Ex-Husbands Review


The title sets a melancholy tone that has a dramatic presence. The direction is subtle in this film and there is a sense that there is a mid-life crisis scenario at hand. Ex-Husbands speaks for itself. The writing and directing is by Noah Pritzker who is just entering the game of directing full-length features. In Ex-Husbands, he pushes the limits of happiness encountering blockades. 

The film focuses on Peter Pearce (played by Griffin Dunne), a middle-aged man going through a divorce with his wife Maria Pearce (played by Rosanna Arquette). His father Simon Pearce (played by Richard Benjamin) is very sick in a nursing home. The oldest son Nick Pearce (played by James Norton) is engaged but his relationship is also in a bad place. The youngest son Mickey Pearce is gay and struggles with moments of feeling closeted in his self-love journey. To escape the many dramas, Peter books a trip to Tulum. Coincidentally, Nick’s bachelor party is in the same location. Peter has traveled to Tulum by himself, and Nick and Mickey are there to celebrate Nick’s engagement. With many moving parts that are mentally hard to take, Ex-Husbands becomes a place where reconciliation has a chance to overcome dramatic undertones. 

When the film takes its audience to Tulum, the portrait painted is of happiness being harder than expected to achieve. With all the personal problems between Peter and his boys, the film’s pacing made me feel different given the various fragments in which some moments are upbeat and then others down. The real feelings are bound to take audiences on a ride of underlying sadness. Peter is not sure how to handle his mentally aggravating scenarios, and neither are his boys.

While Ex-Husbands creates thoughts of resentment, the characters slowly find common ground. This happens when Nick invites his father to some bachelor party festivities. They start to bond over sharing rough patches. There are unlikely connections at unexpected moments between Peter, Nick and Mickey. Nick’s problems correlate to the ones that he shares with his father despite being engaged. Their personality traits lead to dynamics that are spot on in Ex-Husbands.

Another instance where there is an unlikely connection at an unexpected moment happens when there is a sense that the bachelor party may not feel all that special. However, at the same time, it is a chance for Peter to be there for his son even though it was not his intention to end up at the same vacation spot. The precious timing in Ex-Husband takes a serious turn and demonstrates to the audience that Peter’s life is not in the happiest place, nor is life for his boys either. The younger son feels stuck in the middle of it all. He is the third wheel trying to battle his own thoughts of feeling closeted and lost. 

The emotions displayed in Heizer’s performance made me think of his role from the Netflix series 13 Reasons Why. He still has the ability to play an ailing young man in Ex-Husbands.Norton’s performance reminded me of his role from the film Nowhere Special. When he is trying to have a good time before problems begin, he is in that same emotional state in Ex-Husbands. Even though the men’s problems are depressing, the question of whose problems are more important is really no competition. The reality is that sticking together gives a family purpose.

The family navigating the difficulties around them is where Ex-Husbands finds its essential track. It is not a feel-good flick but instead defines what is essential when there is family turmoil. Finding solutions is portrayed poetically in Ex-Husbands. It gives a realistic view with artistic perspective of life scenarios that can be hard to tango with. Three out of four stars.

Invader Review


In just seventy minutes the terror of a home invasion is a mystifying monster in Invader. Written and directed by Mickey Keating, the norm of what may shock and scare audiences takes a new direction in this film. As a Chicago native, the areas of the film grabbed my attention, while I was also shaking in my seat. The cameras and angles are frequently choppy which captures the essence of what it would feel like if a scenario like Invaderwere to happen. A warning though, Invader is very realistic with graphic violence that may be too much to bear for some. For those who can handle it, they are in for a treat but also must go with an open mind.

The film begins with a man wrecking and destroying a home. His goes by the name is “Invader” (played by Joe Swanberg). He continually bashes things up at home with a hammer. The film then transitions to Anna (played by Vero Maynez), as she is coming to the suburbs of Chicago to visit her cousin. However, once she is off the bus, her cousin is not answering her phone, and she gets in a cab. She quickly gets out of the cab because the driver seems dangerous, and she is right, because it is “The Invader!” Anna goes on foot to try and find answers and make it to her cousin’s home to look for clues and evidence of why her cousin is not answering the phone.

Invader fills in the pieces to the puzzle quickly and detrimentally. The writing is paced to convey timing to be of the essence, as it is a bigger nightmare that tends to keep its vibrant tactics swiftly on edge. It interprets anxiety through the lens of conflict, as lives may be in the balance if Anna does not find the answers quickly. Why is Anna’s cousin not answering the phone? Why are there weird traits around Anna? Once Anna meets Carlo, a colleague of her cousin (played by Colin Huerta), they both try to find the pieces to her cousin’s disappearance. Invader keeps its tracks to be a subtle cat-and-mouse game awaiting the finish line to be a harrowing and unforgettable awakening.

There is a chance that “The Invader” may have taken over her cousin’s home. This is the nightmare that is the ravishing aspect of the film. The screenwriting blends in the context of home life and safety to a new level of terror. The continued angles of shaky cameras fulfill the film’s odyssey to create the atmosphere of scarcity.  Once there is the opportunity for Anna and Carlo to come face to face with “The Invader” it takes the terrifying elements to new heights—it is spectacle.

With all of the moving parts and creepy traits, I was both astonished and mortified by Invader. It is a stellar and disturbing work-of-art that paints a portrait of how harrowing a break-in can be. The thoughts that go through one’s head after tragic events creates a blur that cannot be dismissed. Keating pushes the envelope of suspense vividly, thoroughly, and audaciously with Invader. After my experience, it made me want to double check my windows and doors to make sure they were locked up tight. With that in mind, I am sure audiences will know what to expect with this one-of-a-kind, independent slasher flick. It is short but the presentation is extremely real. Invader takes the cake this time. Three-and-a-half out of four stars.

Armand Review


When it comes to movies that revolve around parenting and adding the component of school, they are often written with the intention for its audience to pick a side. “Side” as in the elements of proper parenting, well-behaved children, and all the dynamics that go along with that. Then there is also the factor that much of what is seen is not true—presented in order to have its audience experience moments of feeling no forms of trust. Armand lacks “trust” in the strongest sense possible. Written and directed by Halfdan Ullmann Tondel, Armand is a drama that gives off a vibe of uncertainty that I especially felt with the film’s movement around the subject matter. It starts off as minor, and then gradually keeps introducing more moving parts to have you think otherwise. Armand is a blindsided direction into a dynamic of haunting value—as it tumbles toward the inevitable it becomes interesting, but also not so pleasant.

I did not expect pleasant themes with Armand. Especially with its plot structure. The film’s main character is Elisabeth (played by Renate Reinsve), and she is the mother of a young son, Armand. The film’s other characters of focus are Sarah (played by Ellen Dorrit Petersen) and Anders (played by Endre Hellestveit). They are also the parents of a son, Tom. The conflict occurs after an incident between Armand and Tom. Supposedly, Armand has assaulted Tom. This is a conflict that loops in for a two-hour intervention with Elisabeth and Sarah bashing heads. The boys’ teacher, Sunna (played by Thea Lambrechts Vaulen) struggles to keep the calm and find a better process to navigate the situation. It is one where two wrongs do not make a right, but sadly both sets of parents do not want to believe what the true scenario is. Disbelief is the cause of distrust.

The dramedy of Armand finds its opportunity to get even more detrimental when the higher authorities of the school must get involved in the matter. They are Jarle (played by Oystein Roger) and Ajsa (played by Vera Vljovic-Jovanovic). Both come together to think about where the issue remains at hand. However, the dynamics of the film and the individuality among the parents are what makes the film more serious than audiences expect.

The direction of the film has its moments where it makes a placefor joy and escapism, especially with the quirky personality from the performances of Reinsve and Hellestveit. Their behaviors and thought processes are questionable in the film’s matter. That is where the expansion of the problems to consider creates an underlying tone with more disturbing factors in Armand. The writing, along with the technological aspects of drama, is not only about finding a peaceful solution to a small problem at a school, but also to figure out if there are outside influences that may have led to such a problem with these two young boys. Is it a problem at home? Problems with parentalrelationships? Roads of darkness do not fade in Armand; they only create the puzzle to present the clearer portrait of what the matter may truly be. 

The puzzling fascination of Armand is all around the personality traits. Each conversation is one where the camera angles close in on the thoughts and perceptions of the characters. The setting of Norway also loops in a cultural feeling that leaves the audience curious about how matters of education and conflict are bound to be dealt with. It is subtle with its tone in broaching the subject of some realistic stressors.

Although it is not brilliant, it keeps its authoritative tracks to have presence. Conflicts of younger individuals boils over into many dynamics that spew repeatedly. There is no clear directionas to how the scenario should be handled. Armand does contain artistic value which levels responsibility in a fascinating light. Two-and-a-half out of four stars.

Treating cinema in many forms of art!