‘Plane’ Keeps It Plain and Simple by Gerard Butler Standards

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Not Pictured: The Plane (PHOTO CREDIT: Kenneth Rexach)

Starring: Gerard Butler, Mike Colter, Yoson An, Tony Goldwyn, Daniella Pinda, Kelly Gale, Rami Adeleke, Haleigh Hekking, Lily Krug, Joey Slotnick, Oliver Trevena, Paul Ben-Victor, Quinn McPherson

Director: Jean-François Richet

Running Time: 107 Minutes

Rating: R for Guns and Machetes

Release Date: January 13, 2023 (Theaters)

What’s It About?: I don’t work in the airline industry, but I’m pretty sure the flight in Plane never should have been cleared for takeoff. (Although to be fair, that is the conclusion that the majority of the airline workers in this movie arrive at.) Anyway, widowed Captain Brodie Torrance (Gerard Butler) just wants to get through this one last flight before he’s able to visit his daughter Daniela (Haleigh Hekking). But instead, his titular aircraft is struck by lightning, and he’s forced to make an emergency landing in a remote jungle in the Philippines. He sticks the landing, but now he’s got to deal with a bunch of thirsty, irritable passengers, one of whom is a prisoner (Mike Colter) charged with homicide who for some reason is being extradited on a commercial flight. And an even bigger headache arrives when they discover that they’re in an essentially lawless area that’s run by a militia that may just be interested in holding them for ransom.

What Made an Impression?: I’ve never really been a fan of the Gerard Butler Brand of Action Thrillers, which tend to posit that the world is a sick, violent place, and someone has to stand up if anybody is going to survive. Sure, kidnappings and coups do happen in the real world, but that doesn’t mean that movies about them have to be so joyless. But while it’s not my cup of cinematic tea, there appears to be a loyal audience for this type of genre flick. So for those of you in the market, you’ll be pleased to know that Plane has a clear premise, clearly established stakes, and cleanly shot action. I at least appreciated that the beachside setting allowed for plenty of sunny cinematography. I’m still not a Butler convert, but I respect him for committing to do what works for him.

Plane is Recommended If You Like: Olympus/London/Angel Has Fallen, Chuck Norris and Steven Seagal’s Complete Filmographies

Grade: 2.5 out of 5 Planes

The 2022 Podcast Roundup

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Podcast, anyone?* More like Podcasts, everyone! What I’m trying to say is, it seems like everyone in the whole entire world is making a podcast nowadays. Or at least listening to them.

I’ve certainly been listening to dozens, if not hundreds**, in the past year. So without further ado, (and instead with further adon’t), here’s my roundup of my biggest takeaways from listening to podcasts in 2022, organized by category.

(*-Like “Tennis, anyone?” but replace “tennis” with “podcast.”)

(**-I guess it depends on if you count by the show or by the episode. Or how kooky you’re feeling.)

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‘Broker’ and ‘RRR’ Weekend: What Are They Cooking in Korea and India?

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The only reason to wear suspenders (CREDIT: Screenshot)

RRR:

Starring: N.T. Rama Rao Jr., Ram Charan, Ajay Devgn, Alia Bhatt, Shriya Saran, Samuthirakani, Ray Stevenson, Alison Doody, Olivia Morris, Twinkle Sharma, Edward Sonnenblick

Director: S.S. Rajamouli

Running Time: 182 Minutes

Rating: PG-13

Release Date: March 25, 2022 (Theaters)

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That’s Auntertaiment Mini-Episode: What’s Jeff Watching? #4

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Caption this, wrong answers only (CREDIT: Screenshot)

Spin! The! Wheel! … to see how 2022 ended, and how 2023 began.

Entertainment To-Do List: Week of 1/6/23

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R-U-P-A-U … wait a minute, there’s a sixth letter! (CREDIT: CBS/Screenshot)

Every week, I list all the upcoming (or recently released) movies, TV shows, albums, podcasts, etc. that I believe are worth checking out.

Movies
A Man Called Otto – This had an awards-qualifying run at the end of 2022, and now it’s expanding a bit.
MEGAN (Theaters)

TV
RuPaul’s Drag Race Season 15 Premiere (January 6 on MTV) – Moving to MTV.
Mayfair Witches Series Premiere (January 8 on AMC and AMC+) – Alexandra Daddario stars in an Anne Rice adaptation.
-Golden Globes (January 10 on NBC) – On a Tuesday?!
Celebrity Name That Tune Season Premiere (January 11 on FOX)
Lingo Reboot Premiere (January 11 on CBS) – More RuPaul.

Music
-Iggy Pop, Every Loser

‘M3GAN’ Captures What It Means to Be Both a Robot and a Human in 2023

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In another scene, M3GAN reminds Cady to flush the toilet! (CREDIT: Universal Pictures)

Starring: Allison Williams, Violet McGraw, Amie Donald, Jenna Davis, Ronny Chieng, Brian Jordan Alvarez, Jen Van Epps, Stephane Garneau-Monten, Lori Dungey

Director: Gerard Johnstone

Running Time: 102 Minutes

Rating: PG-13 for Horrifying Demises That Cut Away Before the Goriest Parts

Release Date: January 6, 2023 (Theaters)

What’s It About?: Roboticist Gemma (Allison Williams) becomes the guardian to her young niece Cady (Violet McGraw) after her sister and brother-in-law die in a violent accident. But at the same time, she’s facing a deadline for a major project that could make or break her entire career. Isn’t that just how it always  goes?! 😛 But as it turns out, maybe she can take care of everything in one fell swoop by completing her passion project: the Model 3 Generative Android, aka “M3GAN” (Amie Donald, with Jenna Davis providing the voice). She’s a lifelike talking doll with a titanium foundation and artificial intelligence-fueled learning abilities. She imprints onto Cady and thereby becomes a best friend, surrogate parent, and sworn protector. Initially, she proves to be a wonderfully therapeutic tool for a grieving child, but when it becomes clear that M3GAN’s interpretation of her duties has no ethical bounds, well, then, you’d better watch out.

What Made an Impression?: M3GAN delivers a whirlwind of emotions. It kicks off with a commercial for a line of Furby-esque talking animal toys called Purrpetual Pets that feels like it was plucked from the Cinco company of Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job! Which is to say, it was designed for the most demented consumer market imaginable. But the entirety of the movie doesn’t operate on quite that same bizarro logic. At least not entirely. To clarify: just about every scene features a thrilling tonal mix. I constantly found myself switching between cracking up, choking up, and tightening up for fight-or-flight mode within the span of just one minute.

Take, for example, the scene in which Gemma and her colleagues make the big pitch about M3GAN’s capabilities to the company bigwigs. The presentation immediately goes off the rails when Cady, who’s too upset to stick to the script, breaks down after she’s suddenly hit by the grief of losing her parents that she’s yet to fully process. Everyone steels themselves for a disaster, but M3GAN is a master improviser, so she coaxes a supremely silly story out of Cady about a time that her mom found a cockroach in her school bag. This goofy bonding proves to be exactly what Cady needed in the moment to work through her trauma, and then M3GAN caps it all off with a stunning singing performance, and everyone in the room is blown away by the revolution they’ve just witnessed.

Of course, this being a horror movie and all, M3GAN’s methods for looking after Cady quickly turn much more sinister. And while the scares are effective, they arrive in a much different fashion than you might expect. MEGAN‘s most obvious antecedents are creepy doll franchises like Child’s Play and Annabelle that stare deep into the bowels of the uncanny valley. But M3GAN is more concerned with the unchecked power of artificial intelligence and robotic technology. Essentially, this is The Terminator updated for an era grappling with AI voice assistants that know everything about us, AI portraits that rival the work of human painters, and AI chatbots that can write sophisticated newspaper articles. Every generation activates Skynet in its own particular way, and we are so lucky that the warning postulated by M3GAN allows us to experience the full spectrum of what it means to be alive and human.

MEGAN is Recommended If You Like: The Terminator, AI-generated art, The “Aerodynamics of Gender” episode of Community, The Wikibear sketches from Conan

Grade: 4.5 out of 5 Roasted Chestnuts

jmunney’s Top Cinematic Choices for January 2023

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Welcome to January! (CREDIT: Universal Pictures)

They keep making new movies, and some of them are even worth watching. Here’s what’s at the top of the slate for January 2023:

M3GAN: A robot doll with killer dance moves becomes a killer best friend for a recently orphaned little girl named Cady. Her aunt is played by Allison Williams, who of course established her horror bona fides with Get Out. Would M3GAN have also voted for Obama a third time if she had the chance?

M3GAN is due in theaters January 6.

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2022: A Year at the Movies

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I’m so excited (when I see a movie)! And I just can’t hide it (in front of a movie poster)! I’m about to lose control, and I think the Na’vi will like it!
(PHOTO CREDIT: Walter Wojcik)

We’re back to pre-pandemic demand, but not quite pre-pandemic supply.

(Included with the list of titles are grades, dates, showtimes, theatre locations, and folks I saw the movies with.)

1. The Matrix Resurrections – B+ (1/3, 6:40 PM, Regal Essex Crossing, New York, NY; myself)
2. West Side Story (2021) – B+ (1/4, 6:00 PM, Alamo Drafthouse Brooklyn; myself)
3. The Power of the Dog – B- (1/10, 6:00 PM, Paris Theater, New York, NY; myself)
4. Scream (2022) – B+ (1/11, 5:00 PM, AMC Lincoln Square, New York, NY; myself)
5. Lingui, The Sacred Bonds – B+ (1/14, 7:00 PM, Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY; myself)

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