often comes with overacting. He seems to have chemistry with everything screen, easily keeping up with the two veteran actors beside him.

As one of Brian Dennehy’s final performances, his Del is honest, understated, and yet layered. Like everything in this film, his character is not romanticized yet we feel every emotion as he deals with losing the friends around him to age and bonding with Cody. Every person alive has met someone like Del and you leave the film better off for watching his performance.

Driveways is sweet but not schmaltzy or overdramatic. It’s a quiet slice of life about the relationships that shape us. Ahn handles growing up and growing old with a delicate hand, but not a serious one. He gives each character room to breathe, exploring what it means to be human, in the lives they lived. Where a lesser director could have turned this unlikely friendship story into a hallmark film, filled with forced emotion and melodrama, Ahn gives us a quietly moving story that’s a breath of fresh air.

Driveways is available on iTunes, Prime Video and On-Demand. Watch the trailer below

‘Yes, God, Yes’ Trailer: Natalia Dyer Is Torn Between Catholic Guilt And Her Sexual Awakening

In the new sex comedy Yes, God, Yes, Natalia Dyer of Stranger Things plays a Catholic girl torn between her faith, and joy she gets out of internet porn and masturbation. If you know anything about the Catholic religion, guilt is a big part of it, and Dyer’s character feels the shame of disappointing God…but at the same time, she’s super horny!

The film marks the directorial debut of Karen Maine, a co-writer on the short film Obvious Child, which became the acclaimed sex-positive comedy starring Jenny Slate. Once again, Maine is exploring a young woman’s sexual awakening, while shedding a humorous light on some of the contradictions of being a person of faith with natural human urges. Like Obvious Child, this also began life as a short.

The cast includes Timothy Simons, Wolfgang Novogratz, Francesca Reale, Susan Blackwell, Parker Wierling, Alisha Boe, and Donna Lynne Champlin.

Based on this trailer I’m reminded of the 2004 comedy Saved! which covered very similar territory.

Yes, God, Yes opens in July. Its world premiere was at SXSW last year, and so far has a 100% on Rotten Tomatoes.  Might be worth a look.

SYNOPSIS: In the Midwest in the early 00s, sixteen-year-old Alice (Natalia Dyer) has always been a good Catholic girl. But when an AOL chat turns racy, she discovers masturbation and becomes guilt-ridden. Seeking redemption, she attends a mysterious religious retreat to try and suppress her urges, but it isn’t easy, especially after a cute boy (Wolfgang Novogratz) starts flirting with her. Alice’s sense of shame is spiraling when she uncovers a shocking truth about the retreat’s most devout. Desperate and confused, she flees and meets an unlikely ally (Susan Blackwell) who offers an alternative view of what it means to be good. For the first time, Alice realizes she can decide for herself what to believe and finally gets the release she needs.

‘Shirley’ Trailer: Elisabeth Moss Is At Her Evil Best As Horror Author Shirley Jackson

We already know that no actress in the world does emotional distress quite like Elisabeth Moss, as we saw in The Invisible Man just a few months ago. But man…she can also be downright nasty and cruel, too, and I’m not sure anybody does it better than her there, either. Moss was at her evil best in Shirley, Josephine Decker’s thriller about horror novelist Shirley Jackson, author of a little book you might know about, The Haunting of Hill House.

Shirley isn’t about the author’s best-known book, however. It reimagines her as a cold, manipulative horror/mystery writer who finds inspiration for her next work by manipulating a young couple who are staying in her home. The cast includes Michael Stuhlbarg as her husband, the equally-cunning literary critic Stanley Edgar Hyman, with Logan Lerman and Odessa Young as the couple.

The film debuted at Sundance a few months ago, where Decker won a Grand Jury prize and was nominated for another. It was also one of my favorite films there, with my favorite aspect that Decker and Moss never shy away from the author’s toxicity, and how it fuels her creative energies.

Shirley will be released on June 5th.

David Ayer To Write And Direct Harlan Coben Adaptation ‘Six Years’ For Netflix

David Ayer to direct Heart of the Beast

I’m a huge fan of thriller novelist Harlan Coben. I also acknowledge that his books all have basically the same idea: somebody vanishes or dies, then mysteriously is somehow back like nothing happened. If you’ve read his book Tell No One, or seen the excellent 2006 adaptation, that’s pretty much the way all of his stories go. And the same goes for Six Years, which is surprisingly being adapted by none other than David Ayer.

Ayer is set to write and direct an adaptation of Six Years for Netflix. The story, as usual, centers on someone who has vanished under mysterious circumstances. A college professor named Jake sees the love of his life, Natalie, marry another man. Six years later he attends the funeral of her husband, with hopes of reuniting with her (classy!!) only to discover that Natalie isn’t the dead man’s wife. Jake goes on an exhaustive search to find out what really happened to her.

It’s been a few years of ups and downs for Ayer. He wasn’t asked to return for sequels to Bright or Suicide Squad, but has kept busy with other projects. He’s currently wrapping up his latest crime flick, The Tax Collector, and has a remake of The Dirty Dozen on the way, not to mention another tank movie ala Fury.

Coben’s novels have recently been adapted in the Netflix shows The Stranger and Safe, but Tell No One remains the best of them all. Worth checking out if you haven’t yet. [Deadline]

Spike Lee Reveals Short Film As Tribute To New York City During Pandemic

New York City has been the epicenter of the coronavirus outbreak ever since making its way to the U.S. We’ve all watched the daily briefings, with Andrew Cuomo delivering the staggering death toll and infection rates. And as the numbers have finally begun to slip, so has there been just the tiniest ray of light in all of this tragedy. So goes New York City, so goes the country.

Anybody who knows Spike Lee’s films knows that New York means everything to him. It goes beyond just his love of the New York Knicks. The Brooklyn-based director has New York in his soul and he puts it into every movie he makes. The same goes for his latest, a short film titled New York New York, which he just dropped on social media.

The 3 1/2 minute movie comes with the caption, “My Short Film-NEW YORK NEW YORK Is A Love Letter To It’s People. Plain And Simple.” Short and sweet, it’s a movie showing the impact of the pandemic on New York City, its places that are usually bustling with people, full of life. Now, they’re empty, or more accurately, those people are in other places just trying to survive.

You can watch New York New York below. Good work, Spike.

Review: ‘How To Build A Girl’

Beanie Feldstein's Coming-Of-Age Comedy Is On Pitch Though Slightly Off Beat

It’s almost summer and that means it’s the season for coming of age films. Leading the charge is How To Build A Girl, an English set comedy, based in self-discovery and the power of music. Directed by Coky Giedroyc, with a screenplay written by Caitlyn Moran and John Niven and a premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival, How to Build a Girl is a charming yet uneven story of girl power and growing up.

Set in the 90s and based partially off of Moran’s real life and novel of the same name, How to Build a Girl focuses on aspiring writer and sixteen-year-old Johanna Morrigan (Beanie Feldstein, Book Smart, Lady Bird). Living with her lower-class working family in Northern England, Johanna yearns for notoriety and adventure, as seen in her imaginary conversations with her “muse wall,” a collection of famous minds and writers throughout history. Pulled into music by her father (a slightly off Paddy Considine) and brother (a spot on Laurie Kynaston), she decides to try to be a rock critic. Despite a lack of faith and sexism by her fellow writers, Johanna eventually makes it on staff and under the wing of a sexy critic (a perfect Frank Dillane, Fear The Walking Dead). Through her job, she starts to develop a love of music and a fondness for musician John Kite (Game of Throne’s Alfie Allen), her first interview. As she gets caught up in her new fame and power, Johanna must learn that her actions have consequences and that some of the most important people in your life are the ones that have your best interests at heart.

Though Feldstein has the chops to pull off the emotional weight of her character, her distinctly North English accent takes a good amount of time to get used to. With coming of age stories, there has to be some quality that warms the audience to the main character, so that when they go through that transformation, most likely an unflattering one, we are still on their side. We eventually get there, through physical comedy and sincerity, but it takes a minute.

As the mysterious and enigmatic musician John Kite, Alfie Allen is funny yet untouchable. It’s nice to see him playing a happy person and not the wounded antihero he played on Game of Thrones. However, his performance feels distant, like we walk away not really knowing who he is. That may be purposeful, as we see him fully through Johanna’s eyes but why she’s obsessed with him isn’t really apparent.

Playing Joanna’s mum in a performance that sneaks up on you is Sarah Solemani. If Feldstein is the heart of this film, Solemani is the veins, taking the emotion where it needs to go. As her son and Joanna’s brother, Laurie Kynaston delivers a strong breakout performance despite his screen time petering off towards the film’s end. Also worth noting is the always delightful Chris O’Dowd as a hilarious local news anchor who has clearly had enough of the locals that come on his show.

If you know anything about British film or comedy, the cast is stacked with the who’s who of the industry. From Michael Sheen (Masters of Sex) to Sharon Horgan (Catastrophe), Dame Emma Thompson, to Sue Perkins and Mel Giedroyc from The Great British Bake-Off, director Giedroyc smartly has the cream of the comedic crop popping in and out. Most of these performances can be described as cameos but it’s a delight to pick out your favorites.

Like some of the uneven performances, the film stands on uneven themes. While the importance of family and staying true to yourself is seen through, issues of fatphobia and self-harm seem to pop up out of nowhere. Despite this, Giedroyc ultimately pulls off a fun and engaging story, full of music, life and the reminder of what being sixteen is like.

How To Build A Girl is available through on-demand and streaming services. Watch the trailer below.

Review: ‘Hope Gap’

Annette Bening And Bill Nighy Elevate William Nicholson's Stagy Divorce Drama

Watching divorce unfold is a lot like passing by a car wreck. You know it’s terrible, but you slow down anyway and refuse to turn away. Many movies have been made that chart the end of a marriage, and in just about every case it’s the little, personal details that make them compelling. Even in an inert drama like William Nicholson’s Hope Gap that turns out to be the case. Based on Nicholson’s recollections of his own parents’ divorce, the intimate aspects ring true, as well as the lead performances, that you can forgive its staginess and dispassionate tone.

Hope Gap is based on Nicholson’s own Tony-nominated stageplay The Retreat from Moscow, and it never quite escapes the confines of the stage. Annette Bening and Bill Nighy get the spotlight as long-married couple Grace and Edward, who are approaching their 30th anniversary. In the small English coastal town of seaford, they live a quiet life, or at least it would be if Grace would stop trying to stir her husband up. An early kitchen conversation, where Grace tries to get a rise out of the passive, closed-off Edward, just to get him to do something, ANYTHING in retaliation to show that he cares, suggests this is an oft-repeated tangle. He seems done with it; she seems to not have a clue what’s going on.

The arrival of their son Connor (EMMA. star Josh O’Connor) from London doesn’t make things any better. In fact, it gives Edward the courage to do what he’s long wanted to do, which is to leave and file for divorce so that he can be with someone else. Connor, who is coming out of a failed relationship of his own, must navigate this awkward space between the two people he cares for most in the world. At the same time, their crumbling marriage shines a light on his own issues finding the right person to love.

There’s great material here for all to work with, but Nicholson’s script and bland direction cause it to fall flat. The conversations are long, seem geared toward an audience that isn’t there, and set in only a handful of locations. A couple of sweeping coastal shots would have meant more if better integrated to break up the drama, which is one interaction after another in dull environments. It feels all too much like Nicholson was too faithful in bringing his stageplay to the screen. While his screenplays (including 2000’s Gladiator) continue to earn him accolades, this is his first directorial feature since Firelight in 1997, and it shows.

Fortunately, he’s got Bening, Nighy, and Connor to pick up the slack. Grace is loud, aggressive and needy, a totally imperfect match for the stoic and reserved Edward. Connor is somewhere in the middle; he’s got a touch of his Dad’s hermit-like attitude, which clashes with the other part of him, the need to have his love validated, which he gets from Mom. Bening is, of course, the highlight here. The multi-time Oscar nominee is fantastic as Grace goes from being oblivious to the state of her marriage, to the shock of having lost it. Her means of coping involves a lot of indulgent pettiness, like naming her new dog “Eddie”, which could make Grace unlikable if played by a less-skilled actress. Nighy walks a fine balance, as well. He brings subtlety to a character who could be perceived as cowardly in the wrong hands, but we come to understand he’s probably always been who he is and Grace simply failed to notice.

Hope Gap never makes a case for itself as a film, and perhaps it would have been better off remaining on the stage. If Nicholson does decide to bring it back, here’s hoping he gives Bening and Nighy a call.

‘The King Of Staten Island’ Trailer: Pete Davidson Tries To Get His Sh*t Together In Judd Apatow’s Comedy

It’s been five years since Judd Apatow’s last film, Trainwreck, and in that time he’s kept plenty busy. His career has always been about introducing young comedic talents to a broader audience (think  Seth Rogen, Amy Schumer, and Steve Carell)), and while Pete Davidson isn’t exactly an unknown, The King of Staten Island is definitely his chance to shine on his biggest stage yet.

Directed by Apatow, who co-wrote the script with Davidson and Dave Sirus, the story is loosely based on the SNL breakout’s coping with grief after the death of his firefighter father. He plays Scott, a burnout with no direction who is still at home living with his widowed mother. His life is flipped upside down when she starts dating another firefighter (Bill Burr), and Scott immediately dislikes the guy.

Universal recently unveiled a plan to keep The King of Staten Island in its original June 12th release spot, rather than move the film like so many others have done. However, it’ll drop on VOD rather than in theaters, which could turn out to be a good thing. Clocking in at 2 hours and 16 minutes, this is Apatow’s second-longest movie since Funny People, which happens to be the lowest-grossing of his career. As for Davidson, he’s not exactly stretching himself from the role he just played in Big Time Adolescence, so let’s hope the personal touches add a different dimension to it.

SYNOPSIS: Over his storied career, Judd Apatow has elevated a series of promising young comedy talents to their first major big-screen performance, including Steve Carell, Seth Rogen, Jonah Hill, Jason Segel, Kristen Wiig, Amy Schumer and Kumail Nanjiani.

This summer, Apatow directs Saturday Night Live breakout Pete Davidson in a bracing comedy about love, loss and laughter on Staten Island.

Scott (Davidson) has been a case of arrested development ever since his firefighter father died when he was seven. He’s now reached his mid-20s having achieved little, chasing a dream of becoming a tattoo artist that seems far out of reach. As his ambitious younger sister (Maude Apatow, HBO’s Euphoria) heads off to college, Scott is still living with his exhausted ER nurse mother (Oscar® winner Marisa Tomei) and spends his days smoking weed, hanging with the guys—Oscar (Ricky Velez, Master of None), Igor (Moises Arias, Five Feet Apart) and Richie (Lou Wilson, TV’s The Guest Book)—and secretly hooking up with his childhood friend Kelsey (Bel Powley, Apple TV+’s The Morning Show).

But when his mother starts dating a loudmouth firefighter named Ray (Bill Burr, Netflix’s F Is for Family), it sets off a chain of events that will force Scott to grapple with his grief and take his first tentative steps toward moving forward in life.

The film also stars Steve Buscemi as Papa, a veteran firefighter who takes Scott under his wing, and Pamela Adlon (FX’s Better Things) as Ray’s ex-wife, Gina.

“Too Soon” Was Sony Exec’s Response To Joining The Cinematic Spider-Men On Screen

When I first saw this hitting headlines I was heartbroken. I thought the article was going to say that we got confirmation that this idea was nixed from the next Spidey film. Thankfully this quote actually came about during a discussion about Spider-Man: Into The Spiderverse don’t get me wrong, we missed out on a big thing there…but they couldv’e been right, it was too soon for all that awesome. Apparently Christopher Miller and Phil Lord pitched a scene where Andrew Garfield, Tobey McGuire, and Tom Holland would all join Spider-Ham on screen during Spider-Verse

“We pitched the Sony brass an ambitious tag involving Spider-Ham, Tobey, Andrew, and Tom. They felt it was ‘too soon.’”

So, bad news, we missed something cool. Good news, they didn’t say NO, they said too soon, and some time has passed not to mention the overwhelmingly positive reaction to the idea as it’s been bounded about on the internet. Now the main question is, how do they set the stage for this in the upcoming Dr. Strange and the Multiverse of Madness, truth be told the coolest thing about the next Master Mystic film is not just how little we know but the breadth of the possibilities. In the words of Lloyd Christmas, “So you’re saying there’s a chance!”

Jerry Bruckheimer Says A ‘National Treasure’ Series Is Coming To Disney+

Confirms Original Cast For Big Screen Sequel

Disney thinks they’ve rediscovered riches in National Treasure. With a third film in the Nic Cage historical adventure franchise on the way, Collider now reports a TV series also coming to Disney+.

The site spoke with producer Jerry Bruckheimer, who confirmed not only a National Treasure TV series for Disney+, but that the original cast will return for the big screen sequel by the writer of Bad Boys for Life…

“We’re certainly working on one [National Treasure] for streaming and we’re working on one for the big screen. Hopefully, they’ll both come together and we’ll bring you another National Treasure, but they’re both very active….The one for Disney+ is a much younger cast. It’s the same concept but a young cast. The one for theatrical would be the same cast.”

So look for Nic Cage, Diane Kruger, and Justin Bartha to return to crack mysterious puzzles left by the Founding Fathers and other historical figures. The movies are goofy but a lot of fun, and both did extremely well at the box office. They were like Cage’s own personal Indiana Jones movies, and were about as crazy as that sounds.

As for the series, this “younger cast” Bruckheimer is talking about suggests it’ll be made for the YA crowd.