BOX OFFICE: “Elvis” $31.1, “Maverick” $29.6

Box office actuals, reported via studio receipts added up this AM.

“Elvis” wins the weekend, for those who keep track. With “Minions” and “Thor” on the way, The King will have a short reign. But does he have legs? Will more folks find this eye candy bio pic?

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Movie Review: Banderas and Jaime King vs. Tommy Flanagan, “Code Name Banshee”

Elvis comes to mind whilst watching the shoot-em-up “Code Name Banshee.”

“A little less conversation, a little more action, please,” he’d sing. “All this aggravation ain’t satisfactioning me. A little more bite, a little less bark…”

After a couple of opening shoot-outs, this straight-up C-movie — directed by Jon Keeyes, scripted by Matthew Rogers — flops into lots and lots of cliche-riddled conversation, some time line stumbles (“Five years earlier,” or is it?) and finishes with a whole lot of gunfire, most of it by The Character Who Never Reloads.

That would be the title character, played by “Sin City” and “Pearl Harbor” alumna Jaime King. In a short haircut punching way above her model-slim bodyweight, she has the Ruby Rose role in this implausible and mostly-dull actioner about CIA assassins, high-priced “contracts,” accused “traitors” going off the grid and our heroine hunting for them, because one is or was her dad and the other was her mentor.

Banshee beats up and threatens her apparent CIA “control” (Kim DeLonghi) in an opening scene — in the woman’s OFFICE, mind you. Her father was either killed or went dark after passing on “assets” to the Russians, or so she’s told. His partner and her mentor (Antonio Banderas) disappeared as well.

Funny thing about this screenplay, it never actually clears the whole “treason” thing up. That just sits there, uninvestigated and unresolved. Perhaps Merrick Garland is “on it.”

Banshee works with the modern action pic’s laziest deus ex machina, the all-knowing, all-systems-controlling hacker (Aleksander Vayshelboym). He tracks down the untrackable and guides her into villains’ lairs, where they’re aced out of a contract by some under-explained goon (Tommy Flanagan) and his huge payroll of armed thugs.

The only thing that can solve and settle all this is finding her former mentor.

Naturally, Caleb (Banderas) has slipped into some old, suburban town where he runs a bar. Naturally, he is widowed, with a teen daughter (Catherine Davis) who doesn’t know his past, but should suspect something, as Dad has trained her in martial arts and with his arsenal of firearms.

“Construction?” Sure.

Naturally, Caleb doesn’t want to be found, doesn’t want to get involved and has no interest in clearing his name because, again, that whole “treason” plot thread has been pretty much abandoned.

“There eees mooooooooooore to life than contract killing,” he purrs. But that wisdom comes too late. If she can find him, so can the Irish Eliminator that Flanagan plays.

The story beats are strictly formula, with a few ingredients missing. Somehow, there’s always time to gawk at and fetishize some “professional’s” vast arsenal of weapons, and joke about them.

Trust issues.”

Truth be told, no action picture with Banderas and the always-working Flanagan (“Westworld,” “There Are No Saints,” “Sand Castle”) in it is a total write-off. Banderas makes every line a world-weary Spanish-accented thrill. And Flanagan breaks out his most his menacing brogue for every syllable.

“How many ye’got,” he growls to a minion? “Enough,” the minion underestimates.

It’s never enough, especially when the Big Finish features 110 pound women throwing 190-220 pound goons around, especially when one of those women Never Ever Reloads.

Stupid movie.


Rating: unrated, graphic violence

Cast: Jaime King, Antonio Banderas, Catherine Davis, Aleksander Vayshelboym, Kim DeLonghi and Tommy Flanagan

Credits: Directed by Jon Keeyes, scripted by Matthew Rogers. A Screen Media release.

Running time: 1:32

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Documentary Review: In search of a cult film, and the Uruguayan crank who made it — “Straight to VHS”

When it comes to cult films, ours is not to reason why they gain that status. Ours is but to shrug and marvel that this rare phenomenon has occurred, again, and perhaps laugh or cringe along with the cultists, which may give us all the clues we need.

“Straight to VHS” is about Uruguay’s first direct-to-video thriller. “Act of Violence in a Young Journalist” suddenly appeared on video store shelves there in 1988, and copies of it entered legend — at parties, family and friends’ New Year’s tradition, clung to by film school students much the way Richard Linklater’s “Slacker” inspired a generation of American indie filmmakers.

“Hey, I can do that,” would-be Coppolas and Kubricks said, sometimes going to far as to brag, “Hey, I can do BETTER than that.”

With “Act of Violence,” a bizarre, often inept thriller involving a radio reporter and her work, conversations and relationships, they had to be right. It has hints of “The Room” in its inane storytelling, incompetent editing and weird characters. All anyone knows about the filmmaker, Manuel Lamas, is that he’s obviously “self taught.”

“Straight to VHS” director Emilio Silva Torres sees the movie as “a punk rock call to grab a camera and film your world.”

Torres, whose own filmmaking bonafides are skimpy in the extreme, set out to find Lamas and the people who made this film. Talking with fellow filmmakers, critics and fans from all over South America, using too-few snippets of “Act of Violence” to truly give us the flavor of it, “Straight to VHS” becomes a mystery and a manhunt, as well as a search for Lamas’ other titles.

We hear from people who sold or rented him video gear, learn about the primitive high-end camcorder and video-deck-to-deck editing conditions Lamas worked under. Torres learns, through newspaper and magazine archives, of other films.

But getting people to tell him about Lamas and give away where he is proves nearly impossible. Long hunts for the stars prove almost fruitless as the survivors prove to be reluctant to be interviewed on camera. It is people on the technical side who have more to add. And with a few news clips here, some “personal VHS tapes” of Lamas there, and a couple of interviews, a portrait emerges.

Lamas was an arrogant know-it-all who knew little and wouldn’t listen to advice or accept simple gear upgrades that would have polished his productions. As to why his stars won’t talk about the experience, clues emerge from his personal tapes, which an old colleague held onto. We see him experimenting with shots and framing and scenes, and then rehearsing a sex scene.

“Selfish,” one colleague recalls, in Spanish with English subtitles. “A misogynist,” a former actor allegedly says.

“He was a sadist,” Torres, who worked in the camera and electrical department of a single documentary, diagnoses. “I get why everyone wants to forget him.”

Torres’ film has moments when it’s a fun man-hunt movie, and the footage he uncovers can be chilling, in a rambling confessional (actual footage of Lamas) or control freak “directing” a rehearsal sense.

But as each and every on-camera interview rambles on — too long — and the film itself winds and wends its way towards its quarry, a nagging feeling overwhelms the non-Lamas-cultist that Torres has never answered question one.

“Why is this guy worth hunting down, again?” There’s so little of “Act of Violence” included here, with its fuzzy video transfers and static-blur effects used to show its age, for us to form an opinion on it.

It’s not as obviously-demented and wrong-headed as “Plan 9 from Outer Space,” not kitschy/revolting like “Pink Flamingoes,” not as amusingly, instantly incompetent as “The Room.”

Torres has plenty of fellow aficionados on camera telling us that they “get it,” but not really why. And he samples so little of the actual film that we’re kind of left in the dark.

He’s made a documentary that investigates a cult filmmaker who had a big influence without unraveling that influence, a period piece that visits many a former (now empty) video store, that catches up with that VHS generation and a few hardcore fans who fling to VHS, who prowl social media pages hunting for those long lost actors. But in not showing enough telling samples of Lamas’ films, he never really lets us in on the joke.

Rating: unrated, nudity, sexual situations

Cast: Manuel Lamas, narrated by Emilio Silva Torres.

Credits: Scripted and directed by Emilio Silva Torres. An IndiePix release.

Running time: 1:17

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Next Screening? “Minions: The Rise of Gru,” the decline of…air travel?

Who doesn’t love a little gibberish from the cockpit?

July 1, Steve Carell gets upstaged…again.

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BOX OFFICE: And the winner is? “Marcel the Shell with Shoes On?”

A24’s little stop-motion animated movie based on the viral videos voiced by Jenny Slate and filmed by her ex-husband only opened in six theaters. And yet “Marcel the Shell with Shoes On” pulled in $169k on this six (mostly New York) screens, averaging over $28K per screen.

So, maybe a wider release? Why not? “Lightyear” is bombing, and even if “Marcel” isn’t really aimed at kids, it’s cute enough to hold their attention.

The BIG releases “Elvis” and “Top Gun: Maverick” rolled to a $30.5 million (estimated) each tie. Mondays “actuals,” the final figures submitted by studios from the theater chains, will tell that tale.

Not bad for “Elvis,” another banner weekend for the Tom Cruise war-with-a-country-we-dare-not-name action pic. It’s over $512 million now, 15th best North American box office take EVER. It is, per Exhibitor Relations, the “first billion dollar (global) hit of Tom Cruise’s career.”

“Jurassic World Dominion” managed a $26.44 million weekend, dropping 55% from weekend two for its weekend three total.

“Lightyear” plummeted 65% in its second weekend, down to $17 million. Is it, as the wingnut media is crowing, “too woke,” having a same sex couple among the animated supporting players?

Maybe. Or maybe the general laugh-free script and joylessness of it all killed the word of mouth.

Blunhouse Univesal’s “The Black Phone” only cost $18 million, with Ethan Hawke as the only “name” in its cast. It earned $23.37 million on its opening weekend, and will be in the black by next weekend.

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Movie Review: Satanism finds a home at “H.P. Lovecraft’s Witch House”

The acting is underwhelming, the sound is tinny and off-mike and the script isn’t the least bit subtle about shoving exploitive nudity and lesbian sex into the lurid Lovecraft thriller, “H.P. Lovecraft’s Witch House.”

So, amateurish? Hell yes.

But the ambition is here, and director and co-scripter Bobby Easley’s efforts to weave gloomy collages and montages of superimposed horror imagery — extreme close-ups of underlit rituals and nightmares and Satan showing off his horns as nude cultists cavort by the bonfire — almost atone for some of the worst sins of this non-quite-laughable trip to Lovecraft Country.

Lovecraft aficionados will know the story (“The Dreams of the Witch-House”), the ancient witch-villain Keziah Mason, the bizarre occult riff on academia, Miskatonic University, and the themes of the “Cthulhu Mythos” — the symbolic ancient geometry of inter-dimensional travel, “the witch’s curve” and Stonehenge and Nazi “magic castles” and what not.

It’s the execution of it all that really lets the picture down.

Portia Chellelynn plays Alice, a student-older-than-average who flees a friend’s apartment, her refuge after escaping an abusive relationship that ended in a beating that caused a miscarriage. Her new hide out, Hannah House, is a remote old mansion recommended by her Miskatonic professor and mentor (John Johnson).

In a huge, rambling brick house with many rooms, the frightening owner (Andrea Collins) tucks Alice in the unfinished attic.

“I need to be here. I can feel it!”

There’s just that owner, her creeper alcoholic old Jesus freak brother (Joe Padgett) and her too-welcoming walking-tattoo niece Tommi (Julie Anne Prescott) sharing the place.

What’s spooky about that?

Well, the rats, for starters. The loose floorboard hiding a long-rolled-up black magic altar cloth, creepy paintings of this former servant named Keziah and weird stuff happening in the woods out back are kind of red flags, too.

Alice doesn’t have dreams, she has nightmares. And the fact that infants and children are being abducted all around town should give her another clue.

Gratuitous nudity and supernatural perils encountered while the star’s in her underwear aside, this is a seriously silly movie. Its a high school dropout’s idea of what college is like, right down to the professor and his unmistakable Harley mechanic beard and grasp of Lovecraftian academics.

There’s a whiff of the whole “people who take Lovecraft WAY too seriously” about it, especially in the QAnon U. scenes.

Still, Easley manages some striking if murky and so dimly-lit you can’t follow the action ritual sequences. I could see that footage recycled in nightmare sequences of better films, with better acting and better sound, etc.

Rating: unrated, violence, sex, nudity

Cast: Portia Chellelynn, Julie Anne Prescott, John Johnson, Erin Trimble and Andrea Collins

Credits: Directed by Bobby Easley, scripted by Bobby Easley and Ken Wallace, based on H.P. Lovecraft’s “The Dreams of the Witch-House.” A Horror Wasteland release.

Running time: 1:20

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Documentary Review: Say ‘allo to my gorging lil’friends — “ScarfFace”

You glance at the poster or the DVD cover for “ScarfFace” and you figure “Ah, a new edition to the DePalma/Pacino Cuban gangster epic” is out.

“Say ‘allo to my leetle friend” and all that.

And then you see the extra “f” in the title and figure out it’s a documentary about “competitive eating,” and chuckle. “Clever…cute.”

But the deeper you get into this film about this distinctly American “sport,” built around the annual, over-hyped and oft-televised World Championship hot-dog eating contest staged every July 4 at Nathan’s on Coney Island, the more the film resembles the making-of-a-mobster tale from the ’80s.

PETA protests and deaths among the competitors, allegations of xenophobia and corruption and racketeering and “fixed” results sour what little wry amusement there is for what its most cynical competitor aptly describes as “”wasting food in onstage display of gluttony” that is both gross and quintessentially American.

Joseph Ruze and Sean Slater’s documentary starts out like many a puff-piece TV feature on the comical metaphor for Wasteful America, Gorging America and Why America is So Fat. A little Coney Island stunt, first staged in 1916, grows into something the content-starved “All ‘Sports’ network, ESPN, turns into a big footnote in the annual “news” that spins around the July 4 holiday.

Joey Chestnut beats Takeru Kobayashi in Nathan’s Hot Dog eating contest! USA! USA!”

George Shea is a PR guy who got involved with promoting the event, took on MC duties and is laugh-out-loud GREAT at it. He had to be the one to give nicknames to some of the eaters — Joey “Jaws” Chestnut, Matthew “The Megatoad” Stonie, Sonya “The Black Widow” Thomas.

“The Four Horsemen of the Esophagus are here today,” he intones, working up the crowd, competing for “The Most Important Trophy in the HISTORY OF THE WORLD!”

That there’s some hype, and the straw-boater topped Shea’s breathless patter, reciting-from-memory the titles in eating pierogis, chicken wings, brats and tacos each contestant can claim, is an amusing marvel.

And then “the hot-dog eating contest” film evolves into an expose of “Major League Eating” and hints of greed and megalomania, showing Shea as a would-be Vince McMahon/France family NASCAR cover-ups and NFL colluding hype-master who has taken it over.

It’s enough to make you lose your appetite…for hot dogs and for good-natured carny barker ballyhoo.

The portraits of the competitors are superficial in the extreme. Even the obnoxious self-promoter Juan “More Bite” (Get it?) who is always “available” to talk to doesn’t give us much idea of what motivates these folks — who might pick up an extra $75,000 a year at the very top level — or what their lives are like.

But taking the film far and wide, to Vegas and eating contests staged in restaurants and fairs, gives us an idea of the small-time nature of it, and just how low the stakes actually are that these people and the controlling (no media access except, by contract, through Shea) tyrant who runs it are fighting over.

What feels, at the outset, like a good-natured “King of Kong” (competitive arcade game players) riff on an arcane corner of Americana starts to smell like every dirty thing you’ve ever heard or suspected of the WWE, NASCAR and the NFL.

When we learn, early on, that the skinny Japanese fellow, Takeru Kobayashi, who helped make this event national news in the early 2000s, was banned from competing for refusing to sign on with the greedy control-freak publicist and hype man who took over “competitive eating,” the entire enterprise starts to smell.

And just when you marvel that of all the time we spend watching people shove hot dogs with buns down their throats “nobody chokes to death,” the deaths start to turn up.

They’re not choking, but this practice is as lethal as you’d expect, shortening and ending lives.

As an expose, “ScarfFace” makes a great surface gloss on this “sport,” just deep enough to suggest how unsavory it all is, perhaps not deep enough to lead to legal action against the filmmakers. The “scandals” surrounding it are usually limited to the deaths.

And every “King of Kong” or WWE needs its villain. Shea may even relish (ahem) that label.

The staged footage of Mexican “fans” of the sport watching it on TV and the cynical, droll commentary of semi “above it all” eater and self-described lab trial test subject Phil “The Abyss” Fuden may put this vulgar display of Ugly Americanism in perspective. Or it could be the filmmakers taking their own shot at hyping their product into something it never quite is — an authoritative take-down of a July 4 “tradition.”

Rating: unrated, profanity

Cast: Joey Chestnut, George Shea, Miki Sudo, Molly Schuyler, Takeru Kobayashi, Juan “More Bite” Rodriguez, Phil “The Abyss” Fuden, Matt Stonie

Credits: Directed by Joseph Ruze and Sean Slater, scripted by Sean Slater. An IndiePix release.

Running time: 1:17

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Movie Preview: Dame Helen and Gillian A. star in a sequel that’s also a prequel, “White Bird: A Wonder Story”

Mandy Patinkin also stars in this “Let me tell you my story” sequel that takes “Wonder” and lessons about doing the right thing and kindness back to The Holocaust.

October 14th.

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Movie Review: A Ukrainian combat thriller, “Sniper: The White Raven”

“Sniper” movies are a combat genre all their own thanks to the fatal attraction of the loners — usually two-person teams — who do the work, hit-men or women in uniform, a one-or-two-shooter “surgical strike.”

Many a first-person shooter video game has sniper characters. Check the Internet Movie Database out — scores of titles built around snipers, many of them spin-offs of a seminal Tom Berenger B-movie from the early ’90s — “Sniper.”

The Ukrainian thriller “Sniper: The White Raven,” hews to that Berenger/Billy Zane film’s formula, with its own Ukrainian twists. It’s built on vengeance, a lone shooter mowing down Russians and their in-country lackeys during the 2014 Russian invasion, and a present-day 2022 epilogue.

It’s based on the experiences of a real-life Ukrainian soldier, and unlike most any sniper movie you can think of, this time, we see how such super-shooters are selected and trained.

Nobody likes snipers,” the hard-as-nails “Cap” (Andriy Mostrenko) growls to his recruits, in Ukrainian with English subtitles. “They are insidious and elegant.” They can kill with stealth and any number of weapons, none of them all that high-tech. Because “It’s not the rifle that makes a sniper. It’s intelligence and endurance.”

Aldoshyn Pavlo stars as Mykola, a hippie pacifist when we meet him, married to an artist (Maryna Koshkina) who is expecting their first child, living lightly on the land in a dugout house they built, using electricity from a windmill they installed. They’re cute and odd enough to make local TV in their corner of Donetsk.

Mykola bikes to work and teaches his disinterested students physics. But he gets their interest when he turns a punk’s spitballs into a lesson on the mathematics of velocity.

Clever.

When tensions boil over after Ukraine removes its corrupt Russian puppet president, the stealth invasion begins. Mykola and wife Nastya are in the middle of nowhere, is a somewhat camouflaged house. They must be “spies,” the newly-unmasked Russians declare. One seriously rough-handling of the civilians later and she’s dead and he’s left for dead.

Ukrainian militia help with the burial, but they don’t trust the guy the locals nicknamed “Digger,” because of his dugout house, either. Mykola must convince them he’s no longer a pacifist, that he craves revenge. He will go by the code-name, “Raven,” he says, getting WAY ahead of himself.

The militia bootcamp training montage shows how little regard the officers and fellow recruits have for the long-haired teacher. But his math skills get him noticed when he raises his hand for the sniper recruiters.

Yeah kids, you’ve got to be able to do a lot of calculating when you’re choosing your shot.

“The White Raven” follows our grieving widower, toting his wife’s carved raven totem, into combat to carve fear on the black hearts of the enemy, one dead goon at a time.

Labeling sniper films “genre” pictures works because almost to a one — “Sniper” to “American Sniper,” Saving Private Ryan” to “Enemy at the Gates” — they all boil down to The Ultimate Test. There’s always “a shooter with talent,” as Barry Pepper’s character declares in “Private Ryan.” A sniper-vs-sniper duel is inevitable.

That said, Marian Bushan’s film does a splendid job with the preliminaries, doesn’t leave out the morality of having to shoot a familiar face, and doesn’t omit the consequences of mistakes.

The action climax is solid, tense and exciting. And if you’re wondering why Russian generals are as rare as white ravens, stick around for the coda.

Rating: Rated R for violence, bloody images, language and some sexuality/nudity.

Cast: Pavlo Aldoshyn, Maryna Koshkina and Andriy Mostrenko

Credits: Directed by Marian Bushan, scripted by Marian Bushan and Mykola Voronin. A Well Go USA release.

Running time: 1:51

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BOX OFFICE: “Elvis” is still the king, might edge “Maverick,” “Black Phone” headed towards $24 million

Baz Luhrmann’s “Elvis,” an “event” movie that isn’t about action or actors in tights, is heading towards a $31.5 million opening, and is projected at this point to edge the latest weekend of “Maverick” ($30).

Thursday night previews — which included Tuesday night paid previews for one title — show “Elvis” jump-starting its weekend with $3.5 million, “Black Phone” set up by the horror crowd with a $3 million bonus. But Friday “The King” pulled away, with $12.7 million as its Thursday-Friday take.

Yes, Deadline.com confirms. An older audience is showing up, mostly female, and they’re sitting through a 2:39 film about a music icon who died in 1977.

Younger folks, you’re missing out. It’s worthy of the label “event.”

“Top Gun: Maverick,” crossed the $500 million mark at the domestic box office this week, and shows little sign of exiting soon. A small drop-off, weekend to weekend means the sequel will pull in $30.

“Jurassic World Dominion” looks to earn $26 million or so.

“The Black Phone” is also headed north of the $20 million mark this weekend, opening at $23.2, thanks toa $10 million and change Thursday/Friday take. That’s good, not spectacular, for a horror film opening, and I’d expect fans to show up at this critically-acclaimed thriller in bigger numbers than currently projected. But horror makes a lot of money, typically, opening night. So maybe not.

“Lightyear” is having a steep dive second weekend. Maybe $18? I didn’t think that one played. “Joyless.” Word must be getting around. That’s a 60% drop from opening weekend. Pretty steep for a Pixar movie. Maybe it’s time to leave “Toy Story” alone.

“Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” is winding down, another $1.76 which suggests it’ll lose screens and taper off before hitting $410-415.

“Everything Everywhere all at Once” has cleared $66 million, and might not clear $67.

“Bob’s Burgers” and “Bad Guys” are finishing their animated runs right around $31 and $96, respectively.

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