Netflixable? June Squibb is “Eleanor the Great”

Timing, especially in comedy, is everything. But Sony Pictures Classics had no way of knowing that its Oscar-campaigned Jewish Holocaust dramedy “Eleanor the Great” would come out in the middle of worldwide outrage at an ongoing Israeli genocide in Gaza.

Woody Allen darling Scarlett Johansson’s directing debut and perhaps June Squibb’s best shot at major awards arrived at a moment when the public at large wasn’t in the mood for yet another “Never again” Holocaust story, this one about a woman who claimed to be a “survivor,” and wasn’t.

It’s well-acted all-around. And some would be more forgiving of its parade of third-act stumbles, blunders and “It’ll all work out in the end” contrivances. Because Holocaust stories in general and tales of grief and remembrances have historically earned the benefit of the doubt.

But any sober consideration of this movie about a survivor’s best friend keeping her memories if not her memory alive via lies has to grapple with the blunt truth that it doesn’t really work.

We meet Eleanor (Squibb) and Polish immigrant Bessie (Rita Zohar) as they wind down the last good years of their lives in Florida. They’ve been friends since the ’50s and in New York — widowed and in Florida for over a decade.

As roommates, the amusingly abrasive Eleanor knows Bessie’s story and the reasons for her nightmares. Their past together was happy, and there’s a shared Bronx-hardened sarcastic intolerance for any Florida store clerk who doesn’t keep the kosher pickles supply stocked in their market.

Where’s your sense of humor, ladies?

“Hitler took my smile,” Bessie spits. Eleanor seconds this, only to be reproved by a mutual friend who knows she was no closer to the Holocaust than Coney Island.

Bessie dies. Eleanor moves back to New York, in with her divorced daughter (Jessica Hecht of “Friends”) and the “one good Jew in the family,” her doting college student grandson Max (Will Price).

Stressed working daughter Lisa is anxious to find Mom a little assisted living. But in the meantime, she tries to keep Eleanor connected with their community by signing her up for a music ensemble at their Jewish Community Center. And that’s where it all goes wrong.

Eleanor ducks into the wrong group meeting, and when Holocaust survivors talk about their grief and their experiences in their support group, Eleanor chimes in by repeating Bessie’s experiences as her own. She’s “fitting in” by stealing a Holocaust survivor’s trauma.

The film brushes by any guilt she feels about this and stumbles somewhat as Eleanor’s lies take on more consequence when an NYU journalism student (Erin Kellyman, terrific) picks up the story and that student’s TV anchor dad (Chiwetel Ejiofor) raises the stakes even further when he sees “an angle.”

I kept waiting for Eleanor’s lack of a concentration camp tattoo or, you know, basic research by the “reporters” or old acquaintances (she’s 94, there aren’t any of those) trip her up.

Instead, Tory Kamen’s script takes us into Eleanor’s pursuit of a late life bat mitzvah, with a rabbi (Stephen Singer) assigning her the ethically problematic story of Jacob and Esau as her Torah passage to memorize and recite in Hebrew.

That’s a tad on the nose, as this Biblical tale of a brother’s deceit allowing him to steal a sibling’s birthright is an origin story that excuses, rationalizes and brushes over a lot — rather like “Eleanor the Great.”

Squibb is fine and makes the most of another late career showcase, no matter where the ungainly plot takes her. Hecht is called on to play the struggling daughter who acts most undaughterly — with cause — when the you-know-what hits the fan.

Kellyman, playing a student eager to please a journalist dad but mourning her own Jewish’s mother’s death, is subtle and moving. Ejiofor should have called a journalist friend or two about what could have been done with the nonsense Kamen scripted for the journalistic finale.

But Zohar is the heart of the piece, and anybody who’s ever met a Holocaust survivor will recognize the haunted life behind her performance. Others are good, she is wonderful.

I’ve interviewed Holocaust survivors over the years, and the worst thing about such live (public) radio chats is fighting tears because you know how unprofessional that might appear. At least in print, you have the distance provided by the keyboard.

But if the Holocaust was, as some have observed, a moment that was “The End of History,” then we may be hitting the end of the road of the Holocaust drama and documentary epoch. The scores of documentaries about survivors that I’ve reviewed have lately played as repetitivie, stale and downright hypocritical.

A South African survivor’s family tries to trauma-coat the prosperous life she lived after marrying a South African and Ms. “Never Again” profited from decades and decades of apartheid, which she did not protest. And so on.

I think of her every time I see fresh accounts of what’s happening in Gaza and now Lebanon.

“Stolen valor” stories crossed my path in my Florida journalism years, where a documentary about The Tuskegee Airmen, filming gatherings of those survivors, revealed that their ranks were contaminated by poseurs who pretended to have served with those heroic World War II pilots and did not.

People exaggerate their connection to epic moments in history all the time, not just those running for office. There’s little that’s cute or “revealing the depth of grief” in a movie that tries its damnedest to brush by big lies, especially one that uses the story of Jacob and Esau to excuse it.

Whatever reactions Johansson, Squibb and Sony Pictures Classics were going for, pissed-off must have hit them by surprise. And it shouldn’t have.

Rating: PG-13, for “thematic material” (Holocaust descriptions), sexual references, profanity

Cast: June Squibb, Erin Kellyman, Jessica Hecht, Rita Zohar, Will Price and Chiwetel Ejiofor

Credits: Directed by Scarlett Johansson, scripted by Tory Kamen. A Sony Pictures Classics release on Netflix.

Running time: 1:38

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Movie Review: “Deported” should have been Stopped at the Border

There’s something almost criminal about Amazon acquiring the 2020 immigration “comedy” “Deported,” and passing it off as a “new” “2026” release on their streaming service.

There hasn’t been a good time to unleash a raunchy, tone deaf and whitewashed farce about immigration in the past decade. But putting this Trump I era disaster in front of eyeballs in the middle of the murderously inhumane Trump II regime is damned near criminal.

It’s a familiar-faces/little-known-names romp buried under f-bombs, coarse sex jokes and a cascade of cameos. It’s tooth-grindingly bad, so much so that even Sandler hanger-on Nick Swardson seems embarassed in his scenes in it.

Robert Davi as a customs agent? He seems disappointed the guy isn’t more sadistic.

Director and co-writer Tyler Spindel (“The Wrong Missy”) chickened-out straight away by making this about a Canadian blonde (Megan Park) our “illegal” — “Deported” and banned for messing up some paperwork.

So rather than something edgy, like Cheech and Chong’s decades old “Born in East L.A.,” he makes an unromantic and almost wholly unfunny “Green Card,” about blonde Harper’s dizzy-but-not-nearly-dizzy-enough beau Ross (Whitmer Thomas) refusing to commit to marrying her so that she can finish chef school and, you know, take a chef’s job from an “American” so that she can realize her dreams.

Threatened by his girlfriend’s hunkier and more eager to help friend (Greg Sulkin), Ross’s plan involves marrying her off to this slovenly lout (Mickey Gooch, Jr.) who crashed the Halloween party where Ross and Harper first met.

The odd early tasteless joke has promise — one costumed partygoer shows up nude and years past her last sit-up.

“I’m LENA DUNHAM! I’m COMFORTABLE with my body?”

The “GET it?” is implied in this and most every other “joke” rolled out from here on out.

Ross’s big tech idea is a “Dick Face” app he’s pushing, which adds a penis cap to any photo you post in it.

His sort-of-separated-under-the-same-roof parents (Brenda Strong, Kurt Fuller) trot out testiness about “getting married too young” and intolerance of this would-be-chef who was caught re-entering the country from an Indian cooking school’s seminar.

“She got a dot?”

That much of the movie’s messaging seems on the mark, the idea that America is a nation of descendents of immigrants but roiling with casual, off-the-cuff bigots.

As “there is no such thing as a fake marriage in a REAL relationship,” as on-the-make lesbian and Ross pal Tammy (Fortune Feimster) declares, this is where Doug Lipinski (Gooch) fits in.

He may be a walking, belching, unbathed butt-crack. He may not know how to pronounce his own name (first or last). He may be “definitely on the spectrum.” But he’s willing to sneak into Canada for a quickie fake wedding just to get Harper back across the border.

Conchata Ferrell (“Two and a Half Men”) is his brassy, bare-knuckled, not-quite-disapproving mom. Swardson plays his jealous, over-bearing brother.

Jokes about women as “fire breathing whore dragons,” life onboard Doug’s barely-floating converted-tug houseboat’s resident lava-lamp-humping rat, “butt chugging” and the like don’t move any thinking or sentient person’s needle.

Clint Howard, Missi Pyle, Steven Bauer and others trot by in unfunny cameos.

And the attempted story “arc,” where we glimpse Doug’s unhappy humanity and Ross grows a pair while Harper considers her options but not really, are all clumsily handled

“Cringe comedy” is one thing, and raunchy fare like this still plays to sensory-deprived stoners.

But this is just bad, and Bezos & Co. know it. Which is why they tried to pass it off as “new.”

Rating:

Cast: Whitmer Thomas, Megan Park, Mickey Gooch, Jr.,Fortune Feimster, Kurt Fuller, Brenda Strong, Steven Bauer, Missi Pyle, Clint Howard, Nick Swardson, Conchata Ferrell and Robert Davi.

Credits: Directed by Tyler Spindel, scripted by Tyler Spindel and Dean Ward. A Quiver release on Amazon Prime.

Running time: 1:31

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Movie Review: Tipsy Italians talk a lad into “The Last One for the Road”

“The Last One for the Road” is a seemingly aimless drunken drive through northern Italy, a picaresque misadventure in a minor key about a Neopolitan kid, fresh out of college, being taught “the meaning of life.”

Francesco Sossai’s curious gambole of a comedy makes a joke out of that. A couple of people who may have the answer start to reveal “the secret” — but a helicopter takes off, drowning out one, and a train door closes, silently sealing off another.

But this wistful, wandering wonder of a movie — drifting into and out of narrative focus, veering towards and then away from any sense of purpose — has a sensuality and immediacy that is vaguely universal while distinctly and indolently Italian.

It’s ethos? Don’t let anyone you care about get away with telling you “some other time.”

“There is no ‘some other time.'”

Live for the moment. Go for the gusto. But first, “one last drink,” one last round “for the road.” Just don’t look for “Le città di pianura” to win any endorsement from Mothers Against Drunk Driving.

A prologue takes us to an old man’s last day on the job. Two corporate toughs take him in arm and bring him to a spot where, by pre-arranged plan, a helicopter lands. The big boss steps out, calls Primo Sossai (Gianni Da Re) by name, and congratulates him for his lifetime of service.

“Everything,” he says (in Italian with English subtitles). You have done everything for us.”

What’s that worth? A Rolex and a thank-you from a guy pretending to know you and your wife’s name.

For the first time, we hear word of an “urban legend” about this town. For the first time, a character promises to reveal “the secret of life” and is drowned out by a helicopter. And for the first time, our focus shifts to two tipsy louts sleeping it off in a Jaguar that’s seen better days.

Dori (Simone Bergamasco) and Carlobianchi (Sergio Romano) have an appointment to pick somebody — an old friend — up at the airport. “Which” Venice airport is the question. And they’re not finding answers to that in the parade of bars, live-music pubs and roadside eateries where they pursue “one last drink.”

“I forgot what it was I wanted to tell you.”

But stumbling into college kids singing and drinking through a graduation all-night bender, they spy young architect-to-be Giulio (Filippi Scotti) pining for fair Giulia Antonia (Giulia Bertasi), longing to tear her free from their class revels for just a moment. After all, he’s got to go home and be ready for his design presentation/job interview in the A.M.

“Some other time,” she says. They know what that means, even if Giulio doesn’t.

They take him under their wing, and the film becomes his long night and a couple of days of taking stock. There are endless waylays, detours and stops in assorted bars and pubs, a faux American country music roadhouse among them.

“And I thought Germany was ‘Americanized,'” a tipsy German tourist jokes. He’s come here to “see Italy before the Italians ruin it.”

“I think you’re too late,” Carlobianchi — “Charli” to his mates — grouses.

Dori and Charli drag Giulio through past haunts in search of drinks, “snails, cooked perfectly,” and meaning. Cops are evaded, a “ghost highway” in the making isn’t on any map, “Google” included, Italian designer sunglasses and “the theory of marginal utility” are discussed. An architecturally striking tomb is visited.

And these two sixty-ish geezers model their misspent lives for Giulio to see and sample through the bars, the booze, the music and all the life lessons one can absorb in a short time, once you’ve missed any chance of an appointment that would have set your future in stone.

I kept grasping for movie analogies for this film from the director of “Other Cannibals.” There’s a hint of Jim Jarmusch’s night crawl “Night on Earth,” a taste of such “binge” pictures as “California Split,” “Mississippi Grind” and “The Days of Wine and Roses,” and whiff of the Mark Rydell/Steve McQueen Faulkner adaptation “The Reivers” and other more overt “coming of age” tales.

For some reason I can’t articulate, Neil Young’s song “Harvest Moon” kept drifting into my mind — not during the police pursuit or the bachelorette party they crash, but whenever all involved are sleeping it off. That’s kind of the sentimental, melancholy vibe here.

Sossai hasn’t made a movie that sentimentalizes alcoholism, but he has managed to suggest the mistakes, busted dreams, dashed hopes and futility of getting ahead or getting by in a barely-functioning democracy and permanently-rigged “market economy” that makes the bottle such an appealing escape.

There is no “some other time.” And there are no “appointments” or obligations when you can’t remember them the morning after days and nights of living and God-forbid driving in the alcohol-soaked moment.

Rating: unrated, alcohol abuse, smoking, sexual sitautions, nudity, profanity

Cast: Filippi Scotti, Pierpaolo Capovilla,
Giulia Bertasi,
Roberto Citran and Andrea Pennacchi

Credits: Directed by Francesco Sossai, scripted by Adriano Candiago and Francesco Sossai. A Music Box release.

Running time: 1:40

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Netflixable? Coogan and Bird Charm their Way through a Class on Fascism — “The Penguin Lessons”

No English speaking actor in film is better at making caddish and insufferably self-absorbed charming than Steve Coogan. That proves to be a saving grace of “The Penguin Lessons,” a sweet saunter through a true story of a rescued bird and a “lost” foreigner trying to drift through another country’s fascism as if it doesn’t affect him.

Director Peter Cattaneo, best-known for “The Full Monty,” turns out to have just the right touch in this winning, featherweight memoir that barely hides the jagged edge underneath the feathers. His movie is sad and warm, with a glimmer of hope peeking through the resignation that ordinary people must wear when intolerant, armed thugs govern their daily lives through terror.

Because whatever’s cuddly about rescuing a penguin from an oil slick, this is a story set in Argentina’s junta years, when the world learned the word “desaparecidos,” the name for people The Government made disappear — many of them permanently.

Tom Michell is a British born English teacher who has been “working my way down” the Americas, drifting from private school job to private school job. His newest, Saint Georges, is in Buenos Aires, an elite boarding school where the children of the rich and powerful study in prep for university and taking their place in the elite their parents represent.

It’s 1976, and martial music — including, ironically, Sousa’s “Liberty Bell March,” the theme from “Monty Python’s Flying Circus” — on the radio means the fascist military has taken over, hellbent on ridding the country of “communists” and other dissenters — anyone who might dare criticize their murderous ways or an unjust status quo.

Most all of the locals are resigned to this reality, but not everyone. Tom’s officious new headmaster (Jonathan Pryce) stresses that “politics” are to be avoided, in and out of the classroom. Tom barely notes the armed soldiers everywhere. He barely engages with anything, including his class of spoiled, uniformed boys, many of them bullies, most of them quick to pick on the one seemingly sensitive lad (David Herrero) in their ranks.

Tom’s Swedish colleague (Björn Gustafsson) has taken drinking and prattling on about his divorce as coping mechanisms. Tom just drifts through his days, seeking solace in a long weekend off (after the coup happens) just across the Rio de la Plata, in Uruguay.

But the solace of a night club pick-up (Micaela Breque) is interrupted when they come across an oil slick on the beach, which is covered in dead birds. Tom gallantly is goaded into “rescuing” one survivor. His new female friend then leaves him in the lurch, with one appreciative Magellenic penguin following him everywhere.

“He’s not my penguiin,” he tells all who ask. “I don’t like penguins.”

And yet he takes on the responsibility, the testy questioning from border control agents, who refuse to take the bird off his hands, the threats he ends up making to the zoo, which doesn’t fall all over itself to assume custody.

Tom keeps his penguin in a rucksack when he takes it out, and leaves it to itself in his school flat with balcony during the day. Eventually, his efforts to feed and care for it put him in touch with “the other” Argentina — kind and sympathetic people trapped in an impossible situation.

The man who goes through the motions in class and naps through rugby practice — he’s the coach even though “I actively dislike rugby” — sees his new responsibility, his moral calling to break rules and unjust laws, and to give object lessons in fascism to his fascist offspring students.

The penguin is just a prop to get their attention.

And when one of the school’s custodians (Alfonsina Carrocio) is grabbed off the street for her “leftist” sympathies, his shame and the despair of the maid who raised her (Vivian El Jaber) pushes him even further.

Tom’s first hint of spine? Facing down a red-faced spitting fury of a soldier by showing him that all he has in his shoulder bag is a bird.

“El pingüino no es comunista,” he says. “The penguin is not a communist.”

The film’s topicality is inescapable for anyone living in the U.S., Britain, Germany, Israel or Hungary at this moment. “Pacifism” may apply, but passivity won’t cut it. “We are many and they are few” isn’t just a Percy Bysshe Shelley lesson for school boys, to be taught after they’ve mastered the metaphor of Masefield’s “Sea Fever.”

Coogan’s aloof approach to the role won’t be to every taste. Naturally, there’s an “explanation” for Tom’s state (fictional, and not in the real Tom Michell’s memoir). But the pair-bonded penguin metaphor hits home and the call to resolution in the face of despair and hopelessness is unmissable.

Well, plenty of critics missed it, or just discounted it, to be honest.

Coogan, Cattaneo and screenwriter Jeff Pope have adapted a touching tale that is the Argentine penguin embodiment of “Keep Calm and Carry On,” for those who’re willing to see it.

Magellenic penguin who comes to be named Juan Salvador

Rating: PG-13, violence, profanity, “suggestive material”

Cast: Steve Coogan, Vivian El Jaber, Alfonsina Carrocio and David Herrero and Jonathan Pryce.

Credits: Directed by Peter Cattaneo, scripted by Jeff Pope, based on the memoir by Tom Michell. A Sony Picture Classics release on Netflix.

Running time: 1:50

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Netflixable? Bacon and Sedgwick remind us to do “The Best You Can”

Any team-up of one of the cinema’s most enduring off-camera couples, Kyra Sedgwick and Kevin Bacon, should be cherished. They’re both so very good and “natural” doesn’t begin to describe their onscreen chemistry together. They’re as close as Hollywood gets to a Lunt & Fontanne, these days.

And if their latest film outing as a couple, “The Best You Can,” isn’t all it might have been, they’re still grand in it.

It’s a lurching, cloying and uneven romance that folds in a lot of drama — some of it organic, much of it contrived — as it tosses in the odd tone-deaf scene, moment or performance.

Written and directed by sitcom vet Michael J. Weithorn (“The King of Queens”), it bears the trademark of sitcom writer/creators adapting to the big screen. A TV season’s clutter of characters and situations and story arcs are crammed into a 100 minute film.

Sedgwick plays Cynthia, a New York urologist finally facing the end game of marrying an older spouse. Warren Rand (Judd Hirsch) was a legal tyro in his day, a government attorney who held Nixon and his criminal crew accountable for Watergate. Now, he’s forgetting things, having “episodes. He’ll gregariously go to the wrong table in a restaurant and continue an earlier conversation or anecdote — sometimes from MUCH earlier — with strangers.

“He’s older than me,” 60something Cynthia keeps telling folks. “Older than most people.”

The 25 or so year age difference is taking its toll and rattling her.

Bacon plays Stan, an ex-cop and divorced dad coping with his first blast of prostate issues. His constant need for pee breaks makes his night patrolman for a home security company job an ordeal. And that’s not going to make his casual sex and sexting affair with a cashier (Olivia Luccardi) with a “hot old guy thing” any easier.

Cynthia meets Stan when somebody tries to break into the Rands’ townhouse. The way she chatters away tells us she’s a bit rattled, and maybe grateful to have a conversation with somebody who can stay on topic. She babbles on even after Stan begs to use their bathroom.

Yes, the urologist asks him to “call my office.” Yes, there’s an exam. But an informal friendship blooms from this unlikely meet up. They have the same birthday, and now each has a contemporary to talk to.

The text chats are intimate without intimacy. They share jokes about “fragile” Gen Z, as he has a troubled but talented daughter (Brittany O’Grady). She shares her efforts to get her husband to write a book about his colorful life while he still can, hiring a grad student researcher, with Warren able to remember a lot even as he forgets they’re “working” and wanders off.

It’s all very sweet and innocent. How long can that last?

Weithorn shoehorns in lines, dialogue exchanges, characters and situations you usually see in broadly played sitcoms — a lurch or two into sex talk, a two couples dinner conversation in a restaurant that turns to “My first time” — a sitcommy/joky “consulation” with an old colleague (Ray Romano) who is so tactless in discussing her husband’s dementia that you’d swear he’s a surgeon and not a neurologist.

But there are still lovely moments — Cynthia hiring a nurse (Meer Rohit Kumhbani) whose compassion extends to letting Warren tell her his life story, for posterity, hot-tempered Stan finally “hearing” his nervous, afraid of performing daughter and doing something more than play his ukulele in support.

The picture is — like life itself once you’ve gotten that “Welcome” letter from the AARP — a mixed bag. The supporting characters are less fleshed-out, so much so that when Stan’s daughter shows us her many “triggers,” we scratch our head.

And when Luccardi’s gum-snapping 20something throws her “hot old guy” thing out there, it plays like it sounds — like an older screenwriter’s male wish fulfillment fantasy.

But Bacon plays a little and sings a little, Sedgwick handles jokes and pathos and in the scenes that count and turns “professional” in a heartbeat. And each gets across a shared empathy and humanity that bridges any gap in class and life experience.

They’re the reasons to watch “The Best You Can.” The writer director? Well, let’s just hope this wasn’t his “best.”

Rating: R, sexual situations, some drug use, profanity

Cast: Kyra Sedgwick, Kevin Bacon, Brittany O’Grady, Olivia Luccardi, Meera Rohit Kumbhani, Ray Romano and Judd Hirsch

Credits: Directed by Michael J. Weithorn. A Sony Pictures release on Netflix.

Running time: 1:43

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Movie Review: Wahlberg and Hauser go “Balls Up” in Brazil

The latest Peter Farrelly of The Farrelly Bros. comedy is a tale of condoms, testicular protection, the South American cocaine trade, the World Cup and two doofuses who find one “fine mess” after another to get themselves into.

“Balls Up” is a buddy picture that leans hard into vulgar laughs and finds even them hard to come by. Shockingly.

I was impressed by Mark Wahlberg‘s commitment and energy level in a movie where over-acting is demanded by the lumbering, nearly lifeless script. Take away the usual Farrelly shocks — penises, alligator corpse desecration and Molly Shannon showering the soundtrack with F-bombs — and there’s a whole not of nothing funny or even all that interesting going on in this never-quite-promising farce that gets worse the longer it goes on.

Buddy comedy pro Wahlberg is paired with slow and slow-talking sight-gaggy Paul Walter Hauser of “I, Tonya” and “BlackKlansman” and that just doesn’t pay or play.

Hauser plays Elijah, a pedantic, humor-impaired and risk-averse designer at a condom company that hopes to become the official prophylactic of the (fictional) World Cup 2025, slated for Brazil.

Wahlberg’ is ace salesman Brad, who might save Royal Blue Condom Company’s “Testicle Sentinel” innovation and its very existence by closing this deal.

Watching Elijah’s pained and off-color/over-sharing”presentation” of this innovation to the corporate higher ups (Molly Shannon is CEO) makes that seem like its own Project Hail Mary. Even the introduction of a blue dildo vibrator doesn’t help.

But Brad aces his “Let us cup you and yours at the next World Cup” pitch to Brazilian honcho Santos (Benjamin Bratt, a hoot) and his South American underlings. If only they’d stopped there, and not talked “nine years sober” Santos into celebratory drinks at the sort of vast, production-designed nightclub you only see in the movies.

The cheap shots and mockery of Alcoholics Anonymous are vintage Farrelly (“Dumb and Dumber,” “Kingpin”). Peter and his brother Bobby invented “Oh no they DIDN’T” sacred-cow mockery.

“Joo know what aye haven’tried een a long time,” Bratt purrs?

“Skee-ball,” Brad guesses?

“CRACK!”

But the evening and the movie slip into a coma after that early transgressive buzz as our “heroes” get fired and the company closes, only to have uncanceled tickets arrive months later for the condom designer and “Brad from Sales,” who get to fly down to see Brazil battle Argentina for the title.

There’s an “incident.” The game is compromised and a whole country wants the blood of “os estupidos,” as they call the Ugly Americans.

Screenwriters Paul Wernick and Rhett Reese cut and paste together a story of “You’re free to go…be lynched by Brazilians” official corruption, a more sympathetic and comically-accented drug lord played by Sacha Baron Cohen who has something else in mind for those condoms these two are responsible for, and a visit to Amazonia, where cultish environmentalists do ayuhuasca and protect native species by killing anybody they think is a poacher.

Chelsy Crisp and Eric André try to breathe life into those latter scenes. And a little of S.B. Cohen goes a long way.

Depending on your sense of humor and chemically altered state, there might be half a dozen chuckles in “Balls Up” — less if you’re sober.

The movie and time itself slows to a crawl through the excruciatingly unamusing latter acts. And just when you think it can’t fall more completely to pieces, here comes a finale that further lowers the bar.

Farrelly’s movie, like his comic shock-shtick, gets old in a hurry.

Rating: R, violence, nudity, drug content and profanity

Cast: Mark Walhberg, Paul Walter Hauser, Molly Shannon, Daniela Melchior, Eva de Dominic, Chelsey Crisp, Eric André, Sacha Baron Cohen and Benjamin Bratt.

Credits: Directed by Peter Farrelly, scripted by Paul Wernick and Rhett Reese. An MGM release on Amazon Prime

Running time: 1:45

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Documentary Review: Fallopian Furies Fondly Remembered — “Pretty Ugly: The Story of the Lunachicks”

A fun and furious phenomenon of the ’90s New York punk scene is given its due and another faint glimpse of the spotlight in “Pretty Ugly: The Story of the Lunachicks,” a wry, wizened and not remotely bitter doc about a band that never quite made it, but should have.

They were a respected and popular (not THAT popular) “all girl” ’90s punk band — contemporaries of The Go Go’s, musical, spiritual and showmanship descendents of The Runaways.

The documentary’s decades of performance footage, capturing them as enthusiastic and musically polished teens and onward, makes their case for them all over again. With a sometimes-model lead singer (Theo Kogan) who looks like an ABBA love child and sounds like Cherie Currie (Runaways), howling guitars (played by Gina Volpe and Sindi Benezra) and a thunderous beat provided by bassist Sydney “Squid” Silver and a passing parade of drummers, they should be household names.

A rock journalist working on their biography, Jeanne Fury, assures them that they’d made a huge splash if they reunited. But as that book came out to good reviews and vanished and this documentary finished its film festival run quite a while ago, that didn’t exactly turn out to be the case.

Writer-director Ilya Chaiken’s film still makes for a light and heavily tattooed tour of that Nirvana/Offspring punk era — the rank sexism and abuse the band faced, the internal melodrama of bandmates as lovers and/or junkies and chances the Lunachicks had at the big brass ring.

Forming in the not-yet-Disneyfied New York of the ’80s, when CBGBs was still a thing and punk refused to die, they “wanted to be KISS,” Volpe laughs. They played up a “demented Barbie dolls” image in their stage attire, and titled their albums and EPs “Pretty Ugly,” “Binge & Purge” and “Babysitters on Acid.”

What’s not to love?

The band had minor label record deals, occasional TV and radio exposure, showcase appearances in the Vans Warped Tour, Reading Festival and tours opening for the likes of The Ramones, The Go Go’s, The Buzzcocks, The Dictators, Offspring, Joan Jett, Dinosaur Jr., GWAR and even No Doubt.

They faced sexist taunting from some headliners and mosh pit violence from the mostly-male audience directed at women in the crowd and in the band. Each Lunachick felt they had “something to prove,” “a wall to break down” various members remember.

Their feminism and sex appeal, their polished and frenetic playing, over-the-top shows and tongue-in-cheek tunes — “Jan Brady,” “Spork,” “Buttplug” and “Bitterness Barbie” among them — gave this New York quintet hipster cachet and a rabid following — especially among their punk contemporaries.

But the all-too-familiar story of how success or the lack of it eats away at band harmony plays out here — a taste of the wrong kind of “fame” (Howard Stern running gags, an infamous Calvin Klein heroin chic ad campaign), squabbles about money and credits and resentment over the attention “the beautiful one” gets.

Still, you know there’s a hatchet-burying to come and when it arrives, you can’t help but be touched. And if you aren’t tracking down their tunes after seeing this, your only excuse is “doctor’s orders” about your tinnitus.

Rating: unrated, some nudity, profanity

Cast: Theo Kogan, Gina Volpe, Chip English, Sindi Benezra, Sydney Silver, Becky Wreck and Jeanne Fury, with members of L7, The Offspring, Blondie and The Go Go’s, among others

Credits: Scripted and directed by Ilya Chaiken. A Giant release.

Running time: 1:31

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Movie Review: Mayhem and Murder and the Japanese Mafia Greet Odenkirk in “Normal,” Minnesota

What a time to be alive and a witness to Bob Odenkirk, the Badass Years.

The “Mr. Show” alumnus and ex-“Saturday Night Live” writer, a bit player on every sitcom from “Seinfeld” to “How I Met Your Mother” tapped into something dark and capable of violence with his supporting turn on the breakout series “Breaking Bad.”

Let the murderous mayhem begin as “Better Call Saul” begat “Nobody” and “Nobody 2” and now a tale of a “Normal” town gone in a “Minnesota Nice” way.

Based on “Fargo Lite” story pitch by writer/actor Bob, “Normal” is a conventionally unconventional thriller about an “interim sheriff,” “sort of like a substitute teacher/a midwife with a gun,” hired the duly elected Normal County sheriff dies under circumstances no local seems to find all that unusual.

Turns out, this “half-abandoned” town with mostly-armed citizens has an ace in the hole keeping it afloat. The Yakuza (Japanese Mafia) are stashing their American profits in cash and gold in the local bank.

No nooo, there’s nothing suspicious about those two Japanese bank guards (Peter Shinkoda plays one). The mayor (Henry Winkler) is a big fan of the temp sheriff’s “light touch” — warnings, not tickets, “let’s not get involved” is a rule of thumb.

“I get to say ‘Nothing to see here” over and over again,” Sheriff Ulysses narrates in a long letter to his estranged wife Penny.

That’s the framing/expositional device here. How’d this guy work his way down the law enforcement ladder to a series of temp jobs? When did he stop giving a damn, and why? And what might make him give a damn again?

Could it be the blunt and brassy bar owner (Lena Heady)? Maybe the dead sheriff’s non-binary daughter Alex (Jess MCleod), who seems to be the only one really upset about dad’s death.

“This town used to know right from wrong.”

The tipping point comes when Temp Sheriff Ulysses (Bobby O. was feeling his oats when he came up with that name for his character) tries to de-escalate a bank robbery committed by two homeless drifters (Reena Jolly and Brendan Fletcher) whom he knows dote on their dog.

His politically ambitious top deputy (Ryan Allen) is the one who leads the town’s shootists in their fusilade of the bank and the sticking-his-nose-in-their-business “interim” sheriff.

The movie’s set-up isn’t the most original or surprising. And the story beats that follow this bank stand-off — discovering the vast arsenal that the “department” has stockpiled, just waiting for all hell to break loose, the assorted cute local “types” who turn gun nutty when provoked by Ulysses’ interference and the ticking clock counting down until the murderous top dog of the yakuza (Takahiro Inoue) lands, having flown in to see what the hell is going on with his ill-gotten gains on deposit — don’t deviate from formula.

The Minnesooooooota “types” aren’t as broadly or adorably drawn as those in “Fargo,” even if the violence is on a snowy par with the Coen Brothers’ masterpiece. And the “letter” narration is borderline lazy as a framing device.

But there’s witty banter about bank robberies in a “just tap your card” society — “Nobody uses cash any more.” And director Ben Wheatley (“Free Fire” and “Sightseers” were his) knows his way around a shoot-out, punch-out, snowplow chase or what have you.

One film fan’s “predictable” can be a lot of filmgoers’ comfort food. And kudos to Odenkirk’s personal trainer. After all, why should Liam Neeson, Jackie Chan and Denzel get all the AARP badass roles?

Rating: R, graphic violence, profanity throughout

Cast: Bob Odenkirk, Ryan Allen, Reena Jolly, Billy MacLellan, Jess McLeod, Peter Shinkoda, Takahiro Inoe, Henry Winkler and Lena Heady

Credits: Directed by Ben Wheatley, scripted Derek Kolstad and Bob Odenkirk (story). A Magnolia release.

Running time: 1:31

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Series Review: More Fun with Dysfunction with Dan Levy — “Big Mistakes”

Dysfunction Junction is somewhere in the career-criminal packed suburbs of northern New Jersey in Dan Levy and Rachel Sennott’s “Big Mistakes,” a harder-edged, over-plotted way of covering the same ground as “Schitt’s Creek,” with little of the charm.

Bingeing this eight episode Netflix offering plays up the darkly funny “Oh no they DIDN’T” bits of business and outlandish or just plain grim plot turns. And bingeing makes nakedly plain the fact that “Mistakes” shoots its wad in the first two episodes and fiddles and faddles through the rest trying to top that.

The quarrelsome siblings in this family are Morgan (Taylor Ortega) and her adopted older brother Nicky (Levy) — “Nicholas” to his church congregation. Levy deciding that a gay Canadian Jew in the Protestant clergy is a joke doesn’t pay off nearly as well as he hoped.

Morgan is a school teacher with impulse control issues and committment problems with her “boring” significant other since high school (17 years ago), Max (Jack Innanen). Nicky has a lover (Jacob Gutierrez) and a congregation he won’t come out to no matter what century this is.

Divorced Mom (the indomitable Laurie Metcalf) inherited the family hardware store and is running for mayor against a cutthroat Jimmy Johns franchisee (Darren Goldstein), but not to worry — youngest, stablest and smartest daughter Natalie (Abby Quinn) is running her campaign.

The “Big Mistakes” begin when this stressed-but-maintaining-an-even-strain clan is tested by the death of Nonna (Judith Roberts), their matriarch. That’s what sends Mom over the edge ordering the kids to fetch granny’s “dying wish,” a necklace to be buried in.

And that’s what puts fearful, keeping-up-appearances figure of “some standing” in the community, Pastor Nicholas and loose cannon Morgan in a cheap gift shop where one shoplifted necklace later, a Turkish clerk (Boran Kuzum) is armed and on their case, kidnapping the siblings for a face-off with a murderous Russian mobster (Mark Ivanir).

Nicky and Morgan “owe” him a necklace, even though it’s been buried with grandma. They owe him “a favor” beyond that. As the favors pile up and the Brazilian and the Italian mob get involved, the hapless duo realizes they’re mixed up in the drug trade and cattle smuggling and in way over their heads.

“I just go where the powder blows, as they say” isn’t convincing anybody.

Mom’s campaign turns ugly and personal. Mom and Morgan’s partner’s mom (Elizabeth Perkins) try to intervene in a relationship he is the only one who wants to save — therapy, role-playing, the works.

And Nicky’s dreams of fleeing it all for a six month cruise with Tareq (Gutierrez) on a sabatical minister’s salary seem like dust — or powder — in the wind.

There are enough grace notes in this — Pastor Nicky’s homily-honed storyelling and mediation and lie-on-the-fly skills can be sweet and/or funny.

But Levy struggles to give nuances to his character as the only emotions that register are outrage, panic and desperation. Ortega (of some series called “Welcome to Flatch”) has even fewer notes to hit.

The brash and outrageous co-creator Sennott (:Shiva Baby”) is sorely missed on screen, not off.

And Metcalf lets us see the off-camera stage directions she must have been getting before EVERY SINGLE TAKE.

“Laurie, your EYES didn’t bug out enough last time. Can we go again?”

The first villain we meet, played by Kuzum, is the most interesting and frightening. The rest are a motley crew ranging from rarely amusing to utterly miscast.

“Weeds” alumna Perkins stands out, with Quinn and Ortega making strong impressions and Innanen annoying the hell out of us in ways only Giovanni Ribisi could match.

Completists will stick with “Big Mistakes” even through episodes where the mistakes get bigger, just less funny. But for viewers with less time on their hands, here’s a tip. Watch the first two and laugh, and the third to get a whiff of how it slacks off, and move on.

Rating: R, violence, drug abuse, profanity

Cast: Dan Levy, Taylor Ortega, Laurie Metcalf, Abby Quinn, Jack Innanen, Boran Kuzum, Jacob Gutierez, Mark Ivanir, Darren Goldstein and Elizabeth Perkins

Credits: Created by Dan Levy and Rachel Sennott. A Netflix release.

Running time: Eight episodes @ :31 minutes each

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Classic Film Review: A Timeless, Topical, Dated and Dizzy Debacle — “Rosebud” (1975)

One of the most formative books from my movie fanatic youth was Theodore Gershuny’s “Soon to be a Major Motion Picture: The Anatomy of an All-Star, Big-Budget Multi-Million Dollar Disaster.”

Gershuny’s on-set/in-the-studio observation of the making of Otto Preminger’s greatest debacle, “Rosebud,” remains — I dare say — a definitive eye-opener and an insightful foray into how movies are made and how they can go as wrong as they often do.

Whole epochs in technology, the shape and demographics of the audience and the very business model of making movies have evolved and devolved since 1975. But Gershuny’s all-access account of what it’s like when money, locations, stars and crew are on board the Major Motion Picture train when a production leaves the station with a very bad but “We’ll fix it” script in hand remains a cautionary tale as informative as any investigation of the disaster that was “Heaven’s Gate” or the triumph against the odds that “Apocalypse Now” turned out to be.

Egos, agendas, one hard-drinking “action” star (Robert Mitchum) quits and another (Peter O’Toole) is cast in his place, contempuous sexism and Zionism and retrograde attitudes that play as stunningly tone-deaf today, it’s a “miracle” “Rosebud” ever got the green light. The film was already hard to get one’s hands on in 1980, when the book came out. And despite being a Peter O’Toole fanatic and a (director) Otto Preminger appreciator, I could never make myself watch it when “Rosebud” aired on cable or streamed. Until now.

The film, based on a novel by Joan Hemingway (Ernest’s granddaughter) and Paul Bonnecarrère, came out during a peak era of Middle East unrest, when Palestinians used terrorist acts such as hijackings and the Munich Olympics mass-kidnapping and massacre to call attention to their plight.

They were being displaced and “erased” from their homeland while the whole world looked away.

American foreign policy was very much bent to Israel’s will — even then (something addressed in the film). But there were countries and public figures (Vanessa Redgrave, for one) who had Palestinian sympathies, even then, something John Le Carre’s 1983 thriller “The Little Drummer Girl” touched on.

That’s the climate that Preminger — a directing legend who had given us “Laura,” “Anatomy of a Murder,” “Advise & Consent” and perhaps most tellingly, “Exodus” — made one of his most topical movies, “Rosebud” in.

The global elite would be the target of the film’s smiling, swaggering but generally colorless terrorists. We see them plan and prep their plot when they gather in Corsica. Meanwhile, the daughters of Greek, British, American and other super-rich are gathering on a yacht named after the sled in “Citizen Kane.”

Sabine (Brigitte Ariel) may have taken a leftist French school teacher lover who ruffles her superrich father’s (Claude Dauphin) feathers. But she’s blithely unaware that her money only insulates her from daddy’s fury. There are others watching, waiting and planning their undoing.

The very young Isabelle Huppert and Kim Cattrall are among Sabine’s Rolls Royce chauffeured quintet (Lalla Ward and Debra Berger also co-star), the daughters of an English lord (Peter Lawford) and American senator (ex-New York majoy John Lindsay) among them.

When they’re set-up and nabbed and the yacht’s crew are killed, everybody involved knows the worst has happened. That’s why the (secretly Jewish) shipping tycoon Fargeau (Dauphin) grasps for private help.

Larry Martin (O’Toole) is a Paris-based correspondent for Newsweek, a Brit who’s also a covert hired “fixer” for the CIA. He’s at home in this world, used to tracking down terrorists, dealing with Mossad and mitigating one bad outcome for another. He’s cocky, charming and competent, an expert in getting the answers and results he wants.

Meanwhile, the terrorists make films for The Media, and everybody around the world cooperates to “save these girls,” save for the U.S., which is most easily coerced into doing Israel’s bidding.

As the chase begins and the hunt for the terrorist mastermind (Richard Attenborough, in one of the great casting miscalculations ever) takes our louche anti-hero all over Europe and the Med.

What could go wrong with either side’s best-laid plans, or the movie? Gosh, where does one begin?

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