I consider myself a Fangirl. What does that mean, you ask? A "fanboy" in the most common understanding is a hardcore fan of 'genre' based entertainment in particular. In my case - science-fiction and comic book based movies and television. Because I'm a chick - it's fangirl, not fanboy. There you have it! I am a big movie fan, however, not necessarily a 'film' fan. And now - I have the forum to present my opinions to the public! These will mainly be movie reviews -that will always be my opinion - repeat OPINION. Just what I think, and in no way do I present my opinion as fact. I hope you enjoy and maybe it will help you decide what to see at the movie theater this weekend!
The John Kelly or John Clark character has shown up in some of
the versions of Jack Ryan stories over the years. Willem Dafoe played him in Clear and Present
Danger. Without Remorse tells the story of how he came to join the CIA. And his
continuing adventures will apparently be told in Rainbow Six, which I can only
assume is upcoming. In the meantime, you can catch this movie on Amazon Prime.
Without Remorse begins with Kelly and his team of Navy Seals
completing a mission overseas with some shady intel and less than clear
direction from CIA operative Robert Ritter.Upon returning home, Kelly learns that his team is being eliminated one
member at a time. The killers get to his home and while they fail to take him
out completely, they do eliminate his pregnant wife.Blinded with fury and rage, and operating
without any remorse, Kelly starts taking revenge.
He ends up in prison due to setting a guy on fire in a car
but is broken out by the CIA to team up with Ritter and Karen Greer again to
head oversees and take out the threat in Russia that may or may not be causing
the issue.
The movie is directed by Stefano Sollima and the action is
certainly constant, but bewildering. Like most Clancy-based pieces, it is
military weaponry heavy with so much gunfire that I found myself completely tuning
out.That is one disadvantage to
streaming a movie at home. In the theater, even if my attention began to wane I
would still be sitting there – however, at home I can pick up my phone or
tablet and start putzing around with any little distraction.If you like other Clancy-style military
action pieces, you will like this. If not, you (like me) will find is
overbearing and unengaging.
The cast is certainly wonderful – Michael B. Jordan is
fantastic as Kelly and once he loses everything you completely believe that he
will do whatever it takes to get revenge, even if it means losing himself along
the way.
Jodie Turner-Smith is perfectly still as Karen Greer and it
was interesting to picture the relationship between her and Wendell Pierce’s
Greer over on the Krasinski Jack Ryan. She is trying to lead the team while
still looking out for Kelly when possible.
Jamie Bell is an interesting choice as Ritter, he seems so
clearly the villain that when it is revealed he is not, I was a bit skeptical.
Guy Pearce on the other hand, is so clearly bad he was only missing a moustache
to twirl.
I was pretty excited to see both Cam Gigandet and Luke
Mitchell as members of Kelly’s team in the beginning. Of course, they get
eliminated pretty quickly, so no need to get attached there.
Brett Gelman of all people shows up as Viktor Rykov to hammer
home the point that Kelly really has no clue who is in charge, what their plan
is, or how many people are pawns in their game.
Overall, the movie is fine and if you like this type of
thing, you’ll like this.I really did
not care for it and was surprised by that. Typically Michael B. Jordan is charismatic
enough to bring me in to something I would otherwise not like, but here he
plays Kelly so stoic and grief-furious (rightfully so) that it felt a little closed
off from the audience. I also have gotten
to the point where I just shut down at this level of gun noise and violence.I am curious to see if they make Rainbow Six
and if it is similar or more spying less
shooting.
Be sure to listen to me and fellow LAMBs discuss this flick on the LAMBCast: https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/lambcast/episodes/2021-05-04T11_49_57-07_00
Now that I am fully vaccinated, I was lucky enough to see
the new Mortal Kombat in my local theater which has newprocedures to ensure the safest experience,
and I am very grateful!It also dropped
on HBO Max the same day, which I saw as a huge benefit. After watching the
movie in the theater, I immediately came home and rewatched several bits of it
on HBO Max.
The Mortal Kombat video game debuted in arcades in 1992 as a
simple player vs. player button-smashing fighting game with unnecessary Ks replacing Cs. Sure, the characters had
special moves, but like many other fans, I played by hitting as many buttons as
possible as fast as possible. I did stumble across Scorpion’s fatality and have
never forgotten how to pull that off on MK1.
My family played MK1 and MK2 on our Commodore 64. Since then, there have been nearly countless
versions of the games. My favorites are the ones with the largest assortment of
characters to choose from, which includes MK Trilogy for the PS1, Armageddon on
the PS2, and several of the reboots for PS3 and PS4. Inevitably, there will be another game for
PS5 any day now.
With the popularity of the game, the first Mortal Kombat
movie was released in 1995 and is one of my favorites. It was directed by Paul W.S. Anderson and
features several martial artists and camera work that shows the fights from a
distance so that you can appreciate their skill – something I continue to look
for in action movies with a lot of hand to hand combat. It was followed by a sequel so bad it is not
worth mentioning. Since then, there have been a couple of live-action shows and
one animated movie, but this reboot is the first one that stays true to the
game and honors the fans in the best way possible.
The premise of Mortal Kombat is that there are various
realms sending their best fighters to a once-a-generation tournament. If any
realm loses 10 in a row, the winning realm can invade a losing realm. In this movie, we begin generations ago in
feudal Japan and witness the destruction of Hanzo Hashashi and his family in
the Shirai Ryu clan at the hands of Bi-Han and his Lin Kuei clan. I absolutely
loved that Bi-Han, who will become Sub Zero, is speaking Chinese and that
Hanzo, who will become Scorpion, is speaking Japanese. These are the two core characters from every
game back to 1992, and beginning the movie with an incredible fight between
them feels appropriate.
Jumping forward, we are introduced to MMA fighter Cole
Young, his wife and daughter, and his MK Dragon-shaped birthmark. Jackson Briggs visits him to comment on the
birthmark, just in time to save Cole and his family from Sub Zero by telling
them to find Sonya Blade, but lose his arms in the process, which is not a surprise
to anyone familiar with the games. At
this point, let me mention that the movie sticks to the brutal violence of
recent versions of the game and is rated R for a reason. Why there were so many
kids in my showing is inexplicable.
Young meets up with Blade and meets Kano and gets in a fight
with Reptile. Sonya tells Cole about the tournament because she has learned
about it through research and tracking down ‘champions’ chosen to fight. The three of them head to Raiden’s temple
where they meet Lui Kang and Kung Lao to begin their training. Meanwhile, the Outworld sorcerer Shang Tsung
is gathering champions of his own and has decided to buck the rules and kill
the Earthrealm champions before the tournament even starts – winning by
default. Once you get a look at Outworld, you understand why, it is a bit of a
mess. Cole has to find his true fighting
spirit – his ‘arcana’ (a neat way of explaining why the kombatants have supernatural
powers) and defend himself, his family, and his friends. Basically – hijinks ensue.
The movie is directed by Simon McQuoid, and while the fight
scenes are great, I would have loved even more of them. The hand-to-hand combat
is wonderful and because this is a pre-tournament movie, the careful set up of
each fight individually from the 1995 version is not present here. Basically,
everyone is fighting for their lives. You can tell that the director, writer,
and cast all have a respect if not raging fandom for the games and first movie.
There are plenty of fan-service moments, from trick moves to fatalities, to
quips and bits. Personally, I really
felt the scene where Lui Kang repeatedly uses a leg sweep on Kano multiple
times in a row during training - having lost many a fight to someone who
figured out that one button movement.
Despite striving for brutal violence in some of the finishing moves, the
tone still manages to balance the fighting with some fun, and the movie feels
like the perfect set up to a new franchise. The cast is wonderful and beautifully
inclusive.
Lewis Tan was fantastic in both Into the Badlands and Wu Assassins
(both currently on Netflix). While the addition of Cole Young felt a little
strange in an IP that has dozens of characters available (in case you are curious,
here’s the full list of existing karacters https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Mortal_Kombat_characters),
he was the audience ‘in’ to this fantastical world. Everyone else around him
got to be big and weird, so he has to be the ‘straight man’. Hopefully he gets
to cut a little lose in the sequel.
Jessica McNamee as Sonya Blade and Mechad Brooks as Jax are
fantastic and feel true to the games. Josh Lawson as Kano was fantastically
irritating – exactly as he should be. His interactions with Kabal were spectacular.
Who knew Kabal would be one of my favorite characters in the movie?
Joe Taslim as Sub Zero and Hiroyuki Sanada as Scorpion gave
both characters depths and charisma. I loved their fight before they become the
characters and loved the fight in full costume once they are fully immersed.
Tadanobu Asano as Lord Raiden and Chin Han as Shang Tsung
get to quip at each other while each trying to give their team the edge. I
loved Raiden’s lightning effect but wanted a little more from Shang Tsung’s
soul-sucking effects. Also, since Cary Tagawa is one of my favorite parts of the
95 movie, nothing Chin Han did for me for going to feel right – not his fault.
It did feel strange to have a Mortal Kombat movie where Lui
Kang was not the central focus, but again, he may move more central in the
sequel. I hope so, because Ludi Lin was very interesting and I wanted to see
more of him. I felt like Max Huang’s Kung Lao was the one character that felt
plucked directly out of the game and plopped on screen between the costume and
the moves. Also – I enjoyed his level of snarkiness.
I do want to mention Sisi Stringer as Mileena, because
Mileena has always been one of my favorite characters from the games. I do wish
she was wearing a mask until the reveal of her teeth, but hey – I’ll take it. Mel
Jarnson briefly appears as Nitara and Shang Tsung’s obsession with her was more
than a little creepy. Nathan Jones
played Reiko as he continues to pop up when I least expect him.
Overall, I found the movie to be really fun and very
entertaining. The fights were great and the characters engaging. It was a
little strange that the entire thing is pre-tournament, but that really sets up
some options for a sequel to be very tournament heavy. I cannot wait to see
additional characters in sequels (Baraka, Jade, hell – even D’Vorah). I was disappointed
that Goro had no lines, the Goro puppet dining with Kano was one of my favorite
bits from the 95 movie. I also would
have liked some of the kostumes to be a little more accurate to the game,
basically a little more kolorful. Sub Zero had barely any blue in his outfit,
and Mileena was not wearing any purple. But again, that’s a minor komplaint.
9 out of 10.
Also – I’ve said it before, and I will say it again, if you
have not activated the Mortal Kombat skill on your Amazon Alexa, you should. It
is very fun!
Netflix continues to offer new movies on the regular. A few
weeks ago, they released Thunder Force, which the perfect balm while trying to
wade through the swamp of depressing Oscar movies.
The movie takes place in a world where an event caused some
to be gifted with super powers, but for whatever reason, only enhanced those
that were already bad - essentially creating a ton of super villains and no
heroes. Emily Stanton’s parents were
scientists killed by one of these ‘miscreants.’
Her best friend, Lydia Berman, takes her in. Lydia becomes obsessed with
becoming a genetic scientist herself, intent on finding a way to stop
miscreants and find justice for her parents.
Her studiousness clashes with Lydia’s carelessness and the girls have a
falling out near the end of high school.
Years later, Emily’s scientific company is growing, and
Lydia reaches out to ask her to come to a reunion. Lydia stops by Emily’s office to see her, and
accidentally wanders into one of Lydia’s experiments, ending up with super
strength. Emily takes the second half, resulting in invisibility. Together, the
two team up to stop evil-doers and bring down The King – a local villain. Hijinks ensue.
Honestly, regardless of the plot, you are watching this to
see Spencer and McCarthy have a good time together in some insane situations. The two have been friends for more than 20
years, and it lends a genuineness to the friendship in the movie. Even with as
irritated as Emily is with Lydia, they know they have each other’s support. Ben
Falcone (Mr. McCarthy) has directed this as he has done many of McCarthy’s
other movies. He gives her the leeway to slide into the crazy, which is what
she does best, but I did want the movie to commit to going a little farther
into the silly. At some points, it almost takes itself too seriously.
McCarthy and Spencer are delightful together and again, the real
friendship shows in the on-screen friendship. They work really hard, but I did
want more full-out belly laugh moments. Bits about the cool car being impractical and
the fact that they could not wash the suits were great. The training sequences
were also fun, but the movie could have leaned into a few more scenes of them building
their team skills and doing some general around-town hero-ing before they immediately
shifty to fighting their big bad.
Bobby Cannvale is dependable as always as the King, and I
enjoy him opposite McCarthy. Pom Klementieff gets to ‘twist her mustache’ as relentless
miscreant Laser.
Melissa Leo is
completely unused as Emily’s head of security, and Kevin Dunn continues to be
reliable as a local businessman. I
really enjoyed Taylor Mosby as Tracy, Emily’s daughter. She was smart, funny,
and determined to help even when told to stay out of it.
The true gem of the movie is Jason Bateman as Jerry the
Crab. Bateman in a comedy is typically gold and he absolutely stole each scene
he was in. Particularly when he scooted away sideways. Also – he has mastered
the mid-sentence wink better than any other actor.
Overall the movie is certainly fun but had the potential to
be truly hilarious. I enjoyed it, and it
is a great streaming watch. Again, I found myself wondering if I would have
liked it as much if I had paid to see it in a theater, but at home with a big bowl
of popcorn, it’s just right.
6 out of 10 - taking away extra points for the raw chicken
eating scenes – even if it is specially prepared slices of pear, which I know –
it still is really gross.
The Academy Award for Visual Effects (VFX) is awarded to the movie
and crew the Academy feels have done the best job that year of creating environments
and creatures through computer animation (visual effects) and practical effects
like puppets and sculptures (special effects).I enjoy this category because it honors one of the unsung jobs on a film
that can have incredible impact on the overall finished product.These are the folks working behind the scenes
to make sure the final movie feels seamless. This year, there are five
nominees.
Love and
Monsters (Matt Sloan, Genevieve Camilleri, Matt Everitt, Brian Cox)
This is the simple story of a young man in a
post-apocalyptic world making his way from one compound to another to join his
high school girlfriend through fields of monsters. The impressive effects in
this movie include creating an apocalypse, world-building, a robot, and lots of
monsters.
In a movie with ‘monsters’ in the title, of course the monsters
have to be impressive.The movie feels
inspired by classic Harryhausen effects with giant bugs and creepy
crawlers.The combination of computer
and practical effects make the finished product visually stunning.Currently, you can rent Love and Monsters on
Amazon Prime for $4.99.
The Midnight
Sky (Matthew Kasmir, Christopher Lawrence, Max Solomon, David Watkins)
The Midnight Sky is another post-apocalyptic movie that follows
Augustine, a scientist, as he tries to stop a group of astronauts from
returning to earth.Augustine is dying
of terminal cancer and he sets out to reach a weather station to communicate
with the crew of the Aether to warn them that Earth is not habitable.
The effects here are used to
create the landscape of a new world that the Aether discovers, the look and
feel of the Aether as it travels through space, and various space-travel and
decimated earth radioactive-ice storm scenes. The team created computer facial replacements
for scenes of astronauts in space.Industrial Light & Magic helped by using a smaller version of the
“Volume” used for The Mandalorian for Clooney’s Artic observatory and ice
storms. You can currently stream The Midnight Sky on Netflix.
Mulan
(Sean Fade, Anders Langlands, Seth Maury, Steven Ingram)
Disney was nominated in this category for the Lion King remake last year
and this year the Mulan live-action version got a nomination.The team at Weta Digital helped to create the
Imperial City based on actual historical maps and architecture.Filling in crowd scenes with computer
generated people helped add scale to the feature.
The movie looks amazing, the
battle sequences are astounding and the city expansive. Finding a smooth way to integrate computer
enhancements into battle sequences without them looking cartoony is
tricky.Digital extras are one of the
best advancements of CGI technology and can really provide scope without hiring
hundreds of extras. Weta refined their digital extras for this movie, creating
more realistic looking crowds. You can stream Mulan on Disney+.
The
One and Only Ivan (Nick Davis, Greg Fisher, Ben Jones, Santiago Colomo Martinez)
The One and Only Ivan brings to life a popular children’s book. It tells
the story of a silverback gorilla in captivity who promises to do what he can
to help free a baby elephant. Each of the animals in the movie is created with
computer effects. Ivan is done through performance capture.
Photorealistic animals are always
impressive, and difficult. They need to look realistic but still be able to
convey emotion so that the audience connects with them. The crew from MPC Film
was able to create a digital gorilla that can still give an emotional
performance to bring the audience with him on his quest for freedom.You can stream this movie on Disney+.
Tenet
(Andrew Jackson, David Lee, Andrew Lockley, Scott Fisher)
Tenet tells the story of a ‘protagonist’ as he joins a group of
international agents who are working to stop an impending global war by
inverting time.Yes, inverting time –
not time traveling, as they explain in the movie. But that’s about all the
explanation you get. You really do have to turn off your brain and just enjoy
the crazy effects.
Director Christopher Nolan used few
computer effects, instead shooting most of the effects in reverse and combining
the forward and backward action together to create the dizzying action
sequences. While the story may be confusing, the fights are fantastic, and the
movie almost requires multiple viewings to truly appreciate the high level of
artistic crazy at work. The team at DNEG had to invent some new techniques to
pull of the execution of the inverted sequences. Also, incredible stunt work
across the board. You can currently rent Tenet on Amazon Prime for $5.99.
Who
Should Win:
Admittedly, I have not seen many of
the nominees this year. This is strange as typically this is the category that
features movies I have seen willingly, but last year was strange all around. I
did manage to see Tenet in the theater and the effects are fantastic – mainly
because the majority are practical and layered together beautifully and the
stunt work is absolutely incredible. That is the movie that gets my vote. JDW balancing that espresso cup with one hand
is not an effect, he managed that skill on his own.
Who Will Win:
There does not seem to be a front
runner this year and the internet seems to think that The Midnight Sky and
Tenet are neck and neck.The Academy
does tend to favor the effects that are the least showy – those that recreate
historical locations and events rather than creating new and fantastical
situations. None of the movies this year are historical dramas, but Mulan is
the closest in that area. But even with the historical touches,I do not think that will win, I think that
Tenet will pull it out this year.
We have hit the first big budget summer-type blockbuster of
the year – Godzilla vs. Kong dropped on HBOMax the same day it debuted at
theaters. The two first met 58 years ago
in King Kong vs. Godzilla from 1963.
I
watched this on HBOMax, but my second vaccine shot is scheduled in a week, so I
hope to be able to see it in the theater too as it truly is a big-screen flick.
This is the fourth entry in the recent Monsterverse after
Godzilla (2014), Kong: Skull Island (2017), and Godzilla: King of the Monsters
(2019). After multiple teases in the
previous movies, here we finally see Kong square off with Godzilla. The opening
credit sequence summarizes all the previous movies in a literal
tournament-style bracket until we are left with the two alpha titans, Kong and
Godzilla.
Godzilla has been dominating his movies, emerging as an
alpha titan that has defended most of humankind against worse titans, most
notably, King Ghidorah and his three heads.
Kong was last seen wandering around his own island in the 70s after squishing
Sam Jackson. It was pointed out in that
movie that he was still growing. This movie opens on Kong growing increasingly
annoyed with the Monarch crew observing him on Skull Island Truman
Show-style. The observation team is growing
increasingly concerned about relocating Kong as a storm has rendered the island nearly inhospitable, wiping out the native humans save one. Meanwhile, Godzilla has been growing
increasingly aggressive against various locations of the tech company Apex. Apex has grown increasingly worried about humanity surviving titan attacks.
The human folks in the movie include some from previous
movies and some new ones. Like the
previous movies, there are far too many human characters. Ilene Andrews has been leading up the Kong
observation team with a little girl named Jia, the last of the humans from the
island. Ren Serizawa is working at Apex for Walter Simmons on a project to
defend against rogue titans and Simmons sends his daughter Maia to gather a new
energy source with Dr. Nathan Lind from the 'hollow earth' hidden land in the center of the planet. They team up with Dr. Andrews hoping that Kong can not only lead them to hollow earth, but that he will be safe there instead of his crumbling island.
Conspiracy theory podcast host Bernie Hayes believes Apex is up
to no good and has teamed up with Madison Russell and her friend Josh
Valentine. Madison checks in briefly with her father Mark, who seems to still
be working with Monarch after the whole situation with her mother creating the
‘orca’ in the last movie. All those
various storylines culminate in a climax of epic proportions.
The movie is directed by Adam Wingard and comes in just
under two hours, which is where it should be. The action is epic and intense,
the Hollow Earth scenes are lovely – I particularly enjoyed the bit where Kong
goes to the highest mountain point and jumps through the gravity inversion to
the land above. Most importantly, the
movie definitely delivers on the Godzilla – Kong fights. There are three major
fight sequences, all of which are fantastic.
There are far too many humans, and it is mystifying why
so many of them are new that could have been characters from previous
films recurring.
Rebecca Hall’s character of Ilene Andrews is one of the
unnecessary additions. Why was that not Ziyi Zhang’s character from the previous
movie? She apparently was supposed to be in this be was cut. I did enjoy Kaylee
Hottle as Jia who is the little girl who humanizes Kong through her connection
and communication.
Alexander Skarsgard’s Nathan Lind is equally puzzling as
Bradley Whitford’s character from the previous movie was the one who brought up
the Hollow Earth theory.
Millie Bobby Brown and Kyle Chandler as the Russells provide
a link to the previous movie, but both have very little to do here. Pairing
Brown with Julian Dennison and Brian Tyree Henry does provide some comedy relief,
but they storyline for those three is also unnecessary. They learn that Apex is
up to no good, but any one of the other multiple characters could have
discovered that too. Dennison is the
bright point of the movie and has a natural comedic sense.
In terms of the ‘villains’, Demian Bichir as Simmons is
chewing all the scenery and chewing his moustache, which is on tone for this
movie, but also could have been Charles Dance from the epilogue of the previous
film, since the Ghidorah skull he was shown collecting is a key plot point for
Simmons. His daughter Maia played by Eiza Gonzalez has nothing to do but go with the Hollow Earth expedition and be a jerk about everything.
Shun
Oguri playing Ren Serizawa is the son of Ken Watanabe’s character from the two
previous Godzilla movies but that was not mentioned at all. Honestly, you could have removed both Simmons’s
and let Oguri’s Serizawa cover all of that ground.
Also – Lance Reddick and Chris Chalk are both in this, just
enough to get you excited that they are there, but then disappear so quickly
that you almost feel like you hallucinated both. And Jessica Henwick was
apparently cast but then cut.
Despite the disconnect with the majority of the human
characters, the true stars are Kong and Godzilla, although I will say this felt
like a Kong movie with Godzilla featuring.Kong would have qualified for Best Actor nominations and Godzilla for
Best Supporting, if that clarifies the roles. Appropriate, since Godzilla had
two previous films in this franchise and Kong only one. Yes, of course they are
both heroes, so they inevitably team up to tackle something worse. And while
that is predictable, that is exactly what you want from this movie. Kong gets
the most character development of any character – human or titan – in this
movie. The animators do an incredible job of illustrating a full range of
emotions across his face. His connection and communication with Jia enhances his
‘humanity’. Seeing him in chains is always painful and in this movie,
particularly devastating since he could tell Jia how scared and upset he
was.
Godzilla, on the other hand, continues to be doing his best to
save humanity from both themselves and everything else. In this movie, he seems to have a Danny
Glover quality – definitely too old for this shit but taking up the fight when
needed. He goes after Kong initially
because there can be only one Alpha, and he’s it. He keeps going after Apex bases because he knows
what they are creating is bad news. Once he realizes he is in over his head, he
reluctantly teams up with Kong save the day and quietly swims off into the
sunset after acknowledging that maybe there can be two alphas at the same time.
He is big and beautiful and will always be my favorite titan.
Overall, this movie is exactly what we needed at this point.
Big, loud, splashy, and over the top. It delivers what it promises and despite
having too many humans (my standard complaint for titan-based Monsterverse
movies) it is a swift and enjoyable watch. If you are able to safely see it in
a theater – do it.
Continuing to find movies from home, I watched Moxie, a new
Netflix release.
Moxie is based on the YA book from 2015. The movie tells the
story of a high schooler named Vivian who has coasted through high school to
date with her best friend Claudia, ignoring the cloud of sexism and misogyny
that hangs over the school.She meets a new
student, Lucy, who is determined to not ignore what is happening and instead
call attention to it and get it corrected.Vivian is inspired by her other’s old memorabilia to create a ‘zine’
called Moxie and distributed it in the school. Along the way, she collects a
group of new friends, gets friendly with the right guy, and starts a rebellion.
Amy Poehler directed the movie and manages to find a perfect
balance between fun entertainment and powerful heart. I certainly can relate to
the star of the football team getting away with anything, and I am sure most
people in this country have similar high school memories. The group that Vivian
accidentally pulls together include a variety of girls, all upset for various
justifiable reasons. The movie tackles dress code issues, privilege issues, and
the frustration of wanting to change a system that prefers to be ignored.
Hadley Robinson gives Vivian the all-in emotional
instability of a high school girl and the friendship between her and Lauren
Tsai’s Claudia feels genuine and lasting, even when encountering serious bumps.
I really appreciated Nico Hiraga as Seth, a kid Vivian has
known forever but just recently had the growth spurt into hotness. His character is important because he
completely supports what the girls are doing and the necessity of the message,
without any ulterior motive. He is an ally and for some reason that felt pleasantly
unusual to see in a movie like this. It would have been easy to portray all the
guys as sexist idiots, but this helps point out that the sexists are actually
the smaller group, just louder and more privileged. He also gets to call Vivian out on some of her teen girl angst and misplaced anger.
Alycia Pascual-Pena plays Lucy and is really key as the girl
who will not simply accept the status quo – calling out the injustice when she
sees it. She is the actual hero of the story.
Patrick Schwarzenegger plays the head football idiot very
well.
The rest of the cast, including Sabrina Haskett, Sydney
Park, Joshua Walker, Anjelika Washington, Josie Totah, and Emily Hopper are
really well-rounded and provide more depth than your average high-school movie.
Each one get just enough development to enhance the story.
Overall, the movie is very good and was definitely a
surprise for me. This movie was smarter and funnier than I was expected. It is
certainly worth watching and recommending to any high schoolers you know. Now, I will say that I did find it problematic
to have a white lead suddenly become a hero when watching the plight of a woman
of color and not making any obvious choices to support that classmate – instead
choosing to publish an anonymous zine. Vivian has been quietly ignoring all
this behavior for years, and it takes Lucy standing up to it to spur her to
action. Lucy does get to be a leader, but because the movie focuses on Vivian,
it can feel uncomfortable in some scenes. There is a moment when Claudia points
out to Vivian that her white privilege allows her to start this rebellion without
having to think about the consequences as much as some of her non-white
classmates. That could have been explored a bit more but gets glossed over. I
still really enjoyed the movie – but that did add an interesting layer that
left a little to be desired.