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Now Playing July 26-August 1: Deadpool and Playtime

It’s looking like a rainy weekend in Memphis. Lucky for you, there’s some new movies out.

Deadpool & Wolverine

The Merc with the Mouth teams up with Canada’s favorite mutant to repair a rift in the multiverse. Ryan Reynolds returns as Deadpool, the only Marvel comic book character who knows he’s in a comic book — or in this case, a movie. Hugh Jackman comes out of superhero retirement to reprise his role as Wolverine. This time he’s wearing that fetching yellow outfit Logan wore in the comics, but was deemed too cheesy for the screen. This is the first R-rated Marvel movie, so expect some cussin’. 

The Fabulous Four

Bette Midler’s getting married in Key West, and her college besties Susan Sarandon, Megan Mullally, and Sheryl Lee Ralph are on coming to the party. This outrageous road trip will rekindle friendships and open old wounds. 

Longlegs 

The art horror sleeper hit directed by Osgood Perkins is the creepy slow burn you’re looking for. Maika Monroe stars as an FBI agent, who may or may not be psychic, assigned to a case that has stumped the agency for decades. Nicolas Cage delivers a tour de force performance as a satanic serial killer with a glam rock fetish. This film is even weirder than it sounds, and I mean that in a good way. Read my full review.

PlayTime

The eyes of the world are on Paris this week, as the City of Light hosts the Summer Olympics. So it’s an appropriate time for Crosstown Arts’ film series to feature one of the great masterpieces of French film. Jacques Tati’s PlayTime is something rare: an epic comedy. Shooting over the course of three years in the 1960s on gigantic sets built to mimic (and mock) the glass and steel architecture that was taking over Paris at the time, it was the most expensive French film ever made. It’s nearly wordless, nearly plotless, and hilariously slapstick.

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Film Features Film/TV

NOW PLAYING: Fantastical Visions

The week of May 17-23 at the movies offers lots of fun choices, including the premiere of a film I’ve been most excited about for months:

I Saw The TV Glow

Jane Schoenbrun’s psychological horror about teenage fandom is already being hailed as one of the best movies of the year. Owen (Justice Smith) bonds with Maddy (Brigette Lundy-Paine) over their mutual love for the YA series The Pink Opaque. Years later, with adulthood’s problems pressing down, Maddy reappears in Owen’s life, telling him they can escape into the fictional world of the show — but there’s a price to pay for a permanent trip to TV land. 

IF

Young Elizabeth (Cailey Fleming) has an imaginary friend named Blossom (Phoebe Waller-Bridge) that only she can see. The catch is, she can also see other kids’ imaginary friends, including the ones whom their companions outgrew. Her neighbor Cal (Ryan Reynolds) has the same ability, and together they try to reunite the abandoned Imaginary Friends (IFs) with their former kids. This live action/animated hybrid features a huge cast of voices, including Steve Carell, Emily Blunt, Matt Damon, Maya Rudolph, Jon Stewart, George Clooney, Bradley Cooper, and, in his final role, the late Louis Gossett, Jr.

Back to Black 

Marisa Abela stars in this biopic of singer Amy Winehouse, who scored major hits in the 00’s and set the record for the most Grammys won in one night. Director Sam Taylor-Johnson tries to separate the tabloid hype from the real person, who died in 2011 at age 27. 

The Blue Angels

This new documentary takes IMAX back to its roots as the biggest documentary format. The U.S. Navy’s aviation demonstration team features some of the best pilots in the world. The film gets up close and personal with them, as they get up close and personal with each other while flying F-18s at 300 mph.

Flash Gordon

The Time Warp Drive-In returns for May with the theme Weird Realms. It’s three sci-fi movies from the ’80s that feature extreme visuals unlike anything else ever filmed. In the early 1970s, after George Lucas had a major hit with American Graffiti, he wanted to do a remake of Flash Gordon, which had started as a comic strip before being adapted into one of the original sci-fi serials in the late 1930s. Italian producer Dino De Laurentiis refused to sell him the movie rights to Flash Gordon, which he had purchased on the cheap years before, so Lucas decided to do his own version. That became Star Wars, and you may have heard of it. After Lucas struck gold, De Laurentiis decided to finally exercise his option. His Flash Gordon, which featured visuals inspired by the classic comics, didn’t impress sci-fi audiences upon its 1980 release, but has proven to be hugely influential in the superhero movie era. The best parts of the film are the Queen soundtrack and Max von Sydow (who once played Jesus) chewing the scenery as Ming the Merciless. To be fair, there’s a lot of scenery to chew on.

The second film on the Time Warp bill is The Dark Crystal. Muppet master Jim Henson considered this film his masterpiece, and the puppetry work is unparalleled in film history. If you’re only familiar with the story through the Netflix prequel series (which was also excellent), this is the perfect opportunity to experience the majesty of the original.

The final Time Warp film was Ridley Scott’s follow-up to Blade Runner. Legend has it that the unicorn shots in Blade Runner were actually Scott using that film’s budget to shoot test footage for Legend. A really young Tom Cruise stars with Mia Sara in this high fantasy adventure. Again, the best part of the film is the villain. Tim Curry absolutely slays as Darkness, while sporting one of the best devil costumes ever put to film.

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Film Features Film/TV

Free Guy

Pop quiz time: What is the single most profitable entertainment product of all time?

It’s not Star Wars or Harry Potter or 50 Shades of Grey. The answer is Grand Theft Auto V. Produced and marketed at an estimated cost of $265 million, the 2013 video game has sold more than 150 million copies and has grossed more than $6 billion and counting. (The original Minecraft sold more copies, but GTA V retailed for significantly more per unit.)

In GTA, the player role-plays as a petty criminal trying to work their way up in the organized crime hierarchy, acquiring money, weapons, and all sorts of vehicles along the way. There are missions to go on to advance the plot and increase your status, but it’s completely possible to ignore all that and just run around stealing stuff and killing people for no reason. I, being a writer, like to stick to the script and see where the story takes me. I will admit that, in the midst of a hot pursuit, I have been known to take to the sidewalks, mowing down pedestrians to shake the popo. And when a mission goes really, really wrong, I will sometimes take out my gun and start shooting until the cops take me down. Why not? It’s a simulation. There are no consequences. And besides, I’m not really killing people. They’re just sprites: a collection of polygons going through little loops of simulated behavior.

But who hasn’t felt a twinge of guilt as they watch the hooker fly through the air and land in a heap behind the car? Sure, these non-player characters (NPCs) are just interlocking bundles of reflexes, but as I unthinkingly munch through a bag of Flamin’ Hot Cheetos, it occurs to me that I am, too. What would it be like to be one of those NPCs, doomed to have their cars stolen over and over again, until I get bored and play Tetris?

That’s the jumping-off point for Free Guy. Ryan Reynolds stars as Guy, a bank teller in the GTA-like world of Free City who goes through the motions for eight or nine robberies a day. Taking a shotgun blast to the face is no big deal to Guy or his security guard bestie Buddy (Lil Rel Howery). When the player character, who always wears sunglasses, decides to shoot up the bank, Guy just re-spawns in his apartment next to his goldfish. But one day Guy’s world changes. He sees the girl of his dreams, a sunglasses-wearer named Molotov Girl (Jodie Comer), and he makes the impulsive decision to follow her. Soon, he’s standing up to bank robbers and scores a pair of glasses of his own. That’s when he begins to see the world as it really is: artificially constructed for someone else’s pleasure.

Free Guy is a gumbo of influences. The basic premise of the virtual world colliding with “real life” has been explored for decades, from Philip K. Dick to Westworld. As early as 1976, Doctor Who had adventures in a virtual reality called The Matrix. The hero of Tron was a game character who achieved self-awareness. Molotov Girl, a coder whose software was stolen by Free City creator Antwan (Taika Waititi), lives in-game in a secret shipping container like a William Gibson character. The MMORPG Free City is as much Fortnite and Ready Player One as it is GTA. Guy’s epiphany is brought about by putting on a player’s sunglasses, which allow him to see his world as it really is, just like They Live. Later, his clueless assertions of free will attract a worldwide audience, like The Truman Show, only with Twitch streamers instead of a TV broadcast. What’s really interesting is that all of those stories that used to predict the future now describe a relatable present.

There’s a lot going on here, and director Shawn Levy and writers Matt Lieberman and Zak Penn somehow make it all work. Reynolds is being his usual movie star self, so when the film grapples with sticky concepts — like what our responsibilities would be toward artificially created life capable of suffering — it goes down easy. Did I mention this is a comedy? It primarily gets laughs from Reynolds’ aw-shucks routine in the face of an increasingly abstract situation. But beneath all the slapstick and video game mayhem, Free Guy is a smart film with a lot on its mind.

Free Guy
Now playing
Multiple locations

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Film Features Film/TV

Deadpool 2

Ah yes, the 1990s — the lost golden age of post-Cold War security, moderately rising wages, and good hip-hop. Back in the Clinton era, it was hip not to care. Snark and self-aware meta-humor went together like guitars and heroin. What a great time to be alive, except for the parts that were awful, like the complete lack of wifi hotspots.

I’m sorry. We’re doing ’90s nostalgia now, aren’t we? It’s hard to keep up.

Anyway, Deadpool. Comics in the 1990s were suffering a kind of post traumatic stress disorder fromWatchmen, like a decade-long hangover from one particularly foul bender Alan Moore went on in 1986. The grittier and darker the better, said Rob Liefeld, the artist who set the decade’s zeitgeist at Marvel. Liefeld liked guns, katanas, and bandoleers with lots of pouches and grenades on them. His most famous creation, along with writer Fabian Nicieza, was Deadpool. If Watchmen was a thoughtful critique of the assumptions underlying the superhero myth, Deadpool was raised middle finger. Deadpool is a profane, self-interested mercenary who dispenses ultraviolence on behalf of the highest bidder. His superpower, a Wolverine-like ability to heal wounds instantly, is itself a comment on the consequence-free narratives of the comic medium.

What made Deadpool the quintessential ’90s comic book hero is that he is aware he’s in a superhero comic book. In retrospect, the ironic detachment was a way to both acknowledge that we’ve all seen this stuff before and give ourselves permission to enjoy it anyway.

On screen, Deadpool is the product of an agreement between 20th Century Fox, who own the rights to the X-Men, and Disney, who own the rights to all the rest of Mavel’s creations. Deadpool was a tertiary X-Man, and even led his own spinoff group, X-Force, which was like X-Men, but more X-treme. In a way, Deadpool is the perfect figure to unite the two warring camps of Marvel properties, because he doesn’t take any of this stuff too seriously.

Few actors today tear into their parts with more relish than Ryan Reynolds does with Deadpool. With the origin story out of the way and a producer credit in his contract, Deadpool 2 lets Reynolds take the gloves off and go after the bloated superhero film genre with everything he’s got. He starts with the holy of holies, Wolverine’s death in Logan, and works his way down from there.

Josh Brolin, fresh off his role as Thanos in Avengers: Infinity War, stars as Cable in Deadpool 2.

This time out, Deadpool’s got a frenemy in the form of Cable (Josh Brolin), another Liefeld creation who sports oh so many small pockets and an extremely large, tricked-out gun. He’s a time-traveling super soldier best described as “Terminator but tortured and brooding.” His mission is to kill Russell (Julian Dennison), a young mutant on the verge of turning evil who will grow up to kill Cable’s family. Brolin seems to be genetically engineered to play the square-headed murder machine, and he provides an effective Nick Nolte to Reynolds’ Eddie Murphy. Dennison, who was incredible in Hunt for the Wilderpeople, holds his own against a more experienced cast. Another welcome newcomer is Domino (Zazie Beetz), whose superpower is luck, which serves as another sly joke at the expense of generations of frustrated comics writers who just needed to wrap their story up in two pages.

Back from Deadpool’s first outing is Negasonic Teenage Warhead (Brianna Hildebrand), who has the distinction of being the only comic book character named after a Monster Magnet song, but is left with very little to do in this film except hang out with her new girlfriend Yukio (Shioli Kutsuna). Faring a little better is Colossus (Stefan Kapicic), who at least gets to have, as Deadpool calls it, “a big CGI fight!”

Successful genre parodies, like Venture Bros., know that in order to have your cake and eat it, too, you have to deliver both good comedy and good action. Deadpool 2‘s seemingly endless parade of fight sequences are constructed from the Marvel template, only with the fight choreographers given free rein to be as bloody and brutal as they want to be. But the picture’s real attraction is Reynolds cracking wise, so after the third or fourth decapitation, it all becomes a tedious blur of slicing katanas and spurting blood. Deadpool 2 is so full of superhero movie in-jokes, one suspects it will be almost incomprehensible in a few years. But for now, this is the franchise we need to deflate all the franchises we probably don’t.

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Deadpool

Only Nixon could go to China. Only Deadpool can go hard R.

Ryan Reynolds as Deadpool

By my estimation, we hit peak superhero movie last summer with Avengers: Age Of Ultron, when familiarity with the formula and the needs of corporate synergy finally overwhelmed the burst of creativity that captured the zeitgeist around the time of Sam Rami’s Spider-Man. I liked Age Of Ultron, but the seams were clearly bulging, and Marvel’s secret weapon Joss Whedon got so fed up with corporate filmmaking that he went walkabout. Now that Marvel is mining the C-list and going meta, it’s a sure sign that we’re entering the decadent phase.

Deadpool is a product of the snarky 90s, and the audience for his comics was assumed to be sufficiently steeped in comic book tropes and lore that they would respond to the inside jokes The Merc With The Mouth threw at them through the fourth wall. From Deadpool’s opening credits, which lists the director as “Some Douchebag”, the producers as “Asshats”, and Colossus as “The CGI Character”, it’s obvious that the R-rated ticket buyer is assumed to be familiar with the tropes of the modern superhero film. Since the movie has passed $500 million in international box office, it’s safe to assume the producer were correct in that assumption.

Ryan Reynolds and Morena Baccarin

But Deadpool is not Spaceballs, the 1987 Mel Brooks spoof that signaled the end of the 80s golden age of sci fi. These are the insiders yukking it up and patting each other on the back. Ryan Reynolds, for whom playing Deadpool has been a decade long dream project, famously strangled DC’s Green Lantern franchise in the crib by making Hal Jordan a smirking jerk, so here he gets to make CGI costume jokes. I have never forgiven Reynolds for the debacle of Waiting, but over the course of Deadpool, I developed a grudging admiration for him. He’s always tried to present as a “lovable douchebag”, but somewhere around the time a showboating Deadpool spells out the name of his arch enemy Francis “Ajax” Freeman (Ed Skeen) in the dead bodies of his henchmen, he graduated to “magnificent bastard”. It also helps Reynolds that his love interest is Morena Baccarin, aka Inara from Firefly, as Venessa, an off-the-shelf hooker with a heart of gold. She and Reynolds have good chemistry together, and both of them know exactly how seriously to take the material, which is not very.

To make a high-functioning psychopath like Deadpool, who naturally gravitated towards mercenary work, sympathetic while staying funny means the tone has to be just right. Only in the middle sections of the film, during the flashbacks to Deadpools’ origins in a super soldier torture facility, does the ultra violence curdle from slapstick into sadism. It’s always the origin story that gets you.

Colossus, Deadpool‘s requisite CGI Character

Deadpool’s other bright spot is its portrayal of Colossus, an X-Man brought on board to provide a modicum of respectability and tie-in for the Twentieth Century Fox stable of Marvel heroes. The CGI character, voiced by Stephan Kapicic, provides a properly heroic, goody-two-shoes foil to Deadpool’s kill crazed cynicism. Deadpool’s other sidekick, Negasonic Teenage Warhead (Brianna Hildebrand), who got her gloriously baroque name from a Monster Magnet song, is not as interesting as her moniker.

Deadpool is pretty much Michael Bay’s Bad Boys dressed in superhero drag, but refreshingly, it’s just a simple revenge story instead of having artificially high stakes, because superheroes are supposed to save the world and whatnot. And unlike a Bay film, it’s competently made, and mostly fun. With Batman Vs. Superman: Dawn Of Justice looking like a grimdark wet fart, one can only hope that DC will follow Marvel’s lead and produce that Batman 1966 movie. Come on, you know you want it.