“Art of Self Defense,” more proof that Bleecker Street is the “Witness Protection Program” of film distribution

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Another movie incompetently marketed into Oblivion by Bleecker St.

No, Jesse Eisenberg isn’t box office. He makes indie films, mostly. And the subject matter and rest of the cast was no automatic draw.

But people should have found it. That’s marketing.

Their Florida PR rep is the worst I deal with, blackballs me from their screenings. I still see their movies. Never had a beef with Bleecker St. She is blackballing me over some Film Arcade grievance from years ago. A real grown-up.

So I laugh a little at every bomb they release. The movies are sometimes good. But they never find their audience. Incompetent marketing. Especially here in Florida.

From Exhibitor Relations Co.

“Bleecker Street’s THE ART OF SELF-DEFENSE took a finger through the forehead, dropping -71% in just its 3rd week with $311k on 541 screens, $2M total.” https://twitter.com/ERCboxoffice/status/1155486640590032896?s=17

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The Hollywood Reporter digs into “Tarantino’s Violence Against Women Problem”

There are a lot of points to chew on in “Once Upon a Time…in Hollywood” — issues from the pedestrian (maddeningly indulgent pacing, rewriting history) to political (labeling the Manson cult “hippies” is more reactionary than point blank accurate) to the weird.

What is the director’s deal with women’s feet?

His glib treatment of violence has long been a hangup of mine, and not just against women.

Here’s a Heat Vision column that tears into his murderous, torturous treatment of women, with the sole exception of the utterly objectified Sharon Tate/Margot Robbie.

https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/once-a-time-hollywood-quentin-tarantinos-violence-women-problem-1227406

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Movie Review: Diane Kruger is “The Operative”

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In the espionage game, your only loyalties are personal.

That’s been drummed into us in a century of spy movies, so why would “The Operative” have it any other way?

Here’s a solid, simple spy tale about a Mossad recruit, her handler and the Iranian who becomes her mark, her target and her lover.

Diane Kruger stars in this chilly Israeli/Franco-German production, playing a “rootless” London-born German recruited into the ruthlessly efficient Israeli spy agency by Thomas (Martin Freeman of TV’s “Sherlock”).

The story, based on the novel “The English Teacher,” is framed within a debriefing that plays more like an interrogation. Thomas, pushed out of the spy corps, is summoned back.

A room full of brutish, bluff and blunt interrogators — even the men — want to grill him about “Rachel.” She just made contact with Thomas. But her bosses know more about where she isn’t. She slipped out of Israel. She did this and that in London, and hit another European city or two.

“Is it possible she was ‘doubled?'”

Thomas will only talk to his old handler, another personal relationship with someone he can trust. Joe (Yohanan Herson) hears the flashbacks that take us back to when Thomas turned a woman “who wanted to belong to something” from a sympathetic asset, willing to do a little of this or that, into a full-blown agent.

The script emphasizes relentless questioning, the building blocks of all the best spy fiction. Thomas peppered her back then just as Joe and others are peppering him in their German “safe house.”

Skipping past Rachel’s training is a plus. She is put into service in Tehran, first as a facilitator for a hit squad — which murders a Russian scientist, his bodyguard and an innocent bystander. Rachel then becomes the bait/agent helping the Israelis infiltrate a Tehran tech firm.

Her cover? She’s an Australian-born Canadian French and English teacher, moving from Germany to Iran. Her entré? Company manager Farhad (Cas Anvar of TV’s “The Expanse”) has an eye for European women.

Yuval Adler’s script takes its time with this set up. Farhad is pushy, rude, creepy and bullying to women in a lot of those stereotypical Middle Eastern ways. At first. Rachel puts him on his heels, correcting his English at every turn.

She asks questions, and he warns her. That’s not safe in the Islamic Republic. Everybody keeps everything secret — their Ramadan diet (sneaking food), their drinking.

“Keep it secret…It’s a way of life here. Second nature.”

Even the insiders, those doing well, grate at a country that has “too many rules.”

In a flash, he’s taking her to an underground party filled with drinking, drugs, miniskirts and gambling.

“Drinking is illegal here, right?”

“Your Ecstasy deal is also your alcohol dealer.”

The spycraft in “The Operative” — another simplistic, vague and over-used title in a summer of those — is solid. Rachel does a coded-channel version of Skype to send documents, befriends security guards, finds ways on her own to be of use to her handlers.

Also a plus, the spies themselves are callous, jingoistic jerks. Mossad is depicted as unconcerned about what it asks Rachel to do, ramping up her risks without regard to her growing value or increasingly tenuous situation. Why? She’s “not really Jewish” and she’s not Israeli.

“Little Drummer Girl” got there first, but then, Le Carre always does.

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Freeman’s soft-spoken, testy intensity is much in evidence here, and Kruger — building a nice over-40 career in tough-minded thrillers like “In the Fade” and “The Operative” — gives Rachel brittle vulnerability masked by steely stoicism. Her paranoia never gets the best of her, but we never lose track of the fact that Rachel is human, facing moral dilemmas at every turn that would give a human being trained to be a spy pause.

Bourne and Bond rarely have such qualms.

Still, Freeman’s role is mainly as Mr. Exposition — peeling away the layers of Rachel’s psyche by remembering, in startling detail, her work career in Tehran. Anvar’s gullible businessman has only hints of the charm that is supposed to get into Rachel’s head as she performs her duties.

That’s the “Notorious” trap. No spy movie about a female agent can be without sexual lines crossed, romantic entanglements added for spice. It’s a cliché of the genre, and tends to muffle the drama’s impact and deflate its finale.

But for a genre picture, this one is better than average, letting us see what two fine actors saw in the script and not leaving them or us disappointed in the result.

2half-star6

MPAA Rating: unrated, violence, drug use, sex

Cast: Diane Kruger, Martin Freeman, Cas Anvar

Credits: Written and directed by Yuval Adler, based on the novel “The English Teacher” by Yiftach Reicher Atir. A Vertical release.

Running time: 1:57

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Documentary Review: “Raise Hell: The Life and Times of Molly Ivins”

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Molly Ivins had a method, a way of looking at the world, at Texas and later American politics, when coming up with an idea for her magazine and newspaper columns.

She’d raise an eyebrow, maybe let her jaw drop in advance of the words of incredulity she was about to Texas-drawl out.

“Do what?”

One of the great gadflies, wits and champions of the underdog America has ever known gets her due in documentary form in “Raise Hell: The Life and Times of Molly Ivins.”

You can get a sense of her lingering impact — she died of cancer in 2007 — by the famous peers who get choked up in the film’s final interview clips, marveling at the marvel she was and remains in the journalistic memory.

But mostly, “Raise Hell” is a movie of laughs, because nobody ever popped the balloons of political pretense like the hard-drinking, chain-smoking six-foot permanent “outsider” Molly Ivins.

On covering Dan Quayle in 1992 — “I found him dumber than advertised. Put that man’s brain in a bumblebee, and the bee’d fly backwards.”

Newt Gingrich? “You,” dramatic pause, “speak of the draft-dodging, dope smoking deadbeat dad who divorced his dying wife?”

She labeled her beloved Texas, “the national laboratory for bad government.”

Yup. Still scathing after all these years.

Prescient and pointed, skewering and sending up the powerful, Ivins cut a wide swath through American political coverage in a career that took her from The Texas Observer to The New York Times, then back to Dallas and Fort Worth. She was the modern political equivalent of Mark Twain with a column, an on-stage humorist and wit following that ancient credo of great newspaper reporters — “Afflict the comfortable and comfort the afflicted.”

Director Janice Engel reminds us that Ivins started life as the former and ended her days as the latter. Born into Texas oil wealth, private school-educated with a year in France as part of that, college at one of the prestigious Eastern “Seven Sisters” (Smith College), Ivy League grad school, Ivins rebelled against that privilege when she discovered, in the late 1950s, how wrong she found her rich, racist “authoritarian” father’s views to be.

That led to civil rights protests, where she was arrested, and confrontations with the old man. It also led her into journalism, taking her fellow Houston Chronicle interns out sailing on Daddy’s yacht, launching her career in Minneapolis where the local police adopted a pig as a mascot (in the late 1960s) and named it “Molly” because of her coverage.

She went home shortly after that to become a loud liberal voice in a state not known for them.

“I’m a Texan. I drive a pick-up truck. I drink beer. I cuss. I hunt. I’m a liberal. So what?”

Using Willie Nelson tunes and ZZ Top riffs to underscore her words, Engel tracked down legions of Ivins’ peers to celebrate her life and work, as if Ivins’ words alone are not enough.

Rachel Maddow, Paul Krugman and Dan Rather — as well as relatives, old friends and less famous colleagues remember the take-no-prisoners writer, the hard-drinker who rubbed elbows at the bar with many of the people she took down in print, the imposing smart aleck who found advantages to “towering over editors” such as the snooty, imperial Abe Rosenthal at the New York Times.

Her politics were liberal populist, something she decided it was best and “honest” to get out there as “there’s no such thing as impartiality” in journalism. She was optimistic beyond her droll, “Cheer up. Things could be worse. You could be in Texas.

Her view that “politics aren’t left to right, they’re top to bottom,” she preached like America’s Texas-born/Columbia U. grad-school educated civics teacher.

“We are the board of directors. We own it. They’re just the people we’ve hired to drive the bus a little while.”

Engel samples the decades of hate mail, death threats included, the irate calls that came in whenever she was plugging a book (“Molly Ivins Can’t Say That, Can She?” was the most famous) on CSPAN.

All part of that “outsider” thing, making her life and her living in one of America’s most reactionary states where, as more than one friend put it, she “went after people who had power who were abusing that power.”

She wrote Elvis’s obituary, and then covered the funeral for the Elvis-ignorant New York Times, went back to Texas again and became nationally famous as the Bush Dynasty took hold of America. Ivins was Bush II critic in chief, and an authoritative deflater of Texas Exceptionalism.

“The reason the sky is bigger here is…we’ve got no trees.”

“Texas is not a civilized place. They shoot one another. A lot.”

For 90 minutes, Engel lets us swim in Ivins salty, sarcastic, scathing and very funny words — getting serious about “holding a grudge” against Bill Clinton for going along with welfare reform that would take food from hungry children, rolling her eyes at the many moments of public doltishness of “W.”

Political “targets” don’t turn up in Engel’s film. None of them, even though we hear “Clinton loved her” despite her withering columns on that welfare “reform.”

As prescient as Ivins could be about “dark money” taking over American government via politics, maybe the best advice she could pass on for today’s general (liberal, centrist, sane) gloom is the way she looked at her world, something her friend (and Texas Gov. Ann Richards’ daughter) Cecile Richards says kept Ivins sane.

“If you were a progressive in Texas, if you couldn’t laugh you weren’t going to last.”

3half-star

MPAA Rating: unrated, some profanity, smoking and drinking

Cast: Molly Ivins, Rachel Maddow, Paul Krugman, Dan Rather, Sara Ivins Maley,Ann Richards

Credits: Directed by Janice Engel, script by Janice Engel and Monique Zavistovski. A Magnolia release.

Running time: 1:33

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Preview, “Linda Ronstadt: The Sound of My Voice” promises to be heartbreaking

A lovely, lyrical and big voice silenced before she was done with it. Looking forward to this one.

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Netflixable? Robert Patrick’s still scary after all these years in “Edge of Fear”

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“Home invasion” — it isn’t just the NRA’s easiest recruiting fear.

We all dread the idea of it, somebody like Robert Patrick breaking into the house, waving a gun around, drinking our liquor and smoking our cigars.

And FLUSH the toilet! What, were you raised in an OUThouse?

Patrick’s been one of the most reliable big screen scary guys since he broke out in one a “Terminator” sequel. Even cast as good guys, he’s the scary “good” cop, the alarming dad you don’t want to cross.

He’s used to good effect in “Edge of Fear,” a low-budget Georgia home invasion thriller quite possibly filmed for the Chinese market. It’s got a veritable rainbow of villains and a heroic Chinese couple — doctors — at its center.

We meet Laura (Zhu Zhu) and Patrick (Shen Lin) in the prologue, saving a stock broker (Rockmund Dunbar) who’s had a heart attack.

Years later, they’re visiting their friend at his cabin in the mountains when six tattooed greasy-haired and armed toughs stop in after “car trouble.”

That’s what Jack (Robert Patrick) purrs at the door. Mike (Dunbar) asks a lot of questions, doesn’t want to let Jack in. But rather than be rude in front of his guests.

Hell’s bells, Jack holds the door open and lets in his minions and his client (Robert Knepper). The house is overrun in a second, and tense minutes pass as the visitors throw their weight around — stepping on furniture, taking liberties with “I was saving those for a special occasion” cigars, throwing pottery at the fire place.

Patrick’s halting “Please…leave” isn’t going to cut it. Laura’s glowering isn’t helping. But they haven’t seen what we have. Jack’s gang freed Mexican gang leader Novak (Knepper) and wiped out an entire prison busload of convicts and prison guards to do it.

“I don’t scare you, you do I?”

“I don’t scare easily.  I’m a doctor.”

If you’re shocked that these creeps don’t just storm in and kill Mike, Laura and Patrick, so was I. But Novak, who is NOT Mexican, keeps saying “Karma” to Jack, as if their violence begets his bad fortune.

The first confrontation gets one character killed and another stabbed right in the chest. Only the stabbing doesn’t finish the job. That character awakens from the shock, and with the knife still poking out of the chest, proceeds to try and turn the tables on the villains, who are waiting for their next getaway car to show up.

“We’re sticking to the plan,” Jack growls. “That’s why it’s called...the plan.”

The thugs call Patrick “the little Chinaman” and smirk about “Yellow Fever” (a yen for sex with Asians) with Laura. So yeah, they’re racists, too.

And Patrick is easy to under-estimate. He swooned while deer-hunting with Mike. He’s slight of build and seems to take the Hippocratic Oath way too seriously.

But sometimes, a bad guy or bad guy’s moll (Jodi Lynne O’Keefe) has it coming.

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“Ten Little Indians/Die Hard” thrillers like this, in which one character picks off the others, are all about “the gag,” the inventive ways the hero/heroine finds to even the odds. Director Bobby Roth and screenwriters Scott Barkan and Gregg Zehentner cook up a few good ones, and utterly drop the ball at other points.

There’s a sex and post-coital argument bit of comic relief and gallow’s humor from the crooks, who have dumped a body elsewhere. “He’s in a better place. In the garage!

And Patrick brings the scary with his usual aplomb.

It’s a routine thriller with a far-fetched, not-entirely medically-defensible premise (hero with knife in chest). Still, “Edge of Fear” could have been much worse than the sometimes-tense, sometimes mediocre mixed bag it turns out to be.

Thank Patrick for that. He’s the stuff of a million home-invasion nightmares. 2stars1

MPAA Rating: TV -MA, graphic violence, sex, drug use, profanity

Cast: Shen Lin, Robert Knepper, Zhu Zhu, Rockmund Dunbar, Jodi Lyn O’Keefe and Robert Patrick

Credits:  Directed by Bobby Roth, script by Scott Barkan, Gregg Zehentner.  A Parkside Pictures/Netflix release.

Running time: 1:31

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Preview, John Travolta is. “The Fanatic”

I love the way Travolta keeps at it, keeps taking at bats, stays in the game and does what he loves.

He is at that making-movies-almost-no-one sees stage of his career. Even I can’t get my hands on most of them.

This one may be one I miss, as I have no contacts at this studio startup.

But Fred Durst directed it, Devon Sawa is in the cast. Sooooo…

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Netflixable? “Girls with Balls” face (French) rednecks with guns

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You judge a splatter/slasher film on its own merits, at a comfortable remove from the polite society of the rest of cinema. They operate on a different wavelength and can’t be compared to any other genre, only to other films in theirs.

And one with vengeful volleyball players, hunted and then hunting their hunters in the wilds of France? “Girls with Balls?” That’s a totally different animal.

Because, you know, it’s a splatter film with subtitles!

Director/co-writer Olivier Afonso’s gonzo French comedy takes an unruly, foul-mouthed and sexually active volleyball team of competitive, sometimes back-biting French girls and drops them in the Pyrenees, hunted by cultists, “inbred hunters.”

He slaps a “Something About Mary” styled French troubadour (Orleson), dressed in cowboy singer-wear, as a Greek chorus — teasing the plot, singing about this “sport like tennis, where the rackets are your hands,” warning the viewer to “turn off your cell you bastards, this is a cinema!”

And to those volleyball “Girls with Balls,” the Falcons? They’d better get some sleep when they get lost in Coach’s (Victor Artus Solaro) team RV,”Cow-Boy” sings, “for tomorrow, you will DIE!”

The Falcons, especially tall bombshell Morgane (Manon Azem), aren’t beyond cheating to win — on the court. Captain Hazuki (Anne-Solenne Hatte) tries to keep the peace. But Morgane picks on nerdy M.A. (Louise Blachère) and cheats with star player Jeanne’s (Tiphaine Daviot) beau. Tatiana (Margot Dufrene) and Dany (Dany Verissimo-Petit) are an item, so don’t try coming between them.

How will they respond when they get lost, camp out and wake up to a gang of local redneck cultists who marked their RV with blood symbols the day before, and greet them with hoods, guns and torches at dawn?

“Inbred hunters are old news…you need to find something new!”

Gum-snapping contempt for gun-nuts is fun.

Shots are fired, motorbikes are fired up, and legions, it seems, of costumed murderous rural rubes scatter the girls into the woods for chasing and killing, leaving portly Coach to flee and mutter how “I DIDN’T abandon them” to himself in a breathless, nonstop rant.

Can they be a “team” that’s cohesive enough to survive the day?

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The spatter/splatter tone is set early on, lots of “road kill” covering the windshield as Coach drives them into the wilderness.

Afonso sustains the exploitation by keeping the girls in their “coochie cutter” shorts — lots of butt shots, twerking, a striptease (sort of) or two — anything to let them escape their armed, pitiless pursuers.

It’s not exactly an acting showcase, but the ladies look frightened and defiant when necessary. A crotch-grabbing chihuahua and a beheaded attacker wandering off after his epic fail are among the highlights.

It’s the sort of movie that’s all about attitude, about giving the audience exactly what it wants — gore and empowered cute girls in jeopardy.

Can’t say it’s great, can’t say I didn’t laugh, more than once.

If splatter is your kind of thing, this is your kind of movie. Not bad for what it is, in other words.

And don’t forget the subtitles!

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MPAA Rating: TV-MA, graphic violence, sexual content, profanity

Cast: Anne-Solenne Hatte, Camille Razat, Manon Azem, Dany Verissimo-Peti, Margot Dufrene

Credits: Directed by Olivier Afonso, written by Jean-Luc Cano, Olivier Afonso. A Netflix release.

Running time: 1:17

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John Cusack in Jacksonville, another black baseball cap

He’s touring the country in between movies, showing “High Fidelity” and doing a Q & A afterwards.

John Cusack came to Jacksonville last night, and my girlfriend went with a friend — fangirls, Cusack’s got a million of them.

I had to catch “Once Upon a Time…” because Sony didn’t preview it in my market (they know I gave up the Quentin Kool-Aid several movies back). But I asked a friend to note if he was wearing a black baseball cap (which he is wearing in EVERY movie these days that isn’t a Western) and dared her to ask him about this sartorial obsession on Mr. “Better Off Dead” now in his 50s.

She didn’t. But still…it’s a funny affectation to take on.

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Regal Cinemas Goes full Movie Pass

It’s an “Unlimited Movie Ticket Subscription Plan,” and as theaters evolve into small workforce upscale venues, it makes perfect sense. They’re rolling it out fast, too. By the end of the month it will be in place.

Just saw a trailer promoting it before a screening. $21 a month for Unlimited movie going? Hmmm.

From THR

https://t.co/bHZVK4KIMV https://twitter.com/THRmovies/status/1154579117800472576?s=17

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