Showing posts with label Morena Baccarin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Morena Baccarin. Show all posts

Monday, 11 May 2026

Movie Review: Greenland 2: Migration (2026)


Genre: Apocalyptic Thriller  
Director: Ric Roman Waugh  
Starring: Gerard Butler, Morena Baccarin  
Running Time: 98 minutes  

Synopsis: A comet strike has wiped out most life on Earth. John Garrity (Gerard Butler), his wife Allison (Morena Baccarin), and son Nathan have been living in a Greenland bunker with other survivors for five years. But now seismic activity destroys the bunker, forcing the Garritys to flee. They travel by sea and land to Liverpool, where an old family friend is running a shelter, then onto France, where rumours are circulating that life is resprouting at the main comet crater site.

What Works Well: Gerard Butler's grizzled never-give-up attitude rescues a few moments. 

What Does Not Work As Well: More of a filmed video game than a serious movie, this unnecessary sequel is a listless and repetitive adventure where the Garrity family faces a frantic existential crisis (a planet convulsion, a human threat, or a plain old obstacle course) every 10 minutes. The special effects are cheesy and overcooked, the aesthetics grimy, the logic absent (everyone looks remarkably healthy given the absence of food and water; gasoline, bullets, and functional armaments seem plentiful), and the science ridiculous.

Key Quote:
John (to Ally): I promise you...I'm going to get you to the crater.



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Saturday, 31 January 2026

Movie Review: Fast Charlie (2023)


Genre: Action  
Director: Phillip Noyce  
Starring: Pierce Brosnan, Morena Baccarin, James Caan  
Running Time: 90 minutes  

Synopsis: In Biloxi, Mississippi, Charlie Swift (Pierce Brosnan) is a hitman and fixer for crime boss Stan (James Caan). A hit on low-level criminal Rollo goes a bit wrong, but allows Charlie to connect with Rollo's ex-wife Marcie (Morena Baccarin), a taxidermist. Meanwhile New Orleans crime boss Beggar (Gbenga Akinnagbe) moves in on Stan's turf, leaving many dead bodies behind. Charlie vows revenge, and learns that Beggar is desperate to recover incriminating evidence hidden by Rollo.

What Works Well: Pierce Brosnan cuts through the action with effortless confidence, and a few moments of viciously dark humour deliver an effective punch. The production values are decent, and the energy level sustained. Charlie's narrated philosophy is better than it needs to be, as is the jagged romance that he develops with Marcie.

What Does Not Work As Well: This is stock hitman's revenge material straight from the generica action file, with an auto-pilot plot that cannot survive any level of scrutiny. Multiple violent murders never seem to trouble any enforcement authorities, a compact disc is still considered a relevant MacGuffin, a large amount of cash is stored in a small flimsy box, barely defined allies pop up to save Charlie at the most opportune moments, and all of the bad guys disappear when convenient. 

Key Quote:
Charlie: It is not really letting go of the past that sticks with you. It's coming to terms with letting go of the future that will never be. 



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Wednesday, 20 August 2025

Movie Review: The Good House (2021)


Genre: Alcoholism Dramedy  
Directors: Maya Forbes, Wally Wolodarsky  
Starring: Sigourney Weaver, Kevin Kline, Morena Baccarin  
Running Time: 114 minutes  

Synopsis: In picturesque Wendover, Massachusetts, Hildy Good (Sigourney Weaver) is a realtor with a drinking problem. Having lost her (also alcoholic) mother to suicide and her husband to another man, Hildy is now concealing her drinking from her two grown daughters and attempting to revive her struggling business. She attempts to sell the house of a couple with an autistic child while pursuing an opportunity to rekindle a relationship with old flame Frank (Kevin Kline). She also gets into the middle of an affair between newcomer Rebecca (Morena Baccarin) and the town's therapist Peter (Rob Delaney).

What Works Well: In this adaptation of the Ann Leary novel, Sigourney Weaver is predictably excellent as a woman lying to herself and drowning in the misconception that she is the smartest person in town. Kevin Kline adds heft as the successful local scrappy businessman hiding empathy beneath layers of grime. The gossipy everyone-knows-everything-about-everyone-else small town milieu energizes the backdrop, and the eclectic collection of secondary characters adds plenty of animation.

What Does Not Work As Well: Hildy's frequent breaking of the fourth wall is a questionable artistic decision, and ultimately this is a story steeped in familiarity.

Key Quote:
Hildy, recognizing she's walked into an intervention: Well, if we're really going to do this, I need a drink.


All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Sunday, 15 May 2022

Movie Review: Greenland (2020)

An end-of-the-world thriller, Greenland focuses on individual actions as societal order disintegrates.

In Atlanta, structural engineer John Garrity (Gerard Butler) is trying to mend his marriage to Allison (Morena Baccarin) and be a good dad to his diabetic young son Nathan. A newly discovered comet dubbed Clarke is expected to pass close to earth but not cause serious damage. But then a piece of the comet wipes out Tampa, and John receives a Presidential alert ordering him to report with his family to a military base for evacuation to a secret shelter.

It's soon apparent the comet represents an extinction-level event, and governments have concealed the impact severity to avoid mass hysteria. In the chaos to board the evacuation plane John, Allison and Nathan are separated, but John learns the planes are heading to Greenland. The Garritys have to overcome numerous challenges to reunite at the rural home of Allison's father Dale (Scott Glenn), before trying to plot a path to survival.

After trying to save the world in the awful Geostorm, Gerard Butler narrows his objectives to just saving his family as another calamity threatens planet Earth. The result is a much better doomsday thriller, with only judicious use of not-bad special effects, mostly confined to the background.

The Chris Sparling script resonates by ignoring political leaders and governmental machinations. Officialdom is only represented by overwhelmed army volunteers following orders and trying to organize evacuations. Greenland primarily exists at the level of everyday families and individuals abandoned to deal with cataclysmic events on their own, and director Ric Roman Waugh thrives in portraying the range of reactions. 

After a solid opening act to establish the premise and the Garrity family dynamic, the middle segment is exceptionally dark, both in setting and events. First John is separated from Allison and Nathan, then Allison and Nathan are separated after a series of harrowing encounters exposing how quickly seemingly normal people can lose their senses. Meanwhile John also has to fight for survival and discovers attributes about himself he would have preferred to never learn.

But as some people embrace crime and anarchy, others go above and beyond to help. Greenland seeks a balance and underlines the range of human capability, both John and Allison encountering predators and saviours. Waugh underlines some altruistic acts with sentimental excess, but also succeeds in coupling intensity with searing revelations. John and Allison have their problems as an imperfect couple, but the survival experience brings them together in an affecting, visceral conclusion. The end of the world is an experience like no other to strip away distractions and reveal the essence of what matters.



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.