This is one of the best Marvel movies, along with Thor: Ragnarok. Huh! Marvel gave a couple hundred million dollars to two directors of color and let them tell their stories as they saw fit! Who da'thunk it?

Shuri. Ah, Shuri. I hope there's one scene in Avengers: Infinity War where Shuri goes head-to-head with Tony Stark and outthinks/outtechno-fies his ass.

Kee-ripes, will we ever get away from the overly CGI'd third act? Wonder Woman also fell prey to this, so it's not just a Marvel problem. It makes me appreciate the mostly practical effects of Mad Max: Fury Road even more.

However overly CGI'd, Black Panther's third act was pretty badass. General Okoye stopping the charging battle rhino was alone worth the price of admission. Not to mention Daniel Kaluuya's W'tabi asking her if she would kill her love, and her leveling that vibranium-tipped spear on him and replying, "For Wakanda? Without question."

Even though this is ostensibly a story about Chadwick Boseman's T'challa, in a lot of ways Lupita Nyongo's Nakia was its heart. She sees, before her king does, that Wakanda has a responsibility to humanity, and must begin to share its technology and knowledge with the outside world. (And, of course, this will be just in time, with Thanos barrelling towards Earth.)

This is a movie with a lot to say, and most of it is bound up in the ultimately tragic figure of Michael B. Jordan's Killmonger. His methods were atrocious, and he was not a nice guy and wasn't meant to be, but damn, he still had a point. Marvel had better ramp up the writing and motivations of all its villains henceforth.

If any superhero movie has a chance to win the Best Picture Oscar, I think it's this one. We'll have to see what happens after The Shape of Water's breakthrough.
 
 
resurgence1

Rating: One star, for pointlessness and general stupidity

Welp.

Just got back from seeing Independence Day: Resurgence.

Extremely Short Review: AAUUGH KILL ME NOW

One-sentence review: Do not go see this if you have any affection at all for the original, which was freaking Shakespeare in the Park compared to this bloated, technobabble-stuffed, heartless mess.
Warning: Ranty Mc Rantface Follows )

*headdesk*headdesk*headdesk*

Unless you're really fond of flushing your money down the toilet, folks, I wouldn't waste my time.

thumb-down-smiley
Oh dear Dogg. Tell us how you really feel, Bob.

(Warning: SERIOUSLY not safe for work. But I laughed till I cried.)


_____
mad max

Yes, I know I'm late to this party. But what a helluva ride.

Actually, I enjoyed going into the movie having read all the spoilers. I knew what was going to happen, whose story is being told (hint: it's not Max's, as the poster above clearly illustrates. This was also signaled by the onscreen credits: Tom Hardy's and Charlize Theron's names appear together, but her name is higher than his. I guess this is part of why certain Mens' Rights Activists went apeshit), which specific points of awesomeness to look out for (re: the Vuvalini--I wish George Miller had gone all the way and called them the Vulvalini), and also what small character-building moments were to be found. There were quite a few of them for such a slam-bang action picture, particularly in the quiet middle section. I guess for the screenwriter-literate (which I'm not) that would be the second act. It was certainly a needed breather in between the parts that were cranked up to (h/t Spinal Tap) one hundred and eleven.

Seriously, this is the best freaking movie I have seen in years. I'll get it when it comes out on Blu-Ray, of course, but this really is a film that deserves to be seen on the big screen. This is due in no small part to the stellar editing of Margaret Sixel. (Here's a fascinating article about this. I don't expect either Margaret Sixel or Charlize Theron to be nominated for Oscars, but they effing well deserve to be.) With so many action movies, you can't keep up with what the hell is going on. I had no problems with this one.

Imperator Furiosa is, of course, a character for the ages, right up there with Ellen Ripley and Sarah Connor. There have been many many articles analyzing the film's feminist underpinnings, so I'm not going to go into detail when other people have said it so much better. I would like to make note of my personal "Fuck Yeah!" moment though:

The Vulva Vuvalini. Furiosa's original tribe, the one she was taken from as a child, and the half-remembered "Green Place" she is trying to get back to with the Wives.

This is a tribe of older women. Older women onscreen Doing Stuff and Being Heroes, not being shunted off to the side because they're not fuckable any more. Older women with gray hair and beautiful wrinkled faces, faces that spoke of decades successfully surviving in this horrifying new world, fighting and shooting and riding, and ultimately many of them giving their lives to see Max, Furiosa, and the Wives to safety.

I don't know if y'all have any idea how rare that is, how unexpected, and how lovely. Of course I knew about it from reading all the spoilers, but it still made me cry when they rode their motorcycles down the sand dunes to meet Furiosa. And the Keeper of the Seeds--I want an entire movie about her, dammit.

I liked the earlier movies (of course this was before Mel Gibson went nuts), with Thunderdome being my favorite of the three. Because of Tina Turner, naturally. Aunty Entity would be quite proud of Furiosa, I think. I also think that in many ways, none of which will be recognized come Academy Award time, this is George Miller's masterpiece.
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November 2020

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Words To Live By

There is no frigate like a book to take us lands away. ~Emily Dickinson

Being a writer is a very peculiar sort of a job: it’s always you versus a blank sheet of paper (or a blank screen) and quite often the blank piece of paper wins. ~Neil Gaiman

Of course I am not worried about intimidating men. The type of man who will be intimidated by me is exactly the type of man I have no interest in. ~Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

The road to hell is paved with adverbs. ~Stephen King

The man who does not read has no advantage over the man who cannot read. ~Mark Twain

I feel free and strong. If I were not a reader of books I could not feel this way. ~Walter Tevis

A reader lives a thousand lives before he dies. The man who never reads lives only one. ~George R.R. Martin

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