Netflixable? “Little Brother” makes Cena Look Small

Netflix has made inroads in horror and begun to make a mark in prestige pcitures. But they cornered the market on teen rom-coms a while back. And now, years after signing Adam Sandler, his family and hangers-on, they’re going all in on coarse comedies.

“Little Brother” vies with “Office Romance” for Crudest Comedy of the Summer “honors.”

Pee pee gags, threesome romps played for laughs, drug humor and profanity are the main selling points of this John Cena/Eric André farce.

A few crude moments pay off and the odd “Oh no they didnt” chuckle tinkles around the edges. But mostly this is an R-rated bust and kind of embarassing for all involved.

Cena, a reliable oversized laugh in most movies, is paired up with Eric André, an acquired taste one acquires by watching his TV series — which I haven’t — or movies like “Balls Up” and “Happy Gilmore 2,” which one tries to forget.

The gimmick here is that Cena, as Rudd, a rising star in New York real estate, was once “big brother” to André’s disadvantaged Marcus, who idolized him as a child.

Decades later, Marcus busts out of a mental hospital because he’s got the idea that Rudd “needs” him.

Sherry Cola plays Rudd’s ace assistant, inexplicably attracted to the new loon who’s shown up at Rudd’s door. Michelle Monaghan is Rudd’s wife, mother to his dysfunctional teen sons, a woman inexplicably touched by Marcus’ story and determined to take him in, even though Rudd’s big TV break has landed in his lap — a chance to co-star in a New York real estate “Hustlers” reality series.

And Christopher Meloni plays Rudd’s overbearing, super-successful big brother, a Bezos by way of Joe Rogan success story who may or may not be looking out for his kid bro’s best interests.

I’d quote some funny lines, but there aren’t any. The vulgar sight gags that stick with you involve urinating out of and all over a high-end Porsche, a threesome straining to deliver a laugh via raunchiness and an “I like to watch” third party and Cena doing a tad too much nose candy to safely navigate a very important party at his brother’s place.

The real estate TV show — with its archetypes and machinations — never delivers a titter, much less a giggle. And most of the rest falls into the “know what’s coming, wasn’t that funny the first time we saw it” basket.

Monaghan deserves better. Cola should offer to joke-up her own characters and not be content with a glam wardrobe and hours in the stylist’s chair.

And whatever André brings to the table, Cena would be well-advised to leave him to the ageing Sandler crew, as “Little Brother” is nothing more than a quick, crude and lowdown buck with barely a laugh in it.

Rating: R, nudity, sex, scatological humor, profanity, drug abuse played for laughs

Cast: John Cena, Eric André, Sherry Cola, Christopher Meloni and Michelle Monaghan.

Credits:Directed by Matt Spicer, scripted by Jarrad Paul and Andrew Mogel. A Netflix release.

Running time: 1:40

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BOX OFFICE: Little “Supergirl” Lost — “Toy Story 5” rolls in the (play) dough

Another blockbuster weekend for “Toy Story 5” was a given. And to some of us the indifference that a fresh, punk-riotgrrrl take on “Supergirl” with no “names (Mathias Schoenaerts excepted) and Warner Bros./DC’s MF CGI “dog” sidekick was just as easy to anticipate.

I mean, come ON.

A decent but underwhelming Thursday “preview” turnout of $7.8 million folded into a Friday opening ($18 million) did no favors for “Supergirl”

Deadline.com is calling that a $40 million comic book origin story/franchise starter. Call it fanboy “Captain Marvel” sexism or the Curse of DC Comics (reviews haven’t been enthusiastic) or superhero fatigue or the dark times we’re living through, but true “blockbusters” don’t sell under four million in tickets on their opening weekend.

Maybe it’ll have legs, but that’s unlikely.

Meanwhile, the laugh-starved, obvious and muddled message-heavy “Toy Story 5” is filling cinemas on its second weekend — $74 million, a 54 percent drop, per Deadline.

The endless “Jackass” farewell tour wraps up with “Jackass: Best & Last,” which is cruising towards a $10 million opening. Not terrible, until you remember ticket prices and figure maybe a million people will see it. A lot of people are sentimental fools over these suicidal fools. Well, maybe a million. Hell, they reopened cinemas after COVID, so God Bless them, Every One.

The no-name-stars, sad and smart horror phenom “Obsession” leaves its smart horror rival “Backrooms” in the dust with another $8.5 million weekend, good enough for fourth place on its march towards $250 million, which is where I figure it will end up.

“Disclosure Day” is down to $7 million and fading fast in fifth.

The two new titles should push “Michael” and “The Death of Robin Hood” out of the top ten, but “Leviticus” and “Masters of the Universe” are on top ten life support, too.

Check back later this weekend as I update these figures and we’ll see what we see. Or what we have seen.

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Movie Review: Too Much Talk, Too Little Action — “Ip Man: Kung Fu Legend”

The storied, mythic and constantly fictionalized life of the martial artist who taught Bruce Lee his moves earns perhaps his dullest film outing in “Ip Man: Kung Fu Legend.”

It’s not really the fault of star Yu-Hang (Dennis) To, who has appeared in Ip Man (Yip Man) adventures for nearly 20 years and has played Ip Kai-man off and on since 2010. His wirework-assisted, manic-edited fights serve up nothing new. But he’s got a serene, focused presence reminiscent of Donnie Yen, without Yen’s wit or charisma.

The thing that makes this “Ip Man” outing so laborious is the script, a weary collection of tropes, cliches, “foreign devil” villains and production values that set this in a politically murky netherworld — the Hong Kong of the early ’20s, ’30s, late ’40s? — designed to not offend Chinese authorities.

Our hero has moved to Hong Kong from Foshan with his wife (Zhou Xiaofei) and little boy with the hope of setting up a martial arts school. The local guild insists he fight three duels in order to win this right, which he achieves in the film’s opening scenes.

But there’s a big new player in British-ruled Hong Kong, and Pike (Steven Dasz) has his eye on real estate that the martial arts association and its friends own. His plans include setting up a boxing gym on some of that property.

Pike has the henchman and the money to turn locals (Zhao Jinshuyu) into “traitors” and the police into accomplices. One intrepid woman in uniform (Tingei Zhang) might stand in his way, if the frame-up Pike puts into motion doesn’t pan out.

Ip Man seeks “justice that the law can’t give.” His comrades know that it’s “better to fight than suffer in cowardice!”

The narrative bogs down in real estate details and the talkative waits between this duel or that prison brawl seem interminable.

Hoary plot devices abound. You can guess the who will be kidnapped pretty much the moment the character is introduced, for instance.

To wears the black fedora, black Changsan and kung-fu-fighting slip-ons with style. But there isn’t much to work with here. The constant talk is tedium itself, and the real estate intrigues feel low stakes, even when murder enters the picture.

And expecting wires, CGI and slo-mo to make the fights pop isn’t going to get it done in a world saturated in martial arts thrillers and Ip Man adventures.

Rating: unrated, violence, some profanity

Cast: Yu-Hang (Dennis) To, Tingei Zhang, Steven Dasz, Zhao Jingshuyu and Zhou Xiaofei

Credits: Scripted and directed by Li Liming. A Well Go USA release.

Running time: 1:34

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Netflixable? Schnabel’s Mad Monomania paints “In the Hand of Dante”

There’s a “just go with it” madness that is demanded of anyone who dives into the glorious — some will say wretched — excesses of “In the Hand of Dante.”

A romantic thriller contrived out of history, great “lost” literature and the great creators who write it, it’s a “Da Vinci Code” mystery with “In the Name of the Rose” thrills tucked into an epic length mob movie.

Naturally, there are Italian mobsters. Unnaturally, Jason Momoa plays one and the great Martin Scorsese is cast as a 14th century Jewish intellectual who speaks of the meaning of love and life and who helps finance the art of  Durante di Alighiero degli Alighieri;,known to history as Dante Alighieri, the greatest writer in Italian history and a beacon who lit the way for the literary age that became The Renaissance.

It’s based on a novel by journalist and biographer Nick Tosches, who fictionalized an egomaniacal version of himself as protagonist, a rough-and-tumble writer involved in mob efforts to murderously procure the copy text of Dante’s epic poem, “The Divine Comedy,” written in Dante’s own hand, and as Dante himself, struggling to create and survive Florentine politics and papal disapproval in 1300s Italy.


Any way you look at “In the Hand of Dante,” it’s a LOT.

Al Pacino has a lone scene as a made-man uncle who counsels Nick in his early teens after the boy confesses to killing a kid his age. Gerard Butler plays a inhuman hit man sent to “clean up” any loose ends in the procurement of this priceless manuscript, and a megalomanic 14th century pope (Boniface VIII?). Gal Gadot is both Dante’s wife, Gemma, the woman the poet never wrote about as “The Divine Comedy” was inspired by his longing for a long dead childhood crush, and Nick’s Italian secretary/assistant and new love. Franco Nero and John Malkovich play mobsters, Dennis Hopper’s daughter plays a daughter Nick never knew he had.

And Oscar Isaac is Nick, a man of reason but with a past that gives him the edge a writer needs to traffic in this deadly company, and he is Dante, a Medieval writer caught up in the turmoil of his times, neglectful of his faithful wife if not his genius.

The film is messy, sprawling, with many settings and timelines, and is paying the price for the overreach with poor reviews.

But what can I tell you? It spoke to me.

I’ve interviewed the painter turned filmmaker Julian Schnabel a few times over the years. And I could not imagine a more hilariously arrogant egomaniac outside of a comic book. He is supervillain larger than life and convinced of his greatness, and that I can’t begin to tell you how delightful it is to engage or attempt to engage a creative person like that in conversation. Just getting on his wavelenght is invigorating.

So Netflix giving the director of “Basquiat,” “Before Night Falls,” “The Diving Bell and the Butterfly” and the even more indulgent “Miral” and “At Eternity’s Gate” the money and latitude to make this isn’t their dumbest move.

Isaac’s Nick is a blunt, verbose writer with delusions of his own hardboiled grandeur, ready to chew out any editor with “My books can’t be edited any more than a leopard can be given a manicure!” He’s quick to suggest his greatness and wealth will only be achieved “posthumously,” after he’s dead and gone.

The real Tosches died at 69, and has come to be lionized by the hip set, including Schnabel and Johnny Depp. The fictional Tosches plays hardball with editors and publishers. That hardscrabble Italian-American upbringing — and his love of Dante — is why mobster Joe Black (Malkovich) summons him.

Black relates a long, colorfully-detailed anecdote about this long lost manuscript discovered by a mob-installed functionary at the Vatican. Nick is sent to Italy to meet the aged priest and the mobster (Nero) who now possess the first hand-written copy of “The Divine Comedy,” among other pages.

Mob enforcer Lou (Butler), who insults Black’s prized Rembrandt self-portrait in the same words that Nick does, will come along and kill anybody who keeps the manuscript from them and basically anybody who learns about it.

Nick is trapped in a quest to “authenticate” what he and Lou procure, with assorted Italian archivists and librarians paying the price for his “consulting” with them.

He’s got a new assistant, Giuletta (Gadot), on board to help him get flights, move money and the like. In their past lives, he is Dante and she is Gemma, the great love who made Dante’s life make sense.

The two main timelines are 2001 and the early 14th century, with Nick learning the science of carbon-14 dating and the properties of ancient velum paper stocks as the clock ticks down towards 9-11, and Dante threatened and evicted for his “republican” politics by a power-drunk pope (Butler).

“I place the mark of Cain upon thee!”

Momoa plays a towering, white-suited (and hatted) mobster connected with the gangsters Lou has killed. Benjamin Clémentine is a mysterious Italian underworld figure who goes by “Mephistopheles.” And Scorsese is a Jewish sage who ponders matters temporal, racial and metaphysical with our poet.

“The Arab is the new Jew.”

And most everybody quotes poetry off the cuff, reaching for “a wisp of a memory that can’t be caught.”

“Tempus fugit,” “time flies” according to more than one character, then and in the fictive “now.” But does it?

Schnabel indulges in color cinematography in depicting the distant past, black and white footage to capture the ’70s and 2000s. A lot of lush, baroque villas, public and academic Italian and European spaces are thus drained of the distracting shades of generations of painters. Extreme closeups and swirling pans abound as we bounce through time and chase Nick on his quest and on the lam through Italy, Paris and Tunisia.

The violence is jolting, even when it’s expected. The novel-turned-screenplay’s indulgences stand out — an unnecessary bit of 1920s Sicilian mob history, Dante’s sea journey/test to grasp the infinite and Schnabel finding an excuse to throw Scorsese’s favorite band, The Rolling Stones, onto the soundtrack.

Netflix has indulged filmmakers like Scorsese, Cuaron and Fincher. Why not Schnabel?

Through all this messiness, Isaac is our grounding anchor, mastering the self-absorption of the artists, then and “now,” showing off his mastery of Italian, convincing as a guy just acquainted enough with this world to realize the stakes and attempt to scheme his way out of this fix.

Gadot doesn’t give us much to grab hold of, but it’s fun seeing Butler, Scorese (his later scenes are better than his early ones) and even Malkovich used in this way in these roles.

Even harder to follow scenes wash over you if you’re able to get yourself into that historic/poetic frame of mind. And it’s easy to see what all these talented people grasped in this story to make them want to help Schnabel tell it.

“You look at anything long enough, you see what’s wrong with it,” Nick muses about his love-then-“like” of Dante’s masterpiece. That won’t be the case with “In the Hand of Dante.” Its “issues” are often obvious.

But the result is unlike any movie you’ll see and listen to this summer, a grand overeach with indulgences that will make you grimace even as they give you access to the fertile creative mind of poets, painters, actors and a filmmaker who gets it even if he sometimes struggles to help us get it with him.

Rating: R, graphicviolence, sexual situations, profanity

Cast: Oscar Isaac, Gal Gadot, Gerard Butler, Jason Momoa, Sabrina Impacciatore, Martin Scorsese, Franco Nero, Benjamin Clémentine, John Malkovich and Al Pacino.

Credits: Directed by Julian Schnabel, scripted by Louise Kugelberg and Julian Schnabel, based on a novel by Nick Tosches. A Netflix release.

Running time: 2:30

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Movie Review: Bulimia’s a Drag in “Maddie’s Secret”

The first thing to know about “Maddie’s Secret” is that you have permission to laugh. Releasing it during Pride Month would tend to give one some doubt about that.

Writer-director-star John Early’s melodrama may “play it straight.” But this satiric farce is a direct parody of a “Disease of the Week” TV melodrama starring Meredith Baxter (“Kate’s Secret”) way back in 1986. The leading lady may be a gay man this time, but the illness has seldom been a laughing matter.

Comic actor and writer Early (of TV’s “Search Party” and “The Comeback”) dons drag and stars as a married chef and aspiring food influencer washing dishes and doing prep at a foodie streaming channel — GourMaybe — hoping for a break, hoping her “secret” doesn’t derail it.

Maddie endures the insults and fat-shaming of the channel’s British star, Emily (Claudia O’Dougherty) and their sexist producer-boss Zach (Conner O’Malley) because someday, she hopes to get her recipes and culinary stylings out there for the world to see.

“I’m tired of being such a good girl” and selfless employee, she breathlessly whines.

But meeting her as she’s jogging to work gives us our first clue of what “Maddie’s Secret” is. Her husband (Eric Rahill) and lesbian bestie at work Deena (Kate Berlant) may ogle and flatter her looks. But this foodie has “issues” with food.

The stress of being “discovered” when adoring hubbie Jake videos and edits her creating a dish at home — she goes viral — amps up anxiety over her secret “shame.” And the hot restaurant-set TV drama “The Boar” (“The Bear,” anyone?) needs a culintary consultant. This could be Maddie’s moment.

But lying to Jake and Deena, dealing with her bitter, fat-shaming mother (Kristen Johnson of “Mom” and “Third Rock from the Sun”) sends Maddie over the edge and into the hospital.

“She just couldn’t be happy for me!”

Early utterly commits to this role, mastering every exaggerated affectation of femininity that drag is famous for. Hair-tosses to winces of hurt at every slight and insult, most captured in overly-emotive TV movie close-ups, just heightens the melodrama and underscores the TV movie behavior this movie is mocking.

Early’s script digs for laughs in the fact that the phrase “healthy body” when “complimented” to a weight-sensitive woman is the most cutting insult of all. He trots through “group therapy” tropes — bitchiness and evasion rendered in daft and deft question-and-answer cuts as a baton is passed from patient to therapist to patient denoting who is allowed to “speak.”

“Maddie’s Secret” reminded me of assorted John Waters pre-and-post “Hairspray” parodies. But Camp King Waters rarely pulled his punches. The last comic to take a roundhouse swing at bulimia as a joke was George Carlin. And died 18 years ago this week.

Touchy subject matter aside, Early’s focus here is more on playing it “straight” and on accurate mimicry than cutting edge satire.

A man in drag vomiting as a woman suffering from bulimia may be funny in exaggerated form as a running, revolting gag. Once or twice? That plays as insensitive. And Lifetime, where “Disease of the Week” female filmed fiction migrated, is beyond parody at this point.

The pacing is “Disease of the Week” deliberate, for the most part. The third act hospital treatment/group therapy “types” send up is a grind and the finale is as perfunctory as any Lifetime Original Movie, only less amusing.

Johnson, Early, Berlant and “SNL” alumna Vanessa Bayer (as a too-perky “issues with food” patient) turn this into a thumb-wrestling match for this lady chef’s soul, worth the occasional grin and a guffaw or two, but not really delivering on the camp and cringy possibilities.

And as for subjects the out-actor Early has permission to mock, I’m not sure bulimia sufferers signed off on his drag farce on foodies and eating disorders. One person’s puking punchline is another’s “punching down,” and that isn’t as funny as he seems to think.

Rating: Unrated, sex, profanity, eating disorders

Cast: John Early, Kate Berlant, Claudia O’Dougherty, Eric Rahill, Conner O’Malley, Gordon Landenberger, Vanessa Bayer and Kristen Johnson

Credits:Scripted and directed by John Early. A Magnolia Pictures release.

Running time: 1:38

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Netflixable? Jo Lo & Co go Loooooow for Laughs — “Office Romance”

Brett Goldstein finally found something that audiences want to see him in beyond the World of Ted Lasso in a movie he co-wrote himself.

“Office Romance” may a strained, coarse and lowbrow rom-com that grasps for laughs via endless vulgarity. But a lot of people on Netflix are watching it, and as Jennifer Lopez long ago taught us, there’s no such thing as bad exposure.

Lopez co-stars in this flagrant violation of human resources policy, a kind of grinding/Grindr romp where she’s the boss of the airline her dad started and Goldstein is her new Brit lawyer who always needs a shave.

Jackie Cruz scares most of her Air Cruz subordinates, save for her right arm Sydney, played with vicious and vulgar bravado by Betty Gilpin. Jackie’s too busy for men and too glam to manage a sex life. She dresses to overkill in the classic J. Lo style.

But a competitor airline (run by Roger Bart) is suing her for poaching gates at a new terminal in Dallas. And that creep is paying private detectives to spy on Jackie’s private life to blackmail her into backing down.

When her over-the-top attack dog head of legal affairs (Bradley Whitford, going for the gusto) has a comical medical emergency, it’s up to new counsel Daniel Blanchflower (Goldstein) to take over.

The first AWFUL scene in this clumsy Ol Parker (“The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel”) comedy has our buttoned down Brit getting a comical erection when client and counsel first meet. Jackie’s scripted reaction to this special effects boner is just as “off” as the gag itself.

It’s kind of all downhill after that, as the attorney seems out of his depth but isn’t and the boss shares his attraction and contrives to find a way to see if they can act on it.

There’s nothing particularly realistic about anything here, and the whole power dynamics of sexual harassment — the entire reason for HR “no office romances” rules — is utterly ignored.

Instead, we get lame fish-out-of-limey-water gags like attorney Blanchwater explaining to HR (Tony Hale, of course) the many “British” meanings of the C-word, a bit Goldstein borrowed from George Carlin and adapted for Britain’s favorite expletive.

It’s nice seeing Lopez re-teamed with her “father” from her breakout film, “Selena,” Edward James Olmos. But aside from that…

Even a bit about Blanchwater’s “secret” sister (Jodie Whittaker), stuck in an American prison, crosses the line from “funny” to “let’s shock our way to laughs.”

Yes, some of the shock-jokes land. But “Office Romance” only finds its comfort zone in Lopez’s costume changes and constant reminders of how beautiful she still is. That’s in her contract.

Naturally there’s a beachside bikini scene, post coital (she’s putting her swimsuit back on), in which Jackie complains about all the places sand just got shoved into.

Yeah. It’s like that.

Rating: R, sex, some nudity and endless coarse profanity and innuendo

Cast: Jennifer Lopez, Brett Goldstein, Betty Gilpin, Bradley Whitford, Jodie Whittaker, Tony Hale and Edward James Olmos.

Credits: Directed by Ol Parker, scripted by Brett Goldstein and . A Netflix release.

Running time: 1:54

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Netflixable? Break Out Your Hankies for Zoey and Two Nicks in “Voicemails for Isabelle”

Musical montages abound, covering everything from first date to “find the right dessert nacho recipe” to “See Scenic San Franicsco” to seduction.

Meet Cute? Check. Big Romantic Gesture? Let’s have a couple, ucluding a sing-along. Wedding? Sure. Funeral? Of course.

“Voicemails for Isabelle” wanders all over the place, from tragedy to hilarity, personal loss to workplace dreams to workplace nightmares with a few Mr. and Ms. Wrongs along the way and a Big Secret that’s got to come out.

But “the course of true love never did run smooth.”

The script is a parade of motion picture romantic cliches, indentified as such because our writer-director wants us to know she’s borrowing from the best, “like Noah and Allie in ‘The Notebook.”

“This is like a sad remake of ‘You’ve Got Mail.'” “I’m being ghosted by a ‘Hitch’ wannabe.” Love, NOT Actually,” is what you end up with when you get into some “Notting Hill, ‘Bridget Jones’ sh–.”

But say this for writer-director Leah McKendrick’s Netflix feature. She landed Zoey Deutch as her spunky leading lady — a heroine who keeps her heart on her sleeve and her mouth poised for the next profane put down. McKendrick signed Nick Offerman to play a pretentious, bullying, fake French-accented chef/

And she’s made the most emotionally available rom-com to come along since the golden age of Meg and Julia, a sentimental, sarcastic and sassy stroll through mourning and misery on its way to joy.

Deutch, of “The Outfit,” “Set it Up” and “Before I Fall,” plays Jill, a young woman who’s spent her life speaking her mind, going for what she wants and sticking up for her sickly sister Izzy/Isabella, and that’s turned her into a no-nonsense adult, at least when it comes to dating.

At work, she’s a “prep cook” for a “Top Chef” loser (Offerman) who goes by Chef Bastien and saves his fake accent for the paying customers. The staff? He abuses one and all, especially the women.

Jill endures the insults at work and takes her share of shots at “D-tox,” as in giving up guys and sex because she can do without the D thanks to the dating pool of pretty dolts and narcissists she swims in. Jill manages this San Francisco life because she’s got “the love of my life” to confide in back home in Austin.

And then Isabelle (Ciara Bravo) dies. Her old voice mails aren’t enough to buck her big sister up. Jill makes voice mails confessions to Izzy about her doubts, her stumbles and her fading dreams.

But Izzy’s phone number has been re-assigned. A sketchy, manipulative real-estate agent and would-be “player” Wes (“Jurassic World” and “Everything, Everything” alumnus Nick Robinson) has it.

Wes listens to the voice mails in between scheming how to hang on to this or that arm candy and wondering which laws he can break to get the edge on his commercial real estate competition. The heartfelt messages Jill leaves for Izzy leave him touched. He decides to try and meet Jill. Maybe he’ll change his ways if he does.

The meandering nature of the narrative makes this movie saunter when it could sprint. Robinson’s character is clumsily sketched in, even if he’s supposed to be pretty enough to not let that matter too much. But McKendrick, who plays half of the engaged couple that are Wes’s best friends and his consience, sets up foreshadowing and trips up expectations with it.

We’re treated to an epic takedown of a British “Proactive Dating” podcast (“Douchecaster”) played by Toby Sandeman, Mr. “Hugh Can’t” for those keeping score at home, a long-delayed big confrontation at work and a just-as-long-delayed “When is going to tell her he’s listened to her voice mails to her dead sister?”

Offerman abuses amusingly, Deutch dishes out the melodramatics — even the tweenage version of Jill (Alice Comer) scores Deutch-laughs in her fiery impersonation. Lukas Gage stands out as a preeming pencil-thin-mustached fellow prep cook/baker wannabe and the music rights to scores of songs were secured to make sure this all goes down like lemonade on a hot summer day.

It may borrow from a lot of other movies (“Jerry MaGuire” and the Tom Hanks/Meg Ryan hits) and dawdle a tad as it revisits a formula that Hollywood has been loathe to revisit.

But McKendrick handles this with skill, reassuring us at many a turn that we’re in good hands. And in every scene Deutch reassures McKendrick that in signing Netflix’s Meg Ryan, she’s cast this perfectly.

Rating: TV-14, sex, lots of profanity

Cast: Zoey Deutch, Nick Robinson, Ciara Bravo, Lukas Gage, Toby Sandeman, Tanis Dolam, Gil Bellows, Leah McKendrick and Nick Offerman.

Credits: Scripted and directed by Leah McKendrick. A Sony Pictures/Netflix release.

Running time: 153

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BOX OFFICE: “Toy Story 5” has Epic Opening, “Disclosure Day” falls off a Lot

Theaters filled Thursday afternoon and evening with “Toy Story 5” screenings, and that added up to a whopping $17.5 million “previews” take, which set the table for an epic Juneteenth Friday of over $70 million.

And that, The Numbers.com reports, puts Disney’s cash cow kiddie franchise in the black for a $160 million opening weekend in the U.S. market.

That’s the second highest opening weekend ever for an animated blockbuster, trailing only the pre-Trumpflation “Incredibles 2” record of $182 million back in 2018.

Family filmgoers have been starved for a kids-out-of-school film, and the holdover “Super Marios Galaxy” wasn’t bringing anybody back twice and “Mandalorian & Grogu” is fading and losing screens.

I think this is the weakest and most laugh-starved “Toy Story,” but it has its moments and finishes with more comic oomph than its first 90 minutes provide. Critics overall trend towards overly-forgiving of Pixar product in general and this franchise in particular. So we’ll see if Friday was but a taste of what’s to come or word of mouth suppresses the rest of the weekend.

Steven Spielberg’s last shot at “Aliens are coming” as subject matter is taking a STEEP plunge on its second weekend. “Disclosure Day” opened in the $40s but will clear $17 on its second weekend, a 61% drop. That’s average, and not a glowing endorsement that a Spielberg might expect. Universal had best hope that projection holds. Nobody’s talking about it.

Spielberg is probably kicking himself that he didn’t throw in a cute alien rock crab for luck. Heaven knows THAT paid off.

“Obsession” is proving to be the date movie with legs, the horror movie that won’t fade away, as it comes in third with another $14.2 million take. It cleared the $200 million mark Thursday.

“Backrooms” is also rewarding studios financing smart horror, even if its falling off much faster than “Obsession,” with a $7.3 million tally on its third weekend. That’s good enough for fourth, and with $175 million in the bank, that’s another impressive cost-profit ratio for all of Hollywood to learn from and envy.

The weak tea “Scary Movie” reboot is still making enough money to put it over $100 million by midweek, with a $6.7 million take this weekend.

“Masters of the Universe” managed $5.6. ($60 million in the bank).

The latest “Star Wars: The Mandalorian & Grogu” added $3.9 ($171 million all in).

The new horror title “Leviticus” pulled in $2.47. million opening.

Hugh Jackman’s turn as Robin of Loxley, “The Death of Robin Hood,” will clear $2.62 million and should also squeeze into the bottom half of the second five — ninth.. That’s about all this downbeat, bloody “Robin Hood Nobody Asked For” merits.

“Michael” may enjoy one last weekend in the top ten ($2.185) to come in tenth, and that kept the limited release “Girls Like Girls” at bay.

The three new titles push “Breadwinner,” “Devil Wears Prada 2” and “Sheep Detectives” permanently out of the top ten.

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Movie Review: “Land of Wolves,” Thriller of Cliches

Lordy, not another thriller about men forced to fight to the death for the amusement of the masked ultra-rich, in this case labeled “Illuminati.”

That wasn’t a novel notion when “Star Trek” served it up on TV back in the mid-’60s.

“Land of Wolves” begins as a clumsy, slow-footed commando combat thriller, then staggers to a halt before ever-so-sluggishly crawling towards a “Heart of Darkness” finale, the analogy of a military man who’s gone rogue, much to the shock of those sent to retrieve him.

Just in case those plot points pique your interest, let me disabuse you of any notion that “This is for ME.” The writer-director of “Whispers of the Witching Hour” (Tommy Jackson) grinds his gears, start to finish, in this cliched claptrap about commandos, narco-terrorists and the “elite” who pull the strings and run the world.

Long before he tips his hat towards Joseph Conrad, we know he has no business attempting that.

James William Clark pays Marcus, an Afghan War vet now punching out his demons in the ring but summoned back into service by Aussie accented Capt. Briggs (Matthew Gray) to rescue a long-held-captive member of their former team “t’go say his ass.”

Four commandos head into the desert near Durango, Mexico to storm a derelict “facility” where “tangos” (terrorists) hold and torture law enforcement and military folk whom they capture.

Anderson (Melanie Browning) will be their eyes-and-ears (satellite surveillance and comms) directing them into the towering edifice in the desert. This surgical strike will entail assassinating armed guards, uncovering evidence of torture and the worst simulated “night vision goggles” footage ever put on film.

But by cracky, they’re going to free Knox or die trying in the best “leave no man behind” tradition.

Things go wrong, and the growling narco-leader known as Butcher (Felix Alexander) is soon pitting them against his best thugs in streaming video fights for the paying Illuminati.

Wait’ll this missing Knox (Russell Sheahy) turns up. Things will turn go even more off the rails, then.

There’s nothing wrong with a reach-exceeds-your-grasp effort to make something smarter than a C-movie shoot-em-up out of these settings, this cast in those guises. But mastering the basics of compelling cinema, editing the action beats into something pulse-pounding, making clear the “stakes” of it all and that what we’re watching makes a little sense comes first.

Then and only then should you tackle the source Conrad novella that inspired Coppola’s “Apocalypse Now.”

Talking villains, bloody brawls that beggar belief and hilariously costumed “Illuminati” are but petty gripes in a thriller that has nothing to cling to as real or compelling entertainment. There’s no pace, characters aren’t so much archetypes as generic “types,” and the performances fail to overcome those limitations and engage the viewer in the narrative of those suffering through it.

Rating: R, graphic violence

Cast: James William Clark, Matthew Gray, Melanie Browning, Felix Alexander amd Russell Shealy.

Credits: Scripted and directed by Tommy Jackson. A Saban Films release.

Running time: 1:32

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Movie Review: “Toy Story 5” is all Message, Little Fun

My least favorite “Toy Story” movie takes a solid hour to deliver its first laugh and some 70 minutes to truly get underway.

“Toy Story 5” tells a tale from three different points of view, with three storylines, and hammers its message about “tech” gadgets getting in the way of childhood “play,” development, socialization and creativity with a jackhammer.

But listening to the giggles of children in the viewing audience for the lame “wedding” finale, preceded by a toy “wedding” prologue, you remember “This isn’t for you — it’s for kids.” And if they’re laughing at toilet training humor — “You said DUTY, hehheheheh” and “He will WIPE your a…” it’s working. After a fashion.

But “Toy Story 5” has so much re-casting of voice actors — it’s been thirty years since the first film came out, and Jim Varney, Don Rickles and Estella Harris have passed away, Wallace Shawn clung to Woody Allen past his “canceled” date — that surely it must have occurred to the accountants at Disney/Pixar that they’ve been to this well a few too many times.

Having the toys face their own mortality — an incinerrator at a garbage dump (“Toy Story 3” — was always going to be impossible to top.

But this Andrew Stanton/McKenna Harris project does its best to wrestle with the ideas that kids are “growing up too fast” thanks to “tech” and social media, and that tactile toys force development of imagination in ways that passive “screens” do not, into a kids’ cartoon.

Their narrative follows three threads, at least one of which feels like a (weak) stand-alone “Toy Story” movie or spinoff all its own.

The surviving older toys now entrusted to little Bonnie’s (Scarlett Spears does the voice) care are led by rootin’, tootin’ ’50s cowgirl/sheriff Jessie (Joan Cusack), with spaceman toy Buzz Lightyear (Tim Allen) as her “deputy” and second in command.

Buzz is developing feelings for Jessie, which he may get her off her high horse long enough to consider. Because Jessie is fretting that Bonnie isn’t “playing” enough to be socialized. And her parents are all-too-quick to turn to a kids’ social media toy and the platform/gadget LilyPad (voiced by Greta Lee) to find her a peer group to fix her social anxiety disorder.

Former Sheriff Woody (Tom Hanks) is off with other cast-aways and his true-love Bo-Peep (Annie Potts), but still available for consulations.

And a cargo container of “Hi-Tech” Buzz Lightyear toys has washed overboard, activated itself, and taken on the goal of returning to “Star Command” — a brigade of Buzzes marching into the story for meeting in the third act.

Bonnie is getting bullied by her more social-media savvy contemporaries. Kids aren’t playing and whole classes of toys are being discarded, including the potty-training “screen” gadget Smarty Pants (Conan O’Brien), the mapping toy Atlas (Craig Robinson) and play-digital camera Snappy (Shelby Rabarra), who haven’t yet figured out their role as “part of the problem.”

How can they all come to an agreement on what it will take to win Bonnie some playmates without her surrendering to social media imprisonment in the process?

“I dunno, Jessie,” is Woody’s counsel. “Toys are for play. Tech is for…everything!”

A real horse, a pet pig, “automatic update/upgrades” and the like play into the plot, which any tech-savvy child will pick up on.

And the role of toys in childhood development is played around with, a conclusion is reached and then utterly wimped-out on, because God knows Disney online couldn’t withstand the criticism.

The childhood “play” sequences, imagining toy adventures, weddings, etc., are animated in sketchier form. And the night-and-day difference in character textures, sheens, etc., from the first “Toy Story” to this latest one is striking in a “filmed realism” sense.

But this is inferior product, an idea that’s been worn-out with characters not far removed from movie-turned-daily-kids-TV quality in terms of depth, voice-acting, story and the like.

Pixar has been rightly criticized for struggling with finding a new Big Idea. Watch the coming attractions before “Toy Story 5” and you’ll see how Disney, Universal and everybody else is facing the same story/script/character obstacles.

It’s great that they moved the “toy” story towards a plucky female character helping a little girl grow up with “Toy Story 5.” There are a couple of hard tugs at the heartstrings in the third act to give that something of a payoff. But it’s a crying shame they didn’t have more to say than that in the fifth film in the franchise that made their reputation, at least enough to justify sullying the brand in the process.

Rating: PG, toilet training humor

Cast: The voices of Joan Cusack, Tim Allen, Tom Hanks, Conan O’Brien, Greta Lee, Ernie Hudson, Scarlett Spears, Craig Robinson, Tony Hale and John Ratzenberger.

Credits: Scripted and directed by McKenna Harris and Andrew Stanton. A Pixar/Disney release.

Running time: 1:42

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