Showing posts with label Jermaine Fowler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jermaine Fowler. Show all posts

Movie Review Ricky Stanicky

Ricky Stanicky (2024) 

Directed by Peter Farrelly 

Written by Jeff Bushell, Peter Farrelly, Pete Jones, Mike Cerrone, Brian Jarvis, James Lee Freeman 

Starring John Cena, Zac Efron, Jermaine Fowler, Andrew Santino, William H. Macy

Release Date March 7th, 2024 

Published March 8th, 2024 



I am ashamed at how many times I laughed during Ricky Stanicky. I feel, because I am a high-minded professional film critic, that my palette should be more... sophisticated. Comedy should have the air of sophistication, the notion of being intelligent. It should have deeper meaning and larger goals beyond just getting a laugh. And yet, there are movies like Ricky Stanicky that wear their stupid on their sleeve and remain mildly irresistible. 

Don't get me wrong, I don't love Ricky Stanicky. It's not always a winner. The film is deeply low brow and the plot mechanics are iffy at best. What works however are the performances of the main cast which work very hard, sweatily trying to make you laugh. That's certainly the case for star John Cena, the former pro wrestling champion who kicks his dignity to the wind and throws himself into a deeply meme-able performance, for better and for worse.

Find my full length review at Geeks.Media, linked here. 

Movie Review Sting

Sting (2024) 

Directed by Kiah Roache-Turner 

Written by Kiah Roache-Turner 

Starring Alyla Brown, Ryan Corr, Jermaine Fowler 

Release Date April 12th, 2024 

Published April 11th, 2024 

Sting promises a big nasty alien spider and it delivers a big, nasty, alien spider. If I could end this review here, I would. Sting is exactly what it promises to be. It's a monster movie in which an alien spider crash lands in a Brooklyn apartment building. It's captured and befriended in its infant form by Charlotte (Alyla Brown), a curious and dark-souled 12 year old aspiring artist. Charlotte goes by the name Fanggirl on social media and enjoys drawing herself as a super-heroine riding a giant spider. 

Thus how an alien spider, only we know that it is an alien, comes to be a pet named Sting. All that Charlotte knows that Sting looks cool and, when it is hungry, it whistles. If you don't know, that's not a typical trait of a Spider, especially one you find in an attic in Brooklyn. These unique qualities are intriguing but they grow dangerous as Charlotte starts feeding Sting other bugs and Sting starts to grow and fast.

Find my full length review at Geeks.Media, linked here. 



Movie Review The Blackening

The Blackening (2023) 

Directed by Tim Story 

Written by Tracy Oliver, Dewayne Perkins 

Starring Grace Byers, Jermaine Fowler, Melvin Gregg, X Mayo, Sinqua Walls 

Release Date June 16th, 2023 

Published June 19th, 2023 

The Blackening is a very funny and refreshing take on horror comedy. From the clever mind of director Tim Story and star/co-screenwriter Dewayne Perks and Tracy Oliver, The Blackening takes on numerous horror tropes and puts a new, exciting and often very funny twist on them. This is more than just because the cast is black, it's because the treatment of those well-worn tropes is inventive and really funny. The characters are unique and yet familiar, falling in line with classic horror tropes while upending the tropes with smart dialogue and clever sequences. 

The Blackening opens on a cabin the woods. Morgan (Yvonne Orji), and her boyfriend, Shawn (Jay Pharoah), engage in a series of meta-jokes as they come face to face with a bizarre and deeply problematic board game called The Blackening. Forced to play the game by some unseen bystander, the couple engage in the game and fail almost immediately when neither can name a black character who survived a well-known horror movie. The meta of the moment comes when Orji theorizes that Omar Epps and Jada Pinkett were killed off first in Scream 2 because they were big names that the production could not afford. Orji and Pharoah being, arguably, the best-known members of this cast, deliver this dialogue with a terrific comic knowingness. 

The rest of their party arrives soon after, though Morgan and Shawn are nowhere to be found. Arriving first are the threesome of Allison (Grace Byers), Lisa (Antoinette Robinson), and Dewayne (Dewayne Perkins). They have come for what is supposed to be a weekend of drugs, alcohol and college debauchery in honor of a 10-year college reunion. Lisa, however, has a secret motive. She's reconnected with her college boyfriend, Nnamdi (Sinqua Walls), much to the aggravation of Dewayne who recalls the number of times that Nnamdi cheated on his best friend. 

Later arriving is King (Melvin Gregg), a former thug, according to the dialogue, not my interpretation, King is now a man of peace and zen who makes a point of mentioning that he's married to a white woman. That will become kind of important in one of the film's standout comic horror moments. The final guests arriving are Shanika (X May0), the absolute scene stealer of The Blackening, and Clifton (Jermaine Fowler), someone who may or may not have actually been invited to this reunion. He claims he was invited by Morgan but since she's MIA, there is no way to prove that. 

Find my full length review at Geeks.Media 



Movie Review Get Away if You Can

Get Away if You Can  Directed by Dominique Braun, Terrence Martin Written by Dominique Braun, Terrence Martin Starring Ed Harris, Dominique ...