Sunday, March 2, 2025

Erin Brockovich (2000)

IMDb plot summary: A flamboyant law firm secretary works tirelessly to gain justice for a small town wrecked by a utility company's pollution.
Directed by Steven Soderbergh. Starring Julia Roberts, Albert Finney, and David Brisbin.

Erin Brockovich is based on a true story about an administrative assistant for a legal firm who discovers that all the residents of a particular neighborhood might be suffering from decades-long chemical contamination... and their utilities company knew about it and lied to them. This is a film I absolutely should have seen long before now, and after watching it I think it does deserve the attention it got, particularly in Julia Roberts' leading performance. The character is seriously flawed -- impulsive, defensive, and always unnecessarily escalating conflict -- but that is also exactly what makes her a good advocate for the people seeking compensation for what was done to them. The pacing of the mystery is well-done. It's impressive that Soderbergh was able to set up so much tension around something as mundane as getting the right amount of signatures. The scenes with Aaron Eckhart as the next-door neighbor she starts dating are helpful for fleshing out the character as a whole, but I did find them to be the least interesting part of the movie by far. Overall, this was a good watch that hits basically all the right emotional beats, and Roberts is fantastic. Glad I finally watched it!

How it entered my Flickchart:
Erin Brockovich > The Call
Erin Brockovich > Elf
Erin Brockovich < The People Under the Stairs
Erin Brockovich < Spencer
Erin Brockovich < Kismet
Erin Brockovich < The African Queen
Erin Brockovich > Finian's Rainbow
Erin Brockovich > Sherlock Jr.
Erin Brockovich > Hannah and Her Sisters
Erin Brockovich > Children of Men
Erin Brockovich > The Paper
Erin Brockovich > Mixed Nuts
Final spot: #940 out of 4007, or 77%.

Saturday, February 22, 2025

Oddity (2024)

IMDb plot summary: A psychic medium attempts to uncover the truth behind her sister's murder at the site of the crime.
Directed by Damian McCarthy. Starring Carolyn Bracken, Johnny French, and Steve Wall.

Oddity is a horror movie about a woman who is murdered alone in her house when her husband is at work. They catch the culprit, but a year later the murdered woman's psychic sister discovers the murder wasn't what it seems, and she becomes determined to figure it out. This film feels like a weirdly difficult one to quantify, because it just seems like such a *small* film. The stakes seem weirdly small, the locations claustrophobic, the acting performances so quiet they could be mistaken for a one-room drama. That being said, I think it is put together fairly well. There are a few beautifully creepy moments with the large wooden doll at the center of the marketing, and I enjoy how the mystery of the woman's death unravels piece by piece. Perhaps some of the disjointedness comes from the film not giving us the inside view of any of our protagonists, leaving us as the audience very much on the outside looking in. The individual pieces definitely are more than the sum of its part, at least in my book, although the "homegrown" feel of it is going to be part of the draw to many, I suspect.

How it entered my Flickchart:
Oddity > Wide Awake
Oddity < Elf
Oddity < Family Business
Oddity > The Gold Rush
Oddity < Me and Earl and the Dying Girl
Oddity < The Majestic
Oddity > Rabbit Hole
Oddity < Three Men and a Baby
Oddity < Peter Pan (1960)
Oddity < Splice
Oddity < The Exorcist
Oddity > Knight and Day
Final spot: #1718 out of 4003, or 57%.

Friday, February 21, 2025

Companion (2025)

IMDb plot summary: A weekend getaway with friends at a remote cabin turns into chaos after it's revealed that one of the guests is not what they seem.
Directed by Drew Hancock. Starring Sophie Thatcher, Jack Quaid, and Lukas Gage.

Companion follows a young woman who goes to spend the weekend with her boyfriend's friends at a remote cabin, but everything starts going wrong. The trailers for this movie were extremely cagey about some of the plot points you discover pretty early on in the film, so I think I'm going to keep my synopsis cagey too. But I had a really good time with this. There are some really enjoyable twists and turns that I didn't see coming, and the pacing of the movie is smart and kept me engaged the whole time. I was a little disappointed by Sophie Thatcher's performance in this film, although I have liked her in other things, but the supporting cast of Jack Quaid, Lukas Gage, Megan Suri, and Harvey Guillen really bring the whole experience home in a very satisfying way. It also is smart about knowing when to make the audience laugh versus jump, and it deflates the tension exactly the right way every time. A really solid thriller/comedy, if not groundbreaking.

How it entered my Flickchart:
Companion > Wide Awake
Companion > Key Largo
Companion < Cam
Companion < Spencer
Companion > Shiva Baby
Companion < CODA
Companion > Tell It to the Bees
Companion < Sanjuro
Companion > The Fantasticks
Companion < Perfume: The Story of a Murderer
Companion > A Haunting in Venice
Companion < Roxanne
Final spot: #833 out of 4002, or 79%.

Wednesday, February 19, 2025

Love Me (2024)

IMDb plot summary: A postapocalyptic romance in which a buoy and a satellite meet online and fall in love after the end of human civilization.
Directed by Andrew Zuchero and Sam Zuchero. Stars Kristen Stewart and Steven Yeun.

Love Me is a sci-fi romance set in the future, when humanity has collapsed, and two remaining robots -- one smart buoy in the ocean and one satellite in the atmosphere -- fall in love and explore what it might mean to be human. This movie was everything I wanted it to be, and more. The creativity of the way this romance was portrayed and how these characters began to discover each other and themselves was so engaging and funny and sweet, and I was there for it the whole way. Steven Yeun and Kristen Stewart are so engaging, even when they're just voices, and their romance is strange and totally charming. This does that thing that great sci-fi does in which it demonstrates marvelous insight into humanity and human relationships by highlighting characters who are NOT human, and it's a ton of fun along the way, as well as being creative and thoughtful. Looking up reviews for this movie, I'm a little startled that not everybody loved it as much as I did, but I'd definitely recommend it. A surprising and wonderful watch.

How it entered my Flickchart:
Love Me > The Girl on a Motorcycle
Love Me > Dark Passage
Love Me > The People Under the Stairs
Love Me > Parasite
Love Me < The Lives of Others
Love Me < Dial M for Murder
Love Me > Beasts of No Nation
Love Me < Scaramouche
Love Me < Mr. Smith Goes to Washington
Love Me > All About Eve
Love Me < Seven Samurai
Love Me < Double Indemnity
Final spot: #214 out of 4001, or 95%.

Tuesday, February 18, 2025

Kinds of Kindness (2024)

IMDb plot summary: A man seeks to break free from his predetermined path, a cop questions his wife's demeanor after her return from a supposed drowning, and a woman searches for an extraordinary individual prophesied to become a renowned spiritual guide.
Directed by Yorgos Lanthimos. Starring Emma Stone, Jesse Plemons, and Willem Dafoe.

Kinds of Kindness is an anthology film my Yorgos Lanthimos, in which Jesse Plemons, Emma Stone, and Willem Defoe, among others, play different characters in each of the three stories. I made a social media post after watching this noting that between this and Poor Things, I need to pay more attention to how much I like Yorgos Lanthimos as a director. This was like a series of wonderfully bizarre Black Mirror episodes with an absolutely stellar cast. Jesse Plemons is almost always criminally underutilized as an actor, and he shines here, alongside performances from his also-excellent co-stars. There are obviously a lot of instances of thematic symbolism and potentially bigger meanings here, but I'll be honest, I cared about very few of those -- I was just enjoying the tremendously wild ride. Each one of these stories sticks the landing for me too, closing out with some intense emotional image or scene that puts the perfect button on the strange little story it's telling. This is absolutely not a movie for everyone, but I was thoroughly delighted by it and am so glad I watched it.

How it entered my Flickchart:
Kinds of Kindness > The Girl on a Motorcycle
Kinds of Kindness > Dark Passage
Kinds of Kindness < The People Under the Stairs
Kinds of Kindness > Onward
Kinds of Kindness > The Jungle Book (1967)
Kinds of Kindness > Romy and Michele's High School Reunion
Kinds of Kindness > 56 Up
Kinds of Kindness < Women Talking
Kinds of Kindness > M. Butterfly
Kinds of Kindness > Detroit
Kinds of Kindness < Glengarry Glen Ross
Kinds of Kindness > The Basketball Diaries
Final spot: #518 out of 4000, or 87%.

Monday, February 17, 2025

Hell or High Water (2016)

IMDb plot summary: Toby is a divorced father who's trying to make a better life. His brother is an ex-con with a short temper and a loose trigger finger. Together, they plan a series of heists against the bank that's about to foreclose on their family ranch.
Directed by David Mackenzie. Starring Chris Pine, Ben Foster, and Jeff Bridges.

Hell or High Water follows two brothers robbing banks and the cop who is trying to catch them. The plot's about as simple as that, though the movie does delve into a lot of depth for all these characters. This is a movie where I appreciated individual scenes and moments but when I step back to look at it as a whole, it doesn't quite gel into place for me. On the positive side, Chris Pine is especially good as the bank robber with altruistic motives: to buy back his mother's mortgaged land and leave something to his mostly-estranged children. Jeff Bridges is interesting but unlikable as the cranky about-to-retire police officer chasing them down, who tries to bond with his Native American partner officer by making racist jokes about him. While the film is styled like a western, visually, the ending scenes land it more firmly in the crime genre, with a familiar "who can tell who's the good guy and who's the bad guy?" theme in its closing. It's honestly hard to come up with something to say about this movie that's cohesive. I'm glad I watched it, because there are some good performances, but overall it didn't fully resonate with me.

How it entered my Flickchart:
Hell or High Water > VeggieTales: Madame Blueberry
Hell or High Water < Dark Passage
Hell or High Water < Rachel Getting Married
Hell or High Water > 8-Bit Christmas
Hell or High Water > The Big Chill
Hell or High Water > Charlie St. Cloud
Hell or High Water < The Pirates! Band of Misfits
Hell or High Water < The Green Mile
Hell or High Water < A Star Is Born (1954)
Hell or High Water < Starship Troopers
Hell or High Water < The Age of Adaline
Hell or High Water > National Treasure
Final spot: #1561 out of 3999, or 61%.

Sunday, February 9, 2025

The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare (2024)

IMDb plot summary: The British military recruits a small group of highly skilled soldiers to strike against German forces behind enemy lines during World War II.
Directed by Guy Ritchie. Starring Henry Cavill, Alan Ritchson, and Alex Pettyfer.

The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare is a Guy Ritchie World War II action comedy telling the true story of a group of British rogues hired by Ian Fleming and Prime Minister Winston Churchill to sink the boat that provides necessary resources to all the German U boats. With those resources gone, British troops will be able to sail through the seas unscathed. This is an interesting story, one of the few examples for me where it being a true story actually does enhance the story, and I find it less twisty and more engaging than a lot of Ritchie’s action work sometimes is. As always, I wish the ensemble of mostly white men were easier to tell apart from each other, but there are some good fun heist-style sequences, and seeing how they respond to the various obstacles thrown in their way is a fun ride. Overall an enjoyable but forgettable ride that is going to be some people's absolute cup of tea.

How it entered my Flickchart:
The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare < The Girl on a Motorcycle
The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare > The Third Man
The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare > Hello, Dolly!
The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare > Lost in America
The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare > Rogue One
The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare > Finding Vivian Maier
The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare > The Anderson Tapes
The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare < Skyfall
The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare > Sherlock Holmes
The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare < The Blues Brothers
The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare > Triangle of Sadness
The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare < Kin-Dza-Dza
Final spot: #2020 out of 3998, or 49%.