Category Archives: Movie Reviews

Movie review: ‘Ford v Ferrari’ fires on all cylinders

“Ford v Ferrari” (PG-13)

It’s off to the races – for Oscar, that is – with “Ford v Ferrari,” a fast, furious and enormously entertaining historical sports drama that delves into the rivalry between Henry Ford II and Enzo Ferrari in the 1960s and Ford’s do or die determination to build an American sports car fast enough to win and end Ferrari’s dominance as perennial champion at the race of all races – the 24 hours of Le Mans in France.

True, great race car movies like “Rush,” directed by Ron Howard and starring Chris Hemsworth have hit the wall in recent years, but with a stellar cast including Christian Bale and Matt Damon and intense, breathtaking direction by James Mangold, “Ford v Ferrari” is bound to have some legs (make that wheels) at the box office as it roars into awards season. For the lack of better words, the movie fires on all cylinders.


AUDIO: Hear Tim’s review of “Ford v Ferrari” with Tom Barnard on “The KQ Morning Show” on KQRS-FM. The segment is brought to you by Michael Bryant and Bradshaw & Bryant.

Damon stars as Carroll Shelby, a former racecar champion hired by Ford executive Lee Iacocca (Jon Bernthal) to design a car with enough speed and safety to defeat Ferrari (Remo Girone) following an insult delivered he delivered to Ford (Tracy Letts) when the American automaker attempted to buy the famed Italian carmaker out. Shelby is up to the task, but he insists that Ken Miles (Christian Bale), a loose cannon but a brilliant driver and mechanic, involved. But getting Miles on his team is only one of Shelby’s problems: Despite the promise that would have carte blanche in designing the race car, Shelby is running into interference with Leo Beebe ( a perfectly slimy Josh Lucas), a sychophant Ford executive who insists Miles can’t drive the car at Le Mans because he doesn’t fit the corporation’s image.

While “Ford v Ferrari” will no doubt attract racecar enthusiasts and muscle car lovers, it’s not entirely a race car movie. The film has a lot of depth from a personal standpoint, as it explores the corporate politics that nearly derailed the project, the bond between Shelby and Miles, and Miles’ family life with his wife, Mollie (“Outlander” star Caitriona Balfe) and young son, Peter (“A Quiet Place’s” Noah Jupe). The great thing is, not only is the film intense as Miles takes to the track, it’s loaded with several great moments of comic relief to create a well-rounded filmgoing experience.

That’s not to say that there isn’t a bevy of race car scenes in the movie, and thanks to the genius of seasoned filmmaker Mangold (who last wrote and directed “Logan”), you feel like sitting next to Bale in the car as performs impossible tasks attempting to surpass the 200 mph mark. Every race scene is beyond thrilling, and they’re made all more intense by Mangold’s editing team, who should easily be nominated for an Oscar.

And speaking of Oscar, while Damon is terrific in the role and Fox will be backing a Best Actor campaign for him, expect Bale to be a lock throughout awards season, including Best Actor at the Academy Awards. With his body half the size of his Oscar-nominated Dick Cheney portrayal in “Vice,” Bale is more skinny and gaunt-like reminiscent of his Oscar-winning portrayal in “The Fighter.” His transformative performance touches all emotions, and any other year he would probably be a shoo-in to win if were not for long-overdue Joaquin Phoenix’s stunning turn in “The Joker.”

But make no joke about it, win or lose, “Ford v. Ferrari,” even clocking in at a robust 2 hours and 30 minutes, is compelling every minute and is easily one of the best films of the year.

Lammometer: 9 (out of 10)

Tim Lammers reviews movies weekly for “The KQ92 Morning Show” on KQRS-FM,  “Paul and Jordana” on WCCO Radio, “It Matters with Kelly Cordes on WJON-AM, KLZZ-FM, “The Tom Barnard Podcast” and “The BS Show” with Bob Sansevere, and reviews streaming programming on WCCO Radio’s “Paul and Jordana” as well. On TV, Tim has made hundreds of guest appearances on “KARE 11 News at 11” (NBC).

Copyright 2019 DirectConversations.com

Tim Burton Book 2
Click book cover for info on how to buy!

Movie review: Creepy ‘Doctor Sleep’ is no ‘Shining,’ but is impressive nonetheless

“Doctor Sleep” (R)

The haunting visions of Stephen King’s “The Shining” have been frightfully reawakened with “Doctor Sleep,” a creepy, intense and too-disturbing-for-its own good at times sequel to the director Stanley Kubrick’s 1980 horror film classic.

Based on King’s 2013 novel of the same name, writer, director and editor Mike Flanagan’s 2-hour, 30-minute opus doesn’t come close to “The Shining,” but it is still impressive, nonetheless. It’s clear that Flanagan (“The Haunting of Hill House”) was intent on making the sprawling tale of Danny Torrance his own while honoring the Kubrick film; yet it somehow manages to capture the same tone of “The Shining” even though “Doctor Sleep” is set largely away from the Overlook Hotel.


AUDIO: Hear Tim’s review of “Doctor Sleep” with Tom Barnard on “The KQ Morning Show” on KQRS-FM. The segment is brought to you by Michael Bryant and Bradshaw & Bryant.

“Doctor Sleep” begins in flashback, where Flanagan casts lookalike actors to step in for the young Shelley Duvall and Danny Lloyd to pick up the lives of Wendy and Danny Torrance not long after the murderous events at the end of “The Shining.” Naturally, Danny has been left deeply traumatized by the actions of his father, Jack, and coupled with his gift (or curse) of “the shine” — which gives psychic abilities  to see horrific visions of the past and communicate with others who have similar abilities –- he’s barely able to function. The trauma is so debilitating that it drags on into Danny’s (the always great Ewan McGregor) life as an adult, where, like his father, Jack, he has taken refuge in a bottle.

Danny’s life takes a turn, however, when he meets a fellow alcoholic, Billy Freeman (Cliff Curtis), and begins to communicate with Abra Stone (Kyliegh Curran in an impressive big screen debut), who has a more powerful version of the shine. Unbeknownst to both Danny and Abra, however, is a growing, deadly threat: There’s a small group of quasi-immortal people known as The True Knot, led by the malevolent Rose the Hat (a brilliant Rebecca Ferguson), who hunt down and kill children with the shine, consuming a steam that they expel while they are dying, the essence of which fuels their immortality.

While he doesn’t quite have the presence that Jack Nicholson did in “The Shining,” there’s no question McGregor commands your attention in “Doctor Sleep” as a deeply troubled individual trying to lock away his past in metaphorical boxes, only to be faced with confronting those demons once again as Danny is forced to return to the Overlook Hotel for a cataclysmic showdown in the last 20 minutes of the film’s third act.

It’s there where we get to experience Abra’s true powers and Rose the Hat’s ultimate wickedness, and not surprisingly, the return of Jack Torrance. But instead of using the benefits of CGI or clips from the original “Shining” to bring Jack back, Flanagan opts instead to recast the role, presenting Henry Thomas (“ET the Extraterrestrial”) as Jack Torrance/Nicholson in 1980, along with the recasting of all the other specters that haunted the young Danny from the original film.

It’s hard to say why, exactly, Flanagan took that route, other than to guess he did so to fend off any accusations that he was ripping off Kubrick to benefit his own film. No matter the case, the recasting works enough to grab viewers for the film’s frightening conclusion.

Photo: Warner Bros.
Rebecca Ferguson and Kyliegh Curran in “Doctor Sleep.”

Not having read the original source material, it’s hard to say how faithful “Doctor Sleep” is to the original King novel. My guess is that it’s very faithful, given that it takes some time (exemplifying King’s meandering ways) for the plot to come together. No matter the case, one thing is certain: King has an unhealthy obsession with the way children are brutalized, either psychologically or physically (or both) in his novels.

From the doomed teenage character in “Carrie” to the Loser’s Club in the “It” films to the unfortunate child victims in “Pet Sematary,” there’s no doubt King forces adults to confront their worst fears; but in the case of “Doctor Sleep,” there’s a disturbing scene with a pre-teen (Jacob Tremblay) that crosses the line as Rose the Hat and her frightening band of immortals carry out a ritual to feed upon the fear and pain of their young victim. It is downright amazing Warner Bros. didn’t take a harder look at the scene and ask Flanagan to tone things down. It’s an unnecessarily disturbing scene that stains an otherwise stellar horror film.

Lammometer:  8 (out of 10)

Tim Lammers reviews movies weekly for “The KQ92 Morning Show” on KQRS-FM,  “Paul and Jordana” on WCCO Radio, “It Matters with Kelly Cordes on WJON-AM, KLZZ-FM, “The Tom Barnard Podcast” and “The BS Show” with Bob Sansevere, and reviews streaming programming on WCCO Radio’s “Paul and Jordana” as well. On TV, Tim has made hundreds of guest appearances on “KARE 11 News at 11” (NBC).

Copyright 2019 DirectConversations.com

Tim Burton Book 2
Click book cover for info on how to buy!

Movie review: Hamilton saves ‘Terminator’ franchise by coming back for ‘Dark Fate’

“Terminator: Dark Fate” (R)

Linda Hamilton is back with a vengeance in “Terminator: Dark Fate,” a direct sequel to director James Cameron’s 1991 action blockbuster “Terminator 2:  Judgment Day” that ignores every “Terminator” film in between then and now. As such, “Dark Fate” is superior to the three films that tried to revitalize the franchise, even if it essentially a rehash, for all intents and purpose, a reboot, of the original “Terminator” plot in 1984. But by doing so, director Tim Miller (“Deadpool”) and Cameron, who is on-board as a producer and gets story credit on “Dark Fate” with two others (and five more wrote the screenplay), had to make some crucial creative decisions that may end up alienating the franchise’s diehard fanbase.


AUDIO: Hear Tim’s review of “Terminator: Dark Fate” with Tom Barnard on “The KQ Morning Show” on KQRS-FM. The segment is brought to you by Michael Bryant and Bradshaw & Bryant.

“Dark Fate” picks up in 2019, where Grace (Mackenzie Davis) a tech-enhanced human super soldier from the future arrives much in the same way Kyle Reese and The Terminator in the original film did in the original “Terminator,” naked via an orb and a bolt of lightning. Her mission from the future – 2042 to be exact – in a war against the machines, now called “Legion,” is to protect Dani Ramos (Natalia Reyes), who presumably will give birth to the leader of the future resistance. Hot on their trail, though, is a technologically advanced and seemingly unstoppable liquified version of the Terminator called the Rev-9 (Gabriel Luna), who has the stunning ability to separate its human likeness from its endoskeleton, essentially making him twice as deadly.

Photo: Paramount Pictures

Grace will get help to protect Dani, whether she wants it or not, from Sarah Connor (Hamilton), who is receiving information about arrivals from the future from an unknown source. Not surprisingly, the source turns out being her former foe the T-800 (Arnold Schwarzenegger), who now lives off the grid under the guise of a drapery store owner named Carl. But the eventual reunion between Sarah and the Terminator is beset by deep anger, as Sarah – despite saving 3 billion lives by preventing “Judgement Day” – is still reeling from a devastating turn of events 22 years earlier.

From a filmmaking standpoint, “Dark Fate” is expertly made, with engaging action scenes throughout that rival the high energy and creativity of “T2.” And while Davis, Reyes and Luna are solid, the entire film is anchored by Hamilton, who is even tougher than she was in “T2” almost three decades ago. No one can upstage her in the film – even Schwarzenegger – who doesn’t appear until 75 minutes into the film, which clocks in at 2 hours and 8 minutes.

That’s not to say Schwarzenegger hasn’t lost his step as the T-800, and he uses the character’s lack of human emotion (although he claims to have become more human since the events of “T2”) to deliver some of the funniest lines in the movie. In a way, “Dark Fate” serves as fitting way to wrap up his appearances in the franchise (presumably), giving the character the ending he (and Hamilton) deserves. In fact, Schwarzenegger’s presence – even as a supporting character – is so powerful, that it makes you realize just how lacking Luna is as the villain. Luna is good, but he simply doesn’t have the charisma that Schwarzenegger had when he originated the bad guy role in 1984.

For all “Terminator: Dark Fate” has going for it, the movie is full of flaws. First, there’s the inability to get past the original “time travel to save the future” plot, even though Cameron, Miller and company made a daring move early on in the film to set the overall narrative in a different path. Oddly enough, the move, without giving away a huge spoiler, is never properly explained, leaving fans with task of drawing their own conclusions.


AUDIO: Hear Tim’s review of “Terminator: Dark Fate” with Paul Douglas and guest host Brittany Arneson on “Paul and Jordana” on WCCO-AM. The segment is brought to you by Michael Bryant and Bradshaw & Bryant.

No matter the areas where the film is lacking, “Dark Fate” is worth seeing for Hamilton alone. It was a genius move bringing Hamilton back into the fold to give some new edge to the “Terminator” franchise, much in the way Jamie Lee Curtis returned to last year’s “Halloween” film series (much like “Terminator,” “Halloween” ignored all the sequels after the first film). Sarah Connor has a war-weary wicked edge to her, and her attitude, which is magnified by her smoky voice, screams bad-ass throughout the film. With any luck, “she’ll be back” should “Dark Fate” become a huge enough hit to justify another sequel.

Lammometer: 7 (out of 10)

Tim Lammers reviews movies weekly for “The KQ92 Morning Show” on KQRS-FM,  “Paul and Jordana” on WCCO Radio, “It Matters with Kelly Cordes on WJON-AM, KLZZ-FM, “The Tom Barnard Podcast” and “The BS Show” with Bob Sansevere, and reviews streaming programming on WCCO Radio’s “Paul and Jordana” as well. On TV, Tim has made hundreds of guest appearances on “KARE 11 News at 11” (NBC).

Copyright 2019 DirectConversations.com

Tim Burton Book 2
Click book cover for info on how to buy!

Movie review: ‘The Current War’ powered by fascinating story, brilliant cast

“The Current War: Director’s Cut” (PG-13)

Two years after its debut at the Toronto International Film Festival and becoming a casualty of the Harvey Weinstein scandal, “The Current War: The Director’s Cut,” is, for the lack of better words, finally seeing the light of day. A brilliantly acted,  atmospheric historical drama that takes an inside look at the true-life battle between Thomas Edison and George Westinghouse to bring light to the modern world in the late 1800s, the film isn’t perfect, but is a fascinating historical depiction of some life-altering events, nonetheless.

“The Current War: The Director’s Cut” is named as such because director Alfonso Gomez-Rejon trimmed 10 minutes from the original run time, shot five more scenes and added a new score, under the auspices of executive producer Martin Scorsese. Beginning in 1880, the film picks up just after Edison (Benedict Cumberbatch) created and filed his patent for the incandescent light bulb.

Edison’s got much bigger aspirations, though: to light up Manhattan, America and eventually the world by distributing electricity through a low voltage direct current system; while businessman and engineer Westinghouse (the always great Michael Shannon) believes high voltage alternating current electricity is the answer.

For those unfamiliar with Edison’s personal demeanor, “The Current War” is a real eye-opener. Though he enjoys a high-profile celebrity status in public, behind the scenes, he’s a volatile and vindictive inventor who resorted to nasty business methods in an effort to destroy his competition. The film also delves into Edison’s mistreatment of Nikola Tesla (Nicholas Hoult), a scientific genius who eventually teams up with Westinghouse. Tom Holland also stars as Samuel Insull, Edison’s loyal personal secretary who questions some of his boss’ methods.

Lammometer: 8 (out of 10)

Tim Lammers reviews movies weekly for “The KQ92 Morning Show” on KQRS-FM,  “Paul and Jordana” on WCCO Radio, “It Matters with Kelly Cordes on WJON-AM, KLZZ-FM, “The Tom Barnard Podcast” and “The BS Show” with Bob Sansevere. ALSO, Tim reviews streaming programming weekly on WCCO Radio’s “Paul and Jordana.” On TV, Tim has made hundreds of guest appearances on “KARE 11 News at 11.”

Copyright 2019 DirectConversations.com

Tim Burton Book 2
Click book cover for info on how to buy!