Film Review: WIDOWS (USA 2018) ***1/2

Widows Poster
Trailer

Set in contemporary Chicago, amidst a time of turmoil, four women with nothing in common except a debt left behind by their dead husbands’ criminal activities, take fate into their own hands, and conspire to forge a future on their own terms.

Director:

Steve McQueen

Writers:

Gillian Flynn (screenplay by), Steve McQueen (screenplay by) | 1 more credit »

Drama heavyweight director of critical hits like HUNGER and 12 YEARS A SLAVE attempts an action packed pyro-technics thriller WIDOWS with quite an impressive cast of heavyweights headed by Viola Davis.

WIDOWS is that rare action movie centring on women proving that they too can carry an action film.  The script is by GONE GIRL author Gillian Flynn.

Veronica (Davis) lives an idyllic life in Chicago, ensconced in the loving arms of her husband, Rawlins (Liam Neeson), and in their luxurious condo.  But Rawlins bought that cushy life robbing people, unknown to Veronica, a teacher in the Chicago education system.  (There is no scene of Veronica at her work.)   When a job with his gang goes fatally wrong, Veronica’s life falls to pieces.  With a local crime lord (Brian Tyree Henry) and his muscle (Daniel Kaluuya) pressing her to pay Rawlins’s $2 million debt,  Veronica realizes her late husband’s shady business sees only one option: round up the three other women who had slept for years next to these seasoned criminals, and make a plan left by her husband to win their lives back.  There is also a side plot involving the crime lord running for office against another crooked white politician Tom Mulligan (Colin Farrell).  

The film’s most interesting character is Tom Mulligan.  Tom exerts a power both within and beyond the law, pushed by his father (Robert Duvall).  Tom appears to be a worthy candidate but deep inside, he is fed up of the father’s dynasty in Chicago and wants out.  It is not surprising that the film is at its most interesting when McQueen deals with the drama rather than the action as in the film’s best scene – the confrontation between Farrell and Duvall.

To make the heist film more personal, the film interweaves the lives and hence, problems of the 4 widows that undertake the heist.  Each have their own burdens.  The other three are played by Michelle Rodriguez, Cynthia Erivo, and Elizabeth Debicki all of whom shine in their roles.

McQueen has achieved the rare feat of being able to elicit unforgettable performances – not from a  few but from his entire cast.  The best two performances belong to Farrell who is aided by the most intriguing written character and GET OUT’s immediately recognizable Daniel Kaluuya who demonstrates how smooth violence can be executed.

As this is McQueen’s first action flick, one can see him trying too hard at times.  The romantic scenes are a bit too livid for comfort, all the kissing scenes involving the tongue.  This results in the kissing scene (mixed race) between Viola Davis and Liam Neeson that would make quite a few quite uncomfortable.  Credit for trying.

As a thriller, WIDOWS contains quite a few plot twists.  Well written and inserted into the storyline, they serve to enrich the drama rather than just being there for the sole purpose of surprise, a tactic that seems now too common in most Hollywood thrillers.

WIDOWS premiered successfully at the Toronto International Film Festival to general favourable reviews.  WIDOWS should not only please McQueen’s fan base but extend his career into the Hollywood mainstream.

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nN2yBBSRC78

Film Review: BREATH (Australia 2017)

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Breath Poster
Trailer

Based on Tim Winton’s award-winning and international bestselling novel set in mid-70s coastal Australia. Two teenage boys, hungry for discovery, form an unlikely friendship with a …See full summary »

Director:

Simon Baker

Writers:

Gerard Lee (adapted screenplay), Simon Baker (adapted screenplay) |2 more credits »

 

BREATH is Australian actor Simon Baker’s directorial debut based on the multi-award winning author Tim Winton’s novel of the same name.  Besides directing, maker also shares producing and co-writing credit with Winton.

The film is set in the 1970s and two teenage boys form a connection with an older surfer, Sando played by Baker himself.  The boys Pikelet (Samson Coulter) and Loonie (Ben Spence) have grown up in a small western Australian town and through surfing meets up with Sando, who challenges them to take greater and more dangerous risks.

BREATH shows an all white world where no Aborigines or other minorities appear.  The Australians on display are pure white, golden blonde hair engaging in a general all white male sport.   Baker’s film contains repeated explicitly graphic sex scenes with Pikelet and Sando’s girlfriend Eva (Elizabeth Debicki) once  Sando has abandoned them.  The film and novel title BREATH comes from a kinky sex play the two indulge in.  But Samson is only 14, the age he admits when asked at the beginning of the film.  What is displayed on screen various times amounts to accepted pedophilia  The film runs into problems in the second half once Sando is gone from the picture.  Baker’s film lacks the spark it had and slags towards the end.

Understandably, the film’s best moments are the surfing segments, even when the philosophy of the sport is explained.  “Paddle, turn and commit, without a moment of doubt.”  The science of the sport is also explained at one point by Sando.  He explains the contiental shelf, the girth and the pursuit of the right wave.  At best, both the fear and exhilaration of the sport are demonstrated simultaneously.

The two young actors Coulter and Spence are real finds and make the movie.  Veteran Australian actor Richard Roxburgh  has a small role as Mr. Pike, the father.

The surf scenes are nothing short of stunning, credit to cinematographers Marden Dean and Rick Rifici.  One wonders how the camera gets so close to capturing the action, with the smoothness of the waves.  The audiences gets to see the surfers paddling out into the sea, the wave slowly forming and the surfers standing up on their boards, as the wave grows gigantic behind them.  These magnificent scenes create a high not only for the surfers but for the audience as well.  The stung landscapes are also on display in the film – the magnificent cliffs, rocks, sea and vegetation.

The film is tied together by the voiceover from start to end, supposedly the adult voice of Pikelet, bringing meaning to the story.  The film is basically the coming-of-age story of Pikelet.  His friendship with the rather uncontrollable wild-card, Loonie is also given due importance.

BREATH ends up an occasionally uplifting though flawed film about boyhood in an all white male surf setting.  At the start of the film, surf is described by the voiceover as beautiful, pointless and elegant.  The film BREATH can certainly described using the same three terms.

Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=17M7kcG0SBQ

 

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