The Movie Cricket

Movie reviews by Sean P. Means.

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Best friends Molly (Malin Akerman, left) and Abby (Kat Dennings) watch their plans for a quiet Thanksgiving blow up in the comedy “Friendsgiving.” (Photo courtesy of Saban Films.)

Best friends Molly (Malin Akerman, left) and Abby (Kat Dennings) watch their plans for a quiet Thanksgiving blow up in the comedy “Friendsgiving.” (Photo courtesy of Saban Films.)

Review: Ensemble comedy 'Friendsgiving' is a turkey, all right — too many funny people with not enough funny material

October 21, 2020 by Sean P. Means

Overstuffed, overcooked and indigestible, the ensemble comedy “Friendsgiving” is a prime example of what happens when a novice filmmaker calls in too many favors without a clear plan for how to use them.

It’s Thanksgiving in Los Angeles, and Abby (Kat Dennings) is looking forward to a quiet holiday with her best pal, Molly (Malin Akerman), a movie star, and Molly’s year-old son Eden. Molly’s in the middle of a divorce, and Abby is still nursing being dumped the previous January by her first girlfriend — who, according to her Instagram, is engaged to a “sugar dyke.” So Abby has more reason than usual for a no-stress Thanksgiving.

Arriving at Molly’s house, though, Abby finds Molly is also entertaining her rebound boyfriend, the frequently shirtless Jeff (Jack Donnelly), who’s now also invited to dinner. Then their other gal pal, Lauren (Aisha Tyler) calls, saying that their family’s Thanksgiving plans have fallen through — so now Lauren, her husband Dan (Deon Cole), and their two kids are added to the mix.

But wait, there’s more. Helen (Jane Seymour), Molly’s free-swinging Swedish mom, arrives unannounced — and brought with her one of Molly’s old boyfriends, Gunnar (Ryan Hansen). Molly’s horndog agent, Rick (Andrew Santino), also joins the party, with his trophy wife, Brianne (Christine Taylor), who seems to have her jaw wired shut, for no adequately explored reason.

There also are three young lesbians, each invited along as a possible new love interest for Abby, and each introduced by their Tinder profiles. And there’s another acquaintance, Claire (Chelsea Peretti), who has recently become a shaman — or, as she prefers, “shawoman.”

Put all of these one-note characters around the same table and what do you get? A mess.

Writer-director Nicol Paone has the germ as a good idea here: To explore the endurance of Abby and Molly’s friendship, even when strained by external forces, as well as Molly’s single motherhood and Abby’s struggles as a late-blooming lesbian. One wishes Paone, on her first feature, had stuck to that idea, and not let it get buried in so many nonessential players.

With usually funny people like Akerman and Dennings in the lead, and reliable comic talents in support — besides Tyler, Taylor and Peretti, there’s a bit where Abby meets her “fairy gay mothers,” played by comedians Wanda Sykes, Margaret Cho and Fortune Feimster — you’d think there would be gales of laughter. Unfortunately, the only laughter heard during “Friendsgiving” are from the cast in the outtakes over the closing credits. At least somebody had fun.

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‘Friendsgiving’

★1/2

Opens Friday, October 23, in select theaters; streaming as a VOD rental starting Tuesday, October 27. Rated R for crude sexual content throughout, and for drug use. Running time: 96 minutes.

October 21, 2020 /Sean P. Means
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Kazakh journalist Borat Sagdiyev (Sacha Baron Cohen, left) discovers Americans still recognize him from his 2006 movie, in a scene from the sequel, “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm.” (Photo courtesy of Amazon Studios.)

Kazakh journalist Borat Sagdiyev (Sacha Baron Cohen, left) discovers Americans still recognize him from his 2006 movie, in a scene from the sequel, “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm.” (Photo courtesy of Amazon Studios.)

Spoiler-free review: In 'Borat Subsequent Moviefilm,' Sacha Baron Cohen's satire again reveals some of the worst parts of America

October 21, 2020 by Sean P. Means

Sacha Baron Cohen has not lost his talent to apply shock tactics, and a trunk full of disguises, to create pointed commentary about American politics and culture — which he collects in the sharp-elbowed satirical comedy “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm.”

It’s been 14 years since Baron Cohen unleashed his character Borat Sagdiyev, the politically and often factually incorrect Kazakh journalist, onto the United States, often interacting with Americans who weren’t in on the joke. The fact that Baron Cohen managed to make a sequel, filming at the start of the year just as the coronavirus pandemic was starting to hit, is surprising. The fact that it’s also tartly funny is a small miracle.

Read the full review at sltrib.com.

October 21, 2020 /Sean P. Means
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Fei Fei (voiced by Cathy Ang), with her rabbit Bungee as co-pilot, launches her rocket to the heavens, in the animated musical “Over the Moon.” (Image courtesy of Netflix.)

Fei Fei (voiced by Cathy Ang), with her rabbit Bungee as co-pilot, launches her rocket to the heavens, in the animated musical “Over the Moon.” (Image courtesy of Netflix.)

Review: 'Over the Moon' is a colorful, tuneful and beautiful work, a directing debut for an animation legend

October 15, 2020 by Sean P. Means

The musical computer-animated adventure “Over the Moon” blends luminous and colorful animation with a tender story that combines Chinese folklore with a modern girl’s grief.

Fei Fei (voiced by Cathy And) is an energetic girl growing up in a Chinese city with her parents (voiced by John Cho and Ruthie Ann Miles), who bake the best mooncakes in town. Mom has passed on to Fei Fei the legend of Chang’e, the moon goddess, waiting for eternity for her lost love, Houyi.

Within the first eight minutes, though, Mom falls ill and dies, and much of the joy leaves Fei Fei’s life. For a while, it’s just her and dad — so when Fei Fei notices Dad spending a lot of time with Mrs. Zhong (voiced by Sandra Oh), who brings along her overly rambunctious son, Chin (voiced by Robert G. Chiu), she decides to take a drastic step: Build a rocket to the moon, so she can prove the moon goddess is real, which will somehow keep Dad from marrying Mrs. Zhong.

With that kind of kid logic guiding her, it’s not long before Fei Fei has built her rocket and launched it — though when she learns Chin has stowed away on the ship, Fei Fei fears her calculations are off. Just then, a beam of light from the moon captures the ship, and Fei Fei, her rabbit Bungee, Chin and his frog are all pulled to the glowing moon city to meet Chang’e (voiced by Phillippa Soo), a rock star among the moon’s blobby inhabitants.

It’s fascinating that “Over the Moon” is only the first movie directed by Glen Keane, the legendary animator known for bringing life to such Disney characters as Ariel, The Beast, Aladdin, Pocahontas, Tarzan and Long John Silver. Keane also won an Oscar for directing the Kobe Bryant-narrated short “Dear Basketball.” (Fun fact: He’s one of the inspirations for his late father Bil’s comic strip, “The Family Circus,” which his brother Jeff now draws.) 

Keane and his crew create two distinctly beautiful realms here: The bustling and lived-in Chinese city where Fei Fei lives, dreams and sometimes hangs out with her big family (Margaret Cho and Kimiko Glenn voice her aunties), and the Lava Lamp-style moon city, where every character and background pop with color.

The unfussy script, by the late Audrey Wells (“The Hate U Give,” “The Truth About Cats & Dogs”), and a roster of charming songs (by Christopher Curtis, Marjorie Duffield and Helen Park) channel the emotions of Fei Fei’s journey — from beloved daughter to rebel teen and beyond — that Keane’s visual team depicts so radiantly. Together, through word and picture, Keane’s creative team makes  “Over the Moon” a movie that feels both timeless and modern.

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‘Over the Moon’

★★★1/2

Opens Friday, October 16, at the Megaplex Jordan Commons (Sandy); streaming, starting October 23, on Netflix. Rated PG for some thematic elements and mild action. Running time: 96 minutes.

October 15, 2020 /Sean P. Means
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Tom (Liam Neeson, right) and Annie (Kate Walsh) hide out from rogue FBI agents, after they double-crossed Tom when he tried to turn himself in for a decade of bank robberies, in the thriller “Honest Thief.” (Photo courtesy of Open Road.)

Tom (Liam Neeson, right) and Annie (Kate Walsh) hide out from rogue FBI agents, after they double-crossed Tom when he tried to turn himself in for a decade of bank robberies, in the thriller “Honest Thief.” (Photo courtesy of Open Road.)

Review: 'Honest Thief' awkwardly shoehorns a romance into a by-the-numbers Liam Neeson action movie

October 15, 2020 by Sean P. Means

The not-so-thrilling action thriller “Honest Thief” seems to answer the question nobody asked: What would it look like if you inserted 20 minutes of a Hallmark movie into a Liam Neeson vehicle?

Neeson plays Tom Dolan, a Boston-based bank robber — known to the law as the In-and-Out Bandit for his smooth ability to get into bank vaults and out again without being caught. It’s not a nickname he particularly likes, and he gives up his safe-busting ways when he meets Annie Wilkins (Kate Walsh), a comely psychology grad student. A year after they meet, he buys her a house, and decides he’s going to come clean to the Feds.

Dolan calls the Boston FBI office with a proposal: He’ll confess to the 12 bank robberies he performed over eight years, if the Feds give him a reduced sentence at a minimum-security prison near Boston, so he can be near Annie. The senior Fed who takes his call, Agent Sam Baker (Robert Patrick), is interested in what Dolan has to say, so he sends two junior agents, John Nivens (Jai Courtney) and Ramon Hall (Anthony Ramos), to check out Dolan’s story.

Nivens and Hall find $3 million of Dolan’s $9 million in ill-gotten cash, and Nivens convinces Hall to take the cash for themselves and double-cross Dolan. Nivens’ plan to kill Dolan hits a snag when Baker shows up at the meeting place — so Nivens kills Baker, and pins it on Dolan. And, oh, Annie showed up at the meet just in time to see Dolan and Nivens fall out a second-story window.

This is how Dolan ends up on the run, simultaneously dodging bullets, matching wits with Baker’s partner, Agent Myers (Jeffery Donovan), and explaining to an incredulous Annie the parts of his life that he neglected to mention during their courtship. These scenes turn out to be painfully awkward, as Neeson and Walsh have no romantic chemistry — certainly not enough to carry the weight of the movie’s main plot point: Whether love is stronger than money, or worth all the pain Neeson’s Dolan is enduring to dodge every cop in Boston.

Director Mark Williams, the creator of the TV series “Ozark,” and his co-writer, Steve Allrich, create a by-the-numbers action chase thriller that borrows the plotting of “The Fugitive” with little of that movie’s charm or wit. The characters — including Neeson’s Dolan, Walsh’s Annie and all of the FBI agents — are thin sketches, each with a single personality trait and no other emotional complications.

Unfortunately, the action sequences also are rote and uninteresting, moving from car chase to gunfight to fistfight with few variations in texture or tempo. Even with the reliable Neeson getting revved up to “Taken”-style revenge, “Honest Thief” only steals 99 minutes of the viewer’s time.

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‘Honest Thief’ 

★★

Opens Friday, October 16, at theaters where open. Rated PG-13 for strong violence, crude references and brief strong language. Running time: 99 minutes.

October 15, 2020 /Sean P. Means
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Lawyer Cynthia Chandler, left, and ex-inmate and activist Kelli Dillon lobby the California legislature for a bill to ban forced sterilization in prisons, in a scene from the documentary “Belly of the Beast.” (Photo courtesy of PBS.)

Lawyer Cynthia Chandler, left, and ex-inmate and activist Kelli Dillon lobby the California legislature for a bill to ban forced sterilization in prisons, in a scene from the documentary “Belly of the Beast.” (Photo courtesy of PBS.)

Review: 'Belly of the Beast' documents eugenics in a California prison, and introduces two heroes fighting to end it

October 15, 2020 by Sean P. Means

Filmmaker Erika Cohn’s “Belly of the Beast” tackles a tough subject — the forced sterilization of women inmates at a California prison — with journalistic fire and sensitive artistry.

The statistics are harrowing: At one large California women’s prison, some 1,400 women between 1997 and 2013 were given hysterectomies, usually without their informed consent. And that number is part of a terrible tradition in California, where some 20,000 women — most of them Latina and indigenous — were sterilized against their will from 1903 to 1979. 

California’s eugenics program, meant to keep “undesirables” from having children, was so horrifically efficient that the Nazis in the early 1930s sent officials to California to learn the nuts-and-bolts of genocide.

But Cohn — a Salt Lake City native whose directing credits include “In Football We Trust,” about teens in Utah’s Polynesian community using football as a step to a better life, and “The Judge,” about the first woman jurist in a Palestinian Sharia court — isn’t just about the grim numbers. She finds two people whose stories illuminate this issue, and whose fight helps bring it to light.

One is Cynthia Chandler, an activist lawyer who represents women in this California prison, and whose Bay Area nonprofit, Justice Now, works to document how many women have been sterilized. The other is Kelli Dillon, a former inmate whose sad story — she was in prison for killing her abusive husband, and denied by a doctor’s decision to ever have more children — fuels her work as a domestic violence counselor who turns lobbyist to get California’s laws regarding prison sterilizations changed in the legislature.

With a combination of archival footage, animation, as-it-happens drama in Justice Now’s offices and in Sacramento, and collected audio of Chandler’s clients, Cohn describes the issue and digs into the personal lives of Chandler and Dillon. Cohn beautifully shows us both what they’re fighting for and what their personal stake is in seeing it through.

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‘Belly of the Beast’

★★★1/2

Available starting Friday, October 23, on virtual cinemas, including Salt Lake Film Society’s SLFS@Home. Not rated, but probably PG-13 for descriptions of sexuality and violence, and for language. Running time: 82 minutes.

October 15, 2020 /Sean P. Means
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Joel (Dylan O’Brien) and his dog, Boy, hide from a nasty mutant insect creature, in a scene from the action-comedy “Love and Monsters.” (Photo courtesy of Paramount Pictures.)

Joel (Dylan O’Brien) and his dog, Boy, hide from a nasty mutant insect creature, in a scene from the action-comedy “Love and Monsters.” (Photo courtesy of Paramount Pictures.)

Review: 'Love and Monsters' is a post-apocalyptic YA tale with action, humor, and a solid performance by Dylan O'Brien

October 15, 2020 by Sean P. Means

Young-adult romance meets post-apocalyptic action in “Love and Monsters,” a movie that isn’t nearly as boring as that title.

In the near future, an asteroid is hurtling towards Earth. Humanity figures out how to shoot rockets to destroy the asteroid, but fails to reckon with the chemical fallout from the rockets, which turn all cold-blooded creatures into mutated monsters — which then eat 95% of all humans on Earth.

We’re told all this, in sardonic college-kid fashion, by Joel Dawson (played by “The Maze Runner” star Dylan O’Brien), the least battle-ready member of a survivors’ colony in what used to be called California. Joel can’t hunt, freezing up when he needs to shoot his crossbow, but he makes a great minestrone and handles the radio — through which he finds Aimee (Jessica Henwick, formerly of Marvel’s “Iron Fist”), his high-school girlfriend seven years ago, before the mutants attacked.

Joel, feeling alone in a colony filled with couples, decides to risk death by trekking 85 miles to the coastal colony where Aimee lives. His friends in his colony don’t expect him to survive, and at first they would seem to be right, as Joel barely escapes the darting tongue of a giant toad and a few other creatures. Joel gets some help from two veteran surface dweller, old Clyde (Michael Rooker) and 8-year-old Minnow (Ariana Greenblatt), whose advice helps Joel make it to Aimee’s colony — where things don’t go as he hoped.

The screenplay, by Brian Duffield (who directed the recent YA horror comedy “Spontaneous”) and Matthew Robinson (“The Invention of Lying”), propels Joel from one harrowing adventure to the next, with a healthy dose of sarcastic humor. Director Michael Matthews, on his second feature (after a little-known Western from South Africa, “five Fingers for Marseilles”), balances the scares and jokes with some impressive visual effects and a consistent tone that suggests the end of the world isn’t worth losing one’s snarky attitude.

O’Brien is the key to “Love and Monsters,” since the story makes the audience his travel companions for the whole journey. Thankfully, O’Brien is an easygoing charmer, handsome without being too showy about it, who gives Joel a pleasantly self-deprecating side. He makes “Love and Monsters” worth the walk. 

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‘Love and Monsters’

★★★

Opens Friday, October 16, at theaters where open. Rated PG-13 for action/violence, language and some suggestive material. Running time: 109 minutes.

October 15, 2020 /Sean P. Means
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Sam (Tiera Skovbye, left) and Chris (Jacob Elordi) go on their first real date, in the romantic drama “2 Hearts.” (Photo courtesy of Freestyle Releasing.)

Sam (Tiera Skovbye, left) and Chris (Jacob Elordi) go on their first real date, in the romantic drama “2 Hearts.” (Photo courtesy of Freestyle Releasing.)

Review: "2 Hearts" tells two stories of romance, but withholds the connection that makes the audience care

October 15, 2020 by Sean P. Means

There’s a heartfelt, inspirational story buried somewhere within the based-on-a-true-story “2 Hearts,” if only director Lance Hool knew how to tell it with any clarity or authenticity.

The movie presents two parallel stories, and then takes its sweet time telling us how one connects to the other — enough time that anyone with any movie-watching experience should be able to figure it out.

One story centers on Chris Gregory (Jacob Elordi, from HBO’s “Euphoria”), a college student who, when we first meet him, is being wheeled into the emergency room, unconscious. The story flashes back to Chris as a high school senior, being lectured by his dad (Tahmoh Penikett) about his grades, and barely getting into Loyola University in Louisiana. At college, he becomes smitten by a senior student, Sam (Tiera Skovbye, from “Riverdale”) — and immediately volunteers to help with her campus safety patrol program.

Cutting away from this burgeoning college romance, the movie introduces us to Jorge Bolivar (Adan Canto), scion of a famous rum-making family. (If you know anything about liquor, you can probably guess the real family name, which somehow the filmmakers couldn’t use.) Jorge suffers from a congenital lung problem, and is told by doctors that he may not live past 20. Still, he makes it to his 30s, which is when he meets Leslie (Radha Mitchell), a Pan Am stewardess (they weren’t calling them “flight attendants” yet), and a whirlwind romance ensues.

There must be a way to present these parallel romances — and hint at the link that connects them — that isn’t as hamfisted as what Hool does here. He serves up painfully awkward transitions, time jumps that make the connection less believable, and gorgeous but dull scenery of tropical vacation spots from wherever Jorge has followed the Pan Am-flying Leslie.

There’s a sweet message after the central plot twist is revealed, about sacrifice and lasting effect of thinking beyond one’s own life. But one must slog through the contrivance and forced sentimentality of the script — by Robin U. Russin and Veronica Hool (one of several of the director’s family in the credits) — to get to it, and audiences shouldn’t have to hold their breath to get to it.

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‘2 Hearts’

★★

Opens Friday, October 16, at theaters where open. Rated PG-13 for brief strong language. Running time: 100 minutes.

October 15, 2020 /Sean P. Means
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Adam Brody, right, plays Abe, a former whiz-kid detective who, as an adult, helps high-school student Caroline (Sophie Nélisse) get to the bottom of her boyfriend’s murder, in the suburban noir thriller “The Kid Detective.” (Photo courtesy of Stage …

Adam Brody, right, plays Abe, a former whiz-kid detective who, as an adult, helps high-school student Caroline (Sophie Nélisse) get to the bottom of her boyfriend’s murder, in the suburban noir thriller “The Kid Detective.” (Photo courtesy of Stage 6 Films.)

Review: 'The Kid Detective' turns Encyclopedia Brown upside down, for a weird stab at suburban noir

October 15, 2020 by Sean P. Means

Writer-director Evan Morgan’s “The Kid Detective” is one of those rare films that could earn a one-star review or a four-star review, or anything in between — and a critic could find himself leaning one way on a particular day, and the other way just hours later.

Morgan’s suburban noir thriller centers on Abe Applebaum (Adam Brody), who was once the most talked-about 12-year-old in town, as a private detective who could solve any mystery brought before him — usually involving shenanigans at the school.

But that was 20 years ago, and he’s still a detective, but the town isn’t as impressed any more. His mom (Wendy Crewson) is still proud of his industrious brain, though his dad (Jonathan Whittaker) wishes he would get a real job. Abe also drinks a lot, and barely maintains his detective agency and pays his Goth secretary, Lucy (Sarah Sutherland, Keifer’s daughter).

Morgan tells us, fairly soon, what led to Abe’s downfall. It was the one case he couldn’t solve: His 14-year-old secretary, and the mayor’s daughter, Gracie Gulliver (Kaitlyn Chalmers-Rizzato) was kidnapped. The whole town, and Abe himself, expected him to crack it. Instead, it cracked him.

Abe’s memories and insecurities resurface 20 years later, when a high school boy is stabbed and thrown into a river. The boy’s girlfriend, Caroline (Sophie Nélisse, all grown up from “The Book Thief”), hires Abe to find out who killed him.

The trail of clues leads Abe to the high school, a reunion with his old principal, Mr. Erwin (Peter MacNeill), and some harsh memories about his past cases — the one he couldn’t solve, and the ones he did solve that left a mark on the community.

As a first-time director, Morgan has trouble finding the right tone. Early on, we’re invited to think of Abe as a laughable screwball. The deeper the story goes, into some disturbing material, it’s hard not to think about when the movie was lulling us into a false sense of emotional security. And the ending is supposed to be an emotional gut punch, but it’s hard to feel it when the rest of the movie works to convince you that nothing really matters.

Like I said, though, “The Kid Detective” carries a high “your mileage may vary” quotient. Ask me in a week and I might hate it. Ask me in two weeks and I may defend it to the ends of the earth. It’s that kind of strangeness.

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‘The Kid Detective’

★★1/2

Opens Friday, October 16, at theaters where open. Rated R for language, drug use, some sexual references, brief nudity and violence. Running time: 97 minutes.

October 15, 2020 /Sean P. Means
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