Showing posts with label Mackenzie Davis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mackenzie Davis. Show all posts

Movie Review Speak No Evil

Speak No Evil (2024) 

Directed by James Watkins 

Written by James Watkins 

Starring James McAvoy, Mackenzie Davis, Scoot McNairy, Aisling Franciosi 

Release Date September 13th, 2024

Published September, 13th, 2024 

Speak No Evil stars Mackenzie Davis and Scoot McNairy as Ben and Louise Dalton, a couple vacationing in Italy with their young daughter, Agnes (Alix West Lefler). The trip is relatively mundane and going as planned until the family is befriended by another family headed up by Paddy (James McAvoy) and his wife, Ciara (Aisling Franciosi) and their son, Ant (Dan Hough). Ant has a condition that prevents him from being able to speak. The families spend the rest of their vacation together and things seem pleasant enough. 

After returning to their respective homes, the Dalton’s in London and Paddy’s family on a farm in the countryside, Ben and Louise are surprised with an invitation to spend a week in the country with their new friends. Struggling at home with Ben having lost his job and Louise battling the isolation of being in a new country with few friends and no other family around, the couple agree to accept the invitation. It’s a fateful decision as this trip is set to change everyone’s lives forever in ways they can’t begin to imagine.

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



Movie Review Blade Runner 2049

Blade Runner 2049 (2017) 

Directed by Denis Villeneuve

Written by Hampton Fancher, Michael Green 

Starring Ryan Gosling, Harrison Ford, Dave Bautista, Ana De Armas, Mackenzie Davis 

Release Date October 6th, 2017

 “Sometimes, to love someone, you have to be a stranger.”

Out of context, the above line of dialogue from Blade Runner 2049 doesn’t seem so profound. But when it lands in the context of the story being told by director Denis Villeneuve, the line plays as remarkably poignant. I won’t spoil the context in this review. Indeed, I will venture to avoid any spoilers whatsoever. What I can tell you about Blade Runner 2049 is that it has all of the atmosphere of cool that the 1982, Ridley Scott-helmed original had but with even better characters and deeper meanings, and yes, genuinely poignant moments.

K (Ryan Gosling) is a Blade Runner in Los Angeles circa 2049, 30 years after the time of the original movie. K is tracking down a new generation of Replicants and on his latest job, retiring a hulking replicant played by Guardians of the Galaxy star Dave Bautista, K stumbles into a long-running conspiracy with implications that could rock the foundations of society as he knows it. The secret involves a body, and you will get no more than that from me.

Blade Runner 2049 is rich with questions that the film takes its time to reveal the answers to—not that director Villeneuve is screwing around and playing keep away with the truth. Rather, the story of Blade Runner 2049 is a classic noir mystery ala the original Blade Runner and that kind of story requires patience. The big difference between the new Blade Runner and the original is that this time the questions are bigger and more destructive when answered. There is a remarkable power in steadily unraveling each layer of Blade Runner 2049 and while some might have a hard time with the film’s leisurely pace, I found it riveting.

The key to Blade Runner 2049 is cinematographer Roger Deakins and the way he and Denis Villeneuve have expanded upon the smoky, grimy, and constantly wet streets of Los Angeles of 2049. Noir is best made in the dark with light dancing in puddles and Blade Runner 2049 evokes the old masters of noir while still allowing the movie to look sleek and modern. The noir comes from the atmosphere, as much as the look and the languid pace of the film is matched by Deakins’ visual style which posits a world encased in fog and doused in implacable rain.

Even a trip to the desert is fraught with smoggy gray that blocks out what should be a bright, unyielding sun. The lighting of the desert is remarkably logical and expands on the original movie’s thoughts on the future of the environment, a bleak, ever-worsening landscape of soot and sogginess. It’s dreary and yet a marvel to look at. The look of Blade Runner 2049 is easily as evocative and eye-catching as the original, a film that was tragically overlooked when it came to awarding the Oscar for Cinematography back in 1982. Here’s hoping the sequel doesn’t get the same mistreatment.

Find my full length review in the Geeks Community on Vocal. 



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 ...