Category Archives: Film reviews

Asteroid City Review


As a die-hard fan of Wes Anderson, he strikes gold again with brilliant directing and a bizarre world that feels interactive in his latest film.  There are loads of dynamics involving connections and conflicts between his characters who are stuck in one setting in Asteroid City. The movie is a bit like Wes Anderson’s The Twilight Zone because of the astronomy and physics he utilizes in his creative world. The all-star cast includes Jason Schwartzman (as Augie Steenbeck), Scarlett Johansson (as Midge Campbell), Tom Hanks (as Stanley Zak), Jeffrey Wright (as Grif Gibson) Tilda Swinton (as Dr. Hickenlooper), Bryan Cranston (as the Host), Edward Norton (as Conrad Earp), Adrien Brody (as Schubert Green), Liev Schreiber (as J.J. Kellogg), Hope Davis (as Sandy Borden), Stephen Park (as Roger Cho), Rupert Friend (as Montana), Matt Dillon (as Hank), and many more. It is an endless adventure of wit and giggles in an immersive world that will make audiences’ heads spin.

Asteroid City also offers an element of surprise which makes the film even more irresistible. The film begins with the Host presenting a play and then relating it back to Conrad Earp, a writer. The film’s introduction feels like a real experience which is a bit like Anderson’s The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou (2004). Only this time, the film jumps back and forth between the Host doing his introductions to moments from Conrad Earp to the conflicts in the film’s setting, Asteroid City. The back-and-forth storyline as a setup makes the movie invigorating. The film begins by focusing on the family of Augie Steenbeck, a recent widower who is explaining the sad news to his children. Augie’s father-in-law is Stanley Zak. The two men have a strained relationship. Augie and his family end up in Asteroid City due to car problems detected by the mechanic Hank. Once the car goes out of commission, more problems arise in the town. There is a quarantine order due to UFO danger as well as astronomy concerns. The scientific issues in the film are innovative and shift the dynamics of everyone in Asteroid City.

Astronomy is the focus of the unanswered questions for the film’s characters. Asteroid City explores a variety of intriguing subject matter. Augie finds himself feeling love for Midge Campbell. Augie is a photographer and is always taking pictures around the town. Another character is J.J. Kellogg who plays a boot camp father with strong family values. In addition, the characters are trying to pass the time in quarantine due to unprecedented UFOs. Anderson’s depiction of life in quarantine is relatable due to the actual world recovering from a pandemic. Piled onto these issues are the relationships and backgrounds of all the other characters. Like the approach utilized in Anderson’s previous projects, there are insights into political issues and current interests. Asteroid City is an outstanding work of fiction portrayed in a realistic, clever, and artistic form.

With the direction shifting between narration by Cranston and the scenarios playing out in Asteroid City, several questions and unexpected surprises occur which add to the strangeness and the politics of this fictional world. Anderson also presents scenarios which are unclear in his pictures, but still in tune because of how it relates to his characters and who is ultimately in charge. Asteroid City is one-of-a-kind world filled with egos of talented, crazy people who are under a quarantine in a deserted Nuke town. Asteroid City presents endless possibilities and pure nostalgic joy.

Everyone faces challenges around every corner in Asteroid City which are made more complex due to the egotistical behaviors in close quarters. There are also breathtaking and amusing scenes in Asteroid City that spark the imagination and create an unforgettable spectacle. Four stars for Asteroid City.

The Blackening Review


An adventure of misfit friends and laughs in a twisted yet creative context, The Blackening is what I would call killer funny. The film keeps its audience on edge and its laughs are well timed. It’s quirky but in a good way. Almost each word or scenario in the film is full of wit and giggles. And the setup of The Blackening is horror meets comedy at its finest.

The Blackening gears on seven Black friends who are on a weekend getaway at a cabin in the woods. They are Lisa (played by Antoinette Robertson), Dewayne (played by Dewayne Perkins), Nhamdi (played by Sinqua Walls), Allison (played by Grace Byers) Shanka (played by X Mayo), King (played by Melvin Gregg), and Clifton (played by Jermaine Fowler). A group of diverse people with all kinds of strange humor and often poor judgment, the friends’ vacation is going just fine until they come across a board game called The Blackening. The skill to keep themselves alive and survive this deadly board game is their knowledge of horror movies. That’s the key to making it out of the game alive.

The friends in The Blackening come together to fight for survival, but they aren’t that serious and neither is the film. The friends’ knowledge of horror films leads to all kinds of stereotypes and arguments, and many of the arguments distracts them from the main goal of staying alive. This is where The Blackening finds its genius track. Many of the friends are smart and some not so much, so the dialogue between them becomes offensive at times, but still consistently hysterical. The terror is even hilarious. The Blackening is slapstick at its finest.

The film’s dialogue is where I was sold. Though fighting for their life to survive in the cabin of horrors, the characters also question each other’s beliefs and political backgrounds. This dialogue had me dying laughing—especially when they would get off the subject of figuring out how best to survive. One of the character even admits to voting for Donald Trump. The Blackening will enthrall its audience with its humanistic and realistic humor in a quirky game adventure of a comedy.

To me, The Blackening was almost like the film Jumanji crossed with the television series In Living Color. The board game theme is of course where the Jumanjireference comes in, and the tone of the humor and the personalities and backgrounds of many of the characters was similar to In Living Color. But the terror obviously sets it apart. And the approach work quite well. The Blackening is simply the most creative and superb ensemble cast I have seen in a long time.

I will say that some may find the film offensive at times, but I didn’t find it that way at all. The Blackening starts with a creative concept, it all works very well, and the outcomes are genius. I could not get enough of the joy of The Blackening. Three and a half stars out of four stars for this superb slapstick horror comedy.

The Flash Trips While it Runs…Discussion with Mike Crowley of YPA Reviews on The Flash