A REAL PAIN
2024 | Dir. Jesse Eisenberg | 90 Minutes
4 out of 5
A character-driven dramedy elevated by a fantastic performance from Kieran Culkin that seamlessly drifts between incredibly funny and deeply affecting. Writer/director/co-lead Jesse Eisenberg explores the different ways people process grief and sorrow or, perhaps more often, choose to bury these feelings. While the narrative is pretty straightforward, the emotions driving the picture are earnest, and the odd couple energy of a manic Culkin and a neurotic Eisenberg serve this picture well.
ANORA
2024 | Dir. Sean Baker | 139 Minutes
4 out of 5
A wild, chaotic, and deeply earnest emotional ride driven by a truly exceptional leading performance from Mikey Madison. Despite the somewhat unconventional and ostensibly salacious aspects of its narrative, at its heart the picture is an engaging universally-relatable story of misplaced love and heartbreak. The pacing and incessant shouting can be a tad relentless during the second act, but the film starts and ends masterfully.
SMILE 2
2024 | Dir. Parker Finn | 127 Minutes
4 out of 5
Larger in scale than its predecessor in terms of production value as well as pure anxiety, the toothy trauma monster feeding off a troubled pop star opens the narrative up to all manner of ingeniously plotted and deeply uncomfortable moments. The pacing unfortunately stumbles for long stretches, and while the air of dread is palpable throughout, the jumpscares and disorienting twists do little to break the tension that somewhat devolves into monotony. Naomi Scott is very impressive, incredibly convincing as a celebrity gradually descending into total madness.
SATURDAY NIGHT
2024 | Dir. Jason Reitman | 109 Minutes
4 out of 5
Tense, funny, and very engaging, this dramatization of the 90 minutes leading up to the broadcast of the first episode of Saturday Night Live is an entertaining glimpse into the stress and chaos of creating something brand new under overwhelming pressure and uncertainty. Driven by its larger-than-life characters more than by narrative, Jason Reitman's picture does a decent job of selling the suspense of whether or not the show will even make it to air, though the inevitably of how television history plays out takes quite a bit of the edge off. Leading a fun ensemble cast, Gabriel LaBelle perfectly captures the nervous bottled-up energy of untested talent playing SNL creator Lorne Michaels. Other standout performances include Ella Hunt as Gilda Radner exuding pure sweetness, Nicholas Braun pulling double weirdo duty with varying degrees of success as both Andy Kaufman and Jim Henson, and Cory Michael Smith perfectly cast as arrogant upstart Chevy Chase.
MEGALOPOLIS
2024 | Dir. Francis Ford Coppola | 138 Minutes
3 out of 5
Clearly fueled by raw passion, Coppola's allegorical epic is a fascinating incoherent rant of a film. The dialogue and performances are distractingly affected, and while the ideas the narrative carries are intriguing, if overly broad, the plot is disjointed and even confounding at points. This is the cinematic equivalent of a master chef stepping out of the kitchen to lecture the diner about delicious imaginary dishes, but these illusory delicacies are somehow still undercooked. Its heart is in the right place, I guess.