Saturday, November 25, 2017

Loving Vincent (2017)

This cinematic tour de force, about a postman enlisting his son to find Theo Van Gogh in 1891 and deliver Vincent's last letter to his brother, is the first 100% painted animated feature film, based on famous works of Vincent Van Gogh and executed by a team of 100+ artists over the course of five years. In addition to the marvelous images, it's a pretty good detective story as well.

The voice actors are somewhat recognizable in their painted versions, including Chris O'Dowd (last blogged for St. Vincent) as the Postman, Douglas Booth (first in these pages for Noah) as his son, Helen McCrory (in, but not blogged for, Their Finest) as the church-going Mme. Chevalier, Eleanor Tomlinson (covered in Angus, Thongs and Perfect Snogging) as the perpetually smiling Adeline, Saoirse Ronan (just seen in Lady Bird) as Marguerite Gachet at the piano, and Robert Gulaczyk (it's his second feature and I didn't see the first) as the tortured Vincent, among others. The dialogue is (almost entirely, as I recall three weeks after seeing it) in English with strong British or Irish accents though most of it takes place in France.

It was directed and written by Dorota Kobiela (directing her second feature, writing her first) and former puppeteer Hugh Welchman (wrote one feature, directed nothing before this) and co-written by Jack Dehnel (his first anything). Kobiela and Dehnel are Polish and Welchman is English. You can learn more at the movie's website.

Clint Mansell (last scored Noah) brings suspenseful, dark, and light music which can be streamed from this playlist. Over the end credits we hear Liane La Havas' cover of Starry Night, which Don McLean wrote about Vincent Van Gogh.

Playing on one screen once or twice a day in these parts, its DVD and blu-ray release is set for January 16, 2018. I'd like to see it again, just to freeze frame some of the paintings. Rotten Tomatoes' critics and audiences are averaging 80 and 89%.

Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri (2017)

Another fabulous movie this season, the story of a grieving mother trying to get justice for her murdered daughter is a lot funnier than it sounds, yet it's moving and boasts much character development. Francis McDormand is magnificent as the filter-free Mildred in a role written for her (she was last blogged for Hail, Caesar!). Woody Harrelson (most recently in The Glass Castle) is great as the kind but foul-mouthed police chief--in fact, almost everyone is foul-mouthed in this dark tale. Sam Rockwell (last in Laggies) brings humor as the dumb cop Dixon, until we realize what a menace he is. Caleb Landry Jones (just seen in The Florida Project) has a nice turn as advertising manager Red, as do Abbie Cornish (most recently in Robocop) as the chief's wife, Lucas Hedges (just seen in Lady Bird) as Mildred's son Robbie, and Peter Dinklage (last blogged for The Boss) as James (who is resigned to the yokels calling him a cruel and outdated word for a little person), among many. Darrell Britt-Gibson (best known to me as a character actually named Shitstain in 17 episodes of You're the Worst, he was also in six episodes of Californication and Keanu) makes a nice appearance as one of the billboard installers and Kathryn Newton (profiled in Lady Bird) shows up in flashback as the dead daughter Angela.

This is the third feature directed and written by Martin McDonagh (covered in these pages for Seven Psychopaths, which also starred Harrelson, Rockwell, and Cornish, among others; he is also a lauded author and playwright) and he is talented at pivoting from the ridiculous to the sublime. Following many nominations and wins for In Bruges (2008), he's starting to rack them up for this one, too.

Despite the picture's title, the glorious scenery was actually shot in Sylva, North Carolina, by Ben Davis (Avengers: Age of Ultron). McDonagh is an Englishman, by the way, and I haven't unearthed any reason he decided to set it in the fictional town of Ebbing, Missouri.

Lovely music by the prolific Carter Burwell (last scored Wonderstruck) can be streamed from this link, including The Last Rose of Summer by Renée Fleming, Jeffrey Tate & The English Chamber Orchestra and nearly the whole Joan Baez rendition of The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down.

Ann, Jack, and I loved this movie and Rotten Tomatoes' critics and audiences averages are 94 and 91%, respectively. Jack thinks McDormand may get an Oscar nomination and I'd be pleased if that happens.

Lady Bird (2017)

Jack and I loved this tale of a rebellious Sacramento Catholic-high-school senior bickering with her mother and figuring out her life. Saoirse (SEER-sha) Ronan is transcendent as Christine "Lady Bird" and we don't doubt for a minute that she's 17 or 18 (it begins in September 2002), though she's now 23 and, in her Oscar-nominated performance in Brooklyn she played 23 and older as time passed. As Lady Bird's mother Marion, Laurie Metcalf (best known for 221 episodes of Roseanne as Roseanne's sister, she's done a ton of work on screens both small and big) is also getting some awards buzz and the scenes between them go from funny to wrenching. Tracy Letts (last blogged for The Lovers) is the befuddled father/husband caught in the middle. Many of the supporting actors are terrific, including high school classmates Beanie Feldstein (new to me, she is Jonah Hill's sister) as Julie, Lucas Hedges (Oscar-nominated for Manchester by the Sea) as Lucas, and Timothée Chalamet (I've seen him in four episodes of Royal Pains, eight of Homeland, movies Men, Women & Children and Interstellar, and he's got another coming out momentarily) as Kyle. The lovely Kathryn Newton doesn't have many lines but, even in those tight blond braids, I recognize her from 36 episodes of Gary Unmarried, seven of Big Little Lies, ten of Halt and Catch Fire, and the movie Bad Teacher, and I mention her because of another movie I'll write about after this.

Greta Gerwig, making her debut as the sole director of a feature (she wrote Frances Ha and co-directed another feature which I missed), has admitted that this movie is semi-autobiographical. Her mother's name is Christine but I hope they were a bit nicer to each other when Greta was in high school.

The lilting folk-inflected score is thanks to Jon Brion (composed for Wilson) and 27 minutes of it can be streamed from this link. The pop songs include Alanis Morissette's Hand in My PocketDave Matthews Band’s Crash into Me, Justin Timberlake’s Cry Me a River, and The Crossroads by Bone Thugs N Harmony.

You don't need our recommendation to run and see this: Rotten Tomatoes' critics' average is a perfect 100% and its audiences a respectable 89.

Thursday, November 16, 2017

The Florida Project (2017)

This enjoyable slice of low-life about the denizens of a shabby motel in Orlando, especially a six year old girl, her friends, her remarkably clueless mom, and the kind hotel manager, is languidly paced and getting Oscar buzz for Willem Dafoe as Bobby, the manager.

Dafoe (last blogged for A Most Wanted Man, he was born William but his high school friends in Wisconsin called him Willem), who usually plays scary roles, fully inhabits the guy who watches out for the unsupervised urchins on their summer break, as well as many living hand-to-mouth at his workplace. This LA Times article has all six critics predicting his Oscar nomination. The only other recognizable face is Caleb Landry Jones (he's been in X-Men: First ClassGet Out, and American Made, to name a few) in one scene as Bobby's son. Newcomers Brooklynn Prince as little Moonee, and Christopher Rivera and Valeria Cotto as her friends Scooty and Jancey keep it going with childlike ebullience that owes a lot, says director/co-writer Sean Baker, to the Little Rascals of 1930s America. Here are some videos if you have no idea who they were. Bria Vinaite, who plays the tattooed mom Halley, also has no acting experience. Baker literally picked her from her instagram page which has 52.8k followers. Yes, those are her own tattoos and piercings. Sandy Kane, AKA the Naked Cowgirl of Times Square, has a cameo as a sunbather in a funny scene.

Baker co-wrote the script with Chris Bergoch (they performed the same duties on Tangerine), drawing inspiration from people Bergoch saw en route to his mother's Orlando home. The Florida Project was an early name for Disney World.

The cinematography by Alexis Zabe (new to me) is a strong inducer of MPMS (motion-picture-motion-sickness). I pre-medicated and sat in the back row, but still had to look away from time to time. It's not as bad as Tangerine, which was shot entirely on iPhones, but in that ballpark. Here's the complete MPMS list. The last scene is shot on an iPhone, for reasons which will be obvious when you see it.

The movie opens with the song Celebration by Kool & the Gang and closes with an orchestral version of it by Lorne Balfe (most recently in these pages for scoring Dough). In between, there are dozens of songs, listed here.

Rotten Tomatoes' critics are rhapsodic, averaging 95% and its audiences are a bit cooler at 77. You should probably see it.

Wednesday, November 15, 2017

Too Funny to Fail: The Life & Death of The Dana Carvey Show (2017)

Jack and I loved this Hulu documentary about the 1996 sketch comedy show, canceled before all eight episodes aired. Featuring old clips and new interviews with Carvey, Stephen Colbert, and Steve Carell, among others, it made us wish we had seen the show. Colbert and Carell (last blogged for Battle of the Sexes) worked together before and on that show and it didn't seem to hurt their careers. Same with writer Robert Carlock (profiled in Whiskey Tango Foxtrot).

Director/writer Josh Greenbaum has a handful of credits, the only ones of which I've seen are for directing three episodes of New Girl. I have to mention, though, that his upcoming Hulu documentary about actor George Lazenby, Becoming Bond, has an eerily similar poster to Suburbicon's, which I finished covering minutes ago. Here are the Becoming Bond poster and the Suburbicon poster. See for yourself.

Rotten Tomatoes' critics (14 of them at this posting) are averaging 100% and its critics 94. Watch this at home sometime. You'll laugh.

Tuesday, November 14, 2017

Suburbicon (2017)

Unlike the critics, Jack and I didn't hate this absurd, funny, and disturbing story, beginning with the first African-American family moving in next door to the scene of a home invasion in a 1950s planned suburb. Matt Damon (last blogged for The Martian) is great as the unraveling man of the victimized house and Julianne Moore (just seen in Wonderstruck) adorable as his partner. Young Noah Jupe (new to me but with a handful of credits) is quite convincing as the terrorized young son and Oscar Isaac (most recently in these pages for Star Wars: Episode VII - The Force Awakens) brings his usual intensity and some humor to a pivotal role in the second act.

You may wonder why I have mentioned only white actors. That's because the African-American family next door is given short shrift, even as things happen to them. Joel and Ethan Coen (last blogged for Hail, Caesar!) wrote and were to direct a movie ten years ago about a home invasion, with George Clooney in the Isaac role. The project fell through. Clooney was working on another project with his writing/producing partner Grant Heslov (together they wrote The Monuments Men and Clooney directed it), based on a racism incident in Philadelphia. Someone thought it would be a good idea to mash them together and Suburbicon was born, with Clooney as director and all four credited with the screenplay. Beware of spoilers in this article about the movie's origins. This is one of those times that too many cooks, er, writers, have spoiled...well, you know the rest.

For the record, the Mayers family next door is played by Karimah Westbrook as the mom, Leith M. Burke as the dad, and Tony Espinosa as the son (all new to me, though I have apparently seen some of the work of each).

The prolific and supremely talented Alexandre Desplat (last scored American Pastoral) brings us music alternately lilting, soothing, and intense which can be streamed from this link.

Splat! Rotten Tomatoes' critics and audiences are averaging 26 and 24%, respectively. You can wait for cable but there are some pretty funny moments if you have patience.

Monday, November 13, 2017

Wonderstruck (2017)

This visual masterpiece gracefully weaves together stories of a grieving 1977 boy and a willful deaf 1927 girl, both 12 years old, both eventually enchanted with New York's Museum of Natural History. We loved it. Not having read the book, we didn't know that Ben's story was written in words, while Rose's was all in pictures, so that explains why the 1927 scenes are wordless (and black and white). Jack pointed out that the movie is not sensitive to visual impairments, with lots of dark photography, tight moving close-ups, and blurred shots that focus just before cutting away, if at all. I have very good vision and had to concentrate to catch it all.

The kids are wonderful actors. Oakes Fegley (he turned 13 on Saturday and has a handful of credits over the past six years, including This Is Where I Leave You and three episodes of Boardwalk Empire) gives us Ben's anxiety to a T and Millicent Simmonds (now 14, in her acting debut) is actually deaf and shows Rose's impatience and disregard for authority. Some of the adults are played by Julianne Moore (last blogged for Maggie's Plan), Michelle Williams (earned her fourth Oscar nomination for Manchester by the Sea), and James Urbaniak (he has over 100 credits but seldom stars--in American Splendor (2003) he played R. Crumb; I saw him in four episodes of The Starter Wife, one of Weeds, one of The Good Wife, two of Homeland, four of The Office, one of You're the Worst, and he's done much more. He did play two characters named Venture in 69 episodes of The Venture Bros. but we didn't see any).

Director Todd Haynes (most recently in these pages for helming Carol) works from a script by Brian Selznick (wrote the book which was adapted for Hugo), who adapted his own 2011 book (wrote and illustrated) in this case. Here's the book's official website. The aforementioned dark photography is from Edward Lachman (also shot Carol) and the detail in the shots as well as in the drawings seen onscreen is remarkable. The depictions of 1977 Times Square (when it was still filthy and dangerous) and other New York locations are just great.

Carter Burwell's (last blogged for scoring Goodbye Christopher Robin) lovely score is mostly played over Rose's scenes and can be streamed from this youtube link. Fifty years later we get pop tunes, especially David Bowie's Space Oddity and more, available to stream from here, with misspellings of Austin and Deodato. As a musician, I have a good ear, and the Langley Schools Music Project recording of Space Oddity, played over the closing credits, which you can stream from the pop tunes link, is jarring for its discordance, especially towards the end. This wiki page about the Project gives me an idea why.

Jack and I liked this better than Rotten Tomatoes' critics at 72% and its audiences at 68 and think it should be seen on a big screen. It will be difficult to watch on video at home unless you can get your living room very dark and can sit back from the TV if you are afflicted with MPMS or Motion-picture-motion-sickness. It's going on the list. We recommend it highly for middle schoolers and up.

Friday, November 10, 2017

Professor Marston and the Wonder Women (2017)

We liked the acting and cinematography in this story about the love triangle of William Moulton Marston (creator of Wonder Woman comics), his wife Elizabeth, and their teaching assistant Olive at Harvard/Radcliffe in the 1920s. Luke Evans (last blogged for playing Gaston in the live action Beauty and the Beast) as William and Bella Heathcote (most recently in Dark Shadows) as Olive are great but can't hold a candle to the smoldering Rebecca Hall (after Everything Must Go she was in Iron Man 3 and The BFG) as Elizabeth. Connie Britton (last in Beatriz at Dinner) and Oliver Platt (after Chef he had a cameo in Rules Don't Apply) have pivotal supporting roles.

Director/writer Angela Robinson (one of the directors, writers and producers of the serieses The L Word, Hung, and True Blood) has made a very sexy movie, including some perhaps-too-long erotic sequences. Marston's actual granddaughter Christie has said the polyamory in the movie is fictitious. But wikipedia says Olive Byrne (1904-1990), niece of Margaret Sanger, was the "live-in mistress" of Marston (1893-1947), a psychology professor who developed the DISC (Dominance, Inducement, Submission, and Compliance) theory of human interaction. His wife Elizabeth Holloway Marston (1893-1993) did work with him and they were fascinated by, though perhaps did not actually invent, the polygraph, or lie detector. Olive did live with William and Elizabeth, and wikipedia says that each bore his children, and the women stayed together after his death for the rest of their lives. But Christie wrote an article for the Hollywood Reporter, debunking the "truth" of the movie, though she refused to see it. The article has an unsubtle promotion for another movie about her family, seemingly in development.

The beautiful pictures are shot by Bryce Fortner (we've seen some of his work in the first season of Flaked as well as Ingrid Goes West).

I read a lot of comic books as an adolescent, including Wonder Woman, but the 1940s ones shown in the movie are much racier than mine from years later.

The pretty music by Tom Howe (new to me despite dozens of credits) can be streamed from this link.

For a change, we're a little less enthusiastic than Rotten Tomatoes' critics who are averaging 87% to its audiences' 80. That said, Hall may get some kudos at year end for her formidable Elizabeth.

Thursday, November 9, 2017

Goodbye Christopher Robin (2017)

Jack and I loved this lushly produced story of writer A. A. Milne (creator of Winnie the Pooh) and his family, beginning with his PTSD following World War I and up to the early years of WWII when he got famous for his writing. The acting is just as good as the wardrobe and production design, and that’s saying a lot. Domhnall Gleeson (last blogged for American Made) really makes us feel Alan Milne's post-war despair (with the help of troubling flashbacks) and Margot Robbie (most recently in The Legend of Tarzan) is his fun-loving wife Daphne with exquisite taste in clothes and interior design (more on that in a moment). Kelly Macdonald (last blogged for T2 Trainspotting) is the loving nanny to Christopher AKA Billy, played at age 8 by Will Tilston, now 10, in a stunning acting debut (here's an article about his casting). Stephen Campbell Moore (was one of the teachers in The History Boys, both the 2004 original play and the 2006 movie, and Burnt, to name a few credits) is Milne's supportive war buddy, illustrator Ernest Shepard.

Simon Curtis (last helmed Woman in Gold) directs from a script by co-writers Frank Cottrell Boyce (adapted Hilary and Jackie (1998) and Tristam Shandy: A Cock and Bull Story (2005, under the pen name Martin Hardy) as well as writing the original screenplay for Millions (2004)) and Simon Vaughan (it's his first screenplay after a credit for the story of a 2004 TV movie A Bear Named Winnie). The struggles of love, family, war, and writer's block feel very real--there's a fair amount of sadness mixed in with the imagination and wonder and I don't recommend this for children.

I kind of want to see it again just to focus on Robbie's divine beaded dresses. Costume designer Odile Dicks-Mireaux has worked on, among others, Dirty Pretty Things (2002), The Constant Gardener (2005), An Education, One Day, Quartet, Brooklyn, Denial, and The Sense of an Ending. And the parlor/living room in the Milnes' London house is so magnificent I was delighted each time I got to see it again and notice something new (this is the first theatrical feature, after many TV movies and series, for production designer David Roger).  The country estate in Sussex is also quite beautiful and beautifully shot by Ben Smithard (last blogged for Viceroy's House). Jack wanted me to mention the sweet animation, morphing Shepard's original drawings into real life and back again.

There is one delightful sequence that's a total anachronism, where 1928 Billy is enchanted by penguins in a part of the London Zoo that was actually built in 2011. But who cares? It's gorgeous. A later scene shot in the Zoo will remind present-day viewers of a recent tragedy but it's based on a real event, depicted in photos at the closing credits.

The movie means a lot to me because my mother read to me the poems of A.A. Milne when I was a child in the 1950s, and I have no doubt her mother read them to her. I reread some today, the day after seeing the movie, specifically Disobedience, which is foretold in the movie, and The King's Breakfast, a family favorite, both of which are in the collection When We Were Very Young, first published in 1924, when my mother was five years old.

Carter Burwell (most recently scored The Founder) provides lovely orchestral music, which can be streamed for over an hour (including a few pop songs of the 20s) from this youtube link.

Rotten Tomatoes' critics at 63% and its audiences at 77 aren't as warm as we are and we don't care. Go see it.

Tuesday, November 7, 2017

Marshall (2017)

Jack and I enjoyed this movie about an early case of Thurgood Marshall, the first African-American Supreme Court justice, when he was an NAACP lawyer in the 1940s. Chadwick Boseman, who played James Brown in Get On Up and Jackie Robinson in 42, gives a strong performance adding another important historical figure to his resume. Josh Gad (last blogged for Beauty and the Beast) shows some range in a perfectly serious role as Marshall's co-counsel Sam Friedman, defending chauffeur Joseph Spell (a terrific Sterling K. Brown,  who was new to me before winning Emmys for playing Christopher Darden in the miniseries American Crime Story and Randall in 29 episodes and counting of This Is Us) from the rape accusation of his boss Eleanor Strubing (also a fine performance by Kate Hudson, whom we last saw in Rock the Kasbah) in Bridgeport, Connecticut.

Director/producer Reginald Hudlin (directed Boomerang (1992) with Eddie Murphy and a ton of TV episodes and produced a few projects, including Django Unchained) brings the 40s to life from a script by Jacob Koskoff (co-wrote two others) and his father Michael Koskoff, 75, a Bridgeport lawyer who defended some of the Black Panthers in the 1970s. Here's an origin story of the screenplay.

Wonderful production design is credited to Richard Hoover (did the honors on 29 episodes of the original Twin Peaks (1990-91), Bob Roberts (1992), Dead Man Walking (1995), Girl, Interrupted (1999), North Country (2005), Temple Grandin, 42, and The Last Word, to name a few), though I'm not sure to whom I should credit the spectacular picture cars. We liked the historic court houses shot in Buffalo and Niagara Falls (NY) locations.

Composer Marcus Miller (a jazz musician, he scored Hudlin's other movies as well as I Think I Love My Wife (2007), Good Hair, and 88 episodes of Everybody Hates Chris for Chris Rock, among many fiction and music projects) delivers delightful tunes with Wynton Marsalis sitting in from time to time. You can stream the playlist on youtube as I'm doing right now.

Rotten Tomatoes' critics at 83% and its audiences at 88 join us in recommending this historical courtroom drama as Oscar season begins with many first rate options.

Saturday, November 4, 2017

American Made (2017)

Jack and I really liked this story of Barry Seal, a real pilot who worked for the CIA, the Contras, and others in the late 70s and early 80s. Tom Cruise is perfectly cast as the impulsive, audacious Seal, in an entertaining performance.

Cruise (last blogged for Edge of Tomorrow) makes us think of Top Gun and even Risky Business as his Seal has talent, charisma, and guts to get ahead. Domhnall Gleeson (rhymes with PHONE-ull, most recently in Star Wars: Episode VII - The Force Awakens) has bravado of his own as "Schafer," Seal's CIA recruiter, and Sarah Wright (I can't be sure why she looks familiar, maybe her series arc on Parks & Recreation?) is great as Barry's devoted wife Lucy.

There are occasional historical film and still clips from the real events, including the disclosure that director Doug Liman's (helmed Edge of Tomorrow) father Arthur L. Liman was Chief Counsel to the Senate committee investigating the Reagan Administration's arms-for-hostages scheme known as the Iran-contra affair, which definitely involved our pilot, Barry Seal. The script by Gary Spinelli (his second) was on the 2014 Black List of most liked unproduced screenplays. We also appreciated the technical explanations of some of the aeronautics feats.

The cinematography by César Charlone (last blogged for Blindness) is terrific, and I must mention the magnificent aerial photography by Dylan Goss (here are the movies in this blog for which he's done that job: Up in the AirValentine's DaySamsara, Rock of Ages, Now You See Me, Elysium, Million Dollar Arm, Annie, Sicario, Straight Outta Compton, Concussion, The Boss, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, and Blade Runner 2049. And that's not close to all of his aerial photography credits).

A warning to my fellow sufferers of MPMS, also known as Motion-Picture-Motion-Sickness: you will not do well watching this on the big screen without medication, so be prepared or wait for video. Here's my full list.

We boomers loved the period music from one of the periods we lived. Here's a playlist that includes pop tunes as well as some original music by Christophe Beck (last scored Sisters, another one full of recent period music). Imdb has a pretty complete list of the songs.

Rotten Tomatoes' critics at 87 and its audiences at 80 are flying high with this one and we agree.

There's a little bonus written at the end of the credits--geography buffs will enjoy it. And with 32 producers, this movie goes on my list for the producers plethora prize, though it's going to be hard to beat the current leader with 41. Here's my list of those.

This movie is a big milestone for babetteflix. It is number 1000--I have now written about one thousand movies on this blog since September 3, 2008 (a few weeks after my only child left for college). Inspired by Julie & Julia, wherein Julie Powell kept count in her blog of how many recipes she cooked, I began counting movies on my blog. Sometimes I forget to write about one and add a short summary later in honor of my obsessive-compulsive personality (not a disorder in my case, I guess). Another milestone will be coming up because the blog contains summaries of nineteen movies that I saw before the start date and OCP makes me want to know exactly how many distinct movies I have seen in that time period. Three drafts to write (as of today) and still counting! I have an alphabetical list where I update the numbers each time.

Thursday, November 2, 2017

Blade Runner 2049 (2017)

Jack and I liked this sci-fi action story of the future interactions between humans and robotic/android beings known as replicants. A sequel to the 1982 hit, it features magnificent cinematography, production design, and special effects.

Ryan Gosling (last blogged for Song to Song) puts aside emotions to star as K, a youngish replicant who works for the Los Angeles Police Department hunting older replicants who might interfere with the new world order, as led by his human boss Robin Wright (most recently in Wonder Woman). Two comely replicants are played by actresses new to me: Ana de Armas as K's holographic girlfriend Joi and Sylvia Hoeks as Luv, assistant to corporate warlord Niander Wallace, played by Jared Leto (last blogged for his Oscar-winning performance in Dallas Buyer's Club), who despite being pictured on all posters, isn't in the movie much. Harrison Ford (most recently in these pages for Star Wars: Episode VII - The Force Awakens), starred in the original movie and reprises his role of Deckard, making his first appearance after an hour and 45 minutes of the 2:44 running time has elapsed. It's nice to see Mackenzie Davis (after The Martian, we appreciated her starring role in the Emmy-winning episode of Black Mirror) and Carla Juri (played Inka, a nice German friend in Morris from America) as the immune deficient scientist.

Director Denis Villeneuve (Oscar-nominated for Arrival) works from a script by Hampton Fancher (he co-wrote the original and a couple of other movies) and Michael Green (co-writer of Logan).

The aforementioned photography is thanks to Roger Deakins (last in these pages for shooting Hail, Caesar!), and includes wide shots of sci-fi milieux, with a nod to production design Dennis Gassner (won an Oscar for Bugsy (1991), was nominated for Barton Fink (1991), Road to Perdition (2002), The Golden Compass (2007), and Into the Woods; and is also known for fine work on The Hudsucker Proxy (1994), The Truman Show (1998), Field of Dreams (1998), O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000), Big Fish (2003), Quantum of Solace, and Skyfall, to name a few) and his crew.

Benjamin Wallfisch and Hans Zimmer, who collaborated on the sweet score for Hidden Figures, give us a scary soundtrack that can be streamed for an hour and a half (including five short songs by others) from this youtube link.

I moved to LA and began film school in 1982. We saw the first Blade Runner in one of our screening rooms and I distinctly remember being depressed by the dark, foggy atmosphere shown in the future of Los Angeles, wondering what I had gotten myself into. It took place in 2019. This 2049 LA is even more depressing but I didn't take it personally when we saw it two weeks ago.

Rotten Tomatoes' critics at 88% and its audiences at 81 are liking this one a lot. Fan-kids should see it.