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Review: ‘Ghost Stories’ Manages To Give You Chills – Three Different Ways

 
Ghost Stories
follows Professor Dr. Phillip Goodman (played by co-writer/director Andy Nyman),
who doesn’t believe in ghosts. Or spirits. Or goblins and ghouls. Phillip has focused
his life on disproving these stories and encounters on his own show called
Psychic Cheats. He goes around to different places and figures out the
so-called truth behind the paranormal encounters that people claimed to
have. Phillip is cynical and jaded,
vehemently opposed to anything supernatural. He believes that the brain sees
what it wants to see and lives by this motto.
Charles Cameron is one of Phillip’s idols. Just like
Phillip, Charles made his career disproving ghost stories. Out of the blue
Charles disappeared and no one knows what happened to him. Phillip has always
wished he could meet Charles and one day, years after Charles has been presumed
dead, Phillip gets his wish. He receives a mysterious package that has a tape
and a picture of a man holding that day’s newspaper. The tape is from Charles
and invites Phillip to come meet him. Without delay Phillip goes to meet his
idol. Charles is living in a trailer that is in a state of filth and he is clearly
sick. Surprisingly, Charles condemns Phillip for his work and calls him a coward. Charles tells Phillip that there were three cases that he
could never explain which lead him to change his belief about the supernatural.
Charles gives him the cases and challenges him to come back and explain them to
him…if he can. 
The rest of Ghost
Stories
is broken down into three parts, one for each of the cases. The
first follows Tony Matthews (Paul Whitehouse), a night watchman at a former asylum for women. The
case involves incidents that happened at the asylum that caused Tony to
immediately quit the job and never be the same again. Phillip interviews Tony
and his priest before making his diagnosis about the event. The next case
focuses on Simon Rifkind (Alex Lawther), a troubled teenager who has clearly been through hell
and back. Simon takes his father’s car for a nighttime joyride, and hits a
mysterious figure. Little did he know this ride would forever change his
life. Lastly, we explore the case of Mike Priddle (Martin Freeman). Mike’s wife is pregnant and
is spending the night in the hospital for observation. While she is gone, Mike
experiences paranormal activity in his bedroom. He doesn’t know how to explain
it, but is terrified from what he is seeing.

Ghost Stories has
interesting elements throughout that Nyman and fellow writer/director Jeremy
Dyson employ. We see various old footage that is able to provide a context for
certain characters and past events. At other times Ghost Stories is filmed like a documentary with Dr. Goodman
speaking directly to the camera. These different stylistic features keep Ghost Stories unique and interesting. Nyman
and Dyson show the audience each of the cases that Phillip investigates instead
of just having him hear them through his interviews, breaking the film up
into almost four short films – all unique and different. It was a clever way to
keep Ghost Stories fresh and the audience
engaged. Nyman and Dyson do a masterful job of building dread through all the
stories. The characters have slow, methodical movement as they creep around
corners – terrified of what they may see. Nyman and Dyson use shadows, slow music, long
camera shots, and the perfect emphasis on sounds – breathing, knocking,
and steps – to set a very tense and enjoyable experience. Ghost Stories doesn’t disappoint, and although it may find itself
deep in the weeds towards the end, it was still an enjoyable experience overall.
Rating: 3 out of 5

Review: ‘Kings’, Halle Berry And Daniel Craig Find Love During The L.A.Riots

Turkish-French director Deniz Gamze Erguven’s won hearts and nearly an Academy Award for her soulful coming of age film, Mustang, about a group of sisters breaking free from their conservative Turkish upbringing. On the surface it’s a little difficult to figure out how and why she would then jump to a very American story, that of the 1992  L.A. Riots, with the haphazardly-focused melodrama, Kings. Following on the heels of Kathryn Bigelow’s fact-based and widely overlooked Detroit, Erguven paints a chaotic and mostly fictional picture of explosive racial tension. But within the bedlam she manages to carve out a heartfelt corner where family and civic duty are virtues to withstand the flames of division.

Erguven has big ambitions with Kings, perhaps too big. For one thing, she has a starry duo of Halle Berry and Daniel Craig to feed screen time to. The gloss of celebrity can be a distraction from true examinations of traumatic past events, but in this case it’s the artificial nature of their characters’ actions that distract from what is mostly an authentic look at the Riots’ impact on an entire generation. Berry plays Millie, a kind-hearted but overworked woman whose house is full of the at-risk youths she has taken under her wing. At first it’s tough to figure what the heck is going on under her roof; there are kids of all ages and ethnicities scrambling around, with Millie too busy to truly maintain order. But there’s simply too much for one woman to handle. She works a number of odd jobs trying to make ends meet but her refrigerator is always empty, the kids are starving and resorting to whatever underhanded means to get food.

The young children are bad enough but Millie also has hormonal teens to watch over. Fortunately, her son Jesse (Lamar Johnson) is a good egg, and longs to take care of beautiful and street-wise Nicole (Rachel Hilson, fantastic). In a city where most of the shops are Korean-owned and heavily armed, that either of these teens dare to shoplift shows the depth of their desperation. That combined with the recent Rodney King beatings and eventual verdict have Los Angeles on a razor’s edge. When a Korean shop owner kills a girl (a rather weak rendition of the Latasha Harlins murder) for supposedly stealing a bottle of orange juice, the city explodes in fire and destruction.

Up until this point Erguven kept her intentions and attentions tightly-bound to the little moments, the daily frustrations, disappointments, and anger that come from living in a place where societal oppression is not only seen but felt. It all feels electric and alive, and mostly does so by highlighting the movie’s less recognizable stars. They bring a youthful energy and authenticity to Jesse and Nicole’s dreams of an escape to a better life. Their story grows, but also becomes muddled when the Riots begin. Worse, their story starts taking a backseat as Kings grows increasingly ridiculous and less about anything in particular.

While South Central is literally burning to the ground, Millie is preoccupied with her sexual attraction to Obie (Craig), a drunken neighbor who previously has only been seen when threatening to call social services to take her kids away. Or when he’s firing guns into the air to rebel angrily against society. At no point does he ever seem like a real person, and for a while I thought maybe he was a figment of her imagination. However, Millie finds herself constantly pulled into his orbit as her charges dash off into the city-wide turmoil and she needs help to find them.

That’s when the wheels start to come off, as Millie and Obie find themselves caught in a lame-ass action sequence in which they are handcuffed to a lightpost. The reasons behind it are too ridiculous to go into, their means of escape is even worse. But it’s unclear what Erguven wanted us to get out of it. There’s no shortage of drama in the surrounding violence, so why do we need this bit that if it weren’t so sad it would funny? Her A-list stars don’t seem to know how to play it, either. There’s a moment when Millie has to get naked to help facilitate their escape, and the look on Craig’s face is about as unsure as I’ve ever seen it. He has no idea if this scene is meant to be comic or what.

Meanwhile, Erguven finds greater resonance capturing the buzz of the period. The rise of the 24-hour news cycle would have television sets all throughout the city capturing its own destruction, broadcast to a nation glued to their couches. The cops, both emboldened and shamed by the acquittal of Rodney King’s attackers, loom like sentries waiting to arrest anybody caught too far away from the mob of angry citizens. There is bloodshed around every corner, some intentional, some not so much. There’s a powerful moment, punctuated by some clarifying humor, as a Burger King employee pleads with a mob of rowdy rioters not to burn down the restaurant because then there would be no more hamburgers, no more fries, no more milkshakes. Who doesn’t love burgers and milkshakes? Surely a night of rioting will leave people hungry.

It’s scenes like that which I think best exemplify what Erguven was going for with Kings. The film has been soundly thrashed since debuting at TIFF last year, and while it deserves criticism for being wildly unfocused and messy, it’s when Kings slows down that Erguven best captures civil unrest with brutal honesty.

Rating: 3 out of 5


Review: ‘Love & Bananas’ Is The Elephant Love Story You Didn’t Know You Needed

There is one shot in the documentary Love & Bananas that I feel perfectly and beautifully captures the heart of the story at hand; two women, sitting on land of grass while being surrounded and umbrellaed by five Asian elephants. One of the women: a five ft tall, Thai, elephant rescuer and healer is expectedly calm; she’s in her element. The other woman: an American filmmaker, who after learning about the threats facing Asian elephants became interested in becoming a part of an elephant rescue, is (again) expectedly a lot more enamored and delighted by all that she’s seeing and experiencing; it’s a once in a lifetime moment for her. The elephants are playful, noisy, trusting, and protective – becoming, for these two women, in their own way the very thing that the Nature Elephant Park has become for them, a sanctuary, a kind of safe haven that allows for them to just be.

This passion project invites us into the world of Asian elephants or much in this case, the lack thereof. The Asian elephant is an endangered species with only around 45,000 of them existing today. Elephants themselves are big business, with many of them being slaughtered for their body parts. In Asia, things are a bit different; there is a large looming conflict between mankind and these creatures. On top of black market sales, humans are destroying their land and using the creatures themselves to fulfill other needs with the logging and tourism industry, which includes one such practice known as “trekking”, or elephant rides. It’s these threats that Lek, the elephant rescuer has freely dedicated her to life to fighting and that Ashley, the filmmaker, has chosen to document for all of us to experience and learn about.

I loved everything about this documentary. The story itself was incredibly captivating and informative, taking the average viewer from being someone with little to no knowledge of, personal interest in, and stake within this situation to becoming someone that is well-informed and genuinely invested in these problems facing elephants today.

The characters within the story helped to add another layer of emotion and connection to said story as you see that the humans that are a part of this missions really and truly care about healing, loving, and protecting these elephants. When it comes to the elephants themselves, due to more specifically Lek’s knowledge and bond with these creatures, our hearts also ache for them and the horrible treatment that they go through while living within the bonds of captivity.

One thing that did surprise me about the documentary though was its use of suspense. I think that the filmmakers did a really good job of creating that “holding you breath while unconsciously squeezing your hands into a fist and (though you already know the outcome) hoping that everything turns out well” kind of feeling.

At its core this documentary is a story about freedom and the lengths that people put themselves through in order to find that freedom for themselves and others (both human and non-human). Elephants are more than just the capitalistic value that is placed on them and their body parts, they are the architects of the earth that in their own way help to keep the ecosystem thriving. With the help of this documentary I was truly able to see and understand that, they too, just like us, deserve to be free, even if their version of a free world is one simply filled with love and bananas.

You can find Love & Bananas playing in select theaters

Rating: 5 out of 5

Trav’s Note: Ashley Bell is, of course, the actress best known for The Last Exorcism and Carnage Park, embarking on what I know was her passion project.

‘It’ Breakout Sophia Lillis Joins Naomi Watts In ‘Burning Season’, Will Headline New ‘Nancy Drew’ Film



It star Sophia Lillis is making the most of her breakout performance as Beverly Marsh in the hit Stephen King adaptation. She’s now landed two plum gigs in two more adaptations of popular stories, Claire McCarthy’s Burning Season, and the title role in Nancy Drew and the Hidden Staircase.

First up, Lillis will star alongside Naomi Watts in Burning Season, based on the short story What the World Will Look Like When All The Water Leaves Us
by author Laura Van Den Berg. Penned by Jenny Halper, the film centers on primatologist June Engle, played by Watts, who has returned to a drought-stricken region of Madagascar in search of endangered species. Dragged along for the adventure are teenage daughter Celia (Lillis) and a handsome local researcher, Kiady. June is headstrong and passionate as a scientist but is far from a perfect mother. Left to herself, Celia uses the trip as her own journey of discovery.

McCarthy was recently at Sundance with her latest film, Ophelia (my review), a Hamlet reimagining starring Daisy Ridley.

Lillis also finds herself playing literary super sleuth Nancy Drew in Warner Bros.’ Nancy Drew and the Hidden Staircase. The story was originally published in 1930 as the second book in Carolyn Keene’s series, later adapted into a 1939 movie with a plot vastly different from the novel. It’s unclear at this point what story they’ll be going with in this updated version, which has yet to nail down a writer or director. Ellen DeGeneres and Wendy Williams (!!!) are on board as producers.

Next up for Lillis is HBO’s miniseries adaptation of Gillian Flynn’s Sharp Objects. [Variety/Deadline]

‘Black Widow’: These Are The Female Directors Marvel Has Already Met With

After finally deciding to move forward on a Black Widow movie, Marvel has now begun the process of finding a director. And as expected they are looking at some of the top female filmmakers around for the gig that will see Scarlett Johansson reprising her role as the Russian spy-turned-Avenger, and their choices should inspire a ton of confidence.

According to THR, Marvel has already spoken with Chloe Zhao (The Rider), Deniz Gamze Erguven (Mustang), and Amma Asante (Belle) for the Black Widow film. There aren’t any offers on the table and the process is so early on that we shouldn’t even look at this as a shortlist, but all the same this is quite the impressive group.

Zhao’s film The Rider is in theaters now (my review) and is already seen as one of the year’s best. This would be a huge step for her after a pair of small Montana-set dramas.

Turkish director Erguven gained acclaim for Mustang, a coming-of-age drama nominated for the Oscar for Best Foreign Language film. Her latest movie Kings opens in theaters today and stars Halle Berry and Daniel Craig.

Asante is the accomplished director who earned accolades for the period drama Belle and biopic A United Kingdom, which you’ll recall was on my list of 2016’s best movies.

There are reportedly others that Marvel is speaking with but their mandate is to hire a female director, which seems like the right way to go. The script is being written by Jac Shaeffer, with recent rumors the story may be a prequel involving the Winter Soldier.

‘Kin’ Trailer: Sci-Fi Thriller Has Carrie Coon Tracking A Mysterious Otherworldly Weapon

Carrie Coon continues her deep dive into sci-fi, appearing this week as Proxima Midnight in Avengers: Infinity War. She’s got a pretty sweet fight with Black Widow there.  And you can also find her now in the new trailer for Kin, Lionsgate’s sci-fi thriller that has Coon surrounded by an impressive cast that includes James Franco, Dennis Quaid, Zoe Kravitz, and Jack Reynor.

That’s a lot of talent for a pair of first-time directors, Josh and Jonathan Baker, expanding on their 2015 short film Bag Man.  Family is at the center of this post-apocalyptic flick about a young boy named Eli (Myles Truitt) his adopted ex-con older brother (Reynor) forced to go on the run from a vengeful crimelord (Franco), federal agents (Coon being one), and otherworldly soldiers. They all want the mysterious weapon Eli discovers and uses to protect his family.

The script hails from Daniel Casey, an uncredited writer on 10 Cloverfield Lane, so he’s got some genre cred to offer.  Kin hits theaters on August 31st.

First ‘The Predator’ Plot Details Tease Genetically Upgraded Predators

While no Predator movie will ever be as good as the original without Arnold Schwarzenegger shouting “Get toooo da choppa!!!”, Shane Black’s The Predator could be the best sequel the franchise has ever had. 20th Century Fox’s presentation at CinemaCon unveiled a brand new synopsis that is absolutely insane and has me more hyped for this movie than ever.  Bring. It. On.

From the outer reaches of space to the small-town streets of suburbia, the hunt comes home in Shane Black’s explosive reinvention of the Predator series. Now, the universe’s most lethal hunters are stronger, smarter and deadlier than ever before, having genetically upgraded themselves with DNA from other species. When a young boy accidentally triggers their return to Earth, only a ragtag crew of ex-soldiers and a disgruntled science teacher can prevent the end of the human race.


Genetically upgraded Predators!? Woooot! Presumably the “young boy” in the synopsis is Room star Jacob Tremblay, who is joined in the cast by Boyd Holbrook, Trevante Rhodes, Keegan-Michael Key, Olivia Munn, Sterling K. Brown, Alfie Allen, Thomas Jane, Augusto Aguilera, Jake Busey, and Yvonne Strahovski.

The Predator opens September 14th. Can we get a trailer, please?

S.J. Clarkson To Direct ‘Star Trek 4’, Becoming Franchise’s First Female Director

 

Star Trek is about to make franchise history, just as Star Wars did a week ago when they hired their first African-American director. Paramount has confirmed S.J. Clarkson, best known for helming episodes of Jessica Jones and The Defenders, as the director of Star Trek 4, becoming the first female in the franchise’s long history.

The news surrounding Star Trek sequels have lately revolved around the “will he or won’t he” of Quentin Tarantino’s R-rated film. That film is still in the works according to Paramount’s Jim Gianopulos, but as it’s a long way off it will be preceded by Clarkson’s true sequel to 2016’s Star Trek Beyond.
This will mark Clarkson’s return to feature filmmaking after making her directorial debut with 2010’s Toast, which starred Freddie Highmore. Plot details on her film are slim, but the script by J.D. Payne and Patrick McKay Chris Hemsworth as Captain Kirk’s father, who sacrificed his life in the opening scenes of 2009’s Star Trek.  So you can definitely expect to see Chris Pine return, as well, and Zachary Quinto is signed for another movie. The rest of the cast aren’t on board yet but that is likely to change.
Here is the early plot synopsis for Star Trek 4“In the next installment of the epic space adventure, Chris Pine’s Captain Kirk will cross paths with a man he never had a chance to meet, but whose legacy has haunted him since the day he was born: his father.”

‘Don’t Worry, He Won’t Get Far On Foot’ Trailer: Joaquin Phoenix Gives Another Masterful Performance

If you want to get an idea of Joaquin Phoenix’s versatility, just look at the two movies he’s done this year. In theaters right now you can see him as a tortured, ravenous vigilante in Lynne Ramsay’s You Were Never Really Here.  Also premiering a few months ago and due to be released soon is Gus Van Sant’s Don’t Worry, He Won’t Get Far On Foot, in which he transforms into a quadriplegic trying to find a new lease on life.

Phoenix shines in the adaptation of John Callahan’s memoir about his struggle to overcome alcoholism after a car accident leaves him a quadriplegic. To help give his life greater purpose, John turns his wry sense of humor into a career as a cartoonist.  Alongside Phoenix is Jonah Hill giving another awards-worthy supporting performance, and surprising turns by Jack Black and Rooney Mara.

This is Van Sant returning to the mainstream for the first time since Milk and I think it’s where he’s most comfortable and effective. My only gripe is that he just has so much he wants to say about Callahan that he he tries to cram it all in, but that doesn’t prevent it from having a deep emotional impact.

Don’t Worry, He Won’t Get Far On Foot hits Amazon on July 13th.

Podcast: The Spoiler Free AVENGERS: INFINITY WAR Review Show!

“Dread it! Run from it! Destiny still arrives!” It’s Avengers Day!!! Later tonight millions will be flocking into theaters for the long-awaited AVENGERS: INFINITY WAR! I’ve seen it, and so have my guests Jeffrey Lyles of Lyles’ Movie Files and Matt Razak of Flixist, and we’re going to talk about everything that worked, which heroes stood out, which ones didn’t, what worked, what bombed, but we won’t spoil anything! We promise! Well, except that one thing. Just kidding. No, really. No spoilers!

Tune in and enjoy the show! And be sure to follow my podcast Cinema Royale here on Blogtalkradio as part of Critical: The Movie Critics Network!