Wednesday, August 29, 2018

BlacKkKlansman - Movie Review

Starring John David Washington, Adam Driver, Laura Harrier, Topher Grace, Ryan Eggold, Michael Buscemi, Corey Hawkins, Ken Garito, Jasper Paakkonen, Paul Walter Hauser, Harry Belafonte, Robert John Burke and Alec Baldwin.
Written by Charlie Wachtel, David Rabinowitz, Kevin Willmott & Spike Lee.
Directed by Spike Lee.

★★★★

Along comes Spike Lee with his most vibrant film since Inside Man. He's taken a true story, gave it some sizzle, and it results in one of his funniest movies to date, while also still able to deliver a knock-out punch at the end.

Denzel's son John David Washington plays Ron Stallworth, a rookie cop in 1970's Colorado who just wants to make a difference. He gets himself into undercover work, at first to follow the radical Stokely Carmichael (Corey Hawkins), see if he's riling up black folks too much. But if he's going to check on black radicals, why not check on white radicals? He puts in a call to the local KKK chapter, and he's instantly in.

Since Stallworth has to eventually meet them in person, he enlists his partner Flip Zimmerman (Adam Driver) to play him. On the phone, it's Washington. In person, it's Driver.

Lee isn't subtle about drawing parallels between white supremacists then and now. About every 20 minutes, David Duke (Topher Grace) or one of the other Klansman says a line that could have been lifted from a Donald Trump rally. And yet it's earned by the way the movie ends.

Washington gives a solid performance with his first real leading role. Grace is terrificly slimy as Duke. He can be the nicest guy until race comes up, and he maintains that same pleasant veneer while saying the most vile things. The stand-out for me is Driver. He's so natural in the role, and when I look at his work in Silence, Logan Lucky, and The Last Jedi, I'm convinced he can do whatever's asked of him. He'll eventually win an Oscar.

(P.S. Lee does take some liberties with the true story. That didn't subtract from my enjoyment, but I'm glad I didn't read about them until I'd seen the movie first.)

Monday, August 27, 2018

Crazy Rich Asians #1 for second week


For the weekend of August 24-26, 2018, Crazy Rich Asians was the big winner for a second week in a row. Based on a best-selling book, the movie is the first major US motion picture to feature a predominantly Asian cast, and even if Constance Wu and Michelle Yeoh aren't box-office gold, it demonstrated that it pays off for Hollywood to take more risks on diverse stories.

The Happytown Murders had bad reviews and looked DOA from its first trailer. Maybe it's a testament to Melissa McCarthy it didn't open in single digits.

A.X.L. opened as poorly as predicted. On fewer screens, the Papillon remake starring Charlie Hunnam and Rami Malek, failed to get many people in seats. In limited release, Searching, starring Star Trek's John Cho as a dad trying to find his missing daughter, did really well and should make it in the top five when it expands next week.

In its second week, Mile 22, the fourth collaboration of Mark Wahlberg and director Peter Berg, looks like it will be their least successful yet. It's also their most poorly reviewed. The other second week release, Alpha, had terrible marketing, but excellent reviews. It'll be interesting to see how big or small its third week drop-off is.

Christopher Robin may have opened below Disney's expectations, but it's having long legs. It helps that there aren't any other major family movies opening until The House with a Clock in Its Walls on September 21. BlacKkKlansman is also doing well in keeping audiences coming.

Sometime next week, Incredibles 2 will pass $600 million domestic.

Ant-Man & the Wasp is on pace to out-gross Solo: A Star Wars Story. Solo has yet to hit $400 million worldwide.



Opens August 31
OPERATION FINALE with Oscar Isaac, Ben Kingsley and Melanie Laurent.
KIN with Myler Truitt, James Franco, Jack Reynor, Dennis Quaid and Zoe Kravitz.
THE LITTLE STRANGER with Domhnall Gleeson, Will Poulter and Charlotte Rampling.