Netflixable? Mother and child face “the Beast (El páramo)” in “The Wasteland” of 19th century Spain

“The Wasteland” or “The Beast (El páramo)” as it was originally-titled, is a Spanish period piece that inverts that classic horror trope of a mother doing anything to save her child from “evil.”

In a remote corner of 19th century Spain, doted-on-Diego (Asier Flores) eventually figures out that his mother (Inma Cuesta) is the one in real peril from this “Babadook” like “beast.”

The debut feature of direct/co-writer David Casademunt has an arresting, minimalist setting, a nerve-rattling moment or two and some decent performances. But it’s a slow slog of a thriller, playing much longer than its actual 93 minute running time.

A family of three is riding-out Spain’s troubled, war-wracked 19th century in a farm in a near-literal wasteland. The backlit trees are dead, their cabbage and corn are wilted and Salvador (Roberto Álamo) can barely keep them alive with the rabbits he raises.

It doesn’t help that little Diego is in the habit of treating them as pets. Dad’s “He needs to learn to be a man” (in Spanish, or dubbed into English) demands, handing the boy a bunny-bashing club, only send the kid running to the comfort of his mother.

Mother and child play games, share a bed and even baths. She tells Diego stories, some of them scary.

But when a bloodied, wounded stranger washes ashore in a boat on the edges of their land, and then kills himself in front of mother and child, Salvador tells his own story. It’s about “the beast.”

“No eyes fill the sockets of its face,” but it “still sees through you,” he warns. It’s another tale told to keep the kid in line, because “There are only bad people out there, people who hurt other people” beyond their land.

So what does Salvador do? He impulsively decides to take the body to “his family,” as if he knows them, as if leaving his own wife and son alone isn’t the worst idea anybody in any horror movie ever had.

That leaves mother and son to deal with the spooky sounds in the wind, Diego’s visions of Dad’s long-dead “beast” victim sister (Alejandra Howard) and Mom’s growing paranoia, firing the family shotgun into the darkness, or at nothing Diego can see in the broad daylight.

The kid’s jobs? Distract her. Reel her back into reality. Follow her instructions for fighting the beast, and learn how to bludgeon bunnies.

The bunny-bashing is one of several unpleasant things Casademunt flings at us. We see crude, spooky homemade dolls, and images of rotting fruit and animal carcasses decorate the setting as Mom despairs of her husband ever returning and Diego starts to figure out Mom’s what this beast wants next.

The slow pacing and elementary mistakes about how to frame, light, film and edit horror to make it shock and awe render this otherwise good-looking, stark and elemental thriller too bland to pay off.

Rating: TV-MA, graphic violence, suicide

Cast: Inma Cuesta, Asier Flores, Roberto Álamo and Alejandra Howard

Credits: Directed by David Casademunt, scripted by David Casademunt, Martí Lucas and Fran Menchón. A Netflix release.

Running time: 1:33

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Movie Preview: Horror on a ski trip, “Old Strangers”

Sort of a creature feature of the “Don’t TOUCH that” school.

“Old Strangers” releases Jan. 11.

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Movie Review: For a dementia patient, a day of lucidity when she’s “June Again”

One of those performances you just lose yourself in carries off “June Again,” a sweet and sentimental portrait of dementia, and the “paradoxical lucidity” that gives some sufferers a short respite from the memories, manners, skills and knowledge that disease has stripped from them.

Veteran Australian character actress Noni Hazlehurst is a window into June Wilton, the woman she’s been for five years since a series of strokes left her with vascular dementia — her memory shot, her grasp of time, the present as opposed to the past, unstuck — and the woman she once was.

Hazlehurst, of such recent Oz films as “Ladies in Black” and “The Mule,” lets us see the lost soul June is, the pushy, outspoken bulldozing matriarch she once was and the flashes of panic that cross her face as she feels her “temporary lucidity” about to leave her, perhaps for the last time.

It’s marvelous work at the heart of a story about second chances, making amends and maybe fixing the family world that she slowly figures out has “gone to pieces” since her strokes five years before.

Writer-director JJ Winlove’s debut feature takes us into a life interrupted and the mad dash to take in all that’s happened to her two children, her grandchildren and the family business since she “went away.” While it has a familiar feel that makes this story quite predictable, Winlove trips up expectations by simply erring on the side of “Let’s be realistic,” often as not. And through it all, his star keeps us involved.

When we meet her, June is having trouble distinguishing reality from the flashbacks that come, unannounced, reminding her of relatives who have visited and a romance of long ago. She’s well-cared for at Winburn Rest Home, doted on by the staff whose names she can’t recall. Her doctor (Wayne Blair) makes little headway in even the simplest tests in his evaluations.

“Try to read this and do what it says,” he says. She can’t quite plumb what “Close your eyes” means and what she must do.

She’s pleasant enough, befuddled about forgetting her room number, the combination to the door leading into the yard. But she’s lost. Until one day she isn’t.

“Where the hell AM I?” The staff is startled, but they’ve seen it before. They scramble to get her family over here for this little patch of lucidity. June “does a runner” with the aid of a sympathetic cabbie.

“It’s like a prison in there, the decor ALONE…”

But the house she goes back to has been sold, even though she’s able to steamroll the ballerina-dressed child practicing her violin (“Debussy’s First Arabesque!” June enthuses, recognizing it.) who now lives there into giving her some of her mother’s clothes. The furniture’s long gone, even June’s treasured dresser.

And her daughter and son seem more guarded than delighted at this turn of events. Ginny (Claudia Karvan) endures her “You couldn’t wait until I was in the GROUND?” protests about the house and furnishings, and is helpless as willful June storms back into the family wallpaper business that seems to have gone to ruin. Ginny isn’t wholly forthcoming about the reasons she and her brother Devon (Stephen Curry) are no longer on speaking terms.

As the day unfolds, June learns of the tragedies and trials that her own tragedy kept her from learning about, and presses on with plans to fix things before she loses it again.

“Is there ANYthing that hasn’t fallen apart in this family?”

Winlove largely avoids “cute” in telling this story of June’s journey from oblivious to sentient, only to realize she was another form of “oblivious” back when she was ruling this clan and putting everybody in a position of wanting to please or just appease her.

“Who taught you to hug?” she wants to know of one of her obviously emotionally-stunted kids.

“YOU did!”

There are hints of “The Notebook,” “The Father,” “Still Alice” and “Still Mine” and every other movie about dementia, and even a whiff of “Awakenings” to this bittersweet “Flowers for Algernon” story of the ebb and flow of awareness.

But Winlove is content to keep his story simple and leave the film in the hands of an actress who makes June not just pitiful and sympathetic, but a real piece of work who did a number on her family long before her illness came along and broke their hearts.

Rating: unrated, some profanity

Cast: Noni Hazlehurst, Claudia Karvan, Stephen Curry, Nash Edgerton, Wayne Blair and Otis Dhanji

Credits: Scripted and directed by JJ Winlove. A Samuel Goldwyn release.

Running time: 1:39

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Peter Bogdanovich, “Paper Moon,” “Mask,” “Last Picture Show” and “The Cat’s Meow” director dies — 1939-2022

Critic and essayist turned documentary and then feature filmmaker, a director of “The Last Picture Show” and “Paper Moon,” specializing in nostalgia and homages to the past, a star director who wrecked his career in all sorts of personal, stupid and even tragic ways, there are a lot of reasons to recognize and remember Peter Bogdanovich, who died today at the age of 80.

In hunting down photos of him to do a remembrance, I see some wag’s piece of a few years back that refers to him as “Hollywood’s Favorite Flop.” Oh yes, that fits. He ditched the writer/producer/sounding board wife, Polly Platt, who helped make him a success and took up with starlets, from Cybil Shepherd to Miss “Star 80,” Dorothy Stratten.

He over-reached with his dips into screen nostalgia and struggled, like his longtime friend and mentor, Orson Welles, to stage a comeback. He even managed one, the nostalgic Old Hollywood murder mystery “Cat’s Meow.”

He acted, playing film directors like himself as often as not. He was a hoot on “Northern Exposure,” for instance, playing a version of himself as that director who made it to every film festival that invited him.

And he stayed in the public eye as a critic, historian and enthusiast for the cinema. “Favorite flop” or not, he made a difference.

I talked to him many times over the years, about his Orson Welles biography “This is Orson Welles” (His publisher sent critics cassette copies sampling the taped interviews, which I thanked him for profusely and told him I’d treasure forever. His reply? A droll, “And I knew you would.”), about “Paper Moon,” which he showed at the Florida Film Festival and did a Q & A about, and even about “Cat’s Meow.”

He’d pass on gossip and impersonations — of Cary Grant, whom he knew, and Hitch and Orson. He’d give grooming and fashion tips, always with a hearty helping of fun name dropping.

“Never button your shirt sleeves,” he said, citing Audrey Hepburn’s advice. Gives your arms a “willowy” look when you walk. “Never touch your face with anything but water,” Cary Grant advised, and he passed on.

Below is one of those chats, just a catching-up with a film buff’s film buff, a filmmaker who was an even bigger cinema fan than his more successful doppelganger, Steven Spielberg. This piece came from 2007.

Starting off with the thrilling sniper at a drive-in thriller which gave Boris Karloff a last moment in the spotlight (“Targets”) Peter B. wasn’t everything he might have been. But he had a pretty good run and made an eloquent spokesman for Hollywood history, Orson Welles and the cinema’s Golden Age.

There’s a Tom Petty rockumentary to finish and a possible film project, “The Broken Code,” about a real-life scientific stink over the secrets of DNA.

He appears in the upcoming films “The Dukes “(with Chazz Palminteri), “The Fifth Patient” and “Humboldt County.”

But active on-screen and off-screen career aside, Peter Bogdanovich, a former “boy wonder” of the cinema has, in many ways, gone back to his roots. At 67, he has become a guardian of the cinema’s history. This student actor-turned-curator and film journalist-turned-director is once again focusing on the thing that first brought him fame — preserving and honoring the filmmakers of the past.

Before directing “The Last Picture Show,” “What’s Up Doc?,” “Mask” and “The Cat’s Meow,” he was, film scholar David Thomson notes, “a valuable, French-inspired critic who insisted on the director as auteur [author of the film], so much so that many Americans began to take directors more seriously because of what he wrote.”

Today, Bogdanovich hosts a classic movie channel for online-movie service ClickStar (cstar.com). He has written extensively on his friend and mentor Orson Welles. And he is in talks to edit Welles’ last, unfinished film, “The Other Side of the Wind,” tied up in French courts for more then 30 years.

“It’s like Bleak House,” Bogdanovich jokes. “It just went on and on and on.”

Bogdanovich is this year’s recipient of the Florida Film Festival American Visionary Award. Friday night, his Oscar-winning Dust Bowl comedy, “Paper Moon,” will be shown at 6:30 at the Enzian, followed by a Q&A with the director.

“That was a tough picture,” he says of “Paper Moon.” “Personal problems between my ex-wife, who was working on the picture, too, and me. Making a picture with an 8-year-old lead [Tatum O’Neal, who won an Oscar] was tough. She didn’t know how to read yet, much less act. She was adorable, but she wasn’t a pro. I was so anxious to finish it and get out of there that we came in four days under schedule.”

Bodganovich has always been known for a fondness for nostalgia, both in subject matter and in style. He has made period pieces, 1930s-style screwball comedies, an acclaimed tribute to filmmaker John Ford and an old-fashioned Cole Porter musical.

One thing he hasn’t done before is a music documentary. His Tom Petty film is a music story and a Florida story. It “begins in Gainesville and ends in Gainesville. We looked at a five-hour cut the other day, a little long. But Marty Scorsese spent three and a half hours on just six years of Bob Dylan’s life. We’re trying to cover 30 years of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, a very interesting story, drama, tragedy, personality conflicts, humor. Guys who grew up in Gainesville, went to L.A. to try and make it in the record business. And they did.”

The Orson Welles project is another visit to the past, one he shares with the great filmmaker. In the early 1970s, as his fame was growing, Bogdanovich appeared in and helped Welles make “The Other Side of the Wind,” a movie whose cast included John Huston, Dennis Hopper, Mercedes McCambridge, Edmund O’Brien and Rich Little. A movie about the last day in the life of a legendary moviemaker (Huston), the film’s Iranian backer and Welles fought over the unfinished project, and it wound up in court, and in limbo.

“One day when we were on the set, Orson turns to me and says, ‘If anything happens to me, promise you’ll finish this movie.’ I didn’t want to think about that, or talk about it. But we had no way of knowing it wouldn’t be finished then, or even 10 years later, when Orson died. It fell into the French courts in 1976.

“According to Orson, he shot everything he needed to finish the film except for what he called ‘trick shots,’ effects. The footage with the actors was all done. I haven’t seen all of it, just an hourlong cut of it. So we may do those shots, which would be easier to do in the digital age, or we may not. We’ll try to cut it together in the unusual style Orson intended.

“It was a movie 20 years ahead of its time, at least. It’s amazing how contemporary it is — splintered, fragmented. It was a mockumentary, before there was such a term. It’s important to Orson, to how we remember him, that it be finished. I think it’ll be something extraordinary.”

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Movie Review: A great cast and clever conceit are wasted in “The 355”

On paper, “The 355” looked a lot better than it turned out. A glossy, fast-moving and violent B-movie, an espionage thriller built around five acclaimed actresses — two of them Oscar winners, another a two-time nominee — this could have been an action romp that decorated every resume in the lot.

But good stunts and the always-cool 360 degree pans of our five furies in action can’t cover for a clumsy, contrivance-filled script and listless direction from the guy (Simon Kinberg) who killed the X-Men franchise. It starts with promise, hits the wall at the one-hour mark and nonsensically goes on and on after its climax.

Jessica Chastain stars as “Mace,” a CIA operative who loses a bag of cash, the device she was supposed to buy, and a partner “with benefits” (Sebastian Stan) in a hand-off followed by a chase and melee in Paris.

Oscar-winner Lupita Nyong’o is Khadija, an MI6 technological threats expert who used to be a field agent, summoned to give a little off-the-books help to her pal Mace in retrieving a “drive” that is the ultimate hack — from power grids to jetliner, finance and military systems, it’s a classic “They get this thing, they start World War III” movie MacGuffin.

These two, joined by other women somehow mixed-up in this gadget and the hunt for it, spend the entire film getting and losing the cell-phone shaped device. Diane Kruger trots out her action chops and multi-lingual profanity as the German agent Marie, and Oscar-winner Penélope Cruz plays a Colombian secret police shrink named Graciela lassoed in because of the operative (Edgar Ramirez) who first grabs the drive from a drug lord who figures to sell it to the highest bidder.

And Bingbing Fan makes an appearance as the obligatory kickass Chinese presence in the chase, which climaxes in Shanghai.

Veteran screenwriter Theresa Rebeck, whose credits date back to TV’s “LA Law” and “NYPD Blue,” director and co-writer Kinberg (“Ex-Men: Dark Phoenix”) and Bek Smith (“Maleficent: Mistress of Evil”) reduce the assorted characters into “types” — Chastain as the chilly, two-fisted professional, Kruger as “the most screwed-up” of the lot, Fan as the martial artist, Nyong’o as the tough-broad peacemaker among the warring factions and Cruz as the “normal person” who cries that “I am not MADE for this.”

The actors, as well as they handle the shoot-outs and fight choreography, never overcome this pigeonholing. The odd bit of “I need to call home” suggestion of a love life/home life, which raises the stakes, doesn’t make the characters any less predictable than the plot, whose only surprises are the eye-rolling detours it takes from what’s logical.

The picture stops sprinting and begins to lurch, with scenes and twists that make no sense and even the title’s explanation — they take their name as a “team” from the code-number of a female spy in George Washington’s employ — slapped on as an addendum.

“January release” or not, it’s still a shame that all this talent, an epic fight in a fish market and some cool shootouts and chases were wasted this way.

Rating: PG-13 for sequences of strong violence, brief strong language, and suggestive material.

Cast: Jessica Chastain, Lupita Nyong’o, Diane Kruger, Penélope Cruz, Bingbing Fan, Edgar Ramirez and Sebastian Stan.

Directed by Simon Kinberg, scripted by Theresa Rebeck, Bek Smith and Simon Kinberg. A Universal release.

Running time: 2:04

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Documentary Preview: “We Need to talk About Cosby”

Jan 30, we find found out if this is as damning a reckoning as it seems.

On Showtime. Four episodes.

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Movie Preview: Revenge is a dish best served by Liam Neeson, by “Blacklight”

A Feb. 11 thriller of the Liam as a lethal Fed/grandpa who crosses the wrong Deep Staters.

Aidan Quinn is the biggest name among his co stars. Never heard of this distributor so good luck finding it when it comes out.

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Movie Preview: Cusack and Hirsch play a father and son mixed up in a deadly “Pursuit”

A hacker’s wife is taken, his government assassin dad may know something about it.

Emile Hirsch and John Cusack star in this Feb. 18 C-movie, with Cusack eschewing his trademark black baseball cap. For once.

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Movie Preview: Riseborough stars as another mother obsessed with a lost daughter — “Here Before”

This Feb. thriller is about a grieving mom who thinks a neighbor’s child is her own, reincarnated

Love that Riseborough.

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Netflixable? Not-a-Blade-Runner Guy Pearce gets lost in “Zone 414”

The ghost of “Blade Runner” casts a long, gloomy shadow over sci-fi dystopias, all but defining what we think our hellscape future looks like — dark, rainy and overrun with attractive human-looking robots.

They didn’t spend any money on the “rainy” part in “Zone 414,” a half-hearted half-speed no-budget “Blade Runner” knock off.

Guy Pearce, who turns up in so many of these sorts of C-movies that we wonder about his tax bills, child support payments or Bob Dylan/Nicolas Cage mania for constant work to keep whatever demons he has at bay, stars as a private eye sent to track down the missing daughter of a tech billionaire.

The twist? The technology the billionaire (Travis Fimmel, ridiculously over-the-top) developed was androids — skin-covered robots designed for the fleshy pleasures of the super rich and lonely. His daughter Melissa ran off, he figures, to the one “zone” where such semi-sentient machines are allowed to freely interact with humans, Zone 414, aka “Robot City.”

He hires David Carmichael, scarred and callous, an ex-cop who’s seen it all.

“Did you regret what you did?”

“I live with what I did.”

He’s been hired because “I know what’s alive and what isn’t.” That will be handy, as the missing Melissa fled to a place where she was set on passing for an android pleasure bot.

Carmichael, whom we’ve already seen turn a deaf ear to an android (Antonia Campbell-Hughes) reasoning with him and pleading with him to punish the real villains and spare her. We’ve seen him shoot and dissect her as well. He must be the perfect guy to wander into this zone and start asking questions.

“When you don’t like to answer questions,” one pervy habitue (Ned Dennehy, the stand-out in this cast) purrs, “you quickly learn to not ask any.”

His tourguide through this shadowy world is Jane, the scantily-clad popular new model of digital prostitute. She’s played with an emotionless (she’s a machine, remember) drone by Matilda Anna Ingrid Lutz of “Revenge.”

“Why does a machine have an apartment?” Carmichael wants to know, as she’s got fancy digs.

“So that the machine forgets it’s a machine!”

Carmichael must follow her, visit her pimp Roy “short for Royale (Olwen Fouéré) and question the tech tycoon’s shrink-brother (Jonathan Aris, oily and quite good) to get to the bottom of things. Pearce and Lutz have the trickier task of having to make us care — about any of this.

The performances vary wildly in terms of “convincing” quality. The production values, envisioning a “future” with humanoid robots, pistols with silencers, antique reel-to-reel tape recorders and Ford LTD taxis, is consistently “off.”

But the dialogue in this Northern Irish production has a nice zing to it. A pervy villain’s explanation for his “type” crackles — “I have a penchant for...damaged things.”

Roy asks a rhetorical question — “You know what rich people want? EVERYthing!”

Yet any time one thinks “Well that line lands a punch, that scene crackled,” the drifting narrative and occasional achingly-bad scene brings the picture to a halt.

The dialogue and character “types” might have been what sold Pearce on this production. And as a rule, one never turns down a working vacation in Ireland — northern or southern.

But as “Zone 414” grinds to a gear-crunching halt, one does wonder what Mr. Pearce was thinking, what bills hang over him or what demons send him scurrying back before the camera, losing himself in another bad no-budget movie because the alternative is the threat of getting lost again in one’s own thoughts.

Rating: R (Nudity|Language|Disturbing Images|Some Drug Use|Violence)

Cast: Guy Pearce, Matilda Anna Ingrid Lutz, Jonathan Aris, Travis Fimmel, Colin Salmon, Olwen Fouéré and Antonia Campbell-Hughes

Credits: Directed by Andrew Baird, scripted by Bryan Edward Hill. A Saban Films release on Netflix.

Running time: 1:38

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