NaPoWriMo 2025 Begins!

I keep finding myself taken aback at the swiftness of time, spurring questions like “how have I not posted since Valentine’s Day” or “how is it already National/Global Poetry Writing Month again?” My distractions are numerous, so I’m feeling less prepared than ever for NaPoWriMo, yet I’m also reassuring myself that any pressure here is entirely self-imposed. I look forward to this event every year, following the daily prompts from the NaPoWriMo website and dredging my sometimes stagnant creative juices for hidden gems. Plus, my backlog of films seen and yet-to-be-reviewed is bigger than ever, so a flurry of poems/reviews is long overdue. Maybe those reviews will have to be shorter than usual, but I want to find a way to keep up with the one-a-day cadence if I can.

Anyone else out there is welcome to take part too, of course; it’s nice to be reminded that I’m not alone in this effort when I look at the daily submissions on the NaPoWriMo site. Historically, this has been a great opportunity for creativity, so here’s hoping for a fantastic poetry-filled April!

Love Story (1970)

Tags

, ,

When I held your hand on the long walk home,
In the white twilight of a snowglobe’s gloam,
It warmed me through with the glow of you,
And I thrilled at the thought the world hadn’t a clue
Of the prize I held and the eyes I knew.
You tightened your grip; I tightened mine too,
Lest this moment should end.

When I held your hand as our vows were said,
I meant every word from the day we wed.
A promise once made some are prone to let fade,
But the sight of my bride is a terrible trade,
And your arm in my own as the rice was thrown
Had me feeling somehow young yet grown.
Alas that that moment should end!

When I held your hand after work that day,
Both our eyes had bags that were there to stay.
For richer or poorer, a bitch or a snorer,
A job that was either a bore or a horror,
Your grip reassured that the day was endured
For someone worth holding with barely a word,
Lest even this moment should end.

When I held your hand in the hospital bed,
I fondled your fingers from pallor to red.
You squeezed as a bluff to insist you were tough,
As I thought I had not held your hand near enough.
Why had I always let go first before?
You loosened your grip, but I tightened mine more,
Lest all of our moments should end.
________________________

MPA rating: PG (more like a PG-13)

There are romances, and then there are romantic tragedies, and Love Story has a strong claim as the epitome of the latter. Written by Erich Segal, who also penned a bestselling novel based on his screenplay ten months before the film’s release (the book was published on Valentine’s Day no less), Love Story is a film I only knew from reputation. I still chuckle at the reference to its most famous line in What’s Up, Doc? when Ryan O’Neal’s character replies to “Love means never having to say you’re sorry” with “That’s the dumbest thing I ever heard.” Yet, regardless of the quality of its quotable relationship advice, I was pleasantly surprised at how engrossing this iconic melodrama is.

O’Neal plays wealthy Harvard student Oliver Barrett IV, who starts a relationship with the working-class Radcliffe student Jenny Cavilleri (Ali MacGraw), after a meet-cute born out of mutual antagonism. Despite the contrasts between them and the open disapproval of Oliver’s imperious father (Ray Milland), the two dive headlong into love and marriage, only for disease to sunder what no man could.

With the known melodrama in mind, I wasn’t expecting to especially like Love Story, and Ali MacGraw’s casually scornful Jenny didn’t seem like the kind of character to change my mind. But when paired with O’Neal, her abrasive qualities are matched by his stubborn charm, not-quite-opposites whose attraction is palpable. Even if I’m not a fan of their spurning of religion, to the humorous distress of Jenny’s Catholic father, the pair is easy to root for, making the eventual tragedy hit all the harder. Much has been said of the unrealistic beauty of Jenny even as she’s supposedly on her deathbed, but I wouldn’t say it took me out of the movie too much. While not above some deserved mockery at times, Love Story managed to live up to its genre-defining name, paving the way for the likes of The Fault in Our Stars and We Live in Time and jerking tears and jeers with the best of them.

Best line: (Oliver’s opening voiceover) “What can you say about a twenty-five-year-old girl who died? That she was beautiful and brilliant? That she loved Mozart and Bach, the Beatles, and me?”

Rank:  List Runner-Up

© 2025 S.G. Liput
801 Followers and Counting

THE LIST (2025 Update)

Tags

Rather overdue, but here is the full updated list of my personal top 365 films, including the latest additions in bold, albeit with series and ties combined in completely arbitrary ways because it’s MY list. It’s hard to believe I’ve been curating this list for 10 years now. This blog started as a countdown of poems/reviews for my original Top 365 films that took up my first year of blogging, and then I have edited and updated it annually ever since. (I’m thinking I’ll combine the past updates onto a single page instead of having them clutter up the top menu.)

Looking back at the 10 years that I’ve been curating this index, it’s hard to believe that only 8 films (not counting groupings) have managed to carve out a new place in the Top 100 in that time: Dungeons & Dragons, Little Women, the Star Wars sequel trilogy, Wit, Serenity, The Greatest Showman, La La Land, and The Martian. Otherwise, my favorites have remained pretty solid in the past decade, while the rest of the list has gone through quite a bit of fluctuation.

In this latest update, Tick, Tick… Boom! and Galaxy Quest saw the biggest boost, both jumping 50 places higher as I realized just how much I love those films, with other increases going to The Red Violin (+16), Hidden/A Quiet Place (+18), and Klaus (+26). Meanwhile, other films were brought down a peg, particularly The Right Stuff, dropping 102 places but still staying on the list. Also falling a bit were The Homecoming (-37), the Planet of the Apes series (-40), Labyrinth of Lies (-52), Shang-Chi (-24), and The Father (-42).

But what really pains me, as always, is tearing off the excess from this ever-growing list, so I must mention the excellent films that ended up being supplanted with this update, namely The Ultimate Gift, Shazam!, Wuthering Heights (1970), Remember the Titans, Kubo and the Two Strings, Swiss Family Robinson (1960), and A Chorus Line. I’m still a fan of these and all the other films that have been replaced over the last ten years; alas, there just isn’t enough room.

Thank you again to anyone who gives even a first glance to my little corner of the blogosphere here. I’ve actually been watching a lot more movies so far this year, so I’m hoping I can revive my rather languid posting schedule. Plus, I’m still working on that new musical project, and I live for the day when it’s ready to share with the world. In the meantime, may everyone have a fantastic 2025!

1.  The Lord of the Rings Trilogy (2001, 2002, 2003)

2.  Mr. Holland’s Opus (1995)

3.  Forrest Gump (1994)

4.  It’s a Wonderful Life (1946)

5.  The Sound of Music (1965)

6.  Star Wars Trilogy (1977, 1980, 1983)

7.  Finding Nemo (2003) and Finding Dory (2016)

8.  Titanic (1997)

9.  Toy Story Series  (1995, 1999, 2010, 2019)

10.  Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989)

11.  The Princess Bride (1987)

12.  Beauty and the Beast (1991)

13.  Groundhog Day (1993)

14.  The Shawshank Redemption (1994)

15.  The Prince of Egypt (1998)

16.  You’ve Got Mail (1998)

17.  The Wizard of Oz (1939)

18.  The Avengers (2012), Captain America: Civil War (2016), Infinity War (2018), and Endgame (2019)

19.  Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)

20.  War Horse (2011)

21.  The Incredibles (2004) and The Incredibles 2 (2018)

22.  Cast Away (2000)

23.  Heart and Souls (1993)

24.  Pirates of the Caribbean (2003, 2006, 2007) and Dead Men Tell No Tales (2017)

25.  Tarzan (1999)

26.  Les Miserables (2012)

27.  Ben-Hur (1959)

28.  Elizabethtown (2005)

29.  Star Trek (2009)

30.  The Chronicles of Narnia (2005, 2008, 2010)

31.  The Mummy (1999) and The Mummy Returns (2001)

32.  Driving Miss Daisy (1989)

33.  Oliver! (1968)

34.  Whisper of the Heart (1995)

35.  Spider-Man Trilogy (2002, 2004, 2007)

36.  The Five People You Meet in Heaven (2004)

37.  Doctor Zhivago (1965)

38.  Babe (1995)

39.  The Blues Brothers (1980)

40.  Jurassic Park (1993)

41.  84 Charing Cross Road (1987)

42.  National Treasure (2004) and National Treasure: Book of Secrets (2007)

43.  Ratatouille (2007)

44.  The Fugitive (1993)

45.  True Grit (1969, 2010)

46.  Evita (1996)

47.  The Lion King (1994)

48.  Inception (2010)

49.  When Harry Met Sally… (1989)

50.  Back to the Future Trilogy (1985, 1989, 1990)

51.  Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves (2023)

52.  Chariots of Fire (1981)

53.  Lilies of the Field (1963)

54.  Life of Pi (2012)

55.  Mary Poppins (1964)

56.  Star Trek: First Contact (1996)

57.  Glory (1989)

58.  Singin’ in the Rain (1952)

59.  The Family Man (2000)

60.  The Sixth Sense (1999)

61.  Aliens (1986)

62.  Life Is Beautiful (1997)

63.  Sherlock Holmes (2009) and Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows (2011)

64.  The Phantom of the Opera (2004)

65.  Awakenings (1990)

66.  Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971)

67.  Paulie (1998)

68.  Home Alone (1990) and Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (1992)

69.  The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996)

70.  Big (1988)

71.  Jumanji (1995)

72.  A Christmas Story (1983)

73.  Speed (1994)

74.  Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (1986)

75.  Little Women (1994, 2019)

76.  1776 (1972)

77.  High School Musical Trilogy (2006, 2007, 2008)

78.  Wit (2001)

79.  Serenity (2005)

80.  Somewhere in Time (1980)

81.  Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (1982)

82.  Miracle on 34th Street (1947)

83.  Gone with the Wind (1939)

84.  Aladdin (1992)

85.  The Greatest Showman (2017)

86.  Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015), The Last Jedi (2017) and The Rise of Skywalker (2019)

87.  Saints and Soldiers (2003)

88.  La La Land (2016)

89.  Fantasia (1940)

90.  Shadowlands (1993)

91.  Hook (1991)

92.  Young Frankenstein (1974)

93.  The Truman Show (1998)

94.  The Ten Commandments (1956)

95.  Star Wars Prequel Trilogy (1999, 2002, 2005)

96.  October Sky (1999)

97.  Saving Mr. Banks (2013)

98.  Holes (2003)

99.  The Martian (2015)

100.  The Pursuit of Happyness (2006)

101.  About Time (2013)

102.  Tick, Tick… Boom! (2021)

103.  Mr. Church (2016)

104.  Taking Chance (2009)

105.  Signs (2002)

106.  Star Trek: Generations (1994)

107.  Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991)

108.  The Santa Clause (1994)

109.  Starman (1984)

110.  The Passion of the Christ (2004)

111.  Train to Busan (2016) and Peninsula (2020)

112.  1917 (2019)

113.  Spider-Man: Homecoming (2017), Far from Home (2019), and No Way Home (2021)

114.  Brother Bear (2003)

115.  Everything Everywhere All at Once (2022)

116.  WALL-E (2008)

117.  The Green Mile (1999)

118.  On Golden Pond (1981)

119.  Air Force One (1997)

120.  Captain America: The First Avenger (2011) and Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2013)

121.  Shrek (2001), Shrek 2 (2004), and Puss in Boots: The Last Wish (2022)

122.  The Mitchells vs. the Machines (2021)

123.  Star Trek into Darkness (2013) and Star Trek Beyond (2016)

124.  Big Hero 6 (2014)

125.  To Kill a Mockingbird (1962)

126.  The Matrix (1999)

127.  Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991)

128.  Rogue One: A Star Wars Story (2016)

129.  Shuffle (2011)

130.  The Mask of Zorro (1998) and The Legend of Zorro (2005)

131.  The Color Purple (1985 and 2023)

132.  Jesus Christ Superstar (1973)

133.  Cyrano (2021)

134.  The King’s Speech (2010)

135.  X-Men: Days of Future Past (2014)

136.  My Fair Lady (1964)

137.  Iron Man Trilogy (2008, 2010, 2013)

138.  The Hunger Games series (2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, and 2023)

139.  Men in Black Trilogy (1997, 2002, 2012)

140.  The Wild Robot (2024)

141.  The Music Man (1962)

142.  Ghostbusters Trilogy (1984, 1989, 2021)

143.  Ready Player One (2018)

144.  Yentl (1983)

145.  The Blind Side (2009)

146.  Regarding Henry (1991)

147.  Alien (1979)

148.  Top Gun: Maverick (2022)

149.  The Polar Express (2004)

150.  Sleepless in Seattle (1993)

151.  Julie and Julia (2009)

152.  Airplane! (1980)

153.  Castle in the Sky (1986)

154.  Secondhand Lions (2003)

155.  Grave of the Fireflies (1988)

156.  Mrs. Doubtfire (1993)

157.  Wicked: Part 1 (2024)

158.  National Velvet (1944)

159.  Darkest Hour (2017)

160.  A Christmas Carol (any version)

161.  E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982)

162.  The Little Mermaid (1989)

163.  Die Hard trilogy (1988, 1990, 1995)

164.  Godzilla Minus One (2023)

165.  Soul (2020)

166.  Source Code (2011)

167.  Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse (2018) and Across the Spider-Verse (2023)

168.  Gattaca (1997)

169.  Inside Out (2015) and Inside Out 2 (2024)

170.  Oppenheimer (2023)

171.  Hacksaw Ridge (2016)

172.  Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986)

173.  Overboard (1987)

174.  Cinderella (1950) / Cinderella (2015)

175.  A League of Their Own (1992)

176.  Tangled (2010)

177.  Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind (1984)

178.  Zootopia (2016)

179.  The Untouchables (1987)

180.  Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron (2002)

181.  Treasure Planet (2002)

182.  Ella Enchanted (2004)

183.  Splash (1984)

184.  Monsters, Inc. (2001) and Monsters University (2013)

185.  Children Who Chase Lost Voices (2011)

186.  How to Train Your Dragon (2010)

187.  Guardians of the Galaxy (2014),  Vol. 2 (2017), and Vol. 3 (2023)

188.  Maquia: When the Promised Flower Blooms (2018)

189.  Mission: Impossible III (2006), Ghost Protocol (2011), Rogue Nation (2015), Fallout (2018), and Dead Reckoning (2023)

190.  Selma (2014)

191.  Doc Hollywood (1991)

192.  Knives Out (2019) and Glass Onion (2022)

193.  The Holdovers (2023)

194.  Extraordinary Measures (2010)

195.  The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman (1974)

196.  Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (1968)

197.  Enchanted (2007)

198.  Up (2009)

199.  What’s Up, Doc? (1972)

200.  Ant-Man (2015) and Ant-Man and the Wasp (2018)

201.  Wolf Children (2012)

202.  Jojo Rabbit (2019)

203.  Your Name (2016)

204.  Wolfwalkers (2020)

205.  Galaxy Quest (1999)

206.  Pocahontas (1995)

207.  Planet of the Apes series (2011, 2014, 2017, 2024)

208.  Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure (1989)

209.  Rudy (1993)

210.  Mulan (1998)

211.  Hidden Figures (2016)

212.  The Homecoming: A Christmas Story (1971)

213.  As Good As It Gets (1997)

214.  Coal Miner’s Daughter (1980)

215.  King of Thorn (2010)

216.  In the Heights (2021)

217.  Les Miserables (1998)

218.  Spaceballs (1987)

219.  My Left Foot (1989)

220.  The Way (2010)

221.  The Prestige (2006)

222.  Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close (2011)

223.  Blinded by the Light (2019)

224.  The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008)

225.  Wreck-It Ralph (2012) and Ralph Breaks the Internet (2018)

226.  Saving Private Ryan (1998) / The Longest Day (1962)

227.  To Sir, with Love (1967)

228.  The Right Stuff (1983)

229.  Frozen (2013) and Frozen II (2019)

230.  The Dark Knight Trilogy (2005, 2008, 2012)

231.  Harriet (2019)

232.  United 93 (2006)

233.  Joyeux Noël (2005)

234.  Woman in Gold (2015)

235.  Twister (1996)

236.  Foul Play (1978)

237.  Coco (2017)

238.  Funny Girl (1968)

239.  Rocky (1976), Rocky II (1979), Rocky III (1982), Rocky IV (1985), and Creed (2015)

240.  Hello, Dolly! (1969)

241.  Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984)

242.  Weathering with You (2019)

243.  April and the Extraordinary World (2015) / Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow (2004)

244.  Déjà Vu (2006)

245.  Out of Africa (1985)

246.  Kramer vs. Kramer (1979)

247.  The Hobbit Trilogy (2012, 2013, 2014)

248.  Adventures in Babysitting (1987)

249.  Hoosiers (1986)

250.  The Great Escape (1963)

251.  Arrival (2016)

252.  Scrooged (1988) and Spirited (2022)

253.  The Naked Gun (1988)

254.  Jumpin’ Jack Flash (1986)

255.  Philadelphia (1993)

256.  Raising Arizona (1987)

257. The Jerk (1979)

258.  Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969)

259.  Ghost (1990)

260.  Misery (1990)

261.  School of Rock (2003)

262.  42 (2013)

263.  Daniel Craig Bond films – Casino Royale (2006), Quantum of Solace (2008), Skyfall (2012), Spectre (2015), and No Time to Die (2021)

264.  Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings (2021)

265.  Gravity (2013)

266.  Hidden (2015) and A Quiet Place series (2018, 2021, 2024)

267.  Vantage Point (2008)

268.  Peter Pan (1953)

269.  The Terminal (2004)

270.  The Father (2020)

271.  Eddie the Eagle (2016)

272.  Labyrinth of Lies (2014)

273.  Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000)

274.  Jane Eyre (1970)

275.  Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Across the 2nd Dimension (2011)

276.  The Poseidon Adventure (1972)

277.  The Girl Who Leapt through Time (2006)

278.  Mad Max: Fury Road (2015) / Furiosa (2024) and Waterworld (1995)

279.  Ride Your Wave (2019)

280.  Cloud Atlas (2012)

281.  Anastasia (1997)

282.  Violet Evergarden: The Movie (2020)

283.  Short Term 12 (2013)

284.  X-Men (2000) and X2: X-Men United (2003)

285.  The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim (2024)

286.  Green Book (2018)

287.  Surrogates (2009)

288.  Lethal Weapon 2 (1989)

289.  WarGames (1983)

290.  Atlantis: The Lost Empire (2001)

291.  The Red Violin (1999)

292.  Cars (2006) and Cars 3 (2017)

293.  My Girl (1991)

294.  Memphis Belle (1990)

295.  Soul Man (1986)

296.  The Terminator (1984)

297.  The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (1947)

298.  The Castle of Cagliostro (1979)

299.  Casablanca (1942)

300.  Rain Man (1988) and Dominick and Eugene (1988)

301.  One Cut of the Dead (2017)

302.  Pinocchio (1940) and Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio (2022)

303.  City Slickers (1991)

304.  The Hundred-Foot Journey (2014)

305.  Patema Inverted (2013)

306.  Forget Paris (1995)

307.  A Silent Voice (2016) / Hear Me (2009)

308.  Dances with Wolves (1990)

309.  Doctor Strange (2016)

310.  Akeelah and the Bee (2006)

311.  Murphy’s Romance (1985)

312.  Shenandoah (1965)

313.  A View to a Kill (1985)

314.  Wonder Woman (2017)

315.  Con Air (1997)

316.  Unbreakable (2000)

317.  Trading Places (1983)

318.  Sister Act (1992)

319.  Alien: Romulus (2024)

320.  Something the Lord Made (2004)

321.  The Way Back (2010)

322.  Superman (1978) and Superman II (1980)

323.  Dave (1993)

324.  Klaus (2019)

325.  Annie (1999)

326.  Elemental (2023)

327.  The Elephant Man (1980)

328.  Mean Girls (2004)

329.  The River Wild (1994)

330.  A Beautiful Mind (2001)

331.  Finding Forrester (2000)

332. The Big Year (2011)

333.  Starter for 10 (2006)

334.  Sinbad: Legend of the Seven Seas (2003)

335.  The Pianist (2002)

336.  Wayne’s World (1992)

337.  Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves (1991)

338.  The Disappearance of Haruhi Suzumiya (2010)

339.  Steel Magnolias (1989)

340.  Encanto (2021)

341.  Searching (2018) and Missing (2023)

342.  Chronesthesia (or Love and Time Travel) (2016)

343.  Dancer in the Dark (2000)

344.  Solo: A Star Wars Story (2018)

345.  Please Stand By (2018)

346.  Music and Lyrics (2007)

347.  The Abyss (1989)

348.  The Breakfast Club (1985)

349.  Places in the Heart (1984)

350.  Psycho (1960)

351.  Cabrini (2024)

352.  Chicken Run (2000)

353.  Black Panther (2018) and Wakanda Forever (2022)

354.  Hercules (1997)

355.  Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey (1993)

356.  In Time (2011)

357.  The Emperor’s New Groove (2000)

358.  The Spiderwick Chronicles (2008)

359.  A Monster Calls (2016)

360.  Ordinary People (1980) and Rabbit Hole (2010)

361.  Fiddler on the Roof (1971)

362.  Seven Samurai (1954) / The Magnificent Seven (1960/2016)

363.  Citizen Kane (1941)

364.  The Conjuring (2013) and The Conjuring 2 (2016)

365.  Sneakers (1992)

My 11th Blogiversary and 2024 List Additions

Tags

It feels odd to celebrate my tenth year of blogging and movies when, for my posting at least, the year was basically just NaPoWriMo in April and three Blindspots before that. Heck, I still haven’t gotten around to completing my 2023 Blindspot list! I realize I’ve been out of practice for months, but 2024 still had quite a few excellent films that I enjoyed and will hopefully get to review eventually. Like last year, there weren’t quite a full twelve that I loved enough to add to my Top 365 List, but my love of lists demands a full complement and #12 is still a high runner-up in my book.

As is tradition, I must make mention of the other runners-up seen last year that I still liked and would recommend, even if they didn’t make the cut. These include Long Way North, A Man Called Otto, Mean Girls (2024), Past Lives, American Fiction, Dreamgirls, Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare, The Equalizer and The Equalizer 2, Civil War, Carry-On, Gladiator, and Flow. Beyond the world of film, I also have been seeing a lot more touring and local stage productions lately, as research for my own musical project and just to widen my horizons. I thoroughly enjoyed Shucked, Beetlejuice, and Into the Woods (way better than the movie), as well as Peter and the Starcatcher and To Kill a Mockingbird for straight plays. 

Plus, my vacation to Europe in October allowed me to see two shows in London’s West End: Stranger Things: The First Shadow (great for fans of the show and coming to Broadway in April) and The Curious Case of Benjamin Button: The Musical. The latter is very different from the movie, but, with its Celtic musical style and an exceptionally talented cast, I think it’s my favorite thing I saw all year. Sadly, it’s closing next month, but, if you ever get a chance to see it, I can’t recommend it highly enough.

Once again, this list isn’t exactly full of Best Picture nominees (maybe a few), but it reflects my personal favorite movies seen, all but two of which were actually from 2024. I probably need to start watching more older films again. Anyway, what were your top movies from last year? I always welcome recommendations, but for now, on to the Top Twelve list!

12. Dune: Part Two (2024)

As many noted after the successful first installment, any story split into two parts is going to hinge on how well it sticks the landing, and Denis Villeneuve’s Dune did it with just the right amount of prophetic guile and sci-fi grandeur. The big moments feel appropriately huge – Paul’s first worm ride, the Fremen attack on the palace, the climactic knife duel – and even if Dune overall isn’t my favorite tale in the genre, the skill and scale of this adaptation deserve praise.

11. Furiosa (2024)

While not as universally well-received as Mad Max: Fury Road, George Miller’s prequel was still an awe-inspiring thrill ride, focusing on the past of Charlize Theron’s tough-girl Imperator, played by the always reliable Anya Taylor-Joy. With Chris Hemsworth in rare form as the crazed desert warlord Dementus, Furiosa serves as a fitting origin story of one woman against a world gone mad, reminding us why Mad Max felt like a supporting character in the previous film.

10. Cabrini (2024)

Continuing the theme of one woman against the world (albeit in very different circumstances), Cabrini brought to life the story of the first American saint, the Italian immigrant and missionary nun Francesca Cabrini. Cristiana Dell’anna gives an award-worthy performance in the title role, and her strength and conviction in the face of stubborn powers-that-be represent the kind of inspiration that Hollywood rarely delivers these days, especially for religious audiences.

9. A Quiet Place: Day One (2024)

While I couldn’t care less about the latest Saw or Terrifier, I am fully invested in the Quiet Place franchise, which remains my brand of horror. Scary and intense without resorting to gore, this prequel separate from the other films, set during the beginning of the sound-based alien invasion, continues the themes of loss and self-sacrifice with an excellent Lupita Nyong’o in the lead. Although, let’s face it: her cat is the real star.

8. Alien: Romulus (2024)

What was that about gore? I don’t know exactly why, but Alien is in a league of its own, and this latest entry in the long-running sci-fi horror franchise is one of its best. A crew of orphaned workers trying to escape to a better planet try their luck with a derelict space station, and naturally things go south quickly. Bridging the gap between the Prometheus and original Alien timelines, Romulus sticks to what this franchise does best and creates some outstanding action setpieces amid the android betrayals and xenomorph ambushes. Even seven movies in, I’m still eager to see what comes next.

7. Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes (2024)

After an excellent trilogy of Apes films in the last decade, it seemed like adding another entry into this hoary franchise might backfire, but Kingdom managed to surpass expectations. It follows the hero’s journey of Owen Teague’s young chimp Noa after a human girl appears and his clan is captured by a would-be tyrant. With some of the franchise’s best effects yet and room for more to come, Kingdom breathed some welcome freshness into this simian dystopia. 

6. Inside Out 2 (2024)

Proving that last year’s Elemental was a return to form rather than a fluke, Inside Out 2 built on one of its best films of the last decade. It explored further corners of Riley’s mind while bringing in new teenage emotions like Embarrassment, Ennui, Envy, and especially Anxiety, something that is all too relatable nowadays. The imaginative storytelling at Pixar is still going strong.

5. The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim (2024)

In the Venn diagram of anime fans and Lord of the Rings fans, I am squarely in the center, so it hurt my heart to see War of the Rohirrim ignored at the box office and largely written off as a failure. I can’t argue with some of its weaknesses, whether it’s unrealistic feats or the slightly choppy animation, but it felt so good to return to Middle-earth, complete with music from the Peter Jackson trilogy, that I didn’t care. Regardless of what it could have been, I still love it.

4. The Holdovers (2023)

Appropriately a “holdover” from last year, Alexander Payne’s tale of a student, a teacher, and a cook at an emptied New England boarding school at Christmas is an instant holiday classic. Despite the bratty insolence of Dominic Sessa’s teenage Angus Tully or the crotchety disdain of Paul Giamatti’s Paul Hunham, the layers of surliness are gradually peeled back, allowing the insecure humans underneath to unexpectedly bond. Along with Da’Vine Joy Randolph’s Oscar-winning role as a grieving mother, their trio of performances is pitch perfect.

3. Godzilla Minus One (2023)

Easily the biggest surprise of the year, Godzilla Minus One managed to win over audiences and critics alike with its impressive effects and a genuinely moving story of survivor’s guilt. I was convinced to see it only based on the wave of popular buzz, and it challenged my preconceived notion of what a Godzilla movie could be. It’s a true reinvention of what had once been the stuff of B movies.

2. Wicked: Part 1 (2024)

What a surprise that a musical fan enjoyed the biggest musical movie of the year! Again, the truest evaluation of Jon Chu’s adaptation of Wicked will have to wait until Part 2 (For Good) comes out later this year, but Part 1 certainly delivered the tunes and Ozian wonder of the classic musical’s first half. With both Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande excelling in career-defining roles, Wicked found the success that has eluded so many other movie musicals of late, and I couldn’t be happier about it.

1. The Wild Robot (2024)

Similar to how Pixar made an inquisitive robot beloved in WALL-E, DreamWorks Animation delivered an exquisite fable of technology finding a way to live in harmony with nature. After Lupita Nyong’o’s unprogrammed robot Roz is stranded on a forested island, she must rise above her directives to connect with the local wildlife, particularly a hatchling goose in need of a mother. The animation is stunning, the score soul-stirring, and the voice cast peerless. The Wild Robot is that always-welcome animation that can appeal to anyone of any age, and, despite an imperfect ending, it was my favorite film of the year.

And thus ends another blog year, as sparse as it may have been. Nevertheless, here are my own unofficial awards for the year’s films:

Best opening scene: The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare

Best final scene: Wicked: Part 1

Coolest scene: Alien: Romulus (the ending escape)

Biggest emotional impact: The Wild Robot

Oldest film:  (1963)

Most recent film: Wicked: Part 1

Longest film: Dune: Part Two (166 minutes)

Shortest film: Long Way North (81 minutes)

Best soundtrack: Wicked: Part 1 (naturally)

Best score: The Wild Robot

Best special effects: Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes

Most family-friendly: Inside Out 2

Most mature: Furiosa

Funniest: Inside Out 2

Scariest: Alien: Romulus

Best male performance: Paul Giamatti in The Holdovers

Best female performance: Cristiana Dell’anna in Cabrini

Personal favorite poem written: The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes

Most represented year: 2024, with ten films

So there you have it. While I regret how much I’ve left this blog in limbo lately, I’m still grateful for everyone who has read, liked, commented, or followed in the past year and for this blog itself as a creative outlet. I really want to return to a more regular posting schedule and get to some of the lists I’ve had in the back of my head for a while now. Thank you to all, whether you be a long-time reader or a newfound visitor, and I wish everybody a blessed 2025!

We Didn’t Start 2024 (Recap)

Tags

,

I usually post my end-of-year list of top movies on New Year’s Eve/Day to celebrate my blogiversary. (Hard to believe this is my 11th year of blogging!) I’ll still post my usual Top Twelve list for the year, but I had an idea for something a little different this year. One of my personal favorite past posts was my poem for the movie Boyhood, in which I rewrote the lyrics to Billy Joel’s “We Didn’t Start the Fire” using events from the 2000s when the film was set. I’ve always had a slight obsession with that song and how it conjures a musical montage of history that’s both catchy and nostalgic. (I can’t prove that Fall Out Boy took that idea for their 2023 single that did the same kind of update, but I still like my version better.)

So I decided to do another rewrite of the song, this time as a 2024 retrospective using people, things, and events from the past year. This might be a new tradition for me since I do enjoy year-end recaps and had fun compiling everything. I have an extensive list of other 2024 events that didn’t make the cut, but, while I wish I could have included the likes of Sabrina Carpenter, Concord, the Dodgers, Inside Out 2, Rooster Teeth, Teddy Swims, Red Lobster’s bankruptcy, or Peanut the squirrel, I think I have a pretty comprehensive list of what made 2024 a memorable year, for good or bad. So you can just read it or sing along to Billy Joel’s iconic tune, but this is how I’ll enjoy remembering the past year. Here’s hoping for a great 2025 ahead!

_________________________

Oppenheimer, border surge, cicada double broods emerge,
Fani Willis, Joro spiders, Ticketmaster suit,
Hurkle-durkle, Mystic Dan, Caitlin Clark and TikTok ban,
Kadokawa, Epic sagas, elephant in Butte.

Stanley cups, Fallout, Laken Riley, record drought,
Palworld, pagers blow, and the Apple Vision Pro,
Cowboy Carter, Joker panned, much like Willy’s Wonderland,
Boeing breaking, Taiwan quaking, noncompetes are (not) banned.

Such was the year. We made it!
Through the highs and lows and each surprise, we chose
To get through the year. We made it!
So now, sister, brother, let’s all face another!

Dublin Portal, chatbot apps, Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse,
Dune 2 bucket, Cyberstuck it, Quiet on Set,
Wheel host, Brady roast, Bidenomics, Santos,
Brat Summer, so demure, Golden Bachelorette.

“Hawk tuah,” Assad fled, Charles portrait all in red,
Trump on trial, Elden Ring, full eclipse and Neuralink,
Heat dome, Notre Dame, farewell, Toriyama-san,
Poison chess, Bangladesh, Merrily We Roll Along!

Such was the year. We made it!
Through the highs and lows and each surprise, we chose
To get through the year. We made it!
So now, sister, brother, let’s all face another!

Baby Reindeer, pink cocaine, war in Gaza and Ukraine,
Glen Powell, Yoon Suk Yeol, OTC birth control,
Bird flu, Moana 2, now a 15th Doctor Who,
Drake-Kendrick rap war, ending of the Eras Tour.

A.I. art, Deep State, Biden had a bad debate,
Paris Games, CrowdStrike. Hunter pardon? No, psych!
Bluesky, Labour win, Alcaraz and Malinin,
Jimmy Carter, junk fee, President immunity.

Such was the year. We made it!
Through the highs and lows and each surprise, we chose
To get through the year. We made it!
So now, sister, brother, let’s all face another!

Kamala is in the race, astronauts are stuck in space,
Shogun, Raygun, ear assassination,
Shotime raking in the stats; wait, who’s eating dogs and cats?
“Tipsy,” Sheinbaum, Chevron Deference now gone,
Deadpool and Wolverine, Hurricanes Milton and Helene,
RFK, worm in brain – what else do I have to say?

Such was the year. We made it!
Through the highs and lows and each surprise, we chose
To get through the year. We made it!
So now, sister, brother, let’s all face another!

Diddy parties, Pelicot, Luigi shot a CEO,
White Sox, mPox, Walz and Vance, bump stocks, 
Pygmy hippos, workers strike, Tyson vs. Paul fight,
Wicked, Megaflopolis, Selzer poll a major miss,

Eric Adams, Taliban, Chappell Roan and Dan Da Dan,
James Earl Jones, Quincy Jones, Gaetz, X, mystery drones,
Decongestants no effect, Elmo tweets a status check,
Donald Trump we reelect. What a year in retrospect!

Such was the year. We made it!
Through the highs and lows and each surprise, we chose
To get through the year. We made it!
So now, sister, brother, let’s all face another!

Wicked: Part 1 (2024)

Tags

, , , ,

Long time, no see, eh? I wish I had a better reason for dropping completely out of the blogosphere since May. I have been working on my musical still, and I had a wonderful trip to Europe in the meantime, but the absence simply boiled down to my not having the drive and interest to write about movies, even though I’ve still seen quite a few. With the new year approaching, I would like to change that and return to a somewhat more regular posting schedule, especially since I have a backlog of films to cover. So sorry for the long disappearance, but I’m back and with a movie musical no less!
_________________________

Wicked is as wicked does as wicked is perceived.
The good, by virtue of their virtue, always are believed.
And no one stops to question if there’s something to be grieved
When wicked people get what they deserve.

They surely had a childhood, a life before their fall,
A point of view, a friend or two, a favorite book or doll,
But something changed in them or us, though what I can’t recall,
To slide them down a steep and shameful curve.

The public judge, of course they do, a jury of our peers,
And when the executioner is playing on their fears,
They’ll brand a person “wicked” to a hundred thousand cheers
If only they will get what they deserve.
And surely we all know what they deserve….
_________________________

MPA rating: PG

Despite my love of musical theater, I’m actually a comparative newcomer to the fandom of Wicked. I knew very little about it until a TV special celebrating the show’s 15th anniversary in 2018 (which featured Ariana Grande). I didn’t actually get to see a touring production of the show until earlier this year, so I feel like the timing of my interest in Wicked was far more convenient than for the ardent fans who have been waiting twenty-one years for this movie’s release. Even so, it’s finally here (Part 1 at least), and it’s a hit!

For those who still don’t know, Stephen Schwartz’s Broadway musical Wicked is based on the 1995 novel by Gregory Maguire, a then-innovative twisting of the classic Wizard of Oz storyline to make the Wicked Witch of the West, the green-skinned Elphaba, a more sympathetic main character. While I haven’t read the book myself, I’ve heard the musical and movie are a lighter PG version of the tale that nonetheless touches on themes of acceptance, persecution, and the perils of public perception, all amid a host of now-iconic showtunes. Here in Part 1, covering the first half of the stage show, Elphaba (Cynthia Erivo) is a new student at Oz’s prestigious Shiz University, unpopular but skilled with magic, alongside the more fashionable Galinda (Ariana Grande-Butera). Both dream of meeting the famous Wizard and making their mark on the world, and, though their initial interactions are strained, a friendship eventually blossoms, a bond to be tested by the different directions their ambitions take them.

While it didn’t gain mainstream success, I was a big fan of Jon M. Chu’s previous musical adaptation In the Heights, and Wicked further cements Chu as the premier director for movie musicals. The energy and choreography of the dance scenes are especially thrilling on a big screen, particularly “Dancing Through Life,” the carefree anthem of Fiyero (Jonathan Bailey), the girls’ dreamy Winkie love interest. Much has been said of the decision to split Wicked into two films, but I think it was a smart move. A common complaint of musical adaptations is that fans’ favorite songs or moments end up on the cutting room floor (ahem, Dear Evan Hansen), but Wicked is almost obsessively faithful to its source material, with every song accounted for and many in-between scenes expanded. Does that make its two-hour-and-forty-minute runtime a bit overlong, considering this first half is nearly as long as the whole stage show? Well, yes, but with few exceptions, I appreciate the extended runtime, which lets the relationships grow more naturally and gives the non-musical scenes some breathing room.

I may have had some reservations about the casting when the lead roles were first announced, but Erivo and Grande more than deliver, both of them ardent fans of the show who have publicly championed their commitment to Elphaba and Glinda. Erivo is an outstanding actress and singer and reliable as ever in the lead role, while Grande is more of a surprise. Considering her early acting role as the ditzy Cat Valentine on Nickelodeon, I doubted that she was a serious enough actress for Glinda, even if she was a superfan (and had already contributed to this Mika song that samples and remixes “Popular”). But she brings surprising depth to a character who could easily be written off as a vain blonde but whose connection to Elphaba feels genuine and sweet. It helps too that both lead actresses have amazing voices, with Erivo’s “The Wizard and I” and “Defying Gravity” and Grande’s “Popular” as auditory standouts. There are instances of the movie interrupting a song with some pause or vocal trick that didn’t need to be there, but that’s a minor critique.

Funnily enough, it seems that Wicked fans are the ones poking the most holes in the movie, whether it be a supposedly lackluster color palette or the overly indulgent superhero-style awakening of Elphaba’s witch persona at the end. Yet I as a casual fan found a lot to love and very little I would change. I thought one musicless dance scene was overly awkward and long, but I’ve seen others praise it as an emotional high point, so to each their own. I especially loved some pitch-perfect cameos in the Emerald City sequence, and I certainly think the practical sets and elaborate costumes deserve some Oscar love.

Now, with only a year to wait before part two (subtitled For Good) comes out, I am thrilled with what we have so far and hesitant for what is to come. The second half of Wicked is darker, has fewer memorable songs, and has a lot of stuff happening offstage that is easier to accept in a stage format. With the work they’ve done on extra characterization here, such as with Fiyero and Ethan Slater’s Boq, I do wonder how they’ll handle all that as a movie. But for now, its chill-inducing showstoppers still fresh in my mind, Wicked is a triumph and a treat for musical fans, already outgrossing all other Broadway adaptations, and one I hope to see again soon.

Best line: (the Wizard, played by the fitting Jeff Goldblum) “The best way to bring folks together is to give them a real good enemy.”

Rank: List-Worthy

© 2024 S.G. Liput
800 Followers and Counting! (This was a nice surprise, considering my absence. :D)

Happy New Year, all!

NaPoWriMo 2024 Recap

Tags

May the Fourth be with you all! I am breathing a sigh of relief after the whirlwind of National Poetry Writing Month. Plus, I’m very pleased that, for the first time since 2020, I managed to not miss any days. There were plenty of times I posted right before midnight, but I was able to keep up with the daily schedule of one poem/review a day throughout April. This allowed me to play major catch-up on my backlog of movies waiting to be reviewed, particularly the major films from last year.

With another NaPoWriMo in the books, I want to extend thanks to everyone who read, liked, commented, and subscribed along the way, as well as to the NaPoWriMo website for the daily prompts that helped direct each day’s poem. Not every post may be my best work, but I’ve come to value the inspiration that April brings every year, helping me create verses that I might not have imagined otherwise.

While resuming work on my musical will take precedence again, I’ll be continuing to write on this blog too, hopefully more frequently than I was before April rolled around. Below is a look back at the posts from NaPoWriMo 2024, and until next year, happy writing to all!

April 1 – Great Expectations (1946) – Honorable Mention

April 2 – The Whale (2022) – Honorable Mention

April 3 – Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) (2014) – Honorable Mention

April 4 – Godzilla Minus One (2023) – List-Worthy

April 5 – Living (2022) – List Runner-Up

April 6 – Leave the World Behind (2023) – List Runner-Up

April 7 – Weekend at Bernie’s (1989) – List Runner-Up

April 8 – A Million Miles Away (2023) – List Runner-Up

April 9 – The Tunnel to Summer, the Exit of Goodbyes (2022) – List Runner-Up

April 10 – Barbie (2023) – Honorable Mention

April 11 – Last Night in Soho (2021) – List Runner-Up

April 12 – Django Unchained (2012) – Dishonorable Mention

April 13 – Dune: Part Two (2024) – List Runner-Up

April 14 – Long Way North (2015) – List Runner-Up (my most liked post)

April 15 – Cabrini (2024) – List-Worthy

April 16 – A Man Called Otto (2022) – List Runner-Up

April 17 – Guys and Dolls (1955) – List Runner-Up

April 18 – The Boy and the Heron (2023) – Honorable Mention

April 19 – Hollow Man (2000) – Honorable Mention

April 20 – Lincoln (2012) – List-Worthy

April 21 – Mean Girls (2024) – List Runner-Up

April 22 – The Holdovers (2023) – List-Worthy (my favorite film of the month)

April 23 – The Marvels (2023) – List Runner-Up

April 24 – The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes (2023) – List-Worthy (my favorite poem of the month)

April 25 – Past Lives (2023) – List Runner-Up

April 26 – Cats (2019) – Dishonorable Mention

April 27 – Elemental (2023) – List-Worthy

April 28 – Peninsula (2020) – List-Worthy

April 29 – Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One (2023) – List-Worthy

April 30 – Oppenheimer (2023) – List-Worthy

Oppenheimer (2023)

Tags

, ,

(For the final day of NaPoWriMo, the prompt was for a poem in which the speaker is identified with a mythological figure. It may be on the nose, but I had to go with the “American Prometheus” himself.)

American Prometheus, they name me,
The man who stole the fire from the gods,
Never returned.
Shall I justify my actions
As the fairest of the factions
That ignited chain reactions
And left everybody burned?
I was spurned.
For no good deed goes unpunished
While the bad are not admonished,
And you’d frankly be astonished
At how in-between deeds fare.
I was there,
Leading teams so complex,
Daring dreams of what is next,
All for loyal intellects,
Intent to see the fire burst.
What is worse,
That I built this capability
Employed to end hostility
Or shirked responsibility
For everything it cost?
I am lost
In my chains, writ in ink,
Where the eagles barely blink,
As I think and I drink
And I offer up my liver to atone
For what I’ve sown.
_____________________________

MPA rating:  R (for language and nudity)

This review certainly feels overdue! While everyone was hopping on the Barbenheimer bandwagon last year, I stuck with the more serious half of that mash-up, Christopher Nolan’s ambitious biopic of the “father of the atomic bomb.” Based on the biography American Prometheus, this film would have been very different in more conventional hands. I can envision a version of it that follows the chronological events of J. Robert Oppenheimer’s life and climaxes with the dropping of the bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, perhaps followed by a final scene where he grieves his role in the war and a footnote about how he was effectively disowned by the government. That might have been a great movie on its own, but it’s too pedestrian for Nolan, who instead created a non-linear epic to view Oppenheimer’s life and work from as many angles as possible.

In the role for which he will likely most be remembered, Oscar winner Cillian Murphy epitomizes J. Robert Oppenheimer in all his genius, hubris, and folly. From his time as a physics student admiring Niels Bohr (Kenneth Branagh) to his romantic rendezvous with Communist connections (Florence Pugh, Emily Blunt) to his being approached by General Leslie Groves (Matt Damon) to lead the Manhattan Project and beat the Germans to the atomic bomb, the film presents Oppenheimer as level-headed yet prone to bad choices, aware of his own limitations yet confident in his expertise. By itself, this is the film that Oppenheimer could have been, and Murphy still would have excelled in it.

But interspersed with the scientist’s road to fame are scenes of later bureaucratic proceedings, including Oppenheimer’s security clearance hearing in 1954 and the Senate confirmation hearing of former Admiral Lewis Strauss (Oscar-winning Robert Downey, Jr.) for Secretary of Commerce in 1959. Though these parts can threaten to be dry, they offer a wealth of clues pertaining to Oppenheimer’s work and beliefs, how others viewed him, and the underhanded tactics used to besmirch suspected Communist sympathizers at the time. After years of struggling and building an impromptu town at Los Alamos, the testing of the first atom bomb in the New Mexico desert would understandably be the high point of the film, and indeed it made a friend of mine tear up in the theater with the grandeur of the historic explosion (made more impressive by not using CGI, according to Nolan). Yet this moment oddly serves as a false climax around two-thirds into the three-hour runtime, and Nolan instead manages to make those bureaucratic sessions into a riveting culmination of all that’s come before. It still may feel anticlimactic to some, but Nolan pulls it off better than anyone else could.

It’s hard to believe that Christopher Nolan had never won an Oscar before this film, considering his reputation for smart blockbusters. As much as I loved The Holdovers, I celebrated Oppenheimer’s seven Oscar wins last month, including Best Picture, Best Actor, Best Score, Best Cinematography, and especially Best Supporting Actor. (Like Brendan Fraser the year before, I’m so glad Robert Downey, Jr., has proven his talent beyond his action movie days.) If the Academy had gotten around to adding the Best Casting category this year, I’m sure that Oppenheimer would have won that too, since its huge cast is full of recognizable stars, even in mere cameos, including Rami Malek, Casey Affleck, Jason Clarke, Alden Ehrenreich, Josh Hartnett, and Gary Oldman.

With its convoluted method of presenting Oppenheimer’s story, the film is perhaps not the most accessible or entertaining of biopics, and I could have done without a few unnecessary nude scenes trying to justify its R rating. Its presentation of President Truman and the women in Oppenheimer’s life is far from flattering, and some complaints are also valid about how it omits Japanese perspectives of the bombings or the Native Americans and downwinders living around the bomb testing site. Yet any single movie can only present so much, and it’s hard to imagine a biographical film that is more comprehensive in its exploration of one man’s life and impact. Inception remains my favorite Christopher Nolan film, but Oppenheimer is a masterful history lesson and a well-deserved peak for his career as a filmmaker, one that I hope he can continue to top in future efforts.

Best line: (Kitty Oppenheimer, in a context different from the bomb’s development but no less applicable) “You don’t get to commit sin and then ask all of us to feel sorry for you when there are consequences.”

Rank:  List-Worthy

© 2024 S.G. Liput
796 Followers and Counting

Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One (2023)

Tags

, ,

(For Day 29 of NaPoWriMo, the prompt was for a poem inspired by one of the ten vocabulary words compiled by Merriam-Webster from various Taylor Swift songs, including incandescent, clandestine, Machiavellian, cardigan, elegy, altruism, self-effacing, albatross, antithetical, and mercurial. With more time, I might have liked to tackle using all ten, but I settled on the word clandestine for now.)

Their agents are clandestine
So normal folk can rest in
The peace that comes from ignorance and bliss.
Not knowing we need saving,
We carry on behaving.
Don’t tell the targets just how near the miss.

The villains and the heroes,
The neutral ones and zeroes,
They trade their blows for country, cash, or crown.
I doubt the average person
Will mind if conflicts worsen
As long as they will simply… keep it down!
__________________________

MPA rating:  PG-13

I’ve been behind the curve when it comes to the Mission: Impossible franchise, only realizing how good it was in recent years. Thus, this seventh installment in the Tom Cruise juggernaut is the first one that I was lucky enough to see in theaters. And as is the case ever since the third movie found the franchise’s stride, Dead Reckoning Part One is another winning spy thriller making full use of Cruise’s willingness for death-defying stunts.

After a Russian submarine is sunk by its own torpedo, world leaders are informed of a rogue A.I. known as the Entity, capable of manipulating any computer system. The Entity would be a game changer for whatever government procures the two-part key that can control it, so Ethan Hunt (Cruise) and his friends Luther (Ving Rhames), Benji (Simon Pegg), and the now fugitive Ilsa Faust (Rebecca Ferguson) take it upon themselves to ensure it is destroyed to preserve the global balance of power. With its predictive capabilities, the A.I. is always a step ahead of them as they contend with a self-serving thief (Hayley Atwell) and Ethan’s old nemesis (Esai Morales).

Ethan Hunt is no stranger to “going rogue,” but it’s an interesting change for him to willingly defy his government’s agenda to obtain the Entity because he doesn’t trust it in anyone’s hands, as opposed to the myriad times he’s been set up by a villain. It’s becoming cliché for A.I. to be made scary as it runs amok, and it’s perhaps unrealistic how the Entity pulls strings, seeming omniscient but not infallible, yet it works well as a change of pace from the typical terrorist or corrupt IMF agent that usually battles Hunt’s team, though Morales’ Gabriel still provides that too.

(Non-specific spoilers here) While I liked how characters from previous films were brought back, a part of me is disappointed with how the film handles a particular character, apparently having little idea what to do with them except sacrifice them for the sake of drama. And it’s clear that Hayley Atwell is meant to be the new blood for the team. While that narrative intent is unmistakable, I can’t be too mad because Atwell is a breath of fresh air, a great female foil to Ethan as they match wits until she is drawn deeper into this world of espionage than she expected. Considering Ethan let Michelle Monaghan slip through his fingers already, I think the two of them make an excellent pair.

And we mustn’t forget the action. Whether it’s a car chase through Rome or a free-for-all aboard the Orient Express, the stunts and skirmishes never disappoint, including Cruise’s well-documented motorcycle jump off of an Alpine cliff, though the train climax that follows is even better, in my opinion. It’s unfortunate that the Mission: Impossible hype has waned, leaving this Part One of a two-part story a box-office disappointment, but I sincerely hope it can bounce back even stronger (perhaps with a tighter runtime) because Cruise and this series clearly still have gas in the tank.

Best line: (Ethan, to Gabriel) “If anything happens to them, there’s no place on Earth where you or your God [the Entity] will be safe from me. There’s no place where I won’t go to kill you. THAT is written.”

Rank:  List-Worthy (joining the rest of the series)

© 2024 S.G. Liput
796 Followers and Counting

Peninsula (2020)

Tags

, , ,

(For Day 28 of NaPoWriMo, the prompt was for a sijo, a Korean form similar to the haiku but with longer lines of 14 to 16 syllables, for a total of 44 to 46 syllables. It seems like a tricky form to get right, but I tried my best with the six-line format, ending up with 45 syllables. And of course, I had to pair it with a Korean film.)

For the dead, we spare no thought,
Heedless without a gutted grave.
The shells we humans wear
Serve us well before our final molt.
What remains is not you, not me;
May it never crave your fear.
____________________________

MPA rating:  Not Rated (a light R seems about right)

Train to Busan was an anomaly for me, a Korean zombie film that I genuinely loved as it showcased character growth and action over gross-out horror so common to the genre. The animated prequel Seoul Station only reinforced its predecessor’s uniqueness, since that was merely another exercise in apocalyptic nihilism. So I was cautious in approaching Peninsula, the standalone sequel set in the same zombie-infested South Korea as Train to Busan. While it feels more like the zombie dystopias I tend to avoid, Peninsula proved to be a pleasant surprise.

Four years after South Korea was overrun by fast-moving zombies and sealed off from the rest of the world, former Marine officer Jung-seok (Gang Dong-won) is haunted by the day his world fell apart, losing his sister and nephew in the undead chaos. When he and his bitter brother-in-law (Kim Do-yoon) are approached by mobsters to return to Korea, they sneak back into the desolated Incheon to retrieve a truck with $20 million, only to be confronted by both zombie hordes and a violent rogue military unit that has taken control of the wasteland. With a handful of resourceful survivors (Lee Jung-hyun, Lee Re), Jung-seok must outmaneuver both living and dead to find a way off the peninsula.

At first glance, Peninsula has many of the familiar trappings of the zombie movie: swarming hordes, abandoned cityscapes, evil humans acting worse than the zombies. One thing I liked about Train to Busan was that it was comparatively less violent than others of its genre, owing to the fact that the characters didn’t have access to bloodletting weapons like guns or swords. In contrast, Peninsula has no shortage of guns, making it more of a conventional shoot-em-up actioner, though it at least doesn’t turn into a full-on gorefest.

So, as many middling reviews have pointed out, this sequel doesn’t match the original for creativity or emotional payoff, but it comes closer than I would have expected. While Jung-seok doesn’t have quite the selfless character arc of Seok-woo in the first film, the way his guilt motivates him to do better still becomes poignant by the end, and the story presents a satisfying karma of evil or selfish characters getting their due. Plus, despite the “conventional actioner” complaint earlier, the action is thrilling throughout, particularly a fantastic, Mad Max-level car chase toward the end.

Though Peninsula is more violent and less inspired than its forerunner, I was glad to find that it is not a complete departure from what made Train to Busan so good. Zombie movies are such a well-worn format by now that there needs to be something to set new installments apart, and I can certainly get behind car chases, heist thriller elements, and an emotional core.

Rank:  List-Worthy (joining Train to Busan)

© 2024 S.G. Liput
796 Followers and Counting