Series Review: Anya Taylor-Joy is…”Lucky?”

Anya Taylor-Joy spends most of her new series “Lucky” captured in lusty, loving close-ups.

Attired, dyed, made-up, eyebrowed and false eyelashed to something akin to feminine perfection, we are left with no doubts as to where her series creator (Jonathan Tropper) figures the money is.

Heck, she spends one entire episode in a form-fitting, undergarment-lacking “Cancer Sux” pink belly-baring T-shirt, as if we’re missing the point.

Sure, she’s supposed to be a broke daughter of a convict, married to the son (Drew Starkey) of another convict. But they have come into money, so maybe the sequined minidress makes sense, at least in that first episode.

“Lucky” is a slick, shallow, post-heist thriller in seven episodes, all surface gloss — chases, costume changes, flashbacks, heated arguments and drunken nights in California beach houses and a Vegas hotel.

Based on a novel by Marissa Stapley, this repetitive, meandering and sometimes plodding pursuit loses few chances to suggest “They could’ve covered this in a 90 minute movie.” But as that really only becomes an issue in the fourth episode, where things come to a cliched head and it all goes to pot in recycled “I did what I HAD to do” speeches and such, “Lucky” is worth a little of your “beach read” summer season TV streaming time.

ATJ has the title role, a redhead wronged by her loving husband Cary, who drugs her and leaves her to take the fall in a Vegas casino which is to be the jumping off point to their new life. A getaway to Dominica is in the offing.

Seeing as how they’ve stolen $10 million in mob money — some biodiesel skimming scheme (LOL) — this seems a tad stupid.

But whatever we don’t know about Cary, we can guess Lucky, at least, is no idiot.

A breathless, steal a hoodie/steal a hat sprint through the casino eludes scores of agents and cops led by the FBI’s Rand (Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor) and we’re off.

Lucky will be nabbed by her beloved’s ex-con mother (Annette Bening, properly acrid) and her right-hand-hit-man (Clifton Collins, Jr., chilling), stuffed in car trunks, trapped in wrecks — often of her own creation — as she’s chased by the mob and the Federal mob in a long getaway tale where a character can shrug “America’s kind-of over, anyway” and we know what they mean.

Lucky turns on her “I don’t feel safe” beautiful and imperiled act for strangers who sneak her out of jams, take her in or let her go.

The series is well cast, with Timothy Olyphant playing Lucky’s imprisoned dad and William Fichtner as the boss of biodiesel scamming bosses, and it holds together well enough to keep us interested, even though the foreshadowing is obvious (“You kept your dad’s lighter?”). the flashbacks gratuitous and the costume changes contractually obligated.

Taylor-Joy is enough of an alluring presence that we don’t so much miss the fact that the character’s cunning and modes of speech and style of makeup and dress don’t really fit her class or place in life as just let it slide until we see what she’s wearing in the next sequence.

But our star is on a bit of a “run,” now. And not a good one. The least interesting “Mad Max” (“Furiosa”), “The Gorge,” “Sacrifice,” it’s not like she’s being challenged by the roles she’s taking and it’s not like any of them move the needle on her career.

Pray for her agent, and give “Lucky” a try. But don’t be surprised if you check out of it after a few episodes, or if she changes agents.

Rating: TV-MA, violence, profanity

Cast: Anya Taylor-Joy, Annette Bening,
Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor, Drew Starkey, Timothy Olyphant, Clifton Collins, Jr., William Fichtner

Credits: Created by Jonathon Tropper, based on a novel by Marissa Stapley. An Apple TV+ release.

Running time: Seven episodes @:40-54 minutes each

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BOX OFFICE: “Odyssey” makes money like it’s 2001 — A Boffo Thursday, $120-125 million opening weekend?

IMAX showings are selling out.

Ticket buyers started showing up early Thursday afternoon (when I caught it) and kept lining up until midnight.

“The Odyssey” scored the year’s best Thursday night “preview” take, Deadline.com is reporting. Some $17.6 million (mostly premium priced) worth of tickets sold to this ancient epic based in the first great work of Western literature. That jump-started a Friday “opening day” to blockbuster status — $51 million+, Thursday night and Friday.

Christopher Nolan, the most bankable film director of his generation, has the public lining up to see his latest, breathlessly hyped for the past couple of years as the Matt Damon/Anne Hathaway/Himesh Patel/Lupita Nyong’o/John Leguizamo and Robert Pattinson star vehicle made its stately way through production.

Viewed another way, a public yawning through “Supergirl” and a sea of sequels is voting with its feet in the name of “Show us something NEW.”

Disney spent $250 million+ on a live action “Moana,” and is losing Mickey Mouse’s shirt over gambling waaaaaay too much on shirtless AARP member Dwayne Johnson and lesser known co-stars.

Nolan rounded up Oscar winners Matt Damon, Lupita Nyong’o, Anne Hathaway and Charlize Theron, took them to Greece and Morocco, Sicily, Iceland and Scotland and spent the SAME $250 million and got a genuine epic out of it.

Maybe it’s the movie Steven Spielberg should have made instead of “Disclosure Day.”

“Project Hail Mary” may be cutesy and derivative and more science fantasy than science fiction in many ways, but it was different enough to become a phenomenon it took at “Toy Story 5” to unseat.

Granted, if you remember the outlines of a story told for thousands of years, and in films starring Kurt Douglas and Brad Pitt (just the Trojan War part of “The Odyssey”) and in TV miniseries, “Odyssey” is anything but “new.”

But Nolan’s critically-acclaimed take, one seeking relevance in an alarmingly unstable world lurching towards fascism and the violence that comes with it, is pulling them in.

Other films that had Thursdays like that did brisk Fridays and Saturdays and cleared $136-145 million. But we’ll see. Again, lots of these tickets are higher priced than general admission.

If you’re tired of sequels, reboots and superhero shlock, vote with your feet and your ducats, kids.

Nolan’s raised the bar, so let’s see if the latest “Spider-Man,” a proven property and frankly worn-out comic book franchise, can top it.

“Moana’s” meek opening is being chased by a $19 million second weekend, and for a family film to lose over half its audience, week to week, that’s another sign that this one will be a big’ol bust. It’s over $80 million, all-in, and will lose the rest of its IMAX screens to “Odyssey” and “Spider-Man” before month’s end. It’s #2 this weekend.

The latest animated “Minions,” “Minions & Monsters,” is holding more audience week to week and will finish third with $14 million or so.

“Toy Story 5” adds another $13.8 and may clear the $430 million mark by Sunday night.

“Evil Dead Burn” is managing $3.8 million, losing most of its week-to-week audience. And that’s a pitifully low mark for a summer film to win fifth place bragging rights with.

“Young Washington” is hanging around, clearing $3.7 million and coming in sixth. It’s in the black with a $41 million take on the bank by midnight Sunday.

“The Invite” is making some waves and bucks, hitting seventh this weekend with a $3.3 million take.

“Obsession” is still the horror date movie of choice, earning another $2.4 in eighth. It will clear the $260 million mark all in early next week.

Ninth place belongs to the comic book bomb “Supergirl” whose pulse has weakened to $1.4.

And “Disclosure Day” takes tenth, $1.25 million closing in on $115.

“Jackass Forever and Every” exits the top ten.  

I’ll update these figures as Sunday data comes in, but let’s hope the “Odyssey” stars — all the way down to Zendaya, Patel and Holland, Leguizamo and Remar, got a little profit participation from C. Nolan’s epic. Champagne for everyone!

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Movie Review: “The Odyssey” by Nolan

Sail we must, on Homer’s “wine dark sea” from Ithaca to Asia Minor and many points in between for the greatest story of them all, the tale of “a face, a fleet…of a war with Troy, of a man and a ‘trick'” and “Zeus’s Law,” defied at mankind’s peril.

For his latest feat, Christopher Nolan takes us on the epic quest that is the cornerstone of Western literature and Western civilization, Homer’s saga of Odysseus, “hero of the Trojan War,” a trickster ready to wield his brain and his brawn in a titanic struggle not just to win that war, but the many tests that stand between himself and “home.”

And in Nolan’s telling, what makes “The Odyssey” timeless is the remorse of civilization’s unraveling, of the violence and pitiless greed that brings great epochs and empires to an end. Odysseus, played with equal parts cunning and gravitas by Matt Damon, spends his years “coming home” from The Trojan War filled with regret at what he’s seen, what he’s done and what’ he’s caused to come to pass.

His men and even he see himself as “punished” by the gods for his acts, playing god himself as he is forced to choose who lives and who dies. He pay for his hubris with more tests, more violence and more second guessing than we’ve ever seen in in a film or mini-series about the original “classic” hero of Western literature.

Nolan’s ancient epic is more historical and slightly grander than Wolfgang Peterson’s mythic, popcorny star vehicle “Troy,” more touching than the riveting and brutally heroic “300,” and more tactile than either. We’re seeing real seas, realistic reconstructions of ancient armor, cities, galleys of war and a real dog — Argus — waiting for his master to return from decades of fighting and traveling.

Note to “Supergirl” and “Superboy” filmmakers and anybody else thinking “Let’s just digitally animate the damned dog.” Nobody cries when a digital dog dies.

If I’m honest, Nolan’s version of an oft-told tale had me from the moment I saw “the horse,” the “trick” of the tale-teller’s account of “clever” Odysseus. Troy really existed, and if there really was a “Trojan Horse,” I’ll bet it looked a lot like this — half-buried in the surf, a “Planet of the Apes” post-apocalyptic monument and tribute to the gods that had to be hauled, sans wheels, from the sand to the city whose blasphemous undoing it held hidden in its belly.

Nolan’s narrative opens with that “trick,” and tells the tale from three temporal perspectives — the Trojan War, as remembered, events back home in Ithaca with the queen (Anne Hathaway) and son (Tom Holland) that King Odysseus left behind to fight, and the epic quest to return from that war as recalled by Odysseus in the company of his most alluring captor, Calypso (Charlize Theron).

The central conflict isn’t the war, or the murderously ruthless “suitors” for Queen Penelope, foremost among them the handsome and venomous Antinous (Robert Pattinson). It is between Odysseus and his superstitious men as he struggles with hardened warriors (Himesh Patel plays his stoic but questioning second in command) convinced their commanding officer has offended and re-offended the gods, especially Troy’s patron, Poseidon.

“You can’t live by omens and sacrifices,” Odysseus scoffs. But in this “time of apparent magic,” even our Ur-hero is given pause by Cyclops, the Sirens, the enchantress Circe (Samantha Morton) and the gigantic armored man-eaters that confront them, the Laestrygonians.

And even Odysseus has his Mount Olympus spirit guide. Zendaya plays the goddess Athena, who warns him “Your cleverness will get you into trouble.”

As indeed it does.

Damon’s “brand” as an actor has long been the intelligence he conveys in all but the silliest roles. That’s put to great use here as we see him plotting and planning this escape or that ambush. “The gods help those who help themselves,” he preaches. But his Odysseus also lets us see him second-guessing himself, a wearying and ageing man weighed down by the heartbreaking burdens of leadership.

Hathaway, in the role of the dutiful wife weaving and unraveling her tapestry while bullying suitors impose themselves on her household, shows us her own burdens. She said “Promise me you’ll come back.” And all she’s left with, decades later, is rising anger at the plight her long-absent and presumed-dead husband has placed her in. She is queen, but their overmatched son (Tom Holland) is too unsophisticated and physically weak to take the throne in the presence of entitled, murderous brutes.

Jon Bernthal brings a rough bluntness to the gruff Menelaus of Sparta, a hardnosed ruler dragged into war when Helen (Lupita Nyong’o) ran away from his brother Agamemnon (Benny Safdie) to Troy.

And John Leguizamo nimbly plays the loyal blind swineherd who tries to help Penelope and son Telemachus (Holland) cling to power as long as possible against long odds that his master, Odysseus, might return. Horror icon Mia Goth plays Penelope’s treacherous handmaiden.

Nolan’s “all-star cast” makes something of a statement in terms or the film’s intentions and modern messaging. The first character we see is played by the transgender actor Elliot Page, with a Black Helen of Troy and Black and Asian characters giving this ancient world the cosmopolitan flavor it most certainly had.

A running theme through all this is the breakdown of an old order, “Zeus’s Law” about piety, square dealing and how to treat strangers and guests and the rest of the human race, Trojans included. Nolan is talking about the “Dark Ages” to come, and the “Dark Ages” which have revisited us whenever the people lose their way and the violent and rapacious are empowered over us, often at our own doing.

Take a gander at insensate monster Cyclops and who he seems to resemble. Imagine him in a diaper if you have trouble making the connection.

I love the way Odysseus plucks a musical note from his bow-string before unleashing an arrow, the treatment of the faithful dog who tells us and Odysseus of the decades he lost to an unjust war. And Nolan’s representation of Hades as a Hieronymus Bosch hellscape where the dead seek recognition from the living is one of the most artistic sequences he’s ever put on film.

Who speaks for the dead? Not just those Odysseus knew and lost. The unmistakable voice and half-face of James Remar (“The Warriors”) touches on the meaning of life and death and the residue of loss and regret that are supersedes all other considerations once you’re gone.

This “Odyssey” is almost exactly what we’d expect from Nolan, a very good film, if perhaps not on a par with the unnerving novelty of “Inception,” or lacking the poetry, sentiment and stunning suspense of “Dunkirk” — just an epic yarn given a well-polished epic treatment.

This is a great filmmaker who has something to say to modern audiences, and a pretty good idea of how to say it within the context of a 3000 year old tale of “a face” that “launched” a “fleet” of “a thousand ships,” of “clever” Odysseus” and the gods and all-too-human men who bedeviled him every step of his guilt-ridden and bloody journey “home.”

Rating: R, graphic violence, nudity, profanity

Cast: Matt Damon, Anne Hathaway, Tom Holland, Lupita Nyong’o, Himesh Patel, Zendaya, Robert Pattinson, Elliot Page, John Leguizamo, Samantha Morton, James Remar, Ryan Hurst, Mia Goth, Jon Bernthal and Charlize Theron

Credits: Scripted and directed by Christopher Nolan, based on “The Odyssey” by Homer. A Universal release.

Running time: 2:52

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Netflixable? “53 Sundays” only seems to Last that Long

The prolific Barcelona screenwriter and director Cesc Gay gave us the man and his dog dramedy “Truman,” and the edgier “The People Upstairs,” aka “Sentimental,” just remade by Olivia Wilde as “The Invite.”

So when you see his name on the credits, you expect sophistication and wit that crosses borders and transcends language barriers.

But his “53 Sundays” feels like an unstaged play he plucked out of a seldom-opened drawer and sold to the deep pocket content-cravers at Netflix.

“Unstaged” for a reason is a given. As is “suckers” at Netflix, because their mad rush to create films that play in many markets has them spending mad money on has-been or never-quite-were stars and indulging big name filmmaker/storytellers in their “dream” projects, with decidedly mixed results.

Cesc Gay has a track record. That was good enough for them.

In theatrical terms, “53 Sundays” is a four-hander, four characters in search of a laugh or at least a better story.

One, Carolina (Alexandra Jiménez), is Ms. Exposition, our narrate-to-the-camera “host” for a “fight” between three siblings — one of whom is her partner.

Carolina spends the first seven minutes of the bad play film explaining the family dynamic — the oldest brother Victor (Javier Gutiérrez) who married money and wants little to do with his siblings, the writer/college professor older sister Natalia (Carmen Machi) who workaholics through life as a way of coping with a cheating spouse, and Carolina’s half-broke, under-employed actor partner Julián (popular Spanish character lead Javier Cámara) who is the youngest and feels put upon and taken for granted by his not-wholly-estranged siblings.

The next 70 minutes show us the ways they avoid each other, promising an epic “fight” that never comes, a debate about their 89 year old father who is “forgetting” things, getting lost and “showing his penis” to the neighbors and anybody else within reach.

The pointlessness of this interminably pointless exercise is built in, structural. Consider, the first act is all Carolina and Julián prepping for a dinner party “meeting” between the siblings that doesn’t come off because Victor would rather dash off to Marbella for a little getaway.

The second act is Victor and Julián halfheartedly bickering and waiting for Natalia, who’s a no-show.

And the third act is the Big Fight over “What to do about Dad” that never reaches the level of “fight” much less “big.”

The dialogue is quotably dull, in Spanish or dubbed into English.

“I thought we’d wait an hour before we start arguing.” “Telling the truth is in poor taste.” Victor’s best put-down of his “dumbass little brother” is the script’s only biting line.

“I keep wanting more and more and you keep settling for less.”

The actors aren’t bad. They just have nothing to play. The film never overcomes the low stakes involved, low stakes which the tepid arguments barely address. And it never manages to surprise us from the moment we hear what the “real” beef they have is.

Their father is complaining of a flickering light bulb. WHO will deign to visit Dad and change it? Whose responsibility/JOB is that?

Cesc Gay will of course write and direct again. Maybe next time he’ll spend a little more time on the material, workshop it, figure out it needs more heft and maybe a few laughs.

Maybe next time Netflix will have somebody read this “content” before writing the check.

Rating: TV-MA, profanity, smoking

Cast: Javier Cámara, Carmen Machi, Javier Gutiérrez and Alexandra Jiménez.

Credits: Scripted and directed by Cesc Gay. A Netflix release.

Running time: 1:18

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Movie Review: An “Honor Student” weighs in on America’s Gun Fetish

For a preachy, unevenly-acted thriller about the threat of a school shooting, the indie “Honor Student” certainly punches above its weight.

Director and co-writer Tamika Miller gets into the messy politics of gun control, references earlier school massacres, from Columbine to Sandy Hook to Parkland, and takes inspiration from Aurora (a cinema shooting). Characters pay lip service to “movie” and “video game violence.”

And still one character clings to the hope that one more shooting, as awful but no more awful than many others, will awaken American moral outratgdemocracy and provoke action.

As if the Russian-financed National Rifle Association couldn’t bribe that to a halt. Again.

Kelly Jenrette of TV’s “All American: Homecoming” stars as Mrs. Hill, a single mom/school teacher with a pressing appointment at the end of this particular workday.

That doesn’t mean she doesn’t have time for the upper class kids of Kingsley Academy, where she teaches. You’d be hard-pressed to find a “public” school teacher who’d let herself get lured into a chat about a boy this girl (Olivia Simmons) hopes against hope he will ask her to the prom.

And rushed as she is, she’ll make time for Harvard-bound Jeremy Chue (Hudson Yang), an over-achiever whose father’s (Kelvin Han Yee) expectations are “class valedictorian,” because anything less just won’t do.

Jeremy is popular, nobody’s idea of a social outsider. But he’s carrying a burden most everybody knows about. What they don’t know is what he’s got in his cello case this particular school day.

It takes a couple of agonizing minutes for the rushed Mrs. Hill to get the kid past his explanation of a chess “gambit” and figure out what he means by “sacrificial pawns.”

“I think someone’s going to shoot up the school,” he says. And then, our comes the gun.

Jeremy’s got a silencer-tipped 9mm, for starters. And he’s got his reasons for locking her in this classroom with him until that moment when school lets our and he plans to make all hell break loose.

Flashbacks to formative moments each character’s earlier life are animated, an interesting choice.

Miller — “The Christmas Lottery” and “Undercard” were hers — and co-writer Joe Rechtman squeeze a lot of teen “logic” and racial politics into their script, folding many of the thought exercises and screeds into Yang’s character.

“Ever get tired of the knee on your neck,” the minority kid asks his African-American teacher? A fair question.

But Yang blurts much of his dialogue, which sounds recited and rushed rather than acted and lived.

Jenrette takes a LONG time to register the proper degree of shock and terror.

And the logic of the whole talking villain exercise, which the teacher spends her energy trying to puncture, is malignant wishful thinking of the worst sort. As smart Jeremy himself says, if this country didn’t take drastic steps to curb gun ownership and machine gun sales after the mass murder of little kids at Sandy Hook, well…

The film, shortened by ten minutes for its Amazon release, only achieves the proper pitch in the clock-ticking-down third act. But there are provocative ideas, stances and “solutions” packed into this preachy picture. For a simple two-hander, with basically one setting, it certainly does punch above its weight, even if it never manages more than a glancing blow or two.

Rating: TV-MA, violence, profanity

Cast: Kelly Jenrette, Hudson Yang, Kelvin Han Yee and Olivia Simmons.

Credits: Directed by Tamika Miller, scripted by Joe Rechtman and Tamika Miller. A Deskpop release on Amazon Prime.

Running time: 1:24

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Netflixable? Swedish Midlife Crisis? “Je M’appelle Agneta”

It may be a cliche, but there are few more “liberating” images in the cinema than having your heroine toss aside convention and decorum and dunk her head in the public village fountain in some eternally sunny corner of Provence.

When the woman doing the dunking is a shy, unhappy and more-uptight-than-average Swede, more the better.

That’s a payoff moment in “Je M’appelle Agneta,” an ever-so-slight, not really “funny” midlife crisis rom-com.

A repressed, depressed, newly-laid off empty-nest Swedish mom pops down to Provence to cure what ails her in this Swedish version of “It’s My Turn,” “Eat Pray Love,” “How Stella GotHher Groove Back” or “Under Tuscan Sun.”

The film is as predictable as a Swiss watch and as adventurous as a romance novel or its Hallmark Channel equivalent. But it’s set in Provence, so there’s that.

Eva Melander has the title role, that of a dowdy 50ish mom whose kids have reached an age where they only make contact if they want money and whose husband (Björn Kjellman) has become an exercise freak who always exercises with a cute younger neighbor.

She’s just lost her job and resents “my whole life of useless labor” (in Swedish or dubbed into English) as she ties one on and voice-over narrates her frustrations to the world.

Agneta is a serious Francophile. She adores, she narrates, all things French. But as she’s had a few, that narration is what she’s putting in an application for a job she’s seen in a classified ad.

An “au pair” is needed to “look after an older Swedish boy who needs help.” In small-town Provence. Cleaning and cooking are required. As is accompanying this “older boy” to the bar every Friday afternoon.

Sounds like heaven. Her husband laughs it off. Maybe he’s not having an affair with his exercise partner, but he’s a big source of Agenta’s oppresion. She won’t make it a week away from home, he scoffs. She LOVES France, but never tried to learn the language?

That criticism is what puts her on the next trains south.

Pan-Europeanism aside, there may have been some language barrier issues with that ad. Meeting the swarthy restaurateur who placed it, Fabian (Jérémie Covillault) underscores how out of her depth Agneta is. There are no English speakers in town, much less Swedish.

Except, that is, for the “Swedish” “boy” the ad speaks of. Einar (Claes Månsson) is an ever-shirtless bon vivant of advanced years. A Swedish expat, he lives in a former monastery, and has since the days when being gay could be illegal or called for “a cure,” thanks to the social mores of the ’60s.

He awakens each day with a shout at the sun. “Good morning, my libido!” Just the thing a menopausal mom from Volvoland wants to hear.

Einar doesn’t “need help,” he insists. And as he complains about her (Swedish) cooking and presence, he adds bits of judgemental interrogation that drive this aged gay blade to his own conclusion.

“Apparently, I’m not the one who needs ‘help.'”

What Agneta needs is a good “molting,” shedding her feathers and her Swedish obsession about “what others think of you.” Before you know it, she’s cooking French, standing up for herself, submitting to an undergarment makeover by the town’s aged undies seamstresss (Anne-Marie Ponsot), meddling in Einar’s estrangement from a relative, dunking her head in that fountain and entertaining thoughts of leaving her husband.

Unsurprising cinema like this adaptation of Emma Hamberg’s bestseller plays as comfort food to fans, and Melander and Månsson don’t make bad company in their performances. They’re just not novel enough to be surprising or particularly funny.

“Je M’appelle Agneta” takes us to Provence and lets us see that transformative dunk in the fountain. But it can’t make us feel it.

Rating: TV-MA, sex, nudity, smoking

Cast: Eva Melander, Claes Månsson, Jérémie Covillault,
Anne-Marie Ponsot and
Björn Kjellman

Credits: Directed by Johanna Runevad, scripted by Isabel Nyland, Emma Hamberg and Johanna Runevad, based on a novel by Emma Hamberg.

Running time: 1:53

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Movie Preview: Tom Cruise is the pot-bellied Oil Man ordered to Save the World he’s Destroyed — “Digger”

That cast. That director. That gut!

This October, we’ve got ourselves a Hail Mary for an Oscar nomination for the movies’ Most Valuable Player.

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Netflixable? Don’t Underestimate “The Marked Woman” Trafficked into Barcelona

A grab bag of thriller tropes and action beats is tossed at another “human trafficking” thriller, this one from Spain, in “The Marked Woman.”

We’ve got an amnesiac with Jason Bourne skills. Because one never forgets one’s martial arts training. Apprently. She uses “Memento” Post-It notes to piece together clues from bits of memory. We’ve got shipping containers stuffed with human beings, “coded” bank accounts, dirty cops and a dogged loner detective soldiering on despite recent tragedy.

The film’s big takeway is that this modern day slave trade is not just a North American cinematic obsession.

Women kidnapped to be sex workers, refugees smuggled from Africa and Asia and South America into Europe or North America at their own peril, Chinese smuggled to staff (in indentured servitude) the world’s Asian eateries and the whole Trumpstein scandal — enveloping America’s and the world’s richest in a conspiracy involving pedophilia and blackmail, with Israeli intelligence involvement — all point to a global problem and the most predatory practices of “capitalism.”

Director Gabe Ibáñez and screenwriter Lara Sendim, adapting a novel by Rosa Montero and Olivier Truc, never quite get this beast up and running. It takes 24 minutes to get to the first action beat, and when our heroine (Ana Rujas) isn’t fighting, the picture struggles to hold our interest.

Rujas plays a woman found chained and tortured in a shipping container at the port of Barcelona.

We’ve met our victim as she furtively talked to another woman (Kira Miró) just after that second one has given testimony against a trafficking task force cop. under suspicion for being a mob “mole.” All this took place in Algeciras, the Spanish city adjoining Gibraltar at the entrance to the Mediterranean, months earlier.

The smugglers and the cops — clean ones and dirty ones — are in a race to find and question this anonymous amnesia victim, covered in car battery torture burns, before she remembers things that will bring this crime ring down, dragging a lot of people with it.

She has “something valuable,” (in Spanish or English or subtitled), “somehing ‘they’ don’t want you to share.”

The formidable Candela Peña (“All About My Mother,””Princesses”) is the 50ish detective sergeant, fresh off a tragedy and too anxious to get back to work. She draws this “case that nobody wants” and starts to work the clues with a reluctant junior partner (Carlos Troya).

There’s DNA at the crime scene, phone records to vet and a survivor to interrogate.

Meanwhile, the accused cop from Algeciras (Pol López) elbows his way north and into the investigation, even though nobody seems to trust him. An impending Internal Affairs hearing will do that to a guy.

The under-protected survivor has to kill her way out of being kidnapped again, and we’re off on a movie that blends the implausible (the amnesiac is dragged along on stakeouts) with the cliched, all of it covered at a snail’s pace.

“The Marked Woman” finds some suspense by the third act. It’s well-cast and a couple of the fights are first rate. But if you haven’t figured this clunker out an hour before the characters onscreen do, you’re not seeing enough thrillers.

Rating: TV-MA, graphic violence, profanity

Cast: Candela Peña, Ana Rujas, Pol López, Luka Peros, Manolo Solo and
Kira Miró

Credits: Directed by Gabe Ibáñez, scripted by Lara Sendim, based on the novel by Rosa Montero and Olivier Truc. A Netflix release.

Running time: 1:49

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Sam Neill, New Zealand’s Finest: 1947-2026

One of the cinema’s great talents, grand figures and a gentleman in full, Sam Neill has died. He’d fought a deadly cancer off, but that battle must have taken a terrible toll to get him to “cancer free.”

He was 78.

His iconic turn in the blockbuster “Jurassic Park” — mocked by he and his co-stars above — is what most people remember him for. I interviewed him when “Sirens” came out, a winking turn in a titillating comedy, and one or two other times in later years.

My favorite films of his might have been “Dead Calm,” but he never gave a bad performance on the big or small screen. He was in the Down Under thriller series “Untamed” last year, twinkled in “Hunt for the Wilderpeople,” “Rams,” “A Cry in the Dark,” ‘Children of the Revolution,” “Sleeping Dogs,” My Brilliant Career,” devilshly regal in “Restoration,” Russian in “The Hunt for Red October,” “The Piano,” and more than one “Jurassic.”

Neill was latterly a rancher, a winemaker (Who wasn’t?), an acclaimed memoirist, a gentle soul and a real charmer. I recall Gabriel Byrne telling me the story of how he introduced his little boy to Neill somewhere in Hollywood once. The kid was overawed, and had just one question he sputtered out about “velociraptors.”

Neill grinned, pulled out a prop raptor claw he kept on his person during his Jurassic years for just such encounters, and demonstrated to the lad how a dinosaur like that would gut a little kid like him. Straight out of the movie. And then he’d wickedly chuckle, as Byrne rememembered it, giving a child a memory that would last forever.

Don’t meet your idols, they tell you. But what a bloke, what a twinkling talent. Whar a sweetheart. He will be missed.

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Movie Review: Black Teen faces the trials of being a “Mississippi Scholar”

Earnest, preachy and melodramatic to a fault, “Mississippi Scholar” is exactly the sort of movie that the independent cinema was born to create.

Director and co-writer Marcus Bleecker’s film may traffic in tropes and cliches. But it has a vivid sense of place and a clear notion of the message it wants to send, and that message’s relevence.

Set in an unnamed small Mississippi city — it was filmed in Baldwyn, Saltillo and Fulton — the film is “a mind is a terrible thing to waste” in cinematic form. Our “Scholar” was born into a world of substance abuse, the racist legal traps of the country’s remaining marijuana laws and has a baby-mama-in-waiting and a drunken parent whom our teen hero is responsible for as his burdens.

But he has a world of promise that one dedicated teacher, his dead father (whom he still converses with) and even he himself can see if he can just “stay focused” and keep his eyes on this very personal prize — college and a better life beyond Ole Miss.

Shannon Brown is James, a kid with great grades and an ill-tempered mother (Gisla Stringer) who crawled into the bottle a long time ago and has no interest in crawling out.

But he’s got an ad hoc support system helping him through his senior year. His aunt (GiGi Marie Gaines) feeds him and keeps him advised of his mother’s latest tumbles. His dead dad (co-writer Obba Babatundé) passes on wisdom about his mother in fortune cookie-sized bites when father and son chat — at the cemetary or elsewhere.

“Hurt people hurt people.”

His English teacher, Mr. Keating (Sonny Marinelli) has high hopes for him, hopes he’s willing to nag the kid to achieve — “It takes only five seconds to get in trouble, and 25 years to get out of it!”

His school principal (Lance E. Nichols) expects greatness, but has learned to never get his hopes up over any Black boy at his integrated high school.

Even Ray-Ray (Jeremy Isaiah Earl), the ex-con drug dealer, takes a brotherly interest in the kid who is his “best distributor.” That money is what keeps a roof over James’ and his mother’s heads, and pays for his Jordans.

His white boy bestie (Dominic Arvielo) may act “Black,” but will he have James’ back when things get real?

And girlfriend Tammy (Aysa Branch) may be far and away the prettiest girl in school. But she’s taking the easy route, relying on her looks to achieve the limited goals the script sketches out for her.

“We’re gonna have ourselves a baby as soon as we graduate!”

Bleecker’s film covers all of the bases, all of the tropes and most of the cliches as James faces Big Choices with perils to his plan at every turn. Maybe taking him to visit the football-mad University of Mississippi isn’t the deal-maker his teacher hopes it is, as James doesn’t “see anybody who looks like me.”

Only a real civil rights hero (Dr. Donald Cole) can set him straight, relating the story of what James Meredith and generations before him did to give James this chance. Or can he?

“Mississippi Scholar” is well-crafted and an easy film to like, with relatable if “stock” characters and decent performances from all but the most amateurish (James’ classmates) cast members. But it’s entirely too predictable to surprise and too pre-digested to have an edge.

Worthy subject and novel setting aside, we’ve seen this story on the big screen and the small one too many times to count, seen this kid’s hand played out in every variation the cards have to offer.

But it makes a fine calling card for its cinematographer turned director, and let’s hope we see Bleecker’s name and hear his voice in another Deep South indie film, and soon.

Rating: TV-14, violence, profanity

Cast: Shannon Brown, Gisla Stringer, Sonny Marinelli, Jeremy Isiaah Earl, Aysa Branch and
Obba Babatundé

Credits: Directed by Marcus Bleecker, scripted by
Obba Babatundé, Marcus Bleecker and P.J. Leonard. A Narrative Distribution release on Amazon Prime.

Running time: 1:24

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