Movie Preview: Shia LaBeouf works on inmate “Henry Johnson” for David Mamet

Evan Jonigkeit has the title role, and Chris Bauer is in the supporting cast of this May 9 release.

Mamet has stepped into throughout his career, but his recent outspoken turns of phrase and thinking probably explain why this 2:25 feature film is being self-distributed.

I loved “Heist” like most everybody else, and “Spartan” more than most. He’s still a major figure in American theater. But at some point, you keep burning your bridges and you end up seeing Shia LaBeouf as your last ticket home. And then you have to distribute your movie yourself.

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Charles Bronson has every year’s Best Earth Day Message

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Movie Review: A Robot Might Provide or Deny “The Last Spark of Hope”

Almost all science fiction is in the business of world-building, creating a landscape, setting, period in time or even “universe” where the story takes place. Dystopias engage in world-destroying.

The Polish thriller “The Last Spark of Hope” manages to serve up an arresting, bleak and bitter setting for The End, and do it on a tiny budget — production design exquisitely manages to do more with less.

Throw in a very clever conceit — the limitations of Asimov’s “Laws of Robotics” and the trap of password-protected AI that can’t “prove that you’re not a robot” — and you’ve got the makings for a tight and downbeat “Twilight Zone” episode, or a drawn-out and just as downbeat feature film.

It’s a minimalist post-apocalyptic tale of life after Life on Earth has been canceled. The planet has been so polluted, disease-ridden, pillaged and climate-changed that the fat cats fled it in rockets and the list of those left behind survivors may be down to just this lone 20something in the middle of Poland.

“We were like the Titanic,” Eva narrates (dubbed into English). “Only we knew we were headed towards an iceberg…but nobody wanted to slow down.”

Her army commander father left Eva (Magdalena Wieczorek) on a mountain top, above the “contaminated zone” symbolized by the nuclear power plant in the valley below. It’s still functioning, even though there might be nobody around to use the electricity or pay the bill.

Eva reaches out via radio to “anyone” who might be out there, broadcasting the same thing she spray paints on buildings in the abandoned plant and town nearby — her GPS coordinates — “50 degrees, 8 minutes north, 18 degrees, 51 minutes east.” So far, nobody has made contact.

During The Climate War, Eva’s dad left her with an armed guardian robot named Arthur, who was designed and used as a deadly border defender against climate refugees. Arthur has his limits but can be engaged in wordplay puzzles. Eva jokes with it, even offers to “marry” Arthur, but to no avail.

“Don’t sweat it, Arthur.”

“Robots do not sweat.”

Eva’s solitary existence has her sleeping and working on a “base” consisting of shipping containers, with occasional gas-masked foraging in the nearby town, versions of which we’ve seen in decades of post-apocalyptic thrillers, from “The Omega Man” to “Zombieland” and beyond.

The twist here is the day Eva forgets there’s been a password change at base. Arthur politely demands a password when she returns. She doesn’t have it. He was placed here to protect Eva, but if she can’t give the password, she can’t return to base where safety, food, water and oxygen generators that allow her to tank up when she enters The Contamination Zone for more food are kept.

She can’t survive without that password, or without finding some way around the robot who demands it.

Writer-director Piotr Biedron’s feature filmmaking debut has Eva try compassion, logic and subterfuge to get past this password restriction. His script and his direction of it lacks urgency some of the time, and he could have used “The Martian” as his template for maintaining that and getting creative in Eva’s “work the problem” dilemma.

But the austere production design is so arid it’ll leave your mouth dry. My benchmark for dystopias that show us the ugliest future possible on a budget is 1990’s “Hardware,” and “The Last Spark of Hope” matches that in look and tone.

Wierczorek’s forlorn performance is augmented by an mournful electronic Lukasz Pieprzyk musical score that fits the mood perfectly. And Biedron announces himself as a movie-maker to watch with a solid sci-fi parable that measures up to “good” even if it doesn’t come close to “great.”

Rating: R, violence, profanity

Cast: Magdalena Wieczorek

Credits: Scripted and directed by Piotr Biedron. A Saban Films release.

Running time: 1:29

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Movie Review: Viola Davis is a (literally) Embattled President trying to Survive “G20”

When it comes to action pictures, there’s “So bad that it’s good” and whatever the hell “G20” amounts to. So bad that it’s not godawful?

The idea of Oscar winner Viola Davis, aka “The Woman King,” as a two-fisted, combat vet “badass” president who can handle firearms and choke out a bad guy or snap the sumbitch’s neck isn’t far-fetched.

Sure, we’ve seen all those “Olympus has Fallen” movies and bought into Harrison Ford barking “Get OFF my plane!” in “Air Force One.”

But “G20” lurches between absurd and silly as a terrible, four-writer script ticks off pandering checkboxes even as it hits on a few scary truisms about life and politics in 2025.

Corrupted and treasonouns Secret Service agents in on a conspiracy? OK. Crypto-creeps ponzi scheming the global economy? Never saw that coming. Sexist Brits and brave, reliable South Koreans heads of state? There’s no stretch there.

Director Patricia Riggen earned her big break with “Under the Same Moon,” graduated to bigger budgeet fare with “The 33” and cut her teeth on action with “Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan.” Here, she directs traffic, ensures the brawls have their payoffs and tries to maintain her dignity between one contrived twist, character revelation and bloody one-on-one throwdown after another.

Davis plays new President Danielle Sutton, someone who rode a famously photographed bit of Fallujah heroism into politics and the White House, about to face her first big G20 summit.

It’ll be held in a resort in South Africa, where she’ll make her pitch for a save-sub-Saharan Africa from starvation via financing from the world’s richest economies.

But she’s got this rebellious teen daughter (Marsai Martin) who keeps outsmarting her Secret Service detail, and whatever cajoling she’ll have to do with allies (Douglas Hodge plays the PM of the UK) and international rivals, keeping that 17 year-old under control will be a distraction for her, her First Man (Anthony Anderson) and the hostile press.

There’s something afoot in the security for this high-profile summit. Private contractors have been hired, and a murderous prologue showed us the head of the Pax Security operation (New Zealander Anthony Starr of “The Boys” and “Guy Ritchie’s The Covenent”) killing somebody over a huge crypto-currency transaction.

Are you ready for a planet-shaking international incident, an “inside job” involving the highest profile hostages, crypto and a murderous, technologically omnipotent mob of mercenaries?

Wife, mother and “badass” President Sutton will have to run, hide, shoot and fight her way through this gang of roided up crypto bro commandos to save herself, her fellow leaders, the world’s economy and save face with that impossible but cunning teenage daughter Serena, who gripes that “All you ever try to do is make yourself look good!”

The bad guys play AI “deep fake” games in twisting the words of the world leaders while Sutton and her trusty Secret Service bodyguard and trainer (Ramón Rodríguez) kicj, punch, stab, shoot and choke their way through a multinational mob of mercenaries.

“You get around, DON’T you girl?” the smirking Aussie Rutledge (Starr) cracks on the walkie talkies after Sutton has plunged into a body count that greatly changes the odds.

“I’ll get around to you, too,” says the tough broad POTUS.

Whatever nonsense the narrative serves up involving laundry shoots, an impossibly tech savvy teen and the like, the movie isn’t served by the lack of dramatic weight on the bad guy side. Hitchcock preached “Good villains make good thrillers,” but Starr is no Gary Oldman (“Air Force One”), or even a Rick Yune (“Olympus has Fallen”). He’s more of a Jason Clarke (“White House Down”) or Tim Black Nelson (“Angel has Fallen”).

That points to where the cash WASN’T spent on this actioner. Rodriguez (TV’s “Will Trent”) and Anderson and Clark Gregg (as the barely present vice president) are the other “names” in the cast. Perhaps Amazon/MGM never intended “G20” as a theatrical release, because that crew, surrounded by never lesser-knowns, screams “TV movie.”

But Davis delivers, the fights are visceral and even if the bigger “stunts” are laugh-out-loud riduculous, even if the four screenwriters deserved a WGA paddling over much of their scripted “problem solving” (A laundry shoot? Go figure.), “G20” isn’t bad to the point of awful even if it isn’t so bad it’s “good.”

Rating: R, bloody violence

Cast: Viola Davis, Anthony Starr, Marsai Martin, Ramón Rodríguez,
Sabrina Impacciatore, Douglas Hodge, Elizabeth Marvel, MeeWha Alana Lee, Clark Gregg and Anthony Anderson.

Credits: Directed by Patricia Riggen, scripted by Caitlin Parrish, Erica Weiss, Logan Miller and Noah Miller. An MGM release on Amazon Prime.

Running time: 1:51

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Movie Preview: Chloe Sevigny, Claes Bang and Lily McInerny, Coming of Age by the Sea — “Bonjour Tristesse”

Françoise Sagan’s novel about a teen who makes trouble for Dad (Bang), Dad’s lady (Naïlia Harzoune) and her late mom’s bestie (Sevigny) as a way of showing off she’s 18 and pretty and knows everything.

May 2.

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Classic Film Review: Cabot, Sanders and Tierney fight Nazis by Proxy in Africa — “Sundown” (1941)

“Sundown” is a lightly regarded “all-star” action picture that gets lost in the history of that cinematically storied year, 1941.

When “Citizen Kane,” “The Maltese Falcon,” “How Green Was My Valley,” “Sullivan’s Travels,””High Sierra,” “The 49th Parallel,” “Sergeant York,” “Meet John Doe” and “The Lady Eve” come out the same year, it’d be pretty hard to make anybody’s Top Ten list.

But “Sundown” is an American WWII movie from just before Pearl Harbor, one where “Germans” and “Nazis” are never mentioned, butin which the World War has reached into East Africa and British colonialists must contend with Italians and Nazis arming restless native proxies to tie down British forces.

It collected three Oscar nominations for its score, art direction and cinematography. The settings are just underfilmed enough — New Mexico — to be striking and “alien” looking, passably doubling for East African deserts.

The film was directed by Henry Hathaway, who’d one day earn John Wayne his Oscar (“True Grit”). It doesn’t “erase” Africans from an African story, goes easy on the racist patronizing that was common in American films of the day, and gave work to African American actors like Dorothy Dandridge, Emmett Smith and Jeni Le Gon even if the Islamic African villain role was reserved for veteran heavy Marc Lawrence, appearing in not-quite-blackface.

And “Sundown” is built around a top-flight cast — Gene Tierney, Bruce Cabot and George Sanders, with screen legends Harry Carey and Cedric Hardwicke in key supporting roles and nice showcases for veteran character players Reginald Gardiner and Joseph Calleia.

An independent woman (Tierney) flies into a remote corner of Kenya and “Somaliland” and is welcomed like the local shaker and mover she is. But her place in the story isn’t clear for the first act, which settles in on a remote outpost where the Canadian Crawford (Cabot) is district commissioner, a beneficent and curious do-gooder whose military counterpart (Gardiner) is intent on curbing his plans to explore and make contact with a troublesome tribe, the Senshi.

That earns a brusque visit by army Major Coombes (Sanders) whose orders are to “replace you, old boy” and to find out who is arming the Senshi via capturing one of those rifles they’re now using to shoot their neighbors and the Brits with.

An Arab trader (Lawrence) is getting those guns in, and is behind plots to ambush the local British garrison and take over this corner of Somaliland/Kenya. He and whoever is supplying him must be outed and foiled.

That’s how the region’s queen of trade, Zia (Tierney, immortalized as “Laura”) figures in. Half-French, Western educated, she inherited her father’s trading post empire and now is walking a tightrope between rival factions — Allied and Fascist — hoping to throw in with “the winners.”

The natives are, um, restless, with the ghostly rumor that one of the “six white men” in this African troop’s outpost will “meet his death” on this night. Will it be Crawford, Lt. “Roddy” (Gardiner), Coombes, the jovial Italian history teacher turned army officer and now “prisoner of war” (Joseph Calleia, terrific) or the Dutch mineralogist (Carl Esmond) whose country fell to the Germans the year before? Or might it be the “White (elephant) Hunter” Dewey, played by veteran Western star Harry Carey?

The action is well-handled even if the script struggles to reach for deeper meaning in the existential struggle between fascists, colonialists, the colonized and “Christianity” in all of this.

Tierney is showcased in all manner of belly dancer wear as Zia, who is respected by the Natives, ogled by the Brits and doted over by the Italian who knew her as a child.

“King Kong” veteran Cabot is properly stoic and idealistic, Sanders was well on his way to becoming the droll, bitchy wit famed for acrid put-downs in every movie that followed his turns as “The Saint,” “The Falcon” — “Laura,” “All About Eve” and “A Shot in the Dark” included. The laconic Carey adds credibility to his long in-country “hunter” who has seen it all and anticipated the changes in the wind.

But what remains striking about this aging actioner are the beautiful screen compositions of cinematographer Charles Lang. Principals and supporting players walk from inky darkness into pools of light at Crawford’s high-pitched thatch “hut,” in caverns or skulking about canyons others gather around a campfire.

It’s a lovely looking black and white film, and it demonstrates why Lang thrived during Hollywood’s Golden Age, and went on to light and shoot such classics as “Sabrina,” “Charade” and “Some Like it Hot.”

The deserts, augmented with process shots and fortress sets, show the work of three-time Oscar winning art director/production designer Alexander Goltzen (“Touch of Evil,” “Spartacus,” “The Beguiled,” “Play Misty for Me”).

“Sundown” may not make enough of the idea that fascism must be fought, even in sleepy backwaters like this corner of Africa. An epilogue/sermon by someone (Cedric Hardwicke) recognizing the sacrifices necessary to make every corner of the world safe for decent people doesn’t deliver the punchy pathos of similar moments in “Casablanca,” for instance.

But there’s something to be said for a movie that gives voice to the irony of a war being fought “everywhere,” where even the combatants can’t figure out the import of struggling over a place so out of the way that each day’s gin’n tonic time can’t come soon enough.

“Best part of the day, sundown. Nothing more to do in a place where there’s nothing to do anyway.”

Wait until Gene Tierney shows up.

Rating: TV-PG, violence

Cast: Bruce Cabot, Gene Tierney, George Sanders, Harry Carey,
Joseph Calleia, Reginald Gardiner, Marc Lawrence, Dorothy Dandridge, Jeni Le Gon, Carl Esmond, Emmett Smith and Cedric Hardwicke.

Credits: Directed by Henry Hathaway scripted by Barré Lyndon and Charles G. Booth, based on Lyndon’s novel. A United Artists release streaming on Tubi, et al

Running time:

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Movie Preview: No Big Names, Just Jokes and a Cute Title — “Greek Mothers Never Die”

A rom-com that Gravitas picked up for May 9 (streaming) release. Doesn’t look like much, but you never know. “Greek” in the title is a foolproof hook.

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Netflixable? Dutch cops try to free “iHostage” from an Apple Store

At some point in the police procedural “iHostage” the viewer is obliged to fight off the urge to look up the Dutch translation for “Yeah, and?” Let me save you the trouble. It’s “Ja, en?”

The film is a solid, fact-based thriller about a real-life hostage situation from a couple of years back.

It’s polished and professionally handled as it somewhat expertly takes us from inside an Amsterdam Apple store where a lone customer (Marcel Hensma) is being held by a somewhat inept creep in camo, to the police on the scene, then the command center where decisions are made and the “hostage negotiators” are on the (iPhone) with the perpetrator, and inside an Apple Store storage closet where an alert “Genius” store employee has hidden three customers with himself.

The stakes are high enough — with more customers hiding on an upper floor, the disgruntled hostage taker (Soufaine Moussouli) firing his semi-automatic weapon and claiming this bomb strapped to his chest will take out this building and make a mess of the entire city square where it’s located.

But director and co-writer Bobby Boermans’ film is impersonal and dry in the extreme. We get a barely a glimpse of anybody’s personal/interior life and the cops are by-the-book, ably juggling every contingency, with the chief (Louis Talpe) only losing his cool when an “influencer” posts info online that could get a lot of people killed.

The villain’s mysterious, a touch mad but dull. We meet a cocky hostage negotiator (Loes Haverkort) who brags that her perp “will crumble if we wear him down” (in Dutch with subtitles, or dubbed into English) and a crackerjack SWAT commando nicknamed “Double Zero” and we see another member of the DSI unit ripped away from his family for work.

And we spend a little time in that closet with fearful, even complaining customers and their “Genius” savior (Emmanuel Ohene Boafo), who can’t believe what ingrates some people are, given the circimstances.

There’s just enough suspense to tide the tale over, but opportunities for a deeper dive into characters, the aggravation of dealing with Apple (the company runs all its stores by remote control from New York), the hostage taker’s grievances, etc. are skipped-over or passed-by.

No characters really pop and there’s little room for pathos, humor or anything else.

Sometimes, being right on the money with “reality” isn’t enough to get a compelling movie out of a perilous situation. So what we’re left with is “Ja, en?”

Rating: TV-MA, violence, profanity

Cast: Soufiane Moussouli, Loes Haverkort, Marcel Hensma, Louis Talpe and Emmanuel Ohene Boafo

Credits: Directed by Bobby Boermans, scripted by Bobby Boermans and Simon DeWaal. A Netflix release.

Running time: 1:42

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BOX OFFICE: “Sinners” lures the horror/Coogler/Jordan faithful, bests “Minecraft”

It was a VERY Good Friday, Saturday AND Sunday for Warner Bros, which saw its new horror release “Sinners” do decent, not world-beating business Thursday afternoon and evening ($4.7 million), but added another $14 million to Friday itself to “open” at $18.5 million on its way to a weekend-winning $45 million and change.

The third weekend of “A Minecraft Movie” did over $16 million Friday alone, reports Deadline.com. “Sinners” had been projected to blow the doors off the horror movie doldrums of 2025 with a $40 million weekend, with “Minecraft” sure to best that, chicken-jockeying its way to $45-50 million.

But that did not happen. “Sinners,” the better film of the pair, kept piling up all that pent=up horror audience demand, and damned if it didn’t vanquish the shiny bauble that will be Jack Black and possibly Jason Momoa’s biggest hit. “Minecraft” only rolled up 41 million and change through Sunday. Maybe Monday will revert to form with the kiddie fare taking back over, but Easter weekend is all “Sinners.”

Writer-director Ryan Coogler has his finger on the pulse of what the public wants to see, and this Michael B. Jordan/Miles Caton/Hailee Steinfeld, Jack O’Connell and Delroy Lindo star vehicle is riding good reviews all the way to the bank. Well, not mine. I felt downright depressed at how dumb the movie turned for its finale.

Two other wide releases opening this weekend won’t crack the top five, with “A Wedding Banquet” and a half-assed kiddie cartoon “Sneaks” lucky to find their way into the top ten. Not much ventured, not much gained in either case.

Because the Easter appropriate animated “The King of Kings” is proving to be the sleeper of the spring, with a Dickens touch, an all-star voice cast and good animation and a built-in audience. It’ll reach $17.273 million this weekend, maybe more if the Sunday crowd shows up after church. As it opened at $19 million last week, this picture has the rare chance to BETTER its opening weekend take on its second weekend, a feat as rare as a Second Coming.

The Amateur” is sliding off to fourth with a decent $7.2 million second weekend.

“Warfare” looks to stay in the top five with a $4.855 million-and-fading second weekend.

Hilariously, the re-release of the 2005 Keira-McFadyen “Pride and Prejudice” routed the remake of “A Wedding Banquet” by a $2.7 million to $922,000 roughly the same number of screens. Perhaps Bowen Yang will do a bitchy “Weekend Update” segment about how “humbling” that

The last “Last Supper” big screen release of the streaming “The Chosen” Life of Jesus series, “Part 3, barely made the top ten.

That’s better than Briarcliff’s animated misfire “Sneaks,” which didn’t crack the top 20.

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Series preview: Remaking Alan Alda’s “The Four Seasons” with Tina Fey, Steve Carell, Colman Domingo and Will Forte?

TBH, there was no LOL at the news this had come to pass. I kind of cringed, truth be told. “A series?” As if that 1981 feature film wasn’t interminable enough.

Yes, that early 2000s generation of TV funnyfolk are aging into their AARP years. Colman Domingo represents the wild card in this series about the “seasons” of life and love and marriages.

Kerri Kenney also stars in this May 1 Netflix release.

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