All posts by Tarek Fayoumi…The Paterson of his Craft!

I am someone who strives to become a professional critic. I watch and review many movies. I view the eyes of movies as something as an art form. I have followed many critics over the years, but once I was thirteen I knew writing film reviews was going to be my passion. I learned from watching multiple episodes of Ebert And Roeper in my teen years, and then in middle school I began writing film reviews for a newspaper club. I am also an avid fan of the arts of Chicago including Theatre, Comedy, and music. Films, however, are my primary focus.

Honey Boy Review (Seen at the Chicago International Film Festival)


 

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After experiencing Honey Boy at the Chicago International Film Festival, I now have full respect for Shia LaBeouf. In this film, he truly redeems himself in a story based on his own life at a young age. LaBeouf also wrote the movie and plays his own father, a challenging role. This is also a big directorial debut for director Alma Har’el. Honey Boy is deep with emotions, spellbinding, and powerful from the beginning to the end. Honey Boy also helps viewers realize why Shia has had some rough years, based on the film’s representation of the actor’s struggles both at a young age and as he has grown older.

Honey Boy gears on the life of a boy named Otis who is a young child actor. The film starts with Otis at age 22 (played by Lucas Hedges) and goes back to Otis at age 12 (played by Noah Jupe). Immediately, viewers see the life of an actor that is making the big bucks with the movies, but also getting himself into tons of trouble with the law due to drug abuse-related conflicts that he struggles to stop. Then the film transitions to his younger days and his life being a popular child actor with lots going for him but has an abusive father.  James Lort (played by Shia LaBeouf) is jealous, cruel, outspoken, and testy. He has a bad record, cannot get a job, and his source of income is based on Otis’ fame. He is abusive towards his son because he feels his fame can give him a better life without having to do anything. He is also envious because his son has fame and he does not. This is a serious issue LaBeouf suffered throughout his childhood and that is why I believe he plays the role of his own father so realistically.

The movie transitions multiple times between young and old Otis. The older Otis is in treatment for his drug addiction and is in denial about what is going through his mind.  The counselors challenge him to be open and honest about why his mindset is not in a good place. Hedges is deep and thorough with making his emotions speak to his viewers. When the movie transitions to young Otis, it is the time period when Otis is getting famous. Every time he comes home, his father has nasty words to say and turns all the little conversations into opportunities to put Otis down. Eventually Otis’ tension starts to come around and more damage is done. There are moments when Otis’ father asks for another chance and even tells him he promises there will be a change, but it is always the opposite, it’s a lie. I love how the film’s representation demonstrates the reason why Otis struggles as he grows up.  Clearly, it is because he never had the true support parents should give their kids for their individual talents that can get them far in life.

After looking back at the many outbursts and controversial scenarios LaBeouf has had throughout the years, it makes more sense now. He did not have a supporting father, so once he became an adult, he went his own way.  Although he was always very talented, he struggled to show his emotions. However, now LaBeouf appears to be a changed man. I have seen it with The Peanut Butter Falcon this year and I see it again in Honey Boy in which LaBeouf is able to display his many talents. I believe now that he played his own father, he is starting to realize how he can overcome his challenges through his art of acting. Honey Boy soars with moments of despair turning into hope. I loved this movie and I felt quite emotional at moments.  In the end, it lets viewers who are artistic and/or support the arts feel they are not alone. Four stars for Honey Boy.

Parasite Review


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I have been growing more impressed with Director Joon-ho Bong’s films and I am the most impressed with his newest release, Parasite. This movie is a comedy, drama and thriller that tests many limits as well as offering some expected and unexpected outcomes. Bong’s trademark of making films that are socially and politically conscious remain a big factor with Parasite. The film is filled with people taking advantage of one another, telling lies to get positive results, and thinking of strategies to impact an individual but also benefit the other. The film gets chilling as those elements go on throughout the movie.

The film centers on Kim Ki-taek (played by Kang-ho Song) who is unemployed and trying to maintain a better livelihood for his family since they have little income and can barely afford the necessities that are needed to get by in the world. With this inconvenience in his life, he starts to express an interest in working for wealthy families to gain access to more elegant factors. He has his son Kim Ki-Woo (played by Woo-sik Choi) act like a top-notch tutor for the daughter of a wealthy family, and then after that he has his daughter Kim Ki-jung (played by So-dam Park) be another form of support for the youngest son of that wealthy family. Finally, Ki-taek has his wife Kim Chung-Sook (played by Hye-jin Jang) play a part in being the new housekeeper for this family. The funny part is that the wealthy family has no idea that they are all related.

The Kim family takes advantage of the fancy household because the wealthy family is rarely ever around. They eat the fancy food, use the fancy technology, and even get other workers fired to have even more space for themselves. Parasite makes it seem that the Kim’s are being cheapskates, however, they are just finding resources to have things they cannot afford in life. They normally live in a basement home that is claustrophobic and can flood easily. Also, they have a spotty internet connection where they often need to roam other corners of their home just to get WiFi on their phones. Bong incorporates the family’s level of poverty descriptively where audiences start to understand why they are trying to become part of this wealthy family’s life.

During the movie, there are some scenes where the film may seem like a funny comedy but then it transitions into a dark comedy.  That is an element that viewers need to see for themselves by watching Parasite. The title alone is something viewers will understand when certain conflicts come around. However, the title is just one small part of the film’s central conflict. The main conflict is where things becoming haunting. The house may seem nice and cozy, but it has some dark secrets which relate to the wealthy family’s past.  Later, the Kim family falls into this realization when they are confronted with these various dark alleys.

Parasite is one I label as a top film 2019 on my list and that is because of its unexpected surprises. I went in with excitement, but my enthusiasm grew as I was watching the movie   and the crazy surprises started to occur. Bong tests his viewers by offering shock value with Parasite. The film will have viewers laughing and wondering as new clues to weird scenarios arise. I am giving Parasite four stars.

Joker Review


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Now this is the role that Joaquin Phoenix was born to play. Joker is beyond one of the most thrilling, catastrophic, menacing, and haunting thrill-ride of October. Phoenix has all the perfect characteristics and attitude for this role. He has the suspicious facial expressions, the bizarre laughs, and has the momentum to build to the craziness as his villain character starts to evolve. For director Todd Phillips, he has stepped up his game with directing. I am used to seeing him direct comedies, or films that are dark comedies. Joker is a dark comedy. The film gets even darker as the film progresses.

 

The film starts out with gearing on the back story of Joker. The man’s name (before Joker is a name for him) is Arthur Fleck (Phoenix). He is a depressed, crazy, and mentally ill man that has a life he resents. He is on many medications and has lots of people that refuse to hire him or work with him. He also has many financial problems which start to impact his life. Also, his disorders that happen suddenly (most of the time) start to make him grow to be an even more dangerous person. He develops odd creative ideas, fantasizes about violence, and he views his negative actions to be a positive for himself because in his mindset he defines his judgment as funny (even though they are irreparable consequences). Phoenix delivers the role to the top of his game and it is just inviting but also disturbing.

 

I always thought Heath Ledger’s role of the Joker in The Dark Knight (2008) was one of the best jokers, but now I believe there are two of the best. Phoenix is the second. Only difference though, Ledger’s role geared on the mayhem and destruction without much of his back story (besides some childhood moments in certain conversations). Phoenix’s role gears entirely on his back story but leads up to mayhem. However, this one is much disturbing, and it is hard to define Joker as the protagonist or the antagonist. That is what makes Joker so enticing because viewers wonder if they should root for him or for the people he is impacting, but they also wonder if the prior abuse by other characters make them the antagonists. Joker is a film that leaves viewers to wonder who is to blame for the mental problems that have been built up in this Joker’s mind.

 

Phoenix is one of those actors that I find that has never done a bad role. He always has done something brilliant and this is another brilliant work of art by him. He is always good at playing someone ill-fated, depressed, or angry but expresses it quietly. I find that for this role, he will be praised for it and he already is. Also, I find that when I saw this movie, that Phoenix always can have either a memorable line or habit in his movies. He has that in The Master (2012), Her (2013), Inherent Vice (2014) and many other films. Phoenix always displays something memorable, yet disturbing, and that is why he is right for The Joker.

 

Overall, this movie needs to be experienced. May have some disturbing moments, but if you’re a fan of superhero movies, then this needs to be experienced. It needs though, to be experienced in a premium format. One that is like IMAX or 70 MM projection. I saw this in IMAX because I wanted to fee like I was watching The Dark Knight again in IMAX like I did back in 2008, and I remember people applauded right when Ledger came into the movie, because the IMAX experience made them feel he is right there. It did that for me with Joker in IMAX as soon as Phoenix came out as that character. I am giving this movie four stars!