REVIEW: GODZILLA vs KONG (2021)

MZNJ_New_review

now playing

bars

GODZILLA vs KONG (2021)

Godzilla vs Kong opens a few years after Godzilla’s battle to the death with King Ghidorah in Boston. Godzilla has left mankind in peace, till suddenly launching an attack on an Apex Cybernetics facility in Florida. Meanwhile, Skull Island is becoming unstable and Dr. Ilene Andrews (Rebecca Hall) seeks to find Kong a new home. As fate would have it, scientist Dr. Nathan Lind (Alexander Skarsgård) needs a titan to lead the way to the Hollow Earth, which may be the original home of Kong’s race. As Andrews and Lind, with the help of Apex, begin to move Kong from his ill-fated island home, Madison Russell (Millie Bobby Brown) teams with Titan Truth Podcast host Bernie Hayes (Brian Tyree Henry) to find out what Apex is really up to and why it’s provoking Godzilla to attack. As there can be only one alpha titan, the paths of Godzilla and Kong are fated to collide and as they are destined to meet in combat, Apex is about to unleash a threat that may be the end of all titans on Earth.

            Sequel to Godzilla, Godzilla: King of the Monsters and Kong: Skull Island is directed by Adam Wingard (The Guest, You’re Next) from a script by Eric Pearson and Max Borenstein, based on a story by Terry Rossio, Michael Dougherty and Zach Shields. As such, it is a fun monster battle blast. Sure the plot is a bit convoluted and character development/motivation is kept to a bare minimum, but we don’t watch a Godzilla or Kong movie expecting Shakespeare. Adam Wingard delivers what might be one of the most visually sumptuous kaiju flicks ever made, as well, as some of the most vicious and intense monster fights once Kong and Godzilla collide. His previous films showed a man who loves movies and it’s his inner film geek that best serves this fun, popcorn monster mash. The film gives us a giant monster flick that delightfully flaunts it’s influences, as G vs K evokes Ishirō Honda with it’s spectacular battles, Edgar Rice Burroughs, as Kong and his handlers explore the lost world of the Hallow Earth, and a touch of James Bond as Madison, her bud Josh (Julian Dennison) and Bernie sneak into Apex’s secret underground lab in Hong Kong. Wingard also gives us a Godzilla whose appearances evoke Jaws in the very best way. The human characters may be shortchanged, and Kong is far more the focus than Godzilla, but the action is fast and furious and comes quick enough for what exposition there is, to not get in the way of the entertainment. The battles between Godzilla and Kong are both visually spectacular and extremely brutal and Wingard does deliver what he promises…a definite winner. The script also cleverly finds a way to get the loser of the battle back in action and a chance to redeem themselves, when Apex unleashes a common enemy that presents a danger to both combatants. The digital SPFX are absolutely top notch, especially when pitting Godzilla and Kong against each other in neon drenched Hong Kong, and in the exploration of the Hallow Earth world. The cinematography by Ben Seresin is absolutely gorgeous and compliments Wingard’s expert shot composition and visual design very well. The score by Tom Holkenborg/Junkie XL is simply one of the best non Akira Ifukube scores attached to a Godzilla flick. All in all, story and character weaknesses aside, this is a roller coaster, fun ride of monster movie mayhem.

            Wingard has assembled a good cast that help make two dimensional characters a bit livelier. Rebecca Hall is noble and strong-willed as the Jane Goodall-like Dr. Ilene Andrews. She’s likable and has Kong’s best interests in mind. Alexander Skarsgård is also endearing as the slightly timid but driven Dr. Nathan Lind. He lost a brother to a Hollow Earth expedition and is dedicated to successfully exploring it. Millie Bobby Brown is once again spunky and strong-willed as Madison. She is sworn to clearing Godzilla’s name and prove he is no enemy to man. Brian Tyree Henry is fun as eccentric podcaster Bernie, seeking to uncover Apex’s secret, as is Julian Dennison as the reluctant tag-along Josh. Rounding out our good guys is the charming Kyle Chandler in a smaller role as Dr. Mark Russell and adorable Kaylee Hottle as Jia, a little deaf girl and last survivor of Skull Island’s indigenous people. Her handicap gives her the ability to sign, which she teaches Kong, in a clever story device to have the massive simian emote and communicate more. Kong is presented as a noble hero here, while Godzilla is clearly the aggressor and bad guy, till a last act reveal unveils his motivation for the attacks. As for our underdeveloped bad guys, Demián Bichir is appropriately sinister as Apex CEO Walter Simmons, who wants to destroy all monsters, sexy Eiza González gets some of the worst lines as the apple that doesn’t fall far from the tree, his daughter Maya and Shun Oguri has sadly little screen time as Ren Serizawa, the son of Dr. Ishirō Serizawa, who wants payback from Godzilla over his father’s death. A plot-line that definitely needed more attention. Thinly written characters, yes…a good cast, definitely!

Overall, those expecting a monster flick with the story depth of some of the recent high-end superhero epics might come away disappointed. Those going in expecting a monster Wrestlemania of epic portions, will probably be very entertained and on that level, Wingard and company deliver big time. The action is fast and furious, human interference is kept to a minimum and it is one of the most visually dynamic giant monster movies ever. The battles are brutal and intense and, for the most part, Wingard lets his titans go at it with the human interactions kept on the down low. Sure, the character development could have been stronger, but it’s somewhat convoluted story allows film geek Adam Wingard to delightfully reference a number of flicks both within and without the monster movie world. It also has some clever touches like Kong’s equalizer, an ancient axe made from a Godzilla ancestor dorsal spine. It makes for a wonderfully fun, popcorn flick that has wonders for the eye, plenty of adventure and some of the best monster fights yet captured on film. The Legendary Monster-verse seems to be finally finding it’s stride. Let’s hope they keep it going if this flick is a monster success.

-MonsterZero NJ

 

Rated 3 and 1/2 (out of 4) Godzillas
godzilla 3 and 1-2 rating

**************************************************

 

bars

BARE BONES: HONEYDEW (2020)

MZNJ_bareBones_Marquee

now playing

Humerus-Bone1

honeydew

HONEYDEW (2020)

Indie horror finds couple Riley (Malin Barr) and Sam (Sawyer Spielberg) going on an exploratory camping trip and finding themselves on someone’s (Stephen D’Ambrose) property. Forced to vacate in the middle of the night, they happen upon an old farmhouse owned and inhabited by a very strange old woman named Ruth (Barbara Kingsley) and her even stranger son Gunni (Jamie Bradley). Taking refuge for the night, the two find themselves in a situation that gets weirder and more unsettling by the moment.

Backwoods horror is written and directed by Devereux Milburn and is a tough film to review. On one hand it’s very atmospheric, disturbing and unnerving, but on the other it is also very slow moving and tedious. Despite being very weird and almost surreal at times, the flick also follows the backwoods horror clichés very closely, such as to what Ruth’s favorite food turns out to be. Sure Milburn presents the old school redneck horror tropes in a very disturbing way, but when you get down to it, it’s still a very familiar story and a dreadfully slow paced one at that. Milburn does have a good visual eye and there is some gore to go along with some very creepy imagery. Worth a look if you like the backwoods horror sub-genre and want to see a little creep factor added back to it, but expect a very slow burn.

-MonsterZero NJ

2 and 1-2 star rating

Humerus-Bone1

bars

BARE BONES: THE BANISHING (2020)

MZNJ_bareBones_Marquee

now playing

Humerus-Bone1

THE BANISHING (2020)

Haunted house chiller is set in 1930s England in the shadow of the rise of Nazi Germany. It finds a Vicar (John Heffernan), his wife (Jessica Brown Findlay) and her daughter (Anya McKenna-Bruce) being sent to a small village to live in a house with some dark secrets. Soon the dark nature of the house seeks to overwhelm them.

Flick is directed by Christopher Smith (The Black DeathTriangle, Creep) from a script by David Beton, Ray Bogdanovich and Dean Line. It’s an atmospheric, yet dull movie that takes far too long to get spooky and interesting and by that time, it’s too little and too late. It’s also predictable, with no better example than the end reveal for Bishop Malachi (John Lynch), which was obvious from the beginning. It’s also very cliché, as we have seen countless flicks with haunted old houses with terrible secrets being inhabited by characters with secrets of their own. Smith does direct well and the cast is certainly efficient, but they can’t overcome that it’s all blandly familiar, even with it’s undercurrent of religious commentary. A disappointing, tedious and routine flick from a director whose previous works have been noteworthy.

-MonsterZero NJ

Humerus-Bone1 

bars

WEEKEND BOX OFFICE ESTIMATES MAR 26-28

MZNJ_New_WBO

WEEKEND BOX OFFICE ESTIMATES MAR 26-28

(Remember, clicking the highlighted links brings you to the reviews here at The Movie Madhouse!)

1. “Nobody” $6.7 Million

2. “Raya and the Last Dragon” $3.5 Million

3. “Tom and Jerry” $2.5 Million

4. “Chaos Walking” $1.2 Million

5. “The Courier” $1 Million

6. “The Croods: A New Age” $540,000

7. “The Marksman” $375,000

8. “Boogie” $340,000

9. “Minari” $275,000

10. “Wonder Woman 1984” $245,000

 

source: Box Office Mojo

bars

BARE BONES: APOLLO 18 (2011)

MZNJ_bareBones_Marquee

now playing

Humerus-Bone1

APOLLO 18 (2011)

Apollo 18 is a found footage horror with the interesting premise that there was a classified moon mission kept secret from the public…until now. The mission went horribly awry and we are supposedly seeing the actual footage from this secret 1974 moon launch.

Flick is directed by Gonzalo López-Gallego from a script by Brian Miller. The film does have some creepy sequences and the idea of a secret mission to the moon is intriguing, but sadly this film never delivers the scares and terror it sets out to. Even as our ill-fated astronauts realize that there is something very wrong with their top secret mission and they discover that they may not be the only ones there on the moon, the film fails to really generate the kind of tension it needs. There is a lot of screaming and things begin to become clear to us as to what is happening as the film enters it’s final act, but it never grabs us or involves us in the astronauts’ terror. Is it that we can pretty much figure out how this story will end? Is it that the lunar threat isn’t all that scary to us? Or is that the multiple cameras and camera media is too distracting to allow us to be drawn into the drama? Either way, the film fails as much as the mission it portrays. Too bad, it was a cool idea. Flick stars Warren Christie, Lloyd Owen and Ryan Robbins as the doomed astronauts.

-MonsterZero NJ

Humerus-Bone1 

bars

NEW SLASHER “INITIATION” GETS A POSTER AND TRAILER!

MZNJ_NEW_news

NEW SLASHER “INITIATION” GETS A POSTER AND TRAILER!

***************************************************
A trailer and poster for the new slasher Initiation has arrived!

“Whiton University unravels the night a star-athlete is murdered, kicking off a spree of social media slayings that force students to uncover the truth behind the school’s hidden secrets and the horrifying meaning of an exclamation point.”

The film is directed by John Berardo from his script with Brian Frager and Lindsay LaVanchy and stars Isabella Gomez, Yancy Butler, Jon Huertas and Freddy vs Jason’s Lochlyn Munro. R-rated slasher flick is due to be released theatrically and on demand on 5/7/21!

***************************************************

-MonsterZero NJ

Source: Horror Society and IMDB

bars

BARE BONES: UNCANNY ANNIE (2019)

MZNJ_bareBones_Marquee

now playing

Humerus-Bone1

UNCANNY ANNIE (2019)

Uncanny Annie is part of Hulu and Blumhouse’s Into The Dark series and originally aired on 10/4/19. Flick takes place on Halloween night, where six friends, Wendy (Adelaide Kane), Michael (Dylan Arnold), Eve (Georgie Flores), Craig (Jacques Colimon), Grace (Paige McGhee) and Peter (Evan Bittencourt) are hanging out together. They discover an old board game called Uncanny Annie and they decide to play. Soon the friends find themselves in some kind of void where they are not only forced to bare their souls, but are assailed by a variety of spooks and specters, including Annie (Karlisha Hurley) herself. Is there any way to win and escape for them, or will they be all taken one by one?

Flick is spookily directed by Paul Davis from a fun script by Alan Blake Bachelor and James Bachelor. Sure, we’ve seen the whole drawn into a board game thing before and the haunted board game, too, but the filmmakers know it and go with it with supernatural gusto. There are some spooky spooks and Annie herself is quite unnerving, thanks to a creepy performance by Karlisha Hurley. The whole cast give us some likable characters, even though some have dark secrets to keep, with Adelaide Kane making a solid heroine as sexy Goth chick Wendy. There is some bloodshed and the ghost FX are well done, too. Even if it isn’t the most original concept, it’s a fun Halloween flick that takes itself just seriously enough, yet let’s us have a good time as it’s premise plays out. One of the better Into The Dark flicks.

-MonsterZero NJ

3 star rating

Humerus-Bone1

bars

BARE BONES: DEMENTER (2019)

MZNJ_bareBones_Marquee

now playing

Humerus-Bone1

DEMENTER (2019)

Katie (Katie Groshong) is a woman who has fled a Satanic cult and is trying to get her life back together, seeking work as a caregiver. She is given charge of a woman with Down Syndrome named Stephanie (Stephanie Kinkle), who Katie soon believes is being pursued by a demonic presence. Can Katie use her past experiences to save Stephanie from whatever is pursuing her?

Film is the sophomore flick for writer and director by Chad Crawford Kinkle, whose first film was the strange and spooky Jug Face. Dementer is a disturbing flick from the start, as Katie suffers flashbacks of her traumatic time with the cult and, at the same time, starts to see evidence that Stephanie might be being pursued by something sinister. It can be very creepy at times and is all the more unnerving to see an innocent with Down syndrome as the pursuit of something demonic. It is also intriguing to see Katie use the knowledge gained from her cult experiences to try to protect Stephanie, despite the bad memories it all brings back. The film has numerous spooky moments and visuals and a creepy score by Sean Spillane. There are really good performances from leads Katie Goshong and Stephanie Kinkle and the film uses real Down actors in the roles of not only Stephanie, but the other members of the care center as well. Another original and disturbing horror from Chad Crawford Kinkle. Flick also stars indie horror icon Larry Fessenden.

-MonsterZero NJ

3 star rating

Humerus-Bone1

bars

WEEKEND BOX OFFICE ESTIMATES MAR 19-21

MZNJ_New_WBO

WEEKEND BOX OFFICE ESTIMATES MAR 19-21

(Remember, clicking the highlighted links brings you to the reviews here at The Movie Madhouse!)

1. “Raya and the Last Dragon” $5.15 Million

2. “Tom and Jerry” $3.8 Million

3. “The Courier” $2 Million

4. “Chaos Walking” $1.9 Million

5. “The Croods: A New Age” $620,000

6. “Boogie” $600,000

7. “The Marksman” $480,000

8. “Wonder Woman 1984” $460,000

9. “The Little Things” $340,000

10. “The Father” $321,701

source: Box Office Mojo

bars

TOMB OF NOSTALGIA: MIMIC (1997)

MZNJ_New_TON

now playing

bars

MIMIC (1997)

(Remember, clicking the highlighted links brings you to other reviews and articles here at The Movie Madhouse!)

The story tells of a deadly disease devastating New York City’s children and carried by it’s cockroaches. Entomologist Susan Tyler (Mira Sorvino) creates The Judas Breed, a new insect, genetically bred to destroy the infected cockroaches, then die-off themselves. The Judas Breed have other ideas and are not only thriving, but are soon growing, evolving and nesting in the city sewers. They are also now preying on humans. Susan, along with her husband, Dr. Peter Mann (Jeremy Northam), who is Deputy Director of the CDC, and reluctant subway cop, Officer Leonard Norton (Charles S. Dutton), find themselves in the fight of their lives, and the lives of everyone in the city, as they enter the catacombs of NYC’s massive subway system to find and destroy the The Judas Breed.

Film is directed by Guillermo del Toro from his script with Matthew Robbins, from the book of the same name by Donald A. Wollheim. It’s a solid, modern day sci-fi/horror, that is not without a nod to the giant bug movies of the 50s. It’s got a good story, a top notch cast, some good gore, excellent creature FX and there is enough carnage and action to satisfy the average monster/giant bug movie fan. The attack scenes are intense and suspenseful and Del Toro gives his creatures a nice air of mystery, till he’s ready to reveal them. When he does, they are menacing, vicious and have a character about them. He creates a lot of mystery and atmosphere and his visual style is gorgeous as usual. His visual eye makes good use of the underground subway system setting. The cinematography by Dan Laustsen is both colorful and filled with atmospheric shadows and the score by Marco Beltrami is very effective.

As said, there is a good cast here. Sorvino is a strong heroine as Susan. She has a hard time convincing the authorities of what she’s discovered and goes to investigate herself with only Peter on her side. Jeremy Northam is solid as Peter. He’s more concerned with having a baby than investigating Susan’s claims, at first, but comes to believe Susan is on to something. Charles S. Dutton is also really good as Officer Norton, a tough guy who is reluctantly dragged along on the giant bug hunt. The film also has a good supporting cast with Giancarlo Giannini as a shoe shiner whose autistic son (Alexander Goodwin) has an interest in the creatures, Josh Brolin, F. Murray Abraham, and, in a small role, Walking Dead’s Norman Reedus, as a department of sanitation employee who finds something very interesting in the garbage.

I’ve always liked monster movies and am a huge fan of Guillermo Del Toro, so it’s no surprise I champion his giant bug movie set in the sewers of NYC. I really do believe this is a good and very underrated monster movie that doesn’t get enough love. A director’s cut is now available on blu-ray, as Del Toro was unhappy with studio tinkering on the original release. It expands the story of Sorvino’s Entomologist and her husband, Peter as they try to have a baby, basically adding a bit more of a human element to already likable characters. Those looking for more creature stuff in the director’s cut will be sadly disappointed. A really good monster flick that doesn’t get the respect it deserves and was sadly a box office disappointment upon release in 1997.

-MonsterZero NJ

 Rated 3 and 1/2 (out of 4) Judas Breed Bugs!
**************************************************

bars