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Movie review: ‘Ad Astra’ blasts off strong but veers off course

“Ad Astra” (PG-13)

Most – but not all – systems are go for “Ad Astra,” writer-director James Gray’s ambitious space drama that blasts off in spectacular fashion but desperately spins out of control at the end. It’s no doubt a spectacular film from an audio-visual standpoint, and the doomsday story line is quite engaging with Brad Pitt in the lead. But as the film nears the end of its two-hour star trek, the plot becomes jumbled and the endgame for the key narrative disappoints.


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

Set in the not-too-distant future, Pitt stars Roy McBride, a highly disciplined but emotionally distant astronaut in a government military organization called U.S. Space Command. Space exploration has advanced significantly in Roy’s lifetime, to the point where his father, Space Command’s top dog Clifford McBride (Tommy Lee Jones), embarked on The Lima Project, a mission to explore the solar system for extraterrestrial life that began when Roy was just a boy. But 16 years into the mission, Clifford disappeared near Neptune.

Thirty years after his father’s disappearance, the adult Roy is working on a mission just above Earth when a sudden electrical storm wreaks havoc on a towering space antenna he is working on, causing death to not only some of his colleagues, but massive fatalities all over the planet. With 40,000 people dead and the entirety of Earth’s population in peril as the electrical storm moves closer, Roy is recruited to embark on an interplanetary mission to contact Neptune, where Space Command believes the phenomena is originating from. Making more matters complicated, Roy’s superiors believe that his father is still alive and may have something to do with the deadly phenomena, and believe the younger McBride may be the only astronaut capable of effectively communicating with him in a bid to stave off the inevitable.

As far as space dramas go, “Ad Astra” feels much more like Christopher Nolan’s 2014 intergalatic epic “Interstellar” than it does the classic “2001: A Space Odyssey,” although there’s no question that “Ad Astra” has a vibe closer to the esoteric Stanley Kubrick film. The thing is, as advanced, technologically, as “2001” and “Interstellar” were at the times of their respective releases, the visual effects seem to have taken an even bigger leap forward as Roy’s ship blasts off, first to a fully operational base on moon before heading to a similarly advanced base on Mars, where Roy is expected to make contact with his father. Thanks to a brilliant IMAX presentation of the film, not only do you feel like you’re strapped into the spaceship with Pitt, you can literally feels the rumbling of the rockets underneath your seat as he takes orbit.

While “Ad Astra” is effectively a story about the strained relationship and hopeful reconciliation between a father and a son, the film, doesn’t wallow entirely in the film’s heady narrative. The action scenes are spectacular, especially when its revealed that colonization is so advanced on the moon that, thanks to the commercialism of space travel, corruption and crime have taken a foothold on the moon, as space pirates attempt to hijack Roy and his crew in a thrilling space buggy chase sequence on the lunar surface. The story also takes some unexpected twists and turns once Roy finds his way to Mars and meets a scientist (Ruth Negga) who reveals a dark secret about The Lima Project.

Photo: 20th Century Fox/Disney

As much as “Ad Astra” has going for it throughout the movie, it feels discombobulated and ultimately a bit dull as it lumbers toward its ending. Plus, without giving too much away, the final act feels like a cheat as it relates to the all the hoops Roy had to jump through to begin the mission. That’s not to take away from Pitt’s acting, as he delivers yet another solid performance. But while industry tastemakers and fans are already chanting for a Best Actor nomination for Pitt, the performance comes nothing close to his smaller, but far more memorable turn in Quentin Tarantino’s love letter to 1969 Tinseltown, “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood,” a couple months back.

While “Ad Astra” is clearly Pitt’s movie, Jones no doubt has a presence, albeit a small one in the film. One thing’s for certain: Gray gave Pitt, Jones, Negga and Donald Sutherland (who appears in a small turn as Clifford’s former astronaut colleague) far more material to work with than Liv Tyler, who despite being prominently featured in the film’s trailers, barely appears in a stereotypical role as Roy’s resentful wife, who is left out in the cold because of her husband’s vacant emotions.

Lammometer: 7 (out of 10)

Tim Lammers reviews movies weekly for “The KQ92 Morning Show,”  WCCO Radio, WJON-AM, KLZZ-FM, “The Tom Barnard Podcast” and “The BS Show” with Bob Sansevere. On TV, Tim has made hundreds of guest appearances on “KARE 11 News at 11” (NBC).

Copyright 2019 DirectConversations.com

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Movie review: ‘Once Upon a Time in Hollywood’ not typical Tarantino tale

 “Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood” (R)

Clearly made as a love letter to the La La landscape of the late 1960s, “Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood” is a surprisingly tame entry in writer-director Quentin Tarantino’s otherwise wild body of work as a filmmaker. It proves that Tarantino’s love for the end of the Golden Era in Hollywood is warm and fuzzy, but when its framed as a feature film, perhaps “Once Upon a Time” is warm and fuzzy to a fault. In short, the film lacks the Tarantino bite we associate with the inventive filmmaker until its third act, leaving in its wake several bland moments during the first hour and a half of the film.

“Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood” is largely about TV star Rick Dalton (Leonardo Di Caprio) and his longtime stuntman-turned-personal assistant Cliff Booth (Brad Pitt) as Rick begins to realize his downslide as lead actor who is now largely relegated guest shots as “the heavy” on episodic television. Of course, Rick and Cliff are fictional characters in Tarantino’s “Hollywood,” but much like writer-director did with “Inglorious Basterds,” he drops the characters in among real-life figures and settings to construct what becomes a revisionist tale set over nine months in 1969 Hollywood.


AUDIO: Hear Tim review “Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood” with Jordana Green and guest host Todd Walker on “The Paul and Jordana Show” on WCCO-AM. Segment brought to you by Mike Bryant and Bradshaw & Bryant.

Most prominent of the real-life figures portrayed are actress Sharon Tate (Margot Robbie), who cruelly met her fate while eight-months pregnant along with friend/Hollywood hairstylist Jay Sebring (Emile Hirsch) and two others at the hands of the murderous Manson family on Aug. 9, 1969. Tate’s husband, director Roman Polanski (Polish actor Rafal Zawierucha) is also featured briefly in a few fleeting scenes, while Charles Manson (Damon Herriman) only turns up once in the whole film.

A slow burn set over 2 hours and 41 minutes that eventually rolls up to the private neighborhood where members of the Manson family plan to kill Tate and Polanski, a restrained Tarantino holds off on his penchant for excessive screen violence until late into the third act. Before that, the other razzmatazz identified with the two-time Oscar-winning filmmaker is spread out in inspired bits and pieces throughout the first 90 minutes.

Among them is a charming (and in retrospect, heartbreaking) scene where Tate sits in a Hollywood theater to soak in the reaction to her work in Dean Martin’s Matt Helm adventure comedy “The Wrecking Crew”; and another where Kurt Russell’s producer character become a wreck on the set of a movie where Bruce Lee (Mike Moh) squares off against Cliff in a backlot in one of film’s funniest moments. Perhaps the biggest scene stealer is Julia Butters (TV’s “American Wife”), who plays a precocious 8-year-old actor (don’t call her “actress”), who puts Rick back on his heels as they’re preparing to film scenes for a TV Western (Butters brilliantly holds her own against DiCaprio in not one but two scenes).

To be sure, “Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood” is a nostalgic ride down memory lane for Tarantino as he expertly recreates the look and atmosphere of Tinseltown in the late 1960s, which not surprisingly has pop music hits of the era woven within. But it’s also a ride that may leave fans of his previous work feeling short-changed, especially for the lumbering first 90 minutes the film.

In short, “Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood” is the most un-Tarantino film Tarantino has ever done – at least until its final 45 minutes. The tension begins to ramp up when Cliff tries to visit his old colleague George Spahn (Bruce Dern) on the Spahn Movie Ranch, a once-viable filming location that is now suspiciously populated by a “community” of Charles  Manson followers. It’s there where the Manson Family is plotting out its final steps to murder Tate, who is 8 months pregnant, along with Polanski.

Effectively “Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood” is a 2 hour, 41 minute exercise in wish fulfillment that gives Tarantino – who has long been able to make films carte blanche in Tinseltown – the means to play around in the era of filmmaking (or in this case, TV show making) that he clearly adores.

Photo: Sony Pictures

A sort of insider’s look at the making of TV shows in the late ‘60s (and digitally swapping in Rick for Steve McQueen in “The Great Escape” ), “Once Upon a Time” even gives Tarantino the opportunity to step back in time onto sets to produce classic Westerns through the lens of such directors (turned actor) as Sam Wanamaker. He even peppers the film with several cameos, including Damian Lewis as The King of Cool Steve McQueen and Dakota Fanning in a small but unnerving turn as Manson family member Squeaky Fromme. All but squandered is Al Pacino as agent pushing Rick toward making Spaghetti Westerns; and notably absent is Samuel L. Jackson, who has been a frequent collaborator of Tarantino’s since 1994’s “Pulp Fiction.”


AUDIO: Hear Tim review “Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood” with Tom Barnard on “The KQ Morning Show” on KQRS-FM. Segment brought to you by Mike Bryant and Bradshaw & Bryant.

With DiCaprio, Pitt and Robbie turning in good but not great performances, “Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood” will be remembered as a star-powered film that was a victim of its own hype. Just like the shiny veneer the real Hollywood gives off, the film is ultimately more about looks than it is substance, and thin veil in this case almost completely hides the ugliness of the industry.

Luckily for fans, while Tarantino gets waylaid on his trip back in time, there’s no doubt a ton of satisfaction to be had when the writer-director gives his twisty take on one of the most shocking crimes Hollywood has ever seen to conclude the film. It’s one of the few tales in “Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood” that’s worth telling over and over. The rest you can close the book on.

Lammometer: 6 (out of 10)

Tim Lammers reviews movies weekly for “The KQ92 Morning Show,”  WCCO Radio, WJON-AM, KLZZ-FM, “The Tom Barnard Podcast” and “The BS Show” with Bob Sansevere. On TV, Tim has made hundreds of guest appearances on “KARE 11 News at 11” (NBC).

Copyright 2019 DirectConversations.com

Tim Burton Book 2
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Movie reviews: ‘Concussion,’ ‘The Big Short,’ ‘Daddy’s Home’

Alec Baldwin and Will Smith in 'Concussion' (photo - Sony Pictures)

By Tim Lammers

“Concussion” (PG-13) 3 1/2 stars (out of four)

Will Smith’s career is back in focus with “Concussion,” the compelling true story of revered pathologist Dr. Bennet Omalu (Smith) and his earth-shattering discovery that connected severe brain damage – diagnosed and termed as chronic traumatic enchepolapthy (CTE) – to repeated concussions in NFL players. Based in Pittsburgh, Omalu first made the correlation after the untimely death of Pittsburgh Steelers Hall of Fame center Mike Webster (a barely recognizable David Morse), and the subsequent deaths of other NFL players.

Not surprisingly, NFL officials don’t want to confront the issue, and do their best to discredit Omalu and his colleagues to protect its vast business interests. The supporting cast is stellar, including strong performances by Albert Brooks as famed pathologist Dr. Cyril Wecht and Alec Baldwin as former Steelers team physician Dr. Julian Bailes – who helped Omalu convince the NFL of the problem. Save a horribly miscast Luke Wilson as current NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, “Concussion” is a riveting, must-see movie whether you’re a fan of the NFL or not.

“The Big Short” (R) 3 1/2 stars (out of four)

Director Adam McKay impressively steps away from his normal world of Will Ferrell comedy fare and channels the filmmaking expertise of Martin Scorsese in the process with “The Big Short” – a searing portrait of four groups of Wall Street outsiders who envisioned the burst of the housing bubble in 2008 and tried to stick it to the big banks in the process.

In their turns as the outsiders, Christian Bale, Brad Pitt and Ryan Gosling are at their best, and Steve Carell continues to impress in yet another stunning dramatic turn on the heels of his Oscar-nominated role in “Foxcatcher” last year. Moving at breakneck pace throughout, “The Big Short” contains lots of complex Wall Street jargon, but McKay creatively works in star cameos to break things down in layman’s terms. The film, while entertaining in the way it is presented, is infuriating at the same time.

“Daddy’s Home” (PG-13) 3 stars out of four

Will Ferrell and Mark Wahlberg reteam after the hilarious romp “The Other Guys” with “Daddy’s Home,” a wonderfully sweet comedy about a doting yet hapless step-father (Ferrell) who must deal with the return of the children’s far cooler biological dad (Wahlberg). We’ve seen both actors play these sorts of roles before, but familiarity aside, there’s no question the pairing works wonders here as the two dads engage in a nasty game of one-upsmanship to win the affection of the kids and their mother. “Daddy’s Home” is far from perfect, but it’s an enjoyable movie nonetheless.

Reviews: Tim Lammers talks ‘Fury,’ ‘St. Vincent’ on KARE-TV, more

Brad Pitt in 'Fury'

Tim reviews the World War II action drama “Fury” and the comedy drama “St. Vincent” on KARE-TV in Minneapolis with Bryan Piatt below. Also, you can read Tim’s review on BringMeTheNews.com and hear Tim review the films on The Tom Barnard Show, WCCO-AM, KTWIN-FM and KSCR-FM.

Tony Stark (The Mechanic) Iron Man Sixth Scale Figure

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