Tag Archives: feature

Movie review: Despite exhaustive run time, ‘The Irishman’ is vintage Scorsese

“The Irishman” (R)

The cinematic worlds of Martin Scorsese and Francis Ford Coppola collide with brute force in Scorsese’s epic crime drama “The Irishman,” a in-depth look into the rise and demise of legendary Teamsters president Jimmy Hoffa and his relationship with mob heavy Frank “The Irishman” Sheeran.

Clocking in detailed yet exhaustive 3 1/2 hours, the film – made for the big screen by Netflix with the idea of attracting its main audience on its streaming platform less than 30 days after its qualifying theatrical awards run – is sure to satisfy Scorsese fans with its grand, big screen presentation, but will be digested better in chunks by its home audience. That’s not to say “The Irishman” is a TV movie (as some famous filmmakers would suggest), it’s just that Scorsese has packed so much into the film’s time frame that breaks are probably warranted to sit back and absorb the amazing chronicle of the mob and Hoffa and their influence on labor unions in the 1950s, ’60s and ‘70s, culminating in the disappearance of Hoffa and speculation as to who was actually responsible.

Longtime Scorsese collaborator Robert De Niro stars in the title role as Sheeran, a meat truck driver who by happenstance befriends Russell Bufalino (Joe Pesci), the head of an Northeastern Pennsylvania crime family who taps Sheeran as a hitman because for one, he’s loyal and would never drop names if arrested; and two, he fought in Italy in World War II and wasn’t afraid to pull the trigger on the enemy.

Rising through the ranks of the organization, Sheeran eventually is introduced to Hoffa (Coppola favorite Al Pacino in his first Scorsese film), who quickly develop an affinity for one another as Sheeran himself eventually becomes a powerful union head. But when Hoffa goes to prison for fraud stemming from witness tampering in a court case, the upper echelon of the Teamsters union changes under the rule of Frank Fitzsimmons (Gary Basaraba), and escalating conflicts with the mob spell doom for Hoffa as he tries to regain control of the powerful labor organization.

Based on the novel “I Heard You Paint Houses” by Charles Brandt and a screenplay adapted by Oscar-winning scribe Steve Zaillian (“Schindler’s List”), “The Irishman” is presented in vintage Scorsese fashion, as the lead actor (in this case, De Niro), narrates the story throughout a sprawling tale over decades. Captured within is all the narrative depth, character development, smart dialogue (complete with wry humor), classic music selections lining the background and brilliant acting that you’ve come to expect out of a Scorsese crime drama, a la “Goodfellas” and “The Departed.” Unfortunately, since Netflix gave Scorsese the keys to the cinematic kingdom to make a film as long as he wanted, “The Irishman” lumbers to the point of self-indulgence at times.

That’s not say Scorsese hasn’t earned the right to make the film that he wants, it’s just merely too much of a good thing in this case. Even slicing a half-hour from the film would have worked wonders, giving “The Departed” Oscar winner at three hours still far more time to tell his story than most of his fellow filmmakers are accustomed to.

It’s easy to see why Scorsese wanted to keep the story of “The Irishman” intact, however. The performances are hard-hitting across the board, from De Niro (who, despite being attracted to garbage like “Bad Grandpa” over the years, is clearly in his element and is at his very best under the auspices of the director) and Pacino (in yet another jaw-dropping performance) to Pesci (who shows his range in a rare, subdued performance). Quite simply, it’s a thrill to watch all three iconic performers in the same film together, since let’s be honest, chances are few that we’ll see the trio in another film ever again. The cool thing is, we get to see them at different points of their lives via the wonders of de-aging CGI, which allowed for the actors to become their younger selves.

Scorsese also gets the best from those new to his movie universe, including Ray Romano in a pivotal role as Russell Bufalino’s cousin, Bill Bufalino, a persuasive mob attorney; Jack Huston as Hoffa’s White House foe, Attorney General Bobby Kennedy; and red hot comedian Sebastian Maniscalco in a deathly serious turn as reckless mob legend Joey Gallo (Maniscalco isn’t the only comedian who turns up in the film – Jim Norton is impressive in a short turn as the young version of insult comedy great Don Rickles).

While the acting core looms large in “The Irishman,” there are some name actors who appear whose characters turns are underwhelming. Harvey Keitel has barely a presence as Philadelphia crime family boss Angelo Bruno (save one great scene where he confronts Sheeran about his hitman side work), while the talents of Anna Paquin and Jesse Plemons feel wasted as they play the adult children of Sheeran and Hoffa, respectively.

Apart from the controversy over its promised wide-turned-limited theatrical release in the continuing pissing contest between the secretive Netflix and understandably upset theater owners in the run-up to awards season, “The Irishman” is bound to run into problems over the accuracy of its story. The depiction of Hoffa’s demise (much like Danny DeVito’s “Hoffa” starring Jack Nicholson) is speculative because it’s based on rumors rather than an actual confession, which will spell trouble for the film when it comes to the Oscars and those oh-so-ugly whisper campaigns from rival studios.

For a film, at least, the argument seems plausible, and its far different than the tales of his remains being buried in the end zone of Giants stadium. At least Scorsese has the opportunity to score big points for his running tally of mobsters who get dead throughout the film, as he displays in captions in no uncertain terms how each of them most often met a cruel demise. Whether it be Hoffa or lesser-known figures in the criminal underworld, crime is a dangerous game that definitely does not pay.

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
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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
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Streaming reviews: ‘The Mandalorian,’ ‘Lady and the Tramp’ from Disney+

Click below to hear Tim’s reviews of the new Disney+ releases “The Mandalorian” and the live-action “Lady and the Tramp” with Paul Douglas and Jordana Green on WCCO-AM. The segment is brought to you by Michael Bryant and Bradshaw & Bryant. The segment, which begins at 7:30 minute mark, also includes another segment where Tim discusses the streaming wars with Paul and Jordana.

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!

Interview: David Dastmalchian talks ‘Count Crowley: Reluctant Midnight Monster Hunter’

David Dastmalchian has no doubt been on the wildest ride of his career in the last couple of years, nabbing roles in such Marvel Cinematic Universe superhero movies as “Ant-Man” and “Ant-Man and the Wasp,” as well as TV series guest shots in DC’s “The Flash” and “Gotham.” Dastmalchian has also been busy creating independent cinema, writing and starring in such acclaimed indies as “Animals” and most recently, “All Creatures Here Below.”

Yet for all his success, Dastmalchian said in a recent interview that perhaps his most satisfying achievement to date is something that brings him back to the place where many great fantasy tales begin: the panels of a comic book as the writer of “Count Crowley: Reluctant Midnight Monster Hunter.”

“I was a comic book geek who grew up loving film, dreaming of being an actor, and then got to work with the best of the best with David Lynch and Christopher Nolan, getting to be in Peyton Reed’s ‘Ant-Man’ films and part of the MCU, getting to be in ‘Blade Runner: 2049’ and ‘Dune’ coming up and getting to know James Gunn — I’ve gotten to check so many boxes,” Dastmalchian enthused. “And yet, this comic book has truly been the most exciting thing I’ve done yet as a storyteller.”

Interview: David Dastmalchian talks ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp’

Interview: David Dastmalchian talks ‘Ant-Man’

New on comic book racks from Dark Horse Comics, “Count Crowley: Reluctant Midnight Monster Hunter” is a four-issue tale that’s rooted in Dastmalchian’s love of horror movies and the local, late-night TV host who presented them to him as a kid.

Dark Horse Comics/Persona PR

“I used to watch the ‘Creature Feature’ program in Kansas City growing up. It was ‘Crematia’s Friday Nightmare’ with Crematia Mortem, played by the incredible Roberta Solomon,” recalled Dastmalchian, a Kansas native. “She was our local horror hostess who introduced me to the incredible work of Lon Chaney in ‘Phantom of the Opera,’ Boris Karloff in ‘Frankenstein’ and of course, Bela Lugosi in ‘Dracula.’ Those were my early heroes.”

In Dastmalchian’s ‘Creature Feature’ world, however, “Count Crowley” delves more into the life of the host than the movies she presents. The main character is Jerri Bartman, a disgraced journalist who takes a job as a late-night horror show host named “Count Crowley” at a small TV station in her hometown, only to find out that monsters are real and she’s one of the few people who can stop them.

“Her dream is to be the hardest-hitting news journalist in the world in 1983, but life has hit her sideways and she is barely hanging on by a thread. She drinks from sunup to sundown and she has burned every bridge she has left to burn,” Dastmalchian said. “So, she begrudgingly puts on the make-up and the costume, and she introduces the late-night horror show and ends up being quite a hit. People love her bad attitude and her sassy style, but her first little taste of approval is short-lived because she finds out the Count Crowley she replaced wasn’t just a horror host. He was one of the last, great appointed monster hunters among humanity.”

However, hunting monsters isn’t easy, and Jerri needs to get sober to make things work. It’s a page that Dastmalchian has ripped out of the story of his own life, where he’s successfully battled addiction.

“This is something I’ve been wanting to write about for decades. Thinking about monsters and thinking how fun it would be if they had a secret identity,” Dastmalchian, 42, recalled. “Then I grew up, and I dealt with my battles with depression, anxiety and addiction, and I started to recognize that monsters are sometimes good and sometimes truly evil.”

Among the good ones, Dastmalchian said, are “those of us who I considered werewolves who got bit by the addiction disease and just couldn’t seem to control ourselves when the moon was out, but found help, healing and recovery in so many miraculous ways. I also think about the demons within that plague us, and the story really started to take shape.”

As for the evil monsters in this tale, they’re much closer to us than we think.

“I started to think about the news and information, and the monsters who live among us in our own society and thought, ‘How incredible would it be if all that we think we know is a lie?’ Like they’ve been spinning this fake information, and werewolves can’t be stopped with silver bullets and a stake can’t ever kill a vampire,” he said.

Dastmalchian said the year “Count Crowley” is set in is 1983. True, that was the year where he came of age as a boy reading comic books or started watching horror hosts on TV. But he selected that year more because it the dawning of a new age of media.

“The time was the beginning of cable, and I thought it would be pretty fascinating that the monsters were getting their eyes on the power of cable media and access to a wide audience,” Dastmalchian said.

Dastmalchian is no doubt in a unique position as a comic book author. In a way, he’s living a type of parallel universe, in that many of the films and TV series he’s had roles in over the past decade have originated from DC Comics and Marvel Comics.

“There’s been a wonderful renaissance in the last 10 years that I’ve been so fortunate enough to be a part of in a small, tangential way, like my role in Christopher Nolan’s ‘The Dark Knight,’ which I think reimagined comic book adaptation filmmaking,” Dastmalchian said. “Then, I became a part of the Marvel Cinematic Universe for the last five years with the ‘Ant-Man’ films and getting to become a part of cinema history with what (Marvel President) Kevin Feige and his entire army of artists accomplished. And now, I’m part of the Dark Horse family with ‘Count Crowley.’ It’s been pretty amazing for me as a consumer of this type of material.”

And with any luck, Dastmalchian’s life on the pages of “Count Crowley: Reluctant Midnight Monster Hunter” will continue on after its debut run.

“If it’s just these four issues that are being published, if this is what it ends up being, I’m just trying to be here in the moment, and being as appreciative and as grateful for it as I can be,” Dastmalchian said, humbly. “My dream for it, obviously, is to go many years into the future with many different stories and monsters that I want to explore and battle.”

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!