








ELEMENTAL
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THE FLASH

THE FLASH
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THE BLACKENING

THE BLACKENING
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DALILAND

DALILAND
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6/14/2023 # “Elemental,” “The Flash,” “The Blackening,” “Daliland”
Best Picture
Will Win: Everything Everywhere All at Once
Should Win: Elvis
Did Win: Everything Everywhere All at Once
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Best Picture Winner Notes:
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
I look for films that uplift and inspire, and all of these Oscar films were pretty serious, except for “Everything Everywhere All at Once.” I was really rooting for “Elvis” for its kindness, love and generosity. I also loved the music and the spirited rebellion against the racist and sexist status quo that Elvis (Austin Butler) expresses in the film. It was a treat to see Elvis come back to life, and I also felt that Austin Butler deserved the Best Actor award. I feel that the Academy wanted to show solidarity with Asians, due to the unfair grudges being held against Asians at this moment in time, when spy balloons are being shot down. If the Oscars were held a month ago, “Elvis” would have won easily. The British Bafta Awards gave a landslide support to the film “All Quiet on the Western Front,” because the British were sending long range weapons to Ukraine at the time of the ceremony. Timing is everything. “Everything Everywhere All at Once” was about female mid-life crisis, which in my opinion, is not Best Picture Oscar winner worthy. Politics and timing seem to have affected the outcome.
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https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-64328586
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EVERYTHING EVERYWHERE ALL AT ONCE


EVERYTHING EVERYWHERE ALL AT ONCE
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
“Everything Everywhere all at Once” was one of the few upbeat film contenders, which made it stand out enough to win. The Academy was super supportive of the Asian factor, expecially just after China’s spy balloon episode. This film had ten nominations, and won all but three. It won Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actress, Best Supporting Actor, Best Supporting Actress, Best Original Screenplay, Best Film Editing, losing Best Original Song, Best Music (Original Score), Best Custume Design. Usually, if a film is liked, but is not going to win the top spot, the Academy will give the film something, but with this film, it got all the top spots.
Awkwafina almost played the daughter, but left the project in January 2020 due to scheduling conflicts, and was replaced with Stephanie Hsu.
The film was not released in most parts of the Middle East, including Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, due to censorship of LGBT issues in those countries. The daughter, Joy, is dealing with depression and has a strained relationship with her mother, Evelyn (Michelle Yeoh), who is reluctant to accept Joy’s lesbian relationship with her non-Chinese girlfriend Becky.
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ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT


ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
“Alls Quiet on the Western Front” is such a futile, depressing film, but it does give us a glimspe of what it must be like for the Ukranians right now. Leaders with strong egos do not think about saving the lives of the young men under their command. They have no concern about sending them to slaughter, even if the war was going to be over in a matter of hours. This film did take home Awards for Best International Feature Film, Best Cinematography, Best Music (Original Score) and Best Production Design. I was glad that “Navalny” won Best Documentary Feature Film. Both of these films deal with authoritarian dictator conflicts. What is going on in Sudan right now, is yet another example of dictators in charge.
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AVATAR: THE WAY OF WATER
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AVATAR: THE WAY OF WATER
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
“Avatar” is another war film, only in a fantasy world. This film did manage to take home an Oscar for Best Visual Effects. The main characters choose to run and hide, but ultimately are forced to fight the battle. It is all about adapting to a new environment, country, customs and skillset. At this point in time, there are an estimated 272 million immigrants in the world. The US has 50.6 million of them, Germany comes in second with 15.8 million and Saudi Arabia is third with 13.5 million immigrants. “Avatar” is about immigrants trying to escape war and dictators, which is not only timely, but Oscar worthy in subject matter.
Avatar 4 and 5 “are not only greenlit,” but also a third of Avatar 4 has already been filmed.
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THE BANSHEES OF INISHERIN


THE BANSHEES OF INISHERIN
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
The Oscars had jokes and funny scenes about “The Banshees of Inisherin”, but in my view, this film is another Jeffrey Dahmer story about latent homosexuality. Everyone around them flee, commit suicide or maim themselves. This story is deadly serious and is very depressing. “Banshees..” had eight nominations, but did not take home a single award. Similar to a latent homosexual, no one at the Oscars is able to see or admit the problem. “Tar” was in the same situation, it was nominated for six awards, but took home zero. Homosexuality does not rank very high in this year’s Oscar competition nor in the world view.
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ELVIS


ELVIS
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
“Elvis was my favorite film this year. It is not just a sentimental favorite for me. This film exhibits all the qualities that we strive to achieve, success, love, career, values to live by and respect for each other. My own mother collected all of Elvis’s records. He touched her in a way that no other man in her life was able to do. At one point in his life, Elvis lived for the love of his fans. The music was fantastic as just one of this film’s many strengths. I do not know why one of the songs was not nominated in the Best Song category. Again, “Elvis” was nominated eight times, with no wins. Timing is everything. Also, I feel that the Razzie campaign against Tom Hanks as the Colonel in this film was very effective in turning the tide in the days before the voting. Someone has to play the colonel, Tom Hanks added empathy to the role, in my opinion.
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THE FABELMANS


THE FABELMANS
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
This is sad, seven nominations, with nothing to show for it. I understand that this is supposed to be a true story. (Spoiler Alert) The wife/mother (Michelle Williams) has four children with her decent, hard working husband (Paul Dano), then she insists on having a loser guy (Seth Rogen) tag along with the family, until she just leaves her husband for the other guy. The deal breaker is that her husband is too acommodating and the other guy appears to need her. Go figure. The reason this film did not win had nothing to do with being a good film, it was because it was too much like real life in most marriages. The good guys do not win. It is heart-breaking really.
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TAR


TAR
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
Even with Best Picture, Best Director and Best Actress nomimations, Tar comes up without a single win. This is not a good sign for the gay or the feminist community. The female conductor (Cate Blanchett) makes some political blunders, by offending some powerful male counterparts, and pays dearly for it. (Spoiler alert) First, she gets physically assaulted, then she loses her position and then her musical work is stolen from her. She makes the mistake of thinking that she is safe and that others want her to succeed in such a highly competitive arena. She is clearly being gaslighted to the point of losing her sanity towards the end. All she needed to do was apologize and bake some cupcakes. She was lucky enough to have a young daughter, so she should have had those skills. This is a cautionary tale about never taking ones success for granted. And, yes, females can have big egos, just like some men.
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TOP GUN: MAVERICK


TOP GUN: MAVERICK
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
“Top Gun, Maverick” gets six nominations, including Best Picture and Best Screenplay, but only wins for “Best Sound?” Of all the films nominated for Best Picture, I think “Top Gun, Maverick” enjoyed the longest run and had the greatest public popularity, especially on Father’s Day. The American public loved this film, especially the older population group. I have never seen so many walkers at a movie’s opening. This film made $1.489 billion in gross revenue. So, I guess they figured it did not need the Academy’s recognition. On the other hand, I need to ask what made this film such a big success in comparison to all the other films? I think it should have gotten a little more than “Best Sound.”
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TRIANGLE OF SADNESS


TRIANGLE OF SADNESS
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
“Triangle of Sadness” is all about class struggle and lower class resentment, similar to the 2020 film, “Parasite.”
And, like “Parasite,” these upper class characters could not appear to be nicer individuals.
Life copies art, when the beautiful lead actress, actually dies after making this film.
South African actress and model Charlbi Dean died in August 2022 of bacterial sepsis, caused by a previous surgery. Suddenly gone, at age 32 years old.
So yes, “Triangle of Sadness” is sad. For me, Dean’s performance was the only part of it that would make me want to see it again.
This film was nominated for Best Picture, Best Director and Best Screenplay, with no wins.
Sad about sums it up.
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WOMEN TALKING


WOMEN TALKING
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
Last, but not least, “Women Talking” was nominated for Best Picture and Best Adapted Screenplay at the Academy Awards.
This film was written / directed by Sarah Polley, and I discovered, is based on a true story.
Taken from a 2018 novel by Canadian Miriam Toews about a remote and isolated Mennonite community in Bolivia, where a gang of men from the community, gased and raped the women over a 4-year period by spraying veterinary seditive through the window screens, then attacking the victims.
The women were also being gaslighted by using religious beliefs of non-violence and forgiveness to keep them from acting against the men.
This is a tough film to sit through, but the reward is to understand why today’s women insist on being educated.
Once seen, “Women Talking” is impossible to forget, and after being nominated for Academy Awards its grosses were boosted with a worldwide total of $8.9 million.
Sarah Polley won Best Adapted Screenplay for this film.
(“Women Talking” is the last film released by United Artists Releasing before Amazon ceased the distributor’s operations and folded it into MGM, Orion’s parent company.)
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4/23/2023 # 2023 OSCAR Notes: “Everything Everywhere All at Once,”“All Quiet on the Western Front,” “Avatar: The Way of the Water,” “The Banshees of Inisherin,” “Elvis,” “The Fabelmans,” “Tar,” “Top Gun: Maverick,” “Triangle of Sadness,” “Women Talking.”
2023 RAZZIES: “Blonde”, “Elvis”
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
The Razzie phenomenon began in 1980, but with as much as we now know about bullying and harrassment, I think it is time to pop the razzie balloon.
Recently, the films they make fun of, are also up for major film awards like “Blonde” and “Elvis.”
It is so easy to hurl insults at a vulnerable individual.
In the past, The Razzies have picked on easy, publically vulnerable targets.
They love to make fun of couples who are in love, ” Fifty Shades of Grey,” “Breaking Dawn,” and “Gigli,” come to mind.
Their picks are also cruelly sexist, racist, and even make fun of the newbie and the underage target, like Macaulay Culkin.
Why don’t they go after films, that are unapologetically violent, racist, sexist or cause irredeemable harm?
If they cannot do this, then this should be the last year of the Golden Raspberry Awards, as their powerful enemies keep getting heftier and heftier.
The Razzie winners will be announced on Oscar’s eve on March 11, 2023.
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Full list of 2023 Razzie award nominations:
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BLONDE


BLONDE
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
It seems that no matter how many times Marilyn Monroe’s story is attempted, she gets a Razzie nomination, because everyone just sees one thing, Marilyn’s naked body.
Producer, Brad Pitt, tries to illustrate the pathos of her situation in multiple ways, from childhood to her last breathe, but we still just see Marilyn’s naked body.
The film script for “Blonde” skips over her years in foster care and her first marriage to James Dougherty at age sixteen.
The Fictional novel, Blonde, by Joyce Carol Oates (The Ecco Press/HarperCollins) was a finalist for the 2001 Pulitzer Prize, but the story in this film is wildly fictional and scantily symbolic.
Nowhere in Marilyn’s biography does she get involved with the eldest son of Charlie Chaplin.
Though Marilyn is compared to Charlie Chaplin in her “ability to blend comedy and tragedy.”
Marilyn was looking for the missing father figure in her life, which explains her attraction to and idolatry of men in authority positions, which “Blonde” does point out correctly.
Unfortunately, men in authority positions at that time, did take advantage of beautiful women and used their lack of money as leverage.
The real Marilyn Monroe had to fight for her opportunities and for her money, until she just did not have the ability to fight anymore.
Ana de Armas does a great job of capturing Marilyn’s perception, innocence, and emotional nakedness.
This time, the Razzie creators do not get to exploit her in the cruelest way yet.
They do not get to pin her up for ridicule as a symbol of their own desire and self-loathing.
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Wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marilyn_Monroe
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ELVIS

ELVIS
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
The Razzies go after Tom Hanks, of all people, for playing Elvis’s manager. why?
I think Hanks should be congratulated for having the courage to play what appears to be an unattractive, flawed character in the film.
The Colonel had secrets, but on the other hand, he stood beside Elvis during the good times and the bad. He was not a fair weather friend.
Even Elvis’s family felt Colonel Tom Parker deserved every penny for his services.
I feel this is a clear Razzie case of a younger generation bullying and making fun of the values of an older generation as depicted in the film,”Elvis.”
Elvis clearly respected the Colonel as a manager and as a friend.
Elvis did not judge people by their age or appearance, which was part of his appeal to the masses.
And, that is why Elvis was loved and why the Razzies are not loved.
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Trailer: https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x87zl7
Wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colonel_Tom_Parker
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2/25/23 # 2023 RAZZIES: “Blonde”, “Elvis”
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
It seems that nearly every film has a part now for Africans, so, I have left out “Devotion”, “She Said.” “Black Adam,” “Call Jane,” “Prey for the Devil,” “Armagedon Time,” and “Till.”
But if you watch all of these films, you can see Africans being represented.
It seems that the Golden Globes and the Academy Awards are now requiring this representation, which is a step in the right direction.
When we no longer have to require it, but it just is, we will then have arrived at accepting diversity representation in film.
At least films are not being banned because of Africans being in them, which is not the case if said characters are part of the LGBT community. There is still plenty of work to do before diversity discrimination is a thing of the past.
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VIOLENT NIGHT

VIOLENT NIGHT
Trailer:: Violent Night Trailer #1 (2022) – Bing video
Wiki: Violent Night – Wikipedia
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
In this violent Christmas tale, we find out that Santa has been alive hundreds of years, and was once a Viking warrior.
Greed is a central theme, which provokes murder, putting one on the “naughty list.”
Linda, Jason’s estranged wife (Alexis Louder), plays the African mother of Trudy (Leah Brady), the bi-racial daughter of Linda and Jason.
Mother and daughter are the central characters, who are both pure of heart.
They are capable of loving and seeing the good parts of otherwise flawed individuals, such as husband, Jason (Alex Hassell), and Santa (David Harbour).
And, they both know how to defend their turf and loved ones. Linda can shoot a rifle and Trudy can set booby traps.
For a violent, bloody Christmas, this is it.
(Alexis Louder can be remembered in a lead role in “Copshop,” with Gerard Butler. She plays a rookie police officer, who is matter of fact, and unrelenting in doing her job. Louder also had small roles in “Black Panther” and “Harriet.”
In 2023, Leah Brady will be in a Sci-Fi comedy titled, “Relax, I’m from the Future.”)
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SPIRITED

SPIRITED
Trailer: Spirited Teaser Trailer (2022) – Bing video
Wiki: Spirited (film) – Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Octavia_Spencer
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loren_Woods
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
“Spirited” is a new scrooge tale, with a twist.
Will Ferrell plays Christmas Present to Clint Briggs (Ryan Reynolds), a modern day scrooge.
Other than avoiding loyalty and money spending responsibilities, Clint appears to be a spin doctor, who is only interested in getting money, not parting with it.
He has zero emotional connection to other human beings, even to his family.
Clint appears to be a hopeless case, but Christmas Present (Will Ferrell) argues his case.
These two appear to have a bromance going between them.
But for some reason, Clint (Reynolds) is paired with Christmas Past (Sunita Mani) and Christmas Present (Ferrell) is paired with Clint’s assistant, Kimberly (Octavia Spencer).
Not that these two romances are impossible, but the women do have something in common, African and Indian lineage.
No one but me would dare to point that out, and I will probably get hit with accusations of racism for doing so.
Mani and Spencer are presented as the stereotypical, sexualized females.
Kimberly is glad to be Clint’s assistant, because she now has money and a corner office, but she questions the morality of her duties.
And Christmas Past has just broken all the rules by getting involved with a client, Clint Briggs (Reynolds).
The climax of this film is whether Clint can actually be converted into a caring individual.
The third African cast in this film is Loren G. Woods, who plays Christmas Yet to Come.
Loren is not an actor, he was a successful basketball player, who was selected for his unusual height (Tracy Morgan is his voice).
In “Spirited,” Octavia Spencer shows that she is capable of playing a romantic comedy role, as does Sunita Mani.
Spencer is better known for her parts in “Fruitvale Station,” The Help,” and “Hidden Figures.”
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GLASS ONION: A KNIVES OUT MYSTERY

GLASS ONION: A KNIVES OUT MYSTERY
Trailer: GLASS ONION Trailer 2 (NEW 2022) KNIVES OUT 2 – Bing video
Wiki: Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery – Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janelle_Mon%C3%A1e
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leslie_Odom_Jr.
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
“Glass Onion” has two Africans, a bullied ex-business partner, Andi (Janaelle Monae), and a head scientist, Lionel Toussaint (Leslie Odom Jr.).
They both try to convince Miles (Edward Norton), that the business energy source, Klear, is unstable.
What I appreciate about the Knives Out Mysteries, is its championing of the underdog.
In the first mystery, a Hispanic nurse/caretaker is vindicated and advanced.
In this mystery, a Black female partner is also taken for an easy target, which is ultimately turned on its head.
The viewer, who is paying attention, also realizes that Detective Benoit Blanc (Daniel Craig) must be gay.
All the business partners share in the bullying, because they do not want to end up like Andi, so they go along with the betrayal.
The story takes place during the Covid pandemic with a long list of cameo guest stars, like Ethan Hawke, Hugh Grant, Stephen Sondheim (posthumous), Angela Lansbury (posthumous), Yoyo Ma, Jake Tapper and Serena Williams.
Plus, it was filmed in Greece with fun over-the-top characters.
This is a winning strategy.
“Glass Onion” was only in theaters for one week on November 23, but was shown to full houses.
If you missed it, it will be streaming on Netflix on December 23.
I personally think that “Glass Onion” could have lasted longer in the cinemas.
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STRANGE WORLD

STRANGE WORLD
Trailer: Strange World | Official Trailer – Bing video
Wiki: Strange World (film) – Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabrielle_Union
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jaboukie_Young-White
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
The computer animated “Strange World” not only deals with a mixed race marriage, but their bi-racial son, Ethan (Jaboukie Young-White), is gay.
Disney pulled this film’s release in 20 countries due to the openly gay main character, not because of the mixed race family depiction.
The bi-racial son, Ethan, has a crush on Diazo.
His mother (Gabrielle Union), is of African lineage, and does not seem to have a problem with her son’s orientation.
However, people in the Middle East, Africa, South Asia and China do have a problem with it.
Needless to say, “Strange World” did not do that well in the box office.
The story itself deals with father/son conflicts and takes place from within the bodily environment of a mammal.
The story also touches on green electrical energy and how to revive a diseased heart.
Gabrielle Union’s voice can be recognized from her other film credits in “Think Like a Man,” “Girl’s Trip,” and “The Inspection,” which also deals with gay orientation.
(On June 10, 2021, it was announced that Young-White would be teaming up with Issa Rae and her production company Hoorae to develop the book The Gang’s All Queer: The Lives of Gay Gang Members by Vanessa R. Panfil into a series for HBO. He will write and executive produce the project.[27]
In late 2017, Young-White came out as queer during his first appearance on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. He is of Jamaican descent.)
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BLACK PANTHER – WAKANDA FOREVER

BLACK PANTHER – WAKANDA FOREVER
Trailer: Marvel Studios’ Black Panther: Wakanda Forever | Official Teaser – Bing video
Wiki: Black Panther: Wakanda Forever – Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angela_Bassett
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letitia_Wright
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danai_Gurira
Facts Only Huge Fans Know About Black Panther’s Ayo (msn.com)
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
BLACK PANTHER – WAKANDA FOREVER
Number one in the box-office for five straight weeks, “Wakanda Forever” has delivered with an almost all African cast.
With a budget of $250 Million, this film has made $769.9 Million, so far.
Reeling from the loss of Chadwick Boseman from cancer, Angela Bassett appears to be the rock holding this film in place.
I feel the filmmakers made an excellent decision not to replace Boseman’s T’Challa character with another actor, but instead, respected his death.
The story’s culture seems to value the warrior, so Shuri (Letitia Wright), T’Challa’s younger sister, must find a way to fill his shoes, and she does.
The film stays relevant by making Wakanda one of the present day countries making a presentation at a United Nations meeting.
Power hungry countries want Wakanda’s vibranium, but cannot be too obvious in seeking it.
(The Chinese censors rarely explain their decisions, and each of the Marvel movies have been scuttled for a different reason recently, but it’s likely that LGBT content in Black Panther: Wakanda Forever is the underlying reason behind the ban, as it reportedly was for Thor: Love and Thunder and Lightyear. In the Wakanda Forever, Michaela Coel’s Aneka is in a relationship with Florence Kasumba’s Ayo. )
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12/13/2022 # AFRICANS IN FILM # Part II– “Violent Night,””Spirited,”“Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery,” “Strange World,” “Black Panther- Wakanda Forever.”
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
People of African descent have been very successful in getting roles in Hollywood movies in 2022.
And, thanks to the pioneering efforts of people like Morgan Freeman, they have proven that they can be anyone, even a U.S. President or God.
This year, some roles are more activist oriented than others, but it is pretty much accepted that Africans can be worked into any script, as a member of the general population.
Practically every film has an African in the script, unless we are talking about the upcoming Black Panther, Black Adam, Till, or Armageddon Time, where the actors are nearly all African.
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HALLOWEEN ENDS

HALLOWEEN ENDS
Trailer: Halloween Ends (2022) First Official Trailer | Fear – Bing video
Wiki: Halloween Ends – Wikipedia
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
In Halloween Ends, Keraun Harris plays Willy the Kid, a local radio DJ, who has an unfortunate encounter with Corey Cunningham (Rohan Campbell) and Michael Myers (Nick Castle). He perceives Corey as a vulnerable target, humiliating and using words that hurt, which he later comes to regret.
Omar Dorsey also plays Sheriff Barker, Haddonfield’s current sheriff.
A DJ and a Sheriff are easily fit into the script of this popular film that showcases Jamie Lee Curtis as Laurie Strode, a survivor of Michael Myers’ 1978 killing spree.
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AMSTERDAM



AMSTERDAM
Trailer: AMSTERDAM Trailer 2 (2022) – Bing video
Wiki: Amsterdam (2022 film) – Wikipedia
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
Chris Rock is Milton King, Burt and Harold’s Army buddy. His character was minor, but he was the most memorable for me. He clearly sees their situation, while others seem to be in a state of delusion.
John David Washington plays Harold Woodsman, a lawyer and war veteran, who is the lover of the nurse/socialite (Margot Robbie) Valerie Voze.
For me, this film bordered on a propaganda film, where all big business is perceived to be on the far right, profit-first and part of an evil dictatorship.
In Amsterdam, we have an Army buddy and a lawyer/war veteran to represent Africans in film.
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THE INVITATION

THE INVITATION
Trailer: THE INVITATION Trailer (2022) – Bing video
Wiki: The Invitation (2022 film) – Wikipedia
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
Nathalie Emmanuel as Evelyn “Evie” Jackson / Evelyn “Evie” Alexander, and (Courtney Taylor) Grace, Evie’s best friend, represent Africans in “The Invitation.”
This is a vampire film with surprisingly honest and fresh dialogue, which I really enjoyed.
Here, African women are emphathetic, sexual and powerful. They are perceived as being well able to take care of themselves.
Evie just lost her mother, so she is in a vulnerable place, but she is still brave, smart and verbally adept.
In a tight situation, she quickly reads the souls of others for her own survival.
(Nathalie Emmanuel is Bi-racial.)
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SEE HOW THEY RUN

SEE HOW THEY RUN
Trailer: See How They Run – Official Trailer (2022) Sam Rockwell, Adrien Brody – Bing video
Wiki: See How They Run (2022 film) – Wikipedia
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
David Oyelowo plays Mervyn Cocker-Norris, a playwright.
And, Pippa Bennett-Warner is Ann Saville, who is the producer’s mistress/assistant.
In “See How They Run”, we have a playwright and a Mistress/assistant representing Africans.
Everyone appears to have a motive to kill the director, who turns up dead.
Here again, African females appear to have the reputation of being hot and sexual.
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DON’T WORRY DARLING

DON’T WORRY DARLING
Trailer: Don’t Worry, Darling Trailer #2 (2022) – Bing video
Wiki: Don’t Worry Darling – Wikipedia
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
KiKi Layne plays Margaret Watkins, Alice’s friend, who replaced Dakota Johnson in that role.
Margaret reaches out to Alice for help, but is not taken seriously.
Alice later comes to take her friend’s warning as a signal of her own plight, while she is being gaslighted by her own husband and the cult’s leader.
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THE WOMAN KING

THE WOMAN KING
Trailer: THE WOMAN KING – Official Trailer (HD) – Bing video
Wiki: The Woman King – Wikipedia
The Woman King vs. the True Story of Dahomey’s Female Warriors (historyvshollywood.com)
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
Viola Davis plays General Nanisca, who’s story is based on historical fact.
Africans were being exploited by whites during the slave trade years.
Apparently, white Europeans and Americans could not harvest their own crops; they needed slaves to do the work for them.
Where there was a shortage of men in the African tribes, women were able to advance themselves by developing their fighting skills.
The following Africans had roles in “The Woman King:”
Thuso Mbedu as Nawi.
Lashana Lynch as Izogie.
Sheila Atim as Amenza.
John Boyega as King Ghezo.
Adrienne Warren as Ode.
Angélique Kidjo as the Meunon.
Jimmy Odukoya as General Oba Ade.
Many of these actresses and actors in “The Woman King” are from South Africa.
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NOPE

NOPE
Trailer: NOPE | Final Trailer – Bing video
Wiki: Nope (film) – Wikipedia
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
Daniel Kaluuya plays Otis “OJ” Haywood Jr., Otis’ son.
Keke Palmer is Emerald “Em” Haywood, Otis’ daughter.
And, Keith David is Otis Haywood Sr., the owner of Haywood’s Hollywood Horses Ranch.
Otis’s son, OJ, appears to have a big chip on his shoulder.
I found this film’s symbology to be very intimidating and unsubtle.
White women are the target of brutal gaslighting aggression.
The positive energy did not balance out the negative energy.
I found this film very passive aggressive and scary.
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WHERE THE CRAWDADS SING

WHERE THE CRAWDADS SING
Trailer: WHERE THE CRAWDADS SING Trailer 2 (NEW 2022) Daisy Edgar-Jones, Harris Dickinson – Bing video
Wiki: Where the Crawdads Sing (film) – Wikipedia
Where the Crawdads Sing – Wikipedia
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
Charlene “Michael” Hyatt plays Mabel Madison, the shopkeeper’s wife.
Sterling Macer Jr. is James “Jumpin’” Madison, is the shopkeeper.
This African couple are empathetic with the young swamp girl, Kya (Leslie France), and enable her to survive by doing a trade business with her.
They are portrayed as having religious values and big hearts.
In a way, they help raise and protect the girl, who has been abandoned by her family and bullied by the local town people.
They also show up to give her support at her murder trial.
Aspects of Kya’s life and the novel’s narrative choices, including its attitude towards its black characters, are said to be reminiscent of author, Delia Owens’ time in Zambia, where she, her then husband, and his son are still wanted for questioning in the killing of a poacher captured on film in a 1996 report by ABC News. Owens is not a suspect, but is considered a potential witness.
__________________________________________________________________
BULLET TRAIN

BULLET TRAIN
Trailer: BULLET TRAIN – Official Trailer (HD) – Bing video
Wiki: Bullet Train (film) – Wikipedia
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
Brian Tyree Henry is Lemon, an experienced British assassin and Tangerine’s twin brother with an obsession for Thomas the Tank Engine.
Zazie Beetz is The Hornet, an American assassin who specializes in poisons and is disguised as a mascot. (She is Bi-racial)
No matter how old Brad Pitt gets, he still retains a likable boyish charm, that makes this very violent film seem like a schoolyard romp. Pitt plays the peacemaker, who keeps asking throughout, “would you like to just talk ahout it?” When they say “No”, he continues the struggle by throwing his water bottle that them.
10/18/2022 # Africans in Film – Part I
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
It seems that every film that I go to see this year, is featuring a beloved, older star, who is over 60.
One older patron thought it was because the younger set stream everything, so they are trying to woe the older film goers.
For me, the newer actors and actresses, all look like kids.
I grew up with these older stars, or we somehow grew up together, and I do not want to see them go.
Am I prejudiced and discriminating on the grounds of age to prefer older actors, like Jeff Goldblum, Laura Dern, Sam Neil, Tom Hanks, Tom Cruise, Jamie Lee Curtis, Michelle Yeoh, Liam Neeson and Maggie Smith?
It may be easy to push a relative into a nursing home to die, but I just cannot imagine doing it to my favorite film stars.
I often say that if you live long enough, you will live to experience ageism, where we stereotype elders and have negative attitudes towards them.
We isolate them to the point that it undermines who they are as people, causing them to feel depressed, which can shorten their life.
Our not taking them seriously is life threatening to them, causing them cognitive decline, followed by physical decline.
At which point, life becomes pointless and not worth living.
However, that does not seem to be the case with certain aging actors and actresses.
I cannot imagine how I will feel if they go.
Even the undertaker does not want them to die.
Personally, I cannot live without them.
“Elvis”

Elvis
Trailer: https://youtu.be/2E52kIgSnuE
Wiki: Elvis (2022 film) – Wikipedia
Wiki: Elvis Presley – Wikipedia
Wiki: Colonel Tom Parker – Wikipedia
History vs Hollywood:
Baz Luhrmann’s Elvis Movie vs. the True Story of Elvis Presley (historyvshollywood.com)
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
If you are in your 70’s or 80’s, you remember Elvis, because he was a big part of your growing up in the 1950-1970’s.
The film “Elvis”, captures that era, but because it was made by Australian filmmakers, it may not exactly understand the American pressures that Elvis (Austin Butler) endured during that era.
This film puts all the blame on his manager, Colonel Thomas Andrew Parker (Tom Hanks), for Elvis’s downfall, but a lot of it had to do with Elvis’s own choices.
He chose to love the Black American culture, at a time when Blacks were being hung, shot and segregated in America.
He chose to take amphetamines and sleeping pills to continue his career and to overcome the forces set against him.
He chose to pursue a relationship with Priscilla, who was ten years younger than himself.
And, he chose to leave the finances to others, rather than keeping an eye on that responsibility himself.
Actor Austin Butler does bring back the spirit of Elvis for everyone to enjoy.
A common remark after seeing this film is “I wish there was more of his music.”
Not brought up in the film is the fact that the Colonel was married during the course of his career of managing Elvis.
His first wife died of chronic brain syndrome in 1986, preceded by signs of dementia, which might have shifted sympathy in the Colonel’s direction.
The Colonel was also not an American.
He was Dutch, but without a passport, which was a possible reason he did not encourage Elvis to travel outside of the United States.
“Elvis” brings the king back to life, so that we all get to walk in his very large shoes.
“Jurassic World Dominion”

Jurassic World Dominion
Trailer: JURASSIC WORLD 3: Dominion Trailer (2022) – Bing video
Wiki: Jurassic World Dominion – Wikipedia
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
I rest my case with this film, Jurassic World Dominion, where the older couple, played by Sam Neill and Laura Dern outshine the younger couple.
The twinkle in Sam Neill’s eye says it all.
Physical beauty and virility cannot compete with world experience and that nothing to lose attitude of the older set.
Jeff Goldblum, in my opinion, was the star of this film.
He has all the best lines and is so sardonic and on point, all the time.
I especially enjoyed (spoiler alert) his interpretation of getting fired from the worst boss in the world, the evil head of Biosyn Genetics.
Goldblum’s lecture to his younger students was also great.
The major takeaway from this film is that if greed and avarice are not brought under control, life as we know it and the whole food chain will collapse.
A very timely theme, with a conclusion that we cannot bully our way out of this.
“Top Gun Maverick”


Top Gun Maverick
Trailer: Top Gun: Maverick – Official Trailer (2022) – Paramount Pictures – Bing video
Wiki: Top Gun: Maverick – Wikipedia
Wiki: Kelly McGillis – Wikipedia
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
Has it really been 35 years, since the first Top Gun Movie?
First, I pulled out the VHS Tape from my collection to re-watch the first film with Tom Cruise and Kelly McGinnis.
Then, I went to the Tuesday opening show of the 2nd Top Gun movie.
I cannot remember when I have ever seen so many elderly people with walkers coming out to see any movie, which also happened to be on Memorial weekend.
Nothing personal, but the bar maid love interest in Maverick, could not hold a candle to the aeronautics specialist that McGinnis played.
When I mentioned this to another movie goer, it was pointed out to me that she was not a bar maid, but a business owner.
Then Val Kilmer, who had throat surgery, was nowhere near his former self, just 35 years ago.
Why do some people age rapidly and others stay young forever?
I am partial to the first film, but if you have never seen the first film, the 2nd film was extremely well done.
How dare they push Maverick (spoiler alert) into a teaching position, just because they think that he is too old to carry out a fighter jet mission?
Tom Cruise keeps behaving like he did 35 years ago, while the other commanders want him to behave like an old person.
Then, there is the son of Maverick’s former partner, who died in the first film.
He, who holds a grudge against Maverick, until he doesn’t.
The movie stands on its own feet, but why does Maverick need to act like he is old?
This is the classic attitude of ageism, if I have ever seen it.
“Downton Abbey : A New Era”


Downton Abbey : A New Era
Trailer: DOWNTON ABBEY: A NEW ERA – Official Trailer [HD] – Only in Theaters May 20 – Bing video
Wiki: Downton Abbey: A New Era – Wikipedia
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
I love that Maggie Smith’s character gets to have an intriguing past love life.
Her character inherits a French villa, but her choice to not return to it, proves fatal.
One moment she appears happy and feisty, then after her family’s trip to France, she declines rapidly.
She is beloved, because she is the one member of the family, who is attentive to the well-being of each member of the family.
Her granddaughter finds it difficult to be faithful to a husband, who is off doing his own thing.
In my opinion, this absent husband deserves a divorce.
A marriage means that both individuals are present and contributing their support.
Otherwise, that is a recipe for divorce.
Maggie’s son seems preoccupied with loyalty to his father, and is oblivious to the well-being of his wife, or anyone else.
Considering the conditions of his current circumstances, being the bastard son of a Frenchman, should be the least of his worries.
Maggie Smith is such a great example of an aging woman at her best, but for whatever reason, she chooses to no longer engage.
She is without a doubt the center of this family and of the Downton Abbey series.
“Memory”


Memory
Trailer: Memory Trailer #1 (2022) | Movieclips Trailers – Bing video
Wiki: Memory (2022 film) – Wikipedia
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
If there is one word that scares the hell out of old and young alike, it is Alzheimer’s disease.
And, Liam Neeson attacks this topic as only he could, with his fatalistic positivity, which gives this film the twist that it needs.
His hitman character makes it clear that while he may be experiencing cognitive decline, he is not experiencing moral value decline.
A recurring theme in his films is his aversion to human trafficking.
His character does not harm children, and he can be fatal to anyone who does.
After visiting his brother in an Alzheimer’s ward, he resolves to give his all to living, so long as he can independently function.
He is well aware of his ultimate fate.
I loved the honest wisdom of this film.
If one manages to live into old age, one will no doubt cherish this film as a cult film for the elderly.
“Everything Everywhere All at Once”


Everything Everywhere All at Once
Trailer: Everything Everywhere All At Once | Official Trailer HD | A24 – Bing video
Wiki: Everything Everywhere All at Once – Wikipedia
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
You may have heard of the male mid-life crisis, but in “Everything Everywhere All at Once”, we get to experience the female mid-life crisis.
Evelyn (Michelle Yeoh) seems unhappy with her own life choices, marriage, husband, financial situation in this film.
And, Deirdre (Jamie Lee Curtis) plays a crazy, middle-aged, female IRS inspector, who threatens to take everything altogether away from her.
Here we have an aging female, who feels victimized by her own choices in life and feels powerless in her ability to make new choices at this stage of her life.
If you are an aging female, you will be able to relate.
Also, aging males will be able to relate.
And, if you are not young anymore, you will be able to relate, period.
7/2/2022 # AGEISM – “Elvis”, “Jurassic World Dominion”, “Top Gun Maverick”, “Downton Abbey: A New Era”, “Memory” and “Everything Everywhere All at Once.”
Best Picture
Will Win: “Coda”
Should Win: “Drive My Car”
Did Win” “Coda”
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
As I see it, every one of the Best Picture films deal with the topic of “bullying,” in one form or another.
Because that is what the world is dealing with right now, on the personal level and on the world stage.
My personal Best Picture pick is between “Drive My Car” and “Coda.” Both films demonstrate emotional generosity.
Each of these two films present a solution to the topic of bullying and self-interest.
“Coda” shows me the personal solution. It demonstrates a loving, loyal family that overcomes hardships together, with the highest possible outcome for all concerned.
But “Drive My Car,” slightly wins, in my opinion, because it is able to see the problem from an empathetic view that is deeply personal and can be applied to the world arena.
My “Best Picture” pick is “Drive My Car.” As the title suggests, am I able to drive someone else’s car?
“Drive My Car” encourages me to put myself in the place of the bullied, without judgement, but with a positive solution.
“Belfast”

“Belfast,” Laura Berwick, Kenneth Branagh, Becca Kovacik and Tamar Thomas, producers
Trailer:
BELFAST Trailer 2 (2021) Jamie Dornan, Judi Dench, Drama Movie – Bing video
Wiki:
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
The bullies in “Belfast” are the Protestants against the Catholics.
We are called to identify with a Protestant family, who do not hate Catholics.
When their position is revealed, they are bullied out of town, but they forget to take granny, whose husband has just passed away.
What is going on here? Does the family really think that granny can fend for herself?
Leaving granny behind was even more upsetting, to me, than the 1969 riots.
In “Belfast”, the bullied family just makes a run for it, leaving an elderly grandmother behind.
Major demerits in my book. Not my favorite film.
“CODA”

“CODA,” Philippe Rousselet, Fabrice Gianfermi and Patrick Wachsberger, producers
Trailer:
CODA Trailer (2021) Drama Movie – Bing video
Wiki:
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
I knew that “Coda” was going to be good, when I went to see it, but I was not expecting it to be “that” good.
I have to admit that I was left completely choked up by its ending.
Emilia Jones plays Ruby Rossi, the only hearing member of a deaf family.
She is not your ordinary teen.
Because of her unusual circumstances, she is encouraged to be a strong voice for her family at an early age.
At school, Ruby is bullied for having a deaf family background.
Bullies like to think that they are better than someone else.
So Ruby is made to feel ashamed of her very loving family.
“Coda” champions the deaf and also the selfless teachers out there.
Even though the music teacher is from Mexico, it did not have the world changing aspect that I found in “Drive My Car.”
So “Coda” comes in second, but is first in emotional generosity, that is innocently over-whelming.
“Don’t Look Up”

“Don’t Look Up,” Adam McKay and Kevin Messick, producers
Trailer:
DON’T LOOK UP | Official Teaser Trailer | Netflix – Bing video
Wiki:
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
“Don’t Look Up” is full of bullies, who resist the truth, think only of themselves, and wallow in their own ideas of superiority, no matter what.
This film is about human stupidity and being in denial, even in moon-sized impending disaster.
The bullies are completely frozen in their lack of human empathy for others, their flawed choices and in their delayed action.
Here we have a scientist, who betrays his own wife, and a President, who forgets all about her own son.
These are the kind of people who will throw you a water bottle, or a roll of paper towels, just to pretend that they care.
Bullies are unable to process the concept that what they do to others, they do to themselves.
“Drive My Car”

“Drive My Car,” Teruhisa Yamamoto, producer
Trailers:
Drive My Car Trailer #1 (2021) | Movieclips Indie – Bing video
Drive My Car (2021) | Trailer | Hidetoshi Nishijima | Toko Miura | Masaki Okada – Bing video
Wiki:
Drive My Car (film) – Wikipedia
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
An emotionally ill mother, or an unfaithful spouse, are sources of emotional abuse, which are also forms of bullying.
Bullying has many forms, and “Drive My Car” exposes these two types of bullying.
A renowned actor is trying to heal from his wife’s death and a young female driver is also trying to heal from her mother’s death.
They both feel guilty that they are relieved that the abuse is over.
In this film, they meet by divine appointment to heal each other.
As victims, neither were able to confront the bullies in their lives, which renders them both unfit for intimate relationships.
A healthy relationship requires trust and honest communication.
Bullies use and manipulate others, even their own mates and children.
“Drive My Car” is my number one choice, because it shows the way for the bullied to heal and to learn from others in a life-affirming way.
The actor is invited to direct a Russian play in a way that incorporates diversity of talent, different languages, and even sign language.
His young driver is about the same age as his own daughter would have been, so he treats her like he would his own daughter.
She responds to his fatherly nurturing and is able to realize that not everyone is cruel.
Together they are able to process their emotions and predicaments in a positive way.
By the end of this three-hour film, the viewer also realizes what several world playwrights are trying to say in their plays.
We are here to help and to heal each other, which starts with ourselves and our own families.
On the world arena, kindness, communication and positive action is what is going to save the planet.
Since no one is without guilt, judgement is futile.
“Dune”

“Dune,” Mary Parent, Denis Villeneuve and Cale Boyter, producers
Trailer:
DUNE – FINAL TRAILER – Bing video
Wiki:
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
“Dune” is a magnificent, futuristic story that after two and a half hours, turns out to be only half the story.
If this is our future, then mankind has not learned much.
Mankind is still trying to exploit and bully others, be it on an inter-planet level.
In “Dune”, planetary invaders attempt to keep the defeated population in a state of servitude, while the spice of the planet is exploited.
Are we still on the same track of “might is right?”
Like in the country of Ukraine, the Arrakis people know the terrain and know how to survive in their own desert habitat.
I am hoping that in part two, we are shown how desert power and psychic power are able to defeat brute power.
I am also hoping that the bullies are taught a permanent lesson of respect.
“King Richard”

“King Richard,” Tim White, Trevor White and Will Smith, producers
Trailer:
KING RICHARD Trailer 2 (2021) – Bing video
Wiki:
King Richard (film) – Wikipedia
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
“King Richard” depicts how a whole societal environment can be the bully.
In America, if you are born Black, you are automatically a target for bullies.
Like the deaf family in “Coda”, the Williams family in “King Richard” stick together and support each other, no matter what.
Blacks are kept in their place through economic and educational disadvantage.
This is a blended family, where all the children are girls.
Richard’s wife, Brandy came with three daughters from a previous marriage, and together they have two more girls, Venus and Serena.
They live in Compton, CA, where he is a security guard and she is a nurse, trying to raise all their daughters.
Both Richard and Brandy were athletes, so they do have some knowledge to pass on to their daughters.
Together, this husband-and-wife team groom their two youngest daughters to be tennis pros.
The way up is full of societal land mines that apply to the bullied segment of society.
As a family, they insist that all their daughters are going to get the best education possible, while Venus and Serena are being groomed for tennis stardom.
Richard and Brandy are extremely protective and sensitive to anything that might harm their daughters in a racist societal environment.
Not only is society racist, but their next-door neighbors are racist, not to mention the landmines of gangs and drugs in Compton.
I found this film extremely inspiring for everyone, not just if you were born Black.
“Licorice Pizza”

“Licorice Pizza,” Sara Murphy, Adam Somner and Paul Thomas Anderson, producers
Trailer:
Trailer: ‘Licorice Pizza’ – Bing video
Wiki:
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
Anyone can be a victim of bullying. Usually, there is some physical trait that can make one a victim.
In “Licorice Pizza”, that physical identifier is that you are the weaker sex.
Twenty-five-year-old Alana Kane meets 15-year-old actor Gary Valentine.
In this particular case, she has ten years of experience that puts her at an advantage.
Alana is a smart young female living in a male dominated culture.
In this environment, she is not rewarded for being smart, nor is she seen as an equal to a man.
She is rewarded for her sexual attributes, period.
Here, a fifteen-year-old male, is offered more advantages than she was at his age.
Love is almost impossible to achieve in this kind of an environment.
Alana Kane (Alana Haim) and as Gary Valentine (Cooper Hoffman) do eventually find love and friendship.
This occurs through their constant interest and involvement in each other’s activity, acting, water bed and pin ball businesses, and politics.
If I were to sum it all up, “Licorice Pizza” is about the politics of love.
“Nightmare Alley”

“Nightmare Alley,” Guillermo del Toro, J. Miles Dale and Bradley Cooper, producers
Trailer:
NIGHTMARE ALLEY Trailer 3 (2021) – Bing video
Wiki:
Nightmare Alley (2021 film) – Wikipedia
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
Socio-psychopaths are another form of bully, who will actually kill you in order to advance themselves.
(Spoiler alert) Drifter Stan Carlisle and psychologist Dr. Lilith Ritter, in the film, are both socio-psychopaths.
Stan and Lilith prefer to secretly kill their victims. They are completely lacking in empathy and feelings.
The question is, are socio-psychopaths born or made?
Stan kills three people during the course of this film; five, if you count the suicide.
Lilith likes to psychoanalyze her victims, so she can effectively identify their weak spots, which allows her to effectively defeat them.
Her unique talent lies in winning their trust, so she can later enjoy watching them unravel.
This film is full of not very nice people.
“The Power of the Dog”

“The Power of the Dog,” Jane Campion, Tanya Seghatchian, Emile Sherman, Iain Canning and Roger Frappier, producers
Trailer:
The Power of the Dog | Official Trailer | Netflix – Bing video
Wiki:
The Power of the Dog (film) – Wikipedia
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
Phil Burbank (Benedict Cumberbatch) is the classic bully. He likes to pick on those, whom he perceives as weaker than himself.
He enjoys getting the group to laugh at his victims.
It is hinted that he may be homosexual, so he might be motivated to deflect attention off of himself.
In the film, he is unmarried and is annoyed when his brother George (Jesse Plemons) takes a wife.
His all-male environment has now been violated.
I am not sure if he hates women or just feels that he is superior to them.
He makes a mistake, when he begins to torment the medical student son, Peter Gordon (Kodi Smit-McPhee), of his brother’s new bride.
Her son witnessed his father’s death, so he is a little messed up emotionally.
Peter may also be on his way to becoming a socio-psychopath himself.
What is so heart-breaking is that Phil at one point, is deceived that Peter may actually care about him.
This reminds me of the characters in “Nightmare Alley”, where the socio-psychopath trumps the bully.
I actually felt sorry for Phil, when his last gesture is trying to give Peter the rope that he made for him. (This scene is heart wrenching.)
“West Side Story”

“West Side Story,” Steven Spielberg and Kristie Macosko Krieger, producers
Trailer:
WEST SIDE STORY Trailer 2 (2021) – Bing video
Wiki:
West Side Story (2021 film) – Wikipedia
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
Street gangs are also a form of bullying; one group of people are pitted against another for supremacy.
In “West Side Story,” both gangs are formed for self-protection (the Puerto Ricans against the poor white group).
Each have a loyalty code to their own group (their all-male group).
Neither group has any real power, so they resort to bullying women.
This musical is famous for its rape scene. This is the scene that Rita Moreno got her Oscar for.
In the 1960’s, it was unusual for a woman to fight back, after she is nearly raped.
In this 2021 version, it is again, Rita Moreno, as the widow of the shopkeeper, who is also the one who shames the same kids.
She says, “I saw you all grow up, have you become rapists?”
She is also the one who takes in Tony, when he gets out of jail as the former leader of the Jets.
What makes this film so heart-breaking is the fact that Valentina’s (Rita Moreno) kind treatment of Tony, not only proves her level of caring, but it is what has helped him to reform.
Tony has a respect for women, which is what Maria loves about him.
In my opinion, Rita Moreno deserves the Oscar again.

Full Oscar Nominations:
Best Picture
“Belfast,” Laura Berwick, Kenneth Branagh, Becca Kovacik and Tamar Thomas, producers
X – “CODA,” Philippe Rousselet, Fabrice Gianfermi and Patrick Wachsberger, producers
“Don’t Look Up,” Adam McKay and Kevin Messick, producers
“Drive My Car,” Teruhisa Yamamoto, producer
“Dune,” Mary Parent, Denis Villeneuve and Cale Boyter, producers
“King Richard,” Tim White, Trevor White and Will Smith, producers
“Licorice Pizza,” Sara Murphy, Adam Somner and Paul Thomas Anderson, producers
“Nightmare Alley,” Guillermo del Toro, J. Miles Dale and Bradley Cooper, producers
“The Power of the Dog,” Jane Campion, Tanya Seghatchian, Emile Sherman, Iain Canning and Roger Frappier, producers
“West Side Story,” Steven Spielberg and Kristie Macosko Krieger, producers
Best Director
Kenneth Branagh (“Belfast”)
Ryûsuke Hamaguchi (“Drive My Car”)
Paul Thomas Anderson (“Licorice Pizza”)
X – Jane Campion (“The Power of the Dog”)
Steven Spielberg (“West Side Story”)
Best Lead Actor
Javier Bardem (“Being the Ricardos”)
Benedict Cumberbatch (“The Power of the Dog”)
Andrew Garfield (“Tick, Tick … Boom!”)
X – Will Smith (“King Richard”)
Denzel Washington (“The Tragedy of Macbeth”)
Best Lead Actress
X – Jessica Chastain (“The Eyes of Tammy Faye”)
Olivia Colman (“The Lost Daughter”)
Penélope Cruz (“Parallel Mothers”)
Nicole Kidman (“Being the Ricardos”)
Kristen Stewart (“Spencer”)
Best Supporting Actor
Ciarán Hinds (“Belfast”)
X – Troy Kotsur (“CODA”)
Jesse Plemons (“The Power of the Dog”)
J.K. Simmons (“Being the Ricardos”)
Kodi Smit-McPhee (“The Power of the Dog”)
Best Supporting Actress
Jessie Buckley (“The Lost Daughter”)
X – Ariana DeBose (“West Side Story”)
Judi Dench (“Belfast”
Kirsten Dunst (“The Power of the Dog”)
Aunjanue Ellis (“King Richard”)
Best Adapted Screenplay
X – “CODA,” screenplay by Siân Heder
“Drive My Car,” screenplay by Ryusuke Hamaguchi, Takamasa Oe
“Dune,” screenplay by Jon Spaihts and Denis Villeneuve and Eric Roth
“The Lost Daughter,” written by Maggie Gyllenhaal
“The Power of the Dog,” written by Jane Campion
Best Original Screenplay
X – “Belfast,” written by Kenneth Branagh
“Don’t Look Up,” screenplay by Adam McKay; story by Adam McKay and David Sirota
“King Richard,” written by Zach Baylin
“Licorice Pizza,” written by Paul Thomas Anderson
“The Worst Person in the World,” written by Eskil Vogt, Joachim Trier
Best Cinematography
X – “Dune,” Greig Fraser
“Nightmare Alley,” Dan Laustsen
“The Power of the Dog,” Ari Wegner
“The Tragedy of Macbeth,” Bruno Delbonnel
“West Side Story,” Janusz Kaminski
Best Animated Feature Film
X – “Encanto,” Jared Bush, Byron Howard, Yvett Merino and Clark Spencer
“Flee,” Jonas Poher Rasmussen, Monica Hellström, Signe Byrge Sørensen and Charlotte De La Gournerie
“Luca,” Enrico Casarosa and Andrea Warren
“The Mitchells vs. the Machines,” Mike Rianda, Phil Lord, Christopher Miller and Kurt Albrecht
“Raya and the Last Dragon,” Don Hall, Carlos López Estrada, Osnat Shurer and Peter Del Vecho
Best Animated Short Film
“Affairs of the Art,” Joanna Quinn and Les Mills
“Bestia,” Hugo Covarrubias and Tevo Díaz
“Boxballet,” Anton Dyakov
“Robin Robin,” Dan Ojari and Mikey Please
X – “The Windshield Wiper,” Alberto Mielgo and Leo Sanchez
Best Costume Design
X – “Cruella,” Jenny Beavan
“Cyrano,” Massimo Cantini Parrini and Jacqueline Durran
“Dune,” Jacqueline West and Robert Morgan
“Nightmare Alley,” Luis Sequeira
“West Side Story,” Paul Tazewell
Best Original Score
“Don’t Look Up,” Nicholas Britell
X – “Dune,” Hans Zimmer
“Encanto,” Germaine Franco
“Parallel Mothers,” Alberto Iglesias
“The Power of the Dog,” Jonny Greenwood
Best Sound
“Belfast,” Denise Yarde, Simon Chase, James Mather and Niv Adiri
X – “Dune,” Mac Ruth, Mark Mangini, Theo Green, Doug Hemphill and Ron Bartlett
“No Time to Die,” Simon Hayes, Oliver Tarney, James Harrison, Paul Massey and Mark Taylor
“The Power of the Dog,” Richard Flynn, Robert Mackenzie and Tara Webb
“West Side Story,” Tod A. Maitland, Gary Rydstrom, Brian Chumney, Andy Nelson and Shawn Murphy
Best Original Song
“Be Alive” from “King Richard,” music and lyric by Dixson and Beyoncé Knowles-Carter
“Dos Oruguitas” from “Encanto,” music and lyric by Lin-Manuel Miranda
“Down To Joy” from “Belfast,” music and lyric by Van Morrison
X – “No Time To Die” from “No Time to Die,” music and lyric by Billie Eilish and Finneas O’Connell
“Somehow You Do” from “Four Good Days,” music and lyric by Diane Warren
Best Documentary Feature
“Ascension,” Jessica Kingdon, Kira Simon-Kennedy and Nathan Truesdell
“Attica,” Stanley Nelson and Traci A. Curry
“Flee,” Jonas Poher Rasmussen, Monica Hellström, Signe Byrge Sørensen and Charlotte De La Gournerie
X – “Summer of Soul (…Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised),” Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson, Joseph Patel, Robert Fyvolent and David Dinerstein
“Writing With Fire,” Rintu Thomas and Sushmit Ghosh
Best Documentary Short Subject
“Audible,” Matt Ogens and Geoff McLean
“Lead Me Home,” Pedro Kos and Jon Shenk
X – “The Queen of Basketball,” Ben Proudfoot
“Three Songs for Benazir,” Elizabeth Mirzaei and Gulistan Mirzaei
“When We Were Bullies,” Jay Rosenblatt
Best Film Editing
“Don’t Look Up,” Hank Corwin
X – “Dune,” Joe Walker
“King Richard”, Pamela Martin
“The Power of the Dog,” Peter Sciberras
“Tick, Tick…Boom!” Myron Kerstein and Andrew Weisblum
Best International Feature Film
X – “Drive My Car” (Japan)
“Flee” (Denmark)
“The Hand of God” (Italy)
“Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom” (Bhutan)
“The Worst Person in the World” (Norway)
Best Makeup and Hairstyling
“Coming 2 America,” Mike Marino, Stacey Morris and Carla Farmer
“Cruella,” Nadia Stacey, Naomi Donne and Julia Vernon
“Dune,” Donald Mowat, Love Larson and Eva von Bahr
X – “The Eyes of Tammy Faye,” Linda Dowds, Stephanie Ingram and Justin Raleigh
“House of Gucci,” Göran Lundström, Anna Carin Lock and Frederic Aspiras
Best Production Design
X – “Dune,” production design: Patrice Vermette; set decoration: Zsuzsanna Sipos
“Nightmare Alley,” production design: Tamara Deverell; set decoration: Shane Vieau
“The Power of the Dog,” production design: Grant Major; set decoration: Amber Richards
“The Tragedy of Macbeth,” production design: Stefan Dechant; set decoration: Nancy Haigh
“West Side Story,” production design: Adam Stockhausen; set decoration: Rena DeAngelo
Best Visual Effects
X – “Dune,” Paul Lambert, Tristan Myles, Brian Connor and Gerd Nefzer
“Free Guy,” Swen Gillberg, Bryan Grill, Nikos Kalaitzidis and Dan Sudick
“No Time to Die,” Charlie Noble, Joel Green, Jonathan Fawkner and Chris Corbould
“Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings,” Christopher Townsend, Joe Farrell, Sean Noel Walker and Dan Oliver
“Spider-Man: No Way Home,” Kelly Port, Chris Waegner, Scott Edelstein and Dan Sudick
Best Live Action Short Film
“Ala Kachuu – Take and Run,” Maria Brendle and Nadine Lüchinger
“The Dress,” Tadeusz Łysiak and Maciej Ślesicki
X – “The Long Goodbye,” Aneil Karia and Riz Ahmed
“On My Mind,” Martin Strange-Hansen and Kim Magnusson
“Please Hold,” K.D. Dávila and Levin Menekse
3/26/2022 # 2022 Oscar Predictions
Being the Ricardos

Being the Ricardos vs. the True Story of Lucille Ball, Desi Arnaz (historyvshollywood.com)
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
Let’s be honest, Lucille Ball (Nicole Kidman) was a pioneer in showing us how a mixed marriage could be accepted.
She challenged the idea that maybe there could be an equal relationship between a husband and a wife.
And, she even shattered the status quo concept that pregnancy could be depicted on television.
In “Being the Ricardos”, she is depicted as being a little crazy, when it was actually her husband, Desi (Javier Bardem), who was the crazy lying cheat in their marriage.
Ball used humor to help people accept it all, and in the process, she let people laugh at her.
She was doing it all for love, except her Cuban husband had old school ideas about men and women.
Like Tammy Faye, Lucille Ball becomes a clown-like figure in public.
Cast
| Directed by | Aaron Sorkin |
| Written by | Aaron Sorkin |
House of Gucci

HOUSE OF GUCCI | Official Trailer | MGM Studios – Bing video
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
Similar to “Being the Ricardos,” the “House of Gucci” is fascinating, because it depicts a marriage comprised of mixed classes: The crazy rich and the hard-working upper middle class.
This film shows us the strengths of both classes.
Patrizia (Lady Gaga) manages the payroll accounts of her father’s business, so she is used to managing authority as a woman.
Like Lucille Ball, she is an intelligent woman trapped in a patriarchal society.
Both films are true stories.
In my opinion, Patrizia did not need a tarot reader, she needed an ally, which, unfortunately, was not her husband.
Maurizios’ (Adam Driver) father’s lawyer manages to pit the rich family members against each other to his own advantage.
Patrizia ends up in jail, Maurizio ends up dead, and the family lawyer (Jack Huston) takes over the family business.
Cast
| Directed by | Ridley Scott |
| Screenplay by | · Becky Johnston
· Roberto Bentivegna |
| Story by | Becky Johnston |
Spencer

SPENCER – Official Teaser Trailer – In Theaters November 5th – Bing video
The director of “Spencer” talks about the movie on Princess Diana – Bing video
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
In “Spencer,” Princess Diana (Kristen Stewart), does not become a clown, she becomes bulimic.
Big red flag, her bulimia begins and is most severe right before she is to marry, Prince Charles (Jack Farthing).
Her subconscious body was screaming, “don’t marry him.”
What kind of man, agrees to marry a beautiful young woman, while not hiding his affair with another woman (Camilla)?
Diana (Kristen Stewart) was too young and amenable to patriarchal ways, to protest.
She apparently thought that she could make Charles (Jack Farthing) love her in the process of bearing him two sons.
Like in “Being the Ricardos” and in “The Eyes of Tammy Faye,” Diana is made to look crazy in the process of becoming another victim of the patriarchal system.
Diana finds herself on the outside, under intense, microscopic criticism.
Diana was a person of feeling and empathy, which was out of place in such a militaristic environment.
The Queen (Stella Gonet) appears to be cold towards her. With Diana’s mother gone, Diana was seeking some kind of warmth from the mother Queen.
In the end, her escape to freedom is divorce.
Cast[
| Directed by | Pablo Larraín |
| Written by | Steven Knight |
*(“For all her aristocratic breeding, this innocent young kindergarten teacher felt totally at sea in the deferential hierarchy of Buckingham Palace. There were many tears in those three months and many more to come after that. Weight simply dropped off, her waist shrinking from 29 inches when the engagement was announced down to 23 inches on her wedding day. It was during this turbulent time that her bulimia nervosa, which would take nearly a decade to overcome, began,” Morton writes.
After the wedding in 1981, Prince Charles allegedly commented on Diana’s weight, which exacerbated Diana’s insecurities. “My husband put his hand on my waistline and said: ‘Oh, a bit chubby here, aren’t we?’ and that triggered off something in me. And the Camilla thing,” Diana said in the novel, the “Camilla thing” being Charles’s apparent and ongoing affair with Camilla Shand. On their honeymoon, Charles wore cufflinks that Camilla had given him, which had intertwined “C’s,” and spoke to her on the phone regularly.
While Diana’s bulimia was a secret to the public, the princess said everyone in the palace was aware of her struggles. “Everyone in the family knew about the bulimia, and everyone blamed the bulimia for the failure of the marriage,” she said.)
The Eyes of Tammy Faye


Tammy Faye (young) and (old).
THE EYES OF TAMMY FAYE Trailer (2021) Jessica Chastain, Andrew Garfield Drama Movie – Bing video
The Eyes of Tammy Faye vs. the True Story of Tammy and Jim Bakker (historyvshollywood.com)
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
Here comes the clown, Tammy Faye.
Tammy (Jessica Chastain) is one of many a young woman, who innocently marries a gay/bi man.
She finds herself in a loveless marriage.
In the film, “The Eyes of Tammy Faye,” Tammy is depicted as an energetic, intelligent woman, who gives out love to everyone, but herself.
She gives love to her husband, her mother, her parishioners, but does not get it in return.
She becomes a love-starved, clown-like figure.
The sad part is that her religious intensions were sincere, and receiving money was not important to her.
Tammy Faye just wanted to help people.
Getting more and more money was how her husband, Jim Bakker (Andrew Garfield), proved his manhood, for which he goes to jail.
Cast
| Directed by | Michael Showalter |
| Screenplay by | Abe Sylvia |
| Based on | The Eyes of Tammy Faye by Fenton Bailey Randy Barbato |
1/13/2022 # Women in Film 2021 & 2022

(L to r.) Omar (Amir El-Masry) ,Wasef (Ola Orebiyi), Abedi (Kwabena Ansah) and Farhad (Vikash Bhai).
Trailer:
LIMBO Trailer (2021) Drama Movie – Bing video
Film Review by Marlene Ardoin
With fresh and vivid images of the desperate Afghan people trying to escape a brutal Taliban dictatorship, Scottish Director Ben Sharrock nails the timely pathos of the asylum seeking immigrant experience in “Limbo”.
“Limbo” is a psychological study of four asylum seekers, who find themselves as housemates on a remote Scottish island, waiting to be processed.
Omar (Amir El-Masry) is from Syria, Farhad (Vikash Bhai) is from Afghanistan, Wasef (Ola Orebiyi) is from Nigeria and Abedi (Kwabena Ansah) is from Ghana.
Each housemate represents a different country and culture, yet they each have their own personalities and expectations of living in Scotland.
The cold, windy island is symbolic of their predicament.
To really succeed, they need a positive attitude, a philosophical belief on which to cling, and some kind of encouraging family connection.
I am not sure if it was unconscious bias, or intentional, but the two African men appear to have none of these advantages, so we witness the circumstances being stacked against them.

Farhad (Vikash Bhai) with chicken, Abedi (Kwabena Ansah), Omar (Amir El-Masry), and Wasef (Ola Orebiyi) in “Limbo”.
This film addresses unconscious bias, which expresses as an unwillingness to help or to assist. It expresses as an indifference towards them in expecting the worst of them and in not caring about or reaching out to them. When one of them disappears, no one sounds the alarm or tries to find him.
“Limbo” addresses jealousy and competitiveness, disparities in resources and support.
It addresses despair, disappointment, and false expectations.
I also felt a little bit of gender bias. Women are not depicted as nobly as the men. They are more the source of humor in this film.

Boris (Kenneth Collard), Helga (Sidse Babett Knudsen), and Abedi (Kwabena Ansah) in Limbo.
On the positive side, this film addresses a healthy willingness to learn a new culture, an openness to trying new ways and meeting new people, who may be different and, who may also harbor a race consciousness about who you are.
What I received from this film was an authentic feeling of walking in the shoes of an immigrant.
Twenty-twenty hindsight, is looking back on one’s experience, then getting a second chance to do it over.
“Limbo” can be either rented or purchased online, and is highly recommended.

Farhad (Vikash Bhai) takes his schooling seriously.
Cast:
| Directed by | Ben Sharrock |
| Produced by | · Irune Gurtubai
· Angus Lamont |
| Written by | Ben Sharrock |
| Starring | · Amir El-Masry
· Vikash Bhai · Ola Orebiyi · Kwabena Ansah · Kenneth Collard |
| Music by | Hutch Demouilpied |
| Cinematography | Nick Cooke |
| Edited by | Karel Dolak Lucia Zucchetti |
| Production companies |
· Film4 Productions
· Caravan Cinema |
| Distributed by | MUBI |
| Release date | · 12 September 2020 (TIFF)
· 30 July 2021 (United Kingdom) |
| Running time | 103 minutes |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Language | English |
| Box office | $92,780[1] |
Wiki of “Limbo”:
Amir El-Masry Biography:
Amir El-Masry – Biography – IMDb
Vikash Bhai Interview: Limbo:
Vikash Bhai Interview: Limbo | Screen Rant
Writer/Director Ben Sharrock:
https://shortcircuit.scot/spotlight-on-ben-sharrock/
Ben Sharrock And Amir El-Masry Bring A Refugee Story To Life In ‘Limbo’ : NPR
Limbo director on crafting a different kind of refugee story | EW.com
Interview: Ben Sharrock on Challenging Labels with Refugee Dramedy Limbo – Slant Magazine
Spotlight On: Ben Sharrock – Short Circuit

Omar, a young Syrian musician burdened by the weight of his grandfather’s oud, which he has carried all the way from his homeland.
8/18/2021 # Limbo