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Posts Tagged ‘“28 Years Later”’

Matthew Shear, Amanda Peet

“FANTASY LIFE” My rating: B (At the Glenwood Arts)

91 minutes | MPAA rating: R

With the serio-comedic “Fantasy Life” actor Matthew Shear makes a way-more-than-adequate writing/directing debut…and along with it he gives Amanda Peet what may be the best role of her career.

We first meet law clerk Sam (Shear) on the day he’s fired from his job.  

Sam is a somewhat chubby, bearded, bespectacled thirtysomethibng with a deer-in-the headlights stare.  If you look up the word “schlub” in the dictionary, it’s probably illustrated with his picture.

Anyway the newly unemployed Sam promptly melts down in a massive public panic attack. Visiting his psychiatrist (Judd Hirsch…God, I’ve missed him) and the shrink’s wife/receptionist (Andrea Martin), Sam learns that their son and his wife desperately need a babysitter — a manny — for their three young daughters.

A less ambitious film would amuse us with Mrs. Doubtfire-ish situations involving the male sitter and the fiercely manipulative little girls. Shear has bigger things in mind.

“Fantasy Life” is a couple of things at once.  It’s an insightful study of a troubled marriage…Dianne (Peet) and her husband David (Alessandro Nivola) are well-to-do Manhattanites (there’s family money involved) who look pretty  normal from the outside but are essentially living separate lives.

David isn’t home much since he got a gig performing with a touring musical group (sort of a mid-life crisis deal).

Dianne is a once-promising actress who hasn’t landed a role in a decade and some mornings can barely drag herself out of bed. By assuming many mothering chores the owlish Sam takes some of the pressure off of her.

Except that he finds himself falling for his fragile but often funny employer. Who cares if she’s 20 years  his senior? (Certainly not the men in the audience. This is where the fantasy comes in… there’s terrific comfort in the thought of Peet responding to a bumbling but sincere dweeb.)

One of the marvels of Shear’s screenplay is that it never takes the expected route; instead it is always pirouetting in different directions.  Another is the charity with which it approaches all of the characters…played by a murderer’s row lineup of thespian talent: Peat, Hirsh, Martin, Bob Balaban, Zoysia Mamet, Jessica Harper, Holland Taylor.

But ultimately this is Peet’s movie.  Her depiction of a woman lost in late middle age is  reminiscent of the great roles John Cassettes wrote for his wife, Gena Rowlands. Dianne’s constant battle to hide her anxiety and depression beneath an outward show of hip sardonicism is riveting and not a little heroic. Late in the film she has a breakdown in her therapist’s office that in a more just world would earn her an Oscar nomination.

Also remarkable is Shear’s ability to balance the film’s moments of poignancy and wry humor.  It’s the sort of thing that takes some directors an entire career to nail. He gets it right out of the gate.

Ralph Fiennes, Jack O’Connell

“28 YEARS LATER: THE BONE TEMPLE” My rating: C (Netflix)

119 minutes | MPAA rating: R

Sometimes it’s best to leave well-enough alone.

I was really looking forward to the second installment of “28 Years Later,” but “The Bone Temple” left me with a bad taste in my mouth.

It’s not like I can’t enjoy a good zombie apocalypse.  But “The Bone Temple” is so unrelentingly sadistic that you’ll need a shower afterward.

Basically we have two stories that meet at the end.  In one story, young Spike (Alfie Wiliams), the adolescent protagonist of the first film, becomes a reluctant member of the nomadic religious cult lead by the manipulative Sir Jimmy Crystal (Jack O’Connell, who was so effective as the head bloodsucker in “Sinners”).

The clearly bonkers Sir Jimmy (think Charles Manson) calls the shots for a band of parent-less teens, all clad in filthy running suits and sporting raggedy blond wigs.  Claiming to be the son of Satan, Jimmy has his minions torture unfortunate survivors they encounter…and poor Spike is expected to participate.

The second plot centers on Dr. Kelson (Ralph Fiennes), the half-mad proprietor of the Bone Temple, a sprawling graveyard whose towering monuments are constructed of human remains. (Hats off to art director Karansinh Pratapsinh Chanda and crew…the Bone Temple is a visual tour de force.)

Though undeniably eccentric, Kelson (we met him briefly in the first film) still has a scientist’s curiosity, and a good chunk of the film is devoted to his efforts to drug and “civilize” the alpha zombie (Chi Lewis-Parry) who stalked Spike and his father in the first film.

Ralph Fiennes delivers a demonic floor show

Eventually the two plots collide in a moment of sublime lunacy. Kelson agrees to pretend to be Sir Jimmy’s father — yes, the Devil — so as to impress the kids. He does so by slipping an ancient Iron Maiden LP on the turntable and lip-syncing his way through the tune, proving suitably demonic choreography along the way.

The kids are impressed. Hell, I was impressed.

Like the first film, this one was scripted by Alex Garland.  But “Bone Temple” reeks of desperation.  It’s as if Garland was heaving ideas against a big bloody wall hoping some would stick.

Perhaps if Danny Boyle was back as director he could shape this material into something meaningful. But this effort was  helmed by Nia DaCosta, who made a splash last year with “Hedda” but here can’t find a compelling theme save unrelenting cruelty.

| Robert W. Butler

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“28 YEARS LATER”  My rating: B (Netflix)

115 minutes |MPAA rating: R

“28 Years Later” has plenty of gruesome action, a good chunk of suspense and even, in its final moments, a crushing emotional component.

And zombies, of course.

What it doesn’t have is a sense of completion.  This continuation of the series, directed by “28…” veteran Danny Boyle, ends with an abrupt cliffhanger that leaves characters and plot points dangling.  Obviously there will be a Part II.  In the meantime, the film feels incomplete.

Fans of post-apocalyptic nihilism will no doubt be transported; your hard-core zombie freak will find plenty of new revelations to discuss with the like-minded; and action junkies should get satisfaction. But let’s be honest…this is just another zombie movie.  Well made and with a deep pedigree, perhaps, but it’s going to appeal mostly to the already converted.

Basically Alex Garland’s screenplay delivers two stories and a snippet of a third that sets up the next film.

After a brief (and kinda pointless) prologue set back at the beginning of the “rage virus” infestation, Part One picks up 28 years later on an  island off the coast of England.  Here human survivors have established a zombie-free commune, a just-the-basics but nurturing environment where 14-year-old Spike (Alfie Williams) has grown up in. 

Not that everything is copacetic in this island refuge.  Spike’s mother Isla  (Jodie Comer) suffers from some debilitating condition, and his father Jamie (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) has sought solace in the arms of other women.

The bulk of this segment finds Jamie leading Spike off the island for a sort of coming-of-age initiation on the mainland.  Under his Dad’s firm but encouraging tutelage  Spike is expected to use his bow and arrow to dispatch  a zombie, thus cementing his manhood.

Their trek reveals to us the changes that have undergone Merrie Olde England after all three decades of being quarantined from the rest of civilization.  

On the neat side there are the huge herds of deer that race across the landscape like stampeding bison. 

On the not-so-neat side are the zombies, which have evolved into two species. Easiest to deal with are the obese, sluggish, worm-eating “slow-and-lows.” More problematical are the more humanoid zombies — thin, naked wraiths that move with remarkable speed.  Worst of all are the zombie leaders, the “alphas,” who look like Jason Momoma after a long night of binge drinking and seem capable of at least minimal strategizing.

Alfie Williams, Jodie Comer, Ralph Fiennes

So that’s the movie’s first half.  Part Two offers a different sort of quest.  


Desperate to find a cure for his mother’s condition, young Spike hatches an audacious and dangerous plan. Leaving his father behind, he will sneak Isla to the mainland to find the physician reputed to be living there. Surely there is a cure for what ails her.

Along the way they team up briefly with a young Swedish soldier (Edwin Ryding) marooned while enforcing the quarantine. They witness a female  zombie giving birth (apparently the walking dead have active sex lives) and finally meet the fabled medico (a delightfully scenery-chewing Ralph Fiennes), who still retains his diagnostic skills after having spent 30 years building a massive pyramid of human skulls.

What’s remarkable about all this is that young Williams and Comer — despite all the mayhem surrounding them — are able to create a genuinely touching mother/child relationship. Which provides the film with a quietly heartbreaking pivotal moment.

Production values are strong, offering a thoroughly convincing view of what England might look like once people are gone. 

And the action scenes benefit from fiercely kinetic editing that allows us to see the zombies and splashes of gore mostly in staccato flashes.  It’s a lesson learned from “Jaws” — what you can’t clearly see is far more unsettling than what you can.

| Robert W. Butler

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