Tuesday, February 25, 2020

Timmy Failure: Mistakes Were Made Review - Doesn’t Fail You, Despite What The Name Says


I don’t remember the book being this good. I thought that a lot while watching this movie. I enjoyed reading the misadventures of the comically unintelligent Timmy Failure when I found those books in the library, but this movie takes that goofy kids’ book concept and mines so much heart and charm from it that I can’t shake the feeling that I really missed something while reading the book.
Timmy Failure: Mistakes Were Made is a Disney+ original about a fifth grade boy named Timmy Failure living in Portland, Oregon who runs an imaginary detective agency with an imaginary 200-pound polar bear named Total (gettit? Total... Failure...?). Timmy is stoic, professional and never says two words when one would do, which are all great traits for a detective, but not-so great when you’re a 10 year-old boy. This attitude strains his school performance and his relationship with his family and friends but even when things get rough and is asked to be a normal kid he steadfastly believes that: “normal is for normal people” a saying that his single mother (Ophelia Lovibond) taught him. 
Honestly there’s not a lot to say about this movie so I’ll keep it short. The cast is all pretty solid. There is some wooden acting from the child actors at points (that’s a demerit) but it’s all easily ignored. The plot is rather straightforward but is so full of heart and charm that you forget how straightforward it is while watching it and are constantly wondering what’s going to happen next. The ending is a bit forced (that’s a demerit) and the climactic car crash that serves as a sort-of cold-open doesn’t quite live up to expectations (that’s a demerit) but once again these are all easily ignored. 
Timmy Failure: Mistakes Were Made is very different from the source material. And that’s a good thing. What could’ve been a mediocre, whacky kids comedy that Disney put out to round out the Disney+ originals ends up being a really heart-felt, enjoyable hour-and-a-half that I wish more people were talking about. If you have the time, definitely watch this.

P.S. The one thing I do miss is the lack of Garbanzo Man (that’s a demerit)

P.P.S. Also “That’s a demerit” is going to find it’s way into my every day vocabulary.

Personal Rating: 8/10
Entertainment: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ ☆
Depth: ⭐️⭐️⭐️ ☆ ☆
Story: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ ☆
Comedy: ⭐️⭐️⭐️ ☆ ☆
Tension: ⭐️⭐️⭐️ ☆ ☆
Acting: ⭐️⭐️⭐️ ☆ ☆
Directing: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ ☆

Monday, February 10, 2020

Birds Of Prey And The Fantabulous Emancipation Of One Harley Quinn Review - That’s A Mouthful


Birds of Prey and the Fantabulous Emancipation of one Harley Quinn (not going to say that every time) is the new DCEU film directed by Cathy Yan in her second outing as a director and stars Margot Robbie, Rosa Perez, Ewan McGregor, Jurnee Smollett-Bell, Mary Elizabeth Winstead and Ella Jay Basco. And this movie, more than Shazam, Joker or Aquaman, really shows the potential of DC movies. In a cinema landscape that is dominated by Marvel’s safe, fun, action movies, DC’s new business plan of putting out a bunch of totally different movie shows real potential. Birds of Prey is unlike any other super-hero movie we’ve ever seen, the closest comparison being probably Deadpool, but even that doesn’t quite do it justice. It does have the R-rated comedy as Deadpool at several moments, but it’s less quippy and is able to get a lot darker. That’s not to say that Birds of Prey is a bold new movie, because it’s not. But it is a well put together, very entertaining and memorable blockbuster to kick of 2020.
Let’s talk about it’s greatest strengths. Cathy Yan directs the hell out of the action scenes. There’s an insane amount of visual polish that goes into every big action scene that makes all the fight scene such a joy to watch beyond the fact that the fight choreographer from John Wick came in to make the actual fights insane. The stand out is easily the police station fight scene that is vibrant and exciting in a way that few other super-hero movies have ever shown. Additionally, Margot Robbie IS Harley Quinn in much the same way that Robert Downey Jr. or Chris Evans embody their roles in the MCU. The movie ticket to see this film is worth buying on the merit of watching her alone and both the script and Robbie do an excellent job of telling a story through Harley Quinn’s brain. The other stand out is Ewan McGregor who chews every single scene he’s in to a point where he gives Robbie a run for her money. McGregor’s Roman Sionis is such a delightfully ugly human being that you both love watching McGregor have a blast with it and hate it. The one problem I had with him was less a problem with him and more a problem with the script in that I felt like I never needed him to be “Black Mask” because I didn’t quite buy him as a named super-villain, to me Roman Sionis was enough of an antagonist without a scary mask. 
Following that trail into the mixed aspects of this film, it is a bit chaotic. For my part I was able to follow the film just fine, but there have been plenty of complaints that the crazy plot structure is confusing and unnecessary. There is merit to these complaints and if you want a linear plot-structure then you will have some trouble with this movie but not seeing it because of that will mean that you’re missing out. Additionally, this is not a Birds of Prey movie and it doesn’t really convince me as a backdoor Birds of Prey origin story either. The three Birds of Prey are all fine, but only really work as background characters to Harley Quinn and nothing about this movie makes me interested in seeing a stand-alone Birds of Prey movie. That’s not to say that any actress is bad (with the exception of maybe Ella Jay Basco, who at 12 years old, can’t quite keep up with the rest of the cast), but they just aren’t really engaging in the way that Margot Robbie and Ewan McGregor are. That being said, Mary Elizabeth Winstead as Huntress is fun, but she’s so poorly drawn into the plot that we barely get a good sense of her character. 
Those nitpicks aside, there are no real movie breaking flaws with this film. The action is hella fun, the humor is on point 90% of the time, and it’s just a fun time. Honestly it’s a bit surprising how many people have taken grievance with this film because it seems to me as the type of movie that can whisk anybody up into itself if they’re willing. There have been a lot of complaints lobbied against this film, saying that it’s too much preachy feminism and to that I say, actually watch the movie, don’t just watch the trailers. Because the trailers don’t quite do the film justice. Sure, if you’re looking for a message that says “all woman good, all men bad” you can find that pretty easily, but that’s ignoring the smartness of the script. It is true that all the males in this film are psychotic a$$holes (with the exception of Doc, who’s adorable), but honestly everybody in this movie is kinda a psychotic a$$hole. It’s just that Harley and co. choose to be something more. This is a movie about defining yourself as a singular person while not isolating yourself from everybody else. It could be a bit more strongly stated but Ewan McGregor’s Roman Sionis is a character building himself from scratch after being kicked out of his father’s empire. The only difference between him and the Birds of Prey and Harley Quinn, who are all also defining themselves on their own, is that he finds himself unable to really befriend anybody and gets stuck being a sadistic a$$hole trying to create an army to control Gotham City. He’s so unable to trust that the very second time we see him, he’s cutting off a families’ faces because the dad didn’t agree to his deal. There is good stuff in this movie if you’re willing to watch it.
All in all Birds of Prey and the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn is not reinventing anything. It’s not the best super-hero movie you’ve ever seen and isn’t the best feminist super-hero movie you’ve ever seen. But it is a well-crafted, fun roller-coaster that deserves all the support it can get at the box office, because DC needs to know to make more of these movies.
P.S. Also the title is evidently “Harley Quinn: Birds of Prey” now? It’s a good decision, but why wasn’t it made before the movie came out?
Personal Rating: 8/10
Entertainment: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Depth: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ ☆ 
Story: ⭐️⭐️⭐️ ☆ ☆
Comedy: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ ☆
Tension: ⭐️⭐️ ☆ ☆ ☆
Acting: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ ☆
Directing: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

The Great Episode 1 Review - Lives Up To Its Name

The Great is a new Hulu original about the rise of one of Russia’s more famous rulers, Catherine the Great. And before the concept of watchi...