
Movies! 2024! Hurray! (CREDIT [Clockwise from Top Left): NEON; 20th Century Studios/Screenshot; Altered Innocence/Screenshot; Focus Features)
Jeff "Jmunney" Malone's Self-Styled "Expert" Thoughts on Movies, TV, Music, and the Rest of Pop Culture
January 28, 2025
Best in Film 2024, Best of 2024, Cinema A Different Man, Best of 2024, Conclave, Dune: Part Two, Frankie Freako, Furiosa, Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga, I Saw the TV Glow, Late Night with the Devil, MaXXXine, movies, Problemista, The First Omen, The People's Joker, The Seed of the Sacred Fig, The Substance, Will & Harper Leave a comment

Movies! 2024! Hurray! (CREDIT [Clockwise from Top Left): NEON; 20th Century Studios/Screenshot; Altered Innocence/Screenshot; Focus Features)
May 24, 2024
Cinema, Entertainment To-Do List, Music, Sports, Television Beat Shazam, Blue Electric Light, Clancy, French Open, Furiosa, Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga, Golf, Hit Man, Lenny Kravitz, My Adventures with Superman, South Park, South Park: The End of Obesity, Tennis, The Quiz with Balls, twenty one pilots, US Women's Open Leave a comment

It’s a hit, man! (CREDIT: Netflix © 2024)
Every week, I list all the upcoming (or recently released) movies, TV shows, albums, podcasts, etc. that I believe are worth checking out.
Movies
–Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga (Theaters)
–Hit Man (May 24 in Theaters, June 7 on Netflix) – Glen Powell starring role.
TV
-“South Park: The End of Obesity” (May 24 on Paramount+)
–My Adventures with Superman Season 2 Premiere (May 25 on Adult Swim)
–Beat Shazam Season Premiere (May 28 on FOX)
–The Quiz with Balls Series Premiere (May 28 on FOX) – SNL alum (Jay Pharoah) hosts a new game show.
Music
-Lenny Kravitz, Blue Electric Light
-twenty one pilots, Clancy
Sports
-French Open (May 26-June 9 on Tennis Channel, NBC, and Peacock)
-U.S. Women’s Open (May 30-June 2 on USA, Peacock, and NBC) – The golf version.
May 22, 2024
Cinema, Movie Reviews Alyla Browne, Angus Sampson, anya taylor-joy, Charlee Fraser, Chris Hemsworth, Daniel Webber, Elsa Pataky, Furiosa, Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga, George Miller, Jacob Tomuri, John Howard, Josh Helman, Lachy Hulme, Mad Max, Nathan Jones, Quaden Bayles, Tom Burke 3 Comments

You’re driving me Furiosa! (CREDIT: Warner Bros. Pictures/Screenshot)
Starring: Anya Taylor-Joy, Chris Hemsworth, Alyla Browne, Tom Burke, Lachy Hulme, Nathan Jones, Josh Helman, John Howard, Charlee Fraser, Angus Sampson, Quaden Bayles, Daniel Webber, Jacob Tomuri, Elsa Pataky
Director: George Miller
Running Time: 148 Minutes
Rating: R for The Bloody Violence and Grisly Gruesomeness of the Desert
Release Date: May 24, 2024 (Theaters)
What’s It About?: Imperator Furiosa was the breakout character of Mad Max: Fury Road, and now she’s got her very own prequel! Yes indeed, it’s time once again to return to the sandy, fiery post-apocalypse of the Australian Outback. Originally brought to life inimitably by Charlize Theron nearly a decade ago, the mantle of Furiosa now falls to Alyla Browne as a tween and Anya Taylor-Joy in young adult form. She grows up in one of the few areas in this wasteland where vegetation grows plentifully, but then she’s kidnapped into a life of servitude and forced to watch the execution of her mother (Charlee Fraser). She initially winds up in the clutches of the vulture-nosed warlord Dementus (Chris Hemsworth) before getting passed over to big baddie Immortan Joe (Lachy Hulme), who’s happy to have her as one of his many brides. But her mechanical skills, slippery resourcefulness, lust for vengeance, and an unquenchable desire to return home ensures that her life won’t be quite so simple or quite so repressed
What Made an Impression?: Predictable, But Also Not Predictable: Mad Max is one of those franchises where continuity really doesn’t matter. Every single entry has been directed (or co-directed) and co-written by George Miller, but he’s never exactly felt bound by what he himself has established. Fury Road, for example, played more like a reboot rather than a legacy sequel (understandably so, considering its recasting of the lead role and the fact that it came out 30 years after the previous entry). So it’s a little surprising then that Furiosa plays similarly to Rogue One‘s place in the Star Wars timeline, insofar as it barrels right towards the point where Fury Road kicks off. But that’s not to say that Miller is doing anything obvious. It may be true this time that the continuity is more linear than usual, but the depth of imagination is still staggering. Miller doesn’t give us what we think we want, because he’s speaking an entirely different language than anybody else on the planet.
How’d He Do Dat?: I’m not sure if I’m fully enthralled by Furiosa’s world. Similarly, I admired Fury Road more than I adored it, and my initial reaction to this distaff follow-up is pretty similar. (Though I wouldn’t be surprised if I gradually start feeling a bit zestier). But I can say without reservation that I am absolutely in awe of George Miller’s nutty band of merry stunt workers. With all sorts of sand bikes, monster trucks, and precision-strike firearms, it’s hard to believe that everyone survived the production. (I pray that no terrible exposés emerge to reveal otherwise!) Fury Road already flame-threw the action adventure genre to levels never witnessed before, and Furiosa somehow manages to be even more relentless. It’s nonstop set piece after set piece, each one of them thoroughly thrilling, witty, and reality-altering. This is cinema, baby!
Furiosa is Recommended If You Like: Stunts, Stunts, Stunts, Stunts, and also Stunts
Grade: 4 out of 5 Prosthetic Arms
May 1, 2024
Cinema, Monthly Top Cinematic Choices Furiosa, I Saw the TV Glow, Movie preview, Unfrosted Leave a comment

To frost, or not to frost? That is the popping. (CREDIT: John P. Johnson/Netflix © 2024)
They keep making new movies, and some of them are even worth watching. Here’s what’s at the top of the slate for [MONTH YEAR]:
I Saw the TV Glow: Bonding over a TV show results in distortion between fiction and reality. You know I can’t resist a premise like that!
We will all be able to say I Saw the TV Glow in movie theaters on May 3.