Series Review: “How to Get to Heaven from Belfast” takes Derry “Girls” to Dublin and Donegal along the Way

Here’s a delighftul weekend’s binge, a daft and darkly comic trip to the Emerald Isle that’s a lot cheaper than flying, with a lot more laughs than you’ll get from wrangling with DHS.

“How to Get to Heaven from Belfast” has a hint of Hitchcock, a dab of “Ab Fab” and a big fat dash of “Derry Girls.” It’s an “Only Murders in the Building” where the building or buildings have burned down and only “three Belfast eejits,” gal-pals since Catholic School, can get to the bottom of things.

Creator, principal writer and “Derry Girls” writer-creator Lisa McGee has turned out a cleverly cast, playfully-plotted Ireland-tweaking, Brit-bashing, Catholic Church-torching hoot.

And you’ll want to catch it with the subtitles on, as you won’t want to miss a single bit of the slangy craic or wisecracks, the Derry-accented digs and down and dirty witticisms.

“I was RIGHT! You doubted me like that lad…that fella from the BIBLE!”

“Peter?”

“PETER! You’re all DOUBTING Peters!”

Our four “separate but inseperable” friends met at Our Lady of Sorrows Catholic School. But only three — TV crime show creator Saoirse (Roism Gallagher), whose name her British co-workers never pronounce correctly, the eternally testy well-heeled mother of three Robyn (Sinéad Keenan) and gawky lesbian Dara (Caoilfhionn Dunne) — stuck together into their late ’30s.

Cryptic messages and the mysterious death of their classmate Greta (Natasha O’Keeffe) summon them all South, to tiny, coastal Knockdara, where Greta’s widowed Garda (police) inspector husband (Emmett J. Scanlan) has a creepy way of mourning her passing and Saoirse’s clumsy effort to put a photo of all of them together in the dead woman’s coffin reveals the truth — to her any way.

That’s not Greta’s corpse. The body has no rune/tattoo that Greta made all the girls share, way back when.

There was a “Big Bad” back in their school days. And over the eight episodes of the series, from Northern Ireland to Ireland, London to Portugal via a passing parade of character points of view, the surviving trio track and parse anagrams and their collective past (flashbacks) and other cryptic clues to find their still-living classmate.

“DNA doesn’t just wash off — like Catholicism!”

That’s with the Knockdara constable and part-time tow-truck driver Liam (Darragh Hand) who is sweet on Saoirse always three steps behind them. But the son of a man (Josh Finan has both roles) who disappeared in their youth is also sniffing around, trying to figure out the “Big Bad.”

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Movie Review: A Fantasia on European History “The Year Before the War”

Young Hitler inveighs to any who will listen the evils of meat and the virtues of vegetarianism. The already-famous Freud answers every question with a question with all answers leading to “sex.”

Lenin and Trotsky snigger and giggle at the “unwashed simpletons” of the peasant class with Stalin and Tito waiting in the wings. An aged Everyman Aristocrat rails and whips anybody who questions “the system must live on,” the one that keeps rotting, greedy oligarchs and monarchs like him in charge and the masses in chains.

And Franz Kafka watches and listens and takes in the Kafkaesque nightmare that was Europe “The Year Before the War” to end all wars.

In this Latvian fantasia by director and co-writer Davis Simanis Jr., the continent was aboil in turmoil with revolutionary change in the air. If only one humble lad could travel, listen and learn from everyone and every movement and figure out what to do on the tinderbox of history.

The young Latvian doorman Hans (Petr Buchta), whom everyone confuses for “Pyotr” or “Peter,” is a radicalized Forrest Gump, a witness to that final year before World War I in Riga (Latvia), Bern (Switzerland), Vienna, Paris, Prague and London — a traveling leftist-in-the-making haunted by the helmeted Hamlet’s ghost of his demented father, who cursed him with his final breaths.

“If a man hasn’t been to war, he’s lived an idiot’s life!”

Simanis, who co-wrote this brisk, dark and picaresque “history” with Tabita Rudzate and Uldis Tirons, gives us a modern take on the hoary Ticking Time Bomb theory of a Europe that was ready to blow. But this 2021 satire, in German, Latvian, French and Russian, isn’t a “Downton Abbey” end of the “gilded” Edwardian Era of Kings and Kaisers, Czars, Emperors and Sultans. This is from the point of view of the oppressed “masses,” young women and men in every country and every corner of the continent yearning for more than what generations before them had settled for.

Hans/Peter flees Czarist Latvia, struggles with which side to take (He tries to enlist in the Swiss Army, at one point), which will be the one to free the populace from class and its limiting horizons. He falls in love, gets treated by Freud and eventually picks up a pistol as one of a legion of possible assassins who stalked that era, looking for a shot that might change the world overnight.

He falls in with this beer hall crowd or that cafe agitator, listens to the assorted speakers who rail at this or that injustice, “beggars” who’re labeled “communist idiots,” and sees whole classes of people embrace or reject anti-Semitism, patriotism or existentialism. Some, like Pyotr, are ready to become the “blunt instrument” who trigger cataclysmic change.

Our anti-hero sees not only his deluded father, but a one-eyed version of his future self, a man who helps trigger the revolution and sits at a desk under a bust of Lenin and carries out its end game years later.

The film’s politics are as confused as they were in that roiled age, or in the current age of oligarchs, dictators, endless wars and last gasps of Soviet-styled empire building. Hitler (Edgars Kaufields) isn’t on screen enough to get across his emerging murderous dogma. But Lenin (Lauris Dzelzitis) and the Leninists speak in a hall with a Satanic pentangle painted on the floor.

Nobody comes off well, not even the leftist lover (Inga Silina) who helps “Peter” make up his mind which side he’ll take.

If the absurdity of it all is what we take away from this distant mirror held up to our own roiled times, so much the better. Even the passage of over a century hasn’t really answered what stance anyone held, what actions any labor agitator, suffragette or anarchist took or might have taken that could have been a help or a hindrance to “true democracy” unleashed.

The killing — assassinations to mass slaughter — didn’t in the end change as much as it was supposed to, fallen monarchies excepted. And “going to war” didn’t make a man out of anybody. It just got tens of millions killed.

Rating: unrated, violence, nudity, sexual situations

Cast: Petr Buchta, Lauris Dzelzitis, Inga Silina, Girts Getseris, Edgars Kaufelds, Gints Gravelis, Daniel Sidon and Eduards Johansons.

Credits: Directed by Davis Simanis Jr., scripted by Tabita Rudzate, Davis Simanis Jr. and Uldis Tirons. An IndiePix release.

Running time: 1:35

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BOX OFFICE: “Michael” is back on top, “Obsession” makes Horror Bank, Guy Ritchie’s “In the Grey” Bombs

What had been pitched as a dead heat weekend to see who was holding onto the most audience, week to week, is turning into a “Michael” rout.

A big Friday hints at a $27 million weekend for this spring’s surprise blockbuster. That’ll put it well over $275 million by midnight Sunday.

For those troubled by the film’s shallow take on Jackson’s life, omitting any hint of the pedophile in the making, this box office bonanza incentivizes Lionsgate to make a sequel which can’t help but be darker, family “control” of his image be damned. Would anybody show up for that sort of sequel? We may get a chance to find out.

“The Devil Wears Prada 2” is doing just fine, but a lot less fine than “Michael” at holding the movie going public’s attention. It’ll add $20 million to its take, according to Deadline.com. It will have cleared $200 million by weekend’s end.

Third place goes to comic Curry Barker’s new horror outing “Obsession,” on track to clear $14.

“Mortal Kombat II” is still making money, another $12-13 million this weekend.

Fifth place belongs to “The Sheep Detectives,” which has the family film field mostly to itself and will tally $10 million.

“In the Grey,” the new military themed thriller from Guy Ritchie and starring Jake Gyllenhaal, is on track to sell $3 million in tickets, out of the top five.

I’ll update this later Sat. and Sunday as more BO data comes in.

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Movie Review: This Romantic Corner of Tuscany is “No Place to be Single”

“No Place to be Single” is a scenic but featherweight Italian romance set in the most popular region of Italy for film romances — Tuscany.

Based on a novel by the prolific Italian romance novelist Felicia Kingsley, it’s got sex and sun and soap operatic plot twists and a premise that nobody bothered to Google, making the entire scenario ludicrous.

A fairytale set up promises that this Tuscan town, Belverde, is where “people fall in love with one another as if by magic” (in Italian or dubbed into English). Nothing that follows comes close to “magic.”

And when you blow the “meet cute” in such romances, it’s all downhill from there.

Elisa (Matilde Gioli (“Runner,” “Cativa conscienza”) is the one woman in Belverde who rejects love. She lives and farms on the land of an aged count, where her family has long worked the land raising apples, grapes for wine and olives for olive oil.

Her mother (Cecilia Dazzi) and younger sister Giada (Amanda Campana) don’t seem to “get” why Elisa isn’t falling for a local dullard who pines for her. But maybe the story of how she’s raising a teen daughter, Linda (Margherita Rebeggiani), by herself explains that.

The count dies, and his distant nephews Michele (Cristiano Caccamo of “Under the Riccione Sun”) and Carlo (Sebastiano Pigazzi) stand to inherit that land. As Michele is a struggling deal-maker with a Milan development firm, this could be “our once-in-a-lifetime chance” at breaking through. Carlo? He’s a layabout, just along for the ride.

They come to Belverde where Elisa gives Michele her sales pitch for “plans” for improving the farm, turning on the charm as she does. As this is based on a romance novel, of course they knew each other as children. Or course they meet when he bonks her on the head at the church funeral of his uncle.

Carlo, meanwhile, is chased and charmed by Giada — who is already in love with a married creep in this gossipy little town. Giada is Elisa’s plan B. The younger sister will convince, by hook or seductive crook, Carlo to stand against selling the place.

Perhaps, as the locals say, “It’ll all be handled by karma.” Or maybe somebody will do the math on pitching “10 prime hectares” of beautiful Italian countryside to a boorish, cowboy-hatted American golf course developer.

Ten hectares, for the slow romance novelists, screenwriters and Italian directors in the back of the class, amounts to just under 25 acres. As golf courses are typically 150-200 acres, perhaps this pseudo-Texan American owns a chain of… putt putts?

The scenery is the highlight of the movie whose title is as clunkily unromantic in Italian — “Non è un paese per single” — as it is in English. Gioli is properly fiesty in her dressed-down farmgal scenes and dolled up to runway ready status for Elisa’s big “Night out with womanizer Michele” scene. Caccamo is underwhelming.

Subplots include Giada’s much-gossipped-about fling with an olive oil-making creep and Elisa’s daughter Linda’s rash efforts to lose her virginity to anyone but her unsure-of-his-sexuality-bestie.

They don’t hold one’s interest any better than the primary plot. With three credited screenwriters and a director not “improving” Kingsley’s tediuously formulaic tale, it’s no wonder they didn’t bother to look up how BIG golf courses are and how they’re falling out of vogue as developments in most of the world.

Even boorish American developers in cowboy hats know how many acres there are to a hectare. Well, some do.

Rating: TV-MA, sex, nudity, profanity, pot use

Cast: Matilde Gioli, Cristiano Caccamo, Amanda Campana, Sebastiano Pigazzi, Margherita Rebeggiani and Cecilia Dazzi.

Credits: Directed by Laura Chiossone, scripted by Alessandra Martellini, Giulia Magda Martinez and Matteo Visconti, based on a Felicia Kingsley novel. An MGM release on Amazon Prime.

Running time: 1:42

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Movie Review: Twenty Feet Tall and Still Hiding in the Dark — “The Yeti”

“The Yeti” is a low-budget creature-feature that’s terrible on pretty much every level.

Badly scripted, wootacting, dreadful effects that have that cast brushing fake snowflakes out of their hair and lit like a teenager’s in-mom’s-closet podcast, it’s an abominable waste of 93 minutes for anyone not related to the cast and crew watching it.

I mean, OY.

Writer-directors Gene Gallerano and William Pisciotta try to pull a period piece splatter pic out of their Yeti in Alaska tale and fail on pretty much every level.

Characters skulk about in the perpetual murk of a not-so-special effects blizzard, never for a minute acting A) scared, B) cold or C) determined to get through whatever it is they’ve signed on for.

It’s 1947, and the crappiest imitation of a 1940s newsreel tells us that a famous oilman (Corbin Bernson) and famous explorer (William Sadler) have disappeared after their “ship” sends out a last, futile “MAYDAY.”

Merrill Sunday, Jr. (Eric Nelsen), the son of oilman Merrill Sunday Sr., announces he’s rounded up a team to go to their rescue. He’s got a hunter/man of violence with half a face (Linc Hand), “Dynamite” Hewitt (played by co-writer/director Gellerano), a famed radio combat journalist (Jim Cummings) and the great cartographer/daughter of explorer Hollis Bannister, Ellie (Brittany Allen).

They get themselves lost, cut-off and attacked by some beast in the dark. Because it’s always dark.

“Dynamite,” who claims to have “blowed up jus’ about ever-thin’ that can be blowed up,” sets off some dynamite, the Great White Hunter gets hunted and our cartographer and oil heir fret over their collective daddy issues. And that’s me making the narrative make more sense and play as more interesting than this blundering fiasco can manage on its own.

Those growls in the windy dark?

“Grizzly, maybe. Big one.” Ya think?

I was at a loss to figure out what has gone wrong, what is going wrong and how what they’re doing — setting off dynamite, for instance — is supposed to get them out of this fix and back on task. I remained at a loss throughout this tale of hunters being (dully) hunted, climbing a radio tower and contacting a “ship” as if this was on Kodiak Island or some such and a nautical rescue is possible.

There’s a prologue featuring a collection of very modern looking and sounding folks listening to early ’30s jazz on the 1920s Victrola and playing cards in a snowbound hut in “1047,” only to be interrupted by a beast that snatches one of them through a flimsy Alaska roof. No, it doesn’t tie into the main story. It just tips us off as to what we’re in for.

We know the would-be rescuers are going to figure out what the adventurer and the oil man were up to, either through flashbacks or reconnecting with the biggest names in the cast as the missing persons are eventually no longer missing. And somebody’s got to survive for that reconnection.

But I’ll leave all that as a possible source of suspense for anyone foolish enough to VOD this DOG.

Rating: R, graphic, bloody dismemberments

Cast: Brittany Allen, Elizabeth Cappucino, Gene Gallerano, Christina Bennett Lind, Eric Nelsen, Linc Hand, Jim Cummings, William Sadler and Corbin Bernson.

Credits: Scripted and directed by Gene Gallerano and William Pisciotta. A Well Go USA release.

Running time: 1:33

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Documentary Review: The Insufferable Ages into Adorable — “Marty: Life Is Short”

Maybe he wore us down.

The decades of often indifferent movies, the endless wacky guest-spots on sitcoms, chat show appearances that fatigued the host and viewer long before the commercial break, all of that took its toll on the public image of the Canadian comic actor Martin Short.

Mister “Over the Top” in a world where Robin Williams shouldn’t have had to share that title, years before Jim Carrey hinted at being his first real maple-leafed rival, Short has never been easy to take. Viewers either love or hate this “always on” showbiz tyro, a singing, quipping, impersonating and mugging machine who is the closest thing the world ever got to a goy Jerry Lewis.

I distinctly remember reviewing “Clifford” and “Three Fugitives,” which paired short Short up with Charles Grodin and Nick Nolte, respectively, and noting in print that his co-stars looked like they genuinely loathed the experience of having to work with him. Maybe Grodin (who appears here in an archival interview) was just acting.

I’ve interviewed almost every Short contemporary I could get when they had a movie coming out, but never Short. He comes off as just exhausting, needy.

But then Short aged and we aged. He paired-up with Steve Martin for stage shows and the popular whodunit “Only Murders in the Building,” also starring Selena Gomez. And suddenly, the insults and endless upstaging was hilarious and the collaboration of the then-septugenerains couldn’t help but come off as adorable. Because it is.

The biggest revelation in the latest “the funny person behind the facade” documentary, “Marty: Life is Short” may be how beloved Short is within show business. Short’s decades of home movies show parties and summer gatherings at his Hollywood home and his Canadian lake house, and reveal not just his oldest friend, “Second City” alumnus Eugene Levy as a regular guest, and his lifelong ties to everybody else in that rep company (Andrea Martin, the late Catherine O’Hara, Rick Moranis and Dave Thomas and the late Joe Flaherty), but also his and his ex-showbiz wife Nancy’s closeness to Steven Spielberg and Kate Capshaw, Paul Shaffer, Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson and Steve Martin.

“Nobody is as wired” into Hollywood and show business as Marty, Short’s writer/producer older brother Michael (“Schitt’s Creek”) marvels. And then you catch home movie footage of Chevy Chase at that lake house and you get it. Short gets a laugh and gets along with everybody, even Chase, whom NOBODY likes. Hell, there’s the late Eagles King Jerk Glenn Frey, playing and singing at a Short family Christmas party.

Old comrade Steve notes that among his friends, “You plan a dinner party, and you invite Marty. And then it turns out Marty can’t come. You cancel the party.”

A great filmmaker friend, Lawrence Kasdan of “The Big Chill,” “The Accidental Tourist” and “French Kiss,” questions Short and directed “Life is Short,” gently probing the childhood trauma — losing a beloved older brother, then his mother and then father before he was 21 — that gave Short his ethos and his documentary its title — “Life is Short.”

Hanks marvels that any time you see Short on stage, big screen or small screen, it’s not about “money” or “career move” or ego. “Marty’s doing it to have a blast.”

All those antics, the mannerisms, the shtick and mugging?

“You don’t realize how much energy it takes to do what he does,” Levy declares.

The master improviser never has more fun than in his guise of clueless/tactless entertainment journalist Jiminy Glick, a creation who became the best application of Short’s Irish father’s advice about bringing “a distinctive voice” to any character, the bigger the screwball the better. Lifelong pal Levy breaks down the politically-incorrect and “fat-suited” Glick’s “DEEP” vocal flourishes, another case of a funny person zeroing in on what makes this or that bit by another funny person work, a real hallmark of this documentary.

We even see Short and Martin working over new bits of verbal business for their act.

As we watch outtakes of Short’s outrageous, indecipherable-accented and fey wedding planner in “Father of the Bride,” a comical backstage lecture from Steve Martin about not “upstaging” him in “The Three Amigos,” but to save his “scene stealing” for Short’s scenes with Chevy Chase, the endless, effortless and edgy repartee with half a century of TV talk show hosts and hostesses, and with Steve, we can’t help but build a new appreciation of Short’s “weird” riffs and rips on the business he adores above all — show business.

That kind of explains why generations have one bad Short film they simply will not accept as awful — “The Three Amigos” did it for many. I love “Captain Ron,” and was tickled to see how often Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell turn up in those Short home movies, which include a staged Spielberg-shot “Forrest Gump and Ed Grimley do ‘Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid'” leaping from the deck of a large motor yacht.

It’s not that Forrest (Hanks) can’t swim, before or after his “box-a chocolates.” “The fall will kill you,” Short’s most famous sketch comedy character blurts, “I must say!”

Those home movies and the legions of testimonials give this film a whiff of what the equally sentimental recent John Candy doc had going for it, even if the revelations fall almost as far short of “the man behind the mask” as last year’s Eddie Murphy documentary. The two-part Steve Martin doc “Steve!” remains the gold standard for this subgenre of film.

Short makes light of the “80 percent failure” rate of his many projects, over the decades, including one bomb Kasdan had a hand in (“Cross My Heart”). That’s almost a little too healthy and self-effacing to believe. While one wouldn’t expect co-star Gomez to have anything bad to say about him, surely somebody who found him irritating to work with could be recruited to say so on camera, amusingly if possible.

His love affair with his singer/actress wife Nancy, whom he met in the legendary cast of the first Toronto production of “Godspell,” is explored in depth. Her death became another blow Short worked and kvetched his way through. But their adopted daughter Katherine killed herself in February, which isn’t mentioned.

None of which impacts in any way Short’s late career “moment,” the fun we take from watching him and Martin, whose run of big screen stinkers almost rivaled Short’s, trade insults on tour and on Hulu’s “Only Murders in the Building,” just a couple of veteran funnymen delighting us in their (and our) dotage.

So Short gets to take a victory lap and one more curtain call. Because, as always, he insists on it. And now, we’re just worn down enough to like it.

Cast: Martin Short, Catherine O’Hara, Steve Martin, Andrea Martin, Steven Spielberg, Kate Capshaw, John Mulaney, Tom Hanks, Nancy Dolman and Eugene Levy.

Credits: Directed by Lawrence Kasdan. A Netflix release.

Running time: 1:41

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Movie Review: The Peter Pan who would be “The King of Pop” — “Michael”

Most reviews are in and the furor has abated a bit even as Spike Lee has weighed in on the “Elephant in the Room” missing from the new “Michael” Jackson biopic by Antoine Fuqua.

But fans are still showing up in droves. And as I was off the clock and out of the country when it opened, I ducked in to catch “Michael” before checking out this week’s new releases on Thursday night.

Lee’s got a point, that Fuqua’s film, scripted by three-time Oscar nominee John Logan (“Aviator,” “Hugo,” “Gladiator”), is perfectly within its rights (and the family’s all-controlling “permission”) to dwell on the rise of a superstar rather than the child abuse allegations that dominated the circus that was Jackson’s final decades.

End your movie early enough and maybe the too-forgiving fans will forgive that most mortal of sins. You also dodge the sham marriages, bizarre public blunders, lawsuit settlements and an ongoing moral, ethical and public releations nightmare of the “Neverland Ranch” era.

But “Michael” is so “authorized” that it calls attention to its myriad shortcomings. All the rough edges and much of the “reality” is rubbed off as we get little to no sense of how this pop music pixie took over the culture with iconic tunes and legendary dance moves, a towerinng and terribly damaged and flawed former child star whose lesser sins included billing himself “The King of Pop.”

I mean, he was. But did he ever say that he wouldn’t name his breakout solo LP “Michael” because “It sounds too egocentric?” I doubt it.

“Michael” takes us from the controlling, abused childhood young Michael (Juliano Valdi) endured — a childhood stolen by his greedy, abusive father Joseph (Colman Domingo, excellent as always, but restrained) — in the ’60s to his break from his Jackson Five brothers and manager/father for solo superstardom, his triumphs and trials and accidents in the early to late ’80s.

But comparing this infuriatingly shallow picture to recent bio-pics of Whitney Houston, James Brown, Freddie Mercury, Charlie Parker, Bob Dylan, Elvis and Johnny Cash just underscores its shortcomings.

All but erasing Janet Jackson, never ever “explaining” who the “man in the mirror” or the image “behind the curtain” was, this is far and away the shallowest of the recent musical bio-pics lot.

Logan relies on one all-seeing observer, Jackson’s longtime (’76-96) ex-cop security guard, “fixer” and confidante Bill Bray (KeiLyn Durrel Jones) as something of a framing device, but Fuqua won’t even commit to that.

Jaafar Jackson’s uncanny impersonation of the sweet-seeming, airy not-of-this-world voice and signature dance moves is uncanny. And there is one great laugh than only those who lived through the world of ’80s American pop will get.

“If I’m not here to receive these ideas,” a hard-working Michael declares, “God might give’em to PRINCE!”

Domingo’s on pointe as a classic credit-hogging stage parent, forever reminding the “genius” of his brood who “got us out of Gary (Indiana).

But Nia Long, playing Jackson’s supportive mom, barely registers, a problem in the writing and the passive performance. Miles Teller similarly makes zero impression as the manager who takes over and helps Michael break ties with his father.

If you sit there wondering who is playing the famous CBS Records chief (Walter Yetnikoff) who, at Michael’s prodding, forced MTV to integrate and play Michael’s “short films” (music videos), it’s a barely recognizable Mike Myers, who has little to work with and underwhelms even doing the bare minimum.

Larenz Tate is nobody’s idea of a Berry Gordy (Motown’s guiding genius). And so on down the line.

I kept looking for some flesh and bone depiction of Jackson’s discipline, the work behind the “genius” that borrowed dance moves at a street gang “Beat It” dance rehearsal and gave the world the Moonwalk. A lot more of his creative interaction with Quincy Jones (Kendrick Sampson) — pivotal to his rise to the summit — was in order.

It’s one thing to leave out the making of a pedophile, problematic subject matter on several levels. It’s quite another to leave out Janet, to skim over the recording of “Beat It” and limit “Thriller” to the John Landis music video shoot. It’s quite another to simply serve up an uncanny skin-deep caricature of the guy.

I remember listening to an NPR program’s search for the reasons the Black community in particular never canceled or gave up on Jackson, no matter how twisted his story got. A single band-aid on the nose is meant to symbolize his extensive plastic surgery and skin bleaching efforts to erase his race.

Where is the Jackson of that famous Springsteen anecdote, about meeting the pop icon backstage at Live Aid in ’85, sipping beers just like another one of the rock and pop “guys?”

The “His Story Continues” end title here hints that maybe the family will relent as Lionsgate cries out for a sequel to cover Jackson’s final years. Who’ll they get to play Oprah? Priscilla? Miss Janet if you’re Nasty?

Fuqua’s a better director than this and Logan’s a better writer than “Michael” shows. Now that everybody’s delivered a blockbuster out of this troubled man of mystery, maybe there’ll be money to try something more serious.

They managed the hard part — finding the perfect title character. Now comes the even harder part, doing their subject justice.

Rating: PG-13, “thematic material,” smoking and profanity

Cast: Jaafar Jackson, Nia Long, Miles Teller, Larenz Tate, Juliano Valdi, KeiLyn Durrel Jones, Colman Domingo and Mike Myers.

Credits: Directed by Antoine Fuqua, scripted by John Logan. A Lionsgate release.

Running time: 2:07

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Series Review: A “Grand(ish) Tour” returns… as a “clip show”

We all knew, or perhaps hoped, it would come to this.

Richard Hammond even joked about it on their “farewell” program — “We don’t have to end up in the same old folks’ home, do we?”

Our three blokey blokes, those loveable petrolheads from “Top Gear” and “The Grand Tour,” finish their run of pricey car porn, play-racing and wild motoring — car trips, motorcycle quests, boat passages, bridge building — “adventures” in a British home for OAPs, aka “Old Age Pensioners.”

It’s “2040,” is the premise, and they’re now in this nursing home — forgetful, wizened, gray and paunchier than ever — to replay the Amazon version of their “greatest hits.”

“The Grand(ish) Tour” is a clip show farewell to the Amazon series that was itself a curtain call to their nearly two decades of BBC motoring mayhem on “Top Gear.”

Jeremy Clarkson, James May and Richard Hammond have grown old and plump (ish, in Hammond and May’s cases) before our eyes in two and a half decades of TV car reviewing, racing, testing, questing and stunting.

Now, under the pretext of Amazon’s “teeny tiny print” in their contract, they’re back after wrapping up their series with a sentimental, romantic and fond farewell, to sum up the GT years with a trio of “greatest hits” clips programs — scary moments, funny failures and a lot of Clarkson’s John Bull blustering and carbon consuming myopia.

“The Grand Tour” started with an over-the-top “Drive Tribe” celebration of their new endeavor, after Clarkson haf one too many run-ins with the BBC and got himself fired. They roared in on their chariots of choice to a desert rendezvous with their gear head, petrol head, rat rodder, bikers and fellow travelers fans, serenaded by The Hot House Flowers covering “I Can See Clearly Now the Rain is Gone.”

Considering the tantrums and international incidents these Brit jingoists caused at the BBC, that was the height of irony, and not just a peak moment that Clarkson now admits their follow-up series would never top.

The gimmick of these clip shows — three are planned, we’re told — is that they’re all retired together in a home somewhere in Blighty, with a certain unnamed racing driver glimpsed in the background in a nearly magnanimous moment where Clarkson admits to being taught to drive fast, drift, etc.

As on the series, Clarkson holds forth and the clips burnish his cultivated image of a driver’s driver, a heedless “More POWER” speed demon and a car nut with little understanding of how to fix even the older, simpler beaters the lads drove across Africa, South America and all points in between.

They note the big misstep they took early in their last series, a giddy action pic bit of business driving and shooting through fake terrorists with a fake Queen E. (“Did you come far?”) in the backseat.

Nobody wants to see us having fun,” was the revelation that widely-panned outing told them. If was the comical “suffering” and moments of terror — Hammond crashing, time and again, and peeing himself on a boat trip across the China Sea, May getting punk rear-ended as a running gag, Clarkson bullheadedly blundering through this bit of road or that section of track.

Pieced together, and taken in tandem with the still-bingeable BBC “Top Gear” archives available on several free streaming services, a new question about their group dynamic emerges.

“Playing their roles” or not, why did Hammond and May never rebel against Clarkson’s scenery-chewing, blustering dominance?

Yes, Clarkson and Andy Wilman conceived the re-imagining of the original show (which dates from @1979) and its gimmicks, merely adapting them to Amazon when they crossed over. Yes, that show’s entertainment-meets-supercars conceit made them all rich and famous.

But the show didn’t really work until they found those magic second and third legs of the stool. May and Hammond became just as important and a lot more watchable as the series progressed — Captain Slow and Wee Richie Crashes-a-Lot landing laughs, extolling the virtues of their choices of rides on these assorted “tours” and epic drives.

“Top Gear” has foundered since these three left because recapturing that trio’s chemistry has proven impossible.

But what’s obvious watching the “GT” clips, the old “Top Gears” and now this show is that Hammond and May are still pitched as Clarkson’s inferiors and willing to play along as his stooges, with the permitted insults they’re allowed to throw his way.

Why?

They started calling themselves dinosaurs long ago, and that finally seems to fit as the three play-act out a “forced” series of reminiscences. With gas prices skyrocketing and the planet literally cooking, it all seems a tad more heedless and foolish than it did back then when they first started their high octane hijinks.

I’ve enjoyed most of the shows, almost all of the road trips and even “Clarkson’s Farm,” which is an amusing follow-up for the most restless, wreckless and headstrong of the three to try. I even took May’s advice and bought a vintage Triumph TR-6 to restore.

May is still the one you’d most like to have a conversation with and the handiest to have along on a classic car ride, Hammond the most likeable TV-friendly “presenter” of the lot and best potential drinking buddy.

And Clarkson? He’s aged into the ultra conservative, entitled, self-unaware geezer many of those early “Top Gear” episodes promised, full of blustered opinions, not necessarily adept at defending them, quick with the insult and determined to limit those directed at him that make it on television.

I stumbled back across the most revealing aside involving him just as “Top Gear” was on the rise, an early pre-global-phenomenon “Top Gear” episode where Guns-N-Roses guitarist Slash was the hapless “Star in a Reasonably Priced Car” guest, forced to drive a manual econobox with the steering and gear shift on “the wrong side” around their track.

This was when the show was lucky to get other (obscure to the rest of the world) BBC presenters and radio hosts on as “celebrity” guests, and this guitarist — on tour and willing to come in to give the plucky little show a taste of international celebrity. He even covered the Allman Brothers tune “Jessica,” (“Top Gear’s” theme song long before Clarkson finished his first carton of ciggies) for the closing credits.

Over that closing music, Clarkson insecurely insults Slash’s driving as opposed to his guitar playing as an aside to his “mates.” Producer Wilman chose to put that churlish quip in the show.

That outed them both as pricks-of-a-feather, plainly meant for each other, a ride-or-die pair who lied to the BBC about Clarkson’s Falklands War license plate stunt during the infamous Argentina to Tierra del Fuego road trip, the “real” reason the BBC was looking for an excuse to fire him.

Clarkson’s perfected “watch this John Bull in a china shop fail,” his version of villain watching (a British Kardashian, he is). And his Gentleman Farmer fantasy is fun, even if you don’t buy the proposition that being backed by one of the world’s wealthiest companies and his own celebrity, that he could ever “fail.” Maybe he’ll figure out the error of climate change denial ways and repent.

May’s post “Grand Tour” shows have been entirely too pedantic and narrowly British in their focus — even the travelogues. I haven’t seen much of Hammond’s attempts at finding a fresh hit.

“The Grand Tour” gave them all a fun if repetitive few-years-long send-off. “Grand(ish) Tour” reminds us that there were highlights, and almost as much filler as the BBC shows, and a dire accident or two as well.

In or out of Ammonia Lodge rest home, Charging my HEARING aids” or not, the fans have gotten old with them, so there’s something to be said for the sentimentality of one last round of “Clarkson, you pillock” and the like.

But a clip show is still a clip show, and unless one or two of the three cares to go all George Takei on their egomaniac Captain Kirk, it’s hard to see much point to this, unless there really is “fine print” or somebody needs the money.

Rating: TV-MA, profanity

Cast: Jeremy Clarkson, Richard Hammond and James May.

Credits: Created by Andy Wilmon and Jeremy Clarkson. An Amazon Prime release.

Running time: 3 (presumably) episodes @80 minutes each.

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BOX OFFICE: “Mortal Kombat II” vs “Devil Wears Prada 2” is a Dead Heat

Whatever the Summer of 2026 holds in store, the spring of this movie going year has been positively littered with temporary blockbusters, a few of them with “legs.”

From “Project Hail Mary” to “Super Mario Galaxy,” to the more unexpected smashes “Micheal” and “The Devil Wears Prada 2,” business at the movies is rebounding, and not just thanks to spiking ticket prices.

This second weekend of May sees the latest iteration of the video games-turned-movies “Mortal Kombat” series, “Mortal Kombat 2,” clearing a very healthy but not spectacular $40 million. A $17 million Thursday night/Friday means it could reach into the mid-$40s, and it’ll pretty much have to. As Deadline.com points out, last weekend’s smash, “The Devil Wears Prada 2” is still making bank, with $41-43 million looking like its second weekend tally after a Friday of just under $10 million.

It beat “Kombat” on Saturday by ringing up nearlt $15 million in ticket sales.

As “Prada 2,” an adult fashionista romance sequel to a movie that opened 20 years ago, earned $76 million on its opening weekend, a lowish week-to-week drop of 45% is something serious to brag about.

There have been four “Mortal Kombat” movies, and the novelty of this one is that it has Karl Urban in the role of the washed-up-action-movoie hero, dropping zingers and out of his depth in “real” martial arts brawls with demigods out to destroy “Earthrealm.” He helps a little, but not much. Every single one of these video game adaptations has had story problems that overwhelm the production values and “acting.” They’ve all sucked.

But reviews don’t sink or float these movies, and Urban is the reason this one is getting more lightly panned than the earlier incarnations.

“Prada” box office was overestimated in the early part of last weekend, and it may fall off enough to give New Line a weak weekend “Kombat” win.” The movie — with little known supporting players — “only” cost $80 million or so to make.

“Michael” has been the big surprise of the spring. It bested “Kombat” on Saturday, pulling in $13 million or so, and is on track to make another $35 (nearly $9 on Friday) million this weekend, a third place finish that puts it well on its way to $250 million, just in North America. Most everything bad everybody has said about it is true, but also true is Spike Lee’s defense that a superficial gloss on a story that ends before Jackson’s life became a tabloid freak show of sham marriages, stunts and lawsuits over his pedophilia is a valid approach to his life.

Maybe they’re saving that for the sequel. Who’ll play Oprah?

But Jaafar Jackson’s impersonation in the title role is uncanny– the voice, the hair, right down to the perfectly-placed band-aid symbolizing Jackson’s many race-erasing medical procedures. I hope to get around to writing a review on it today.

Fourth place goes to a family film with a bit of an edge. “The Sheep Detectives” is about sheep trying to solve the murder of their shepherd (Hugh Jackman), but it surprisingly gets into imparting wisdom about death and dying and faith and — being British — it doesn’t shy away from discounting religion for the fairy tale it is.

The “mystery” is kind of a dud and the picture kind of plods, I thought. But hard-pressed-for-laughs or not, it’s playing, got decent enough reviews overall and might hit the $15 million mark by midnight Sunday.

The new Billie Eilish concert doc, “Billie Eilish: Hit me Hard and Soft — The Tour” looks like it’ll take fifth with a sliding (projections keep falling) $7 million and change weekend. She’s still a “thing,” I guesss, so go figure. Those aren’t exacly Beyonce/Tay-Tay concert doc numbers, though. Maybe her audience eschews moviegoing. Or maybe she’s yesterday’s news.

Sixth place looks to be a race between the March release that just won’t fade away, “Project Hail Mary,” and a fast-falling animated “Super Mario Galaxy” sequel.

“The Drama” exits the top ten, “Hokum” won’t crack it but “Animal Farm” and “Lee Cronin’s Mummy Bomb” are still hanging around. .

I’ll update this with final figures Sunday,.

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Movie Review: Same ol’ “Mortal Kombat,” but Urban adds a little Humor — “Mortal Kombat II”

Video game fans seem to never tire of film adaptations of beloved big screen throwbacks to their misspent youth. The movies are often plotless, just collections of quips and a parade of indifferently tied-together scenes with this or that beloved character, a few even played by big name stars as “Lara Croft,” “Minecraft,” “Street Fighter,” this or that “Mario Brother” “come to life.”

Invariably, they don’t “come to life,” and that’s a problem for those of us who haven’t devoted enough screen time to this interactive “content.”

“Mortal Kombat II” isn’t appreciably different from any of the other “Mortal Kombats” — which have generated four big screen adaptations and a couple of TV series. In the 30-plus years since this first Paul W.S. Anderson (LOL) adaptation, stars have come and gone, as has Anderson. Pretty much. The original game maker went bankrupt and yet here we are.

This latest iteration of the franchise is jokier, bloodier and far more littered with F-bombs. The production values are higher, with CGI sets, psychotronic effects, lavish costumes and makeup and decent fight choreography that occasionally hides which actors have the moves and who needs the most digitally assisted stuntmen helping out.

Characters fight to the death, but no “death” is permanent. I know Josh Larson, playing Aussie wisecracker Kano, is grateful for the work. But the upshot of that is that the stakes start out low and stay low. There’s no reason to invest in a character’s fate because he or she can be video-game reborn.

And Karl Urban’s better at dry, catch-phrases and one-liners than anybody else who played the martial arts actor sucked into a fight to the death to save “Earthrealm” from whatever extraterrestrial threat faces it this time.

This Johnny Cage wears Rayban Wayfarers. And he goes by “Johnny F—ing Cage,” thank you.

Johnny’s a ’90s action movie has-been trapped in fan convention hell when he’s summoned to join “Blondie” (Jessica McNamee), Jax (Mehcad Brooks), Liu Kang (Ludi Lin) and others in Lord Raiden’s (Tadanobu Asano) Earth-defending corps.

Martyn Ford plays the super-dooper supervillain Shao Kahn, a towering, helmeted hulk armed with a warclub the size of a data center. Adeline Rudolph is the daughter of a vanquished foe he’s raised to be his champion, trained by petite fury Jade (Tati Gabrielle).

The old pros in the cast (Urban, Hiroyuki Sanada) don’t let the boredom or embarassment show. Much. But nobody seems invested in the characters or in what they’re doing with them. Well, maybe Lawson.

Urban gets most of the one-liners, from Johnny’s on-screen catch phrase “It’s show time,” to cracks about “Transformer arms” Jax, “Big Trouble in Little China” settings and an old martial arts actor’s eagerness to cite his credentials.

“Hey, I got a SATURN Award for ‘Best Fight in a Feature Film!'”

Lawson’s return means Urban has to share the “Pennywise” and “Spirit Halloween” zingers. At heast the New Line Cinema checks cleared, right?

A sample of Johnny’s ’90s movie career — the snap of his sunglasses preceding every “It’s SHOW time” — is about as compelling as the movie that movie within a movie turns out to be.

I laughed a few times, but this pile of cluttered, poorly organized exposition interrupted by CGI brawls isn’t going to headline screenwriter Jeremy Slater’s resume.

And director Simon McQuoid? Well, somebody’s got to be the new Paul W.S. Anderson.

Rating: R, graphic, bloody violence, lots of profanity

Cast: Karl Urban, Adeline Rudolph, Tati Gabrielle, Jessica McNamee, Martyn Ford, Mehcad Brooks, Ludi Lin, Lewis Tan, Max Huang, Tadanobu Asano, Josh Lawson, Chin Han and Hiroyuki Sanada.

Credits: Directed by Simon McQuoid, scripted by Jeremy Slater. A New Line Cinema release.

Running time: 1:56

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