Tag Archives: Film reviews

The Mother Review


The role of overly protective mother suits Jennifer Lopez well. In 2002, she played a mother trying to protect herself and her child from her abusive husband in Enough. In 2015, she played a mother trying to protect herself from a psycho student in The Boy Next Door (2015). In The Mother, she plays the parent who has a past that impacts her own child. The name of Lopez’s character is simply Mother.

This film opens in a crime investigation and the situation has gotten ugly. She has spent much of her life on the run trying to escape from her past involvement with drug cartels and dangerous enemies. Mother keeps getting caught in situations where her troubles are linked to her past.  Mother can’t even see her daughter Zoey (played by Lucy Paez) due to having legal troubles which pose a risk to her own daughter.  Both Mother and Zoey are in harm’s way and the situations do not get any easier.

Mother has lost custody of Zoey. Despite Mother’s past, she will do all it takes to protect her daughter.  Because drug cartels keep impacting Mother’s life, she has adapted to being aware of her surroundings and fighting like her life depends on it. The film transitions to Mother’s harsh past and Lopez gives a stellar performance of teaching a child how to survive. However, the transition lacks focus, and The Mother begins to feature many catastrophes with lots of shooting action.

Unfortunately, the featured scenarios led to boredom in my opinion. As soon as Mother’s main objective was to ensure her daughter knows how to survive, I found that there was no meaningful clarification to how exactly this connects to Mother’s past.  In the beginning of the movie, there are backstories of Mother being a veteran and also involved in various crime scenarios. Then, she seems to be a criminal who is targeted by the worst enemies. The film’s algorithm which would allow it to find its redemption by having Mother and daughter survive is off base. I thought to myself that the role of Lopez was a bit like Liam Neeson’s role in Taken (2009). The Mother is similar to Taken in terms of fighting for the ones we love most. Disappointingly, the direction is lacking in quality that results in this story being a predictable setup with obvious outcomes.

On a positive note, The Mother is watchable because Lopez delivers a prestige performance. As she teaches her daughter to fight, she tells her to use her hate and frustration to help her live. The Mother fully explores that idea. The film also displays how the present is more important than the past. Mother’s previous issues are not worth going back to. In The Mother, Zoey is the priority of the story, but the film suffers due to the lack of structure and poor writing. Still, thanks to Lopez’s strong acting skills, it is not a complete failure. Two and a half stars for The Mother.

BlackBerry Review


Remember the fascinating times of getting your first cell phone that you could text with? Remember buying a more expensive phone because you could also use it to receive and send email? Remember 2007 and 2008, when these and other up-and-coming features were new and invigorating? The film that will take fans back to that era is BlackBerry, directed by Matt Johnson (he is also one of the lead actors).

BlackBerry introduces us to Mike Lazaridis, played by Jay Baruchel, and Doug Fregin, played by Matt Johnson. Mike and Doug are laid-back tech guys who run a company called Research in Motion. Their business has financial constraints causing production delays with new technologies, until they meet Jim Balsillie, played by Glenn Howerton. Jim is a businessman with a big ego and innovative ideas, and he’s after the big bucks. Jim takes over and his biggest idea is the first smartphone—the BlackBerry.

With new features being added continuously and new ways of selling cellular products, there is a lot that goes into a new product like the BlackBerry. The developers also had serious questions about whether the servers, the cellular companies, or the cell towers could handle the new speed and high data load that comes with smartphones. With the glitches growing and still more products selling, there is plateau after plateau in this film. Mike and Doug are focused on the technologies, but Jim is only interested in getting himself richer and richer.

The lesson from BlackBerry is one that is common today. It is that success and profit from a given product or service do not benefit everyone involved with the product. The ones actually developing and making the product are often treated poorly. The people pitching and selling the product—in the case of the BlackBerry, Jim—often make all the money. That is where the tension in BlackBerry is created. Jim is all about how much he can get for himself and not about how everyone else is compensated for their hard work.

The turmoil of the profiting, marketing, and sales pitching is where BlackBerry has its anxiety-provoking moments. Mike and Doug have brilliant minds, but they’re not great salesmen. And they don’t know how Jim does business. Jim is actually taking advantage of them, but they don’t realize it.

There are parts of BlackBerry that will make audiences laugh. But mostly it’s a serious film based on real-life events that will shock its audiences to their core and have their minds racing with curiosity about how it will turn out. Its focus is in-depth, and its revelations are intriguing. It’s a rollercoaster ride that creates suspense about a world where technology could not keep up with the speed of innovation. And it’s about greed and ambition that may leave behind the brilliant people who develop our technology products. It is a ride of egos, suspense, and a race to make profits. It is stellar in its presentation and is a one-of-a-kind true story. Four stars for BlackBerry.

Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie


The beloved actor Michael J. Fox shines with empathy and honesty in Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie. Fox has a positive vibe that the world appreciates, and his struggle with Parkinson’s disease has not dampened that positivity, a fact that’s evident in director Davis Guggenheim’s new documentary. Fox tells the story of his family, his successes, and his life since the diagnosis. His is one of the most detailed and enthralling stories I have seen this year in a documentary.

As Fox talks about his success, the film brings its audience back to the days of Back to the Future, Teen Wolf, and Family Ties. He explains how his journey has required considerable patience at times, and that most of all, optimism is what keeps him alive. Still is a powerful and invigorating celebration of an icon who thrives on positivity despite having a terrible disease. It shines with realism and emotion, while never going too far down the rabbit hole of sadness, finding the light in Fox’s life as well.

Four Stars!