Wednesday, 1 July 2026

Movie Review: The Adventurers (1970)


Genre: Epic Drama  
Director: Lewis Gilbert  
Starring: Bekim Fehmiu, Ernest Borgnine, Candice Bergen, Fernando Rey, Alan Badel, Olivia de Havilland, Rossano Brazzi, Leigh Taylor-Young, Charles Aznavour  
Running Time: 177 minutes  

Synopsis: It's 1945 in (fictional) Corteguay, South America. With a violent revolution underway, ten-year-old Dax witnesses rape and slaughter. His nobleman father Jaime Xenos (Fernando Rey) is loyal to revolutionary leader Rojo (Alan Badel), who seizes power but quickly turns to corruption. Jaime is appointed ambassador to Italy, where Dax (Bekim Fehmiu) grows up as a driven young man. With Corteguay again in the grips of revolution, Jaime and Dax return to the country but are manipulated and victimized. Dax retreats to Europe with nothing and starts life over again as a gigolo, intent on achieving wealth to settle scores.

What Works Well: Packed full of incident, characters, and action, this epic and engrossing adaptation of the Harold Robbins novel (inspired by the life of Dominican diplomat and playboy Porfirio Rubirosa) leaves almost nothing out from the book. The scope and scale resemble a David Lean project, but without the polish. Director Lewis Gilbert excels in grand scenes of combat and ceremonial set-pieces featuring armies of extras, and does not flinch from the intense violence and sexual exploits that underpin Dax's emotional detachment. The powerful context nails the futility of caring about a troubled country in a constant state of upheaval, idealism devoured by corruption while the populace endures persistent misery.

What Does Not Work As Well: The editing can be messy, and while the script contains the occasional sparkle, the acting lacks subtlety and most of the the dialogue is obvious. At almost three hours in length, the middle act does drag.

Key Quote: 
President Rojo: A man must use what weapons he has to defend his country, Dax.
Dax: Treachery?
President Rojo: Treachery is a weapon.



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Movie Review: Postcards From The Edge (1990)


Genre: Dramedy  
Director: Mike Nichols  
Starring: Meryl Streep, Shirley MacLaine, Gene Hackman, Dennis Quaid, Richard Dreyfuss  
Running Time: 101 minutes  

Synopsis: Movie actress Suzanne Vale (Meryl Streep) is abusing drugs, and is eventually checked into rehab by her mother, Hollywood legend Doris Mann (Shirley MacLaine). After recovering, Suzanne moves in with her mother as an insurance requirement as she tries to rebuild her career with an unbecoming role in a low-budget film. She has to deal with her mother's alcoholic narcissism and a deceptive suitor (Dennis Quaid), but finds support from a caring director (Gene Hackman) and an emergency room surgeon (Richard Dreyfuss).

What Works Well: This adaptation of Carrie Fisher's semi-autobiographical book features two reliably excellent performances from Meryl Streep and Shirley MacLaine. The focus is on stardom-induced self-absorption translating into unintentional pressure passed down from mother to daughter, amplifying dysfunction in both generations. While the dramatic moments are genuine, director Mike Nichols also has fun portraying quirky on-set dynamics as Suzanne navigates the idiosyncrasies of directors and producers.

What Does Not Work As Well: A nonchalant attitude results in frivolous treatment of important topics, including addiction, parenting, workplace toxicity, and exploitive men. The absence of meaningful secondary characters and glorified cameos from Gene Hackman and Richard Dreyfus add to an overall sense of dismissiveness. Some bizarre narrative choices result in three songs being performed in full, betraying a lack of conviction in the core strength of the material.

Key Quote:
Doris: I was such an awful mother... what if you had a mother like Joan Crawford or Lana Turner?
Suzanne: These are the options? You, Joan, or Lana?



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Movie Review: Paris, Texas (1984)


Genre: Drama  
Director: Wim Wenders  
Starring: Harry Dean Stanton, Nastassja Kinski, Dean Stockwell  
Running Time: 147 minutes  

Synopsis: Travis (Harry Dean Stanton) walks out of the West Texas desert four years after abandoning his family. His brother Walt (Dean Stockwell) is summoned to fetch him, and the two men drive back to Los Angeles where Walt and his wife Anne (Aurore Clément) have been caring for Travis' son Hunter. After Travis tentatively re-establishes a bond with his child, he sets out to search for his wife Jane (Nastassja Kinski), who also disappeared four years prior. 

What Works Well: Director Wim Wenders and writer Sam Shepard take a long, and hard, look at the state of masculinity in the west. In the shape of Travis, they define a mostly silent crisis built on an inability to communicate and cohabitate, but also a deep conviction that a form of imperfect redemption is possible. Augmented by stellar Robby Müller cinematography and a comfortably nervous Ry Cooder music score, the desert terrain that forged a mythically heroic western persona now spits out a broken man who has lost everything but is still determined to make amends. In a career filled with character roles, Harry Dean Stanton achieves a captivating highlight as an emotionally battered average man, as does Nastassja Kinski as a young wife and mother doing what she must to survive.

What Does Not Work As Well: The final act is a compelling tour-de-force of vulnerability shared in separation, but also defaults to describing rather than showing the demons at the heart of Travis' crisis. 

Key Quote:
Jane (to Travis): I hear your voice all the time. Every man has your voice.



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Sunday, 28 June 2026

Movie Review: The Hotel New Hampshire (1984)


Genre: Dramedy  
Director: Tony Richardson  
Starring: Jodie Foster, Rob Lowe, Beau Bridges, Nastassja Kinski, Wilford Brimley, Matthew Modine, Amanda Plummer, Wallace Shawn  
Running Time: 110 minutes  

Synopsis: It's the 1950s, and dreamer Win Berry (Beau Bridges) converts an abandoned school into a hotel. His teenaged children John (Rob Lowe) and Franny (Jodie Foster) are incestuously attracted to each other, while their brother Frank (Paul McCrane) comes out as gay. Bad-boy high school footballer Chip (Matthew Modine) inflicts a life-long trauma on Franny, and over the years the family endures many adventures, including a relocation to Vienna, and encounters with Win's friend Freud (Wallace Shawn), and a girl in a bear costume (Nastassja Kinski).

What Works Well: The adaptation of John Irving's novel is committed to an original assortment of unconventional characters, unexpected incidents, and challenging themes, riding on a foundation of tragedy as a foundation for life's journey. Death is the Berry family's constant, and often unexpected, companion, but this does not prevent the pursuit of dreams, pleasure, and sometimes miraculous achievements despite shocking setbacks. 

What Does Not Work As Well: In a case of stuffing too much of the book onto the screen, the outcome is too quirky for its own good, with serious incidents of rape, incest, terrorism, and suicide almost dismissively caught up in merriment. Director Tony Richardson rarely pauses long enough to allow true emotions to surface, and further degrades his work with some ill-considered and unworthy Benny Hill-like fast-motion sequences. 

Key Quote:
Multiple characters: Keep passing the open windows.



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Saturday, 27 June 2026

Movie Review: Man Of The West (1958)


Genre: Psychological Western  
Director: Anthony Mann  
Starring: Gary Cooper, Julie London, Lee J. Cobb  
Running Time: 100 minutes  

Synopsis: Former outlaw Link Jones (Gary Cooper) has built a new life of peaceful domesticity. But after he is caught up in a botched train robbery along with entertainer Billie Ellis (Julie London) and card sharp Beasley (Arthur O'Connell), Link stumbles upon his old gang led by the hard-drinking and aging Dock Tobin (Lee J. Cobb). The gang is now marginalized and incompetent, but Dock harkens back to old glories and wants Link to rejoin for one last bank heist. 

What Works Well: Director Anthony Mann combines the impressive breadth of CinemaScope with an intimate focus on one man forced to confront his legacy. Gary Cooper's considered presence enhances a central theme of the monster within called upon to slay the ghosts of the past, and Lee J. Cobb's borderline maniacal father figure exemplifies the power of elders to shape destinies. The overarching titular narrative captures the man of the west's progress from lawlessness to respectability. And while the unevolved are decidedly humiliated (in an exhaustingly epic fist fight) and discarded, beneath the veneer of civility violence is not far from the surface.

What Does Not Work As Well: In a few talky scenes, the tight focus on a small number of characters starts to resemble a stage play. A climactic gun battle is staged with exquisite excellent but suffers from endless bullets syndrome.

Key Quote:
Link Jones (to Dock): You've outlived your kind and outlived your time, and I'm comin' to get you!



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Movie Review: Yalla Aa'belkon Chabeb: Single, Married, Divorced 2 (2016)


Genre: Dramedy  
Director: Shady Hanna  
Starring: Badih Abou Chakra, Talal Jurdi, Fouad Yammine, Dory Al Samarany, Nada Abou Farhat, Nibal Arakji, Darine Hamze, Marwa Khalil, Julia Kassar  
Running Time: 118 minutes  

Synopsis: In Beirut, four fortysomething men grapple with relationship issues. Walid (Badih Abou Chakra) is wealthy but frustrated by the shallow women he meets on the dating scene. His friend Mazen (Dory Al Samarany) has frequent casual sex behind the back of his long suffering girlfriend Nour (Nada Abou Farhat). Heart surgeon Hatem (Talal Jurdi) is secretly bulimic, testing the limits of his wife Nina (Nibal Arakji). And new father Ziad (Fouad Yammine) is married to Maya (Darine Hamze) but feeling neglected and carrying on a secret affair with Ghida (Marwa Khalil).

What Works Well: Stylistically similar but less a sequel and more a male counter-perspective to the 2014 original, this version is more serious and dramatic. The bulimia sub-plot makes for a difficult watch, and Mazen's callous treatment of Nour points to unstated sex addiction. Nevertheless moments of humour do emerge, most commonly in Walid's succession of dates with entitled and materialistic husband-hunters.

What Does Not Work As Well: The shifts in tone between serious and lighthearted are often awkward, and the drama is less expressive, a natural outcome of a focus on men unwilling to verbalize thoughts and emotions. A character with early onset dementia (Julia Kassar as Mazen's neighbour) is treated as no more than comic relief.

Key Quote:
Walid: I would very much like to get married. Especially if I fall in love.



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Movie Review: Yalla Aa'belkon: Single, Married, Divorced (2014)


Genre: Romantic Comedy  
Director: Elie Khalifé  
Starring: Darine Hamze, Nada Abou Farhat, Nibal Arakji, Marwa Khalil  
Running Time: 100 minutes  

Synopsis: In Beirut, four single 30-something women friends grapple with relationship issues. Make-up artist Yasmina (Darine Hamze) is looking for true love, and is in a relationship with the Egyptian Hazem (Aiman Kaissouni) who's only available on weekends. Yasmina's mom (Julia Kassar) pesters her constantly about getting married. Art gallery curator Taline (Nada Abou Farhat) just wants to have casual sex, but her neighbour Marwan (Mario Bassil) is a persistent suitor. Dressmaker Layan (Nibal Arakji) is in a relationship with the married Wissam (Badih Abou Chakra), while Doctor Zina (Marwa Khalil) is deeply frustrated by the shallow men she dates.

What Works Well: Writer and star Nibal Arakji relocates the breezy friendship-and-fashion Sex And The City vibe to the Beirut social scene. This is a surprisingly sharp and often poignant commentary on the sometimes genuine, often caustic, but always humorous search for love and sex among a group of well-defined women. As the friends navigate ticking biological clocks and a minefield of men pursuing their own pleasure, director Elie Khalifé uses crisp editing and observant camera placements to supplement fine work by the ensemble cast.

What Does Not Work As Well: Some of the scene transitions are clunky, and in search of cheap laughs, some emotional beats (in particular Yasmina's mother) play into stereotypes. 

Key Quote:
Yasmina (narrating to the camera): Let's check out my city Beirut. I'll show you how a single girl lives. A doormat has it so much better.



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Sunday, 21 June 2026

Movie Review: Ladies First (2026)


Genre: Satirical Fantasy Comedy  
Director: Thea Sharrock  
Starring: Sacha Baron Cohen, Rosamund Pike, Emily Mortimer, Charles Dance, Fiona Shaw  
Running Time: 93 minutes  

Synopsis: In London, Damien Sachs (Sacha Baron Cohen) is a misogynistic marketing company executive, in-line to be the next CEO. After he promotes previously ignored middle-manager Alex Fox (Rosamund Pike) to be a token female presence on the executive team, Damien bangs his head and wakes up in a world where women have all the power. Alex has his job and is the CEO-in-waiting, and men are treated like playthings and their opinions ignored. Damien has to find a way to return to his version of normal, and decides to compete with Alex for the CEO role.

What Works Well: Although in real life his character would have been marched out of the office carrying a box, Sacha Baron Cohen is adequate as a smug and over-confident executive. Some chuckles can be found in the representation of a topsy-turvy world where males are subservient, and a perpetually miffed cat makes for a good co-star.

What Does Not Work As Well: The premise is about 40 years out of date and may have been marginally funny in a 1980s context, although even by then Diane Keaton and Sigourney Weaver were already bossing the corner office. The imaginative dead-end of women behaving just as badly as men if roles were reversed results in ideas drying up by about the 30 minute mark. Desperate for any plot line to prolong proceedings, a "let's have a competition for CEO" results in a bizarre lack of self-awareness as order is restored with the supposedly more awakened man still destined to come out on top.

Key Quote:
Alex: Can you change a tire?
Damien: No. I'm a man.



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Movie Review: Office Romance (2026)


Genre: Romantic Comedy  
Director: Ol Parker  
Starring: Jennifer Lopez, Brett Goldstein  
Running Time: 115 minutes  

Synopsis: Jackie Cruz (Jennifer Lopez) is the embattled CEO of Air Cruz, the company founded by her father (Edward James Olmos). With the airline embroiled in legal action initiated by a competitor, Jackie works closely with lawyer Daniel Blanchflower (Brett Goldstein) from her legal team, and they fall in love despite the company's strict policy forbidding office romances. Jackie's pregnant assistant Sydney (Betty Gilpin) starts to suspect that her boss is in a relationship, and when Jackie's private life is dragged into the legal action, the romance is threatened.

What Works Well: Jennifer Lopez makes for a glamorous CEO.

What Does Not Work As Well: It's difficult to believe that an HR policy can be the catalyst for a rom-com, and sure enough this limp effort leans heavily on adults behaving like (literally) horny teenagers. Daniel gets tongue-tied and develops a very visible erection in Jackie's presence, and his use of the "c" word, apparently quite acceptable in his native England, is over-deployed. It's never clear if the pregnant Sydney is supposed to be comic relief, a supporter, or an antagonist, but she is victimized by a shock-for-shock's sake birth scene. Equally, Daniel's incarcerated sister (Jodie Whittaker) is a sub-plot that goes nowhere.

Key Quote:
Jackie (to Daniel): Do you believe in magic?



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Movie Review: The Rebound (2009)


Genre: Romantic Comedy  
Director: Bart Freundlich  
Starring: Catherine Zeta-Jones, Justin Bartha  
Running Time: 95 minutes  

Synopsis: 40-year-old suburbanite housewife Sandy (Catherine Zeta-Jones) separates from her cheating husband and moves to New York City with her two pre-teen kids. She finds a sportscasting job and leans on 25-year-old barista Aram (Justin Bartha) for babysitting. He is a college graduate but aimlessly drifting through life and still living with his parents. Gradually a romance evolves between Sandy and Aram, but the age difference will get into the way.

What Works Well: Catherine Zeta-Jones is radiant as a mom getting to grips with a new stage of life, and director Bart Freundlich avoids romanticizing Manhattan. The final act seeks originality within genre confines. 

What Does Not Work As Well: This clunky rom-com suffers from poor pacing, a paucity of ideas, unfunny secondary characters (Aram's parents are obnoxious), and a lack of both subtlety and wit. A couple of scenes (a woman's self-defense class, Sandy's disastrous date with a chiropractor) are prolonged well after the humour runs out. Vulgarity is deployed in a misguided search for laughs, with adults who should know better and kids spouting foul language. Sandy and Aram generate limited romantic chemistry, and it's never clear what a supposedly smart woman sees in his failure-to-launch character other than convenient babysitting services. 

Key Quote:
Sandy (to Aram): Someone like you shouldn't be with someone like me - an old girlfriend with two kids.



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.