
A lovely moment from this year’s Oscars! (CREDIT: Screenshot)
Four days after the 94th Academy Awards, Aunt Beth and Jeff sit down to their microphones to discuss what happened.
Jeff "Jmunney" Malone's Self-Styled "Expert" Thoughts on Movies, TV, Music, and the Rest of Pop Culture
April 3, 2022
Podcasts, That's Auntertainment 94th Academy Awards, 94th Oscars, Academy Awards, Oscars, Podcasts, That's Auntertainment Leave a comment

A lovely moment from this year’s Oscars! (CREDIT: Screenshot)
Four days after the 94th Academy Awards, Aunt Beth and Jeff sit down to their microphones to discuss what happened.
April 1, 2022
Cinema, Entertainment To-Do List, Music, Sports, Television Apollo 10½, Grammys, Morbius, Red Hot Chili Peppers, The Bubble, The Masters, Unlimited Love, You Won't Be Alone Leave a comment

The Bubble (CREDIT: Laura Radford/Netflix)
Every week, I list all the upcoming (or recently released) movies, TV shows, albums, podcasts, etc. that I believe are worth checking out.
Movies
–Apollo 10½ (April 1 on Netflix)
–The Bubble (Limited Theaters and Netflix) – Judd Apatow directs, and the cast includes Maria Bakalova, post-Borat.
–Morbius (Theaters) – I loved Jared Leto in House of Gucci, will I also love him in this?
–You Won’t Be Alone (Theaters)
Music on TV
-64th Annual Grammy Awards (April 3 on CBS)
Music
-Red Hot Chili Peppers, Unlimited Love
Sports
-The Masters (April 7-10 on ESPN and CBS)
March 31, 2022
Cinema, Movie Reviews Colin Firth, Eva Husson, Glenda Jackson, Josh O'Connor, Mothering Sunday, Odessa Young, Olivia Colman, Patsy Ferran, Sope Dirisu Leave a comment

Mothering Sunday (CREDIT: Sony Pictures Classics/Screenshot)
Starring: Odessa Young, Josh O’Connor, Colin Firth, Olivia Colman, Sope Dirisu, Patsy Ferran, Glenda Jackson
Director: Eva Husson
Running Time: 110 Minutes
Rating: R
Release Date: March 25, 2022 (Theaters)
For a good stretch of Mothering Sunday, Odessa Young walks around a big English country estate while totally naked. She’s by herself, just exploring the place, luxuriating in her own body. There’s a few moments when it cuts to some other characters and you think she’s about to be discovered, but that’s just misleading editing, because they’re in some other time and/or place. Anyway, it’s the most long-lasting incidental nudity I can ever remember seeing in a movie, and it had me thinking, “Well, I guess she’s comfortable.” Anyway, her character starts out as a maid and eventually becomes a highly acclaimed writer. Not a bad way for a life to turn out. Elsewhere, Colin Firth and Olivia Colman play characters who get very emotional.
Grade: 3 Typewriters out of No Clothes
March 31, 2022
Cinema, Movie Reviews Dan Kwan, Daniel Scheinert, Daniels, Everything Everywhere All at Once, Harry Shum Jr., James Hong, Jamie Lee Curtis, Jenny Slate, Ke Huy Quan, Michelle Yeoh, Stephanie Hsu 2 Comments

Everything Everywhere All at Once (CREDIT: Allyson Riggs/A24)
Starring: Michelle Yeoh, Ke Huy Quan, Stephanie Hsu, James Hong, Jamie Lee Curtis, Jenny Slate, Harry Shum Jr.
Directors: Dan Kwan and Daniel Scheinert
Running Time: 139 Minutes
Rating: R
Release Date: March 25, 2022 (Theaters)
Everything Everywhere All at Once captures how I feel all the time. I’m not always an outwardly emotional person, but inside I’m perpetually cooking in much the same way that the multiverse is constantly bumping up against itself in the Daniels’ vision. (Damn, Daniels.) Basically, so many of my daily thoughts are something along the lines of, “What do I have to do to make my life a recreation/mashup of The Matrix, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, Rick and Morty, In the Mood for Love, 2001, Kill Bill, Ratatouille, and that SNL sketch about googly eyes with Christopher Walken?” And now some folks actually went ahead and did it!
Grade: Everything out of Everything!
March 30, 2022
Cinema, Movie Reviews Apollo 10½, Apollo 10½: A Space Age Childhood, Bill Wise, Danielle Guilbot, Glen Powell, Jack Black, Jessica Brynn Cohen, Josh Wiggins, Lee Eddy, Milo Coy, Natalie L'Amoreaux, Richard Linklater, Sam Chipman, Zachary Levi 1 Comment

Apollo 10½: A Space Age Childhood (CREDIT: Netflix)
Starring: Milo Coy, Jack Black, Josh Wiggins, Lee Eddy, Bill Wise, Natalie L’Amoreaux, Jessica Brynn Cohen, Sam Chipman, Danielle Guilbot, Glen Powell, Zachary Levi
Director: Richard Linklater
Running Time: 98 Minutes
Rating: PG-13 for Some Mildly Adult Moments
Release Date: April 1, 2022 (Netflix)
Isn’t it cool when kids do something that only adults are supposed to do? Well, maybe not all the time, at least not in the real world. Sure, a toddler dressing up like a doctor is so gosh darn cute, but that same toddler performing surgery is probably not the best idea. But we’re talking about fictional worlds right now! And that means that children can hold down dangerous jobs, and perform them quite admirably to boot. That brings me to the Richard Linklater-directed Apollo 10½: A Space Age Childhood, a rotoscope-animated adventure in which a boy named Stanley (Milo Coy) is recruited by NASA to participate in the Apollo 11 mission. Now that’s some historical revisionism I can get behind.
In this alterna-vision of the 1960s, finding fresh astronauts is akin to the modern practice of college scouts traversing through middle schools to find the next big football or basketball phenom. A couple of NASA officials (Glen Powell, Zachary Levi) are hanging around a recess kickball game because one of the lunar modules is too small for adults and they’re hoping to find someone here who can fit in it. So they key right in on Stanley, and I’m all ready to go for some astronaut training montages. But not so quick, as that’s not exactly what Linklater has in mind. Instead, this is mostly a semi-autobiographical coming-of-age tale about growing up in a big family in 1960s Texas, with the Space Race serving mostly as a background event. An important background event that sets the tone, but not the main event no matter how you slice it.
If Apollo 10½ had focused more on the child astronaut conceit, it would’ve been a lot more unique than what we actually ended up with. Instead, it’s a familiar piece of coming-of-age nostalgia from an oft-explored era. A well-made piece of familiar nostalgia, with compelling narration from Linklater vet Jack Black as adult Stanley, but decidedly familiar nonetheless. So just keep your expectations in check about the potential for freshness, and you should be able to find something to enjoy here.
Apollo 10½ is Recommended If You Like: 1960s fashion, 1960s TV shows, 1960 music
Grade: 3 out of 5 Lunar Modules
March 29, 2022
Cinema, Movie Reviews Alice Englert, Anamaria Marinca, Carloto Cotta, Félix Maritaud, Goran Stolevski, Noomi Rapace, Sara Klimoska, You Won't Be Alone 1 Comment

You Won’t Be Alone (CREDIT: Branko Starcevic/Focus Features)
Starring: Noomi Rapace, Anamaria Marinca, Alice Englert, Carloto Cotta, Félix Maritaud, Sara Klimoska
Director: Goran Stolevski
Running Time: 108 Minutes
Rating: R for Violence, Blood, and Sexaul Content – All Involving Witches
Release Date: April 1, 2022 (Theaters)
You Won’t Be Alone is the type of movie that will make you feel like your mind has been altered if you look away for just a minute. And honestly, that’s a big part of the gnarly appeal. Time jumps ahead without any hand holding, while major characters shapeshift all over the place. Not to mention it’s in a language I’m unfamiliar with, though I’d be surprised if any native Macedonian speakers find it straightforward. So go ahead and watch You Won’t Be Alone while you’re fighting insomnia or in the middle of a bleary-eyed food coma. Or if you’re a recreational drug user, consider this an ideal opportunity to indulge. But even if you’re fully awake and 100% sober, the odds are still high that your brain will be squeezed into another dimension.
For a description a little more straightforward, here’s the logline from the film’s PR team:
“Set in an isolated mountain village in 19th century Macedonia, YOU WON’T BE ALONE follows a young girl who is kidnapped and then transformed into a witch by an ancient spirit. Curious about life as a human, the young witch accidentally kills a peasant in the nearby village and then takes her victim’s shape to live life in her skin. Her curiosity ignited, she continues to wield this horrific power in order to understand what it means to be human.”
My response to reading that after watching the movie is, “Oh. I guess that’s what happened.” If I were pitching it, I would personally probably keep it a little simpler and say something like: the hallucinogenic cultural subconscious of fairy tales spills out phantasmagorically across the European woodlands. The bottom line is, Macedonian-Australian writer-director Goran Stolevski is throwing together a wide array of influences here that are bound to satisfy widescreen-loving cineastes, as well as English majors who tend toward the sylvan supernatural.
If it sounds like I’m being vague about what actually happens in this movie, well, that’s because I’m a little wary of describing anything concretely for fear of totally misinterpreting everything. But don’t let that scare you away! Sometimes it’s okay to let a film confound you, and it’s also totally okay to ask someone else what happened. And if your buddies don’t know either, you can try to figure it out together! After all, you shouldn’t have to feel alone while watching You Won’t Be Alone.
You Won’t Be Alone is Recommended If You Like: Midsommar, The Witch, Grimm fairy tales, Terrence Malick
Grade: 3.5 out of 5 Witches
March 27, 2022
Podcasts, That's Auntertainment basketball, college basketball, March Madness, Podcasts, That's Auntertainment Leave a comment

Jeff and his longtime friend, also named Jeff, go mad every March, and the culprit is: college basketball.
March 26, 2022
Awards Shows, Cinema, Oscars, Television 94th Academy Awards, 94th Oscars, Academy Awards, Oscar Predictions, Oscars Leave a comment

“Children of Deaf Adults”? More for like “Oscars FOR Deaf Adults!” (CREDIT: Apple TV+)
Here’s my quick rundown of who might just grab the gold on Sunday, March 27, 2022, and whom I would vote for if I had a ballot.
Best Picture
Prediction: CODA
Preference: King Richard
Best Director
Prediction: Jane Campion
Preference: Steven Spielberg
March 25, 2022
Cinema, Entertainment To-Do List, Movie Reviews 94th Academy Awards, Academy Awards, Everything Everywhere All at Once, How We Roll, Moon Knight, Mothering Sunday, Name That Tune, Oscars Leave a comment

Moon Knight (CREDIT: Csaba Aknay/©Marvel Studios 2022)
Every week, I list all the upcoming (or recently released) movies, TV shows, albums, podcasts, etc. that I believe are worth checking out.
Movies
–Everything Everywhere All at Once (Theaters)
–Mothering Sunday (Theaters)
TV
-94th Academy Awards (March 27 on ABC) – Da moviesh.
–Name That Tune Season Premiere (March 29 on FOX) – Celebrity contestants this time around.
–Moon Knight Series Premiere (March 30 on Disney+) – Oscar Isaac joins the MCU.
–How We Roll Series Premiere (March 31 on CBS) – Pete Holmes goes bowling.