Classic Film Review: A Reporter digs into government scandals real and staged — “Defence of the Realm” (1985)

It’s odd to think of the ’80s as a movie decade in which we can bandy the phrase “They don’t make’em like that any more” about. Hollywood’s blockbuster obsession almost wholly took over, and the roman numeralization of cinema “franchises” became the business model.

It wasn’t just “Rocky” or Indiana Jones or “Jaws” or any Eddie Murphy smash hit that served up sequels.

But there was were defiant voices shouting into the hurricane of mass market commodities that the movies were becoming. Producer David Puttnam was a maverick of the British cinema, an instinctual artist who put his energy into financing and filming “Chariots of Fire,” “The Killing Fields,” “Local Hero,” “Midnight Express” and Ridley Scott’s first film, “The Duelists.”

His movie-making motto was “I’m not afraid to fail, providing I fail honorably.” And he didn’t really fail until he tried to reform Hollywood from within by taking over as head of Sony/Columbia/Tristar in the mid-80s, fired “honorably” but quite quickly (after about a year) for pushing smart cinema like “Someone to Watch Over Me,” “Little Nikita,” “Hope and Glory” and the Bill Cosby bomb “Leonard Part 6” into production.

One of the last films he got into theaters before taking Columbia’s reins was quintessential Puttnam and something of a deal-maker for the Columbia hire. “Defence of the Realm” was a jewel created on a modest budget. It’s a crisp, smart, sharply-observant and perfectly paranoid thriller about a government scandal that might have been ginned up to cover up a bigger scandal. A reporter who must turn over clues, take ethical shortcuts, follow his insincts and fight lies, pushback, government threats and the unholy truth that big media companies — even then — are owned by rich men with self-serving agendas that trump independent journalism, no matter how important.

It’s a movie that spent its production money on the cast — Gabriel Byrne, Greta Scaachi, Denholm Elliott, Ian Bannen and Bill Paterson for starters. The director came from and would go back to British TV, an unfussy master of unflashy story-telling and making a production’s trains run on time.

The score might be that twinkly synthesized tinnitus that was the soundtrack of ’80s cinema, a hallmark of the era thanks to the Puttnam-produced/Vangelis-scored “Chariots of Fire.” But it’s the understated, limited dialogue of the underexplained story that makes the viewer pay attention and “come to” the movie rather than having it simplistically served up that makes this crackling, cynical tale a classic.

An unfussy, unspectacular car chase open “Defence,” retitled “Defense” for its m. A stakeout follows. But it isn’t cops or government agents who’re watching who goes into a prostitute’s flat. It’s a newspaper photographer, under orders from editors at the Daily Dispatch. A few snaps confirm what they’ve been told to expect. A Member of Parliament (Ian Bannen) named Markham is seeing the same sex worker of an East German/Russian-connected spy.

Rumpled, seasoned and sometimes sauced political reporter Vernon (Elliott) may advise caution and take the job of confronting his old MP friend/source with the accusation. But younger “ink-stained wretch” Nick Mullen (Byrne) is all over it, and his underhanded Fleet Street ethics have him passing himself off as a policeman to get the MP’s wife to get a rise out of her. Which he does.

The “Red Markham” headlines write themselves.

But Vernon hints that there’s something seriously wrong with this story. And when Nick catches a couple of fellows rummaging through Vernon’s newsroom desk after hours and takes Vernon home from the pub to find the man’s flat has been tossed, he develops his own suspicions.

When someone winds up dead, it’s on Nick to work the phones, follow leads and track down the truth, no matter what his editor (Paterson) and rich, connected publisher (Fulton McKay) think.

“Defence of the Realm” plays as a snapshot-in-time period piece today, a film that captured peak Fleet Street newspapering, with profitable enterprises all up and down that London thoroughfare sending reporters hither and yon to scoop their legions of competitors. The Aussie oligarch Murdoch had already bought his way in and ethics were in a downward spiral that the digital era would only amplify.

The typewriter-filled newsroom is quieter than any depicted in American films. But even if they didn’t call their library/archives “the morgue” filled with story clips (“cuttings,” the Brits called them), the photo archives and chemical, analog enlargement process — following another “tipped” scoop — were the same at pretty much any newspaper in what we used to call “the Free World.”

Decisions are made by the mostly elder statesman of the newspaper’s masthead — senior (white, male) editors. But the publisher is destined to intervene, even though they all say they’ll “not interfere” with what’s being reported.

Martin Stellman’s script — loosely inspired by the Profumo affair of the ’60s (filmed as “Scandal” with Joanne Whalley) — is thin on dialogue. So director David Drury (TV’s “Prime Suspect”) has Byrne get across his state of mind and the next clue he might follow with gestures and facial expressions, not words. Byrne has long been one of my favorite actors, and this is one of his greatest and most compact performances.

The accomplished cast of supporting players gets across their roles and function in the story even if we can’t pick up everybody’s name or actual job.

Scaachi plays the accused MP’s secretary, that one source our reporter is destined to plead “I need your help” to. She’s too smart to get involved with him, even if he was to allow the distraction of acting “interested.” There’s an early appearance by Robbie Coltrane as a fellow reporter,

Drury gets great suspense out of simple matters like collecting a hidden stash of incriminating documents before a rickety elevator arrives. And he, Stellman and Byrne keep the tone relentlessly downbeat.

We’re warned, with every turn of events, not to expect a Hollywood ending. Because there isn’t one coming. Because, as ’80s thrillers go, “Defence of the Realm” is as blunt and bleak as anything the more celebrated ’70s cinema produced. In either case, they really “don’t make’em like this any more.”

Rating: PG, smoking

Cast: Gabriel Byrne, Greta Scaachi, Denholm Elliott, Ian Bannen, Fulton McKay, Bill Paterson and Robbie Coltrane

Credits: Directed by David Drury, scripted by Martin Stellman. An MGM release streaming on Tubi, Amazon, etc.

Running time: 1:36

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Netflixable? Legendary Thai Gangster “Tee Yai” earns a Weak Tea Action Bio-pic, “Born to be Bad”

For a trigger-happy bank robber, convincing the public and cops that your exploits are “magical,” that you have supernatural protections, would seem like the ultimate edge. Convince law enforcement that bullets pass right through you, that arresting and handcuffing is futile, and they might leave you to your work.

But when that work is blood-stained armed robberies of jewelry stores, armored trucks and even buses and the “collateral damage” body count piles up, even the most cowwardly or corrupt cops know they have to do something.

Tee Yai was a real robber of the post-Vietnam War Thailand of the ‘late 70s. This web link to a place that sells magical amulets of the type he wore link is the best I could find as far as a “biography” of the guy –– of Chinese descent, favored 11mm Colt semi-automatics, mop toppsed and kind of dashing in his wanted posters.

After seeing the latest Thai thriller aiming to tell his story, “Yee Tai: Born to be Bad,” he remains just as much of a mystery. Yee Tai is not exactly the central figure in his own story.

Director Nonzee Nimibutr and screenwriter Chanchana Homsap serve up a bullet-riddled Butch and Sundance story that, thanks to the facts, breaks the formula of most Thai action pictures of recent decades. It’s not about martial arts. Gangsters and cops here drive ’70s vintage Datsuns and the like and shoot it out in a series of stand-offs and hold-ups.

The bursts of grenades and gunplay are pretty much all that recommends this one, which features a lifelong partner Rerk (Wisarut Himmarat) as “Butch” to Nattawin Wattanagitphat‘s Tee Yai/”Sundance.” We get hints that our title charcter is a violent hothead who treats life cheaply, when he isn’t chanting incantations to fend off his pursuers, and only the barest suggestion of how he got that way.

Yes, there’s an abused sex worker, Dao (Supassra Thanachat) whom Rerk, Tee Yai’s accomplice since childhood is sweet on. She’s a pawn who must be fought over, with one brutally dirty cop acting as muscle for her madam. Of course there’s a giant Cadillac hauling around a top level government minister who is forever shouting at and urging on his outgunned cops. Tee Yai, Rerk and accomplices Joon and Kid fire semi-automatics and war surplus M-16s, the cops use revolvers and shotguns. The car chases, involving Datsuns, ancient Toyotas, etc. are nothing to write home about.

The story of robberies, betrayals and the monk/guru the bandits consult because he “taught us everything we know” (About robbing? Killing? Supernatural huxterism?) has possibilities, mainly in the amusing superstition which the police share with the general public.

“You guys think he has magic powers, don’t you?” one frustrated chief inspector gripes (in Thai or dubbed into English).

When the crook you’re pursuing seems unkillable, when he says a few words, blows in a cop’s face and puts the officer to sleep, you can see how Thai Barney Fifes might believe his “legend.”

The predatory robber/killer’s biography is limited to a few flashbacks of how Tee Yai’s con man/snake oil salesman father might have set him on this amoral path and how he and Rerk teamed up and met the monk Luang Po.

But there’s no depth to the characters, especially Tee Yai, little that tells us how or what each is thinking or hoping. The shootouts are routine if excessive and the finale inevitable.

As “Born to be Bad” legends go, ” this Tee Yai tale is strictly weak tea.

Rating: TV-MA, graphic violence, prostitution, profanity

Cast: Wisarut Himmarat, Apo Nattawin Wattanagitiphat and Supassra Thanachat

Credits: Directed by Nonzee Nimibutr, scripted by Chanchana Homsap. A Netflix release.

Running time: 1:58

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Movie Review: An Indie Gem from Opiod Appalachia — “Hazard”

Ruined, emptied-out towns filled with rusting hulks of their mining past, long-shuttered storefronts, mobile homes twenty years past their expiration date, kudzu-overgrown Little League fields and locals who know they’re trapped even if they don’t know that ATV they just bought won’t drive them out of it — that’s the Appalachia of “Hazard,” a simple and poignant portrait of an America that’s been left behind in one of the most beautiful places on Earth.

It’s a taste of Opiod Appalachia, where the insidious oxy has embedded itself into the fabric, the economy and the life expectancy of people who can’t see the big picture. Big Pharma underplays the dangers, crooked doctors run a prescription flood-the-market business, even the “clean” locals get those scripts and resell the drugs to support themselves. And Big Rehab is end game, scamming insurance, state and federal resources to keep the whole cycle running and operating at a profit.

The second feature from Appalachian filmmaker Eddie Mensore (“Mine 9”) is an immersive gem of a drama and an 88 minute long argument for the survival of indie regional cinema. Because Hollywood sure as hell isn’t telling these stories.

Alex Roe of “The Fifth Wave,” “Forever My Girl” and the current “Billy the Kid” streaming series stars as Will, a young father, estranged partner, and an addict and addict’s son who knows how to steal, buy at a discount or finagle the pills that he and his kind can pop, snort or cook and shoot up.

At least he’s not a coal miner. “It’s s— work,” he tells his pain-wracked and now oxy addicted coal miner dad (Steven Ogg).

Sara (Sosie Bacon, you’ll recognize her “Smile”) kicked Will out of the house. She’ll raise their little boy Morgan on her own, if need be.

But “What if I had a plan and the bucks to back it up?”

Will’s dream, “getting out,” fleeing to Myrtle Beach and opening a t-shirt shop. He’s got cash saved up. But it’s how he earns that money — his “I got a house to paint” odd job lies don’t convince anyone — that has her keeping her distance. She’s nearly a year sober, and he isn’t.

And that “plan?” When he unloads pricy pills to some teenagers, we can see what’s coming.

So can the local cop (Dave Davis). He’s at home in the decay all around him, knows everybody and which park the locals shoot up in. Not just because he sets up trail cameras to catch addicts and dealers in the act. Because he grew up with Will. And Sara? She’s his sister. He alone on the underfunded force knows something has to be done before Hazard overdoses itself into oblivion.

Mensore took a Kentucky town’s name and used Harlan County, Kentucky as his gritty, authentic filming location. But “Hazard” could be anywhere from vast swaths of Southwest Virginia, West Virginia, mountain Kentucky, mountaineer Tennessee or the western Carolinas.

As someone who grew up near Appalachia, went to school there, took “Appalachian Studies” courses on the history and never-ending parade of exploitation there and worked and lived in the region, I keep one rule in mind when viewing films set this close to home.

Are the filmmakers, actors included, looking down on a blighted place? Or are they seeing it through the inhabitants’ eyes, and letting us see it the same way?

Mensore, a West Va. U. alumnus, gets it. The “dreams” — of Myrtle Beach or just a getaway to King’s Island amusement park in Cincinnati — are limited, as are the horizons. He catches a few non-actors showing off on their ATVs in the opening credits. This is not America’s Smart Decision Belt.

The world he shows us is a town and region wrapped up in co-dependency. Will barking at Officer John about what he’s trying to accomplish, when this abused woman needs her pills for pain, and the extras as income because she’s fled a bad marriage and lives in a van, speaks volumes. Such stories are everywhere in a region where intergenerational co-dependency is almost the only economic life left. Even if it’s killing people.

A muddled ending and the over-familiarity of the ground we’re covering dull the movie’s impact, but only a little.

Mensore gets it right and tells a story validated by journalism and every trip through the region and everybody you know who lives there. And Roe, Bacon, Ogg, Davis and the parade of non-acting Appalachians we glimpse along the edges of the frame let us feel they’re living it, even if only for the length of a film shoot in Harlan County, Kentucky.

Rating: R, drug abuse, sex, profanity

Cast: Alex Roe, Sosie Bacon, Steven Ogg and Dave Davis

Credits: Scripted and directed by Eddie Mensore. A Quiver release on Plex, Amazon Prime.

Running time: 1:28

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N.C. Symphony goes “Psycho?”

What record is sitting on the turntable in Norman Bates’ room on his mother’s motel?

Beethoven’s “Eroica” Symphony. The kinky bugger. He had a Napoleon complex — Lovely Ludwing Van had a flirtation many artsy anti monarchy Europeans shared when the Frenchman first came to power. Or maybe Norman just thought it spelled “Erotica.” Cold comfort to Marian Crane, who should have noticed all the birds the creep stuffed, remembered her avian last name and fled.

First up in this concert,  a suite of music from the score of the Appalachian Carolina Civil War romance “Cold Mountain.”

But why is it that every film, concert or funeral I  attend has me parked next to the one ill mannered rube who insists on playing with her/his phone?

As Jack Donaghy memorably put it in many an episode of “30 Rock” when confronted by such gaucherie, “What are we, farmers?”

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Netflixable? “Being Eddie” is how Murphy wants you to See Him

Eddie Murphy has a lot to be satisfied with.

A gifted mimic turned overnight stand-up star, famous since his teen years on “Saturday Night Live,” a ground-breaking African American superstar of the screen, for decades one of the biggest box office draws and one of the best paid actors ever, mentor and example to generations of Black comics and actors who followed him, idolized by millions, what’s he got to complain about?

At 64, he’s maintained a career that took him from Next Big Thing to Hottest Thing on Screen to Dad Comedies, making classics (“48 Hours,” “Trading Places”) and finding more recent critical acclaim (“Dream Girls,” “Dolemite is My Name”) that reminds us he’s overdue for a career achievement Oscar.

That’s the version of Eddie Murphy that he wants to you see in “Being Eddie,” self-satisfied. It’s an obviously Eddie-approved documentary about his life and career that editor-turned-first-time-doc-director Angus Wall filmed.

Eddie tells the story of his life — a glimpsed-over childhood, the father who left and the stepfather who supported him and even became the good-natured butt of onstage Eddie jokes about his drinking, his devotion to Richard Pryor and stand-up from the age of 13, his teenaged stardom and beyond.

He notes how he avoided the drug and alcohol downfall that took down so many of his idols and contemporaries, and friends, colleagues and his late brother Charlie Murphy back this up by confirming Eddie “was never the life of the party” — any party.

Director John Landis relates how Paramount had set up “Trading Places” for Richard Pryor, but “Richard set himself on fire,” Eddie jokes/explains. He speaks about the role then-Paramount exec Jeffrey Katzenberg had on starting his film career and “protecting me” from getting fired from “48 Hours,” his film debut, and Katzenberg confirms telling his fellow execs to be patient, because Eddie is “special.”

Murphy jokes about an entire older generation of Hollywood that suddenly wanted to meet him for dinner, drinks, what have you. Who knows what Yul Brynner had in mind when he invited Eddie home?

But as we revel in the anecdotes and see and hear Chris Rock, Dave Chappelle, Tracy Morgan, Arsenio Hall and others sing Murphy’s praises, it’s pretty obvious this is a life and career that has been sanitized for Eddie’s protection.

The more interesting Eddie is the one who recalls his infamous Peak Era Eddie on-stage bit of truth-to-power Oscar presentation speech back in 1988 — “Black people will not ride the caboose of society, and we will not bring up the rear anymore. And I want you to recognize us.” Murphy figures that’s the main reason he’s never gotten an Oscar, honorary or otherwise.

“Norbit?” Sure, that might have cost him the “Dream Girls” best supporting actor Oscar. But there was also the cavalcade of crap that came before that and for years after it. “Meet Dave,” anyone?

“My advice to young comics? Don’t ever play a rocket ship.”

He’s certain Hollywood holds a grudge the way he does — 35 years estranged from “Saturday Night Live” because David Spade joked “Look children, it’s a falling star! Make a wish” about “Vampire in Brooklyn,” one of the legions of ill-conceived dogs Murphy brought to the screen after his peak.

So there’s no Lorne Michael testimonial, no Walter Hill (director of “48 Hours” and Richard Pryor’s “Brewster’s Millions”), no Nick Nolte or any “Beverly Hills Cop” co-star here to speak about working with him.

It’s enlightening to hear Murphy assert and others back up the doors he opened when he took roles because “Nobody’s seen a Black guy” in this or that sort of on-screen part. That “Hollywood before Eddie” and Hollywood after him statement about his significance is undeniable.

He’s been canny about his career and image all along. Remember Muphy’s first big screen entrance? What song is he caterwauling in a prison cell in “48 Hours?” “Roxanne” by The Police. That’s a hip and white-American moviegoing audience approved choice of tune, something I noted at the time. Edgy Eddie was “safe” for Middle American moviegoers was the message he always sent.

Murphy wanders his Roman villa-sized $85 million Beverly Park mansion and tells us stories and it’s fun to see him opening up, even if he isn’t opening up that much. And we can’t help but notice the select group of co-stars and proteges (Rock, Chappelle, etc) who sing his praises. Even if Arsenio Hall has some interesting insights, he’s never shaken the “Eddie’s Lapdog” image he’s justly worn his entire life.

There’s lots of appreciation for Murphy’s stand-up documentaries “Raw” and “Delirious,” much of it from Chappelle and Morgan. But there’s no mention of the widely criticized homophobia Murphy threw out there in both those stand-up tours, something he has in common with Chappelle and Morgan, who’ve also gone for homophobic laughs, perhaps taking their cue from their idol.

Perhaps that’s one reason comic elder-statesman Jerry Seinfed says “The rules are just different for him.”

Murphy mentions his divorce in passing, shows off his new wife and “ten kids.” He leaves out the Spice Girl he had to be sued to make him admit he was her baby daddy. That “baby” is now a teen and just came out as transgender, by the way. He doesn’t talk about his infamous police stop for picking up a transgender prostitute named Shalimir.

Hell, Hugh Grant makes jokes about his similar arrest, and he’s not even a stand up comic. Think of how Murphy, who shows off ventriloquist dummies he had made of Richard Pryor and Bill Cosby for a possible stand-up “conversation” he never got around to staging, might relate his “real” and even embarrassing experiences on stage.

“Eddie Murphy telling a story made you feel like you were there,” Kevin Hart marvels.

So while his tribute to big brother Chair is touching, and it’s entertaining to hear what Murphy does tell us, the origins of his gift for voices and character creation (from “Gumby, dammit” on “SNL” to all those makeup-assisted roles he took in “The Nutty Professor,” “Norbit,” and “Coming to America”) and flattering for all these comics to lament that he hasn’t gone back and done some stand-up, “Being Eddie” never overcomes the “hagiography” label.

Murphy telling us which broke actor’s tombstone he paid for and which famous Black performers he “buried” (paid for their funeral) is righteous but self-serving. Having no contrary voices in this fawning film makes such “admissions” grating.

In the recent rush of comics lauded in bio-documentaries, “Being Eddie” simply isn’t on a par with “John Candy” I Like Me,” or “Pee Wee as Himself.” Let’s hope Eddie doesn’t wait until he’s dead for his story to fully be told.

Rating: R, profanity

Cast: Eddie Murphy, Dave Chappelle, Jerry Seinfeld, Tracee Ellis Ross, Chris Rock, Tracy Morgan, Arsenio Hall, Reginald Hudlin, Jeffrey Katzenberg, John Landis, Brian Grazer, Charlie Murphy and Richard Pryor.

Credits: Directed by Angus Wall. A Netflix release.

Running time: 1:43

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Movie Review: A Torch and a Card Trick are passed to a new Generation — “Now You See Me: Now You Don’t”

It helps to think of the “Now You See Me” film franchise as a manga that dodged the whole anime series then anime movie “product” assembly line. “Now You See Me: Now You Don’t” brought on that epiphany.

Revived a dozen years after it launched and six years after a sequel that included Daniel Radcliffe, these tepid thrillers are pure pop fantasy, with a manga style universe in which magic is not just cool, it’s “hip.” Gen Y and Z are all about pop-up shows where four Gen X-ers — OK, three plus one Boomer — show them card tricks, rob the robber barons and serve up justice by sharing all that ill-gotten, hoarded wealth with the underemployed “Gen Z staring” masses.

If you think of it all as manga in origin, you can brush off every absurd assumption, assertion (“This is cool!”) and laughable “reality” with a “Well, that’s what’s big in Japan right now.”

Hey, we all have our coping mechanisms.

Confronted with this joyless, by-the-numbers “getting the band back together” reunion, with ancient overseer Michael Caine retired out of the series and the agent chasing these “outlaw” magicians around the globe (Mark Ruffalo) reduced to a Zoom call with three new “horsemen” recruited to the four FIVE horsemen of the first two films, you can’t just wait to hang on every word the normally wonderful Rosamund Pike utters for a laugh.

Pike plays the villain, a South African diamond mining empress. And that accent... Oh. My. God.

Ordinarily, actors not named Sharlto Copley, Alice Krige or Embeth Davidtz speak a version of English that’s mostly Aussie without the “crikeys.” But Pike (“Gone Girl”) goes at it like a Jamaican on a rum-bender in County Kildare.

“She makes all the world’s worst people possible,” is how Atlas (Jesse Eisenberg) describes Veronica Vanderberg’s blood diamond/money-laundering empire. Yes, and she makes South African Oscar winner Charlize Theron spit up her prosecco every time she opens her mouth.

The four credited screenwriters open the film with a pop-up show in Bushwick, with the long-split-up “Four Horsemen” of magic (Eisenberg, Dave Franco, Woody Harrelson and even Isla Fischer from the first film) pulling out all the stops as they appear, disappear and make a crypto bro’s millions vanish into the hands of the Gen Z audience.

But it turns out the “Horsemen” weren’t really there. It was an illusion/hustle cooked up by Ms. Parkour practicing Pickpocket June (Ariana Greenblatt), tech nerd illusionist Charlie (Justice Smith) and “Horsemen” hating master of disguise Bosco (Domonic Sessa).

J. Daniel Atlas is not amused. He was summoned there by a tarot card clue, and after he’s instantly sussed who the real practical jokers are, he enlists the new kids on the block for a heist.

Can the world’s largest diamond, the wellspring of the wealth of the Vanderberg diamond empire, be swiped? Let the old blood meet the new blood and we’ll see if that can be sorted out.

Jack (Franco), reduced to cruise ship magic bookings, mom Henley (Fisher) and hard-drinking hypnotist.”mentalist” Merritt (Harrelson) show up with their own Tarot card summons to pitch in, mid-theft.

“This liver is not going to destroy itself,” Merritt reasons between rounds.

They don tuxes and evening wear and disguises, crash galas, zipline, jet off to “the Orlando of the Middle East” (Abu Dhabi), steal a Formula One race car and face death because, as our South African princess reminds us “The Vanderberg family day nowt lowse!”

The humor is meant to come from the clash of generations, mocking shots of “You kids make a REAL difference” and the like.

The illusions are well-handled, “unbelievable” but easy enough to pull off — in a movie. Bringing back Henley’s “replacement” Horseman from “Now You See Me 2” (Lizzy Caplan) is worth a chuckle or three, mainly in her disguises.

But there are now FAR too many characters to track. And there’s no pop to the story or the new recruits. An F-1 car chase, a harrowing escape or two and more magic words of wisdom from the sage Thaddeus (Morgan Freeman) don’t put the picture over.

That four-handed screenplay gives us 85 minutes of movie, and “Zombieland/Venom” director Ruben Fleischer drags that out to nearly two hours. That underscores just how much this disposable piffle outstays its welcome.

As for the formidable Ms. Pike, let’s hope this over-budget card trick and her accent vanish before any real career damage is done.

Rating: PG-13, violence, profanity

Cast: Jesse Eisenberg, Rosamund Pike, Woody Harrelson, Isla Fisher, Justice Smith, Dave Franco, Ariana Greenblatt, Lizzy Caplan, Dominic Sessa and Morgan Freeman

Credits: Directed by Ruben Fleischer, scripted by Seth Grahame-Smith, Michael Leslie, Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick, based on characters created by Boaz Yakin. A Lionsgate release.

Running time: 1:52

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Movie Review: “The Running Man” Stumbles into a Dead End

About thirty minutes into the Glen Powell/Edgar Wright remake of “The Running Man” I thought “This is kind of working.” I invested in this updating of Stephen King’s dytopian sci-fi horror for the age of ICE, fascism and murderously amoral media and new star Glen Powell navigating it.

There are jokes connecting the film to the 1987 original. This fascist mediacracy America uses “New Dollars,” and Arnold Schwarzenegger, the last “Running Man,” has his picture on the currency. Wright brings in his “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World” star Michael Cera, and there’s a further sop to the fangirls and fanboys in a character who researches, writes and performs a vlog dissecting the infamous race-to-the-death TV show called “The Running Man.”

But the film’s grim tone suggests serious intent, and Wright wrestles with how to manage that messaging throughout. About an hour in, we get the first hints that Wright and co-writer Michael Bacall are scripting themselves into a corner. And upon arriving at that dead end, they focus group themselves right out of topical, allegorical sci-fi thriller and into a finish that’s the least satisfying or logical of the “Sean of the Dead/Hot Fuzz” director’s career.

Powell plays a short-tempered blue collar laborer in this future winner-take-all economy. Ben Richards can’t keep a job, at least partly because of his compassion and sense of responsibility to his fellow workers. His wife (Jayme Lawson) can only take so many extra shifts at The Libertine, a strip club where she insists she just “waits tables.”

And in an America where the working masses are at each other’s throats, the health care system has entered its end game. They’re on their own with a sick toddler and no money to get her “good pharm,” the medicine and medical care that will let her survive the latest iteration of the flu.

The Network isn’t just serving up all manner of “reality” FreeVee TV shows with terminal stakes for the participants. They’re the outsourced supplier of masked “goons” who serve as private police. Some of those goons are the hunters and killers on their most popular show, “The Running Man.”

Ben Richards insists “I’m not stupid enough” to audition for that 30-days-on-the-lam program, whose participants are always hunted down and killed before surviving the full thirty days and collecting the big paycheck. But when Ben shows up, desperate and ill-tempered, for the clearinghouse audition for any of a number of Network game shows, “Running Man” creator/show-runner Dan Killian (Josh Brolin at his toothiest) identifies him as the best prospect for his series, pitched to auditioners as “We’ve got the cash if you’ve got the balls.”

Maybe it was his responses to word association and the holographic Rorschach Tests. “The angriest man to ever audition” is a star in the making, Killian figures.

Ben signs on the dotted line, sends cash home to the wife — who is taken into hiding. And he braces himself for the challenge of running, hiding, disguising and fighting his way past paid thugs and freelance yahoos angling for the rewards the show promises to those who help track Ben, dopey Tim (Martin Herlihy) or their running woman Jenni (Katy O’Brian) down and kill them.

Colman Domingo tries to bring a little Tucci/Elizabeth Banks “Hunger Games” showmanship to the role of MC, the person who whips up the studio audience and viewers at home about how “evil” these “criminals” are that they’re turning loose to be hunted down on TV.

Ben quickly figures out this isn’t on the up-and-up. The Network deep fakes videos, backgrounds and the speeches the hunted “criminals” make and uses any means at its disposal to hunt and stage bloody executions in prime time — once the runners have driven the ratings up — collateral damage be damned.

King came back to this sort of Darwinian contest idea for “The Long Walk,” which was recently filmed. And “The Hunger Games” was just one YA novel series that stole that plot.

Dystopia seems a lot closer to real life than it did when King wrote the book and when Schwarzenegger & Co. first committed it to film. Not sure if that’s a selling point any more than the futuristic slums and legions of neon-lined futurecars mixed in with retrofitted DeLoreans, Citroens and the like we see in the crowded streets. But yes, the production values are first rate.

And there’s something primal about the chase, and “The Running Man” gets us pondering how we’d get out of this or that jam, get away from the D.C./Philly region to New York, Boston and — of course — Derry, Maine, the Capital of Stephen King Country.

Powell may be adept at taking us along for the run, but Brolin at his most sinister is the one who makes the sale. Yes, “entertainment” really could come to this.

Alas, the film’s pacing is stumbling and the longer it goes on, the less urgency we feel in that chase.

There’s little character development, with supporting roles barely sketched in. William H. Macy plays the black market explosives, disguises and weapons dealer/pal that everybody on the lam needs. Daniel Ezra plays the vlogger, with Angelo Gray as the kid brother who talks him into helping this stranger escape the mob and the goons.

And then, as we check our phones or watches for the umpteeth time, we figure that the fellows writing this have no neat, original, satisfying or “true” way of wrapping it all up. The sad part of that is they knew this before we did.

Everything they throw at the screen in the last 12 minutes plays like rewrites, reshoots and a studio badly fumbling what they’d thought was a sure thing way back when they set it up.

Rating: R, graphic violence, nudity, profanity

Cast: Glen Powell, Josh Brolin, Jayme Lawson, Daniel Ezra, William H. Macy, Angelo Gray, Michael Cera, Lee Pace and Colman Domingo.

Credits: Directed by Edgar Wright, scripted by Michael Bacall and Edgar Wright, based on a Stephen King novel. A Paramount release.

Running time: 2:13

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Classic Film Review: Lesser Lubitsch, a “Heaven Can Wait” (1943) that Bores

When we think of the Hollywood comedies by the great German expat Ernst Lubitsch, we remember Garbo at her drollest, a Bolshevik who falls in love in “Ninotchka,” the doors-slamming-on-Nazis backstage farce “To Be or Not to Be” and the oft-remade wit of “The Shop Around the Corner.”

We recollect the sophistication, the famed “Lubitsch touch” that made his films stand apart, even those less timeless titles (“That Uncertain Feeling”).

The monied, high-society setting and comedy of manners and mores “touch” is in evidence in his adaptation of the play “Birthday,” which the studio retitled “Heaven Can Wait” for its 1943 release.

Some critics at the time park this one in the pantheon of Lubitsch pictures, and a few today still do. But blame it on the limitations of the Technicolor production process, the time the film premiered — right at the height of World War II — the screwball-averse cast or the source material itself if you want to. Any way you slice it, this picture’s a sentimental stiff.

Glancing at reviews of it at the time on the film’s Wikipedia page, the greatest critic of the era might have been the only one to see the light. “Not up to his best,” James Agee opined. I’d go so far as labeling it a “Magnificent Ambersons” with fewer laughs.

The game is given away straight off as Alfred Newman’s score quotes freely from that 1909 tune “By the Light of the Silv’ry Moon.” Whatever else is going on here, a fat coating of sentiment will be lathered over it.

A “great cavalier of the gay ’90s” has died and gotten an appointment with “His Excellency,” Satan. The womanizing old man (Don Ameche) taking a seat before a towering Lucifer (Laird Cregar) is sure he’s hellbound and that he’s earned it. But the tall, tuxedo’d Old Scratch will decide if he meets “our requirements.”

So Henry Van Cleve of the Manhattan Van Cleves tells us and His Excellency the story of his privileged life and his lifelong infatuation with “girls,” from the child in pigtails he crushed on as a tween, through his marriage and into his dotage.

Impressing one of a couple of schoomates he was sweet on as a child required the gift of a captured beetle. Life lesson learned?

“If you want to win a girl, you have to have lots of beetles.”

We meet the oft-fired housemaid/French teacher (Signe Hasso) who gave teen Henry his first drink and it’s implied, first taste of sexual experience. Henry’s mother is quite put out at his “ill” her son must be, mumbling and half-passed-out as he is.

“Oh Randolph! Our boy, DELIRIOUS in a foreign language!

We see the young 20something Henry fall hard for a vision of 1890s femininity — Martha. Gene Tierney, who’d film the movie’s she’s most remembered for, “Laura,” the next year, makes Martha Strabel beguiling and guileless, just a girl from new money in Kansas who has no intention of letting her parents (Marjorie Main and the blustery character comic Eugene Pallette) keep her in Kansas. She’s just gotten engaged to Henry’s square young lawyer cousin Albert (Allyn Joslyn) to ensure she gets out.

Not for long.

When Henry poses as a store sales clerk (she’s interested in a “How to Please Your Husband” self-help book), poor Martha doesn’t even know she’s being courted and set up for an elopement at Henry’s birthday party later that evening. Albert barely has a chance to make their big announcement and introduce his prospective in-laws before the happy not-quite-a-couple-yet are off.

These scenes, stuffed with a smorgasbord of the best character actors of the day, charm and merit a grin, maybe two. Louis Calherne is Henry’s indulgent “keep a stiff upper lip” father. Spring Byington is a my-boy-can-do-no-wrong mom. But the venerable Charles Coburn has the most chances for laughs as the all-knowing grandad who sees through the lad and his son and daughter-in-law’s failed parenting. Grandpa sees enough of himself in the 26 year-old to give it all away.

He gruffly questions his butler, whom he sends after the elopers in mock outrage, shoving cash into that butler’s hands to get the young couple out of town.

“She was packed by E.F. Strabel / To be served at Albert’s table / But that Henry changed the label. Now that’s poetry!”

Wisecracks about Kansas “yokels” and the like keep the tone light in the early scenes. But the stodgy “My life story as told to the Devil” framework slows the pace and drains the light out of laughs that should trot by at a sprint.

Henry can’t think of any one capital offense that’s earned him the right to Eternity in Hell.

“But I can safely say my whole life was one continuous misdemeanor!”

For me, “Heaven Can Wait” doesn’t light up until the setting shifts to Kansas, an HOUR into the narrative. There’s where Martha is fleeing after years of Henry’s constant philandering around the fringes of their “happy” marriage.

The bickering Strabel matriarch and patriarch, who disowned Martha, can’t bear to sit closer than 25 feet apart at breakfast. An early 1900s disagreement over “the funny papers” has to be adjudicated by a long-suffering servant (Clarence Muse, who almost steals these scenes).

Pallette, who was Little John to Flynn’s “Robin Hood” and the blustering, flustered employer of “My Man Godfrey” is in his usual dudgeon, and Main (the future “Ma Kettle”) is more than his match.

The film’s screwball possibilities are evident early on, but mildly dithered away. That broken promise is only kept (almost) in this Kansas sequence, with Henry dashing in to lie and finesse his wife back home.

The stately pacing seems to reflect the somber mood of the country, the world and time the film was conceived and released in. I’ll bet this pattered by at a sprint on the stage.

Ameche had a sort of Ralph Bellamy handsome guy who doesn’t always get the girl career in his younger years. Whatever possibilities this scoundrel Henry Van Cleve afforded him weren’t really realized until his grand ’80s comeback — “Trading Places” (co-starring with Bellamy), two “Cocoon” movies and “Things Change.”

Tierney was a star hitting just hitting her peak, but she was never known for comedy.

Cregar’s turn as Satan is more of a sight gag than anything the screenwriter or the actor tried to have any fun with.

One can wonder if re-casting with a Stanwyck/Jean Arthur type would have goosed the pacing and the picture’s punch, with Ameche amping up his performance just to hold his own.

Shooting it in black and white might have stripped the “stately” out of this “escape” and allowed Lubitsch to pick up the tempo. Technicolor slowed many a feature film production to a crawl.

But what’s here is never more than a wry template for a sendup of dated mores and manners with a sentimental Satan there to hold our anti-hero’s hand and assure him that he’s not really suited for “down here,” even if “up there” seems like a bigger stretch.

And through it all, Alfred Newman keeps coming back to his idea of the right “Sentimental Journey” tone that the score needed, the maudlin but not-quite-sappy-enough to be funny (here) “Silv’ry Moon.”

Seen today, “Heaven Can Wait” — which was the title of the play that became the film “Here Comes Mr. Jordan,” which Warren Beatty remade as “Heaven Can Wait” in 1978 — feels like a polished production of a darkly funny film on the page rendered into something too sober by half on the screen.

Rating: “approved,” TV-PG

Cast: Gene Tierney, Don Ameche, Charles Coburn, Marjorie Main, Eugene Pallette, Louis Calherne, Spring Byington, Allyn Joslyn, Signe Hasso, Clarence Muse and Laird Cregar

Credits: Directed by Ernst Lubitsch, scripted by Samuel Raphaelson, based on a play by Leslie Bush-Fekete. A 20th Century Fox release.

Running time: 1:52

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Movie Review: Exiled Man and Woman wrestle with their Pasts on “The Silent Planet”

“The Silent Planet” is a sci-fi allegory that attempts to take the pulse of the human condition in our current, fear-immigrants moment and doesn’t quite come off.

One can appreciate the cleverness of seeing The Tablelands in Canada’s Gros Morne National Park as an alien world and some (but not all) of the sci-fi world-building-on-a-budget. But the script looks for universalities, loss, crimes and redemption or at least “tests” of humanity that it almost finds but never quite grasps.

Elias Koteas, a veteran of “The Last Days on Mars,” “The Baker” and “Chicago P.D.” is Theodore, an aged miner sentenced to this out-world where he digs up valuable ore which he’s able to electrically launch into a vehicle in low atmosphere orbit. He lives in the living-pod quarters stage of an atmospheric entry vehicle.

It’s implied that Theodore is the lone miner on this low-oxygen planet or planetoid (Europa?). For all the expense and tech it took to get him and those who proceded him –one at a time — there, his tools are a hammer, a chisel and a wheel barrow. The entry vehicle he plunged to the surface on had him strapped into a transparent bubble that forces him to face the searing flames and heat of hurtling downward. All part of his punishment?

Let’s take a moment to be thankful the writer-director didn’t call the mineral “unobtainium.”

Theodore mutters to himself through his days, writes and watches the sitcom “Roomies” at night during the 14 hour days. For some reason, he removes the life monitor planted in his chest. His overseers assume he’s dead. For some other reason, Theodore keeps mining and making his deposits into orbit.

Niyya (Briana Middleton of “Sharper” and “The Tender Bar”) is sent to replace him before anybody figures out the other guy is still there, just crazy.

Earth has been visited by aliens called the Oieans, designed and attired like creatures straight out of 1960s era “Doctor Who.” The planet has been less than welcoming of these interplanetary refugees. That’s how Niyya, raised by Oieans, got into trouble and was sentenced to work on thise mines.

“F— Humanity!” she’s scribbled in her journal, which Theodore promptly swipes rather than welcoming his new “company.” He’s paranoid, and he has his reasons. She’s paranoid and she has hers. At least she got Oiean advice as a child that might help her cope with her future.

“You can climb to the top of the world, but you can’t climb above yourself.”

Not sure if that’s as helpful as they make out. On a world with low oxygen, with a crazed fellow criminal your only company and rolling, sentient purple fog that reads your thoughts and turns them against you, “the silence will crush you.” Can these two just get along?

The clumsy arbitrariness of the plot, the “rules” of this world and the limits the story imposes which characters sometimes ignore undercut any “reality” we’re meant to buy into. Flashbacks, even those with nudity and murky evidence of past crimes, don’t illuminate much.

The actors are pretty much stranded in the The Tablelands with a static plot, spacesuit costumes, the flimsiest fake survival without O2 gear ever budgeted and most everything — wheel barrows included — sourced at nearby Deer Lake’s Home Hardware.

You don’t need a lot of Canadian money to pull off science fiction. But you do need to at least let us see what the actors must have seen in the script in the finished product.

Rating: TV-16+, violence, nudity, profanity

Cast: Elias Koteas, Briana Middleton and Courtney Lancaster.

Credits: Scripted and directed by Jeffrey St. Jules. A Quiver release on Amazon Prime.

Running time: 1:35

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Book Review — “The Worlds of Hayao Miyazaki: The Influences and Inspirations Behind the Iconic Films”

This fall’s North American box office success of such anime franchises as “Chainsaw Man” and “Demon Slayer” and the vast collection of such titles on offer from Netflix underscore the soaring popularity and international appeal of the Japanese animated art form.

But when it comes to anime, there is but one godfather and undisputed master of that world. The Oscar-winning writer and director Hayao Miyazaki, now 84 years old, is the artist who still towers over any serious discussion of anime. And his films, from “My Neighbor Totoro” and “Ponyo” to “Spirited Away” and “The Wind Rises” are still the exemplars of the best anime, a corner of film dominated by artistically inferior and far less demanding franchises with mass production TV production values.

“The Worlds of Hayao Miyazki” is a lovely new appreciation of Miyazaki’s art and touchstone films in book form, a breakdown of the myriad influences that this artist absorbed before making “Kiki’s Delivery Service,” “Howl’s Moving Castle” and “The Boy and the Heron.”

Nicolas Rapold, a former editor in chief of “Film Comment” magazine, has written an “unofficial” and “unauthorized” biography that isn’t a conventional “biography” at all. “Worlds” touches on some of Miyazaki’s life story and folds bits of biography in with the scores of literary and animation origins and origin stories he tapped into to create his work. The new book is an illustrated biographical monograph compiled without much in the way of fresh access to Miyazaki or his animation house, Studio Ghibli.

We learn of the filmmaker’s youthful love of early sci-fi writer Jules Verne and how that helped shape the “steampunk” settings and production design of works like “Future Boy Conan,” Castle in the Sky” and “Howl’s Moving Castle.” Rapold may try to correct that “steampunk” label, but Miyazaki was most fans’ introduction to that world.

Miyazaki’s World War II childhhood and his father’s work for a fighter plane parts manufacturer informed the aviation-centric “Porco Rosso” and his fanciful “Jiro dreams of Zeroes” biography of a Japanese fighter plane designer — “The Wind Rises.” There are academic theses and New York Times “think pieces” on Miyazki’s obsession with flight, some of which Rapold traces back to an oft-mentioned favorite book from his youth, “The Little Prince.”

Miyazaki wasn’t just reading, digesting and adaptation variations of characters, fantasy themes and settings from “The Little Prince,” “Alice in Wonderland,” “Pippi Longstocking” or “The Secret Garden.” Like Disney corporate practice to this day, he’d take colleagues on scouting trips to quaint, historical European cities and towns to inform the backgrounds of his often Euro-centric stories.

Rapold labels Miyazaki’s ability to absorb and re-think themes, ideas and characters into new stories “magpie tendencies,” and these manifest themselves in forms that render seemingly “foreign” fantasies like “Ponyo” somehow familiar.

That’s just a Japanese “The Little Mermaid” with younger characters and more modern and more Japanese concerns and considerations.

I’m not much of a fan of fantasy fiction or films. And using Miyazaki as your benchmark is a great way to dismiss the vast majority of anime as boilerplate mass production piffle, from under-developed derivative stories to under-animated execution.

But if you’re going to have standards, “The Japanese Walt Disney” is a great place to set the bar. His creative process, style, influences and the ongoing impact he has have been covered elsewhere, in a very fine TV documentary “10 Years with Hayao Miyazaki,” for instance.

“The Worlds of Hayao Miyazaki” adds to that appreciation. It’s a beautiful book, filled with images from those inspirations and how Miyazaki re-imagined them, and a grand overview of the touchstone TV and film works of Miyazaki’s career. Even a casual Miyazki fan will be transported back to those films, gain insight into their themes and the creative process. That makes this new publication a great gift idea for the anime or animation fan on your holiday shopping list.

“The Worlds of Hayao Miyazaki: The Influences and Inspiration Behind the Iconic Films.” By Nicolas Rapold. Frances Lincoln Publishers. 224 pages. $35.

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