Showing posts with label Olivia Munn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Olivia Munn. Show all posts

Sunday, 19 February 2023

Movie Review: Love Wedding Repeat (2020)


Genre: Romantic Comedy
Director: Dean Craig
Starring: Sam Claflin, Olivia Munn, Freida Pinto
Running Time: 100 minutes

Synopsis: At a scenic Italian villa, Englishman Jack (Sam Claflin) is supporting his sister Hayley (Eleanor Tomlinson) on her wedding day. Jack is also interested in re-igniting a romance with Hayley's friend Dina (Olivia Munn), three years after they felt a spark in Rome. The wedding guests include Jack's ex-girlfriend Amanda and her new partner Chaz (Freida Pinto and Allan Mustafa), Jack's friend and aspiring actor Bryan (Joel Fry), and most disruptive of all, Hayley's admirer since high school Marc (Jack Farthing).

What Works Well: Writer and director Dean Craig aims for a Death At A Funeral madcap vibe, and partially succeeds. Enough funny shenanigans swirl around Hayley's wedding to maintain interest, including a spiked drink, an insufferable guest in a kilt (an often hilarious Tim Key), and at least one surprise revelation. Sam Claflin (the would-be lover lacking confidence), Eleanor Tomlinson (the stressed out bride), and especially Jack Farthing (the event wrecker) buy into their roles as a narrator laments the whims of fate orchestrating various outcomes. 

What Does Not Work As Well: The two different playthroughs suggest a scarcity of material to occupy a feature length film, and some characters either never get going (Vitelli the film director) or just get tiresome in a hurry (the size-obsessed Chaz).

Conclusion: The wedding is worth attending, but it's not the event of the season.



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.

Thursday, 5 August 2021

Movie Review: Deliver Us From Evil (2014)

A demonic horror movie about a series of disturbing deaths, Deliver Us From Evil creates a strong sense of dread but spends too much time fumbling in the dark.

In Iraq of 2010, three United States Marines stumble into a hidden cave and encounter something horrific.

Three years later in the Bronx, New York Police Special Operations Sergeant Ralph Sarchie (Erica Bana) and his partner Butler (Joel McHale) confront a series of grisly incidents. An infant is found dead, then ex-Marine Jimmy Tratner is arrested for violently beating his wife. Deranged woman Jane Crenna throws her baby to death at the zoo, and after a family complains about unusual sounds from the basement, the dead body of ex-Marine David Griggs is discovered. He was Jane's husband and Tratner's army buddy. 

All the incidents are accompanied by power failures and flickering lights, and Spanish priest Mendoza (Edgar Ramirez) warns Sarchie they are dealing with supernatural events. Sarchie and Butler focus their investigation on Mick Santino (Sean Harris), who served with Tratner and Griggs in Iraq. Sarchie also starts to have unusual visions, and his wife Jen (Olivia Munn) and child are threatened.

Inspired by events recounted in Sarchie's book Beware The Night, Deliver Us From Evil meets expectations as it moves purposefully through a supernatural story of ominous gates, cryptic messages, demonic beings, inhuman strength, disturbing possessions, and finally an all-out exorcism. Director and co-writer Scott Derrickson adopts a grim, dark aesthetic and finds the damp and downtrodden corners of the Bronx where evil lurks.

The plot secrets are revealed in steady increments, maintaining engagement as the initially sceptical Sarchie and more jovial Butler connect the dots and identify the impossible as possible. Mendoza starts on the sidelines but gradually moves to the centre, the mounting evidence nudging Sarchie towards considering metaphysical explanations. Eric Bana and Edgar Ramirez forge a grounded duo, and the evolving partnership between Sarchie and Mendoza provides a human core amidst the abominations. In contrast the repeated references to the music of The Doors is a rather more quirky angle, the demon's preferred playlist either too obvious or left unexplained.

While Derrickson maintains tight control over the material, he is also too quick to lean on repetitive scenes slowly exploring dark spaces, light bulbs flickering and flashlights piercing the black, the next jump scare - a crazed assailant! a dead body! and yes, a cat! - just around the corner. Deliver Us From Evil delivers the requisite scares, accompanied by the typical cliches.



All Ace Black Movie Blog reviews are here.