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Film Features Film/TV

Now Playing in Memphis: Cuckoo for Borderlands

It’s August, traditionally the tail end of the summer blockbuster season. But there’s still plenty of choices for your big screen viewing pleasure.

Cuckoo

Gretchen (Hunter Schafer), an American teenager, moves to the German Alps to live with her divorced Dad (Jan Bluthardt). But things are not all as they seem in the picaresque mountain town. Her father’s wealthy boss Herr Koing (Dan Stevens) has some plans that seem … unnatural. This psychological horror by German director Tilman Singer is giving off heavy Midsomer vibes.  

It Ends With Us

Gossip Girl’s Blake Lively stars in this adaptation of Colleen Hoover’s popular romance novel of the same name. Lily (Lively) has just opened her own floral shop in Boston when she has to return to her Maine hometown to eulogize her abusive father. She finds herself with a choice between an emotionally distant neurosurgeon boyfriend (Justin Baldoni) and an old flame (Brandon Sklenar). 

Borderlands 

The first person shooter hit from 2009 gets a film adaptation. The great Cate Blanchett stars as Lilith, an adventurer who descends to the planet Pandora (no relation to the Avatar homeworld) in search of a rumored vault full of alien treasure. To help her navigate the savage planet, she bring along her robot Claptrap (Jack Black), the mercenary Roland (Kevin Hart), demolitionist Tiny Tina (Ariana Greenblatt) and more familiar characters from the game. 

Lawrence of Arabia

If you loved Dune: Part Two earlier this year, now you can see the inspiration for Denis Villaneuve’s sweeping desert landscapes. David Lean’s Lawrence of Arabia is one of the great masterpieces of cinema, and was actually one source of inspiration for Frank Herbert’s original novel. On Sunday Aug. 11 and Monday Aug. 12 at the Paradiso, there’s a special Fathom screening of the film, which starred Peter O’Toole as British intelligence officer T.E. Lawrence who tried to rally Arab resistance against the Ottoman Turks during the First World War. If you’ve wondered why things in the Middle East have been so screwed up for so long, this film will give you a little bit of insight. Lawrence was, depending on who you ask, either the guy whose arrogance started the still-roiling conflicts or the guy who saw the future and tried to head it off. Both points of view are aired in Lean’s immortal epic, and O’Toole’s legendary performance hints that maybe they’re both right. Unlike some films, this is one you’re going to want to watch on the biggest screen available. But don’t take my word for it, ask Steven Spielberg.

Breakin’

Breakdancing is making its debut as an Olympic sport this weekend, so it’s appropriate that Crosstown Arts is screening the first film focused on the dance phenomenon. Breakin’ is about as 1984 as you can get. Helmed by exploitation director Joel Siberg, who tried to recapture the dance magic a few years later with Lambada, it’s got a paper thin plot, but memorable characters and no shortage of great dance moves. Check out this scene, featuring a very young Ice-T.

Breakin’ screens on Thursday, August 15 at Crosstown Theatre.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Colossal

When I am called upon to give lectures on screenwriting, one of the things I like to talk about is the Giant Robot Problem. It goes something like this: From Voltron to Optimus Prime to the Big O, everybody loves giant robots — especially the Japanese. What could be cooler than strapping into a 30-story, humanoid mecha and crushing your enemies beneath your giant metal boots? But if giant robots are so cool, why haven’t we built one yet? After all, we can put a man on the moon and take selfies with our lunch — why not Voltron?

The answer is, as cool as they look, giant robots aren’t really good for much. Anything a giant robot can do, you can use a specialized tool to do better. Need an invulnerable war machine? We have those. They’re called tanks. Want to dig a giant hole in the ground? You can either spend billions building a giant robot and give it a giant shovel, or you can just rent a commercial earth mover. Basically, the only things giant robots are good for are fighting giant monsters or other giant robots, and since neither one of those actually exists, we don’t build giant robots. This is why long-running anime series starring giant robots always evolve into soap operas about the people who drive the giant robots, proving that character development is always the most important element.

Director Nacho Vigalondo’s new film Colossal adds new dimensions to the eternal dance between giant monster and giant robot, while reinforcing the principle that character development is everything. Like any great kaiju movie, it begins in an Asian megalopolis — in this case, Seoul — with an innocent child witnessing the arrival of a giant monster. The dark, scaly, hundred-meter-tall creature materializes in a cloud of lightning and mystery, only to vanish again just as quickly.

Fast forward to 25 years later, and we meet Gloria (Anne Hathaway), a magazine writer in New York living with her boyfriend Tim (Dan Stevens). At least, Gloria used to be a magazine writer. She got laid off a year ago, and now she mostly just parties hard with her semi-glamorous publishing friends while mooching off of the dregs of Tim’s largesse. But Tim’s done watching her drink herself into an early grave, and he gives her the boot from his swank Manhattan apartment.

Thus, Gloria is faced with the ultimate nightmare of every young go-getter who goes to the Big Apple to get her fame and fortune: She has to move back home to the small town where she came from. Living alone in the vacant house where she grew up, she vows to quit drinking and get her life back on track. But her plan, and her sobriety, is instantly undermined in a chance meeting with Oscar (Jason Sudeikis), an old friend from elementary school who, wouldn’t you know it, runs the neighborhood watering hole. Soon, she’s working night shifts in the bar and staying after close to pound beers with Oscar, local loudmouth Garth (Tim Blake Nelson), and the quiet-but-hunky handyman Joel (Austin Stowell).

Around the same time, the mysterious monster reappears in Seoul. But this time, it’s back for all to see, trashing neighborhoods and killing hundreds of hapless Koreans as it rampages through the city. Only it’s not really rampaging so much as wandering aimlessly, seemingly distracted by invisible specters only it can see. The world pays rapt attention to the improbable drama, but Gloria notices something strange about the monster’s behavior. It seems to have the same tics she does, such as nervously scratching at the top of its head, and its uncoordinated ramblings look a lot like her movements when she’s stumbling home drunk every morning. Could she somehow be unwittingly controlling the monster? Meanwhile, her relationship with her childhood friend Oscar is taking an unhealthy, controlling turn — just as the giant monster of Seoul is joined by an equally mysterious giant robot.

Colossal‘s gimmick is gigantic, but the meat of this fascinating little picture is the interactions of a pair of ordinary, down-on-their-luck people just trying to create lives that make sense. Like Being John Malkovich, Colossal uses a fantastical premise to explore real human emotions and psychology. Hathaway and Sudeikis are both brilliant in this psychologically complex examination of how one person’s inner conflicts can ripple outward and affect people who have little to do with the original issues, even if, in this case, those people are being crushed underfoot half a world away.